18 Escutai vós, pois, a parábola do semeador - traducción al holandés
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18 Escutai vós, pois, a parábola do semeador - traducción al holandés

FILM RATINGS IN CANADA
A (Rating); 18 A; 18-A; 18a; 18 a; 18-a; XVIII-A

do me a favor         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Do Me a Favour; Do Me a Favor (disambiguation); Do Me A Favor; Do Me a Favour (song)
doe mij een gunst
do it yourself         
  • Fiberglass dome house, California, in style of the Whole Earth Catalog building techniques
  • ''Electronics World'' 1959, home assembled amplifier
  • Mennonite woman [[dressmaking]] (1942)
  • Shelves attached to a toy vehicle
  • Drink mixing robot
  • San Mateo]], 2016
  • [[Zine]]s, London
BUILDING, MODIFYING, OR REPAIRING SOMETHING WITHOUT THE AID OF EXPERTS OR PROFESSIONALS
DIY not EMI; DIY ethic; D.I.Y.; Do-it-yourself; DIY Punk Ethic; DIY; Do it for me; DIY punk ethic; D.I.Y; Do-It-Yourself; Do It Yourself; Guerrilla punk; DIY culture; DIY Culture; Diy culture; Guerrilla Rock; Guerrilla rock; Guerrilla Punk; Diyism; DIY media; DIY ethic of punk; DIY ethos; Do it yourself ethic; Do-it-yourself ethic; D-I-Y; DIY film; Resolver (Cuba); Resolver spirit; Resolver ethos
zelf doen, zelf voor elkaar brengen
till death do us part         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Till Death Us Do Part (album); Till Death Do Us Part (album); Til' Death Do Us Part; Till Death Do Us Part (book); Till Death Do Us Part (disambiguation); 'Til Death Do Us Part (disambiguation); Till death; ’Til Death Do Us Part; 'Til Death Do Us Part; Til Death Do Us Part; UDDUP; Til death; Till Death Do Us Part (novel); Hasta que la muerte nos separe; 'Til Death Do Us Part (TV series); Until Death Do Us Part; Till Death Do Us Part (song); Til Death Do Us Part (disambiguation); Draft:Til Death Do Us Part (disambiguation)
tot de dood ons scheidt (een eed die men aflegt bij het trouwen in de kerk)

Definición

VOS
<operating system> An operating system used in Stratus computers. See also FTX. [Details?] (1998-07-06)

Wikipedia

Canadian motion picture rating system

Motion picture ratings in Canada are mostly a provincial responsibility, and each province has its own legislation regarding exhibition and admission. For home video purposes, a single Canadian Home Video Rating System rating consisting of an average of the participating provincial ratings is displayed on retail packages, although various provinces may have rules on display and sale, especially for the R and A categories.

There are currently four film classification offices rating commercially released movies in Canada, each an agency of a provincial government:

  • British Columbia Film Classification Office, a division of Consumer Protection BC, provides ratings for British Columbia, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.
  • Alberta Film Classification provides ratings for Alberta, the Northwest Territories, and Nunavut.
  • Régie du cinéma du Québec provides ratings for Quebec.
  • Maritime Film Classification Board, run by the Nova Scotia Alcohol & Gaming Authority, provides ratings for Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island.

The province of Saskatchewan retains its own classification board, Saskatchewan Film Classification, but it has used ratings provided by British Columbia since 1997 for almost all commercially distributed films. Similarly, the Manitoba Film Classification Board was dissolved in 2018 and now uses the ratings assigned by British Columbia. Film distributors pay additional fees to Consumer Protection BC for certification in other provinces; they can also pay for certification in one or more provinces if they do not plan on distributing their film in British Columbia, although films to be shown only in Saskatchewan are still rated by that province's film classification office. The Ontario Film Review Board was abolished in 2019, and as of 2020, Ontario no longer requires films to be rated; instead, film exhibitors must provide information related to the film's content and viewer discretion.

By law, the film ratings in Alberta are also applied in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut.

There is no compulsory film ratings system in Newfoundland and Labrador, but Maritime Film Classification Board ratings are voluntarily used by some theatres.

Yukon also does not have a compulsory rating system; the two Landmark Cinemas commercial theatres in Whitehorse "assign the average of film classification for Canada."