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Some Related Sentences

Bambuti and were
The earliest inhabitants of the region comprising present-day Congo were the Bambuti people.

Bambuti and Pygmy
Khonvoum is the supreme god and creator of the Bambuti Pygmy people in central Africa.

Bambuti and by
As for many Bambuti rituals, the time it takes to complete a molimo is not rigidly set ; instead, it is determined by the mood of the group.

Bambuti and Bantu
The meat obtained from the giant forest hog ( as is the meat from rats ) is often considered kweri, a bad animal which may cause illness to those who eat it, but is often valuable as a trade good between the Bambuti and agriculturalist Bantu groups.

Bambuti and from
The most important god of the Bambuti pantheon is Khonvoum ( also Khonuum, Kmvoum, Chorum ), a god of the hunt who wields a bow made from two snakes that together appear to humans as a rainbow.
The Bambuti are composed of bands which are relatively small in size, ranging from 15 to 60 people.
Further, there are unconfirmed reports of giant forest hogs eating Bambuti infants from their cribs in the night.
Many oral traditions feature polygenesis in their creation stories, for example Bambuti mythology and other creation stories from the pygmies of Congo state that the supreme God of the pygmies, Khonvoum, created three different races of man separately out of three kinds of clay: one black, one white, and one red.

Bambuti and Democratic
*' Erasing the Board ' Report of the international research mission into crimes under international law committed against the Bambuti Pygmies in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo ; Minority Rights Group International, July 2004

Bambuti and Congo
Mbuti ( Bambuti ) mythology is the mythology of the African Mbuti ( also known as Bambuti ) Pygmies of Congo.
Mbuti or Bambuti are one of several indigenous pygmy groups in the Congo region of Africa.
The Bambuti are pygmy hunter-gatherers, and are one of the oldest indigenous people of the Congo region of Africa.

Bambuti and about
The Bambuti population totals about 30, 000 to 40, 000 people.

Bambuti and .
There are four distinct cultures within the Bambuti.
Several ecological problems exist which affect the Bambuti.
The Bambuti live in villages that are categorized as bands.
This way the Bambuti are able to utilize more land area for maximum foraging.
The Bambuti are primarily hunter-gatherers.
While hunting, the Bambuti have been known to specifically target the giant forest hog.
There is some lore that is thought to have identified giant forest hogs as kweri due to their nocturnal habits and penchant for disruption of the few agricultural advances the Bambuti have made.
This lore can be tied to Bambuti mythology, where the giant forest hog is thought to be a physical manifestation of Negoogunogumbar.
The Bambuti use large nets, traps, and bows and arrows to hunt game.
The Bambuti tend to follow a patrilineal descent system, and their residences after marriage are patrilocal.
The only type of group seen amongst the Bambuti is the nuclear family.
In Bambuti society, bride wealth is not customary.
Bambuti societies have no ruling group or lineage, no overlying political organization, and little social structure.
The Bambuti are an egalitarian society in which the band is the highest form of social organization.

were and linked
Horses were, in the Celtic world, closely linked to the sun.
Thus the only member churches of the present Anglican Communion existing by the mid-18th century were the Church of England, its closely linked sister church, the Church of Ireland ( which also separated from Roman Catholicism under Henry VIII ) and the Scottish Episcopal Church which for parts of the 17th and 18th centuries was partially underground ( it was suspected of Jacobite sympathies ).
* The program was stored as a linked list of lines ; a or took O ( n ) ( linear ) time, and although Applesoft programs were not very long compared to today's software, on a 1 MHz 6502 this could be a significant bottleneck.
According to the authors, " Our analysis clearly reveals for the 3 GMOs new side effects linked with GM maize consumption, which were sex-and often dose-dependent.
This custom is linked to an older English tradition: Since they would have to wait on their masters on Christmas Day, the servants of the wealthy were allowed the next day to visit their families.
Before 2000, arguments that the Deccan Traps flood basalts caused the extinction were usually linked to the view that the extinction was gradual, as the flood basalt events were thought to have started around 68 Ma and lasted for over 2 million years.
In the years when the Deccan Traps hypothesis was linked to a slower extinction, Luis Alvarez ( who died in 1988 ) replied that paleontologists were being misled by sparse data.
According to the Stalinist development policy of planned interdependence, all the economies of the socialist countries were linked tightly with that of the Soviet Union.
Early in the following season the Addicks were linked with a foreign takeover, but this was swiftly denied by the club.
This was not a problem because they all had a strong affinity with the polis ; their own destiny and the destiny of the community were strongly linked.
The new establishment remained unchanged until 1936 when three regiments were redesignated as permanent training units, each with six, still mounted, regiments linked to them.
Monastic estates were called chos-gzhis (), linked to Buddhist monasteries, and were similar to priests or clergy castes of other societies.
On 16 May 2003, 33 civilians were killed and more than 100 people were injured when Casablanca was hit by a multiple suicide bomb attack carried out by Moroccans and claimed by some to have been linked to al-Qaeda.
Since it would be impossible for the Bahá ' í Faith to unite the world if it were itself disunited, the role of the covenant as the guarantor of the unity of the Bahá ' í community becomes inextricably linked with the goal of world unity: " It is evident that the axis of oneness of the world of humanity is the power of the Covenant and nothing else.
Unlike modern systems, which can be applied to widely different databases and needs, the vast majority of older systems were tightly linked to the custom databases in order to gain speed at the expense of flexibility.
His images were carefully ordered in a patterned sequence, and his major theme was the unity of all life, the continuing process of life and death and new life that linked the generations.
In the United Kingdom, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand and other areas whose cultures were recently linked to the UK, the title Doctor generally applies in both the academic and clinical fields.
In cursive handwriting, a large number of shorthand glyphs came to be used, where the cross-bar and the curved stroke were linked in various ways.
Electricity and magnetism ( and light ) were definitively linked by James Clerk Maxwell, in particular in his " On Physical Lines of Force " in 1861 and 1862.
Brockovich and Masry alleged that 300 cancer cases were linked to the oil wells.
Groups such as animal rights, and the gun control lobby became linked with environmentalism while sportsman, farmers and ranchers were no longer influential in the movement.
These popular religious practices were distinct from, but closely linked with, the formal rituals and institutions.

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