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Lena remains close to her Armenian roots, both cultural and musical, and includes an Armenian folk song in each of her albums and concerts. Chamamyan is known for her style of combining folkloric music with modern styles and arrangements, crossing genres and creating a new fusion of both the traditional and the new.
Lena Lilian Hill Severance (November 21, 1855 - September 15, 1942) was a female student mathematician at Cornell University, author of a book on equipollences, a world traveller, and an activist for educators. [1] [2] [3] She was born as Lena Lilian Hill in North Hero, Vermont to Henry C. Hill and Cornelia Scott
Lena, Russia, a list of names of several rural localities in Russia; Lena (river), the easternmost of the three great rivers in Siberia; Lena Cheeks, a stretch of the river Lena with peculiar rock formations in Kirensky District, Irkutsk Oblast, Russia; Lena Pillars, a natural rock formation along the banks of the Lena River in far eastern Siberia
Lena (Asturian: Ḷḷena [ˈʈ͡ʂɛna]) is a municipality in the Autonomous Community of the Principality of Asturias, Spain. It has a population of 12.000 inhabitants, while 9,200 of them live in the capital, Pola de Lena.
Versions of the song have been recorded by artists including Fairuz, [5] Sabah Fakhri, [5] Souad Massi, Lena Chamamyan [6], Nabyla Maan, Hamza El Din, Sami Yusuf and Abeer Nehme [7]. References [ edit ]
In 1995, the L.A.M.A. Miami chapter was founded, and one year later, L.A.M.A. grew to become a national association with the election of the organization's first president. LAMA became an international association in June of 1999 with chapters in Puerto Rico, Mexico and Cuba. [2]
Lena is a feminine given name with several origins and meanings. In Greek, it is a short form of Helena (Ἑλένη), meaning “torch” or “shining light.” In Germanic cultures, it may be a diminutive of names like Magdalena or Alena [1], meaning “elevated,” “exalted,” “great,” or “bright,” or derived from the Germanic suffix -lein, meaning “little.”
Lama is a genus containing the South American camelids: the wild guanaco and vicuña and the domesticated llama, alpaca, and the extinct chilihueque. Before the Spanish conquest of the Americas , llamas, alpacas, and chilihueques were the only domesticated ungulates of the continent .