Anthropology: the exploration of human diversity |
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Page 7
... example. For many years archeologists have used pottery as a diagnostic of sedentary populations with food-producing economies, those of cultivators, for example, rather than of people who subsisted on hunting and collecting. Finally ...
... example. For many years archeologists have used pottery as a diagnostic of sedentary populations with food-producing economies, those of cultivators, for example, rather than of people who subsisted on hunting and collecting. Finally ...
Page 257
... example—a voiced phoneme follows, -/z/, and marks plurality. When the word ends with ch (/c/) or sh (/s/) as in "church"/ "churches," "knish"/"knishes," the suffix -es forms the plural. The term zero morph is used to cover words which ...
... example—a voiced phoneme follows, -/z/, and marks plurality. When the word ends with ch (/c/) or sh (/s/) as in "church"/ "churches," "knish"/"knishes," the suffix -es forms the plural. The term zero morph is used to cover words which ...
Page 376
... example, a parking ticket. In discussing things which seem to serve as money in different populations, we have to examine the functions they are serving. American money, like currency of other contemporary nation-states, serves all the ...
... example, a parking ticket. In discussing things which seem to serve as money in different populations, we have to examine the functions they are serving. American money, like currency of other contemporary nation-states, serves all the ...
Contents
Introduction to Anthropology | 3 |
Historical and Evolutionary | 19 |
POPULATION GENETICS AND | 34 |
Copyright | |
57 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Africa agricultural allele ambilineal descent American ancestors animals anthro anthropologists apes areas argued associated baboons band basic Beginning of Food behavior Betsileo biological broad spectrum broad spectrum revolution brother chiefdoms contemporary contrast cousins cultivation cultural descent group developed early ecological economic endogamy environment ethnographic evolutionary example exchange exogamy father female Food Production foraging fossil functions gene genetic gorillas highlands Homo africanus Homo erectus horticultural human evolution human populations hunting Indians individuals kin types kinship terminology kinsmen land language lineage linguistic live major male marriage marry means of adaptation ment mother's mutation natural selection Neanderthal nuclear family Old World orig patrilineal peasant personality phenotypes plants political pologists polygyny primates prosimians race Ramapithecus relationship religion role similar societies Sociocultural Adaptive Means specific taboo tion tive traits tribal troop tween United Upper Paleolithic urban village wealth Yanomamo York
References to this book
Rituals In Families And Family Therapy 1e Black Evan Imber,Janine Roberts,Richard Alva Whiting Limited preview - 1988 |
Current Practices in High-Tech Home Care Lenard W. Kaye, DSW,Joan K. Davitt, MSS, MLSP No preview available - 1999 |