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Revolving repository at the Tayuansi in Mt. Wutai, Shanxi, dated late Ming (photo from unknown source)
COPY
Repository: Penn Libraries
Call number: TH7563 .Z447 1831
Collection: Smith Collection
Copy title: Practische Anleitung zur vorteilhaften und sicheren Benutzung der Wasserdämpfe von einfacher und mehrfacher Spannung
Author(s): Zeise, Heinrich, 1793-1863
Published: Gedruckt bey den Gebrüdern Bonn, auf Kosten des Verfassers, Altona , 1831
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Doe Library at the University of California, Berkeley.
จดหมายเหตุดิจิทัลจากกองทุนสนทนาธัมม์นำสุข ท่านผู้หญิง ม.ล.มณีรัตน์ บุนนาค ในพระสังฆราชูปถัมภ์ฯ ผู้ดำเนินโครงการพระไตรปิฎกสากลอักษรโรมัน พ.ศ. 2542-ปัจจุบัน
Digital Archives from the M.L. Maniratana Bunnag Dhamma Society's World Tipiṭaka Project in Roman Script, 1999-2009.
World Tipiṭaka Project :
Archives 1999-present :
World Tipitaka Council B.E.2500 (1956)
World Tipiṭaka in Roman Script
There are several posts on this old road. Some are worn away by years of woodpeckers storeing there acorns in these fence posts.
Coonass, or Coon-ass, is an epithet used in reference to a person of Cajun ethnicity.
Although many Cajuns use the word in regard to themselves, other Cajuns view the term as an ethnic slur against the Cajun people, especially when used by non-Cajuns. Socioeconomic factors appear to influence how Cajuns are likely to view the term: working-class Cajuns tend to regard the word "coonass" as a badge of ethnic pride; whereas middle- and upper-class Cajuns are more likely to regard the term as insulting or degrading, even when used by fellow Cajuns in reference to themselves. (In Sociolinguistics, this type of behavior is termed covert prestige.) Despite an effort by Cajun activists to stamp out the term, it can be found on T-shirts, hats, and bumper stickers throughout Acadiana, the 22-parish Cajun homeland in south Louisiana.