FEA
Fea was the smallest unit of land a fief could own under the feudal system.
Acronyms and abbreviations
FEA is an acronym or abbreviation for:
- School of Economics, Business and Accounting of the University of São Paulo, known in Portuguese as Faculdade de Economia, Administração e Contabilidade da Universidade de São Paulo (FEA-USP).
- Fair Employment Act
- Federación Ecuatoriana de Atletismo, the Ecuadorian Athletics Federation
- Federación Ecuatoguineana de Atletismo, the governing body for the sport of athletics in Equatorial Guinea
- Federal Energy Administration, the U.S. Government's response to energy shortages in the 1970s
- Federal Enterprise Architecture, a U.S. Government initiative to improve IT investment performance as a result of the Clinger-Cohen Act
- Field Emitter Array
- Finite element analysis, a method of mechanical computer simulation
- Fire Emblem Awakening, a role-playing game for Nintendo 3DS
- FLAG Europe Asia, a segment of the Fibre-Optic Link Around the Globe
- Flieger-Ersatz-Abteilung, aviation replacement detachment in the German Air Service in World War I
- Florida Education Association
- Fluid Experiment Apparatus or Fluids Experiment Apparatus, see Bonnie J. Dunbar and Daniel Brandenstein
- Foreign Economic Administration, a United States federal agency
- French Equatorial Africa
- Future Educators Association
People
As a first name, Fea refers to the Russian word for fairy.
Fea is also a surname, and may refer to:
- Carlo Fea — an Italian archaeologist
- Leonardo Fea — an Italian naturalist
Animals
Fea may refer to the following animals:
- Fea's muntjac (Muntiacus feae), a deer
- Fea's petrel (Pterodroma feae), a seabird
- Fea's tree rat (Chiromyscus chiropus), a rodent
- Fea's viper (Azemiops feae), a snake
Other
Fea and FEA can also refer to the following:
- For J. R. R. Tolkien's fëa, see Fëa and hröa.
- Fea is a goddess in Irish mythology — see Mórrígan, Neo-druidism and Celtic polytheism.
- FEA is the ICAO Code for Far Eastern Air Transport.
- Fea means "ugly" (female) in Spanish, as in the telenovela Betty La Fea.
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