Ethnology, Volume 15University of Pittsburgh, 1976 - Anthropology |
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Page 12
... names alone . This was with the exception of one's parents , who were most often addressed with the formal faðir and móðir . Foster relations were commonly addressed as fostri ( male ) and fostra ( female ) , with or without the given name ...
... names alone . This was with the exception of one's parents , who were most often addressed with the formal faðir and móðir . Foster relations were commonly addressed as fostri ( male ) and fostra ( female ) , with or without the given name ...
Page 24
... name as her husband's mother , the second son and second daughter are not given the names of maternal grandfather and paternal grandmother respectively , as this would result in children having the same names as the father and mother ...
... name as her husband's mother , the second son and second daughter are not given the names of maternal grandfather and paternal grandmother respectively , as this would result in children having the same names as the father and mother ...
Page 33
... names seems to contain an explicit notion of replacement and continuity which applies both to families and to the community as a whole , in that parents are replaced by their children's children and Nisiot men and women succeed to land ...
... names seems to contain an explicit notion of replacement and continuity which applies both to families and to the community as a whole , in that parents are replaced by their children's children and Nisiot men and women succeed to land ...
Contents
Changing Icelandic Kinship | 1 |
Property and Ritual | 21 |
Measuring Marriage Preference | 35 |
Copyright | |
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affinal agnates agricultural intensity Altirdning Anthropology Anuak behavior BG BG blood boat brothers Camaxtli camp cent child Chinese clan Coast Salish codes contracts correlation cultural Dani daughter descent group dowry eating economic ethnographic exogamous father female feuding friends friendship Gabra genealogical distance Hindu homesteads household husband Icelandic important Indian individual informants initiated interaction jajmani kinship kinsmen kupa labor land Limbu lineage living male male pregnancy Mallannapalle marriage married matrilineal means menstruation moiety myths ndon negative reciprocity neighbors Nepal Nisos nuclear family Ocotlán owners parents pattern persons phratry political pollution population density possum rank relationship relatives religious reserve residence ritual resolution Sahlins sample San Tin sectoral distance sexual share Shilluk slavery slaves social societies status structure syncretic Table Teacapán Tlaxcala traditional transactions variables Vasilika Victoria village Virgin wife woman women Xochiquetzalli