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Italian football club
Associazione Calcio Petacciato is an Italian association football club located in Petacciato, Molise. It currently plays in the Eccellenza. Its colors
AC_Petacciato
Ethnic group
Tavenna, Ripalta, San Giacomo degli Schiavoni, Montelongo, San Biase, Petacciato, Cerritello, Sant'Angelo and Montenero di Bisaccia. Other Slavs settled
Molise_Croats
Football league season
Lavello 34 35 16 Sporting Genzano 34 31 17 Leonessa Altamura 34 17 18 Petacciato 34 5 Teams from Campania, Calabria & Sicily Pos Club Pld Pts 1 Neapolis
2006–07_Serie_D
AC PETACCIATO
AC PETACCIATO
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the numerous places in England so called. Most of them, as for example those in Leicestershire, Lincolnshire (near Gainsborough), Sussex, and West Yorkshire, are named with Old English lēac ‘leek’ + tūn ‘enclosure’. The compound was also used in the extended sense of a herb garden and later of a kitchen garden. Laughton near Folkingham in Lincolnshire, however, was probably named as loc-tūn ‘enclosed farm’ (see Lock 2).English : variant spelling of Lawton.
Surname or Lastname
English (Sussex)
English (Sussex) : habitational name from any of several places named from Old English ac ‘oak’ + hyrst ‘wooded hill’. The modern spelling of the place name is Oakhurst.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of various places so called, for example in Lancashire (near Blackpool) and in North Yorkshire. The former was named in Old English as ‘settlement by the watercourse’, from Old English lÄd ‘watercourse’ + tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’; the latter as ‘leek enclosure’ or ‘herb garden’, from lÄ“ac ‘leek’ + tÅ«n. Compare Leighton.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Sussex, so named from Old English hrÄ“ac ‘mound’, ‘(hay)rick’ (probably the name of a nearby hill) + hÄm ‘homestead’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of various places so called. Most, as for example those in Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Cheshire, Lancashire, and Shropshire, are named with Old English lēac ‘leek’ + tūn ‘settlement’. Compare Layton.
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Berkshire)
English (mainly Berkshire) : apparently a habitational name from a lost or unidentified place, which would derive its name from Old English hrēac ‘mound’ (compare Rackham) or hraca ‘throat’, ‘gulley’ + lēah ‘woodland clearing’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from places in Lancashire and East Yorkshire named Beswick. The second element is clearly Old English wÄ«c ‘outlying (dairy) farm’ (see Wick). The first element of the Lancashire name may be an Old English personal name BÄ“ac; that of the Yorkshire name is possibly an Old Norse personal name BÅsi or Besi.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone living by a pointed hill (or regional name from the Peak District (Old English Pēaclond) in Derbyshire), named with Old English pēac ‘peak’, ‘pointed hill’ (found only in place names). This word is not directly related to Old English pīc ‘point’, ‘pointed hill’, which yielded Pike; there is, however, some evidence of confusion between the two surnames.Possibly also Irish : reduced form of McPeak.Major concentrations of the surname Peak are found in Staffordshire and the West Country of England. Among the earliest known bearers are Richard del Pech or del Pek (d. 1196), son of Rannulf, sheriff of Nottingham, and Willielmus Piec (Winchester 1194). A century later, c.1284, a certain Richard del Peke settled in Denbighshire (now part of Clwyd), Wales, receiving lands from Henry de Lacey, earl of Lincoln, in return for helping to control the region. His descendants, who bear the name Peak(e), can be traced to the present day, and are found in New Zealand and Canada as well as in Britain. Peake is also the name of a family descended from John Pyke, who paid rent to the abbot of Leicester in 1477. The name took various forms, such as Peke and Pick, eventually becoming established as Peak in the 17th century.
AC PETACCIATO
AC PETACCIATO
Girl/Female
Australian, German, Polish, Slavic
Industrious for the People
Boy/Male
Indian
Best of mankind, An epithet
Surname or Lastname
English (South Yorkshire)
English (South Yorkshire) : possibly a habitational name from Ulley in South Yorkshire, probably so named from Old English ūle ‘owl’ + lēah ‘(woodland) clearing’.
Boy/Male
Greek
Son of Ander.
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
One of the Ninety-nine Names of God
Boy/Male
Arabic
Sponsor; Representative; Promised
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Cornwell in Oxfordshire, named from Old English corn, a metathesized form of cron, cran ‘crane’ + well(a) ‘spring’, ‘stream’.English : variant of Cornwall.
Boy/Male
Indian
An heir, A master, A Lord, Supreme inheritor
Boy/Male
Australian, Irish, Latin
Beyond Praise; Priceless; Inestimable
Girl/Female
Muslim
Rose
AC PETACCIATO
AC PETACCIATO
AC PETACCIATO
AC PETACCIATO
AC PETACCIATO
n.
The space included between the boundary lines of two similar parallelograms, the one within the other, with an angle in common; as, the gnomon bcdefg of the parallelograms ac and af. The parallelogram bf is the complement of the parallelogram df.
n.
the residual AC component in the DC current output from a rectifier, expressed as a percentage of the steady component of the current.