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Page "Buddhism in Vietnam" ¶ 22
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more and domesticated
In domesticated mammals, choosing not to offend the dominant owner, they eat or more prominently bury waste.
The new image of Hercules was more domesticated.
They also became more dog-like as well: they lost their distinctive musky " fox smell ", became more friendly with humans, put their ears down ( like dogs ), wagged their tails when happy and began to vocalize and bark like domesticated dogs.
or more specifically, are ornamental varieties of domesticated common carp ( Cyprinus carpio ) that are kept for decorative purposes in outdoor koi ponds or water gardens.
During the 6th – 5th millennium BC, various animals were domesticated, dwellings became more sophisticated and could shelter larger families.
Wheat genetics is more complicated than that of most other domesticated species.
This more primitive morphology ( in evolutionary terms ) consists of toughened glumes that tightly enclose the grains, and ( in domesticated wheats ) a semi-brittle rachis that breaks easily on threshing.
Mules also tend to be more independent than most other domesticated equines other than the donkey.
All four of the cultivated cocas were domesticated in pre-Columbian times and are more closely related to each other than to any other species.
Nonheading cabbages and kale were probably the first to be domesticated, sometime before 1000 BC, and the Greeks and Romans had some variety of cabbage, although whether it was more closely related to today's cabbage or to one of the other Brassica crops is unknown.
The many different types of domesticated brown rats include variations in coat patterns, as well as the style of the coat, such as Hairless or Rex, and more recently developed variations in body size and structure, including dwarf and tailless fancy rats.
With more than 10, 000 domesticated and wild species, the Poaceae represent the fifth-largest plant family, following the Orchidaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae, and Rubiaceae.
Wild populations of M. esculenta subspecies flabellifolia, shown to be the progenitor of domesticated cassava, are centered in west-central Brazil, where it was likely first domesticated more than 10, 000 years BP.
A 2009 molecular study using ancient DNA recovered from archaeological finds like bones and teeth places the Przewalski's horse in the middle of the domesticated horses, but more recent mitochondrial DNA analysis suggests that the Przewalski and the modern domestic horse diverged some 160, 000 years ago.
There is archaeological evidence at sites located in southwestern Ecuador that chili peppers were domesticated more than 6000 years ago, and is one of the first cultivated crops in the Central and South Americas that is self-pollinating.
The dogs of ancient Egypt were likely domesticated subspecies of one or more of these enigmatic species.
Once a wild and pristine environment rich with native wildlife, non-native species such as the dozens of domesticated ducks and geese and Eurasian mute swans released here by people over the years, as well as artificially high amounts of food due to feedings have produced an environment that holds far more animals than the area could ever naturally sustain.
At Festival Park, the one-hundred to two-hundred or so resident birds ( which include virtually-flightless domesticated birds, swans, mallards and Canada geese that cannot or do not migrate, and hybrids of all types ) that live at the lake year round, as well as migrant Canada geese and mallards, have stripped the shoreline and land of most vegetation, resulting in erosian, and have turned the shallow lake below the dam into little more than a muddy broth of bacteria.
The city is also notable for its dog population, which more than doubles that of the human population at 1, 891 canines, mainly domesticated.
Cherokee tribesmen, who often survived by growing crops, and tended to live in small villages, were in many ways more domesticated than other Native American tribes.
In order to maintain health and happiness, pet parrots require much more attention than domesticated animals such as dogs or cats.
In this paper Bailey used only the rank of species for the cultigen but it was clear to him that many domesticated plants were more like botanical varieties than species, and that appears to have motivated the suggestion of the new classification category cultivar, which is generally assumed to be a contraction of the words cultivated and variety.
Pediculosis is more common in cattle than any other type of domesticated animal .< ref name =" Hussain ">

more and offshoot
While Spock makes it clear that the events during the period of Surak are well documented (" The Savage Curtain "), he is completely uncertain in regard to the origin of the Romulans: " If the Romulans are an offshoot of my Vulcan blood -- and I think this likely -- then attack becomes even more imperative.
The rozhok (‘ little horn ’) of the Vladimir and Tver ( Kalinin ) districts, however, may be a rural offshoot of the straight cornett ; it has a separate mouthpiece ( which some players place to the side of the lips ) and is made in two or more sizes for playing music in parts.
An offshoot of the Boston Symphony Orchestra is the Boston Pops Orchestra, founded in 1885, which plays lighter, more popular classics, and show tunes.
It has been suggested that early procyonids were an offshoot of the canids that adapted to a more omnivorous diet.
The Atlanta Rhythm Section and the Amazing Rhythm Aces were more focused on vocal harmonies, and Louisiana's Le Roux ranged from Cajun-flavored Southern boogie early on to a more arena rock sound later on, while the Dixie Dregs and Allman Brothers ' offshoot Sea Level explored jazz fusion.
Others, probably influenced by the electric folk pioneered by Fairport Convention from 1969, moved towards more traditional material, a category including Dando Shaft, Amazing Blondel, and Jack the Lad, an offshoot of northern progressive folk group Lindisfarne, who were one of the most successful UK bands of the early 1970s.
Some of the more popular theories include Freemasonry being an offshoot of the ancient mystery schools, or that it is an institutional outgrowth of the medieval guilds of stonemasons, or that it is a direct descendant of the Knights Templar.
Real tennis players often call the game " tennis ", while continuing to refer to its more widely played offshoot as " lawn tennis ".
A modern offshoot of bouyon is bouyon-muffin, uses more prominient elements of the Jamaican raggamuffin music.
The defection of assorted and sundry anti-parliamentary members from the Social Democratic Federation, including a fair number of anarchists, to form the Socialist League in 1885 left the SDF a relatively more homogeneous unit than its new offshoot.
Flowering forth in the Greek, pre-Celtic, Indo-Aryan, Aryo-Persian, Armenic, Roman, Germanic, Tiwanaku, Teotihuacán, early Chinese, Aztec-Nahua, Inca and first Egyptian dynasties ' representatives, with more or less ethnic but great spiritual purity, the " Northern Light " was considerably lost to the Atlantean offshoot which defiled itself through spiritual integration into the spiritual lunar sphere of the world of the " Mother " or " Earth " of the " Southern Light " and further miscegenation with bestial, dark Lemurian stocks.
Chris Guthrie joined Davis, and introduced him to Jef Poskanzer and Craig Leres, who were working on a more strategic offshoot of Empire called Conquest.
The Zululand Dwarf Chameleon from western uThungulu apparently consists of 2 or more species, one that may be closer to the preceding, and one that might be an early offshoot of the ancestral Drakensberg stock, and which are distinguishable by morphological and mtDNA characteristics.
Upper Pennington is the northern residential offshoot of Pennington, more rural in character, almost entirely surrounded by heath and farmland.
More modern style instruments are often used in the more modern dance music that was an offshoot of traditional village music.
Along with humans, playable races include the drug-addicted mutant humans called " Frothers ", the stealthy feline " Wraith Raiders ", the formidably violent saurian " Shaktar ", and the two ' Ebb ' / pseudo-magic using races: the emotionally sensitive and charismatic Ebon, and their more sadistic and violent genetic offshoot, the " Brain Wasters ".
At the beginning of the decade, the countrypolitan — an offshoot of the earlier " Nashville Sound " of the late 1950s and early 1960s — and the honky-tonk fused Bakersfield Sound were some of the more popular styles.
Following this step, a small offshoot group sought to form the Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade, a small non-denominational group that could lobby more successfully by incorporating Anglican and Parliamentary support ( Quakers were barred from Parliament until the early nineteenth century, whereas the Anglican Church had the right to seats in the House of Lords ).
Some of the more notable groups of this variety include Japanese duo Ruins, Magma offshoot Weidorje and Belgian chamber rock outfit, Univers Zero.
" Chimera " is an offshoot of what happened in " Grace ", and the writers were trying to " dispel the black widow curse that Carter has, and also to open her up for more experiences and to flesh her out just a little bit more as a human being ".
The first album, Music From The Penguin Cafe, was released in 1976 on Brian Eno's experimental Obscure Records label, an offshoot of the EG label ; a collection of pieces recorded in the years 1974-1976, it was followed in 1981 by Penguin Cafe Orchestra, after which the band settled into a more regular release schedule.
Diverging frequently from Comic Party canon, this offshoot manga series includes more yaoi elements than the original materials.
Most contemporary races are either some offshoot of the Archaen race, " Neomorphs " created by magical means, or one of a handful of mysterious races more ancient than the Archaens.

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