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Canadian frozen food company
Luvo Inc. [loo- vō] is a privately held frozen food company that develops, manufactures, markets and sells retail food products. Its products are sold
Luvo_Inc.
Canadian retail executive
retail executive. She was the CEO of the Vancouver-based food company Luvo Inc. since January 2014. From 2008 through December 2013, she was the CEO of
Christine_M._Day
American baseball player (born 1974)
after his website. Jeter also serves as a brand development officer for Luvo Inc. and has investment interests in multi-channel video network company, Whistle
Derek_Jeter
Travel class offered on some airlines
International also get one free premium snack and a free cold meal from Luvo Inc., as well as a pre-departure bottle of water and a sleep kit) Edelweiss
Premium_economy_class
American restaurant chain
Safeway, Amazon, and other outlets. Later, this division was renamed "Luvo Inc." after being bought by its current CEO, former Lululemon CEO Christine
LYFE_Kitchen
2021-07-13. Luvo Prague: The Czech AR-15 Maker - The Firearm Blog "Luvo Arms LA-11 in 6.5×55mm or 7.5mm SWISS" Luvo | ALL GUNS S.r.l. "LUVO ARMS LA-11
List of AR platform cartridges
List_of_AR_platform_cartridges
Airline of the United States
transcontinental flights between JFK-LAX/SFO, Delta Comfort+ passengers also get Luvo snack wraps. Certain Medallion members can upgrade from Main Cabin to Comfort+
Delta_Air_Lines
American swimmer (born 1982)
Coughlin became a brand ambassador and investor in a frozen food company, Luvo Inc. In 2017, she became a partner in Gaderian Wines, a winemaking operation
Natalie_Coughlin
2000s CZ 2075 RAMI 9×19mm Parabellum 2004-2020 CZ-TT ČZ Strojírna s.r.o. LUVO Arms 9×19mm Parabellum .40 S&W .45 ACP Czech Republic 2000s-present Daewoo
List_of_pistols
Proposed reconstructed word list for the Proto-Indo-European language
University. pp. 571–572. hdl:1887/4297594. Melchert, H. Craig (1989). "New Luvo-Lycian Isoglosses". Historische Sprachforschung. 102 (1): 23–45. JSTOR 40848962
Indo-European_vocabulary
Municipality and city in Cabinda Province, Angola
cities in Angola "Cabinda". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. 2014. Archived from the original on 2011-02-08. Retrieved 2014-06-21. "Cabinda"
Cabinda_(city)
Municipality in Cubango, Angola
9800–10505. Retrieved 30 December 2024. "Menongue". Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. Retrieved 25 April 2012. Law, Gwillim (6 October 2016). "Provinces of Angola"
Menongue
South African politician
in Mthatha". Daily Dispatch. 8 June 2019. Retrieved 2 June 2026. Cakata, Luvo (25 November 2021). "Honour for late 'Aunt Laura'". Mthatha Express. Retrieved
Mandisi_Mpahlwa
Municipality and town in Huambo, Angola
exploration underway at Longonjo Project in Angola". Proactive Group Holdings Inc. 14 May 2013. Archived from the original on 9 September 2022. Bahu, Andrade
Longonjo
Archived from the original on 25 June 2010. Retrieved 9 August 2016. "MANYONGA Luvo - Olympic Athletics". Rio 2016. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016
List of athletes at the 2016 Summer Olympics with a prior doping offence
List_of_athletes_at_the_2016_Summer_Olympics_with_a_prior_doping_offence
(JAM) 10.21 Charles Silmon (USA) 10.23 Jimmy Vicaut (FRA) 10.28 Long jump: Luvo Manyonga (RSA) 7.99 m Eusebio Cáceres (ESP) 7.90 m Taylor Stewart (CAN) 7
July_2010_in_sports
LUVO INC
LUVO INC
Boy/Male
African, Hindu, Indian, Kenyan
Born when it was Raining; Born During the Rainy Season; From Luo
Boy/Male
Australian, Finnish
To Raise; Lift Up
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English love(n), luve(n) ‘to love’ + lavedi ‘lady’. Reaney describes this as an obvious nickname for a philanderer; but perhaps it denoted a man who loved a woman above his social status, given the connotation of high status carried by the word lavedi.
Boy/Male
Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Telugu
Son of Lord Rama
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Middle English vernacular form, Maudeleyn, of the New Testament Greek personal name Magdalēnē. This is a byname, meaning ‘woman from Magdala’ (a village on the Sea of Galilee, deriving its name from Hebrew migdal ‘tower’), denoting the woman cured of evil spirits by Jesus (Luke 8:2), who later became a faithful follower. In Christian folk belief she was generally identified with the repentant sinner who washed Christ’s feet with her tears in Luke 7; hence the name came to be used as a byname for a prostitute, also a tearful woman. The popularity of the personal name increased with the supposed discovery of her relics in the 13th century.
Boy/Male
Australian, Christian, French, German, Italian
Light; Famous Warrior
Surname or Lastname
English and French
English and French : variant of Marchand.John Marchant (c.1600–c.1668) was in Newport, RI, before 1638. In that year he moved to Braintree, MA, then to Watertown, MA (1642), and finally to Yarmouth, MA (1648). His descendants included many sea captains and other prominent people.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived near a meadow or a patch of arable land, Middle English lee, lea, from Old English lēa, dative case (used after a preposition) of lēah, which originally meant ‘wood’ or ‘glade’.English : habitational name from any of the many places named with Old English lēah ‘wood’, ‘glade’, as for example Lee in Buckinghamshire, Essex, Hampshire, Kent, and Shropshire, and Lea in Cheshire, Derbyshire, Herefordshire, Lancashire, Lincolnshire, and Wiltshire.Irish : reduced Americanized form of Ó Laoidhigh ‘descendant of Laoidheach’, a personal name derived from laoidh ‘poem’, ‘song’ (originally a byname for a poet).Americanized spelling of Norwegian Li or Lie.Chinese : variant of Li 1.Chinese : variant of Li 2.Chinese : variant of Li 3.Korean : variant of Yi.Lee is a prominent VA family name brought over in 1641 by Richard Lee (d. 1664), a VA planter and legislator. His great-grandsons included the brothers Arthur, Francis L., Richard Henry, and William Lee, all prominent American Revolution legislators and diplomats.
Surname or Lastname
English and Dutch
English and Dutch : from Latin Marcus, the personal name of St. Mark the Evangelist, author of the second Gospel. The name was borne also by a number of other early Christian saints. Marcus was an old Roman name, of uncertain (possibly non-Italic) etymology; it may have some connection with the name of the war god Mars. Compare Martin. The personal name was not as popular in England in the Middle Ages as it was on the Continent, especially in Italy, where the evangelist became the patron of Venice and the Venetian Republic, and was allegedly buried at Aquileia. As an American family name, this has absorbed cognate and similar names from other European languages, including Greek Markos and Slavic Marek.English, German, and Dutch (van der Mark) : topographic name for someone who lived on a boundary between two districts, from Middle English merke, Middle High German marc, Middle Dutch marke, merke, all meaning ‘borderland’. The German term also denotes an area of fenced-off land (see Marker 5) and, like the English word, is embodied in various place names which have given rise to habitational names.English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Marck, Pas-de-Calais.German : from Marko, a short form of any of the Germanic compound personal names formed with mark ‘borderland’ as the first element, for example Markwardt.Americanization or shortened form of any of several like-sounding Jewish or Slavic surnames (see for example Markow, Markowitz, Markovich).Irish (northeastern Ulster) : probably a short form of Markey (when not of English origin).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname from Middle English love(n), luve(n) ‘to love’ (Old English lufian) + Middle English joie ‘joy’ (Old French joie).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from the city of Lincoln, so named from an original British name Lindo- ‘lake’ + Latin colonia ‘settlement’, ‘colony’. The place was an important administrative center during the Roman occupation of Britain and in the Middle Ages it was a center for the manufacture of cloth, including the famous ‘Lincoln green’.Abraham Lincoln (1809–65), 16th president of the United States, was the son of an illiterate laborer, descended from a certain Samuel Lincoln, who had emigrated from England to MA in 1637.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name, either a variant of Madeley (a name common to several places, including one in Shropshire and two in Staffordshire), named in Old English as ‘MÄda’s clearing’, from an unattested byname, MÄda (probably a derivative of mÄd ‘foolish’) + lÄ“ah ‘woodland clearing’; or from Medley on the Thames in Oxfordshire, named in Old English with middel ‘middle’ + Ä“g ‘island’.English : nickname for an aggressive person, from Middle English, Old French medlee ‘combat’, ‘conflict’ (Late Latin misculata).
Boy/Male
Tamil
First of ramas twin son (Son of Lord Rama)
Boy/Male
Hindu
First of ramas twin son (Son of Lord Rama)
Girl/Female
Indian
Love
Boy/Male
Italian Scottish
Light.
Surname or Lastname
French (western)
French (western) : from a pet form of Martin 1.English : habitational name from Martineau in France. The name was also taken to England by Huguenot refugees in the 17th century (see below).Harriet Martineau (1802–76), the English writer, was the daughter of a Norwich manufacturer. She was descended from a family of French Huguenots who owned land around Poitou and Touraine in the 15th century. They included a number of surgeons in the 17th century. In the 19th century a branch of the family was firmly established in Birmingham, England; others went to North America.
Surname or Lastname
English and Scottish
English and Scottish : from the Middle English personal name Ma(t)thew, vernacular form of the Greek New Testament name Matthias, Matthaios, which is ultimately from the Hebrew personal name Matityahu ‘gift of God’. This was taken into Latin as Mat(t)hias and Matthaeus respectively, the former being used for the twelfth apostle (who replaced Judas Iscariot) and the latter for the author of the first Gospel. In many European languages this distinction is reflected in different surname forms. The commonest vernacular forms of the personal name, including English Matthew, Old French Matheu, Spanish Mateo, Italian Matteo, Portuguese Mateus, Catalan and Occitan Mateu are generally derived from the form Matthaeus. The American surname Matthew has also absorbed European cognates from other languages, including Greek Mathias and Mattheos.It is found as a personal name among Christians in India, and in the U.S. is used as a family name among families from southern India.
Surname or Lastname
French
French : from the Old French word goi (Latin gubia) denoting a type of bill hook or knife used by vine-growers or coopers, hence possibly a metonymic occupational name for a maker or user of such implements.English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from any of various places in France named Gouy, for example in Aisne or Pas-de-Calais.Galician : probably a habitational name from Goy in Lugo province, Galicia.German : northwestern variant of Gau.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a mower or reaper of grass or hay, Old English mǣðere. Compare Mead, Mower. Hay was formerly of great importance, not only as feed for animals in winter but also for bedding.English : in southern Lancashire, where it has long been a common surname, it is probably a relatively late development of Madder (see Mader).English : The prominent Mather family of New England were established in America by Richard Mather (1596–1669) in 1635. He was a Puritan clergyman from a well-established family of Lowton, Lancashire, England. After he emigrated, he was in great demand as a preacher, finally settling in Dorchester, MA. His son Increase Mather (1639–1723) was a diplomat and president of Harvard. He married his step-sister Maria Cotton, herself the daughter of an eminent Puritan divine, John Cotton. Their son Cotton Mather (1663–1728) bore both family names. The latter was a minister who is remembered for his part in witchcraft trials, but he was also a man of science and a fellow of the Royal Society in London.
LUVO INC
LUVO INC
Boy/Male
Hindu
Boy/Male
American, Arabic, Australian, Muslim, Swahili
Righteous; Wise; Rightly Guided; Counsellor; Thinker; Good Judgement; Young Gazelle
Girl/Female
Arabic, Australian, Muslim
Proud; Glory; Honorary; Pride for Noble Cause; Female Version of Fakhri
Girl/Female
Hebrew
Praise.
Girl/Female
British, English, Gaelic
Man; Pledge
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Sandal Victory
Biblical
that sees and observes; that expects or covers
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant of Raphael.German : nickname for someone who was loud or indiscreet, a blabbermouth, from Middle High German raffeln ‘to be noisy’, ‘to scold’.German : from an unexplained personal name, Raffo. Compare Raff.
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim
Thinker
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Lord Venkateshwara
LUVO INC
LUVO INC
LUVO INC
LUVO INC
LUVO INC
v. t.
To meet or fall in with, as something inconvenient, harmful, or onerous; to put one's self in the way of; to expose one's self to; to become liable or subject to; to bring down upon one's self; to encounter; to contract; as, to incur debt, danger, displeasure/ penalty, responsibility, etc.
n.
Unconcernedness; incuriosity.
a.
Not capable of being cured; beyond the power of skill or medicine to remedy; as, an incurable disease.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Incur
v. t.
Alt. of Incuss
n.
The act of incurring, bringing on, or subjecting one's self to (something troublesome or burdensome); as, the incurrence of guilt, debt, responsibility, etc.
n.
The state of being incurable; incurability.
imp. & p. p.
of Incurve
a.
Not admitting or capable of remedy or correction; irremediable; remediless; as, incurable evils.
a.
Characterized by a current which flows inward; as, the incurrent orifice of lamellibranch Mollusca.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Incurve
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Incurvate
n.
A state of being bent or curved; incurvation; a bending inwards.
imp. & p. p.
of Incurvate
a.
Making an incursion; invasive; aggressive; hostile.