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Her and wild
Her eyes were wild.
Her associations with hawks, lions, and the very stone of the wild, mountainous Anatolian landscape, suggest her as mother of the land and its wild, untrammeled nature, with power to dominate, moderate or soften its latent ferocity, and control its potential threats to a settled, civilised life ; thus, her enrollment as a protective goddess of the state by Anatolian elites, possibly concurrent with some form of ruler-cult.
Her father was forced to agree, but Heracles intervened on her behalf and killed the wild horse-man.
Her yellow blouse was originally thought to be made of wild " tussah " silk but closer examination of the fibers indicate the material is not Chinese but was a wild silk which came from somewhere else, perhaps India.
Her life of wild freedom makes him realise that an existence is possible other than the rigid formalities and ritual of the castle.
Her mother Grace, who described Stéphanie as a " warm, bright, amusing, intelligent and capable girl " and a " good athlete ", lovingly called her " wild child " ( French: enfant terrible ).
) Her two sisters were eventually sent to the Rotterdam Zoo in the Netherlands, while Elsa herself remained with the Adamsons until she was released into the wild, following the Adamsons ' efforts to train her to survive on her own.
Her first strip introduced her as ' wild as wild can be ' and showed her exasperated mother attempting to get her to be more creative rather than fight.
Her French mother Florence – whom McCall has described as something of a " wild child " and later, specifically as " an alcoholic " – returned to Paris, and McCall saw her only when on holidays.
Her four-year-old sister Ramona exasperates her with her high spirits and wild imagination.
Her personality echoes her talents as a powerful and somewhat wild sorceress, highly unpredictable and prone to sudden outbursts of rage.
Her negative perceptions of Romanian " Otherness " include a childlike population living decadent lives, passive and immoral women, corruption, and a wild, untamed environment.
The saint endured the torments with joy, and died under the blows inflicted by the hands of the executioner. Her body was then put in the open air to be torn apart by wild animals, yet none would touch it.
Her account of wild tiger conservation, drawing on her scientific background and Darwinian descent, was valued internationally for its insights on conservation, for its travel writing.
Her hobbies include walking, picking wild mushrooms and cinema.
Her wild, rebellious attitude tends to get her into trouble.
Her relationship with her mother was further strained when Vanessa discovered her teenage daughter was socialising with alcoholics at wild parties thanks to her new boyfriend's influence.
Her publications have earned her the reputation as China's literary wild child, and some are banned in China.
Her name means " wild hemp ".
Her mother insisted she dress as a boy to thwart amorous attention from drunken grown men in such a wild and woolly outpost as Nome.
Her spouse had a wild rose carved upon her grave stone, and at his own, wrote, " The one God gave a woman, was given a treasure.

Her and child
Her hair was dyed, and her bloom was fading, and she must have been crowding forty, but she seemed to be one of those women who cling to the manners and graces of a pretty child of eight.
Her only child, son Terry Melcher, resulted from this marriage.
Her parents divorced when she was a child.
Her fifth child, Catherine, married King Henry VIII of England and was mother to Queen Mary I of England.
Her observations about the sharing of garden plots amongst the Arapesh, the egalitarian emphasis in child rearing, and her documentation of predominantly peaceful relations among relatives are very different from the " big man " displays of dominance that were documented in more stratified New Guinea cultures — e. g., by Andrew Strathern.
Her first child died early and the second was Atje ( c. 1834 – c. 1876 ), Laurence's sister, for whom he had great affection.
Her maternal grandparents were of mixed European and Eastern Cherokee ancestry ; of particular importance to her as a child was her grandfather, Calvin Clinton Copeland, who was a great source of inspiration and guidance to her as a young child, offering a more pantheistic spiritual alternative to her father and paternal grandmother's traditional Christianity.
Her mother Rit ( who may have been the child of a white man ) was a cook for the Brodess family.
Her professional exterior conceals psychological scars from her encounter with the slugs as a child.
Her mother rejected her at birth, and she was hand-raised by the zookeepers like a human child, dressed in clothing and fed from a bottle.
Her mother was Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, the third child and younger daughter of Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, and Princess Augusta of Hesse-Cassel.
Her work was to have a dramatic effect on the British Society, polarising its members into rival factions as it became clear that her approach to child analysis was seriously at odds with that of Anna Freud as set out in her 1927 book An Introduction to the Technique of Child Analysis.
Her family had been relatively obscure until, when she was a child, her father, Prince Christian of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, was chosen with the consent of the great powers to succeed his distant cousin, Frederick VII, to the Danish throne.
Her first husband was the Max Factor seller Enrique Alvarez Alatorre, father of her only child, also actor Enrique Álvarez Félix.
Her characterisation of Lear is that of a child being mothered, but without real mothers, his children become the daughter-mother figures.
Her mother was the youngest child of the consul Lucius Domitius Ahenobarbus and Antonia Major.
Her father died when she was a child.
Her long nails came as the result of a contest her father devised to get her to stop biting her nails as a child.
Her first child, the future Emperor Tiberius, was born in 42 BC.
Her sisters spread the report that she had only endeavored to conceal unmarried sex with a mortal man, by pretending that Zeus was the father of her child, and said that her destruction was a just punishment for her falsehood.
Her father was member of the religious Sillon movement and anarchist sympathiser, her mother a child of a Carlist revolutionary.
Her pregnancy is a scandal as she is betrothed to Sualtam mac Róich, and the Ulstermen suspect Conchobar of being the father, so she aborts the child and goes to her husband's bed " virgin-whole ".
Her basic function is related to birth of child and deciding its fate.
Her father was rich, and had a magnificent house in Acropolis, that had a massive courtyard that young Athenais played in a lot as a child.

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