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Kinship Terminology

1997
Abstract Korowai kinship nouns are a class of nouns with two characteristics. First, they have plural forms, whereas other Korowai nouns do not have plural forms. Second, they can be glossed in terms of the English nouns for relationships in the nuclear family (‘father/mother, son/daughter, brother/ sister, husband/wife’).1
Gerrit J Van Enk, Lourens De Vries
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Kinship Terminology and the American Kinship System

American Anthropologist, 1955
THE American kinship system is marked by bilateral descent, and the nuclear family and the kindred are the basic kin groups. Marriage is monogamous, residence neolocal, and inheritance by testamentary disposition. Succession is absent; a man gets no political or other office simply through kinship ties. The range of kinship is narrow, and kinship tends
DAVID M. SCHNEIDER, GEORGE C. HOMANS
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Attic Kinship Terminology

The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 1971
Some years ago M. Miller began an article in this Journal with the statement, ‘Classical Greek kinship terminology, as it is used for example by Isaios, offers few difficulties of meaning in its terms.’ She then constructed a chart to show the ‘principal usages’.
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Greek Kinship Terminology

The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 1953
Classical Greek kinship terminology, as it is used for example by Isaios, offers few difficulties of meaning in its terms, and describes a bilateral family rather like our own. The principal usages mav be shown in genealogical form as follows:The noteworthy terms are: (i) kedestes, (2) anepsios, anepsiadous, exanepsios, and (3) adelphos and adelphe ...
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Eskimo kinship terminologies

2011
Seventeen complete and incomplete Eskimo kinship terminologies are examined and compared with a view to determining and assessing the nature and extent of the reported discrepancies. It is shown that the lack of a standardized orthography for the Eskimo language has contributed to the difficulties of comparing the distribution of terminology.
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Twana Kinship Terminology

Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, 1946
western Washington, have a relatively simple system of relationship nomenclature.' Their grouping and use of kin terms, as well as the actual stock of primary words comprising these, accord most closely with the terminologies of neighboring Puget Sound Salish-speaking groups, and also resemble less closely but in a considerable number of features the ...
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WOGEO KINSHIP TERMINOLOGY

Oceania, 1964
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