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Incomplete lists from November 2018

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Stéphane Dion
Canadian politician
Filiz Akın
Turkish actor (1943–2025)
Djinet
Djinet (Arabic: جنّات Jannāt), the classical Cissi, is a port town and commune in the Bordj Menaïel District of Boumerdès Province, Algeria, east of the mouth of the Isser River and around Cape Djinet. As of 2008, the population of the municipality is 21,966.
Léopold Robert
Swiss painter (1794-1835)
Bill Graham
Canadian politician (1939–2022)
list of largest Internet companies
Wikimedia list article
Tigisi in Numidia
Diocese
Onur Ünlü
Turkish actor and director (born 1973)
visa policy of Cape Verde
policy on permit required to enter Cape Verde
list of primates by population
Wikimedia list article
national health insurance
system of health insurance that insures a national population against the costs of health care
visa policy of Guinea
policy which denotes whether a citizen of a country requires a visa to enter Guinea
Otago Harbour
harbour in New Zealand
Tigisi in Mauretania
ancient town and modern titular see
Rusubbicari
Rusubbicari was a Phoenician and Carthaginian colony and Roman town. It has been tentatively identified with ruins at Zemmouri El Bahri, Algeria. The Roman town was in the province of Mauretania Caesariensis.
visa policy of Burkina Faso
policy which denotes whether a citizen of a country requires a visa to enter Burkina Faso
visa policy of Nigeria
visa policy
Tarkan discography
discography
Shanda Games
company in Shanghai, China
visa policy of Senegal
Policy on permit required to enter Senegal
visa policy of Togo
policy on permit required to enter Togo
Gaguari
thumb|right|Africa (Roman province)|Africa Proconsularis (AD125) __NOTOC__ Gaguari () is a former diocese of North Africa and since 1933 a titular bishopric. The location of the former diocese is for the moment unknown. Under Roman hegemony, the bishop belonged to the province of Byzacène. This province was located in North Africa. The exact location of Gaguari can not be determined for the current state of research. However, everything leads us to believe that the bishopric site localizes to the current Sahel of Tunisia.