1,002 research outputs found

    Negestä saba ena negus tabtahağ

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    Tedeschi Salvatore. Negestä saba ena negus tabtahağ. In: Annales d'Ethiopie. Volume 14, année 1987. p. 165

    Nell'impero del Negus Neghest : viaggio di esplorazione apostolica/P. Giovanni Ciravegna

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    Nell'impero del Negus Neghest : viaggio di esplorazione apostolica / P. Giovanni Ciravegna Torino : Istituto Missioni Consolata, [1930] 238 p. : ill. ; 22 cm (mutilo pag. 109 - 110

    Supplementary Tables associated with Negus et al.

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    Supplementary Tables associated with Negus et al. (2023). Lelliottia amnigena recovered from the lung of a harbour porpoise, and comparative analyses with Lelliottia spp. Available from bioRxiv - https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.08.09.552678v1</p

    Storie leggende e favole del paese dei Negus

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    Storie leggende e favole del paese dei Negus / Alberto Pollera Firenze : Bemporad, [1936] 243 p., 26 carte di tav. : ill. ; 23 c

    Sydney S. Negus Memorial Lecture: John Clayton (as portrayed by Richard Cheatham)

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    For the Negus Lecture, Richard Cheatham portrays the 18th century colonial Virginia Botanist John Clayton, co-author of the Flora Virginica, the first flora of Virginia last published in 1762

    The Work of Cultural Intermediaries and the Enduring Distance between Production and Consumption

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    This article raises some critical questions about cultural intermediaries as both a descriptive label and analytic concept. In doing so, it has two main aims. First, it seeks to provide some clarification, critique and suggestions that will assist in the elaboration of this idea and offer possible lines of enquiry for further research. Second, it is argued that whilst studying the work of cultural intermediaries can provide a number of insights, such an approach provides only a partial account of the practices that continue to proliferate in the space between production and consumption. Indeed, in significant ways, a focus on cultural intermediaries reproduces rather than bridges the distance between production and consumption. The paper focuses on three distinct issues. First, some questions are raised about the presumed special significance of cultural intermediaries within the production/consumption relations of contemporary capitalism. Second, how 'creative' and active cultural intermediaries are within processes of cultural production is discussed. Third, specific strategies of inclusion/exclusion adopted by this occupational grouping are highlighted in order to suggest that access to work providing 'symbolic goods and services' is by no means as fluid or open as is sometimes claimed

    Deleaster negus Cuccodoro & Makranczy, 2013, new species

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    &lt;i&gt;Deleaster negus&lt;/i&gt; new species Figs 2, 5, 10, 21-24 &lt;p&gt;HOLOTYPE (&male;): ETHIOPIA: SNNPR [Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples' Region], Gamu Gofa, Gughe Mts., 6km SW Chencha, 6.2031&deg;N, 37.5605&deg;E, 2515m, 05.VIII.2008, leg. J. Beck, automatic light trap (7-11pm), edge of a large pasture next to forest fragment in good condition, apart from dead wood collecting (NHMB).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;PARATYPES (9): same data as holotype, 2&male;, 3&female; (NHMB), 1&male;, 1&female; (MHNG), 1&male; (MRAC), 1&male; (NHMW).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;DESCRIPTION: Measurements (n = 10: unit = mm): HW = 1.27 (1.22-1.31); TW = 1.09 (1.04-1.12); PW = 1.19 (1.15-1.23); SW = 1.73 (1.66-1.86); AW = 2.05 (1.95- 2.22); HL = 0.85 (0.83-0.87); EL = 0.51 (0.48-0.54); TL = 0.13 (0.10-0.15); PL = 1.02 (0.97-1.06); SL = 2.09 (1.98-2.21); SC = 1.96 (1.81-2.10); FB = 4.32 (4.05-4.56); BL = 7.11 (6.18-7.89).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; Similar to &lt;i&gt;D. pectinatus&lt;/i&gt;, from which it may be distinguished as follows: habitus as in Fig. 2; scape and pedicel almost concolorous with flagellum; head as in Fig. 5; vertex with markedly curved, broad grooves (with the remnants of the ocelli in their middle) extending anterolaterally from middle of neck margin to middle of inner eyes margin, forming together a rather U-shaped impression surrounding the disc, filled with dense granulose microsculpture unlike the imbricate microsculpture filling most of the groove delineating dorsal part of neck; pronotum (Fig. 5) with hind angles evenly rounded; presence of two rather strongly protruding knob-like elevations near posterior pronotal angles; presence of deep, curved pronotal subbasal impression; medial pronotal groove very fine, indistinct posteriorly, an indistinct coriaceous/substrigulate microsculpture in directionality surrounding the centre of pronotal disc, but there missing on larger spots, leaving the surface smooth and shiny; elytra with postscutellar area gently depressed till middle of suture; posterior portion of elytral disc not swollen; posterior portion of sutural margin on level with disc; abdomen with laterosternites moderately broad; pubescence on laterobasal parts of tergites not directed outwards; pectinate middle (comb) of apical margin of abdominal tergite VIII as in Fig. 10.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Sexual characters: Female abdominal sternite VIII expanded subapically, subtriangular, narrowly rounded apically and with couple of tiny (and occasionally also 1-2 larger) incisions on apical margin. Male abdominal tergite IX as in Fig. 23; tergite X as in Fig. 24; sternite VIII with slightly and narrowly produced apex, with membranous edge; aedeagus as in Figs 21-22.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;ETYMOLOGY: The specific epithet 'negus' refers to the title of king in Ethiopia.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;It is a noun in apposition.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; DISTRIBUTION: The species is known only from Ethiopia, from its type locality that lies more south than that of &lt;i&gt;D. pectinatus&lt;/i&gt; Fauvel.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; COMMENTS: &lt;i&gt;Deleaster negus&lt;/i&gt; is the only Afrotropical member of the genus to possess on the abdominal tergite VIII a comb with a minute mesal denticle in combination with the posterior portion of the elytral disc lacking hump.&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Cuccodoro, Giulio &amp; Makranczy, György, 2013, Review of the Afrotropical species of Deleaster Erichson, 1839 (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae, Oxytelinae), pp. 537-547 in Revue suisse de Zoologie 120 (4)&lt;/i&gt; on pages 546-547, DOI: &lt;a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5823328"&gt;10.5281/zenodo.5823328&lt;/a&gt

    Laryngeal Nerve Activity During Pulse Emission in the CF-FM Bat, Rhinolophus ferrumequinum. II. The Recurrent Laryngeal Nerve

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    The activity of the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) was recorded in the greater horseshoe bat,Rhinolophus ferrumequinum. Respiration, vocalization and nerve discharges were monitored while vocalizations were elicted by stimulation of the central gray matter. This stimulation evoked either expiration or expiration plus vocalization depending on the stimulus strength. When vocalization occurred it always took place during expiration. Recordings from the RLN during respiration showed activity during the inspiration phase, but when vocalization occurred there was activity during inspiration and expiration. These results are consistent with the view that the RLN innervates muscles which control the opening and closing of the glottis. During vocalization the vocal folds are closely approximated and the discharge patterns of the nerve suggests that it controls the muscles which start and end each pulse
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