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Obama family portrait, 2011. A person's biological parents are the persons from whom the individual inherits their genes.The term is generally only used if there is a need to distinguish an individual's parents from their biological parents, For example, an individual whose father has remarried may call the father's new wife their stepmother and continue to refer to their mother normally ...
Pengertian Syahadat Menurut Aqidah Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah [Understanding the Creed according to the aqidah of Ahlus Sunnah Wal Jamaah] (in Indonesian). Pustaka Khazanah Fawa'id. ISBN 978-602-61392-4-5. Yazid, Abdul Qadir (2018). Hadiah istimewa menuju keluarga sakinah [A special gift to a Sakina family] (in Indonesian). Pustaka Khazanah Fawa'id.
Selo Soemardjan (May 23, 1915 in Yogyakarta [1] – June 11, 2003 in Jakarta), also spelled as Selo Sumarjan or Selo Sumardjan, was a well known senior academic in sociology at the University of Indonesia, and is known as the Pioneer of Indonesian Social Sciences. [1]
The Female Orang – Utan (Jenny sitting in a chair) [110] c. 1830s. By the early 19th century, orangutans were being kept in captivity. In 1817, an orangutan joined several other animals in London's Exeter Exchange. He rejected the company of other animals, aside from a dog, and preferred to be with humans.
Jakun people or Orang Ulu/Orang Hulu (meaning "people of the upstream") are an ethnic group recognised as Orang Asli (indigenous people) of the Malay Peninsula in Malaysia. The Malaysian government recognises 18 different sub-groups of Orang Asli , including three broad divisions: the Negrito ( Semang ), Senoi and aboriginal Malays ( Proto-Malay ).
Tua may refer to: Tua River, a river in Portugal; Tua (Papua New Guinea), a river in Papua New Guinea; Tuʻa, also known as Alo, a chiefdom in Wallis and Futuna in Oceania; Tua line, a railway line in Portugal; Tua railway station, in Portugal; David Tua (born 1972), Samoan-New Zealand boxer; Tua Forsström (born 1947), Finnish Swedish-language ...
The Orang Rimba ('people of the forest') are a much smaller population of people (~3000) [citation needed] who live in the upstream regions of Jambi and South Sumatran. They have a unique, diverse economy, which shifts in and out of two base subsistence strategies: swidden farming and a very nomadic life based on foraging wild yams.
Cut Nyak Dhien was born into a Muslim aristocratic family in Aceh Besar in VI mukim district in 1848. Her father, Teuku Nanta Setia, was a member of the ruling Ulèë Balang aristocratic class in VI mukim, and her mother was also from an aristocrat family.