waterboarding
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waterboarding
Summary
waterboarding is a torture instrument[1]. waterboarding ranks in the top 3% of torture_instrument entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,224 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- waterboarding's image is recorded as Waterboarding-Demonstration-30-05-2008-Island-a.jpg[3].
- waterboarding's instance of is recorded as torture instrument[4].
- waterboarding's instance of is recorded as torture method[5].
- waterboarding's subclass of is recorded as water cure[6].
- waterboarding's subclass of is recorded as white torture[7].
- waterboarding's Commons category is recorded as Waterboarding[8].
- waterboarding's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/037zyb[9].
- waterboarding's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Waterboarding[10].
- waterboarding's U.S. National Archives Identifier is recorded as 10675148[11].
- waterboarding's OmegaWiki Defined Meaning is recorded as 808346[12].
- waterboarding's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/waterboarding[13].
- waterboarding's different from is recorded as wakeboarding[14].
- waterboarding's uses is recorded as water[15].
- waterboarding's uses is recorded as asphyxia[16].
- waterboarding's New York Times topic ID is recorded as subject/waterboarding[17].
- waterboarding's Quora topic ID is recorded as Waterboarding[18].
- waterboarding's JSTOR topic ID is recorded as waterboarding[19].
- waterboarding's on focus list of Wikimedia project is recorded as WikiProject Human rights[20].
- waterboarding's The Independent topic ID is recorded as waterboarding[21].
- waterboarding's RationalWiki ID is recorded as Waterboarding[22].
- waterboarding's KBpedia ID is recorded as WaterBoardingEvent[23].
- waterboarding's Der Spiegel topic ID is recorded as waterboarding[24].
- waterboarding's New York Post topic ID is recorded as waterboarding[25].
Why It Matters
waterboarding ranks in the top 3% of torture_instrument entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (2,224 views/month).[2] waterboarding has Wikipedia articles in 24 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[26] waterboarding is known by 19 alternative names across languages and contexts.[27]