Queens Are Born in August

Queens Are Born in August

Author: Panda Studio

Publisher:

Published: 2018-11-22

Total Pages: 110

ISBN-13: 9781790199990

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Lined Journal with 110 Inspirational Quotes for all Beautiful Queens! The journal includes: Black Cover with Gold Lettering Dimensions: 8.5x11 inches 110 lined pages with inspirational quotes Thick Cardstock Matte Cover Do you have any questions? Let us know! Connect with us on Instagram - @pandastudio_amazon or email us [email protected].


Queens Are Born in August: Journal for Woman Born in August - Ruled, Soft Cover

Queens Are Born in August: Journal for Woman Born in August - Ruled, Soft Cover

Author: Urban Lighthouse Journals

Publisher: Independently Published

Published: 2018-09-13

Total Pages: 102

ISBN-13: 9781720275367

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Queens Are Born In August (Journal/Diary/Notebook) This journal makes a perfect, fun, unique gift for that special queen in your life. Great for writing diary and essays, taking notes and memoranda, creative writing, musing, organizing to do lists, journaling, doodling, and more 100 wide-ruled paper with a line at the top for date 6


Queens Are Born In August But The Real Queens Are Born On August 29

Queens Are Born In August But The Real Queens Are Born On August 29

Author: Regal Celebrations

Publisher:

Published: 2019-08-02

Total Pages: 112

ISBN-13: 9781086996012

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This journal makes a great birthday gift and alternative to a card. Features: Measures 6x9 inches Wide Ruled Paper, 110 pages Paperback. Soft cover design. Matte.(Not a sewn binding.) White interior pages It can be used as a notebook, journal or composition book. There is ample room inside for writing notes and ideas.


Queens Are Born In August But The Real Queens Are Born On August 26

Queens Are Born In August But The Real Queens Are Born On August 26

Author: Regal Celebrations

Publisher:

Published: 2019-08-02

Total Pages: 112

ISBN-13: 9781086987256

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This journal makes a great birthday gift and alternative to a card. Features: Measures 6x9 inches Wide Ruled Paper, 110 pages Paperback. Soft cover design. Matte.(Not a sewn binding.) White interior pages It can be used as a notebook, journal or composition book. There is ample room inside for writing notes and ideas.


All the Queens Houses

All the Queens Houses

Author: Rafael Herrin-Ferri

Publisher: Jovis Verlag

Published: 2021-08-23

Total Pages: 272

ISBN-13: 9783868596564

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The borough of Queens has long been celebrated as the melting pot of America. It was the birthplace of North American religious freedom in the seventeenth century, hosted two World's Fairs in the twentieth, and is currently home to over a million foreign-born residents participating in the American experience. In 2013, Spanish-born artist and architect Rafael Herrin-Ferri began to paint a portrait of the "World's Borough"--not with images of its diverse population, or its celebrated international food scene, but with photographs of its highly idiosyncratic housing stock. While All the Queens Houses is mainly a photography book celebrating the broad range of housing styles in New York City's largest and most diverse county, it is also a not-so-subtle endorsement of a multicultural community that mixes global building traditions into the American vernacular, and by so doing breathes new life into its architecture and surrounding urban context.


Birthdays of the Rich and Famous: Almanac Vol. 2

Birthdays of the Rich and Famous: Almanac Vol. 2

Author: Joseph J. Randazzo

Publisher: Elohim Inc.

Published: 2019-04-29

Total Pages: 413

ISBN-13: 1545744343

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This collector’s edition of, Birthdays of the Rich and Famous helps us look at the men and women in history who have spent a lifetime to achieve excellence in whatever field or carriers chosen, as we acknowledge them and honor their participation towards service. This very prestigious historical uplifting body of work is now presented in a format of 365 pages of calendar days where you will discover 3 masterful Birthdays on any day of the year. Plus, the additional list of 105 special iconic celebrities Birthdays.


The Kojiki

The Kojiki

Author: Basil Hall Chamberlain

Publisher: Library of Alexandria

Published:

Total Pages: 448

ISBN-13: 1465577165

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Of all the mass of Japanese literature, which lies before us as the result of nearly twelve centuries of book-making, the most important Monument is the work entitled "Ko-ji-ki"1 or "Records of Ancient Matters," which was completed in A. D. 712. It is the most important because it has preserved for us more faithfully than any other book the mythology, the manners, the language, and the traditional history of Ancient Japan. Indeed it is the earliest authentic connected literary product of that large division of the human race which, has been variously denominated Turanian, Scythian and Altaic, and it even precedes by at least a century the most ancient extant literary compositions of non-Aryan India. Soon after the date of its compilation, most of the salient features of distinctive Japanese nationality were buried under a superincumbent mass of Chinese culture, and it is to these "Records" and to a very small number of other ancient works, such as the poems of the "Collection of a Myriad Leaves" and the Shintō Rituals, that the investigator must look, if he would not at every step be misled in attributing originality to modern customs and ideas, which have simply been borrowed wholesale from the neighbouring continent. It is of course not pretended that even these "Records" are untouched by Chinese influence: that influence is patent in the very characters with which the text is written. But the influence is less, and of another kind. If in the traditions preserved and in the customs alluded to we detect the Early Japanese in the act of borrowing from China and perhaps even from India, there is at least on our author's part no ostentatious decking out in Chinese trappings of what he believed to be original matter, after the fashion of the writers who immediately succeeded him. It is true that this abstinence on his part makes his compilation less pleasant to the ordinary native taste than that of subsequent historians, who put fine Chinese phrases into the mouths of emperors and heroes supposed to have lived before the time when .intercourse with China began. But the European student, who reads all such books, not as a pastime but in order to search for facts, will prefer the more genuine composition. It is also accorded the first place by the most learned of the native literati. Of late years this paramount importance of the "Records of Ancient Matters" to investigators of Japanese subjects generally has become well-known to European scholars; and even versions of a few passages are to be found scattered through the pages of their writings. Thus Mr. Aston has given us, in the Chrestomathy appended to his "Grammar of the Japanese Written Language," a couple of interesting extracts; Mr. Satow has illustrated by occasional extracts his elaborate papers on the Shintō Rituals printed in these "Transactions," and a remarkable essay by Mr. Kempermann published in the Fourth Number of the "Mittheilungen der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Natur und Völkerkunde Ostasiens," though containing no actual translations, bases on the account given in the "Records" some conjectures regarding the origines of Japanese civilization which are fully substantiated by more minute research. All that has yet appeared in any European language does not, however, amount to one-twentieth part of the whole, and the most erroneous views of the style and scope of the book and its contents have found their way into popular works on Japan. It is hoped that the true nature of the book, and also the true nature of the traditions, customs, and ideas of the Early Japanese, will be made clearer by the present translation the object of which is to give the entire work in a continuous English version, and thus to furnish the European student with a text to quote from, or at least to use as a guide in consulting the original. The only object aimed at has been a rigid and literal conformity with the Japanese text. Fortunately for this endeavour (though less fortunately for the student), one of the difficulties which often beset the translator of an Oriental classic is absent in the present case. There is no beauty of style, to preserve some trace of which he may be tempted to sacrifice a certain amount of accuracy. The "Records" sound queer and bald in Japanese, as will be noticed further on, and it is therefore right, even from a stylistic point of view, that they should sound bald and queer in English. The only portions of the text which, from obvious reasons, refuse to lend themselves to translation into English after this fashion are the indecent portions. But it has been thought that there could be no objection to rendering them into Latin,—Latin as rigidly literal as is the English of the greater part.