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  1. Aiyo, Not Bad (traditional Chinese: 哎呦, 不錯哦; simplified Chinese: 哎呦, 不错哦; pinyin: āi yōu bú cuò ó) is the thirteenth studio album by Taiwanese singer Jay Chou, released on 26 December 2014 by JVR Music. [1]

    • Mandarin
  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jay_ChouJay Chou - Wikipedia

    Jay Chou (traditional Chinese: 周杰倫; simplified Chinese: 周杰伦; pinyin: Zhōu Jiélún; born 18 January 1979) [2] is a Taiwanese singer, songwriter, and musician. Dubbed the "King of Mandopop" and having sold over 30 million records, Chou is one of the best-selling artists in Taiwan.

  3. John Rolph (1793–1870) was a physician, lawyer, and political figure. He immigrated to Upper Canada in 1813 and practised law and medicine concurrently. In 1824, Rolph was elected to the Parliament of Upper Canada. He was elected as an alderman to Toronto 's first city council but resigned after his council colleagues did not select him as ...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ØØ - Wikipedia

    • Language Usage
    • Similar Letters
    • Similar Symbols
    • History
    • Computers
    • References
    In modern Danish, Faroese, and Norwegian, the letter is a monophthongal close-mid front rounded vowel, the IPA symbol for which is also [ø] (Unicode U+00F8). As with so many vowels, it has slight v...
    The Southern Sami language uses the letter ø in Norway. It is used in the diphthongs yø [yo] and øø [oe]. In Sweden, the letter öis preferred.
    The Iaai language uses the letter ø to represent the sound [ø].
    Ø is used in the orthographies of several languages of Africa, such as Lendu, spoken in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Koonzime, spoken in Cameroon.
    The Turkish, Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Tatar, Swedish, Icelandic, Rotuman, German, Finnish, Estonian, and Hungarian alphabets use the letter Ö instead of Ø. Hungarian orthographyuses Ő for the same sou...
    Ø / ø is not related to, and should not be confused with similar-looking Greek Φ / φ or Cyrillic Ф/ ф.
    The Cyrillic letter Ө has the same sound as Ø, which is used in the Cyrillic alphabets for Kazakh, Mongolian, Azerbaijani, and other languages that have this sound. This is not to be confused with...
    The letter Ø-with-diæresis (Ø̈, ø̈) was used by the Øresund bridge company, as part of their logotype, to symbolize its union between Sweden and Denmark. Since Ø-with-diæresis did not exist in comp...
    The letter "Ø" is sometimes used in mathematics as a replacement for the symbol "∅" (Unicode character U+2205), referring to the empty set as established by Bourbaki, and sometimes in linguistics a...
    The diameter symbol (⌀) (Unicode character U+2300) is similar to the lowercase letter ø, and in some typefaces it even uses the same glyph, although in many others the glyphs are subtly distinguish...
    Ø or ⌀ is sometimes also used as a symbol for average value, particularly in German-speaking countries. ("Average" in German is Durchschnitt, directly translated as cut-through.)
    Slashed zero is an alternate glyph for the zero character. Its slash does not extend outside the ellipse (except in handwriting). It is often used to distinguish "zero" ("0") from the Latin script...

    The letter arose as a version of the ligature ⟨oe⟩. In Danish manuscripts from the 12th and 13th century, the letter used to represent an /ø/ sound is most frequently written as an ⟨o⟩ with a line through, but also ⟨oe⟩. The line could both be horizontal or vertical.

    Some 7-bit ASCII variants defined by ISO/IEC 646 use 0x5C for Ø and 0x7C for ø, replacing the backslash and vertical bar.The most common locations in EBCDIC code pages is 0x80 and 0x70.Most code pages used by MS-DOS such as CP437 did not contain this character, in Scandinavian codepages, Ø replaces the yen sign (¥) at 165, and ø replaces the ¢ sign...

    Robert Bringhurst (2002). The Elements of Typographic Style, pp. 270, 284. For typographic reference to "slashed o".

  5. program. A "Hello, World!" program is generally a simple computer program that emits (or displays) to the screen (often the console) a message similar to "Hello, World!" while ignoring any user input. A small piece of code in most general-purpose programming languages, this program is used to illustrate a language's basic syntax. A "Hello, World!"

  6. CJK Unified Ideographs is a Unicode block containing the most common CJK ideographs used in modern Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese characters. When contrasted with other blocks containing CJK Unified Ideographs, it is also referred to as the Unified Repertoire and Ordering (URO).[3] The block has hundreds of variation sequences ...

  7. Microsoft Bing, commonly referred to as Bing, is a search engine owned and operated by Microsoft. The service traces its roots back to Microsoft's earlier search engines, including MSN Search, Windows Live Search, and Live Search.

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