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  1. List of programs broadcast by Cartoon Network. A variation of Cartoon Network's current logo, which resembles the network's original logo, used since 2010. This is a list of television programs currently or formerly broadcast by Cartoon Network in the United States. The network was launched on October 1, 1992, and airs mainly animated ...

  2. Cartoon Network, often abbreviated as CN, is an American cable television channel owned by Warner Bros. Discovery. It is a part of The Cartoon Network, Inc., a division that also has the broadcasting and production activities of Boomerang, Cartoonito, Discovery Family, Adult Swim, and Toonami under its purview.

  3. The Cartoon Network, Inc. is an American multinational entertainment company operating as a unit of Warner Bros. Discovery. Founded by Ted Turner and based out of Atlanta, Georgia , its main properties include its flagship service, Cartoon Network and Boomerang as well as programming blocks Cartoonito and Adult Swim .

  4. Cartoon - Bishop's Breakfast Table.jpg 500 × 441; 89 KB Charon's Boat - or - the Ghosts of "all the Talents" taking their last voyage, - from the Pope's Gallery at Rome LCCN2001695079.jpg 4,627 × 3,712; 2.94 MB

  5. Cartoon Network Studios is an American animation studio owned by the Warner Bros. Television Studios division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery. The studio is the production arm of Cartoon Network , and was founded on October 21, 1994, as a division of Hanna-Barbera , until the latter was absorbed into Warner ...

  6. Satirical cartoons of the time, like Austen’s portrayals of Collins, Elton, and Grant, illustrate popular perceptions of the clergy and many of the issues facing Austen’s Church of England. Jane Austen mentions such cartoons twice in her letters.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ClergyClergy - Wikipedia

    Clergy" is from two Old French words, clergié and clergie, which refer to those with learning and derive from Medieval Latin clericatus, from Late Latin clericus (the same word from which "cleric" is derived). [2] ". Clerk", which used to mean one ordained to the ministry, also derives from clericus. In the Middle Ages, reading and writing ...

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