Ethnographical love

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Examples

  • He entered the San Carlos Academy in 1917 and was there until 1921 when he was appointed head of the Department of Ethnographical Drawing at the National Museum of Archeology.

    Rufino Tamayo 2007

  • He entered the San Carlos Academy in 1917 and was there until 1921 when he was appointed head of the Department of Ethnographical Drawing at the National Museum of Archeology.

    Rufino Tamayo 2007

  • The great Ethnographical Museum adjoining, on the corner of

    In and Around Berlin Minerva Brace Norton

  • Herodotus, from the most Recent Sources of Information; and embodying the Chief Results, Historical and Ethnographical, which have been obtained in the Progress of Cuneiform and Hieroglyphical Discovery.

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 05, No. 31, May, 1860 Various

  • Herodotus, from the most Recent Sources of Information; and embodying the Chief Results, Historical and Ethnographical, which have been obtained in the Progress of Cuneiform and Hieroglyphical Discovery.

    The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 06, No. 37, November, 1860 Various

  • _Essays, chiefly Philological and Ethnographical_, p. 247.

    The Number Concept Its Origin and Development Levi Leonard Conant

  • On only half-a-dozen occasions had he ever been in print, and that in obscure publications, when he composed an "Ethnographical Alphabet," beginning "A is an Afghan."

    The History of "Punch" M. H. Spielmann

  • Her head and her beautiful black hair are now in the Ethnographical Department of the Natural History Museum at South Kensington, and her precious papyrus is in the Bodleian Library at Oxford.

    Pharaohs, Fellahs and Explorers 1891

  • Russian Ethnographical Society, these women were sometimes of an astonishing beauty, and when opportunity offered, as it sometimes did

    Modern Saints and Seers Jean Finot 1890

  • + Ethnographical studies have established the fact that things were first hung on the body as amulets or trophies, that is, for superstition or vanity, and that the body was painted or tattooed for superstition or in play.

    Folkways A Study of the Sociological Importance of Usages, Manners, Customs, Mores, and Morals William Graham Sumner 1875

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