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GE: Good Ending (Japanese: GE~グッドエンディング~, Hepburn: Guddo Endingu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kei Sasuga. It was serialized in Kodansha 's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Magazine from August 2009 to January 2013, with its chapters collected in 16 tankōbon volumes.
Ge (Cyrillic) (Г, г), a letter of the Cyrillic alphabet; Ghe with upturn (Ґ, ґ), a letter of the Ukrainian alphabet; ġē, a plural Old English pronoun; Gê languages, spoken by the Gê, a group of indigenous people in Brazil; Gejia language, spoken in China; げ or ゲ (ge), a Japanese syllabic character
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Ayn Rand's 1934 play Night of January 16th allowed the audience to affect the ending by acting as the "jury" and voting the defendant "innocent" or "guilty". [1] The 1985 musical The Mystery of Edwin Drood; Dario Fo's 1970 play, Accidental Death of an Anarchist; The long-running play Shear Madness has multiple, audience-selected endings.
GFDL – (i) GNU Free Documentation License; GFE (i) Girlfriend experience (used in escort services) Good Faith Estimate; Government Furnished Equipment; GFI – (i) Ground Fault Interruptor (aka GFCI) GFL – (i) German Football League (Germany's Bundesliga for American football; the English-language name is used in German without translation)
When GE sponsored a television program, the ad agency used a number of “We Bring Good Things to Life” commercials, each telling the GE story in a different way. Aside from promoting products and services, GE commercials and print ads began to project a new corporate image, stressing how the company's products and services had enhanced ...
In English, the sound of soft g is the affricate /dʒ/, as in general, giant, and gym. A g at the end of a word usually renders a hard g (as in "rag"), while if a soft rendition is intended it would be followed by a silent e (as in "rage").
GE was the primary focus of a 1991 short subject Academy Award-winning documentary, Deadly Deception: General Electric, Nuclear Weapons, and Our Environment, [269] that juxtaposed GE's "We Bring Good Things To Life" commercials with the true stories of workers and neighbors whose lives have been affected by the company's activities involving ...