Fedora Raugei has written:
'Bologna, 1980' -- subject(s): Terrorism, Railroad stations, Bombing investigations
Elena Raugei has written: 'Carmen Consoli' -- subject(s): Singers, Biography
Anna Maria Raugei has written: 'Rifrazioni e metamorfosi' 'Bestiario valdese' -- subject(s): Animals, Bestiaries, Folklore, Texts, Vaudois dialect
Fedora Filippi has written: 'Sepulcra Pollentiae' -- subject(s): Excavations (Archaeology), Tombs, Antiquities
Fedora Small Frank has written: 'Beginnings on Market Street' -- subject(s): History, Jews
Mark A Fedora has written: 'Simulation of storm runoff in the Oregon Coast Range' -- subject(s): Runoff, Mathematical models, Rainstorms
Fedora Giordano has written: 'Etnopoetica' -- subject(s): Avant-garde (Aesthetics), History, Indian influences, Indian philosophy, Modern Arts
Umberto Giordano has written: 'Fedora' -- subject(s): Librettos, Dramatic music
Arkadii Petrov has written: 'Lichnost' i sud'ba Fedora Tyutcheva'
The singular possessive of fedora is fedora's. For example, "The fedora's brim was stained with coffee."
simply a different distro of Linux built around a certain kernal build version. you can check http://distrowatch.com/ for more info on fedora core, or many other distros. fedora is named fedora i believe because the author wrote an article or a book and in this text he asked the question (loosely pulled from my memory bank) 'has anyone found my red fedora hat? if so let me know'. so from then on, from what i was told that distrobution what called fedora from then on. i may be wrong, feel free to correct me on this. :)
If by 'fedora' you mean the hat, you use it as you would use 'hat' in a sentence. e.g. - I am wearing a fedora - I want to buy a fedora - Your fedora is so cute! Hope it helped :)
No, fedora is a noun. It is a type of hat.