Irula riddles

1979 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 361-368
Author(s):  
K. V. Zvelebil

The Irulas 2 are a tribal complex of four tribes inhabiting the lower slopes of the northern, eastern and southern parts of the Nilgiri mountains of South India. They speak a tribal language of their own—the ërla na:ya—in four dialects; it belongs, historically, to the Tamil-Malayalam group of South Dravidian.3 Two of the tribes intermarry, so that the Irula complex forms a tribal group of three endogamous units. Linguistically and from the point of social organization, the Irula situation may be thus symbolized asThe creativity of Irula-speaking tribes finds expression mostly in music,4 dance, and above all, in verbal art.5 They have a wealth of oral traditions characteristic for most pre-literary cultures; though modernization—thus far mostly in the socio-economic sphere—has had its impact on the Irula-speaking tribes, the absolute majority of the Irulas are still illiterate. Hence storytelling, oral rendering of myths, legends and genealogies, and other forms of verbal art are still very much alive.

Man ◽  
1946 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 98
Author(s):  
M. N. Srinivas

1995 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 315-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marilyn R. Whalen

ABSTRACTChildren's play activities are widely perceived as developing from primitive to increasingly complex forms of social organization, as children mature and acquire interactional competency. Research following this traditional, developmentally oriented approach postulates that sports and games with rules are the most advanced and complex form of play activity; activities involving fantasy and pretend-play are viewed in comparison as considerably less complex. This article argues that fantasy play encounters exhibit complex features in their own right, and that long-held distinctions between higher-order games and fantasy play are conceptually overdrawn. The argument is grounded in a conversation analytic study of the play activities of a cross-sex, mixed-age neighborhood play group. This analysis focuses on the endogenous social organization of a fantasy play encounter. (Conversation analysis, children's play, socialization, social psychology)


1973 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 599-602
Author(s):  
D. S. Goel ◽  
B. N. Sahney

Let be a given infinite series and {sn} the sequence of its partial sums. Let {pn} be a sequence of constants, real or complex, and let us write(1.1)If(1.2)as n→∞, we say that the series is summable by the Nörlund method (N,pn) to σ. The series is said to be absolutely summable (N,pn) or summable |N,pn| if σn is of bounded variation, i.e.,(1.3)


2015 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 1037-1066 ◽  
Author(s):  
IDRIS ASSANI ◽  
DAVID DUNCAN ◽  
RYO MOORE

In this paper we extend Bourgain’s double recurrence result to the Wiener–Wintner averages. Let $(X,{\mathcal{F}},{\it\mu},T)$ be a standard ergodic system. We will show that for any $f_{1},f_{2}\in L^{\infty }(X)$, the double recurrence Wiener–Wintner average $$\begin{eqnarray}\frac{1}{N}\mathop{\sum }_{n=1}^{N}f_{1}(T^{an}x)f_{2}(T^{bn}x)e^{2{\it\pi}int}\end{eqnarray}$$ converges off a single null set of $X$ independent of $t$ as $N\rightarrow \infty$. Furthermore, we will show a uniform Wiener–Wintner double recurrence result: if either $f_{1}$ or $f_{2}$ belongs to the orthogonal complement of the Conze–Lesigne factor, then there exists a set of full measure such that the supremum on $t$ of the absolute value of the averages above converges to $0$.


1973 ◽  
Vol 54 ◽  
pp. 153-155
Author(s):  
H. Kienle ◽  
D. Labs

The scale of effective temperatures Teff is based on observed absolute radiation temperatures Tr, which are defined by Planck's radiation law where TAu designs the absolute temperature of the gold point. A relative scale of radiation temperatures can be derived from spectrophotometric comparisons with a standard star. The absolute calibration of the standard star (α Lyr or Sun) demands a careful comparison with a standard radiation source of well known spectral energy distribution (Black Body or Synchrotron). With ground-based observations atmospheric extinction is to be taken into account; with extraterrestrial observations detectors may be used which are absolutely calibrated in a radiation laboratory under space conditions.


1906 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 227-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. W. Taylor

The absolute viscosity calculated from the formula(where p = the pressure, t the time, r the radius, l the length of capillary, and v the volume of liquid), which connects the viscosity of a liquid with the rate of flow through a long capillary tube, is not often made use of, mainly on account of the difficulty of accurately determining some of the constants (r in particular).


1989 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 290-303
Author(s):  
Kamil V. Zvelebil

The following contribution is based on several assumptions: First, it is assumed that the oral traditions of verbal art, whether “fixed” in writing/print or not, belong legitimately to the bulk of a national literature; second, it is assumed that such oral traditions have been grossly neglected, misunderstood and/or misinterpreted; third, when speaking of a “tradition”, what I have in mind is not an authoritative dogmatism based on set doctrines, but a fountain-source from which stems a continuous stream of thought and culture, irrespective of whether it is orally transmitted, or fixed in literary texts.


1928 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 355-356 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Mahdihassan

Caterpillars of the moth Holcocera pulverea, Meyr., along with those of Eublemma amabilis, Moore, do great damage to lac cultivation by feeding upon the living insects. Misra* and Imms & Chatterjee† have pointed out that H. pulverea may be found in even greater numbers than E. amabilis, though the predacious nature of the latter is more generally recognised. I have been able to confirm this observation with North Indian species of lac insects growing on Butea frondosa and Schleichera trijuga. However, in South India the wild species of lac, Lakshadia communis, at least in Mysore, is entirely free from the attack of H. pulverea, while Lakshadia mysorensis, the species commercially cultivated on Shorea talura, is never attacked by H. pulverea to the same extent that it is by Eublemma amabilis. With L. mysorensis this is partly due to H. pulverea being heavily parasitised. In the pupal stage this moth is attacked by the Chalcid, Eurytoma pallidiscapus, Cam. Imms & Chatterjee mention that only four examples of this parasite were reared by them during the entire course of their study, indicating its rare association with North Indian species of lac insects. In Mysore it is far from being scarce, which has enabled its life-history to be traced as a pupal parasite of H. pulverea. Fig. 1, a, shows a pupa of this moth from which a female, Eurytoma pallidiscapus, was reared on 14th November 1922.


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