Catchy japan fashion slogan?
Q. this is our speech 4 the project: Ria: A Heian empress wore something like five, six, or even twenty layers of robe at once. Those layers were called junihitoe. The hairstyle pictured on the doll on the screen is the hairstyle that only Heian empresses were allowed to wear. Dako: She wore rice-white mautte make-up, deep red lipstick to thin her lips, and she also blackened her teeth. The blackening of teeth was the symbol of nobility, and not only did empresses blacken their teeth, but also their ladies-in-waiting, nobles, the royal court, the emperor, etc. Noble-women also shaved off their eyebrows and instead painted thumb-prints way above the natural eyebrow line to give her a constantly surprised look. Dako: Japanese usually wore… [cont.]
Asked by secrets - Fri May 8 00:27:55 2009 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
so, what darwinism also responsible for...?
Q. i'm curious. was darwinism also responsible for the eugenics involved in breeding slaves during early american colonization? keep in mind, darwin didn't come up with his theory of evolution till the 1850s. people were breeding slaves in much the same fashion hitler was producing the "master race" back as early as the early 1700s. was darwin responsible for this as well? that's exactly my point folks. i'm asking rhetorically. question should read: so, was darwinism also... mr. red x, i wasn't speaking of hitler. i was speaking of slave owners in the 1700s. they were carrying out very much the same practices hitler was carrying out, only with goals of what they were wanting to produce. iam, no, people who point to hitler as somehow… [cont.]
Asked by just curious (A.A.A.A.) - Mon Apr 21 01:29:57 2008 - - 12 Answers - 0 Comments

A. Haha, yeah, Hitler, eugenics, global warming, 9/11-- all Darwin's fault.
Answered by Barbarella - Mon Apr 21 01:33:26 2008

History primary source assignment?
Q. I have a 1,000 word primary source assignment due in for tomorrow. We have to take at minimum 3 primary sources into consideration. Does anyone have any tips on how I can go about this? The question asks how these sources contribute to the way we think of rural life in England in the 1850s. Any pointers or tips would be appreciated The first source is penny wedding - The second source is poverty knock ballad - Poverty Knock (The arrival of power looms forced down the wages of the handloom weavers, resulting in the name poverty knockers . Poverty knock also refers to the sound made by the old Dobbie looms as they worked) Poverty, poverty knock, my loom is a-sayin all day Poverty, poverty knock, gaffer s too skinny to pay… [cont.]
Asked by glosoliii - Tue Nov 11 07:51:52 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments

A. You forgot the fourth thing 4) A website called Yahoo! Answers, where this girl who procrastinated on her assignment, left it to the last minute as she played, misprioritizing. She then posted her entire assignment on Yahoo Answers, shwoing a disturbing tendency not wanting to work and put in the hard yards. There is an easy way to do this. 1. Look at the picture. Describe it, look at it. See the country? Describe that? See the clothing? Is it ragged? Then life could have been hard for the ppor 2. What does the poem suggest about the loom? Is it always going, or only sometimes? 3. WHat does this say about rural life?
Answered by Chris S - Tue Nov 11 08:03:49 2008

From Yahoo Answer Search: '1850s in fashion'
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