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All of his works are now lost. Some fragments exist, as well as titles and subjects of many of his books. Lost works of Proclus. A number of his commentaries on Plato are lost. Lost works of Pyrrhus. He wrote Memoirs and several books on the art of war, all now lost. According to Plutarch, Hannibal was influenced by them and they received ...
The Lost Words is a book of "spells" by Robert Macfarlane with illustrations by Morris. The book has clues to words like acorn, blackberry and conker.The book was said [by whom?] to be inspired by 21st-century editions of the Oxford Junior Dictionary in which some words like kingfisher associated with nature were omitted in order to include technical terms like attachment, broadband and chatroom.
"What Kate Did" is the name of the ninth episode of season 2 of Lost. "What Kate Does" is the name of the second episode of season 6 of Lost. A character named Katy Carr appears in the first volume of Alan Moore's graphic novel The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. As Katy beats a student at Ms Coote's school, the headmistress says she ...
Around this time, Loftus's undergraduate student Jim Coan developed the "lost in the mall" technique. [6]: Part II This technique involved Coan giving his younger brother three stories of actual events from his childhood, plus a false story about the brother being lost in a mall. The younger brother believed all stories to be true and provided ...
According to PEN America's annual book-banning report, restrictions on books have increased 33% since last year, but students offer a glimmer of hope.
Lost and Found: 2002 Anne Schraff Darcy Wills is the main protagonist in the first book in the series. 2 A Matter of Trust: 2002 Anne Schraff This is a sequel to Lost and Found. 3 Secrets in the Shadows: 2002 Anne Schraff Features Roylin Bailey, who first appeared in A Matter of Trust. 4 Someone to Love Me’’ 2002 Anne Schraff
The "lost in the mall" technique or experiment [1] is a memory implantation technique used to demonstrate that confabulations about events that never took place – such as having been lost in a shopping mall as a child – can be created through suggestions made to experimental subjects that their older relative was present at the time.
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