nome

listen to the pronunciation of nome
Englisch - Englisch
cape in West Alaska
seaport in West Alaska
a prefecture or unit of regional government in Greece

Laconia is the southernmost nome in the Peloponnese.

a territorial division of ancient Egypt
a type of musical composition in ancient Greece
A city of western Alaska on Norton Sound and the southern coast of Seward Peninsula. It was founded as a gold-mining camp in 1896 and was an important center of the Alaskan gold rush from 1899 to 1903. Population: 3,500. Seaport (pop., 2000: 3,505), western Alaska, U.S., on the southern side of the Seward Peninsula. Founded as a mining camp called Anvil City after the discovery of gold at nearby Anvil Creek in 1898, it became a centre of the Alaskan gold rush of 1899-1903. Its population, estimated at 20,000 in 1900, had dwindled to 852 by 1920. Gold mining remained the chief occupation until the dredge fields were closed in 1962. The finish line for the Iditarod trail sled race, it also serves as a supply centre for northwestern Alaska
A province or political division, as of modern Greece or ancient Egypt; a nomarchy
a town in western Alaska on the southern coast of the Seward Peninsula; an important center of an Alaskan gold rush at the beginning of the 20th century
a province of Egypt Traditionally there were 42
(from Greek nomos division) Administrative region
One of the forty-two traditional provinces of ancient Egypt known in Egyptian as a sepat
Egyptian province of administrative district Egypt used to be shared to 42 nomes that created the i e nome-system, which developed around the 3rd and 4th dynasties
of Nim
Any melody determined by inviolable rules
A province of ancient Egypt - there were 42 nomes
nomes
plural of nome
nome

    Silbentrennung

    Nome

    Türkische aussprache

    nōm

    Aussprache

    /ˈnōm/ /ˈnoʊm/

    Etymologie

    [ 'nOm ] (noun.) circa 1727. Ancient Greek νομός (nomos), from νέμειν (nemein, “to divide”).
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