# | Title | Description
|
---|
200 | 2 (Q200) | natural number |
201 | 3 (Q201) | natural number |
202 | 4 (Q202) | natural number |
203 | 5 (Q203) | natural number |
204 | zero (Q204) | integer number |
205 | infinity (Q205) | mathematical concept |
206 | Stephen Harper (Q206) | 22nd prime minister of Canada from 2006 to 2015 |
207 | George W. Bush (Q207) | President of the United States from 2001 to 2009 |
208 | rakfisk (Q208) | Norwegian fish dish made from trout or char |
209 | rectangle (Q209) | quadrilateral with four right angles |
210 | right angle (Q210) | 90° angle (π/2 radians): an angle that bisects the angle formed by two halves of a straight line |
211 | Latvia (Q211) | sovereign state in northeastern Europe |
212 | Ukraine (Q212) | country in Eastern Europe |
213 | Czech Republic (Q213) | country in Central Europe |
214 | Slovakia (Q214) | country in Central Europe |
215 | Slovenia (Q215) | country in Central Europe |
216 | Vilnius (Q216) | capital and largest city of Lithuania |
217 | Moldova (Q217) | country in Eastern Europe |
218 | Romania (Q218) | country in Southeast Europe |
219 | Bulgaria (Q219) | country in Southeast Europe |
220 | Rome (Q220) | capital and largest city of Italy |
221 | North Macedonia (Q221) | country in southeastern Europe |
222 | Albania (Q222) | country in southeastern Europe |
223 | Greenland (Q223) | autonomous country within the Kingdom of Denmark on several islands including world's largest island by the same name |
224 | Croatia (Q224) | country in Central Europe |
225 | Bosnia and Herzegovina (Q225) | country in Southeast Europe |
226 | Nuuk (Q226) | capital of Greenland |
227 | Azerbaijan (Q227) | country in the Caucasus in Eastern Europe and Western Asia |
228 | Andorra (Q228) | sovereign microstate between France and Spain, in Western Europe |
229 | Cyprus (Q229) | Mediterranean island nation in Europe |
230 | Georgia (Q230) | country in the Caucasus |
231 | Walloon Region (Q231) | region of Belgium |
232 | Kazakhstan (Q232) | sovereign state in Eastern Europe and Central Asia |
233 | Malta (Q233) | sovereign state in Southern Europe situated on an archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea |
234 | Flanders (Q234) | land of the Flemish people |
235 | Monaco (Q235) | sovereign city-state on the French Riviera |
236 | Montenegro (Q236) | country in southeastern Europe |
237 | Vatican City (Q237) | Holy See's independent state, an enclave within Rome, Italy |
238 | San Marino (Q238) | sovereign state in southern Europe, enclaved within Italy |
239 | City of Brussels (Q239) | municipality and capital city of Belgium |
240 | Brussels-Capital Region (Q240) | region of Belgium |
241 | Cuba (Q241) | sovereign state situated on an island in the Caribbean Sea |
242 | Belize (Q242) | sovereign state in Central America |
243 | Eiffel Tower (Q243) | tower located on the Champ de Mars in Paris, France |
244 | Barbados (Q244) | island nation in the Caribbean |
245 | Raspberry Pi (Q245) | series of low-cost single-board computers used for educational purposes and embedded systems |
246 | Volkswagen (Q246) | German automotive brand; manufacturing subsidiary of Volkswagen Group |
247 | Volkswagen Golf (Q247) | small family car manufactured by Volkswagen |
248 | Intel (Q248) | American multinational technology corporation |
249 | wireless communication (Q249) | transfer of information or power that does not require the use of physical wires |
250 | computer keyboard (Q250) | device comprising an arrangement of buttons or keys used to input text in computers |
251 | Java (Q251) | object-oriented programming language |
252 | Indonesia (Q252) | country in Southeast Asia and Oceania |
253 | QWERTY (Q253) | keyboard layout where the first line is "QWERTYUIOP" |
254 | Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Q254) | Austrian composer of the Classical period (1756-1791) |
255 | Ludwig van Beethoven (Q255) | German composer (1770–1827) |
256 | Turkish (Q256) | Oghuz Turkic language of the Turkish people |
257 | Mandelbrot set (Q257) | fractal named after mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot |
258 | South Africa (Q258) | country in southern Africa |
259 | Q259 | no description |
260 | Jean-François Champollion (Q260) | French classical scholar (1790-1832) |
261 | Linkin Park (Q261) | American rock band |
262 | Algeria (Q262) | country in North Africa |
263 | Wikisource (Q263) | online library that collects open-content source material |
264 | Hurricane Sandy (Q264) | Category 3 Atlantic hurricane in 2012 |
265 | Uzbekistan (Q265) | sovereign state in Central Asia |
266 | Drosera (Q266) | genus of plants |
267 | Cafeteria (Q267) | genus of marine bicosoecid |
268 | Poznań (Q268) | Capital of the Greater Poland Voivodeship in west-central Poland |
269 | Tashkent (Q269) | capital of Uzbekistan |
270 | Warsaw (Q270) | capital and largest city of Poland |
271 | Prytanée National Militaire (Q271) | French military school |
272 | Paul Morand (Q272) | French writer (1888-1976) |
273 | Islay (Q273) | southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK |
274 | Ardbeg (Q274) | Scotch whisky distillery |
275 | Forth Bridge (Q275) | cantilever bridge in the east of Scotland, carries the Edinburgh to Aberdeen railway line across Firth of Forth |
276 | Eurovision Song Contest (Q276) | annual song competition held among the member countries of the European Broadcasting Union |
277 | Kilchoman distillery (Q277) | distillery that produces single malt Scotch whisky on Islay |
278 | Talisker distillery (Q278) | whisky distillery in Highland, Scotland, UK |
279 | Modena (Q279) | Italian city and municipality |
280 | Lagavulin Distillery (Q280) | Scotch whisky distillery in Lagavulin, Islay, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK |
281 | whisky (Q281) | type of distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented grain mash |
282 | wine (Q282) | alcoholic drink typically made from grapes through the fermentation process |
283 | water (Q283) | chemical compound with raw molecular formula H₂O; main constituent of the fluids of most living organisms |
284 | cognac (Q284) | alcoholic beverage; variety of brandy |
285 | Cognac (Q285) | commune in Charente, New Aquitaine, France |
286 | leather (Q286) | durable and flexible material created by the tanning of animal rawhide and skin |
287 | wood (Q287) | fibrous material from trees or other plants |
288 | Tours (Q288) | city and commune in Indre-et-Loire, Centre-Val de Loire, France |
289 | television (Q289) | telecommunication medium for transmitting and receiving moving images |
290 | biological sex (Q290) | biological system that determines an individual's sexually reproductive function |
291 | pornography (Q291) | explicit portrayal of sexual acts and intercourse in media |
292 | Russian (Q292) | East Slavic language |
293 | Eurymorion (Q293) | genus of arachnids |
294 | Icelandic (Q294) | North Germanic language mainly spoken in Iceland |
295 | Q295 | no description |
296 | Claude Monet (Q296) | French painter (1840–1926) |
297 | Diego Velázquez (Q297) | Spanish painter (1599-1660) |
298 | Chile (Q298) | country in South America |
299 | Vidov (Q299) | village and municipality in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic |
300 | Sagas of Icelanders (Q300) | group of narratives |
301 | El Greco (Q301) | Greek artist, painter, sculptor and architect, (1541–1614) |
302 | Jesus (Q302) | central figure of Christianity (6 or 4 BC – AD 30 or 33) |
303 | Elvis Presley (Q303) | American singer and actor (1935–1977) |
304 | Q304 | no description |
305 | corporal punishment (Q305) | punishment which is intended to cause physical pain to a person |
306 | Sebastián Piñera (Q306) | Chilean entrepreneur and politician |
307 | Galileo Galilei (Q307) | Italian polymath |
308 | Mercury (Q308) | smallest and closest planet to the sun in the Solar System |
309 | history (Q309) | past events and their tracks or records |
310 | Taumatawhakatangihangakōauauotamateapōkaiwhenuakitānatahu (Q310) | hill in New Zealand |
311 | Père Lachaise Cemetery (Q311) | cemetery in Paris, France |
312 | Apple (Q312) | American multinational technology company based in Cupertino, California |
313 | Venus (Q313) | planet second-closest to the Sun in the Solar System |
314 | funeral litre (Q314) | painted funeral band on the internal or external walls of a church |
315 | language (Q315) | structured system of communication |
316 | love (Q316) | strong, positive emotion based on affection |
317 | dictatorship (Q317) | autocratic form of government which is ruled by a sole leader |
318 | galaxy (Q318) | large gravitationally bound system of stars and interstellar matter |
319 | Jupiter (Q319) | fifth planet from the Sun and largest planet in the Solar System |
320 | Michelle Bachelet (Q320) | president of Chile |
321 | Milky Way (Q321) | spiral galaxy in the Local Group containing the Solar System; its appearance across the night sky in areas with little to no light pollution |
322 | Llanfairpwllgwyngyll (Q322) | village in Anglesey, Wales, United Kingdom |
323 | Big Bang (Q323) | hypothetical begin of the Universe through expansion out of an infinitely small and infinitely dense state |
324 | Uranus (Q324) | seventh planet in the Solar System from the Sun |
325 | digital dark age (Q325) | conceptual situation in which large swathes of historic digitised materials are inaccessible |
326 | Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle (Q326) | Chilean politician and president |
327 | Brittany (Q327) | cultural area located in northwestern France |
328 | English Wikipedia (Q328) | English-language edition of Wikipedia |
329 | Nicolas Sarkozy (Q329) | 23th President of the French Republic from 2007 to 2012 |
330 | Battle of Marignano (Q330) | 1515 battle between Switzerland and France |
331 | Ricardo Lagos (Q331) | Chilean politician |
332 | Neptune (Q332) | eighth and farthest planet from the Sun in the Solar System |
333 | astronomy (Q333) | scientific study of celestial objects and phenomena |
334 | Singapore (Q334) | sovereign island country and city-state in maritime Southeast Asia |
335 | Patricio Aylwin (Q335) | Chilean politician and former president (1918-2016) |
336 | science (Q336) | systematic endeavor that builds and organizes knowledge, and the set of knowledge produced by this system |
337 | Lake Chaubunagungamaug (Q337) | lake in the town of Webster, Massachusetts, United States |
338 | cosmology (Q338) | scientific study of the origin, evolution, and eventual fate of the universe |
339 | Pluto (Q339) | dwarf planet in the Solar System |
340 | Montreal (Q340) | largest city in Quebec, Canada |
341 | free software (Q341) | software distributed under terms that allow users to freely run, study, change and distribute it and modified versions |
342 | Quimper (Q342) | commune in Finistère, France |
343 | La Flèche (Q343) | commune in Sarthe, France |
344 | future (Q344) | events, developments or states in time which have yet to occur |
345 | Virgin Mary (Q345) | mother of Jesus |
346 | Louis IX of France (Q346) | King of France from 1226 to 1270 |
347 | Liechtenstein (Q347) | country in Central Europe |
348 | time capsule (Q348) | cache of goods or data secured for some time to be opened at a date in the future |
349 | sport (Q349) | forms of recreational activity, usually physical |
350 | Cambridge (Q350) | city in Cambridgeshire, England |
351 | Yellowstone National Park (Q351) | first national park in the world, located in Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho in the United States |
352 | Adolf Hitler (Q352) | dictator of Germany from 1933 to 1945 |
353 | Blanche of Castile (Q353) | Queen consort of France (1188–1252) |
354 | Piet Kraak (Q354) | Dutch footballer and football coach (1921-1984) |
355 | Facebook (Q355) | American online social media and social networking service |
356 | Google+ (Q356) | social networking service |
357 | Guantanamo Bay detention camp (Q357) | United States military prison at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba |
358 | heritage site (Q358) | general term for a site of cultural heritage for a specific country (please avoid as a P31 value except for large sites containing multiple entities) |
359 | WikiLeaks (Q359) | NGO owned by Icelandic company Sunshine Press Productions ehf that has published news leaks provided by anonymous sources |
360 | Julian Assange (Q360) | Australian editor, publisher, and activist (born 1971) |
361 | World War I (Q361) | global war originating in Europe, 1914–1918 |
362 | World War II (Q362) | 1939–1945 global conflict |
363 | World War 3 (Q363) | hypothetical future global conflict |
364 | GitHub (Q364) | hosting service for software projects using Git |
365 | Cologne (Q365) | most populous city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany |
366 | corruption (Q366) | form of dishonesty or criminal offense undertaken by a person or organization entrusted with a position of authority, to acquire illicit benefit or abuse power for one's private gain |
367 | Wikibooks (Q367) | collaborative development of free textbooks |
368 | Augusto Pinochet (Q368) | dictator of Chile from 1973 to 1990 |
369 | Wikiquote (Q369) | open collection of quotes that anyone can edit |
370 | Wikiversity (Q370) | Wikiproject focused on learning, teaching, research, service and ideas materials and activities |
371 | !!! (Q371) | American dance-punk band from California |
372 | We Live in Public (Q372) | 2009 documentary film |
373 | Wikivoyage (Q373) | free online travel guide that anyone can edit |
374 | vodka (Q374) | distilled alcoholic beverage |
375 | waffle (Q375) | batter- or dough-based food cooked between two patterned, shaped plates |
376 | clock (Q376) | instrument that measures the passage of time |
377 | Yanka Kupala (Q377) | Belarusian writer (1882–1942) |
378 | May (Q378) | fifth month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars |
379 | František Plánička (Q379) | Czech association football player (1904-1996) |
380 | Meta Platforms (Q380) | American multinational technology corporation |
381 | Ubuntu (Q381) | Linux distribution developed by Canonical |
382 | January (Q382) | first month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars |
383 | January (Q383) | first month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars |
384 | Skopje (Q384) | capital city of North Macedonia |
385 | Gdynia (Q385) | city in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland |
386 | Bixi (Q386) | bicycle-sharing system in Montreal, Québec, Canada |
387 | Old Bazaar (Q387) | bazaar in Skopje, North Macedonia |
388 | Linux (Q388) | family of Unix-like operating systems |
389 | Andrew and variants (Q389) | male name, and its local variations |
390 | Valdemar (Q390) | Wikimedia disambiguation page |
391 | Saint Catherine Street (Q391) | primary commercial artery of downtown Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
392 | Bob Dylan (Q392) | American singer-songwriter (born 1941) |
393 | Szczecin (Q393) | capital city of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland |
394 | metrology (Q394) | science of measurement and its application |
395 | mathematics (Q395) | field of study |
396 | U2 (Q396) | Irish rock band |
397 | Latin (Q397) | Indo-European language of the Italic branch |
398 | Bahrain (Q398) | country in the Persian Gulf |
399 | Armenia (Q399) | sovereign state in the South Caucasus region of Eurasia |