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Cultural Property wmph identifier [lower-roman 1] | Site name | Description | Province | City or municipality | Address | Coordinates | Image |
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Saint Catherine de Alexandria Parish Church | Construction started in 1834 [1] | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | Zamora St. | 16°07′00″N119°47′59″E / 16.116671°N 119.799644°E | ||
Church Convent | Construction started in 1845 [1] | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | Zamora St. | 16°07′00″N119°47′58″E / 16.116749°N 119.799436°E | ||
Agno Central School | Gabaldon building, built between 1915-1920 | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | Mabini St. | 16°07′07″N119°47′49″E / 16.118549°N 119.797052°E | ||
Don Angel Sison Bridge | Old bridge parallel to Don Marcelo Nagal Bridge | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 16°07′07″N119°47′49″E / 16.118549°N 119.797052°E | |||
Kirai House | Construction finished on May 7, 1947 | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 03 Regidor St. | |||
Unknown House (Jan Jedd's Store) | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 88 Rizal St. | ||||
Unknown House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | Gomez St. corner Rizal St. | ||||
Unknown House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 18 Bonifacio St. | ||||
Fran House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | Jaena St. | ||||
Unknown House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | |||||
Nilo House | Built in the 1870s | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 62 Rizal St. | |||
Nino House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 54 Rizal St. | ||||
Unknown House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | |||||
Navata-Padama House | Built around 1910 | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 41 Rizal St. | |||
Batalia House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 48 Rizal St. | ||||
Nino House | Built in 1932 | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 27 (old #) Rizal St. | |||
Unknown House | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 22 Zamora St. | ||||
De Guzman House | Built in 1957 | Pangasinan | Agno, Pangasinan | 26 Zamora St. |
The International Standard Book Number (ISBN) is a numeric commercial book identifier that is intended to be unique. Publishers purchase or receive ISBNs from an affiliate of the International ISBN Agency.
A MAC address is a unique identifier assigned to a network interface controller (NIC) for use as a network address in communications within a network segment. This use is common in most IEEE 802 networking technologies, including Ethernet, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth. Within the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) network model, MAC addresses are used in the medium access control protocol sublayer of the data link layer. As typically represented, MAC addresses are recognizable as six groups of two hexadecimal digits, separated by hyphens, colons, or without a separator.
Queer is an umbrella term for people who are not heterosexual or are not cisgender. Originally meaning 'strange' or 'peculiar', queer came to be used pejoratively against LGBT people in the late 19th century. From the late 1980s, queer activists began to reclaim the word as a neutral or positive self-description.
The word cisgender describes a person whose gender identity corresponds to their sex assigned at birth, i.e., someone who is not transgender. The prefix cis- is Latin and means on this side of. The term cisgender was coined in 1994 as an antonym to transgender, and entered into dictionaries starting in 2015 as a result of changes in social discourse about gender. The term has been and continues to be controversial and subject to critique.
Pansexuality is sexual, romantic, or emotional attraction towards people of all genders, or regardless of their sex or gender identity. Pansexual people may refer to themselves as gender-blind, asserting that gender and sex are not determining factors in their romantic or sexual attraction to others.
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ISO 9362 is an international standard for Business Identifier Codes (BIC), a unique identifier for business institutions, approved by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). BIC is also known as SWIFT-BIC, SWIFT ID, or SWIFT code, after the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), which is designated by ISO as the BIC registration authority. BIC was defined originally as Bank Identifier Code and is most often assigned to financial organizations; when it is assigned to non-financial organization, the code may also be known as Business Entity Identifier (BEI). These codes are used when transferring money between banks, particularly for international wire transfers, and also for the exchange of other messages between banks. The codes can sometimes be found on account statements.
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PubMed is a free database including primarily the MEDLINE database of references and abstracts on life sciences and biomedical topics. The United States National Library of Medicine (NLM) at the National Institutes of Health maintains the database as part of the Entrez system of information retrieval.
Political party strength in U.S. states is the level of representation of the various political parties in the United States in each statewide elective office providing legislators to the state and to the U.S. Congress and electing the executives at the state and national level.
REST is a software architectural style that was created to guide the design and development of the architecture for the World Wide Web. REST defines a set of constraints for how the architecture of a distributed, Internet-scale hypermedia system, such as the Web, should behave. The REST architectural style emphasises uniform interfaces, independent deployment of components, the scalability of interactions between them, and creating a layered architecture to promote caching to reduce user-perceived latency, enforce security, and encapsulate legacy systems.
Obtaining precise numbers on the demographics of sexual orientation is difficult for a variety of reasons, including the nature of the research questions. Most of the studies on sexual orientation rely on self-reported data, which may pose challenges to researchers because of the subject matter's sensitivity. The studies tend to pose two sets of questions. One set examines self-report data of same-sex sexual experiences and attractions, while the other set examines self-report data of personal identification as homosexual or bisexual. Overall, fewer research subjects identify as homosexual or bisexual than report having had sexual experiences or attraction to a person of the same sex. Survey type, questions and survey setting may affect the respondents' answers.
White Americans are Americans who identify as white people. In a more official sense, the U.S. Census Bureau, which collects demographic data on Americans, defines "white" as "A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa." This group constitutes the majority of the people in the United States. According to the 2020 census, 71%, or 235,411,507 people, were White alone or in combination, and 61.6%, or 204,277,273 people, were White alone. This represented a national white demographic decline from a 72.4% white alone share of the U.S. population in 2010.
HTTP cookies are small blocks of data created by a web server while a user is browsing a website and placed on the user's computer or other device by the user's web browser. Cookies are placed on the device used to access a website, and more than one cookie may be placed on a user's device during a session.
Since 1922, the United Kingdom has been made up of four countries: England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The UK Prime Minister's website has used the phrase "countries within a country" to describe the United Kingdom.
The International Standard Name Identifier (ISNI) is an identifier system for uniquely identifying the public identities of contributors to media content such as books, television programmes, and newspaper articles. Such an identifier consists of 16 digits. It can optionally be displayed as divided into four blocks.
A transgender person is someone whose gender identity differs from that typically associated with the sex they were assigned at birth. Some transgender people who desire medical assistance to transition from one sex to another identify as transsexual. Transgender is also an umbrella term; in addition to including people whose gender identity is the opposite of their assigned sex, it may also include people who are non-binary or genderqueer. Other definitions of transgender also include people who belong to a third gender, or else conceptualize transgender people as a third gender. The term may also include cross-dressers or drag kings and drag queens in some contexts. The term transgender does not have a universally accepted definition, including among researchers.
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A uniform resource locator (URL), colloquially known as an address on the Web, is a reference to a resource that specifies its location on a computer network and a mechanism for retrieving it. A URL is a specific type of Uniform Resource Identifier (URI), although many people use the two terms interchangeably. URLs occur most commonly to reference web pages (HTTP/HTTPS) but are also used for file transfer (FTP), email (mailto), database access (JDBC), and many other applications.