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The Dinka alphabet is used by South Sudanese Dinka people. The written Dinka language is based on the ISO basic Latin alphabet, but with some added letters adapted from the International Phonetic Alphabet. The current orthography is derived from the alphabet developed for the southern Sudanese languages at the Rejaf language conference in 1928. [1]
Comics Factory (Russian: Фабрика комиксов, Fabrika komiksov) is a comics imprint of major Russian book publisher AST. [2] It serves as a translator and the licensor of European graphic novels , Japanese manga , Korean manhwa , Taiwan and Hong Kong manhua , Original English-language manga . [ 3 ]
O.W. Comics was a short-lived Publishing House consisting of comic veteran, William_Woolfolk, who had worked for MLJ Magazines, Fawcett Comics and Marvel Comics, and John Gerard "Jack" Oxton, Sr., an Illustrator, Film Editor at Paramount News/Paramount Pictures in New York City, and from 1957-1969, he was also Local Union Head/Business Agent ...
Dinka (natively Thuɔŋjäŋ, Thuɔŋ ë Jiɛ̈ɛ̈ŋ or simply Jiɛ̈ɛ̈ŋ) is a Nilotic dialect cluster spoken by the Dinka people, a major ethnic group of South Sudan. There are several main varieties, such as Padang, Rek, Agaar, Ciec, Malual, Apaak, Aliab, Bor, Hol, Nyarweng, Twic East and Twic Mayardit, which are distinct enough (though ...
Dinka may also refer to: Dinka language, a group of languages spoken by the Dinka people Dinka alphabet, the alphabet in which the Dinka language is written; Dinka (grape), a Hungarian wine grape; Dinka (DJ), a Swiss DJ; Dinka or Dinkan, fictional comics character and central deity of the parody Indian religion Dinkamatham or Dinkoism
The Cyrillic alphabet and Russian spelling generally employ fewer diacritics than those used in other European languages written with the Latin alphabet. The only diacritic, in the proper sense, is the acute accent ́ (Russian: знак ударения 'mark of stress'), which marks stress on a vowel, as it is done in Spanish and Greek.
The Red Star is a comic book series created by American artist Christian Gossett and a large team, and first published by Image Comics in 2001. It was one of the first computer-generated comics, making heavy use of line-art from 3D models to present large cinematic scenes suited to its expansive sci-fi/fantasy world. This world is described by ...
Mentac (Mutant from the Russian Exiles, possessed a fifth-level brain capable of computer-like analysis, deceased) Mikhail Nikolaievitch Rasputin (A mutant who was the older brother of Colossus of the X-Men and Magik of the New Mutants. He was a former Russian cosmonaut, a superhero, a supervillain, and a presumed messiah. Deceased.)