Dub
Look up dub, dubs, or dubbing in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Dub, Dubs, or dubbing may refer to:
Places
- Dub (Hadžići), a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Dub (Rogatica), a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Dub (Prachatice District), a town in the Czech Republic
- Dub, Tomaszów Lubelski County, Poland, a village
- Dub (Bajina Bašta), a village in Serbia
- Dub, Arkansas, an unincorporated community in the United States
Music
- Dub music, a subgenre of reggae music
- Dub techno, a subgenre of techno
- Dubbing (music), transfer or copying of previously recorded audio material from one medium to another
- The Dubs, American 1950s vocal group
- Dub FX (born 1983), Australian street performer and studio recording artist
Film and television
- Dubbing (filmmaking), post-production process in which additional or supplementary recording occurs
- Dub localization, altering the dubbed translation of a foreign language film or television series to further adapt it for a "local" audience
Literature and publishing
- DUB (magazine), covering the urban custom car culture
- Dub poetry, a form of performance poetry consisting of spoken word over reggae rhythms
- The Dubs: Dublin GAA since the 1940s, a 2006 book about the Gaelic football team (see below)
Sports
- Dublin GAA, an Irish Gaelic football team
- The Dubs, a nickname for the Golden State Warriors National Basketball Association team
- Dubuque Dubs, a Dubuque, Iowa minor league baseball team from 1906 to 1915
People
Medieval period
- Dub-Indrecht mac Cathail (died 768), King of Connacht
- Dub Calgaid mac Laidcnén (died 769), King of the Uí Cheinnselaig of South Leinster
- Dub Dá Leithe mac Tomaltach (died 816), King of Uí Maine
- Dub Lémna ingen Tighearnáin (died 943), Queen of Ireland
- Dub, King of Scotland (died 967), King of Alba
- Dub Chablaigh ingen Cathal (died 1009), Queen of Ireland
- Dub dá Leithe (died 1064), Abbot of Armagh
- Máel Dub (died 675), Irish monk
- Amlaíb Dub, Olaf the Black (died 1237), sea-king who ruled the Isle of Man and parts of the Hebrides
Modern era
Nickname
- Dub Garrett (1925–1976), American football player
- Dub Jones (singer) (1928–2000), American bass R&B singer
- Dub Jones (American football) (born 1924), American former National Football League player
- Dub Robinson (c. 1920–1987), former tennis coach at Louisiana State University
- Dub Taylor (1907–1994), American actor
- Jamie Wilkinson, internet culture researcher and software engineer nicknamed "Dubs"
- Dub Williams (1927-2014), American politician
Surname
- Gene Dub (born 1943), Canadian architect and former politician
- Dubs (surname). a list of people
Abbreviations
- Deubiquitinating enzyme, essential component of the ubiquitin-proteasome system
- Down Under Bowl, annual high school football competition in Australia
- Dubitative mood, an epistemic grammatical mood found in some languages
- Dysfunctional uterine bleeding, a medical condition
Other uses
- Dublin Airport, whose IATA airport code is DUB
- Lawrence Weston, Bristol, England, a housing estate also known as "El Dub"
- Dub Cottage in the Isle of Man
- Dub (wheel), an automobile wheel or rim that is twenty or more inches in diameter
- Dubbing (poultry), the procedure of removing the comb, wattles and sometimes earlobes of poultry
- W, shortened name for the 23rd letter of the Latin alphabet
- Accolade (also known as dubbing), central act in rite of passage ceremonies conferring knighthood
- Dübs and Company, a locomotive works in Glasgow, Scotland
See also
- Dubí, a town in the Czech Republic
- Dubbin, a wax product used to soften, condition and waterproof leather
- Doubs (river) in eastern France
- Doubs, a department in the Franche-Comté region of France
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