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Research Results For 'Bobbing'

IGUANA

Picture of Iguana

The iguana is several species of lizard of the genus Iguana, family Iguanidae.
Iguana are found in the Caribbean, northern South America, southern North America and Central America.

The common iguana (Iguana iguana) grows to about two metres long, is green in colour and has dark bands forming rings on its tail. Primarily a herbivore, the Iguana will eat invertebrates, small birds and mammals in addition to its main diet of leaves, buds flowers and fruit.

The head is large, the mouth wide. Along the whole length of the back to the tip of the tail there is a crest of elevated, compressed, pointed acales; the lower part of the head and neck is furnished with a dew-lap or throat-pouch. The toes are furnished with sharp claws, which enable the Iguana to climb trees with ease, while a rapid serpentine movement of its tail propels it swiftly through the water.

Iguanas communicate using non-verbal movements and postures - body language to convey crude concepts such as agression, courtship and submission, and also with an intricate system of head bobbing movements which appears to be much more than a crude display of aggression, submission or courtship, but a sophisticated system of communication.

The flesh of the iguana is considered a delicacy, being tender and delicately-flavoured, resembling that of a chicken. The eggs, of which the female lays from four to six dozen, are also eaten, having an excellent flavour. They are about the size of those of a pigeon, are laid in the sand, and hatched by the heat of the sun.
Research Iguana

HALLOWEEN

Halloween (All Hallow Even) was the last night of the British Celtic year (equivalent to the modern new year's eve) - October the 31st, later adopted as the Eve of All Saints by the Christian church in Britain when the Pope of Rome in 610 ordered that the heathen Pantheon should be converted into a Christian church and dedicated to the honour of all martyrs.


Halloween was a Celtic fire festival and a day on which the spirits of the dead revisited their old homes and evil spirits roamed the land. Superstition, based in part upon the reality that November the 1st (Samhain) ushered in the cold, dark months of winter, encouraged the Celts to placate the spirits of nature at Halloween, lest the next year's crops should fail, and because of the presence of so many spirits at large at this time, and the strong supernatural forces at work, it was a time for divination. Later, games were held throughout Britain for teenagers, including apple and sixpence bobbing, success at these games being thought to guarantee good fortune for the coming year and to enable divination with regard to forthcoming marriages. In early Ireland, it is reported that children were sacrificed to placate the evil spirits at Halloween, but this is more probably propaganda than a reality. During the 19th century Irish immigrants introduced to America the concept of mischief on Halloween, with young men playing tricks on residents and demanding a treat lest they should play a trick on them - an echo of sacrifices of foods to the spirits so as to placate them. This practise having originated in the North of England, while elsewhere young people demanded of their elders to be shown a magic trick or receive a treat by way of a forfeit by the elder.

Welsh tradition had it that on Halloween, an evil spirit sat on every stile. While in Scotland the notion of the goblin was invented, which only came out on Halloween. Modern Halloween is not, as is popularly thought, an American invention, but a survival of an old British festival. Sacrifices are still made to placate the witches, goblins, ghosts and other supernatural spirits, though these now generally take the form of sweets given to costumed children dressed as representations of the spirits, that call from house to house demanding of those devoid of supernatural powers (proven by performing a trick) tribute (a treat) so as to ensure good fortune the following year.
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BOBBING

Bobbing is a village in Kent, England.
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BOBBING

Bobbing was British army Second World War slang for currying favour.
Research Bobbing

BOBBING AND WEAVING

Bobbing and weaving is London Cockney rhyming slang for breathing.
Bobbing and weaving is British slang for getting along, getting by.
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BOBBING FOR APPLES

Bobbing for apples is nursing slang for unblocking a badly constipated patient with one's finger.
Research Bobbing For Apples

 

 
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