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Cane

A Wisdom Archive on Cane

Cane

A selection of articles related to Cane

We recommend this article: Cane - 1, and also this: Cane - 2.
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Cane
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cane, Cane, Cane - Disciplinary implement, Cane - Other meanings, Cane - Other uses of canes, Cane - Walking stick, Cane - Weapon

ARTICLES RELATED TO Cane

Cane: Encyclopedia - Cane

A cane is a long, straight wooden stick, generally of bamboo, Malacca (rattan), or some similar plant, mainly used as a support, such as a walking stick or as an instrument of punishment. Depending on the use it is left in its natural state or improved (e.g. smoothened, varnished). Cane - Walking stick. Around the 17th or 18th century, the cane took over from the sword as an essential part of the European gentleman's wardrobe. In addition to its value as a decorative accessory, the cane also continued to fu ...

Including:

Read more here: » Cane: Encyclopedia - Cane

Cane: Encyclopedia - Caning
Caning is a physical punishment (see that article for generalities and alternatives) consisting of a beating with a cane, generally applied on the bare or clad buttocks (see spanking), hand(s) (palm, rarely knuckles) or even the soles of the feet. It was a common punishment in many parts of Asia and throughout Europe and North America and several colonies in the nineteenth and early twentieth century, but has now been banned in most countries. It is often considered a cruel, inhumane and degrading punishment as meant by the Uni ...

Including:

Read more here: » Caning: Encyclopedia - Caning

Cane: Encyclopedia - Caning furniture

In the context of furniture, caning is a method of weaving chair seats and other furniture. Caning material is derived from the skin of rattan vines grown mostly in Indonesia, the Philippines and Malaysia. Some vines reach 500 feet in length. One of the earliest woven chair seats is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art collection. It was owned by Reni-seneb, a scribe of Dynasty 18 (1539 - 1295 BC). A wood chair with ivory inlay, it had a string mesh seat which has been reconstructed. Caning or cane is a term which is ...

Read more here: » Caning furniture: Encyclopedia - Caning furniture

Cane: Encyclopedia - White cane

A white cane is used by many people who are blind or visually impaired, both as a mobility tool and as a courtesy to others. Not all modern white canes are designed to fulfill the same primary function, however: There are at least four different varieties of this tool, each serving a slightly different need. White cane - Types. Long cane: This "traditional" white cane is designed primarily as a mobility tool used to feel obstacles in the path of a user. Cane length depends upon the height of a ...

Including:

Read more here: » White cane: Encyclopedia - White cane

Cane: Encyclopedia - Walking stick

A walking stick (or two) is a tool used by many people to ease pressure on the legs when walking. They come in many shapes and sizes, indeed leading some to build collections of them. Like with all practical objects that take on novelty features, this must not detract attention from their aforementioned primary purpose. They are also useful for hikers who use them for a wide variety of purposes: to clear spiderwebs that have been built across the trail, to part thick bushes or grass obscuring the trail, as a support when going ...

Read more here: » Walking stick: Encyclopedia - Walking stick

Cane: Encyclopedia - Canes Venatici

Canes Venatici (Latin for hunting dogs) is a small northern constellation that was introduced by Johannes Hevelius in the 17th century. It is supposed to represent the dogs Chara and Asterion held on a leash by Boötes. Canes Venatici - Notable features. Canes Venatici is one of three constellations that represent dogs, along with Canis Major and Canis Minor. The constellation's brightest star is α CVn, whose proper name is Cor Caroli, named by Edmund Halley in memory of the English Ki ...

Including:

Read more here: » Canes Venatici: Encyclopedia - Canes Venatici

Cane: Encyclopedia - Candy cane

A candy cane is a hard cane-shaped candy stick. It is traditionally white with red stripes and flavored with peppermint; however, it is also made in a variety of other flavors and colored stripes. The candy cane is a traditional candy surrounding the Christmas holiday, although it is possible to find them throughout the year. The candy cane was originally a straight, hard, and all-white candy stick. The cane shape is traditionally credited to a choirmaster at Cologne Cathedral in Germany, who, legend has it, in 1670 bent straig ...

Including:

Read more here: » Candy cane: Encyclopedia - Candy cane

Cane: Encyclopedia - Cane Ridge Kentucky

Cane Ridge, Kentucky, was the site, in 1801, of a large camp meeting which drew thousands of people and had a lasting influence as one of the landmark events of the Second Great Awakening. While Methodists, Baptists and Presbyterians all participated, and many of the "spiritual exercises" such as glossolalia were exhibited that later became more associated with the Pentecostal movement, perhaps the most lasting legacy of the Cane Ridge experience was a formalization of what became known in the future as the Restoration Movement, the origin of the Disciples of Chris ...

Read more here: » Cane Ridge Kentucky: Encyclopedia - Cane Ridge Kentucky

Cane: Encyclopedia - Sugar

In general use, "sugar" is taken to mean sucrose, also called "table sugar" or saccharose, a disaccharide which is a white crystalline solid. It is the most commonly used sugar for altering the flavor and properties (such as "mouthfeel", preservation, and texture) of beverages and food. Table sugar is commercially extracted from either sugar cane or sugar beet. The word sugar originates from the Sanskrit word Sharkara which means "sugar" or "pebble." The "simple" sugars, or monosaccharides, such as glucose, are a store of energy which is used by biological cells. A sugar is denoted by any word ...

Including:

Read more here: » Sugar: Encyclopedia - Sugar

Cane: Encyclopedia - Vinegar

Vinegar (from Old French vinaigre, meaning "sour wine") is a sour-tasting liquid made from the oxidation of ethanol in wine, cider, beer, fermented fruit juice, or nearly any other liquid containing alcohol. It can also be made by certain bacteria operating on sugar-water solutions directly, without intermediary conversion to ethanol (see acetic acid). Vinegar - Production. Vinegar production may be started by the addition of mother of vinegar to wine or cider. Vinegar is a dilute form of acetic acid ...

Including:

Read more here: » Vinegar: Encyclopedia - Vinegar

Cane: Encyclopedia - Blackbirding

Blackbirding refers to the recruitment of people through trickery and kidnappings to work on plantations, particularly sugar cane plantations. Over a period of 40 years, from the mid-19th century to the early 20th century, labour for the sugar cane fields of Queensland in Australia, Fiji, New Caledonia, and the Samoan Islands included an element of coercive recruitment and indentured servitude. ...

Read more here: » Blackbirding: Encyclopedia - Blackbirding

Cane: Encyclopedia - Wineberry United States

The wineberry (Rubus phoenicolasius), a type of raspberry, grows wild in the eastern part of the United States. The heart-shaped leaves grow in groups of three and are white underneath. The canes have fine, red thorns, which appear much like red hair. The calyx (covering the fruit until it is ripe) is also red and hairy. The delicate fruits are slightly tart and ripen to a deep red in late June to early July. New plants are formed from the tips of existing canes touching the ground. They enjoy moist soil and grow near and ...

Read more here: » Wineberry United States: Encyclopedia - Wineberry United States

Cane: Encyclopedia - Bastinado

Bastinado, originally, was a Spanish word for the act of caning in the literal sense of beating with a stick or similar implement. It is specifically used to refer to a form of torture or corporal punishment which consists of beating the soles of the offender's bare feet with a hard object, like a cane or rod, a club, or a piece of wood, or a whip. This torture is effective owing to the clustering of nerve endings in the feet, and the structure of the foot, with numerous small bones and tendons. The feet were often tied togethe ...

Including:

Read more here: » Bastinado: Encyclopedia - Bastinado

Cane: Encyclopedia - Lamedh

Lamed or Lamedh is the twelfth letter in many Semitic alphabets, including Phoenician, Hebrew, and Aramaic. The Phoenician letter gave rise to the Greek Lambda (Λ), Latin L, and the equivalent in the Cyrillic alphabet. The name of the letter "Lemd" originates from the Hebrew word "Malmad" - a cane used to guide sheep, and hence the shape of the letter both in anchient and modern writing. In gimatria the letter is equal to the number 30. ...

Read more here: » Lamedh: Encyclopedia - Lamedh

Cane: Encyclopedia - Armenian mythology

Armenian mythology also includes the myths of the ancient Urartian culture. Fairy Tales The Clever Weaver The Golden-Headed Fish He Wins Who Waits The Lady of Sparrow-Hawk The Steel Cane The Story of Zoulvisia The Wandering Jew Arpachshad Kainan Mount Ararat Urartian gods Haldi Bagbarti Teseba Siwini Selardi ...

Read more here: » Armenian mythology: Encyclopedia - Armenian mythology

Cane: Encyclopedia - List of Christmas dishes

This page is a list of Christmas dishes as eaten around the world. List of Christmas dishes - Belgium. Cougnou (or cougnolle), sweet bread in the form of the infant Jesus List of Christmas dishes - Canada. Apple cider Beignes (powdered donuts) Candy canes Eggnog Fruitcake Gingerbread, often in the form of a Gingerbread house or Gingerbread man Christmas pudding Pâté à la viandeIncluding:

Read more here: » List of Christmas dishes: Encyclopedia - List of Christmas dishes

Cane: Encyclopedia - Jam

Jam is a type of fruit preserve made by boiling fruit with sugar to make an unfiltered jelly. Jam is often spread on bread and also as a culinary sweetener, for example in yogurt. The use of cane sugar to make jam and jelly can be traced back to the 16th century when the Spanish came to the West Indies, where they preserved fruit, but the Greek technique of preseving quinces by boiling them in honey was included in the Roman cook ...

Read more here: » Jam: Encyclopedia - Jam

Cane: Encyclopedia - Bone corsetry

In corsetry, a bone is one of the rigid parts of a corset that forms its frame, gives it rigidity, and helps to shape the wearer's body. Originally, bones were made of whalebone, because no other material matched it for flexibility and strength. As whalebone was expensive, wood and cane were also used. Ivory was another luxury material used for the centre front bone, which was known as the busk. In the nineteenth century, whalebone was superseded by steel. Today, many corsets use plastic bones, alth ...

Read more here: » Bone corsetry: Encyclopedia - Bone corsetry

Cane: Encyclopedia - Biomass to liquid

Biomass to liquid (BTL) is a (multi step) process to produce liquid fuels out of biomass: Making ethanol from sugar cane Fischer Tropsch process is used to produce synfuels out of gasified biomass. While biodiesel and bio-ethanol production so far only use parts of a plant, i.e. oil, sugar or starch, BTL production uses the whole plant which is gasified or converted enzymatically . The result is that for BTL, less land area is required per unit of energy produced compared with biodiesel or b ...

Read more here: » Biomass to liquid: Encyclopedia - Biomass to liquid

Cane: Encyclopedia II - Motobécane - Motobécane bicycles

Motobécane was a major and respected manufacturer in the French bicycle industry. The frames on Motobécane's mid-to-upper end bikes were typically double-butted lugged steel made from Vitus or Reynolds 531 molybdenum/mangenese steel tubing with elegant Nervex lugs. Thus, they were light, sturdy, and well made. Motobécane finished their frames in exceptionally beautiful and high-quality paints, a practice not often followed in the French bicycle industry. Considered the second most prestigious French bicycle (after Peugeot, whose more dura ...

See also:

Motobécane, Motobécane - Motobécane bicycles, Motobécane - Motobécane mopeds, Motobécane - Motobécane scooters, Motobécane - Motobécane motorcycles

Read more here: » Motobécane: Encyclopedia II - Motobécane - Motobécane bicycles

More material related to Cane can be found here:
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related to
Cane
Index of Articles
related to
Cane
Glossary
related to
Cane
Dream Dictionary
related to
Cane



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