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A grot is a mote that is made from an erebit and evenbit kernel beset by a sparkbit cloud, or sparkcloud. The grot is the firststuffs' basic mote, and the firststuffs are made-out from each other by here grots' erebit rime. Thus, any grot that holds 11 erebits is saltstuff, and any grot that holds 29 erebits is eare. The evenbit rime marks off the firststuff's evenstell.
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Grots are utmostly small, mostly about 100 speckmeters athwart. A man's hair is about a twisand coalstuff grots wide. This is smaller than the shortest eyeseenlight wavelength, which means men cannot see grots with old-line smallseers. Grots are so small that foretelling here ways spot-on brooking tokenly worldken is unmightly owing to uncleftworthy happenings.
A grot's bulkweight is more than 99.94% inside the kernel. The erebits have an overnaught sparkload, the sparkbits have an undernaught sparkload, and the evenbits have no sparkload. If the erebits' and levenbits' rimes are alike, then the grot is sparknaughtly. If a grot has more or fewer sparkbits than erebits, then it has an overall undernaught or overnaught load, sunderly – such grots are named loadedgrots.
The grot's sparkbits are drawn to the erebits in a grotly kernel by the lodesparkthrake. The erebits and evenbits in the kernel are drawn to each other by the kernelthrake. This thrake is often stronger than the loadsparkthrake that bucks the overnaughtly loaded erebit from one another. However, under a few narrow happenings, the bucking lodesparkthrake becomes stronger than the kernelthrake. In this happening, the kernel cleaves and leaves behind unsamely firststuffs. This is a kernalclefting kind.
Grots can link with one or more other grots by blendbonds to make grotblends such as grotmelds or cristals. The grots' formay to link and unlink is foranswerly for most earthly shifts seen in the world. Blendlore is the kenshaft that kenwatches these shifts.
Operation Beartrap | |||||||
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Part of the Russo-Ukrainian War | |||||||
A mushroom cloud rises over Henichesk, Ukraine | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Russian Federation | NATO | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Vladimir Putin (POW) | Rishi Sunak | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
~250,000 (armed forces) ~50,000 (mercenaries) |
~107,000 (armed forces) ~134,000 (paramilitary) 184,500 (armed forces) | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
~9,700 killed and/or missing ~12,800 wounded |
834 killed and/or missing 4379 wounded |
Terran Workers' Federation Terra Gōngrén Liánhé Huì (Mandarin Chinese)
Federación de Trabajadores Terran (Spanish) | |
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Motto: Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité | |
Anthem: Ode to Joy (Peacetime) The Internationale (Wartime) | |
Capital | Liberty, New Brittania 40.74907677607109, -73.96742247379782 |
Largest city | Pearl River Delta Gigapolis |
Official languages | English, Mandarin, Hindustani, Spanish, Arabic, French |
Recognised national languages | All |
Ethnic groups | All |
Religion | All |
Demonym(s) | Terran |
Government | Federal Semi-Rojavist Democracy |
Paysleigh Marcylynn Farris-Mendelez (6th International) | |
Yǎhuì Cáo (6th International) | |
Chancellor | |
• 2070-2082 | William Knapp-Cravens (6th Interational) |
Legislature | Forum of Humanity |
Terran Federal Senate | |
Terran Peoples' Assembly | |
History | |
• Established | 1 May 2070 |
Area | |
• Total | 186,200,000 km2 (71,900,000 sq mi) (1st) |
Population | |
• Estimate | 10,400,000,000 |
• Density | 66.38/km2 (171.9/sq mi) |
GDP (PPP) | 2100 estimate |
• Total | $529,000,000,000,000 |
Gini | 7.3 low (1st) |
HDI (2100) | 0.889 very high (1st) |
Currency | Terran Labor Credit (TRC) |
Lon
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish. (April 2012) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
|
President of the Argentine Nation | |
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Presidente de la Nación Argentina | |
Style | Excelentísimo Señor (m) Excelentísima Señora (f) |
Residence | Casa Rosada (government office) Quinta de Olivos (official residence) Chapadmalal Residence (summer house) |
Term length | Four years, renewable once |
Inaugural holder | Bernardino Rivadavia |
Formation | first: 1826 Constitution current: 1853 Constitution (amended in 1994). |
Salary | 1,281,328 Argentine pesos[1] (as of December 2022) |
Website | Office of the President |
Argentina has had many different types of heads of state, as well as many different types of government. During pre-Columbian times, most of the territories that today form Argentina were inhabited by Amerindian peoples without any centralized government, with the exception of the Inca subjects of the Northwest and Cuyo regions. During the Spanish colonization of the Americas, the King of Spain retained the ultimate authority over the territories conquered in the New World, appointing viceroys for local government. The territories that would later become Argentina were first part of the Viceroyalty of Peru and then the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata. The May Revolution started the Argentine War of Independence by replacing the viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros with the first national government. It was the Primera Junta, a junta of several members, which would grow into the Junta Grande with the incorporation of provincial deputies. The size of the juntas gave room to internal political disputes among their members, so they were replaced by the First and Second Triumvirate, of three members. The Assembly of the Year XIII created a new executive authority, with attributions similar to that of a head of state, called the Supreme Director of the United Provinces of the Río de la Plata. A second Assembly, the Congress of Tucumán, declared independence in 1816 and promulgated the Argentine Constitution of 1819. However, this constitution was repealed during armed conflicts between the central government and the Federal League Provinces. This started a period known as the Anarchy of the Year XX, when Argentina lacked any type of head of state.
There was a new attempt to organize a central government in 1826. A new congress wrote a new constitution and elected Bernardino Rivadavia as president in the process.[2] Rivadavia was the first President of Argentina. However, he resigned shortly after and the 1826 Constitution was repealed. The Argentine provinces then organized themselves as a confederation without a central head of state. In this organization, the governors of Buenos Aires province took some duties such as the payment of external debt or the administration of the foreign relations in the name of all provinces.[3] Those governors were appointed by the Buenos Aires legislature, with the only exception of Juan Lavalle. Juan Manuel de Rosas kept the governor office for seventeen consecutive years until Justo José de Urquiza defeated him at the 1852 Battle of Caseros. Urquiza then called for a new Constitutional Assembly and promulgated the Argentine Constitution of 1853, which is the current Constitution of Argentina through amendments. In 1854, Urquiza became the first President of modern Argentina, acting both as head of government and head of state.[4] However, the Buenos Aires Province had rejected the Constitution and became an independent state until the aftermath of the 1859 Battle of Cepeda, although the internecine conflict continued. Only after the subsequent Battle of Pavón in 1861, the former bonaerense leader Bartolomé Mitre became the first president of a unified Argentine Republic.[5]
The succession line of constitutional presidents run uninterrupted until 1930, when José Félix Uriburu took government through a civic-military coup d'état. For many decades, there was an alternance between legitimate presidents and others that took government through illegitimate means. Those means included coups d'état, but also proscriptions of major political parties[6] and electoral fraud.[6][7] The last coup d'état occurred in 1976 and resulted in the National Reorganization Process, which ended in 1983. The retrospective recognition as presidents or heads of state of any de facto ruler that exercised its authority outside the Constitutional mandate is a controversial and relevant issue in Argentine politics.[8][9][10] However, their government actions were recognized as valid following the de facto government doctrine that used to legitimize them.[11] This doctrine was rejected by the 1994 amendment and would not be applicable for potential future coups. The current head of state is President Javier Milei, who took office on 10 December 2023.