enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Poultice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poultice

    Poultices may also be heated and placed on an area where extra circulation is desired. A poultice is a cooling product that is commonly used for show-jumpers and racehorses, as it is often cheaper and easier to administer than many other cooling products. A poultice is applied to the horse's distal limbs after exercise, for 9–12 hours.

  3. Phrasikleia Kore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phrasikleia_Kore

    The name Phrasikleia is derived from the archaic Greek word kléos meaning 'fame'. [4] The word was important to archaic Greek culture, and had significant meaning to the Alcmaeonid family. Evidently, part of an Alcmaeonid family tradition was to bestow given names derived from kléos.

  4. Domestication of Ficus carica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domestication_of_Ficus_carica

    The origin of the common fig is debated. [1] Some believe it to be indigenous to Western Asia and then spread by human activity throughout the Mediterranean. [2] Despite uncertainty about its geographic origins, most archaeobotanists agree that the domestication of the fig tree occurred around 6500 years ago in the Near East. [1]

  5. Culture of Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Greece

    Greek salad Traditional Greek taverna, integral part of Greek culture and cuisine. A bottle of retsina. Greek cuisine has a long tradition and its flavors change with the season and its geography. [12] Greek cookery, historically a forerunner of Western cuisine, spread its culinary influence – via ancient Rome – throughout Europe and beyond ...

  6. Pontic Greek culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontic_Greek_culture

    Patricia Fann Bouteneff, an academic who focuses on Pontian Greek culture and folklore, described the ideal Pontian wife: "She had a mouth, but she didn't have a voice." [150] In folktales, Pontian women and girls are stereotyped as disloyal; they cuckold their husbands and betray their fathers. [152] Clothing was an important part of the bride ...

  7. Ficus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ficus

    Ficus (/ ˈ f aɪ k ə s / [2] or / ˈ f iː k ə s / [3] [4]) is a genus of about 850 species of woody trees, shrubs, vines, epiphytes and hemiepiphytes in the family Moraceae.Collectively known as fig trees or figs, they are native throughout the tropics with a few species extending into the semi-warm temperate zone.

  8. Modern Greek folklore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Greek_folklore

    Greek folklore is the folk tradition that has developed among the Greek people in and outside Greece over the centuries. Similarly to other European folklore, it includes pre-Christian pagan folklore and elements of ancient Greek mythology and folklore which developed from the Indo-European religion and the local Pelasgian mythology, along with Christian myths and legends that developed during ...

  9. Agriculture in ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_ancient_Greece

    An ear of barley, symbol of wealth in the city of Metapontum in Magna Graecia (i.e. the Greek colonies of southern Italy), stamped stater, c. 530–510 BCE. During the early time of Greek history, as shown in the Odyssey, Greek agriculture - and diet - was based on cereals (sitos, though usually translated as wheat, could in fact designate any type of cereal grain).