What is the meaning of STOG. Phrases containing STOG
See meanings and uses of STOG!STOG
Archaeological culture in Eastern Europe
The Sredny Stog culture (Russian: Среднесто́говская культу́ра, romanized: Srednestogovskaja kul'tura, Ukrainian: Середньостогівська культура,
Sredny_Stog_culture
Rolled bundle of dried and fermented tobacco leaves made to be smoked
A cigar is a rolled bundle of dried and fermented tobacco leaves made to be smoked. Cigars are produced in a variety of sizes and shapes. Since the 20th
Cigar
Prehistoric culture north of the Black Sea c. 5000–4200 BCE
many parallels with the Samara culture, and was succeeded by the Sredny Stog culture. The Dnieper–Donets culture complex was defined by the Soviet archaeologist
Dnieper–Donets_culture
Archaeological culture in the Pontic steppe circa 3300 BCE
late Sredny Stog (Serednii Stih) pastoralist cultures, which, he suggests, gave rise to the Yamnaya culture. Dmytro Telegin viewed Sredny Stog and Yamnaya
Yamnaya_culture
Theory of Indo-European origin
archaeological evidence for the domestication of the horse comes from the Sredny Stog culture north of the Azov Sea in Ukraine, and would correspond to an early
Kurgan_hypothesis
Bad mother and beer
Betty Stogs was a Cornishwoman in a folktale. She lived on moorland near Towednack, Cornwall. She had a six-month-old baby but was lazy and dissipated
Betty_Stogs
Archaeological culture (c. 4000-3200)
settlements. The pottery shares traits with that found further east, in the Sredny Stog culture on the south-west Eurasian steppe;[citation needed] burials similarly
Cernavodă_culture
Buddhist monastery in Ladakh, northern India
Stok Monastery or Stok Gompa is a Buddhist monastery in Stok, Leh district, Ladakh, northern India, 15 kilometres south of Leh. It was founded by Lama
Stok_Monastery
Archaeogenetic name for an ancestral genetic component
directly related ancient populations including the Khvalynsk, Repin, Sredny Stog, and Yamnaya cultures, and found in substantial levels in contemporary populations
Western_Steppe_Herders
One of the Eurasian steppes
Cucuteni-Trypillian culture 5300–2600 BCE Khvalynsk culture 5000–3500 BCE Sredny Stog culture 4500–3500 BCE Maykop culture 3700–3000 BCE Mykhailivka culture 3600—3000
Pontic–Caspian_steppe
Geographic region where the proto-Indo-European language originated
pastoralists (early Sredny Stog culture) who took over the Tripillia culture at c. 4300–4000 BCE. On its eastern border lay the Sredny Stog culture (4400–3400
Proto-Indo-European_homeland
Archaeological site in Ukraine
Dnieper. The site dates to c. 4500—3500 BC and is associated with the Sredny Stog culture, now is under waters of artificial Kamianske Reservoir. This site
Deriivka
2007 book by David W. Anthony
to increased warfare by the need for additional grazing land. The Sredny Stog culture (4400–3300 BCE) appears at the same location as the Dniepr-Donets
The Horse, the Wheel, and Language
The_Horse,_the_Wheel,_and_Language
orientation to east or northeast. The burials are similar to those of the Sredny Stog culture, but the burials are more elaborate with chambers of stone coverings
Novodanilovka_group
Bronze age steppe culture, 2500–1950 BC
Yamnaya culture, the Catacomb culture displays links with the earlier Sredny Stog culture, the Afanasievo culture and the Poltavka culture. The Catacomb culture
Catacomb_culture
Archaeologically, Suvorovo is synchronous with the Skelya phase of the Sredny Stog culture and is considered to be part of the Suvorovo–Novodanilovka group
Suvorovo_culture
Collection of Indo-European peoples sharing Celtic languages and cultural traits
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Celts
Defined list of sacred texts recognized by various schools of Tibetan Buddhism
These include the Derge, Lhasa, Narthang, Cone, Peking, Urga, Phudrak and Stog Palace versions, each named after the physical location of its printing (or
Tibetan_Buddhist_canon
Archaeological culture in modern-day Russia
pendants of bear teeth. Similar founds have been made in the earlier Sredny Stog culture, Yamnaya culture and Catacomb culture. Some have interpreted this
Fatyanovo–Balanovo_culture
Extinct branch of Indo-European languages
It has been theorized that Cernavodă culture, together with the Sredny Stog culture, was the source of Anatolian languages and introduced them to Anatolia
Anatolian_languages
Chalcolithic culture
Caucasus Period Eneolithic Dates c. 4500 – 3000 BC Preceded by Mariupol culture, Sredny Stog culture Followed by Maykop culture, Novosvobodnaya culture
Darkveti-Meshoko
Archaeological culture
U5a1i, and Q1a and a subclade of U4. A male from the contemporary Sredny Stog culture was found to have 80% WSH ancestry of a similar type to the Khvalynsk
Khvalynsk_culture
Ancient Anatolian people of Kussara
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Hittites
4th millennium BC Eneolithic archaeological culture in Eastern Europe
local Neolithic cultures. Sinyuk states that the (pre-Corded Ware) Sredny Stog I and Neolithic lower Don cultures are fundamental components in the formation
Repin_culture
One hundred years, from 3500 BC to 3401 BC
BC) Uruk period (Sumer) Naqada IIb (Ancient Egypt) Early Minoan I Sredny Stog culture (final phase) Yamna culture (early phase) Cucuteni culture Vinča
35th_century_BC
Branch of the Indo-European language family
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Germanic_languages
Millennium between 4000 BC and 3001 BC
3500–2300 BC – The Yamna culture ("Kurgan culture"), succeeding the Sredny Stog culture on the Pontic–Caspian steppe in the Caucasus and Central Asia. This
4th_millennium_BC
Migrations out of the Proto-Indo-European homeland
to Vasiliev, the Khvalynsk and Sredny Stog cultures show strong similarities, suggesting "a broad Sredny Stog-Khvalynsk horizon embracing the entire
Indo-European_migrations
Military unit
Muslim Knight Liberation Brigade independently captured the Stog ridge (935m) and the Stog hilltop, advancing into the Velika Rasječenica–Stošnica region
7th_Muslim_Brigade
One hundred years, from 4000 BC to 3901 BC
Pit–Comb Ware culture In the Pontic steppe, the Dnieper–Donets and Sredny Stog cultures flourish, according to the Kurgan hypothesis associated with Proto-Indo-Europeans
40th_century_BC
Prehistoric culture in modern Russia
Khvalinskaya equal to Sredni Stog 1 equal to Tripolie B1 equal to Pre-Cucuteni equal to Gumelnita; Maykop equal to Yamna equal to Sredni Stog II equal to Tripolie
Samara_culture
Bronze Age culture of the Urals
broad-faced proto-Europoid type is a trait of post-Mariupol’ cultures, Sredniy Stog, as well as the Pit-grave culture of the Dnieper’s left bank, the Donets
Abashevo_culture
European Bronze Age culture
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Corded_Ware_culture
Indo-European language
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Albanian_language
Ethnic group native to the Armenian highlands
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Armenians
Yidam in Tantric or Vajrayana Buddhism
par bgyis pa'o/ kye'i rdo rje zhes bya ba rgyud kyi rgyal po Stog Palace Kangyur, stog 379, Volume 94, rgyud bum (ga), 107r-148v colophon: rgyud kyi
Hevajra
Mountain range in the Czech Republic and Poland
rebuilt look-out tower. Other peaks include Jizera (1,122 m; 3,681 ft) and Stóg Izerski (Heufuder, 1,107 m; 3,632 ft). The peaks in order of elevation: Wysoka
Jizera_Mountains
Neolithic culture in southern Russia and Ukraine
Post-Mariupol culture. The Post-Mariupol culture was superseded by Sredny Stog culture. In older works, it is referred to as a part of wider Dnieper-Donets
Mariupol_culture
River island and national park in Ukraine
construction of the hydroelectric station in 1927, gave its name to the Sredny Stog culture.[citation needed] In his treatise De Administrando Imperio (written
Khortytsia
Ancestor of the Indo-European languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Proto-Indo-European_language
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
List of ancient Baltic peoples and tribes
List_of_ancient_Baltic_peoples_and_tribes
Structure with roof for drying hay and other crops
kazuc (colloquial, usually referring to a single straight-line hayrack), stog (commonly found in Upper Carniola and especially in the area around Studor
Hayrack
Cave and archaeological site in Turkmenistan
Sergent, the lithic assemblage of the first Kurgan culture in Ukraine (Sredni Stog II), which originated from the Volga and South Urals, recalls that of the
Cave_of_Dzhebel
From the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Ural River and northwestern Kazakhstan
Culture Era Features The Sredny Stog culture 5,000 BCE is a pre-Kurgan archaeological culture of the 5th millennium BCE. The Yamna culture 3,500 to 2,300
History of human settlement in the Ural Mountains
History_of_human_settlement_in_the_Ural_Mountains
Historical group of Indo-European peoples
hypothesis. Magenta indicates the assumed Urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture), red the area which may have been settled by Indo-European-speaking
Indo-Iranians
Hypothesis in Indo-European historical linguistics
the north Volga steppes. The resulting culture contributed to the Sredny Stog culture, a predecessor of the Yamnaya culture. Anthony cites evidence from
Armenian_hypothesis
Branch of the Indo-European language family
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Italic_languages
Geographical grouping of Indo-European languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Paleo-Balkan_languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
List of Tocharian (Agnean-Kuchean) peoples
List_of_Tocharian_(Agnean-Kuchean)_peoples
Nomadic Iranic people of the Pontic Steppe
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Scythians
Early to middle Bronze Age archaeological culture of the middle Volga
successor of the Yamnaya culture was the Catacomb culture. Along with the Sredny Stog culture, the Yamnaya culture and the Catacomb culture, the Poltavka culture
Poltavka_culture
Ethnolinguistic groups in South Asia
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Indo-Aryan_peoples
Era of pre-history prior to copper & bronze ages in each region
millennium BC) Chasséen culture (France, 5th to 4th millennium BC) Sredny Stog culture (Ukraine, Russia, 5th to 4th millennium BC) Michelsberg culture (Central
Neolithic_Europe
Indo-European people in Ancient Southeast Europe
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Dacians
Indo-European language
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Armenian_language
Ancient people mentioned in Chinese histories
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Yuezhi
Large Iranian confederation that existed in classical antiquity
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Sarmatians
Ancestor of the Germanic languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Proto-Germanic_language
Republic of Russia in the Volga Region
these areas, known as the Indo-European Urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture, Yamna culture). Some of the first recorded peoples to move into
Kalmykia
Ancient northeast European culture
Ware Pitted Ware Pfyn Rössen Rzucewo Seine–Oise–Marne Sesklo Sopot Sredny Stog Starčevo–Körös–Criș Starčevo Körös Criş Tisza Tiszapolgár Varna Vinča Vlaardingen
Comb_Ceramic_culture
Language family
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Celtic_languages
Linguistic group
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
North_Germanic_peoples
Ancient Anatolian kingdom
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Phrygia
Branch of the Indo-European language family
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Albanoid_languages
Place in Southwestern, North Macedonia
The Famous 'Stog' rock in Trpejca A typical street in Trpejca Sunset over Albania from Trpejca Sunset panorama from Trpejca Trpejca stog Trpejca and Lake
Trpejca
Ancient Indo-European people from Paeonia
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Paeonians
Direct descendants of Vulgar Latin
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Romance_languages
Group of Eastern Iranic languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Scythian_languages
Period of human history before records
in Europe c. 5000–4000 BC. The people of the Proto-Indo-European Sredny Stog culture were the result of a genetic admixture between the Eastern hunter-gatherers
Prehistory
East Slavic ethnic group
migrations c. 5000–4000 BC. The people of the Proto-Indo-European Sredny Stog culture were the result of a genetic admixture between the Eastern European
Ukrainians
Ancient Indo-European-speaking people of Anatolia
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Phrygians
European archaeological culture, 2800–1800 BC
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Bell_Beaker_culture
Copper Age (3500 to 1700 BC) in prehistoric Europe
Pontic-Caspian steppe (Yamnaya culture), creating a plural complex known as Sredny Stog culture. This culture replaced the Dnieper-Donets culture, and migrated northwest
Chalcolithic_Europe
River in Hunedoara County, Romania
Progression ‹See Tfd› Mureș→ ‹See Tfd› Tisza→ ‹See Tfd› Danube→ Black Sea Tributaries • left Duba, Stog • right Răcaș, Ormindea, Peștera, Fornădia
Căian
Proto-language of all the Slavic languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Proto-Slavic_language
Branch of Indo-European language family
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Hellenic_languages
Immigration patterns of different lineages of people of India
Kurgan hypothesis. Pontic–Caspian steppe area corresponds to the assumed Urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture) and the subsequent Yamna culture.
Peopling_of_India
Branch of the Indo-Iranian languages
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Indo-Aryan_languages
Central European archeological culture (c. 5000–4000 BC)
Ware Pitted Ware Pfyn Rössen Rzucewo Seine–Oise–Marne Sesklo Sopot Sredny Stog Starčevo–Körös–Criș Starčevo Körös Criş Tisza Tiszapolgár Varna Vinča Vlaardingen
Lengyel_culture
Human movement over the earth
purple area corresponds to the assumed Urheimat (Samara culture, Sredny Stog culture). The red area corresponds to the area which may have been settled
Pre-modern_human_migration
Group of Indo-European peoples
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Iranian_peoples
Branch of the Indo-European language family
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Balto-Slavic_languages
Bronze Age archaeological culture in Eastern Europe
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Trzciniec_culture
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Proto-Indo-European_mythology
originating from beyond the Volga, creating a plural complex known as Sredny Stog culture, which substituted the previous Dnieper-Donets culture in Ukraine
Prehistoric_Europe
Archaeological culture
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Bug–Dniester_culture
Kingdoms in the Indian subcontinent (c. 600 BCE–c. 345 BCE)
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Mahajanapadas
Self-designation used by ancient Indo-Iranian peoples
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Aryan
Millennium between 5000 BC and 4000 BC
in Europe c. 5000–4000 BC. The people of the Proto-Indo-European Sredny Stog culture were the result of a genetic admixture between the Eastern hunter-gatherers
5th_millennium_BC
Archaeological culture in modern-day Ukraine and Belarus
migration. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Middle Dnieper culture. Sredny Stog culture Milograd culture Abashevo culture Nordqvist, Kerkko; Heyd, Volker
Middle_Dnieper_culture
Ethnic group in South Asia
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
List_of_Baloch_tribes
Language family native to Eurasia
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Indo-European_languages
Tumulus in Eastern Europe
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Kurgan
Ancient Western Balkanic tribes
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Illyrians
Former hiking trail in Poland
1933 Guide to the Eastern Beskids, indicated that traversing the Sianky–Stóg section would take from 17 to 18 days, although his proposed itinerary included
Main_Carpathian_Trail
Historical Indo-European ethnic group in present-day China
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Tocharians
Bronze Age cultures, 2000–900 BCE
broad-faced proto-Europoid type is a trait of post-Mariupol' cultures, Sredniy Stog, as well as the Pit-grave culture of the Dnieper's left bank, the Donets
Andronovo_culture
Ancient Iranic people of the North Caucasus
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Alans
Ancient nomadic Iranic people who invaded West Asia in the 8th and 7th centuries BC
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Cimmerians
Chalcolithic European archaeological culture
Kurgan Kurgan stelae Kurgan culture Steppe cultures Bug–Dniester Sredny Stog Dnieper–Donets Samara Khvalynsk Yamnaya Mikhailovka culture Novotitarovskaya
Battle_Axe_culture
STOG
STOG
STOG
STOG
STOG
STOG
Acronyms & AI meanings
Embryonic Stem
Integrated Components Exchange
Committee of the Earth Resources Survey Program
Committee on Library Co-Operation in Ireland
Ghost Froce
Kalomo Miners Association
renal epithelial cell lines
Schiff-Sherrington Phenomenon
Australian Students Prize
Mall of Metal Fabricators
STOG
STOG
STOG
STOG
STOG