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University of Quindio was created on 1960-10-14.
The motto of University of Quindio is 'Desafíos, sueños y compromisos'.
I think you refer to Armenia, is in the Quindio Department. The center of the Coffee growers, with a nice tropical weather all the year.
Please type your question in English so I can understand it,and thank you.
The national tree of Cuba is the royal palm tree, also called the roystonea regia. This tree is native to the island of Cuba.
necesito saber si me cedula ya esta en que pagina puedo consultar
El café más suave dek mundo es el colombiano!!! es el mejor se da en los departamenros de Antioquia, Quindio, Masanizales. EL CAFE COLOMBIANO ES EL MEJOR DEL MUNDO:
The best answer currently available is: somewhere between zero and a handful, most likely closer to zero. The situation concerning same-sex marriage is chaotic in Colombia and the rule of law has failed. Although the highest court in the land has ordered the entire country to permit same-sex couples to marry beginning June 20, 2013, almost all local registrars refuse to marry any same-sex couples. The legislature has failed to conform the marriage laws to the ruling. Local registrars who have registered same-sex marriages have been threatened with sanctions by their superiors.
Colombia's coffee growing areas are most often associated with the Andes mountain range due to their high altitude and fertile volcanic soils, which provide ideal conditions for coffee cultivation. The regions of Eje Cafetero (Coffee Axis) in central Colombia, which includes departments like Quindio, Caldas, and Risaralda, are particularly well-known for producing high-quality Arabica coffee beans.
Qinghai Lake ToadQinling panda - A subspecies of giant pandaQuadrate PebblesnailQuadrisectus - A wasp (Pseudodynerus quadrisectus)Quagga - An extinct, zebra-like animal of South AfricaQuahog - A bivalve (clam)Quail - type of birdQuarry Worm SalamanderQuarter horse - breed of horseQuebrada Valverde SalamanderQuechuan HocicudoQueen Alexandra's Bird-wing ButterflyQueen angelfishQueen MalachiteQueensland Rat kangarooQueen snake - A nonvenomous snake (Regina septemvittata)Queen Trigger fishQuelea - A genus of African birdQueretaran Desert LizardQuetzal - S. American bird, Genus: Pharomachus, national emblem of GuatemalaQuetzalcoatlus - extinct flying reptile, a pterodactyloid pterosaurQuick Step Robber FrogQuietschbükers - A fish (Coregonus lucinensis)Quindio Glass - A FrogQuino Checker spot - A ButterflyQuokka - A small marsupial in the kangaroo familyQuoll - A marsupial of Australia and Papua New Guinea
Qinghai Lake ToadQinling panda - A subspecies of giant pandaQuadrate PebblesnailQuadrisectus - A wasp (Pseudodynerus quadrisectus)Quagga - An extinct, zebra-like animal of South AfricaQuahog - A bivalve (clam)Quail - type of birdQuarry Worm SalamanderQuarter horse - breed of horseQuebrada Valverde SalamanderQuechuan HocicudoQueen Alexandra's Bird-wing ButterflyQueen angelfishQueen MalachiteQueensland Rat kangarooQueen snake - A nonvenomous snake (Regina septemvittata)Queen Trigger fishQuelea - A genus of African birdQueretaran Desert LizardQuetzal - S. American bird, Genus: Pharomachus, national emblem of GuatemalaQuetzalcoatlus - extinct flying reptile, a pterodactyloid pterosaurQuick Step Robber FrogQuietschbükers - A fish (Coregonus lucinensis)Quindio Glass - A FrogQuino Checker spot - A ButterflyQuokka - A small marsupial in the kangaroo familyQuoll - A marsupial of Australia and Papua New GuineaRead more: What_are_some_animals_that_begin_with_the_letter_Q
One day while the narrator was having breakfast in the morning at the Havana Riviera Hotel, a gigantic wave crushed down "like an explosion of dynamite" on the shore and picked up several cars. Under one of smashed cars was found a smashed a woman wearing "a gold ring shaped like a serpent, with emerald eyes". And her eyes and ring reminded the narrator "an unforgettable woman" who used to wear "a similar ring on her right forefinger" whom he met thirty-four years earlier in Vienna which was an old imperial city then. When she was asked "how she had come to be in a world so distant and different from the windy cliffs of Quindio, she answered "I sell my dreams." Selling dream was her only trade. She was the third of eleven children born to a prosperous shopkeeper in old Caldas. In her childhood her dreams began to show oracular qualities. In her youth she turned her dreams into a source of earnings. One night she told the narrator to leave Vienna. Considering her conviction real, the narrator boarded the last train to Rome that same night and "considered himself a survivor of some catastrophe". Later the narrator happened to meet Pablo Neruda and they found that woman; by then the woman earned affluence by selling dreams. Anyway they spent time together for some days. One day Neruda "dreamed about that woman who dream(ed)"s. Later after Neruda "took his leave", the narrator met the woman and she said "I dreamed he(Neruda) was dreaming about me." After that day, the narrator never met her again. After the Havana Riviera disaster, the narrator met the Portuguese ambassador with whom that woman wearing a snake ring come and he asked him "what did she do?" He (the ambassador) answered with a certain disenchantment "Nothing," "she dreamed."