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Main-belt asteroid
514 Armida is a minor planet orbiting the Sun. According to the Catalogue of Minor Planet Names and Discovery Circumstances, it is "named for the beautiful
514_Armida
Topics referred to by the same term
1817) Armida (Dvořák), by Antonín Dvořák (1904) Armida (Weir), by Judith Weir (2005) An 1855 ballet by Cesare Pugni, and Jules Perrot 514 Armida, a minor
Armida_(disambiguation)
German astrophotography pioneer (1863–1932)
April 1903 512 Taurinensis - 23 June 1903 513 Centesima - 24 August 1903 514 Armida - 24 August 1903 515 Athalia - 20 September 1903 520 Franziska - 27 October
Max_Wolf
discovery of an asteroid made by Max Wolf (1863–1932) DMP · 513 514 Armida 1903 MB Armida, fictional character in the epic poem Jerusalem Delivered by Italian
Meanings of minor-planet names: 1–1000
Meanings_of_minor-planet_names:_1–1000
Armando 10996 Armandspitz 129555 Armazones 6855 Armellini 780 Armenia 514 Armida 1464 Armisticia 774 Armor 6469 Armstrong 28321 Arnabdey 281272 Arnaudleroy
List of named minor planets: A
List_of_named_minor_planets:_A
Princetonia 509 Iolanda 510 Mabella 511 Davida 512 Taurinensis 513 Centesima 514 Armida 515 Athalia 516 Amherstia 517 Edith 518 Halawe 519 Sylvania 520 Franziska
List of named minor planets: 1–999
List_of_named_minor_planets:_1–999
Main-belt asteroid
v t e Minor planets navigator 512 Taurinensis 513 Centesima 514 Armida
513_Centesima
August 24, 1903 Heidelberg M. F. Wolf EOS 49 km (30 mi) MPC · JPL 514 Armida 1903 MB Armida August 24, 1903 Heidelberg M. F. Wolf · 120 km (75 mi) MPC ·
List_of_minor_planets:_1–1000
Minor planet (asteroid)
v t e Minor planets navigator 514 Armida 515 Athalia 516 Amherstia
515_Athalia
Mars-crossing asteroid
"Lightcurves of asteroids 141 Lumen, 259 Alatheia, 363 Padua, 455 Bruchsalia 514 Armida, 524 Fidelio, and 1139 Atami". The Minor Planet Bulletin. 33 (2): 31–33
1139_Atami
Sushmita; Alcock, Glyn; Patil, Sarita; Porel, Maya; Vaidya, Leena; Fernandez, Armida; Joshi, Wasundhara; Osrin, David (3 July 2012). "Community Mobilization
Sex_education_in_India
English epic poem by Edmund Spenser
Similar characters in other epics: Circe (Homer's Odyssey), Alcina (Ariosto), Armida (Tasso), or the fairy woman from Keats' poem "La Belle Dame sans Merci"
The_Faerie_Queene
Italian Dominican philosopher and saint (1347–1380)
and magic in nineteenth-century France". French History. Vol. 27. pp. 496–514. doi:10.1093/fh/crt047. ISSN 0269-1191. OCLC 5187349553. At section VI. Noffke
Catherine_of_Siena
considered by many to be one of the great mezzo-sopranos of the 20th century Armida Parsi-Pettinella (1868–1949), successful at the Scala, especially as Dalila
List_of_people_from_Italy
Day of the year
Tarō III, Japanese sumo wrestler, the 46th Yokozuna (born 1929) 1989 – Armida, Mexican-American actress, singer, and dancer (born 1911) 1990 – Thomas
October_23
Aspect of musical history
disabitata (1779), La fedeltà premiata (1781), Orlando paladino (1782), Armida (1784) and L'anima del filosofo (1791). The main exponent of classicism
History_of_opera
20th-century Italian Catholic theologian
(1925–2013)]. Anuario de Historia de la Iglesia (in European Spanish). 29: 491–514. doi:10.15581/007.29.018. hdl:10171/60561. ISSN 1133-0104. OCLC 8595217109
Itala_Mela
Mexican baseball player and manager (1949–2026)
1949 in Guaymas, Sonora to American baseball player Lonnie Summers and Armida López; at the time, his father was playing for the Diablos Rojos del México
Jesús_Sommers
Christian mystical practices
American and Canadian Publications of the Years 1940–1952". Traditio. 9: 439–514. doi:10.1017/S0362152900003822. ISSN 0362-1529. JSTOR 27830285. S2CID 152099684
Christian_mysticism
Autumn 1717 701 Artabano, re dei Parti Antonio Marchi Carnival 1718 699 Armida al campo d'Egitto Giovanni Palazzi Carnival 1718 732 Scanderbeg Antonio
List of compositions by Antonio Vivaldi
List_of_compositions_by_Antonio_Vivaldi
Theme de l'Opera Corradino Op. 30, Rondino No. 3 on a Theme de l'Opera Armida Op. 31, 3 Fugues Fugue in F Fugue in E♭ minor Fugue in C Op. 32, New Year's
List of compositions by Carl Czerny
List_of_compositions_by_Carl_Czerny
Spontini pf 1824 Piano, original published as Op. 3; using themes from Armida and La donna del lago by Gioachino Rossini, and Fernand Cortez and Olimpie
List of compositions by Franz Liszt
List_of_compositions_by_Franz_Liszt
Emissions, impacts and responses of Indonesia
08001. doi:10.1051/matecconf/201814708001. ISSN 2261-236X. Alisjahbana, Armida S.; Busch, Jonah M. (2017-05-04). "Forestry, Forest Fires, and Climate Change
Climate_change_in_Indonesia
for piano four-hands, which are listed in the Burghauser catalogue as B. 514. Dvořák's Symphonic Variations are among the three most frequently played
Symphonic_Variations_(Dvořák)
Indian physician and surgeon (born 1930)
Report with Review of the Literature". The Journal of Urology. 109 (3): 512–514. doi:10.1016/S0022-5347(17)60466-X. ISSN 0022-5347. PMID 4692390. Singh,
Jai_Pal_Singh
514 ARMIDA
514 ARMIDA
Girl/Female
Latin American
Little armed one.
Surname or Lastname
English (Devon)
English (Devon) : topographic name for someone who lived ‘at the end of the cottages’, from Middle English, Old English ende ‘end’ + cot ‘cottage’. One locality so named is Endicott in Cadbury, Devon; another is now called Youngcott, in Milton Abbot.John Endecott (1588–1665) was a prominent figure in the early history of MA, being one of the founding fathers of Salem, MA, in 1638. He served as governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony (1629–30), and worked harmoniously with his successor, John Winthrop, despite differences on points of religious doctrine. He served as governor again in 1644–45, 1649–50, 1651–54, and 1655–64, and as deputy governor in many of the intervening years. He is buried in the King’s Chapel Burying Ground in Boston.
Boy/Male
Irish
Is the Irish form of Old English ead “â€richâ€â€ + mund “â€guardianâ€â€, and implies “â€guardian of the riches.â€â€ In more recent times the name has been given to honor Eamon De Valera who was President of Ireland for 14 years, the maximum allowed, from 1959 to 1973.
Surname or Lastname
English (Shropshire)
English (Shropshire) : from the Welsh personal name Einws, a diminutive of Einion (of uncertain origin, popularly associated with einion ‘anvil’).English : patronymic from the medieval personal name Hain 2.English : habitational name from Haynes in Bedfordshire. This name first appears in Domesday Book as Hagenes, which Mills derives from the plural of Old English hægen, hagen ‘enclosure’.Irish : variant of Hines.John Haynes (?1594–1653) had emigrated from Essex, England, where his father was lord of the manor of Copford Hall near Colchester, to MA, where he was governor in 1635. He moved to CT, and was the colony's first governor (1639–53/54).
Boy/Male
Irish
Is the Irish form of Old English ead “â€richâ€â€ + mund “â€guardianâ€â€, and implies “â€guardian of the riches.â€â€ In more recent times the name has been given to honor Eamon De Valera who was President of Ireland for 14 years, the maximum allowed, from 1959 to 1973.
Male
English
English and French form of Latin Paulus, PAUL means "small." In the bible, this is the name of the author of the 14 epistles of the New Testament.
Male
Greek
(ΠαÏλος) Greek form of Latin Paulus, PAULOS means "small." In the bible, this is the name of the author of the 14 epistles of the New Testament.
Boy/Male
Irish
Is the Irish form of Old English ead “â€richâ€â€ + mund “â€guardianâ€â€, and implies “â€guardian of the riches.â€â€ In more recent times the name has been given to honor Eamon De Valera who was President of Ireland for 14 years, the maximum allowed, from 1959 to 1973.
Female
English
Latin form of Greek Kleopatra, CLEOPATRA means "glory of the father." Cleopatra VII reigned as Queen of Egypt from 51-30 B.C. She was born in 69 B.C. in Alexandria, Egypt and is believed to have been black African.Â
Surname or Lastname
German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Slovenian, Czech, Hungarian, and Jewish (Ashkenazic)
German, Dutch, Scandinavian, Slovenian, Czech, Hungarian, and Jewish (Ashkenazic) : ethnic or regional name for someone from Franconia (German Franken), a region of southwestern Germany so called from its early settlement by the Franks, a Germanic people who inhabited the lands around the river Rhine in Roman times. In the 6th–9th centuries, under leaders such as Clovis I (c. 466–511) and Charlemagne (742–814), the Franks established a substantial empire in western Europe, from which the country of France takes its name. The term Frank in eastern Mediterranean countries was used, in various vernacular forms, to denote the Crusaders and their descendants, and the American surname may also be an Americanized form of such a form.English, Dutch, German, etc. : from the personal name Frank, in origin an ethnic name for a Frank. This also came be used as an adjective meaning ‘free’, ‘open-hearted’, ‘generous’, deriving from the fact that in Frankish Gaul only people of Frankish race enjoyed the status of fully free men.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for someone with gray hair or a gray beard, from Old English græg ‘gray’. In Scotland and Ireland it has been used as a translation of various Gaelic surnames derived from riabhach ‘brindled’, ‘gray’ (see Reavey). In North America this name has assimilated names with similar meaning from other European languages.English and Scottish (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Graye in Calvados, France, named from the Gallo-Roman personal name Gratus, meaning ‘welcome’, ‘pleasing’ + the locative suffix -acum.French and Swiss French : habitational name from Gray in Haute-Saône and Le Gray in Seine-Maritime, both in France, or from Gray-la-ville in Switzerland, or a regional name from the Swiss canton of Graubünden.A leading English family called Grey, holders of the earldom of Stamford, can be traced to Henry de Grey, who was granted lands at Thurrock, Essex, by Richard I (1189–99). They once held great power, and Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk (1517–54), married a granddaughter of Henry VII. Because of this he felt entitled to claim the throne for his daughter, Lady Jane Grey (1537–54), after the death of Henry VIII. For this, and for his part in Wyatt’s rebellion, both he and his daughter were beheaded.
Surname or Lastname
Irish
Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Colmáin ‘descendant of Colmán’. This was the name of an Irish missionary to Europe, generally known as St. Columban (c.540–615), who founded the monastery of Bobbio in northern Italy in 614. With his companion St. Gall, he enjoyed a considerable cult throughout central Europe, so that forms of his name were adopted as personal names in Italian (Columbano), French (Colombain), Czech (Kollman), and Hungarian (Kálmán). From all of these surnames are derived. In Irish and English, the name of this saint is identical with diminutives of the name of the 6th-century missionary known in English as St. Columba (521–97), who converted the Picts to Christianity, and who was known in Scandinavian languages as Kalman.Irish : Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó Clumháin ‘descendant of Clumhán’, a personal name from the diminutive of clúmh ‘down’, ‘feathers’.English : occupational name for a burner of charcoal or a gatherer of coal, Middle English coleman, from Old English col ‘(char)coal’ + mann ‘man’.English : occupational name for the servant of a man named Cole.Jewish (Ashkenazic) : Americanized form of Kalman.Americanized form of German Kohlmann or Kuhlmann.
Female
Welsh
Welsh form of French Guinevere, the Arthurian legend name of Gwenhwyvach's sister, possibly composed of the elements gwen "fair, holy, white" and hwyfar "smooth, soft,"Â hence "white and smooth." There are other possibilities. It may come from Proto-Celtic *vindo-siabraid, GWENGWYVAR means "white phantom." Or, the names of the sisters may mean "Gwenhwy the Great" (Gwenhwy-vawr) and "Gwenhwy the Less" (Gwenhwy-vach). Gwenhwyvach and Gwenhwyvar did not get along well together; Triad 84 of the Culhwch states that the Battle of Camlann was caused by the enmity between the two sisters. Triad 53 lists the slap that Gwenhwyvach gave Gwenhwyvar as one of the "Three Harmful Blows of the Island of Britain." And Triad 54 describes how Mordred raided Arthur's court and threw Gwenhwyvar to the ground and beat her.Â
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : from a medieval personal name, Latin Valentinus, a derivative of Valens (see Valente), which was never common in England, but is occasionally found from the end of the 12th century, probably as the result of French influence. The name was borne by a 3rd-century saint and martyr, whose chief claim to fame is that his feast falls on February 14, the date of a traditional celebration of spring going back to the Roman fertility festival of Juno Februata. A 5th-century missionary bishop of Rhaetia of this name was venerated especially in southern Germany, being invoked as a patron against gout and epilepsy.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name for someone from Dunster in Somerset, recorded in 1138 as Dunestore ‘craggy pinnacle (Old English torr) of a man named Dun(n)’.Henry Dunster emigrated to MA in 1640 from Bury, Lancashire, England, and was made the first president of Harvard College (1640–54) almost immediately upon arrival in MA.
514 ARMIDA
514 ARMIDA
Girl/Female
Tamil
Born from God
Boy/Male
Tamil
Anikant | அநீகாஂத
Blue jewel
Boy/Male
Tamil
Sudamsh | ஸà¯à®¤à®¾à®®à¯à®·Â
Gold
Boy/Male
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Punjabi, Rajasthani, Sanskrit, Sikh, Tamil, Telugu, Traditional
The King of Elephants
Male
English
English form of French Gilles, GILES means "shield of goatskin." This was the name of an 8th century saint of cripples.
Boy/Male
German, Polish
Glad for Glory
Boy/Male
Indian, Telugu
Name of God Hunman
Boy/Male
Indian, Sikh
Fearless
Boy/Male
Tamil
Pracheta | பà¯à®°à®šà¯‡à®¤à®¾
Lord Varun, Wise
Girl/Female
Hindu
Handsome
514 ARMIDA
514 ARMIDA
514 ARMIDA
514 ARMIDA
514 ARMIDA
n.
A low, soft, sibilant voice or utterance, which can be heard only by those near at hand; voice or utterance that employs only breath sound without tone, friction against the edges of the vocal cords and arytenoid cartilages taking the place of the vibration of the cords that produces tone; sometimes, in a limited sense, the sound produced by such friction as distinguished from breath sound made by friction against parts of the mouth. See Voice, n., 2, and Guide to Pronunciation, // 5, 153, 154.
n.
Leap year; every fourth year, in which a day is added to the month of February on account of the excess of the tropical year (365 d. 5 h. 48 m. 46 s.) above 365 days. But one day added every four years is equivalent to six hours each year, which is 11 m. 14 s. more than the excess of the real year. Hence, it is necessary to suppress the bissextile day at the end of every century which is not divisible by 400, while it is retained at the end of those which are divisible by 400.
n.
Either of the feasts of the Holy Cross, occuring on May 3 and September 14, annually.
v. t.
Intellectual ability, natural or acquired; mental endowment or capacity; skill in accomplishing; a special gift, particularly in business, art, or the like; faculty; a use of the word probably originating in the Scripture parable of the talents (Matt. xxv. 14-30).
n.
A quarter. Specifically: (a) The fourth part of a pint; a gill. (b) The fourth part of a peck, or of a stone (14 ibs.).
n.
A rare metallic element found in platinum ore. It is a white malleable substance. Symbol Da. Atomic weight 154.
n.
A colorless nonmetallic element, tasteless and odorless, comprising four fifths of the atmosphere by volume. It is chemically very inert in the free state, and as such is incapable of supporting life (hence the name azote still used by French chemists); but it forms many important compounds, as ammonia, nitric acid, the cyanides, etc, and is a constituent of all organized living tissues, animal or vegetable. Symbol N. Atomic weight 14. It was formerly regarded as a permanent noncondensible gas, but was liquefied in 1877 by Cailletet of Paris, and Pictet of Geneva.
n.
A gold coin of Zealand [Netherlands] equal to 14 florins, about $ 5.60.
n.
A symbol representing fourteen, as 14 or xiv.
n.
A small barrel of no certain dimensions. It may contain from 3 to 20 gallons, but it usually holds about 14/ gallons.
n.
One of the products arising from the multiplication of two or more quantities by the same number or quantity. Thus, seven times 2, or 14, and seven times 4, or 28, are equimultiples of 2 and 4.
a.
Pertaining to, derived from, or contained in, oil; as, oleic acid, an acid of the acrylic acid series found combined with glyceryl in the form of olein in certain animal and vegetable fats and oils, such as sperm oil, olive oil, etc. At low temperatures the acid is crystalline, but melts to an oily liquid above 14/ C.