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Wikipedia's contents: Portals
A portal is an introductory page for a given topic. It complements the main article of the subject by introducing the reader to key articles, images, and categories that further describe the subject. Portals also help editors find related projects and things they can do to help improve Wikipedia. Featured portals are in bold-italic.
At present, there are 116 featured portals, of a total of 548 portals on Wikipedia.
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Culture and the arts
Culture
- Amusement parks • Comedy • Food (Beer, Wine) • Language (Constructed languages, Esperanto, Low Saxon) • Mythology • Nudity • Numismatics • Philately • Radio
- Arts
- Anime and manga (Evangelion, Naruto) • Architecture • Books • Charles Dickens • Comics • Dance • Fashion • Fictional worlds (Dragonlance, Redwall, Harry Potter, James Bond, Middle-earth, Narnia, Oz, Pokémon, Stargate) • Film (Star Wars, Disney, Academy Award) • Horror • Literature (French and Francophone literature, Poetry, Shakespeare, Speculative fiction) • Music (Classical music, Opera, Pipe organ, The Beatles, AC/DC, Aerosmith, Electronic music, Heavy metal, Rock and Roll, Progressive rock, Powderfinger, Music of Australia, Dream Theater, Eurovision, Led Zeppelin, Motörhead, Rush, Guitar, Classical guitar, Alternative music, Jazz, U2, Slipknot, Christian metal) • Musical Theatre • Origami • Photography • Pornography • Television (Futurama, The Simpsons, Doctor Who, Star Trek, Stargate, M*A*S*H, EastEnders, Hitchhiker's, Muppets, BBC, Television in Australia) • Textile arts • Theatre • Visual arts • Graffiti
- Sports and games
- Association football (soccer) (A-League) (English football) • American football (College football) • Baseball • Basketball • Canadian football • Cricket • Figure skating • Fishing • Golf • Ice hockey • Martial arts • Olympics • Professional wrestling • Racing (Cycling, Motorsport, Formula One, Motorcycle racing) • Rugby (Rugby League • Rugby union) • Swimming • Tennis
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- Amusement parks • Chess • Halo • PlayStation • Final Fantasy • Insomniac Games • Nintendo • Pokémon • Sega • Video games • Mario • Sonic • Zelda • Massively multiplayer online games • Role-playing games • Strategy games • Warhammer • Xbox 360 • The Sims
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Geography and places
Geography
- Atlas
- Border
- Africa
- Algeria • Cape Verde • Democratic Republic of the Congo • Egypt • Ghana • Kenya • Libya • Mali • Morocco • Namibia • Nigeria • Senegal • Somalia • South Africa • Sudan • Tanzania • Uganda • Western Sahara • Zambia • Zimbabwe (Harare)
- North America
- Canada
- British Columbia (Vancouver) • Manitoba • Nova Scotia • Nunavut • Ontario (Eastern Ontario • Toronto • Hamilton • York Region) • Quebec • (Montreal) • Saskatchewan
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- United States
- Alaska • Arizona • California (San Francisco Bay Area • California Central Valley) • Colorado • Delaware • Florida • Georgia • Hawaii • Illinois (Chicago) • Indiana (Indianapolis) • Kansas • Kentucky (Louisville) • Louisiana (New Orleans • Shreveport) • Nebraska • Maryland • Massachusetts • Minnesota • Missouri • New Hampshire • New Jersey • New Mexico • New York (New York City) • North Carolina • North Dakota • Ohio (Cleveland • Cincinnati) • Oklahoma • Oregon • Pennsylvania (Erie • Lancaster • Philadelphia) • Puerto Rico • South Carolina • Tennessee • Texas (Houston • Dallas • Austin) • Utah • Vermont • Virginia • Washington (Seattle) • Wisconsin
- Latin America and Caribbean
- Argentina • Brazil (Paraíba) • Chile • Cuba • Colombia • Guatemala• Ecuador• El Salvador • Haiti • Jamaica • Mexico • Panama • Peru • Puerto Rico • Uruguay • Venezuela
- Asia
- Bangladesh • Bengal • Cambodia • Chechnya • China (People's Republic of China, Republic of China, Hong Kong, Macau) • Cyprus • India (Goa, Gujarat, Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Hyderabad, Indian wildlife, Indian Christianity) • Indonesia • Japan (Osaka) • Kazakhstan • Korea • Malaysia • Himalaya region • Pakistan • Philippines (Bohol) • SAARC • Saudi Arabia • Singapore • Sri Lanka • Syria • Taiwan • Thailand • Turkey • Vietnam
- Europe
- European Union • Belgium • Bulgaria • Czech Republic • (Prague) • Denmark • Estonia • Finland • France (Paris) • Germany • Gibraltar • Greece • Hungary (Budapest, Miskolc) • Iceland • Ireland • Italy • Latvia • Lithuania • Malta • Netherlands • Poland • Portugal • Romania (Bucharest) • Silesia • Slovakia • Slovenia • Spain (Galicia • Basque Country) • Sweden • United Kingdom (England (Bristol, Cheshire, Cornwall, London, North West England, Somerset, South East England (East Sussex, Kent, Hampshire, Oxfordshire), Yorkshire), Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales)
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- Albania • Armenia • Azerbaijan • Belarus • Bosnia and Herzegovina • Croatia • Faroe Islands • Georgia (Tbilisi) • Isle of Man • Kazakhstan • Republic of Macedonia • Moldova • Montenegro • Norway • Russia • Serbia • Switzerland • Turkey • Ukraine (Crimea)
- Middle East
- Iran • Iraq (Kurdistan) • Israel • Jordan • Lebanon • Libya • Morocco • Palestine • Saudi Arabia • Syria • Turkey
- Oceania
- Australia (New South Wales • Northern Territory • Queensland • South Australia • Tasmania • Victoria • Western Australia) • Micronesia • New Zealand • Papua New Guinea
- Antarctica
CHAPTER 1: In chapter one the main character is getting out of jail after being in there for 18 months. We see about the type of person he is which is careless and ruthless. His man is thinking back on the memories of his mother, his first time in jail and about what is going to happen when he gets out. He knows though, because he has experienced it all before. He knows he will get out, then few weeks or days be back in. In chapter 1, the time of time and change of point of view are both seen. The person starts the book in the present time when he is telling of his release from jail and the outer world, then goes on to tell about his past, his first time in there and about his family life, his mother and how he grew up. The themes of Aboriginals and their lives are seen throught this forst chapter. It explores how they live and how people set them out to be, as well as how they see thierselves. Also the 1st chapter of the novel themes around the life of a young half-cast boy and at the time how his life was.
‘Today the end and the gates will swing to eject me, alone and so-called free”. ‘Another dept paid to society and I never owed it a thing’. ‘Fake Heaven’. ‘I don’t care anymore. I trained myself though the actions of life’.
CHAPTER 2: This chapter is also about the release of this character but this time it gets closer to the release where he changes his clothes and waits and while doing so, thinks about the outside world and what to do. He in this chapter also, like the first, goes back and thinks about what he has done before and about his past life.
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Mathematics and logic
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Natural and physical sciences
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Philosophy and thinking
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Religion and belief systems
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Society and social sciences
Social sciences
- Anthropology • Economics • Education • Geography • History • Law • Linguistics • Psychology • Sociology
Society
- Colonialism • British Empire • Business and economics (Companies) • Education (Schools, University (University of Houston, University of Texas at Austin)) • Ethnic groups (African American, Berbers, Indigenous peoples of North America) • Espionage • Holidays • International organisations (United Nations, NATO) • Law (Human rights) • LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender) • Journalism • Organized Labour • Politics (Anarchism, Communism, Fascism, India Government, Pakistan Government, Philippine Presidency, U.S. Government) • Psychology (Thinking) • Scouting • Sustainable development • War (Cold War, Italian Wars, Military of Australia, Military history of France, Military of ancient Rome, Military history of Africa, Military history of the Ottoman Empire, British Army, Royal Navy, Royal Air Force, Military of the United States (American Civil War, United States Air Force, United States Marine Corps, United States Navy), Weapons of mass destruction, World War I, World War II)
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Technology and applied sciences
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