Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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The term Vul was frequently employed as an element in royal and other names; and the emblem which seems to have symbolized him -- the double or triple bolt -- appears constantly among those worn by the kings, and engraved above their heads on the rock-tablets.
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Together, in everything we do, we must respond to her melodic call - Vul 'indlela!
Address to the First Joint Sitting of the Third Democratic Parliament 2004
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As a result of a cooperative effort with B.M. Vul and collaborators the injection semiconductor lasers utilizing crystals of gallium arsenide were made at the beginning of
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_Vul-can_ is but a modified form of _Baal-Cain_, the god Cain.
The Symbolism of Freemasonry Albert G. Mackey
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I often wish that this mere bit of ordinary civility were more rigorously observed by Ba and Hortanes and Fricco and Vul and Baal-Peor, and by all your other cousins who come to visit you in such a zoologically muddled condition.
Jurgen A Comedy of Justice James Branch Cabell 1918
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Shamas-Vul, the son of Ishii-Dagon, king of Chaldaea, built a temple to Anu and Vul at
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Sargon dedicated to him the north gate of his city, in conjunction with Vul, the god of the air, built a temple to him at Khorsabad in conjunction with Sin, and assigned him the third place among the tutelary deities of his new town.
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Sin; the four-rayed disk, the emblem of the Sun-God, Shamas; the six-rayed or eight-rayed disk, the emblem of Gula, the Sun-Goddess; the horned cap, perhaps the emblem of the king's guardian genius; and the double or triple bolt, which was the emblem of Vul, the god of the atmosphere.
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Babylon, repenting of the submission which she had made either to Vul-lush III., or to his father, Shamas-Vul II., once more vindicated her right to freedom, and resumed the position of a separate and hostile monarchy.
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The gods worshipped in Assyria in the next degree to Asshur appear to have been, in the early times, Anu and Vul; in the later, Bel, Sin,
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