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nourisher การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Rashnu and Arshtat both have roles in Zoroastrian eschatology while Zam is the divinity of the earth and nourisher of plants.
  • India, where it has traditionally been marketed as " The Great Family Nourisher ", is the largest market for Horlicks.
  • Sullivan's growing reputation as a nourisher of new work drew some of the best writers in Manhattan for stays in the Pacific Northwest.
  • As for other than Allah, it can be used to say Rabb Ad-Dar, the master of such and such object or the nourisher of such and such object.
  • With these lesser issues put aside, it was now time for the court to deal with the " breeder and nourisher of all these distempers, " as Anne Hutchinson was called forth.
  • In Hindu astrology the Planetary dispositor is also known as the " Poshaka ", meaning the " Nourisher ", because it tends to aid the occupant of its sign or house.
  • A good night's sleep, the " balm of hurt minds . . . chief nourisher in life's feast, " so beloved of Shakespeare, is increasingly missing from teen-agers'frantic lives.
  • He said : " Agriculture is the mother and nourisher of all arts : When agriculture is well conducted, all other arts prosper; when agriculture is neglected, all other arts decay, on land and on the sea ."
  • The word " Pusan " appears in a Vedic era Upanishad, meaning " nourisher " and associates it with the creation of earth and production activities that nourishes the whole world, and the text calls this " Pusan " as Shudra.
  • Stutz was once asked : " What is the difference between mere fashion and true style ? " Her answer was : " Fashion says'Me too', and style says'Only me'. " She thought her best talent was as a finder and nourisher of talents, " I help people to perform more bravely than they think they can ."
  • :: I believe in one secret and ineffable LORD; and in one Star in the Company of Stars of whose fire we are created, and to which we shall return; and in one Father of Life, Mystery of Mystery, in His name CHAOS, the sole vicegerent of the Sun upon the Earth; and in one Air the nourisher of all that breathes.
  • This would seem to be supported by the fact that fosterage was important in both early medieval Irish and Welsh societies, and that there is a cognate terminology in Irish and Welsh for the foster-father / teacher, allowing to reconstruct a Celt . * " altros ",'nourisher, foster-father, teacher', as well as close friend / foster sibling, from Celt . * " komaltros ",'jointly nourished, co-fostered, alumni '.
  • Grimm was unable to interpret it, but suggested variously that it was connected to " Stempe ", a name of Berchte, that she was named for an association with a sieve, and, based on the now discredited lullaby, that her name meant " bountiful, merciful . " Based on folklore and toponymy, Friedrich Woeste proposed that the name was cognate with German " zimmern " and meant " builder " or " nourisher "; based on the season at which the festival and the Roman attack took place, Karl M黮lenhoff proposed she was a goddess of harvest plenty, properly * " Tabana ", cognate with Greek words for " expenditure " and ( hypothetically ) " unthrifty "; others added Icelandic and Norwegian words for " fullness, swelling, " " to stuff, " and " large meal . " A . G . de Bruyn, a scholar of Oldenzaal folklore, returned to splitting the name into " Tan " and " fana " on toponymic grounds and because of a stamp dated 1336 found near Ommen that shows a woman holding a fir tree flanked by a sun symbol and a catlike creature and a bird; he proposed that she was a moon or a mother goddess, perhaps related to the Carthaginian goddess Tanit.