Sentences with phrase «facts about the mythology»

Learn about the Aries man in love as well as interesting facts about the mythology and general characteristics of this passionate personality.

Not exact matches

Sadly you also throw around the term «child abuse» with a cavalier looseness that suggests you don't have the foggiest idea what child abuse is... it's a shame abused children everywhere can't write in and tell you about their trevails at the hands of an abuser... Jesus Christ was no abuser... if I'm wrong about Jesus, he was at least a Rabbi who loved his followers, and who taught, peace, compassion, forgiveness, and inclusiveness... If I'm right, Jesus is the most amazing, wonderful gift GOD could ever give to his beloved creation... in either event, belief in him, and sharing those beliefs with children is not abuse, it's loving and nurturing fact based belief, not mythology...
«Too often people have assumed that we have got to make the rise of euroscepticism about the mythology of bendy bananas and bans on chocolate, not the fact that the European budget looks like it's suited to the 1950s and not the 21st century,» he added.
Before I started my Paleo eating experiment I used to dismiss stories about the sudden and surprising physical changes some women experience as they hit their 40's as more mythology than fact.
A fun fact about Les Néréides is that the name derives from Greek Mythology in which the Néréides were the sea nymph daughters of Nereus, the Old Man of the Sea.
A fascinating projection of Guy Maddin's memories and personal mythologies about the city where he was born and raised, juxtaposed upon a fantastical recount of historical facts and urban legends with his trademark silent film aesthetic, grainy and ethereal.
At the very least, people have this mythology about who she is — she's hip, she's cosmopolitan, and she's undeniably Caucasian, and she's in tune with the fact that she's been given wonderful privileges.
You'd think the fact that «Insurgent» isn't bogged down by the same tedious exposition would allow the film to dig deeper into its characters and mythology, but you don't learn much more about the main players by the end of the movie than when it began.
Apples, oranges, corn, potatoes, tomatoes, grapes, bananas, mushrooms, and pomegranates are the focus of this beautifully illustrated book that blends facts about each food with language, history, mythology, and folklore.
Using the market as both a geographic and ideological center, Heading Southwest [About Practice # 2] aims to shed light on the macro meaning of the Essex Market's inner and parallel social functions, as a metaphor of a universal need: the human desire to discover and find the irrationality within reality, the extraordinary within ordinary and the mythology within facts, in turn revealing a fragile desire to fictionalize reality by threading together a narrative that feels more impressive than the real.
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