Agade


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Related to Agade: Akkad

A·ga·de

 (ə-gä′də)
See Akkad.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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Defenders: Dan Otewa, Nicholas Meja, Felly Mulumba, Brian Otieno, Hassan Iddi, Moses Mudavadi, Dan Guya and Fred Nkata.Midfielders: Collins Agade, Abdallah Hassan, Danson Chetambe, Benjamin Mosha, Wilberforce Lugogo, William Wadri, Cliff Kasuti, Hammis Mwinyi, Mohammed Siraj, David Kingatua, Alex Luganji and Darius Msagha.
Kenga justified his start as he fired Bandari to take the lead at the half an hour mark after head in Collins Agade's cross.
It is unclear to this reviewer whether the Curse of Agade, arguably the model for all Old Babylonian City Laments, has been excluded from the discussion for chronological reasons, as it is at least an Ur III composition.
Irons (eds.), Towards Becoming a Good Adult Educator Sweden: AGADE, 24-37.
The convoy was en route to Agade, but the final destination, for now, is expected to be Niger's capital, Niamey.
For instance, Egyptian pharaohs were considered very important gods in their culture; in 44 B.C., Julius Caesar erected a statue of himself with the inscription, "The unvanquished god"; and in the mid 2200s B.C., King Narim-Sin of the Akkadian Empire was known as "the god of Agade."
Agade (1998) says that few guidelines exist for integrating collaborative skills in LIS education.
For an excellent explanation of this phenomenon, see: Kennedy Agade Mkutu, Guns and Governance in the Rift Valley: Pastoralist Conflict and Small Arms (Oxford: James Currey, 2008).
From here he moves into biblical scholarship by digressing into the fascinating birth of Egyptology and telling the story of the discovery and translation of the Rosetta stone, the archeology revealing the authenticity of the Exodus, the 'Apiru, an enslaved people in Egypt and an analogy between the birth of Moses and the legend, written in cuneiform, of the birth of Sargon I of Agade.