Rup Kumar Barman has written:
'Fisheries and fishermen'
Rup Lal has written: 'Pesticides and the nitrogen cycle'
Narinjan Tasnim has written: 'Tareran te rup'
Ahmad al-'Umari has written: 'The Lady of the Lotus, Rup Mati, Queen of Mandu'
Ni
The lyrics tell the apocryphal story of a poor young boy who, unable to afford a gift for the infant Jesus, plays his drum for the newborn with the Virgin Mary's approval. Miraculously, the baby, although a newborn, seems to understand and smiles at the boy in gratitude. The story is somewhat similar to an old twelfth-century legend retold by Anatole France as Le jongleur de Notre-Dame (The Juggler of Notre Dame), which was adapted into an opera in 1902 by Jules Massenet. In the French legend, however, a juggler juggles before the statue of the Virgin Mary.
rup
There are 2 syllables. Rup-ture.
Plenty of Blackfish
There are 4 syllables. In-ter-rup-ted.
first take onion and rup it on your face hahaha
Methodologies Evaluated Rational Unified ProcessWe had two presentations from RUP representatives. The first was a one-hour session, the second a more detailed two-hour presentation. Both times, I was more confused after the presentation than before. I also spoke to a number of friends that had worked with RUP and had positive things to say about the process. The scope of RUP is extremely broad. It covers pretty much everything in the entire SDLC, which is both its strength and its weakness. I was recently at a conference and attended a session by Phillipe Krutchen, one of the leading authorities on RUP. His view was that the main problem that arose when people tried using RUP was that they tried to use all of it. This was the same advice that I'd heard from friends who had used RUP. It's large and sophisticated, and the key is to use only those aspects of the process that you need for your project. This makes a lot of sense given that projects often vary and the same approach won't work in every case. However, given the context of our team, RUP presented a number of issues: * RUP was large, complex and sophisticated, yet our team was not! We had some team members who were still learning about the SDLC, and to try to introduce something as complex as RUP would require significant additional training. * Even though RUP was comprehensive, we would have to review it in depth before we could decide which elements we would apply to our projects. We'd then need to trial and refine the process over time. * The cost associated with the tools that were required to use RUP (eg. rational rose, requisite pro…etc) was high. Overall, to implement RUP, or a scaled down version of RUP, appeared to be a potentially complex, difficult, time-consuming and expensive process that had a high risk of failure. Process Mentor We also received a presentation from a Process Mentor representative. The process itself was more compact than RUP, and therefore easier to get one's head around. In essence it was a Website with a series of steps, forms and templates that could be used to run a project. We felt more comfortable with Process Mentor than RUP because it was less overwhelming, but it still wasn't quite right. There wasn't anything that stood out as a major issue, as had happened with RUP, but regardless, Process Mentor did not feel like the right approach.
Depends on where you are in America, I've heard some people say syrup (see-rup). Where I live, it's pronounced syrup (seh-rup).