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The Violent Bear It Away is a 1960 novel by American author Flannery O'Connor.It is the second and final novel that she published. The first chapter was originally published as the story "You Can't Be Any Poorer Than Dead" in the journal New World Writing. [1]
In the lineal kinship system used in the English-speaking world, a niece or nephew is a child of an individual's sibling or sibling-in-law. A niece is female and a nephew is male, and they would call their parents' siblings aunt or uncle. The gender-neutral term nibling has been used in place of the common terms, especially in specialist ...
A majority of the terms used in the kinship system are similar to the English kinship system, but the terms for aunt, uncle, nephew, niece and cousin have a far vaguer and different use. These terms, however, vary in degree of use as this system is largely confined to the Gaeltacht regions, and hence not widely used among other members of Irish ...
A travel insurance policy which covers curtailment due to the death or illness of a member of the policy-holder's "immediate family" uses a wide definition but adds residential requirements: "Immediate Family is your Partner, and: parents, children, stepchildren, fostered or adopted children, brothers, sisters, aunts, uncles, cousins, nephews ...
aunt / uncle / niece / nephew: 25% half-aunt / half-uncle / half-niece / half-nephew: 12.5% first cousin: 12.5% half-first cousin: 6.25% double-first cousin: 25% great-grandparent / great-grandchild: 12.5% grandaunt / granduncle / grandniece / grandnephew: 12.5% first cousin once removed: 6.25% second cousin: 3.125%
Donald Trump's nephew Fred C. Trump III is opening up about his family's often-overlooked history of dementia — and how his uncle's recent behavior reminds him of the other Trumps who have faced ...
Great-Uncle Joseph, who died at the age of 95 by throwing himself out of a sixth-floor window, bequeathed his grand-nephew only his stomach and alimentary organs, with their contents, preserved in a bottle. Wimsey suspects there is more to the story than an eccentric old man's whims, especially when he learns that Great-Uncle Joseph was said to ...
Eddie Dickens is a character from a series of books written by the children's author Philip Ardagh. Eddie first appeared in Awful End (known as A House Called Awful End in the USA [1]) and has appeared in a total of six books. Ardagh originally created Eddie Dickens in letters written to his nephew Ben.