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Research Results For 'Ibis'

ANIMAL WORSHIP

Animal worship is a practice found to prevail, or to have prevailed, in the most widely distant parts of the world, both the Old and the New, but nowhere to such an amazing extent as in ancient Egypt, notwithstanding its high civilization. Nearly all the more important animals found in the country were regarded as sacred in some part of Egypt, and the degree of reverence paid to them was such that throughout Egypt the killing of a hawk or an ibis, whether voluntary or not, was punished with death. The worship, however, was not, except in a few instances, paid to them as actual deities. The animals were merely regarded as sacred to the deities, and the worship paid to them was symbolical.
Research Animal Worship

COLLECTIVE NOUN

A collective noun (or collective name) is a name which denotes or represents a number of individual items. For example, a number of sheep together is known as a 'flock'. The word 'flock' is the collective noun for a number of sheep. Some items have multiple collective nouns, for example a collection of goats can be known as a 'herd', a 'tribe' or a 'trip'.


  • Ambush is the collective noun for a group of tigers.

  • Army is the collective noun for a group of frogs, ants,

  • Array is the collective noun for a group of hedgehogs.

  • Badelynge is the collective noun for a group of ducks on the ground.

  • Bale is the collective noun for a group of turtles.

  • Barren is the collective noun for a group of mules.

  • Basket is the collective noun for a group of plums.

  • Battery is the collective noun for a group of barracuda.

  • Bazaar is the collective noun for a group of guillemots.

  • Bed is the collective noun for a group of clams.

  • Bench is the collective noun for a group of bishops, magistrates.

  • Bevy is the collective noun for a group of quail, roes, swans, pheasants, ladies.

  • Brace is the collective noun for a group of bucks.

  • Brood is the collective noun for a group of chickens.

  • Building is the collective noun for a group of rooks.

  • Bunch is the collective noun for a group of grapes, flowers.

  • Bundle is the collective noun for a group of asparagus.

  • Business is the collective noun for a group of ferrets.

  • Caravan is the collective noun for a group of camels.

  • Cast is the collective noun for a group of hawks, falcons.

  • Cete is the collective noun for a group of badgers.

  • Charm is the collective noun for a group of goldfinches.

  • Chatter is the collective noun for a group of budgerigars.

  • Chattering is the collective noun for a group of choughs.

  • Chine is the collective noun for a group of polecats.

  • Clamour is the collective noun for a group of rooks.

  • Clous is the collective noun for a group of gnats.

  • Clowder is the collective noun for a group of cats.

  • Clump is the collective noun for a group of trees.

  • Cluster is the collective noun for a group of grapes, spiders.

  • Clutch is the collective noun for a group of eggs.

  • Clutter is the collective noun for a group of spiders.

  • Colony is the collective noun for a group of gulls, frogs, penguins, ants, beavers.

  • Company is the collective noun for a group of widgeon, parrots.

  • Congregation is the collective noun for a group of plovers.

  • Convocation is the collective noun for a group of eagles.

  • Covert is the collective noun for a group of coots.

  • Covey is the collective noun for a group of partridges, grouse.

  • Crash is the collective noun for a group of rhinoceros.

  • Crowd is the collective noun for a group of ibis.

  • Cry is the collective noun for a group of hunting dogs.

  • Deceit is the collective noun for a group of lapwings.

  • Den is the collective noun for a group of snakes.

  • Descent is the collective noun for a group of woodpeckers.

  • Dole is the collective noun for a group of turtles.

  • Dopping is the collective noun for a group of sheldrakes.

  • Dout is the collective noun for a group of wild cats.

  • Down is the collective noun for a group of hares.

  • Drift is the collective noun for a group of swine.

  • Drove is the collective noun for a group of donkeys, cattle, pigs.

  • Dryet is the collective noun for a group of swine.

  • Earth is the collective noun for a group of foxes.

  • Erst is the collective noun for a group of bees.

  • Exaltation is the collective noun for a group of larks in flight.

  • Fall is the collective noun for a group of woodcock.

  • Family is the collective noun for a group of sardines.

  • Fesnyng is the collective noun for a group of ferrets.

  • Flight is the collective noun for a group of dunlins.

  • Fling is the collective noun for a group of oxbirds, sandpipers.

  • Float is the collective noun for a group of crocodiles.

  • Flock is the collective noun for a group of sheep, birds, swifts.

  • Gaggle is the collective noun for a group of geese on the ground - rather than in flight.

  • Galaxy is the collective noun for a group of beauties

  • Gam is the collective noun for a group of whales, porpoises, dolphins.

  • Gang is the collective noun for a group of elk.

  • Gang is the collective noun for a group of slaves, prisoners, thieves.

  • Gleam is the collective noun for a group of herring.

  • Grist is the collective noun for a group of bees.

  • Haras is the collective noun for a group of horses.

  • Herd is the collective noun for a group of deer, goats, cattle, antelope, seals, swans, curlews.

  • Hill is the collective noun for a group of ruffs.

  • Hive is the collective noun for a group of bees.

  • Hover is the collective noun for a group of trout.

  • Husk is the collective noun for a group of hares.

  • Kennel is the collective noun for a group of dogs.

  • Kindle is the collective noun for a group of kittens.

  • Knab is the collective noun for a group of toads.

  • Knot is the collective noun for a group of toads.

  • Labour is the collective noun for a group of moles.

  • Leap is the collective noun for a group of leopards.

  • Leash is the collective noun for a group of bucks.

  • Litter is the collective noun for a group of pups, whelps, pigs, cubs.

  • Murder is the collective noun for a group of crows.

  • Murmuration is the collective noun for a group of starlings.

  • Muster is the collective noun for a group of peacocks.

  • Mutation is the collective noun for a group of thrush.

  • Mute is the collective noun for a group of hounds.

  • Nest is the collective noun for a group of ants, mice, rabbits, wasps.

  • Nye is the collective noun for a group of pheasants.

  • Pace is the collective noun for a group of asses.

  • Pack is the collective noun for a group of hounds, wolves, grouse.

  • Paddling is the collective noun for a group of ducks in water.

  • Parliament is the collective noun for a group of owls.

  • Pit is the collective noun for a group of snakes.

  • Pitying is the collective noun for a group of turtle doves.

  • Plump is the collective noun for a group of woodcock, wildfowl.

  • Pod is the collective noun for a group of peas, whiting, whales, seals.

  • Pride is the collective noun for a group of lions.

  • Pump is the collective noun for a group of ducks in flight.

  • Punnet is the collective noun for a group of strawberries.

  • Rafter is the collective noun for a group of turkeys.

  • Rag is the collective noun for a group of colts.

  • Richesse is the collective noun for a group of martens.

  • Roost is the collective noun for a group of pigeons.

  • Rope is the collective noun for a group of onions.

  • Run is the collective noun for a group of poultry.

  • Rush is the collective noun for a group of pochards.

  • School is the collective noun for a group of porpoises, whales, dolphins.

  • Sedge is the collective noun for a group of cranes, bitterns, herons.

  • Shoal is the collective noun for a group of fish.

  • Show is the collective noun for a group of dogs.

  • Shrewdness is the collective noun for a group of apes.

  • Siege is the collective noun for a group of cranes, bitterns, herons.

  • Skein is the collective noun for a group of geese in flight.

  • Skulk is the collective noun for a group of foxes.

  • Sleuth is the collective noun for a group of bears.

  • Sloth is the collective noun for a group of bears.

  • Smuck is the collective noun for a group of jellyfish.

  • Sord is the collective noun for a group of wildfowl.

  • Sounder is the collective noun for a group of swine, boars.

  • Spinney is the collective noun for a group of trees.

  • Spring is the collective noun for a group of teals.

  • String is the collective noun for a group of race horses.

  • Stud is the collective noun for a group of mares.

  • Sute is the collective noun for a group of bloodhounds, wildfowl.

  • Swarm is the collective noun for a group of ants, gnats, bees, flies.

  • Team is the collective noun for a group of ducks in flight, oxen.

  • Thicket is the collective noun for a group of trees.

  • Tiding is the collective noun for a group of magpies.

  • Tower is the collective noun for a group of giraffes.

  • Tribe is the collective noun for a group of goats.

  • Trip is the collective noun for a group of goats.

  • Troop is the collective noun for a group of baboons, monkeys, kangaroos.

  • Troubling is the collective noun for a group of goldfish.

  • Unkindness is the collective noun for a group of ravens.

  • Venue is the collective noun for a group of vultures.

  • Volery is the collective noun for a group of birds.

  • Walk is the collective noun for a group of snipe.

  • Watch is the collective noun for a group of nightingales.

  • Wing is the collective noun for a group of plovers.

  • Wisp is the collective noun for a group of snipe.

  • Yoke is the collective noun for a group of oxen.


Research Collective Noun

CROWD

Crowd is the collective noun for a group of ibis.

IBIS

Picture of Ibis

The Ibis (Ibididae) is a family of birds related to the storks, and mostly found in warm countries. The bill is long, slender, and nearly cylindrical, tapers towards the tip, and is more or less arched. The head is always more or less bare of feathers, the tail is short, and there are generally tufts of plume-like feathers near the posterior end of the body.

The most famous member of the family is the sacred ibis (Ibis aethiopica or Ibis religiosa) of the ancient Egyptians, often found as a mummy in temples. This is found throughout Africa. It is about the size of a common fowl, with its head and neck bare, and white plumage, the primaries of the wings being tipped with black and the secondaries being bright black, glossed with green and violet. It was reared in the temples of ancient Egypt with a degree of respect bordering on adoration, and after death was preserved in a mummified condition. The cause of its being deemed sacred was no doubt because it appeared in Egypt with the rise of the Nile; but it is now rare in that country, living farther south.

There are several other species, as the Ibis falcinellus, or glossy ibis, nearly 60 cm in length, which nests in Asia, but migrates also to Egypt, sometimes visiting England; the Ibis rubra of tropical America, remarkable for its scarlet plumage; the Ibis alba, or white ibis of Florida; the Ibis or Geronticus spinicollis, or straw-necked ibis of Australia; etc.aqws
Research Ibis

WOOD-IBIS

Picture of Wood-Ibis

Wood-ibis is an American bird of the Tantalus genus. It lives in swamps where it feeds on snakes, young alligators, frogs and other reptiles.
Research Wood-Ibis

THOTH

Picture of Thoth

Thoth was the ancient Egyptian god of wisdom. He was a lover of Nut, and playing draughts with the moon won from her a seventy second part of every day which he compounded into five days which he added to the original Egyptian calendar of 360 days. The divine scribe, Thoth recorded the result of the weighing of the souls of the dead in the underworld. Thoth was represented as having the head of an Ibis with a lunar disk and crescent, and the cynocephalus baboon was sacred to him. He is identified with the later Greek god Hermes.
Research Thoth

IBIS

Ibis is a cultivated variety of potato.
Research Ibis

IBIS

HMS Ibis was a British Black Swan Class escort sloop of 1250 tons displacement launched in 1940 and sunk during the Second World War. She was armed with six 4-inch anti-aircraft guns and ten smaller guns. Two 3-drum type boilers provided a top speed of 19.25 knots and she carried a complement of 180.
Research Ibis

AFRICA

Africa is one of the three great divisions of the Old World, and the second in extent of the five principal continents of the globe, forming a vast peninsula joined to Asia by the Isthmus of Suez. It is of a compact form, with few important projections or indentations, and having therefore a very small extent of coast-line (about 16,000 miles, or much less than that of Europe) in proportion to its area. This continent extends from 37 degrees 20 minutes North latitude to 34 degrees 50 minutes South latitude, and the extreme points, Cape Blanco and Cape Agulhas, are nearly 5000 miles apart. Erom west to east, between Cape Verde, longitude 17 degrees 34 minutes West, and Cape Guardafui, longitude 51 degrees 16 minutes East, the distance is about 4600 miles. The area is more than three times that of Europe. The islands belonging to Africa are not numerous, and, except Madagascar, none of them are large. They include Madeira, the Canaries, Cape Verde Islands, Fernando Po, Prince's Island, St Thomas, Ascension Island, St Helena, Mauritius, Bourbon, the Comoros, Socotra, etc.

Almost all round the interior of Africa, at no great distance from the sea, and, roughly speaking, parallel with the coast-line, we find ranges of mountains or elevated lands forming the outer edges of interior plateaux. The most striking feature of Northern Africa is the immense tract known as the Sahara or Great Desert, which is inclosed on the north by the Atlas Mountains, the plateau of Barbary and that of Barca, on the east by the mountains along the west coast of the Red Sea, on the west by the Atlantic Ocean, and on the south by the Sudan. The Sahara is by no means the sea of sand it has sometimes been represented: it contains elevated plateaux and even mountains radiating in all directions, with habitable valleys between. A considerable nomadic population is scattered over the habitable parts, and in the more favoured regions there are settled communities.

The Sudan, which lies to the south of the Sahara, and separates it from the more elevated plateau of Southern Africa, forms a belt of pastoral country across Africa, and includes the countries on the Niger, around Lake Tchad (or Chad), and eastwards to the elevated region of Ethiopia.

Southern Africa as a whole is much more fertile and well watered than Northern Africa, though it also has a desert tract of considerable extent - the Kalahari Desert. This division of the continent consists of a table-land, or series of table-lands, of considerable elevation and great diversity of surface, exhibiting hollows filled with great lakes, and terraces over which the rivers break in falls and rapids, as they find their way to the low-lying coast tracts. The mountains which inclose Southern Africa are mostly much higher on the east than on the west, the most northerly of the former being those of Ethiopia, with heights of 10,000 to 14,000 or 16,000 feet, while the eastern edge of the Abyssinian plateau presents a steep unbroken line of 7000 feet in height for many hundred miles.

The Nile is the only great river of Africa which flows to the Mediterranean, It receives its waters primarily from the great lake Victoria Nyanza, which lies under the equator, and in its upper course is fed by tributary streams of great size, but for the last 1200 miles of its course it has not a single affluent. It drains an area of more than 1,000,000 square miles. The Indian Ocean receives numerous rivers; but the only great river of South Africa which enters that ocean is the Zambesi, the fourth in size of the continent, and having in its course the Victoria Falls, one of the greatest waterfalls in the world. In Southern Africa also, but flowing westward and entering the Atlantic, is the Congo, which takes origin from a series of lakes and marshes in the interior, is fed by great tributaries, and is the first in volume of all the African rivers, carrying to the ocean more water than the Mississippi. Unlike most of the African rivers, the mouth of the Congo forms an estuary. Of the other Atlantic rivers, the Senegal, the Gambia, and the Niger are the largest, the last being third among African streams.

With the exception of Lake Tchad there are no great lakes in the northern division of Africa, whereas in the number and magnificence of its lakes the southern division almost rivals North America. Here are the Victoria and Albert Nyanza, Lakes Tanganyika, Nyassa, Shirwa, Bangweolo, Moero, and other lakes. Of these the Victoria and Albert belong to the basin of the Nile;
Tanganyika, Bangweolo, and Moero to that of the Congo; Nyassa, by its affluent the Shire,to the Zambesi. Lake Tchad on the borders of the northern desert region, and Lake Ngami on the borders of the southern, have a remarkable resemblance in position, and in the fact that both are drained by streams that lose themselves in the sand.

The climate of Africa is mainly influenced by the fact that it lies almost entirely within the tropics. In the equatorial belt, both north and south, rain is abundant and vegetation very luxuriant, dense tropical forests prevailing for about 10 degrees on either side of the line. To the north and south of the equatorial belt the rainfall diminishes, and the forest region is succeeded by an open pastoral and agricultural country. This is followed by the rainless regions of the Sahara on the north and the Kalahari Desert on the south, extending beyond the tropics, and bordering on the agricultural and pastoral countries of the north and south coasts, which lie entirely in the temperate zone. The low coast regions of Africa are almost everywhere unhealthy, the Atlantic coast within the tropics being the most harsh region to Europeans.

Among mineral productions may be mentioned gold, which is found in the rivers of West Africa (hence the name Gold Coast), and in Southern Africa, most abundantly in the Transvaal; diamonds were found in large numbers at the end of the 19th century in the south; iron, copper, lead, tin, and coal are also found.

As regards both plants and animals, northern Africa, adjoining the Mediterranean, is distinguished from the rest of Africa in its great agreement with southern Europe. Among the most characteristic African animals are the lion, hyena, jackal, gorilla, chimpanzee, baboon, African elephant (never domesticated, and formerly yielding much ivory to trade), hippopotamus, rhinoceros, giraffe, zebra, quagga, antelopes in great variety and immense numbers. Among birds are the ostrich, the secretary-bird or snake-eater, the honey-guide cuckoo, sacred ibis, guinea-fowl. The reptiles include the crocodile, chameleon, and snakes of various kinds, some of them very venomous. Among insects are locusts, scorpions, the tsetse-fly whose bite is so fatal to cattle, and white-ants.

During the 19th century great areas in Africa were apportioned among European powers as protectorates or spheres of influence. During the 20th century these artificially created countries became independent and terrible civil wars ensued between rival tribes who had been articially forced together by European boundaries.

The name Africa was given by the Romans at first only to a small district in the immediate neighbourhood of Carthage. The Greeks called Africa Libya, and the Romans often used the same name. The first African exploring expedition on record was sent by Pharaoh Necho about the end of the seventh century B.C. to circumnavigate the continent. The navigators, who were Phoenicians, were absent three years, and according to report they accomplished their object. Fifty or a hundred years later, Hanno, a Carthaginian, made a voyage down the west coast and seems to have got as far as the Bight of Benin. The east coast was probably known to the ancients as far as Mozambique and the island of Madagascar. Of modern nations the Portuguese were the first to take in hand the exploration of Africa. In 1433 they doubled Cape Bojador, in 1441 reached Cape Blanco, in 1442 Cape Verde, in 1462 they discovered Sierra Leone. In 1484 the Portuguese Diego Cam discovered the mouth of the Congo. In 1486 Bartholomew Diaz rounded the Cape of Good Hope and reached Algoa Bay. A few years later a Portuguese traveller visited Abyssinia - now Ethipioa. In 1497 Vasco da Gama, who was commissioned to find a route by sea to India, sailed round the southern extremity as far as Zanzibar, discovering Natal on his way. The first European settlements were those of the Portuguese in Angola and Mozambique, soon after 1500. In 1650 the Dutch made a settlement at the Cape. In 1770 James Bruce reached the source of the Blue Nile in Abyssinia. For the exploration of the interior of Africa, however, little was done before the close of the 18th century.

Modern African exploration maybe said to begin with Mungo Park, who reached the upper course of the Niger between 1795 and 1805. Dr. Lacerda, a Portuguese, about the same time reached the capital of the Cazembe, in the centre of South Africa, where he died. In 1802 - 1806 two Portuguese traders crossed the continent from Angola, through the Cazembe's dominions, to the Portuguese possessions on the Zambesi. In 1822 - 1824 extensive explorations were made in Northern and Western Africa by Denham, Clapperton, and Oudney, who proceeded from Tripoli by Murzuk to Lake Tchad, and explored the adjacent regions; Laing, in 1826, crossed the desert from Tripoli to Timbuctoo; Caillie, leaving Senegal, made in 1827 - 1828 a journey to Timbuctoo, and thence through the desert to Morocco. In 1830 Lander traced a large part of the course of the Niger downward to its mouth, discovering its tributary the Benue. In the south David Livingstone, who was stationed as a missionary at Kolobeng, setting out from that place in 1849 discovered Lake Ngami. In 1851 he went north again, and came upon numerous rivers flowing north, affluents of the Zmbesi.

In 1848 and 1849 Krapf and Rebmann, missionaries in East Africa, discovered the mountains Kilimanjaro and Kenya. An expedition sent out by the British government started from Tripoli in 1850 to visit the Sahara and the regions around Lake Tchad, the chiefs being Richardson, Overweg, and Barth. The last alone returned in 1855, having carried his explorations over 2,000,000 sq. miles of this part of Africa, hitherto almost unknown. In 1853 - 1856 David Livingstone made an important series of explorations. He first went north-westwards, tracing part of the Upper Zambesi, and reached St Paul de Loanda on the west coast in 1854. On his return journey he followed pretty nearly the same route until he reached the Zambesi, and proceeding down the river, and visiting its falls, called by him the Victoria Falls, he arrived at Quilimane at its mouth on the 20th of May, 1856, thus crossing the continent from sea to sea. In 1858 he resumed his exploration of the Zambesi regions, and in various journeys visited Lakes Shirwa and Nyassa, sailed up the Shire to the latter lake, and established the general features of the geography of this part of Africa, returning to England in 1864.

By this time the great lakes of equatorial Africa were becoming known, Tanganyika and Victoria having been discovered by Burton and Speke in 1858, and the latter having been visited by Speke and Grant in 1862 and found to give rise to the Nile, while the Albert Nyanza was discovered by Baker in 1864. In 1866 David Livingstone entered on his last great series of explorations, the main object of which was to settle the position of the water-sheds in the interior of the continent, and which he carried on until his death in 1873. His most important explorations on this occasion were west and south-west of Tanganyika, including the discovery of Lakes Bangweolo and Moero, and part of the upper course of the river Congo (here called Lualaba). For over two years he was lost to the knowledge of Europe until met with by Henry Stanley at Tanganyika in 1871.

Gerhard Rohlfs, in a succession of journeys from 1861 to 1874 traversed the Sahara in various directions, and crossed the continent entirely from Tripoli to Lagos by way of Murzuk, Bornu, etc. In 1873 - 1875 Lieutenant Cameron, who had been sent in search of David Livingstone, surveyed Lake Tanganyika, explored the country to the west of it, and then travelling to the south-west, finally reached Benguela on the Atlantic coast. In 1874 - 1777 Henry Stanley surveyed Lakes Victoria Nyanza and Tanganyika and explored the intervening country, then going westward to where David Livingstone had struck the Congo he followed the river down to its mouth, thus finally settling its course and completing a remarkable and valuable series of explorations. In 1879 Serpa Pinto completed a journey across the continent from Benguela to Natal, and in 1881 - 1882 Wissman and Pogge crossed it again from St Paul de Loanda to Zanzibar. Around 1900 European knowledge of this part of Africa was rapidly increased through the efforts of travellers, missionaries, and commercial agents, and many European settlements made. By 1906 on the Upper Congo, and on Lakes Tanganyika and Nyaasa there were a number of steamers, and railways extended far into the continent.
Research Africa

MEDIO TUTISSIMUS IBIS

Medio tutissimus ibis is Latin for You will find the middle course the safest
Research Medio Tutissimus Ibis

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