��qu�� pasar�� a continuaci��n - translation to
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��qu�� pasar�� a continuaci��n - translation to

A Bao A Qu; A Baoa Qu
  • A Bao A Qu

tufa         
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INTERPRO FAMILY
Elongation factor thermo unstable; Elongation factor tu; TufA; GTP-binding elongation factor family, EF-Tu/EF-1A subfamily
toba
tufo
piedra caliza muy porosa y ligera
sarro de los dientes
tufa         
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INTERPRO FAMILY
Elongation factor thermo unstable; Elongation factor tu; TufA; GTP-binding elongation factor family, EF-Tu/EF-1A subfamily
(n.) = toba
Ex: In addition to streams and thermal springs, groundwater discharges from alluvium, bedrock, and karstified tufa.
Burkina Faso         
  • West Africa circa 1875
  • National Assembly]] building in downtown [[Ouagadougou]]
  • President Blaise Compaoré ruled Burkina Faso from a coup d'état in 1987 until he lost power in 2014.
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  • Map of Burkina Faso
  • A proportional representation of Burkina Faso exports, 2019
  • A cameraman in [[Ouagadougou]], Burkina Faso in 2010
  • Artisan garland of decorative painted [[gourd]]s in [[Ouagadougou]]
  • Satellite image of Burkina Faso
  • [[Burkina Faso national football team]] in white during a match
  • A masked Winiama dancer, c. 1970
  • Processing facilities at the Essakane Mine in Burkina Faso
  • [[French West Africa]] c. 1913
  • A plate of [[fufu]] (right) accompanied with [[peanut soup]]
  • GDP per capita in Burkina Faso, since 1950
  • Gando]] primary school. Its architect, [[Diébédo Francis Kéré]], received the [[Aga Khan Award for Architecture]] in 2004.
  • The ''Grand marché'' in [[Koudougou]], Burkina Faso
  • Map of [[Köppen climate classification]]
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  • Malika Outtara, poet
  • [[Maurice Yaméogo]], the first president of Upper Volta, examines documents pertaining to the ratification of the country's independence in 1960
  • The capital, [[Ouagadougou]], in 1930
  • The cavalry of the [[Mossi Kingdoms]] were experts at raiding deep into enemy territory, even against the formidable [[Mali Empire]].
  • Tuareg]] man in [[Ouagadougou]]
  • Armed men prevent the French explorer [[Louis-Gustave Binger]] from entering Sia (Bobo-Dioulasso) during his stay in April 1892.
  • The railway station in [[Bobo Dioulasso]] was built during the colonial era and remains in operation.
  • Batié]]
  • Damage caused by the Dourtenga floods in 2007
SOVEREIGN STATE IN AFRICA
ISO 3166-1:BF; Burkina; Burkina Fasoan; Burkino Faso; Burkina Fasso; Burkina-Faso; Bourkina Faso; Burkina Fatso; Bourkina-Fasso; Bourkina Fasso; Faso; Berkina faso; Burkina faso; Burkinafaso; Food security in Burkina Faso; Food insecurity in Burkina Faso; Causes of food insecurity in Burkina Faso; Infrastructure in Burkina Faso; Hunger in Burkina Faso; Republic of Burkina Faso
Burkina Faso (país en el occidente de Africa, la antigua Volta)

Definition

BF
Bus Fraction [Additional explanations: pin] (Reference: Intel, Pentium, CPU)

Wikipedia

Á Bao A Qu

A Bao A Qu is a legendary Mewar creature described in Jorge Luis Borges's 1967 Book of Imaginary Beings. Borges claimed to have found it either in an introduction to the Arabian Nights by Richard Francis Burton, or in the book On Malay Witchcraft (1937) by C.C. Iturvuru. The Burton reference was given in the original Spanish, but it was changed to the Iturvuru reference in the English text, possibly to make it sound more exotic, or as a reference to Borges' friend C. C. Iturburu. The writer Antares conjectures that Borges's tale might be inspired by Orang Asli myth, and that "A Bao A Qu" is a slurring of abang aku meaning "my elder brother".

In Borges's story, the A Bao A Qu lives on the steps of the Tower of Victory in Chitor, from the top of which one can see "the loveliest landscape in the world". The A Bao A Qu waits on the first step for a man brave enough to try to climb up. Until that point, it lies sleeping, shapeless and translucent, until someone passes. Then, when a man starts climbing, the creature wakes, and follows close behind. As it progresses further and further up, it begins to become clearer and more colorful. It gives off a blue light which increases as it ascends. But it only reaches perfection when the climber reaches the top, and achieves Nirvana, so his acts don't cast any shadows. But almost all the time, the climber cannot reach the top, for they are not perfect. When the A Bao A Qu realizes this, it hangs back, losing color and visibility, and tumbles back down the staircase until it reaches the bottom, once more dormant and shapeless. In doing so, it gives a small cry, so soft that it sounds similar to the rustling of silk. When touched, it feels like the fuzz on the skin of a peach. Only once in its everlasting life has the A Bao A Qu reached its destination at the top of the tower.