Ratatouille (1 Viewer)

f4f

翠鸟科
Tricksters


The Fushimi Inari shrine in Kyoto features numerous kitsune statues.


Kitsune are often presented as tricksters, with motives that vary from mischief to malevolence. Stories tell of kitsune playing tricks on overly proud samurai, greedy merchants, and boastful commoners, while the crueler ones abuse poor tradesmen and farmers or devout Buddhist monks. Their victims are usually men; women are possessed instead.[16] For example, kitsune are thought to employ their kitsune-bi or fox-fire to lead travelers astray in the manner of a will o' the wisp.[46][47] Another tactic is for the kitsune to confuse its target with illusions or visions.[16] Other common goals of trickster kitsune include seduction, theft of food, humiliation of the prideful, or vengeance for a perceived slight.
A traditional game called kitsune-ken (fox-fist) references the kitsune's powers over human beings. The game is similar to rock, paper, scissors, but the three hand positions signify a fox, a hunter, and a village headman. The headman beats the hunter, whom he outranks; the hunter beats the fox, whom he shoots; the fox beats the headman, whom he bewitches.[48][49]
 

f4f

翠鸟科
[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Boomerang by Eric Frank Russell:[/FONT][FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]
Science Fiction Inventions, Technology and Ideas[/FONT]


[FONT=Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Great short story by Russell; he combines some great elements. This is one of the earliest stories in which a robot struggles with the rules it's been given, and it has a very cool weapon. I'd tell you more, but you should read this Cold War classic for yourself.





[/FONT]
 

f4f

翠鸟科
Il termine Macropodidae deriva dal nome del genere tipico Macropus, che a sua volta viene dal greco e significa grande piede. Il nome comune canguro proviene dal termine inglese kangaroo, che a sua volta deriva dalla parola gangurru che definisce propriamente il canguro grigio nella lingua guguyimidjir, del Queensland[1], registrato per la prima volta come "Kangooroo or Kanguru" il 4 agosto 1770 dal Capitano James Cook, sbarcato lungo la costa nord-orientale dell'Australia per effettuare una riparazione alla nave[2].


La diffusa credenza che kangaroo significasse "non capisco", risposta nella lingua aborigena a una domanda posta in inglese, è soltanto una leggenda

:mumble::mumble::mumble:
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Alto