Search Results - Sin, I. S.~
-
1
<i>The Merchant of Venice</i> and the demise of hospitality
Published 2021“…The flesh bond and the wealthy Lady of Belmont appear in one of the probable sources for Shakespeare's play: Giovanni Fiorentino’s medieval Italian novella Il Pecorone. …”
Get full text
Default Article -
2
Spenser's nationalistic images of beauty: the ideal and the other in relation to Protestant England and Catholic Ireland in The Faerie Queene Book 1
Published 1998“…In Book 1 of The Faerie Queene images of beauty are used by Spenser to endorse the status of Elizabeth I as head of the Protestant church and grotesque images are used to demonize the enemies of that church, and of Elizabeth. …”
Get full text
Default Article -
3
Selection of touch gestures for children’s applications: repeated experiment to increase reliability
Published 2014Get full text
Default Article -
4
-
5
-
6
-
7
Age-group differences in speech identification despite matched audiometrically normal hearing: contributions from auditory temporal processing and cognition
Published 2015“…Twenty-one older normal-hearing (ONH; 60-79 years) participants with bilateral audiometric thresholds = 20 dB HL at 0.125-6 kHz were matched to nine young (YNH; 18-27 years) participants in terms of mean audiograms, years of education, and performance IQ. …”
Get full text
Default Article -
8
-
9
"In order to spirituall good the body often afflicted": bodily affliction in Lady Mary Carey's conversion narrative (1649-57)
Published 2013“…In the manuscript conversion narrative of the seventeenth century noblewoman Lady Mary Carey, entitled ‘A Dialogue betwixt the Soul, and the Body’ (1649), she noted in one of the margins that ‘in order to spirituall good[,] the body often afflicted’.1 This article will go on to consider the importance of bodily affliction in Carey’s religious experiences, particularly how she interpreted it as integral to her spiritual health.…”
Get full text
Default Article -
10
Sorption of Ni And Eu in a multi-element system
Published 2011“…The effect on sorption in a multi-element system was expressed by the ratio of the sorption capacity of one metal ions in the presence of the other metal ions Qmix to the sorption capacity of same metal ions when it is present alone in solution Qsing. s in 1 m ix g Q Q > , the sorption is promoted by the presence of other metal ions, whereas if: sin 1 mix g Q Q = , there appears to be no observable effect, and if: s in 1 m ix g Q Q < , it would indicate that sorption is suppressed by the presence of other metal ions in solution. …”
Get full text
Default Article -
11