Jan
31

Egyptian Folkloric Belly Dance : Hagalla Belly Dance Drill

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Practice the hagalla walk of belly dancing by focusing on certain muscles and training muscle memory. Learn Egyptian belly dancing hagalla drill from an instructor in this free belly dance video. Expert: Johanna ‘Xenobia’ Krynytzky Contact: www.hip-expressions.com/HipEx/Home.html Bio: Johanna Krynytzky studied belly dancing while at the University of Chicago in 1996, and is the director at Hip Expressions Dance Studio in Gulfport, Florida. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
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Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
30

Belly Dance Chest Movements : Smile Belly Dance Move

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A smile is a belly dance move that combines the slide and pull chest motionsLearn belly dance chest movements like the smile from a dance instructor in this free dance video lesson. Expert: Karen Sun Ray Coletti Contact: www.hip-expressions.com Bio: Karen Sun Ray Coletti began belly dancing in 1976 and has focused on dance styles from around the world from the time she was a little girl. Currently, Coletti directos Hip Expressions Dance Studio. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
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Hip pulls in belly dancing are traditional moves that tug the hips horizontally across the body. Learn Egyptian belly dancing hip pull move from an instructor in this free belly dance video. Expert: Johanna ‘Xenobia’ Krynytzky Contact: www.hip-expressions.com/HipEx/Home.html Bio: Johanna Krynytzky studied belly dancing while at the University of Chicago in 1996, and is the director at Hip Expressions Dance Studio in Gulfport, Florida. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
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Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
30

Belly Dance Chest Movements : Smile Belly Dance Move

Posted by admin Comments (23)

A smile is a belly dance move that combines the slide and pull chest motionsLearn belly dance chest movements like the smile from a dance instructor in this free dance video lesson. Expert: Karen Sun Ray Coletti Contact: www.hip-expressions.com Bio: Karen Sun Ray Coletti began belly dancing in 1976 and has focused on dance styles from around the world from the time she was a little girl. Currently, Coletti directos Hip Expressions Dance Studio. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Hip pulls in belly dancing are traditional moves that tug the hips horizontally across the body. Learn Egyptian belly dancing hip pull move from an instructor in this free belly dance video. Expert: Johanna ‘Xenobia’ Krynytzky Contact: www.hip-expressions.com/HipEx/Home.html Bio: Johanna Krynytzky studied belly dancing while at the University of Chicago in 1996, and is the director at Hip Expressions Dance Studio in Gulfport, Florida. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
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Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
30

General Knowledge Pt.- XI

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General Knowledge Pt.- XI

 

Who designed the first flyover? When and where was it built?

Holborn Viaduct was the world’s first flyover, connecting Holborn with Newgate Street, avoiding a deep dip in the road. It was built across the Fleet Valley to get rid of the steep Holborn and Snow Hills. It was built between 1863 and 1869 and opened by Queen Victoria in 1869. Nearby is the City Thameslink station, a replacement for the former Holborn Terminus of the London, Chatham & Dover Railway It cost over two million pound sterling to complete and was opened by Queen Victoria.

Why are communists called ‘reds’?

‘Red’-refers to the blood shed by the working class in its struggle against capitalism. The identification of Communism with ‘Socialist’ red (with the red flag being the primary colour of the flag of the Soviet Union) and the red star being a Communist emblem led to such Cold War phrases as ‘the Red Menace’ and ‘Red China’.

Why are there only 12 sun signs?

The zodiac is the belt or band of constellations through which the Sun, moon and planets move across the sky. Astrologers noted these constellations and attached a particular significance to them. Over time, they developed the system of twelve signs of the zodiac, based on twelve constellations they considered important. In China, the development of the zodiac was different. Although the Chinese too have a system of twelve signs (named after animals), its zodiac refers to a pure calendrical cycle, as there are no equivalent constellations linked to it. The common choice of twelve zodiac signs is understandable when it is considered that the interaction of the Sun and moon was central to all forms of astrology Thus, twelve cycles of the moon — or months — coincided with one solar year, making twelve a natural choice.

Who are kitchen table tycoons?

Female entrepreneurs in Britain who have set up enormously successful businesses are called kitchen table tycoons in jest. In fact, half of the millionaires in the UK today are women. So, the erstwhile ‘weaker sex’ and the ‘second sex’ is now being referred to as the richer sex’.

How far is the nearest black hole from the earth?

The nearest black hole is in the constellation Sagittarius. A normal star named V4641Sgr began emitting rapidly-fluctuating X-ray intensities and ejecting sub-atomic particles moving at the speed of light on September 15,1999. This was observed by an amateur Australian sky-watcher. Later, orbiting X-ray telescopes and groundbased radio and optical telescopes also recorded the dramatically rapid X-ray intensity changes ever seen from one star. The black hole is a mere 1,600 light years away from Earth — the nearest reported black hole yet.

What is snow line?

The snow line on a mountain is the boundary beyond which there is permanent snow. It is about 3,500 metres above sea level. The snow line’s location depends on conditions such as elevation, latitude, proximity to the sea, climate, wind direction, exposure, and the steepness of the slope. In India, it occurs at 4,250 metres above sea level while in Europe it may begin at about 3,500 metres. Further North, at the poles, the snow line starts at sea level.

What is the da vinci surgical system used for?

The Da Vinci device is used hi surgeries in the abdomen, pelvis and chest. It provides surgeons with a 3-D view of the operating area, magnified up to 12 times. Sitting at a console away from the patient, the surgeon uses joystick-like controls to manipulate tiny surgical instruments. These can be used in hard-to-reach areas and turned in ways that would be impossible with the normal dexterity of the wrist.

What are tulip festivals?

The tulip is perhaps the most fashionable flower of England and the Netherlands. There are thousands of varieties of these flowers. Tulip cultivation is the most important industry in the Netherlands today. Billions of bulbs are also produced in the US every year. Dutch growers produce nearly 2,000 varieties, of which about 400 are available in large quantities. During spring, tulip festivals are held in various parts of the world to showcase this beautiful flower.

Our national anthem’s notations were prepared by herbert murrill. In what capacity did he prepare it?

Jana Gana Mana was officially adopted by the Constituent Assembly as the India’s National Anthem on January 24, 1950. The version, which had the approval of Prime Minister Pandit Nehru and a number of members of the Constituent Assembly, was composed by a well-known Briton Herbert Murrill. He was one of three foreign composers who undertook to prepare harmonised versions of the first stanza of the Anthem, on the basis of the Vishwa Bharati tune’s recordings supplied by All India Radio. According to AIR, which had circulated copies of it to all the provincial governments and states, the approved version was not only the best musically, but also faithfully reflected the Indian tune of Jana Gana Mana.

When was the first fashion show held in the world?

The history of fashion shows remains vague. In the 1800s, ‘fashion parades’ periodically took place in Paris couture salons. American retailers imported the concept of the fashion show in the early 1900s. The first American fashion show is likely to have taken place in 1903 in the New York City store Ehrlich Brothers.

What are budgrooks and xeraphines?

They were the units of currency issued by the East India Company in Bombay, during the 17th century Originally belonging to Portugal, the island of Bombay was given to the British King Charles II in dowry when he married the Portuguese Princess Catherine. Charles II auctioned Bombay to the East India Company and authorised it to issue its own currency locally One xeraphine was equal to 580 budgrooks.

Why are orbits of planets elliptical in shape?

Astronomers call the more massive of the two objects, the primary and the less massive one, the secondary Orbit is a path of a natural or artificial object that moves under the influence of a central force. The orbit of a secondary object within the gravitational pull (which is not constant all over) of a primary object is a closed curve called an ellipse. Perfectly circular orbits rarely occur. In an el- liptical orbit, the primary is not in the centre of the ellipse. As a result, the secondary travelscloser to the primary at certain times than the others.

Why can’t we tickle ourselves?

We cannot tickle ourselves because we anticipate our own actions. Research has shown that the brain is trained to know what to feel when a person moves or performs any function. We aren’t aware of many of the sensations generated by our movements. For example, you probably don’t pay much attention to your vocal cords when you speak. For the same reason, we can’t tickle ourselves. If we grab our sides in an attempt to tickle ourselves, our brain anticipates this contact from the hands and prepares itself for it. By taking away the feeling of unease and panic, the body no longer responds the same way as it would if someone else were to tickle us.

What is the paris basin?

It is the region of France constituting the lowland area around Paris. Geologically, it is the centre of a structural depression that extends between the ancient Armorican Massif (west), the Massif Central (south), the Vosges, Ardennes, and Rhineland (east). The area, which forms the heartland of France, is drained largely by the Seine and its major tributaries converge in Paris. The natural vegetation of the basin has been almost entirely lost to civilisation, except for a few relict forests.

What does cymatics refer to?

Also known as Chladni Patterns, cymatics is an ancient system of music. It was in the news recently when the father-son duo Thomas Mitchell and Stuart Mitchell were intrigued by the symbols carved in the arches of the 15th century Rosslyn Chapel (of Dan Brown’s ‘Da Vinci Code’ fame) in Scotland. The duo did some sleuthing of their own which led them to the Chladni Patterns, formed by sound waves at specific pitches.

When was the system of visas introduced?

A visa (short for the Latin carta visa, meaning ‘the document having been seen’) is issued by a country giving an individual permission to formally request entrance to the country during a given period of time and for certain purposes. It is mostly stamped or glued inside a passport, or sometimes issued as separate pieces of paper. An early reference is found in the biblical book of Nehemiah, circa 450 B.C. Nehemiah, an official serving King Artaxerxes of ancient Persia, asked permission to travel to Judah. The king agreed and gave Nehemiah a letter ‘to the governors beyond the river’. As per the current format of passports, blank pages are given for foreign countries to affix visas, or stamp the passport on entrance or exit.

Who invented the toothbrush?

Toothbrushes came into existence in 1938. People used them in the form of ‘chew sticks’ as early as 3000 BC. People would chew a thin twig with a frayed end and then rub it against the teeth. A similar toothbrush in use today was invented in China in 1498. The Chinese used pig’s neck hair as bristles and attached it to handles made of bone or bamboo. Dupont de Nemours introduced nylon bristles in 1938 for the first time. William Addis of England created the first mass-produced toothbrush in 1780. The first patent for a toothbrush was for H N Wadsworth in 1850 in the US, but mass production only started in 1885.

Did robin hood really exist?

Stories of Robin Hood have been told for over 700 years. The earliest ballads were sung as early as the 14th century. The real life Robin Hood was probably born in Loxley in 1160 and became a fugitive in the forest to escape arrest. He married Matilda and joined the fight against the king’s army in the Battle of Borough bridge. The defeat of the rebels forced Robin into Barnsdale Forest, where he lived as an outlaw and was charged with treason. His wife Matilda was the figure who was eventually transformed into Maid Marian of the legend. Robin Hood is said to have died on November 18,1247.

What is the difference between acne and pimples?

While acne is a disease (acne vulgaris), a pimple is just one type of lesion found in acne patients. Other lesions could be a papule or a nodule. However, in common parlance, these are interchangeably use.

What is unique about the la sagrada familia?

La Sagrada Familia or the Church of the Holy Family is unique in two ways. Firstly, its construction which started in 1882, is still going on, and will probably be completed only in another 40-50 years — something like our own Dayalbagh temple in Agra. Secondly, its architect Antoni Gaudi is buried in its basement.

What are sniglets?

A sniglet is a word that should be in the dictionary but isn’t. Sniglets are the brainchild of comedian Rich Hall who, with a little help from his friends, wrote a series of books containing sniglets in the mid-1980s. Sniglets are actually a long-running popular joke in which people make up their own humorous words to define things or concepts that have no “official” definitions.

Which country first introduced paper currency?

Paper currency was introduced by the Chinese around 600 A.D. Back then, the Chinese would string copper coins together and carry them around. As the economy grew, people found it difficult to carry too many coins and paper money was introduced as an alternative.

What is the pigeonhole principle?

The exact statement of the pigeonhole principle is ‘If you want to put N+l pigeons in N pigeon holes, then at least one of the pigeonholes must contain more than one pigeons’. This is just a very obvious fact moulded into a principle. But its applications are vast. Its proof by contradiction is very simple: suppose no pigeonhole contains more than one pigeon. Then, there are no more than N pigeons, which contradicts the fact that there are N+l pigeons.

What is the ultimate picnic sandwich?

Priced at a cool £2.5, the Ultimate Picnic Sandwich is all the rage in Britain. Smoked salmon, mashed avocado, cherry tomatoes, lemon juice, chili flakes, roasted red and yellow peppers, low-fat cream cheese, fresh mint and chives are sandwiched between two thick slices of wholemeal bread. The makers of the Ultimate Picnic Sandwich say the cream cheese and the chives absorb moisture and keep the sandwich fresh. The chilli flakes ward off mosquitoes while easing nasal congestion. The makers also claim that it can boost the immune system.

What are micronesia and melanasia?

Micronesia and Melanesia are both divisions of Oceania in the Pacific Ocean and part of a group of islands. Micronesia is located in the West Pacific Ocean, east of Philippines and includes the islands of Caroline, Marshall, Mariana, Gilbert Islands, Guam and Nauru. Melanesia is in the southwest Pacific Ocean comprising islands northeast of Australia and includes Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Tuvalu, Bismarck Archipelago, Admiralty Islands, New Guinea and Fiji.

What is an elephant pearl?

The Nine Pearls, sometimes known as the Nava Moti (nine gems) are a group of sacred gems described in the Vedic texts as the ‘Garuda Purana’. Elephant Pearl is one of them- It is said these pearls are produced in the heads and in the sockets of the elephant’s tusk of the Airavata’s family at the Moon’s conjunction with the asterism Pusya or Sravana synchronous with a Sunday or Monday, as well as of the Bhadra class of elephants.

Which country has the world’s largest navy?

The United States Navy is the world’s largest and has a capacity greater than that of the next 17 largest combined navies. Currently, it has nearly 3,42,000 personnel on active duty and 1,29,634 in reserve; 276 ships and over 4,000 aircraft. Its budget is supposed to be 7.3 billion for 2007.

Who is the youngest nobel prize recipient?

The youngest person to receive a Nobel Prize was Sir William Lawrence Bragg (Physics, 1915). He was 25 years old then. Bragg and his father, Sir William Henry Bragg, won the award jointly for their work with X-ray spectra, X-ray diffraction and crystal structure.

Where did graffiti originate?

The underground art of graffiti has its origins in the late 1960s in Philadelphia, through “bombing”. Writers Cornbread and Cool Earl went about town writing their names just to gain attention from the community and media. The practice spread to New York and its various boroughs in the early 1970s and different styles such as tagging and scaling emerged. Graffiti is the practice of defacing a surface, which if done without consent, is considered vandalism. With consent, if is an art form often used as a powerful political tool.

Who was the first female judge of the supreme court of india?

Justice Fathima Beevi was the first female judge of the Supreme Court of India whose tenure lasted from October 6 1989 to April 29, 1992. The second was Justice Sujata V Manohar, from November 8,1994 to August 27,1999. The third was Justice Ruma Pal who became a Supreme Court judge in 2000 and continues to hold office. However, no female judge has yet been appointed as Chief Justice of India.

Who is the first woman judge of the supreme court?

In the June 3 edition, it’s been incorrectly mentioned that Justice Ruma Pal continues to hold office. Justice Ruma Pal retired in June 2006. She came closest to being the Chief Justice of India had she not retired.

Where did belly dancing originate?

Belly dancing is one of the oldest forms of dance in the world, and has been practised for thousands of years. A specific place or time of origination has never been determined, but it has its roots in various ancient cultures of India, the Middle East and the Eastern Mediterranean regions.

What are bric countries?

The term refers to Brazil, Russia, India and China, which economists feel will be the world economy’s building blocks. It was first used in a 2003 thesis of Goldman Sachs Investment Bank. The economies of the BRIC countries are fast developing and according to the thesis, these countries are likely to overtake the current richest countries by 2050.

What is the significance of the custom of tossing one’s hat?

The ‘hat toss’, the traditional ending to graduation and commissioning ceremonies at all service academies, originated at the US Naval Academy in 1912. Earlier, graduates of this Academy served two years as naval cadets or midshipmen before being commissioned as officers. They had to retain their midshipman’s hats for their sea tour. With the Class of 1912, graduates were commissioned as ensigns or second lieutenants, and no longer needed their midshipman’s hats. In a spontaneous gesture, new officers tossed their old hats into the air. This became the symbolic end to the four-year programme at the academy.

If a child is born mid-air on an international flight, what would be its nationality?

One theory presumes that the ship or the aircraft is the floating island of the country in which it is registered or whose flag it flies. So, the law of that particular State would apply in it. This may cover not only mid-air births but also offences, contracts, wrongs, etc. too. As far as citizenship is concerned, different States have different laws. In some, it is the place of birth while in some others it is the parent’s citizenship at the time birth that determines the child’s citizenship.

What is investment banking?

Investment banking involves structuring financial transactions for private and public companies into developed and emerging markets. Investment bankers identify capital opportunities, negotiate and structure deals, and execute private and public financial transactions. The essential function of an investment bank is to act as an intermediary between potential investors and those who seek capital. Investors include individuals, mutual funds, municipalities, public corporations, and private institutions.

Why do we say ‘bring home the bacon’?

One theory of its origin refers to contest at early American county fairs involving chasing a greased pig. If you caught it, you could take it home as your prize. Another says it originated in the early 1300s. A baron willed that if any married persons in Dunmow, England, swore at the church door that they hadn’t quarrelled for a year and a day, they would get a free side of bacon to take home. The idiom ‘bring home the bacon’ means to score a point or earn something of value, such as a salary

Why were fountains installed in old buildings?

In ancient Rome, drinking water would be supplied to different parts of the city through aqueducts, Instead of collecting such water in plain troughs; the rich would letitcome out of fountains in their mansions. This would not only serve as a water source but also add beauty to the surroundings. The refreshing ambience created by a fountain used to make it an ideal location in a building for meditation and social gatherings. Even now, some people believe the sound of flowing water such as the jet of a fountain has healing power.

In pulse polio abhiyan, what does ‘pulse’ mean?

In Pulse Polio Abhiyan, an immunisation campaign since 1994 to eradicate poliomyelitis (polio) from India, ‘pulse’ stands for Post-Resuscitation and Initial Utility in Life Saving Efforts.

Which is the world’s smallest car?

The world’s smallest car is the nanocar created by researchers at Rice University. The car measures 4 nm x 3 nm. It is slightly wider than a strand of DNA. The human hair is about 80,000 nanometres thick. The car has a chassis, axles and a pivoting suspension. The wheels are buck-balls, spheres of pure carbon containing 60 atoms a piece.

The French Ligier Be Up is the smallest car in the world still in production and can be driven on public roads. It has two seats, a 505 cc engine and measures 268 cm long, 141 cm wide and 156 cm high. It weighs 330 kg, half the weight of a Mini and it has a top speed of 100 kmph (62.2 mph).

Where was the first-ever grape wine park established in the world?

The grape wine park concept is unique to India. It’s an effort to promote grape wine production. The Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation established two wine parks under the Food Park scheme of the central ministry of food processing industry. The first one, Krishna Grape Wine Park, is at Palus near Miraj. The second is at Vinchur near Nasik and called the Godavari Valley Wine Park. Apart from basic infrastructure facilities, these parks would have other features like a wine festival ground, exhibition centre, wine therapy centre, a three-star hotel, etc.

What is the fuel consumption of an fl car per lap in a grand prix race?

The current Formula One cars have 2.4 litre V8 engines running at 19000 RPM max and can produce about 840 bhp. The fuel consumption is around 75 litres per 100 km. However, a Formula One engine is said to be more than 20% efficient at turning fuel into power than any other car. An average Formula One circuit is around 4.5-5 km. The fuel consumption is different for every circuit depending on the length and corners and also depends on driving style.

What is aristotle’s political cycle?

Aristotle classified six forms of states and believed that these keep revolving in a cyclic order. The cycle begins with monarchy which soon gets perverted into tyranny, which gets replaced by aristocracy — the rule of a few wise and able people. Aristocracy soon gets perverted into oligarchy — the rule of the rich, to be replaced by the rule of the people or the majority — polity. Polity gets perverted into democracy — the mob rule. Democracy, in the final turn, gets replaced by monarchy and the cycle begins all over again.

What is asset under management?

Assets Under Management (AUM) is the total value of assets that a mutual fund, hedge fund, or other portfolio manager manages and administers for customers. Many financial services companies use AUM in lieu of revenue. AUM indicates market performance gains/losses, foreign exchange movements; net new assets inflow outflow and structural effects of the company.

What is a hedge fund?

The term hedge fund comes from the phrase ‘to hedge one’s bets’ and refers to the practice of balancing out transactions to ensure that no matter which way the market turns, a profit can still be made. The first hedge fund was created by stock pioneer Alfred Winslow Jones. Hedge fund includes strategies like trading stock options and bonds, purchase or sale of highly undervalued securities. A common hedge fund strategy is buying shares in a company that is in the midst of a merger and acquisition. In this case, there is a guaranteed profit if the merger is completed; the only risk being the acquisition will fail.

What are abc powers?

In 1914, Argentina, Brazil and Chile arbitrated the dispute between the United States and Mexico, which was under Victoriano Huerta’s dictatorship. Mexico dissolved into civil war shortly after Woodrow Wilson’s became US President in 1913 when Victoriano Huerta seized control of the nation’s government from the Constitutionalists. Tension between Mexico and the US culminated in Wilson’s seizure of the Mexican port of Veracruz. Wilson appealed to Argentina, Brazil and Chile, the ABC powers, to arbitrate the dispute.

What is carrot and stick policy?

Carrot and stick is an approach to motivation which is widely used by the managers. Carrot stands for rewards while stick stands for penalties. In short, carrots for good performance and sticks for unacceptable performance. It is based on the belief that people are motivated by hope and fear — hope of getting rewards and fear of being denied rewards. If people fail to respond to carrots in a desired manner, sticks can be administered to do the trick. It is justified on the ground that rewards alone are insufficient for motivating people in positive ways.

Why are the latin americas called so even though the language spoken there is spanish?

The term Latin America was coined in the 1860s when the French emperor Napoleon ffl was trying to extend French imperial control over the whole region. He and his ministers used the term to try to suggest at least some degree of cultural similarity between the region and France. The region consists of people who speak Spanish, Portuguese and French. These languages (together with Italian and Romanian) developed from Latin during the days of the Roman Empire and the Europeans who speak them are sometimes called ‘Latin’ people. Hence the term Latin America.

What is the city of swans?

The City of Swans is a local government area of Western Australia. It is located in Perth’s northeastern metropolitan region and the Swan Valley, centred approximately 20 km north-east of the Perth central business district. The city of Lakeland Florida is called the ‘city of swans’. The many lakes in Lakeland are graced by white mute swans descended from a pair donated by England’s Queen Elizabeth in 1957. The city’s original swan population is thought to have originated as pets of lakefront residents around 1923.

What is a solarium?

A solarium is a sun room, derived from the Latin word for ‘sun’. In mediaeval Rome, a solarium was a room at the top of the castle towers with windows all around so that the room received sunlight at any time of day Later on, a solarium became a room built largely of glass to afford exposure to the sun. This kind of solarium was similar to a free-standing greenhouse, but could be reached from the home without going outdoors. It was a general view then that an airy sunny room promoted health. In today’s context, the term solarium can mean either a sun porch or a tanning bed.

What is a hybrid car?

Any vehicle that combines two or more sources of power that can directly or indirectly provide propulsion power is a hybrid. A hybrid car features a small fuel-efficient gas engine combined with an electric motor that assists the engine when accelerating. The electric motor is powered by batteries that recharge automatically while you drive

What is the origin of the saying, “you can only take a horse to the water but you can’t make it drink”?

This proverb means that if you want to help a person, you can only offer the person suitable advice or show her or him an opportunity, but it is wrong to expect the person to follow the advice or seize the opportunity, because a person does not do any thing unless she or he really wants to do it. The proverb must have been based on the observation that an animal does not drink water unless it is really feeling thirsty, no matter how close you take it to water. According to some sources, the proverb is of Rwandan origin. In English, it appeared first in a book on proverbs written by John Heywood in 1546. The form of the saying in the above book was “A man mate well bring a horse to the water, But he cannot make him drink without he will.” The wording of the proverb changed over the years and it assumed its current form in the mid-nineteenth century.

What is realla?

Realia is associated with libraries and are objects such as coins, tools, and textiles that do not easily fit into the orderly categories of printed material. It is also used for objects from real life used in classroom education. It concretises vocabulary and language and places it within a frame of reference. It also allows language learners to see, hear, and in some cases, touch the objects. For example, to illustrate and teach concepts such as animals, clothing, fruits, etc., we use pieces of clothing, toy animals, plastic fruit. It’s a useful tool in making the abstract concrete.

Who was the world’s first woman president?

The world’s first woman President was Marma Estela ‘Isabel’ Martinez Cartas de Peron of Argentina. She was the President of Argentina from 1974 to 1976. After her husband President Juan Peron died in office, Isabel served as President from July 1,1974 to March 24,1976. The world’s first elected woman President was Vigdis Finnbogadsttir of Iceland, between 1980 and 1996.

What is geotourism?

It refers to tourism that sustains or enhances the geographical character of the place being visited, including its environment, culture, aesthetics, heritage and well-being of its residents. Geotourists are conscious of the environment and inclined to seek culture and unique experiences when they travel.

When was the first santa congress held?

The first Santa Congress started 50 years ago in 1957, when one of the performers at Bakken had a Christmas party in the middle of summer. Santas from all over the world gather in Denmark every year to discuss important matters such as when to hold Christmas and how large the presents can be. This year, the Annual Santa Congress was held at Bakken amusement park in Denmark in July

Why is the uss nimitz called the ‘old salt’?

An ‘old salt’ in English-speaking naval services is often a raconteur, or teller of sea stories. Much of the history and traditions of the navy are passed from generation to generation of service members by these sea stories as told and retold by ‘old salts’. Sea stories may be truthful, half-truths, or falsehoods; however, they always enhance the reputations of the naval and ma.rine units, or individuals. Being one of USA’s famous ships with a long naval history, the USS Nimitz is referred to as an ‘old salt’.

Why is uss nimitz called ‘old salt’?

Though an old sailor is called an Old Salt, this warship is called so in honour of the most famous American sailor of WW II, Admiral Chester Nimitz, a great Old Salt himself.

What is druidism?

Druidism was the religious faith of ancient Celtic inhabitants of Gaul and the British Isles from the 2nd century BC until 2nd century AD. In parts of Britain which the Romans did not invade, Druidism survived until it was supplanted by Christianity two to three centuries later. This religion included a belief in the immortality of the soul, which at death was believed to pass into the body of a newborn child.

Which is the largest university in the world?

In terms of campus area, the Berry College, an American private, liberal arts college in Mount Berry on the northern-most boundary of Rome, Georgia is arguably the largest university in the world. It has approximately 2,100 students on 28,000 acres of north Georgia hill country In terms of number of students, Allama Iqbal Open University, Islamabad, Pakistan is the world’s largest university with around 1.8 million enrollments, followed by the Indira Gandhi National Open University, New Delhi, with approximately 1.4 million enrollments.

Which was the first tv talk show?

The talk show, popularly understood as a show comprising a host, a few panelists and a live audience, had its origins in the ’70s in American television. Phil Donahue’s ‘The Donahue Show’, which first aired in 1970, is the first talk show. Oprah Winfrey, however, took this format to new levels and is today the highest-paid TV personality.

What’s the origin of the word ‘greenhorn’?

The word means immature. One explanation relates to green timber which isn’t seasoned. The word dates back to the 17th century’s jewellery manufacturing industry when animal horns were used as inset in silver frames. The horn was usually decorated with a figure, often a head, and this was impressed in the brown horn by heating it to a specific temperature. Heating it to a higher temperature would result in the horn turning green, not the desired shade of brown. Such an outcome was usually the handiwork of apprentices. Hence, they came to be called greenhorns. Currently, it also refers to foreigners who haven’t yet learnt the ways of the new country.

Who is a dreyfusard?

Dreyfusard and anti-Dreyfusard refer to individuals who respectively supported or denounced Captain Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish artillery officer who was wrongly convicted of treason in 1894. This developed into a major political scandal and sharply polarised France into two camps. The Dreyfus affair was shocking abuse of the legal system, primarily driven by anti-Semitism and by an ardent desire to shield the French military from its own mistakes. Dreyfus was eventually vindicated after which he actively served in World War I and received the Legion of Honour.

When are nations said to be developed?

The nations which have a high Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita and a high Human Development Index (HDI) are generally considered developed. According to the United Nations, there is no established convention to classify nations as developed or otherwise. According to the World Bank, a nation which has a gross national per capita income of ,116 or more is called a high-income country, but it need not to be a developed nation. However, a high HDI is strongly correlated to a prosperous economy HDI mainly focuses on standard of living, literacy, life expectancy, child care, infrastructural availability, clean water and uniform wealth distribution (as per Gini co-efficient).

How many mahatma gandhi roads are there in india?

M G Road is one of the most used road names in India; there are M G Roads in almost all the districts. It is difficult to count the number of roads as they are found in several cities including Kolkata, Chennai, Bangalore, Pune, Lucknow, Agra, Porbundar, Delhi, Kochi, Hyderabad, Secunderabad, Wardha and Nagpur.

What is a tempera painting?

It is a method of painting in which the pigment is held together through a water solution mixed with either egg, casein, gum or glycerin. This method is the oldest and probably executed with a medium of egg yolk, to which a little vinegar was sometimes added. It subsequently became widespread throughout Europe and reached its height in Italy. Today, tempera paints are prepared in tubes and pots, requiring only addition of water or some other medium, usually casein. Tempera paints have a matte (non-glossy) finish, and the colours remain stable for long periods. Egg tempera can be buffed once it is completely dry to yield a rich, lustrous finish.

What is doge of venice?

Doge of Venice was the highest official of the Republic of Venice from the 8th to 18th century It originated when the city was subject to the Byzantine empire and became permanent in the 8th century. The doge was chosen from the ruling families and held office for life. He held extensive power, as seen by the rule of Enrico Donaldo (1192-1205), though from the 12th century, the aristocracy placed limits on the doge’s authority. Under Frencesco Foscari (1427-57), Venice undertook the first conquest of the Italian mainland. The last doge was deposed when Napoleon conquered northern Italy in 1797.

Which place is called the granite city?

Aberdeen, Scotland’s third largest city, is known as the Granite City It’s called so because nearly all its buildings are made of the pale granite that is quarried nearby Madison County, Illinois, USA, is also called Granite City. About 75,000 people live in the immediate Granite City area. Granite City is part of the Greater St. Louis and named by the Niedringhaus Brothers who operated a graniteware plant there.

In which play does the character ophelia appear?

Ophelia is a fictional character in the play Hamlet by William Shakespeare. She is a young noblewoman of Denmark, Polonius’ daughter, Laertes’ sister, and Prince Hamlets sweetheart. Ophelia is often referred to in literature and the arts in connection with suicide, love, and/or mental instability.

What is gravel culture?

Gravel culture is a kind of hydroponic culture (a method where plants are grown without soil for experimental and hobby purposes). Here, pea-sized gravel supports and distributes the root system. This coarse gravel allows a nutrient solution to flow down a slope or to seep from a surface drip and filter down through the roots. When the nutrients flow back into the container, they can be recirculated; otherwise, they are replenished weekly. This cycle maximises both nutrient delivery and aeration to the roots.

Why is champagne showered during a celebration?

The wine-producing region of Champagne in northern France is well known for its special white sparkling wine, which, over the centuries, came to be called by the same name. m its early days, it was produced by French monks living in the region of Champagne and the monks considered the wine holy Around 496 AD, one of the kings of France was converted to Christianity, and his baptism ceremony took place in the Champagne region. During the ceremony, the priests applied Champagne wine on his body. Since then, Champagne, because of its sparkling and bubbly quality, has become synonymous with joy, and people found it refreshing and enjoyable to spray the wine on one another during celebrations of all kinds. Members of the winning team in sports celebrate their victory by pouring champagne on one another.

What is the origin of the phrase ‘dead ringer’?

The definition of ringer, from which this phrase originated, is ‘substituted racehorse’. Unscrupulous racehorse owners would have a fast horse and a slow horse, nearly identical in appearance. They would use the slow horse until the betting odds reached the desired level. Then they’d substitute the ringer, which could run much faster. Dead, in this case means abrupt or exact like in dead stop, or dead shot. In other explanations, in order to make sure that a buried person was actually dead, a string was sometimes tied to the deceased person’s wrist and attached to a bell above the ground. If he was merely unconscious and woke up he could ring the bell and draw attention to himself — he was a ‘dead ringer’. In current usage someone who closely resembles a deceased person is regarded a ‘dead ringer’.

In which range of the himalayas is kashmir located?

Kashmir is located in the Pir Panjal Range. The other ranges of the Himalayas are Dhaula Dhar range Zanskar range, Ladakh range and East Korakoram range

Why is the cape of good hope called so?

In 1486, Bartholomew Diaz, a Portuguese nobleman sailed from Lisbon, determined to follow the African coast farther than anyone had before. After he had passed the mouth of the Congo (now Zaire) River, a fierce storm sent his ship reeling out to sea. When the gales had blown themselves out, he came back to the coast and found to his surprise that it now lay to the west. The storm had blown his ship right around the cape. On his return to Portugal, Diaz told King John II that he had named the great promontory the Cape of Storms. The king, realising this discovery might open a route to greater wealth, suggested it be renamed the Cape of Good Hope.

Why was trafalgar square built?

Trafalgar Square situated in London was built to memorialise Lord Horatio Nelson’s victory against Napoleon’s navy at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. The original name was to have been King William the Fourth’s Square, but George Ledwell Taylor suggested the name Trafalgar Square. A large monument to Lord Nelson, who won the battle of Trafalgar, stands in the centre of the square. The four-sided base of Nelson’s column depicts Nelson’s naval victories. On the North — The Battle of the Nile; the East — The Bombardment of Copenhagen; the West — The Battle of St Vincent and the South— The Death of Nelson.

Who are called cosers?

A section of youth in Taiwan who dress up like Japanese animation characters are called cosers. They emulate not just the costumes but even the roles of the characters. Experts view this trend as a way in which these youths try to break out of strict traditions of Chinese society. The act of imitating these characters is called cosplay. The cosers exhibited their flamboyant sense of style during the recently held expo of Japanese manga animation in Taiwan.

Who was the first man in hindu mythology?

According to the Matsya Purana, sage Manu was the first man (and the first human) created by God, In the above Purana it was mentioned that lord Brahma created, using his difine powers, the Goddess Shatrupa (as Saraswati was first called) and out of the union of Brahma and Shatrupa was born Manu. Manu obtained through long penance his wife Ananti. The rest of the human race originated from Manu and Ananti. Details about the children of Manu and Ananti are found in the Bhagavata Purana. Manu is also considered to be the author of the ancient Sansiilrit code of law, Manu Smrifi, which was the summary of a discourse given by Manu to several rishis. The English noun man and the Sanskrit verb mun, meaning to think, are supposed to have evolved from the word Manu. Rigveda has a different account of the origin of the human race, which was born from the five children (four male, and one female) of Lord Prajapati, as Brahma was earlier called. Of the two versions, the Matsya Purana is more popular and complete.

What is the difference between a notification and a circular?

A notification is issued by a government (central/ state) to exercise the power of a legislative enactment (Parlimentary/ Assembly). These powers are in abundance in taxation (direct/ indirect) legislations. These notifications generally lay down the law taking care of some procedural aspects of the enactment.-The circulars are issued by the chief executive in charge of the taxation hierarchy, and are normally explanatory/ interpretative or relax the rigours of the law administered.

Why are domestic lpg cylinders red?

Domestic LPG cylinders are not always red in colour. For example, blue-coloured cylinders are used in Singapore. Red colour light has the highest wavelength in the visible spectrum. So, it is visible even from a long distance. Red colour is used for anything which is dangerous or urgent. As we know that LPG is highly inflammable, it is painted red for the safety of the consumer.

What are teepees made of?

Long before the Indians from the plains moved from place to place throughout the year, taking their homes with them, they had lightweight, comfortable, collapsible structures which they called teepees (or tepees or tipis). Teepee is a tall, cone-shaped tent dwelling used by the plains’ Indians, and was made by stretching buffalo skin over a skeleton of 20-30 wooden poles, all slanted towards a central point and tied together near the top. A flap at the top allowed smoke to escape, and a flap. at the bottom served as a doorway Water-resistant and flame-retardant teepees are even produced from the best natural cotton canvas by marquee manufactures and have withstood hard commercial use for many years. The basic design and construction methods of the teepee have also been well established over many years to increase the life of the teepee.

Who created the smiley?

Research professor at the Carnegie Mellon University Scott E Fahtman is said to be the creator of the smiley, an emoticon used in internet parlance. It is believed that Fahlman sent an e-mail to his colleagues on September 19,1982; I propose the following character sequence for joke markers;:-). Read it sideways.” This year, the emoticon which has endeared itself the world over, turned 25. To celebrate its silver jubilee, an annual Smiley Award meant for CMU students was created. It carries a cash prize of 0. Prof Fahlman says that the Smiley Award is for ‘innovation in technology-assisted human to-human communication’.

Why is world aids day observed on december 1?

The first World AIDS Day came in the wake of the world summit of ministers of health on programmes for AIDS prevention in London in January 1988 which delegates from 148 countries attended. They emphasised the need for worldwide AIDS education, the free exchange of information, and the protection of human rights and dignity The World Health Organisation recognised the event by declaring December 1 as World AIDS Day. In 1991, the red ribbon became the international symbol of HIV and AIDS awareness. It was created by the Visual AIDS Caucus in New York. It made its public debut at the 1991 Tony Awards on the lapel of host Jeremy Irons.

Which is the world’s first sez?

A Special Economic Zone (SEZ) is a region that has economic laws that are more liberal than a country’s typical economic laws. The goal of an SEZ is to increase foreign investment. One of the earliest and the most famous SEZs was founded by the government of the People’s Republic of China under Deng Xiaoping in the early 1980s. The most successful SEZ in China is in Shenzhen. Following this example, SEZs have been established in several countries, including Brazil, India, Iran, Jordan, Kazas Bistan, Pakistan, the Philippines, Poland, Russia, and Ukraine.

Who was the first indian to be knighted?

Queen Victoria founded The Most Exalted Order of the Star of India in 1861, which was an order of chivalry, meant to be given to viceroys of India, nawabs and princes for their meritorious service and loyalty to the British empire. The people admitted to this order were called knights. In the year of its founding, Nawab Sikandar Begum Sahiba, Nawab Begum of Bhopal was made the Knight Grand Commander of the Star of India (GCSI). Later, her daughter and grand-daughter also received the same honour.

Who are kitchen police?

Kitchen police are military service personnel whose services are deployed to assist the cook in the kitchen. They help the cook by cutting vegetables, cleaning the floor, washing the dishes, etc. Sometimes, regular combat personnel are also sent on kitchen duty as punishment for minor offences. This term has been used in the US since World War I.

What are ugg boots?

Traditionally, ugg boots are Australian boots made from sheep skin, with wool as the inner lining and a tanned outer surface. The natural properties of sheep skin results in thermostatic benefits. Thick fleecy fibres on the inner part of the boots allow air to circulate during summer so that the feet do not become excessively warm. In winter, the sheep skin prevents heat loss and is highly effective. Ugg boots are designed to be worn without socks. The name ugg is probably derived from the word ugly to indicate their ugly look.

How are international telephone dialling codes assigned to countries?

International Telecommunication Union (ITU) recommendation defines the international public telecommunication numbering ^ttttsedin the PSTN. It also defines the format of telephone numbers. As per these recommendations, numbers can have a maximum of 15 digits and are usually written with a + prefix. CCITT, the predecessor of the ITU Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T), developed the first formal list of telephone country codes. It was included in the 1964 CCITT Blue Book, which became ITU-T recommendation E.164. The list was organised by creating nine zones, one for each international region. Zone 1 — United States, Canada, Bermuda and other Caribbean nations; Zone 2 for Africa and other Atlantic Islands; Zone 3 for Europe; Zone 4 for Europe; Zone 5 for Mexico, South America, Caribbean, and Central America; Zone 6 for Oceania and South-East Asia; Zone 7 for Russia, former Soviet Union Zone; Zone 8 for East Asia and other special services; Zone 9 for South, Central, West Asia and Middle East.

What is psiphon?

Psiphon is a censorship circumvention solution that allows users to access blocked sites in countries where the internet is censored. Psiphon turns a regular home computer into a personal, encrypted server capable of retrieving and displaying web pages anywhere. Psiphon is a human rights software project developed by the Citizen Lab.

What are bionic buildings?

In the era of ever-increasing urbanisation, people live and work in high-rise buildings which depend on artificial energy sources like electricity for survival. In the natural world, insects like spiders use a saliva-made fibre to construct their steely web. Termites build intricate airway systems in their habitat. In the same way, some architects and engineers have turned to nature for inspiration when designing buildings. These buildings are called bionic buildings. They are designed to enhance the efficiency in usage of energy by having a provision for entry of sunrays (natural lighting) to reduce dependence on electricity.

What is the lantern festival?

The 15th day of the first lunar month is the Chinese Lantern Festival because the first lunar month is called yuan-month and in ancient times people called the night Xiao. The 15th day is the first night when the full moon is visible. So, the day is also called Yuan Xiao Festival in China. According to Chinese tradition, at the very beginning of a new year, when there is a bright full moon hanging in the sky, there should be thousands of colourful lanterns hung out for people to appreciate. At this time, people try to solve the puzzles on the lanterns and eat yuanxiao (glutinous rice ball) and families gather to make for a joyful atmosphere.

If red roses speak of love, what do yellow roses indicate?

Yellow roses indicate friendship as the bright, sunny colour of yellow roses evokes a feeling of warmth and happiness. The warm feelings associated with the yellow rose are often akin to those shared with a true friend.

What is pop art?

The term pop art is short for popular art. It emerged from the pen of English critic Lawrence Alloway in the late 1950s to describe what he viewed as a contemporary attitudinal shift in subject matter and techniques of art. Beginning in England in the mid-1950s and America in early ’60s, pop art focussed on everyday objects rendered through an adoption of commercial art techniques. In doing so, artists availed themselves of images and ideas culled from popular culture, including movies, comic books, advertising, and especially, television — faithfully reproduced in all their mass-produced glory. Thus, by making use of what had been dismissed as kitsch by the art establishment, pop artists whose works were displayed in museums effectively thumbed their collective noses at the distinction between highbrow and lowbrow art.

What’s the doomsday vault?

The doomsday vault is a Noah’s Ark of sorts which would store samples of the world’s most important seeds. It was inaugurated at Longyearbyen, Norway on Tuesday The vault is trident-shaped tunnel bored into the permafrost of the Arctic mountain range. It comprises three cold chambers and can hold 4.5 billion batches of seeds from the world’s main crops. This is to ensure that species of plants obliterated by any manmade or natural disaster can be regrown.

How was the term pink slip coined?

In America, there was an old practice where the personnel department would put a discharge notice printed on pink paper in the pay envelope to notify the employee of his or her termination of employment or lay-off. The term pink slip also refers to a car race in which the winner receives the loser’s car where the vehicle title would be printed on pink paper. The term dates back to 1915. However, originally, the colour of the paper had no particular significance.

Who is adolf loos?

Adolf Loos was an Austrian architect and theoretician, one of the most important representatives of modern architecture. In his theoretical and practical works, he developed a concept of functionalist architecture, free of decoration, which he regarded as superficial and subjective (in his essay Ornament and Crime). Among Loos’ most significant works were the Steiner House and the Goldman & Salatsch department store in Vienna. The Miller Villa in Prague is among his climactic house buildings, described as “a single large, airy space” (the so-called ‘Raumplan’). Loos also designed a number of coffee houses and luxury shops (particularly in Vienna) as well as apartments.

What is ‘a very silent night’?

It’s music to a dog’s ears, literally A Very Silent Night’ is a CD recorded at a frequency only dogs can hear. It was recently launched in New Zealand. It’s not to be confused with the Christmas hymn Silent Night, Holy Night.

What is international white cane day?

James Biggs of Bristol claimed to have invented the white cane in 1921. After he lost his vision in an accident, the artist felt threatened by increased motor vehicle traffic around his home and decided to paint his walking stick white to make himself more visible to motorists. It was not, however, until 10 years later the white cane became established. With the realisation that the black cane was barely visible to motorists, the Lion’s Club decided to paint the cane white to increase its visibility and then began a national programme promoting the use of white canes for visually impaired persons. During the early 1960s, several state organisations and rehabilitation agencies serving visually impaired citizens of the United States urged Congress to proclaim October 15 the White Cane Safety Day A joint resolution of Congress was signed authorising the US president to proclaim October 15 as White Cane Safety Day

What are gigantes?

In Greek mythology, the gigantes were a race of giants, children oil Gaia or Gaea (Earth Mother) who was fertilized by the blood of Uranus when Cronus castrated him. The primordial Gigantes rose up in arms against the Olympians in an attempt to end the reign of the Olympian gods but were defeated by them and buried beneath the Earth, where their writhing is supposed to cause volcanic activity and earthquakes.

Which desert is also known as shamo? Why?

The Gobi desert, the extensive area of southern Mongolia and northern China and the largest desert in Asia, is also known as Shamo. It’s the Chinese word for ‘sand desert’. The Gobi, which extends 1,600 km from East to West and about 1,000 km from North to South, has an area of about 1,300,000 sq km. It is bounded by the Da Hinggan Ling (Greater Khingan Range) on the East, the Alton Shan and Nan Shan mountains on the South, the Tian i Shan mountains on the West, and the Altay and Hangayn Nuruu (Khangai) mountains and Yablonovyy Range on the North.

What is an adobe?

In Peru, where I come from, an adobe is a brick made of mud mixed with other material such as cane, straw and stone to give consistency It is dried in the sun. The adobe also provides a cool atmosphere to buildings made of it and is therefore used in much different kind of constructions. In Peru, there are many archaeological places that used this material, like the Huaca del Sol (450 CE), a great pre-Columbian construction in Trujillo, Peru which used around 100 million adobe bricks. Chan Chan, Huaca Pucllana, and many other complexes of our rich culture were also made with adobe. The great colonial buildings were also made with adobe, a very good material in dry weather prevalent on the coast of Peru where it rarely rains. Even today, adobe is still used for home constructions.

What does thor refer to?

It’s widely known that Thor is the Norse God of Thunder. But now, Thor is also the first ship made of ice-cream sticks that will sail to the UK from the Netherlands. This new-age Viking ship is built with 15 Million recycled ice-cream sticks which are glued together. It was created by stuntman Robert McDonald along with his son and over 5,000 children.

What are fizeau’s fringes?

Fizeau’s fringes occur in interferometry. One of the most common methods used to test the flatness of a polished surface is by analyzing the interference patterns formed when the surface is placed against another polished flat transparent surface. When two surfaces are fully in contact, a pattern of concentric dark and light cycles is seen and these patterns (or fringes) are called Newton’s rings. However, when the surfaces are separated by a very thin wedge-shaped layer of air, straight, parallel, dark and light patterns are produced and these are called Fizeau’s fringes. These fringes are named in honour of French physicist Armand Hippolyte Louis Fizeau (1819-1896), who used the interference of light to measure the dilation of crystals.

What is the origin of the term ‘the whole nine yards’?

This phrase’s origins have several interpretations. Some popular ones are as follows: nine yards probably refers to the amount of cloth/ material needed to make a wedding dress or bridal train, a man’s three-piece suit or a burial shroud. Also, the term, perhaps, comes from World War II pilots who wanted to be sure that they were fully loaded with ammunition before take-off. The ammunition belts were normally 27 ft or 9 yards. Alternatively, the term comes from the capacity of ready-mix concrete trucks which were normally 9 cubic yards — the whole nine yards referred to a fully loaded concrete truck.

What is back-door financing?

Back-door financing, an American concept, is the practice of governmental borrowing from the US treasury over and above legislature-approved budgeted expenses. The government resorts to this form of financing to meet unforeseen expenses arising out of events such as natural calamities.

Why is quartz used in watches?

Quartz is used in watches as it acts as a piezoelectric oscillator. As a potential difference is applied across quartz, stress is generated across the perpendicular faces of the quartz crystal. It is known as reverse piezoelectric effect. The word piezo in Greek means pressure and, therefore, piezoelectricity means pressure electricity It fakes place in some crystals like quartz which lack certain symmetrical properties. A mechanical stress produces an electric polarization and, reciprocally, an applied field produces a mechanical strain. So, this oscillator keeps watches ticking.

What is the geographical indications (gi) registry?

In December 1999; the Parliament passed the Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999. It seeks to provide registration and better protection of geographical indications relating to goods produced and manufactured in India. The Act is administered by the Controller General of Patents, Design and Trade Marks who is the Registrar of Geographical Indications. The Geographical Indications Registry is located in Chenhai.

What is the subprime effect?

Subprime lending, also called ‘B-Paper’, ‘near-prime’ or ‘second chance’ lending, refers to they practice of giving loans to borrowers at interest rates above the prevailing market rates because of their low credit status and increased risk due to either a limited credit history, or histories of payment delinquencies, charge-offs or bankruptcies. Subprime lending includes mortgages, credit cards and car loans. It is risky for both the lender and the borrower. It helps those consumers who otherwise Would not have access to credit market. But on the flip side the borrowers do not have the resources to meet the long-term loan obligations. But the crisis began in 2006, when in the US, thousands of borrowers defaulted in payments; as a result many lenders had to file for bankruptcy leading to a direct impact on the US housing market and economy as a whole.

What is dumdum bullet?

In the 1890s, the British military developed a bullet to be used at Dum Dum arsenal in India.’s North-West frontier and was named ‘dumdum’ bullet. It comprised a jacketed .303 bullet in which the jacket nose opened to expose its lead core to improve the effectiveness of the bullet by increasing its expansion upon impact. Afterwards, the term dumdum was taken to include any softnosed or hallow-pointed bullet. In 1899, the use of dumdum bullet was outlawed following the Hague Convention. But during First World War, the Germans accused the Belgian government of having used a dumdum bullet which the Belgians strongl denied.

What is a fish-eye lens?

It is a type of wide-angle lens used in photography to capture extremely wide and hemispherical images. Its focus length varies between 8-10 mm for circular lenses and 15-16 mm for full frame lens. Originally developed for use in meteorology and astronomy, it is used in planetariums and IMAX dome theatres to show pictures on a broad canvas.

What is the flynn effect?

The Flynn Effect is the rise of average intelligence quotient test scores seen over a period of time; say a decade or a century, in a country due to better schooling, improved nutrition or TV or even greater familiarity with multiple choice questions. The effect was named after New Zealand philosopher James R Flynn.

What is grimm’s law?

Grimm’s Law shows the systematic relationship between consonants in Germanic languages and consonants in other Indo-European languages, stating what phonetic changes took place. It is a phonetic principle formulated by German philologist Jacob Grimm in 1822. It describes the pattern of two stages of sound changes, known as the German consonant shift and the High German consonant shift. Grimm’s Law is important because it demonstrates the development, from the Old Germanic languages, of more recent languages such as English, Dutch, and Low German. It also shows that changes in a language and in groups of languages come about gradually and not as a result of random’ word changes.

What’s unique about gothenburg?

Located on the west coast of Sweden, Gothenburg is Sweden’s second largest city Known primarily as a university city housing two famous universities —University of Gothenburg and Chalmers University of Technology — Gothenburg is also an important trade centre, having one of the largest ports in the Scandinavian countries. Further, the city happens to be an important cultural and sports centre among Scandinavian countries, possessing many theatres, museums, parks, and sports clubs. The annual Gothenburg Film Festival is the biggest in Scandinavia. Despite its relatively small size, Gothenburg organizes many largescale international sports championships. During March 18-23, 2008, World Figure Skating championships were held there at the Scandinavian Arena, the second largest indoor stadium of Sweden.

What is the ole robotic beetle?

These are robots that look like Volkswagen Beetle cars, only they have legs instead of wheels. They can scuttle

Dr. Ashok Kumar Sharma, M.A.(History); Certificate in Taxidermy(Madras); Certifate in Library Science (TOPPER-ML Sukhadia Uni. Udaipur,(Rajasthan) INDIA. Hobby: Cricket; Postal Stamp Collection and Collection of Quotations since 1981.


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Looking for belly dancing steps? Professional belly dancers teach you how to do hip bumps in belly dancing with these free video lesson. Expert: Patricia Prata Contact: www.patrciaprata.com Bio: Patricia Prata is a triple threat Brazilian actress living in Los Angeles. Patricia has been training and working with the best dance artists in the world for many years. Filmmaker: Nili Nathan

Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
29

Lebanese Belly Dance 25

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A nice performance by Nadeen Abu Abdullah. She is wearing an Egyptian style belly dance costume. The Egyptian style costumes are different from other costumes in that they look more like glitsy evening gowns rather than the traditional two piece costumes. In fact, in Egypt, due to this style of costume, it is not common to see the abdominal area of a belly dancer exposed.
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Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
28

Egyptian Folkloric Belly Dance : Hip Drop Belly Dancing Drill

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The hip drop is a belly dancing move with traditional roots popular in many belly dance routines. Learn Egyptian belly dancing hip drop drill from an instructor in this free belly dance video. Expert: Johanna ‘Xenobia’ Krynytzky Contact: www.hip-expressions.com/HipEx/Home.html Bio: Johanna Krynytzky studied belly dancing while at the University of Chicago in 1996, and is the director at Hip Expressions Dance Studio in Gulfport, Florida. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
28

5 Fun Activities That Can Help Shrink Your Waistline

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5 Fun Activities That Can Help Shrink Your Waistline

A lot of people say that losing weight is quite a difficult feat. However, it seems that majority of those who find it hard to shed off pounds are either spending too much time on the couch or do not have the imagination to find ways to minimize the flab.

There are actually many ways to stay fit and healthy. You do not have to bore yourself to death in spending hours on the gym. Here are 5 activities that have been proven to help people, especially women, reduce their bulk in the middle:

1.      Have A Dip

If you are obese or overweight, one of the best activities to help you lose the belly is swimming. Besides taking a dip will not put strain on your knees and joints. Moreover, swimming is a fun activity that not only exercises your abdomen, but also your arms, legs and almost every muscle in your body. If you really want to get most of swimming, make sure to use butterfly strokes.

2.      Keep Your House Spic And Span

If you find that your middle is getting bigger, it may be time to let your cleaning lady enjoy a permanent vacation. Having nobody to turn to in tidying up your house will compel you to set aside a couple of hours on weekends to make your crib spic and span. Dusting the furniture, vacuuming the carpet, scrubbing the walls, waxing the floor, washing the dishes and your clothes will surely give you the total body workout that you are craving for. All the bending, pushing, pulling, lifting, and walking will surely help you slim down.

3.      Shake Your Booty

Do you have a sluggish metabolism? No problem, all you have to do is to fidget and shake your booty every time you have an opportunity to do so. According to a research, people who move and fidget a lot lose more weight than people who rarely move. For more abs-shrinking action, you may want to get your jump rope and hula hoop out of the closet and starting jumping and shaking your butt away.

4.      Row Away

Have you ever encountered a member of a rowing team who has a big belly? The answer to that is probably no. The bending and the pulling back of the paddles are crucial in making the tummies of rowers strong and hard. Furthermore, swimming is also part of the training of the rowing team so if you joined a rowing team or club.

5.      Get Your Groove Back

Having two left feet is never an excuse to ditch dancing as a form of exercise. Although it would be more fun to go dancing with your friends in a club or learning ballroom in a class, you can still benefit from dancing even when you do it alone inside your room. If you are a bit shy to show your moves to a lot of people, just buy a dance video that you can follow on your own. The swinging, thrusting and swaying of your body and hips will help reduce your belly fat.

By the way, learning how to belly dance or pole dance can also help ignite your sexual life with your husband or partner. He will surely appreciate the moves you learned on the dance floor when you use them in the bedroom.

To help hasten your weight loss, you may also want to watch your diet and take natural supplements to help curb your appetite and boost your metabolism. One product that has been proven to help people lose weight is Phenocal. For more information, visit http://www.phenocal.com.

Janet Martin is an avid health and fitness enthusiast and published author. Many of her insightful articles can be found at the premier online news magazine. http://www.thearticleinsiders.com.


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Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
27

Belly Dance Chest Movements : Horizontal Chest Circle Belly Dance Move

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Make horizontal circles with the chest in belly dancing by combining the torso slide and chest pushes and pulls. Learn horizontal circle belly dance chest movements from a dance instructor in this free dance video lesson. Expert: Karen Sun Ray Coletti Contact: www.hip-expressions.com Bio: Karen Sun Ray Coletti began belly dancing in 1976 and has focused on dance styles from around the world from the time she was a little girl. Currently, Coletti directos Hip Expressions Dance Studio. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz
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Add a triple step to a belly pop belly dancing move with circular motions to intensify a dance routine. Learn Egyptian belly dancing pop circle move from an instructor in this free belly dance video. Expert: Johanna ‘Xenobia’ Krynytzky Contact: www.hip-expressions.com/HipEx/Home.html Bio: Johanna Krynytzky studied belly dancing while at the University of Chicago in 1996, and is the director at Hip Expressions Dance Studio in Gulfport, Florida. Filmmaker: Christopher Rokosz

Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
27

General Knowledge Pt. XVI

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General Knowledge Pt. XVI

What is collateral debt obligation?

Collateral Debt Obligation (CDO) is the cause of the subprime crisis and recession. European banks and investors bought sub-prime housing loan portfolios from original US lenders to diversify their investment portfolio before the sub-prime crisis. At that time, it seemed a lucrative investment avenue. These are known as Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS). Later on, CDOs became toxic assets for these banks and investors.

In star wars, how is a sith different from a jedi?

Star Wars is a series of science fiction movies depicting events taking place in a fictional galactic empire filled with a mysterious force. The Siths and the Jedi are two cult-like orders in the galaxy, and are enemies. The Jedi are the guardians of peace and justice in the empire. The Siths, on the other hand, are devoted to the dark side of the force, which imparts to them evil characteristics like hatred, aggression and malevolence.

What is barcode art?

Barcode art is created using the personalized data of a human being. When an individual’s gender, weight, height, age and location are entered, a barcode is formed using realworld data. This barcode can then be printed, mapped, scanned, even depicted on a T-shirt or a coffee mug. The calculation of an individual’s BMI reveals the health of an individual. Thus, those considered underweight or over weight are worth less money.

Why is the empty space in a car measured in litres?

Generally, volume in litres is associated with liquid measurements. Space inside a car is a not a perfect cube or an easily calculable shape. Volumes are not always easy to measure for irregular solid objects or spaces. We can use litres and cubic centimetres, or even cubic metres for measuring solid objects, or space that something might fit into, for example, the space of the car boot, as well as for liquids such as drinks, water, and gas.

What is the delta triangle?

The Delta Triangle is an imaginary uninhabited sector of the Milky Way galaxy that finds a mention in the series/ film ‘Star Trek’, with a lot of similarities with the infamous Bermuda Triangle on Earth. The Delta Triangle has the unusual ability to cause starship sensors fluctuate in a state of chaos while within the region. According to the film’s plot, the Delta Triangle is explored by the Starship ‘Bonaventure’ but it gets trapped in it. Finally, the airship USS Enterprise is sent to investigate the incidences, but that also gets trapped.

What gives sunrise and sun-set an orange glow?

At sunrise and sunset, we see the sun through a greater thickness of air because it is low in the sky Therefore, we are looking at it across the earth’s surface rather than directly up into the sky At these times, the sky often turns orange-red because the photonsof red and orange light are scattered through the atmosphere around us.

Which christian festival is the nice carnival linked to?

The Nice Carnival has been held annually since the 14hth century, 12 days before the Christian festival of Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, and which occurs 40 days before Easter (excluding Sun days). During this period, verious performances and festivities succeed one another on a 2-km stretch of the town The carnival ends with a grand fireworks display on Shrove Tuesday.

What is slow blogging?

It’s a movement that emphasizes blogging after thoughtful consideration instead of hammering out posts in a surge of emotion. While successful bloggers are known to update their blog regularly, slow blogging urges bloggers to slow down. In its manifesto, ToddSieling, a Canadian technology consultant, writes that slow blogging is “a rejection of immediacy… an affirmation that not all things worth reading are written quickly…”

What are the silver lotus awards in indian cinema?

The Silver Lotus awards are the national film awards presented in two main categories: feature films and non-feature films. They are the country’s oldest award alongside the Filmfare awards. The awards hold the distinction of recognizing merit in Indian cinema as well as presenting awards for the best films in each region and language of the country.

What is a liquidity trap?

In this age of recession and shrinking world economies, governments, in a bid to increase aggregate demand (AD), may lower interest rates to encourage spending. This is because a lower interest rate makes spending relatively more attractive to consumers and businesses than saving in banks. When a government continues to lower interest rates repeatedly and they reaches a level of 0% without correlated increase in AD, then it is called a liquidity trap.

What’s the blue nile and the white nile?

Blue Nile and White Nile are two tributaries of the Nile that flow from the South into what is referred to as the Nile proper, the longest river in the world. While the White Nile is the longer tributary, the Blue Nile is the main source of water and fertile soil.

What is the difference between a coat and a blazer?

A blazer is for formal wear and a coat is for anytime wear. Formal blazers are generally made in deep shades. Coats can be made of any fabric like cotton, linen and leather.

What is push to talk feature in mobile phones?

Push to Talk (PTT), also known as press to transmit, is a method by which we can communicate on half-duplex communication lines, including two-way radio, using a momentary button to switch from voice reception mode to transmit mode. A two-way radio can both transmit and receive (a transceiver), unlike a broadcast receiver which only receives content.

How is the distance between planets calculated?

The distance between planets was calculated by Copernicus using Kepler’s Third Law of Planetary Motion: the square of the time period of the revolution of a planet around the sun is directly proportional to the cube of the semi-major axis of its orbit.

Who is a musher?

A musher is a person who competes in cross-country races with a dog team and sled. The word mush probably originated from the French term marchons meaning ‘let us march’. Mush is a command word to sled dogs and is used to make sled dogs start pulling or moving faster. The person giving the mush command to sled dog is called musher.

What is a staycation?

A staycation is a neologism in vogue, where a person or family stays home instead of taking expensive and stressful vacations to exotic locations. It is a new travel word and is very popular what with today’s recession and high prices.

What is 3-g technology?

3-G technology refers to third generation of mobile telephony technology, with improved and extended facilities over the first and second generation technologies. Transfer of data in 3-G is many times faster, up to 384 kpbs.

What is spoofing in it?

The most common sort of spoofing online is ‘e-mail spoofing’, i.e making an e-mail message appear to have come from one place when really it comes from another. It is generally used by spammers, who do not want their real address to appear on the e-mails they send.

What is the concept of a time machine? How does it work?

To locate an object in a plane, we require four dimensions — length, breadth, height and time. We all travel frequently in the first three dimensions, but can’t do it in the fourth dimension ‘time’. A time machine is a device or vehicle that can potentially take us into the future or past.

What are floaters?

Floaters can be any of these things: Musca volitans — spots before the eyes caused by opaque cell fragments in the vitreous humour and lens of the eye; a debt instrument with variable interest rate tied to some other interest rate; a va grant with no established residence or visible means of support; an employee who is reassigned from job to job as needed; a voter who votes illegally at different polling places in the same election; a swimmer who floats in the water; an object that floats;an insurance policy covering loss of movable property,

What is a stimulus shelter?

Stimulus shelter is a mechanism that the brain develops to shield us from the barrage of information coming our way every minute. It filters out unimportant stimuli and retain the important ones.

How did the symbols +, – etc originate?

The earliest print appearance of the modern signs seem to come from a book on Mercantile Arithmetic by Johannes Widmann in 1489, used to indicate surpluses and deficits. The + is a simplification of the Latin “et”. Robert Recorde, designer of the equals sign, introduced plus and minus in the UK in 1557.

What is a busman’s holiday?

The phrase Busman’s Holiday means to do the same thing on one’s day off as one does all week. The accepted origin of the phrase traces it to drivers of London’s horse-drawn omnibuses in the 19th century, who would supposedly spend their days off checking up on how the substitute drivers were treating their horses.

What is bibliotherapy?

Bibliotherapy is an expressive therapy that uses an individual’s relationship to the content of books and poetry and other written words as therapy. It is often combined with writing therapy

What does mineral water contain?

Naturally available water, after coming in contact with various salts found in soil, contains a large number of chemicals, including calcium, magnesium, potassium and iron. Small quantities of these give water its odour and are useful for the essential functioning of the human body

What is global cooling?

Scientists believe the cooling of the sun causes global cooling. Global cooling is known for the absence of sunspot activity. According to the theory of global cooling, the sun had no sunspots between 2008 and 2009, while sunspot activity was at its peak in the 1990s.

Why are danger signals in red although the eye is most sensitive to yellow and green?

Although the human eye is sensitive to yellow and green, it has become a tradition to use red as a signal for caution. Experts believe that since the deep red colour of blood could shock people into alertness, such a shade was most suitable as a signal for caution.

What is the oldest dance form?

Historians consider the dance form that is today known as belly dance the oldest form. It originated 6,000 years ago and was practised by many ancient cultures, including those of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and India. Even though the modern belly dance has many negative connotations and is considered to be seductive, it had a totally different purpose in ancient times. Originally, it was performed only by women, for women, sometimes as a part of goddess worship and sometimes to celebrate womanhood. Its practical purpose was to exercise the abdominal muscles of women so that they could go through pregnancy and child birth successfully.

How is doldrum pressure formed?

The equatorial area is a region of high temperature. Due to intense heat, the atmosphere heats up, expands arid becomes lighter. Hence, the air starts rising vertically, causing low pressure on the ground. The horizontal movement of wind in this belt is very feeble. It is, therefore, a calm belt, also known as doldrums.

What is ratware?

Ratware is the colourful name for any mass email software that generates, sends, and automates spam email sending.

What is taipei 101?

Taipei 101 is a skyscraper located in the international business district of Xinyi (code 101) in Taipei, Taiwan, with 101 floors constructed above the ground and five floors underground. Taipei 101 has been the world’s tallest completed building since 2004. Though the Burj Dubai building structure surpassed Taipei 101′s height in July 2007, the building is still under construction.

Where did the phrase ‘throw in the towel’ originate?

When you throw in the towel, you are giving up. In its original form, it was called ‘to throw up the sponge’. The reference is to sponges used to cleanse combatants faces at prize fights. A contestant’s manager throwing in the sponge would signal that the fighter had had enough. In recent years, towels have been substituted for sponges at fights, and consequently, replaced the term in the expression too.

What is the origin of the phrase ‘there are no atheists in a foxhole’?

The phrase means in a pressure situation, such as war or a terrorist attack, even committed atheists may start thinking about God. This line is used in the 1942 film ‘Wake Island’, a story about the military garrison in Wake Island and the travails in the island during the Japanese attack. The phrase is believed to be of World War I origin.

What are mammatus clouds and how are they formed?

True to their ominous appearance, mammatus clouds are often harbingers of a coming storm. Composed primarily of ice, they can extend for hundreds of miles in each direction and individual formations can remain visibly static for 10-15 minutes at a time. While they may appear foreboding, they are merely the messengers.

Why ‘daily soaps’ are called so?

Daily soaps are a take-off from opera shows in South America, which were sponsored by soap manufacturers. They were then known as ‘soap operas’— these inspired daily television shows, known as ‘daily soaps’.

What is ‘feeling stressurised’?

Feeling ‘stressurised’ means the feeling of “being under pressure and stress” at the Same time.

Tidal waves occur at night due to the moon’s attraction. Though the moon is present in the day too, why are there no tidal waves?

It is not true that there are no tidal waves during the day. Tidal waves are the result of the gravitational pull of the moon and the sun, but the effect of the sun is much less than that of the moon. In fact, tidal waves occur twice on any day-night cycle of 24 hours — once when the moon is right over the head, and for the second time when the moon is in the opposite position.

How do odi teams choose their colours?

There is no hard and fast rule about choosing cricket colours. In most cases, the country adopts colours from their national flags — as Pakistan, Bangladesh, England, West Indies, Zimbabwe do. In some cases, the country wears the national colours — Australia wears green and gold, Holland wears orange, South Africa wears dark green and New Zealand wears black (silver earlier, as silver and white are their secondary national colours). India wears blue because of the blue Ashok Chakra on the flag, and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) flag is also blue.

What is the maginot line?

The Maginot Line was built between 1930 and 1940, and named after French minister of defence Andre Maginot. It was built to prevent attacks from Germany, after learning a hard lesson from World War I. The Maginot Line was a line of concrete fortification, consisting of tank obstacles, artillery casemates, machine gun posts and other defence establishments, like a complex of bunkers. It was constructed to cover its borders with Germany and Italy, although the line stretched from Switzerland to Luxembourg. It was extended further after 1934 to the Strait of Dover. However, it later proved to be strategically ineffective, as the Germans invaded France through Belgium.

What is paypal?

PayPal is a safe and easy way to pay and get paid online. The service allows anyone to pay in any way they prefer, including through credit cards, bank accounts, buyer credit or account balances, without sharing financial information. Available in 190 markets and 24 currencies around the world, PayPal enables local e-commerce by making payments possible across different locations, currencies and languages. Located in San Jose, California, PayPal was founded in 1998 and acquired by eBay in 2002.

What is the catfish effect?

‘Catfish effect’ is a term used in human resource management to describe how groups are motivated by the addition of a strong competitor. The phrase comes from the practice of Norwegian fishermen, who add a single catfish into their haul of live sardines. In this way, the sardines swim vigorously to avoid contact with the catfish, and can be brought to market while still alive, thus fetching a higher price.

What is the difference between tomato sauce and tomato ketchup?

In the US, ketchup is prepared with tomatoes, sugar, vinegar/acetic acid and spices. It is used as a dressing or table condiment. Ketchup is cold and is never heated as a rule. Tomato sauce, on the other hand, is made from tomatoes, oil, meat or vegetable stock and spices. Vinegar is not usually used. Sauces are generally served hot. Most manufacturers insist that ketchup is made with spices while Sauce is generally made without spices.

What is the saros cycle?

The Saros Cycle is an eclipse cycle with a period of nearly 18 years, 11 days and 8 hours. The earliest discovered historical record of the Saros Cycle is by the Chaldeans (ancient Babylonian astronomers). It is very useful for predicting the times at which nearly identical eclipses of the sun and moon will occur. A complication with the Saros Cycle is that its period is not an integer number of days.

What is a nuclear umbrella and how does it work?

Nuclear umbrella refers to a guarantee by a nuclear-weapon state to defend a non-nuclear allied state. It is usually used for the security alliances of the United States with Japan, South Korea, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and Australia, originating with the Cold War with the Soviet Union. For some countries, it was an alternative to acquiring nuclear weapons themselves.

What is groundhog day?

It is a traditional American festival celebrated on February 2. The legend of Groundhog Day is based on an old Scottish couplet: “If Candlemas Day is bright and clear, there’ll be two winters in the year.” It is said that if the groundhog pops out from its electrically-heated burrow, sees his shadow, and then disappears again, it will mean that winter is to continue for six more weeks. But if the groundhog does not see its shadow, then winter will soon end. Groundhog Day received worldwide attention as a result of a 1993 film of the same name.

Who is a warmist?

A warmist —or global warmist — is a person who believes that the human race is primarily responsible for warming. Once a term used for scientists whoso believed, it has now taken on a pejorative meaning. There are ‘deniers’ who believe that while global warming may be true, warming and cooling has been happening for millions of years, and man may not be directly responsible. ‘Coolists’ are those who disbelieve the warming theory.

How did spectacles originate?

Lenses are the key component of spectacles and were made even in ancient times. However, it is not known whether such lenses were used merely as ornaments or as visual aids. It was discovered around 1000 AD that a glass sphere, when placed on a surface, enlarged the contents of the surface beneath it. The first wearable eye glasses were made by an Italian, Salvino D’Armate, in the 13th century AD. Soon, they became quite popular with priests. While spectacles have undergone many design improvements since then, the credit for making spectacles with double-hinged side pieces is given to British designer James Ayscough, who made them in 1752. In 1784, American inventor Benjamin Franklin made the first bifocals.

What substance do bones of birds contain?

Bones of many adult birds are hollow and are connected to a system of air sacs dispersed through the body Bone or osseous tissue consists of phosphate and carbonate of lime, salt and a few other substances. They are not filled with marrow and contain more calcium than mammalian bone, which tends to make them more brittle and prone to developing multiple fractures.

What is an integrated city?

An integrated city is developed as a whole, by examining the existing city and identifying areas which have been neglected. ‘Civic software’ is still new and can be utilised to work out problems. Those who advocate this concept aim for at a ‘do-it-yourself’ city which does not need government departments and funds. They look at integrating the city with a transport system which connects all areas and urban design which taps local resources. Liverpool is the first city with such a project at hand.

What does t in t-shirt stand for?

The origin is uncertain: it may refer to the shape of the shirt as a T — when laid out, it looks like the alphabet T; it may be derived from its use by the army as a ‘training shirt’. The shapebased theory is supported by the existence of an A-shirt in the 1930s, which was a typical undershirt and later referred to as a tank top.

Why does an iron nail gain weight on rusting?

Rust is iron-oxide — a molecule consisting of iron and oxygen. When rust forms, the mass of the iron object is increased by the mass of oxygen that has combined with some of the iron.

What is the betawi dance?

The Betawi dance form or ‘Topeng Betawi’ is an art form of the people living in Java and Ball in Indonesia. The name comes from Batavia, the old Dutch name for the city of Jakarta. It can be used to describe both theatre and dance, with the performers sometimes wearing masks. A performance can include a mix. of dialogue, song, comedy, dance and music, beginning with dance but could include dialogue later. They are sometimes performed by a female singer-dancer and a male clown. Music is provided by a small ensemble of bronze idiophones, drums called gendang, and a two-string spike fiddle called a rebab.

How is the data of emails stored on servers? What is their capacity andwhere are they located?

An e-mail system consists of two different servers running on a machine. One is called the SMTP server, where SMTP stands for Simple Mail Transfer Protocol. The SMTP server handles outgoing mail. The other is either a POPS server or an IMAP server, both of which handle incoming mail. POP stands for Post Office Protocol and IMAP stands for Internet Mail Access Protocol. In the simplest implementations of POPS, the server maintains a collection of text files — one for each e-mail account. When a message arrives, the POPS server simply appends it to the bottom of the recipient’s file. With POPS, once downloaded, email is removed from the POPS server, with IMAP, the mail stays on the server. Size of the server can be 2-10 Terra bytes. All email providers have several clusters of servers in various locations across the world. Each cluster has a few thousand servers. Google server farms are all over the world: 19 in the US where they operate data centres, 12 in Europe, one in Russia and three in Asia.

Why do most birds jump on landmstead of walking?

Smaller birds hop, while larger ones walk by alternating legs. Smaller birds won’t get very far with each baby step, However, there are plenty of exceptions, even within the same taxonomic groups, and some species (ravens, robins and blackbirds) move by both methods.

What is the fog index?

The Fog Index was developed by Robert Gunning, an American businessman, in 1952. It is a test designed to measure the readability of a sample of English writing. The resulting number is an indication of the number of years of formal education that a person requires in order to easily understand the text on the first reading. If a passage has a fog index of 12, it has the reading level of a US highschool senior. Texts that require a close-to-universal understanding generally require an index of less than 8. The Bible and Shakespeare reportedly have a fog index of 6.

Why do our joints and knuckles crack?

Joints produce a cracking sound when nitrogen bubbles burst in a thick and clear fluid surrounding the joints to lubricate them, called ‘synovial fluid’. When we stretch or twist our fingers, the pressure in the fluid decreases, which leads to dissolving of gases present there, forming bubbles, through a process called “cavitation”. When the joint is stretched far enough, the pressure drops and the bubble burst, producing a pop sound. It takes about 25-3O minutes for the gas to redissolve into the joint fluid. During this period, the knuckles won’tcrack.

What is an ice dance?

Ice dancing is a sport in which iceskating pairs perform to music routines similar to ballroom dances. Ice dancers are judged on the difficulty and originality of their dance steps, their interpretation of the music and their timing and unison. Unlike figure skating, ye dancing does not allow movement of strength or technical skill. It hasbeen an Olympic event since 1976.

What is philematology?

Philematology is the study of kissing, what it means and its place in various cultures. It is the subject of a new book A Compendium of Kisses’ by Lana Citron, an actress and stand-up comic. Citron talks descriptively about the light cheek-brushing to the French smooch to the ‘olfactory kiss’ or the rubbing of noses. The study includes observations by celebrities and how the kiss has metamorphosed from an expression of love to social style.

What is philosopher’s wool?

The compound zinc oxide (ZnO) is called philosopher’s wool. Alchemists, as part of their rituals, would burn zinc in air and collect the residue, which formed into white woolly tufts. They called it lana philosophica in Latin, meaning philosopher’s wool. Zinc oxide has many uses: as white pigment in paints, component in zinc ointment for treating skin diseases, material in sun screens and sun lotions, in rubber manufacture and in photocopying products.

What is the emperor pair?

In cricket, if a batsman is out for no score in both innings of a Test match, he is said to have scored a ‘pair’ or a ‘spectacle’. When a batsman is out for a duck in both innings — on the very first ball — in each innings, it is termed an ‘Emperor Pair’ or ‘King Spectacles’. The record for the maximum number of Emperor Pairs is held by ace spinner Bhagvat Chandra Sekhar, who managed it twice in two Tests.

What does eliot’s famous line ‘i have measured out my life with coffee spoons… Mean?

This line is from the poem The Love Song of J Alfred Prufrock, in which Prufrock is a mythical person symbolic of the 20th century man. The poem highlights the emotional woes of this man, who has no self-confidence, is indecisive about proposing to the girl he loves.

What are quarks and gluons?

For close to three decades, nucleons (protons and neutrons) were considered to be the ultimate subatomic particles. As scientists delved deeper, they detected shadows of yet another layer of matter inside nucleons. Unable so far to crack open a nucleon and bring out one of these shadowy objects for observation and measurement, they named them quarks. It is believed that one up and one down quark make up the proton and neutron. Quarks are held together by a force dubbed the chromo force, represented by particles named gluons, which are just as unseen as quarks.

Where is the sonoran desert?

The Sonoran Desert, sometimes called the Gila Desert, is located in North America and covers parts of the state of Arizona and California in the United States and the state of Sonora in Mexico. It is spread over 3,11,000 sqkm.

Why are the wee hours called so and what is the origin of the phrase?

Wee hours mean the early hours of a day, or the period immediately after midnight. They are called so because the word ‘wee’ in present-day English means ‘very small or tiny’. As these hours are the beginning of the new day they came to be referred to as the wee hours. According to the Oxford Dictionary, ‘wee’ has been in usage with the above meaning since the 1600s in Southern England.

What makes honey sweet?

Nectar is taken from a flower by the bee and carried in the honey sac back to the hive. It is transformed into honey by enzymes produced in the honey sac, which convert the natural sucrose (a complex sugar) in the nectar into fructose and glucose (simple sugar). Fructose is the sugar that makes honey sweet.

What is zero net?

Zero net is the modern strategy to regulate pollution by controlling the use of energy in constructions. The term ‘zero net energy’ is used when the amount of energy utilised by a building is equal to the amount provided by on-site or nearby renewable energy resources. Such buildings are also called zero energy buildings and are gaining popularity in US and Europe.

How did positions on the cricket field get their names?

The words ‘on’ and ‘off’ originate from the offside and near side of a horse or carriage, the ‘offside’ being the opposite side, which a driver walks or rider mounts. The origin of the word ‘slips’ is hinted at in an early description of the long stop, who “is required to cover manyslips from the bat”. Early cricket writers identify two slip positions — ‘short-slip’, which was equivalent to modern-day first or second ‘slip’ position. The other position was ‘long-slip’, equivalent to the modern-day ‘short third man’ or ‘fly-slip’ position. By the turn of the century, an attacking field would usually have two ‘slips’ — ‘first slip’ and ‘cover-slip’ or extra-slip. The name gully apparently derives from the more general meaning of a narrow channel or gorge between ‘point’ and slips. It became a position in its own right, following the development of off-theory attack towards the end of the 19th century The origin of the term ‘point’ stems from early cricket when the position was called ‘point of the bat’ and the fieldsman would field no more than three and half yards from the batsman. ‘New fieldsman’ was the third man up.

What is coriolis force?

It is an apparent force caused by the earth’s rotation. The coriolis force is responsible for deflection of winds towards the right in the northern hemisphere and left in the southern hemisphere. It is also known as Ferrel’s law, and is responsible for deflection of the south-east trade winds which enter the Indian peninsula as the south-west monsoon.

What is a travelling exhibition?

A travelling exhibition is that which is available for circulation on a local, national or international level. The collection of the exhibition can be en tirely loaned to organizations for a fixed period of time. Travelling exhibitions are usually supported by governmental organizations to spread knowledge and local culture.

Where is the white city?

Located in Tel Aviv, Israel, the White City was constructed from the early 1930s to 1950s, based on an urban plan by Sir Patrick Geddes. The buildings were designed by architects trained in Europe where they practised before immigrating. They created an outstanding architectural ensemble of the Modern Movement in a new cultural context. Over 4,000 Bauhaus or international-style buildings were built and all painted white. The architecture had to be adapted to suit the extremes of the Mediterranean ; and desert climate.White and light colors reflected the heat. Large areas of glass that let in the light, a key element of the Bauhaus style in Europe, were replaced with small recessed windows. The houses had long, narrow balconies and flat roofs for socializing in the evening.

Who is an ecotarian?

An ecotarian is a person who eats a diet of food grown or produced in an eco-friendly manner. In a wide sense, it is organic, locally produced food, minimally processed and with little packaging. It should have a minimal impact on the planet. An ecotarian is not necessarily a vegetarian, but a meat-eater who sticks to poultry and pork.

What is the chemical composition of ivory?

Ivory tusks and teeth consist of an inner pulp cavity surrounded by dentine — a combination of connective tissues that have minerals and collagen properties. Found in tusks of elephants and teeth of mammals such as the hippopotamus, walrus, boar, sperm and killer whale, ivory forms layers. It gets strength and rigidity from inorganic components, namely mineralised tissues. The organic element, collagen, helps in the growth and repair of ivory, which has no blood vessels, is porous and absorbs and releases moisture.

What causes ‘winterline’ and why is it visible only in a few places in the world?

From mid-October to January, when the sun sets, the western horizon turns a myriad combination of yellow, red, orange and mauve. This is known as the winterline. The phenomenon is unique to Mussoorie and a part of Switzerland. The sun drops behind a false horizon, a grey and mauve strip, with a bright line of yellow and orange colours at its upper end. It occurs due to the refraction of sunlight at a particular angle, visible only from mountain areas with a long, clear valley towards the west. .

Why does the wwf logo feature a panda?

The World Wildlife Fund was founded in UK by Sir Peter Scott, a British naturalist and painter, in 1961. The WWF got the idea of using Chi-Chi, a female giant panda at London Zoo. The team felt “the big, furry animal with her appealing, black-patched eyes” would make an excellent logo. Another reason was to minimize printing costs (it needed just black and white).

What is the dog house in the glass industry?

The charging end of the glass furnace is commonly referred to as the ‘dog house’. It comprises a tank with spaced sidewalls. The glass-batch (raw material) is fed continuously into this opening — called dog house — at one end of the tank, and the melted, refined and conditioned glass is drawn out the other end.

Who is zorro?

Zorro is a charismatic legend, which changed through 90 years of cinema. Zorro’s origin lies in Baroness Orczy’s 1905 novel ‘The Scarlet Pimpernel’, where the hero helped scores of French aristocrats escape from France and avoid the guillotine. Johnston McCulley first introduced the character of Zorro. In 1920, Douglas Fairbanks Sr brought fame to McCulley, by starring as Don Diego Vega and Zorro. We now have Antonio Banderas carrying the baton.

What is peep culture?

Pop culture, with television and radio as entertainment, has evolved into peep culture, with reality TV and internet. Entertainment is all about going through people’s private lives on blogs and social networking sites. These are tellall, show-all times. Peep culture is a vent for social isolation, ironically, a result of an increasingly virtual world.

What is carbon dating?

It is a method to determine the age of plants and fossils. Carbon has three naturally occurring isotopes, C12, C13 and C14. Of the three, C14 is radioactive in nature and has a half-life (decays to half the strength) of 5,730 years. Scientists measure the strength of C14 in the plant or fossil, and compare it with the expected strength of C14 in the atmosphere, to compute the age. Also known as radio carbon dating, this technique was developed by Willard Libby in 1949. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1960.

What is the anchor investor concept?

The anchor investor is a recently introduced category of investor in the Initial Public Offer (IPO). A Qualified Institutional Buyer who gets firm allotment in an IPO of up to 30% of the institutional quota is an anchor investor. The lock-in period for such an investor is 30 days. This is done to instill a higher degree of confidence among the investing community, as an anchor investor is its brand ambassador.

Why does the touch-me-not shrink when touched?

The touch-me-not shrinks due to loss of turgidity (the pressure of content against the cell wall) by cells within the pulvini-specialised motor organs at leaf joints. Upon stimulation, like touching, the leaf cells lose potassium ions, triggering water to leave the cells through osmosis. It takes about 10 minutes for the cells to regain turgidity and the leaves to open out.

What is big crunch theory?

This theory says the universe will one day stop expanding. Then, as gravity pulls on matter, the universe will begin to contract, falling inward until it has collapsed into a superhot, super-dense singularity. The universe is like a giant souffle. It starts out small, expands as it heats up, and eventually, as the souffle cools, begins to collapse. Big Crunch is the consequence of the Big Bang Theory.

Who is known as the ‘pumpkin king of britain’?

Ralph Upton of the village of Slindon, in West Sussex, south England, was known as the ‘Pumpkin King of Britain’. This market gardener died earlier this year, at 88, and his son Robin Upton took over. The Uptons have been growing pumpkins on their sixacre plot for over 40 years, producing over 50 varieties. Slindon is known as the pumpkin capital of Britain.

Who is super child?

The Super Child University in Gandhinagar promises couples that they can have a super child, who is tutored in the womb. Researchers claim to have studied ancient Indian literature and modern sci ence and feel it is feasible. Couples have to stay at the university for a week after conception. Here, they visualize the kind of child they want and are guided on how to do attain the same.

Why is a feature film so called?

The term ‘feature’ was an inheritance of the Vaudeville — programme. When the feature film was first marketed, it meant a special film, that could be featured between advertising shorts. A feature film was one that cost more to make, buy, rent, and sometimes mojpe to watch. That usually meant longer films and after 1909, ‘feature’ was the term used for any multireel film. In 1909, a feature film was 1,000-ft long or a little less, running 15-20 minutes at its slowest speed.

What is maslow’s hierarchy?

Maslow’s hierarchy is a model for understanding human behaviour, put forth by Abraham Maslow, an American psychologist, in the 1940s. It refers to a five-layered pyramid representing the psychological need structure of human beings. Each level further up the pyramid represents a more advanced or higher order need. Maslow suggested that higher order needs (such as self-esteem, self-actualisation) become relevant only when basic needs (physiological, safety, belonging) are met. ‘

How did the hula-hoop get its name?

The hula-hoop got its name from the resemblance and movements made while spinning one swiftly around the body to Hawaiian hula dances. It is also a trademark for a * plastic ring, which Wham-0 used when it started manufacturing the toy in 1958.

What is the significance of 65 in the dish ‘chicken65′?

Chicken65 is a spicy, deep-fried chicken dish popular as a bar snack, entree or quick snack. There exist a number of theories behind the number ’65′. One is that ’65′ represents the year 1965 in which it was introduced by a famous hotel in Chennai. Another is that the number 65 is said to be the number of days taken to prepare the marinade. According to a chef on Youtube, the true story behind the name is that the recipe originated in an Army mess hall where the number 65 referred to the recipe number on the menu.

What do nanomites mean?

Nanomites are nanosized partides, nanorobots or nanites, which when released into the bloodstream of a human kill infected or cancerous cells, The precision and minute size of these particles make them useful in medical science. However, it’s still a concept and there’s a long way to go before actual nanomites being made.

Who is frenemy?

Frenemy is made of two opposites — friend and enemy — and is used for a person who appears to be both. A friend who shares similar interests and hangs around with you, but who secretly works against your interests and is fiercely competitive. It came into currency with chicklit and television serials, mostly in the feminine world.

What is a zwitter ion?

A zwitter ion is an inner salt of amphoteric compound resulting due to the reaction between acidic and basic groups. Ammo acids and proteins constitute both acidic (-COOH) and alkaline (-NH2) groups, as a result they can form salts with acid and alkali. When dissolved in either acid or alkali, they behave like anions and cations, migrating to either cathod or anode. However, at a definite pH, called isoelectric pH, they form inner salt or zwitter ions, at which they are least soluble and electrically neutral.

Why does the sky look blue from the earth and black from the moon?

A phenomenon called Rayleigh’s Scattering causes light to scatter when it passes through particles that have a diameter one-tenth that of the wavelength (colour) of light. Sunlight is made Up of different colours, but because of the elements in the atmosphere, the colour blue is scattered more efficiently than other .^colours making the sky appear blue. However, the moon does not have an atmosphere, so light is not scattered, and the sky appears black.

What is a mud bath?

Mud from certain water sources is wrapped around body parts before a proper bath. This contains therapeutic value and cures some skin-related diseases, including psoriasis. Dead Sea in Israel is especially famous for mud baths, and attracts people from across the world.

What is a quadrillion?

Quadrillion is 1,000 trillion. It has a value in which 1 is followed by 15 zeros in Short Scale countries such as UK and USA. In Long Scale countries like some European nations, quadrillion is 1 followed by 24 zeros.

Why does the black box remain intact in an air crash?

Each aircraft is fitted with two pieces of equipment — Flight Data Recorder (FDR) and Cockpit Voice Recorder (CVR) — that are designed to survive an air crash so that the data recorded helps investigators reconstruct events preceding the crash. FDR records values of about 700 parameters related to the flight and controls and CVR records conversations taking place in the cockpit. The data is recorded in a crash survivable memory unit and housed in a cylindrical casing made of three layers that can withstand extreme .heat, high impact and pressure. The black box is painted orange, not black, has reflective tape on its surface and is fitted with underwater locator beacon.

What is a wildscape?

It is a garden landscaped for wildlife — like frogs, garden snakes, birds and butterflies. Small wild animals visit a wildscape which provides food, water and shelter.

What is couch surfing?

Couch surfing is getting to know about other parts of the world through the internet. CouchSurfing is an international, non-profit network site that connects travellers with locals in over 230 countries around the world. Since 2004, members have been using the System for cultural exchange. Today, there are over a million couch surfers.

What are anticyclones? How are they caused?

An ‘anticyclone’ is opposite to a cyclone, in which winds move into a lowpressure area. In an anticyclone, winds move out from a high-pressure area with wind direction clockwise in the northern hemisphere, anti-clockwise in the southern hemisphere. Such a high pressure area is usually spread over a large area, created by descending warm air devoid of moisture. The absence of moisture makes the dry air denser than an equal quantity of air with moisture. When it displaces the heavier nitrogen and oxygen, it causes an anti-cyclone.

What is pink noise?

Pink noise, also known as 1/f noise, is a sound that has equal energy in all octaves. It primarily consists of low frequency sounds. Due to practical constraints, pink noise can be produced only over a certain range of frequencies and occurs naturally. Astronauts listening to electromagnetic radiation in outer space have noted it being emitted from certain stars. In biology, it is produced by the heartbeat and has shown up in DNA sequence statistics.

What is the quantum god effect?

Albert Einstein considered the idea of quantum entanglement, like much of quantum physics, to be ridiculous. The phenomenon asserts that two particles can be connected so that changes in one are instantly reflected in the other,, even if those two particles are light-years apart. Despite its strangeness. reports of entanglement have been well-documented. Known as ‘the God effect’, entanglement is an area of constant development because of its potential in real-life applications, making possible codes that are unbreakable, instant communication across distances, and teleportation.

How are the maximum and minimum temperatures of a place fixed?

Maximum and minimum temperatures are measured using thermometers mounted inside a wooden box with slits, called Stevenson’s screen, which is generally kept facing north. The maximum thermometer is mercury-in-glass — as the temperature rises, the mercury expands and moves freely up a constriction in the thermometer. When air temperature drops, the constriction prevents the mercury from flowing back due to higher pressure, and gives the maximum reading. The minimum thermometer is alcohol-in-glass and is kept horizontally inside the box. As the temperature falls, the alcohol contracts and the index is dragged towards the bulb by the surface of the alcohol meniscus, giving the lowest, or minimum, temperature.

What is a dress rehearsal?

A dress or full dress rehearsal is the pre-final stage of an activity or event, and is performed to ensure that nothing goes wrong at the final event. The concept of dress rehearsal may apply, apart from performing arts, to business promotional programmes also.

Who is known as a cragger?

A cragger is a member of a carbon reduction, action group. Such a person is in terested in reducing her car bon footprint. The word has made it to the growing lexicon of green terms in the Collins Dictionary

What does the bitten apple in the apple computers logo signify?

The original was a quotation by Wordsworth, inscribed into the logo: ‘Newton — a mind forever voyaging through strange seas of thought’. That was changed by designer Rob Janoff into a multi-coloured bitten apple —the ‘rainbow apple’ — to commemorate the discoveries of gravity (the apple) and separation of light (colours) done by Isaac Newton. Besides, Alan Turing, the father of modern computing, committed suicide using a cyanide-laced apple. In 1997, .Steve Jobs decided to replace this apple by a solid one.

What imparts fragrance to flowers, fruits and spices?

The fragrance in flowers, fruits and spices is due to the evaporation of certain volatile chemicals into the air. Flowers produce a scent which is a complex mixture of low molecular weight, with volatile compounds such as esters, is emitted into the atmosphere. No two floral scents are exactly the same because of these compounds. Plants pollinated by bees and flies have sweet scents, those pollinated by beetles have strong musty, spicy, or fruity odours.

What is the full form of spa?

SPA is an acronym originating during the Roman Empire, when battle-weary legionnaires found a way to recover from their military wounds and ailments. They sought out hot springs and built baths so they could heal their aching bodies; calling these places ‘aquae’ and naming the treatment there ‘Sanus Per Aquam’ (SPA) — meaning ‘health by or through water’. During this period, the town Spa in Belgium was founded.

Why does an iron work only when it is hot?

An iron can be worked even when it’s not hot. However, it becomes softer when heated, so working on cloth becomes easy. When iron, like any other metal, is heated, it absorbs energy which excites its molecules. This makes the metal softer. This property was known to ancient craftsmen and is used even today in producing iron implements.

What is the kanga?

Kanga (or khanga) is a popular traditional garment worn mostly by women of East Africa. Rectangular in shape, it has enough length and breadth to cover the body from neck to knee. It has bright, colourful designs and is worn as a wraparound dress by women on all occasions. Even men wear it, but only at home. White spots against a dark background, a common design, made it resemble the plumage of the guineafowl called kanga, and hence the name. Today, the kanga is to East Africa, what the sari is to India or the kimono to Japan.

What is brain roughage?

Brain roughage is information fed to the brain to chew on and digest, in digestible chunks. It is a term lifted from gastronomic language to liken the brain to the stomach, and is of very recent origin. Roughage is ingested to help in food digestion, and is considered good for the system, similarly brain roughage. Other such terms are information snacking and junk, as parallels for the brain. Roughage may be a little tough and needs some exercising to digest, but the grey cells need to work and think before absorbing the information.

What is an okapi?

The okapi is a mammal belonging to the giraffe family. Also known as ‘forest giraffe’, it is native to the Ituri rainforest in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Africa. The okapi lives a secluded life and was not discovered until 1900 by explorer Sir Harry Johnson. It is shorter than the giraffe and has stripes on the legs, reminiscent of the zebra. Okapis are herbivores; the name is a portmanteau of two Lese words, oka — a verb meaning to cut, and kpi — a noun referring to the design made on arrows by wrapping the arrow with bark so as to leave stripes when scorched by fire.

What is bee dancing?

Bee dancing is the circling and wag- ging movements made by worker bees to give other bees in the hive information about the location of a new source of food. Bees dance in a particular area in the comb: the dance floor. They perform a waggle dance, indicating that food is farther away, while the round dance indicates the food is nearby

How does an ant know its way home with no clues in a desert?

Experiments by German scientists on the Sahara desert ant, called cataglyphis fortis, have shown that the ant uses a method known as ‘path integration’ in its navigation. Path integration consists of measuring the extent of each turn, and remembering the direction of its nest, whenever the direction of its path changes, and then measuring the distance of travel in each direction.

What is the history of sudoku?

Sudoku was first designed in the 1970s by a retired architect and freelance puzzle constructor, Howard Garns.The puzzle was first published in 1979 in New York by Dell Magazines and was titled ‘Number Place’. In 1984, the puzzle was introduced in Japan by puzzle magazine ‘Nikoli’ and titled ‘Suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru’ which in Japanese meant, “the numbers must occur only once”. This was abbreviated to Sudoku; ‘Su’ meaning number and ‘Doku’ meaning single.

What are astroturf groups?

Astroturf refers to grassroots-based citizen groups or coalitions that are created and funded by corporations, trade associations, political interests or public relations firms. They use computer databases, telephone banks and hired organizers to rope less-informed activists into sending letters to elected officials or engaging in other actions that create the appearance of grassroots support for their client’s cause.

What’s hakkeijama sea paradise?

Located in Yokohama, Japan, the Hakkeijima Sea Paradise is an amusement park consisting of an aquarium, mall, hotel, marina and amusement rides. Also known as the ‘Aqua Museum’, it has thousands of varieties fish and other aquatic life forms, rides featuring sea animals, besides exotic gardens. It is a top attraction in Yokohama, besting even the temples and zoological gardens the area is known for.

What does bt in bt brinjal signify?

Bt brinjal, a genetically modified version of the common brinjal, is a transgenic vegetable created by inserting a gene (Cry lAc) from the soil bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) into it. The insertion of the gene is said to give the brinjal plant resistance against insects like the brinjal fruit and shoot borer and fruit borer.

What is pascal’s wager?

It refers to the argument put forward by famous French mathematician Blaise Pascal to help a person arrive at a decision on the existence of God. You’d better believe in God, Pascal argued, because if you are right, you stand to gain eternal bliss and if you are wrong, it won’t make any difference, anyway. But if you don’t believe in God, and turn out to be wrong, you are eternally damned, whereas if you are right, it makes no difference.

How did the dollar get its sign?

The symbol $ written before the numerical amount is used for the US dollar and many other currencies. The sign’s actual origins are not certain, though it is possible it comes from the Pillars of Hercules, which flank the Spanish coat of arms on the Spanish dollars that were minted in the New World Mints. The Pillars of Hercules are in the form of two vertical bars and a swinging cloth band in the shape of an’S’. Another explanation is that the symbol for peso was the result of the abbreviation ‘ps’ —the p and s came to be written over each other, appearing like ‘$ ‘. Another possibility is that the dollar sign is capital letters U and S typed one on top of the other. This theory, popularized by novelist Ayn Rand in Atlas Shrugged, does not consider the fact that the symbol was in use before the formation of the United States.

What is the camel race track?

Camel racing is a deep-rooted traditional sport that finds its origins in the desert culture of the Arabian peninsula, North Africa, and West Asia. The UAE has 15 race tracks across the country Race distances can be 4-10 km and may include anywhere from 15-70 camels.

What is the atomic number of the element named after einstein?

The name of the element is ‘Einsteinium’, its symbol is Es and the atomic number is 99. Named in honour of Albert Einstein, it is the seventh transuranic element and does not occur naturally in any measura ble quantities. Einsteinium was first identified in December 1952 by Albert Ghiorso, with co-workers at the University of California, Berkeley, when he was examining debris from the first hydrogen bomb test of November 1952.

Why are south africans called the proteas?

The giant or King Protea, South Africa’s national flower, is the largest of the proteas species, which make up an important part of the Cape Floral Region, a major global biodiversity hotspot and Unesco World Heritage site. The South African cricket team got its name from this flower with pink and yellow petals. Similarly South Africa’s rugby team is called Springboks, which is the country’s national animal.

What is a thumbo?

A thumbo is an error made while typing a text message on a mobile phone —basically a mix of thumb and typo. Typo is an old word which means a mistake made while typing. A related word is speako, used to indicate mistakes made while dictating text.

What is wingloading of an aircraft?

Mathematically, wingloading of an aircraft is the total weight of the aircraft (during take-off), divided by the span area of the wings. It is, thus, the weight carried by per unit area of the wing during flight. Wingloading is the most important factor while stress analyzing and designing an aircraft wing. The wing has to be strong enough to safely carry, the ‘load’ of the entire aircraft.

What is the difference between measles and german measles?

Both measles and German measles (rubella) are viruses. German measles is accompanied by a blotchy red rash. The patient sometimes suffers a slight cold prior to the appearance of the rash. German measles can be dangerous for pregnant women, who have no immunity for the virus. It is called German measles because it was German physicians who first described this disease. Mild upper respiratory affect, high temperature that can last for four days and conjunctivitis are some symptoms of measles.

What is a heat budget?

A heat budget is the perfect balance between incoming heat absorbed by earth and outgoing heat escaping it in the form of radiation. If the balance is disturbed, then earth would get progressively warmer or cooler with each passing year.

What does the warsaw convention signify?

The Warsaw Convention, which took place in Warsaw on October 12,1929, comprising experts in the field of aviation law from 31 nations, intended to create a legal framework that binds international aviation even today. Its regulatory issues consist of mandates covering carriers to issue passenger tickets, baggage checks for luggage, compensation amount and limitation period for claiming^ compensation. It was amended later at The Hague, in 1955, and in Montreal in 1999.

How did red indians get their name?

Red Indian is an offensive term for a native North American. In North America, the term is now considered a racial slur. The use of the term Indian for the natives of the Americas originated with Christopher Columbus, who mistakenly believed that the Antilles were the islands of the Indian Ocean, known to Europeans as the Indies. Though Columbus’s mistake was soon recognized, the name stuck, and for centuries the native people of the Americas were called Indians.

Who is a plastinator?

The art of plastination deals with preservation of organs, tissues and whole beings. Plastination, unlike preservation through formalin, involves a series of processes that replace the fluids in the tissues and organs by reactive plastics such as silicon rubber, epoxy resin and polyester resin, in a special vacuum process. This achieves the same objective as formalin, which is to prevent decay, and also retains the natural colour and texture of the specimen. Gunther von Hagens, research assistant at the Institute of Anatomy and Cellular Biology at the University of Heidelberg, in 1978, accidentally stumbled upon using plastics to preserve anatomical specimens.

What is a pity bonus?

Even with economic restrictions, companies are finding ways to pay the big bosses with incentives and discretionary bonuses. ‘Pity bonus’ is one such sum given to a CEO who fails to qualify for a big payout because of the downturn. Boards of companies make special concessions to award such incentives. CEOs may not be taking home good salaries, but the bonuses make up for the losses.

What is the maastricht discipline?

The term refers to conditions that all countries of the European Union had to adhere to while adopting the Euro as a common currency. To do so, the countries had to show that their economic condition was stable and their fiscal deficit did not exceed 3%. Initially, Poland and some other countries did not join because of their poor growth rate.

What is an ouija board? How does it work?

Modern Ouija boards were developed by William Fuld who sold his patent to the Parker Brothers in 1966. The Ouija Board has evolved from a mindreader to a portal of communication with spirits. It is a small board with letters, numbers from 1 to 9 and words like ‘Yes’ and ‘No’. ‘Out’ and ‘ja’ mean, ‘yes’ in French and German respectively. A heart-shaped plastic planchette or pointer held at the fingertips is used to navigate letters or numbers to spell words, in answer to questions asked to the spirits.

What is the origin of orkut?

‘Qrkut’ is believed to be of Turkish originand is a common name among men. The person who created the famous online community site www.orkut.com was a Google employee, Orkut Buyukkokten. He reportedly lost his girlfriend in a train accident but believed that she was not dead and that he could find her. Orkut hired developers from across the globe to develop a software to search for her on the web. After spending three years and millions of dollars, he found her. He decided to shut down the site, but the CEO of Google took over the application, though Orkut gets paid for each login!

How does a jukebox operate?

A jukebox is a semi-automatic electro-mechanical music playing device that works on a coin-operated system — a person can select music of his choice by pressing certain numbers. The original design of the jukebox contained a rack of records in vertical slits with numbers designated to each record.

How does a cricketer get inducted into the icc hall of fame?

Taking cue from sports bodies around the world, the ICC and Federation of International Cricketers’ Associations launched the ‘Hall of Fame’ as part of the centenary year celebrations. Initially, 55 cricketers — from Richie Benaud to Sunil Gavaskar — were inducted. The inductees received a Fame cap. The elected members also get a chance to recommend other cricketers as inductees. The new players are announced every year.

How are card structures built?

US card stacker Bryan Berg, 35, made it into the Guinness World Records and then recently broke his own record by building the largest house of free-standing playing cards. The architect successfully created a replica of the Venetian Macau with 2,18,792 cards. These cards are stacked without glue or tape. His method has been tested to support 660 Ibs per square foot. The secret is that cards are placed like grids or honeycombs.

Who is a vegangelical?

A fanatic vegetarian out to convert non-vegetarians. The word vegangelical comes from vegan and evangelical. A vegangelical is someone who thinks that any other lifestyle choice besides veganism is wrong. The word usually used in the West, first made its appearance in print in 2003.

What is silhouette photography?

Silhouette photography is the technique of taking a photograph so the subject appears like a black outline against a bright background. The light should not be too bright or too dull and most of these photographs are taken with the rising or setting sun as the background.

What is baryogenesis?

It is a branch of physics concerned with how baryons were originally formed. Baryons are a family of subatomic particles a

Dr. Ashok Kumar Sharma, M.A.(History); Certificate in Taxidermy(Madras); Certifate in Library Science (TOPPER-ML Sukhadia Uni. Udaipur,(Rajasthan) INDIA. Hobby: Cricket; Postal Stamp Collection and Collection of Quotations since 1981.


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Categories: Belly Dance Clothes
Jan
26

A Curious Mother’s Day Story

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A Curious Mother’s Day Story

SALOME and HERODIAS,


A CURIOUS MOTHER’S DAY STORY©


Reprinted with permission from The Perspicacious Woman OnLine©

April, 2003 issue, Volume 3:Number 2

Publisher, The Daisy Shop, women’s couture resale

http://www.daisyshop.com

Barbara Nell


First, a disclaimer:


This article requires information about John the Baptist, whose life and works and words are holy, divinely inspired, to Christians. The sources I’ve accessed are religious, historical, literary, exegetic, and anecdotal. In order to avoid disrespect for the sacredness of the words and concepts with which Christians hold The Gospels and with which Jews hold The Torah, I’ve renamed both ‘translated redactions.’ I also use the euphemism, monotheistic god, to avoid any disrespect to any deity and religion. This is an essay designed to entertain and inform you, Dear Reader, not to cause any religious discussion or foment.


Second, a thank you:


To friend Pam and friend Vanessa, both of whom got my research juices going on Salome, whom, I believed, was trivial, too trivial even for our newsletter. It boiled down to “Who did she do the belly dance for?” I hadn’t a clue, because I didn’t think she was real. They both assured me she was a real person. I checked it out. Yup, she was real and…


…she may have danced or may not have danced. But, if she did dance, it wasn’t a belly dance that she did, nor was it a tap, the tango, or the quick step. The belly dance aspect was imagined in the late 19th century by some artistic guy, and we’ll get there, later, when it’s timely. She did perform, that much is true, and she performed for the host, her stepfather, at the instigation of the hostess, her mother, and their banquet guests.


It was an entertainment interlude, and it occurred about the 1st century AD in a castle located in area called The Galilee. She may have performed in a play about some Greek mythological character or she may have been the one non-Bedouin ( a guest) in a troop of Bedouin entertainers who did folk dances that non-Bedouins enjoyed seeing. If it was the former, the structure of the play was rigid: it was a pantomime, with stringed instrumentals to keep the story line going, mime actors of both genders, all adults, and young children acrobatics of both genders. Everyone was masked. This was a troop of professional entertainers on the payroll of biggies, not a traveling group (a type not yet invented). They were probably on the payroll of her stepfather and she had time to practice with them before the banquet.


If it was the latter, it was a dance, one with a lot of whirling and head tossing, by females in heavy blue robes with cowls, and there was a flute accompaniment. The company did not live in The Galilee, but were nomads from the desert between The Galilee and Arabia, who had come by request of the biggie. It is unlikely that Bedouin dancers were involved in this banquet, for they had to walk a fine line in their desert migrations, land that abutted both The Galilee and Arabia at that time There was bad blood between Aretas IV King of Arabia and Antipas, stepfather of Salome, Tetrarch of The Galilee, the place where the banquet and the entertainment took place and the place where Salome lived. And, Salome would not have had time to practice the whirling and head tossing before the banquet.


So, it was a Roman style play about Greek mythology that was probably performed as the intermediate event between courses or the closing event of a posh banquet. The host, her stepfather, was a Herod we’ll call Antipas, (not as high as a King) and the hostess, her mother, was named Herodias (a former Queen, divorced from her 1st husband, Phillip, a King, and now married to a mere Tetrarch, making her a Tetrarchess, I guess). These were minor players in the times’ political stage and the definition of ‘posh’ was relative to their stature…minor. The guest list contained: nobles visiting from Rome, Roman nobles stationed in The Galilee by Rome, aristocrats from The Galilee and maybe Judea, and Antipas’ Steward, Chuza. Some sources say the banquet was thrown by Herodias because it was Antipas’ birthday, an unnecessary embellishment, to my way of thinking. Most sources are silent about the reason for the banquet, so I tend to go with most when it’s a fact such as this kind.


Any banquet takes preparation, whether you’re a Queen, a Tetrarchess, or merely the wife of a mope. So, along with the timing, guest list, menu, food preparation, and seating plan, Herodias prepared for the entertainment. She had to decide that Salome’s participation in the entertainment would be the thing to do long before the banquet took place. Herodias is described as a savvy kind of gal by the benign tellers of the tale (she’s vilified by most) and Salome was her only child (by Phillip), so she probably made time to watch Salome rehearse. A lot was riding on Salome being real real good. Nothing anywhere says whether Salome wanted to be a part of the entertainment or was unwilling to be a part of the entertainment.


Herodias planned a staid, Roman affair. It could not have been a bacchanal type banquet (similar to the present Wild On’s on E!), as some sources suggest. There were stringent Roman rules about highborn women and what they can attend and do in while in attendance. Herodias was high born and from Judea. (Antipas, her second husband, was not as high born, coming from an Idumean father and possibly a Samarian mother.)


Salome was just a kid at the time of the banquet. Some sources say she was a teenager, but they have to in order for other parts of the legend to fit. (We’ll get to the other parts later.) I doubt if she was a nubile teenager. She was royalty, a Princess, in fact, with very good blood on her mother’s side, Maccabean blood, which was respected even by Rome, who, by the way, had conquered Judea (and The Galilee) long before this time and made this area a part of their Empire. Modesty and chastity were required for this type female from a Roman standpoint and a Maccabean standpoint (her bloodline was matriarchal). She had to be dutiful, respectful, and learn at her mother’s knee, an important custom amongst the Maccabean women. She was a good kid. So, she couldn’t have been a teenager and allowed to perform. It would diminish her future value in the marriage market, Roman or otherwise, and it would have been a sin. I would opine she had to be less than Nadia Comaneci’s age when she blew away the Olympic judges in 1976, but she was probably just as agile.


It’s probable that Herodias recognized her daughter’s agility long before the banquet, for kids have a tendency to display what they’re good at long before there’s a use for the tendency. It could have been a genetic throwback to the time before the Maccabees were promoted to highborn, the time when the men were just about the best guerilla fighters in Judea and found the mountainous regions around Judea excellent terrain to entice their foes into combat. She was probably proud of this tendency and tedious of this tendency (“Watch me, Momma,” once too often can be tedious.) and savvy enough to see a utilization for her own good. This also pre-supposes that Herodias might have had more contact in Salome’s upbringing than Roman highborn mothers, for Maccabean women were responsible for (both gender) children to ‘learn at their knee’ a minimum of 613 rules the monotheistic god required of adherents, or that there was a lot of contact between highborn mothers and their daughters at that time. In either case, Herodias planned the banquet and the entertainment and included her agile daughter in the entertainment, making sure Salome rehearsed and would do a good job in the acrobatic kid part of the troop…a multi-tasking woman for sure.


Protocol at posh and formal banquets where Roman mucky mucks were invited was stringent. This would have been very important to Antipas, also. He had been raised in Rome (maybe even a hostage child) and the land he administered at the time of the banquet had been bequeathed to him by Rome. Augustus (of the Cleopatra story) had handled the apportioning of Antipas’ father’s enormous estate when he, known as Herod the Great, died. Antipas was not happy with the way Poppa’s estate was apportioned, felt he had gotten the short stick amongst his four brothers. (He had.) He would have been very, very Roman at this Roman banquet in order to make nice and have this get back to Rome.


The men would have reclined on the equivalent of 1st century Barco-Loungers and ate lovely things and drank lovely wine moderately, while trading amusing stories and quips and bantering amongst each other. I’m not sure just what bantering is, but I am sure they bantered. They would have been arranged in a horseshoe U pattern. The women guests and their hostess would have sat on chairs and I couldn’t figure out where the chairs were placed, within the horseshoe in a line or outside the horseshoe in a line. But in any case, they would have sat on fancy, but hard backed, chairs in a line and would not have eaten or drunken wine, but I suggest they may have bantered. Their job was to just sit, all gussied up and smellin’ good. (They would eat and drink, later, when they got home or when the guests left, depending on your perspective.)


Salome could not have been invited. If she had been invited, she would have left her fancy, hard-backed chair vacant in order to get into costume and perform. Antipas would have noticed the empty chair and have asked someone, “Where did the kid go?” And, someone would have said, “She’s going to perform.” That would have taken the drama out of this next part of the story. Let’s agree; she was not invited to the banquet.


At the proper time, the play was performed, and the audience clapped after it was over. Antipas complimented the performers, then singled one out. Because it was Salome that was singled out, I believe she was one of the masked acrobats. It only makes sense. Antipas apparently didn’t recognize the stepdaughter he had raised since infancy as the excellent acrobat in the play. Rather, he thought her one of the professionals, for if he had recognized her, he wouldn’t have offered the gift
eward. He just would have said, “Good job, sweetie. Go get washed. You’ll catch cold.” Therefore, because he didn’t recognize her, he made a magnanimous gesture (It’s not unlikely that he was showing off for the guests, for Antipas was a doodle-head, didn’t think things through. We’ll get to that, later.), and he offered the acrobat-Salome anything she desired as a gift from him for her fine performance. This is exactly what Herodias had planned to happen. She knew her guy pretty well and she knew her little girl real well. The benign tellers were right: she was a savvy gal.


Since all sources attribute what comes next as engendered by Herodias, the acrobat-Salome had to have asked him to wait a minute and had to have gone to the chair line, where her mother and the other women were sitting, otherwise Herodias would not have been associated with what comes next. (It would have been only Salome who would have been associated with what comes next.). So, the mother and daughter had to have conferred quietly, while Antipas (and the guests) watched. Perhaps, Salome said, “Euwww,” as kids do when they hear something revolting; or perhaps, not. She was a 1st century kid and they may have been different from 21st century kids. I think not. Kids are kids. She said “Euwww.” Dutifully, she listened closely to what her mother told her and she probably repeated it back to Herodias, so that she got it right and straight. Then, she, the acrobat-Salome, came back to Antipas with the gift idea: the head of the long time prisoner John (who later became John the Baptist, but who was merely the prisoner John at this time) on a platter (which was probably not a platter, but a charger).


It’s possible that he recognized Salome at this point. It doesn’t really matter. I do know he knew he had been set up by his wife, Herodias, via this acrobat-Salome, when he heard the performance reward. And he was startled and embarrassed and in a public quandary. It’s possible he questioned the acrobat-Salome with an ‘are you kidding? kind of question, while looking in Herodias’ direction, who either shrugged her shoulders or nodded ‘yes.’ From a legal standpoint, he did not have to honor this acrobat-Salome’s request, for it wasn’t hers. It was Herodias.’ It is possible that Chuza, his Steward, jumped in at this point, for he had been financing John’s nascent ministry through his wife, Elizabeth, but it’s just as possible, he did not, for that’s not how it went down.


Everyone at the banquet knew there had been a big mad between Herodias and Antipas regarding John for a long, long time. She had wanted him killed outright for talking often and badly about her and her marriage to Antipas to everyone and anyone who would listen to him. John had labeled it incestuous and it was, kind of, but by only a technicality, the small print in a big, long contract. Herodias’ first husband, the Herod we’re calling Phillip, was Antipas’ half brother. They shared the same father, Herod The Great, but had different mothers. Phillip was still living in Judea where he was King (Rome gave him a large portion of his father’s estate, larger than Antipas..) and as long as Phillip lived, Herodias and Antipas had an incestuous marriage. As soon as he died, it would be an okay marriage. But, he hadn’t died, yet.


Although it was the gossip that bothered Herodias (A good spin doctor would have helped, but they were 2000 years down the road in development.), it was the religious twist John put on the technical incest that bothered Antipas. John attributed all the stuff that had gone wrong in The Galilee since they married (and stuff had gone wrong, for Antipas was a doodle-head) to the marriage. And, John said that the monotheistic god was angry with her, more than Antipas, because of her good Maccabean blood (a mix of Idumean and Samarian blood results in a person that the monotheistic god doesn’t expect much from), and would stay angry with her and get more so, so the anger would spill over to the whole of The Galilee, until she and Antipas split (or, I guess, until Phillip died, a factor that was out of her hands).


People listened to that kind of stuff at that time and in that place and they got real scared. A monotheistic god’s anger was a terrible thing. Famine, drought, disease, pestilence, flood, invasion, even eclipse – anything could happen when a monotheistic god was angry. While there hadn’t been famine, drought, disease, pestilence, flood, invasion, or even an eclipse in The Galilee, Antipas had lost a war, his first, with Nabatea, their neighbor in Arabia.


Herodias could have been a vulnerable position should important people have listened to John’s predictions. Luckily for her, the important people had other things on their mind. Antipas said ‘no’ to killing John and ‘yes’ to imprisoning him, believing that would shut John up. Some sources said Antipas had a feeling that John’s predictions were true; others said he had a feel for the monotheistic deity. Still others say he was merely acting like a political animal, notably, a fox. At any rate, John was not killed, but imprisoned, and he had been languishing in the prison for many years at the time of the banquet.


Now, killing a local prisoner was no big deal anywhere in the 1st century world of the Roman Empire and having a prisoner killed to reward an agile acrobat was stretching the reward idea, but… it could work. The thing is that the head on a plattercharger was the note that made it a bigger deal. This touch was a gruesome, certainly barbaric, dramatic thing and would cause a scandal and gossip all over Judea and in Rome, what Antipas did not need if he were to ever get any more land from his dead father’s estate from Rome. (And it did, for Flavius Josephus in his book, “Antiquities,” writing to and for Rome about 100 years after the event ,included the event for it was still so juicy. This, by the way, is how we know about some parts of it.) (An important question occurs to me and that is this: How and where did Herodias get this notion? Two ideas come to mind: (1) the Greek myth of Perseus and Medusa and their fight to death: Perseus won. He decapitated Medusa and waved her head around and took it a bunch of places as a talisman. It must have been awful after a time. Maybe that’s where she got it, for she was well educated. (2) A similar event took place in Rome 50 years earlier: Pemejus, a political competitor to Julius, lost his political battle, and his foes brought Julius, the winning Caesar, his head. She might have heard this gossip. Perhaps, she then pragmatically adapted decapitation to the situation at hand. Beheading was a popular type of death and an honorable type of execution for criminals and warriors amongst the Romans and the Maccabees and the Arabians. This, I discovered, from plunking around on the Internet to some very weird websites. I don’t recommend you check this out for yourself. Truthfully, I cannot imagine where she got this embellishment. One of these weird websites calls her talented.)


The doodle-head complied.


A messenger was sent to the fortress named Macharerus (now called Mukawir) in an area called The Perea (now part of Amman, Jordan) where John was imprisoned. A nameless guard cut off his head, and got a messenger to convey it to the castle somewhere in The Galilee, where the banquet guests were waiting, the males still bantering with one another, I guess, to pass the time; the females still sitting quietly on their hard chairs, smellin’ good. The acrobat-Salome probably went off somewhere to bathe and change clothes, then returned to the banquet room to stand next to her (talented) Momma or stand with the performers. The guards put the headless body somewhere, waited for further orders.


I couldn’t find out how far away the area The Parea was from The Galilee, for I couldn’t pin down exactly what city the castle was located in the area known as The Galilee, then, the area where the banquet occurred. Let’s believe it wasn’t terribly far, so the messenger conveying the head could get from there to there quick. He arrived and a kitchen servant brought a plattercharger (No one knows if it was a platter made out of silver, gold, porcelain, or stoneware. In fact, no one cared. Furthermore, it may not have been a platter, but a charger, which is larger than a plate and smaller than a platter and rested under a plate at a table service and was often of precious metal. Since it’s a Roman banquet, people took morsels of this and that from servant-held chargers, didn’t have a table service at all. They were reclining.) Another servant, a serving type, brought the head to the banquet hall and stood in front of Antipas. It’s possible he directed the servant to acrobat-Salome, who took the plattercharger and gave it to her Mother. One redactor source makes Herodias even more gruesome stating: she got a sword and stabbed the tongue. This is an embellishment that even Flavius Josephus didn’t believe, so he doesn’t mention it. What she really did with it, I don’t know. (People who thought John had a direct line to the monotheistic god requested his body and his head from Antipas, who released both parts to them. They took it to an area called Samaria, which was close to The Perea, and buried it.)


What happened after this part of the banquet took place, I don’t know. I imagine some guy yawned and said, “It’s been quite an evening. I think it’s time to get going.” And the guests all went to their lodgings. It’s probable that Antipas and Herodias had a long conversation, after the guests left. When they were alone in their private rooms, he probably opened the conversation with: “We never talk anymore, Herodias. Tell me what’s going on with you.” Salome, who had been up long past her normal bedtime, was probably overtired and went to sleep or was put to sleep immediately.


And there you have it. Salome didn’t dance, didn’t wear veils, and had a strong bond with her Mother.


To discover how the belly dance became associated with Salome, we have to veer away from her. It’s Herodias and John who carry the story line forward.


At the time of the banquet, Herodias was the 2nd wife of Antipas, and they had been married for about 10 years. (Antipas was the only father Salome had known.) Salome’s biological father was Phillip, who was King of Judea, a large land mass, much larger than the area called The Galilee, and he and Herodias were divorced when Salome was about 1 year old. Herodias had been an important wife when Phillip was first made King by Rome because of her Maccabean blood. The Maccabees had been rulers of Judea long before Phillip came on board, but through a lot of circumstances, Judea was ruled by the Herod bunch and had accepted Rome’s yoke by that time. The Maccabees were prolific (as was Herod The Great), and there was a large pool of eligible Maccabean women for rulers to marry. It was a stable region in Rome’s empire. In any event, the divorce was with Rome’s permission. Phillip was allowed to marry some one else with Rome’s permission, and I didn’t check out whom. He never asked for visitation rights.


Some sources say Antipas first met Herodias when Herodias was on a trip to Rome with Phillip petitioning Rome for something or another at the same time that Antipas was in Rome (alone) petitioning Rome, yet again, for the title of King and more land from his father’s estate, neither of which Rome never granted him in his lifetime. I don’t think it matters how they met. They met, they talked, a deal was struck.


I don’t know why Herodias left Queenship of Judea to become a Tetrarch’s wife. There are always sources that attribute lust to this sort of situation, and these sources do arise in this story, some attributing lust to Herodias, others attributing lust to Antipas. Personally, I find lust a poor reason. A Queen, one of royal blood, just doesn’t think lust. She thinks power and lineage. A tetrarch, although not as powerful as a King, doesn’t have to go far from his little castle, even as far as Judea, to satisfy a lustful thought. An unhappy Tetrarch thinks power and lineage, too. Maybe it was her Maccabean blood and her Maccabean ties that Antipas thought would help him become a King of a landmass that included Judea, which her ancestors ruled before Rome put the Herods there. Maybe she thought The Galilee plus Judea is bigger than just Judea. Maybe she thought that The Galilee plus Arabia, which abutted The Galilee, is bigger than Judea should Antipas go to war for the Arabian territory. In any event, she left Phillip before the divorce (which came through quickly) and went to Antipas’ puny area, The Galilee.


She also jumped the gun. Antipas was not yet rid of his first wife, Phasaelis, when Herodias and the baby arrived. And, he hadn’t petitioned Rome to get rid of Phasaelis and marry Herodias. Although Phasaelis was a Princess by blood and the daughter of a powerful neighbor and King, Aretas IV of Nabatea (Arabia), Antipas decided to circumvent Rome by merely ‘putting her aside,’ an ignominy. This was not nice. Phasaelis went home to Poppa (and took the kids, if there were any with her and Antipas) who bided his time a bit, then attacked The Galilee, because of the dishonor.


Troops from all of Herod the Great’s sons (half-brothers to a man) jumped in to help The Galilean troops, even Phillip (inherited family land was a big thing; a former wife was nothing) and Roman legions jumped in to help, too. But land was lost and that, by definition, means The Galileans lost the war. He never did divorce Phasaelis and she never returned to him.


Herodias stayed put and she and Antipas married (with Rome’s permission, whose attitude toward provinces was very pragmatic: the war is over; they lost; let ‘em marry; who gives a damn) and lived in a castle somewhere in The Galilee with the baby.


Antipas’ reputation went from an annoying pest to miserable in Rome’s eyes because of this double screw up (stupidly and unnecessarily dishonoring a neighbor’s daughter thereby incurring an unnecessary troop expense on Rome’s tab and loosing land to a King who was not conquered by Rome). He decided to Make It Better. Tiberius was now the Caesar and Antipas decided to build a city to honor him. He commandeered land in The Galilee and his construction people began building a city. But, Antipas and his building contractors either didn’t do their homework, or if they did, they didn’t think it through. The land upon which the city was being built was a cemetery, sacred ground to every person in the world then as well as today. There was an uprising amongst the folk that local troops could not quell. Again, Rome had to help Antipas out, for Judea wouldn’t, since they sided with the people, not Antipas. The people were quelled and the city was built. It remained uninhabited. No one would go there to live no matter how sweet the pot Antipas created (free homes, free land, tax abatement). Rome had to send troops to forcibly move families to Tiberius and to guard them so they wouldn’t move out in the dark of the night. Flavius Josephus liked this morsel a lot when he heard of it. He checked around and then comments that riff-raff were recruited to populate the city. He observes that even the riff-raff were afraid of the monotheistic god, so local holy people made a rule: the new settlers would only be defiled for 7 days, then everything would be okay.


And life went on in The Galilee.


John, during some of this, had been going about his business in The Galilee. One particular thing he did caught on amongst the folk. No one knew what to call it, so it had two different names: sprinkling and lave-ing, both of which were already accepted cleansing rites in most, if not all, religions before that time and during that time in that area and most of the known world. Water was always the cleansing agent and John

used the nearby Jordan River as the sprinkling and lave-ing site. What John did was total body immersion, a new twist, one the people liked a lot, for it made sense to them and made them feel good and purified from sins committed previously. This total body immersion always occurred after John would talk about sinning and give definitions. He would call for penitents, people who wanted to cleanse themselves. They would step forward and get in a line, so he could do them one-by-one. He had set himself up as a person who knew what the monotheistic deity expected of good folk (mostly it was to stop acting like Romans and revert to the Galilean ways, the ones prevalent before Rome took over the area). While he was in prison and after his death, other people did the immersion for him. What he had said before he was imprisoned was credible to the folk.


But then, John was imprisoned and killed years after he was imprisoned.


Very soon a very lot of other things happened in The Galilee. These events were written down and pondered and interpreted by brilliant, eloquent, and sincere men, three of whom decided that John and what he said and his immersion twist was a ceremony that would be important to incorporate as a ritual for their testimonials. They were the redactors whose words have been translated and pondered for centuries. Their decision caused his death to be discussed (and his childhood, parents, vocation, inspiration, relationships, etc. to be determined) and this is how Herodias’ name was never forgotten.


The earliest redactor, a stickler for details, had a problem with her daughter’s name, when he read Flavius Josephus, who says ‘a damsel, the daughter of Herodias, brought the head…’ in his book to Rome. This was not good enough for him. He did some easy homework, for Herodias’ royal lineage was known and available. He determined that Herodias’ daughter was named Salome. This was not good homework. Herodias was Maccabean. No Maccabee, male or female, would ever name a child for a still living person, let alone the actual name of a relative, this case, a blood aunt, who was living at the time of her daughter’s birth. But, it’s all we have, so she must remain misnamed Salome (which means ‘peace,’ a nice touch, don’t you think?) when John’s beheading is talked about and when Herodias’ progeny is included.


And this is how Salome and Herodias and John were tied together forever more. Many centuries have to pass by before the triangle comes into focus again. We have to wait for society to go from antiquity all the way to modern…at least 1,970 years or so. More specifically, we have to wait for a religion to formalize; we have to wait until John’s contributions become important and incorporated; we have to wait for churches to be invented; we have to wait for representational art to be used for something other than decorative purposes; we have to allow for the Bubonic Plague interlude when absolutely nothing happened except the death of millions; we have to wait for literacy to occur; we have to wait for Gutenberg and his printing press; we have to wait for portraiture to be invented.


Once churches were invented, representational art was applied as a method to tell the stories to the illiterate devout people. The triangle story was not as popular as other stories, so it was represented only some times. The scene chosen was most always was when the plattercharger is proffered takes place. No one character of the triangle is more important that the other. It’s the story behind the scene that’s important, and that is John’s death (but not as a martyr, I don’t think, but I may be wrong). Typical friezes and frescos from churches in the early 14th show the scene with figures that are medieval in demeanor and costume. That’s what the medieval people needed; that’s what they got. Their eyes could roam the church for something to center on, if their attention drifted from the devotions at hand.


Everything gets pretty quiet everywhere, beginning 1330, when the first Bubonic Plague episode begins and we have to wait a long time, about 150 years, for normalcy to occur.


In 1485, the beheading surfaces. Portraiture had been invented by then, and art has gone into homes of wealthy people, who ask artists to do pictures for them, often of them and their family members. One type of portraiture allowed the viewer to be a voyeur, to glimpse an intimate scene, a freeze frame, if you will, from a larger story, if the artist was good. Religious art was a popular theme. The artist selected the motif and there was a lot of symbolism to get the whole story line into the canvas. It’s Salome and the plattercharger that’s chosen, when this subject is chosen at all, and truth be told, it’s lousy, static portraiture. She’s not portrayed as a child, but she’s not portrayed as a woman, either. “Damsel,” was apparently interpreted as that twilight zone a female has between childhood and woman. I don’t know why the subject matter was chosen by the patron or the artist, who apparently just couldn’t get into ‘it.’ I guess my opinion was shared by the patrons from 500+ years back, for this theme dies out.


John and his sainthood, not his death or Herodias or Salome, become the theme of most art, and we have to wait until 1630 to find the others of the triangle depicted again.


In 1630, a blockbuster piece of art is produced (my opinion) that asks you to consider Herodias, not John. It’s my absolute favorite, by a guy named Francesco del Cairo, “Herodias with Head of John the Baptist.” It is so different from all others than came before (and after). Is she exhausted, meditative, musing, or in a trance? A closer look might surprise you. Could she possibly be holding his tongue while on the verge of stroking his hair? I believe she is. What could del Cairo have been thinking? What is he asking us to believe about Herodias? Frankly, I don’t wanna go there. No one else did either, for depictions of Herodias (and Salome) simply stop until the 1800′s and John in his sainthood continue…with one exception.


Because of a single painting of Herodias by Paul Delaroche in 1843, it’s the literary arts, the poets and authors and playwrights, who pick up the story and fiction supercedes reality. Herodias, first, and Salome, next, sans John, are the motifs for the first time. They move from real people to fictional characters.


Delaroche shows Herodias as exotic (read, non-European) (The euphemism used for most any type non-European at that time was Occidental.), regal (He did his homework.), authentically dressed (more good homework), and very, very lovely. The look on her face is open to interpretation. Has the grotesque event occurred or not yet? Is she serene or is she challenging us to question her? I don’t know who is represented in the background, for it certainly cannot be Salome. Herodias is a person in her own right. I would like to tie Delaroche’s interpretation to having viewed del Cairo (although I don’t know if this occurred, not having the resources to track the provenance of the del Cairo picture to align its location with Delaroche’s life).


Apparently Heinrich Heine, a German poet of some renown, was enchanted by the picture. He wrote a poem in 1843, “Atta Troll,” which sources say is a mock epic about Herodias. I was unable to find an English translation, so I have to accept what sources say as true. What I do know is that an epic is a very long and twisted story (the Iliad and the Odyssey are epics) about fanciful adventures of a protagonist (usually heroic) in pursuit of good end. How Heine got enough ideas about Herodias, who was minor in the first place and arcane by this time, to go on and on about her pursuit of an end, good or not good, I don’t know. I guess that’s called talent. In any event, he catapults Herodias (and the triangle) back into the minds of artistic people and they make her (and the triangle) interesting enough for public contemplation.


This mock epic and Delaroche’s painting next enchanted Stephane Mallarme, another poet of some renown, a Frenchman. He got his juices flowing and wrote a poem in 1869, “Herodiade,” whose English translation I was unable to find. I have absolutely no idea what his poem says. Critics say she described sultry (for the first time). I have to believe that Mallarme associated Occidental with sultry, not an uncommon association amongst fanciful European guys. Herodias is changing to heroic (maybe if Heine’s epic shows her to be this), Occidental, and sultry (read sexy).


All this got a French artist (of some renown) all excited. Gustave Moreau pondered the triangle and centered on Salome, instead of Herodias. He figured if Herodias was sultry, then Salome was more sultry. I don’t know why, but that’s what he did. He worked and worked this theme and ended up with a bunch of pictures with her as the (undressed) focal point, a first in Salome’s depictions, and threw in John’s head to make it all understandable. They were finished in 1876. All are amazing. The very last time Salome was the chosen subject matter was in 16th century (bad) portraiture. She’s always holding the plattercharger and has a boring look on her face and is all dressed up in 16th century costume. What the hell did Heine’s mock epic and Mallarme’s poem allude to with regard to Salome? I don’t know.


Anyway, Gustave Flaubert, a French writer of some renown, apparently read Heine and Mallarme and saw the picture interpretations of Delaroche and Moreau. All inspired him to write a short story in 1877 about Herodias, which indicates excellent homework, by the way. This, I read, and in this short story, she is called a Jezebel, albeit an aging one, for the first time. Her daughter is described as resembling her mother in her youth. You can read it, too. Go to http://www.classicbookshelf.com/library/gustave_flaubert/herodias/0/. It’s now fictional open season on Herodias and by association, her daughter, Salome.


Then came Joris-Karl Huysman, who liked what Heine, Mallarme, and Flaubert wrote and liked Delaroche’s and Moreau’s pictures. He went with Salome, not Herodias, in 1884, for his essay, “Against the Grain.” The essay is really prose poetry in the style of “The Song of Solomon,” real, real sexy. The essay was labeled decadent after it was published. You can read it, too, if and when you get in the mood for 19th century decadence. Go to http://www.imagi-nation.com/moonstruck/salome1.html.


In the 19th century, certain people loved decadent stuff, especially the artistic types who felt stultified with conservative stuff and who felt they had to push the envelope of public taste. This decadent Salome idea percolated for ten years in Oscar Wilde’s mind before his play, “Salome,” was performed in 1893. An interesting touch was his collaboration with Aubrey Beardsley to do playbill artwork. Wilde was jailed it was so damn decadent.


Within a year after Wilde’s play, Beardsley came out with a folio of images of Salome. It’s racy for the bare breasts and belly button, but it’s also a curiously clunky, non-sexy posing of Salome. Why is her midriff covered? Why is she wearing high heeled shoes with bows at the ankle? What the hell is going on here? Mere titillation, nothing more. Shame on you, Beardsley.


Everything rested until 1905, when Richard Strauss, a German of music renown, chose Salome as his opera subject. His librettist, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, an Austrian poet of some renown, put words to the decadent musical motifs. A costume designer, whose name I could not find, turned her eastern Byzantine and gave her a harem twist and a costume of 7 veils. A choreographer had her shimmy (belly dance). In the first performance of “Salome,’ Marie Wittich, described as an ample soprano Salome, refused to do the dance or wear the costume. A nameless ballerina accommodated the scene and this became a tradition each time the opera was performed. One critic, a word wizard, called Strauss the apostle of decadence. This made the people want to see it for themselves. Strauss’ “Salome” was performed 50 times in the first two years after it was written in opera houses all over the world.


This chronicle has ended.


PS. A beheaded John, not yet a saint, is so very popular that I had to find a depiction of John with his head on. Caravaggio was quite taken with him and did a lot of versions of John with his head on.


PS. One female artist, Fra Lippinni, an Italian woman, did work on the triangle. I am disappointed with Fra. Although she chose Salome to be focal, she dressed her modestly in Medieval costume, twirling her skirts. It’s a pretty nothing picture that says more about Lippinni and her lack of inspiration and imagination (She is technically apt, I think.) than the subject matter. I think she should have tried harder to ‘get into it.’ She was a daughter once and may have been the mother of a daughter at the time the picture was painted.


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