Ladies, have you ever forgotten to shave your legs, underarms or bikini area, then donned an outfit that showed your hairy figure perfectly to the world? Men have you forgotten to shave your face, rolled out bed when the alarm clock didn’t go off and then showed up to work looking scruffy and
recoveredscience.com We offer surprises about . and numerals and their ancient religious uses in our e-book. Ancient Creation Stories told by the Numbers. by H. Peter Aleff
With the help of the Egyptians, Sumerians, and Phonecians, Jason Novak illustrates what characters in the alphabet originally represented:
The Egyptians almost exclusively used fractions of the form 1/n. One notable exception is the fraction 2/3, which is frequently found in the mathematical texts.
An estimated 20,000 gathered in Central Park, Manhattan, yesterday for the annual AIDS Walk New York. The event first took place in 1986. Since that time, it has grown in […]
Contrary to popular belief, the glory hole is not a modern invention. The glory hole made its mark upon society long before modern-day perverts began drilling holes in public toilets, adult bookstores and gay bathhouses.
Ancient Egypt was a civilization of ancient Northeastern Africa, concentrated along the lower reaches of the Nile River in the place that is now the country Egypt.Egyptian civilization followed prehistoric Egypt and coalesced around 3100 BC (according to conventional Egyptian chronology) with the political unification of Upper and Lower …
A number of references onancientEgypt insinuate that the Egyptians had no concept of the term, art. Indeed, we know of no word from the ancientEgyptian language that exactly conforms to our abstract use of the word. They did have words for their creations that we today regard as examples of Egyptian
Boron group element: Boron group element, any of the six chemical elements constituting Group 13 (IIIa) of the periodic table. The elements are boron (B), aluminum (Al), gallium (Ga), indium (In), thallium (Tl), and nihonium (Nh).
Passion and Resurrection. Scholars such as E.A. Wallis Budge have suggested possible connections or parallels of Osiris’ resurrection story with those found in Christianity: “The Egyptians of every period in which they are known to us believed that Osiris was of divine origin, that he suffered death and mutilation at the hands of the powers of