One Child, One Planet

One Child, One Planet

Author: Bridget McGovern Llewellyn

Publisher: Emerald Shamrock Press

Published: 2009

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780984188000

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One child learns about greenhouse gases, climate change, going green and how conservation can protect Earth's environment.


One Seed

One Seed

Author: Rosemary Phillips

Publisher: Grand Forks, B.C. : Quills Quotes & Notes Enterprises

Published: 2002-01-01

Total Pages: 32

ISBN-13: 9780973156805

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Across Cultures

Across Cultures

Author: Kathy A. East

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA

Published: 2007-05-30

Total Pages: 356

ISBN-13: 031309456X

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Compiled by two experienced librarians, Across Cultures introduces you to more than 400 recent fiction and nonfiction multicultural resources for preschool through grade 6 and encourages you to make literature about diversity an integral part of your program of instruction. Arranged in thematic groupings (Identity and Self-Image, Family and Friends, Traditions, Exploring the Past in Diverse Communities, for example), this lively volume links diverse peoples, themes, and issues. It presents both annotations and practical advice on programming strategies. Connections are made to projects, graphic organizers, and activities.


Count and Mass Across Languages

Count and Mass Across Languages

Author: Diane Massam

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2012-09-13

Total Pages: 331

ISBN-13: 0199654271

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This volume explores the expression of the concepts count and mass in human language and probes the complex relation between seemingly incontrovertible aspects of meaning and their varied grammatical realizations across languages. In English, count nouns are those that can be counted and pluralized (two cats), whereas mass nouns cannot be, at least not without a change in meaning (#two rices). The chapters in this volume explore the question of the cognitive and linguistic universality and variability of the concepts count and mass from philosophical, semantic, and morpho-syntactic points of view, touching also on issues in acquisition and processing. The volume also significantly contributes to our cross-linguistic knowledge, as it includes chapters with a focus on Blackfoot, Cantonese, Dagaare, English, Halkomelem, Lithuanian, Malagasy, Mandarin, Ojibwe, and Persian, as well as discussion of several other languages including Armenian, Hungarian, and Korean. The overall consensus of this volume is that while the general concepts of count and mass are available to all humans, forms of grammaticalization involving number, classifiers, and determiners play a key role in their linguistic treatment, and indeed in whether these concepts are grammatically expressed at all. This variation may be reflect the fact that count/mass is just one possible realization of a deeper and broader concept, itself related to the categories of nominal and verbal aspect.


Medicine and Morality in Egypt

Medicine and Morality in Egypt

Author: Sherry Sayed Gadelrab

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2016-01-22

Total Pages: 215

ISBN-13: 1786739755

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In Middle Eastern and Islamic societies, the politics of sexual knowledge is a delicate and often controversial subject. Sherry Sayed Gadelrab focuses on nineteenth and early-twentieth century Egypt, claiming that during this period there was a perceptible shift in the medical discourse surrounding conceptualisations of sex differences and the construction of sexuality. Medical authorities began to promote theories that suggested men's innate 'active' sexuality as opposed to women's more 'passive' characteristics, interpreting the differences in female and male bodies to correspond to this hierarchy. Through examining the interconnection of medical, legal, religious and moral discourses on sexual behaviour, Gadelrab highlights the association between sex, sexuality and the creation and recreation of the concept of gender at this crucial moment in the development of Egyptian society. By analysing the debates at the time surrounding science, medicine, morality, modernity and sexuality, she paints a nuanced picture of the Egyptian understanding and manipulation of the concepts of sex and gender.


Commentary on Genesis

Commentary on Genesis

Author: Didymus the Blind

Publisher: CUA Press

Published: 2016-04-15

Total Pages: 249

ISBN-13: 081322845X

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Blind since early childhood, the Egyptian theologian and monk Didymus (ca. 313-398) wielded a masterful knowledge of Scripture, philosophy, and previous biblical interpretation, earning the esteem of his contemporaries Athanasius, Antony of Egypt, Jerome, Rufinus, and Palladius, as well as of the historians Socrates and Theodoret in the decades following his death. He was, however, anathematized by the Fifth Ecumenical Council in 553 because of his utilization and defense of the works of Origen, and this condemnation may be responsible for the loss of many of Didymus's writings. Jerome and Palladius mentioned that Didymus had written commentaries on Old Testament books; these commentaries were assumed to be no longer extant until the discovery in 1941 in Tura, Egypt, of papyri containing commentaries on Genesis, Zechariah, Job, Ecclesiastes, and some of the Psalms.


Contextualizing the Muslim Other in Medieval Christian Discourse

Contextualizing the Muslim Other in Medieval Christian Discourse

Author: J. Frakes

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2011-10-27

Total Pages: 321

ISBN-13: 0230370519

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Broadens the perspective of recent work on the discourse of the Muslim Other in medieval Christendom by investigating pertinent texts, art, and artefacts, situating these local discourses of the Muslim Other in the larger cultural context of proto-Eurocentric discourse.


Paracelsus's Theory of Embodiment

Paracelsus's Theory of Embodiment

Author: Amy Eisen Cislo

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2015-09-30

Total Pages: 175

ISBN-13: 131731381X

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Paracelsus has been called the father of modern chemistry and is legendary for his treatment of syphilis. This work argues that Paracelsus developed an understanding of the body as composed of two distinct sexes, revolutionizing early modern conceptions of the female body as an inversion of or flawed approximation of the male body.