Pirate derives from the Latin pirata (-ae; pirate), which is a transliteration of the Greek piratis (pirate; πειρατής) from the verb pirao (make an attempt, try, test, get experience, endeavour, attack; πειράω). Också empiri
plockepinn, Mikado, Bentham. "Push-pin was immortalized by Jeremy Bentham when he wrote in The Rationale of Reward that "Prejudice apart, the game of push-pin is of equal value with the arts and sciences of music and poetry."[5] John Stuart Mill, who disa
Essay by Donna Trueit. "This semantic play is on the word “play” itself" "in recognizing differences between play then and play now one begins to achieve what Gregory Bateson (1979) calls binocular vision" "By “interrogat[ing] common sense definitions o
"I must tell you a critical discovery of mine apropos: in an old book of Venetian arms, there are two coats of Capello, who from their name bear a hat; on one of them is added a fleur-de-lis on a blue ball, which I am persuaded was given to the family by
Tomas Tranströmer. Ett diktarporträtt Staffan Bergsten 384 s. Albert Bonniers förlag Tomas Tranströmer, Dikter och prosa 1954–2004, 512 s. Albert Bonniers förlag
26 Aug 2010, by Guy Deutscher [an honorary research fellow at the School of Languages, Linguistics and Cultures at the University of Manchester]. "Seventy years ago, in 1940, a popular science magazine published a short article that set in motion one of t