Afturelding - Valur | Ragnarsmót kvenna | 17.8.2023 kl 20:00 Set Höllin Selfoss.
Selfoss - Afturelding | Ragnarsmót kvenna | 16.8.2023 kl 20:00 Set Höllin Selfoss.
Stjarnan - Afturelding | Ragnarsmót kvenna | 14.8.2023 kl 18:00 Set Höllin Selfoss.
The Selfoss women's football, commonly known as Selfoss team is the women's football department of the Ungmennafélag Selfoss multi-sport club. It is based in Selfoss, Iceland, and currently plays in the Úrvalsdeild kvenna, the top-tier women's football league in Iceland.
Víðir is an Icelandic sports club from Garður on the Reykjanes peninsula of Iceland. They currently play in the 2.
The Selfoss women's handball team is the women's handball section of Icelandic multi-sport club Selfoss from Selfoss.
Selfoss may refer to:
Selfoss is a town in southern Iceland on the banks of the Ölfusá river. It is the seat of the municipality of Árborg.
Selfoss is a waterfall on the river Jökulsá á Fjöllum in the north of Iceland. The river drops over a number of waterfalls over about 30 km before flowing into Öxarfjörður, a bay of the Arctic Sea.
The 2008 Iceland earthquake was a doublet earthquake that struck on May 29 at 15:46 UTC in southwestern Iceland. The recorded magnitudes of the two main quakes were 5.9 Mw and 5.8 Mw , respectively, giving a composite magnitude of 6.1 Mw .
Selfoss Airport is an airport serving Selfoss, a town on the banks of Ölfusá river in the Árborg municipality in southern Iceland. Selfoss Airport is privately owned.
The Selfoss men's handball team is the men's handball section of Icelandic multi-sport club Selfoss from Selfoss. It currently plays in the Úrvalsdeild karla.
The Selfoss men's football team, commonly known as Selfoss or UMF Selfoss, is the men's football department of the Ungmennafélag Selfoss multi-sport club. It is based in Selfoss, Iceland and currently plays in the 2.
Vidiri is an ethnic group in the Central African Republic and Sudan. They speak Banda-Banda, a Niger-Congo language.
Vidiri may refer to:
Video is an electronic medium for the recording, copying, playback, broadcasting, and display of moving visual media. Video was first developed for mechanical television systems, which were quickly replaced by cathode ray tube systems which were later replaced by flat panel displays of several types.