You only get into that if you are pretty deeply into the myths of the last great power, Britain's responsibility around the world, and so on. |
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The parables of Jesus metaphorically break open myths and allow us to reimagine a new world. |
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At the same time he was a believer in all sorts of myths and mysteries, and a devout worshipper of divinities both Greek and Oriental. |
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Many of Smith's stories are rewrites of Chinese myths and fables, with casts of characters out of his dreamlike human universe. |
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They are also purveyors of a number of pious myths about American politics. |
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Most personality disorder treatments today include all the myths of childhood inherited from psychoanalytic models of development. |
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Two of the more influential proselytes of that degenerate old collectivist have chosen to re-iterate all the old myths once again. |
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Welsh culture was based on an oral tradition of legends, myths, and folktales passed down from generation to generation. |
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These decades of collecting and collating myths, legends and historical snippets are clearly reflected in breadth and depth of the book. |
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Children were once told fairytales, myths, legends and fables because they had a meaning, a moral or a special psychological relevance. |
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Every culture has its own body of folklore, myths, legends, song, poetry, stories, and parables. |
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It is an interesting survey, and shows how creative people still continue to mine myths, legends and traditional culture for material. |
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To most people, the old myths and legends are quaint reminders of a bygone and superstitious age, and have nothing much to tell us anymore. |
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Born in Huddersfield, the 45-year-old is the son of a draughtsman and a mother with a passion for historical myths and legends. |
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The text is dense, yet accessible to someone with only a fleeting knowledge of Greek myths. |
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Boxes on most pages give generous gobbets of fact about food words, food history and myths and misunderstandings of cooks gone by. |
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And since we are in the realm of myths and fairytales, she deserves to be rewarded. |
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Thank you for Talbot's excellent series of articles debunking the myths propagated by the AIDS denialists. |
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In Western Europe, the defence and revision of the myths have run along different tracks. |
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Why has smoking been so readily accepted into so many different cultures, where it has been the subject of creation myths and demonologies? |
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The goddess Hathor was the protectress of an important wine-producing area, and myths linked her to wine and drunkenness. |
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His viewpoint can be illustrated by myths such as those of ancient Egypt, where the living believe that ghosts live the same lives as themselves. |
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The early and primitive myths were stories, mainly stories about gods, and their units were physical images. |
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Among the myths exposed along the way is the idea that Houdini, great escapologist though he was, could do magic. |
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A movie which is about dark power and evil, it uses the most powerful of Indian myths to its advantage. |
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The foundation myths of Scotland state that the Scottish Gaels originated from the Dal Riata tribe in Antrim, north-east Ireland. |
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Was I fully and credulously consumed by the ongoing myths and history told on these incredible walls? |
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In some of the myths it is permissible for them to marry women of various forbidden degrees. |
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Many of the physical theories and cosmologies of the Greeks read like rational revisions of the early myths. |
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Of the seven identified or plausibly identifiable books, not one is a book of histories, myths, or fables by a classical author. |
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Certainly, there are marked, and perhaps primary, political connotations to such myths. |
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The legacy of Buffalo Bill's fight with Yellow Hair vexed the plainsman in his own day and survives among the myths of the American West. |
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Such myths and misrepresentations explain, justify and resolve insupportable contradictions and problems in society. |
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He saw no need to write a poetry out of anachronistic myths, inkhorn lingos, and prissy poetic forms. |
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After all, the image of politically inert women reinforces cherished myths about motherhood. |
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He will be remembered for starring in a series of urban myths fuelled by celebrity fawners which painted him as some anarchic anti-hero. |
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This sophisticated stand-up comedy confronts and surprises audiences by shattering myths about deafness and cross-cultural love. |
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It's one of the myths of sport that international contests create goodwill between the competing nations. |
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This attempts to debunk a few myths, correct a few inaccuracies and enlighten us as to certain events that were omitted from the original book. |
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His many works filled Colombians with curiosity and admiration for the region's cultural complexity, its contemporary myths, its take on reality. |
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There's little harm in fanboys creating myths around their heroes, but when the artist buys into this myth, the work suffers for it. |
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Stories about pounds of impacted fecal matter lodged in colon walls are myths. |
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It is based on myths and fallacies which provide legitimacy for gross social inequalities. |
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The origins of myths and legends are as varied as the immortal marvels they celebrate. |
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The book contains unsubstantiated statements perpetuating old myths and creating confusion. |
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Over the past few months and years, some pernicious myths have started to become a little too popular. |
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Then came the latest of the many myths that constitute the fable of the modern American presidency. |
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I really don't know anything about The Beach Boys other than the fables and tired myths that surround their bandleader. |
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He remained throughout his life motivated by an abiding belief in the twin myths of racial paternalism and national mission. |
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I will confront the major criticisms of the language, explaining the origin and inaccuracy of the many myths about Pascal. |
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Seeking deeper inspiration, the erudite Masson turned to the somber, chthonic Greek myths. |
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For most Japanese, he was a living god, as propounded in the myths of State Shint, and the conflict was a holy war fought in his name. |
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Some of the myths are overstated, but many have a strong element of truth to them. |
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Traditional beliefs and views are subverted as a searching look is directed at figures and heroines from our epics, myths and legends. |
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The birth myths of supernatural heroes have been a subject of considerable interest to psychoanalysts. |
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The heroes and myths of the hill tribes of Cambodia are religious and familial in nature. |
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He certainly was the kind of figure who would have questioned a great deal of the myths concerning the gods and goddesses and heroes of the past. |
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From being servants of myths, heroes become puppets, overwhelmed by absurdity, groping for faith. |
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A number of myths are likely to have been dispelled almost as soon as Friday's opening match between France and Senegal has been completed. |
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These foreign aid programs rely on a series of myths concocted by a statist intellectual class. |
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The Hebrews must certainly have encountered them, and learned the handed-down traditions of early Mesopotamia, the myths and tales. |
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Ideas about storage architectures are obsoleting long held sacred tenets and myths about backup and archiving. |
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Cameroonian folklore has many intriguing myths, legends, and proverbs from its varied cultural groups. |
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All we have are the myths, the images, their particular Camelots that say particular things about our two countries. |
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It was not my place to scorn myths, when some people thought they were nothing but stories told to children late at night. |
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Athlete behavior is meant to be exemplary and virtuous and sustain the rags to riches myths of successful sports stars from humble origins. |
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He deconstructs myths of the tough virile man, laying his anxieties bare on the floor. |
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He knew little about the myths versified by Ovid and depicted by the flighty polychromatic cloud-scapers of Versailles. |
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The lover's perception, guided by stories and poetic myths, looks for a Venus in the real woman who is before him. |
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Ni-Vanuatu appreciate oratory and storytelling and have large archives of oral tales, myths, and legends. |
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If we are to develop a more realistic sense of place we will need to strip the varnish from some cherished myths about our island world. |
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Divided into five sections, Section One examines California from 1900 to 1920 and the utopic myths by which the state is most often identified. |
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Faithful to the tradition of urban myths, everyone swears their story is absolutely true. |
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Submitted for your consideration are some of the stories that have become Internet legends and urban myths. |
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Funny how one of the most urbanised societies on earth clings to its foundation myths. |
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No-one peddles more myths than the conventional economist, whose view of the world bears only the slightest connection to reality. |
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In a February 2009 article for Businessweek Online, social media expert, BL Ochman debunked six media myths surrounding social media. |
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Our next phase has to blow out of the water major myths and untruths about live animal export. |
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What makes him unique is his willingness to construct his myths on a scaffolding of calculated untruths. |
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The people who wrote the myths knew a bit more about real violence than any neckbeard developers will ever know. |
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The symmetry of its economic system rests on some very unsymmetrical myths and illusions. |
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Whether in ancient Greece or in contemporary society, myths are intrinsic to the process of naturalization and normalization. |
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Outside of the Roman Empire, St. Bernards were prominent in many Native American creation myths. |
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Most had heard of the legendary myths of Marine Corps boot camp, but none had seen this level of training up close and personal. |
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One of the biggest myths surrounding diabetes is that people with the condition must stick to the same uninspired foods all the time. |
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And what better weapon do we have against such myths, than to mythify them in their turn and produce other artificial myths? |
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Racial conflicts are being encouraged with vastly exaggerated figures and myths. |
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Idealized, regressive myths of a better, more magical time and place are a poor platform for making art. |
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His analyses of objects, media and other signs often seek to debunk the myths, or false representations, that surround them and appear natural. |
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I hope to see a few myths and untruths put to bed in 2004, but first a confession. |
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These myths were widely believed because they seemed to support the idea of evolutionary naturalism. |
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One of the most widely believed myths in America today is the belief that corporations are an inherent part of capitalism. |
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It aims at creating awareness about the snakes among the rural populace and also to dispel the many myths surrounding the reptiles. |
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At the top of their list of myths was the idea that males are primarily interested in objects and females are primarily interested in people. |
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For example, in AIDS trials in South Africa myths and beliefs about the disease hamper progress and treatment is unavailable to most patients. |
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For example, how widely were hunting myths like these spread throughout Europe? |
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Among the most common myths is the belief that it is contagious or caused by poor hygiene. |
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It's one of the great myths, this idea that you can directly derive a creature's temperament from its diet. |
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Why do I believe in an ancient book that some say is a book of legends, myths, fables, and ancient history? |
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Gold is the one metal that transcends fashion because of its many traditional associations with myths, legends, folklore and spirituality. |
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Each begins with the assumption that ancient myths are not myths but historical and scientific texts. |
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There are ancient myths of creation and heroes that resemble those in Chinese mythology. |
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Is it because nobody's writing scripts for that kind of theatre that we keep going back to all these ancient myths and stories? |
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The hill tribes have a strong oral tradition that consists of myths, legends, stories, and group knowledge. |
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The reporter should not be touting uncritically the myths of the defectors. |
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Because of his uncritical and selective acceptance of ancient myths, he cannot be said to be doing history, either. |
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Like all myths the ancient idea of Oxford is both unchanging and perpetually re-inventing itself. |
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These myths of the emperor's blamelessness were designed to maintain national unity. |
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There are myths about early attempts of the gods to create human life until the third try which was us. |
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A particular concentration is on a binary structure present in many myths, focusing on the complementary elements. |
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Chinese myths are stuffed with shape-shifters, dragons and half-human creatures. |
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As with the sexual revolution, the end of life is surrounded by myths and half-truths. |
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Even in earlier literature toadstones have been mentioned and many myths have been woven around them. |
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It's easier to bask in the memory of a glorious past than to confront some of the myths we continue to cherish in the present. |
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The book sets out to nail the lies and myths about the man, to set the record straight. |
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The Scottish baronial architectural style of the nineteenth century was an attempt to create myths and legends from nothing. |
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Anyway, we had a think in the office but were stumped for specific local Melbourne myths. |
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He integrates his new approach to the myths seamlessly with the traditional art historical account of the evolution of the genre. |
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These myths about mange reach gigantic proportions causing fear to strike in the hearts of dog owners. |
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Rivers in all their forms have become the raw material for countless metaphors, myths, sayings, and symbols. |
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Swift's disturbing satiric vision and eccentricities have given rise to countless myths and legends about his life. |
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And in conversation he wove a fantastic tapestry of myths about his personal life. |
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Instead, a hodgepodge of myths and fictions were promulgated to sow illusions among the strikers. |
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Maybe that rumour could be added to the list of Viking myths and sagas that will feature next Friday in Bardic Adventurers! |
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Nations tend to develop myths that attribute positive qualities to their founders and uniqueness to their political institutions. |
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Some rituals involved enacting ancient myths from a feminist point of view, revering nature, and sacralizing women's bodies. |
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This week I would like to dispel some of the myths and rumours regarding dogs and raw food. |
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I guess it was an exaggeration of the collective myths all families spin around themselves. |
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Wrapped in its national myths of splendid isolation and blessed innocence, it held out. |
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His elder sister, a computer ace, spent second grade doing research on the Internet, delving into Greek myths and studying artists. |
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Most of these sacred marriage myths are ancient and archetypal, from millennia before the era of Ephesians. |
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In addition to the potential causes of acne, there are also many myths about what causes acne. |
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All hoodwinking hounds will truly appreciate the urban myths and theories abounding regarding the origin of April Fool's Day. |
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While we are in the business of exploding some myths, there are a few others that I would like to consign to oblivion. |
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Modern myths follow a basic pattern, known as the monomyth or the hero's journey. |
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When it comes to myths about Ragdoll Cats, ragdoll history is truly stranger than fiction. |
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In the scenes from the Apocalypse or from Serbian myths and legends, drama and exaltation prevail. |
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One of the central figures in Chewa myths is Mbona, a rainmaker among the Mang'anja of Southern Malawi. |
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A number of myths exist about who may adopt and about the unwieldy processes which exist in adoption. |
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The myths and legends of the Aboriginal people, including their accounts of the creation of the world, are known as the Dreamtime. |
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All these examples are known as externalist theories, where mythographers explain myths as a reaction to the physical environment. |
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During ancient times, groups of Kathaks allegedly roved around the country recounting the epics and myths through poetry, music and dance. |
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With relatively little opposition the Afro-Caribbeans developed their own spiritual hierarchy, myths, festivals, musical and dance forms. |
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My impression is that his opinions were built on several myths and false assumptions. |
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The discussion on talk-back radio and in fan club chat rooms has unfortunately reflected misogynist myths common about rape. |
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It explodes myths about refugees and exposes attitudes that need to be dealt with. |
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Each culture has a worldview encased in a variety of myths, practices, rites, and moral exemplars. |
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Discard the myths in which biblical stories are wrapped and hold on to the kerygma to which they point. |
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Barthes has argued that myths and rituals in our society have taken the form of reasoning and speech. |
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Other leading businesses were reconstituted and rechristened, their new names often evocative of revolutionary myths, personalities, or imagery. |
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Science writer Bob Beale looks at some of the myths surrounding the male hormone testosterone. |
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The right to seek redress of wrongs in court is precious and should not be restricted or abridged, based on myths. |
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At this late stage, the elites found themselves forced to work upon the increasingly dysfunctional myths. |
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Westerner's perplexed by the artificiality of Hangzhou's dredged, diked and manipulated Xihu need only recall their own foundational myths. |
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The myths include the idea that Oxford Road is built on a ley line and so is believed by some to be an energy centre. |
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But he also makes elaborately costumed and staged studio photos that are based on Chinese myths and legends. |
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Like prehistoric man, some of the beliefs of the Egyptians were based on myths and legend. |
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The mythology and folklore of the Kutenai consist chiefly of cosmic and ethnic myths, animal tales, etc. |
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I recommend Dr Warren's latest observations about the myths and realities of tax regimes. |
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Although our myths and fairy tales are full of examples of the plight of fatherless children, are unfathered children really at risk today in modern America? |
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The monomyth was a structure that myths all around the world followed. |
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The staff has long been interested in jackalope myths around the world. |
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As such it entertains and titillates, yet unexpectedly moves to deeper levels through a series of related myths mysteriously woven into the story. |
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Such myths, Manchester argues, may be vestigial in the modern era, but they remain vital to the cohesion of a culture. |
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As Cordelia learns, the myths that define us are finally meant to be defied, too. |
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Giants are the cornerstone of the myths, legends, and traditions of almost every culture on Earth. |
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James Alan Fox, a criminologist who studies mass shootings, has debunked a lot of the myths of mass shooters. |
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But cliches, like myths, are often built around kernels of pure truth. |
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What is bad about all terror is when it is attached to religious and political abstractions and reductive myths that keep veering away from history and sense. |
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In addition, she said there was a need to dispel some of the myths around cocaine such as the notion that it is relatively safe and relatively clean. |
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The first Konkani book to be translated into English, The Upheaval deals with the collapse of an agrarian society that lived by myths and unspoken rules. |
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Others, myself included, have discussed celebrity as a kind of art, providing narratives that reify themes and ideas in the culture much the way myths do. |
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He does, however, attempt to dispel some of the myths that have emerged from hearsay and rumor over the last century. |
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It's a city packed full of historical monuments and relics, of myths and legends, which seem to come to life every time you walk through its century old streets. |
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It is impossible for a modern author to create the necessary tone for an epic without lapsing into irony, because the material conditions preclude the creation of new myths. |
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The myths surrounding censorship are legion, and are largely based on the unproven premise that screen violence incites people to actual violence. |
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His expedition was less a holiday than an exercise in comparative anthropology, since he wanted to examine the differences between American and Australian myths. |
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He loves the whole idea of leprechauns and the magic and myths of Ireland. |
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He could fabricate myths that did not seem manufactured but felt real enough to explain the mysteries of your own existence. |
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Religion is founded upon the oral tradition, the passing down of myths and fact and apocrypha until they cohere into something with a central doctrine. |
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There's great beauty, there's great chaos, there's death and rebirth, it goes back to the classical Greek myths, the Apollonian and the Dionysian. |
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Unlike deliberately constructed visions, the myths we live and work by often remain unseen, residing incognito in our daily rituals, rites, customs, and metaphors. |
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The Arawaks explained the mysteries of everyday life in their myths. |
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European myths settle on archetypal characters and events, stories rich in metaphor and allusion that weave deep meaning from past epics into the activities of everyday life. |
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Duncan and Jess came to artistic maturity together, ever expanding and refining a study of world literature and art focused on myths, symbols and archetypes. |
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Russian worldview is almost entirely based on myths and combines delusions of grandeur with paranoia. |
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And the more we do to perpetuate the myths surrounding motherhood, the more unbearable we make the cross to bear for those who don't find it all rusks and baby bottles. |
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The sagas, legends, myths and histories which have been passed on orally or in written documents by ancient peoples are sometimes called pseudohistory. |
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Here are a few books that sketch out the myths and realities of how to pull a heist. |
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But early vampire myths were a far cry from the sleek, cloaked version Stoker described. |
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The Mayans, Incas and Aztecs all have had their creation myths, but these tell us equally little about how their societies actually came into being. |
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Bust times inevitably recall repressed myths of gallant cavalry laid low by Northern treachery and an economy ravaged by carpetbaggers and scalawags. |
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But while the validity of moulding the myths from separate classical poems is questionable, he is not the first to mangle the work of Homer in the name of cinema. |
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It is a mournful threnody, measuring to the final cost the waste and destruction caused by the edenic myths of California that have defined it throughout its existence. |
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It's the result of a wider sentiment of fear in the community, brought about by our failure to satisfactorily tackle the misunderstandings and myths we have about each other. |
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One of the most persistent myths in American politics is the media-fueled concept of the lame duck. |
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In the one there was much talk of the unconscious, of the underlying grammar of myths, of metaphor and metonymy, contradictions, resolutions, transformations and obviations. |
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After that we turned our attention to animal myths, totems and characters, and I asked them to draw each of themselves as animals with which they identified. |
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But I'm not a recluse so it was only a minor gripe and things like midnight feasts and all the fun myths that go with boarding school sort of made up for it. |
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Examining the crucial elements leading to World War I, he exposes how a pack of falsehoods and the militarist myths they serve may bedevil us still. |
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Several essays emphasize the formal elements involved in reproducing both American myths through the effective employment of transhistorical archetypes. |
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It is only right that a few myths and misunderstandings are corrected. |
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I inhaled Indian myths, and I crept through the woods near our house, re-enacting these myths, and wishing, wishing, for a pair of soft leather moccasins. |
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Her field of deployment was not the courtrooms of Paris but the literary culture of the Valois court, with its love of classical myths and its taste for bizarrerie. |
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Schlosser does nothing more than repackage some of the same tired old myths about capitalism that earlier generations of muckraking socialists perpetrated. |
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But, before you slather on that oil-laden cream or lotion, it's important to understand how the skin functions and to dispel a few myths about moisturizing products to boot. |
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She reinterprets history and, using new symbols, she shapes new myths. |
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He led a nation secure in its past, with a strong oral tradition of myths and legends, but one somewhat behind the social change wrought in the rest of north Europe. |
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This can be seen through the ages, from ancient folklore and myths such as vampires and ghosts, which still have great power even in modern, scientific times. |
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I probably know more ancient myths and stories than they ever will. |
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Her work is imbued with a keen sense of the macabre and the wittily surreal and draws heavily on symbolism and themes derived from traditional fairy tales and folk myths. |
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But, then, ignorance of the facts is a great aid to belief in myths. |
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Both major political parties propagate myths about young people. |
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By the time the number of examples of myths, false assertions and cases of deliberate disinformation had reached 40 I reckoned it was time to publish them. |
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There are myths and distorted concepts out there that may not be true. |
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Not only myths, but the nature of that which makes stories mythic changes once stories are technologically reproducible and we begin to attribute authorship. |
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Contemporary belief stories and older myths intermingle to create the rich mythic tapestry that forms the backdrop to vernacular and alternative religiosity there. |
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Other planets have been named after ancient myths and mythological beings. |
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Through experiences of community, rituals, and teachings, the mythopoetic men sought to overcome negative images of masculinity by creating new ones from myths and poems. |
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Sadly, some of these myths have become so entrenched that we sometimes forget they are merely half-truths or untruths which bear little resemblance to reality. |
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We are not talking about armour here, we are talking about email chains that get circulated, some of which become urban myths and some becomes information and news to others. |
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Ambrosia, nectar, soma, these swill through our myths and histories. |
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In satires on lewdness and folly, artists and poets continued to portray brothel-keepers as old hags, following the tradition established by classical myths. |
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Like all myths, there is a vestige of truth in the caricature. |
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In fact, classic myths, being vehicles for expressing universal patterns of unconscious thought, are filled with examples of spontaneous generation. |
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Classicism was, after all, based on a historic culture, and late eighteenth-century radicals were to find sustenance in the myths of Saxon freedom and the Norman yoke. |
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Because of this, it is crucial that research continues in this area so that racial myths, stereotypes and prejudice within New Zealand can be exposed and understood. |
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In accordance with the strategy of orientalism, and relying on the electronic and print media, the myths of the Other are created and perpetuated. |
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Each ethnic group has its own heroes and heroines, legends, and myths. |
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And all are either outright myths or severe distortions of truth. |
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Through its association with the Apollo and Orpheus myths and with the Homeric epics the lyre was accorded high status in Greek and Roman society. |
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How can those who articulate the green case possibly be comfortable with such a curiously unbalanced mix of myths and beliefs, such a partial view of the world? |
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And like Lewis, she serves the useful purpose of noting that myths and legends and plain old garden variety cliches are all derived from some intrinsic truth. |
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They also appear, imbued with human attributes, in myths and fables, making them key agents in the teaching of indigenous manners and codes of behavior. |
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We all live by concocting stories, myths, images of the world. |
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Shermer argues that religion is a social institution resulting from evolutionary development for the purpose of promoting myths and encouraging altruism. |
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Where oracles once spoke with a particular type of intentionality that provided a foundational basis for truth, we now cannot fall back on such myths. |
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I am complicit, in the sense that I am trying to point out that everything is not containable, and everything is interconnected, and myths are being accepted as truth. |
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He, in effect, fell victim to the myths of his own invincibility. |
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The two brothers aren't larger than life myths sprung to life, but ordinary hunters attempting to provide for themselves and their families in a forbidding and hostile world. |
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The one-eyed, savage giant called Cyclops remained a mystery, submerged in the myths and imagery of men at sea and women who wait for them, told through story and song. |
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In challenging the myths of mulatto fiction by precursory white writers, in particular, Fauset reveals the fundamentally political nature of her novels. |
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The play thus presents the Spanish as offering a more immediate example of how to achieve imperial status, rather than relying upon the myths of the past. |
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From either side of the Atlantic, two of the more influential proselytes of that degenerate old collectivist have chosen to re-iterate all the old myths once again. |
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There were Gnostic schools, sects, writings, teachers, myths and churches. |
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Where did this hatred of Witchcraft begin and who is responsible for spreading the myths of diabolism, devil-worship, infanticide and crazed orgiastic rites? |
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These are found in a number of myths, notably that of Endymion, and on Dionysiac sarcophagi, where personifications of the seasons often also appear. |
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In the old vegetation myths the god is dismembered, dies, and is buried as a sacrifice that generates new life, freeing the waters and restoring life to the Waste Land. |
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Many people in the sustainable agriculture community have been instrumental in publishing and disseminating factual information to counter these myths. |
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Before mentioning these myths and stereotypes, let me explicate a developmental theory, for good theory and science enhance each other for practice. |
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If lecturers cannot challenge students freely to engage in debate, no matter how disturbing, how are they supposed to explode myths and encourage radical thinking? |
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Not bad for a couple of writers huckstering their work, with one writing poetic retellings of ancient myths, and the other ranting and raving at the kakistocracy. |
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This second volume answers new questions, debunks myths the first book didn't address, and includes 35 new recipes from food-critic Parrish. |
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Snorri was also part of this revived interest, examining pagan myths from his perspective as a cultural historian and mythographer. |
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Naevius's dramas were mainly reworkings of Greek originals, but he also created tragedies based on Roman myths and history. |
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Some thinkers claimed that myths result from the personification of objects and forces. |
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On May 20, 1894, the Times set about debunking some of these myths. |
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Visitors can pet a king snake and feed a desert tortoise while learning about their habits and dispelling fears and myths. |
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He believed myths began as allegorical descriptions of nature and gradually came to be interpreted literally. |
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Author Tim Maltin has undertaken years of research to distinguish the myths and truth in his book on the doomed Belfast-built ship. |
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Herewith, how Humphrey bogarted the 20th century, in myths, movies and, when we absolutely have to resort to them, facts. |
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Radiotherapist Kari Mawerere stated that many Ugandans are afraid of taking x-rays because of myths that x-rays cut one s life short. |
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As stories spread to other cultures or as faiths change, myths can come to be considered folktales. |
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Much historical effort in the 20th century was devoted to combating the romantic historical myths created in the 19th century. |
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Other myths explain how a society's customs, institutions and taboos were established and sanctified. |
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Creation myths particularly, take place in a primordial age when the world had not achieved its later form. |
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Important motifs in German Romanticism are travelling, nature, for example the German Forest, and Germanic myths. |
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Did you know that my first degree was in xenomythology?' 'I did not. Please continue.' 'The volcryn story was among the Nor T'alush myths. |
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But if we inhabited such a world, men themselves would have been wonderless things, unable ever to spin myths. |
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There are a lot of aggravating myths and narratives in politics. |
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As an institution with such a long history, the university has developed a large number of myths and legends. |
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In the great myths, the adventures are external, even when they involve such metaphorical spelunkings as the voyage into the underworld. |
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In fact, many societies group their myths, legends and history together, considering myths to be true accounts of their remote past. |
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Other myths state that he was reborn 13 times after his first life during the days of Fuxi. |
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Main characters in myths are usually gods, demigods or supernatural humans, while legends generally feature humans as their main characters. |
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Taoist myths state that Laozi was conceived when his mother gazed upon a falling star. |
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Some of its myths were once true, but now it's a mature, global, competitive, commodity-based, and capital-intensive industry. |
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For example, Greek mythology, Roman mythology and Hittite mythology all describe the body of myths retold among those cultures. |
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The myths and oral literature formed the cosmogenic view of the world of the indigenous people. |
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In present use, mythology usually refers to the collected myths of a group of people, but may also mean the study of such myths. |
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Where ancient myths and spellbinding tales will set your imagination alight and your hair on end. |
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The indigenous peoples of North America have many creation myths by which they assert that they have been present on the land since its creation. |
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This King Atlas was a son of the Titan Atlas but the two myths very quickly coalesced. |
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We should therefore expect an inventive, prolific mythmaker to return, time and again, to old myths in service of new ideas. |
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The myths sometimes depict Jauja as an island and other times as a city in a mythical land. |
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While each unique ethnic group has its own stories and myths to tell, Hindu and Spanish influences can nonetheless be detected in many cases. |
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Mythology or godlore refers variously to the collected myths of a group of people or to the study of such myths. |
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They practiced a form of animistic pantheism, much of which has survived in the form of folklore and numerous myths. |
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This article examines the Tuareg myths which form a large part of Libyan novelist's Ibrahim al-Koni's work. |
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By expressing the myths of having common descent and common destiny, people's sense of belonging to a nation is enhanced. |
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The rediscovery of the Canary Islands by Europeans in the 14th century revived an interest in Atlantic island myths. |
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It has been suggested that some early myths surrounding the Welsh hero Culhwch involved the character being the son of a boar god. |
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Several Greek myths use the boar as a symbol of darkness, death and winter. |
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This difference was kept alive by invoking Ireland's historic past, its myths, legends and folklore. |
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Before we get into the party season, MARIA CROCE asked nutritionists to bust the myths and reveal what could really work for a hangover. |
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She and her young artists briefly explored some American Indian beliefs and myths, particularly of the Ojibwa tribe. |
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Timorese origin myths tell of ancestors that sailed around the eastern end of Timor arriving on land in the south. |
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Don't put your faith in mortgage urban myths that suggest you can break your contract or stop paying your premiums indefinitely. |
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It's one of football's urban myths that a young Sir Les played a part in trashing the site at the BBC studios in White City. |
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Germanic mythology consists of the body of myths native to the Germanic peoples. |
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