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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

SUPERSONIC INTERCONTINENTAL CRUISE MISSILE PROJECT
Navaho missile; SM-64; Navaho (rocket); SM-64 Navajo; Navaho (missile); B-64 Navaho; North American B-64 Navaho; XSM-64 Navaho; Navajo Rocket Engine; Northrop XSM-64 Navaho; Northrop SM-64 Navaho; North American SM-64 Navaho; North American Navaho
  • The V-1 inspired a range of US Army Air Force missile designs.
  • The dual engine (XLR-71-NA-1) of the SM-64 Navaho at the [[Udvar-Hazy Center]]

Navajo         
  • Canyon de Chelly]]
  • Hogan at Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park
  • A 19th-century hogan
  • [[Edward S. Curtis]]}}
  • baseball player]] for the [[New York Yankees]].
  • [[Manuelito]] (Navajo, 1818–1893), a chief during the Long Walk
  • Navajos spinning and weaving on vertical loom
  • Navajo Germantown Eye Dazzler Rug, [[Science History Institute]]
  • Dibé (sheep) remain an important aspect of Navajo culture.
  • Navajo Yebichai (Yei Bi Chei) dancers. Edward S. Curtis. USA, 1900. The Wellcome Collection, London
  • Navajo weaver with sheep
  • Navajo woman and child, ''circa'' 1880–1910
  • 19th-century Navajo jewelry with the popular concho and [[dragonfly]] designs
  • ''Probably Bayeta-style Blanket with Terrace and Stepped Design'', 1870–1880, 50.67.54, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • Squash blossom necklace
ETHNIC GROUP IN NORTH AMERICA
Navaho; Diné; Dineh; Navajo tribe; Navajo (people); Navajo Indians; Dine people; Navajos; Navahos; Hatałii; Hatalli; Navahu˙; Navajo people; Naabeehó; Naabeeho; History of the Navajo; Navajo culture; List of Navajo people; Navajo art; Prehistory of the Navajos; Navajo emigration to Canada
['nav?h??]
(also Navaho)
¦ noun (plural same or Navajos)
1. a member of an American Indian people of New Mexico and Arizona.
2. the Athabaskan language of the Navajo.
Origin
from Sp. Apaches de Navajo 'apaches from Navajo', from Tewa navahu: 'fields adjoining an arroyo'.
USS Navajo (AT-52)         
TUGBOAT OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY
USS Navajo (IX-56); USS Navaho (AT-52); USS Navajo (AT-56)
USS Navajo (AT-52) was a tug built in 1907 by Neafie & Levy, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, purchased by the United States Navy on 21 November 1907 and commissioned on 17 March 1908 as Fleet Tug No.52.
witch         
  • [[Albrecht Dürer]] circa 1500: Witch riding backwards on a goat
  • James VI]], from his ''[[Daemonologie]]'' (1597)
  • Examination of a Witch]]'' by [[T. H. Matteson]], inspired by the [[Salem witch trials]]
  • ''Preparation for the Witches' Sabbath'' by [[David Teniers the Younger]]. It shows a witch brewing a potion overlooked by her [[familiar spirit]] or a demon; items on the floor for casting a spell; and another witch reading from a [[grimoire]] while anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly upon an inverted [[besom]].
  • The Magic Circle]]'' by [[John William Waterhouse]], 1886
  • publisher=Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy}}</ref>
  • Okabe – The cat witch, by [[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]]
  • A painting in the [[Rila Monastery]] in [[Bulgaria]], condemning witchcraft and traditional [[folk magic]]
  • Finnish]] [[epic poetry]] ''[[Kalevala]]'', attacking [[Väinämöinen]] in the form of a giant eagle with her troops on her back. <small>(''[[The Defense of the Sampo]]'', [[Akseli Gallen-Kallela]], 1896)</small>
  • Lord Chief Justice of England [[Sir John Holt]] by [[Richard van Bleeck]], c. 1700. Holt greatly influenced the end of prosecutions for witchcraft in England. National Portrait Gallery, London.<ref>[https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/portrait/mw03214/Sir-John-Holt Sir John Holt.] National Portrait Gallery.</ref>
  • access-date=29 February 2016}}</ref>
  • Alleged witches being accused in the [[Salem witch trials]]
  • ''Saul and the Witch of Endor'' (1828) by [[William Sidney Mount]]
  • A witch bottle, used as counter-magic against witchcraft
  • A 1613 English pamphlet showing "Witches apprehended, examined and executed"
  • url-status=live }} Based on [[Ronald Hutton]]'s essay ''Counting the Witch Hunt''.</ref>
PRACTICE OF MAGICAL SKILLS AND ABILITIES
The Craft (religion); Witches; Hedge witchcraft; White witch; Cazi; Djambe; Low magic; Rae Beth; Hedge witch; Witch craft; Witch (Navajo); Hedge Witch; Navajo witch; Navaho witch; Russian witchcraft; African witchcraft; South American witchcraft; North American witchcraft; Greenwitch Witchcraft/Paganism; Cottagewitch; Gardenwitch; Contemporary witchcraft; Hedgecraft; Hedge Witchcraft; Hedgewitch; Sea Witches; Contemporary Witchcraft; Sea witches; Colonial Witchcraft; Bewitches; Witchcrafts; Witch crafts; Contemporary practice of witchcraft; Witch; Witchcraft in Native American mythology; Witch (magic); Corpse powder; Áńt’į; Corpse poison; Corpse-poison; Witchcraft in Native American culture; Sabbatic witchcraft; Witche; Neowitchcraft; Ant’i; Modern witchcraft; Modern Witchcraft; Witchery (magic); Witcheries; Witch-craft; Neo-witch; Neowitch; Neo-witchcraft; Contemporary witch; Modern witch; Witch (modern); Witch (contemporary); Witchcraft (contemporary); Sea witch (folklore); Sea witch (mythology); Sorcery in Islam; Witchcraft in Islam; Witches in Islam; Witch in Islam; Sorcerer in Islam; Magicians in Islam; Sorcerers in Islam; Witchcraft Act 1604
I. n.
Sorceress, enchantress.
II. v. a.
Charm, enchant, fascinate, enamour, captivate, ravish, bewitch.

ويكيبيديا

SM-64 Navaho

The North American SM-64 Navaho was a supersonic intercontinental cruise missile project built by North American Aviation (NAA). The final design was capable of delivering a nuclear weapon to the USSR from bases within the US, while cruising at Mach 3 (3,700 km/h; 2,300 mph) at 60,000 feet (18,000 m) altitude. The missile is named after the Navajo Nation.

The original 1946 project called for a relatively short-range system, a boost-glide weapon based on a winged V-2 rocket design. Over time the requirements were repeatedly extended, both due to the US Air Force's desire for longer ranged systems, as well as competition from similar weapons that successfully filled the shorter-range niche. This led to a new design based on a ramjet powered cruise missile, which also developed into a series of ever-larger versions, along with the booster rockets to launch them up to speed.

Through this period the US Air Force was developing the SM-65 Atlas, based on rocket technology developed for Navaho. Atlas filled the same performance goals but could do so with total flight times measured in minutes rather than hours, and flying at speeds and altitudes which made them immune to interception, as opposed to merely very difficult to intercept as in the case of Navaho. With the launch of Sputnik 1 in 1957 and the ensuing fears of a missile gap, Atlas received the highest development authority. Navaho continued as a backup, before being canceled in 1958 when Atlas successfully matured.

Although Navaho did not enter service, its development provided useful research in a number of fields. A version of the Navaho airframe powered by a single turbojet became the AGM-28 Hound Dog, which was carried towards its targets on the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress and then flew the rest of the way at about Mach 2. The guidance system was used to guide the first Polaris submarines. The booster engine design, spun off to NAA's new Rocketdyne subsidiary, was used in various versions of the Atlas, PGM-11 Redstone, PGM-17 Thor, PGM-19 Jupiter, Mercury-Redstone, and the Juno series; it is therefore the direct ancestor of the engines used to launch the Saturn I and Saturn V moon rockets.