Results 191 to 200 of about 138,899 (232)

Ethnobotanical study on medicinal plants in Melit area (North Darfur), Western Sudan. [PDF]

open access: yesJ Ethnobiol Ethnomed
Muhakr MAYM   +3 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Flowers of evil

The Lancet, 2010
Department of Acute Medicine, West Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust, Twickenham Road, Isleworth, Middlesex, UK (K Bonnici MRCP, E Mukherjee MRCP); LGC Forensics, F5, Culham Science Centre, Abingdon, UK (D Stanworth BSc); Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UK (Prof M S J Simmonds PhD); and Department of Clinical Pharmacology, West ...
Kathleen, Bonnici   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Flowers of Good and Evil

Studies in Eastern European Cinema, 2017
During his journey to Brobdingnag, Jonathan Swift's Gulliver is told by the king that the person who can make two blades of grass grow where one grew before deserves to be called great.
openaire   +1 more source

The Flowers of Evil and Paris Spleen

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1992
Poets are more likely to be patients than doctors, and no poets displayed more florid pathology than the three Frenchmen who made poetry modern: Baudelaire, Verlaine, and Rimbaud. They carried among them more diagnoses than a wardful of my patients at Bellevue.
openaire   +1 more source

Marangoni Flowers and the Evil Eye: Overhead Presentations of Marangoni Flow

Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
Intermolecular forces and surface tension gradients in solutions lead to remarkable flows, known as Marangoni flows, where liquid flows from a region of low surface tension towards higher surface tension. Details of these flows, not visible to the naked eye, are made visible on an overhead projector owing to variation in the index of refraction.
openaire   +1 more source

The Flower of Evil: On the Phenomenon of Boredom

Philosophical practice, 2014
This paper focuses on the concept of boredom, which is often described as the product of modern times. However, the writings of Lucretius and Seneca warn of taedium vitae and horror loci, early Christian monks suffered under the demon of acedia, while the malady of melancholy plagued 17th and 18th century Europe.
openaire   +2 more sources

Flowers of Evil.

Modern Language Notes, 1937
E. Preston Dargan   +3 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Flower of Evil:

2020
Yves Alion, Claude Chabrol
openaire   +1 more source

Home - About - Disclaimer - Privacy