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  1. Coaches: The Great Plains states have produced many successful professional and college sports coaches. Plains natives have coached their teams to numerous national and international championships. Several prominent professional baseball managers were born in the Plains. (Geography) [100%] 2004-01-01 [North America] [Great Plains]...
  2. Pirates: Redirect to:. [97%] 2024-01-09
  3. Pirates (TV series): Pirates is a British children's television sitcom. Produced by Childsplay Productions for the BBC, it ran for three series broadcast by Children's BBC between 1994 and 1997, and has not been repeated or commercially released since. (TV series) [97%] 2024-01-09 [BBC children's television shows] [BBC television sitcoms]...
  4. Pirates: El término inglés pirates («piratas») puede referirse a. [97%] 2024-01-07
  5. Southwestern Pirates football: The Southwestern Pirates football team represents Southwestern University in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) intercollegiate football competition. After a brief period of prominence during the Second World War, the school disbanded its football program in April 1951 due to budgetary ... (Football program representing Southwestern University) [90%] 2024-01-04 [Southwestern Pirates football] [American football teams established in 1908]...
  6. Perates: The Perates or Peratae (Greek: Περατής, "to pass through"; πέρας, "to penetrate") were a Gnostic sect from the 2nd century AD. The Philosophumena of Hippolytus is our only real source of information on their origin and beliefs. (Religion) [83%] 2024-02-10 [Gnosticism]
  7. Pilates: Pilates (/pɪˈlɑːtiːz/; German: [piˈlaːtəs]) is a type of mind-body exercise developed in the early 20th century by German physical trainer Joseph Pilates, after whom it was named. Pilates called his method "Contrology". (Medicine) [83%] 2023-12-17 [Mind–body interventions]
  8. Pirate (steamboat): The steamboat Pirate was an early American expeditionary supply vessel that sank on the Missouri River near what is now Bellevue, Nebraska, in April 1839 after snagging. The sinking of the steamboat was witnessed by Pierre-Jean De Smet and ... (Steamboat) [81%] 2023-10-17 [Shipwrecks of the Missouri River] [History of Iowa]...
  9. Pirate (Cher song): "Pirate" is a song recorded by American singer and actress Cher, released as the first single from her 14th album Cherished (1977). The song debuted at #96 on the Billboard Hot 100 on the issue date of January 15, peaking ... (Cher song) [81%] 2023-12-11 [1977 singles] [1977 songs]...
  10. Pirate: rapariis, creep av, to attempt or attack), as hostis humani generis, and as a robber upon the sea. Sir Fitzjames Stephen in his Digest of Criminal Law defined piracy as follows: " Taking a ship on the High Seas or within ... [81%] 2022-09-02
  11. American Football Coaches Association: The American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) is an association of over 11,000 American football coaches and staff on all levels. According to its constitution, some of the main goals of the American Football Coaches Association are to "maintain the ... (Organization of football coaches at various levels) [80%] 2024-06-13 [American football organizations] [College football coaches in the United States]...
  12. Orlando Pirates Football Club: El Orlando Pirates Football Club es un club de fútbol de Sudáfrica, situado en el barrio de Orlando en Soweto, Johannesburgo. Fue fundado en 1937 y actualmente juega en la Premier Soccer League, máxima categoría del fútbol sudafricano. [78%] 2024-02-05
  13. East Carolina Pirates football: The East Carolina Pirates are a college football team that represents East Carolina University (variously "East Carolina" or "ECU"). The team is a member of the American Athletic Conference, which is in Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division I ... (College football team) [78%] 2023-07-14 [East Carolina Pirates football] [American football teams established in 1932]...
  14. Colchis: Colchis : From Greek mythology, it was a region to the east of the Black Sea in Asia which was the home of Aeetes and Medea and a destination of the Argonauts. It was mentioned in epic poems such as the ... [71%] 2023-08-05
  15. Caorches: Su población en el censo de 1999 era de 564 habitantes. Está integrada en la Communauté de communes de Bernay et ses environs . INSEE, Datos de población para el año 2012 de Caorches-Saint-Nicolas (en francés). [71%] 2023-06-01
  16. Comanches: The Comanches were the first Native people to adopt the classic horse-mounted lifestyle of the Plains. The ethnonym Comanche probably derives from the Ute word komantsia- "anyone who wants to fight me all the time. Their name for themselves ... (Geography) [71%] 2004-01-01 [North America] [Great Plains]...
  17. Cachoes: , 1753 [editar datos en Wikidata] El orozuz falso (Astragalus glycyphyllos) es una hierba de la familia de las leguminosas. Ilustración Detalle de la flor Astragalus glycyphyllos ## Caracteres[editar] Planta robusta, erecta, extendida, perenne de 1 m o más, de hojas ... [71%] 2023-06-01
  18. Coochee: Coochie, coochee or coochi is an American term often used as a cute or slang word for a vulva. It has also been used as a slang descriptor in relation to a belly dance and related types of movement. (Social) [71%] 2023-12-15 [Internet memes]
  19. Comanches: Comanches, a tribe of North American Indians of Shoshonean stock, so called by the Spaniards, but known to the French as Padoucas, an adaptation of their Sioux name, and among themselves nimenim (people). They number some 1400, attached to the ... [71%] 2022-09-02
  20. Cacheos: Para la novela de Dennis Cooper, véase Cacheo (novela). Una evacuada es registrada antes de ser trasladada en avión desde Nueva Orleans después del huracán Katrina. Se denomina registro superficial o cacheo[1]​ a una técnica de seguridad por la ... [71%] 2023-06-01

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