Hebrides island

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Possible Answers: IONA, SKYE, UIST, TYREE, TIREE.

Last seen on: –Thomas Joseph – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Dec 13 2018
Eugene Sheffer – King Feature Syndicate Crossword – Oct 27 2018
Universal Crossword – Sep 22 2018
Wall Street Journal Crossword – Jul 18 2018 – Somewhat Clueless

Random information on the term “IONA”:

In standard English usage, the toponym “the British Isles” refers to a European archipelago consisting of Great Britain, Ireland and adjacent islands. However, the word “British” is also an adjective and demonym referring to the United Kingdom. For this reason, the name British Isles is avoided in Hiberno-English as such usage could be construed to imply continued territorial claims or political overlordship of the Republic of Ireland by the United Kingdom.

Proposed alternatives to renaming the British Isles to something more neutral include “Britain and Ireland”, “Atlantic Archipelago”, “Anglo-Celtic Isles”, the “British-Irish Isles” and the Islands of the North Atlantic. In documents drawn up jointly between the British and Irish governments, the archipelago is referred to simply as “these islands”.

To some, the dispute is partly semantic and the term is a value-free geographic one while, to others, it is a value-laden political one. The Crown dependencies of the Channel Islands may also for geo-political reasons be included in the British Isles, despite not being geographically part of the archipelago. Early variants of the term date back to Ancient Greek times; it fell into disuse for over a millennium, and was introduced into English in the late 16th or early 17th centuries by English and Welsh writers whose writings have been described as propaganda and politicised. The term became more resisted after the breakup of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1922.

IONA on Wikipedia

Random information on the term “UIST”:

ACM SIGACCESS is the Association for Computing Machinery’s Special Interest Group on Accessible computing, an interdisciplinary group of academic and industrial researchers, clinicians and rehabilitation personnel, policy makers, end users, and students to develop technologies for use by people with disabilities.

In 1964, the Association for Computing Machinery started a Committee on Professional Activities for the Blind, which published a newsletter for four years and organized a conference in 1969. The purpose of the committee was to promote and support blind people as capable programmers. The committee broadened its focus to include other people with disabilities and became the “Special Interest Group on Computers and the Physically Handicapped” (SIGCAPH) in 1971. In 2003, the SIG was renamed to SIGACCESS.

The ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility (ASSETS) is the flagship annual conference. All conference contributions are peer-reviewed by an international program committee, and accepted papers, posters and demonstrations are archived in the ACM Digital Library. All authors of accepted papers will be invited to submit extended versions of their papers to a special issue of the ACM Transactions on Accessible Computing (TACCESS).

UIST on Wikipedia