Zoon"s erythroplasia - translation to arabic
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:     

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

Zoon"s erythroplasia - translation to arabic

BRITISH BAND
Zoon; Zoon (album); Zoon (Nefilim album); Nefilim

Zoon's erythroplasia      
‎ التَّنَسُّجُ الأَحْمَرُ بحَسَبِ زون,الْتِهابُ الحَشَفَةِ المُحَدَّدُ البلاَزْماوِيُّ‎
erythroplasia         
MEDICAL CONDITION
Erythroplasia; Erythroplakia of oral mucous membrane
تَنَسُّجٌ أَحْمَر
erythroplasia         
MEDICAL CONDITION
Erythroplasia; Erythroplakia of oral mucous membrane
‎ تَنَسُّجٌ أَحْمَر‎

Definition

long s
¦ noun an obsolete form of lower-case s, written or printed as ?.

Wikipedia

The Nefilim

Nefilim was a industrial death metal studio project formed by Carl McCoy with John "Capachino" Carter in 1992 after the disbanding of Fields of the Nephilim. It featured McCoy on vocals and keyboards and John Carter on bass, guitars and drums. The album title track Zoon was written during this period, as were now famed demos including "Red Harvest777", "Chaochracy" and "Subsanity (Sensorium)". After a year Carter and McCoy parted company, and McCoy went on to recruit Paul Miles on guitar, Simon Rippin on drums and Cian Houchin on bass. The lineup released one album, Zoon (1996), which was more influenced by death metal and industrial metal than McCoy's previous releases with the Fields of the Nephilim, though similar themes of mysticism are prevalent, seen in songs like "Pazuzu (Black Rain)," which refers to the Assyro-Babylonian god also known as "king of the demons." Rippin and Miles would later go on to form Sensorium, while Houchin would go on to form Saints of Eden. McCoy and Carter would later re-establish Fields of the Nephilim as a living entity which still performs today.