folkway การใช้
- Obviously, this kind of old-world folkway is ridiculously primitive.
- For example, a deviant act is wearing jeans to a formal wedding which also is a folkway.
- Her records, and the entire Folkways collection, are found in the " Smithsonian Folkway " collection online.
- -- Australian folkway you won't see discussed on NBC : Q . What's Australian foreplay?
- A folkway is a sociological standard, whose violation is generally met with a small amount of concern raised in society.
- The folkway of Voodoo of Louisiana, and Vud?of Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Dominican Republic are related more to Vodun than to Hoodoo.
- While a minority of Conservative Friends wear traditional plain dress ( it is not mandated ), they are most associated today with that traditional Quaker folkway.
- -- Australian folkway you won't see discussed on NBC : The cuddly koala bear is not a bear, and it's not cuddly.
- __ _ Eds : " Songs from the Gates of Hell, " released in 1979, is available from Folkway Records, album No . FSS37700.
- Several designers are at least taking the higher road into the next century, trying inventive cuts, abstraction in color and shape, a melding of the artisinal and the industrial, the modern and the folkway.
- Whenever they think about those Old World ancestors, Americans grow desperately nostalgic; they start mythologizing every more and folkway in sight and competing wildly with one another in the name of equity but with the hope of superiority.
- Important CD recordings surviving from this period of Wakefield's career include " Red Allen and Frank Wakefield : the Kitchen Tapes " and " Red Allen : the Folkway Years 1964-1983 ."
- The wife of the teen-agers'victim, Elena Cajon Yat, said mob killings will remain a Guatemalan folkway as long as peasants can find a desperate justice that cops and courts in the Guatemalan capital want to pretend doesn't exist.
- Performance blossomed again in 1976, when Widdie and Jonathon Hall founded the Peterborough Folkway . " Within a few years, it became a'must play'on the East Coast for folk musicians and continued to be a popular stop " for two decades.
- Robert Christgau was more enthusiastic in his blog for " pop songs cohere into a portrait of a man whose insecurity about love is expressed more sincerely than most other artists without indulging in self-pity : " Both vocally and verbally, they offer the kind of emotional complexity about sexual romance's ins and outs that good pop captures better than good literature, where cynicism is such a folkway . " Lauren Murphy from " The Irish Times " was impressed by the variety in which Smith and his producers use his voice throughout " In the Lonely Hour ", which she viewed as a sign of promise with songs " so understated yet so vibrant and accomplished ".