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dyspepsia | A Wisdom Archive on dyspepsia |  | dyspepsia A selection of articles related to dyspepsia |  |
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| ARTICLES RELATED TO dyspepsia |  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - H₂-receptor antagonist - History and developmentCimetidine was the prototypical histamine H2-receptor antagonist from which the later members of the class were developed. Cimetidine was the culmination of a project at Smith, Kline & French (SK&F; now GlaxoSmithKline) to develop a histamine receptor antagonist to suppress stomach acid secretion.
At the time (1964) it was known that histamine was able to stimulate the secretion of stomach acid, but also that traditional antihistamines had no effect on acid production. In the process, the SK&F scient ...
See also:H₂-receptor antagonist, H₂-receptor antagonist - History and development, H₂-receptor antagonist - Pharmacology, H₂-receptor antagonist - Clinical use of H2-antagonists, H₂-receptor antagonist - Indications, H₂-receptor antagonist - Adverse drug reactions, H₂-receptor antagonist - Drug interactions, H₂-receptor antagonist - Examples Read more here: » H₂-receptor antagonist: Encyclopedia II - H₂-receptor antagonist - History and development |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - International appealCoca-Cola is the best-selling soft drink in most countries. Nevertheless, there are some places like Scotland, where the locally produced Irn-Bru is more popular; Peru, where Inca Kola, the "national beverage" (independently produced until 1999, when Coca-Cola acquired Corporación Inca Kola del Perú S.A., the Peruvian company that formerly produced it) is more popular; and Quebec, Ontario, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island in Canada, where Pepsi is the market leader. In Sweden, despite Coca-Cola's strong holiday-oriented marketing efforts, Julmu ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - As a political and corporate symbol, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - International appeal |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Burgess - Achievement
Anthony Burgess - Novels.
With the Malayan trilogy (Time For A Tiger, The Enemy in the Blanket and Beds in the East), his first published venture into the art of fiction, Burgess staked a claim to have written the definitive Malayan novel (i.e. novel of expatriate experience of Malaya) to set alongside George Orwell's Burma (Burmese Days), E.M. Forster's India (A Passage to India) and Graham Greene's Viet Nam (The Quiet American), and continuing in the tradition established by Rudyard Kipling for India and, for Southeast Asia in ...
See also:Anthony Burgess, Anthony Burgess - Life, Anthony Burgess - Childhood, Anthony Burgess - Youth and education, Anthony Burgess - War service, Anthony Burgess - Early teaching career, Anthony Burgess - Malaya, Anthony Burgess - Brunei, Anthony Burgess - Repatriate years, Anthony Burgess - European exile, Anthony Burgess - Death, Anthony Burgess - Achievement, Anthony Burgess - Novels, Anthony Burgess - Criticism, Anthony Burgess - Linguistics, Anthony Burgess - Journalism, Anthony Burgess - Screenwriting, Anthony Burgess - Symphonies, Anthony Burgess - Opera and Musicals, Anthony Burgess - Trivia, Anthony Burgess - Work methods, Anthony Burgess - Espionage, Anthony Burgess - Food and drink, Anthony Burgess - Smoking, Anthony Burgess - Finances, Anthony Burgess - Sex, Anthony Burgess - Mischief, Anthony Burgess - Pop-culture influence, Anthony Burgess - Early triumphs, Anthony Burgess - Polyglottal virtuosity, Anthony Burgess - Health, Anthony Burgess - Names and namesakes, Anthony Burgess - Birthplace, Anthony Burgess - Memorial services, Anthony Burgess - Transport, Anthony Burgess - Pets, Anthony Burgess - General, Anthony Burgess - The Burgess tourist trail, Anthony Burgess - Works, Anthony Burgess - Fiction, Anthony Burgess - Non-fiction, Anthony Burgess - Selected musical compositions, Anthony Burgess - Prefaces, etc. Read more here: » Anthony Burgess: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Burgess - Achievement |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Burgess - Trivia
Anthony Burgess - Work methods.
"I start at the beginning, go to the end, then stop," Burgess once said. He revealed in Martin Seymour-Smith's Novels and Novelists: A Guide to the World of Fiction (1980) that he would often prepare a synopsis with a name-list before beginning a project. But Seymour-Smith wrote: "Burgess believes overplanning is fatal to creativity and regards his unconscious mind and the act of writing itself as indispensable guides. He does not produce a draft of a whole novel which ...
See also:Anthony Burgess, Anthony Burgess - Life, Anthony Burgess - Childhood, Anthony Burgess - Youth and education, Anthony Burgess - War service, Anthony Burgess - Early teaching career, Anthony Burgess - Malaya, Anthony Burgess - Brunei, Anthony Burgess - Repatriate years, Anthony Burgess - European exile, Anthony Burgess - Death, Anthony Burgess - Achievement, Anthony Burgess - Novels, Anthony Burgess - Criticism, Anthony Burgess - Linguistics, Anthony Burgess - Journalism, Anthony Burgess - Screenwriting, Anthony Burgess - Symphonies, Anthony Burgess - Opera and Musicals, Anthony Burgess - Trivia, Anthony Burgess - Work methods, Anthony Burgess - Espionage, Anthony Burgess - Food and drink, Anthony Burgess - Smoking, Anthony Burgess - Finances, Anthony Burgess - Sex, Anthony Burgess - Mischief, Anthony Burgess - Pop-culture influence, Anthony Burgess - Early triumphs, Anthony Burgess - Polyglottal virtuosity, Anthony Burgess - Health, Anthony Burgess - Names and namesakes, Anthony Burgess - Birthplace, Anthony Burgess - Memorial services, Anthony Burgess - Transport, Anthony Burgess - Pets, Anthony Burgess - General, Anthony Burgess - The Burgess tourist trail, Anthony Burgess - Works, Anthony Burgess - Fiction, Anthony Burgess - Non-fiction, Anthony Burgess - Selected musical compositions, Anthony Burgess - Prefaces, etc. Read more here: » Anthony Burgess: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Burgess - Trivia |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Burgess - Life
Anthony Burgess - Childhood.
John Burgess Wilson was born on February 25, 1917 in Harpurhey, a northeastern quarter of Manchester, England, to a Catholic father and a Protestant mother. He was known in childhood as Jack. Later, on his confirmation, the name Anthony was added and he became John Anthony Burgess Wilson. It was not until 1956 that he was to conceive, and to be ...
See also:Anthony Burgess, Anthony Burgess - Life, Anthony Burgess - Childhood, Anthony Burgess - Youth and education, Anthony Burgess - War service, Anthony Burgess - Early teaching career, Anthony Burgess - Malaya, Anthony Burgess - Brunei, Anthony Burgess - Repatriate years, Anthony Burgess - European exile, Anthony Burgess - Death, Anthony Burgess - Achievement, Anthony Burgess - Novels, Anthony Burgess - Criticism, Anthony Burgess - Linguistics, Anthony Burgess - Journalism, Anthony Burgess - Screenwriting, Anthony Burgess - Symphonies, Anthony Burgess - Opera and Musicals, Anthony Burgess - Trivia, Anthony Burgess - Work methods, Anthony Burgess - Espionage, Anthony Burgess - Food and drink, Anthony Burgess - Smoking, Anthony Burgess - Finances, Anthony Burgess - Sex, Anthony Burgess - Mischief, Anthony Burgess - Pop-culture influence, Anthony Burgess - Early triumphs, Anthony Burgess - Polyglottal virtuosity, Anthony Burgess - Health, Anthony Burgess - Names and namesakes, Anthony Burgess - Birthplace, Anthony Burgess - Memorial services, Anthony Burgess - Transport, Anthony Burgess - Pets, Anthony Burgess - General, Anthony Burgess - The Burgess tourist trail, Anthony Burgess - Works, Anthony Burgess - Fiction, Anthony Burgess - Non-fiction, Anthony Burgess - Selected musical compositions, Anthony Burgess - Prefaces, etc. Read more here: » Anthony Burgess: Encyclopedia II - Anthony Burgess - Life |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertisingCoca-Cola's advertising has had a significant impact on American culture, and is frequently credited with the "invention" of the modern image of Santa Claus as an old man in red-and-white garments; however, while the company did in fact start promoting this image in the 1930s in its winter advertising campaigns, it was already common before that.[3] In the 1970s, a song from a Coca-Cola commercial called "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing", produced by Billy Davis, became a popular hit single, but there is no evidence that ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Recent history, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke, Coca-Cola - Brands owned by Coca-Cola Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola designThe famous Coca-Cola logotype is said to have largely been created by John Pemberton's business partner, Frank Mason Robinson, in 1885. It was Robsinson who came up with the name, and he also chose the logo’s distinctive cursive script. The typeface used, known as Spencerian script, was developed in the mid 19th century and was the dominant form of formal handwriting in the United States during that period.
The equally famous Coca-Cola bottle, called the "Contour bottle" within the company, was created in 1915 by a Swedish former gl ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Recent history, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke, Coca-Cola - Brands owned by Coca-Cola Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Virginia politics: Readjuster Party U.S. SenateWilliam Mahone was active in the economic and political life of Virginia after the Civil War for almost 30 years. He was elected to the Virginia General Assembly as a Delegate from Norfolk in 1863 (during the Civil War). He served as mayor of Petersburg. After his unsuccessful bid for governor in 1877, he became the leader of the Readjuster Party, a coalition of Democrats, Republicans, and African-Americans seeking a reduction in Virginia's prewar debt, and an appropriate allocation made to the former portion of the state that constituted th ...
See also:William Mahone, William Mahone - Childhood education, William Mahone - Civil engineer railroad builder family, William Mahone - Little Billy: Hero of the Battle of the Crater, William Mahone - Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad, William Mahone - Virginia politics: Readjuster Party U.S. Senate, William Mahone - Heritage, William Mahone - Trivia Read more here: » William Mahone: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Virginia politics: Readjuster Party U.S. Senate |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - International appealCoca-Cola is the best-selling soft drink in most countries. Nevertheless, there are some places like New York state in the United States of America, where Pepsi leads the market; Texas, in the USA, where Dr. Pepper is the number one soft drink; and Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island in Canada, where Pepsi is the market leader.[citation needed] In Peru,Inca Kola, the "national beverage" (independently produced until 1999, when Coca-Cola acquired Corporación Inca Kola del Perú S.A., the Peruvian com ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Recent history, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke, Coca-Cola - Brands owned by Coca-Cola Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - International appeal |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - International appealCoca-Cola is the best-selling soft drink in most countries. Nevertheless, there are some places like New York state in the United States of America, where Pepsi leads the market; Texas, in the USA, where Dr. Pepper is the number one soft drink; and Quebec, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Prince Edward Island in Canada, where Pepsi is the market leader.[citation needed] In Peru,Inca Kola, the "national beverage" (independently produced until 1999, when Coca-Cola acquired Corporación Inca Kola del Perú S.A., the Peruvian com ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Recent History, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke, Coca-Cola - Brands owned by Coca-Cola Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - International appeal |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - History
Coca-Cola - Early years.
Columbus, Georgia druggist John S. Pemberton invented a cocawine called Pemberton's French Wine Coca in 1884. He was inspired by the formidable success of French Angelo Mariani's cocawine, Vin Mariani.
The following year, when Atlanta and Fulton County passed Prohibition legislation, Pemberton began to develop a non-alchoholic version of the French Wine Cola. He named it Coca-Cola, because it included the stimulant coca leaves from South America and was flavored using kola nuts, a ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Recent history, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke, Coca-Cola - Brands owned by Coca-Cola Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - History |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - HeritageAfter suffering a stroke, Mahone died in Washington, D.C., on October 8, 1895. He was interred in the family mausoleum in Blandford Cemetery in Petersburg, Virginia. His widow, Otelia, lived until 1911, and was interred alongside him.
Otelia and William Mahone's former home in Petersburg now serves as part of the Petersburg Public Library. Virginia State University, which he helped found, is a major community presence nearby.
A large portion of U.S. Highway 460 in eastern Virginia (between Petersburg and Suffolk) parallels the ...
See also:William Mahone, William Mahone - Childhood education, William Mahone - Civil engineer railroad builder family, William Mahone - Little Billy: Hero of the Battle of the Crater, William Mahone - Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad, William Mahone - Virginia politics: Readjuster Party U.S. Senate, William Mahone - Heritage, William Mahone - Trivia Read more here: » William Mahone: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Heritage |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Types of PepsiThere are many types of Pepsi-Cola all differing in taste, price and appearance. Diet Pepsi is one of the most popular variations of the drink, containing no sugar and zero calories.Other popular variations of the drink are Pepsi Max and Pepsi ONE, both sugar-free colas. A caffeine-free cola called Pepsi Free was introduced in 1982 by PepsiCo as the first major-brand caffeine-free cola and is today sold as Caffeine-Free Pepsi and Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi.
In 1988, the company launched Wild Cherry Pepsi as a response to the popularity ...
See also:Pepsi-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - History, Pepsi-Cola - Ingredients, Pepsi-Cola - Spokespersons, Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms, Pepsi-Cola - Long-term health effects, Pepsi-Cola - Accusations made against Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - Troubled Popstar Endorsements, Pepsi-Cola - Notes Read more here: » Pepsi-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio RailroadAfter the war, Lee advised his generals to go back to work rebuilding the Southern economy. William Mahone did just that, and became the driving force in the linkage of N&P, South Side Railroad, and the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad. He was president of all three by the end of 1867. He worked diligently lobbying the Virginia General Assembly to gain the legislation necessary to form the Atlantic, Mississippi & Ohio Railroad (AM&O), a new line comprised of the three railroads he headed, extending 408 miles from Norfolk to Bristo ...
See also:William Mahone, William Mahone - Childhood education, William Mahone - Civil engineer railroad builder family, William Mahone - Little Billy: Hero of the Battle of the Crater, William Mahone - Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad, William Mahone - Virginia politics: Readjuster Party U.S. Senate, William Mahone - Heritage, William Mahone - Trivia Read more here: » William Mahone: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Childhood educationWilliam Mahone was born in Monroe in Southampton County, Virginia, to Fielding Jordan Mahone and Martha (née Drew) Mahone. The little town of Monroe was on the banks of the Nottoway River about eight miles south of Jerusalem (now Courtland), the county seat. Fielding Mahone ran a store at Monroe and owned considerable farmland. In 1840, the family moved to Jerusalem, where Fielding Mahone ran a tavern. There, the freckled-faced youth of Irish-American heritage gained a reputation for ...
See also:William Mahone, William Mahone - Childhood education, William Mahone - Civil engineer railroad builder family, William Mahone - Little Billy: Hero of the Battle of the Crater, William Mahone - Atlantic Mississippi and Ohio Railroad, William Mahone - Virginia politics: Readjuster Party U.S. Senate, William Mahone - Heritage, William Mahone - Trivia Read more here: » William Mahone: Encyclopedia II - William Mahone - Childhood education |
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| |  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Types of PepsiThere are many types of Pepsi-Cola all differing in taste, price and appearance. Diet Pepsi is one of the most popular variations of the drink, containing no sugar and zero calories.Other popular variations of the drink are Pepsi Max and Pepsi ONE, both sugar-free colas. A caffeine-free cola called Pepsi Free was introduced in 1982 by PepsiCo as the first major-brand caffeine-free cola and is today sold as Caffeine-Free Pepsi and Caffeine-Free Diet Pepsi.
In 1988, the company launched Wild Cherry Pepsi as a response to the popularity ...
See also:Pepsi-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - History, Pepsi-Cola - Ingredients, Pepsi-Cola - Spokespersons, Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms, Pepsi-Cola - Long-term health effects, Pepsi-Cola - Accusations made against Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - Notes Read more here: » Pepsi-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms
Pepsi-Cola - Long-term health effects.
Some nutritionists assert that the phosphoric acid component of Pepsi-Cola, and other similar soft drinks, may be deleterious to bone health in both men and women, with some studies finding the effects to be more notably pronounced in female subjects. See phosphoric acid in food.
Pepsi and other similar products contain a lot of sugar. An excessive intake of sugar has been suspected as a contributing factor in certain kinds of diabetes. Sugar is a ...
See also:Pepsi-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - History, Pepsi-Cola - Ingredients, Pepsi-Cola - Spokespersons, Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms, Pepsi-Cola - Long-term health effects, Pepsi-Cola - Accusations made against Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - Notes Read more here: » Pepsi-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - Criticisms
The numerous urban legends about Coca-Cola have led the Urban Legends Reference Pages to devote a whole section of their site to "Cokelore". One false legend claims that Coke was once green, or was accidentally carbonated when a clerk squirted syrup into the wrong glass.
Coca-Cola has been the target of urban legends decrying the drink for its supposedly copious amounts of acid (its pH value of 2.5 is midway between vinegar and gastric acid), or the "life-threatening" effects of its carbonated water. These urban legends usuall ...
See also:Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola - History, Coca-Cola - Early years, Coca-Cola - World War II, Coca-Cola - New Coke to the present, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola formula, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola design, Coca-Cola - Coca-Cola's advertising, Coca-Cola - Recent History, Coca-Cola - Sport event sponsorships, Coca-Cola - Criticisms, Coca-Cola - Business practices, Coca-Cola - International appeal, Coca-Cola - Notes, Coca-Cola - Types of Coke, Coca-Cola - Brands owned by Coca-Cola Read more here: » Coca-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Coca-Cola - Criticisms |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - OverviewPrior to and outside the influence of the major Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam), sex with animals (also known as zoophilia, or bestiality) was sometimes forbidden, and sometimes accepted. Occasionally it was incorporated into religious ritual. The Abrahamic religions by and large forbid it, and make it a sin against God[1], and during the Middle ages in Europe people and animals were often executed if found guilty. With the Age of Enlightenment, bes ...
See also:Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Overview, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Zoophilia through history, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Ancient Greek and Roman, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Europe: Middle Ages, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - China and Asia, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Tribal and other cultures, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - c.1700 - 1950, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Modern era, Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Sources Read more here: » Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia: Encyclopedia II - Historical and cultural perspectives on zoophilia - Overview |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-ColaCoke still outsells Pepsi in almost all areas of the world. Saudi Arabia and the Canadian provinces of Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec are some of the few exceptions.
In India, due to rumours of the use of cocaine, Coke was banned for a long time in India. Recently that ban was lifted, however, Pepsi had maintained a commanding market share. In 2005, Coca-Cola India's market share was 60.9%.[5]
Pepsi had long been the drink of Canadian Francophones and it continues to hold its dominance by relying on loc ...
See also:Pepsi-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - History, Pepsi-Cola - Ingredients, Pepsi-Cola - Spokespersons, Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms, Pepsi-Cola - Long-term health effects, Pepsi-Cola - Accusations made against Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - Troubled Popstar Endorsements, Pepsi-Cola - Notes Read more here: » Pepsi-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola |
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|  |  |  | dyspepsia: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-ColaCoke still outsells Pepsi in almost all areas of the world. Saudi Arabia and the Canadian provinces of Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec are some of the few exceptions.
Due to rumours of the use of cocaine, Coke was banned for a long time in India. Recently that ban was lifted, however, Pepsi had maintained a commanding market share. In 2005, Coca-Cola India's market share was 60.9%.[5]
Pepsi had long been the drink of Canadian Francophones and it continues to hold its dominance by relying on local Québé ...
See also:Pepsi-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - History, Pepsi-Cola - Ingredients, Pepsi-Cola - Spokespersons, Pepsi-Cola - Types of Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Criticisms, Pepsi-Cola - Long-term health effects, Pepsi-Cola - Accusations made against Pepsi, Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola, Pepsi-Cola - Notes Read more here: » Pepsi-Cola: Encyclopedia II - Pepsi-Cola - Rivalry with Coca-Cola |
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