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Trampling is the act of walking on something repeatedly by humans or animals. Trampling on open ground can destroy the above ground parts of many plants and can compact the soil, thereby creating a distinct microenvironment that specific species may be adapted for. It can be used as part of a wildlife management strategy along grazing.
Trampling may refer to: Trampling, the effect on soil, vegetation and ground structures; Trampling (sexual practice) Trampling during stampedes; Trample may also refer to: Lady Trample (born 1991), New Zealander skater
Trampling is a sexual activity that involves being trampled underfoot by another person or persons. [1] Trampling is common enough to support a subgenre of trampling pornography . Because trampling can be used to produce pain, the trampling fetish for some adherents is closely linked to sadomasochistic fetishism.
Tramp is derived from a Middle English verb meaning to "walk with heavy footsteps" (cf. modern English trample) and "to go hiking". In Britain, the term was widely used to refer to vagrants in the early Victorian period. The social reporter Henry Mayhew refers to it in his writings of the 1840s and 1850s. By 1850, the word was well established.
A chastity device designed to be fastened around the penis and cause pain if it becomes erect. Cock and ball torture (CBT) [a] is a sexual activity involving the application of pain or constriction to the male genitals.
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The iconography derives from Biblical texts, in particular Psalm 91 (90):13: [3] "super aspidem et basiliscum calcabis conculcabis leonem et draconem" in the Latin Vulgate, literally "The asp and the basilisk you will trample under foot/you will tread on the lion and the dragon", translated in the King James Version as: Thou shalt tread upon the lion and adder: the young lion and the dragon ...
Statue of Kali trampling on Shiva, worshipped in Bengal. Idol of goddess Kali kept near Nimtala ghat for Visarjan or Immersion in the waters of river Hooghly. Kali is a central figure in late medieval Bengal devotional literature, with such notable devotee poets as Kamalakanta Bhattacharya (1769–1821) and Ramprasad Sen (1718–1775).