Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Nagato (Japanese: 長門), known primarily under the alias of Pain (ペイン, Pein), is a fictional character in the manga and anime series Naruto created by Masashi Kishimoto. Nagato is the figurehead leader of the Akatsuki who wishes to capture the tailed beasts sealed into various people around the shinobi world.
Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey (Persian: پائين احمدچاله پي) [a] is a village in, and the capital of, Lalehabad Rural District [4] of Lalehabad District, Babol County, Mazandaran province, Iran. Demographics
Pain Qazi Mahalleh (Persian: پائين قاضي محله, also Romanized as Pā’īn Qāẕī Maḩalleh; also known as Qāẕī Maḩalleh-ye Pā’īn and Ya‘qūbīyeh) [1] is a village in Daryasar Rural District, Kumeleh District, Langarud County, Gilan Province, Iran.
Pain Mahalleh-ye Pashaki (Persian: پايين محله پاشاكی, also Romanized as Pā’īn Maḩalleh-ye Pāshākī; also known as Pā’īn Maḩalleh, Pāshākī Pā’īn Maḩalleh, and Pāshkī-ye Pā’īn) [1] is a village in Lafmejan Rural District, in the Central District of Lahijan County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 ...
Pain Mahalleh-ye Rudbaneh (Persian: پايين محله رودبنه, also Romanized as Pā’īn Maḩalleh-ye Rūdbaneh; also known as Pā’īn Rūd Beneh) [1] is a village in Rudboneh Rural District, Rudboneh District, Lahijan County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 415, in 120 families.
Pain Kuh (Persian: پا ئين کوه) [a] is a village in Bonab Rural District of the Central District in Zanjan County, Zanjan province, Iran. Demographics
Pain Ahmad Kola (Persian: پايين احمدكلا, also Romanized as Pā’īn Aḩmad Kolā) [1] is a village in Saheli Rural District, in the Central District of Babolsar County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,158, in 285 families.
Pain Kuyakh (Persian: پايين كويخ, also Romanized as Pā’īn Kūyakh; also known as Kūyakh-e Pā’īn) [1] is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rasht County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2016 census, its population was 293, in 97 families, [2] up from 272 people in 2006. [3]