17 resultados para Excipients for tablets
em University of Michigan
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Publisher varies: 1990- British Museum Publications.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Cuneiform text and English translation on opposite pages.
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Principally a reply to statements in H.W. Henshaw's Animal carvings from mounds in the Mississippi Valley, published in the 2nd annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, 1883.
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Translated from the Persian by Mirza Ahmad Esphahani.
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First published 1877.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Cover title: Christian tombs and monuments in the United Provinces.
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Fifty-eight tablets of temple accounts "selected for publication because, with one exception, they contain the Umma month-names."-cf. Introd.
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"Bibliographical appendix": p. [61]-62.
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"All the tablets here published form part of the Nippur collections now in the University Museum of the University of Pennsylvania."--Pref.
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Photocopy, Ann Arbor, Mich., University Microfilms International, 1976.
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Historical and religious textts from the Temple Library of Nippur. 1914.
Of Elephants and Toothaches : Ethics, Politics, and Religion in Krzysztof Kieslowski's 'Decalogue' /
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This collection is the first to offer a genuinely interdisciplinary approach to Krzysztof Kie?lowski’s Decalogue, a ten-film cycle of modern tales that touch on the ethical dilemmas of the Ten Commandments. The cycle’s deft handling of moral ambiguity and inventive technique established Kie?lowski as a major international director. Kie?lowski once said, “Both the deep believer and the habitual skeptic experience toothaches in exactly the same way.” Of Elephants and Toothaches takes seriously the range of thought, from theological to skeptical, condensed in the cycle’s quite human tales. Bringing together scholars of film, philosophy, literature, and several religions, the volume ranges from individual responsibility, to religion in modernity, to familial bonds, to human desire and material greed. It explores Kie?lowski’s cycle as it relentlessly solicits an ethical response that stimulates both inner disquiet and interpersonal dialogue.