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Mortar and pestle

Index Mortar and pestle

A mortar and pestle is a kitchen implement used since ancient times to prepare ingredients or substances by crushing and grinding them into a fine paste or powder. [1]

345 relations: A History of the World in 100 Objects, Acoma Pueblo, Agate, Agriculture in Indonesia, Aioli, Ajoblanco, Al Zubara Fort, Al-Judeira, Alexander Dounce, All Creatures Great and Small (TV series), Altar (Bible), Anadenanthera colubrina, Ancient Egyptian cuisine, Ancient Israelite cuisine, Ara (constellation), Arcade Creek, Arcadocypriot Greek, Archeological Site 4 SLO 834, As a dog returns to his vomit, so a fool repeats his folly, Ayam goreng, Ayam penyet, Ayam Taliwang, Aztec cuisine, Baba Yaga, BAFS Building, Bantu mythology, Bark bread, Barzan Towers, Batan (stone), Bedrock mortar, Betutu, Bhang, Biñan, Bismuth ferrite, Black pepper, Blade grinder, Blind men and an elephant, Bojinka plot, Bondurant's Pharmacy, Bort, Bowl of Hygieia, Breast ironing, British Museum, Bumbu (seasoning), Calixarene, Candeleda, Cannizzaro reaction, Carlston Annis Shell Mound, Carn Liath (broch), Cốm, ..., Cedar oil, Chang'an, Charles Angibaud, Charnel ground, Chavín de Huantar, Chestnut pie, Chinigchinix, Chinois, Clay mineral X-ray diffraction, Cocrystal, Coffee ceremony, Coffee preparation, Colin Raston, Collota (Huaylas), Coronation of the Thai monarch, Cristóbal Oudrid, Crusher, Culture of Eritrea, Cupstone, Cupules, Cuyamaca Rancho State Park, Dacryodes edulis, Dan Kwian, Darbechtar, Daun ubi tumbuk, Davenport Neck, Detailed logarithmic timeline, Dheki, Diazonium compound, Djembe, Dravo Gravel Site, Ecuador maize varieties, Ed Z'berg Sugar Pine Point State Park, Edge mill, Edward Frankland, Ellerbusch Site, Elton on the Hill, Empal gepuk, Evaristo Conrado Engelberg, Feminist technoscience, Florida arrowroot, Food Paradise, Frumenty, Fufu, Gado-gado, Ganesha in world religions, Gardiner Pond Shell Midden, Gastric shield, Gazpacho, Gbagyi people, Gerald Dunning, Germuiller Row, Goan Catholics, Gomul, Green curry, Green papaya salad, Greensand, Ground stone, Gruel, Gullah, Gynoecium, Hacilar, Haitian cuisine, Hardwickia, Hatch bell foundry, Herbalism, Hisar Hill, History of Charleston, History of Kentucky, History of paper, History of Recreo, Homogenizer, Hong Kong dollar, How the Devil Married Three Sisters, Husk, Iga penyet, Ilocos Sur, Incan agriculture, India ink, Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park, Indian Knoll, Indigenous peoples of Florida, Indonesian cuisine, Ink, Inkstick, Inkstone, Insuknawr, Irishtown, California, Isabella Breviary, Islamic influences on Western art, Iximche, James Pharmacy, Jamu, Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve, Jeolgu, Jojoba, Jullutahuarco, Juutila Foundry, Kaeng som, Katherine Jones, Viscountess Ranelagh, Kaumodaki, Kava, Kaweah River, Key Marco, Kinderhook Creek, Kitch-iti-kipi, Kroeung, Kue satu, Lalmohan Ganguly, Latah County, Idaho, Lei cha, Lignum vitae, List of abbreviations used in medical prescriptions, List of African dishes, List of Brazilian dishes, List of California state parks, List of Chinese inventions, List of diminutives by language, List of dishes made using coconut milk, List of food pastes, List of food preparation utensils, List of garlic dishes, List of Good Eats episodes, List of Japanese cooking utensils, List of Journey to the West characters, List of mythological objects, List of National Treasures of Japan (archaeological materials), List of New Hampshire historical markers (126–150), List of Russian people, List of Spanish words of Nahuatl origin, List of types of mill, Listed buildings in Albrighton, Bridgnorth, Listed buildings in Alston Moor, Lithic analysis, Lugbara cuisine, Lunumiris, Luzon, Lyutika, Makhtesh, Malay cuisine, Marmes Rockshelter, Marsala Ship, Maya civilization, Mazamorra, Medieval cuisine, Metate, Mihbaj, Military career of Bhoja, Mill (grinding), Miller, Minuartia handelii, Mishaguji, Mofongo, Molcajete, Momordica charantia, Monjolo, Moon rabbit, Mor lam, Moretum, Mortadella, Mortar, Mortar (masonry), Mortar (weapon), Mortarium, Mortis (food), Muchka, Muddler, Munhata, Museum Tani Jawa Indonesia, Music of Chad, Music of Taiwan, Nam chim, Nam phrik, National Monument (Indonesia), Native American cuisine, Natufian culture, Ndut initiation rite, Nea Nikomedeia, Nemrik 9, Nias people, Nirengi Castle, Njangsa, Njoro River Cave, Nodena Phase, Nujol, Oilseed press, Onake Obavva, Orchard House, Ousdale Broch, Outline of alchemy, Paçoca, Pac-Kit First Aid Kits, Peanut sauce, Pestel, Pesto, Pharmacy, Picada, Pictures at an Exhibition, Pinipig, Pinoy Big Brother (season 2), Pinoy Big Brother: Unlimited events, Piracy in the Atlantic World, Pistou, Poi (food), Poldark Mine, Polemos, Pomo, Poppy seed, Porra antequerana, Potato masher, Powdered sugar, Prehistory of Pampanga, Punjabi cuisine, Purbeck Marble, Quelepa, Qulluta (Huancavelica), Qulluta (Recuay), Qulluta (Sihuas), Radical 134, Radical 51, Raine Baljak, Rajahnate of Maynila, Rajucollota, Red curry, Resorcinarene, Rice huller, Rice hulls, Rice pounder, Riddle Ranch, Robert Spear Hudson, Robert Steinberg (chocolate maker), Rojak, Royal Pharmaceutical Society, Russell Cave National Monument, Salsa (sauce), Sambal, Santiago Creek, Savanna Pastoral Neolithic, Scallion, Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker, Science and technology of the Song dynasty, Scouting in Hawaii, Sedentism, Serer maternal clans, Shenantaha Creek Park, Shir (Neolithic site), Show globe, Siamese twins (linguistics), Sierra Leonean cuisine, Sir Francis Buller, 1st Baronet, Sir Robert Grierson, 1st Baronet, Snuff (tobacco), Soap, Society and culture of the Han dynasty, Solid-state reaction route, Spice, St Michael's Church, Michaelchurch, Stone and muller, Sub-Saharan African music traditions, Suribachi, Sutton County, Texas, Tamarind, Tamis, Taramasalata, Technology, Thai cuisine, Thai curry, Thai salads, The Amazing Race 13, The Amazing Race Canada 3, The Brothers Karamazov, The Knight of the Burning Pestle, The Owl Drug Company, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, Three hares, Tiangong Kaiwu, Time Team (series 9), Timeline of agriculture and food technology, Timeline of historic inventions, Tondo (historical polity), Topanga, California, Toum, Trip hammer, Tteok, Umm Jamil, Vasilisa the Beautiful, Vegetable oil, Vietnamese cuisine, Viminacium, Virginia Dare, Wei Baoheng, Wiiwish, Worshipful Company of Wax Chandlers, Yagen, Zeita, Tulkarm. Expand index (295 more) »

A History of the World in 100 Objects

A History of the World in 100 Objects was a joint project of BBC Radio 4 and the British Museum, comprising a 100-part radio series written and presented by British Museum director Neil MacGregor.

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Acoma Pueblo

Acoma Pueblo is a Native American pueblo approximately west of Albuquerque, New Mexico in the United States.

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Agate

Agate is a rock consisting primarily of cryptocrystalline silica, chiefly chalcedony, alternating with microgranular quartz.

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Agriculture in Indonesia

Agriculture is one of the key sectors within the Indonesian economy.

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Aioli

Aioli or aïoli (or; Provençal alhòli or aiòli; allioli) is a Mediterranean sauce made of garlic and olive oil; some regions use other emulsifiers such as egg or cranberries.

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Ajoblanco

Ajoblanco (sometimes written ajo blanco) is a popular Spanish cold soup typical from Granada and Málaga (Andalusia).

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Al Zubara Fort

Al Zubara Fort (حصن الزبارة), also known as Fort Zubara(h), Zubara(h) Fort, Al Zubarah Fort, or Az Zubara(h) Fort, is a historic Qatari military fortress built under the oversight of Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Al Thani in 1938.

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Al-Judeira

al-Judeira (جديره) is a Palestinian village in the Jerusalem Governorate in the central West Bank.

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Alexander Dounce

Alexander Latham Dounce (December 7, 1909 – April 24, 1997) was an American professor of biochemistry.

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All Creatures Great and Small (TV series)

All Creatures Great and Small is a British television series based on the books of the British veterinary surgeon Alf Wight, who wrote under the pseudonym James Herriot.

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Altar (Bible)

Altars (מזבח, mizbeaḥ, "a place of slaughter or sacrifice") in the Hebrew Bible were typically made of earth or unwrought stone.

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Anadenanthera colubrina

Anadenanthera colubrina (also known as vilca, huilco, huilca, wilco, willka, curupay, curupau, cebil, or angico) is a South American tree closely related to Yopo, or Anadenanthera peregrina.

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Ancient Egyptian cuisine

The cuisine of ancient Egypt covers a span of over three thousand years, but still retained many consistent traits until well into Greco-Roman times.

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Ancient Israelite cuisine

Ancient Israelite cuisine refers to the food eaten by the ancient Israelites during a period of over a thousand years, from the beginning of the Israelite presence in the Land of Israel at the beginning of the Iron Age until the Roman period.

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Ara (constellation)

Ara (Latin: "The Altar") is a southern constellation situated between Scorpius and Triangulum Australe.

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Arcade Creek

Arcade Creek is a waterway in Northeastern Sacramento County in central California.

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Arcadocypriot Greek

Arcadocypriot, or southern Achaean, was an ancient Greek dialect spoken in Arcadia in the central Peloponnese and in Cyprus.

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Archeological Site 4 SLO 834

Archeological Site 4 SLO 834, also known as CA-SLO-834, is a prehistoric archaeological site in Atascadero, California.

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As a dog returns to his vomit, so a fool repeats his folly

"As a dog returns to his vomit, so a fool repeats his folly" is an aphorism which appears in the Book of Proverbs in the Bible — Proverbs 26:11 (Kəḵeleḇ šāḇ ‘al-qê’ōw; kəsîl, šōwneh ḇə’iwwaltōw.), also partially quoted in the New Testament, 2 Peter 2:22.

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Ayam goreng

Ayam goreng is an Indonesian dish of chicken deep fried in coconut oil.

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Ayam penyet

Ayam penyet (Javanese for: smashed fried chicken) is Indonesian — more precisely East Javanese cuisine — fried chicken dish consisting of fried chicken that is smashed with the pestle against mortar to make it softer, served with sambal, slices of cucumbers, fried tofu and tempeh.

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Ayam Taliwang

Ayam Taliwang is a spicy Indonesian ayam bakar (grilled chicken) dish from Lombok.

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Aztec cuisine

Aztec cuisine was the cuisine of the Aztec Empire and the Nahua peoples of the Valley of Mexico prior to European contact in 1519.

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Baba Yaga

In Slavic folklore, Baba Yaga is a supernatural being (or one of a trio of sisters of the same name) who appears as a deformed and/or ferocious-looking woman.

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BAFS Building

BAFS Building is a heritage-listed former pharmacy at 331 & 333 George Street, Brisbane City, City of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.

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Bantu mythology

The Bantu mythology is the system of myths and legends of the Bantu peoples of Africa.

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Bark bread

Bark bread is a form of famine food made by adding ground phloem to the flour as an extender to make it last longer.

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Barzan Towers

Barzan Towers (برج برزان "High Place"), also known as the Umm Salal Mohammed Fort Towers, are watchtowers that were built in the late 19th century and renovated in 1910 by Sheikh Mohammed bin Jassim Al Thani.

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Batan (stone)

The batán is a kitchen utensil used to process different kinds of foods in South Asian, South American and Andean cuisine.

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Bedrock mortar

A bedrock mortar (BRM) is an anthropogenic circular depression in a rock outcrop or naturally occurring slab, used by people in the past for grinding of grain, acorns or other food products.

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Betutu

Betutu is a Balinese dish of steamed or roasted chicken or duck in rich bumbu betutu (betutu spice mix).

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Bhang

Bhang (भांग) is an edible preparation of cannabis.

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Biñan

, officially the, (name), and known simply as City is a settlement_text in the province of,. According to the, it has a population of people.

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Bismuth ferrite

Bismuth ferrite (BiFeO3, also commonly referred to as BFO in materials science) is an inorganic chemical compound with perovskite structure and one of the most promising multiferroic materials.

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Black pepper

Black pepper (Piper nigrum) is a flowering vine in the family Piperaceae, cultivated for its fruit, which is usually dried and used as a spice and seasoning, known as a peppercorn.

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Blade grinder

A blade grinder (also propeller grinder) is a machine that chops material while mixing it, by means of a high-speed spinning blade.

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Blind men and an elephant

The parable of the blind men and an elephant originated in the ancient Indian subcontinent, from where it has been widely diffused.

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Bojinka plot

The Bojinka plot (بوجينكا; Oplan Bojinka) was a large-scale, three-phase attack planned by terrorists Ramzi Yousef and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed for January 1995.

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Bondurant's Pharmacy

Bondurant's Pharmacy is a pharmacy that operated from 1974 to 2011, and is notable for being built in the shape of a giant mortar and pestle, a common tool of the pharmacist.

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Bort

Bort, borat or boort is a term used in the diamond industry to refer to shards of non-gem-grade/quality diamonds.

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Bowl of Hygieia

Bowl of Hygieia is one of the symbols of pharmacy.

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Breast ironing

Breast ironing, also known as breast flattening, is the pounding and massaging of a pubescent girl's breasts, using hard or heated objects, to try to make them stop developing or disappear.

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British Museum

The British Museum, located in the Bloomsbury area of London, United Kingdom, is a public institution dedicated to human history, art and culture.

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Bumbu (seasoning)

Bumbu is the Indonesian word for a blend of spices and it commonly appears in the names of spice mixtures, sauces and seasoning pastes.

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Calixarene

A calixarene is a macrocycle or cyclic oligomer based on a hydroxyalkylation product of a phenol and an aldehyde.

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Candeleda

Candeleda is a town and municipality located in the province of Ávila, in the autonomous community of Castile and León, Spain.Is also known as "La Andalucía de Ávila" According to the 2011 INE census, the municipality has a population of 5,213 inhabitants, making it the fifth largest municipality in the province after Ávila –the capital–, Arévalo, Arenas de San Pedro and Las Navas del Marqués.

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Cannizzaro reaction

The Cannizzaro reaction, named after its discoverer Stanislao Cannizzaro, is a chemical reaction that involves the base-induced disproportionation of a non-enolizable aldehyde.

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Carlston Annis Shell Mound

The Carlston Annis Shell Mound (designated 15 BT 5) is a prominent archaeological site in the western part of the U.S. state of Kentucky.

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Carn Liath (broch)

Càrn Liath (Grey Cairn) is an Iron Age broch on the eastern shore of the Scottish Highlands, near Golspie, Sutherland.

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Cốm

Cốm, or green rice, is a dish in Vietnamese cuisine.

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Cedar oil

Cedar oil, also known as cedarwood oil, is an essential oil derived from various types of conifers, most in the pine or cypress botanical families.

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Chang'an

Chang'an was an ancient capital of more than ten dynasties in Chinese history, today known as Xi'an.

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Charles Angibaud

Charles Angibaud was a French apothecary.

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Charnel ground

A charnel ground (Devanagari: श्मशान; Romanized Sanskrit: śmaśān; Tibetan pronunciation: durtrö),Rigpa Shedra (July 2009).

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Chavín de Huantar

Chavín de Huántar is an archaeological site in Peru, containing ruins and artifacts constructed beginning at least by 1200 BC and occupied by later cultures until around 400-500 BC by the Chavín, a major pre-Inca culture.

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Chestnut pie

Chestnut pie is a pie prepared with chestnuts as a primary ingredient.

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Chinigchinix

Chingichngish (also spelled Chinigchinix, Chinigchinich, Changitchnish, etc.) also known as Quaoar (also Qua-o-ar, Kwawar, etc.) and by other names including Ouiamot, Tobet and Saor is the name of an important figure in the mythology of the Mission Indians of coastal Southern California, a group of Takic-speaking peoples, today divided into the Payomkowishum (Luiseño), Tongva (Gabrieliño and Fernandeño), and Acjachemem (Juaneño) peoples.

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Chinois

A chinois is a conical sieve with an extremely fine mesh.

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Clay mineral X-ray diffraction

Clay minerals are one of the most diverse minerals but all have a commonalty of crystal or grain sizes below 2 µm.

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Cocrystal

The definition of a cocrystal has been debated in the crystallography field.

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Coffee ceremony

A coffee ceremony (bunna maflat) is a ritualized form of making and drinking coffee.

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Coffee preparation

Coffee preparation is the process of turning coffee beans into a beverage.

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Colin Raston

Colin Llewellyn Raston AO is a Professor of Chemistry of Flinders University in Adelaide, South Australia and the Premier's Professorial Fellow in Clean Technology.

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Collota (Huaylas)

Collota (possibly from Quechua for mortar) is a mountain in the north of the Cordillera Blanca in the Andes of Peru.

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Coronation of the Thai monarch

The coronation of the Thai monarch is a ceremony in which the King of Thailand is formally consecrated by anointment and crowning.

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Cristóbal Oudrid

Cristóbal (Carlos Domingo Romualdo y Ricardo) Oudrid y Segura (7 February 1825 – 13 March 1877) was a Spanish pianist, conductor, and composer.

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Crusher

A crusher is a machine designed to reduce large rocks into smaller rocks, gravel, or rock dust.

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Culture of Eritrea

The culture of Eritrea is the collective cultural heritage of the various populations native to Eritrea.

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Cupstone

Variously known as cupstones, "anvil stones," "pitted cobbles" and "nutting stones," among other names, these roughly discoidal or amorphous groundstone artifacts are among the most common lithic remains of Native American culture, especially in the Midwest, in Early Archaic contexts.

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Cupules

Cupules are humanly made depressions on rock surfaces that resemble the shape of a spherical cap or dome.

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Cuyamaca Rancho State Park

Cuyamaca Rancho State Park is a state park in California, United States, located east of San Diego in the Cuyamaca and Laguna Mountains of the Peninsular Ranges.

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Dacryodes edulis

Dacryodes edulis or safou is a fruit tree native to Africa, sometimes called Atanga (Gabon), Ube (Nigeria), African or bush pear or plum, Nsafu, bush butter tree, or butterfruit.

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Dan Kwian

Dan Kwian (ด่านเกวียน) is a village and subdistrict in Chok Chai District, Nakhon Ratchasima Province.

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Darbechtar

Darbechtar (known also as Darb Ishtar, داربعشتار) is a village located on the South-Eastern periphery of the Koura District in the North Governorate of the Republic of Lebanon.

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Daun ubi tumbuk

Daun ubi tumbuk (Indonesian for "pounded cassava leaves") is a vegetable dish commonly found in Indonesia, made from pounded cassava leaves.

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Davenport Neck

Davenport Neck is a peninsula in New Rochelle, New York, extending southwesterly from the mainland into Long Island Sound, and running parallel to the main shore.

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Detailed logarithmic timeline

This timeline shows the whole history of the universe, the Earth, and mankind in one table.

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Dheki

A dheki is an agricultural tool used for threshing, to separate rice grains from their outer husks, while leaving the bran layer, thus producing brown rice.

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Diazonium compound

Diazonium compounds or diazonium salts are a group of organic compounds sharing a common functional group where R can be any organic group, such as an alkyl or an aryl, and X is an inorganic or organic anion, such as a halogen.

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Djembe

A djembe or jembe (from Malinke jembe) is a rope-tuned skin-covered goblet drum played with bare hands, originally from West Africa.

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Dravo Gravel Site

The Dravo Gravel Site (33HA377) is an archaeological site located above the Great Miami River in Miami Township, Hamilton County, Ohio, United States.

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Ecuador maize varieties

The varieties of Ecuadorian maize are the repository of a rich farming and cooking tradition.

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Ed Z'berg Sugar Pine Point State Park

Ed Z'berg Sugar Pine Point State Park is a state park in California in the United States.

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Edge mill

An edge mill is a mill used for crushing or grinding in which stones roll around on their edges on a level circular bed.

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Edward Frankland

Sir Edward Frankland, (18 January 1825 – 9 August 1899) was a British chemist.

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Ellerbusch Site

The Ellerbusch Site (12-W-56) is a small but significant archaeological site in the southwestern part of the U.S. state of Indiana.

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Elton on the Hill

Elton on the Hill is a small Nottinghamshire village and civil parish in the Vale of Belvoir.

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Empal gepuk

Empal gepuk (Sundanese) or sometimes simply known just as empal or gepuk is an Indonesian sweet and spicy fried beef dish.

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Evaristo Conrado Engelberg

Evaristo Conrado Engelberg (26 October 1853 – 1932) was a Brazilian mechanical engineer and inventor.

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Feminist technoscience

Feminist technoscience is a transdisciplinary branch of science studies which emerged from decades of feminist critique on the way gender and other identity markers are entangled in the combined fields of science and technology.

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Florida arrowroot

Florida arrowroot was the commercial name of an edible starch extracted from Zamia integrifolia (coontie), a small cycad native to North America.

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Food Paradise

Food Paradise is a television series narrated by Jesse Blaze Snider (formerly by Mason Pettit) that features the best places to find various cuisines at food locations across America.

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Frumenty

Frumenty (sometimes frumentee, furmity, fromity, or fermenty) was a popular dish in Western European medieval cuisine.

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Fufu

Fufu (variants of the name include foofoo, fufuo, foufou) is a staple food common in many countries in Africa such as Ghana, Liberia and Nigeria.

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Gado-gado

Gado-gado (Indonesian or Betawi), also known as lotek (Sundanese and Javanese), is an Indonesian salad of slightly boiled, blanched or steamed vegetables and hard-boiled eggs, boiled potato, fried tofu and tempeh, and lontong (rice wrapped in a banana leaf), served with a peanut sauce dressing.

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Ganesha in world religions

India and Hinduism has influenced many countries of East Asia and the Indian Subcontinent as a result of commercial and cultural contacts.

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Gardiner Pond Shell Midden

The Gardiner Pond Shell Midden (also known as RI-101W) is a prehistoric archaeological site in Middletown, Rhode Island.

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Gastric shield

A gastric shield is an organ in the digestive tract of bivalves, tusk shells, and some gastropods against which a crystalline style typically rotates, in an action resembling that of a mortar and pestle.

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Gazpacho

Gazpacho Andalusian gazpacho or Gabacho is a cold soup made of raw blended vegetables.

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Gbagyi people

Gbagyi or Gbari (plural - Agbagyi) is the name and the language of Gbagyi/Gbari ethnic group who are predominantly found in Central Nigeria, with a population of about 15 million people.

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Gerald Dunning

Gerald Clough Dunning (20 December 1905 – 16 April 1978) was a pioneering scholar in the development of medieval British archaeology.

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Germuiller Row

Germuiller Row are historic structures located in the Chinatown neighborhood of Washington, D.C. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

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Goan Catholics

The Goan Catholics (Goenche Katholik) are an ethno-religious community of Roman Catholics and their descendants from the state of Goa, located on the west coast of India.

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Gomul

Gomul refers to a number of powdered coatings, toppings, fillings, or dips in Korean cuisine.

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Green curry

Green curry (แกงเขียวหวาน,,, literally sweet green curry) is a central Thai variety of curry.

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Green papaya salad

Green papaya salad is a spicy salad made from shredded unripe papaya.

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Greensand

Greensand or green sand is a sand or sandstone which has a greenish color.

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Ground stone

In archaeology, ground stone is a category of stone tool formed by the grinding of a coarse-grained tool stone, either purposely or incidentally.

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Gruel

Gruel is a food consisting of some type of cereal—oat, wheat or rye flour, or rice—boiled in water or milk.

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Gullah

The Gullah are African Americans who live in the Lowcountry region of the U.S. states of Georgia and South Carolina, in both the coastal plain and the Sea Islands (including urban Savannah and Charleston).

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Gynoecium

Gynoecium (from Ancient Greek γυνή, gyne, meaning woman, and οἶκος, oikos, meaning house) is most commonly used as a collective term for the parts of a flower that produce ovules and ultimately develop into the fruit and seeds.

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Hacilar

Hacilar is an early human settlement in southwestern Turkey, 23 km south of present-day Burdur.

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Haitian cuisine

Haitian cuisine consists of cooking traditions and practices from Haiti.

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Hardwickia

Hardwickia is a monotypic genus of flowering plant in the subfamily Detarioideae of the legumes.

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Hatch bell foundry

The Hatch bell foundry at Ulcombe, near Maidstone, in Kent, England, was operated by three generations of the Hatch family from 1581 or earlier until 1664.

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Herbalism

Herbalism (also herbal medicine or phytotherapy) is the study of botany and use of plants intended for medicinal purposes or for supplementing a diet.

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Hisar Hill

The Hisar (Хисар) is a hill near the town of Leskovac in southern Serbia.

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History of Charleston

The history of Charleston, South Carolina, is one of the longest and most diverse of any community in the United States, spanning hundreds of years of physical settlement beginning in 1670 through modern times.

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History of Kentucky

The prehistory and history of Kentucky spans thousands of years, and has been influenced by the state's diverse geography and central location.

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History of paper

Paper, a thin unwoven material made from milled plant fibers, is primarily used for writing, artwork, and packaging; it is commonly white.

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History of Recreo

Recreo began as a small Hispanic homestead which offered rest to travellers and hence its name.

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Homogenizer

A homogenizer is a piece of laboratory or industrial equipment used for the homogenization of various types of material, such as tissue, plant, food, soil, and many others.

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Hong Kong dollar

The Hong Kong dollar (sign: HK$; code: HKD) is the official currency of Hong Kong.

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How the Devil Married Three Sisters

How the Devil Married Three Sisters is an Italian fairy tale found in Thomas Frederick Crane's Italian Popular Tales (1885).

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Husk

Husk (or hull) in botany is the outer shell or coating of a seed.

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Iga penyet

Iga penyet ('''Squeezed ribs'''.) is Indonesian — more precisely Eastern Javanese cuisine — fried beef spare ribs served with spicy sambal terasi.

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Ilocos Sur

Ilocos Sur (Makin-abagatan nga Ilocos) is a province in the Philippines located in the Ilocos Region in Luzon.

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Incan agriculture

Incan Agriculture was the culmination of thousands of years of farming and herding in the high-elevation Andes mountains of South America, the coastal deserts, and the rainforests of the Amazon basin.

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India ink

India ink (British English: Indian Ink; also Chinese ink) is a simple black or colored ink once widely used for writing and printing and now more commonly used for drawing and outlining, especially when inking comic books and comic strips.

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Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park

Indian Grinding Rock State Historic Park is a California State Park, preserving an outcropping of marbleized limestone with some 1,185 mortar holes—the largest collection of bedrock mortars in North America.

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Indian Knoll

Indian Knoll is an archaeological site near Paradise, Kentucky that was declared to be a U.S. National Historic Landmark.

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Indigenous peoples of Florida

The Indigenous peoples of Florida lived in what is now known as Florida for more than 12,000 years before the time of first contact with Europeans.

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Indonesian cuisine

Indonesian cuisine is one of the most vibrant and colourful cuisines in the world, full of intense flavour.

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Ink

Ink is a liquid or paste that contains pigments or dyes and is used to color a surface to produce an image, text, or design.

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Inkstick

Inksticks (Chinese: 墨; Japanese: 墨 Sumi; Korean: 먹 Meok) or Ink Cakes are a type of solid ink (India ink) used traditionally in several East Asian cultures for calligraphy and brush painting.

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Inkstone

An inkstone is a stone mortar for the grinding and containment of ink.

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Insuknawr

Insuknawr or Rod Pushing Sport is an indigenous game of Mizoram, a state in North-East India.

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Irishtown, California

Irishtown (also, Irish Town) is a former settlement in Amador County, California.

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Isabella Breviary

The Isabella Breviary (Ms. 18851) is a late 15th-century illuminated manuscript housed in the British Library, London.

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Islamic influences on Western art

Islamic influences on Western art refers to the influence of Islamic art, the artistic production in the Islamic world from the 8th to the 19th century, on Christian art.

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Iximche

Iximche (or Iximché using Spanish orthography) is a Pre-Columbian Mesoamerican archaeological site in the western highlands of Guatemala.

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James Pharmacy

The James Pharmacy is a historic building at 2 Pennywise Lane in Old Saybrook, Connecticut.

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Jamu

Jamu (old spelling Djamu) is a traditional medicine from Indonesia.

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Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve

The Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve is a 1,200 acre (5 km²) nature preserve and biological field station owned by Stanford University, located at south of Sand Hill Road and west of Interstate 280 in Portola Valley, California.

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Jeolgu

Jeolgu and gongi are a type of traditional Korean mortar and pestle set, used for pounding grains or tteok (rice cake).

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Jojoba

Jojoba, with the botanical name Simmondsia chinensis, and also known as goat nut, deer nut, pignut, wild hazel, quinine nut, coffeeberry, and gray box bush, is native to Southwestern North America.

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Jullutahuarco

Jullutahuarco (possibly from Quechua qulluta, kalluta mortar, warkhu hanging; a coin) is a mountain in the west of the Huayhuash mountain range in the Andes of Peru, about high.

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Juutila Foundry

Juutila Foundry is the oldest still working bell foundry in Finland.

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Kaeng som

Kaeng som or gaeng som (แกงส้ม) or Thai sour curry is a sour and spicy fish curry or soup with vegetables popular in central Thailand.

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Katherine Jones, Viscountess Ranelagh

Katherine Jones, Viscountess Ranelagh (22 March 1615 – 3 December 1691), also known as Lady Ranelagh, was a scientist in seventeenth-century Britain.

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Kaumodaki

Kaumodaki (IAST: Kaumodakī) is the gada (mace) of the Hindu god Vishnu.

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Kava

Kava or kava kava or Piper methysticum (Latin "pepper" and Latinized Greek "intoxicating") is a crop of the Pacific Islands.

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Kaweah River

The Kaweah River is a river draining the southern Sierra Nevada in Tulare County, California in the United States.

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Key Marco

Key Marco was an archaeological site (8CR48) consisting of a large shell works island next to Marco Island, Florida.

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Kinderhook Creek

Kinderhook Creek is a U.S. Geological Survey.

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Kitch-iti-kipi

Kitch-iti-kipi ("KITCH-i-tee-KI-pee" with short "i"s) is Michigan's largest natural freshwater spring.

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Kroeung

Kroeung (គ្រឿង) is the generic Cambodian word for a number of spice/herb pastes that make up the base flavors of many Khmer dishes.

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Kue satu

Kue satu (in West Java and Jakarta) or kue koya (in Central and East Java) is a popular traditional kue kering (traditional cookie) of white-colored sweet mung beans powder that is crumbled when being bitten.

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Lalmohan Ganguly

Lalmohan Ganguly, alias Jatayu (also spelled Jotayu), is a fictional character in the Feluda stories written by Satyajit Ray.

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Latah County, Idaho

Latah County is a county located in the north central region of the U.S. state of Idaho.

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Lei cha

Lei cha (pronounced) or ground tea is a traditional Southern Chinese tea-based beverage or gruel.

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Lignum vitae

Lignum vitae is a wood, also called guayacan or guaiacum, and in parts of Europe known as pockholz, from trees of the genus Guaiacum.

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List of abbreviations used in medical prescriptions

This is a list of abbreviations used in medical prescriptions, including hospital orders (the patient-directed part of which is referred to as sig codes).

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List of African dishes

This is a list of notable dishes found in African cuisine.

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List of Brazilian dishes

This is a list of dishes found in Brazilian cuisine.

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List of California state parks

This is a list of parks, historic resources, reserves and recreation areas in the California State Parks system.

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List of Chinese inventions

China has been the source of many innovations, scientific discoveries and inventions.

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List of diminutives by language

The following is a list of diminutives by language.

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List of dishes made using coconut milk

This is a list of dishes made using coconut milk.

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List of food pastes

This is a list of notable food pastes.

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List of food preparation utensils

A kitchen utensil is a hand-held, typically small tool that is designed for food-related functions.

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List of garlic dishes

This is a list of garlic dishes, comprising dishes and foods that use garlic as a main ingredient.

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List of Good Eats episodes

Good Eats is an informational cooking show in which Alton Brown would go into the history and or science of a particular dish or item that was the focal point of each episode.

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List of Japanese cooking utensils

The following items are common Japanese cooking tools used in preparing Japanese cuisine.

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List of Journey to the West characters

The following is a list of characters in the Chinese classical novel Journey to the West, including those mentioned by name only.

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List of mythological objects

Mythological objects encompass a variety of items (e.g. weapons, armour, clothing) found in mythology, legend, folklore, tall tale, fable, religion, and spirituality from across the world.

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List of National Treasures of Japan (archaeological materials)

The term "National Treasure" has been used in Japan to denote cultural properties since 1897.

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List of New Hampshire historical markers (126–150)

This is part of the list of New Hampshire historical markers.

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List of Russian people

This is a list of people associated with the modern Russian Federation, the Soviet Union, Imperial Russia, Russian Tsardom, the Grand Duchy of Moscow, and other predecessor states of Russia.

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List of Spanish words of Nahuatl origin

Documented Nahuatl words in the Spanish language (mostly as spoken in Mexico and Mesoamerica) include an extensive list of words that represent (i) animals, (ii) plants, fruit and vegetables, (iii) foods and beverages, and (iv) domestic appliances.

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List of types of mill

Types of mill include the following.

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Listed buildings in Albrighton, Bridgnorth

Albrighton is a civil parish in Shropshire, England.

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Listed buildings in Alston Moor

Alston Moor is a civil parish in the Eden District, Cumbria, England.

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Lithic analysis

In archaeology, lithic analysis is the analysis of stone tools and other chipped stone artifacts using basic scientific techniques.

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Lugbara cuisine

Lugbara cuisine is one of the meals of East Africa and the ancient Lado Enclave.

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Lunumiris

Lunumiris (Sinhala:ලුණු මිරිස් some also refer it as "Katta Sambal") is a spicy Sri Lankan sambal paste served as a condiment.

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Luzon

Luzon is the largest and most populous island in the Philippines.

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Lyutika

Lyutika (лютика) is a traditional vegetable mixture — salad or chunky relish, popular in the northern part of Bulgaria.

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Makhtesh

A makhtesh (מַכְתֵּשׁ, plural: (– Makhteshim) is a geological landform considered typical for the Negev desert of Israel and the Sinai peninsula of Egypt. A makhtesh has steep walls of resistant rock surrounding a deep closed valley, which is usually drained by a single wadi. The valleys have limited vegetation and soil, containing a variety of different colored rocks and diverse fauna and flora. The best known and largest makhtesh is Makhtesh Ramon.

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Malay cuisine

Malay cuisine is the cooking tradition of ethnic Malays of Malaysia, Indonesia (parts of Sumatra and West Kalimantan), Singapore, Brunei, Southern Thailand and the Philippines (mostly Southern).

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Marmes Rockshelter

The Marmes Rockshelter (also known as (45-FR-50)) is an archaeological site first excavated in 1962, near the confluence of the Snake and Palouse Rivers, in Franklin County, southeastern Washington.

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Marsala Ship

The Marsala Ship is the earliest warship known from archeological evidence.

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Maya civilization

The Maya civilization was a Mesoamerican civilization developed by the Maya peoples, and noted for its hieroglyphic script—the only known fully developed writing system of the pre-Columbian Americas—as well as for its art, architecture, mathematics, calendar, and astronomical system.

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Mazamorra

Mazamorra (from Spanish Arabic pičmáṭ from Greek παξαμάδιον paxamádion, and from the Greek μάζα mâza) is the name for numerous traditional dishes from Córdoba, Andalusia and Latin America.

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Medieval cuisine

Medieval cuisine includes foods, eating habits, and cooking methods of various European cultures during the Middle Ages, which lasted from the fifth to the fifteenth century.

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Metate

A metate or metlatl (or mealing stone) is a type or variety of quern, a ground stone tool used for processing grain and seeds.

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Mihbaj

A mihbaj (مهباج) is a traditional Bedouin implement, made of a wooden base with a foot-long pestle, that serves both as a coffee grinder and as a percussion instrument.

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Military career of Bhoja

The 11th century Paramara king Bhoja ruled from his capital at Dhara (Dhar in present-day Madhya Pradesh, India).

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Mill (grinding)

A mill is a device that breaks solid materials into smaller pieces by grinding, crushing, or cutting.

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Miller

A miller is a person who operates a mill, a machine to grind a cereal crop to make flour.

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Minuartia handelii

Minuartia handelii or Handei-Maceti's sandwort, is a perennial plant of the family Caryophyllaceae.

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Mishaguji

, also known as Mishaguchi or Mishakuji among other variants (see below), is a collective term for kami worshipped mainly in Nagano Prefecture (historical Shinano Province) since ancient times, with possible traces of their worship found elsewhere in east and central Japan.

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Mofongo

Mofongo is a Puerto Rican dish with fried plantains as its main ingredient.

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Molcajete

A molcajete (Mexican Spanish, from Nahuatl molcaxitl) is a stone tool, the traditional Mexican version of the mortar and pestle, similar to the South American batan, used for grinding various food product.

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Momordica charantia

Momordica charantia, known as bitter melon, bitter gourd, bitter squash, or balsam-pear, is a tropical and subtropical vine of the family Cucurbitaceae, widely grown in Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean for its edible fruit.

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Monjolo

A Monjolo is a primitive hydraulic machine, used for the processing and grinding of grains.

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Moon rabbit

The moon rabbit in folklore is a rabbit that lives on the Moon, based on pareidolia that identifies the markings of the Moon as a rabbit.

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Mor lam

Mor lam (Thai/Isan: หมอลำ) is a traditional Lao form of song in Laos and Isan.

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Moretum

Moretum is a type of herb cheese spread that the Ancient Romans ate with bread.

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Mortadella

Mortadella is a large Italian sausage or luncheon meat (salume) made of finely hashed or ground, heat-cured pork, which incorporates at least 15% small cubes of pork fat (principally the hard fat from the neck of the pig).

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Mortar

Mortar may refer to.

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Mortar (masonry)

Mortar is a workable paste used to bind building blocks such as stones, bricks, and concrete masonry units together, fill and seal the irregular gaps between them, and sometimes add decorative colors or patterns in masonry walls.

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Mortar (weapon)

A mortar is usually a simple, lightweight, man portable, muzzle-loaded weapon, consisting of a smooth-bore metal tube fixed to a base plate (to absorb recoil) with a lightweight bipod mount.

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Mortarium

A mortarium (pl. "mortaria") was one of a class of Ancient Roman pottery kitchen vessels.

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Mortis (food)

A mortis, also spelt mortrose, mortress, mortrews, or mortruys, was a sweet pâté of a meat such as chicken or fish, mixed with ground almonds, made in Medieval, Tudor and Elizabethan era England.

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Muchka

Muchka (Quechua for mortar, also spelled Muchca) is a mountain in the Cordillera Central in the Andes of Peru which reaches a height of approximately.

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Muddler

A muddler is a bartender's tool, used like a pestle to mash—or muddle—fruits, herbs and spices in the bottom of a glass to release their flavor.

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Munhata

Munhata (Horvat Minha or Khirbet Munhata) is an archaeological site south of Lake Tiberias, Israel on the north bank and near the outlet of Nahal Tavor (Tabor Stream) on a terrace below sea level.

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Museum Tani Jawa Indonesia

The Javanese Farmers Museum (Indonesian Museum Tani Jawa Indonesia) is a small museum located in the tourist village of Candran, in Kebon Agung, Bantul Regency, Yogyakarta.

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Music of Chad

Chad is an ethnically diverse Central African country in Africa.

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Music of Taiwan

The music of Taiwan reflects the diverse culture of Taiwanese people.

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Nam chim

Nam chim or nam jim (น้ำจิ้ม) is Thai for "dipping sauce".

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Nam phrik

Nam phrik (น้ำพริก) is a type of spicy, chili-based, hot sauce typical of Thai cuisine.

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National Monument (Indonesia)

The National Monument (Monumen Nasional, abbreviated Monas) is a 132 m (433 ft) tower in the centre of Merdeka Square, Central Jakarta, symbolizing the fight for Indonesia.

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Native American cuisine

Native American cuisine includes all food practices of the indigenous peoples of the Americas.

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Natufian culture

The Epipaleolithic Natufian culture existed from around 12,500 to 9,500 BC in the Levant, a region in the Eastern Mediterranean.

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Ndut initiation rite

The Ndut is a rite of passage as well as a religious education commanded by Serer religion that every Serer (an ethnic group found in Senegal, the Gambia and Mauritania) must go through once in their lifetime.

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Nea Nikomedeia

Nea Nikomedeia (Νέα Νικομήδεια) is a village approximately to the northeast of Veria in Imathia, in the region of Central Macedonia in northern Greece.

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Nemrik 9

Nemrik 9 is an early Neolithic archeological site in the Dohuk Governorate in the north of modern-day Iraq.

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Nias people

Nias people are an ethnic group native to Nias, an island off the west coast of North Sumatra, Indonesia.

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Nirengi Castle

was a Japanese castle in what is now the city of Toyohashi, Aichi Prefecture, during the Sengoku period.

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Njangsa

The term Njangsa refers to an oily seeds tree, Ricinodendron heudelotii, found in tropical West Africa.

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Njoro River Cave

Njoro River Cave is an archaeological site on the Mau Escarpment, Kenya, that was first excavated in 1938 by Mary Leakey and her husband Louis Leakey.

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Nodena Phase

The Nodena Phase is an archaeological phase in eastern Arkansas and southeastern Missouri of the Late Mississippian culture which dates from about 1400–1650 CE.

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Nujol

Nujol is a brand of mineral oil by Plough Inc., cas number 8012-95-1, and density 0.838 g/mL at 25 °C, used in infrared spectroscopy.

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Oilseed press

An oilseed press is a machine that lies at the center of vegetable oil extraction.

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Onake Obavva

Onake Obavva (18th Century) (Kannada: ಓಬವ್ವ) was a woman who fought the forces of Hyder Ali single-handedly with a pestle (Onake) in the kingdom of Chitradurga of Karnataka, India.

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Orchard House

Orchard House is a historic house museum in Concord, Massachusetts, US.

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Ousdale Broch

Ousdale Broch is an Iron Age broch located near the village of Helmsdale in Caithness, Scotland.

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Outline of alchemy

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to alchemy: Alchemy – A philosophical tradition recognized as protoscience, that includes the application of Hermetic principles, and practices related to mythology, religion, and spirituality.

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Paçoca

Paçoca is a candy made out of ground peanuts, sugar and salt.

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Pac-Kit First Aid Kits

Pac-Kit Safety Equipment Company has roots dating back to 1880 when Silas Burroughs, a former representative of the US pharmaceutical company John Wyeth & Co, and his business associate Henry Wellcome formed Burroughs Wellcome & Co in the UK.

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Peanut sauce

Peanut sauce, satay sauce, bumbu kacang, sambal kacang, or pecel is a sauce made from ground roasted or fried peanuts, widely used in cuisines worldwide.

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Pestel

Pestel may refer to.

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Pesto

Pesto, sometimes spelled as pasto or to refer to the original dish pesto alla genovese, is a sauce originating in Genoa, the capital city of Liguria, Italy.

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Pharmacy

Pharmacy is the science and technique of preparing and dispensing drugs.

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Picada

For the Colombian cuisine dish see Picada (Colombian cuisine) Picada is one of the characteristic sauces and culinary techniques essential to Spanish cuisine.

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Pictures at an Exhibition

Pictures at an Exhibition (Картинки с выставки – Воспоминание о Викторе Гартмане, Kartínki s výstavki – Vospominániye o Víktore Gártmane, "Pictures from an Exhibition – A Remembrance of Viktor Hartmann"; Tableaux d'une exposition) is a suite of ten pieces (plus a recurring, varied Promenade) composed for the piano by Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky in 1874.

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Pinipig

Pinipig are immature grains of glutinous rice pounded until flat before being toasted.

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Pinoy Big Brother (season 2)

The second season and fourth series overall of Pinoy Big Brother aired on ABS-CBN.

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Pinoy Big Brother: Unlimited events

Pinoy Big Brother: Unlimited was a Philippine reality show based on the Big Brother franchise.

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Piracy in the Atlantic World

Piracy was a phenomenon that was not limited to the Caribbean region.

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Pistou

Pistou (Provençal: pisto (classical) or pistou (Mistralian)), or pistou sauce, is a Provençal cold sauce made from cloves of garlic, fresh basil, and olive oil.

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Poi (food)

Poi is primarily the traditional staple food in native cuisine of Hawaii, made from the underground plant stem or corm of the taro plant (known in Hawaiian as kalo).

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Poldark Mine

Poldark Mine is a museum and tin mine that can be explored near the town of Helston in Cornwall, UK.

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Polemos

In Greek mythology, Polemos (Πόλεμος; "war") was a Daemon; a divine personification or embodiment of war.

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Pomo

The Pomo are an indigenous people of California.

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Poppy seed

Poppy seed is an oilseed obtained from the poppy (Papaver somniferum).

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Porra antequerana

Porra antequerana is a part of the gazpacho family of soups originating in Andalusia, in southern Spain.

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Potato masher

A potato masher, bean masher, pea masher or crusher is a food preparation utensil used to crush soft food for such dishes as mashed potatoes, Retrieved November 2016 apple sauce or refried beans.

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Powdered sugar

Powdered sugar, also called confectioners' sugar, icing sugar, and icing cake, is a finely ground sugar produced by milling granulated sugar into a powdered state.

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Prehistory of Pampanga

Pampanga lies within the Central Plain region and has a total land area of 2,180.70 square kilometers.

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Punjabi cuisine

Punjabi cuisine is associated with food from the Punjab region of India and Pakistan.

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Purbeck Marble

Purbeck Marble is a fossiliferous limestone found in the Isle of Purbeck, a peninsula in south-east Dorset, England.

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Quelepa

Quelepa is an important archaeological site located in eastern El Salvador.

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Qulluta (Huancavelica)

Qulluta (Quechua for mortar, also spelled Jollota) is a mountain in the Andes of Peru high.

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Qulluta (Recuay)

Qulluta (Quechua for mortar, also spelled Collota) is a mountain in the Cordillera Negra in the Andes of Peru which reaches a height of approximately.

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Qulluta (Sihuas)

Qulluta (Quechua for mortar, also spelled Collota) is a mountain in the northern extensions of the Cordillera Blanca in the Andes of Peru which reaches a height of approximately.

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Radical 134

Radical 134 meaning "mortar" or "joint" is 1 of 29 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals total) composed of 6 strokes.

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Radical 51

Radical 51 (Unicode U+5E72, pinyin gān meaning "oppose" or "dried") is one of 31 out of the total 214 Kangxi radicals written with three strokes.

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Raine Baljak

Raine Baljak (born as Gabriele Raine Abellana Baljak on December 12, 1996) is a professional model, host, beauty and fitness consultant, columnist and YouTube.

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Rajahnate of Maynila

In early Philippine history, the Tagalog Bayan ("country" or "polity") of Maynila (Bayan ng Maynila; Baybayin:; Balen ning Maynila) was a major trade hub located on the southern part of the Pasig River delta,Abinales, Patricio N. and Donna J. Amoroso, State and Society in the Philippines.

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Rajucollota

Rajucollota (possibly from Quechua rahu snow, ice, mountain with snow, qulluta, kalluta mortar), Suerococha (possibly from Quechua suyru very long dress tracked after when worn, qucha lake), named after the nearby lake, or Diablo Mudo (Spanish for "dumb devil") is a mountain in the west of the Huayhuash mountain range in the Andes of Peru, about high.

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Red curry

Red curry (แกงเผ็ด;,, lit: spicy soup) is a popular Thai dish consisting of red curry paste cooked in coconut milk with meat added, such as chicken, beef, pork, duck or shrimp, or vegetarian protein source such as tofu.

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Resorcinarene

A resorcinarene (also resorcarene or calixresorcinarene) is a macrocycle, or a cyclic oligomer, based on the condensation of resorcinol (1,3-dihydroxybenzene) and an aldehyde.

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Rice huller

A rice huller or rice husker is an agricultural machine used to automate the process of removing the chaff (the outer husks) of grains of rice.

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Rice hulls

Rice hulls (or rice husks) are the hard protecting coverings of grains of rice.

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Rice pounder

A rice pounder is an agricultural tool, a simple machine that is commonly used in Southeast Asia to dehull rice or to turn rice into rice flour.

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Riddle Ranch

The Riddle Brothers Ranch is a pioneer ranch complex located in the in Harney County in eastern Oregon, United States.

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Robert Spear Hudson

Robert Spear Hudson (6 December 1812 – 6 August 1884) was an English businessman who popularised dry soap powder.

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Robert Steinberg (chocolate maker)

Robert Wayne Steinberg (March 4, 1947 – September 17, 2008) was an American physician who co-founded Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker in 1996 with John Scharffenberger, his friend and former patient.

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Rojak

Rojak (Malay spelling) or Rujak (Indonesian spelling) is a traditional fruit and vegetable salad dish commonly found in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.

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Royal Pharmaceutical Society

The Royal Pharmaceutical Society (RPharmS or RPS) is the body responsible for the leadership and support of the pharmacy profession within England, Scotland and Wales.

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Russell Cave National Monument

The Russell Cave National Monument is a U.S. National Monument in northeastern Alabama, United States, close to the town of Bridgeport.

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Salsa (sauce)

Salsa is any one of several sauces typical of Mexican cuisine, also known as salsa fresca, hot salsa or salsa picante, particularly those used as dips.

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Sambal

Sambal is a hot sauce or paste typically made from a mixture of a variety of chili peppers with secondary ingredients such as shrimp paste, fish sauce, garlic, ginger, shallot, scallion, palm sugar, lime juice, and rice vinegar or other vinegars.

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Santiago Creek

Santiago Creek is a major watercourse in Orange County in the U.S. state of California.

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Savanna Pastoral Neolithic

The Savanna Pastoral Neolithic or SPN (formerly known as the Stone Bowl Culture) is a collection of ancient societies that appeared in the Rift Valley of East Africa and surrounding areas during a time period known as the Pastoral Neolithic.

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Scallion

Scallions (green onion, spring onion and salad onion) are vegetables of various Allium onion species.

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Scharffen Berger Chocolate Maker

Scharffen Berger Chocolate is a line of chocolate produced by Artisan Confections Company, a subsidiary of The Hershey Company.

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Science and technology of the Song dynasty

The Song dynasty (960–1279 CE) provided some of the most significant technological advances in Chinese history, many of which came from talented statesmen drafted by the government through imperial examinations.

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Scouting in Hawaii

Scouting in Hawaii began in the 1900s.

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Sedentism

In cultural anthropology, sedentism (sometimes called sedentariness; compare sedentarism) is the practice of living in one place for a long time.

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Serer maternal clans

Serer maternal clans or Serer matriclans (Serer: Tim or Tiim; Ndut: Ciiɗim) are the maternal clans of the Serer people of Senegal, the Gambia and Mauritania.

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Shenantaha Creek Park

Shenantaha Creek Park is located in the town of Malta, in Saratoga County, New York.

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Shir (Neolithic site)

Shir (German transcription according to the German Oriental Society: Šīr/Arabic: شير) is a Late Neolithic site in western Syria, located 12 km northwest of Hama, capital of the province by the same name. The settlement of Shir is situated upon a 30-m high terrace formation above the Nahr as-Sārūt, a tributary of the Orontes River (Arabic: Nahr al-‛Asi).

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Show globe

A show globe is a glass vessel of various shapes and sizes containing a colorful liquid.

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Siamese twins (linguistics)

Siamese twins (also irreversible binomials, binomials, binomial pairs, nonreversible word pairs, or freezes) in the context of the English language refer to a pair or group of words used together as an idiomatic expression or collocation, usually conjoined by the words and or or.

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Sierra Leonean cuisine

This article documents the cuisine of Sierra Leone, a country in West Africa.

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Sir Francis Buller, 1st Baronet

Sir Francis Buller, 1st Baronet (17 March 1746 – 5 June 1800) of Churston Court in the parish of Churston Ferrers, of nearby Lupton in the parish of Brixham, and of Prince Hall on Dartmoor, all in Devon, was an English judge.

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Sir Robert Grierson, 1st Baronet

Sir Robert Grierson, 1st Baronet, of Lag (1655/56 – 31 December 1733) was a Scottish baronet.

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Snuff (tobacco)

Snuff is a smokeless tobacco made from ground or pulverised tobacco leaves.

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Soap

Soap is the term for a salt of a fatty acid or for a variety of cleansing and lubricating products produced from such a substance.

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Society and culture of the Han dynasty

The Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE) was a period of Ancient China divided into the Western Han (206 BCE – 9 CE) and Eastern Han (25–220 CE) periods, when the capital cities were located at Chang'an and Luoyang, respectively.

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Solid-state reaction route

The solid-state reaction route is the most widely used method for the preparation of polycrystalline solids from a mixture of solid starting materials.

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Spice

A spice is a seed, fruit, root, bark, or other plant substance primarily used for flavoring, coloring or preserving food.

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St Michael's Church, Michaelchurch

St Michael's Church is a redundant Anglican church in Michaelchurch, Herefordshire, England.

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Stone and muller

A stone and muller is a hand-operated tool used for mixing and grinding paint.

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Sub-Saharan African music traditions

Sub-Saharan African music traditions exhibit so many common features that they may in some respects be thought of as constituting a single musical system.

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Suribachi

Suribachi (すり鉢 or 擂鉢, literally: grinding-bowl) and surikogi (すりこぎ or 擂粉木, literally: grind-powder-wood) are a Japanese mortar and pestle.

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Sutton County, Texas

Sutton County is a county located on the Edwards Plateau in the U.S. state of Texas.

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Tamarind

Tamarind (Tamarindus indica) is a leguminous tree in the family Fabaceae indigenous to tropical Africa.

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Tamis

A tamis (pronounced "tammy", also known as a drum sieve, or chalni in Indian cooking) is a kitchen utensil, shaped somewhat like a snare drum, that acts as a strainer, grater, or food mill.

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Taramasalata

Taramasalata or taramosalata (ταραμοσαλάτα, from taramas, from tarama 'fish roe' and salata, from insalata "salad") is a Greek meze made from tarama, the salted and cured roe of the cod, carp, or grey mullet (bottarga) mixed with olive oil, lemon juice, and a starchy base of bread or potatoes, or sometimes almonds.

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Technology

Technology ("science of craft", from Greek τέχνη, techne, "art, skill, cunning of hand"; and -λογία, -logia) is first robustly defined by Jacob Bigelow in 1829 as: "...principles, processes, and nomenclatures of the more conspicuous arts, particularly those which involve applications of science, and which may be considered useful, by promoting the benefit of society, together with the emolument of those who pursue them".

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Thai cuisine

Thai cuisine (อาหารไทย) is the national cuisine of Thailand.

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Thai curry

Thai curry refers both to dishes in Thai cuisine that are made with various types of curry paste and to the pastes themselves.

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Thai salads

Salads that are internationally known as Thai salads, with a few exceptions, fall into four main methods of preparation.

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The Amazing Race 13

The Amazing Race 13 is the thirteenth installment of the American reality television show The Amazing Race.

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The Amazing Race Canada 3

The third season of The Amazing Race Canada is a reality game show based on the American series The Amazing Race.

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The Brothers Karamazov

The Brothers Karamazov (Бра́тья Карама́зовы, Brat'ya Karamazovy), also translated as The Karamazov Brothers, is the final novel by the Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky.

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The Knight of the Burning Pestle

The Knight of the Burning Pestle is a play in five acts by Francis Beaumont, first performed at Blackfriars Theatre in 1607 and first published in a quarto in 1613.

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The Owl Drug Company

The Owl Drug Company was an American drugstore retailer with its headquarters in San Francisco.

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The Sorcerer's Apprentice

"The Sorcerer's Apprentice" ("Der Zauberlehrling") is a poem by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe written in 1797.

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Three hares

The three hares (or three rabbits) is a circular motif or meme appearing in sacred sites from the Middle and Far East to the churches of Devon, England (as the "Tinners' Rabbits"), and historical synagogues in Europe.

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Tiangong Kaiwu

The Tiangong Kaiwu (天工開物), or The Exploitation of the Works of Nature was a Chinese encyclopedia compiled by Song Yingxing.

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Time Team (series 9)

This is a list of Time Team episodes from series 9.

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Timeline of agriculture and food technology

No description.

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Timeline of historic inventions

The timeline of historic inventions is a chronological list of particularly important or significant technological inventions and the people who created the inventions.

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Tondo (historical polity)

In early Philippine history, the Tagalog settlement at Tondo (Baybayin) was a major trade hub located on the northern part of the Pasig River delta, on Luzon island.

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Topanga, California

Topanga is a census-designated place (CDP) in western Los Angeles County, California, United States.

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Toum

Toum or Toumya (Levantine Arabic: ْتُوم "garlic") is a garlic sauce common to the Levant.

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Trip hammer

Saint-Hubert (Belgium). A trip hammer, also known as a tilt hammer or helve hammer, is a massive powered hammer used in.

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Tteok

Tteok (떡) is a class of Korean rice cakes made with steamed flour made of various grains, including glutinous or non-glutinous rice.

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Umm Jamil

Umm Jamil bint Harb (أم جميل بنت حرب), also known as Arwā, was an aunt of the Islamic prophet Muhammad who is mentioned in the Quran.

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Vasilisa the Beautiful

Vasilisa (Василиса Прекрасная) is a Russian fairy tale collected by Alexander Afanasyev in Narodnye russkie skazki.

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Vegetable oil

Vegetable oils, or vegetable fats, are fats extracted from seeds, or less often, from other parts of fruits.

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Vietnamese cuisine

Vietnamese cuisine encompasses the foods and beverages of Vietnam, and features a combination of five fundamental tastes (Vietnamese: ngũ vị) in the overall meal.

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Viminacium

Viminacium (VIMINACIUM) or Viminatium was a major city (provincial capital) and military camp of the Roman province of Moesia (today's Serbia), and the capital of Moesia Superior (hence once Metropolitan archbishopric, now a Latin titular see).

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Virginia Dare

Virginia Dare (born August 18, 1587, date of death unknown) was the first English child born in a New World English overseas possession, and was named after the territory of Virginia, her birthplace.

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Wei Baoheng

Wei Baoheng (韋保衡) (died 873), courtesy name Yunyong (蘊用), was an official of the Chinese dynasty Tang dynasty.

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Wiiwish

Wiiwish, also known as acorn mush, was one of the main food staples of California Indians.

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Worshipful Company of Wax Chandlers

The Worshipful Company of Wax Chandlers is one of the oldest livery companies of the City of London, with one of the smallest memberships (about 120 members).

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Yagen

is a crushing tool used in phytotherapy in Japan.

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Zeita, Tulkarm

Zeita (زيتا) is a Palestinian town in the Tulkarm Governorate in the eastern West Bank, located 11 kilometers South-east of Tulkarm.

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References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mortar_and_pestle

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