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Some Related Sentences

Betel and quid
Betel leaf is mostly consumed in Asia, and elsewhere in the world by some Asian emigrants, as betel quid or paan, with or without tobacco, in an addictive psycho-stimulating and euphoria-inducing formulation with adverse health effects.

Betel and is
Café Lou is a dive bar in Gretchen Town, New Betel.
The Betel ( Piper betle ) is the leaf of a vine belonging to the Piperaceae family, which includes pepper and Kava.
Betel is an important part of the economy in rural Bangladesh.
Examples of herbs where a high degree of confidence of a risk long term adverse effects can be asserted include ginseng, which is unpopular among herbalists for this reason, the endangered herb goldenseal, milk thistle, senna, against which herbalists generally advise and rarely use, aloe vera juice, buckthorn bark and berry, cascara sagrada bark, saw palmetto, valerian, kava, which is banned in the European Union, St. John's wort, Khat, Betel nut, the restricted herb Ephedra, and Guarana.
Production of Betel nut is also a sustaining business of Mon state, as the Mon pheasants preserved their heredity land onwards along with the government regulations, however, there are some many parts of uncultivated crude land in the area closed to neighbour Karen state.
Betel nut chewing is associated with an increased risk of squamous cell cancer of the head and neck.
Pre-and post-dinner Betel nut ( Paan ) chewing is very popular, along with chewing tobacco.
It is also famous for Betel Leaf, a typical south Asian chewing item.

Betel and also
Betel leaf has a fresh, peppery taste, but it can also be bitter to varying degrees depending on the variety.
* Pan, also spelled Paan, a North Indian term for Betel, often mixed with tobacco and lime for chewing as a mouth freshener
The term Betel nut beauty ( also betel nut girl-) refers to a common sight along roadsides in Taiwan: a young woman selling betel nuts and cigarettes from a brightly lit glass enclosure while wearing revealing clothing ( Openshaw ).

Betel and .
Betel nuts are sold mostly by old women walking around trying to sell it, but the dried version can be found in most shops which sell tea, alcohol and cigarettes.
File: Betel container. jpg | Betel container, 19th century, Filigree work in gold on a gold ground, outlined with bands of rubies and imitation emeralds, Mandalay, Burma
Betel leaf and Areca nut consumption in the world.
Betel requires high land and especially fertile soil.
Betel needs constantly moist soil, but there should not be excessive moisture.
Betel leaves are used as a stimulant, an antiseptic and a breath-freshener.
Betel leaves are cultivated throughout southeast Asia.
Betel nut beauties often hail from agricultural and working-class sectors of Taiwanese society.
Betel nuts are, after all, an agricultural product.
File: Betal bag, West Timor, 1921-Staatlichen Museums für Völkerkunde München-DSC08346. JPG | A Betel bag from West Timor, made around 1921.
Main fruits: Mango, Jackfruit, Litchi, Banana, Blackberry, Papaya, Guava, Coconut and Betel nut.
* Main crops: Paddy, Tea, Wheat, Potato, Jute, Ground nut, Betel leaf and Oil seed.

quid and is
A real definition, by contrast, is one expressing the real nature or quid rei of the thing.
Logrolling is the trading of favors, or quid pro quo, such as vote trading by legislative members to obtain passage of actions of interest to each legislative member.
He attended Ysgol Syr Thomas Jones school in Amlwch, where he was nicknamed Lemmy, although he is unsure why and it would later be claimed that it originated from the phrase " lemmy me a quid till Friday " because of his habit of borrowing money from people to feed his addiction to fruit machines ( slot machines ).
The temporary monopoly on the subject matter of the patent is regarded as a quid pro quo for thus disclosing the information to the public.
In 2003 the International Agency for Research on Cancer ( IARC ) reached the conclusion that there is sufficient evidence that the habit of chewing betel quid, with or without tobacco, is carcinogenic to humans.
**: Problem: The exception does not break nor define the rule ; a dicto simpliciter ad dictum secundum quid ( where an accountable exception is ignored ).
In January 2010 LAS Magazine posted an article on alternative financing in " a cash-strapped music industry, unable to rely on record label financing, is positioning its own quid pro quo: fan dollars to fund projects in exchange for exclusive material and a sense of involvement " that cites the Swans selling out of the 1, 000 signed and numbered copies of I Am Not Insane as an example of reverse financing where proceeds from one project are rolled over to finance the next.
In anthropology and the social sciences, a gift economy ( or gift culture ) is a mode of exchange where valuable goods and services are regularly given without any explicit agreement for immediate or future rewards ( i. e. no formal quid pro quo exists ).
Tertium quid refers to an unidentified third element that is in combination with two known ones.
:" The second thought streaming from the death ( slave )- ship and the curving river is the thought of the older South, the sincere and passionate belief that somewhere between men and cattle, God created a tertium quid, and called it a Negro — a clownish, simple creature, at times even lovable within its limitations, but straitly foreordained to walk within the Veil.
Moustachioed, complacent and greedy, he's an opportunistic money-grabber, whose habitual charge for any treatment is " ten quid "-regardless of whether the cure works or does more harm than good.
In legal usage, quid pro quo indicates that an item or a service has been traded in return for something of value, usually when the propriety or equity of the transaction is in question.
Such conduct becomes bribery only when there is an identifiable exchange between the contribution and official acts, previous or subsequent, and the term quid pro quo denotes such an exchange.
The phrase qui pro quo ( from medieval Latin: literally " qui instead of quid "), is common in languages such as Italian, Portuguese, Spanish and French, where it means a misunderstanding.
In those languages, the phrase corresponding to the usage of quid pro quo in Latin is do ut des ( English for " I give so that you will give ").
This is intended to prevent them from operating campaigns that complement or parallel those of the candidates they support or engaging in negotiation that could result in quid pro quo bargaining between donors to the PAC and the candidate or officeholder.
At the end of his The City and Man, Strauss invites his reader to " be open to the full impact of the all-important question which is coeval with philosophy although the philosophers do not frequently pronounce it — the question quid sit deus " ( p. 241 ).
The fallacy is also known as the fallacy of insufficient statistics, fallacy of insufficient sample, generalization from the particular, leaping to a conclusion, hasty induction, law of small numbers, unrepresentative sample, and secundum quid.
Such evidence is frequently obtained using undercover agents, since evidence of a quid pro quo relation difficult to prove.
Giving one gift in exchange for another is considered good form, but any kind of quid pro quo is a violation of the gift-economy rules
He is always trying to make a quick quid and his schemes usually backfire and leave him either in debt to local underworld figures, or with his activities coming under the scrutiny of the police ( or often a combination of both )-with Terry ultimately being left to sort out the mess and get him out of trouble.
The central plank of the statute is a social quid pro quo ; to encourage " learned men to compose and write useful books " the statute guaranteed the finite right to print and reprint those works.

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