Four-cornered

  • 61Syādvāda — Part of a series on Jain philosophy Concepts Anekāntavāda · Syādvāda · Nayavāda · Jain Co …

    Wikipedia

  • 62Meknès — /mek nes /, n. a city in N Morocco: former capital of Morocco. 244,520. * * * City (pop., 1994: 459,958), north central Morocco. It was one of Morocco s four imperial cities, founded in the 10th century by a Berber tribe. Originally a group of… …

    Universalium

  • 63quadrangle — quadrangled, adj. /kwod rang geuhl/, n. 1. a plane figure having four angles and four sides, as a square. 2. a square or quadrangular space or court that is surrounded by a building or buildings, as on a college campus. 3. the building or… …

    Universalium

  • 64quadrangle — quad•ran•gle [[t]ˈkwɒdˌræŋ gəl[/t]] n. 1) math. a plane figure having four angles and four sides, as a square 2) archit. a square or quadrangular space or court that is surrounded by a building or buildings, as on a college campus 3) archit. the… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 65quadrangle — /ˈkwɒdræŋgəl / (say kwodrangguhl) noun 1. a plane figure having four angles and four sides, as a square. 2. a quadrangular space or court wholly or nearly surrounded by a building or buildings, as in a school, college, etc. 3. the building or… …

  • 66Messina — This article is about the city in Sicily, Italy. For the city in South Africa, see Musina. For other uses, see Messina (disambiguation). Messina   Comune   Comune di Messina …

    Wikipedia

  • 67Wire wrap — This article deals with electronics manufacturing and prototyping techniques, see Wire wrap jewellery for the jewellery related topic Wire wrap is a technique for constructing small numbers of complex electronics assemblies. It is an alternative… …

    Wikipedia

  • 68Chad (paper) — Chads from punched cards. Each chad is about 1/8 inch (3 mm) long …

    Wikipedia

  • 69613 Mitzvot — Part of a series of articles on Jews and Judaism …

    Wikipedia

  • 70Spherical Earth — Medieval artistic representation of a spherical Earth with compartments representing earth, air, and water (c. 1400). The concept of a spherical Earth dates back to ancient Greek philosophy from around the 6th century BC …

    Wikipedia