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Confusingly and /
Confusingly, 617 Patroclus was named before the Greece / Troy rule was devised, and a Greek name thus appears in the Trojan node ; the Greek node also has one " misplaced " asteroid, 624 Hektor, named after a Trojan hero.
Confusingly, Scots is also used adjectivally when referring to the people of Scotland, and / or to either Scots Gaelic or Scots English ( Lowlands ).
Confusingly, this style is sometimes colloquially called a duplex in New England, in certain other parts of the United States and in most of Canada ( elsewhere ' duplex ' usually refers to a building split into two flats / apartments, one above the other ).
System D was dropped in order to focus efforts on VME / B and System T, renamed to VME / K ( Confusingly, VME / B was developed in Kidsgrove, VME / K in Bracknell.
Confusingly, the English word " snuff " is translated to snus in Swedish and the word snuff is, often incorrectly and outside Sweden, used to refer to both the inhaled form and the placed under the lip form of snus / snuff.
Confusingly, the term convective derivative is both used for the whole material derivative Dφ / Dt or Du / Dt, and for only the spatial rate of change part, v •∇ φ or v •∇ u respectively.
Confusingly, the special NKVD rank system was left intact, so for example Captain of Militsiya / State Security was assigned the three-box insignia of an army Colonel ( in the Red Army, this patch was reassigned to Lieutenant Colonel in September 1939, but the NKVD did not alter their insignia ) and Major of Militsiya / State Security was mapped to one-romb insignia of Kombrig ( a brigade commander ) ( which was abolished for commanding officers of the Red Army in May 1940 ).
Confusingly the 80 km / hr limit applies northbound from Keilor Park Drive until the Service Centre at Calder Park, whereas southbound it applies from the Green Gully Road bridge to just prior to the Western Ring Road interchange.
Confusingly it is sometimes referred to as the Spotted Kestrel, a name usually used for the Moluccan / Indonesian Kestrel, while the Mauritius Kestrel's scientific name literally means " spotted falcon / kestrel ".

Confusingly and April
Confusingly, both the Pinot Noir clone Gamay Beaujolais and ' Napa Gamay ' could be labelled ' Gamay Beaujolais ', a name banned on labels from April 2007.

Confusingly and .
Confusingly, the terms " assault " and " common assault " often encompass the separate offence of battery, even in statutory settings such as s 40 ( 3 )( a ) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988.
Confusingly, linen and silk that was printed by this method was known as linen calicoes and silk calicoes.
Confusingly, END was both a Europe-wide campaign that comprised a series of large public conferences ( the END Conventions ), and a small British pressure group.
Confusingly, in Portugal, the word vihuela referred to the guitar, whereas guitarra meant the " Portuguese guitar ", a variety of cittern.
Confusingly, the convention of negative for East is also sometimes seen.
An agent of the ARM, Gil Hamilton, is the protagonist of Niven's sci-fi detective stories, a series-within-a-series gathered in the collection Flatlander ( Confusingly, " Flatlander " is also the name of an unrelated Known Space story.
Confusingly, three of the sons were named Maredudd and two of the daughters were named Gwenllian.
( Confusingly, W44 additionally contains a pulsar and pulsar wind nebula ; so it is simultaneously both a " classic " composite and a thermal composite.
Confusingly, the generic term Code Division Multiple access sometimes refers to a specific CDMA based cellular system defined by Qualcomm.
Confusingly, the Poynting vector is sometimes called the power flux, which is an example of the first usage of flux, above.
* Topology Table: Confusingly named, this table does not store an overview of the complete network topology ; rather, it effectively contains only the aggregation of the routing tables gathered from all directly connected neighbors.
Confusingly, there are other card-based games of chance by the same name that are unrelated to the rules described here.
Below its junction with the Ilim River the Angara has been known in the past as the Upper Tunguska () Confusingly, some maps ( e. g., 1773 atlas by Kitchen-see illustration ) referred to this same section of the Angara as Nizhnyaya Tunguska, i. e. the Lower Tunguska-the name that's currently applied to another river.
Confusingly, " geranium " is also the common name of members of the genus Pelargonium ( sometimes known as ' storksbill '), which are also in the Geraniaceae family.
Confusingly, the Korean sancho ( 산초, 山椒 ) refers to a different if related species ( Z. schinifolium ), while Z. piperitum is known as chopi ( 초피 ).
Confusingly, all three ROMs were officially designated as version " 2. 05 ".
Confusingly, it has been said to both stop bleeding and promote it.
( Confusingly, the Pochhammer symbol that many use for falling factorials is used in special functions for rising factorials.
This crescent shape is reminiscent of the sickle described in the Key of Solomon, a medieval grimoire which is one of the sources for modern Wicca .. Confusingly, an Italian version of the Key of Solomon has a hook-shaped knife called an artauo ( a possible root for athame ) and a straight, needle-shaped blade called a bolino.

Gaulish and Samonios
The Gaulish calendar appears to have divided the year into two halves: the ' dark ' half, beginning with the month Samonios ( the October / November lunation ), and the ' light ' half, beginning with the month Giamonios ( the April / May lunation ).
The celebration of New Year itself may have taken place during the ' three nights of Samonios ( Gaulish trinux samo ), the beginning of the lunar cycle which fell nearest to the midpoint between the autumnal equinox and the winter solstice.

Gaulish and /
The first recorded use of the term " luge " is 1905, from the Savoy / Swiss dialect of French " luge " meaning " small coasting sled ", and is possibly from a Gaulish word with the same root as English sled.
All are etymologically related to the Gaulish root * aballo-( as found in the place name Aballo / Aballone, now Avallon in Burgundy or in the Italian surname Avallone ) and are derived from a Common Celtic * abal-" apple ", which is related at the Proto-Indo-European level to English apple, Russian яблоко ( jabloko ), Latvian abele, et al.
The toponym is based on the Gaulish phrase are-mori " on / at sea ", made into the Gaulish place name Aremorica (* are-mor-ika ) " Place by the Sea ".
The name Argenteuil is recorded for the first time in a royal charter of 697 as Argentoialum, from a Latin / Gaulish root argento meaning " silver ", " silvery ", " shiny ", perhaps in reference to the gleaming surface of the river Seine, on the banks of which Argenteuil is located, and from a Celtic suffix-ialo meaning " clearing, glade " or " place of ".
It is possible that Iberian had the semivowels / j / ( in words such as aiun or iunstir ) and / w / ( only in loanwords such as diuiś from Gaulish ).
The Gaulish Coligny calendar is possibly the oldest Celtic solar / lunar ritual calendar.
It will have been from Bishop Paulianus that the Gaulish settlement of Ruessium / Vellavorum received its Christianizing name, Saint-Paulien.
The name Riothamus has been interpreted by some as a title " High King ", though there is no evidence for such a title being used by ancient Britons or Gauls and the formation of the name ( noun / adjective + superlative-tamo-suffix ) follows a pattern found in numerous other Brittonic and Gaulish personal names ( for example, Old Breton / Welsh Cunatam / Cunotami / Condam / Cyndaf * Cunotamos " Great Dog ", Old Welsh Caurdaf * Cauarotamos " Great Giant ", Old Welsh / Breton Eudaf / Outham * Auitamos " Great Will / Desire ", Uuoratam / Gwrdaf * Uortamos " Supreme ", Old Breton Rumatam * Roimmotamos " Great Band / Host ", Gwyndaf * Uindotamos " Fairest / Whitest / Holiest One ", Breton Uuentamau * Uenutamaua: " Friendliest or * Uendutamaua: " Little Fairest / Whitest / Holiest ( One )").

Gaulish and November
Flavius Rufinus ( died November 27, 395 ) was a 4th century Eastern Roman Empire statesman of Gaulish extraction who served as Praetorian prefect of the East for the emperor Theodosius I, as well as his son Arcadius, under whom Rufinus was the actual power behind the throne.

Gaulish and corresponds
The Mediolanum name is borne by a number of Gallo-Roman sites in France, such as Mediolanum Santonum ( Saintes ) and Mediolanum Aulercorum ( Évreux ) and agreed to be of ( Continental ) Celtic, specifically Gaulish origin, a compound whose first element corresponds to Latin medius " middle ".

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