Webpages concerning "World [13]"
Two teams in the Volvo Ocean Race have made crew changes ahead of the start of the fourth leg from New Zealand at the end of January.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/sailing/01/10/teams.spt/index.html
The teams in the Volvo Ocean Race have spent a quiet first night sailing after a three-week stay in Auckland.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/sailing/01/28/emails.ppl/index.html
Interpol's secretary general said Wednesday he thanked Cuba for condemning the Sept. 11 terror attacks and would help connect the country to a global police network battling international terrorism and other crime.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/americas/01/16/inv.cuba.interpol/index.html
Greek and Turkish Cypriot leaders are discussing the fate of more than 2,000 people who have disappeared since fighting began on the island in 1964.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/11/cyprus.missing/index.html
A major breakthrough has been made in the diplomatic efforts to reunify Cyprus.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/17/cyprus/index.html
Museum officials in Florence have shelved controversial plans to restore Leonardo da Vinci's unfinished masterpiece The Adoration of the Magi after recent tests showed the painting was in good health.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/08/italy.restoration/index.html
Former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic clashed with U.N. war crimes judges on Wednesday, accusing them of bias, and again accusing NATO of atrocities in Kosovo.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/09/milosevic.court/index.html
Princess Diana's former butler Paul Burrell has been ordered to stand trial on charges of stealing hundreds of items belonging to the late princess and other royals.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/10/uk.diana.butler/index.html
Police say they have discovered a cache of dissident Irish Republican Army weaponry and arrested four people at a home in Catholic west Belfast.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/25/ireland.arrests/index.html
The official currency of The Netherlands -- the guilder -- has formally ceased to exist as spendable cash after 776 years.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/28/euro.netherlands/index.html
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/28/brussels.leaders0745/index.html
Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi eclipsed Zimbabwe as the main talking point at the opening of the EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/28/brussels.leaders/index.html
Heads of state from seven East African countries are meeting to discuss regional conflicts and frame a joint initiative against terrorism.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/africa/01/10/ret.sudan.terror/index.html
George Carey with his East Enders background and pop-music-in-the-aisles style was a surprise choice as the 103rd archbishop of Canterbury.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/08/uk.carey.profile/index.html
An Ecuadorean airplane carrying 92 people crashed Monday as it approached the northern city of Tulcan on the Colombian border, said a spokeswoman for TAME, Ecuador's national airline.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/americas/01/28/ecuador.crash/index.html
The bodies of 15 Egyptian fishermen have been recovered from about 40 feared drowned after their boat capsized in rough weather in the Gulf of Suez.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/12/egypt.fishermen/index.html
Investigators tracing the movements of suspected shoe bomber Richard Reid cannot be certain that e-mailed instructions he received came from Pakistan, CNN has learned.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/28/inv.shoe.bomber.probe/index.html
An English airport is set to re-open on Sunday two days after five Americans died when their private jet crashed on take-off.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/05/england.inv.plane/index.html
The boss of Britain's press watchdog, Conservative ex-minister Lord Wakeham, is stepping aside to answer questions about his links with collapsed energy giant Enron.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/31/uk.enron/index.html
The latest violence in the Middle East occurred when a bomb blast in west Jerusalem killed one Israeli, the suspected bomber and injured more than 110 people.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/01/28/erakat.cnna/index.html
The Estonian Prime Minister Mart Laar has announced his resignation following a row over a coalition party's alliances with the opposition.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/08/estonia.resign/index.html
A French court has approved the extradition to Spain of a suspected leader of the armed Basque separatist group ETA, accused of plotting to kill King Juan Carlos, judicial sources have said.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/11/eta.arregui/index.html
The European Union has told Zimbabwe to end political violence and stage a free and fair presidential election in March.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/africa/01/11/zimbabwe.eu/index.html
EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels have given Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe one last chance before imposing sanctions.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/28/brussels.zimbabwe/index.html
European Union foreign ministers have urged Israel to regard Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat as a partner to work towards peace in the Mideast.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/28/brussels.mideast/index.html
The EU has lifted the remaining restrictions on British pig and meat exports imposed during the foot-and-mouth crisis, officials have said.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/17/eu.disease/index.html
European policy chiefs have proclaimed the historic changeover to euro notes and coins in a dozen eurozone countries a success.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/03/euro.review/index.html
Europe's new single currency has survived its first working day despite two strikes, three robberies and some confusion.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/02/euro.lead/index.html
Europe's new single currency is facing its first real test as stores reopen after the New Year holiday and people return to work with the new bills in their pockets.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/02/euro.lead.0545/index.html
Nearly 300 million Europeans have started 2002 with a new currency.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/01/euro.wrap/index.html
Politicians joined the public across Europe in greeting the launch of the continent's new currency.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/01/euro.reax/index.html
Europeans have been spending their way into a new era as the euro becomes an everyday reality of coins and banknotes.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/01/euro.wrap.1300/index.html
European air travellers face more than a week of possible disruption as a result of two new air traffic control systems being introduced.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/26/air.delays/index.html
Freezing temperatures failed to dampen party spirits across Europe as the new year revellers welcomed in 2002.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/01/new.year.day/index.html
The euro has become the main currency for Europeans living in the eurozone after three-working days using the new currency, the EC has said.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/05/euro.transactions/index.html
A strike by French banking unions failed to disrupt transactions on the first working day after the switch from the franc to the euro.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/02/euro.france.strike/index.html
Fears are growing that the introduction of the euro will mean higher prices as retailers round up the converted cost of goods and take advantage of initial confusion over the new currency.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/02/euro.prices/index.html
Excitement is mounting on the Volvo Ocean Race boats as they head for a cold front in the Southern Ocean.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/sailing/01/31/volvo.spt/index.html
The former Christian militia leader Elie Hobeika, who had been tied to 1982 Palestinian refugee camp massacres, died in an explosion Thursday near his home in the suburbs of Beirut, government sources said.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/meast/01/24/lebanon.explosion/index.html
Two former Bosnian Serb leaders have appeared accused of genocide on the first day of their war crimes trial at The Hague.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/23/bosnia.hague/index.html
Britain's former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher suffered a minor stroke over the holidays, but has made a full recovery, a spokesman said Saturday.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/26/uk.thatcher/index.html
Dominic Nutt, of Christian Aid, writes for CNN about an imaginative decommissioning programme in Mozambique.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/africa/01/08/mozambique.arms/index.html
A journalist working for a leading African newspaper has fled Zimbabwe and is in fear for his life after he was branded a terrorist on television by a minister in President Robert Mugabe's government.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/africa/01/13/zimbabwe.journalist/index.html
A Russian army and police unit has been attacked by Chechen separatists, prompting fierce fighting in the
Chechen town of Argun.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/07/chechnya.battle/index.html
Work has started on dismantling Paris's giant ferris wheel after its owner agreed to drop his fight for another year on the Place de la Concorde square.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/21/france.wheel/index.html
Europe's women voted with their feet by forcing the continent's first brothel for women to close, police said.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/18/swiss.brothel/index.html
A German man stuck together two photographs of a 500 euro note back-to-back and spent it in a casino, in the second forgery to come to light since the launch of the currency.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/03/euro.forgeries/index.html
The first contingent of French troops have joined the international peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/02/ret.france.peacekeepers/index.html
Twenty Afghan war detainees spent a calm and peaceful first night in a temporary detention center -- 6-by-8 chain-link cells on the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the head of security for the detention center said Saturday.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/americas/01/12/cuba.detainees/index.html
Five people have been killed after a private executive jet crashed during take-off at an English airport.
http://cnn.com/2002/WORLD/europe/01/04/england.plane/index.html
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Wikipedia-Article "World [13]"
- This article is about the World, meaning the Earth. For uses of the specific phrase "The World", see The World (disambiguation)
In English, world is rooted in a compound of the obsolete words were, man, and eld, age; thus, its oldest meaning is "age or life of man". Its primary modern meaning is the planet Earth, especially when capitalized: the World. In this sense, a world map is a map of the surface of the Earth. World can also refer to human population in general or to a distinct group of people.
Physical locations
In other contexts, "world" is sometimes used poetically to mean any planet or moon; for example, Mars and Titan are two 'worlds' within the solar system.
"World" is sometimes used to refer to the entire Universe. This is less common now that knowledge of space is commonplace; however, it is still used vaguely in this sense (as in "the whole wide world"). A similar sense is also used in philosophy, particularly in discussion of "possible worlds"; a possible world is any possible complete history of the whole universe.
Other meanings
World can be used in less literal words; for example, two people with very little in common are "living in two different worlds". The "end of the world" usually means "the end of everything I am familiar with."
- In Christianity the world connotes the fallen and corrupt world order of human society outside the community of believers. The world is frequently cited alongside the flesh and the Devil as a source of temptation that Christians should flee. Monks speak of striving to be "in this world, but not of this world", and the term "worldhood" has been distinguished from "monkhood", the former being the status of merchants, farmers, and others who deal with "worldly" things.
- The term can also be used in a culturally specific context: commentators increasingly refer, for example, to the "Muslim world" as if it were a distinct entity.
- In modern Europe, refering to the world usually means Europe to its furthest extent, plus ocassionaly USA and Japan. (example: Everyone in the world learns English.)
- World can refer to WORLD Magazine, the fourth largest newsweekly in the United States.
First World, Second World, Third World
The terms First World, Second World, and Third World were used to divide the nations of Earth into three broad categories. The three terms did not arise simultaneously. After World War II it became common to speak of the capitalist and Communist countries as two major blocs, scarcely using such terms as the "free world" as compared to the "communist bloc". The two "worlds" were not numbered. It was eventually pointed out that there were a great many countries that fit into neither category, and in the 1950s this latter group came to be called the Third World. It then began to seem that there ought to be a "First World" and a "Second World". These latter terms were always much less common.
In the context of the Cold War:
- Second World referred to nations within the Soviet Union's sphere of influence, principally the Warsaw Pact countries. Besides the Soviet Union proper, most of Eastern Europe was run by satellite governments working closely with Moscow. This term may or may not also refer to Communist countries whose leadership were at odds with Moscow, e.g. China and Yugoslavia. Recently, this term has been used to describe former Third World countries that have experienced too much development to be classified any longer as being a part of the Third World.
There were a number of countries which did not fit comfortably into this neat definition of partition, including Switzerland, Sweden, and the Republic of Ireland, which chose to be neutral. Finland was under the Soviet Union's sphere of influence but was not communist, nor was it a member of the Warsaw Pact. Austria was under the United States' sphere of influence, but in 1955, when the country again became a fully independent republic, it did so under the condition that it remained neutral.
With the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, the term "Second World" largely fell out of use, though the term "Third World" remains popular, mostly as another term for developing countries. The remaining Communist countries either became more isolated from the world economy, as in North Korea and Cuba, or began integrating capitalist concepts such as private enterprise into their societies and forging new trading ties with external capitalist economies, as in Vietnam and China.
In more recent use, the term First World refers to developed nations, while Third World, in contrast, refers to developing/undeveloped nations.
There is also the less commonly used term Fourth World, often used to refer to nations that lack any national representation at the UN, but that may enjoy representation at UNPO — indigenous peoples living within or across state boundaries.
"The World" can also be used to refer to the group of people on the planet earth.
See also