Tibetli kilim dokumacıları geleneksel tasarımlar ve düğümler kullanır. Dolayısıyla onların kilimleri basit, doğal bir görünüme sahiptir. - Tibetan rug weavers use traditional designs and knotting. Hence their rugs have a simple, natural look.
born June 12, 1833, Dayton, Ohio, U.S. died Feb. 6, 1912, Des Moines, Iowa U.S. politician. An advocate of the Greenback movement, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Iowa (1879-81, 1885-89). He helped form the People's Party (see Populist movement) and was its candidate for president in 1892, receiving more than 1 million popular votes and 22 electoral votes. After helping effect the party's merger with the Democratic Party, he retired to Iowa
born June 12, 1833, Dayton, Ohio, U.S. died Feb. 6, 1912, Des Moines, Iowa U.S. politician. An advocate of the Greenback movement, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from Iowa (1879-81, 1885-89). He helped form the People's Party (see Populist movement) and was its candidate for president in 1892, receiving more than 1 million popular votes and 22 electoral votes. After helping effect the party's merger with the Democratic Party, he retired to Iowa
born July 21, 1673, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, Eng. died Sept. 24, 1760, Shrewsbury English dancer and teacher, known as "the father of English pantomime. " From 1700 to 1736 he performed and produced his dance dramas at the Drury Lane and Lincoln's Inn Fields theatres. His libretto for The Loves of Mars and Venus (1717) was the first published dance drama and displayed the integration of plot and dance that was later developed by Jean-Georges Noverre and Gasparo Angiolini as the ballet d'action
born 1894, Reedsburg, Wisc., U.S. died 1978 U.S. mathematician. He studied at the University of Wisconsin, taught there (1920-32), and directed the Rockefeller Foundation's Natural Science Division (1932-55). He is considered the first person to propose using electronic computers for the translation of natural languages. In a 1949 memo, he proposed that statistical techniques from the field of information theory could be used to enable computers to translate text from one natural language to another automatically. His proposal was based on the assumption that a document in a human language can be viewed as having been written in code, which can be broken like other codes
{i} one who weaves; one who produces cloth by interlacing strands or yarn; any of several species of finch-like communal birds that are native to Africa and Asia and are known for the intricate nests they weave