returned$97090$ - meaning and definition. What is returned$97090$
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What (who) is returned$97090$ - definition

SONG
The Ship that never returned; The Ship That Never Returned

The Ship that Never Returned         
"The Ship That Never Returned" is an 1865 song written by Henry Clay Work, about a ship that left a harbor and never came back. A reason for the ship not returning is not given in the lyrics.
From the Dust Returned         
2001 NOVEL BY RAY BRADBURY
From the Dust Returned is a fix-up fantasy novel by Ray Bradbury published in 2001. The novel is largely created from a series of short stories Bradbury wrote decades earlier, centering on a family of Illinois-based monsters and ghosts named the Elliotts.
Energy return on investment         
RATIO OF ACQUIRED ENERGY TO THE AMOUNT OF ENERGY SPENT TO OBTAIN THIS ENERGY
Net energy return; Energy Return on Energy Invested; Energy Return On Investment; Energy Return on Investment; Energy Returned on Energy Invested; Energy Returned On Energy Invested; Net energy ratio; EROEI; Energy return on energy invested; Energy Return On Energy Invested; Solar breeder; Energy payback ratio; Energy returned on energy invested
In energy economics and ecological energetics, energy return on investment (EROI), also sometimes called energy returned on energy invested (ERoEI), is the ratio of the amount of usable energy (the exergy) delivered from a particular energy resource to the amount of exergy used to obtain that energy resource.

Wikipedia

The Ship that Never Returned

"The Ship That Never Returned" is an 1865 song written by Henry Clay Work, about a ship that left a harbor and never came back. A reason for the ship not returning is not given in the lyrics. However, the line "and their fate is yet unlearned" implies that the reason is unknown.

The song became so popular that Carl Sandburg's collection American Songbag recorded an adaptation from the Kentucky mountains. The tune formed the basis of "Wreck of the Old 97", about a 1903 train wreck; recorded by Vernon Dalhart in 1924, and many others afterward, the song became the first million-selling country music hit.

Later, the melody was adapted in "Charlie on the MTA", created in 1948, as a campaign song for Walter A. O'Brien about a man unable to alight from a Boston subway train because, rather than change all the turnstiles, the M.T.A. added an exit fare—Charlie did not have the extra nickel to get off the train. The Kingston Trio recorded the song in 1959 (as "M.T.A.") and had a hit with the recording in the same year.