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Tristana may refer to: Tristana, a novel published in 1892 by Benito Pérez Galdós Tristana, a 1970 Spanish film directed by Luis Buñuel based on the eponymous novel; Tristana, a 1987 song recorded by the French artist Mylène Farmer; Tristana, The Yordle Gunner, a playable champion character from the video game League of Legends
The 2024 LCK season was the 13th season of the League of Legends Champions Korea (LCK), a professional South Korean esports league for the MOBA PC game League of Legends. The season is divided into two splits: Spring and Summer. The Spring Split began on 17 January 2024 and culminated with the playoff finals on 14 April.
The Dinh brothers were both part of a League of Legends clan called All or Nothing during the game's beta testing, which later rebranded to SoloMid. A small group of players that represented the SoloMid.net community would become the original TSM team: SaintVicious, Chaox, TheOddOne, Locodoco, and Reginald. [ 2 ]
Commentary teams typically feature one professional commentator describing the passage of play, and another, usually a former player or coach, providing supplementary input as the game progresses. Color commentators usually restrict their input to times that the ball or the puck is out of play, or there is no significant action on the field or ...
With their win, SKT became the first three-time League of Legends world champion. SKT's Lee "Faker" Sang-hyeok was named MVP of the tournament. The final prize pool reached $6.7 million, the largest single prize pool in League of Legends history. The final was followed by 43 million unique viewers, with a peak concurrent viewership of 14.7 million.
"Tristana" is a 1987 song recorded by the French artist Mylène Farmer. Fourth single from her first studio album Cendres de Lune , the song was released in February 1987. As for the previous single " Libertine ", the music video was produced as a film, with many extras and a huge budget.
Tristana's transformation in the novel is heavily tied to language: the novel begins with her being mute for four chapters; she then finally speaks the word "libertad" (liberty), and then begins to construct a new reality for women and herself, by inventing gendered words for professions that were not in common use in the nineteenth century, such as "abogada" (female lawyer) and "médica ...
limrunar "branch-runes" (stanza 10, a healing spell, the runes to be carved on trees "with boughs to the eastward bent"), [8] malrunar "speech-runes" (stanza 11, the stanza is corrupt, but apparently referred to a spell to improve one's rhetorical ability at the thing),