Search references for GETTONE. Phrases containing GETTONE
See searches and references containing GETTONE!GETTONE
Italian telephone token
Gettone means "token" in Italian. More specifically, the word gettone can be used to refer to the gettone telefonico (telephone token), which was used
Gettone
Token coins for telephone calls
as with Italian gettone, they were used informally as cash equivalents. Most telephone tokens are round and many have grooves. Gettone telefonico Jeton
Telephone_token
Coin-like counting token
century, jetons continue to be used in some countries as telephone tokens or gettone in coin-operated public telephones or in vending machines. They are usually
Jeton
Group of related team sports
football – also known as foosball, table soccer, babyfoot, bar football or gettone Blood Bowl Fantasy football (American) Madden NFL Paper football AFL video
Football
Foosball – also known as table football/soccer, babyfoot, bar football or gettone. Ice football Subbuteo Based on rugby: Penny rugby Based on American football:
List_of_types_of_football
Italian footballer (born 1959)
Retrieved 26 October 2017. FABRIZIO BOCCA (15 June 1991). "VIERCHOWOD A GETTONE 'HO UN FUTURO A ZONA'". La Repubblica (in Italian). Retrieved 26 October
Pietro_Vierchowod
Trade token
Numismatics portal American Vecturist Association Civil War token Coins of Lundy Gettone Glossary of numismatics Feuchtwanger Cent Hard times token Jeton Medal
Token_coin
Italian teacher, writer, activist
Italy: Società Editrice Avanti!. OCLC 79111567. Sinclair, Upton (1922). Il gettone della prostituta [The Brass Check] (in Italian). Translated by Zampetti
Anita_Dobelli_Zampetti
1959 film
Carlo Delle Piane as Pecorino Alberto Talegalli as Il rurale Toni Ucci as Gettone Giuseppe Robby as Vittorio Anna Campori as Padrona del bar Francesco Mulè
The_Friend_of_the_Jaguar
that the editor Dynes had published articles under the pseudonym Evelyn Gettone. Dynes admitted that he had done so and apologized. Dynes subsequently
Encyclopedia_of_Homosexuality
Italian lawyer, antiquarian and archaeologist
(1791) Il Porto Di Miseno (1808) L'Ermatena ossia la impronta da darsi al gettone della regal societa (1816) La legge Petronia illustrata col mezzo di un'
Michele_Arditi
Former Italian coin
2020. "Gettone Loubet". Archived from the original on 27 March 2020. Retrieved 28 March 2020. Serafino Ricci (1904). "La medaglietta-gettone e portafortuna
1_Centesimo_(Italian_coin)
Italian actor
(uncredited) Non cantare... baciami! (1957) The Friend of the Jaguar (1959) - Gettone La cento chilometri (1959) - The Race Walker Searching for His Watch Il
Toni_Ucci
Italian footballer (born 2000)
Italian). Sky Sport. 19 July 2020. Retrieved 26 October 2020. "Verona, primo gettone in Serie A anche per Lovato". mondoprimavera.com (in Italian). 19 July
Matteo_Lovato
Cameroonian footballer
(in Italian). Retrieved 23 April 2010. "Vasari, firmato il contratto a gettone". la Repubblica (in Italian). 18 July 2003. Retrieved 23 April 2010. "Ongfiang
Franck_Ongfiang
GETTONE
GETTONE
GETTONE
GETTONE
Girl/Female
American, British, Christian, English
Bright Meadow
Girl/Female
American, Australian, British, Dutch, English, Finnish
Pearl; Sea of Bitterness; Wished to Child; Swell; Beloved
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from the city of Oxford, named in Old English with ox(e)na (genitive plural of oxa ‘ox’) + ford ‘ford’.
Surname or Lastname
North German
North German : variant of Fick.English : variant of Fitch.
Boy/Male
Australian, Christian, Teutonic
Surname and Place Name; The House of Windsor has been the Ruling Family of the Uk Since 1917; From Windsor; Landing Place with a Windlass
Girl/Female
Australian, Greek
From the Sea
Girl/Female
Indian, Tamil
Attractive
Girl/Female
Hindu
Daughter, Queen, Owner, A garland
Boy/Male
Tamil
Precious
Surname or Lastname
English
English : one of the most common and widespread of English surnames, either a nickname for someone who was fond of dressing in this color (Old English grēne) or who had played the part of the ‘Green Man’ in the May Day celebrations, or a topographic name for someone who lived near a village green, Middle English grene (a transferred use of the color term). In North America this name has no doubt assimilated cognates from other European languages, notably German Grün (see Gruen).Jewish (American) : Americanized form of German Grün or Yiddish Grin, Ashkenazic ornamental names meaning ‘green’ or a short form of any of the numerous compounds with this element.Irish : translation of various Gaelic surnames derived from glas ‘gray’, ‘green’, ‘blue’. See also Fahey.North German : short form of a habitational name from a place name with Gren- as the first element (for example Greune, Greubole).
GETTONE
GETTONE
GETTONE
GETTONE
GETTONE