classes ::: Verb,
children :::
branches ::: Applause, because, Confuse, greenhouse, house, Lighthouse, mouse care, refuse, Tiny house, use

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object:use
word class:Verb
verb-noun
noun-verb
use time
time use
drug use

see also :::

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now begins generated list of local instances, definitions, quotes, instances in chapters, wordnet info if available and instances among weblinks


OBJECT INSTANCES [0] - TOPICS - AUTHORS - BOOKS - CHAPTERS - CLASSES - SEE ALSO - SIMILAR TITLES

TOPICS
SEE ALSO


AUTH

BOOKS
A_Brief_History_of_Everything
Advanced_Dungeons_and_Dragons_2E
A_Garden_of_Pomegranates_-_An_Outline_of_the_Qabalah
A_Treatise_on_Cosmic_Fire
Big_Mind,_Big_Heart
Blazing_the_Trail_from_Infancy_to_Enlightenment
books_(quotes)
City_of_God
Collected_Fictions
Collected_Poems
Concentration_(book)
Dark_Night_of_the_Soul
DND_DM_Guide_5E
Enchiridion_text
Epigrams_from_Savitri
Evolution_II
Faust
Full_Circle
General_Principles_of_Kabbalah
Heart_of_Matter
Hymn_of_the_Universe
Infinite_Library
Initiation_Into_Hermetics
Journey_to_the_Lord_of_Power_-_A_Sufi_Manual_on_Retreat
Know_Yourself
Labyrinths
Let_Me_Explain
Letters_on_Occult_Meditation
Letters_On_Yoga
Letters_On_Yoga_I
Letters_On_Yoga_III
Letters_On_Yoga_IV
Liber_157_-_The_Tao_Teh_King
Life_without_Death
Manual_of_Zen_Buddhism
Meditation__The_First_and_Last_Freedom
Modern_Man_in_Search_of_a_Soul
More_Answers_From_The_Mother
My_Burning_Heart
Mysterium_Coniunctionis
Mysticism_and_Logic
Nausea
On_Interpretation
On_the_Way_to_Supermanhood
On_Thoughts_And_Aphorisms
Patanjali_Yoga_Sutras
Plotinus_-_Complete_Works_Vol_01
Plotinus_-_Complete_Works_Vol_02
Plotinus_-_Complete_Works_Vol_03
Plotinus_-_Complete_Works_Vol_04
Poetics
Practice_And_All_Is_Coming__Abuse,_Cult_Dynamics,_And_Healing_In_Yoga_And_Beyond
Process_and_Reality
Questions_And_Answers_1929-1931
Questions_And_Answers_1950-1951
Questions_And_Answers_1953
Questions_And_Answers_1954
Questions_And_Answers_1955
Questions_And_Answers_1957-1958
Raja-Yoga
Savitri
Sayings_of_Sri_Ramakrishna_(toc)
Self_Knowledge
Society
Spiral_Dynamics
Tablets_of_Baha_u_llah
The_Archetypes_and_the_Collective_Unconscious
The_Bible
the_Book
the_Book_of_God
The_Book_of_Lies
The_Book_of_Secrets__Keys_to_Love_and_Meditation
the_Book_of_Wisdom2
The_Categories
The_Diamond_Sutra
The_Divine_Companion
The_Divine_Milieu
The_Divinization_of_Matter__Lurianic_Kabbalah,_Physics,_and_the_Supramental_Transformation
The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh
The_Essential_Songs_of_Milarepa
The_Externalization_of_the_Hierarchy
The_Future_of_Man
The_Golden_Bough
The_Gospel_of_Sri_Ramakrishna
The_Heros_Journey
The_Human_Use_of_Human_Beings
The_Imitation_of_Christ
The_Interior_Castle_or_The_Mansions
The_Interpretation_of_Dreams
The_Key_to_the_True_Kabbalah
The_Ladder_of_Divine_Ascent
The_Lotus_Sutra
The_Narcissistic_Abuse_Recovery_Bible__Spiritual_Recovery_from_Narcissistic_and_Emotional_Abuse
The_Odyssey
The_Perennial_Philosophy
The_Practice_of_Psycho_therapy
The_Prophet
The_Republic
The_Seals_of_Wisdom
The_Secret_Doctrine
The_Study_and_Practice_of_Yoga
The_Tarot_of_Paul_Christian
The_Tibetan_Yogas_of_Dream_and_Sleep
The_Use_and_Abuse_of_History
The_Way_of_Perfection
The_Wit_and_Wisdom_of_Alfred_North_Whitehead
The_World_as_Will_and_Idea
The_Yoga_Sutras
Thought_Power
Three_Books_on_Occult_Philosophy
Toward_the_Future
Twilight_of_the_Idols
Vishnu_Purana
Walden,_and_On_The_Duty_Of_Civil_Disobedience
Words_Of_The_Mother_III

IN CHAPTERS TITLE
03.03_-_The_House_of_the_Spirit_and_the_New_Creation
1.03_-_The_House_Of_The_Lord
1.04_-_ADVICE_TO_HOUSEHOLDERS
1.056_-_Lack_of_Knowledge_is_the_Cause_of_Suffering
1.060_-_Tracing_the_Ultimate_Cause_of_Any_Experience
1.07_-_On_mourning_which_causes_joy.
1.08_-_Karma,_the_Law_of_Cause_and_Effect
1.09_-_Concentration_-_Its_Spiritual_Uses
1.10_-_THE_NEIGHBORS_HOUSE
1.20_-_On_bodily_vigil_and_how_to_use_it_to_attain_spiritual_vigil_and_how_to_practise_it.
1.20_-_RULES_FOR_HOUSEHOLDERS_AND_MONKS
1.23_-_FESTIVAL_AT_SURENDRAS_HOUSE
1.26_-_FESTIVAL_AT_ADHARS_HOUSE
1929-04-14_-_Dangers_of_Yoga_-_Two_paths,_tapasya_and_surrender_-_Impulses,_desires_and_Yoga_-_Difficulties_-_Unification_around_the_psychic_being_-_Ambition,_undoing_of_many_Yogis_-_Powers,_misuse_and_right_use_of_-_How_to_recognise_the_Divine_Will_-_Accept_things_that_come_from_Divine_-_Vital_devotion_-_Need_of_strong_body_and_nerves_-_Inner_being,_invariable
1951-04-02_-_Causes_of_accidents_-_Little_entities,_helpful_or_mischievous-_incidents
1951-04-07_-_Origin_of_Evil_-_Misery-_its_cause
1951-05-03_-_Money_and_its_use_for_the_divine_work_-_problems_-_Mastery_over_desire-_individual_and_collective_change
1954-07-14_-_The_Divine_and_the_Shakti_-_Personal_effort_-_Speaking_and_thinking_-_Doubt_-_Self-giving,_consecration_and_surrender_-_Mothers_use_of_flowers_-_Ornaments_and_protection
1954-07-21_-_Mistakes_-_Success_-_Asuras_-_Mental_arrogance_-_Difficulty_turned_into_opportunity_-_Mothers_use_of_flowers_-_Conversion_of_men_governed_by_adverse_forces
1955-02-16_-_Losing_something_given_by_Mother_-_Using_things_well_-_Sadhak_collecting_soap-pieces_-_What_things_are_truly_indispensable_-_Natures_harmonious_arrangement_-_Riches_a_curse,_philanthropy_-_Misuse_of_things_creates_misery
1956-06-13_-_Effects_of_the_Supramental_action_-_Education_and_the_Supermind_-_Right_to_remain_ignorant_-_Concentration_of_mind_-_Reason,_not_supreme_capacity_-_Physical_education_and_studies_-_inner_discipline_-_True_usefulness_of_teachers
1957-06-19_-_Causes_of_illness_Fear_and_illness_-_Minds_working,_faith_and_illness
1958-09-17_-_Power_of_formulating_experience_-_Usefulness_of_mental_development
1.bsf_-_The_lanes_are_muddy_and_far_is_the_house
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dreams_in_the_Witch_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_in_the_Museum
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Picture_in_the_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shunned_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Strange_High_House_in_the_Mist
1.fs_-_To_The_Muse
1.fua_-_The_peacocks_excuse
1.hcyc_-_13_-_This_jewel_of_no_price_can_never_be_used_up_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_15_-_Some_may_slander,_some_may_abuse_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_30_-_To_live_in_nothingness_is_to_ignore_cause_and_effect_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hs_-_Naked_in_the_Bee-House
1.jr_-_Because_I_Cannot_Sleep
1.jr_-_I_Am_Only_The_House_Of_Your_Beloved
1.jr_-_The_Guest_House
1.jwvg_-_A_Plan_the_Muses_Entertained
1.jwvg_-_The_Muses_Mirror
1.jwvg_-_The_Muses_Son
1.kbr_-_Ive_burned_my_own_house_down
1.kbr_-_Ive_Burned_My_Own_House_Down
1.lovecraft_-_The_House
1.mb_-_Why_Mira_Cant_Come_Back_to_Her_Old_House
1.okym_-_40_-_You_know,_my_Friends,_how_long_since_in_my_House
1.pbs_-_On_A_Fete_At_Carlton_House_-_Fragment
1.rmpsd_-_Of_what_use_is_my_going_to_Kasi_any_more?
1.rwe_-_The_Titmouse
1.sdi_-_Have_no_doubts_because_of_trouble_nor_be_thou_discomfited
1.tr_-_At_Master_Do's_Country_House
1.wby_-_A_Prayer_On_Going_Into_My_House
1.wby_-_The_Lover_Asks_Forgiveness_Because_Of_His_Many_Moods
1.wby_-_Upon_A_House_Shaken_By_The_Land_Agitation
1.whitman_-_The_City_Dead-House
1.whitman_-_To_Thee,_Old_Cause!
1.whitman_-_When_I_Peruse_The_Conquerd_Fame
1.ww_-_2_-_Houses_and_rooms_are_full_of_perfumes,_the_shelves_are_crowded_with_perfumes
1.ww_-_Here_Pause-_The_Poet_Claims_At_Least_This_Praise
1.ww_-_The_Recluse_-_Book_First
1.ww_-_Written_With_A_Pencil_Upon_A_Stone_In_The_Wall_Of_The_House,_On_The_Island_At_Grasmere
2.13_-_THE_MASTER_AT_THE_HOUSES_OF_BALARM_AND_GIRISH
2.14_-_AT_RAMS_HOUSE
2.15_-_CAR_FESTIVAL_AT_BALARMS_HOUSE
2.16_-_VISIT_TO_NANDA_BOSES_HOUSE
3.02_-_The_Practice_Use_of_Dream-Analysis
31.09_-_The_Cause_of_Indias_Decline
7.5.61_-_Because_Thou_Art
The_House_of_Asterion

IN CHAPTERS CLASSNAME

IN CHAPTERS TEXT
00.00_-_Publishers_Note
00.00_-_Publishers_Note_B
0_0.01_-_Introduction
00.01_-_The_Approach_to_Mysticism
00.01_-_The_Mother_on_Savitri
00.02_-_Mystic_Symbolism
00.03_-_Upanishadic_Symbolism
00.04_-_The_Beautiful_in_the_Upanishads
00.05_-_A_Vedic_Conception_of_the_Poet
0.00a_-_Introduction
0.00a_-_Participants_in_the_Evening_Talks
000_-_Humans_in_Universe
0.00_-_INTRODUCTION
0.00_-_The_Book_of_Lies_Text
0.00_-_THE_GOSPEL_PREFACE
0.00_-_The_Wellspring_of_Reality
0.01f_-_FOREWARD
0.01_-_I_-_Sri_Aurobindos_personality,_his_outer_retirement_-_outside_contacts_after_1910_-_spiritual_personalities-_Vibhutis_and_Avatars_-__transformtion_of_human_personality
0.01_-_Letters_from_the_Mother_to_Her_Son
0.01_-_Life_and_Yoga
0.02_-_II_-_The_Home_of_the_Guru
0.02_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.02_-_The_Three_Steps_of_Nature
0.03_-_III_-_The_Evening_Sittings
0.03_-_Letters_to_My_little_smile
0.03_-_The_Threefold_Life
0.04_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.04_-_The_Systems_of_Yoga
0.05_-_Letters_to_a_Child
0.05_-_The_Synthesis_of_the_Systems
0.06_-_INTRODUCTION
0.06_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Sadhak
0.07_-_DARK_NIGHT_OF_THE_SOUL
0.07_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.08_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Captain
0.09_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Teacher
01.01_-_A_Yoga_of_the_Art_of_Life
01.01_-_Sri_Aurobindo_-_The_Age_of_Sri_Aurobindo
01.01_-_The_New_Humanity
01.01_-_The_One_Thing_Needful
01.01_-_The_Symbol_Dawn
01.02_-_Natures_Own_Yoga
01.02_-_Sri_Aurobindo_-_Ahana_and_Other_Poems
01.02_-_The_Creative_Soul
01.02_-_The_Issue
01.03_-_Mystic_Poetry
01.03_-_Rationalism
01.03_-_Sri_Aurobindo_and_his_School
01.03_-_The_Yoga_of_the_King_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Souls_Release
01.03_-_Yoga_and_the_Ordinary_Life
01.04_-_Motives_for_Seeking_the_Divine
01.04_-_The_Intuition_of_the_Age
01.04_-_The_Poetry_in_the_Making
01.04_-_The_Secret_Knowledge
01.05_-_Rabindranath_Tagore:_A_Great_Poet,_a_Great_Man
01.05_-_The_Nietzschean_Antichrist
01.05_-_The_Yoga_of_the_King_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Spirits_Freedom_and_Greatness
01.06_-_On_Communism
01.06_-_Vivekananda
01.07_-_Blaise_Pascal_(1623-1662)
01.08_-_A_Theory_of_Yoga
01.08_-_Walter_Hilton:_The_Scale_of_Perfection
01.09_-_The_Parting_of_the_Way
01.09_-_William_Blake:_The_Marriage_of_Heaven_and_Hell
0.10_-_Letters_to_a_Young_Captain
01.10_-_Nicholas_Berdyaev:_God_Made_Human
01.10_-_Principle_and_Personality
01.11_-_Aldous_Huxley:_The_Perennial_Philosophy
01.11_-_The_Basis_of_Unity
01.12_-_Three_Degrees_of_Social_Organisation
01.13_-_T._S._Eliot:_Four_Quartets
01.14_-_Nicholas_Roerich
0.11_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0.12_-_Letters_to_a_Student
0.13_-_Letters_to_a_Student
0.14_-_Letters_to_a_Sadhak
0_1951-09-21
0_1954-08-25_-_what_is_this_personality?_and_when_will_she_come?
0_1955-06-09
0_1956-05-02
0_1956-09-14
0_1956-10-07
0_1956-10-28
0_1956-12-26
0_1957-01-18
0_1957-04-09
0_1957-07-03
0_1957-10-08
0_1957-12-21
0_1958-01-01
0_1958-01-22
0_1958-02-03a
0_1958-02-03b_-_The_Supramental_Ship
0_1958-03-07
0_1958-04-03
0_1958-05-10
0_1958-05-11_-_the_ship_that_said_OM
0_1958-05-30
0_1958-06-06_-_Supramental_Ship
0_1958-07-02
0_1958-07-05
0_1958-07-06
0_1958-07-19
0_1958-07-21
0_1958-08-07
0_1958-08-09
0_1958-09-16_-_OM_NAMO_BHAGAVATEH
0_1958-09-19
0_1958-10-01
0_1958-10-04
0_1958-10-10
0_1958-11-04_-_Myths_are_True_and_Gods_exist_-_mental_formation_and_occult_faculties_-_exteriorization_-_work_in_dreams
0_1958-11-08
0_1958-11-11
0_1958-11-14
0_1958-11-20
0_1958-11-22
0_1958-11-26
0_1958-11-27_-_Intermediaries_and_Immediacy
0_1958-12-24
0_1958-12-28
0_1959-01-06
0_1959-01-14
0_1959-01-21
0_1959-01-31
0_1959-03-10_-_vital_dagger,_vital_mass
0_1959-03-26_-_Lord_of_Death,_Lord_of_Falsehood
0_1959-04-07
0_1959-04-13
0_1959-05-19_-_Ascending_and_Descending_paths
0_1959-05-25
0_1959-05-28
0_1959-06-03
0_1959-06-04
0_1959-06-07
0_1959-06-08
0_1959-06-13a
0_1959-06-17
0_1959-06-25
0_1959-07-10
0_1959-07-14
0_1959-08-15
0_1959-10-06_-_Sri_Aurobindos_abode
0_1959-10-15
0_1960-01-28
0_1960-03-03
0_1960-04-20
0_1960-05-16
0_1960-05-21_-_true_purity_-_you_have_to_be_the_Divine_to_overcome_hostile_forces
0_1960-05-24_-_supramental_flood
0_1960-05-28_-_death_of_K_-_the_death_process-_the_subtle_physical
0_1960-06-04
0_1960-06-07
0_1960-06-11
0_1960-06-Undated
0_1960-07-12_-_Mothers_Vision_-_the_Voice,_the_ashram_a_tiny_part_of_myself,_the_Mothers_Force,_sparkling_white_light_compressed_-_enormous_formation_of_negative_vibrations_-_light_in_evil
0_1960-07-23_-_The_Flood_and_the_race_-_turning_back_to_guide_and_save_amongst_the_torrents_-_sadhana_vs_tamas_and_destruction_-_power_of_giving_and_offering_-_Japa,_7_lakhs,_140000_per_day,_1_crore_takes_20_years
0_1960-07-26_-_Mothers_vision_-_looking_up_words_in_the_subconscient
0_1960-08-20
0_1960-09-20
0_1960-09-24
0_1960-10-02a
0_1960-10-08
0_1960-10-11
0_1960-10-15
0_1960-10-19
0_1960-10-22
0_1960-10-25
0_1960-10-30
0_1960-11-05
0_1960-11-08
0_1960-11-12
0_1960-11-15
0_1960-11-26
0_1960-12-13
0_1960-12-17
0_1960-12-20
0_1960-12-31
0_1961-01-10
0_1961-01-12
0_1961-01-17
0_1961-01-19
0_1961-01-22
0_1961-01-24
0_1961-01-27
0_1961-01-29
0_1961-01-31
0_1961-02-04
0_1961-02-05
0_1961-02-07
0_1961-02-11
0_1961-02-18
0_1961-02-25
0_1961-03-04
0_1961-03-07
0_1961-03-11
0_1961-03-14
0_1961-03-17
0_1961-03-21
0_1961-03-25
0_1961-03-27
0_1961-04-07
0_1961-04-08
0_1961-04-12
0_1961-04-15
0_1961-04-18
0_1961-04-22
0_1961-04-25
0_1961-04-29
0_1961-05-02
0_1961-05-12
0_1961-05-19
0_1961-05-23
0_1961-05-30
0_1961-06-02
0_1961-06-06
0_1961-06-20
0_1961-06-24
0_1961-06-27
0_1961-07-04
0_1961-07-07
0_1961-07-12
0_1961-07-15
0_1961-07-18
0_1961-07-28
0_1961-08-02
0_1961-08-05
0_1961-08-08
0_1961-08-11
0_1961-08-18
0_1961-08-25
0_1961-09-10
0_1961-09-16
0_1961-09-23
0_1961-09-28
0_1961-09-30
0_1961-10-02
0_1961-10-15
0_1961-10-30
0_1961-11-05
0_1961-11-06
0_1961-11-07
0_1961-11-12
0_1961-12-16
0_1961-12-20
0_1961-12-23
0_1962-01-09
0_1962-01-12_-_supramental_ship
0_1962-01-15
0_1962-01-21
0_1962-01-24
0_1962-01-27
0_1962-02-03
0_1962-02-06
0_1962-02-13
0_1962-02-17
0_1962-02-24
0_1962-02-27
0_1962-03-06
0_1962-03-11
0_1962-03-13
0_1962-04-03
0_1962-04-13
0_1962-05-13
0_1962-05-15
0_1962-05-18
0_1962-05-24
0_1962-05-27
0_1962-05-29
0_1962-05-31
0_1962-06-02
0_1962-06-06
0_1962-06-09
0_1962-06-12
0_1962-06-20
0_1962-06-23
0_1962-06-27
0_1962-06-30
0_1962-07-04
0_1962-07-07
0_1962-07-14
0_1962-07-18
0_1962-07-21
0_1962-07-25
0_1962-07-28
0_1962-07-31
0_1962-08-04
0_1962-08-08
0_1962-08-11
0_1962-08-14
0_1962-08-18
0_1962-08-25
0_1962-08-28
0_1962-08-31
0_1962-09-05
0_1962-09-08
0_1962-09-15
0_1962-09-18
0_1962-09-26
0_1962-10-06
0_1962-10-12
0_1962-10-16
0_1962-10-20
0_1962-10-27
0_1962-10-30
0_1962-11-03
0_1962-11-07
0_1962-11-10
0_1962-11-14
0_1962-11-17
0_1962-11-20
0_1962-11-23
0_1962-11-27
0_1962-11-30
0_1962-12-04
0_1962-12-12
0_1962-12-15
0_1962-12-19
0_1962-12-22
0_1962-12-25
0_1962-12-28
0_1963-01-02
0_1963-01-09
0_1963-01-12
0_1963-01-14
0_1963-01-18
0_1963-01-30
0_1963-02-15
0_1963-02-19
0_1963-02-23
0_1963-03-06
0_1963-03-09
0_1963-03-13
0_1963-03-16
0_1963-03-19
0_1963-03-23
0_1963-03-27
0_1963-03-30
0_1963-04-06
0_1963-04-16
0_1963-04-20
0_1963-04-22
0_1963-05-03
0_1963-05-11
0_1963-05-15
0_1963-05-18
0_1963-05-22
0_1963-05-25
0_1963-06-03
0_1963-06-08
0_1963-06-12
0_1963-06-15
0_1963-06-19
0_1963-06-22
0_1963-06-26a
0_1963-06-26b
0_1963-06-29
0_1963-07-03
0_1963-07-06
0_1963-07-10
0_1963-07-13
0_1963-07-17
0_1963-07-20
0_1963-07-24
0_1963-07-27
0_1963-07-31
0_1963-08-03
0_1963-08-07
0_1963-08-10
0_1963-08-13b
0_1963-08-17
0_1963-08-21
0_1963-08-24
0_1963-08-28
0_1963-08-31
0_1963-09-04
0_1963-09-07
0_1963-09-18
0_1963-09-21
0_1963-09-25
0_1963-09-28
0_1963-10-03
0_1963-10-05
0_1963-10-16
0_1963-10-19
0_1963-10-26
0_1963-11-04
0_1963-11-13
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02.01_-_A_Vedic_Story
02.01_-_Metaphysical_Thought_and_the_Supreme_Truth
02.01_-_Our_Ideal
02.01_-_The_World-Stair
02.01_-_The_World_War
02.02_-_Lines_of_the_Descent_of_Consciousness
02.02_-_Rishi_Dirghatama
02.02_-_The_Kingdom_of_Subtle_Matter
02.02_-_The_Message_of_the_Atomic_Bomb
02.03_-_An_Aspect_of_Emergent_Evolution
02.03_-_National_and_International
02.03_-_The_Glory_and_the_Fall_of_Life
02.03_-_The_Shakespearean_Word
02.04_-_The_Kingdoms_of_the_Little_Life
02.04_-_The_Right_of_Absolute_Freedom
02.05_-_Federated_Humanity
02.05_-_Robert_Graves
02.05_-_The_Godheads_of_the_Little_Life
02.06_-_The_Integral_Yoga_and_Other_Yogas
02.06_-_The_Kingdoms_and_Godheads_of_the_Greater_Life
02.06_-_Vansittartism
02.07_-_George_Seftris
02.07_-_India_One_and_Indivisable
02.07_-_The_Descent_into_Night
02.08_-_Jules_Supervielle
02.08_-_The_Basic_Unity
02.08_-_The_World_of_Falsehood,_the_Mother_of_Evil_and_the_Sons_of_Darkness
02.09_-_The_Way_to_Unity
02.09_-_Two_Mystic_Poems_in_Modern_French
02.10_-_Independence_and_its_Sanction
02.10_-_The_Kingdoms_and_Godheads_of_the_Little_Mind
02.10_-_Two_Mystic_Poems_in_Modern_Bengali
02.11_-_Hymn_to_Darkness
02.11_-_New_World-Conditions
02.11_-_The_Kingdoms_and_Godheads_of_the_Greater_Mind
02.12_-_Mysticism_in_Bengali_Poetry
02.12_-_The_Heavens_of_the_Ideal
02.12_-_The_Ideals_of_Human_Unity
02.13_-_In_the_Self_of_Mind
02.13_-_On_Social_Reconstruction
02.13_-_Rabindranath_and_Sri_Aurobindo
02.14_-_Appendix
02.14_-_Panacea_of_Isms
02.14_-_The_World-Soul
02.15_-_The_Kingdoms_of_the_Greater_Knowledge
03.01_-_Humanism_and_Humanism
03.01_-_The_Evolution_of_Consciousness
03.01_-_The_Malady_of_the_Century
03.01_-_The_New_Year_Initiation
03.01_-_The_Pursuit_of_the_Unknowable
03.02_-_Aspects_of_Modernism
03.02_-_The_Adoration_of_the_Divine_Mother
03.02_-_The_Philosopher_as_an_Artist_and_Philosophy_as_an_Art
03.02_-_Yogic_Initiation_and_Aptitude
03.03_-_Arjuna_or_the_Ideal_Disciple
03.03_-_Modernism_-_An_Oriental_Interpretation
03.03_-_The_House_of_the_Spirit_and_the_New_Creation
03.03_-_The_Inner_Being_and_the_Outer_Being
03.04_-_The_Body_Human
03.04_-_The_Other_Aspect_of_European_Culture
03.04_-_The_Vision_and_the_Boon
03.04_-_Towardsa_New_Ideology
03.05_-_Some_Conceptions_and_Misconceptions
03.05_-_The_Spiritual_Genius_of_India
03.06_-_Divine_Humanism
03.06_-_Here_or_Otherwhere
03.06_-_The_Pact_and_its_Sanction
03.07_-_Brahmacharya
03.07_-_The_Sunlit_Path
03.08_-_The_Democracy_of_Tomorrow
03.08_-_The_Spiritual_Outlook
03.08_-_The_Standpoint_of_Indian_Art
03.09_-_Art_and_Katharsis
03.09_-_Sectarianism_or_Loyalty
03.10_-_Sincerity
03.10_-_The_Mission_of_Buddhism
03.11_-_Modernist_Poetry
03.11_-_The_Language_Problem_and_India
03.11_-_True_Humility
03.12_-_Communism:_What_does_it_Mean?
03.12_-_TagorePoet_and_Seer
03.13_-_Human_Destiny
03.15_-_Origin_and_Nature_of_Suffering
03.16_-_The_Tragic_Spirit_in_Nature
03.17_-_The_Souls_Odyssey
04.01_-_The_Birth_and_Childhood_of_the_Flame
04.01_-_The_Divine_Man
04.01_-_The_March_of_Civilisation
04.02_-_A_Chapter_of_Human_Evolution
04.02_-_Human_Progress
04.02_-_The_Growth_of_the_Flame
04.03_-_Consciousness_as_Energy
04.03_-_The_Call_to_the_Quest
04.03_-_The_Eternal_East_and_West
04.04_-_A_Global_Humanity
04.04_-_Evolution_of_the_Spiritual_Consciousness
04.04_-_The_Quest
04.05_-_The_Freedom_and_the_Force_of_the_Spirit
04.05_-_The_Immortal_Nation
04.06_-_Evolution_of_the_Spiritual_Consciousness
04.06_-_To_Be_or_Not_to_Be
04.07_-_Readings_in_Savitri
04.08_-_An_Evolutionary_Problem
04.09_-_Values_Higher_and_Lower
04.14_-_To_the_Heights-XXIV
04.15_-_To_the_Heights-XV_(God_the_Supreme_Mystery)
04.18_-_To_the_Heights-XVIII
04.20_-_To_the_Heights-XX
04.21_-_To_the_HeightsXXI
04.22_-_To_the_Heights-XXII
04.24_-_To_the_Heights-XXIV
04.34_-_To_the_Heights-XXXIV
04.45_-_To_the_Heights-XLV
04.46_-_To_the_Heights-XLVI
05.01_-_Man_and_the_Gods
05.01_-_Of_Love_and_Aspiration
05.01_-_The_Destined_Meeting-Place
05.02_-_Gods_Labour
05.02_-_Of_the_Divine_and_its_Help
05.02_-_Physician,_Heal_Thyself
05.02_-_Satyavan
05.03_-_Bypaths_of_Souls_Journey
05.03_-_Of_Desire_and_Atonement
05.03_-_Satyavan_and_Savitri
05.03_-_The_Body_Natural
05.04_-_The_Immortal_Person
05.05_-_In_Quest_of_Reality
05.05_-_Man_the_Prototype
05.05_-_Of_Some_Supreme_Mysteries
05.06_-_Physics_or_philosophy
05.07_-_The_Observer_and_the_Observed
05.08_-_An_Age_of_Revolution
05.09_-_The_Changed_Scientific_Outlook
05.09_-_Varieties_of_Religious_Experience
05.10_-_Children_and_Child_Mentality
05.10_-_Knowledge_by_Identity
05.11_-_The_Place_of_Reason
05.11_-_The_Soul_of_a_Nation
05.12_-_The_Soul_and_its_Journey
05.13_-_Darshana_and_Philosophy
05.14_-_The_Sanctity_of_the_Individual
05.15_-_Sartrian_Freedom
05.16_-_A_Modernist_Mentality
05.20_-_The_Urge_for_Progression
05.21_-_Being_or_Becoming_and_Having
05.22_-_Success_and_its_Conditions
05.24_-_Process_of_Purification
05.25_-_Sweet_Adversity
05.26_-_The_Soul_in_Anguish
05.28_-_God_Protects
05.29_-_Vengeance_is_Mine
05.30_-_Theres_a_Divinity
05.31_-_Divine_Intervention
05.32_-_Yoga_as_Pragmatic_Power
05.33_-_Caesar_versus_the_Divine
05.34_-_Light,_more_Light
06.01_-_The_End_of_a_Civilisation
06.01_-_The_Word_of_Fate
06.02_-_Darkness_to_Light
06.02_-_The_Way_of_Fate_and_the_Problem_of_Pain
06.03_-_Types_of_Meditation
06.07_-_Total_Transformation_Demands_Total_Rejection
06.08_-_The_Individual_and_the_Collective
06.09_-_How_to_Wait
06.10_-_Fatigue_and_Work
06.11_-_The_Steps_of_the_Soul
06.12_-_The_Expanding_Body-Consciousness
06.16_-_A_Page_of_Occult_History
06.17_-_Directed_Change
06.19_-_Mental_Silence
06.23_-_Here_or_Elsewhere
06.25_-_Individual_and_Collective_Soul
06.26_-_The_Wonder_of_It_All
06.27_-_To_Learn_and_to_Understand
06.29_-_Towards_Redemption
06.31_-_Identification_of_Consciousness
06.32_-_The_Central_Consciousness
06.35_-_Second_Sight
06.36_-_The_Mother_on_Herself
07.01_-_Realisation,_Past_and_Future
07.01_-_The_Joy_of_Union;_the_Ordeal_of_the_Foreknowledge
07.02_-_The_Parable_of_the_Search_for_the_Soul
07.02_-_The_Spiral_Universe
07.03_-_The_Entry_into_the_Inner_Countries
07.03_-_This_Expanding_Universe
07.04_-_The_Triple_Soul-Forces
07.05_-_The_Finding_of_the_Soul
07.05_-_This_Mystery_of_Existence
07.06_-_Nirvana_and_the_Discovery_of_the_All-Negating_Absolute
07.07_-_The_Discovery_of_the_Cosmic_Spirit_and_the_Cosmic_Consciousness
07.08_-_The_Divine_Truth_Its_Name_and_Form
07.10_-_Diseases_and_Accidents
07.11_-_The_Problem_of_Evil
07.12_-_This_Ugliness_in_the_World
07.13_-_Divine_Justice
07.14_-_The_Divine_Suffering
07.15_-_Divine_Disgust
07.16_-_Things_Significant_and_Insignificant
07.17_-_Why_Do_We_Forget_Things?
07.18_-_How_to_get_rid_of_Troublesome_Thoughts
07.19_-_Bad_Thought-Formation
07.20_-_Why_are_Dreams_Forgotten?
07.21_-_On_Occultism
07.22_-_Mysticism_and_Occultism
07.24_-_Meditation_and_Meditation
07.25_-_Prayer_and_Aspiration
07.26_-_Offering_and_Surrender
07.27_-_Equality_of_the_Body,_Equality_of_the_Soul
07.30_-_Sincerity_is_Victory
07.31_-_Images_of_Gods_and_Goddesses
07.34_-_And_this_Agile_Reason
07.36_-_The_Body_and_the_Psychic
07.37_-_The_Psychic_Being,_Some_Mysteries
07.38_-_Past_Lives_and_the_Psychic_Being
07.39_-_The_Homogeneous_Being
07.40_-_Service_Human_and_Divine
07.41_-_The_Divine_Family
07.42_-_The_Nature_and_Destiny_of_Art
07.43_-_Music_Its_Origin_and_Nature
07.44_-_Music_Indian_and_European
07.45_-_Specialisation
08.01_-_Choosing_To_Do_Yoga
08.02_-_Order_and_Discipline
08.03_-_Death_in_the_Forest
08.03_-_Organise_Your_Life
08.04_-_Doing_for_Her_Sake
08.05_-_Will_and_Desire
08.06_-_A_Sign_and_a_Symbol
08.07_-_Sleep_and_Pain
08.08_-_The_Mind_s_Bazaar
08.10_-_Are_Not_Dogs_More_Faithful_Than_Men?
08.12_-_Thought_the_Creator
08.13_-_Thought_and_Imagination
08.14_-_Poetry_and_Poetic_Inspiration
08.15_-_Divine_Living
08.17_-_Psychological_Perfection
08.19_-_Asceticism
08.20_-_Are_Not_The_Ascetic_Means_Helpful_At_Times?
08.21_-_Human_Birth
08.22_-_Regarding_the_Body
08.23_-_Sadhana_Must_be_Done_in_the_Body
08.24_-_On_Food
08.25_-_Meat-Eating
08.26_-_Faith_and_Progress
08.27_-_Value_of_Religious_Exercises
08.28_-_Prayer_and_Aspiration
08.29_-_Meditation_and_Wakefulness
08.30_-_Dealing_with_a_Wrong_Movement
08.33_-_Opening_to_the_Divine
08.34_-_To_Melt_into_the_Divine
08.35_-_Love_Divine
08.36_-_Buddha_and_Shankara
08.37_-_The_Significance_of_Dates
08.38_-_The_Value_of_Money
09.01_-_Towards_the_Black_Void
09.02_-_Meditation
09.02_-_The_Journey_in_Eternal_Night_and_the_Voice_of_the_Darkness
09.03_-_The_Psychic_Being
09.04_-_The_Divine_Grace
09.05_-_The_Story_of_Love
09.06_-_How_Can_Time_Be_a_Friend?
09.07_-_How_to_Become_Indifferent_to_Criticism?
09.08_-_The_Modern_Taste
09.09_-_The_Origin
09.10_-_The_Supramental_Vision
09.11_-_The_Supramental_Manifestation_and_World_Change
09.12_-_The_True_Teaching
09.13_-_On_Teachers_and_Teaching
09.14_-_Education_of_Girls
09.16_-_Goal_of_Evolution
09.17_-_Health_in_the_Ashram
09.18_-_The_Mother_on_Herself
100.00_-_Synergy
10.01_-_A_Dream
1.001_-_The_Aim_of_Yoga
10.01_-_The_Dream_Twilight_of_the_Ideal
10.02_-_The_Gospel_of_Death_and_Vanity_of_the_Ideal
1.002_-_The_Heifer
1.003_-_Family_of_Imran
10.03_-_The_Debate_of_Love_and_Death
10.04_-_The_Dream_Twilight_of_the_Earthly_Real
10.04_-_Transfiguration
1.004_-_Women
10.05_-_Mind_and_the_Mental_World
1.005_-_The_Table
10.06_-_Beyond_the_Dualities
1.006_-_Livestock
10.06_-_Looking_around_with_Craziness
1.007_-_Initial_Steps_in_Yoga_Practice
10.07_-_The_Demon
1.007_-_The_Elevations
10.07_-_The_World_is_One
10.08_-_Consciousness_as_Freedom
1.008_-_The_Principle_of_Self-Affirmation
1.008_-_The_Spoils
1.009_-_Perception_and_Reality
1.009_-_Repentance
1.00a_-_DIVISION_A_-_THE_INTERNAL_FIRES_OF_THE_SHEATHS.
1.00a_-_Introduction
1.00b_-_DIVISION_B_-_THE_PERSONALITY_RAY_AND_FIRE_BY_FRICTION
1.00b_-_Introduction
1.00b_-_INTRODUCTION
1.00c_-_DIVISION_C_-_THE_ETHERIC_BODY_AND_PRANA
1.00c_-_INTRODUCTION
1.00d_-_DIVISION_D_-_KUNDALINI_AND_THE_SPINE
1.00d_-_Introduction
1.00e_-_DIVISION_E_-_MOTION_ON_THE_PHYSICAL_AND_ASTRAL_PLANES
1.00f_-_DIVISION_F_-_THE_LAW_OF_ECONOMY
1.00g_-_Foreword
1.00h_-_Foreword
1.00_-_INTRODUCTION
1.00_-_Introduction_to_Alchemy_of_Happiness
1.00_-_INTRODUCTORY_REMARKS
1.00_-_Main
1.00_-_Preface
1.00_-_PREFACE
1.00_-_PREFACE_-_DESCENSUS_AD_INFERNOS
1.00_-_Preliminary_Remarks
1.00_-_PRELUDE_AT_THE_THEATRE
1.00_-_PROLOGUE_IN_HEAVEN
1.00_-_The_Constitution_of_the_Human_Being
1.00_-_The_way_of_what_is_to_come
10.10_-_A_Poem
10.10_-_Education_is_Organisation
1.010_-_Jonah
1.010_-_Self-Control_-_The_Alpha_and_Omega_of_Yoga
1.011_-_Hud
1.012_-_Joseph
1.012_-_Sublimation_-_A_Way_to_Reshuffle_Thought
1.013_-_Defence_Mechanisms_of_the_Mind
10.13_-_Go_Through
1.013_-_Thunder
1.014_-_Abraham
10.14_-_Night_and_Day
10.15_-_The_Evolution_of_Language
1.015_-_The_Rock
1.016_-_The_Bee
10.16_-_The_Relative_Best
10.17_-_Miracles:_Their_True_Significance
1.017_-_The_Night_Journey
10.18_-_Short_Notes_-_1-_The_Sense_of_Earthly_Evolution
1.018_-_The_Cave
1.019_-_Mary
1.01_-_About_the_Elements
1.01_-_Adam_Kadmon_and_the_Evolution
1.01_-_An_Accomplished_Westerner
1.01_-_A_NOTE_ON_PROGRESS
1.01_-_Appearance_and_Reality
1.01_-_Archetypes_of_the_Collective_Unconscious
1.01_-_Asana
1.01_-_BOOK_THE_FIRST
1.01_-_Description_of_the_Castle
1.01_-_DOWN_THE_RABBIT-HOLE
1.01_-_Economy
1.01f_-_Introduction
1.01_-_Foreward
1.01_-_Fundamental_Considerations
1.01_-_Hatha_Yoga
1.01_-_Historical_Survey
1.01_-_How_is_Knowledge_Of_The_Higher_Worlds_Attained?
1.01_-_'Imitation'_the_common_principle_of_the_Arts_of_Poetry.
1.01_-_Introduction
1.01_-_Isha_Upanishad
1.01_-_Maitreya_inquires_of_his_teacher_(Parashara)
1.01_-_MAPS_OF_EXPERIENCE_-_OBJECT_AND_MEANING
1.01_-_MASTER_AND_DISCIPLE
1.01_-_MAXIMS_AND_MISSILES
1.01_-_Meeting_the_Master_-_Authors_first_meeting,_December_1918
1.01_-_Necessity_for_knowledge_of_the_whole_human_being_for_a_genuine_education.
1.01_-_Newtonian_and_Bergsonian_Time
1.01_-_On_knowledge_of_the_soul,_and_how_knowledge_of_the_soul_is_the_key_to_the_knowledge_of_God.
1.01_-_On_renunciation_of_the_world
1.01_-_ON_THE_THREE_METAMORPHOSES
1.01_-_Our_Demand_and_Need_from_the_Gita
1.01_-_Prayer
1.01_-_Principles_of_Practical_Psycho_therapy
1.01_-_Proem
1.01_-_SAMADHI_PADA
1.01_-_Sets_down_the_first_line_and_begins_to_treat_of_the_imperfections_of_beginners.
1.01_-_Soul_and_God
1.01_-_Tara_the_Divine
1.01_-_THAT_ARE_THOU
1.01_-_the_Call_to_Adventure
1.01_-_The_Castle
1.01_-_The_Cycle_of_Society
1.01_-_The_Dark_Forest._The_Hill_of_Difficulty._The_Panther,_the_Lion,_and_the_Wolf._Virgil.
1.01_-_The_Divine_and_The_Universe
1.01_-_The_Ego
1.01_-_The_First_Steps
1.01_-_The_Four_Aids
1.01_-_The_Highest_Meaning_of_the_Holy_Truths
1.01_-_The_Human_Aspiration
1.01_-_The_Ideal_of_the_Karmayogin
1.01_-_The_King_of_the_Wood
1.01_-_The_Lord_of_hosts
1.01_-_The_Mental_Fortress
1.01_-_The_Offering
1.01_-_THE_OPPOSITES
1.01_-_The_Rape_of_the_Lock
1.01_-_The_Science_of_Living
1.01_-_THE_STUFF_OF_THE_UNIVERSE
1.01_-_The_Three_Metamorphoses
1.01_-_The_True_Aim_of_Life
1.01_-_The_Unexpected
1.01_-_To_Watanabe_Sukefusa
1.01_-_Two_Powers_Alone
1.01_-_What_is_Magick?
1.01_-_Who_is_Tara
1.020_-_Ta-Ha
1.020_-_The_World_and_Our_World
1.02.1_-_The_Inhabiting_Godhead_-_Life_and_Action
1.021_-_The_Prophets
1.02.2.1_-_Brahman_-_Oneness_of_God_and_the_World
1.02.2.2_-_Self-Realisation
10.22_-_Short_Notes_-_5-_Consciousness_and_Dimensions_of_View
1.022_-_The_Pilgrimage
1.02.3.1_-_The_Lord
1.02.3.2_-_Knowledge_and_Ignorance
1.02.3.3_-_Birth_and_Non-Birth
10.23_-_Prayers_and_Meditations_of_the_Mother
1.023_-_The_Believers
1.02.4.2_-_Action_and_the_Divine_Will
1.024_-_Affiliation_With_Larger_Wholes
10.24_-_Savitri
1.024_-_The_Light
10.25_-_How_to_Read_Sri_Aurobindo_and_the_Mother
1.025_-_Sadhana_-_Intensifying_a_Lighted_Flame
1.025_-_The_Criterion
10.26_-_A_True_Professor
1.026_-_The_Poets
10.27_-_Consciousness
1.027_-_The_Ant
1.028_-_Bringing_About_Whole-Souled_Dedication
1.028_-_History
10.28_-_Love_and_Love
1.02.9_-_Conclusion_and_Summary
10.29_-_Gods_Debt
1.029_-_The_Spider
1.02_-_BEFORE_THE_CITY-GATE
1.02_-_BOOK_THE_SECOND
1.02_-_Education
1.02_-_Groups_and_Statistical_Mechanics
1.02_-_In_the_Beginning
1.02_-_IN_THE_COMPANY_OF_DEVOTEES
1.02_-_Karma_Yoga
1.02_-_MAPS_OF_MEANING_-_THREE_LEVELS_OF_ANALYSIS
1.02_-_Meditating_on_Tara
1.02_-_Meeting_the_Master_-_Authors_second_meeting,_March_1921
1.02_-_Of_certain_spiritual_imperfections_which_beginners_have_with_respect_to_the_habit_of_pride.
1.02_-_On_the_Knowledge_of_God.
1.02_-_On_the_Service_of_the_Soul
1.02_-_Outline_of_Practice
1.02_-_Prana
1.02_-_Pranayama,_Mantrayoga
1.02_-_Prayer_of_Parashara_to_Vishnu
1.02_-_SADHANA_PADA
1.02_-_Self-Consecration
1.02_-_Skillful_Means
1.02_-_SOCIAL_HEREDITY_AND_PROGRESS
1.02_-_Substance_Is_Eternal
1.02_-_Taras_Tantra
1.02_-_The_7_Habits__An_Overview
1.02_-_The_Age_of_Individualism_and_Reason
1.02_-_The_Child_as_growing_being_and_the_childs_experience_of_encountering_the_teacher.
1.02_-_The_Concept_of_the_Collective_Unconscious
1.02_-_The_Descent._Dante's_Protest_and_Virgil's_Appeal._The_Intercession_of_the_Three_Ladies_Benedight.
1.02_-_The_Development_of_Sri_Aurobindos_Thought
1.02_-_The_Divine_Teacher
1.02_-_The_Doctrine_of_the_Mystics
1.02_-_The_Eternal_Law
1.02_-_The_Great_Process
1.02_-_The_Human_Soul
1.02_-_The_Magic_Circle
1.02_-_THE_NATURE_OF_THE_GROUND
1.02_-_The_Necessity_of_Magick_for_All
1.02_-_The_Philosophy_of_Ishvara
1.02_-_The_Pit
1.02_-_THE_POOL_OF_TEARS
1.02_-_The_Principle_of_Fire
1.02_-_THE_PROBLEM_OF_SOCRATES
1.02_-_THE_QUATERNIO_AND_THE_MEDIATING_ROLE_OF_MERCURIUS
1.02_-_The_Recovery
1.02_-_The_Refusal_of_the_Call
1.02_-_The_Shadow
1.02_-_The_Soul_Being_of_Man
1.02_-_The_Stages_of_Initiation
1.02_-_The_Three_European_Worlds
1.02_-_The_Two_Negations_1_-_The_Materialist_Denial
1.02_-_The_Ultimate_Path_is_Without_Difficulty
1.02_-_The_Virtues
1.02_-_The_Vision_of_the_Past
1.02_-_THE_WITHIN_OF_THINGS
1.02_-_What_is_Psycho_therapy?
1.02_-_Where_I_Lived,_and_What_I_Lived_For
10.30_-_India,_the_World_and_the_Ashram
1.030_-_The_Romans
1.031_-_Intense_Aspiration
1.031_-_Luqman
10.31_-_The_Mystery_of_The_Five_Senses
1.032_-_Our_Concept_of_God
1.032_-_Prostration
10.32_-_The_Mystery_of_the_Five_Elements
1.033_-_The_Confederates
10.34_-_Effort_and_Grace
1.034_-_Sheba
1.035_-_Originator
10.35_-_The_Moral_and_the_Spiritual
1.035_-_The_Recitation_of_Mantra
10.36_-_Cling_to_Truth
1.036_-_The_Rise_of_Obstacles_in_Yoga_Practice
1.036_-_Ya-Seen
1.037_-_Preventing_the_Fall_in_Yoga
1.037_-_The_Aligners
10.37_-_The_Golden_Bridge
1.038_-_Impediments_in_Concentration_and_Meditation
1.038_-_Saad
1.039_-_Throngs
1.03_-_A_CAUCUS-RACE_AND_A_LONG_TALE
1.03_-_A_Parable
1.03_-_APPRENTICESHIP_AND_ENCULTURATION_-_ADOPTION_OF_A_SHARED_MAP
1.03_-_A_Sapphire_Tale
1.03_-_Bloodstream_Sermon
1.03_-_BOOK_THE_THIRD
1.03_-_Concerning_the_Archetypes,_with_Special_Reference_to_the_Anima_Concept
1.03_-_Fire_in_the_Earth
1.03_-_Hieroglypics__Life_and_Language_Necessarily_Symbolic
1.03_-_Hymns_of_Gritsamada
1.03_-_Invocation_of_Tara
1.03_-_Japa_Yoga
1.03_-_Man_-_Slave_or_Free?
1.03_-_Master_Ma_is_Unwell
1.03_-_Measure_of_time,_Moments_of_Kashthas,_etc.
1.03_-_Meeting_the_Master_-_Meeting_with_others
1.03_-_Of_some_imperfections_which_some_of_these_souls_are_apt_to_have,_with_respect_to_the_second_capital_sin,_which_is_avarice,_in_the_spiritual_sense
1.03_-_On_Children
1.03_-_On_exile_or_pilgrimage
1.03_-_On_Knowledge_of_the_World.
1.03_-_ON_THE_AFTERWORLDLY
1.03_-_PERSONALITY,_SANCTITY,_DIVINE_INCARNATION
1.03_-_Physical_Education
1.03_-_Preparing_for_the_Miraculous
1.03_-_Questions_and_Answers
1.03_-_Reading
1.03_-_.REASON._IN_PHILOSOPHY
1.03_-_Self-Surrender_in_Works_-_The_Way_of_The_Gita
1.03_-_Some_Aspects_of_Modern_Psycho_therapy
1.03_-_Some_Practical_Aspects
1.03_-_Spiritual_Realisation,_The_aim_of_Bhakti-Yoga
1.03_-_Supernatural_Aid
1.03_-_Sympathetic_Magic
1.03_-_Tara,_Liberator_from_the_Eight_Dangers
1.03_-_The_Armour_of_Grace
1.03_-_The_Coming_of_the_Subjective_Age
1.03_-_The_Desert
1.03_-_THE_EARTH_IN_ITS_EARLY_STAGES
1.03_-_The_End_of_the_Intellect
1.03_-_The_Gate_of_Hell._The_Inefficient_or_Indifferent._Pope_Celestine_V._The_Shores_of_Acheron._Charon._The
1.03_-_The_Gods,_Superior_Beings_and_Adverse_Forces
1.03_-_THE_GRAND_OPTION
1.03_-_The_House_Of_The_Lord
1.03_-_The_Human_Disciple
1.03_-_The_Manner_of_Imitation.
1.03_-_THE_ORPHAN,_THE_WIDOW,_AND_THE_MOON
1.03_-_The_Phenomenon_of_Man
1.03_-_The_Psychic_Prana
1.03_-_The_Sephiros
1.03_-_The_Spiritual_Being_of_Man
1.03_-_THE_STUDY_(The_Exorcism)
1.03_-_The_Sunlit_Path
1.03_-_The_Syzygy_-_Anima_and_Animus
1.03_-_The_Tale_of_the_Alchemist_Who_Sold_His_Soul
1.03_-_The_Two_Negations_2_-_The_Refusal_of_the_Ascetic
1.03_-_The_Uncreated
1.03_-_The_Void
1.03_-_Time_Series,_Information,_and_Communication
1.03_-_To_Layman_Ishii
1.03_-_VISIT_TO_VIDYASAGAR
1.03_-_Yama_and_Niyama
1.03_-_YIBHOOTI_PADA
1.040_-_Forgiver
1.040_-_Re-Educating_the_Mind
1.041_-_Detailed
1.042_-_Consultation
1.043_-_Decorations
1.044_-_Smoke
1.045_-_Kneeling
1.045_-_Piercing_the_Structure_of_the_Object
1.046_-_The_Dunes
1.047_-_Muhammad
1.049_-_The_Chambers
1.04_-_ADVICE_TO_HOUSEHOLDERS
1.04_-_ALCHEMY_AND_MANICHAEISM
1.04_-_A_Leader
1.04_-_Body,_Soul_and_Spirit
1.04_-_BOOK_THE_FOURTH
1.04_-_Communion
1.04_-_Descent_into_Future_Hell
1.04_-_Feedback_and_Oscillation
1.04_-_GOD_IN_THE_WORLD
1.04_-_Homage_to_the_Twenty-one_Taras
1.04_-_HOW_THE_.TRUE_WORLD._ULTIMATELY_BECAME_A_FABLE
1.04_-_Hymns_of_Bharadwaja
1.04_-_KAI_VALYA_PADA
1.04_-_Magic_and_Religion
1.04_-_Money
1.04_-_Narayana_appearance,_in_the_beginning_of_the_Kalpa,_as_the_Varaha_(boar)
1.04_-_Nothing_Exists_Per_Se_Except_Atoms_And_The_Void
1.04_-_Of_other_imperfections_which_these_beginners_are_apt_to_have_with_respect_to_the_third_sin,_which_is_luxury.
1.04_-_On_blessed_and_ever-memorable_obedience
1.04_-_On_Knowledge_of_the_Future_World.
1.04_-_Pratyahara
1.04_-_Reality_Omnipresent
1.04_-_Religion_and_Occultism
1.04_-_SOME_REFLECTIONS_ON_PROGRESS
1.04_-_Sounds
1.04_-_Te_Shan_Carrying_His_Bundle
1.04_-_The_33_seven_double_letters
1.04_-_The_Aims_of_Psycho_therapy
1.04_-_THE_APPEARANCE_OF_ANOMALY_-_CHALLENGE_TO_THE_SHARED_MAP
1.04_-_The_Conditions_of_Esoteric_Training
1.04_-_The_Control_of_Psychic_Prana
1.04_-_The_Core_of_the_Teaching
1.04_-_The_Crossing_of_the_First_Threshold
1.04_-_The_Discovery_of_the_Nation-Soul
1.04_-_The_Divine_Mother_-_This_Is_She
1.04_-_The_First_Circle,_Limbo__Virtuous_Pagans_and_the_Unbaptized._The_Four_Poets,_Homer,_Horace,_Ovid,_and_Lucan._The_Noble_Castle_of_Philosophy.
1.04_-_The_Fork_in_the_Road
1.04_-_The_Future_of_Man
1.04_-_The_Gods_of_the_Veda
1.04_-_The_Origin_and_Development_of_Poetry.
1.04_-_The_Paths
1.04_-_The_Praise
1.04_-_The_Qabalah__The_Best_Training_for_Memory
1.04_-_THE_RABBIT_SENDS_IN_A_LITTLE_BILL
1.04_-_The_Sacrifice_the_Triune_Path_and_the_Lord_of_the_Sacrifice
1.04_-_The_Self
1.04_-_The_Silent_Mind
1.04_-_THE_STUDY_(The_Compact)
1.04_-_To_the_Priest_of_Rytan-ji
1.04_-_Vital_Education
1.04_-_Wake-Up_Sermon
1.04_-_What_Arjuna_Saw_-_the_Dark_Side_of_the_Force
1.04_-_Wherefore_of_World?
1.04_-_Yoga_and_Human_Evolution
1.050_-_Qaf
1.051_-_The_Spreaders
1.05_-_2010_and_1956_-_Doomsday?
1.052_-_The_Mount
1.052_-_Yoga_Practice_-_A_Series_of_Positive_Steps
1.053_-_A_Very_Important_Sadhana
1.053_-_The_Star
1.056_-_Lack_of_Knowledge_is_the_Cause_of_Suffering
1.056_-_The_Inevitable
1.057_-_Iron
1.057_-_The_Four_Manifestations_of_Ignorance
1.058_-_The_Argument
1.059_-_The_Mobilization
1.05_-_Adam_Kadmon
1.05_-_ADVICE_FROM_A_CATERPILLAR
1.05_-_AUERBACHS_CELLAR
1.05_-_Bhakti_Yoga
1.05_-_BOOK_THE_FIFTH
1.05_-_Buddhism_and_Women
1.05_-_Character_Of_The_Atoms
1.05_-_CHARITY
1.05_-_Christ,_A_Symbol_of_the_Self
1.05_-_Computing_Machines_and_the_Nervous_System
1.05_-_Consciousness
1.05_-_Definition_of_the_Ludicrous,_and_a_brief_sketch_of_the_rise_of_Comedy.
1.05_-_Dharana
1.05_-_Hsueh_Feng's_Grain_of_Rice
1.05_-_Hymns_of_Bharadwaja
1.05_-_Knowledge_by_Aquaintance_and_Knowledge_by_Description
1.05_-_Mental_Education
1.05_-_Morality_and_War
1.05_-_MORALITY_AS_THE_ENEMY_OF_NATURE
1.05_-_ON_ENJOYING_AND_SUFFERING_THE_PASSIONS
1.05_-_On_painstaking_and_true_repentance_which_constitute_the_life_of_the_holy_convicts;_and_about_the_prison.
1.05_-_On_the_Love_of_God.
1.05_-_Pratyahara_and_Dharana
1.05_-_Prayer
1.05_-_Problems_of_Modern_Psycho_therapy
1.05_-_Qualifications_of_the_Aspirant_and_the_Teacher
1.05_-_Ritam
1.05_-_Solitude
1.05_-_Some_Results_of_Initiation
1.05_-_Splitting_of_the_Spirit
1.05_-_The_Activation_of_Human_Energy
1.05_-_The_Ascent_of_the_Sacrifice_-_The_Psychic_Being
1.05_-_The_Belly_of_the_Whale
1.05_-_The_Creative_Principle
1.05_-_The_Destiny_of_the_Individual
1.05_-_THE_HOSTILE_BROTHERS_-_ARCHETYPES_OF_RESPONSE_TO_THE_UNKNOWN
1.05_-_The_Magical_Control_of_the_Weather
1.05_-_THE_MASTER_AND_KESHAB
1.05_-_The_New_Consciousness
1.05_-_THE_NEW_SPIRIT
1.05_-_The_Second_Circle__The_Wanton._Minos._The_Infernal_Hurricane._Francesca_da_Rimini.
1.05_-_The_True_Doer_of_Works
1.05_-_The_Universe__The_0_=_2_Equation
1.05_-_The_Ways_of_Working_of_the_Lord
1.05_-_To_Know_How_To_Suffer
1.05_-_True_and_False_Subjectivism
1.05_-_Vishnu_as_Brahma_creates_the_world
1.05_-_War_And_Politics
1.05_-_Work_and_Teaching
1.05_-_Yoga_and_Hypnotism
1.060_-_The_Woman_Tested
1.060_-_Tracing_the_Ultimate_Cause_of_Any_Experience
1.061_-_Column
1.062_-_Friday
1.063_-_The_Hypocrites
1.064_-_Gathering
1.065_-_Divorce
1.066_-_Prohibition
1.067_-_Sovereignty
1.068_-_The_Pen
1.06_-_Agni_and_the_Truth
1.06_-_A_Summary_of_my_Phenomenological_View_of_the_World
1.06_-_Being_Human_and_the_Copernican_Principle
1.06_-_BOOK_THE_SIXTH
1.06_-_Confutation_Of_Other_Philosophers
1.06_-_Definition_of_Tragedy.
1.06_-_Dhyana
1.06_-_Dhyana_and_Samadhi
1.06_-_Gestalt_and_Universals
1.06_-_Hymns_of_Parashara
1.06_-_Iconography
1.06_-_Incarnate_Teachers_and_Incarnation
1.06_-_LIFE_AND_THE_PLANETS
1.06_-_Magicians_as_Kings
1.06_-_Man_in_the_Universe
1.06_-_MORTIFICATION,_NON-ATTACHMENT,_RIGHT_LIVELIHOOD
1.06_-_Of_imperfections_with_respect_to_spiritual_gluttony.
1.06_-_On_Induction
1.06_-_On_remembrance_of_death.
1.06_-_ON_THE_PALE_CRIMINAL
1.06_-_On_Thought
1.06_-_On_Work
1.06_-_Origin_of_the_four_castes
1.06_-_PIG_AND_PEPPER
1.06_-_Psychic_Education
1.06_-_Psycho_therapy_and_a_Philosophy_of_Life
1.06_-_Quieting_the_Vital
1.06_-_Raja_Yoga
1.06_-_The_Ascent_of_the_Sacrifice_2_The_Works_of_Love_-_The_Works_of_Life
1.06_-_The_Breaking_of_the_Limits
1.06_-_The_Desire_to_be
1.06_-_THE_FOUR_GREAT_ERRORS
1.06_-_The_Four_Powers_of_the_Mother
1.06_-_The_Greatness_of_the_Individual
1.06_-_The_Literal_Qabalah
1.06_-_THE_MASTER_WITH_THE_BRAHMO_DEVOTEES
1.06_-_The_Objective_and_Subjective_Views_of_Life
1.06_-_The_Sign_of_the_Fishes
1.06_-_The_Third_Circle__The_Gluttonous._Cerberus._The_Eternal_Rain._Ciacco._Florence.
1.06_-_The_Three_Schools_of_Magick_1
1.06_-_The_Transformation_of_Dream_Life
1.06_-_Wealth_and_Government
1.06_-_WITCHES_KITCHEN
1.06_-_Yun_Men's_Every_Day_is_a_Good_Day
1.070_-_The_Seven_Stages_of_Perfection
1.070_-_Ways_of_Ascent
1.071_-_Noah
1.072_-_The_Jinn
1.073_-_The_Enwrapped
1.074_-_The_Enrobed
1.075_-_Resurrection
1.075_-_Self-Control,_Study_and_Devotion_to_God
1.077_-_The_Unleashed
1.078_-_Kumbhaka_and_Concentration_of_Mind
1.078_-_The_Event
1.07_-_Akasa_or_the_Ethereal_Principle
1.07_-_A_MAD_TEA-PARTY
1.07_-_A_Song_of_Longing_for_Tara,_the_Infallible
1.07_-_A_STREET
1.07_-_BOOK_THE_SEVENTH
1.07_-_Bridge_across_the_Afterlife
1.07_-_Cybernetics_and_Psychopathology
1.07_-_Hui_Ch'ao_Asks_about_Buddha
1.07_-_Hymn_of_Paruchchhepa
1.07_-_Incarnate_Human_Gods
1.07_-_Jnana_Yoga
1.07_-_Medicine_and_Psycho_therapy
1.07_-_Note_on_the_word_Go
1.07_-_Of_imperfections_with_respect_to_spiritual_envy_and_sloth.
1.07_-_On_Dreams
1.07_-_On_mourning_which_causes_joy.
1.07_-_On_Our_Knowledge_of_General_Principles
1.07_-_ON_READING_AND_WRITING
1.07_-_Past,_Present_and_Future
1.07_-_Production_of_the_mind-born_sons_of_Brahma
1.07_-_Raja-Yoga_in_Brief
1.07_-_Samadhi
1.07_-_Savitri
1.07_-_Standards_of_Conduct_and_Spiritual_Freedom
1.07_-_The_Continuity_of_Consciousness
1.07_-_The_Ego_and_the_Dualities
1.07_-_The_Farther_Reaches_of_Human_Nature
1.07_-_The_Fire_of_the_New_World
1.07_-_The_Fourth_Circle__The_Avaricious_and_the_Prodigal._Plutus._Fortune_and_her_Wheel._The_Fifth_Circle__The_Irascible_and_the_Sullen._Styx.
1.07_-_THE_GREAT_EVENT_FORESHADOWED_-_THE_PLANETIZATION_OF_MANKIND
1.07_-_The_Ideal_Law_of_Social_Development
1.07_-_THE_.IMPROVERS._OF_MANKIND
1.07_-_The_Infinity_Of_The_Universe
1.07_-_The_Literal_Qabalah_(continued)
1.07_-_The_Magic_Wand
1.07_-_The_Mantra_-_OM_-_Word_and_Wisdom
1.07_-_THE_MASTER_AND_VIJAY_GOSWAMI
1.07_-_The_Plot_must_be_a_Whole.
1.07_-_The_Primary_Data_of_Being
1.07_-_The_Process_of_Evolution
1.07_-_The_Prophecies_of_Nostradamus
1.07_-_The_Psychic_Center
1.07_-_The_Three_Schools_of_Magick_2
1.07_-_TRUTH
1.080_-_Pratyahara_-_The_Return_of_Energy
1.081_-_The_Application_of_Pratyahara
1.083_-_Choosing_an_Object_for_Concentration
1.083_-_The_Defrauders
1.084_-_The_Rupture
1.085_-_The_Constellations
1.089_-_The_Levels_of_Concentration
1.08_-_Adhyatma_Yoga
1.08a_-_The_Ladder
1.08_-_Attendants
1.08_-_BOOK_THE_EIGHTH
1.08_-_Civilisation_and_Barbarism
1.08_-_Departmental_Kings_of_Nature
1.08_-_EVENING_A_SMALL,_NEATLY_KEPT_CHAMBER
1.08_-_Independence_from_the_Physical
1.08_-_Information,_Language,_and_Society
1.08_-_Introduction_to_Patanjalis_Yoga_Aphorisms
1.08_-_Karma,_the_Law_of_Cause_and_Effect
1.08_-_On_freedom_from_anger_and_on_meekness.
1.08_-_Origin_of_Rudra:_his_becoming_eight_Rudras
1.08_-_Phlegyas._Philippo_Argenti._The_Gate_of_the_City_of_Dis.
1.08_-_Psycho_therapy_Today
1.08_-_RELIGION_AND_TEMPERAMENT
1.08_-_SOME_REFLECTIONS_ON_THE_SPIRITUAL_REPERCUSSIONS_OF_THE_ATOM_BOMB
1.08_-_Sri_Aurobindos_Descent_into_Death
1.08_-_Stead_and_the_Spirits
1.08_-_Summary
1.08_-_The_Change_of_Vision
1.08_-_The_Depths_of_the_Divine
1.08_-_The_Four_Austerities_and_the_Four_Liberations
1.08_-_The_Gods_of_the_Veda_-_The_Secret_of_the_Veda
1.08_-_The_Historical_Significance_of_the_Fish
1.08_-_The_Magic_Sword,_Dagger_and_Trident
1.08_-_THE_MASTERS_BIRTHDAY_CELEBRATION_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.08_-_The_Methods_of_Vedantic_Knowledge
1.08_-_The_Splitting_of_the_Human_Personality_during_Spiritual_Training
1.08_-_The_Supreme_Discovery
1.08_-_The_Supreme_Will
1.08_-_The_Three_Schools_of_Magick_3
1.08_-_THINGS_THE_GERMANS_LACK
1.08_-_Wherein_is_expounded_the_first_line_of_the_first_stanza,_and_a_beginning_is_made_of_the_explanation_of_this_dark_night
1.08_-_Worship_of_Substitutes_and_Images
1.090_-_The_Land
1.094_-_Understanding_the_Structure_of_Things
1.096_-_Powers_that_Accrue_in_the_Practice
1.097_-_Sublimation_of_Object-Consciousness
1.098_-_The_Transformation_from_Human_to_Divine
1.099_-_The_Entry_of_the_Eternal_into_the_Individual
1.09_-_ADVICE_TO_THE_BRAHMOS
1.09_-_A_System_of_Vedic_Psychology
1.09_-_BOOK_THE_NINTH
1.09_-_Civilisation_and_Culture
1.09_-_Concentration_-_Its_Spiritual_Uses
1.09_-_Equality_and_the_Annihilation_of_Ego
1.09_-_FAITH_IN_PEACE
1.09_-_Fundamental_Questions_of_Psycho_therapy
1.09_-_Legend_of_Lakshmi
1.09_-_Man_-_About_the_Body
1.09_-_Of_the_signs_by_which_it_will_be_known_that_the_spiritual_person_is_walking_along_the_way_of_this_night_and_purgation_of_sense.
1.09_-_On_remembrance_of_wrongs.
1.09_-_(Plot_continued.)_Dramatic_Unity.
1.09_-_PROMENADE
1.09_-_Saraswati_and_Her_Consorts
1.09_-_SELF-KNOWLEDGE
1.09_-_SKIRMISHES_IN_A_WAY_WITH_THE_AGE
1.09_-_Sleep_and_Death
1.09_-_Sri_Aurobindo_and_the_Big_Bang
1.09_-_Stead_and_Maskelyne
1.09_-_Talks
1.09_-_Taras_Ultimate_Nature
1.09_-_The_Absolute_Manifestation
1.09_-_The_Ambivalence_of_the_Fish_Symbol
1.09_-_The_Crown,_Cap,_Magus-Band
1.09_-_The_Furies_and_Medusa._The_Angel._The_City_of_Dis._The_Sixth_Circle__Heresiarchs.
1.09_-_The_Greater_Self
1.09_-_The_Guardian_of_the_Threshold
1.09_-_The_Pure_Existent
1.09_-_The_Secret_Chiefs
1.09_-_The_Worship_of_Trees
1.09_-_To_the_Students,_Young_and_Old
1.09_-_WHO_STOLE_THE_TARTS?
1.1.01_-_Seeking_the_Divine
1.1.01_-_The_Divine_and_Its_Aspects
11.01_-_The_Eternal_Day__The_Souls_Choice_and_the_Supreme_Consummation
11.01_-_The_Opening_Scene_of_Savitri
1.1.02_-_Sachchidananda
1.1.02_-_The_Aim_of_the_Integral_Yoga
1.1.03_-_Brahman
11.03_-_Cosmonautics
1.1.03_-_Man
1.1.04_-_Philosophy
1.1.04_-_The_Self_or_Atman
11.04_-_The_Triple_Cord
1.1.05_-_The_Siddhis
1.106_-_Quraish
11.06_-_The_Mounting_Fire
1.107_-_The_Bestowal_of_a_Divine_Gift
11.08_-_Body-Energy
11.09_-_Towards_the_Immortal_Body
1.10_-_Aesthetic_and_Ethical_Culture
1.10_-_BOOK_THE_TENTH
1.10_-_Concentration_-_Its_Practice
1.10_-_Conscious_Force
1.10_-_Farinata_and_Cavalcante_de'_Cavalcanti._Discourse_on_the_Knowledge_of_the_Damned.
1.10_-_Fate_and_Free-Will
1.10_-_GRACE_AND_FREE_WILL
1.10_-_Harmony
1.10_-_Laughter_Of_The_Gods
1.10_-_Life_and_Death._The_Greater_Guardian_of_the_Threshold
1.10_-_Mantra_Yoga
1.10_-_On_our_Knowledge_of_Universals
1.10_-_On_slander_or_calumny.
1.10_-_ON_WAR_AND_WARRIORS
1.10_-_Relics_of_Tree_Worship_in_Modern_Europe
1.10_-_The_Absolute_of_the_Being
1.10_-_The_descendants_of_the_daughters_of_Daksa_married_to_the_Rsis
1.10_-_THE_FORMATION_OF_THE_NOOSPHERE
1.10_-_The_Image_of_the_Oceans_and_the_Rivers
1.10_-_The_Magical_Garment
1.10_-_THE_MASTER_WITH_THE_BRAHMO_DEVOTEES_(II)
1.10_-_The_Methods_and_the_Means
1.10_-_THE_NEIGHBORS_HOUSE
1.10_-_Theodicy_-_Nature_Makes_No_Mistakes
1.10_-_The_Revolutionary_Yogi
1.10_-_The_Roughly_Material_Plane_or_the_Material_World
1.10_-_The_Scolex_School
1.10_-_The_Secret_of_the_Veda
1.10_-_The_Three_Modes_of_Nature
1.10_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Intelligent_Will
1.10_-_THINGS_I_OWE_TO_THE_ANCIENTS
1.1.1.01_-_Three_Elements_of_Poetic_Creation
1.1.1.03_-_Creative_Power_and_the_Human_Instrument
1.1.1.04_-_Joy_of_Poetic_Creation
1.1.1.06_-_Inspiration_and_Effort
1.1.1.07_-_Aspiration,_Opening,_Recognition
1.1.1.08_-_Self-criticism
11.10_-_The_Test_of_Truth
11.14_-_Our_Finest_Hour
11.15_-_Sri_Aurobindo
1.11_-_BOOK_THE_ELEVENTH
1.11_-_Correspondence_and_Interviews
1.11_-_Delight_of_Existence_-_The_Problem
1.11_-_FAITH_IN_MAN
1.11_-_GOOD_AND_EVIL
1.11_-_Higher_Laws
1.11_-_Legend_of_Dhruva,_the_son_of_Uttanapada
1.11_-_Oneness
1.11_-_On_Intuitive_Knowledge
1.11_-_On_talkativeness_and_silence.
1.11_-_ON_THE_NEW_IDOL
1.11_-_Powers
1.1.1_-_Text
1.11_-_The_Broken_Rocks._Pope_Anastasius._General_Description_of_the_Inferno_and_its_Divisions.
1.11_-_The_Change_of_Power
1.11_-_The_Influence_of_the_Sexes_on_Vegetation
1.11_-_The_Kalki_Avatar
1.11_-_The_Magical_Belt
1.11_-_The_Master_of_the_Work
1.1.1_-_The_Mind_and_Other_Levels_of_Being
1.11_-_The_Reason_as_Governor_of_Life
1.11_-_The_Second_Genesis
1.11_-_The_Seven_Rivers
1.11_-_The_Soul_or_the_Astral_Body
1.11_-_The_Three_Purushas
1.11_-_Transformation
1.11_-_WITH_THE_DEVOTEES_AT_DAKSHINEWAR
1.11_-_Woolly_Pomposities_of_the_Pious_Teacher
1.11_-_Works_and_Sacrifice
1.12_-_BOOK_THE_TWELFTH
1.12_-_Brute_Neighbors
1.1.2_-_Commentary
1.12_-_Delight_of_Existence_-_The_Solution
1.12_-_Dhruva_commences_a_course_of_religious_austerities
1.12_-_Further_Magical_Aids
1.12_-_GARDEN
1.12_-_God_Departs
1.12_-_Independence
1.1.2_-_Intellect_and_the_Intellectual
1.12_-_Love_The_Creator
1.12_-_On_lying.
1.12_-_ON_THE_FLIES_OF_THE_MARKETPLACE
1.12_-_Sleep_and_Dreams
1.12_-_SOME_REFLECTIONS_ON_THE_RIGHTS_OF_MAN
1.12_-_The_Divine_Work
1.12_-_THE_FESTIVAL_AT_PNIHTI
1.12_-_The_Herds_of_the_Dawn
1.12_-_The_Left-Hand_Path_-_The_Black_Brothers
1.12_-_The_Minotaur._The_Seventh_Circle__The_Violent._The_River_Phlegethon._The_Violent_against_their_Neighbours._The_Centaurs._Tyrants.
1.12_-_The_Office_and_Limitations_of_the_Reason
1.12_-_The_Sacred_Marriage
1.12_-_The_Significance_of_Sacrifice
1.12_-_The_Sociology_of_Superman
1.12_-_The_Strength_of_Stillness
1.12_-_The_Superconscient
1.12_-_TIME_AND_ETERNITY
1.12_-_Truth_and_Knowledge
1.13_-_A_Dream
1.13_-_And_Then?
1.13_-_BOOK_THE_THIRTEENTH
1.13_-_Conclusion_-_He_is_here
1.13_-_Dawn_and_the_Truth
1.13_-_Gnostic_Symbols_of_the_Self
1.13_-_Knowledge,_Error,_and_Probably_Opinion
1.1.3_-_Mental_Difficulties_and_the_Need_of_Quietude
1.13_-_On_despondency.
1.13_-_(Plot_continued.)_What_constitutes_Tragic_Action.
1.13_-_Posterity_of_Dhruva
1.13_-_Reason_and_Religion
1.13_-_SALVATION,_DELIVERANCE,_ENLIGHTENMENT
1.13_-_System_of_the_O.T.O.
1.13_-_The_Divine_Maya
1.13_-_THE_HUMAN_REBOUND_OF_EVOLUTION_AND_ITS_CONSEQUENCES
1.13_-_The_Kings_of_Rome_and_Alba
1.13_-_The_Lord_of_the_Sacrifice
1.13_-_THE_MASTER_AND_M.
1.13_-_The_Pentacle,_Lamen_or_Seal
1.13_-_The_Spirit
1.13_-_The_Supermind_and_the_Yoga_of_Works
1.13_-_The_Wood_of_Thorns._The_Harpies._The_Violent_against_themselves._Suicides._Pier_della_Vigna._Lano_and_Jacopo_da_Sant'_Andrea.
1.13_-_Under_the_Auspices_of_the_Gods
1.14_-_Bibliography
1.14_-_BOOK_THE_FOURTEENTH
1.14_-_Descendants_of_Prithu
1.14_-_FOREST_AND_CAVERN
1.14_-_INSTRUCTION_TO_VAISHNAVS_AND_BRHMOS
1.14_-_Noise
1.14_-_On_the_clamorous,_yet_wicked_master-the_stomach.
1.14_-_(Plot_continued.)_The_tragic_emotions_of_pity_and_fear_should_spring_out_of_the_Plot_itself.
1.14_-_The_Book_of_Magic_Formulae
1.14_-_The_Limits_of_Philosophical_Knowledge
1.14_-_The_Mental_Plane
1.1.4_-_The_Physical_Mind_and_Sadhana
1.14_-_The_Principle_of_Divine_Works
1.14_-_The_Sand_Waste_and_the_Rain_of_Fire._The_Violent_against_God._Capaneus._The_Statue_of_Time,_and_the_Four_Infernal_Rivers.
1.14_-_The_Secret
1.14_-_The_Stress_of_the_Hidden_Spirit
1.14_-_The_Structure_and_Dynamics_of_the_Self
1.14_-_The_Succesion_to_the_Kingdom_in_Ancient_Latium
1.14_-_The_Supermind_as_Creator
1.14_-_The_Suprarational_Beauty
1.14_-_The_Victory_Over_Death
1.14_-_TURMOIL_OR_GENESIS?
1.15_-_Conclusion
1.15_-_Index
1.15_-_In_the_Domain_of_the_Spirit_Beings
1.15_-_LAST_VISIT_TO_KESHAB
1.15_-_MARGARETS_ROOM
1.15_-_On_incorruptible_purity_and_chastity_to_which_the_corruptible_attain_by_toil_and_sweat.
1.15_-_Prayers
1.15_-_Sex_Morality
1.15_-_SILENCE
1.15_-_THE_DIRECTIONS_AND_CONDITIONS_OF_THE_FUTURE
1.15_-_The_Possibility_and_Purpose_of_Avatarhood
1.15_-_The_Supramental_Consciousness
1.15_-_The_Suprarational_Good
1.15_-_The_Supreme_Truth-Consciousness
1.15_-_The_Transformed_Being
1.15_-_The_Value_of_Philosophy
1.15_-_The_world_overrun_with_trees;_they_are_destroyed_by_the_Pracetasas
1.15_-_The_Worship_of_the_Oak
1.1.5_-_Thought_and_Knowledge
1.15_-_Truth
1.16_-_Advantages_and_Disadvantages_of_Evocational_Magic
1.16_-_Dianus_and_Diana
1.16_-_Guidoguerra,_Aldobrandi,_and_Rusticucci._Cataract_of_the_River_of_Blood.
1.16_-_Inquiries_of_Maitreya_respecting_the_history_of_Prahlada
1.16_-_Man,_A_Transitional_Being
1.16_-_On_Concentration
1.16_-_On_love_of_money_or_avarice.
1.16_-_ON_LOVE_OF_THE_NEIGHBOUR
1.16_-_(Plot_continued.)_Recognition__its_various_kinds,_with_examples
1.16_-_PRAYER
1.16_-_THE_ESSENCE_OF_THE_DEMOCRATIC_IDEA
1.16_-_The_Process_of_Avatarhood
1.16_-_The_Season_of_Truth
1.16_-_The_Suprarational_Ultimate_of_Life
1.16_-_The_Triple_Status_of_Supermind
1.16_-_WITH_THE_DEVOTEES_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.17_-_Astral_Journey__Example,_How_to_do_it,_How_to_Verify_your_Experience
1.17_-_DOES_MANKIND_MOVE_BIOLOGICALLY_UPON_ITSELF?
1.17_-_Geryon._The_Violent_against_Art._Usurers._Descent_into_the_Abyss_of_Malebolge.
1.17_-_Legend_of_Prahlada
1.17_-_M._AT_DAKSHINEWAR
1.17_-_On_poverty_(that_hastens_heavenwards).
1.17_-_On_Teaching
1.17_-_ON_THE_WAY_OF_THE_CREATOR
1.17_-_Religion_as_the_Law_of_Life
1.17_-_SUFFERING
1.17_-_The_Burden_of_Royalty
1.17_-_The_Divine_Birth_and_Divine_Works
1.17_-_The_Divine_Soul
1.17_-_The_Seven-Headed_Thought,_Swar_and_the_Dashagwas
1.17_-_The_Spiritus_Familiaris_or_Serving_Spirits
1.17_-_The_Transformation
1.18_-_Asceticism
1.18_-_Evocation
1.18_-_FAITH
1.18_-_Hiranyakasipu's_reiterated_attempts_to_destroy_his_son
1.18_-_M._AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.18_-_Mind_and_Supermind
1.18_-_On_insensibility,_that_is,_deadening_of_the_soul_and_the_death_of_the_mind_before_the_death_of_the_body.
1.18_-_ON_LITTLE_OLD_AND_YOUNG_WOMEN
1.18_-_The_Divine_Worker
1.18_-_The_Eighth_Circle,_Malebolge__The_Fraudulent_and_the_Malicious._The_First_Bolgia__Seducers_and_Panders._Venedico_Caccianimico._Jason._The_Second_Bolgia__Flatterers._Allessio_Interminelli._Thais.
1.18_-_THE_HEART_OF_THE_PROBLEM
1.18_-_The_Human_Fathers
1.18_-_The_Importance_of_our_Conventional_Greetings,_etc.
1.18_-_The_Infrarational_Age_of_the_Cycle
1.18_-_The_Perils_of_the_Soul
1.19_-_Dialogue_between_Prahlada_and_his_father
1.19_-_Equality
1.19_-_GOD_IS_NOT_MOCKED
1.19_-_Life
1.19_-_NIGHT
1.19_-_On_sleep,_prayer,_and_psalm-singing_in_chapel.
1.19_-_ON_THE_PROBABLE_EXISTENCE_AHEAD_OF_US_OF_AN_ULTRA-HUMAN
1.19_-_Tabooed_Acts
1.19_-_The_Act_of_Truth
1.19_-_The_Curve_of_the_Rational_Age
1.19_-_THE_MASTER_AND_HIS_INJURED_ARM
1.19_-_The_Practice_of_Magical_Evocation
1.19_-_The_Third_Bolgia__Simoniacs._Pope_Nicholas_III._Dante's_Reproof_of_corrupt_Prelates.
1.19_-_The_Victory_of_the_Fathers
1.200-1.224_Talks
1.201_-_Socrates
1.2.01_-_The_Call_and_the_Capacity
12.01_-_The_Return_to_Earth
1.2.01_-_The_Upanishadic_and_Purancic_Systems
12.01_-_This_Great_Earth_Our_Mother
1.2.02_-_Qualities_Needed_for_Sadhana
12.02_-_The_Stress_of_the_Spirit
1.2.03_-_Purity
1.2.03_-_The_Interpretation_of_Scripture
12.03_-_The_Sorrows_of_God
1.2.04_-_Sincerity
1.2.05_-_Aspiration
12.05_-_Beauty
12.05_-_The_World_Tragedy
1.2.06_-_Rejection
1.2.07_-_Surrender
12.07_-_The_Double_Trinity
1.2.08_-_Faith
12.08_-_Notes_on_Freedom
1.2.09_-_Consecration_and_Offering
12.09_-_The_Story_of_Dr._Faustus_Retold
1.20_-_CATHEDRAL
1.20_-_Death,_Desire_and_Incapacity
1.20_-_Diction,_or_Language_in_general.
1.20_-_Equality_and_Knowledge
1.20_-_HOW_MAY_WE_CONCEIVE_AND_HOPE_THAT_HUMAN_UNANIMIZATION_WILL_BE_REALIZED_ON_EARTH?
1.20_-_On_bodily_vigil_and_how_to_use_it_to_attain_spiritual_vigil_and_how_to_practise_it.
1.20_-_ON_CHILD_AND_MARRIAGE
1.20_-_RULES_FOR_HOUSEHOLDERS_AND_MONKS
1.20_-_Tabooed_Persons
1.20_-_Talismans_-_The_Lamen_-_The_Pantacle
1.20_-_TANTUM_RELIGIO_POTUIT_SUADERE_MALORUM
1.20_-_The_End_of_the_Curve_of_Reason
1.20_-_The_Fourth_Bolgia__Soothsayers._Amphiaraus,_Tiresias,_Aruns,_Manto,_Eryphylus,_Michael_Scott,_Guido_Bonatti,_and_Asdente._Virgil_reproaches_Dante's_Pity.
1.20_-_The_Hound_of_Heaven
1.20_-_Visnu_appears_to_Prahlada
1.2.1.03_-_Psychic_and_Esoteric_Poetry
1.2.1.06_-_Symbolism_and_Allegory
1.2.10_-_Opening
12.10_-_The_Sunlit_Path
1.2.1.11_-_Mystic_Poetry_and_Spiritual_Poetry
1.2.1.12_-_Spiritual_Poetry
1.2.11_-_Patience_and_Perseverance
1.2.12_-_Vigilance
1.21_-_A_DAY_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.21_-_Chih_Men's_Lotus_Flower,_Lotus_Leaves
1.21_-_FROM_THE_PRE-HUMAN_TO_THE_ULTRA-HUMAN,_THE_PHASES_OF_A_LIVING_PLANET
1.21_-_IDOLATRY
1.2.1_-_Mental_Development_and_Sadhana
1.21_-_My_Theory_of_Astrology
1.21_-_ON_FREE_DEATH
1.21__-_Poetic_Diction.
1.21_-_Tabooed_Things
1.21_-_The_Ascent_of_Life
1.21_-_The_Fifth_Bolgia__Peculators._The_Elder_of_Santa_Zita._Malacoda_and_other_Devils.
1.21_-_The_Spiritual_Aim_and_Life
1.21_-_WALPURGIS-NIGHT
1.2.2.01_-_The_Poet,_the_Yogi_and_the_Rishi
1.22_-_ADVICE_TO_AN_ACTOR
1.22_-_Ciampolo,_Friar_Gomita,_and_Michael_Zanche._The_Malabranche_quarrel.
1.22__-_Dominion_over_different_provinces_of_creation_assigned_to_different_beings
1.22_-_EMOTIONALISM
1.22_-_How_to_Learn_the_Practice_of_Astrology
1.22_-_OBERON_AND_TITANIA's_GOLDEN_WEDDING
1.22_-_ON_THE_GIFT-GIVING_VIRTUE
1.22_-_On_the_many_forms_of_vainglory.
1.22_-_(Poetic_Diction_continued.)_How_Poetry_combines_elevation_of_language_with_perspicuity.
1.22_-_Tabooed_Words
1.22_-_THE_END_OF_THE_SPECIES
1.22_-_The_Necessity_of_the_Spiritual_Transformation
1.2.2_-_The_Place_of_Study_in_Sadhana
1.22_-_The_Problem_of_Life
1.23_-_Conditions_for_the_Coming_of_a_Spiritual_Age
1.23_-_Escape_from_the_Malabranche._The_Sixth_Bolgia__Hypocrites._Catalano_and_Loderingo._Caiaphas.
1.23_-_FESTIVAL_AT_SURENDRAS_HOUSE
1.23_-_Improvising_a_Temple
1.23_-_On_mad_price,_and,_in_the_same_Step,_on_unclean_and_blasphemous_thoughts.
1.23_-_Our_Debt_to_the_Savage
1.23_-_The_Double_Soul_in_Man
1.23_-_THE_MIRACULOUS
1.2.3_-_The_Power_of_Expression_and_Yoga
1.240_-_1.300_Talks
1.240_-_Talks_2
1.24_-_Describes_how_vocal_prayer_may_be_practised_with_perfection_and_how_closely_allied_it_is_to_mental_prayer
1.24_-_(Epic_Poetry_continued.)_Further_points_of_agreement_with_Tragedy.
1.24_-_Matter
1.24_-_Necromancy_and_Spiritism
1.24_-_PUNDIT_SHASHADHAR
1.24_-_RITUAL,_SYMBOL,_SACRAMENT
1.2.4_-_Speech_and_Yoga
1.24_-_The_Advent_and_Progress_of_the_Spiritual_Age
1.24_-_The_Killing_of_the_Divine_King
1.24_-_The_Seventh_Bolgia_-_Thieves._Vanni_Fucci._Serpents.
1.25_-_ADVICE_TO_PUNDIT_SHASHADHAR
1.25_-_Critical_Objections_brought_against_Poetry,_and_the_principles_on_which_they_are_to_be_answered.
1.25_-_Describes_the_great_gain_which_comes_to_a_soul_when_it_practises_vocal_prayer_perfectly._Shows_how_God_may_raise_it_thence_to_things_supernatural.
1.25_-_DUNGEON
1.25_-_Fascinations,_Invisibility,_Levitation,_Transmutations,_Kinks_in_Time
1.25_-_On_Religion
1.25_-_On_the_destroyer_of_the_passions,_most_sublime_humility,_which_is_rooted_in_spiritual_feeling.
1.25_-_SPIRITUAL_EXERCISES
1.25_-_Temporary_Kings
1.25_-_The_Knot_of_Matter
1.25_-_Vanni_Fucci's_Punishment._Agnello_Brunelleschi,_Buoso_degli_Abati,_Puccio_Sciancato,_Cianfa_de'_Donati,_and_Guercio_Cavalcanti.
1.26_-_Continues_the_description_of_a_method_for_recollecting_the_thoughts._Describes_means_of_doing_this._This_chapter_is_very_profitable_for_those_who_are_beginning_prayer.
1.26_-_FESTIVAL_AT_ADHARS_HOUSE
1.26_-_Mental_Processes_-_Two_Only_are_Possible
1.26_-_On_discernment_of_thoughts,_passions_and_virtues
1.26_-_PERSEVERANCE_AND_REGULARITY
1.26_-_Sacrifice_of_the_Kings_Son
1.26_-_The_Ascending_Series_of_Substance
1.26_-_The_Eighth_Bolgia__Evil_Counsellors._Ulysses_and_Diomed._Ulysses'_Last_Voyage.
1.27_-_AT_DAKSHINESWAR
1.27_-_CONTEMPLATION,_ACTION_AND_SOCIAL_UTILITY
1.27_-_Describes_the_great_love_shown_us_by_the_Lord_in_the_first_words_of_the_Paternoster_and_the_great_importance_of_our_making_no_account_of_good_birth_if_we_truly_desire_to_be_the_daughters_of_God.
1.27_-_Guido_da_Montefeltro._His_deception_by_Pope_Boniface_VIII.
1.27_-_On_holy_solitude_of_body_and_soul.
1.27_-_Structure_of_Mind_Based_on_that_of_Body
1.27_-_Succession_to_the_Soul
1.27_-_The_Sevenfold_Chord_of_Being
1.28_-_Describes_the_nature_of_the_Prayer_of_Recollection_and_sets_down_some_of_the_means_by_which_we_can_make_it_a_habit.
1.28_-_Need_to_Define_God,_Self,_etc.
1.28_-_On_holy_and_blessed_prayer,_mother_of_virtues,_and_on_the_attitude_of_mind_and_body_in_prayer.
1.28_-_Supermind,_Mind_and_the_Overmind_Maya
1.28_-_The_Killing_of_the_Tree-Spirit
1.28_-_The_Ninth_Bolgia__Schismatics._Mahomet_and_Ali._Pier_da_Medicina,_Curio,_Mosca,_and_Bertr_and_de_Born.
1.29_-_Concerning_heaven_on_earth,_or_godlike_dispassion_and_perfection,_and_the_resurrection_of_the_soul_before_the_general_resurrection.
1.29_-_Continues_to_describe_methods_for_achieving_this_Prayer_of_Recollection._Says_what_little_account_we_should_make_of_being_favoured_by_our_superiors.
1.29_-_Geri_del_Bello._The_Tenth_Bolgia__Alchemists._Griffolino_d'_Arezzo_and_Capocchino._The_many_people_and_the_divers_wounds
1.29_-_The_Myth_of_Adonis
1.29_-_What_is_Certainty?
1.2_-_Katha_Upanishads
1.300_-_1.400_Talks
1.3.01_-_Peace__The_Basis_of_the_Sadhana
13.02_-_A_Review_of_Sri_Aurobindos_Life
1.3.02_-_Equality__The_Chief_Support
13.03_-_A_Programme_for_the_Second_Century_of_the_Divine_Manifestation
1.3.03_-_Quiet_and_Calm
13.04_-_A_Note_on_Supermind
1.3.04_-_Peace
13.05_-_A_Dream_Of_Surreal_Science
1.3.05_-_Silence
13.07_-_The_Inter-Zone
1.30_-_Concerning_the_linking_together_of_the_supreme_trinity_among_the_virtues.
1.30_-_Describes_the_importance_of_understanding_what_we_ask_for_in_prayer._Treats_of_these_words_in_the_Paternoster:_Sanctificetur_nomen_tuum,_adveniat_regnum_tuum._Applies_them_to_the_Prayer_of_Quiet,_and_begins_the_explanation_of_them.
1.30_-_Do_you_Believe_in_God?
1.30_-_Other_Falsifiers_or_Forgers._Gianni_Schicchi,_Myrrha,_Adam_of_Brescia,_Potiphar's_Wife,_and_Sinon_of_Troy.
1.3.1.02_-_The_Object_of_Our_Yoga
1.31_-_Adonis_in_Cyprus
1.31_-_Continues_the_same_subject._Explains_what_is_meant_by_the_Prayer_of_Quiet._Gives_several_counsels_to_those_who_experience_it._This_chapter_is_very_noteworthy.
1.31_-_Is_Thelema_a_New_Religion?
1.31_-_The_Giants,_Nimrod,_Ephialtes,_and_Antaeus._Descent_to_Cocytus.
1.3.2.01_-_I._The_Entire_Purpose_of_Yoga
1.32_-_Expounds_these_words_of_the_Paternoster__Fiat_voluntas_tua_sicut_in_coelo_et_in_terra._Describes_how_much_is_accomplished_by_those_who_repeat_these_words_with_full_resolution_and_how_well
1.32_-_How_can_a_Yogi_ever_be_Worried?
1.32_-_The_Ninth_Circle__Traitors._The_Frozen_Lake_of_Cocytus._First_Division,_Caina__Traitors_to_their_Kindred._Camicion_de'_Pazzi._Second_Division,_Antenora__Traitors_to_their_Country._Dante_questions_Bocca_degli
1.32_-_The_Ritual_of_Adonis
1.33_-_Count_Ugolino_and_the_Archbishop_Ruggieri._The_Death_of_Count_Ugolino's_Sons.
1.33_-_The_Gardens_of_Adonis
1.33_-_The_Golden_Mean
1.33_-_Treats_of_our_great_need_that_the_Lord_should_give_us_what_we_ask_in_these_words_of_the_Paternoster__Panem_nostrum_quotidianum_da_nobis_hodie.
1.3.4.01_-_The_Beginning_and_the_End
1.3.4.02_-_The_Hour_of_God
1.3.4.04_-_The_Divine_Superman
1.34_-_Continues_the_same_subject._This_is_very_suitable_for_reading_after_the_reception_of_the_Most_Holy_Sacrament.
1.34_-_Fourth_Division_of_the_Ninth_Circle,_the_Judecca__Traitors_to_their_Lords_and_Benefactors._Lucifer,_Judas_Iscariot,_Brutus,_and_Cassius._The_Chasm_of_Lethe._The_Ascent.
1.34_-_The_Myth_and_Ritual_of_Attis
1.34_-_The_Tao_1
1.3.5.02_-_Man_and_the_Supermind
1.3.5.03_-_The_Involved_and_Evolving_Godhead
1.3.5.04_-_The_Evolution_of_Consciousness
1.3.5.05_-_The_Path
1.35_-_Attis_as_a_God_of_Vegetation
1.35_-_Describes_the_recollection_which_should_be_practised_after_Communion._Concludes_this_subject_with_an_exclamatory_prayer_to_the_Eternal_Father.
1.35_-_The_Tao_2
1.36_-_Human_Representatives_of_Attis
1.36_-_Quo_Stet_Olympus_-_Where_the_Gods,_Angels,_etc._Live
1.36_-_Treats_of_these_words_in_the_Paternoster__Dimitte_nobis_debita_nostra.
1.37_-_Death_-_Fear_-_Magical_Memory
1.37_-_Describes_the_excellence_of_this_prayer_called_the_Paternoster,_and_the_many_ways_in_which_we_shall_find_consolation_in_it.
1.37_-_Oriential_Religions_in_the_West
1.38_-_The_Myth_of_Osiris
1.38_-_Treats_of_the_great_need_which_we_have_to_beseech_the_Eternal_Father_to_grant_us_what_we_ask_in_these_words:_Et_ne_nos_inducas_in_tentationem,_sed_libera_nos_a_malo._Explains_certain_temptations._This_chapter_is_noteworthy.
1.38_-_Woman_-_Her_Magical_Formula
1.39_-_Continues_the_same_subject_and_gives_counsels_concerning_different_kinds_of_temptation._Suggests_two_remedies_by_which_we_may_be_freed_from_temptations.135
1.39_-_Prophecy
1.39_-_The_Ritual_of_Osiris
1.3_-_Mundaka_Upanishads
1.400_-_1.450_Talks
1.4.01_-_The_Divine_Grace_and_Guidance
14.01_-_To_Read_Sri_Aurobindo
14.02_-_Occult_Experiences
1.4.02_-_The_Divine_Force
14.03_-_Janaka_and_Yajnavalkya
1.4.03_-_The_Guru
14.04_-_More_of_Yajnavalkya
14.05_-_The_Golden_Rule
14.06_-_Liberty,_Self-Control_and_Friendship
14.07_-_A_Review_of_Our_Ashram_Life
14.08_-_A_Parable_of_Sea-Gulls
1.40_-_Coincidence
1.40_-_Describes_how,_by_striving_always_to_walk_in_the_love_and_fear_of_God,_we_shall_travel_safely_amid_all_these_temptations.
1.40_-_The_Nature_of_Osiris
1.41_-_Are_we_Reincarnations_of_the_Ancient_Egyptians?
1.41_-_Isis
1.41_-_Speaks_of_the_fear_of_God_and_of_how_we_must_keep_ourselves_from_venial_sins.
1.42_-_This_Self_Introversion
1.42_-_Treats_of_these_last_words_of_the_Paternoster__Sed_libera_nos_a_malo._Amen._But_deliver_us_from_evil._Amen.
1.439
1.43_-_Dionysus
1.43_-_The_Holy_Guardian_Angel_is_not_the_Higher_Self_but_an_Objective_Individual
1.44_-_Demeter_and_Persephone
1.44_-_Serious_Style_of_A.C.,_or_the_Apparent_Frivolity_of_Some_of_my_Remarks
1.450_-_1.500_Talks
1.45_-_The_Corn-Mother_and_the_Corn-Maiden_in_Northern_Europe
1.45_-_Unserious_Conduct_of_a_Pupil
1.46_-_Selfishness
1.46_-_The_Corn-Mother_in_Many_Lands
1.47_-_Lityerses
1.47_-_Reincarnation
1.48_-_Morals_of_AL_-_Hard_to_Accept,_and_Why_nevertheless_we_Must_Concur
1.48_-_The_Corn-Spirit_as_an_Animal
1.49_-_Ancient_Deities_of_Vegetation_as_Animals
1.49_-_Thelemic_Morality
1.4_-_Readings_in_the_Taittiriya_Upanishad
15.02_-_1973-02-17
15.03_-_A_Canadian_Question
15.04_-_The_Mother_Abides
15.07_-_Souls_Freedom
15.08_-_Ashram_-_Inner_and_Outer
15.09_-_One_Day_More
1.50_-_A.C._and_the_Masters;_Why_they_Chose_him,_etc.
1.50_-_Eating_the_God
1.51_-_Homeopathic_Magic_of_a_Flesh_Diet
1.51_-_How_to_Recognise_Masters,_Angels,_etc.,_and_how_they_Work
1.52_-_Family_-_Public_Enemy_No._1
1.52_-_Killing_the_Divine_Animal
1.53_-_Mother-Love
1.53_-_The_Propitation_of_Wild_Animals_By_Hunters
1.54_-_On_Meanness
1.54_-_Types_of_Animal_Sacrament
1.550_-_1.600_Talks
1.55_-_Money
1.55_-_The_Transference_of_Evil
1.56_-_Marriage_-_Property_-_War_-_Politics
1.56_-_The_Public_Expulsion_of_Evils
1.57_-_Beings_I_have_Seen_with_my_Physical_Eye
1.57_-_Public_Scapegoats
1.58_-_Do_Angels_Ever_Cut_Themselves_Shaving?
1.58_-_Human_Scapegoats_in_Classical_Antiquity
1.59_-_Geomancy
1.59_-_Killing_the_God_in_Mexico
16.02_-_Mater_Dolorosa
16.03_-_Mater_Gloriosa
16.05_-_Distiques
1.60_-_Between_Heaven_and_Earth
1.60_-_Knack
1.61_-_Power_and_Authority
1.61_-_The_Myth_of_Balder
1.62_-_The_Elastic_Mind
1.62_-_The_Fire-Festivals_of_Europe
1.63_-_Fear,_a_Bad_Astral_Vision
1.63_-_The_Interpretation_of_the_Fire-Festivals
1.64_-_Magical_Power
1.64_-_The_Burning_of_Human_Beings_in_the_Fires
1.65_-_Balder_and_the_Mistletoe
1.65_-_Man
1.66_-_The_External_Soul_in_Folk-Tales
1.66_-_Vampires
1.67_-_Faith
1.67_-_The_External_Soul_in_Folk-Custom
1.68_-_The_God-Letters
1.68_-_The_Golden_Bough
1.69_-_Farewell_to_Nemi
1.69_-_Original_Sin
17.03_-_Agni_and_the_Gods
17.09_-_Victory_to_the_World_Master
1.70_-_Morality_1
17.10_-_A_Hymn
17.11_-_A_Prayer
1.71_-_Morality_2
1.72_-_Education
1.73_-_Monsters,_Niggers,_Jews,_etc.
1.74_-_Obstacles_on_the_Path
1.75_-_The_AA_and_the_Planet
1.76_-_The_Gods_-_How_and_Why_they_Overlap
1.77_-_Work_Worthwhile_-_Why?
1.78_-_Sore_Spots
1.79_-_Progress
18.01_-_Padavali
18.04_-_Modern_Poems
18.05_-_Ashram_Poets
1.80_-_Life_a_Gamble
1.81_-_Method_of_Training
1.82_-_Epistola_Penultima_-_The_Two_Ways_to_Reality
1.83_-_Epistola_Ultima
19.01_-_The_Twins
19.03_-_The_Mind
19.10_-_Punishment
19.11_-_Old_Age
1912_11_02p
1912_11_19p
1912_12_10p
1913_02_10p
1913_02_12p
1913_06_15p
1913_08_02p
1913_10_07p
1913_11_25p
1913_11_29p
1914_01_02p
1914_01_04p
1914_01_05p
1914_01_06p
1914_01_10p
1914_02_07p
1914_02_11p
1914_02_12p
1914_02_19p
1914_02_22p
1914_03_03p
1914_03_06p
1914_03_09p
1914_03_13p
1914_03_17p
1914_03_21p
1914_03_22p
1914_03_24p
1914_03_28p
1914_04_01p
1914_04_03p
1914_04_17p
1914_04_23p
1914_05_09p
1914_05_13p
1914_05_16p
1914_05_18p
1914_05_20p
1914_05_22p
1914_05_23p
1914_05_24p
1914_05_28p
1914_06_09p
1914_06_13p
1914_06_25p
1914_06_27p
1914_07_10p
1914_07_11p
1914_07_31p
1914_08_08p
1914_08_11p
1914_08_20p
1914_08_24p
1914_08_29p
1914_09_05p
1914_09_24p
1914_10_11p
1914_10_14p
1914_10_23p
1914_11_15p
1914_11_17p
1914_12_10p
19.14_-_The_Awakened
1915_03_03p
1915_03_04p
1915_03_07p
1915_05_24p
1915_11_07p
1916_01_15p
1916_01_22p
1916_06_07p
1916_12_05p
1916_12_07p
1916_12_08p
1916_12_09p
1916_12_10p
1916_12_12p
1916_12_20p
1916_12_21p
1917_01_05p
1917_01_10p
1917_03_27p
1917_09_24p
1917_10_15p
1917_11_25p
1918_07_12p
19.18_-_On_Impurity
1919_09_03p
19.19_-_Of_the_Just
19.22_-_Of_Hell
19.25_-_The_Bhikkhu
19.26_-_The_Brahmin
1929-04-07_-_Yoga,_for_the_sake_of_the_Divine_-_Concentration_-_Preparations_for_Yoga,_to_be_conscious_-_Yoga_and_humanity_-_We_have_all_met_in_previous_lives
1929-04-14_-_Dangers_of_Yoga_-_Two_paths,_tapasya_and_surrender_-_Impulses,_desires_and_Yoga_-_Difficulties_-_Unification_around_the_psychic_being_-_Ambition,_undoing_of_many_Yogis_-_Powers,_misuse_and_right_use_of_-_How_to_recognise_the_Divine_Will_-_Accept_things_that_come_from_Divine_-_Vital_devotion_-_Need_of_strong_body_and_nerves_-_Inner_being,_invariable
1929-04-21_-_Visions,_seeing_and_interpretation_-_Dreams_and_dreaml_and_-_Dreamless_sleep_-_Visions_and_formulation_-_Surrender,_passive_and_of_the_will_-_Meditation_and_progress_-_Entering_the_spiritual_life,_a_plunge_into_the_Divine
1929-04-28_-_Offering,_general_and_detailed_-_Integral_Yoga_-_Remembrance_of_the_Divine_-_Reading_and_Yoga_-_Necessity,_predetermination_-_Freedom_-_Miracles_-_Aim_of_creation
1929-05-05_-_Intellect,_true_and_wrong_movement_-_Attacks_from_adverse_forces_-_Faith,_integral_and_absolute_-_Death,_not_a_necessity_-_Descent_of_Divine_Consciousness_-_Inner_progress_-_Memory_of_former_lives
1929-05-12_-_Beings_of_vital_world_(vampires)_-_Money_power_and_vital_beings_-_Capacity_for_manifestation_of_will_-_Entry_into_vital_world_-_Body,_a_protection_-_Individuality_and_the_vital_world
1929-05-19_-_Mind_and_its_workings,_thought-forms_-_Adverse_conditions_and_Yoga_-_Mental_constructions_-_Illness_and_Yoga
1929-05-26_-_Individual,_illusion_of_separateness_-_Hostile_forces_and_the_mental_plane_-_Psychic_world,_psychic_being_-_Spiritual_and_psychic_-_Words,_understanding_speech_and_reading_-_Hostile_forces,_their_utility_-_Illusion_of_action,_true_action
1929-06-02_-__Divine_love_and_its_manifestation_-_Part_of_the_vital_being_in_Divine_love
1929-06-09_-_Nature_of_religion_-_Religion_and_the_spiritual_life_-_Descent_of_Divine_Truth_and_Force_-_To_be_sure_of_your_religion,_country,_family-choose_your_own_-_Religion_and_numbers
1929-06-16_-_Illness_and_Yoga_-_Subtle_body_(nervous_envelope)_-_Fear_and_illness
1929-06-23_-_Knowledge_of_the_Yogi_-_Knowledge_and_the_Supermind_-_Methods_of_changing_the_condition_of_the_body_-_Meditation,_aspiration,_sincerity
1929-06-30_-_Repulsion_felt_towards_certain_animals,_etc_-_Source_of_evil,_Formateurs_-_Material_world
1929-07-28_-_Art_and_Yoga_-_Art_and_life_-_Music,_dance_-_World_of_Harmony
1929-08-04_-_Surrender_and_sacrifice_-_Personality_and_surrender_-_Desire_and_passion_-_Spirituality_and_morality
1950-12-21_-_The_Mother_of_Dreams
1950-12-23_-_Concentration_and_energy
1950-12-25_-_Christmas_-_festival_of_Light_-_Energy_and_mental_growth_-_Meditation_and_concentration_-_The_Mother_of_Dreams_-_Playing_a_game_well,_and_energy
1950-12-28_-_Correct_judgment.
1951-01-04_-_Transformation_and_reversal_of_consciousness.
1951-01-08_-_True_vision_and_understanding_of_the_world._Progress,_equilibrium._Inner_reality_-_the_psychic._Animals_and_the_psychic.
1951-01-11_-_Modesty_and_vanity_-_Generosity
1951-01-13_-_Aim_of_life_-_effort_and_joy._Science_of_living,_becoming_conscious._Forces_and_influences.
1951-01-15_-_Sincerity_-_inner_discernment_-_inner_light._Evil_and_imbalance._Consciousness_and_instruments.
1951-01-20_-_Developing_the_mind._Misfortunes,_suffering;_developed_reason._Knowledge_and_pure_ideas.
1951-01-25_-_Needs_and_desires._Collaboration_of_the_vital,_mind_an_accomplice._Progress_and_sincerity_-_recognising_faults._Organising_the_body_-_illness_-_new_harmony_-_physical_beauty.
1951-01-27_-_Sleep_-_desires_-_repression_-_the_subconscient._Dreams_-_the_super-conscient_-_solving_problems._Ladder_of_being_-_samadhi._Phases_of_sleep_-_silence,_true_rest._Vital_body_and_illness.
1951-02-03_-_What_is_Yoga?_for_what?_-_Aspiration,_seeking_the_Divine._-_Process_of_yoga,_renouncing_the_ego.
1951-02-05_-_Surrender_and_tapasya_-_Dealing_with_difficulties,_sincerity,_spiritual_discipline_-_Narrating_experiences_-_Vital_impulse_and_will_for_progress
1951-02-08_-_Unifying_the_being_-_ideas_of_good_and_bad_-_Miracles_-_determinism_-_Supreme_Will_-_Distinguishing_the_voice_of_the_Divine
1951-02-10_-_Liberty_and_license_-_surrender_makes_you_free_-_Men_in_authority_as_representatives_of_the_divine_Truth_-_Work_as_offering_-_total_surrender_needs_time_-_Effort_and_inspiration_-_will_and_patience
1951-02-12_-_Divine_force_-_Signs_indicating_readiness_-_Weakness_in_mind,_vital_-_concentration_-_Divine_perception,_human_notion_of_good,_bad_-_Conversion,_consecration_-_progress_-_Signs_of_entering_the_path_-_kinds_of_meditation_-_aspiration
1951-02-15_-_Dreams,_symbolic_-_true_repose_-_False_visions_-_Earth-memory_and_history
1951-02-17_-_False_visions_-_Offering_ones_will_-_Equilibrium_-_progress_-_maturity_-_Ardent_self-giving-_perfecting_the_instrument_-_Difficulties,_a_help_in_total_realisation_-_paradoxes_-_Sincerity_-_spontaneous_meditation
1951-02-19_-_Exteriorisation-_clairvoyance,_fainting,_etc_-_Somnambulism_-_Tartini_-_childrens_dreams_-_Nightmares_-_gurus_protection_-_Mind_and_vital_roam_during_sleep
1951-02-22_-_Surrender,_offering,_consecration_-_Experiences_and_sincerity_-_Aspiration_and_desire_-_Vedic_hymns_-_Concentration_and_time
1951-02-24_-_Psychic_being_and_entity_-_dimensions_-_in_the_atom_-_Death_-_exteriorisation_-_unconsciousness_-_Past_lives_-_progress_upon_earth_-_choice_of_birth_-_Consecration_to_divine_Work_-_psychic_memories_-_Individualisation_-_progress
1951-02-26_-_On_reading_books_-_gossip_-_Discipline_and_realisation_-_Imaginary_stories-_value_of_-_Private_lives_of_big_men_-_relaxation_-_Understanding_others_-_gnostic_consciousness
1951-03-01_-_Universe_and_the_Divine_-_Freedom_and_determinism_-_Grace_-_Time_and_Creation-_in_the_Supermind_-_Work_and_its_results_-_The_psychic_being_-_beauty_and_love_-_Flowers-_beauty_and_significance_-_Choice_of_reincarnating_psychic_being
1951-03-03_-_Hostile_forces_-_difficulties_-_Individuality_and_form_-_creation
1951-03-05_-_Disasters-_the_forces_of_Nature_-_Story_of_the_charity_Bazar_-_Liberation_and_law_-_Dealing_with_the_mind_and_vital-_methods
1951-03-08_-_Silencing_the_mind_-_changing_the_nature_-_Reincarnation-_choice_-_Psychic,_higher_beings_gods_incarnating_-_Incarnation_of_vital_beings_-_the_Lord_of_Falsehood_-_Hitler_-_Possession_and_madness
1951-03-10_-_Fairy_Tales-_serpent_guarding_treasure_-_Vital_beings-_their_incarnations_-_The_vital_being_after_death_-_Nightmares-_vital_and_mental_-_Mind_and_vital_after_death_-_The_spirit_of_the_form-_Egyptian_mummies
1951-03-12_-_Mental_forms_-_learning_difficult_subjects_-_Mental_fortress_-_thought_-_Training_the_mind_-_Helping_the_vital_being_after_death_-_ceremonies_-_Human_stupidities
1951-03-14_-_Plasticity_-_Conditions_for_knowing_the_Divine_Will_-_Illness_-_microbes_-_Fear_-_body-reflexes_-_The_best_possible_happens_-_Theories_of_Creation_-_True_knowledge_-_a_work_to_do_-_the_Ashram
1951-03-17_-_The_universe-_eternally_new,_same_-_Pralaya_Traditions_-_Light_and_thought_-_new_consciousness,_forces_-_The_expanding_universe_-_inexpressible_experiences_-_Ashram_surcharged_with_Light_-_new_force_-_vibrating_atmospheres
1951-03-19_-_Mental_worlds_and_their_beings_-_Understanding_in_silence_-_Psychic_world-_its_characteristics_-_True_experiences_and_mental_formations_-_twelve_senses
1951-03-22_-_Relativity-_time_-_Consciousness_-_psychic_Witness_-_The_twelve_senses_-_water-divining_-_Instinct_in_animals_-_story_of_Mothers_cat
1951-03-24_-_Descent_of_Divine_Love,_of_Consciousness_-_Earth-_a_symbolic_formation_-_the_Divine_Presence_-_The_psychic_being_and_other_worlds_-_Divine_Love_and_Grace_-_Becoming_consaious_of_Divine_Love_-_Finding_ones_psychic_being_-_Responsibility
1951-03-26_-_Losing_all_to_gain_all_-_psychic_being_-_Transforming_the_vital_-_physical_habits_-_the_subconscient_-_Overcoming_difficulties_-_weakness,_an_insincerity_-_to_change_the_world_-_Psychic_source,_flash_of_experience_-_preparation_for_yoga
1951-03-29_-_The_Great_Vehicle_and_The_Little_Vehicle_-_Choosing_ones_family,_country_-_The_vital_being_distorted_-_atavism_-_Sincerity_-_changing_ones_character
1951-03-31_-_Physical_ailment_and_mental_disorder_-_Curing_an_illness_spiritually_-_Receptivity_of_the_body_-_The_subtle-physical-_illness_accidents_-_Curing_sunstroke_and_other_disorders
1951-04-02_-_Causes_of_accidents_-_Little_entities,_helpful_or_mischievous-_incidents
1951-04-05_-_Illusion_and_interest_in_action_-_The_action_of_the_divine_Grace_and_the_ego_-_Concentration,_aspiration,_will,_inner_silence_-_Value_of_a_story_or_a_language_-_Truth_-_diversity_in_the_world
1951-04-07_-_Origin_of_Evil_-_Misery-_its_cause
1951-04-09_-_Modern_Art_-_Trend_of_art_in_Europe_in_the_twentieth_century_-_Effect_of_the_Wars_-_descent_of_vital_worlds_-_Formation_of_character_-_If_there_is_another_war
1951-04-12_-_Japan,_its_art,_landscapes,_life,_etc_-_Fairy-lore_of_Japan_-_Culture-_its_spiral_movement_-_Indian_and_European-_the_spiritual_life_-_Art_and_Truth
1951-04-14_-_Surrender_and_sacrifice_-_Idea_of_sacrifice_-_Bahaism_-_martyrdom_-_Sleep-_forgetfulness,_exteriorisation,_etc_-_Dreams_and_visions-_explanations_-_Exteriorisation-_incidents_about_cats
1951-04-17_-_Unity,_diversity_-_Protective_envelope_-_desires_-_consciousness,_true_defence_-_Perfection_of_physical_-_cinema_-_Choice,_constant_and_conscious_-_law_of_ones_being_-_the_One,_the_Multiplicity_-_Civilization-_preparing_an_instrument
1951-04-19_-_Demands_and_needs_-_human_nature_-_Abolishing_the_ego_-_Food-_tamas,_consecration_-_Changing_the_nature-_the_vital_and_the_mind_-_The_yoga_of_the_body__-_cellular_consciousness
1951-04-21_-_Sri_Aurobindos_letter_on_conditions_for_doing_yoga_-_Aspiration,_tapasya,_surrender_-_The_lower_vital_-_old_habits_-_obsession_-_Sri_Aurobindo_on_choice_and_the_double_life_-_The_old_fiasco_-_inner_realisation_and_outer_change
1951-04-23_-_The_goal_and_the_way_-_Learning_how_to_sleep_-_relaxation_-_Adverse_forces-_test_of_sincerity_-_Attitude_to_suffering_and_death
1951-04-26_-_Irrevocable_transformation_-_The_divine_Shakti_-_glad_submission_-_Rejection,_integral_-_Consecration_-_total_self-forgetfulness_-_work
1951-04-28_-_Personal_effort_-_tamas,_laziness_-_Static_and_dynamic_power_-_Stupidity_-_psychic_and_intelligence_-_Philosophies-_different_languages_-_Theories_of_Creation_-_Surrender_of_ones_being_and_ones_work
1951-05-03_-_Money_and_its_use_for_the_divine_work_-_problems_-_Mastery_over_desire-_individual_and_collective_change
1951-05-05_-_Needs_and_desires_-_Discernment_-_sincerity_and_true_perception_-_Mantra_and_its_effects_-_Object_in_action-_to_serve_-_relying_only_on_the_Divine
1951-05-07_-_A_Hierarchy_-_Transcendent,_universal,_individual_Divine_-_The_Supreme_Shakti_and_Creation_-_Inadequacy_of_words,_language
1951-05-11_-_Mahakali_and_Kali_-_Avatar_and_Vibhuti_-_Sachchidananda_behind_all_states_of_being_-_The_power_of_will_-_receiving_the_Divine_Will
1951-05-12_-_Mahalakshmi_and_beauty_in_life_-_Mahasaraswati_-_conscious_hand_-_Riches_and_poverty
1951-05-14_-_Chance_-_the_play_of_forces_-_Peace,_given_and_lost_-_Abolishing_the_ego
1953-03-18
1953-03-25
1953-04-01
1953-04-08
1953-04-15
1953-04-22
1953-04-29
1953-05-06
1953-05-13
1953-05-20
1953-05-27
1953-06-03
1953-06-10
1953-06-17
1953-06-24
1953-07-01
1953-07-08
1953-07-15
1953-07-22
1953-07-29
1953-08-05
1953-08-12
1953-08-19
1953-08-26
1953-09-02
1953-09-09
1953-09-16
1953-09-23
1953-09-30
1953-10-07
1953-10-14
1953-10-21
1953-10-28
1953-11-04
1953-11-11
1953-11-18
1953-11-25
1953-12-09
1953-12-16
1953-12-23
1953-12-30
1954-02-03_-_The_senses_and_super-sense_-_Children_can_be_moulded_-_Keeping_things_in_order_-_The_shadow
1954-02-10_-_Study_a_variety_of_subjects_-_Memory_-Memory_of_past_lives_-_Getting_rid_of_unpleasant_thoughts
1954-02-17_-_Experience_expressed_in_different_ways_-_Origin_of_the_psychic_being_-_Progress_in_sports_-Everything_is_not_for_the_best
1954-03-03_-_Occultism_-_A_French_scientists_experiment
1954-03-24_-_Dreams_and_the_condition_of_the_stomach_-_Tobacco_and_alcohol_-_Nervousness_-_The_centres_and_the_Kundalini_-_Control_of_the_senses
1954-04-07_-_Communication_without_words_-_Uneven_progress_-_Words_and_the_Word
1954-04-14_-_Love_-_Can_a_person_love_another_truly?_-_Parental_love
1954-04-28_-_Aspiration_and_receptivity_-_Resistance_-_Purusha_and_Prakriti,_not_masculine_and_feminine
1954-05-05_-_Faith,_trust,_confidence_-_Insincerity_and_unconsciousness
1954-05-12_-_The_Purusha_-_Surrender_-_Distinguishing_between_influences_-_Perfect_sincerity
1954-05-19_-_Affection_and_love_-_Psychic_vision_Divine_-_Love_and_receptivity_-_Get_out_of_the_ego
1954-05-26_-_Symbolic_dreams_-_Psychic_sorrow_-_Dreams,_one_is_rarely_conscious
1954-06-02_-_Learning_how_to_live_-_Work,_studies_and_sadhana_-_Waste_of_the_Energy_and_Consciousness
1954-06-16_-_Influences,_Divine_and_other_-_Adverse_forces_-_The_four_great_Asuras_-_Aspiration_arranges_circumstances_-_Wanting_only_the_Divine
1954-06-23_-_Meat-eating_-_Story_of_Mothers_vegetable_garden_-_Faithfulness_-_Conscious_sleep
1954-06-30_-_Occultism_-_Religion_and_vital_beings_-_Mothers_knowledge_of_what_happens_in_the_Ashram_-_Asking_questions_to_Mother_-_Drawing_on_Mother
1954-07-07_-_The_inner_warrior_-_Grace_and_the_Falsehood_-_Opening_from_below_-_Surrender_and_inertia_-_Exclusive_receptivity_-_Grace_and_receptivity
1954-07-14_-_The_Divine_and_the_Shakti_-_Personal_effort_-_Speaking_and_thinking_-_Doubt_-_Self-giving,_consecration_and_surrender_-_Mothers_use_of_flowers_-_Ornaments_and_protection
1954-07-21_-_Mistakes_-_Success_-_Asuras_-_Mental_arrogance_-_Difficulty_turned_into_opportunity_-_Mothers_use_of_flowers_-_Conversion_of_men_governed_by_adverse_forces
1954-07-28_-_Money_-_Ego_and_individuality_-_The_shadow
1954-08-04_-_Servant_and_worker_-_Justification_of_weakness_-_Play_of_the_Divine_-_Why_are_you_here_in_the_Ashram?
1954-08-11_-_Division_and_creation_-_The_gods_and_human_formations_-_People_carry_their_desires_around_them
1954-08-18_-_Mahalakshmi_-_Maheshwari_-_Mahasaraswati_-_Determinism_and_freedom_-_Suffering_and_knowledge_-_Aspects_of_the_Mother
1954-08-25_-_Ananda_aspect_of_the_Mother_-_Changing_conditions_in_the_Ashram_-_Ascetic_discipline_-_Mothers_body
1954-09-08_-_Hostile_forces_-_Substance_-_Concentration_-_Changing_the_centre_of_thought_-_Peace
1954-09-15_-_Parts_of_the_being_-_Thoughts_and_impulses_-_The_subconscient_-_Precise_vocabulary_-_The_Grace_and_difficulties
1954-09-22_-_The_supramental_creation_-_Rajasic_eagerness_-_Silence_from_above_-_Aspiration_and_rejection_-_Effort,_individuality_and_ego_-_Aspiration_and_desire
1954-09-29_-_The_right_spirit_-_The_Divine_comes_first_-_Finding_the_Divine_-_Mistakes_-_Rejecting_impulses_-_Making_the_consciousness_vast_-_Firm_resolution
1954-10-06_-_What_happens_is_for_the_best_-_Blaming_oneself_-Experiences_-_The_vital_desire-soul_-Creating_a_spiritual_atmosphere_-Thought_and_Truth
1954-10-20_-_Stand_back_-_Asking_questions_to_Mother_-_Seeing_images_in_meditation_-_Berlioz_-Music_-_Mothers_organ_music_-_Destiny
1954-11-03_-_Body_opening_to_the_Divine_-_Concentration_in_the_heart_-_The_army_of_the_Divine_-_The_knot_of_the_ego_-Streng_thening_ones_will
1954-11-10_-_Inner_experience,_the_basis_of_action_-_Keeping_open_to_the_Force_-_Faith_through_aspiration_-_The_Mothers_symbol_-_The_mind_and_vital_seize_experience_-_Degrees_of_sincerity_-Becoming_conscious_of_the_Divine_Force
1954-11-24_-_Aspiration_mixed_with_desire_-_Willing_and_desiring_-_Children_and_desires_-_Supermind_and_the_higher_ranges_of_mind_-_Stages_in_the_supramental_manifestation
1954-12-08_-_Cosmic_consciousness_-_Clutching_-_The_central_will_of_the_being_-_Knowledge_by_identity
1954-12-15_-_Many_witnesses_inside_oneself_-_Children_in_the_Ashram_-_Trance_and_the_waking_consciousness_-_Ascetic_methods_-_Education,_spontaneous_effort_-_Spiritual_experience
1954-12-22_-_Possession_by_hostile_forces_-_Purity_and_morality_-_Faith_in_the_final_success_-Drawing_back_from_the_path
1954-12-29_-_Difficulties_and_the_world_-_The_experience_the_psychic_being_wants_-_After_death_-Ignorance
1955-02-09_-_Desire_is_contagious_-_Primitive_form_of_love_-_the_artists_delight_-_Psychic_need,_mind_as_an_instrument_-_How_the_psychic_being_expresses_itself_-_Distinguishing_the_parts_of_ones_being_-_The_psychic_guides_-_Illness_-_Mothers_vision
1955-02-16_-_Losing_something_given_by_Mother_-_Using_things_well_-_Sadhak_collecting_soap-pieces_-_What_things_are_truly_indispensable_-_Natures_harmonious_arrangement_-_Riches_a_curse,_philanthropy_-_Misuse_of_things_creates_misery
1955-02-23_-_On_the_sense_of_taste,_educating_the_senses_-_Fasting_produces_a_state_of_receptivity,_drawing_energy_-_The_body_and_food
1955-03-02_-_Right_spirit,_aspiration_and_desire_-_Sleep_and_yogic_repose,_how_to_sleep_-_Remembering_dreams_-_Concentration_and_outer_activity_-_Mother_opens_the_door_inside_everyone_-_Sleep,_a_school_for_inner_knowledge_-_Source_of_energy
1955-03-09_-_Psychic_directly_contacted_through_the_physical_-_Transforming_egoistic_movements_-_Work_of_the_psychic_being_-_Contacting_the_psychic_and_the_Divine_-_Experiences_of_different_kinds_-_Attacks_of_adverse_forces
1955-03-23_-_Procedure_for_rejection_and_transformation_-_Learning_by_heart,_true_understanding_-_Vibrations,_movements_of_the_species_-_A_cat_and_a_Russian_peasant_woman_-_A_cat_doing_yoga
1955-03-30_-_Yoga-shakti_-_Energies_of_the_earth,_higher_and_lower_-_Illness,_curing_by_yogic_means_-_The_true_self_and_the_psychic_-_Solving_difficulties_by_different_methods
1955-04-06_-_Freuds_psychoanalysis,_the_subliminal_being_-_The_psychic_and_the_subliminal_-_True_psychology_-_Changing_the_lower_nature_-_Faith_in_different_parts_of_the_being_-_Psychic_contact_established_in_all_in_the_Ashram
1955-04-13_-_Psychoanalysts_-_The_underground_super-ego,_dreams,_sleep,_control_-_Archetypes,_Overmind_and_higher_-_Dream_of_someone_dying_-_Integral_repose,_entering_Sachchidananda_-_Organising_ones_life,_concentration,_repose
1955-04-27_-_Symbolic_dreams_and_visions_-_Curing_pain_by_various_methods_-_Different_states_of_consciousness_-_Seeing_oneself_dead_in_a_dream_-_Exteriorisation
1955-05-04_-_Drawing_on_the_universal_vital_forces_-_The_inner_physical_-_Receptivity_to_different_kinds_of_forces_-_Progress_and_receptivity
1955-05-18_-_The_Problem_of_Woman_-_Men_and_women_-_The_Supreme_Mother,_the_new_creation_-_Gods_and_goddesses_-_A_story_of_Creation,_earth_-_Psychic_being_only_on_earth,_beings_everywhere_-_Going_to_other_worlds_by_occult_means
1955-05-25_-_Religion_and_reason_-_true_role_and_field_-_an_obstacle_to_or_minister_of_the_Spirit_-_developing_and_meaning_-_Learning_how_to_live,_the_elite_-_Reason_controls_and_organises_life_-_Nature_is_infrarational
1955-06-01_-_The_aesthetic_conscience_-_Beauty_and_form_-_The_roots_of_our_life_-_The_sense_of_beauty_-_Educating_the_aesthetic_sense,_taste_-_Mental_constructions_based_on_a_revelation_-_Changing_the_world_and_humanity
1955-06-08_-_Working_for_the_Divine_-_ideal_attitude_-_Divine_manifesting_-_reversal_of_consciousness,_knowing_oneself_-_Integral_progress,_outer,_inner,_facing_difficulties_-_People_in_Ashram_-_doing_Yoga_-_Children_given_freedom,_choosing_yoga
1955-06-15_-_Dynamic_realisation,_transformation_-_The_negative_and_positive_side_of_experience_-_The_image_of_the_dry_coconut_fruit_-_Purusha,_Prakriti,_the_Divine_Mother_-_The_Truth-Creation_-_Pralaya_-_We_are_in_a_transitional_period
1955-06-22_-_Awakening_the_Yoga-shakti_-_The_thousand-petalled_lotus-_Reading,_how_far_a_help_for_yoga_-_Simple_and_complicated_combinations_in_men
1955-06-29_-_The_true_vital_and_true_physical_-_Time_and_Space_-_The_psychics_memory_of_former_lives_-_The_psychic_organises_ones_life_-_The_psychics_knowledge_and_direction
1955-07-06_-_The_psychic_and_the_central_being_or_jivatman_-_Unity_and_multiplicity_in_the_Divine_-_Having_experiences_and_the_ego_-_Mental,_vital_and_physical_exteriorisation_-_Imagination_has_a_formative_power_-_The_function_of_the_imagination
1955-07-13_-_Cosmic_spirit_and_cosmic_consciousness_-_The_wall_of_ignorance,_unity_and_separation_-_Aspiration_to_understand,_to_know,_to_be_-_The_Divine_is_in_the_essence_of_ones_being_-_Realising_desires_through_the_imaginaton
1955-07-20_-_The_Impersonal_Divine_-_Surrender_to_the_Divine_brings_perfect_freedom_-_The_Divine_gives_Himself_-_The_principle_of_the_inner_dimensions_-_The_paths_of_aspiration_and_surrender_-_Linear_and_spherical_paths_and_realisations
1955-08-03_-_Nothing_is_impossible_in_principle_-_Psychic_contact_and_psychic_influence_-_Occult_powers,_adverse_influences;_magic_-_Magic,_occultism_and_Yogic_powers_-Hypnotism_and_its_effects
1955-08-17_-_Vertical_ascent_and_horizontal_opening_-_Liberation_of_the_psychic_being_-_Images_for_discovery_of_the_psychic_being_-_Sadhana_to_contact_the_psychic_being
1955-09-21_-_Literature_and_the_taste_for_forms_-_The_characters_of_The_Great_Secret_-_How_literature_helps_us_to_progress_-_Reading_to_learn_-_The_commercial_mentality_-_How_to_choose_ones_books_-_Learning_to_enrich_ones_possibilities_...
1955-10-05_-_Science_and_Ignorance_-_Knowledge,_science_and_the_Buddha_-_Knowing_by_identification_-_Discipline_in_science_and_in_Buddhism_-_Progress_in_the_mental_field_and_beyond_it
1955-10-12_-_The_problem_of_transformation_-_Evolution,_man_and_superman_-_Awakening_need_of_a_higher_good_-_Sri_Aurobindo_and_earths_history_-_Setting_foot_on_the_new_path_-_The_true_reality_of_the_universe_-_the_new_race_-_...
1955-10-19_-_The_rhythms_of_time_-_The_lotus_of_knowledge_and_perfection_-_Potential_knowledge_-_The_teguments_of_the_soul_-_Shastra_and_the_Gurus_direct_teaching_-_He_who_chooses_the_Infinite...
1955-10-26_-_The_Divine_and_the_universal_Teacher_-_The_power_of_the_Word_-_The_Creative_Word,_the_mantra_-_Sound,_music_in_other_worlds_-_The_domains_of_pure_form,_colour_and_ideas
1955-11-02_-_The_first_movement_in_Yoga_-_Interiorisation,_finding_ones_soul_-_The_Vedic_Age_-_An_incident_about_Vivekananda_-_The_imaged_language_of_the_Vedas_-_The_Vedic_Rishis,_involutionary_beings_-_Involution_and_evolution
1955-11-09_-_Personal_effort,_egoistic_mind_-_Man_is_like_a_public_square_-_Natures_work_-_Ego_needed_for_formation_of_individual_-_Adverse_forces_needed_to_make_man_sincere_-_Determinisms_of_different_planes,_miracles
1955-11-16_-_The_significance_of_numbers_-_Numbers,_astrology,_true_knowledge_-_Divines_Love_flowers_for_Kali_puja_-_Desire,_aspiration_and_progress_-_Determining_ones_approach_to_the_Divine_-_Liberation_is_obtained_through_austerities_-_...
1955-11-23_-_One_reality,_multiple_manifestations_-_Integral_Yoga,_approach_by_all_paths_-_The_supreme_man_and_the_divine_man_-_Miracles_and_the_logic_of_events
1955-12-07_-_Emotional_impulse_of_self-giving_-_A_young_dancer_in_France_-_The_heart_has_wings,_not_the_head_-_Only_joy_can_conquer_the_Adversary
1955-12-14_-_Rejection_of_life_as_illusion_in_the_old_Yogas_-_Fighting_the_adverse_forces_-_Universal_and_individual_being_-_Three_stages_in_Integral_Yoga_-_How_to_feel_the_Divine_Presence_constantly
1955-12-28_-_Aspiration_in_different_parts_of_the_being_-_Enthusiasm_and_gratitude_-_Aspiration_is_in_all_beings_-_Unlimited_power_of_good,_evil_has_a_limit_-_Progress_in_the_parts_of_the_being_-_Significance_of_a_dream
1956-01-04_-_Integral_idea_of_the_Divine_-_All_things_attracted_by_the_Divine_-_Bad_things_not_in_place_-_Integral_yoga_-_Moving_idea-force,_ideas_-_Consequences_of_manifestation_-_Work_of_Spirit_via_Nature_-_Change_consciousness,_change_world
1956-01-11_-_Desire_and_self-deception_-_Giving_all_one_is_and_has_-_Sincerity,_more_powerful_than_will_-_Joy_of_progress_Definition_of_youth
1956-01-18_-_Two_sides_of_individual_work_-_Cheerfulness_-_chosen_vessel_of_the_Divine_-_Aspiration,_consciousness,_of_plants,_of_children_-_Being_chosen_by_the_Divine_-_True_hierarchy_-_Perfect_relation_with_the_Divine_-_India_free_in_1915
1956-01-25_-_The_divine_way_of_life_-_Divine,_Overmind,_Supermind_-_Material_body__for_discovery_of_the_Divine_-_Five_psychological_perfections
1956-02-01_-_Path_of_knowledge_-_Finding_the_Divine_in_life_-_Capacity_for_contact_with_the_Divine_-_Partial_and_total_identification_with_the_Divine_-_Manifestation_and_hierarchy
1956-02-08_-_Forces_of_Nature_expressing_a_higher_Will_-_Illusion_of_separate_personality_-_One_dynamic_force_which_moves_all_things_-_Linear_and_spherical_thinking_-_Common_ideal_of_life,_microscopic
1956-02-15_-_Nature_and_the_Master_of_Nature_-_Conscious_intelligence_-_Theory_of_the_Gita,_not_the_whole_truth_-_Surrender_to_the_Lord_-_Change_of_nature
1956-02-22_-_Strong_immobility_of_an_immortal_spirit_-_Equality_of_soul_-_Is_all_an_expression_of_the_divine_Will?_-_Loosening_the_knot_of_action_-_Using_experience_as_a_cloak_to_cover_excesses_-_Sincerity,_a_rare_virtue
1956-02-29_-_Sacrifice,_self-giving_-_Divine_Presence_in_the_heart_of_Matter_-_Divine_Oneness_-_Divine_Consciousness_-_All_is_One_-_Divine_in_the_inconscient_aspires_for_the_Divine
1956-03-07_-_Sacrifice,_Animals,_hostile_forces,_receive_in_proportion_to_consciousness_-_To_be_luminously_open_-_Integral_transformation_-_Pain_of_rejection,_delight_of_progress_-_Spirit_behind_intention_-_Spirit,_matter,_over-simplified
1956-03-14_-_Dynamic_meditation_-_Do_all_as_an_offering_to_the_Divine_-_Significance_of_23.4.56._-_If_twelve_men_of_goodwill_call_the_Divine
1956-03-21_-_Identify_with_the_Divine_-_The_Divine,_the_most_important_thing_in_life
1956-03-28_-_The_starting-point_of_spiritual_experience_-_The_boundless_finite_-_The_Timeless_and_Time_-_Mental_explanation_not_enough_-_Changing_knowledge_into_experience_-_Sat-Chit-Tapas-Ananda
1956-04-04_-_The_witness_soul_-_A_Gita_enthusiast_-_Propagandist_spirit,_Tolstoys_son
1956-04-11_-_Self-creator_-_Manifestation_of_Time_and_Space_-_Brahman-Maya_and_Ishwara-Shakti_-_Personal_and_Impersonal
1956-04-18_-_Ishwara_and_Shakti,_seeing_both_aspects_-_The_Impersonal_and_the_divine_Person_-_Soul,_the_presence_of_the_divine_Person_-_Going_to_other_worlds,_exteriorisation,_dreams_-_Telling_stories_to_oneself
1956-04-25_-_God,_human_conception_and_the_true_Divine_-_Earthly_existence,_to_realise_the_Divine_-_Ananda,_divine_pleasure_-_Relations_with_the_divine_Presence_-_Asking_the_Divine_for_what_one_needs_-_Allowing_the_Divine_to_lead_one
1956-05-02_-_Threefold_union_-_Manifestation_of_the_Supramental_-_Profiting_from_the_Divine_-_Recognition_of_the_Supramental_Force_-_Ascent,_descent,_manifestation
1956-05-16_-_Needs_of_the_body,_not_true_in_themselves_-_Spiritual_and_supramental_law_-_Aestheticised_Paganism_-_Morality,_checks_true_spiritual_effort_-_Effect_of_supramental_descent_-_Half-lights_and_false_lights
1956-05-23_-_Yoga_and_religion_-_Story_of_two_clergymen_on_a_boat_-_The_Buddha_and_the_Supramental_-_Hieroglyphs_and_phonetic_alphabets_-_A_vision_of_ancient_Egypt_-_Memory_for_sounds
1956-05-30_-_Forms_as_symbols_of_the_Force_behind_-_Art_as_expression_of_contact_with_the_Divine_-_Supramental_psychological_perfection_-_Division_of_works_-_The_Ashram,_idle_stupidities
1956-06-06_-_Sign_or_indication_from_books_of_revelation_-_Spiritualised_mind_-_Stages_of_sadhana_-_Reversal_of_consciousness_-_Organisation_around_central_Presence_-_Boredom,_most_common_human_malady
1956-06-13_-_Effects_of_the_Supramental_action_-_Education_and_the_Supermind_-_Right_to_remain_ignorant_-_Concentration_of_mind_-_Reason,_not_supreme_capacity_-_Physical_education_and_studies_-_inner_discipline_-_True_usefulness_of_teachers
1956-06-20_-_Hearts_mystic_light,_intuition_-_Psychic_being,_contact_-_Secular_ethics_-_True_role_of_mind_-_Realise_the_Divine_by_love_-_Depression,_pleasure,_joy_-_Heart_mixture_-_To_follow_the_soul_-_Physical_process_-_remember_the_Mother
1956-06-27_-_Birth,_entry_of_soul_into_body_-_Formation_of_the_supramental_world_-_Aspiration_for_progress_-_Bad_thoughts_-_Cerebral_filter_-_Progress_and_resistance
1956-07-04_-_Aspiration_when_one_sees_a_shooting_star_-_Preparing_the_bodyn_making_it_understand_-_Getting_rid_of_pain_and_suffering_-_Psychic_light
1956-07-11_-_Beauty_restored_to_its_priesthood_-_Occult_worlds,_occult_beings_-_Difficulties_and_the_supramental_force
1956-07-18_-_Unlived_dreams_-_Radha-consciousness_-_Separation_and_identification_-_Ananda_of_identity_and_Ananda_of_union_-_Sincerity,_meditation_and_prayer_-_Enemies_of_the_Divine_-_The_universe_is_progressive
1956-07-25_-_A_complete_act_of_divine_love_-_How_to_listen_-_Sports_programme_same_for_boys_and_girls_-_How_to_profit_by_stay_at_Ashram_-_To_Women_about_Their_Body
1956-08-01_-_Value_of_worship_-_Spiritual_realisation_and_the_integral_yoga_-_Symbols,_translation_of_experience_into_form_-_Sincerity,_fundamental_virtue_-_Intensity_of_aspiration,_with_anguish_or_joy_-_The_divine_Grace
1956-08-08_-_How_to_light_the_psychic_fire,_will_for_progress_-_Helping_from_a_distance,_mental_formations_-_Prayer_and_the_divine_-_Grace_Grace_at_work_everywhere
1956-08-15_-_Protection,_purification,_fear_-_Atmosphere_at_the_Ashram_on_Darshan_days_-_Darshan_messages_-_Significance_of_15-08_-_State_of_surrender_-_Divine_Grace_always_all-powerful_-_Assumption_of_Virgin_Mary_-_SA_message_of_1947-08-15
1956-08-22_-_The_heaven_of_the_liberated_mind_-_Trance_or_samadhi_-_Occult_discipline_for_leaving_consecutive_bodies_-_To_be_greater_than_ones_experience_-_Total_self-giving_to_the_Grace_-_The_truth_of_the_being_-_Unique_relation_with_the_Supreme
1956-08-29_-_To_live_spontaneously_-_Mental_formations_Absolute_sincerity_-_Balance_is_indispensable,_the_middle_path_-_When_in_difficulty,_widen_the_consciousness_-_Easiest_way_of_forgetting_oneself
1956-09-05_-_Material_life,_seeing_in_the_right_way_-_Effect_of_the_Supermind_on_the_earth_-_Emergence_of_the_Supermind_-_Falling_back_into_the_same_mistaken_ways
1956-09-12_-_Questions,_practice_and_progress
1956-09-19_-_Power,_predominant_quality_of_vital_being_-_The_Divine,_the_psychic_being,_the_Supermind_-_How_to_come_out_of_the_physical_consciousness_-_Look_life_in_the_face_-_Ordinary_love_and_Divine_love
1956-09-26_-_Soul_of_desire_-_Openness,_harmony_with_Nature_-_Communion_with_divine_Presence_-_Individuality,_difficulties,_soul_of_desire_-_personal_contact_with_the_Mother_-_Inner_receptivity_-_Bad_thoughts_before_the_Mother
1956-10-03_-_The_Mothers_different_ways_of_speaking_-_new_manifestation_-_new_element,_possibilities_-_child_prodigies_-_Laws_of_Nature,_supramental_-_Logic_of_the_unforeseen_-_Creative_writers,_hands_of_musicians_-_Prodigious_children,_men
1956-10-10_-_The_supramental_race__in_a_few_centuries_-_Condition_for_new_realisation_-_Everyone_must_follow_his_own_path_-_Progress,_no_two_paths_alike
1956-10-17_-_Delight,_the_highest_state_-_Delight_and_detachment_-_To_be_calm_-_Quietude,_mental_and_vital_-_Calm_and_strength_-_Experience_and_expression_of_experience
1956-10-24_-_Taking_a_new_body_-_Different_cases_of_incarnation_-_Departure_of_soul_from_body
1956-10-31_-_Manifestation_of_divine_love_-_Deformation_of_Love_by_human_consciousness_-_Experience_and_expression_of_experience
1956-11-07_-_Thoughts_created_by_forces_of_universal_-_Mind_Our_own_thought_hardly_exists_-_Idea,_origin_higher_than_mind_-_The_Synthesis_of_Yoga,_effect_of_reading
1956-11-14_-_Conquering_the_desire_to_appear_good_-_Self-control_and_control_of_the_life_around_-_Power_of_mastery_-_Be_a_great_yogi_to_be_a_good_teacher_-_Organisation_of_the_Ashram_school_-_Elementary_discipline_of_regularity
1956-11-21_-_Knowings_and_Knowledge_-_Reason,_summit_of_mans_mental_activities_-_Willings_and_the_true_will_-_Personal_effort_-_First_step_to_have_knowledge_-_Relativity_of_medical_knowledge_-_Mental_gymnastics_make_the_mind_supple
1956-11-28_-_Desire,_ego,_animal_nature_-_Consciousness,_a_progressive_state_-_Ananda,_desireless_state_beyond_enjoyings_-_Personal_effort_that_is_mental_-_Reason,_when_to_disregard_it_-_Reason_and_reasons
1956-12-05_-_Even_and_objectless_ecstasy_-_Transform_the_animal_-_Individual_personality_and_world-personality_-_Characteristic_features_of_a_world-personality_-_Expressing_a_universal_state_of_consciousness_-_Food_and_sleep_-_Ordered_intuition
1956-12-12_-_paradoxes_-_Nothing_impossible_-_unfolding_universe,_the_Eternal_-_Attention,_concentration,_effort_-_growth_capacity_almost_unlimited_-_Why_things_are_not_the_same_-_will_and_willings_-_Suggestions,_formations_-_vital_world
1956-12-19_-_Preconceived_mental_ideas_-_Process_of_creation_-_Destructive_power_of_bad_thoughts_-_To_be_perfectly_sincere
1956-12-26_-_Defeated_victories_-_Change_of_consciousness_-_Experiences_that_indicate_the_road_to_take_-_Choice_and_preference_-_Diversity_of_the_manifestation
1957-01-02_-_Can_one_go_out_of_time_and_space?_-_Not_a_crucified_but_a_glorified_body_-_Individual_effort_and_the_new_force
1957-01-09_-_God_is_essentially_Delight_-_God_and_Nature_play_at_hide-and-seek_-__Why,_and_when,_are_you_grave?
1957-01-16_-_Seeking_something_without_knowing_it_-_Why_are_we_here?
1957-01-23_-_How_should_we_understand_pure_delight?_-_The_drop_of_honey_-_Action_of_the_Divine_Will_in_the_world
1957-01-30_-_Artistry_is_just_contrast_-_How_to_perceive_the_Divine_Guidance?
1957-02-06_-_Death,_need_of_progress_-_Changing_Natures_methods
1957-02-07_-_Individual_and_collective_meditation
1957-02-13_-_Suffering,_pain_and_pleasure_-_Illness_and_its_cure
1957-02-20_-_Limitations_of_the_body_and_individuality
1957-03-06_-_Freedom,_servitude_and_love
1957-03-08_-_A_Buddhist_story
1957-03-13_-_Our_best_friend
1957-03-15_-_Reminiscences_of_Tlemcen
1957-03-20_-_Never_sit_down,_true_repose
1957-03-22_-_A_story_of_initiation,_knowledge_and_practice
1957-03-27_-_If_only_humanity_consented_to_be_spiritualised
1957-04-03_-_Different_religions_and_spirituality
1957-04-10_-_Sports_and_yoga_-_Organising_ones_life
1957-04-17_-_Transformation_of_the_body
1957-04-24_-_Perfection,_lower_and_higher
1957-05-01_-_Sports_competitions,_their_value
1957-05-08_-_Vital_excitement,_reason,_instinct
1957-05-15_-_Differentiation_of_the_sexes_-_Transformation_from_above_downwards
1957-05-29_-_Progressive_transformation
1957-06-05_-_Questions_and_silence_-_Methods_of_meditation
1957-06-12_-_Fasting_and_spiritual_progress
1957-06-19_-_Causes_of_illness_Fear_and_illness_-_Minds_working,_faith_and_illness
1957-06-26_-_Birth_through_direct_transmutation_-_Man_and_woman_-_Judging_others_-_divine_Presence_in_all_-_New_birth
1957-07-03_-_Collective_yoga,_vision_of_a_huge_hotel
1957-07-09_-_Incontinence_of_speech
1957-07-10_-_A_new_world_is_born_-_Overmind_creation_dissolved
1957-07-17_-_Power_of_conscious_will_over_matter
1957-07-31_-_Awakening_aspiration_in_the_body
1957-08-07_-_The_resistances,_politics_and_money_-_Aspiration_to_realise_the_supramental_life
1957-08-21_-_The_Ashram_and_true_communal_life_-_Level_of_consciousness_in_the_Ashram
1957-08-28_-_Freedom_and_Divine_Will
1957-09-04_-_Sri_Aurobindo,_an_eternal_birth
1957-09-11_-_Vital_chemistry,_attraction_and_repulsion
1957-09-18_-_Occultism_and_supramental_life
1957-10-02_-_The_Mind_of_Light_-_Statues_of_the_Buddha_-_Burden_of_the_past
1957-10-09_-_As_many_universes_as_individuals_-_Passage_to_the_higher_hemisphere
1957-10-16_-_Story_of_successive_involutions
1957-10-23_-_The_central_motive_of_terrestrial_existence_-_Evolution
1957-10-30_-_Double_movement_of_evolution_-_Disappearance_of_a_species
1957-11-13_-_Superiority_of_man_over_animal_-_Consciousness_precedes_form
1957-11-27_-_Sri_Aurobindos_method_in_The_Life_Divine_-_Individual_and_cosmic_evolution
1957-12-04_-_The_method_of_The_Life_Divine_-_Problem_of_emergence_of_a_new_species
1957-12-11_-_Appearance_of_the_first_men
1957-12-18_-_Modern_science_and_illusion_-_Value_of_experience,_its_transforming_power_-_Supramental_power,_first_aspect_to_manifest
1958-01-01_-_The_collaboration_of_material_Nature_-_Miracles_visible_to_a_deep_vision_of_things_-_Explanation_of_New_Year_Message
1958-01-08_-_Sri_Aurobindos_method_of_exposition_-_The_mind_as_a_public_place_-_Mental_control_-_Sri_Aurobindos_subtle_hand
1958-01-15_-_The_only_unshakable_point_of_support
1958-01-22_-_Intellectual_theories_-_Expressing_a_living_and_real_Truth
1958-01-29_-_The_plan_of_the_universe_-_Self-awareness
1958-02-12_-_Psychic_progress_from_life_to_life_-_The_earth,_the_place_of_progress
1958-02-19_-_Experience_of_the_supramental_boat_-_The_Censors_-_Absurdity_of_artificial_means
1958-02-26_-_The_moon_and_the_stars_-_Horoscopes_and_yoga
1958-03-05_-_Vibrations_and_words_-_Power_of_thought,_the_gift_of_tongues
1958-03-19_-_General_tension_in_humanity_-_Peace_and_progress_-_Perversion_and_vision_of_transformation
1958-03-26_-_Mental_anxiety_and_trust_in_spiritual_power
1958-04-02_-_Correcting_a_mistake
1958-04-09_-_The_eyes_of_the_soul_-_Perceiving_the_soul
1958-04-16_-_The_superman_-_New_realisation
1958-04-23_-_Progress_and_bargaining
1958-04-30_-_Mental_constructions_and_experience
1958-05-07_-_The_secret_of_Nature
1958-05-14_-_Intellectual_activity_and_subtle_knowing_-_Understanding_with_the_body
1958-05-21_-_Mental_honesty
1958-05-28_-_The_Avatar
1958-06-04_-_New_birth
1958-06-11_-_Is_there_a_spiritual_being_in_everybody?
1958-06-18_-_Philosophy,_religion,_occultism,_spirituality
1958-06-25_-_Sadhana_in_the_body
1958-07-16_-_Is_religion_a_necessity?
1958-07-23_-_How_to_develop_intuition_-_Concentration
1958-07-30_-_The_planchette_-_automatic_writing_-_Proofs_and_knowledge
1958-08-06_-_Collective_prayer_-_the_ideal_collectivity
1958-08-13_-_Profit_by_staying_in_the_Ashram_-_What_Sri_Aurobindo_has_come_to_tell_us_-_Finding_the_Divine
1958-08-27_-_Meditation_and_imagination_-_From_thought_to_idea,_from_idea_to_principle
1958-09-03_-_How_to_discipline_the_imagination_-_Mental_formations
1958-09-10_-_Magic,_occultism,_physical_science
1958_09_12
1958-09-17_-_Power_of_formulating_experience_-_Usefulness_of_mental_development
1958_09_19
1958-09-24_-_Living_the_truth_-_Words_and_experience
1958_09_26
1958-10-08_-_Stages_between_man_and_superman
1958_10_10
1958_10_17
1958-10-22_-_Spiritual_life_-_reversal_of_consciousness_-_Helping_others
1958_10_24
1958-11-05_-_Knowing_how_to_be_silent
1958_11_07
1958-11-12_-_The_aim_of_the_Supreme_-_Trust_in_the_Grace
1958_11_14
1958_11_21
1958-11-26_-_The_role_of_the_Spirit_-_New_birth
1958_11_28
1958_12_05
1960_01_27
1960_02_10
1960_03_02
1960_03_16
1960_03_23
1960_04_06
1960_04_07?_-_28
1960_04_20
1960_04_27
1960_05_04
1960_06_16
1960_06_22
1960_08_24
1960_08_27
1960_11_11?_-_48
1960_11_12?_-_49
1960_11_13?_-_50
1960_11_14?_-_51
1961_01_18
1961_01_28
1961_03_11_-_58
1961_03_17_-_56
1961_03_17_-_57
1961_04_26_-_59
1961_05_21?_-_62
1961_05_22?
1961_07_18
1962_01_12
1962_02_03
1962_02_27
1962_05_24
1962_10_06
1962_10_12
1963_01_14
1963_03_06
1963_05_15
1963_08_10
1963_08_11?_-_94
1963_11_04
1963_11_06?_-_97
1964_02_05_-_98
1964_03_25
1964_09_16
1965_01_12
1965_03_03
1965_05_29
1965_09_25
1965_12_25
1965_12_26?
1966_07_06
1966_09_14
1967-05-24.1_-_Defining_the_Divine
1967-05-24.2_-_Defining_God
1969_08_03
1969_08_05
1969_08_14
1969_08_15?_-_133
1969_08_19
1969_08_21
1969_08_28
1969_09_04_-_143
1969_09_07_-_145
1969_09_14
1969_09_17
1969_09_18
1969_09_22
1969_09_27
1969_09_29
1969_09_30
1969_10_01?_-_166
1969_10_07
1969_10_15
1969_10_17
1969_10_18
1969_11_08?
1969_11_15
1969_12_01
1969_12_11
1969_12_13
1969_12_14
1969_12_15
1969_12_21
1969_12_23
1969_12_26
1969_12_28
1969_12_29?
1969_12_31
1970_01_01
1970_01_03
1970_01_04
1970_01_07
1970_01_08
1970_01_12
1970_01_13?
1970_01_21
1970_01_27
1970_01_28
1970_01_30
1970_02_01
1970_02_05
1970_02_17
1970_02_23
1970_02_27?
1970_03_05
1970_03_06?
1970_03_09
1970_03_10
1970_03_12
1970_03_13
1970_03_14
1970_03_15
1970_03_17
1970_03_18
1970_03_19?
1970_03_24
1970_03_25
1970_03_27
1970_03_30
1970_04_03
1970_04_04
1970_04_06
1970_04_07
1970_04_08
1970_04_10
1970_04_11
1970_04_18
1970_04_20_-_485
1970_04_22_-_493
1970_04_23_-_495
1970_04_24_-_497
1970_04_30
1970_05_02
1970_05_22
1970_06_01
1970_06_04
1970_06_07
1971_12_11
1.A_-_ANTHROPOLOGY,_THE_SOUL
1.ac_-_Happy_Dust
1.ac_-_Leah_Sublime
1.ac_-_On_-_On_-_Poet
1.ac_-_Power
1.ac_-_The_Four_Winds
1.ac_-_The_Tent
1.ac_-_The_Twins
1.ami_-_To_the_Saqi_(from_Baal-i-Jibreel)
1.anon_-_But_little_better
1.anon_-_Enuma_Elish_(When_on_high)
1.anon_-_If_this_were_a_world
1.anon_-_Less_profitable
1.anon_-_Others_have_told_me
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_TabletIX
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_Tablet_VII
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_Tablet_VIII
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_Tablet_X
1.anon_-_The_Epic_of_Gilgamesh_Tablet_XI_The_Story_of_the_Flood
1.anon_-_The_Poem_of_Antar
1.anon_-_The_Poem_of_Imru-Ul-Quais
1.anon_-_The_Seven_Evil_Spirits
1.anon_-_The_Song_of_Songs
1.ap_-_The_Universal_Prayer
1.asak_-_My_Beloved-_this_torture_and_pain
1.at_-_St._Agnes_Eve
1.bd_-_A_deluded_Mind
1.bd_-_Endless_Ages
1.bd_-_The_Greatest_Gift
1.bsf_-_I_thought_I_was_alone_who_suffered
1.bsf_-_Raga_Asa
1.bsf_-_The_lanes_are_muddy_and_far_is_the_house
1.bs_-_One_Point_Contains_All
1.bsv_-_Dont_make_me_hear_all_day
1.bsv_-_Where_they_feed_the_fire
1.bs_-_What_a_carefree_game_He_plays!
1.bs_-_You_alone_exist-_I_do_not,_O_Beloved!
1.bts_-_Invocation
1.bv_-_When_I_see_the_lark_beating
1.ct_-_One_Legged_Man
1.da_-_All_Being_within_this_order,_by_the_laws_(from_The_Paradiso,_Canto_I)
1.dd_-_So_priceless_is_the_birth,_O_brother
1.dz_-_Ching-chings_raindrop_sound
1.dz_-_Wonderous_nirvana-mind
1f.lovecraft_-_A_Reminiscence_of_Dr._Samuel_Johnson
1f.lovecraft_-_Ashes
1f.lovecraft_-_At_the_Mountains_of_Madness
1f.lovecraft_-_Azathoth
1f.lovecraft_-_Beyond_the_Wall_of_Sleep
1f.lovecraft_-_Celephais
1f.lovecraft_-_Cool_Air
1f.lovecraft_-_Dagon
1f.lovecraft_-_Deaf,_Dumb,_and_Blind
1f.lovecraft_-_Discarded_Draft_of
1f.lovecraft_-_Ex_Oblivione
1f.lovecraft_-_Facts_concerning_the_Late
1f.lovecraft_-_From_Beyond
1f.lovecraft_-_He
1f.lovecraft_-_Herbert_West-Reanimator
1f.lovecraft_-_H.P._Lovecrafts
1f.lovecraft_-_Hypnos
1f.lovecraft_-_Ibid
1f.lovecraft_-_In_the_Vault
1f.lovecraft_-_In_the_Walls_of_Eryx
1f.lovecraft_-_Medusas_Coil
1f.lovecraft_-_Old_Bugs
1f.lovecraft_-_Out_of_the_Aeons
1f.lovecraft_-_Pickmans_Model
1f.lovecraft_-_Poetry_and_the_Gods
1f.lovecraft_-_Polaris
1f.lovecraft_-_Sweet_Ermengarde
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Alchemist
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Battle_that_Ended_the_Century
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Beast_in_the_Cave
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Book
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Call_of_Cthulhu
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Case_of_Charles_Dexter_Ward
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Cats_of_Ulthar
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Challenge_from_Beyond
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Colour_out_of_Space
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Crawling_Chaos
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Curse_of_Yig
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Descendant
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Diary_of_Alonzo_Typer
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Disinterment
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Doom_That_Came_to_Sarnath
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dream-Quest_of_Unknown_Kadath
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dreams_in_the_Witch_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Dunwich_Horror
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Electric_Executioner
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Evil_Clergyman
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Festival
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Ghost-Eater
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Green_Meadow
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Haunter_of_the_Dark
1f.lovecraft_-_The_History_of_the_Necronomicon
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Hoard_of_the_Wizard-Beast
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_at_Martins_Beach
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_at_Red_Hook
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_in_the_Burying-Ground
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Horror_in_the_Museum
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Hound
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Last_Test
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Little_Glass_Bottle
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Loved_Dead
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Lurking_Fear
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Man_of_Stone
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Moon-Bog
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Mound
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Music_of_Erich_Zann
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Mysterious_Ship
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Mystery_of_the_Grave-Yard
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Nameless_City
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Night_Ocean
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Other_Gods
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Picture_in_the_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Quest_of_Iranon
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Rats_in_the_Walls
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shadow_out_of_Time
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shadow_over_Innsmouth
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Shunned_House
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Silver_Key
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Statement_of_Randolph_Carter
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Strange_High_House_in_the_Mist
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Street
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Temple
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Terrible_Old_Man
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Thing_on_the_Doorstep
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Tomb
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Transition_of_Juan_Romero
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Trap
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Tree
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Tree_on_the_Hill
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Unnamable
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Very_Old_Folk
1f.lovecraft_-_The_Whisperer_in_Darkness
1f.lovecraft_-_The_White_Ship
1f.lovecraft_-_Through_the_Gates_of_the_Silver_Key
1f.lovecraft_-_Till_A_the_Seas
1f.lovecraft_-_Two_Black_Bottles
1f.lovecraft_-_Under_the_Pyramids
1f.lovecraft_-_What_the_Moon_Brings
1f.lovecraft_-_Winged_Death
1.fs_-_A_Funeral_Fantasie
1.fs_-_Archimedes
1.fs_-_Elegy_On_The_Death_Of_A_Young_Man
1.fs_-_Elysium
1.fs_-_Feast_Of_Victory
1.fs_-_Fridolin_(The_Walk_To_The_Iron_Factory)
1.fs_-_Greekism
1.fs_-_Hero_And_Leander
1.fs_-_Human_Knowledge
1.fs_-_Hymn_To_Joy
1.fs_-_Melancholy_--_To_Laura
1.fs_-_Nadowessian_Death-Lament
1.fs_-_Parables_And_Riddles
1.fs_-_Pompeii_And_Herculaneum
1.fs_-_Punch_Song_(To_be_sung_in_the_Northern_Countries)
1.fs_-_Rapture_--_To_Laura
1.fs_-_Resignation
1.fs_-_The_Antiques_At_Paris
1.fs_-_The_Artists
1.fs_-_The_Battle
1.fs_-_The_Celebrated_Woman_-_An_Epistle_By_A_Married_Man
1.fs_-_The_Count_Of_Hapsburg
1.fs_-_The_Cranes_Of_Ibycus
1.fs_-_The_Division_Of_The_Earth
1.fs_-_The_Driver
1.fs_-_The_Eleusinian_Festival
1.fs_-_The_Fight_With_The_Dragon
1.fs_-_The_Four_Ages_Of_The_World
1.fs_-_The_Gods_Of_Greece
1.fs_-_The_Hostage
1.fs_-_The_Ideals
1.fs_-_The_Lay_Of_The_Bell
1.fs_-_The_Meeting
1.fs_-_The_Poetry_Of_Life
1.fs_-_The_Power_Of_Woman
1.fs_-_The_Triumph_Of_Love
1.fs_-_The_Words_Of_Belief
1.fs_-_To_Laura_At_The_Harpsichord
1.fs_-_To_Laura_(Mystery_Of_Reminiscence)
1.fs_-_To_The_Muse
1.fs_-_Untitled_01
1.fua_-_God_Speaks_to_Moses
1.fua_-_The_Hawk
1.fua_-_The_peacocks_excuse
1.fua_-_The_Simurgh
1.gmh_-_The_Alchemist_In_The_City
1.hcyc_-_13_-_This_jewel_of_no_price_can_never_be_used_up_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_15_-_Some_may_slander,_some_may_abuse_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_30_-_To_live_in_nothingness_is_to_ignore_cause_and_effect_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_33_-_Students_of_vigorous_will_hold_the_sword_of_wisdom_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_41_-_People_say_it_is_positive_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_52_-_From_my_youth_I_piled_studies_upon_studies_(from_The_Shodoka)
1.hcyc_-_Roll_the_Dharma_thunder_(from_The_Song_of_Enlightenment)
1.he_-_Hakuins_Song_of_Zazen
1.hs_-_A_Golden_Compass
1.hs_-_Belief_and_unbelief
1.hs_-_Cypress_And_Tulip
1.hs_-_I_Know_The_Way_You_Can_Get
1.hs_-_It_Is_Time_to_Wake_Up!
1.hs_-_Mystic_Chat
1.hs_-_Naked_in_the_Bee-House
1.hs_-_O_Saghi,_pass_around_that_cup_of_wine,_then_bring_it_to_me
1.hs_-_Spring_and_all_its_flowers
1.hs_-_Streaming
1.hs_-_The_Good_Darkness
1.hs_-_Then_through_that_dim_murkiness
1.hs_-_The_Only_One
1.hs_-_The_Pearl_on_the_Ocean_Floor
1.hs_-_There_is_no_place_for_place!
1.hs_-_The_Secret_Draught_Of_Wine
1.ia_-_I_Laid_My_Little_Daughter_To_Rest
1.iai_-_Those_travelling_to_Him
1.ia_-_Modification_Of_The_R_Poem
1.ia_-_Oh-_Her_Beauty-_The_Tender_Maid!
1.ia_-_The_Hand_Of_Trial
1.ia_-_When_we_came_together
1.ia_-_When_We_Came_Together
1.ia_-_With_My_Very_Own_Hands
1.is_-_Although_The_Wind
1.jc_-_On_this_summer_night
1.jda_-_My_heart_values_his_vulgar_ways_(from_The_Gitagovinda)
1.jda_-_Raga_Gujri
1.jda_-_You_rest_on_the_circle_of_Sris_breast_(from_The_Gitagovinda)
1.jk_-_Acrostic__-_Georgiana_Augusta_Keats
1.jk_-_A_Draught_Of_Sunshine
1.jk_-_A_Song_About_Myself
1.jk_-_Ben_Nevis_-_A_Dialogue
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_I
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_II
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_III
1.jk_-_Endymion_-_Book_IV
1.jk_-_Epistle_To_John_Hamilton_Reynolds
1.jk_-_Epistle_To_My_Brother_George
1.jk_-_Fancy
1.jk_-_Fill_For_Me_A_Brimming_Bowl
1.jk_-_Fragment._Welcome_Joy,_And_Welcome_Sorrow
1.jk_-_Fragment._Wheres_The_Poet?
1.jkhu_-_Gathering_Tea
1.jk_-_Hyperion,_A_Vision_-_Attempted_Reconstruction_Of_The_Poem
1.jk_-_Hyperion._Book_I
1.jk_-_Hyperion._Book_II
1.jk_-_Hyperion._Book_III
1.jk_-_Imitation_Of_Spenser
1.jk_-_Isabella;_Or,_The_Pot_Of_Basil_-_A_Story_From_Boccaccio
1.jk_-_King_Stephen
1.jk_-_La_Belle_Dame_Sans_Merci
1.jk_-_Lamia._Part_I
1.jk_-_Lamia._Part_II
1.jk_-_Lines_On_Seeing_A_Lock_Of_Miltons_Hair
1.jk_-_Lines_On_The_Mermaid_Tavern
1.jk_-_Lines_To_Fanny
1.jk_-_Lines_Written_In_The_Highlands_After_A_Visit_To_Burnss_Country
1.jk_-_Meg_Merrilies
1.jk_-_Ode_On_A_Grecian_Urn
1.jk_-_Ode_On_Indolence
1.jk_-_Ode_To_A_Nightingale
1.jk_-_On_Visiting_The_Tomb_Of_Burns
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_I
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_II
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_III
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_IV
1.jk_-_Otho_The_Great_-_Act_V
1.jk_-_Sleep_And_Poetry
1.jk_-_Song._Hush,_Hush!_Tread_Softly!
1.jk_-_Song_Of_The_Indian_Maid,_From_Endymion
1.jk_-_Sonnet_-_After_Dark_Vapors_Have_Oppressd_Our_Plains
1.jk_-_Sonnet._If_By_Dull_Rhymes_Our_English_Must_Be_Chaind
1.jk_-_Sonnet_III._Written_On_The_Day_That_Mr._Leigh_Hunt_Left_Prison
1.jk_-_Sonnet_I._To_My_Brother_George
1.jk_-_Sonnet_To_George_Keats_-_Written_In_Sickness
1.jk_-_Sonnet_To_Spenser
1.jk_-_Sonnet_VIII._To_My_Brothers
1.jk_-_Sonnet_VI._To_G._A._W.
1.jk_-_Sonnet._Written_In_Answer_To_A_Sonnet_By_J._H._Reynolds
1.jk_-_Sonnet._Written_On_A_Blank_Page_In_Shakespeares_Poems,_Facing_A_Lovers_Complaint
1.jk_-_Sonnet._Written_Upon_The_Top_Of_Ben_Nevis
1.jk_-_Sonnet_XIII._Addressed_To_Haydon
1.jk_-_Specimen_Of_An_Induction_To_A_Poem
1.jk_-_Spenserian_Stanzas_On_Charles_Armitage_Brown
1.jk_-_Spenserian_Stanza._Written_At_The_Close_Of_Canto_II,_Book_V,_Of_The_Faerie_Queene
1.jk_-_Staffa
1.jk_-_Teignmouth_-_Some_Doggerel,_Sent_In_A_Letter_To_B._R._Haydon
1.jk_-_The_Cap_And_Bells;_Or,_The_Jealousies_-_A_Faery_Tale_.._Unfinished
1.jk_-_The_Eve_Of_St._Agnes
1.jk_-_The_Gadfly
1.jk_-_To_......
1.jk_-_To_.......
1.jk_-_To_Ailsa_Rock
1.jk_-_To_Charles_Cowden_Clarke
1.jk_-_To_George_Felton_Mathew
1.jk_-_Written_In_The_Cottage_Where_Burns_Was_Born
1.jlb_-_At_the_Butchers
1.jlb_-_Daybreak
1.jlb_-_Emerson
1.jlb_-_History_Of_The_Night
1.jlb_-_Limits
1.jlb_-_Parting
1.jlb_-_Patio
1.jlb_-_Plainness
1.jlb_-_Remorse_for_any_Death
1.jlb_-_Shinto
1.jlb_-_That_One
1.jlb_-_The_Golem
1.jlb_-_The_Other_Tiger
1.jlb_-_Unknown_Street
1.jlb_-_When_sorrow_lays_us_low
1.jm_-_Song_to_the_Rock_Demoness
1.jm_-_The_Song_of_Food_and_Dwelling
1.jm_-_The_Song_of_Perfect_Assurance_(to_the_Demons)
1.jr_-_A_World_with_No_Boundaries_(Ghazal_363)
1.jr_-_Because_I_Cannot_Sleep
1.jr_-_Book_1_-_Prologue
1.jr_-_Bring_Wine
1.jr_-_Did_I_Not_Say_To_You
1.jr_-_Every_day_I_Bear_A_Burden
1.jr_-_Ghazal_Of_Rumi
1.jr_-_I_Am_A_Sculptor,_A_Molder_Of_Form
1.jr_-_I_Am_Only_The_House_Of_Your_Beloved
1.jr_-_If_continually_you_keep_your_hope
1.jr_-_If_I_Weep
1.jr_-_I_Have_A_Fire_For_You_In_My_Mouth
1.jr_-_In_The_End
1.jr_-_I_regard_not_the_outside_and_the_words
1.jr_-_I_Swear
1.jr_-_I_Will_Beguile_Him_With_The_Tongue
1.jr_-_Like_This
1.jr_-_look_at_love
1.jr_-_Lord,_What_A_Beloved_Is_Mine!
1.jr_-_Love_Is_Reckless
1.jr_-_Lovers
1.jr_-_Moving_Water
1.jr_-_Not_Here
1.jr_-_Rise,_Lovers
1.jr_-_Seeking_the_Source
1.jr_-_Shall_I_tell_you_our_secret?
1.jr_-_That_moon_which_the_sky_never_saw
1.jr_-_The_grapes_of_my_body_can_only_become_wine
1.jr_-_The_Guest_House
1.jr_-_There_is_some_kiss_we_want
1.jr_-_The_Self_We_Share
1.jr_-_The_Sun_Must_Come
1.jr_-_The_Time_Has_Come_For_Us_To_Become_Madmen_In_Your_Chain
1.jr_-_This_Is_Love
1.jr_-_Two_Friends
1.jr_-_Weary_Not_Of_Us,_For_We_Are_Very_Beautiful
1.jr_-_What_can_I_do,_Muslims?_I_do_not_know_myself
1.jr_-_What_Hidden_Sweetness_Is_There
1.jt_-_In_losing_all,_the_soul_has_risen_(from_Self-Annihilation_and_Charity_Lead_the_Soul...)
1.jwvg_-_Anniversary_Song
1.jwvg_-_A_Plan_the_Muses_Entertained
1.jwvg_-_At_Midnight
1.jwvg_-_Book_Of_Proverbs
1.jwvg_-_Ever_And_Everywhere
1.jwvg_-_Growth
1.jwvg_-_In_A_Word
1.jwvg_-_June
1.jwvg_-_Legend
1.jwvg_-_Living_Remembrance
1.jwvg_-_Mahomets_Song
1.jwvg_-_My_Goddess
1.jwvg_-_Playing_At_Priests
1.jwvg_-_Prometheus
1.jwvg_-_The_Exchange
1.jwvg_-_The_Godlike
1.jwvg_-_The_Muses_Mirror
1.jwvg_-_The_Muses_Son
1.jwvg_-_The_Pupil_In_Magic
1.jwvg_-_The_Wanderer
1.jwvg_-_The_Warning
1.jwvg_-_To_My_Friend_-_Ode_I
1.jwvg_-_To_The_Kind_Reader
1.jwvg_-_Wholl_Buy_Gods_Of_Love
1.kaa_-_I_Came
1.kaa_-_The_Friend_Beside_Me
1.kbr_-_Are_you_looking_for_me?
1.kbr_-_Dohas_II_(with_translation)
1.kbr_-_Friend,_Wake_Up!_Why_Do_You_Go_On_Sleeping?
1.kbr_-_Hes_that_rascally_kind_of_yogi
1.kbr_-_He's_That_Rascally_Kind_Of_Yogi
1.kbr_-_Hope_For_Him
1.kbr_-_How_Humble_Is_God
1.kbr_-_I_have_been_thinking
1.kbr_-_I_Laugh_When_I_Hear_That_The_Fish_In_The_Water_Is_Thirsty
1.kbr_-_Ive_burned_my_own_house_down
1.kbr_-_Ive_Burned_My_Own_House_Down
1.kbr_-_My_Body_And_My_Mind
1.kbr_-_O_Friend
1.kbr_-_Poem_15
1.kbr_-_Poem_2
1.kbr_-_Poem_8
1.kbr_-_The_self_forgets_itself
1.kbr_-_The_Self_Forgets_Itself
1.kbr_-_The_Time_Before_Death
1.khc_-_Idle_Wandering
1.khc_-_this_autumn_scenes_worth_words_paint
1.lb_-_Alone_and_Drinking_Under_the_Moon
1.lb_-_Alone_And_Drinking_Under_The_Moon
1.lb_-_Amidst_the_Flowers_a_Jug_of_Wine
1.lb_-_A_Song_Of_Changgan
1.lb_-_Before_The_Cask_of_Wine
1.lb_-_Chiang_Chin_Chiu
1.lb_-_Climbing_West_of_Lotus_Flower_Peak
1.lb_-_Climbing_West_Of_Lotus_Flower_Peak
1.lb_-_Confessional
1.lb_-_Down_Zhongnan_Mountain
1.lb_-_Drinking_Alone_in_the_Moonlight
1.lb_-_Drinking_in_the_Mountains
1.lb_-_Exile's_Letter
1.lb_-_Gold_painted_jars_-_wines_worth_a_thousand
1.lb_-_His_Dream_Of_Skyland
1.lb_-_Lament_On_an_Autumn_Night
1.lb_-_Leaving_White_King_City
1.lb_-_Nefarious_War
1.lb_-_Poem_by_The_Bridge_at_Ten-Shin
1.lb_-_Song_Of_The_Jade_Cup
1.lb_-_Spring_Night_In_Lo-Yang_Hearing_A_Flute
1.lb_-_Staying_The_Night_At_A_Mountain_Temple
1.lb_-_The_City_of_Choan
1.lb_-_The_River_Song
1.lb_-_To_His_Two_Children
1.lb_-_We_Fought_for_-_South_of_the_Walls
1.lb_-_Ziyi_Song
1.lla_-_If_youve_melted_your_desires
1.lovecraft_-_An_American_To_Mother_England
1.lovecraft_-_An_Epistle_To_Rheinhart_Kleiner,_Esq.,_Poet-Laureate,_And_Author_Of_Another_Endless_Day
1.lovecraft_-_Arcadia
1.lovecraft_-_Egyptian_Christmas
1.lovecraft_-_Ex_Oblivione
1.lovecraft_-_Fact_And_Fancy
1.lovecraft_-_Fungi_From_Yuggoth
1.lovecraft_-_Laeta-_A_Lament
1.lovecraft_-_March
1.lovecraft_-_Poemata_Minora-_Volume_II
1.lovecraft_-_Providence
1.lovecraft_-_Psychopompos-_A_Tale_in_Rhyme
1.lovecraft_-_The_Ancient_Track
1.lovecraft_-_The_Conscript
1.lovecraft_-_The_House
1.lovecraft_-_The_Messenger
1.lovecraft_-_Theodore_Roosevelt
1.lovecraft_-_The_Poe-ets_Nightmare
1.lovecraft_-_The_Teutons_Battle-Song
1.lovecraft_-_To_Alan_Seeger-
1.lovecraft_-_Tosh_Bosh
1.lovecraft_-_Waste_Paper-_A_Poem_Of_Profound_Insignificance
1.lr_-_An_Adamantine_Song_on_the_Ever-Present
1.ltp_-_The_Hundred_Character_Tablet_(Bai_Zi_Bei)
1.mah_-_I_Witnessed_My_Maker
1.mah_-_You_live_inside_my_heart-_in_there_are_secrets_about_You
1.mb_-_All_I_Was_Doing_Was_Breathing
1.mb_-_The_Five-Coloured_Garment
1.mb_-_this_old_village
1.mb_-_Why_Mira_Cant_Come_Back_to_Her_Old_House
1.ml_-_Realisation_of_Dreams_and_Mind
1.mm_-_Of_the_voices_of_the_Godhead
1.mm_-_Set_Me_on_Fire
1.nrpa_-_The_Viewm_Concisely_Put
1.okym_-_40_-_You_know,_my_Friends,_how_long_since_in_my_House
1.okym_-_46_-_later_edition_-_Why,_be_this_Juice_the_growth_of_God,_who_dare_Why,_be_this_Juice_the_growth_of_God,_who_dare
1.pbs_-_Adonais_-_An_elegy_on_the_Death_of_John_Keats
1.pbs_-_Alastor_-_or,_the_Spirit_of_Solitude
1.pbs_-_An_Allegory
1.pbs_-_An_Exhortation
1.pbs_-_Bigotrys_Victim
1.pbs_-_Charles_The_First
1.pbs_-_Chorus_from_Hellas
1.pbs_-_Despair
1.pbs_-_Epigram_IV_-_Circumstance
1.pbs_-_Epipsychidion
1.pbs_-_Epipsychidion_(Excerpt)
1.pbs_-_Epipsychidion_-_Passages_Of_The_Poem,_Or_Connected_Therewith
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_"Igniculus_Desiderii"
1.pbs_-_Fragment_Of_The_Elegy_On_The_Death_Of_Bion
1.pbs_-_Fragments_Of_An_Unfinished_Drama
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_Supposed_To_Be_An_Epithalamium_Of_Francis_Ravaillac_And_Charlotte_Corday
1.pbs_-_Fragments_Written_For_Hellas
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_To_The_People_Of_England
1.pbs_-_Fragment_-_Yes!_All_Is_Past
1.pbs_-_From
1.pbs_-_From_The_Greek_Of_Moschus
1.pbs_-_Ginevra
1.pbs_-_Good-Night
1.pbs_-_Hellas_-_A_Lyrical_Drama
1.pbs_-_HERE_I_sit_with_my_paper
1.pbs_-_Homers_Hymn_To_Castor_And_Pollux
1.pbs_-_Homers_Hymn_To_The_Earth_-_Mother_Of_All
1.pbs_-_Homers_Hymn_To_The_Moon
1.pbs_-_Homers_Hymn_To_Venus
1.pbs_-_Hymn_To_Mercury
1.pbs_-_Invocation_To_Misery
1.pbs_-_Julian_and_Maddalo_-_A_Conversation
1.pbs_-_Letter_To_Maria_Gisborne
1.pbs_-_Marenghi
1.pbs_-_Mont_Blanc_-_Lines_Written_In_The_Vale_of_Chamouni
1.pbs_-_Music_And_Sweet_Poetry
1.pbs_-_Ode_To_Liberty
1.pbs_-_Ode_To_Naples
1.pbs_-_Oedipus_Tyrannus_or_Swellfoot_The_Tyrant
1.pbs_-_On_A_Fete_At_Carlton_House_-_Fragment
1.pbs_-_On_Leaving_London_For_Wales
1.pbs_-_On_The_Dark_Height_of_Jura
1.pbs_-_Orpheus
1.pbs_-_Otho
1.pbs_-_Peter_Bell_The_Third
1.pbs_-_Prince_Athanase
1.pbs_-_Prometheus_Unbound
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_I.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_II.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_IV.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_IX.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_V.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_VI.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_Vi_(Excerpts)
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_VII.
1.pbs_-_Queen_Mab_-_Part_VIII.
1.pbs_-_Revenge
1.pbs_-_Rosalind_and_Helen_-_a_Modern_Eclogue
1.pbs_-_Saint_Edmonds_Eve
1.pbs_-_Scenes_From_The_Faust_Of_Goethe
1.pbs_-_Song._Translated_From_The_German
1.pbs_-_Stanzas._--_April,_1814
1.pbs_-_The_Boat_On_The_Serchio
1.pbs_-_The_Cenci_-_A_Tragedy_In_Five_Acts
1.pbs_-_The_Cyclops
1.pbs_-_The_Daemon_Of_The_World
1.pbs_-_The_Devils_Walk._A_Ballad
1.pbs_-_The_Mask_Of_Anarchy
1.pbs_-_The_Pine_Forest_Of_The_Cascine_Near_Pisa
1.pbs_-_The_Retrospect_-_CWM_Elan,_1812
1.pbs_-_The_Revolt_Of_Islam_-_Canto_I-XII
1.pbs_-_The_Spectral_Horseman
1.pbs_-_The_Triumph_Of_Life
1.pbs_-_The_Wandering_Jews_Soliloquy
1.pbs_-_The_Witch_Of_Atlas
1.pbs_-_The_Woodman_And_The_Nightingale
1.pbs_-_To_A_Skylark
1.pbs_-_To_Edward_Williams
1.pbs_-_To_Harriet_--_It_Is_Not_Blasphemy_To_Hope_That_Heaven
1.pbs_-_To_Jane_-_The_Recollection
1.pbs_-_To_The_Mind_Of_Man
1.pbs_-_To_William_Shelley
1.pbs_-_Ugolino
1.pbs_-_War
1.pc_-_Autumns_Cold
1.poe_-_Al_Aaraaf-_Part_2
1.poe_-_Elizabeth
1.poe_-_Eureka_-_A_Prose_Poem
1.poe_-_Fairy-Land
1.poe_-_For_Annie
1.poe_-_Israfel
1.poe_-_Tamerlane
1.poe_-_The_Conversation_Of_Eiros_And_Charmion
1.poe_-_The_Power_Of_Words_Oinos.
1.poe_-_To_Helen_-_1848
1.poe_-_To_My_Mother
1.raa_-_Circles_1_(from_Life_of_the_Future_World)
1.rb_-_Abt_Vogler
1.rb_-_A_Grammarian's_Funeral_Shortly_After_The_Revival_Of_Learning
1.rb_-_Aix_In_Provence
1.rb_-_A_Lovers_Quarrel
1.rb_-_Andrea_del_Sarto
1.rb_-_An_Epistle_Containing_the_Strange_Medical_Experience_of_Kar
1.rb_-_Another_Way_Of_Love
1.rb_-_Any_Wife_To_Any_Husband
1.rb_-_A_Pretty_Woman
1.rb_-_A_Toccata_Of_Galuppi's
1.rb_-_Before
1.rb_-_Bishop_Blougram's_Apology
1.rb_-_By_The_Fire-Side
1.rb_-_Caliban_upon_Setebos_or,_Natural_Theology_in_the_Island
1.rb_-_Childe_Roland_To_The_Dark_Tower_Came
1.rb_-_Cleon
1.rb_-_Confessions
1.rb_-_Cristina
1.rb_-_De_Gustibus
1.rb_-_Evelyn_Hope
1.rb_-_Fra_Lippo_Lippi
1.rb_-_Garden_Francies
1.rb_-_Holy-Cross_Day
1.rb_-_In_A_Gondola
1.rb_-_Incident_Of_The_French_Camp
1.rb_-_Introduction:_Pippa_Passes
1.rbk_-_He_Shall_be_King!
1.rb_-_Love_Among_The_Ruins
1.rb_-_Love_In_A_Life
1.rb_-_Master_Hugues_Of_Saxe-Gotha
1.rb_-_Memorabilia
1.rb_-_Mesmerism
1.rb_-_My_Last_Duchess
1.rb_-_Nationality_In_Drinks
1.rb_-_Never_the_Time_and_the_Place
1.rb_-_Old_Pictures_In_Florence
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_III_-_Paracelsus
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_II_-_Paracelsus_Attains
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_I_-_Paracelsus_Aspires
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_IV_-_Paracelsus_Aspires
1.rb_-_Paracelsus_-_Part_V_-_Paracelsus_Attains
1.rb_-_Pauline,_A_Fragment_of_a_Question
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_III_-_Evening
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_II_-_Noon
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_I_-_Morning
1.rb_-_Pippa_Passes_-_Part_IV_-_Night
1.rb_-_Popularity
1.rb_-_Protus
1.rb_-_Rabbi_Ben_Ezra
1.rb_-_Rhyme_for_a_Child_Viewing_a_Naked_Venus_in_a_Painting_of_'The_Judgement_of_Paris'
1.rb_-_Song
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Fifth
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_First
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Fourth
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Second
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Sixth
1.rb_-_Sordello_-_Book_the_Third
1.rb_-_The_Boy_And_the_Angel
1.rb_-_The_Englishman_In_Italy
1.rb_-_The_Flight_Of_The_Duchess
1.rb_-_The_Glove
1.rb_-_The_Guardian-Angel
1.rb_-_The_Italian_In_England
1.rb_-_The_Patriot
1.rb_-_The_Pied_Piper_Of_Hamelin
1.rb_-_Times_Revenges
1.rb_-_Waring
1.rb_-_Why_I_Am_a_Liberal
1.rmpsd_-_Kulakundalini,_Goddess_Full_of_Brahman,_Tara
1.rmpsd_-_Love_Her,_Mind
1.rmpsd_-_Meditate_on_Kali!_Why_be_anxious?
1.rmpsd_-_Mother,_am_I_Thine_eight-months_child?
1.rmpsd_-_Mother_this_is_the_grief_that_sorely_grieves_my_heart
1.rmpsd_-_Of_what_use_is_my_going_to_Kasi_any_more?
1.rmpsd_-_O_Mother,_who_really
1.rmr_-_Autumn_Day
1.rmr_-_Blank_Joy
1.rmr_-_Elegy_I
1.rmr_-_Elegy_IV
1.rmr_-_Elegy_X
1.rmr_-_Evening
1.rmr_-_Exposed_on_the_cliffs_of_the_heart
1.rmr_-_Fear_of_the_Inexplicable
1.rmr_-_Fire's_Reflection
1.rmr_-_Growing_Old
1.rmr_-_Ignorant_Before_The_Heavens_Of_My_Life
1.rmr_-_Interior_Portrait
1.rmr_-_Lady_On_A_Balcony
1.rmr_-_Lament
1.rmr_-_Lament_(O_how_all_things_are_far_removed)
1.rmr_-_Music
1.rmr_-_On_Hearing_Of_A_Death
1.rmr_-_Song_Of_The_Orphan
1.rmr_-_Sunset
1.rmr_-_The_Future
1.rmr_-_The_Poet
1.rmr_-_The_Sisters
1.rmr_-_The_Sonnets_To_Orpheus_-_Book_2_-_XIII
1.rmr_-_The_Spanish_Dancer
1.rmr_-_The_Voices
1.rmr_-_To_Lou_Andreas-Salome
1.rmr_-_Torso_of_an_Archaic_Apollo
1.rmr_-_To_Say_Before_Going_to_Sleep
1.rmr_-_You_Who_Never_Arrived
1.rt_-_(80)_I_am_like_a_remnant_of_a_cloud_of_autumn_(from_Gitanjali)
1.rt_-_A_Dream
1.rt_-_All_These_I_Loved
1.rt_-_At_The_Last_Watch
1.rt_-_Babys_World
1.rt_-_Brahm,_Viu,_iva
1.rt_-_Brink_Of_Eternity
1.rt_-_Broken_Song
1.rt_-_Clouds_And_Waves
1.rt_-_Compensation
1.rt_-_Defamation
1.rt_-_Farewell
1.rt_-_Fireflies
1.rt_-_Flower
1.rt_-_Gitanjali
1.rt_-_I_Am_Restless
1.rt_-_I_Cast_My_Net_Into_The_Sea
1.rt_-_In_The_Dusky_Path_Of_A_Dream
1.rt_-_Kinu_Goalas_Alley
1.rt_-_Let_Me_Not_Forget
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_IV_-_She_Is_Near_To_My_Heart
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_LVIII_-_Things_Throng_And_Laugh
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XIX_-_It_Is_Written_In_The_Book
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XVIII_-_Your_Days
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XVI_-_She_Dwelt_Here_By_The_Pool
1.rt_-_Lovers_Gifts_XXII_-_I_Shall_Gladly_Suffer
1.rt_-_On_The_Seashore
1.rt_-_Parting_Words
1.rt_-_Prisoner
1.rt_-_Rare
1.rt_-_Religious_Obsession_--_translation_from_Dharmamoha
1.rt_-_Roaming_Cloud
1.rt_-_Shyama
1.rt_-_Song_Unsung
1.rt_-_Stray_Birds_01_-_10
1.rt_-_Stray_Birds_11-_20
1.rt_-_Stray_Birds_31_-_40
1.rt_-_The_Beginning
1.rt_-_The_End
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_IV_-_Ah_Me
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_IX_-_When_I_Go_Alone_At_Night
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_LXIX_-_I_Hunt_For_The_Golden_Stag
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_LXVIII_-_None_Lives_For_Ever,_Brother
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_LXXIX_-_I_Often_Wonder
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XI_-_Come_As_You_Are
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XLII_-_O_Mad,_Superbly_Drunk
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XLVI_-_You_Left_Me
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XVI_-_Hands_Cling_To_Eyes
1.rt_-_The_Gardener_XXIV_-_Do_Not_Keep_To_Yourself
1.rt_-_The_Hero
1.rt_-_The_Homecoming
1.rt_-_The_Judge
1.rt_-_The_Last_Bargain
1.rt_-_The_Little_Big_Man
1.rt_-_The_Lost_Star
1.rt_-_The_Portrait
1.rt_-_The_Recall
1.rt_-_The_Sailor
1.rt_-_This_Dog
1.rt_-_Threshold
1.rt_-_Untimely_Leave
1.rt_-_Vocation
1.rt_-_Waiting
1.rt_-_We_Are_To_Play_The_Game_Of_Death
1.rt_-_When_I_Go_Alone_At_Night
1.rvd_-_Upon_seeing_poverty
1.rwe_-_Bacchus
1.rwe_-_Boston
1.rwe_-_Boston_Hymn
1.rwe_-_Celestial_Love
1.rwe_-_Compensation
1.rwe_-_Culture
1.rwe_-_Dmonic_Love
1.rwe_-_Etienne_de_la_Boce
1.rwe_-_Experience
1.rwe_-_Forerunners
1.rwe_-_From_the_Persian_of_Hafiz_I
1.rwe_-_From_the_Persian_of_Hafiz_II
1.rwe_-_Gnothi_Seauton
1.rwe_-_Initial_Love
1.rwe_-_In_Memoriam
1.rwe_-_Loss_And_Gain
1.rwe_-_Love_And_Thought
1.rwe_-_May-Day
1.rwe_-_Merlin_I
1.rwe_-_Merlin_II
1.rwe_-_Mithridates
1.rwe_-_Monadnoc
1.rwe_-_Musketaquid
1.rwe_-_My_Garden
1.rwe_-_Nature
1.rwe_-_Nemesis
1.rwe_-_Ode_-_Inscribed_to_W.H._Channing
1.rwe_-_Ode_To_Beauty
1.rwe_-_Politics
1.rwe_-_Quatrains
1.rwe_-_Saadi
1.rwe_-_Solution
1.rwe_-_Song_of_Nature
1.rwe_-_Spiritual_Laws
1.rwe_-_Sursum_Corda
1.rwe_-_Terminus
1.rwe_-_The_Adirondacs
1.rwe_-_The_Bell
1.rwe_-_The_Chartist's_Complaint
1.rwe_-_The_Days_Ration
1.rwe_-_The_Forerunners
1.rwe_-_The_Lords_of_Life
1.rwe_-_The_Rhodora_-_On_Being_Asked,_Whence_Is_The_Flower?
1.rwe_-_The_Snowstorm
1.rwe_-_The_Titmouse
1.rwe_-_The_World-Soul
1.rwe_-_Threnody
1.rwe_-_To-day
1.rwe_-_To_Laugh_Often_And_Much
1.rwe_-_To_Rhea
1.rwe_-_Una
1.rwe_-_Uriel
1.rwe_-_Voluntaries
1.rwe_-_Wakdeubsankeit
1.rwe_-_Water
1.rwe_-_Waves
1.rwe_-_Woodnotes
1.sca_-_Draw_me_after_You!
1.sdi_-_Have_no_doubts_because_of_trouble_nor_be_thou_discomfited
1.sfa_-_Exhortation_to_St._Clare_and_Her_Sisters
1.sfa_-_How_Virtue_Drives_Out_Vice
1.sfa_-_Let_us_desire_nothing_else
1.sfa_-_Prayer_Inspired_by_the_Our_Father
1.sig_-_Before_I_was,_Thy_mercy_came_to_me
1.sig_-_I_look_for_you_early
1.sjc_-_Dark_Night
1.sjc_-_I_Live_Yet_Do_Not_Live_in_Me
1.sjc_-_Not_for_All_the_Beauty
1.sk_-_Is_there_anyone_in_the_universe
1.snk_-_In_Praise_of_the_Goddess
1.snt_-_O_totally_strange_and_inexpressible_marvel!
1.srd_-_Krishna_Awakes
1.srd_-_Shes_found_him,_she_has,_but_Radha_disbelieves
1.srh_-_The_Royal_Song_of_Saraha_(Dohakosa)
1.srmd_-_He_is_happy_on_account_of_my_humble_self
1.srm_-_The_Marital_Garland_of_Letters
1.srm_-_The_Necklet_of_Nine_Gems
1.ss_-_Its_something_no_on_can_force
1.ss_-_Most_of_the_time_I_smile
1.ss_-_Outside_the_door_I_made_but_dont_close
1.ss_-_Paper_windows_bamboo_walls_hedge_of_hibiscus
1.ss_-_This_bodys_lifetime_is_like_a_bubbles
1.ss_-_To_glorify_the_Way_what_should_people_turn_to
1.ss_-_Trying_to_become_a_Buddha_is_easy
1.stav_-_I_Live_Without_Living_In_Me
1.stav_-_In_the_Hands_of_God
1.sv_-_Kali_the_Mother
1.sv_-_Song_of_the_Sanyasin
1.tc_-_After_Liu_Chai-Sangs_Poem
1.tm_-_The_Fall
1.tm_-_When_in_the_soul_of_the_serene_disciple
1.tr_-_At_Master_Do's_Country_House
1.tr_-_Descend_from_your_head_into_your_heart
1.tr_-_Images,_however_sacred
1.tr_-_You_Do_Not_Need_Many_Things
1.vpt_-_The_moon_has_shone_upon_me
1.wb_-_Auguries_of_Innocence
1.wb_-_The_Errors_of_Sacred_Codes_(from_The_Marriage_of_Heaven_and_Hell)
1.wby_-_A_Deep_Sworn_Vow
1.wby_-_A_Dramatic_Poem
1.wby_-_Aedh_Wishes_For_The_Cloths_Of_Heaven
1.wby_-_Against_Unworthy_Praise
1.wby_-_All_Souls_Night
1.wby_-_A_Lovers_Quarrel_Among_the_Fairies
1.wby_-_Alternative_Song_For_The_Severed_Head_In_The_King_Of_The_Great_Clock_Tower
1.wby_-_A_Model_For_The_Laureate
1.wby_-_Among_School_Children
1.wby_-_An_Acre_Of_Grass
1.wby_-_Anashuya_And_Vijaya
1.wby_-_An_Irish_Airman_Foresees_His_Death
1.wby_-_A_Prayer_For_My_Daughter
1.wby_-_A_Prayer_On_Going_Into_My_House
1.wby_-_A_Song
1.wby_-_A_Song_From_The_Player_Queen
1.wby_-_At_The_Abbey_Theatre
1.wby_-_A_Woman_Young_And_Old
1.wby_-_Baile_And_Aillinn
1.wby_-_Beautiful_Lofty_Things
1.wby_-_Beggar_To_Beggar_Cried
1.wby_-_Blood_And_The_Moon
1.wby_-_Broken_Dreams
1.wby_-_Colonus_Praise
1.wby_-_Coole_Park_1929
1.wby_-_Crazy_Jane_And_The_Bishop
1.wby_-_Crazy_Jane_On_God
1.wby_-_Demon_And_Beast
1.wby_-_Easter_1916
1.wby_-_Ego_Dominus_Tuus
1.wby_-_Ephemera
1.wby_-_Friends
1.wby_-_He_Reproves_The_Curlew
1.wby_-_Her_Praise
1.wby_-_Her_Triumph
1.wby_-_He_Thinks_Of_His_Past_Greatness_When_A_Part_Of_The_Constellations_Of_Heaven
1.wby_-_He_Wishes_His_Beloved_Were_Dead
1.wby_-_High_Talk
1.wby_-_His_Dream
1.wby_-_Hound_Voice
1.wby_-_In_Memory_Of_Eva_Gore-Booth_And_Con_Markiewicz
1.wby_-_In_Memory_Of_Major_Robert_Gregory
1.wby_-_In_Taras_Halls
1.wby_-_In_The_Seven_Woods
1.wby_-_King_And_No_King
1.wby_-_Lapis_Lazuli
1.wby_-_Love_Song
1.wby_-_Meditations_In_Time_Of_Civil_War
1.wby_-_Memory
1.wby_-_News_For_The_Delphic_Oracle
1.wby_-_Nineteen_Hundred_And_Nineteen
1.wby_-_On_A_Picture_Of_A_Black_Centaur_By_Edmund_Dulac
1.wby_-_On_Woman
1.wby_-_Owen_Aherne_And_His_Dancers
1.wby_-_Parting
1.wby_-_Responsibilities_-_Introduction
1.wby_-_Sailing_to_Byzantium
1.wby_-_Shepherd_And_Goatherd
1.wby_-_Supernatural_Songs
1.wby_-_Sweet_Dancer
1.wby_-_The_Apparitions
1.wby_-_The_Ballad_Of_Father_Gilligan
1.wby_-_The_Ballad_Of_Moll_Magee
1.wby_-_The_Choice
1.wby_-_The_Circus_Animals_Desertion
1.wby_-_The_Curse_Of_Cromwell
1.wby_-_The_Dolls
1.wby_-_The_Double_Vision_Of_Michael_Robartes
1.wby_-_The_Folly_Of_Being_Comforted
1.wby_-_The_Ghost_Of_Roger_Casement
1.wby_-_The_Gift_Of_Harun_Al-Rashid
1.wby_-_The_Grey_Rock
1.wby_-_The_Heart_Of_The_Woman
1.wby_-_The_Hour_Before_Dawn
1.wby_-_The_Leaders_Of_The_Crowd
1.wby_-_The_Living_Beauty
1.wby_-_The_Lover_Asks_Forgiveness_Because_Of_His_Many_Moods
1.wby_-_The_Madness_Of_King_Goll
1.wby_-_The_Man_And_The_Echo
1.wby_-_The_Man_Who_Dreamed_Of_Faeryland
1.wby_-_The_Municipal_Gallery_Revisited
1.wby_-_The_Old_Age_Of_Queen_Maeve
1.wby_-_The_Old_Stone_Cross
1.wby_-_The_ORahilly
1.wby_-_The_People
1.wby_-_The_Phases_Of_The_Moon
1.wby_-_The_Pilgrim
1.wby_-_The_Pity_Of_Love
1.wby_-_The_Saint_And_The_Hunchback
1.wby_-_The_Secret_Rose
1.wby_-_The_Seven_Sages
1.wby_-_The_Shadowy_Waters_-_The_Harp_Of_Aengus
1.wby_-_The_Shadowy_Waters_-_The_Shadowy_Waters
1.wby_-_The_Song_Of_The_Old_Mother
1.wby_-_The_Song_Of_Wandering_Aengus
1.wby_-_The_Spirit_Medium
1.wby_-_The_Statesmans_Holiday
1.wby_-_The_Three_Bushes
1.wby_-_The_Tower
1.wby_-_The_Two_Kings
1.wby_-_The_Wanderings_Of_Oisin_-_Book_I
1.wby_-_The_Wanderings_Of_Oisin_-_Book_II
1.wby_-_The_Wanderings_Of_Oisin_-_Book_III
1.wby_-_The_Wheel
1.wby_-_The_Wild_Old_Wicked_Man
1.wby_-_The_Withering_Of_The_Boughs
1.wby_-_Those_Images
1.wby_-_Three_Marching_Songs
1.wby_-_Three_Songs_To_The_One_Burden
1.wby_-_Three_Songs_To_The_Same_Tune
1.wby_-_To_A_Friend_Whose_Work_Has_Come_To_Nothing
1.wby_-_To_A_Shade
1.wby_-_To_A_Wealthy_Man_Who_Promised_A_Second_Subscription_To_The_Dublin_Municipal_Gallery_If_It_Were_Prove
1.wby_-_To_Ireland_In_The_Coming_Times
1.wby_-_To_Some_I_Have_Talked_With_By_The_Fire
1.wby_-_To_The_Rose_Upon_The_Rood_Of_Time
1.wby_-_Towards_Break_Of_Day
1.wby_-_Two_Songs_Of_A_Fool
1.wby_-_Under_Saturn
1.wby_-_Under_The_Moon
1.wby_-_Upon_A_Dying_Lady
1.wby_-_Upon_A_House_Shaken_By_The_Land_Agitation
1.wby_-_What_Then?
1.wby_-_Words
1.whitman_-_A_Broadway_Pageant
1.whitman_-_A_Carol_Of_Harvest_For_1867
1.whitman_-_A_child_said,_What_is_the_grass?
1.whitman_-_A_Leaf_For_Hand_In_Hand
1.whitman_-_All_Is_Truth
1.whitman_-_American_Feuillage
1.whitman_-_Apostroph
1.whitman_-_Ashes_Of_Soldiers
1.whitman_-_As_I_Ebbd_With_the_Ocean_of_Life
1.whitman_-_As_I_Lay_With_My_Head_in_Your_Lap,_Camerado
1.whitman_-_As_I_Sat_Alone_By_Blue_Ontarios_Shores
1.whitman_-_As_I_Walk_These_Broad,_Majestic_Days
1.whitman_-_As_Toilsome_I_Wanderd
1.whitman_-_A_Woman_Waits_For_Me
1.whitman_-_Beat!_Beat!_Drums!
1.whitman_-_Brother_Of_All,_With_Generous_Hand
1.whitman_-_Carol_Of_Occupations
1.whitman_-_Carol_Of_Words
1.whitman_-_City_Of_Orgies
1.whitman_-_Crossing_Brooklyn_Ferry
1.whitman_-_Dirge_For_Two_Veterans
1.whitman_-_Drum-Taps
1.whitman_-_Eidolons
1.whitman_-_Elemental_Drifts
1.whitman_-_Europe,_The_72d_And_73d_Years_Of_These_States
1.whitman_-_Faces
1.whitman_-_Facing_West_From_Californias_Shores
1.whitman_-_For_Him_I_Sing
1.whitman_-_France,_The_18th_Year_Of_These_States
1.whitman_-_From_Pent-up_Aching_Rivers
1.whitman_-_Give_Me_The_Splendid,_Silent_Sun
1.whitman_-_God
1.whitman_-_Hours_Continuing_Long
1.whitman_-_Hushd_Be_the_Camps_Today
1.whitman_-_Inscription
1.whitman_-_I_Sing_The_Body_Electric
1.whitman_-_I_Sit_And_Look_Out
1.whitman_-_Italian_Music_In_Dakota
1.whitman_-_Kosmos
1.whitman_-_Manhattan_Streets_I_Saunterd,_Pondering
1.whitman_-_Mannahatta
1.whitman_-_Miracles
1.whitman_-_My_Picture-Gallery
1.whitman_-_Myself_And_Mine
1.whitman_-_Now_List_To_My_Mornings_Romanza
1.whitman_-_Of_Him_I_Love_Day_And_Night
1.whitman_-_O_Hymen!_O_Hymenee!
1.whitman_-_Old_Ireland
1.whitman_-_O_Me!_O_Life!
1.whitman_-_Once_I_Passd_Through_A_Populous_City
1.whitman_-_One_Song,_America,_Before_I_Go
1.whitman_-_Ones_Self_I_Sing
1.whitman_-_One_Sweeps_By
1.whitman_-_On_Journeys_Through_The_States
1.whitman_-_Out_From_Behind_His_Mask
1.whitman_-_Out_of_the_Cradle_Endlessly_Rocking
1.whitman_-_Over_The_Carnage
1.whitman_-_Passage_To_India
1.whitman_-_Pioneers!_O_Pioneers!
1.whitman_-_Poems_Of_Joys
1.whitman_-_Poets_to_Come
1.whitman_-_Proud_Music_Of_The_Storm
1.whitman_-_Respondez!
1.whitman_-_Rise,_O_Days
1.whitman_-_Salut_Au_Monde
1.whitman_-_Says
1.whitman_-_Scented_Herbage_Of_My_Breast
1.whitman_-_Sea-Shore_Memories
1.whitman_-_Shut_Not_Your_Doors
1.whitman_-_Sing_Of_The_Banner_At_Day-Break
1.whitman_-_So_Long
1.whitman_-_Sometimes_With_One_I_Love
1.whitman_-_Song_At_Sunset
1.whitman_-_Song_of_Myself
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_II
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_III
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_IV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_LII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_VII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_X
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XI
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XIII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XIV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XL
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XLI
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XLII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XLIII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XLVII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XX
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXIII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXIV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXVI
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXXI
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXXIII
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_Myself-_XXXV
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Broad-Axe
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Exposition
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Open_Road
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Redwood-Tree
1.whitman_-_Song_Of_The_Universal
1.whitman_-_Souvenirs_Of_Democracy
1.whitman_-_Sparkles_From_The_Wheel
1.whitman_-_Spirit_That_Formd_This_Scene
1.whitman_-_Spontaneous_Me
1.whitman_-_Starting_From_Paumanok
1.whitman_-_States!
1.whitman_-_That_Last_Invocation
1.whitman_-_The_Artillerymans_Vision
1.whitman_-_The_Centerarians_Story
1.whitman_-_The_City_Dead-House
1.whitman_-_The_Death_And_Burial_Of_McDonald_Clarke-_A_Parody
1.whitman_-_The_Indications
1.whitman_-_The_Last_Invocation
1.whitman_-_The_Mystic_Trumpeter
1.whitman_-_There_Was_A_Child_Went_Forth
1.whitman_-_The_Singer_In_The_Prison
1.whitman_-_The_Sleepers
1.whitman_-_The_Sobbing_Of_The_Bells
1.whitman_-_The_Wound_Dresser
1.whitman_-_Think_Of_The_Soul
1.whitman_-_This_Compost
1.whitman_-_Thoughts_(2)
1.whitman_-_To_A_Certain_Cantatrice
1.whitman_-_To_A_Common_Prostitute
1.whitman_-_To_A_Foild_European_Revolutionaire
1.whitman_-_To_A_Locomotive_In_Winter
1.whitman_-_To_A_Western_Boy
1.whitman_-_To_Him_That_Was_Crucified
1.whitman_-_To_Oratists
1.whitman_-_To_The_East_And_To_The_West
1.whitman_-_To_Thee,_Old_Cause!
1.whitman_-_To_Think_Of_Time
1.whitman_-_Wandering_At_Morn
1.whitman_-_Washingtons_Monument,_February,_1885
1.whitman_-_Weave_In,_Weave_In,_My_Hardy_Life
1.whitman_-_When_I_Heard_the_Learnd_Astronomer
1.whitman_-_When_I_Peruse_The_Conquerd_Fame
1.whitman_-_When_I_Read_The_Book
1.whitman_-_When_Lilacs_Last_in_the_Dooryard_Bloomd
1.whitman_-_Whoever_You_Are,_Holding_Me_Now_In_Hand
1.whitman_-_Who_Learns_My_Lesson_Complete?
1.ww_-_0-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons_-_Dedication
1.ww_-_10_-_Alone_far_in_the_wilds_and_mountains_I_hunt
1.ww_-_1-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_24_-_Walt_Whitman,_a_cosmos,_of_Manhattan_the_son
1.ww_-_2_-_Houses_and_rooms_are_full_of_perfumes,_the_shelves_are_crowded_with_perfumes
1.ww_-_2-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_3_-_I_have_heard_what_the_talkers_were_talking,_the_talk_of_the_beginning_and_the_end
1.ww_-_3-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_4-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_4_-_Trippers_and_askers_surround_me
1.ww_-_6_-_A_child_said_What_is_the_grass?_fetching_it_to_me_with_full_hands
1.ww_-_6-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_7_-_Has_anyone_supposed_it_lucky_to_be_born?
1.ww_-_7-_The_White_Doe_Of_Rylstone,_Or,_The_Fate_Of_The_Nortons
1.ww_-_8_-_The_little_one_sleeps_in_its_cradle
1.ww_-_A_Complaint
1.ww_-_Address_To_A_Child_During_A_Boisterous_Winter_By_My_Sister
1.ww_-_Address_To_My_Infant_Daughter
1.ww_-_Advance__Come_Forth_From_Thy_Tyrolean_Ground
1.ww_-_A_Flower_Garden_At_Coleorton_Hall,_Leicestershire.
1.ww_-_Alas!_What_Boots_The_Long_Laborious_Quest
1.ww_-_A_Narrow_Girdle_Of_Rough_Stones_And_Crags,
1.ww_-_Andrew_Jones
1.ww_-_Anecdote_For_Fathers
1.ww_-_An_Evening_Walk
1.ww_-_A_Night-Piece
1.ww_-_A_Poet!_He_Hath_Put_His_Heart_To_School
1.ww_-_A_Poet's_Epitaph
1.ww_-_Artegal_And_Elidure
1.ww_-_As_faith_thus_sanctified_the_warrior's_crest
1.ww_-_At_Applewaite,_Near_Keswick_1804
1.ww_-_A_Whirl-Blast_From_Behind_The_Hill
1.ww_-_A_Wren's_Nest
1.ww_-_Book_Eighth-_Retrospect--Love_Of_Nature_Leading_To_Love_Of_Man
1.ww_-_Book_Eleventh-_France_[concluded]
1.ww_-_Book_Fifth-Books
1.ww_-_Book_First_[Introduction-Childhood_and_School_Time]
1.ww_-_Book_Fourteenth_[conclusion]
1.ww_-_Book_Fourth_[Summer_Vacation]
1.ww_-_Book_Ninth_[Residence_in_France]
1.ww_-_Book_Second_[School-Time_Continued]
1.ww_-_Book_Seventh_[Residence_in_London]
1.ww_-_Book_Sixth_[Cambridge_and_the_Alps]
1.ww_-_Book_Tenth_{Residence_in_France_continued]
1.ww_-_Book_Third_[Residence_at_Cambridge]
1.ww_-_Book_Thirteenth_[Imagination_And_Taste,_How_Impaired_And_Restored_Concluded]
1.ww_-_Book_Twelfth_[Imagination_And_Taste,_How_Impaired_And_Restored_]
1.ww_-_British_Freedom
1.ww_-_Call_Not_The_Royal_Swede_Unfortunate
1.ww_-_Character_Of_The_Happy_Warrior
1.ww_-_Composed_Upon_Westminster_Bridge,_September_3,_1802
1.ww_-_Cooling_Off
1.ww_-_Dion_[See_Plutarch]
1.ww_-_Elegiac_Stanzas_Suggested_By_A_Picture_Of_Peele_Castle
1.ww_-_Epitaphs_Translated_From_Chiabrera
1.ww_-_Extempore_Effusion_upon_the_Death_of_James_Hogg
1.ww_-_From_The_Cuckoo_And_The_Nightingale
1.ww_-_From_The_Dark_Chambers_Of_Dejection_Freed
1.ww_-_Goody_Blake_And_Harry_Gill
1.ww_-_Guilt_And_Sorrow,_Or,_Incidents_Upon_Salisbury_Plain
1.ww_-_Hart-Leap_Well
1.ww_-_Here_Pause-_The_Poet_Claims_At_Least_This_Praise
1.ww_-_Hint_From_The_Mountains_For_Certain_Political_Pretenders
1.ww_-_I_Know_an_Aged_Man_Constrained_to_Dwell
1.ww_-_Inscriptions_For_A_Seat_In_The_Groves_Of_Coleorton
1.ww_-_Inscriptions_Written_with_a_Slate_Pencil_upon_a_Stone
1.ww_-_Invocation_To_The_Earth,_February_1816
1.ww_-_It_was_an_April_morning-_fresh_and_clear
1.ww_-_Laodamia
1.ww_-_Lines_Composed_a_Few_Miles_above_Tintern_Abbey
1.ww_-_Lines_Left_Upon_The_Seat_Of_A_Yew-Tree,
1.ww_-_Lines_Written_As_A_School_Exercise_At_Hawkshead,_Anno_Aetatis_14
1.ww_-_Maternal_Grief
1.ww_-_Matthew
1.ww_-_Memorials_Of_A_Tour_In_Scotland
1.ww_-_Memorials_Of_A_Tour_In_Scotland-_1803
1.ww_-_Memorials_Of_A_Tour_In_Scotland-_1803_X._Rob_Roys_Grave
1.ww_-_Michael-_A_Pastoral_Poem
1.ww_-_Minstrels
1.ww_-_Most_Sweet_it_is
1.ww_-_Ode_Composed_On_A_May_Morning
1.ww_-_Ode_on_Intimations_of_Immortality
1.ww_-_Ode_To_Lycoris._May_1817
1.ww_-_Oer_The_Wide_Earth,_On_Mountain_And_On_Plain
1.ww_-_Oerweening_Statesmen_Have_Full_Long_Relied
1.ww_-_O_Me!_O_life!
1.ww_-_On_the_Departure_of_Sir_Walter_Scott_from_Abbotsford
1.ww_-_On_the_Extinction_of_the_Venetian_Republic
1.ww_-_Picture_of_Daniel_in_the_Lion's_Den_at_Hamilton_Palace
1.ww_-_Repentance
1.ww_-_Resolution_And_Independence
1.ww_-_Ruth
1.ww_-_September,_1819
1.ww_-_She_Was_A_Phantom_Of_Delight
1.ww_-_Simon_Lee-_The_Old_Huntsman
1.ww_-_Song_at_the_Feast_of_Brougham_Castle
1.ww_-_Sonnet-_It_is_not_to_be_thought_of
1.ww_-_Sonnet-_On_seeing_Miss_Helen_Maria_Williams_weep_at_a_tale_of_distress
1.ww_-_Star-Gazers
1.ww_-_Stray_Pleasures
1.ww_-_The_Brothers
1.ww_-_The_Cottager_To_Her_Infant
1.ww_-_The_Danish_Boy
1.ww_-_The_Eagle_and_the_Dove
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_I-_Dedication-_To_the_Right_Hon.William,_Earl_of_Lonsdalee,_K.G.
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_II-_Book_First-_The_Wanderer
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_IV-_Book_Third-_Despondency
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_IX-_Book_Eighth-_The_Parsonage
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_V-_Book_Fouth-_Despondency_Corrected
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_VII-_Book_Sixth-_The_Churchyard_Among_the_Mountains
1.ww_-_The_Excursion-_X-_Book_Ninth-_Discourse_of_the_Wanderer,_and_an_Evening_Visit_to_the_Lake
1.ww_-_The_Farmer_Of_Tilsbury_Vale
1.ww_-_The_Fountain
1.ww_-_The_French_Revolution_as_it_appeared_to_Enthusiasts
1.ww_-_The_Germans_On_The_Heighs_Of_Hochheim
1.ww_-_The_Happy_Warrior
1.ww_-_The_Horn_Of_Egremont_Castle
1.ww_-_The_Idiot_Boy
1.ww_-_The_Morning_Of_The_Day_Appointed_For_A_General_Thanksgiving._January_18,_1816
1.ww_-_The_Oak_And_The_Broom
1.ww_-_The_Old_Cumberland_Beggar
1.ww_-_The_Pet-Lamb
1.ww_-_The_Prelude,_Book_1-_Childhood_And_School-Time
1.ww_-_The_Prioresss_Tale_[from_Chaucer]
1.ww_-_The_Recluse_-_Book_First
1.ww_-_There_Was_A_Boy
1.ww_-_The_Seven_Sisters
1.ww_-_The_Sparrow's_Nest
1.ww_-_The_Thorn
1.ww_-_The_Two_Thieves-_Or,_The_Last_Stage_Of_Avarice
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_First
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_Fourth
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_Second
1.ww_-_The_Waggoner_-_Canto_Third
1.ww_-_The_Wishing_Gate_Destroyed
1.ww_-_To_a_Highland_Girl_(At_Inversneyde,_upon_Loch_Lomond)
1.ww_-_To_A_Sexton
1.ww_-_To_B._R._Haydon
1.ww_-_To_Dora
1.ww_-_To_H._C.
1.ww_-_To_Joanna
1.ww_-_To_May
1.ww_-_To_Sir_George_Howland_Beaumont,_Bart_From_the_South-West_Coast_Or_Cumberland_1811
1.ww_-_To_The_Memory_Of_Raisley_Calvert
1.ww_-_To_The_Same_(John_Dyer)
1.ww_-_To_The_Spade_Of_A_Friend_(An_Agriculturist)
1.ww_-_To_Thomas_Clarkson
1.ww_-_Translation_Of_Part_Of_The_First_Book_Of_The_Aeneid
1.ww_-_Tribute_To_The_Memory_Of_The_Same_Dog
1.ww_-_Troilus_And_Cresida
1.ww_-_Upon_Perusing_The_Forgoing_Epistle_Thirty_Years_After_Its_Composition
1.ww_-_Vaudracour_And_Julia
1.ww_-_Vernal_Ode
1.ww_-_When_I_Have_Borne_In_Memory
1.ww_-_When_To_The_Attractions_Of_The_Busy_World
1.ww_-_Written_In_A_Blank_Leaf_Of_Macpherson's_Ossian
1.ww_-_Written_in_London._September,_1802
1.ww_-_Written_With_A_Pencil_Upon_A_Stone_In_The_Wall_Of_The_House,_On_The_Island_At_Grasmere
1.ww_-_Yarrow_Revisited
1.ww_-_Yarrow_Visited
1.yt_-_The_Supreme_Being_is_the_Dakini_Queen_of_the_Lake_of_Awareness!
20.01_-_Charyapada_-_Old_Bengali_Mystic_Poems
20.03_-_Act_I:The_Descent
20.04_-_Act_II:_The_Play_on_Earth
2.00_-_BIBLIOGRAPHY
2.01_-_AT_THE_STAR_THEATRE
2.01_-_Habit_1__Be_Proactive
2.01_-_Indeterminates,_Cosmic_Determinations_and_the_Indeterminable
2.01_-_Mandala_One
2.01_-_On_Books
2.01_-_On_the_Concept_of_the_Archetype
2.01_-_Proem
2.01_-_THE_ADVENT_OF_LIFE
2.01_-_THE_ARCANE_SUBSTANCE_AND_THE_POINT
2.01_-_The_Attributes_of_Omega_Point_-_a_Transcendent_God
2.01_-_THE_CHILD_WITH_THE_MIRROR
2.01_-_The_Mother
2.01_-_The_Object_of_Knowledge
2.01_-_The_Path
2.01_-_The_Picture
2.01_-_The_Road_of_Trials
2.01_-_The_Sefirot
2.01_-_The_Tavern
2.01_-_The_Therapeutic_value_of_Abreaction
2.01_-_The_Two_Natures
2.01_-_The_Yoga_and_Its_Objects
2.01_-_War.
2.02_-_Atomic_Motions
2.02_-_Brahman,_Purusha,_Ishwara_-_Maya,_Prakriti,_Shakti
2.02_-_Evolutionary_Creation_and_the_Expectation_of_a_Revelation
2.02_-_Habit_2__Begin_with_the_End_in_Mind
2.02_-_Indra,_Giver_of_Light
2.02_-_Meeting_With_the_Goddess
2.02_-_On_Letters
2.02_-_Surrender,_Self-Offering_and_Consecration
2.02_-_The_Bhakta.s_Renunciation_results_from_Love
2.02_-_The_Circle
2.02_-_THE_DURGA_PUJA_FESTIVAL
2.02_-_THE_EXPANSION_OF_LIFE
2.02_-_The_Ishavasyopanishad_with_a_commentary_in_English
2.02_-_The_Mother_Archetype
2.02_-_THE_SCINTILLA
2.02_-_The_Status_of_Knowledge
2.02_-_The_Synthesis_of_Devotion_and_Knowledge
2.02_-_UPON_THE_BLESSED_ISLES
2.02_-_Yoga
2.03_-_Atomic_Forms_And_Their_Combinations
2.03_-_DEMETER
2.03_-_Indra_and_the_Thought-Forces
2.03_-_Karmayogin__A_Commentary_on_the_Isha_Upanishad
2.03_-_On_Medicine
2.03_-_ON_THE_PITYING
2.03_-_The_Christian_Phenomenon_and_Faith_in_the_Incarnation
2.03_-_THE_ENIGMA_OF_BOLOGNA
2.03_-_The_Eternal_and_the_Individual
2.03_-_THE_MASTER_IN_VARIOUS_MOODS
2.03_-_The_Mother-Complex
2.03_-_The_Naturalness_of_Bhakti-Yoga_and_its_Central_Secret
2.03_-_The_Purified_Understanding
2.03_-_The_Pyx
2.03_-_The_Supreme_Divine
2.04_-_Absence_Of_Secondary_Qualities
2.04_-_ADVICE_TO_ISHAN
2.04_-_Agni,_the_Illumined_Will
2.04_-_Concentration
2.04_-_On_Art
2.04_-_Positive_Aspects_of_the_Mother-Complex
2.04_-_The_Divine_and_the_Undivine
2.04_-_The_Forms_of_Love-Manifestation
2.04_-_The_Scourge,_the_Dagger_and_the_Chain
2.04_-_The_Secret_of_Secrets
2.04_-_Yogic_Action
2.05_-_Apotheosis
2.05_-_Aspects_of_Sadhana
2.05_-_Blessings
2.05_-_Habit_3__Put_First_Things_First
2.05_-_Infinite_Worlds
2.05_-_On_Poetry
2.05_-_ON_THE_VIRTUOUS
2.05_-_Renunciation
2.05_-_The_Cosmic_Illusion;_Mind,_Dream_and_Hallucination
2.05_-_The_Divine_Truth_and_Way
2.05_-_The_Holy_Oil
2.05_-_The_Line_of_Light_and_The_Impression
2.05_-_The_Religion_of_Tomorrow
2.05_-_The_Tale_of_the_Vampires_Kingdom
2.05_-_Universal_Love_and_how_it_leads_to_Self-Surrender
2.05_-_VISIT_TO_THE_SINTHI_BRAMO_SAMAJ
2.06_-_On_Beauty
2.06_-_ON_THE_RABBLE
2.06_-_Reality_and_the_Cosmic_Illusion
2.06_-_Revelation_and_the_Christian_Phenomenon
2.06_-_The_Higher_Knowledge_and_the_Higher_Love_are_one_to_the_true_Lover
2.06_-_The_Synthesis_of_the_Disciplines_of_Knowledge
2.06_-_The_Wand
2.06_-_Two_Tales_of_Seeking_and_Losing
2.06_-_Union_with_the_Divine_Consciousness_and_Will
2.06_-_WITH_VARIOUS_DEVOTEES
2.06_-_Works_Devotion_and_Knowledge
2.07_-_BANKIM_CHANDRA
2.07_-_I_Also_Try_to_Tell_My_Tale
2.07_-_On_Congress_and_Politics
2.07_-_ON_THE_TARANTULAS
2.07_-_The_Cup
2.07_-_The_Knowledge_and_the_Ignorance
2.07_-_The_Mother__Relations_with_Others
2.07_-_The_Release_from_Subjection_to_the_Body
2.07_-_The_Supreme_Word_of_the_Gita
2.07_-_The_Triangle_of_Love
2.07_-_The_Upanishad_in_Aphorism
2.08_-_ALICE_IN_WONDERLAND
2.08_-_AT_THE_STAR_THEATRE_(II)
2.08_-_Concentration
2.08_-_God_in_Power_of_Becoming
2.08_-_Memory,_Self-Consciousness_and_the_Ignorance
2.08_-_On_Non-Violence
2.08_-_ON_THE_FAMOUS_WISE_MEN
2.08_-_The_Branches_of_The_Archetypal_Man
2.08_-_The_God_of_Love_is_his_own_proof
2.08_-_The_Release_from_the_Heart_and_the_Mind
2.08_-_The_Sword
2.08_-_Three_Tales_of_Madness_and_Destruction
2.08_-_Victory_over_Falsehood
2.09_-_Human_representations_of_the_Divine_Ideal_of_Love
2.09_-_Meditation
2.09_-_Memory,_Ego_and_Self-Experience
2.09_-_On_Sadhana
2.09_-_SEVEN_REASONS_WHY_A_SCIENTIST_BELIEVES_IN_GOD
2.09_-_THE_MASTERS_BIRTHDAY
2.09_-_The_Pantacle
2.09_-_The_Release_from_the_Ego
2.0_-_Reincarnation_and_Karma
2.0_-_THE_ANTICHRIST
2.1.01_-_God_The_One_Reality
2.1.01_-_The_Central_Process_of_the_Sadhana
21.01_-_The_Mother_The_Nature_of_Her_Work
2.1.01_-_The_Parts_of_the_Being
2.1.02_-_Classification_of_the_Parts_of_the_Being
2.1.02_-_Combining_Work,_Meditation_and_Bhakti
21.02_-_Gods_and_Men
2.1.02_-_Love_and_Death
2.1.02_-_Nature_The_World-Manifestation
2.1.03_-_Man_and_Superman
21.03_-_The_Double_Ladder
2.10_-_Conclusion
2.10_-_Knowledge_by_Identity_and_Separative_Knowledge
2.10_-_On_Vedic_Interpretation
2.10_-_THE_DANCING_SONG
2.10_-_The_Lamp
2.10_-_THE_MASTER_AND_NARENDRA
2.10_-_The_Primordial_Kings__Their_Shattering
2.10_-_The_Realisation_of_the_Cosmic_Self
2.10_-_The_Vision_of_the_World-Spirit_-_Time_the_Destroyer
2.1.1.04_-_Reading,_Yogic_Force_and_the_Development_of_Style
2.11_-_On_Education
2.11_-_The_Boundaries_of_the_Ignorance
2.11_-_The_Crown
2.11_-_The_Guru
2.11_-_The_Modes_of_the_Self
2.1.1_-_The_Nature_of_the_Vital
2.11_-_The_Shattering_And_Fall_of_The_Primordial_Kings
2.11_-_THE_TOMB_SONG
2.11_-_The_Vision_of_the_World-Spirit_-_The_Double_Aspect
2.11_-_WITH_THE_DEVOTEES_IN_CALCUTTA
2.12_-_On_Miracles
2.12_-_ON_SELF-OVERCOMING
2.12_-_THE_MASTERS_REMINISCENCES
2.12_-_The_Origin_of_the_Ignorance
2.12_-_The_Position_of_The_Sefirot
2.12_-_The_Realisation_of_Sachchidananda
2.12_-_The_Robe
2.1.2_-_The_Vital_and_Other_Levels_of_Being
2.12_-_The_Way_and_the_Bhakta
2.1.3.1_-_Students
2.1.3.2_-_Study
2.1.3.3_-_Reading
2.1.3.4_-_Conduct
2.13_-_Exclusive_Concentration_of_Consciousness-Force_and_the_Ignorance
2.13_-_Kingdom-The_Seventh_Sefira
2.13_-_On_Psychology
2.13_-_ON_THOSE_WHO_ARE_SUBLIME
2.13_-_Psychic_Presence_and_Psychic_Being_-_Real_Origin_of_Race_Superiority
2.13_-_The_Difficulties_of_the_Mental_Being
2.13_-_THE_MASTER_AT_THE_HOUSES_OF_BALARM_AND_GIRISH
2.1.3_-_Wrong_Movements_of_the_Vital
2.1.4.1_-_Teachers
2.1.4.2_-_Teaching
2.1.4.3_-_Discipline
2.1.4.4_-_Homework
2.1.4.5_-_Tests
2.14_-_AT_RAMS_HOUSE
2.14_-_Faith
2.14_-_On_Movements
2.14_-_The_Bell
2.1.4_-_The_Lower_Vital_Being
2.14_-_The_Origin_and_Remedy_of_Falsehood,_Error,_Wrong_and_Evil
2.14_-_The_Passive_and_the_Active_Brahman
2.14_-_The_Unpacking_of_God
2.1.5.1_-_Study_of_Works_of_Sri_Aurobindo_and_the_Mother
2.1.5.2_-_Languages
2.1.5.4_-_Arts
2.1.5.5_-_Other_Subjects
2.15_-_CAR_FESTIVAL_AT_BALARMS_HOUSE
2.15_-_ON_IMMACULATE_PERCEPTION
2.15_-_On_the_Gods_and_Asuras
2.15_-_Reality_and_the_Integral_Knowledge
2.15_-_Selection_of_Sparks_Made_for_The_Purpose_of_The_Emendation
2.15_-_The_Cosmic_Consciousness
2.15_-_The_Lamen
2.16_-_Oneness
2.16_-_ON_SCHOLARS
2.16_-_Power_of_Imagination
2.16_-_The_15th_of_August
2.16_-_The_Integral_Knowledge_and_the_Aim_of_Life;_Four_Theories_of_Existence
2.16_-_The_Magick_Fire
2.16_-_VISIT_TO_NANDA_BOSES_HOUSE
2.1.7.05_-_On_the_Inspiration_and_Writing_of_the_Poem
2.1.7.07_-_On_the_Verse_and_Structure_of_the_Poem
2.1.7.08_-_Comments_on_Specific_Lines_and_Passages_of_the_Poem
2.17_-_December_1938
2.17_-_ON_POETS
2.17_-_THE_MASTER_ON_HIMSELF_AND_HIS_EXPERIENCES
2.17_-_The_Progress_to_Knowledge_-_God,_Man_and_Nature
2.17_-_The_Soul_and_Nature
2.18_-_January_1939
2.18_-_Maeroprosopus_and_Maeroprosopvis
2.18_-_SRI_RAMAKRISHNA_AT_SYAMPUKUR
2.18_-_The_Evolutionary_Process_-_Ascent_and_Integration
2.18_-_The_Soul_and_Its_Liberation
2.19_-_Feb-May_1939
2.19_-_Knowledge_of_the_Scientist_and_the_Yogi
2.19_-_Out_of_the_Sevenfold_Ignorance_towards_the_Sevenfold_Knowledge
2.19_-_THE_MASTER_AND_DR._SARKAR
2.19_-_The_Planes_of_Our_Existence
2.19_-_THE_SOOTHSAYER
2.19_-_Union,_Gestation,_Birth
2.2.01_-_The_Outer_Being_and_the_Inner_Being
2.2.01_-_The_Problem_of_Consciousness
2.2.01_-_Work_and_Yoga
2.2.02_-_Becoming_Conscious_in_Work
2.2.02_-_Consciousness_and_the_Inconscient
2.2.02_-_The_True_Being_and_the_True_Consciousness
2.2.03_-_The_Divine_Force_in_Work
2.2.03_-_The_Psychic_Being
2.2.03_-_The_Science_of_Consciousness
2.2.04_-_Practical_Concerns_in_Work
2.2.05_-_Creative_Activity
22.05_-_On_The_Brink(2)
22.06_-_On_The_Brink(3)
2.20_-_Chance
2.20_-_Nov-Dec_1939
2.20_-_ON_REDEMPTION
2.20_-_The_Infancy_and_Maturity_of_ZO,_Father_and_Mother,_Israel_The_Ancient_and_Understanding
2.20_-_The_Lower_Triple_Purusha
2.20_-_THE_MASTERS_TRAINING_OF_HIS_DISCIPLES
2.20_-_The_Philosophy_of_Rebirth
2.2.1.01_-_The_World's_Greatest_Poets
2.21_-_1940
2.2.1_-_Cheerfulness_and_Happiness
2.21_-_IN_THE_COMPANY_OF_DEVOTEES_AT_SYAMPUKUR
2.21_-_ON_HUMAN_PRUDENCE
2.21_-_The_Ladder_of_Self-transcendence
2.21_-_The_Order_of_the_Worlds
2.2.1_-_The_Prusna_Upanishads
2.21_-_The_Three_Heads,_The_Beard_and_The_Mazela
2.21_-_Towards_the_Supreme_Secret
2.22_-_1941-1943
2.22_-_Rebirth_and_Other_Worlds;_Karma,_the_Soul_and_Immortality
2.2.2_-_Sorrow_and_Suffering
2.2.2_-_The_Mandoukya_Upanishad
2.22_-_THE_MASTER_AT_COSSIPORE
2.22_-_THE_STILLEST_HOUR
2.22_-_The_Supreme_Secret
2.22_-_Vijnana_or_Gnosis
2.23_-_A_Virtuous_Woman_is_a_Crown_to_Her_Husband
2.2.3_-_Depression_and_Despondency
2.23_-_Life_Sketch_of_A._B._Purani
2.23_-_Man_and_the_Evolution
2.2.3_-_The_Aitereya_Upanishad
2.23_-_The_Conditions_of_Attainment_to_the_Gnosis
2.23_-_The_Core_of_the_Gita.s_Meaning
2.23_-_THE_MASTER_AND_BUDDHA
2.24_-_Back_to_Back__Face_to_Face__and_The_Process_of_Sawing_Through
2.24_-_Gnosis_and_Ananda
2.24_-_Note_on_the_Text
2.2.4_-_Sentimentalism,_Sensitiveness,_Instability,_Laxity
2.2.4_-_Taittiriya_Upanishad
2.24_-_The_Evolution_of_the_Spiritual_Man
2.24_-_THE_MASTERS_LOVE_FOR_HIS_DEVOTEES
2.24_-_The_Message_of_the_Gita
2.25_-_AFTER_THE_PASSING_AWAY
2.25_-_List_of_Topics_in_Each_Talk
2.25_-_Mercies_and_Judgements_of_Knowledge
2.25_-_The_Higher_and_the_Lower_Knowledge
2.25_-_The_Triple_Transformation
2.26_-_Samadhi
2.26_-_The_Ascent_towards_Supermind
2.2.7.01_-_Some_General_Remarks
2.27_-_Hathayoga
2.27_-_The_Gnostic_Being
2.27_-_The_Two_Types_of_Unions
2.28_-_Rajayoga
2.28_-_The_Divine_Life
2.28_-_The_Two_Feminine_Polarities__Leah_and_Rachel
2.2.9.02_-_Plato
2.3.01_-_Aspiration_and_Surrender_to_the_Mother
2.3.01_-_Concentration_and_Meditation
2.3.02_-_Mantra_and_Japa
2.3.02_-_Opening,_Sincerity_and_the_Mother's_Grace
2.3.02_-_The_Supermind_or_Supramental
2.3.03_-_Integral_Yoga
2.3.03_-_The_Mother's_Presence
2.3.03_-_The_Overmind
2.3.04_-_The_Higher_Planes_of_Mind
2.3.04_-_The_Mother's_Force
2.3.05_-_Sadhana_through_Work_for_the_Mother
2.3.05_-_The_Lower_Nature_or_Lower_Hemisphere
2.3.06_-_The_Mind
2.3.06_-_The_Mother's_Lights
2.3.07_-_The_Mother_in_Visions,_Dreams_and_Experiences
2.3.07_-_The_Vital_Being_and_Vital_Consciousness
2.3.08_-_The_Mother's_Help_in_Difficulties
2.3.08_-_The_Physical_Consciousness
2.30_-_The_Uniting_of_the_Names_45_and_52
2.3.1.08_-_The_Necessity_and_Nature_of_Inspiration
2.3.1.09_-_Inspiration_and_Understanding
23.10_-_Observations_II
2.3.10_-_The_Subconscient_and_the_Inconscient
2.3.1.10_-_Inspiration_and_Effort
23.11_-_Observations_III
2.3.1.20_-_Aspiration
2.3.1_-_Ego_and_Its_Forms
2.3.1_-_Svetasvatara_Upanishad
2.3.2_-_Chhandogya_Upanishad
2.3.2_-_Desire
2.3.3_-_Anger_and_Violence
2.3.4_-_Fear
2.4.01_-_Divine_Love,_Psychic_Love_and_Human_Love
2.4.02.08_-_Contact_with_the_Divine
2.4.02_-_Bhakti,_Devotion,_Worship
24.03_-_Notes_on_Savitri_II
24.05_-_Vision_of_Dante
2.4.1_-_Human_Relations_and_the_Spiritual_Life
2.4.2_-_Interactions_with_Others_and_the_Practice_of_Yoga
2.4.3_-_Problems_in_Human_Relations
25.03_-_Songs_of_Ramprasad
25.11_-_EGO
25.12_-_AGNI
26.09_-_Le_Periple_d_Or_(Pome_dans_par_Yvonne_Artaud)
27.01_-_The_Golden_Harvest
27.02_-_The_Human_Touch_Divine
27.03_-_The_Great_Holocaust_-_Chhinnamasta
27.05_-_In_Her_Company
28.01_-_Observations
29.03_-_In_Her_Company
29.04_-_Mothers_Playground
29.05_-_The_Bride_of_Brahman
29.06_-_There_is_also_another,_similar_or_parallel_story_in_the_Veda_about_the_God_Agni,_about_the_disappearance_of_this
29.07_-_A_Small_Talk
2_-_Other_Hymns_to_Agni
3.00.1_-_Foreword
30.01_-_World-Literature
30.02_-_Greek_Drama
3.00.2_-_Introduction
30.03_-_Spirituality_in_Art
30.04_-_Intuition_and_Inspiration_in_Art
30.05_-_Rhythm_in_Poetry
30.06_-_The_Poet_and_The_Seer
30.07_-_The_Poet_and_the_Yogi
30.08_-_Poetry_and_Mantra
30.09_-_Lines_of_Tantra_(Charyapada)
3.00_-_Hymn_To_Pan
3.00_-_Introduction
3.00_-_The_Magical_Theory_of_the_Universe
30.10_-_The_Greatness_of_Poetry
30.11_-_Modern_Poetry
30.12_-_The_Obscene_and_the_Ugly_-_Form_and_Essence
30.13_-_Rabindranath_the_Artist
30.14_-_Rabindranath_and_Modernism
30.15_-_The_Language_of_Rabindranath
30.16_-_Tagore_the_Unique
30.17_-_Rabindranath,_Traveller_of_the_Infinite
30.18_-_Boris_Pasternak
3.01_-_Fear_of_God
3.01_-_Forms_of_Rebirth
3.01_-_Hymn_to_Matter
3.01_-_INTRODUCTION
3.01_-_Love_and_the_Triple_Path
3.01_-_Natural_Morality
3.01_-_Proem
3.01_-_Sincerity
3.01_-_THE_BIRTH_OF_THOUGHT
3.01_-_The_Mercurial_Fountain
3.01_-_The_Principles_of_Ritual
3.01_-_The_Soul_World
3.01_-_Towards_the_Future
3.02_-_Aridity_in_Prayer
3.02_-_King_and_Queen
3.02_-_Mysticism
3.02_-_Nature_And_Composition_Of_The_Mind
3.02_-_ON_THE_VISION_AND_THE_RIDDLE
3.02_-_On_Thought_-_Introduction
3.02_-_SOL
3.02_-_THE_DEPLOYMENT_OF_THE_NOOSPHERE
3.02_-_The_Formulae_of_the_Elemental_Weapons
3.02_-_The_Great_Secret
3.02_-_The_Motives_of_Devotion
3.02_-_The_Practice_Use_of_Dream-Analysis
3.02_-_The_Psychology_of_Rebirth
3.02_-_The_Soul_in_the_Soul_World_after_Death
3.03_-_Faith_and_the_Divine_Grace
3.03_-_ON_INVOLUNTARY_BLISS
3.03_-_On_Thought_-_II
3.03_-_SULPHUR
3.03_-_The_Ascent_to_Truth
3.03_-_The_Consummation_of_Mysticism
3.03_-_The_Formula_of_Tetragrammaton
3.03_-_The_Four_Foundational_Practices
3.03_-_The_Godward_Emotions
3.03_-_The_Mind_
3.03_-_THE_MODERN_EARTH
3.03_-_The_Naked_Truth
3.03_-_The_Soul_Is_Mortal
3.03_-_The_Spirit_Land
3.04_-_BEFORE_SUNRISE
3.04_-_Folly_Of_The_Fear_Of_Death
3.04_-_Immersion_in_the_Bath
3.04_-_LUNA
3.04_-_On_Thought_-_III
3.04_-_The_Formula_of_ALHIM
3.04_-_The_Spirit_in_Spirit-Land_after_Death
3.04_-_The_Way_of_Devotion
3.05_-_Cerberus_And_Furies,_And_That_Lack_Of_Light
3.05_-_ON_VIRTUE_THAT_MAKES_SMALL
3.05_-_SAL
3.05_-_The_Central_Thought
3.05_-_The_Conjunction
3.05_-_The_Divine_Personality
3.05_-_The_Fool
3.05_-_The_Formula_of_I.A.O.
3.05_-_The_Physical_World_and_its_Connection_with_the_Soul_and_Spirit-Lands
3.06_-_Charity
3.06_-_Death
3.06_-_The_Delight_of_the_Divine
3.06_-_The_Formula_of_The_Neophyte
3.06_-_The_Sage
3.06_-_Thought-Forms_and_the_Human_Aura
3.06_-_UPON_THE_MOUNT_OF_OLIVES
3.07.2_-_Finding_the_Real_Source
3.07.5_-_Who_Am_I?
3.07_-_ON_PASSING_BY
3.07_-_The_Adept
3.07_-_The_Ananda_Brahman
3.07_-_The_Ascent_of_the_Soul
3.07_-_The_Divinity_Within
3.07_-_The_Formula_of_the_Holy_Grail
3.08_-_Of_Equilibrium
3.08_-_ON_APOSTATES
3.08_-_Purification
3.08_-_The_Mystery_of_Love
3.08_-_The_Thousands
3.09_-_Evil
3.09_-_Of_Silence_and_Secrecy
3.09_-_THE_RETURN_HOME
3.09_-_The_Return_of_the_Soul
3.0_-_THE_ETERNAL_RECURRENCE
3.1.01_-_Distinctive_Features_of_the_Integral_Yoga
31.01_-_The_Heart_of_Bengal
3.1.01_-_The_Problem_of_Suffering_and_Evil
3.1.02_-_Asceticism_and_the_Integral_Yoga
3.1.02_-_A_Theory_of_the_Human_Being
3.1.02_-_Spiritual_Evolution_and_the_Supramental
3.1.02_-_Who
3.1.03_-_A_Realistic_Adwaita
31.04_-_Sri_Ramakrishna
3.1.04_-_Transformation_in_the_Integral_Yoga
31.05_-_Vivekananda
31.06_-_Jagadish_Chandra_Bose
31.07_-_Shyamakanta
31.08_-_The_Unity_of_India
3.1.08_-_To_the_Sea
31.09_-_The_Cause_of_Indias_Decline
3.10_-_Of_the_Gestures
3.10_-_ON_THE_THREE_EVILS
3.10_-_Punishment
3.10_-_The_New_Birth
31.10_-_East_and_West
3.1.14_-_Vedantin.s_Prayer
3.1.16_-_The_Triumph-Song_of_Trishuncou
3.1.19_-_Parabrahman
3.11_-_Epilogue
3.11_-_Of_Our_Lady_Babalon
3.11_-_ON_THE_SPIRIT_OF_GRAVITY
3.11_-_Spells
3.1.1_-_The_Transformation_of_the_Physical
3.1.23_-_The_Rishi
3.1.24_-_In_the_Moonlight
3.1.2_-_Levels_of_the_Physical_Being
3.12_-_Of_the_Bloody_Sacrifice
3.12_-_ON_OLD_AND_NEW_TABLETS
3.1.3_-_Difficulties_of_the_Physical_Being
3.13_-_Of_the_Banishings
3.13_-_THE_CONVALESCENT
3.14_-_Of_the_Consecrations
3.14_-_ON_THE_GREAT_LONGING
3.15_-_Of_the_Invocation
3.16.1_-_Of_the_Oath
3.16.2_-_Of_the_Charge_of_the_Spirit
3.16_-_THE_SEVEN_SEALS_OR_THE_YES_AND_AMEN_SONG
3.17_-_Of_the_License_to_Depart
3.18_-_Of_Clairvoyance_and_the_Body_of_Light
3.19_-_Of_Dramatic_Rituals
31_Hymns_to_the_Star_Goddess
3.2.01_-_On_Ideals
3.2.01_-_The_Newness_of_the_Integral_Yoga
32.01_-_Where_is_God?
32.02_-_Reason_and_Yoga
3.2.02_-_The_Veda_and_the_Upanishads
3.2.02_-_Yoga_and_Skill_in_Works
3.2.03_-_Conservation_and_Progress
32.03_-_In_This_Crisis
3.2.03_-_Jainism_and_Buddhism
3.2.04_-_Sankhya_and_Yoga
3.2.04_-_The_Conservative_Mind_and_Eastern_Progress
32.04_-_The_Human_Body
3.2.05_-_Our_Ideal
32.05_-_The_Culture_of_the_Body
3.2.05_-_The_Yoga_of_the_Bhagavad_Gita
3.2.06_-_The_Adwaita_of_Shankaracharya
32.06_-_The_Novel_Alchemy
3.2.07_-_Tantra
32.07_-_The_God_of_the_Scientist
3.2.08_-_Bhakti_Yoga_and_Vaishnavism
32.08_-_Fit_and_Unfit_(A_Letter)
32.09_-_On_Karmayoga_(A_Letter)
3.2.09_-_The_Teachings_of_Some_Modern_Indian_Yogis
3.20_-_Of_the_Eucharist
32.10_-_A_Letter
3.2.10_-_Christianity_and_Theosophy
32.11_-_Life_and_Self-Control_(A_Letter)
32.12_-_The_Evolutionary_Imperative
3.2.1_-_Food
3.21_-_Of_Black_Magic
3.2.2_-_Sleep
3.2.3_-_Dreams
3.2.4_-_Sex
33.01_-_The_Initiation_of_Swadeshi
3.3.01_-_The_Superman
3.3.02_-_All-Will_and_Free-Will
33.02_-_Subhash,_Oaten:_atlas,_Russell
33.03_-_Muraripukur_-_I
3.3.03_-_The_Delight_of_Works
33.04_-_Deoghar
33.05_-_Muraripukur_-_II
33.06_-_Alipore_Court
33.07_-_Alipore_Jail
33.08_-_I_Tried_Sannyas
33.09_-_Shyampukur
33.10_-_Pondicherry_I
33.11_-_Pondicherry_II
33.12_-_Pondicherry_Cyclone
33.13_-_My_Professors
33.14_-_I_Played_Football
33.15_-_My_Athletics
33.16_-_Soviet_Gymnasts
33.17_-_Two_Great_Wars
33.18_-_I_Bow_to_the_Mother
3.3.1_-_Agni,_the_Divine_Will-Force
3.3.1_-_Illness_and_Health
3.3.2_-_Doctors_and_Medicines
3.3.3_-_Specific_Illnesses,_Ailments_and_Other_Physical_Problems
3.4.01_-_Evolution
3.4.02_-_The_Inconscient
3.4.03_-_Materialism
34.06_-_Hymn_to_Sindhu
34.07_-_The_Bride_of_Brahman
3.4.1.01_-_Poetry_and_Sadhana
3.4.1.05_-_Fiction-Writing_and_Sadhana
3.4.1.06_-_Reading_and_Sadhana
3.4.1_-_The_Subconscient_and_the_Integral_Yoga
3.4.2.04_-_Dance_and_Sadhana
3.4.2_-_Guru_Yoga
3.4.2_-_The_Inconscient_and_the_Integral_Yoga
3.5.01_-_Aphorisms
3.5.02_-_Thoughts_and_Glimpses
3.5.03_-_Reason_and_Society
3-5_Full_Circle
3.6.01_-_Heraclitus
36.07_-_An_Introduction_To_The_Vedas
36.08_-_A_Commentary_on_the_First_Six_Suktas_of_Rigveda
36.09_-_THE_SIT_SUKTA
37.01_-_Yama_-_Nachiketa_(Katha_Upanishad)
37.02_-_The_Story_of_Jabala-Satyakama
37.03_-_Satyakama_And_Upakoshala
37.04_-_The_Story_Of_Rishi_Yajnavalkya
37.05_-_Narada_-_Sanatkumara_(Chhandogya_Upanishad)
37.06_-_Indra_-_Virochana_and_Prajapati
37.07_-_Ushasti_Chakrayana_(Chhandogya_Upanishad)
3.7.1.01_-_Rebirth
3.7.1.02_-_The_Reincarnating_Soul
3.7.1.03_-_Rebirth,_Evolution,_Heredity
3.7.1.04_-_Rebirth_and_Soul_Evolution
3.7.1.05_-_The_Significance_of_Rebirth
3.7.1.06_-_The_Ascending_Unity
3.7.1.07_-_Involution_and_Evolution
3.7.1.08_-_Karma
3.7.1.09_-_Karma_and_Freedom
3.7.1.10_-_Karma,_Will_and_Consequence
3.7.1.11_-_Rebirth_and_Karma
3.7.1.12_-_Karma_and_Justice
3.7.2.01_-_The_Foundation
3.7.2.02_-_The_Terrestial_Law
3.7.2.03_-_Mind_Nature_and_Law_of_Karma
3.7.2.04_-_The_Higher_Lines_of_Karma
3.7.2.05_-_Appendix_I_-_The_Tangle_of_Karma
3.7.2.06_-_Appendix_II_-_A_Clarification
38.01_-_Asceticism_and_Renunciation
38.02_-_Hymns_and_Prayers
38.05_-_Living_Matter
38.06_-_Ravana_Vanquished
3.8.1.02_-_Arya_-_Its_Significance
3.8.1.03_-_Meditation
3.8.1.04_-_Different_Methods_of_Writing
3.8.1.05_-_Occult_Knowledge_and_the_Hindu_Scriptures
3.8.1.06_-_The_Universal_Consciousness
3_-_Commentaries_and_Annotated_Translations
40.01_-_November_24,_1926
40.02_-_The_Two_Chains_Of_The_Mother
4.01_-_Circumstances
4.01_-_Conclusion_-_My_intellectual_position
4.01_-_Introduction
4.01_-_INTRODUCTION
4.01_-_Prayers_and_Meditations
4.01_-_Proem
4.01_-_Sweetness_in_Prayer
4.01_-_THE_COLLECTIVE_ISSUE
4.01_-_THE_HONEY_SACRIFICE
4.01_-_The_Presence_of_God_in_the_World
4.01_-_The_Principle_of_the_Integral_Yoga
4.02_-_Autobiographical_Evidence
4.02_-_BEYOND_THE_COLLECTIVE_-_THE_HYPER-PERSONAL
4.02_-_Difficulties
4.02_-_Divine_Consolations.
4.02_-_Existence_And_Character_Of_The_Images
4.02_-_GOLD_AND_SPIRIT
4.02_-_Humanity_in_Progress
4.02_-_THE_CRY_OF_DISTRESS
4.02_-_The_Integral_Perfection
4.02_-_The_Psychology_of_the_Child_Archetype
4.03_-_CONVERSATION_WITH_THE_KINGS
4.03_-_Mistakes
4.03_-_Prayer_of_Quiet
4.03_-_Prayer_to_the_Ever-greater_Christ
4.03_-_The_Meaning_of_Human_Endeavor
4.03_-_The_Psychology_of_Self-Perfection
4.03_-_The_Senses_And_Mental_Pictures
4.03_-_The_Special_Phenomenology_of_the_Child_Archetype
4.03_-_THE_TRANSFORMATION_OF_THE_KING
4.03_-_THE_ULTIMATE_EARTH
4.04_-_Conclusion
4.04_-_In_the_Total_Christ
4.04_-_Some_Vital_Functions
4.04_-_THE_LEECH
4.04_-_The_Perfection_of_the_Mental_Being
4.04_-_THE_REGENERATION_OF_THE_KING
4.04_-_Weaknesses
4.05_-_THE_DARK_SIDE_OF_THE_KING
4.05_-_The_Instruments_of_the_Spirit
4.05_-_THE_MAGICIAN
4.05_-_The_Passion_Of_Love
4.06_-_Purification-the_Lower_Mentality
4.06_-_RETIRED
4.06_-_THE_KING_AS_ANTHROPOS
4.07_-_Purification-Intelligence_and_Will
4.07_-_THE_RELATION_OF_THE_KING-SYMBOL_TO_CONSCIOUSNESS
4.07_-_THE_UGLIEST_MAN
4.08_-_The_Liberation_of_the_Spirit
4.08_-_THE_RELIGIOUS_PROBLEM_OF_THE_KINGS_RENEWAL
4.08_-_THE_VOLUNTARY_BEGGAR
4.09_-_REGINA
4.09_-_The_Liberation_of_the_Nature
4.0_-_NOTES_TO_ZARATHUSTRA
4.0_-_The_Path_of_Knowledge
4.1.01_-_The_Intellect_and_Yoga
4.10_-_The_Elements_of_Perfection
4.1.1.04_-_Foundations_of_the_Sadhana
4.1.1.05_-_The_Central_Process_of_the_Yoga
4.1.1_-_The_Difficulties_of_Yoga
4.11_-_The_Perfection_of_Equality
4.11_-_THE_WELCOME
4.1.2_-_The_Difficulties_of_Human_Nature
4.12_-_The_Way_of_Equality
4.1.3_-_Imperfections_and_Periods_of_Arrest
4.13_-_ON_THE_HIGHER_MAN
4.13_-_The_Action_of_Equality
4.1.4_-_Resistances,_Sufferings_and_Falls
4.14_-_The_Power_of_the_Instruments
4.14_-_THE_SONG_OF_MELANCHOLY
4.15_-_ON_SCIENCE
4.15_-_Soul-Force_and_the_Fourfold_Personality
4.16_-_The_Divine_Shakti
4.17_-_The_Action_of_the_Divine_Shakti
4.17_-_THE_AWAKENING
4.18_-_Faith_and_shakti
4.19_-_The_Nature_of_the_supermind
4.1_-_Jnana
4.2.01_-_The_Mother_of_Dreams
4.2.03_-_The_Birth_of_Sin
4.20_-_The_Intuitive_Mind
4.2.1.04_-_The_Psychic_and_the_Mental,_Vital_and_Physical_Nature
4.2.1.05_-_The_Psychic_Awakening
4.2.1.06_-_Living_in_the_Psychic
4.21_-_The_Gradations_of_the_supermind
4.2.1_-_The_Right_Attitude_towards_Difficulties
4.2.2.01_-_The_Meaning_of_Psychic_Opening
4.2.2.02_-_Conditions_for_the_Psychic_Opening
4.2.2.04_-_The_Psychic_Opening_and_the_Inner_Centres
4.2.2_-_Steps_towards_Overcoming_Difficulties
4.22_-_The_supramental_Thought_and_Knowledge
4.2.3.02_-_Signs_of_the_Psychic's_Coming_Forward
4.2.3.04_-_Means_of_Bringing_Forward_the_Psychic
4.2.3.05_-_Obstacles_to_the_Psychic's_Emergence
4.23_-_The_supramental_Instruments_--_Thought-process
4.2.3_-_Vigilance,_Resolution,_Will_and_the_Divine_Help
4.2.4.04_-_The_Psychic_Fire_and_Some_Inner_Visions
4.2.4.08_-_Psychic_Sorrow
4.2.4.11_-_Psychic_Intensity
4.2.4.12_-_The_Psychic_and_Uneasiness
4.24_-_The_supramental_Sense
4.2.4_-_Time_and_CHange_of_the_Nature
4.2.5.01_-_Psychisation_and_Spiritualisation
4.2.5.03_-_The_Psychic_and_Spiritual_Movements
4.2.5.05_-_The_Psychic_and_the_Supermind
4.2.5_-_Dealing_with_Depression_and_Despondency
4.25_-_Towards_the_supramental_Time_Vision
4.26_-_The_Supramental_Time_Consciousness
4.2_-_Karma
4.3.1.03_-_The_Self_and_the_Sense_of_Individuality
4.3.1.04_-_The_Disappearance_of_the_I_Sense
4.3.1.10_-_Experiences_of_Infinity,_Oneness,_Unity
4.3.1_-_The_Hostile_Forces_and_the_Difficulties_of_Yoga
4.3.2.02_-_Breaking_into_the_Spiritual_Consciousness
4.3.2.09_-_Overmind_Experiences_and_the_Supermind
4.3.2_-_Attacks_by_the_Hostile_Forces
4.3.3_-_Dealing_with_Hostile_Attacks
4.3.4_-_Accidents,_Possession,_Madness
4.3_-_Bhakti
4.4.1.03_-_Both_Ascent_and_Descent_Necessary
4.4.1.05_-_Ascent_and_Descent_of_the_Kundalini_Shakti
4.4.1.06_-_Ascent_and_Descent_and_Problems_of_the_Lower_Nature
4.4.1.07_-_Experiences_of_Ascent_and_Descent
4.41_-_Chapter_One
4.4.2.01_-_Contact_with_the_Above
4.4.2.03_-_Ascent_and_Return_to_the_Ordinary_Consciousness
4.4.2.09_-_Ascent_and_Change_of_the_Lower_Nature
4.42_-_Chapter_Two
4.4.3.03_-_Preparatory_Experiences_and_Descent
4.4.3.04_-_The_Order_of_Descent_into_the_Being
4.43_-_Chapter_Three
4.4.4.02_-_Peace,_Calm,_Quiet_as_a_Basis_for_the_Descent
4.4.4.04_-_The_Descent_of_Silence
4.4.4.05_-_The_Descent_of_Force_or_Power
4.4.4.09_-_The_Descent_of_Wideness
4.4.4.10_-_The_Descent_of_Ananda
4.4.5.01_-_Descent_and_Experiences_of_the_Inner_Being
4.4.5.03_-_Descent_and_Other_Experiences
5.01_-_ADAM_AS_THE_ARCANE_SUBSTANCE
5.01_-_EPILOGUE
5.01_-_Message
5.01_-_On_the_Mysteries_of_the_Ascent_towards_God
5.01_-_The_Dakini,_Salgye_Du_Dalma
5.02_-_Against_Teleological_Concept
5.02_-_Perfection_of_the_Body
5.02_-_THE_STATUE
5.02_-_Two_Parallel_Movements
5.03_-_ADAM_AS_THE_FIRST_ADEPT
5.03_-_The_Divine_Body
5.03_-_The_World_Is_Not_Eternal
5.04_-_Formation_Of_The_World
5.04_-_Supermind_and_the_Life_Divine
5.04_-_THE_POLARITY_OF_ADAM
5.04_-_Three_Dreams
5.05_-_Origins_Of_Vegetable_And_Animal_Life
5.05_-_Supermind_and_Humanity
5.05_-_THE_OLD_ADAM
5.05_-_The_War
5.06_-_Origins_And_Savage_Period_Of_Mankind
5.06_-_THE_TRANSFORMATION
5.07_-_Beginnings_Of_Civilization
5.07_-_ROTUNDUM,_HEAD,_AND_BRAIN
5.08_-_ADAM_AS_TOTALITY
5.08_-_Supermind_and_Mind_of_Light
5.1.01.1_-_The_Book_of_the_Herald
5.1.01.2_-_The_Book_of_the_Statesman
5.1.01.3_-_The_Book_of_the_Assembly
5.1.01.4_-_The_Book_of_Partings
5.1.01.5_-_The_Book_of_Achilles
5.1.01.6_-_The_Book_of_the_Chieftains
5.1.01.7_-_The_Book_of_the_Woman
5.1.01.8_-_The_Book_of_the_Gods
5.1.01.9_-_Book_IX
5.1.01_-_Terminology
5.1.02_-_Ahana
5.1.03_-_The_Hostile_Forces_and_Hostile_Beings
5.2.01_-_The_Descent_of_Ahana
5.2.01_-_Word-Formation
5.2.02_-_Aryan_Origins_-_The_Elementary_Roots_of_Language
5.2.02_-_The_Meditations_of_Mandavya
5.2.03_-_The_An_Family
5.3.04_-_Roots_in_M
5.3.05_-_The_Root_Mal_in_Greek
5.4.01_-_Notes_on_Root-Sounds
5.4.01_-_Occult_Knowledge
5.4.02_-_Occult_Powers_or_Siddhis
5_-_The_Phenomenology_of_the_Spirit_in_Fairytales
6.01_-_Proem
6.01_-_THE_ALCHEMICAL_VIEW_OF_THE_UNION_OF_OPPOSITES
6.02_-_Great_Meteorological_Phenomena,_Etc
6.02_-_STAGES_OF_THE_CONJUNCTION
6.03_-_Extraordinary_And_Paradoxical_Telluric_Phenomena
6.04_-_THE_MEANING_OF_THE_ALCHEMICAL_PROCEDURE
6.05_-_THE_PSYCHOLOGICAL_INTERPRETATION_OF_THE_PROCEDURE
6.06_-_Remembrances
6.06_-_SELF-KNOWLEDGE
6.07_-_THE_MONOCOLUS
6.08_-_Intellectual_Visions
6.08_-_THE_CONTENT_AND_MEANING_OF_THE_FIRST_TWO_STAGES
6.09_-_Imaginary_Visions
6.09_-_THE_THIRD_STAGE_-_THE_UNUS_MUNDUS
6.0_-_Conscious,_Unconscious,_and_Individuation
6.10_-_THE_SELF_AND_THE_BOUNDS_OF_KNOWLEDGE
7.01_-_The_Soul_(the_Psychic)
7.02_-_Courage
7.02_-_The_Mind
7.03_-_Cheerfulness
7.04_-_Self-Reliance
7.04_-_The_Vital
7.05_-_Patience_and_Perseverance
7.06_-_The_Simple_Life
7.07_-_Prudence
7.07_-_The_Subconscient
7.08_-_Sincerity
7.09_-_Right_Judgement
7.10_-_Order
7.11_-_Building_and_Destroying
7.12_-_The_Giver
7.13_-_The_Conquest_of_Knowledge
7.14_-_Modesty
7.15_-_The_Family
7.16_-_Sympathy
7.2.04_-_Thought_the_Paraclete
7.5.28_-_The_Greater_Plan
7.5.30_-_The_Godhead
7.5.31_-_The_Stone_Goddess
7.5.32_-_Krishna
7.5.59_-_The_Hill-top_Temple
7.5.60_-_Divine_Hearing
7.5.61_-_Because_Thou_Art
7.5.65_-_Form
7.6.12_-_The_Mother_of_God
7.6.13_-_The_End?
7_-_Yoga_of_Sri_Aurobindo
9.99_-_Glossary
Aeneid
A_God's_Labour
Apology
Appendix_4_-_Priest_Spells
APPENDIX_I_-_Curriculum_of_A._A.
A_Secret_Miracle
Avatars_of_the_Tortoise
Averroes_Search
Big_Mind_(non-dual)
Big_Mind_(ten_perfections)
Blazing_P1_-_Preconventional_consciousness
Blazing_P2_-_Map_the_Stages_of_Conventional_Consciousness
Blazing_P3_-_Explore_the_Stages_of_Postconventional_Consciousness
Book_1_-_The_Council_of_the_Gods
BOOK_I._-_Augustine_censures_the_pagans,_who_attributed_the_calamities_of_the_world,_and_especially_the_sack_of_Rome_by_the_Goths,_to_the_Christian_religion_and_its_prohibition_of_the_worship_of_the_gods
BOOK_II._-_A_review_of_the_calamities_suffered_by_the_Romans_before_the_time_of_Christ,_showing_that_their_gods_had_plunged_them_into_corruption_and_vice
BOOK_III._-_The_external_calamities_of_Rome
BOOK_II._--_PART_I._ANTHROPOGENESIS.
BOOK_II._--_PART_III._ADDENDA._SCIENCE_AND_THE_SECRET_DOCTRINE_CONTRASTED
BOOK_II._--_PART_II._THE_ARCHAIC_SYMBOLISM_OF_THE_WORLD-RELIGIONS
BOOK_I._--_PART_I._COSMIC_EVOLUTION
BOOK_I._--_PART_III._SCIENCE_AND_THE_SECRET_DOCTRINE_CONTRASTED
BOOK_I._--_PART_II._THE_EVOLUTION_OF_SYMBOLISM_IN_ITS_APPROXIMATE_ORDER
BOOK_IV._-_That_empire_was_given_to_Rome_not_by_the_gods,_but_by_the_One_True_God
BOOK_IX._-_Of_those_who_allege_a_distinction_among_demons,_some_being_good_and_others_evil
Book_of_Exodus
Book_of_Genesis
Book_of_Imaginary_Beings_(text)
Book_of_Proverbs
Book_of_Psalms
BOOK_VIII._-_Some_account_of_the_Socratic_and_Platonic_philosophy,_and_a_refutation_of_the_doctrine_of_Apuleius_that_the_demons_should_be_worshipped_as_mediators_between_gods_and_men
BOOK_VII._-_Of_the_select_gods_of_the_civil_theology,_and_that_eternal_life_is_not_obtained_by_worshipping_them
BOOK_VI._-_Of_Varros_threefold_division_of_theology,_and_of_the_inability_of_the_gods_to_contri_bute_anything_to_the_happiness_of_the_future_life
BOOK_V._-_Of_fate,_freewill,_and_God's_prescience,_and_of_the_source_of_the_virtues_of_the_ancient_Romans
BOOK_XI._-_Augustine_passes_to_the_second_part_of_the_work,_in_which_the_origin,_progress,_and_destinies_of_the_earthly_and_heavenly_cities_are_discussed.Speculations_regarding_the_creation_of_the_world
BOOK_XIII._-_That_death_is_penal,_and_had_its_origin_in_Adam's_sin
BOOK_XII._-_Of_the_creation_of_angels_and_men,_and_of_the_origin_of_evil
BOOK_XIV._-_Of_the_punishment_and_results_of_mans_first_sin,_and_of_the_propagation_of_man_without_lust
BOOK_XIX._-_A_review_of_the_philosophical_opinions_regarding_the_Supreme_Good,_and_a_comparison_of_these_opinions_with_the_Christian_belief_regarding_happiness
BOOK_X._-_Porphyrys_doctrine_of_redemption
BOOK_XVIII._-_A_parallel_history_of_the_earthly_and_heavenly_cities_from_the_time_of_Abraham_to_the_end_of_the_world
BOOK_XVII._-_The_history_of_the_city_of_God_from_the_times_of_the_prophets_to_Christ
BOOK_XVI._-_The_history_of_the_city_of_God_from_Noah_to_the_time_of_the_kings_of_Israel
BOOK_XV._-_The_progress_of_the_earthly_and_heavenly_cities_traced_by_the_sacred_history
BOOK_XXII._-_Of_the_eternal_happiness_of_the_saints,_the_resurrection_of_the_body,_and_the_miracles_of_the_early_Church
BOOK_XXI._-_Of_the_eternal_punishment_of_the_wicked_in_hell,_and_of_the_various_objections_urged_against_it
BOOK_XX._-_Of_the_last_judgment,_and_the_declarations_regarding_it_in_the_Old_and_New_Testaments
BS_1_-_Introduction_to_the_Idea_of_God
CASE_1_-_JOSHUS_DOG
CASE_2_-_HYAKUJOS_FOX
CASE_3_-_GUTEIS_FINGER
CASE_5_-_KYOGENS_MAN_HANGING_IN_THE_TREE
Chapter_III_-_WHEREIN_IS_RELATED_THE_DROLL_WAY_IN_WHICH_DON_QUIXOTE_HAD_HIMSELF_DUBBED_A_KNIGHT
Chapter_II_-_WHICH_TREATS_OF_THE_FIRST_SALLY_THE_INGENIOUS_DON_QUIXOTE_MADE_FROM_HOME
Chapter_I_-_WHICH_TREATS_OF_THE_CHARACTER_AND_PURSUITS_OF_THE_FAMOUS_GENTLEMAN_DON_QUIXOTE_OF_LA_MANCHA
City_of_God_-_BOOK_I
Conversations_with_Sri_Aurobindo
COSA_-_BOOK_I
COSA_-_BOOK_II
COSA_-_BOOK_III
COSA_-_BOOK_IV
COSA_-_BOOK_IX
COSA_-_BOOK_V
COSA_-_BOOK_VI
COSA_-_BOOK_VII
COSA_-_BOOK_VIII
COSA_-_BOOK_X
COSA_-_BOOK_XI
COSA_-_BOOK_XII
COSA_-_BOOK_XIII
Cratylus
Deutsches_Requiem
Diamond_Sutra_1
DM_2_-_How_to_Meditate
DS2
DS3
DS4
Emma_Zunz
ENNEAD_01.01_-_The_Organism_and_the_Self.
ENNEAD_01.02_-_Concerning_Virtue.
ENNEAD_01.02_-_Of_Virtues.
ENNEAD_01.03_-_Of_Dialectic,_or_the_Means_of_Raising_the_Soul_to_the_Intelligible_World.
ENNEAD_01.04_-_Whether_Animals_May_Be_Termed_Happy.
ENNEAD_01.05_-_Does_Happiness_Increase_With_Time?
ENNEAD_01.06_-_Of_Beauty.
ENNEAD_01.07_-_Of_the_First_Good,_and_of_the_Other_Goods.
ENNEAD_01.08_-_Of_the_Nature_and_Origin_of_Evils.
ENNEAD_02.01_-_Of_the_Heaven.
ENNEAD_02.02_-_About_the_Movement_of_the_Heavens.
ENNEAD_02.03_-_Whether_Astrology_is_of_any_Value.
ENNEAD_02.04a_-_Of_Matter.
ENNEAD_02.05_-_Of_the_Aristotelian_Distinction_Between_Actuality_and_Potentiality.
ENNEAD_02.06_-_Of_Essence_and_Being.
ENNEAD_02.07_-_About_Mixture_to_the_Point_of_Total_Penetration.
ENNEAD_02.08_-_Of_Sight,_or_of_Why_Distant_Objects_Seem_Small.
ENNEAD_02.09_-_Against_the_Gnostics;_or,_That_the_Creator_and_the_World_are_Not_Evil.
ENNEAD_03.01_-_Concerning_Fate.
ENNEAD_03.02_-_Of_Providence.
ENNEAD_03.03_-_Continuation_of_That_on_Providence.
ENNEAD_03.04_-_Of_Our_Individual_Guardian.
ENNEAD_03.05_-_Of_Love,_or_Eros.
ENNEAD_03.06_-_Of_the_Impassibility_of_Incorporeal_Entities_(Soul_and_and_Matter).
ENNEAD_03.06_-_Of_the_Impassibility_of_Incorporeal_Things.
ENNEAD_03.07_-_Of_Time_and_Eternity.
ENNEAD_03.08b_-_Of_Nature,_Contemplation_and_Unity.
ENNEAD_03.09_-_Fragments_About_the_Soul,_the_Intelligence,_and_the_Good.
ENNEAD_04.01_-_Of_the_Being_of_the_Soul.
ENNEAD_04.02_-_How_the_Soul_Mediates_Between_Indivisible_and_Divisible_Essence.
ENNEAD_04.03_-_Problems_About_the_Soul.
ENNEAD_04.03_-_Psychological_Questions.
ENNEAD_04.04_-_Questions_About_the_Soul.
ENNEAD_04.05_-_Psychological_Questions_III._-_About_the_Process_of_Vision_and_Hearing.
ENNEAD_04.06a_-_Of_Sensation_and_Memory.
ENNEAD_04.07_-_Of_the_Immortality_of_the_Soul:_Polemic_Against_Materialism.
ENNEAD_04.08_-_Of_the_Descent_of_the_Soul_Into_the_Body.
ENNEAD_04.09_-_Whether_All_Souls_Form_a_Single_One?
ENNEAD_05.01_-_The_Three_Principal_Hypostases,_or_Forms_of_Existence.
ENNEAD_05.02_-_Of_Generation_and_of_the_Order_of_Things_that_Follow_the_First.
ENNEAD_05.02_-_Of_Generation,_and_of_the_Order_of_things_that_Rank_Next_After_the_First.
ENNEAD_05.03_-_Of_the_Hypostases_that_Mediate_Knowledge,_and_of_the_Superior_Principle.
ENNEAD_05.03_-_The_Self-Consciousnesses,_and_What_is_Above_Them.
ENNEAD_05.04_-_How_What_is_After_the_First_Proceeds_Therefrom;_of_the_One.
ENNEAD_05.05_-_That_Intelligible_Entities_Are_Not_External_to_the_Intelligence_of_the_Good.
ENNEAD_05.06_-_The_Superessential_Principle_Does_Not_Think_-_Which_is_the_First_Thinking_Principle,_and_Which_is_the_Second?
ENNEAD_05.07_-_Do_Ideas_of_Individuals_Exist?
ENNEAD_05.08_-_Concerning_Intelligible_Beauty.
ENNEAD_05.09_-_Of_Intelligence,_Ideas_and_Essence.
ENNEAD_06.01_-_Of_the_Ten_Aristotelian_and_Four_Stoic_Categories.
ENNEAD_06.02_-_The_Categories_of_Plotinos.
ENNEAD_06.03_-_Plotinos_Own_Sense-Categories.
ENNEAD_06.04_-_The_One_and_Identical_Being_Is_Everywhere_Present_As_a_Whole.
ENNEAD_06.04_-_The_One_Identical_Essence_is_Everywhere_Entirely_Present.
ENNEAD_06.05_-_The_One_and_Identical_Being_is_Everywhere_Present_In_Its_Entirety.345
ENNEAD_06.05_-_The_One_Identical_Essence_is_Everywhere_Entirely_Present.
ENNEAD_06.06_-_Of_Numbers.
ENNEAD_06.07_-_How_Ideas_Multiplied,_and_the_Good.
ENNEAD_06.08_-_Of_the_Will_of_the_One.
ENNEAD_06.09_-_Of_the_Good_and_the_One.
Epistle_to_the_Romans
Euthyphro
Ex_Oblivione
First_Epistle_of_Paul_to_the_Thessalonians
For_a_Breath_I_Tarry
Gods_Script
Gorgias
Guru_Granth_Sahib_first_part
Ion
IS_-_Chapter_1
I._THE_ATTRACTIVE_POWER_OF_GOD
Jaap_Sahib_Text_(Guru_Gobind_Singh)
Kafka_and_His_Precursors
Liber
Liber_111_-_The_Book_of_Wisdom_-_LIBER_ALEPH_VEL_CXI
Liber_46_-_The_Key_of_the_Mysteries
Liber_71_-_The_Voice_of_the_Silence_-_The_Two_Paths_-_The_Seven_Portals
LUX.01_-_GNOSIS
LUX.02_-_EVOCATION
LUX.03_-_INVOCATION
LUX.04_-_LIBERATION
LUX.06_-_DIVINATION
LUX.07_-_ENCHANTMENT
Medea_-_A_Vergillian_Cento
Meno
MMM.01_-_MIND_CONTROL
MMM.02_-_MAGIC
MMM.03_-_DREAMING
MoM_References
new_computer
P.11_-_MAGICAL_WEAPONS
Partial_Magic_in_the_Quixote
Phaedo
Prayers_and_Meditations_by_Baha_u_llah_text
r1909_06_23
r1912_01_13
r1912_01_14
r1912_01_15
r1912_01_16
r1912_01_17
r1912_01_18
r1912_01_20
r1912_01_21
r1912_01_22
r1912_01_27
r1912_02_02
r1912_02_07
r1912_02_08
r1912_07_01
r1912_07_03
r1912_07_04
r1912_07_13
r1912_07_14
r1912_07_15
r1912_07_17
r1912_07_20
r1912_07_22
r1912_07_25
r1912_10_18
r1912_10_27
r1912_11_17
r1912_11_19a
r1912_11_26
r1912_11_27
r1912_11_28
r1912_11_29
r1912_11_30
r1912_12_01
r1912_12_04
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r1912_12_31
r1913_01_02
r1913_01_03
r1913_01_05
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r1913_01_07
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r1913_01_15
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r1913_01_17
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r1913_01_24
r1913_01_25
r1913_01_26
r1913_01_27
r1913_01_31
r1913_02_02
r1913_02_08
r1913_02_12
r1913_06_05
r1913_06_09
r1913_06_15
r1913_06_16
r1913_06_16b
r1913_06_20
r1913_07_02
r1913_07_05
r1913_07_06
r1913_07_08
r1913_09_05b
r1913_09_13
r1913_09_16
r1913_09_17
r1913_09_18
r1913_09_29
r1913_09_30
r1913_11_13
r1913_11_14
r1913_11_15
r1913_11_17
r1913_11_18
r1913_11_23
r1913_11_24
r1913_11_25
r1913_12_03b
r1913_12_12a
r1913_12_14
r1913_12_19
r1913_12_22
r1913_12_24
r1913_12_25
r1913_12_26
r1913_12_27
r1913_12_28
r1913_12_29
r1913_12_30
r1913_12_31
r1914_01_02
r1914_01_03
r1914_01_10
r1914_01_11
r1914_01_15
r1914_03_12
r1914_03_13
r1914_03_14
r1914_03_19
r1914_03_24
r1914_03_25
r1914_03_26
r1914_03_27
r1914_03_28
r1914_03_30
r1914_04_01
r1914_04_04
r1914_04_08
r1914_04_09
r1914_04_11
r1914_04_13
r1914_04_14
r1914_04_15
r1914_04_16
r1914_04_19
r1914_04_23
r1914_04_30
r1914_05_02
r1914_05_04
r1914_05_05
r1914_05_07
r1914_05_08
r1914_05_12
r1914_05_18
r1914_05_21
r1914_05_22
r1914_05_28
r1914_06_01
r1914_06_10
r1914_06_11
r1914_06_12
r1914_06_13
r1914_06_14
r1914_06_15
r1914_06_16
r1914_06_17
r1914_06_19
r1914_06_20
r1914_06_21
r1914_06_24
r1914_06_25
r1914_06_28
r1914_07_06
r1914_07_07
r1914_07_08
r1914_07_10
r1914_07_11
r1914_07_12
r1914_07_15
r1914_07_18
r1914_07_19
r1914_07_20
r1914_07_21
r1914_07_23
r1914_07_24
r1914_07_25
r1914_07_26
r1914_07_28
r1914_07_30
r1914_08_03
r1914_08_08
r1914_08_13
r1914_08_14
r1914_08_15
r1914_08_23
r1914_08_24
r1914_08_26
r1914_09_05
r1914_09_06
r1914_09_07
r1914_09_13
r1914_09_15
r1914_09_17
r1914_09_19
r1914_09_20
r1914_10_05
r1914_10_08
r1914_10_20
r1914_10_29
r1914_10_30
r1914_11_10
r1914_11_11
r1914_11_13
r1914_11_16
r1914_11_18
r1914_11_21
r1914_11_22
r1914_11_23
r1914_11_24
r1914_11_26
r1914_11_28
r1914_11_29
r1914_12_05
r1914_12_08
r1914_12_10
r1914_12_14
r1914_12_15
r1914_12_17
r1914_12_18
r1914_12_19
r1914_12_22
r1915_01_01a
r1915_01_03
r1915_01_03a
r1915_01_04a
r1915_01_05a
r1915_01_05b
r1915_01_08
r1915_01_09
r1915_01_10
r1915_01_14
r1915_01_15
r1915_01_25
r1915_01_28
r1915_02_02
r1915_02_25
r1915_04_25
r1915_05_05
r1915_05_12
r1915_05_22
r1915_05_24
r1915_05_25
r1915_05_27
r1915_06_01
r1915_06_08
r1915_06_13
r1915_06_19
r1915_06_24
r1915_07_03
r1915_07_11
r1915_07_12
r1915_08_26
r1916_03_13
r1916_03_17
r1917_01_09
r1917_01_24
r1917_02_04
r1917_02_05
r1917_02_09
r1917_02_10
r1917_02_11
r1917_02_12
r1917_02_13
r1917_02_15
r1917_02_18
r1917_02_22
r1917_03_04
r1917_03_10
r1917_03_18
r1917_03_20
r1917_03_22
r1917_08_26
r1917_08_28
r1917_09_06
r1917_09_12
r1917_09_15
r1917_09_24
r1918_02_17
r1918_02_18
r1918_02_20
r1918_02_22
r1918_04_20
r1918_04_25
r1918_04_30
r1918_05_04
r1918_05_05
r1918_05_06
r1918_05_07
r1918_05_09
r1918_05_13
r1918_05_14
r1918_05_15
r1918_05_19
r1918_05_20
r1918_05_21
r1918_05_23
r1918_05_24
r1919_06_25
r1919_06_27
r1919_06_30
r1919_07_01
r1919_07_02
r1919_07_03
r1919_07_06
r1919_07_07
r1919_07_09
r1919_07_11
r1919_07_14
r1919_07_16
r1919_07_18
r1919_07_20
r1919_07_21
r1919_07_22
r1919_07_23
r1919_07_27
r1919_07_29
r1919_08_03
r1919_08_21
r1919_08_29
r1919_09_01
r1920_02_09
r1920_02_25
r1920_03_02
r1920_03_03
r1920_03_13
r1920_06_07
r1920_06_16
r1920_06_17
r1920_06_19
r1927_01_11
r1927_01_12
r1927_01_19
r1927_04_07
Ragnarok
Sayings_of_Sri_Ramakrishna_(text)
SB_1.1_-_Questions_by_the_Sages
Sophist
Story_of_the_Warrior_and_the_Captive
Symposium_translated_by_B_Jowett
Tablet_1_-
Tablets_of_Baha_u_llah_text
Talks_001-025
Talks_026-050
Talks_051-075
Talks_076-099
Talks_100-125
Talks_125-150
Talks_151-175
Talks_176-200
Talks_225-239
Talks_500-550
Talks_600-652
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_1
Talks_With_Sri_Aurobindo_2
The_Act_of_Creation_text
Theaetetus
The_Aleph
The_Anapanasati_Sutta__A_Practical_Guide_to_Mindfullness_of_Breathing_and_Tranquil_Wisdom_Meditation
The_Book_of_Certitude_-_P1
The_Book_of_Certitude_-_P2
The_Book_of_Job
The_Book_of_Joshua
The_Book_of_Sand
The_Book_of_the_Prophet_Isaiah
The_Book_of_the_Prophet_Micah
The_Book_of_Wisdom
The_Book_(short_story)
The_Circular_Ruins
The_Coming_Race_Contents
The_Divine_Names_Text_(Dionysis)
The_Dream_of_a_Ridiculous_Man
The_Dwellings_of_the_Philosophers
The_Egg
The_Epistle_of_James
The_Epistle_of_Paul_to_the_Ephesians
The_Epistle_of_Paul_to_the_Philippians
the_Eternal_Wisdom
The_Fearful_Sphere_of_Pascal
The_First_Epistle_of_Paul_to_the_Corinthians
The_First_Epistle_of_Paul_to_Timothy
The_First_Epistle_of_Peter
The_First_Letter_of_John
The_Five,_Ranks_of_The_Apparent_and_the_Real
The_Garden_of_Forking_Paths_1
The_Garden_of_Forking_Paths_2
The_Gold_Bug
The_Golden_Sentences_of_Democrates
The_Golden_Verses_of_Pythagoras
The_Gospel_According_to_John
The_Gospel_According_to_Luke
The_Gospel_According_to_Mark
The_Gospel_According_to_Matthew
The_Gospel_of_Thomas
The_Great_Sense
The_Hidden_Words_text
The_House_of_Asterion
The_Immortal
The_Last_Question
The_Letter_to_the_Hebrews
The_Library_of_Babel
The_Library_Of_Babel_2
The_Logomachy_of_Zos
The_Lottery_in_Babylon
The_Mirror_of_Enigmas
The_Monadology
The_One_Who_Walks_Away
The_Pilgrims_Progress
The_Poems_of_Cold_Mountain
The_Pythagorean_Sentences_of_Demophilus
The_Revelation_of_Jesus_Christ_or_the_Apocalypse
The_Riddle_of_this_World
The_Second_Epistle_of_John
The_Second_Epistle_of_Paul_to_Timothy
The_Second_Epistle_of_Peter
The_Shadow_Out_Of_Time
The_Theologians
The_Third_Letter_of_John
The_Waiting
The_Wall_and_the_BOoks
The_Witness
The_Zahir
Thus_Spoke_Zarathustra_text
Timaeus
Verses_of_Vemana

PRIMARY CLASS

SIMILAR TITLES
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Practice And All Is Coming Abuse, Cult Dynamics, And Healing In Yoga And Beyond
refuse
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The Human Use of Human Beings
The Narcissistic Abuse Recovery Bible Spiritual Recovery from Narcissistic and Emotional Abuse
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Tiny house
use
Use and Control

DEFINITIONS

1. A dog. 2. A domestic dog of any of various breeds commonly used for hunting, characteristically having drooping ears, a short coat, and a deep resonant voice. 3. In literary use the image of the hound is of something that pursues or chases relentlessly.

1. A loose pliable covering for the head and neck, often attached to a robe or jacket. 2. Something resembling this in shape or use. 3. In animals, a conformation of parts (as in the cobra and the hooded seal), or arrangement of colour about the head or neck, resembling or suggesting a hood. hoods.

1. Any abnormal phenomenon or product or unusual object; anomaly; aberration. 2. A sudden and apparently causeless change or turn or events; occurrence, etc. freaks.

1. Appearing sad or lonely because deserted or abandoned. 2. Forsaken or deprived.

1. A suggested explanation for a group of facts or phenomena, either accepted as a basis for further verification (working hypothesis) or accepted as likely to be true. 2. An assumption used in an argument without its being endorsed; a supposition.

1. A sweet yellowish or brownish viscid fluid produced by various bees from the nectar of flowers and used as food. 2. Something sweet, delicious or delightful. 3.* Fig. Sweetness. *honey-buds, honey-drunk, honey-fire, honey-packed, honey-sweet, honey-wine.

1. Having horns (often used in combination). 2. Having a crescent-shaped part or form.

1. Lacking education or knowledge. 2. Unaware because of a lack of relevant information or knowledge.

1. The condition of being deceived by a false perception, belief or appearance. 2. Something, such as a fantastic plan or desire that causes an erroneous belief or perception; as a deceptive apparition etc. Illusion, illusion"s, Illusion"s, illusions, illusion-makers.

1. To be inadequate or insufficient; fall short. 2. To fall short of success or achievement in something expected, attempted, desired, or approved. 3. To dwindle, pass, or die away. 4. To decline, as in strength or effectiveness; fig. of the heart. 5. Of some expected or usual resource: To prove of no use or help to. 6. Of a material thing: To break down under strain or pressure. fails, failed, failed.

1. Touchstone; a very smooth, fine-grained, black or dark-coloured variety of quartz or jasper (also called basanite), used for testing the quality of gold and silver alloys by the colour of the streak produced by rubbing them upon it; a piece of such stone used for this purpose. 2. *fig.* That which serves to test or try the genuineness or value of anything; a test, criterion.

abode ::: a dwelling-place, place of ordinary habitation; house or home. (Also pt. of abide.) abodes.

abstruse ::: 1. Concealed, hidden, secret. 2. Hard to understand; difficult, recondite.

accuse ::: to charge with a fault; to find fault with, blame, censure. accused.

access ::: 1. The ability, right, or permission to approach, enter, speak with, or use; admittance. 2. A way or means of approach; an entrance, channel, passage, or doorway.

accident ::: 1. Any event that happens unexpectedly, without a deliberate plan or cause. 2. A fortuitous circumstance, quality, or characteristic. 3. An unfortunate event, a disaster, a mishap. accidents.

ache ::: a continuous or abiding pain, in contrast to a sudden or sharp one. Used of both physical and mental sensations.

adj. 1. Rousing (something) or being aroused, as if from sleep. n. awakenings. 2. Recognitions, realizations, or coming into awareness of things.

agencies ::: active powers or causes which have the power to produce an effect.

agree ::: 1. To be in harmony or unison in opinions, feelings, conduct, etc.; to be in sympathy; to live or act together harmoniously; to have no causes of variance. 2. To give consent; assent (often followed by to). agreed.

alarm ::: n. 1. A warning sound of any kind to give notice of danger, or to arouse or attract attention; esp. a loud and hurried peal rung out by a tocsin or alarm bell. v. 2. To arouse to a sense of danger, to excite the attention or suspicion of, to put on the alert; warn. 3. To strike with fear or apprehension of danger; to agitate or excite with sudden fear. alarmed, alarming.

"All depends on the meaning you attach to words used; it is a matter of nomenclature. Ordinarily, one says a man has intellect if he can think well; the nature and process and field of the thought do not matter. If you take intellect in that sense, then you can say that intellect has different strata, and Ford belongs to one stratum of intellect, Einstein to another — Ford has a practical and executive business intellect, Einstein a scientific discovering and theorising intellect. But Ford too in his own field theorises, invents, discovers. Yet would you call Ford an intellectual or a man of intellect? I would prefer to use for the general faculty of mind the word intelligence. Ford has a great and forceful practical intelligence, keen, quick, successful, dynamic. He has a brain that can deal with thoughts also, but even there his drive is towards practicality. He believes in rebirth (metempsychosis), for instance, not for any philosophic reason, but because it explains life as a school of experience in which one gathers more and more experience and develops by it. Einstein has, on the other hand, a great discovering scientific intellect, not, like Marconi, a powerful practical inventive intelligence for the application of scientific discovery. All men have, of course, an ‘intellect" of a kind; all, for instance, can discuss and debate (for which you say rightly intellect is needed); but it is only when one rises to the realm of ideas and moves freely in it that you say, ‘This man has an intellect".” Letters on Yoga

allegiance ::: loyalty or devotion to some person, group, cause, or the like.

:::   "All existence is a manifestation of God because He is the only existence . . . .” Essays on the Gita

almighty ::: 1. *Orig. and in the strict sense used as an attribute of the Deity, and joined to God or other title. 2. Absol. The Almighty; a title of God. 3. All-powerful (in a general sense); omnipotent. Almighty"s, Almightiness, almightiness.

altar ::: 1. A block, pile, table, stand, mound, platform, or other elevated structure on which to place or sacrifice offerings to a deity. 2. With reference to the uses, customs, dedication, or peculiar sanctity of the altar. 3. A place consecrated to devotional observances. altar"s, altars, altar-burnings, mountain-altars.

amusements ::: pleasurable pastimes of the mind or attention; mental diversions and enjoyments in lieu of more serious matters.

amuse ::: to hold the attention of (someone) pleasantly; entertain or divert in an enjoyable or cheerful manner. amused, amusing.

A mental formation stamped by the thoughts and feelings of a departed human being on the atmosphere of a place or locality, wandering about there or repeating itself, till that formation either exhausts itself or is dissolved by one means or another. This is the explanation of such phenomena as the haunted house in which the scenes attending or surrounding or preceding a murder are repeated over and over again and many other similar phenomena.

amethyst ::: a purple or violet quartz; having the clear colour as of the precious stone. Sri Aurobindo uses the word as an adj."for Amethyst (the Mother)she has revealed that it has a power of protection” Huta

amidst ::: in the middle of; surrounded by; among; amidst is often used of things scattered about, or in the midst of others.

:::   "A Mind, a Will seems to have imagined and organised the universe, but it has veiled itself behind its creation; its first erection has been this screen of an inconscient Energy and a material form of substance, at once a disguise of its presence and a plastic creative basis on which it could work as an artisan uses for his production of forms and patterns a dumb and obedient material.” The Life Divine

analyse ::: to examine carefully and in detail so as to identify causes, key factors, possible results; examine minutely and critically to determine the elements or essential features of. analysed.

anchorites ::: those who have retired to a solitary place for a life of religious seclusion; hermits, recluses.

  And do you want to know why he is always represented as a child? It is because he is in constant progression. To the extent that the world is perfected, his play is also perfected — what was the play of yesterday will no longer be the play of tomorrow; his play will become more and more harmonious, benign and joyful to the extent that the world becomes capable of responding to it and enjoying it with the Divine.” Words of the Mother, MCW Vol. 15.

anxious ::: full of mental distress or uneasiness because of fear of danger or misfortune; greatly worried.

a person who professes beliefs and opinions that he or she does not hold in order to conceal his or her real feelings or motives; one who pretends to be what he is not. (Sri Aurobindo also uses the term as an adjective.) hypocrite"s.

a person whose back is humped in a convex position because of abnormal spinal curvature.

a punctuation mark ( - ) used between the parts of a compound word or name or between the syllables of a word, especially when divided at the end of a line of text or the parts of a word divided for any purpose. Hence, fig. A joining or connecting link.

arenas ::: central stages, rings, areas, or the like, used for sports or other forms of entertainment, surrounded by seats for spectators.

aristocracy ::: the class to which a ruling body belongs, a patrician order; the collective body of those who form a privileged class; also used fig. of those who are superior.

arouse ::: 1. To awaken from or as if from sleep or inactivity. 2. To stir up; excite 3. To stir to action or strong response; excite. aroused, arousing.

a rod, esp. a forked stick supposed to be useful in locating underground water, metal deposits, etc.

arraigned ::: called (an accused person) before a court to answer the charge made against him or her by indictment, information, or complaint, or brought before a court to answer to an indictment; accused, charged with fault.

a structure for supporting or enclosing something else, especially a skeletal support used as the basis for something being constructed. Also fig.

:::   ". . . a true occultism means no more than a research into supraphysical realities and an unveiling of the hidden laws of being and Nature, of all that is not obvious on the surface. It attempts the discovery of the secret laws of mind and mental energy, the secret laws of life and life-energy, the secret laws of the subtle-physical and its energies, — all that Nature has not put into visible operation on the surface; it pursues also the application of these hidden truths and powers of Nature so as to extend the mastery of the human spirit beyond the ordinary operations of mind, the ordinary operations of life, the ordinary operations of our physical existence. In the spiritual domain which is occult to the surface mind in so far as it passes beyond normal and enters into supernormal experience, there is possible not only the discovery of the self and spirit, but the discovery of the uplifting, informing and guiding light of spiritual consciousness and the power of the spirit, the spiritual way of knowledge, the spiritual way of action. To know these things and to bring their truths and forces into the life of humanity is a necessary part of its evolution. Science itself is in its own way an occultism; for it brings to light the formulas which Nature has hidden and it uses its knowledge to set free operations of her energies which she has not included in her ordinary operations and to organise and place at the service of man her occult powers and processes, a vast system of physical magic, — for there is and can be no other magic than the utilisation of secret truths of being, secret powers and processes of Nature. It may even be found that a supraphysical knowledge is necessary for the completion of physical knowledge, because the processes of physical Nature have behind them a supraphysical factor, a power and action mental, vital or spiritual which is not tangible to any outer means of knowledge.” The Life Divine

author ::: 1. An originator or creator, one who originates or gives existence to anything. 2. He who gives rise to or causes an action, event, circumstance, state, or condition of things. 3. The composer or writer of a treatise, play, poem, book, etc. authors.

availed ::: to be of use, value, or advantage; to have the necessary force to accomplishment something.

awakened ::: 1. Aroused from sleep, sloth, or inaction. 2. Made aware; cognizant; conscious. half-awakened.

awaken ::: fig. To rouse into activity; to stir up, excite; kindle.

awake ::: v. 1. To arouse from sleep or inactivity. 2. Fig. To rise from a state resembling sleep, such as death, indifference, inaction; to become active or vigilant. 3. To come or bring to an awareness, to become cognizant, to be fully conscious, to appreciate fully (often followed by to). awakes, awoke, awaking. *adj.* 4. Not asleep; conscious; vigilant, alert. half-awake.

baffled ::: 1. Confused, bewildered, or perplexed. 2. Frustrated or confounded; thwarted. baffles, baffling.

barge ::: a large, open pleasure boat used for parties, pageants, or formal ceremonies.

barns ::: a large farm building used for storing farm products and sheltering livestock.

barren ::: 1. Unproductive of results or gains; unprofitable. 2. Lacking vegetation, especially useful vegetation. 3. Devoid of something specified.

basilicas ::: public buildings in ancient Rome having a central nave with an apse at one or both ends and two side aisles formed by rows of columns, which was used as an assembly hall – also Christian churches with a similar design.

bathe ::: 1. To become immersed in or as if in liquid, as a bath or in other substances or elements. 2. To wash or pour over; suffuse or envelope, like sunshine. bathed, bathing.

bay ::: the position or stand of an animal or fugitive that is forced to turn and resist pursuers because it is no longer possible to flee. (preceded by at).

beast ::: 1. An animal other than a human, especially a large four-footed mammal. 2. Fig. Animal nature as opposed to intellect or spirit. 3. A large wild animal. 4. A domesticated animal used by man. (Sri Aurobindo also employs the word as an adj.) beast"s, Beast"s, beasts, wild-beast. ::: —the Beast. Applied to the devil and evil spirits.

begot ::: pt. of beget. 1. Caused to exist or occur; created. 2. Called into being, gave rise to; produced. begotten.

benumbed ::: made (any part of the body) insensible, torpid, or powerless; made numb, deprived of sensation; stupefied or stunned, as by a blow or shock; now mostly used for the effects of cold.

bewilder ::: to confuse utterly; puzzle completely. bewildered.

bivouac ("s) ::: a temporary camp with shelters such as tents, as used by soldiers or mountaineers, often unprotected from an enemy.

bloom ::: n. **1. The flower of a plant. 2. Fig. A condition or time of vigour, freshness, and beauty; prime. 3. Fig. Glowing charm; delicate beauty. blooms. v. 4. To bear flowers; to blossom. Also fig. 5. To be in a healthy, glowing, or flourishing condition. 6. To flourish or grow. 7. To cause to flourish or grow; to flourish. Chiefly fig. blooms, bloomed.**

blow ::: to produce a sound or cause to sound as by expelling a current of air.

body-slave ::: a servant reserved for personal attendance or use.

bow ::: a weapon consisting of a curved, flexible strip of material, especially wood, strung taut from end to end and used to launch arrows.

breaks up. ::: 1. Breaks into many parts; divides or become divided into pieces. 2. Dissolves, disbands, puts an end to, gives up; breaks up a house, household, etc.

bricks ::: blocks of clay hardened by drying in the sun or burning in a kiln, and used for building, paving, etc.

brief ::: a memorandum of points of fact or of law for use in conducting a case. (All other references are as: short lived, fleeting, transitory. briefer, brief-lived.)

uselessly

"But always the whole foundation of the gnostic life must be by its very nature inward and not outward. In the life of the Spirit it is the Spirit, the inner Reality, that has built up and uses the mind, vital being and body as its instrumentation; thought, feeling and action do not exist for themselves, they are not an object, but the means; they serve to express the manifested divine Reality within us: otherwise, without this inwardness, this spiritual origination, in a too externalised consciousness or by only external means, no greater or divine life is possible.” The Life Divine

"But in the path of knowledge as it is practised in India concentration is used in a special and more limited sense. It means that removal of the thought from all distracting activities of the mind and that concentration of it on the idea of the One by which the soul rises out of the phenomenal into the one reality.” The Synthesis of Yoga*

"By individual we mean normally something that separates itself from everything else and stands apart, though in reality there is no such thing anywhere in existence; it is a figment of our mental conceptions useful and necessary to express a partial and practical truth. But the difficulty is that the mind gets dominated by its words and forgets that the partial and practical truth becomes true truth only by its relation to others which seem to the reason to contradict it, and that taken by itself it contains a constant element of falsity. Thus when we speak of an individual we mean ordinarily an individualisation of mental, vital, physical being separate from all other beings, incapable of unity with them by its very individuality. If we go beyond these three terms of mind, life and body, and speak of the soul or individual self, we still think of an individualised being separate from all others, incapable of unity and inclusive mutuality, capable at most of a spiritual contact and soul-sympathy. It is therefore necessary to insist that by the true individual we mean nothing of the kind, but a conscious power of being of the Eternal, always existing by unity, always capable of mutuality. It is that being which by self-knowledge enjoys liberation and immortality.” The Life Divine

bypaths ::: a little used path or track, esp. in the country.

cabin ::: 1. A small, roughly built house; a simple cottage. 2. An enclosed space; a confined area.

cause ::: 1. A person or thing that acts, happens, or exists in such a way that some specific thing happens as a result; the producer of an effect. 2. A basis for an action or response; a reason. 3. Grounds for action; motive; justification. 4. Good or sufficient reason. 5. The principle, ideal, goal, or movement to which a person or group is dedicated. Cause.

causeless ::: having no justifying cause or reason.

causeway ::: 1. A raised roadway, as across water or marshland. 2. A paved highway.

calm ::: n. 1. Serenity; tranquillity; peace. 2. Nearly or completely motionless as a condition of no wind. Calm, Calm"s, calms, calmness. adj. 3. Not excited or agitated; composed; tranquil; 4. Without rough motion; still or nearly still. calmer, calm-lipped, stone-calm. *adv. calmly.
Sri Aurobindo: "Calm is a still unmoved condition which no disturbance can affect — it is a less negative condition than quiet.” Letters on Yoga*
"Calm is a positive tranquillity which can exist in spite of superficial disturbances.” *Letters on Yoga
"Calm is a strong and positive quietude, firm and solid — ordinary quietude is mere negation, simply the absence of disturbance.” *Letters on Yoga
"But more powerful still is the giving up of the fruit of one"s works, because that immediately destroys all causes of disturbance and brings and preserves automatically an inner calm and peace, and calm and peace are the foundation on which all else becomes perfect and secure in possession by the tranquil spirit.” Essays on the Gita
The Mother: "Calm is self-possessed strength, quiet and conscious energy, mastery of the impulses, control over the unconscious reflexes.” Words of the Mother, MCW Vol. 14*.


care ::: n. **1. A burdened state of mind, as that arising from heavy responsibilities; worry. 2. An object of or cause for concern. 3. Watchful oversight; charge or supervision. 4. An object or source of worry, attention, or solicitude. care, cares. v. 5. To be concerned or interested, have concern for. cares, cared.**

cart ::: a two-wheeled vehicle drawn by an animal and used in farm work and for transporting goods.

cast ::: v. 1. To throw with force; hurl. 2. To form (liquid metal, for example) into a particular shape by pouring into a mould. Also fig. 3. To cause to fall upon something or in a certain direction; send forth. 4. To throw on the ground, as in wrestling. 5. To put or place, esp. hastily or forcibly. 6. To direct (the eye, a glance, etc.) 7. To throw (something) forth or off. 8. To bestow; confer. casts, casting.

-causing ::: being the cause of; effecting, bringing about, producing, inducing, making. All-causing.

ceaseless ::: without stop or pause; constant. ceaselessly.

cessation ::: a ceasing or stopping; discontinuance; pause. cessations.

chalice ::: a cup or goblet often of gold or silver used esp. in religious services.

challenge ::: 1. A call or summons to engage in a contest, fight, or competition. 2. A demand for explanation or justification; a calling into question. v. **3. To invite; arouse; stimulate; provoke. challenges, challenged, challenging.**

chamber ::: 1. Archaic or poetic: A room in a private house, esp. a bedroom. 2. An enclosed space; compartment. chamber"s, chambers, work-chamber.

champion ::: an ardent defender or supporter of a cause.

chance ::: n. 1. The absence of any cause of events that can be predicted, understood, or controlled: often personified or treated as a positive agency. 2. The happening of events; the way in which things happen; fortune. 3. An opportune or favourable time; opportunity. 4. Fortune; luck; fate. Chance, chances. *adj.* 5. Not planned or expected; accidental. v. 6. To happen by chance; be the case by chance.** chanced.

characters ::: 1. The combination of qualities, features and traits that distinguishes one person, group, or thing from another. 2. The marks or symbols used in writing systems such as the letters of the alphabet.

chariot ::: an ancient horse-drawn, four-wheeled carriage used for occasions of ceremony or transport. chariot"s, chariots, chariot-course.

chiselled ::: shaped or cut as with a chisel, a metal tool with a sharp bevelled edge, used to cut and shape stone, wood, or metal. chisels.

chrysolites ::: brown or yellow-green olivine found in igneous and metamorphic rocks and used as gemstones such as topaz, etc.

citadel ::: **A fortress that commands a city and is used in the control of the inhabitants and in defence during attack or siege. citadels.**

clause ::: a distinct article, stipulation, or provision, in a document.

clauses, items, points, or particulars in a contract, treaty, or other formal agreement; conditions or stipulations in a contract.

clang ::: 1. A loud resounding noise, as a large bell or metal when struck. 2. v. To make or cause to make, or produce a loud ringing, resonant sound as of a large bell.

clay ::: 1. A natural earthy material that is plastic when wet, consisting essentially of hydrated silicates of aluminium: used for making bricks, pottery, etc. 2. The material which is said to form the human body. 3. The human body, esp. as opposed to the spirit. clay-kin.

cloud ::: 1. A visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth"s surface. 2. Any similar mass, esp. of smoke or dust. 3. Something fleeting or unsubstantial. 4. Anything that obscures or darkens something, or causes gloom, trouble, suspicion, disgrace, etc. clouds, clouds", cloud-veils.

cloying ::: causing or tending to cause disgust or aversion through excess.

code ::: 1. A system of symbols, letters, or words given certain arbitrary meanings, used for transmitting messages requiring secrecy or brevity. 2. A systematic collection of regulations and rules of procedure or conduct. codes.

coerce ::: 1. To compel or restrain by force or authority without regard to individual wishes or desires. 2. To dominate or control, esp. by exploiting fear, anxiety, etc. 3. To bring about through the use of force or other forms of compulsion. coerced, coercing.

coin ::: 1. A small piece of metal, usually flat and circular, authorized by a government for use as money. 2. A mode of expression considered standard, a symbol; token.

combine ::: to integrate or cause to be integrated; join together. combined.

compel ::: 1. To cause (someone) by force (to be or do something) 2. To force to submit; subdue. 3. To exert a strong, irresistible force on; sway. compels, compelled, compelling, compellingly.

conceive ::: 1. To form or hold an idea. 2. To begin, originate, or found (something) in a particular way (usually used in the passive). 3. To apprehend mentally; understand. 4. To be created or formed in the womb; to be engendered; begotten. conceives, conceived, self-conceived.

conch-shells :: 1. The spiral shell of a gastropod, often used as a horn. 2. The fabled shell trumpet of the Tritons.

confused ::: 1. Lacking logical order or sense. 2. *adj. Disordered and difficult to understand or make sense of. *3. Chaotic; jumbled.

confine ::: 1. To enclose within bounds, limit, restrict. 2. To shut or keep in; prevent from leaving a place because of imprisonment, illness, discipline, etc. confined.

constant ::: 1. Unchanging in nature, value, or extent; invariable. 2. Continuing without pause or letup; unceasing. 3. Steadfast; firm in mind or purpose; resolute.

constellated ::: formed or caused to form a group or cluster.

consumed ::: destroyed totally; destroyed or expended by use. consuming.

contents ::: things contained or held, as in a receptacle. Often used in the plural.

convinced ::: brought by the use of argument or evidence to a firm belief or a course of action.

corrupt ::: 1. To destroy or subvert the honesty or integrity of. 2. To ruin morally; pervert. 3. To cause to become rotten; spoil. 4. To taint; contaminate. corrupted, corrupting.

cosmicity ("s) ::: a word coined by Sri Aurobindo. The suffix ity is used to form abstract nouns expressing state or condition. Hence, cosmicity refers to a cosmic state or condition.

cosmic mind ::: Sri Aurobindo: "Nevertheless, the fact of this intervention from above, the fact that behind all our original thinking or authentic perception of things there is a veiled, a half-veiled or a swift unveiled intuitive element is enough to establish a connection between mind and what is above it; it opens a passage of communication and of entry into the superior spirit-ranges. There is also the reaching out of mind to exceed the personal ego limitation, to see things in a certain impersonality and universality. Impersonality is the first character of cosmic self; universality, non-limitation by the single or limiting point of view, is the character of cosmic perception and knowledge: this tendency is therefore a widening, however rudimentary, of these restricted mind areas towards cosmicity, towards a quality which is the very character of the higher mental planes, — towards that superconscient cosmic Mind which, we have suggested, must in the nature of things be the original mind-action of which ours is only a derivative and inferior process.” *The Life Divine

"If we accept the Vedic image of the Sun of Truth, . . . we may compare the action of the Higher Mind to a composed and steady sunshine, the energy of the Illumined Mind beyond it to an outpouring of massive lightnings of flaming sun-stuff. Still beyond can be met a yet greater power of the Truth-Force, an intimate and exact Truth-vision, Truth-thought, Truth-sense, Truth-feeling, Truth-action, to which we can give in a special sense the name of Intuition; . . . At the source of this Intuition we discover a superconscient cosmic Mind in direct contact with the supramental Truth-Consciousness, an original intensity determinant of all movements below it and all mental energies, — not Mind as we know it, but an Overmind that covers as with the wide wings of some creative Oversoul this whole lower hemisphere of Knowledge-Ignorance, links it with that greater Truth-Consciousness while yet at the same time with its brilliant golden Lid it veils the face of the greater Truth from our sight, intervening with its flood of infinite possibilities as at once an obstacle and a passage in our seeking of the spiritual law of our existence, its highest aim, its secret Reality.” The Life Divine

"There is one cosmic Mind, one cosmic Life, one cosmic Body. All the attempt of man to arrive at universal sympathy, universal love and the understanding and knowledge of the inner soul of other existences is an attempt to beat thin, breach and eventually break down by the power of the enlarging mind and heart the walls of the ego and arrive nearer to a cosmic oneness.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

"[The results of the opening to the cosmic Mind:] One is aware of the cosmic Mind and the mental forces that move there and how they work on one"s mind and that of others and one is able to deal with one"s own mind with a greater knowledge and effective power. There are many other results, but this is the fundamental one.” Letters on Yoga

"The cosmic consciousness has many levels — the cosmic physical, the cosmic vital, the cosmic Mind, and above the higher planes of cosmic Mind there is the Intuition and above that the overmind and still above that the supermind where the Transcendental begins. In order to live in the Intuition plane (not merely to receive intuitions), one has to live in the cosmic consciousness because there the cosmic and individual run into each other as it were, and the mental separation between them is already broken down, so nobody can reach there who is still in the separative ego.” Letters on Yoga*


cosmic Self ::: Sri Aurobindo: "When one has the cosmic consciousness, one can feel the cosmic Self as one"s own self, one can feel one with other beings in the cosmos, one can feel all the forces of Nature as moving in oneself, all selves as one"s own self. There is no why except that it is so, since all is the One.” Letters on Yoga (See also Cosmic Spirit)

"Impersonality is the first character of cosmic self; . . . .” *The Life Divine

"An eternal infinite self-existence is the supreme reality, but the supreme transcendent eternal Being, Self and Spirit, — an infinite Person, we may say, because his being is the essence and source of all personality, — is the reality and meaning of self-existence: so too the cosmic Self, Spirit, Being, Person is the reality and meaning of cosmic existence; the same Self, Spirit, Being or Person manifesting its multiplicity is the reality and meaning of individual existence.” The Life Divine

"But this cosmic self is spiritual in essence and in experience; it must not be confused with the collective existence, with any group soul or the life and body of a human society or even of all mankind.” The Synthesis of Yoga

"It is the Cosmic Self and Spirit that is in and behind all things and beings, from which and in which all is manifested in the universe — although it is now a manifestation in the Ignorance.” Letters on Yoga*


cottage ::: a small, humble, single-storied house, especially in the country.

counters ::: anything used in keeping account, as a disk of metal or wood, used in some games, as checkers, for marking a player"s position or for keeping score.

courted ::: 1. Endeavoured to win favour with. 2. Tried to gain the love or affections of. 3. Attempted to gain (applause, favour, a decision, etc.).

craft ::: 1. An art, trade, or occupation requiring special skill, esp. manual skill. 2. Skill; dexterity. 3. Skill or ability used for bad purposes; cunning; deceit; guile; fraud; evasion or deception. crafts.

creaks ::: makes or causes to make a harsh squeaking or grating sound.

create ::: 1. To cause to come into being, as something unique that would not naturally evolve or that is not made by ordinary processes. 2. To evolve from one"s own thought or imagination, as a work of art or an invention. 3. To cause to happen; to bring about; arrange, as by intention or design. creates, created, creating, all-creating, self-creating, world-creating, new-create.

cross ::: 1. A structure consisting essentially of an upright and a transverse piece, upon which persons were formerly put to a cruel and ignominious death by being nailed or otherwise fastened to it by their extremities. 2. A representation or delineation of a cross on any surface, varying in elaborateness from two lines crossing each other to an ornamental design painted, embroidered, carved, etc.; used as a sacred mark, symbol, badge, or the like. 3. A trouble, vexation, annoyance; misfortune, adversity; sometimes anything that thwarts or crosses. v. 4. To go or extend across; pass from one side of to the other: pass over. 5. To extend or pass through or over; intersect. 6. To encounter in passing. crosses, crossed, crossing.

cry ::: 1. To entreat loudly; supplicate. 2. To call loudly; shout. 3. To sob or shed tears because of grief, sorrow, or pain; weep. 4. To utter or shout (words of appeal, exclamation, fear, etc.) 5. To utter a characteristic sound or call. Used of an animal. cries, cried, criedst, criest, crying.

crypt ::: 1. An underground vault or chamber, especially one beneath a church that is used as a burial place. 2. A cellar, vault or tunnel. 3. A location for secret meetings, etc. crypts.

crystal ::: 1. A mineral, especially a transparent form of quartz, having a crystalline structure, often characterized by external planar faces. 2. Resembling crystal; transparent as water or a liquid. 3. Fig. Sometimes used to describe the eyes.

cup ::: 1. A small open container, usually with a flat bottom and a handle, used for drinking, or something resembling it. cup"s 2. *Fig.* Something that one must endure; one"s lot to be experienced or endured with pain or happiness, as these lines in Savitri:

curious ::: 1. Eager to learn more. 2. Arousing interest because of novelty or strangeness.

currency ::: money in any form when in actual use as a medium of exchange; also anything that has value.

curse ::: n. 1. The expression of a wish that misfortune, evil, doom, etc., befall a person, group, etc. 2. A formula or charm intended to cause such misfortune to another. 3. An evil brought or inflicted upon one. 4. The cause of evil, misfortune, or trouble. 5. A profane or obscene expression or oath. curses. v. 6. To wish harm upon; invoke evil upon. 7. To invoke supernatural powers to bring harm to (someone or something). cursed.

curtain ::: 1. A hanging piece of fabric used to shut out the light from a window, adorn a room, increase privacy, etc. 2. Something that functions as or resembles a screen, cover, or barrier. curtains.

dagger ("s) ::: a short, sword like weapon with a pointed blade and a handle, used for thrusting and stabbing.

dam ::: a female parent (esp. used of four-footed domestic animals).

dangled ::: caused to hang loosely, esp. with a jerking or swaying motion.

dark ::: adj. 1. Lacking or having very little light. 2. Concealed or secret; mysterious. 3. Difficult to understand; obscure. 4. Characterized by gloom; dismal. 5. Fig. Sinister; evil; absent moral or spiritual values. 6. (used of color) Having a dark hue; almost black. 7. Showing a brooding ill humor. 8. Having a complexion that is not fair; swarthy. darker, darkest, dark-browed, dark-robed.* n. 9. Absence of light; dark state or condition; darkness, esp. that of night. 10. A dark place: a place of darkness. 11. The condition of being hidden from view, obscure, or unknown; obscurity. *in the dark: in concealment or secrecy.

dart ::: n. 1. A small, slender missile that is pointed at one end and usually feathered at the other and is propelled by hand, as in the game of darts, or by a blowgun when used as a weapon. 2. Something similar in function to such a missile, as the stinging member of an insect. *v. 2. To thrust or move suddenly or rapidly.* darts.

deadly ::: causing or tending to cause death; fatal; lethal.

"Death is there because the being in the body is not yet developed enough to go on growing in the same body without the need of change and the body itself is not sufficiently conscious. If the mind and vital and the body itself were more conscious and plastic, death would not be necessary.” Letters on Yoga

declined ::: refused; rejected.

deep ::: n. 1. A vast extent, as of space or time; an abyss. 2. Fig. Difficult to penetrate; incomprehensible to one of ordinary understanding or knowledge; as an unfathomable thought, idea, esp. poetic. Deep, deep"s, deeps. adj. 3. Extending far downward below a surface. 4. Having great spatial extension or penetration downward or inward from an outer surface or backward or laterally or outward from a center; sometimes used in combination. 5. Coming from or penetrating to a great depth. 6. Situated far down, in, or back. 7. Lying below the surface; not superficial; profound. 8. Of great intensity; as extreme deep happiness, deep trouble. 9. Absorbing; engrossing. 10. Grave or serious. 11. Profoundly or intensely. 12. Mysterious; obscure; difficult to penetrate or understand. 13. Low in pitch or tone. 14. Profoundly cunning, crafty or artful. 15. The central and most intense or profound part; "in the deep of night”; "in the deep of winter”. deeper, deepest, deep-browed, deep-caved, deep-concealed, deep-etched, deep-fraught, deep-guarded, deep-hid, deep-honied, deep-pooled, deep-thoughted. *adv. *16. to a great depth psychologically or profoundly.

defeatist ::: marked by the attitude of one who admits, expects, or no longer resists defeat, as because of a conviction that further struggle or effort is futile.

defect ::: an imperfection that causes inadequacy or failure; a shortcoming.

delay ::: n. 1. The putting off or deferring of action, etc. v. 2. To slow up, hinder, or cause to be late; detain. delays, delaying.

demand ::: n. 1. A formal claim. 2. An urgent requirement or need. demands. v. 3. To ask urgently or peremptorily, to claim as just or due. 4. To require as useful, just, proper, or necessary; call for. demands, demanded, demanding.

den ::: 1. The shelter or retreat of a wild animal; a lair. 2. A cave used as a place of shelter or concealment. 3. A squalid or vile abode or place.

deny ::: 1. To refuse to recognize or acknowledge; disavow. 2. To declare untrue; contradict. 3. To refuse to fulfil the requests or expectations; refuse to give. 4. To give a refusal to; turn down or away. 5. To withhold the possession, user, or enjoyment of. denies, denied, denying.

desert ::: 1. A region so arid because of little rainfall that it supports only sparse and widely spaced vegetation or no vegetation at all. 2. Any area in which few forms of life can exist because of lack of water, permanent frost, or absence of soil. 3. Any place lacking in something; desolate, barren. deserts.

"Desire is the root of all sorrow, disappointment, affliction, for though it has a feverish joy of pursuit and satisfaction, yet because it is always a straining of the being, it carries into its pursuit and its getting a labour, hunger, struggle, a rapid subjection to fatigue, a sense of limitation, dissatisfaction and early disappointment with all its gains, a ceaseless morbid stimulation, trouble, disquiet, asânti. ” The Synthesis of Yoga

destroy ::: 1. To reduce anything to useless fragments, a useless form, or remains, as by rending, burning, or dissolving; injuring beyond repair or renewal; demolish; ruin; annihilate. 2. To subdue or defeat completely; crush. 3. To slay, to kill. destroys, destroyed, destroying, world-destroying.

detached ::: 1. Impartial or objective; disinterested; unbiased. 2. Not involved or concerned; aloof. ::: Sri Aurobindo: "Detachment means that one stands back from [imperfections and weakness of the nature, etc.] , does not identify oneself with them or get upset or troubled because they are there, but rather looks on them as something foreign to one"s true consciousness and true self, rejects them and calls in the Mother"s Force into these movements to eliminate them and bring the true consciousness and its movements there.” Letters on Yoga

determined ::: 1. Settled, decided, resolved. 2. Caused, effected, or controlled. determines, determining, name-determined.

dice ::: small cubes with 1 to 6 spots on the six faces; used in gambling to generate random numbers.

dim ::: 1. Obscure to the mind or the senses. 2. Not clearly seen; indistinct; faint. 3. Having weak or indistinct vision. 4. Faintly outlined; indistinct. 5. Lacking in brightness. v. 1. To cause to seem less bright, as by comparison. 2. Make dim or lusterless. dimly, dim-eyed, dim-heart, dim-hearted, dim-masked, dim-souled.

disaster ::: an occurrence that causes great distress or destruction. disasters".

disclose ::: 1. To make known; reveal or uncover. 2. To cause to appear; allow to be seen; lay open to view. discloses, disclosed, disclosing , heart-disclosing.

::: "Discoveries will be made that thin the walls between soul and matter; attempts there will be to extend exact knowledge into the psychological and psychic realms with a realisation of the truth that these have laws of their own which are other than the physical, but not the less laws because they escape the external senses and are infinitely plastic and subtle.” The Human Cycle, etc.

disgrace ::: a person, act, or thing that causes shame, reproach, or dishonour, or is dishonourable or shameful.

disown ::: to deny any connection with; refuse to acknowledge.

disrupt ::: 1. To cause disorder or turmoil in. 2. To destroy, usually temporarily, the normal continuance or unity of; interrupt. 3. To break apart. disrupted.

dissolve ::: 1. To cause to disappear or vanish; dispel. ::: 2. To cause to fade away. dissolved, dissolving.

divine Comedy ::: a stage-play of a light and amusing character, with a happy conclusion to its plot. Its mediaeval use for a narrative poem with an agreeable ending. (Probably taken from Italian; cf. the Divine Comedy, the great tripartite poem of Dante, called by its author La Commedia, because in the conclusion, it is prosperous, pleasant, and desirable.)

divine ::: Sri Aurobindo: "The Divine is the Supreme Truth because it is the Supreme Being from whom all have come and in whom all are.” *Letters on Yoga

document ::: something, such as a recording or a photograph, that can be used to furnish evidence or information. documents.

dove ::: 1. Any bird of the family Columbid, esp. the smaller species with pointed tails. 2. A pure white member of this species, used as a symbol of innocence, gentleness, tenderness, and peace. dove"s, doves.

drag-net ::: a heavy or weighted net used to scour the bottom of a pond, river, etc., as when searching for something.

draw ::: 1. To cause to move in a given direction or to a given position, as by leading. 2. To bring towards oneself or itself, as by inherent force or influence; attract. 3. To cause to come by attracting; attract. 4. To cause to move in a particular direction by or as by a pulling force; pull; drag. 5. To get, take or obtain as from a source; to derive. 6. To bring, take, or pull out, as from a receptacle or source. 7. To draw a (or the) line (fig.) to determine or define the limit between two things or groups; in modern colloquial use (esp. with at), to lay down a definite limit of action beyond which one refuses to go. 8. To make, sketch (a picture or representation of someone or something) in lines or words; to design, trace out, delineate; depict; also, to mould, model. 9. To mark or lay out; trace. 10. To compose or write out in legal format. 11. To write out (a bill of exchange or promissory note). 12. To disembowel. 13. To move or pull so as to cover or uncover something. 14. To suck or take in (air, for example); inhale. 15. To extend, lengthen, prolong, protract. 16. To cause to move after or toward one by applying continuous force; drag. draws, drew, drawn, drawing, wide-drawn.

drawing ::: a picture or plan made by means of lines on a surface, esp. one made with a pencil or pen without the use of colour; a sketch, plan or outline.

drive ::: v. 1. To impel; constrain; urge; compel. 2. To manoeuvre, guide or steer the progress of. 3. To impel (matter) by physical force; to cause (something) to move along by direct application of physical force; to propel, carry along. 4. To send, expel, or otherwise cause to move away or out by force or compulsion. 5. To strive vigorously and with determination toward a goal or objective. 6. To cause and guide the movement of (a vehicle, an animal, etc.). n. 7. A strong organized effort to accomplish a purpose, with energy, push or aggressiveness. 8. Impulse; impulsive force. adj. 9. Urged onward, impelled. 10. Pertaining to an inner urge that stimulates activity or inhibition. drives, drove, drov"st, driving, driven.

drop ::: n. 1. A small quantity of liquid that forms or falls in a spherical or pear-shaped mass; globule. Also fig. of things immaterial. 2. The action or an act of dropping; fall, descent. drops. v. 3. To let or cause to fall (like a drop or drops). Also fig. **drops, dropped, dropping.**

dungeon ::: a dark, often underground chamber or cell used to confine prisoners. (Sri Aurobindo employs the word as an adjective.)

dupe ::: one who unquestioningly or unwittingly serves a cause or another person.

dwelling-house ::: a house occupied, or intended to be occupied, as a residence.

dwindled ::: grew or caused to grow less in size, intensity, or number; diminished or shrunk gradually. dwindling.

earth ::: 1. The realm of mortal existence; the temporal world. 2. The softer, friable part of land; soil, especially productive soil. **Earth, earth"s, earth-beauty"s, earth-being"s, earth-beings, earth-bounds, earth-bride, earth-fact, earth-force, Earth-Goddess, earth-hearts, earth-habit"s, earth-heart, earth-instruments, earth-kind, earth-life, earth-light, earth-made, earth-matter"s, earth-mind, earth-mind"s, earth-myth, earth-nature, earth-nature"s, Earth-Nature"s, earth-nursed, earth-pain, Earth-plasm, earth-poise, earth-scene, earth-scene"s, earth-seat, earth-shapes, earth-stage, earth-stuff, earth-time, earth-time"s, earth-use, earth-vision, earth-ways, summer-earth.

eclipse ::: n. **1. A temporary or permanent dimming or cutting off of light. 2. A fall into obscurity or disuse; a decline. v. 3. To obscure; darken. eclipsed, eclipsing.**

ecstasy ::: 1. Intense joy or delight. 2. A state of exalted emotion so intense that one is carried beyond thought. 3. Used by mystical writers as the technical name for the state of rapture in which the body was supposed to become incapable of sensation, while the soul was engaged in the contemplation of divine things. 4. The trance, frenzy, or rapture associated with mystic or prophetic exaltation. Ecstasy, ecstasy"s, ecstasies, ecstasied, self-ecstasy, strange-ecstasied.

edged ::: 1. Having or provided with an edge or border. ::: 2. Having a cutting edge or especially an edge or edges as specified (often used in combination). 3. keen-edged. Sharpness with reference to the mind.

effect and cause ::: cause and effect. Noting a relationship between actions or events such that one or more are the result of the other or others.

effects ::: things that are produced by an agency or cause; results; consequences.

effort ::: the use of physical or mental energy to do something; exertion. effort"s, efforts.

"Emotion is a good element in yoga; but emotional desire becomes easily a cause of perturbation and an obstacle. Turn your emotions towards the Divine, aspire for their purification; they will then become a help on the way and no longer a cause of suffering.” Letters on Yoga*

employment ::: the purpose for which something is used.

engender ::: 1. To give rise to, produce, cause (a state of things, a disease, force, quality, feeling, etc.). 2. To beget; procreate. engenders, engendered, engendering.

engross ::: 1. To devote (oneself) fully to; consume all of one"s attention or time. 2. To acquire the entire use of, take altogether to itself; to occupy entirely, monopolise. engrossed, engrossing.

ensleeved ::: a word coined by Sri Aurobindo. The prefix en, occurring originally in loanwords from French, forms verbs with the general sense "to cause (a person or thing) to be in” a place, condition, or state. Hence, ensleeved in this instance is "held within a sleeve”.

entangled ::: 1. Ensnarled; intertwined; enmeshed. 2. Confused or perplexed. entangling, entanglement, star-entangled.

enthusiasm ::: great excitement for or interest in a subject or cause.

erect ::: v. 1. To set up; build; establish. 2. To raise and to set in an upright or vertical position. 3. To bring about; cause to come into existence. erects, erected. *adj. *4. Upright in posture or position 5. Raised or directed upward.

espouse ::: to take to oneself, make one"s own (a cause, quarrel, etc.); to adopt, embrace (a doctrine, opinion, theory, profession, mode of life).

eternal Lord and Spouse, the

evangelist ::: 1. A preacher of the Christian gospel. 2. Any zealous advocate of a cause. (Employed by Sri Aurobindo as an adjective.)

:::   "Even Science believes that one day death may be conquered by physical means and its reasonings are perfectly sound. There is no reason why the supramental Force should not do it. Forms on earth do not last (they do in other planes) because these forms are too rigid to grow expressing the progress of the spirit. If they become plastic enough to do that there is no reason why they should not last.” Letters on Yoga

*evoke 1. To call up or produce (memories, feelings, etc.). 2. To elicit or draw forth. 3. To call up; cause to appear; summon. evoked.

"Evolution is an inverse action of the involution: what is an ultimate and last derivation in the involution is the first to appear in the evolution; what was original and primal in the involution is in the evolution the last and supreme emergence.” The Life Divine ::: "Evolution, as we see it in this world, is a slow and difficult process and, indeed, needs usually ages to reach abiding results; but this is because it is in its nature an emergence from inconscient beginnings, a start from nescience and a working in the ignorance of natural beings by what seems to be an unconscious force. There can be, on the contrary, an evolution in the light and no longer in the darkness, in which the evolving being is a conscious participant and cooperator, and this is precisely what must take place here.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

exhaust ::: to use up completely; drain the resources or properties of; deplete. exhausted, exhaustless.

expense ::: something spent or used to attain a goal or accomplish a purpose.

fuse ::: to become mixed or united by or as if by melting together. fusing.

fearful ::: causing or apt to cause fear; frightening.

::: **"Fear is always a feeling to be rejected, because what you fear is just the thing that is likely to come to you: fear attracts the object of fear.” Letters on Yoga*

fear ::: n. 1. A distressing emotion aroused by impending danger, evil, pain, etc., whether the threat is real or imagined; the feeling or condition of being afraid. v. 2. To regard with fear; be afraid of. 3. To have reverential awe of.** fear"s, fears, feared, fearing, fear-filled.

fidelity ::: loyalty or devotion, as to a person or cause.

field ::: 1. A wide unbroken expanse, as of ice. 2. An area or sphere of activity. 3. A broad, level, open expanse of land; a stretch of open land, esp. one used for pasture or tillage; a plain. 4. The surface on which something is portrayed or enacted. An area of human activity or interest. 5. A piece of ground devoted to sports or contests; playing field. 6. A region of space characterized by a physical property, such as gravitational or electromagnetic force or fluid pressure. fields, field-paths, star-field, time-field, play-fields, race-fields.

film ::: 1. A movie. 2. A thin flexible strip of cellulose coated with a photographic emulsion, used to make negatives and transparencies.

  "Find the Guide secret within you or housed in an earthly body, hearken to his voice and follow always the way that he points. At the end is the Light that fails not, the Truth that deceives not, the Power that neither strays nor stumbles, the wide freedom, the ineffable Beatitude.” Essays Divine and Human

fitting ::: 1. Appropriate or proper; suitable. 2. Used with prefixed adverbs to denote an appropriate or inappropriate fit. 3. Of a manufactured article: Of the right measure or size; made to fit, accurate in fit, well or close-fitting. close-fitting, ill-fitting.

flare ::: 1. A flaring or swaying flame or light as of torches in the wind. 2. A sudden blaze or burst of flame or light, e.g. lightening. 3. A bright blaze of fire or light used as a signal, a means of illumination or guidance, etc. 4. A sudden burst, as of zeal or anger. flares, flared, flaring, sky-flare.

flash ::: n.** 1. A brief, sudden burst of bright light. 2. A sudden thought, insight, inspiration, or vision. 3. A momentary brightness. 4. A very brief moment; instant. flashes, lightening-flash. v. 5. To move or proceed rapidly. 6. To communicate or reveal through flashes. 7. To appear or occur suddenly; come into perception. 8. To cause to flash, as powder by ignition or a sword by waving. flashes, flashed, flashing.**

float ::: 1. To remain suspended within or on the surface of a fluid without sinking. 2. To move or progress smoothly as on a stream. 3. To move or cause to move buoyantly, lightly, or freely across a surface or through air, water, etc.; drift. 4. To move lightly and gracefully. 5. Fig. To move or seem to move lightly and faintly before the eyes. floats, floated, floating.

flux ::: 1. Constant or frequent change; fluctuation; movement. 2. A flowing or flow: Also used with reference to other forms of matter and energy that can be regarded as flowing, such as radiant energy, particles, etc.

foam ::: n. 1. A mass of small bubbles of gas formed on the surface of a liquid, such as the froth produced by agitating a solution of soap or detergent in water. v. 2. To produce or cause to produce froth. foamed, foaming, foam-curled, foam-leap, foam-maned.

follow ::: 1. To come or go after; proceed behind. 2. Lit. and fig. To move along the course of; take a path. 3. Fig. To come after in order, time, or position. 4. To occur or be evident as a consequence; result. 5. Fig. To accompany; attend. 6. To take (a person) as a guide, leader, or master; to accept the authority or example of, obey the dictates or guidance of; to adhere to, espouse the opinions, side, or cause of. 7. Fig. To go after in or as if in pursuit. 8. To accept and follow the leadership or command or guidance of. 9. To watch or trace the movements, progress, or course of. follows, followed, following. ::: following out. Proceeding; following; pursuing something to an end or conclusion.

forbid ::: 1. To command (someone) not to do something. 2. To command against the doing or use of (something); prohibit. forbids, forbade, forbidding, forbidden, half-forbidden.

force ::: n. 1. Strength; energy; power; intensity. 2. Fig. An agency, influence, or source of power likened to a physical force. Force, force"s, forces, Force-compelled, Conscious-Force, earth-force, God-Force, lion-forces, Mother-Force, Nature-force, Nature-Force, serpent-force, soul-force, Soul-Forces, world-force, World-Force, world-forces. *v. 3. To compel or cause (a person, group, etc.) to do something through effort, superior strength, etc.; coerce. 4. To propel or drive despite resistance. 5. To break open (a gate, door, etc.) *forces, forced, forcing.

force, universal ::: Sri Aurobindo: "This force that we feel is the universal Force of the Divine, which, veiled or unveiled, acting directly or permitting the use of its powers by beings in the cosmos, is the one Energy that alone exists and alone makes universal or individual action possible. For this force is the Divine itself in the body of its power; all is that, power of act, power of thought and knowledge, power of mastery and enjoyment, power of love. Conscious always and in everything, in ourselves and in others, of the Master of Works possessing, inhabiting, enjoying through this Force that is himself, becoming through it all existences and all happenings, we shall have arrived at the divine union through works and achieved by that fulfilment in works all that others have gained through absolute devotion or through pure knowledge.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

". . . for doubt is the mind"s persistent assailant.” Letters on Yoga ::: "The enemy of faith is doubt, and yet doubt too is a utility and necessity, because man in his ignorance and in his progressive labour towards knowledge needs to be visited by doubt, otherwise he would remain obstinate in an ignorant belief and limited knowledge and unable to escape from his errors.” The Synthesis of Yoga*

forego ::: to abstain from, go without, deny to oneself; to let go or pass, omit to take or use; to give up, part with, relinquish, renounce, resign. foregone.

forgive ::: to excuse for a fault or an offense; pardon.

formidable ::: 1. Arousing fear, dread, or alarm. 2. Of discouraging or awesome strength, size, difficulty, etc.; intimidating. 3. Arousing feelings of awe or admiration because of grandeur, strength, etc. 4. Of great strength; forceful; powerful.

"Forms on earth do not last (they do in other planes) because these forms are too rigid to grow expressing the progress of the spirit. If they become plastic enough to do that there is no reason why they should not last.” Letters on Yoga

formula ::: 1. A prescribed form; a rule or model; any fixed or conventional method for doing something. 2. An established form of words or symbols for use in a ceremony or procedure. 3. Math. A general relationship, principle, or rule stated, often as an equation, in the form of symbols. 4. A representation of a substance using symbols for its constituent elements. formulas.

:::   "For there seems to be no reason why Life should evolve out of material elements or Mind out of living form, unless we accept the Vedantic solution that Life is already involved in Matter and Mind in Life because in essence Matter is a form of veiled Life, Life a form of veiled Consciousness.” The Life Divine

"For what do we mean by Man? An uncreated and indestructible soul that has housed itself in a mind and body made of its own elements.” The Supramental Manifestation

fountain ::: 1. The source or origin of anything. 2. A jet or stream of water made by artificial means to spout or rise from an opening or structure, as to afford water for use, to cool the air, or to serve for ornament. fountain"s, fountains.

frankincense ::: an aromatic gum resin obtained from African and Asian trees of the genus Boswellia and used chiefly as incense and in perfumes.

front ::: n. 1. That part or side that is forward, prominent, or most often seen or used. 2. Outward aspect or bearing as when dealing with a situation. 3. Demeanour or bearing, especially in the presence of danger or difficulty. 4. At a position before, in advance of, facing, or confronting; at the head of. 5. The most forward line of a combat force. 6. A position of leadership in a particular endeavour or field. front"s, fronts. v. 7. To look out on; face. 8. To meet face to face; in opposition; confront. fronts, fronted, fronting.

fruitless ::: useless; unproductive; without results or success. fruitlessly.

galleries ::: long narrow passages sometimes serving as a means of access to other parts of a house; corridors.

gaol ::: a prison, esp. one for the detention of persons awaiting trial or convicted of minor offences. (A variant spelling of jail. In British official use the form with G is still current; in literary and journalistic use both the G and the J form is now admitted as correct; in the U.S. the J form is standard.) gaoled.

garden-house ::: a house built in a garden, often a smaller summer-house.

gathered or accumulated valuable items; stored up, accumulated for future use.

gauze ::: 1. A thin, transparent fabric with a loose open weave, used for curtains and clothing. *Also fig.*

gem ::: 1. A pearl or mineral that has been cut and polished for use as an ornament. 2. Something that is valued for its beauty or perfection. gems.

glass ::: 1. A glass mirror, a looking-glass. 2. A mirror. 3. A device, such as a monocle or spyglass, containing a lens or lenses and used as an aid to vision. 4. A lens.

gloom ::: total or partial darkness; dimness often used to describe depression or melancholy. gloom"s, glooms, gloomy.

glue ::: n. 1. Any substance used as a strong adhesive for fastening or joining substances. v. 2. To stick or fasten with or as if with glue. glued, blood-glued.

goad ::: n. 1. A long stick with a pointed end used for prodding animals. 2. An agent or means of prodding or urging; a stimulus. v. 3. To prod or urge with or as if with a long pointed stick. goads.

"God is the one stable and eternal Reality. He is One because there is nothing else, since all existence and non-existence are He. He is stable or unmoving, because motion implies change in Space and change in Time, and He, being beyond Time and Space, is immutable. He possesses eternally in Himself all that is, has been or ever can be, and He therefore does not increase or diminish. He is beyond causality and relativity and therefore there is no change of relations in His being.” The Upanishads

gold-leaf ::: gold beaten into extremely thin sheets used especially for gilding.

graphic characters or figures that indicate the meaning of a thing without indicating the sounds used to express it.

grate ::: a framework of metal bars used to hold fuel or food in a stove, furnace, or fireplace.

grey ::: 1. A neutral tone, intermediate between black and white, that has no hue and reflects and transmits only a little light. 2.* Fig. Dismal or dark, esp. from lack of light; gloomy. 3. Dull, dreary or monotonous. 4. Used often in reference to twilight or a gloomy or an overcast day. greyer, grey-eyed, grey-hued, silver-grey. n. *greyness.

grief ::: 1. Deep or intense sorrow or distress, esp. at the death of someone. 2. Something that causes great unhappiness. grief"s, griefs, griefless.

grin ::: to smile broadly, esp. as an indication of pleasure, amusement, vulgar merriment, or the like.

gross ::: 1. Used in reference to material things that the senses can perceive in contrast to those that are spiritual or ethereal. 2. Thick; dense; heavy. grosser, grossly.

habitual ::: 1. Of the nature of a habit. 2. Established by long use; usual.

hallucination ::: 1. A sensory experience of something that does not exist outside the mind, caused by various physical and mental disorders. 2. A false notion, belief, or impression; illusion; delusion.

harbour ::: n. 1. A sheltered port where ships can take on or discharge cargo. 2. Any place of shelter or refuge. v. 3. To give shelter or refuge to. 4. To cherish within one"s breast. 5. To house or contain. harbours, harboured, harbouring, all-harbouring.

harnessed ::: brought under conditions for effective use; gained control over for a particular end.

harrow ::: a farm implement consisting of a heavy frame with sharp teeth or upright disks, used to break up and even off ploughed ground.

harvest ::: n. 1.* fig. The result or consequence of an activity. v. *2. To gain, win, acquire, or use (a prize, product, or result of any past act, process, plan, etc.).

hasten ::: to hurry or cause to hurry; rush. hastened, hastening.

having a specified kind of heart, lit. and fig. (now used only in combination). dim-hearted, Rich-hearted, sensuous-hearted, swift-hearted. See also hard-hearted, iron-hearted, stone-hearted.

haze ::: 1. An aggregation in the atmosphere of very fine, widely dispersed, solid or liquid particles, or both, giving the air an opalescent appearance that subdues colours. 2. Reduced visibility in the air as a result of condensed water vapour, dust, etc., in the atmosphere. 3. Vagueness of obscurity, as of the mind or perception; confused or vague thoughts, feelings, etc.

heaven ::: 1. Any of the places in or beyond the sky conceived of as domains of divine beings in various religions. 2. The sky or universe as seen from the earth; the firmament. 3.* Fig. A condition or place of great happiness, delight, or pleasure. *Heaven, heaven"s, Heaven"s, heavens, heaven-air, heaven-bare, heaven-bliss, heaven-born, heaven-bound, heaven-fire, heaven-hints, heaven-leap, Heaven-light, heaven-lights, Heaven-nature"s, heaven-nymphs, heaven-pillaring, heaven-pleased, heaven-rapture"s, heaven-sent, heaven-sentience, heaven-surrounded, heaven-truth, heaven-use, heaven-worlds.

hermit ::: one who has withdrawn to a solitary place for a life of religious seclusion; a recluse. hermits, hermit-life, hermit-roofs.

hesitates ::: pauses.

hieratic ::: 1. Of or associated with sacred persons or their offices or duties. 2. Constituting or relating to a simplified cursive style of Egyptian hieroglyphics, used in both sacred and secular writings.

householder

household

houselord

house

"Ideals are truths that have not yet effected themselves for man, the realities of a higher plane of existence which have yet to fulfil themselves on this lower plane of life and matter, our present field of operation. To the pragmatical intellect which takes its stand upon the ever-changing present, ideals are not truths, not realities, they are at most potentialities of future truth and only become real when they are visible in the external fact as work of force accomplished. But to the mind which is able to draw back from the flux of force in the material universe, to the consciousness which is not imprisoned in its own workings or carried along in their flood but is able to envelop, hold and comprehend them, to the soul that is not merely the subject and instrument of the world-force but can reflect something of that Master-Consciousness which controls and uses it, the ideal present to its inner vision is a greater reality than the changing fact obvious to its outer senses. The Supramental Manifestation*

  "I don"t know [‘what plane is spoken of by Virgil"], but purple is a light of the Vital. It may have been one of the vital heavens he was thinking of. The ancients saw the vital heavens as the highest and most of the religions also have done the same. I have used the suggestion of Virgil to insert a needed line.” *Letters on Savitri

ignorance ::: the state or fact of being ignorant; lack of knowledge, learning, information. Ignorance, ignorance"s, Ignorance"s, ignorance", world-ignorance, World-Ignorance.

Sri Aurobindo: "Ignorance is the absence of the divine eye of perception which gives us the sight of the supramental Truth; it is the non-perceiving principle in our consciousness as opposed to the truth-perceiving conscious vision and knowledge.” *The Life Divine

"Ignorance is the consciousness of being in the successions of Time, divided in its knowledge by dwelling in the moment, divided in its conception of self-being by dwelling in the divisions of Space and the relations of circumstance, self-prisoned in the multiple working of the unity. It is called the Ignorance because it has put behind it the knowledge of unity and by that very fact is unable to know truly or completely either itself or the world, either the transcendent or the universal reality.” The Life Divine

"Ignorance means Avidya, the separative consciousness and the egoistic mind and life that flow from it and all that is natural to the separative consciousness and the egoistic mind and life. This Ignorance is the result of a movement by which the cosmic Intelligence separated itself from the light of the Supermind (the divine Gnosis) and lost the Truth, — truth of being, truth of divine consciousness, truth of force and action, truth of Ananda. As a result, instead of a world of integral truth and divine harmony created in the light of the divine Gnosis, we have a world founded on the part truths of an inferior cosmic Intelligence in which all is half-truth, half-error. . . . All in the consciousness of this creation is either limited or else perverted by separation from the integral Light; even the Truth it perceives is only a half-knowledge. Therefore it is called the Ignorance.” The Mother

". . . all ignorance is a penumbra which environs an orb of knowledge . . . .”The Life Divine

"This world is not really created by a blind force of Nature: even in the Inconscient the presence of the supreme Truth is at work; there is a seeing Power behind it which acts infallibly and the steps of the Ignorance itself are guided even when they seem to stumble; for what we call the Ignorance is a cloaked Knowledge, a Knowledge at work in a body not its own but moving towards its own supreme self-discovery.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

"Knowledge is no doubt the knowledge of the One, the realisation of the Being; Ignorance is a self-oblivion of Being, the experience of separateness in the multiplicity and a dwelling or circling in the ill-understood maze of becomings: . . . .” The Life Divine*


indeed ::: without a doubt; certainly; in fact; in reality. (Used for emphasis, to confirm and amplify a previous statement, to indicate a concession or admission, or, interrogatively, to obtain confirmation.)

indignation ::: anger aroused by something unjust, mean, wicked or unworthy.

inflamed ::: aroused to passionate feeling or action.

inspired ::: aroused, animated or imbued with the spirit to do something, by or as if by supernatural or divine influence. inspiring.

inspires ::: 1. Produces, kindles, arouses or awakens a feeling, thought, etc. 2. Guides or arouse by divine influence or inspiration. inspired, inspiring.* *n. inspirer.**

instinct ::: adj. Filled or infused with some animating principle (usually followed by with).

institutions ::: organizations, establishments, foundations, societies, or the like, devoted to the promotion of a particular cause or program.

instrument ::: 1. A means by which something is affected or done; agency. 2. A person used by an agency for a particular purpose. instruments, instruments", instrument-personality.

interest ::: 1. Something that concerns, involves, draws the attention of, or arouses the curiosity of a person. 2. Regard for one"s own benefit or advantage; self-interest. interests.

intermediate zone ::: Sri Aurobindo: "The intermediate zone means simply a confused condition or passage in which one is getting out of the personal consciousness and opening into the cosmic (cosmic Mind, cosmic vital, cosmic physical, something perhaps of the cosmic higher Mind) without having yet transcended the human mind levels. One is not in possession of or direct contact with the divine Truth on its own levels , but one can receive something from them, even from the overmind, indirectly. Only, as one is still immersed in the cosmic Ignorance, all that comes from above can be mixed, perverted, taken hold of for their purposes by lower, even by hostile Powers. ::: It is not necessary for everyone to struggle through the intermediate zone. If one has purified oneself, if there is no abnormal vanity, egoism, ambition or other strong misleading element, or if one is vigilant and on one"s guard, or if the psychic is in front, one can either pass rapidly and directly or with a minimum of trouble into the higher zones of consciousness where one is in direct contact with the Divine Truth.

interregnum ::: any pause or interruption in continuity.

intuition ::: direct perception of truth, fact, etc., independent of any reasoning process. intuition"s, intuitions, half-intuition.

Sri Aurobindo: "Intuition is a power of consciousness nearer and more intimate to the original knowledge by identity; for it is always something that leaps out direct from a concealed identity. It is when the consciousness of the subject meets with the consciousness in the object, penetrates it and sees, feels or vibrates with the truth of what it contacts, that the intuition leaps out like a spark or lightning-flash from the shock of the meeting; or when the consciousness, even without any such meeting, looks into itself and feels directly and intimately the truth or the truths that are there or so contacts the hidden forces behind appearances, then also there is the outbreak of an intuitive light; or, again, when the consciousness meets the Supreme Reality or the spiritual reality of things and beings and has a contactual union with it, then the spark, the flash or the blaze of intimate truth-perception is lit in its depths. This close perception is more than sight, more than conception: it is the result of a penetrating and revealing touch which carries in it sight and conception as part of itself or as its natural consequence. A concealed or slumbering identity, not yet recovering itself, still remembers or conveys by the intuition its own contents and the intimacy of its self-feeling and self-vision of things, its light of truth, its overwhelming and automatic certitude.” *The Life Divine

   "Intuition is always an edge or ray or outleap of a superior light; it is in us a projecting blade, edge or point of a far-off supermind light entering into and modified by some intermediate truth-mind substance above us and, so modified, again entering into and very much blinded by our ordinary or ignorant mind-substance; but on that higher level to which it is native its light is unmixed and therefore entirely and purely veridical, and its rays are not separated but connected or massed together in a play of waves of what might almost be called in the Sanskrit poetic figure a sea or mass of ``stable lightnings"". When this original or native Intuition begins to descend into us in answer to an ascension of our consciousness to its level or as a result of our finding of a clear way of communication with it, it may continue to come as a play of lightning-flashes, isolated or in constant action; but at this stage the judgment of reason becomes quite inapplicable, it can only act as an observer or registrar understanding or recording the more luminous intimations, judgments and discriminations of the higher power. To complete or verify an isolated intuition or discriminate its nature, its application, its limitations, the receiving consciousness must rely on another completing intuition or be able to call down a massed intuition capable of putting all in place. For once the process of the change has begun, a complete transmutation of the stuff and activities of the mind into the substance, form and power of Intuition is imperative; until then, so long as the process of consciousness depends upon the lower intelligence serving or helping out or using the intuition, the result can only be a survival of the mixed Knowledge-Ignorance uplifted or relieved by a higher light and force acting in its parts of Knowledge.” *The Life Divine

  "I use the word ‘intuition" for want of a better. In truth, it is a makeshift and inadequate to the connotation demanded of it. The same has to be said of the word ‘consciousness" and many others which our poverty compels us to extend illegitimately in their significance.” *The Life Divine - Sri Aurobindo"s footnote.

"For intuition is an edge of light thrust out by the secret Supermind. . . .” The Life Divine

". . . intuition is born of a direct awareness while intellect is an indirect action of a knowledge which constructs itself with difficulty out of the unknown from signs and indications and gathered data.” The Life Divine

"Intuition is above illumined Mind which is simply higher Mind raised to a great luminosity and more open to modified forms of intuition and inspiration.” Letters on Yoga

"Intuition sees the truth of things by a direct inner contact, not like the ordinary mental intelligence by seeking and reaching out for indirect contacts through the senses etc. But the limitation of the Intuition as compared with the supermind is that it sees things by flashes, point by point, not as a whole. Also in coming into the mind it gets mixed with the mental movement and forms a kind of intuitive mind activity which is not the pure truth, but something in between the higher Truth and the mental seeking. It can lead the consciousness through a sort of transitional stage and that is practically its function.” Letters on Yoga


invasion ::: the entrance, incursion or advent of anything (usually used in a negative sense).

invent ::: to produce or contrive (something previously unknown) by the use of ingenuity or imagination. invents, invented, inventing, inventor, invention, invention"s, inventions, inventive.

invoke ::: 1. To call forth or upon (a spirit) by incantation. 2. To cause, call forth, or bring about. invokes, invoked, invoking.

iron ::: n. 1. A silver-white metal, usually an admixture of some other substance, usually carbon, rendering it extremely hard and useful for tools, implements, machinery, constructions, and in many other applications. adj. 2. Inflexible; unyielding; firm. 3. Stern; harsh; cruel. 4. *Fig.* Resembling iron in firmness, strength, colour, etc.

irony ::: 1. The humorous or mildly sarcastic use of words to imply the opposite of what they normally mean. 2. Fig. Incongruity between what might be expected and what actually occurs. ironic.

"It is because of our experience won at a tremendous price that we can urge upon you and others, ``Take the psychic attitude; follow the straight sunlit path, with the Divine openly or secretly upbearing you — if secretly, he will yet show himself in good time, — do not insist on the hard, hampered, roundabout and difficult journey."" Letters on Yoga

"It [the Cosmic Spirit] uses Truth and Falsehood, Knowledge and Ignorance and all the other dualities as elements in the manifestation and works out what has to be worked out till all is ready for a higher working.” Letters on Yoga*

jail ::: american spelling of the British gaol. See also gaol. (In Savitri both spellings are used.)

joy ::: n. 1. The emotion of great delight or happiness caused by something exceptionally good or satisfying; keen pleasure; elation. 2. A state of happiness or felicity. joys, joyless, joylessness, joy-glow, soul-joy. v. 3. To feel happiness or joy. **joys, joyed.

:::   "Karma is only a machinery, it is not the fundamental cause of terrestrial existence — it cannot be, for when the soul first entered this existence, it had no Karma.” *Letters on Yoga

kennel ::: fig. A ramshackle house; hovel; dog house.

kind ::: 1. A class or group of individual objects, people, animals, etc., of the same nature or character, or classified together because they have traits in common; category. 2. Nature or character as determining likeness or difference between things. 3. One"s family, clan, kin, or kinsfolk. earth-kind, god-kind, self-kind.

kindle ::: 1. To start (a fire); cause (a flame, blaze, etc.) to begin burning; often fig. 2. To light up, illuminate, or make bright. 3. To arouse or be aroused; call forth (emotions, feelings, and responses); 4. To begin to burn as combustible matter, a light, fire, or flame. kindles, kindled, kindling.

lance ::: a long wooden shaft with a pointed metal head, used as a weapon by knights and horsemen in charging at full speed.

language ::: any system of formalized symbols, signs, sounds, gestures, or the like used or conceived as a means of communicating thought, emotion, etc. God-language.

lapis lazuli ::: a deep blue mineral composed mainly of lazarite with smaller quantities of other minerals, used mainly as a gem or as a pigment.

lasso ::: a long rope or line of hide or other material with a running noose at one end, used for roping horses, cattle, etc. lassoes.

lavish ::: 1. To expend or give in great amounts or without limit. 2. Expending or bestowing without stint or measure; unboundedly liberal or profuse; prodigal. lavishing, lavishly.

  "Law is a process or a formula; but the soul is the user of processes and exceeds formulas.” Essays Divine and Human :::   **law"s, laws, stone-laws, world-law, world-laws.**

lay ::: attribute (as in lay all on her) and other uses.

lease ::: a contract granting use or occupation of property during a specified period in exchange for a specified compensation.

:::   "Liberty in one shape or another ranks among the most ancient and certainly among the most difficult aspirations of our race: it arises from a radical instinct of our being and is yet opposed to all our circumstances, it is our eternal good and our condition of perfection, but our temporal being has failed to find its key. That perhaps is because true freedom is only possible if we live in the infinite, live, as the Vedanta bids us, in and from our self-existent being; but our natural and temporal energies seek for it first not in ourselves, but in our external conditions. This great indefinable thing, liberty, is in its highest and ultimate sense a state of being; it is self living in itself and determining by its own energy what is shall be inwardly and, eventually, by the growth of a divine spiritual power within determining too what it shall make of its external circumstances and environment." War and Self-Determination

lodge ::: 1. To take up residence in. 2. To bring or send into a particular place or position. 3. To house or contain. 4. To be fixed; implanted. lodged.

lodgers ::: those who pay rent in return for accommodation in someone else"s house.

lord and Spouse, the eternal

lord or master of the house.

lotus ::: any aquatic plant of the genus Nelumbo, of the water lily family, having shieldlike leaves and showy, solitary flowers usually projecting above the water. lotuses, lotus-bud, lotus-cup, lotus-heart, lotus-leaf, lotus-pools, lotus-throne.

lotus (as chakra) ::: Sri Aurobindo: "This arrangement of the psychic body is reproduced in the physical with the spinal column as a rod and the ganglionic centres as the chakras which rise up from the bottom of the column, where the lowest is attached, to the brain and find their summit in the brahmarandhra at the top of the skull. These chakras or lotuses, however, are in physical man closed or only partly open, with the consequence that only such powers and only so much of them are active in him as are sufficient for his ordinary physical life, and so much mind and soul only is at play as will accord with its need. This is the real reason, looked at from the mechanical point of view, why the embodied soul seems so dependent on the bodily and nervous life, — though the dependence is neither so complete nor so real as it seems. The whole energy of the soul is not at play in the physical body and life, the secret powers of mind are not awake in it, the bodily and nervous energies predominate. But all the while the supreme energy is there, asleep; it is said to be coiled up and slumbering like a snake, — therefore it is called the kundalinî sakti, — in the lowest of the chakras, in the mûlâdhâra.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

low-built ::: comb. Forming with ppl. adjs. used attrib. numerous quasi-compounds, usually hyphened, such as low-built; built, constructed, in a low or inferior way.

luxuriantly ::: in a richly abundant, profuse or superabundant manner; copiously.

lyre ::: a musical instrument of ancient Greece consisting of a sound box made typically from a turtle shell, with two curved arms connected by a yoke from which strings are stretched to the body, used especially to accompany singing and recitation. lyres.

magic ::: n. 1. The art of producing a desired effect or result through the use of incantation or various other techniques that presumably assure human control of supernatural agencies or the forces of nature. 2. Any extraordinary or mystical influence, charm, power, etc. magic"s. adj. 3. Of, pertaining to, or due to magic. magical, magically.

magnified ::: 1. Made greater in size or importance; enlarged. 2. Caused to appear greater or seem more important than is in fact the case; exaggerated. magnifies, magnifying.

maim ::: 1. To injure, disable, or disfigure, usually by depriving of the use of a limb or other part of the body. 2. To make imperfect or defective; impair. Also fig. maims.

managed ::: handled, directed, governed, or controlled in action or use. managing.

"Man himself is not a life and mind born of Matter and eternally subject to physical Nature, but a spirit that uses life and body.” The Renaissance in India

marble ::: n. 1. A hard crystalline metamorphic rock resulting from the recrystallization of a limestone: takes a high polish and is used for building and sculpture. adj. 2. Resembling metamorphic rock in consistency, texture, venation, color, or coldness, smoothness, whiteness, etc. 3. Hard, rigid and inflexible, as marble.

marked by excessive enthusiasm for and intense devotion to a cause or idea.

mar ::: to damage or spoil to a certain extent; to render less perfect, attractive, useful; impair or spoil. Now poet. or rhet. **marred.**

martyr ::: one who makes great sacrifices or suffers much, even death, in order to further a belief, cause, or principle.

marvel ::: n. 1. Something that causes feelings of wonder, astonishment or admiration. Marvel, marvel"s, marvels. *v. 2. To become filled with wonder or astonishment. marvelled, marvelling, marvel-fraught, marvel-house, marvel-mooned, marvel-wefts. adv. marvellingly. See also: *Winged marvel

masseuse ::: a woman who gives massages professionally.

master ::: a respectful term of address, esp. as used by disciples when addressing or referring to a religious teacher.

master-spring ::: 1. A compound word denoting the mainspring or principal spring in a piece of equipment. 2. Fig. The prevailing power or motive to use or control something.

mate ::: n. 1. A good friend or companion. 2. A counterpart. 3. A husband or wife; spouse. 4. The partner of a bird or an animal; one of a pair. 5. An equal in reputation; peer. v. 6. To fit or join with or to. 7. To match or marry. 8. To connect or link. mates, mated.

maya ::: Sri Aurobindo: "Maya in its original sense meant a comprehending and containing consciousness capable of embracing, measuring and limiting and therefore formative; it is that which outlines, measures out, moulds forms in the formless, psychologises and seems to make knowable the Unknowable, geometrises and seems to make measurable the limitless. Later the word came from its original sense of knowledge, skill, intelligence to acquire a pejorative sense of cunning, fraud or illusion, and it is in the figure of an enchantment or illusion that it is used by the philosophical systems.” *The Life Divine

muse ::: myth. Any of the nine daughters of Mnemosyne and Zeus, each of whom presided over a different art or science.

muse ::: n. 1. A state of abstraction or contemplation; reverie. 2. The goddess or the power regarded as inspiring a poet, artist, thinker, or the like. musings, musers. *v. 3. To be absorbed in one"s thoughts; engage in meditation. 4. To consider or say thoughtfully. mused, musing. adj. *mused. 5. Perplexed, bewildered, bemused. musing. 6. Being absorbed in thoughts; reflecting deeply; contemplating; engaged in meditation. muse-lipped.

meditates ::: engages in contemplation; muses over or reflects upon. meditating.

meditation ::: Sri Aurobindo: "There are two words used in English to express the Indian idea of dhyana , ‘meditation" and ‘contemplation". Meditation means properly the concentration of the mind on a single train of ideas which work out a single subject. Contemplation means regarding mentally a single object, image, idea so that the knowledge about the object, image or idea may arise naturally in the mind by force of the concentration. Both these things are forms of dhyana , for the principle of dhyana is mental concentration whether in thought, vision or knowledge. *Letters on Yoga

menace ::: something likely to cause injury, damage etc.; a possible danger; a threat.

merchant ::: n. 1. One who runs a retail business; a shopkeeper. adj. 2. Pertaining to or used for trade or commerce.

mesh ::: 1. Any of the open spaces in a net or network; an interstice. 2. The cords, threads, or wires surrounding these spaces. Often used in the plural. meshes, black-meshed.

metaphysical ::: highly abstract or theoretical; abstruse, relating to that which is immaterial or concerned with abstract thought or subjects, as existence, causality, or truth.

might ::: pt. of may (used to express possibility). **mightst.**

mind ::: Sri Aurobindo: "The ‘Mind" in the ordinary use of the word covers indiscriminately the whole consciousness, for man is a mental being and mentalises everything; but in the language of this yoga the words ‘mind" and ‘mental" are used to connote specially the part of the nature which has to do with cognition and intelligence, with ideas, with mental or thought perceptions, the reactions of thought to things, with the truly mental movements and formations, mental vision and will, etc., that are part of his intelligence.” *Letters on Yoga

"Mind in its essence is a consciousness which measures, limits, cuts out forms of things from the indivisible whole and contains them as if each were a separate integer.” The Life Divine

"Mind is an instrument of analysis and synthesis, but not of essential knowledge. Its function is to cut out something vaguely from the unknown Thing in itself and call this measurement or delimitation of it the whole, and again to analyse the whole into its parts which it regards as separate mental objects.” The Life Divine

"The mind proper is divided into three parts — thinking Mind, dynamic Mind, externalising Mind — the former concerned with ideas and knowledge in their own right, the second with the putting out of mental forces for realisation of the idea, the third with the expression of them in life (not only by speech, but by any form it can give).” Letters on Yoga

"The difference between the ordinary mind and the intuitive is that the former, seeking in the darkness or at most by its own unsteady torchlight, first, sees things only as they are presented in that light and, secondly, where it does not know, constructs by imagination, by uncertain inference, by others of its aids and makeshifts things which it readily takes for truth, shadow projections, cloud edifices, unreal prolongations, deceptive anticipations, possibilities and probabilities which do duty for certitudes. The intuitive mind constructs nothing in this artificial fashion, but makes itself a receiver of the light and allows the truth to manifest in it and organise its own constructions.” The Synthesis of Yoga

"He [man] has in him not a single mentality, but a double and a triple, the mind material and nervous, the pure intellectual mind which liberates itself from the illusions of the body and the senses, and a divine mind above intellect which in its turn liberates itself from the imperfect modes of the logically discriminative and imaginative reason.” The Synthesis of Yoga

"Our mind is an observer of actuals, an inventor or discoverer of possibilities, but not a seer of the occult imperatives that necessitate the movements and forms of a creation. . . .” *The Life Divine

"The human mind is an instrument not of truth but of ignorance and error.” Letters on Yoga

"For Mind as we know it is a power of the Ignorance seeking for Truth, groping with difficulty to find it, reaching only mental constructions and representations of it in word and idea, in mind formations, sense formations, — as if bright or shadowy photographs or films of a distant Reality were all that it could achieve.” The Life Divine

The Mother: "The true role of the mind is the formation and organization of action. The mind has a formative and organizing power, and it is that which puts the different elements of inspiration in order for action, for organizing action. And if it would only confine itself to that role, receiving inspirations — whether from above or from the mystic centre of the soul — and simply formulating the plan of action — in broad outline or in minute detail, for the smallest things of life or the great terrestrial organizations — it would amply fulfil its function. It is not an instrument of knowledge. But is can use knowledge for action, to organize action. It is an instrument of organization and formation, very powerful and very capable when it is well developed.” Questions and Answers 1956, MCW Vol. 8.*


mirror ::: n. 1. A surface capable of reflecting sufficient undiffused light to form an image of an object placed in front of it. 2. Something that faithfully reflects or gives a true picture of something else. Also fig. mirrors. v. 3. To reflect in or as if in a mirror. mirrors, mirrored, mirroring, mirror-air, fragment-mirrorings.

misuse ::: n. Wrong or improper use; misapplication.

mischiefs ::: damage, destruction, or injury caused by specific persons or things.

misery ::: 1. Severe mental or emotional unhappiness or distress. 2. The state of suffering and want as a result of physical circumstances or extreme poverty. 3. A cause or source of suffering. misery"s, miseries.

mnemonics ::: n. Devices, such as formulas or rhymes, used as aids in remembering. adj. mnemonic. Relating to, assisting, or intended to assist the memory.

moonstone ::: a semitransparent or translucent, opalescent, pearly-blue variety of adularia, used as a gem.

"Moreover we see that this cosmic action or any cosmic action is impossible without the play of an infinite Force of Existence which produces and regulates all these forms and movements; and that Force equally presupposes or is the action of an infinite Consciousness, because it is in its nature a cosmic Will determining all relations and apprehending them by its own mode of awareness, and it could not so determine and apprehend them if there were no comprehensive Consciousness behind that mode of cosmic awareness to originate as well as to hold, fix and reflect through it the relations of Being in the developing formation or becoming of itself which we call a universe.” The Life Divine

morse ::: morse code. Either of two systems of clicks and pauses, short and long sounds, or flashes of light, used to represent the letter of the alphabet, numerals, etc.

mosque ::: a Muslim house of worship.

moved ::: aroused the emotions of; affected.

mover ::: a person, force or thing that sets something in motion. Often used for God. movers.

myrrh ::: an aromatic gum resin obtained from several trees and shrubs of the genus Commiphora of India, Arabia, and eastern Africa, used in perfume and incense.

n. 1. A structure serving as a dwelling for one or more persons, especially for a family. 2.* Fig. An abode; dwelling-place. houses, marvel-house. v. 3. To be a receptacle for or repository of. 4. To shelter, keep, or store in or as if in a house; to give shelter to. *housed, housing. ::: See also dwelling-house.

n. 1. The discomfort, weakness, or pain caused by a prolonged lack of food. v. 2.* Fig. To have a strong desire or craving. Hunger, *hunger"s, hungers hungered, hungering.

n. 1. The feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best. 2. Something that is hoped for or desired. 3. A person or thing that gives cause for hope. hopes, hoping. v. 4. To feel that something desired may happen; to have trust or confidence (in). hopes, hoped, hoping, hopest.

name ::: Sri Aurobindo: "Name in its deeper sense is not the word by which we describe the object, but the total of power, quality, character of the reality which a form of things embodies and which we try to sum up by a designating sound, a knowable name, Nomen. Nomen in this sense, we might say, is Numen; the secret Names of the Gods are their power, quality, character of being caught up by the consciousness and made conceivable. The Infinite is nameless, but in that namelessness all possible names, Numens of the gods, the names and forms of all realities, are already envisaged and prefigured, because they are there latent and inherent in the All-Existence.” The Life Divine

  "Nature, because she is a power of spirit, is essentially qualitative in her action. One may almost say that Nature is only the power in being and the development in action of the infinite qualities of the spirit, . . . .” *The Synthesis of Yoga

No-man"s-land. ::: Sri Aurobindo: "As to the two lines with ‘no man"s land" there can be no capital in the first line because there it is a description while the capital is needed in the other line, because the phrase has acquired there the force of a name or appellation. I am not sure about the hyphen; it could be put but the no hyphen might be better as it suggests that no one in particular has as yet got possession.” Letters on Savitri.

"Nor can the human confusion of values which obliterates the distinction between spiritual and moral and even claims that the moral is the only true spiritual element in our nature be of any use to us; for ethics is a mental control, and the limited erring mind is not and cannot be the free and ever-luminous spirit.” The Synthesis of Yoga

nursery ::: a room or area in a household set apart for the use of children.

o ::: 1. Used before a name or noun in direct address, esp. in solemn or poetic language, to lend earnestness. 2. Used to express surprise or strong emotion.

obsolete ::: no longer in use.

obtuse ::: characterized by a lack of intelligence or sensitivity; dull.

oceaned ::: a word coined by Sri Aurobindo and used as an adj.

"Of course, that is the real fact — death is only a shedding of the body, not a cessation of the personal existence. A man is not dead because he goes into another country and changes his clothes to suit that climate.” Letters on Yoga

oh ::: used to express strong emotion, such as surprise, fear, anger, or pain.

omniscient ::: 1. Having total knowledge; knowing everything. 2. One having total knowledge. 3. Omniscient God. Used with the. Omniscient.

"One must go deep and find the soul, the self, the Divine Reality within us and only then can life become a true expression of what we can be instead of a blind and always repeated confused blur of the inadequate and imperfect thing we were. The choice is between remaining in the old jumble and groping about in the hope of stumbling on some discovery or standing back and seeking the Light within till we discover and can build the Godhead within and without us. "Letters on Yoga

one who occupies or owns a house. house-holder.

oppressed ::: v. 1. Overwhelmed or crushed, esp. in battle. 2. To lie heavy on; burdened (the mind, imagination, etc.). oppresses, oppressed, oppressing.* *n. oppressed. 3. Those who are subjugated by cruelty, force, etc.; trampled down. adj. oppressed. 4.** Afflicted or tormented; burdened psychologically or mentally; caused to suffer.

"Our nature is not only mistaken in will and ignorant in knowledge but weak in power; but the Divine Force is there and will lead us if we trust in it and it will use our deficiencies and our powers for the divine purpose. If we fail in our immediate aim, it is because he has intended the failure; often our failure or ill-result is the right road to a truer issue than an immediate and complete success would have put in our reach. If we suffer, it is because something in us has to be prepared for a rarer possibility of delight. If we stumble, it is to learn in the end the secret of a more perfect walking.” The Synthesis of Yoga

owe ::: 1. To be in debt to. 2. To be indebted (to) as the cause or source of. owes.

pain ::: 1. An unpleasant sensation occurring in varying degrees of severity as a consequence of injury, disease, or emotional disorder. 2. The sensation of acute physical hurt or discomfort caused by injury, illness, etc. **Pain, pain"s, pains, earth-pain, life-pain, world-pain, pain-forgetting, pain-fraught.

"Pain is caused because the physical consciousness in the Ignorance is too limited to bear the touches that come upon it. Otherwise, to cosmic consciousness in its state of complete knowledge and complete experience all touches come as Ananda.” Letters on Yoga

panergy ::: Sri Aurobindo: "The ‘Panergy" suggested is a self-existent total power which may carry the cosmic energies in it and is their cause but is not constituted by them.” Letters on Savitri.

panic ::: a sudden overwhelming fear, with or without cause, that produces hysterical or irrational behaviour, and that often spreads quickly through a group of persons or animals.

parable ::: 1. A short allegorical story designed to illustrate or teach some truth, spiritual principle, or moral lesson. 2. A statement or comment that conveys a meaning indirectly by the use of comparison, analogy, or the like, esp. concerning morality or ethics.

parent ::: n. 1. A father or mother. 2. Fig. A source or cause; an origin. parent"s, parents, parents". adj. 3. Being the original source.

patent ::: n. 1. A grant made by a government that confers upon the creator of an invention the sole right to make, use, and sell that invention for a set period of time. adj. 2. Obvious; plain.

pathology ::: the scientific study of the nature of disease and its causes, processes, development, and consequences and in other uses, a departure or deviation from a normal condition.

pathos ::: a quality, as of an experience or a work of art, that arouses feelings of pity, sympathy, tenderness, or sorrow.

patron ::: one that supports, protects, or champions someone or something, such as an institution, event, or cause; a sponsor or benefactor.

pattern ::: 1. A model or original used as an archetype. 2. A plan or diagram used as a guide in making something. 3. An artistic or decorative design. 4. A combination of qualities, acts, tendencies, etc., forming a consistent or characteristic arrangement; order or form discernible in things, actions, ideas, situations, etc. patterns, patterned, many-patterned.

pawn ::: a person or an entity used to further the purposes of another.

pell-mell ::: n. 1. A confused mixture or crowd, a medley. adv. 2. In frantic disorderly haste; headlong.

perused ::: read or examined, typically with great care. perusing.

perfection ::: Sri Aurobindo: "Perfection in the sense in which we use it in Yoga, means a growth out of a lower undivine into a higher divine nature. In terms of knowledge it is a putting on the being of the higher self and a casting away of the darker broken lower self or a transforming of our imperfect state into the rounded luminous fullness of our real and spiritual personality. In terms of devotion and adoration it is a growing into a likeness of the nature or the law of the being of the Divine, to be united with whom we aspire, . . . .” *The Synthesis of Yoga

peril ::: 1. Exposure to the risk of harm or loss. 2. Something that causes or may cause injury, loss, or destruction. perils.

periods ::: rather large intervals of time that are meaningful in the life of a person, in history, etc., because of its particular characteristics.

pervert ::: adj. Turned from the right way, from the proper use, from truth to error, etc.; wicked; distorted; misapplied. perverted, perverting.

pitched ::: 1. Erect or established; set up; as a tent, etc. 2. Set at a certain point, degree, level, etc. 3. (of sound) set to a certain pitch or key; usually used as a combining form; "high-pitched”, "sky-pitched”.

pity ::: sympathy and sorrow aroused by the misfortune or suffering of another. **pitying.

plaything ::: 1. A toy. 2. One who is used capriciously and selfishly by another. playthings.

plead ::: 1. To maintain (a cause) by argument before a court. 2. To appeal or entreat earnestly; beg or implore. pleads, pleaded, pleading.

plot ::: 1. The pattern of events or main story in a narrative or drama. 2. A secret plan to accomplish a purpose (often hostile or illegal); a scheme. 3. A small piece of ground, generally used for a specific purpose. plots.

poetry ::: Sri Aurobindo: "All poetry is an inspiration, a thing breathed into the thinking organ from above; it is recorded in the mind, but is born in the higher principle of direct knowledge or ideal vision which surpasses mind. It is in reality a revelation. The prophetic or revealing power sees the substance; the inspiration perceives the right expression. Neither is manufactured; nor is poetry really a poiesis or composition, nor even a creation, but rather the revelation of something that eternally exists. The ancients knew this truth and used the same word for poet and prophet, creator and seer, sophos, vates, kavi.” Essays Human and Divine

pointillage ::: a word coined by Sri Aurobindo. The suffix age, originally in words adopted from Fr., is typically used in abstract nouns to indicate "aggregate”. Hence, pointillage indicates something made up of minute details; particularized. The root word, pointillism, refers to a method, invented by French impressionist painters, of producing luminous effects by crowding a surface with small spots of various colours, which are blended by the eye.

::: "Possession in oneness and not loss in oneness is the secret. God and Man, World and Beyond-world become one when they know each other. Their division is the cause of ignorance as ignorance is the cause of suffering.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

postulates ::: things assumed without proof as being self-evident or generally accepted, esp. when used as a basis for an argument.

presence ::: 1. The state or fact of being present; current existence or occurrence. 2. A divine, spiritual, or supernatural spirit or influence felt or conceived as present. 3. The immediate proximity of someone or something.

Sri Aurobindo: "It is intended by the word Presence to indicate the sense and perception of the Divine as a Being, felt as present in one"s existence and consciousness or in relation with it, without the necessity of any further qualification or description. Thus, of the ‘ineffable Presence" it can only be said that it is there and nothing more can or need be said about it, although at the same time one knows that all is there, personality and impersonality, Power and Light and Ananda and everything else, and that all these flow from that indescribable Presence. The word may be used sometimes in a less absolute sense, but that is always the fundamental significance, — the essential perception of the essential Presence supporting everything else.” *Letters on Yoga

"Beyond mind on spiritual and supramental levels dwells the Presence, the Truth, the Power, the Bliss that can alone deliver us from these illusions, display the Light of which our ideals are tarnished disguises and impose the harmony that shall at once transfigure and reconcile all the parts of our nature.” Essays Divine and Human

"But if we learn to live within, we infallibly awaken to this presence within us which is our more real self, a presence profound, calm, joyous and puissant of which the world is not the master — a presence which, if it is not the Lord Himself, is the radiation of the Lord within.” *The Life Divine

"The true soul secret in us, — subliminal, we have said, but the word is misleading, for this presence is not situated below the threshold of waking mind, but rather burns in the temple of the inmost heart behind the thick screen of an ignorant mind, life and body, not subliminal but behind the veil, — this veiled psychic entity is the flame of the Godhead always alight within us, inextinguishable even by that dense unconsciousness of any spiritual self within which obscures our outward nature. It is a flame born out of the Divine and, luminous inhabitant of the Ignorance, grows in it till it is able to turn it towards the Knowledge. It is the concealed Witness and Control, the hidden Guide, the Daemon of Socrates, the inner light or inner voice of the mystic. It is that which endures and is imperishable in us from birth to birth, untouched by death, decay or corruption, an indestructible spark of the Divine.” *The Life Divine

"If we need any personal and inner witness to this indivisible All-Consciousness behind the ignorance, — all Nature is its external proof, — we can get it with any completeness only in our deeper inner being or larger and higher spiritual state when we draw back behind the veil of our own surface ignorance and come into contact with the divine Idea and Will behind it. Then we see clearly enough that what we have done by ourselves in our ignorance was yet overseen and guided in its result by the invisible Omniscience; we discover a greater working behind our ignorant working and begin to glimpse its purpose in us: then only can we see and know what now we worship in faith, recognise wholly the pure and universal Presence, meet the Lord of all being and all Nature.” *The Life Divine

"The presence of the Spirit is there in every living being, on every level, in all things, and because it is there, the experience of Sachchidananda, of the pure spiritual existence and consciousness, of the delight of a divine presence, closeness, contact can be acquired through the mind or the heart or the life-sense or even through the physical consciousness; if the inner doors are flung sufficiently open, the light from the sanctuary can suffuse the nearest and the farthest chambers of the outer being.” *The Life Divine

"There is a secret divine Will, eternal and infinite, omniscient and omnipotent, that expresses itself in the universality and in each particular of all these apparently temporal and finite inconscient or half-conscient things. This is the Power or Presence meant by the Gita when it speaks of the Lord within the heart of all existences who turns all creatures as if mounted on a machine by the illusion of Nature.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

"For what Yoga searches after is not truth of thought alone or truth of mind alone, but the dynamic truth of a living and revealing spiritual experience. There must awake in us a constant indwelling and enveloping nearness, a vivid perception, a close feeling and communion, a concrete sense and contact of a true and infinite Presence always and everywhere. That Presence must remain with us as the living, pervading Reality in which we and all things exist and move and act, and we must feel it always and everywhere, concrete, visible, inhabiting all things; it must be patent to us as their true Self, tangible as their imperishable Essence, met by us closely as their inmost Spirit. To see, to feel, to sense, to contact in every way and not merely to conceive this Self and Spirit here in all existences and to feel with the same vividness all existences in this Self and Spirit, is the fundamental experience which must englobe all other knowledge.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

"One must have faith in the Master of our life and works, even if for a long time He conceals Himself, and then in His own right time He will reveal His Presence.” *Letters on Yoga

"They [the psychic being and the Divine Presence in the heart] are quite different things. The psychic being is one"s own individual soul-being. It is not the Divine, though it has come from the Divine and develops towards the Divine.” *Letters on Yoga

"For it is quietness and inwardness that enable one to feel the Presence.” *Letters on Yoga

"Beyond mind on spiritual and supramental levels dwells the Presence, the Truth, the Power, the Bliss that can alone deliver us from these illusions, display the Light of which our ideals are tarnished disguises and impose the harmony that shall at once transfigure and reconcile all the parts of our nature.” *Essays Divine and Human

The Mother: "For, in human beings, here is a presence, the most marvellous Presence on earth, and except in a few very rare cases which I need not mention here, this presence lies asleep in the heart — not in the physical heart but the psychic centre — of all beings. And when this Splendour is manifested with enough purity, it will awaken in all beings the echo of his Presence.” Words of the Mother, MCW, Vol. 15.


present ::: adj. 1. Being, existing, occurring, or going on now, current. 2. Existing or in use at, or belonging to, the particular time under consideration n. 3. The present time, the time that now is (as opposed to the past and the future). present"s.

press ::: n. 1. A crowd, throng, or multitude. 2. A crowding, thronging, or pressing together; a collective force. 3. Pressure or demands of affairs; urgency, haste, hurry. v. 4. To exert weight, force or pressure. 5. To advance or carry on vigorously despite obstacles in one"s way. 6. To impress (a thing) upon the mind, etc., emphasize, inculcate. 7. To beset or harass; afflict. 8. To cause to move in some direction or into some position by pressure; to push, drive, thrust. 9. To compress or squeeze. 10. To squeeze out or express, as juice. 11. To urge or entreat strongly or insistently. 12. To hold closely as in an embrace; clasp. presses, pressed, pressing.

prevail ::: 1. To be or become effective; become dominant. 2. To be most common or frequent; be predominant; to predominate. 3. To be in force, use, or effect; be current. prevails, prevailed.

printing-house ::: a place where printing of books, pamphlets, etc. is done.

prism ::: a transparent solid body, often having triangular bases, used for dispersing light into a spectrum or for reflecting rays of light. Also fig.

prison-house ::: a prison. Often fig.

prodigal ::: n. 1. Giving or given in abundance; lavish or profuse. adj. 2. Recklessly wasteful or extravagant.

produced ::: 1. Caused to occur or exist; gave or given rise to. 2. Created, generated, brought forth, yielded. producing.

prop ::: n. 1. An object placed beneath or against a structure to keep it from falling or shaking; a support. 2. Fig. A person or thing giving support, as of a moral or spiritual nature. 3. Theat. Property, a usually moveable item, other than costumes or scenery, used on the set of a theatre production, motion picture, etc.; any object handled or used by an actor in a performance. v. 3. To sustain or support. props.

  "Purity means freedom from soil or mixture. The divine Purity is that in which there is no mixture of the turbid ignorant movements of the lower nature. Ordinarily, purity is used to mean (in the common language) freedom from sexual passion and impulse.” *Letters on Yoga

quarrel ::: 1. An angry dispute; an altercation. 2. A cause of dispute, complaint, or hostile feeling.

question-mark ::: a punctuation used to signify a question. Also fig.

raft ::: a flat structure, typically made of planks, logs, or barrels, that floats on water and is used for transport or as a platform for swimmers.

rails ::: 1. Naut. Horizontal members capping a bulwark (a solid wall enclosing the perimeter of a weather or main deck of a ship). 2. Steel bars used, usually in pairs, as tracks for railroad cars or other wheeled vehicles.

rarity ::: a rare person or thing, esp. something interesting or valued because it is uncommon.

reason ::: v. 1. To form conclusions, judgments, or inferences from facts or premises. 2. To determine or conclude by logical thinking. reasons, reasoned.* *n. 3. An underlying fact or cause that provides logical sense for a premise or occurrence. Reason, reason"s, Reason"s. ::: *

regards as resulting from a specified cause; considers as caused by something or someone. attributing.

See also garden-house.

See also printing-house.

See also prison-house.

See also summer-house.

See also treasure house.

something caused or dictated by fate; esp. misfortune often resulting in death.

"Spirituality respects the freedom of the human soul, because it is itself fulfilled by freedom; and the deepest meaning of freedom is the power to expand and grow towards perfection by the law of one"s own nature, dharma.” The Human Cycle

Sri Aurobindo: ". . . all cosmic and real Law is a thing not imposed from outside, but from within, all development is self-development, all seed and result are seed of a Truth of things and result of that seed determined out of its potentialities. For the same reason no Law is absolute, because only the infinite is absolute, and everything contains within itself endless potentialities quite beyond its determined form and course, which are only determined through a self-limitation by Idea proceeding from an infinite liberty within.” The Life Divine

*(Sri Aurobindo: "And finally all is lifted up and taken into the supermind and made a part of the infinitely luminous consciousness, knowledge and experience of the supramental being, the Vijnana Purusha.” The Synthesis of Yoga*) ::: Angel of the House. The guardian spirit of the home.

Sri Aurobindo uses the word in the sense of the definition for imager.

*Sri Aurobindo: ". . . desires come from outside, enter the subconscious vital and rise to the surface. It is only when they rise to the surface and the mind becomes aware of them, that we become conscious of the desire. It seems to us to be our own because we feel it thus rising from the vital into the mind and do not know that it came from outside.” Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: " . . . Divine Love which is at the heart of all creation and the most powerful of all redeeming and creative forces has yet been the least frontally present in earthly life, the least successfully redemptive, the least creative. Human nature has been unable to bear it in its purity for the very reason that it is the most powerful, pure, rare and intense of all the divine energies; what little could be seized has been corrupted at once into a vital pietistic ardour, a defenceless religious or ethical sentimentalism, a sensuous or even sensual erotic mysticism of the roseate coloured mind or passionately turbid life-impulse and with these simulations compensated its inability to house the Mystic Flame that could rebuild the world with its tongues of sacrifice. The Synthesis of Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "Doubt cannot be convinced, because by its very nature it does not want to be convinced; . . . .” *Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "Faith is a necessary means for arriving at realisation, because we are ignorant and do not yet know that which we are seeking to realise; faith is indeed knowledge giving the ignorance an intimation of itself previous to its own manifestation, it is the gleam sent before by the yet unrisen Sun. When the Sun shall rise, there will be no longer any need of the gleam.” *Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: ". . . for each individual is in himself the Eternal who has assumed name and form and supports through him the experiences of life turning on an ever-circling wheel of birth in the manifestation. The wheel is kept in motion by the desire of the individual, which becomes the effective cause of rebirth and by the mind"s turning away from the knowledge of the eternal self to the preoccupations of the temporal becoming.” The Life Divine

Sri Aurobindo: "Further, vision is of value because it is often a first key to inner planes of one"s own being and one"s own consciousness as distinguished from worlds or planes of the cosmic consciousness. Yoga-experience often begins with some opening of the third eye in the forehead (the centre of vision in the brows) or with some kind of beginning and extension of subtle seeing which may seem unimportant at first but is the vestibule to deeper experience.” *Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "God and Man, World and Beyond-world become one when they know each other. Their division is the cause of ignorance as ignorance is the cause of suffering.” *Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "History teaches us nothing; it is a confused torrent of events and personalities or a kaleidoscope of changing institutions. We do not seize the real sense of all this change and this continual streaming forward of human life in the channels of Time. What we do seize are current or recurrent phenomena, facile generalisations, partial ideas. We talk of democracy, aristocracy and autocracy, collectivism and individualism, imperialism and nationalism, the State and the commune, capitalism and labour; we advance hasty generalisations and make absolute systems which are positively announced today only to be abandoned perforce tomorrow; we espouse causes and ardent enthusiasms whose triumph turns to an early disillusionment and then forsake them for others, perhaps for those that we have taken so much trouble to destroy. For a whole century mankind thirsts and battles after liberty and earns it with a bitter expense of toil, tears and blood; the century that enjoys without having fought for it turns away as from a puerile illusion and is ready to renounce the depreciated gain as the price of some new good. And all this happens because our whole thought and action with regard to our collective life is shallow and empirical; it does not seek for, it does not base itself on a firm, profound and complete knowledge. The moral is not the vanity of human life, of its ardours and enthusiasms and of the ideals it pursues, but the necessity of a wiser, larger, more patient search after its true law and aim.” *The Human Cycle etc.

Sri Aurobindo: "I used the word ‘mystic" in the sense of a certain kind of inner seeing and feeling of things, a way which to the intellect would seem occult and visionary — for this is something different from imagination and its work with which the intellect is familiar.” *On Himself

Sri Aurobindo: "In considering the action of the Infinite we have to avoid the error of the disciple who thought of himself as the Brahman, refused to obey the warning of the elephant-driver to budge ::: from the narrow path and was taken up by the elephant"s trunk and removed out of the way; ‘You are no doubt the Brahman," said the master to his bewildered disciple, ‘but why did you not obey the driver Brahman and get out of the path of the elephant Brahman?"” *The Life Divine

Sri Aurobindo: "In fact it [the world] is not an illusion in the sense of an imposition of something baseless and unreal on the consciousness, but a misinterpretation by the conscious mind and sense and a falsifying misuse of manifested existence.” Letters on Yoga

*Sri Aurobindo: "In our world error is continually the handmaid and pathfinder of Truth; for error is really a half-truth that stumbles because of its limitations; often it is Truth that wears a disguise in order to arrive unobserved near to its goal.” The Life Divine

Sri Aurobindo: "Intelligence does not depend on the amount one has read, it is a quality of the mind. Study only gives it material for its work as life also does. There are people who do not know how to read and write who are more intelligent than many highly educated people and understand life and things better. On the other hand, a good intelligence can improve itself by reading because it gets more material to work on and grows by exercise and by having a wider range to move in. But book-knowledge by itself is not the real thing, it has to be used as a help to the intelligence but it is often only a help to stupidity or ignorance — ignorance because knowledge of facts is a poor thing if one cannot see their true significance.” Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "In the very atom there is a subconscious will and desire which must also be present in all atomic aggregates because they are present in the Force which constitutes the atom.” *Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "Krishna is the Eternal"s Personality of Ananda; because [of] him all creation is possible, because of his play, because of his delight, because of his sweetness.” *Essays Divine and Human

Sri Aurobindo: " Love? It is not Love who meets the burdened great and governs the fate of men! Nor is it Pain. Time also does not do these things — it only provides the field and movement of events. If I had wanted to give a name, I would have done it, but it has purposely to be left nameless because it is indefinable. He may use Love or Pain or Time or any of these powers but is not any of them. You can call him the Master of the Evolution, if you like. Letters of Savitri

Sri Aurobindo: " Mental intelligence thinks out because it is merely a reflecting force of consciousness which does not know, but seeks to know; it follows in Time step by step the working of a knowledge higher than itself, a knowledge that exists always, one and whole, that holds Time in its grasp, that sees past, present and future in a single regard.: The Life Divine

Sri Aurobindo: ". . . our mind has the faculty of imagination; it can create and take as true and real its own mental structures: . . . . Our mental imagination is an instrument of Ignorance; it is the resort or device or refuge of a limited capacity of knowledge, a limited capacity of effective action. Mind supplements these deficiencies by its power of imagination: it uses it to extract from things obvious and visible the things that are not obvious and visible; it undertakes to create its own figures of the possible and the impossible; it erects illusory actuals or draws figures of a conjectured or constructed truth of things that are not true to outer experience. That is at least the appearance of its operation; but, in reality, it is the mind"s way or one of its ways of summoning out of Being its infinite possibilities, even of discovering or capturing the unknown possibilities of the Infinite.” The Life Divine

*Sri Aurobindo: "Pleasure, joy and delight, as man uses the words, are limited and occasional movements which depend on certain habitual causes and emerge, like their opposites pain and grief which are equally limited and occasional movements, from a background other than themselves. Delight of being is universal, illimitable and self-existent, not dependent on particular causes, the background of all backgrounds, from which pleasure, pain and other more neutral experiences emerge. When delight of being seeks to realise itself as delight of becoming, it moves in the movement of force and itself takes different forms of movement of which pleasure and pain are positive and negative currents.” The Life Divine*

Sri Aurobindo: ". . . some things are suppressed in the ordinary life and remain lying in the nature, suppressed but not eliminated; they may rise up any day or they may express themselves in various nervous forms or other disorders of the mind or vital or body without it being evident what is their real cause. This has been recently discovered by European psychologists and much emphasised, even exaggerated in a new science called psycho-analysis.” *Letters on Yoga

::: Sri Aurobindo: "Spiritual force has its own concreteness; it can take a form (like a stream, for instance) of which one is aware and can send it quite concretely on whatever object one chooses. This is a statement of fact about the power inherent in spiritual consciousness. But there is also such a thing as a willed use of any subtle force — it may be spiritual, mental or vital — to secure a particular result at some point in the world. Just as there are waves of unseen physical forces (cosmic waves etc.) or currents of electricity, so there are mind-waves, thought-currents, waves of emotion, — for example, anger, sorrow, etc., — which go out and affect others without their knowing whence they come or that they come at all, they only feel the result. One who has the occult or inner senses awake can feel them coming and invading him.” Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "That (‘to blend and blur shades owing to technical exigencies"] might be all right for mental poetry — it won"t do for what I am trying to create — in that, one word won"t do for the other. Even in mental poetry I consider it an inferior method. ‘Gleam" and ‘glow" are two quite different things and the poet who uses them indifferently has constantly got his eye upon words rather than upon the object.” Letters on Savitri *

Sri Aurobindo: "The ancient knowledge in all countries was full of the search after the hidden truths of our being and it created that large field of practice and inquiry which goes in Europe by the name of occultism, — we do not use any corresponding word in the East, because these things do not seem to us so remote, mysterious and abnormal as to the occidental mentality; they are nearer to us and the veil between our normal material life and this larger life is much thinner.” *The Synthesis of Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "the black dragon of the Inconscience sustains with its vast wings and its back of darkness the whole structure of the material universe; its energies unroll the flux of things, its obscure intimations seem to be the starting-point of consciousness itself and the source of all life-impulse.” The Life Divine ::: **Unused, guarded beneath Night"s dragon paws,**

*Sri Aurobindo: "The highest aim of the aesthetic being is to find the Divine through beauty; the highest Art is that which by an inspired use of significant and interpretative form unseals the doors of the spirit.” The Human Cycle etc.*

Sri Aurobindo: "The Mother not only governs all from above but she descends into this lesser triple universe. Impersonally, all things here, even the movements of the Ignorance, are herself in veiled power and her creations in diminished substance, her Nature-body and Nature-force, and they exist because, moved by the mysterious fiat of the Supreme to work out something that was there in the possibilities of the Infinite, she has consented to the great sacrifice and has put on like a mask the soul and forms of the Ignorance. But personally too she has stooped to descend here into the Darkness that she may lead it to the Light, into the Falsehood and Error that she may convert it to the Truth, into this Death that she may turn it to godlike Life, into this world-pain and its obstinate sorrow and suffering that she may end it in the transforming ecstasy of her sublime Ananda. In her deep and great love for her children she has consented to put on herself the cloak of this obscurity, condescended to bear the attacks and torturing influences of the powers of the Darkness and the Falsehood, borne to pass though the portals of the birth that is a death, taken upon herself the pangs and sorrows and sufferings of the creation, since it seemed that thus alone could it be lifted to the Light and Joy and Truth and eternal Life. This is the great sacrifice called sometimes the sacrifice of the Purusha, but much more deeply the holocaust of Prakriti, the sacrifice of the Divine Mother.” The Mother

Sri Aurobindo: ". The mystic Muse is more of an inspired Bacchante of the Dionysian wine than an orderly housewife.” Letters on Savitri

Sri Aurobindo: "The prophetic or revealing power sees the substance; the inspiration perceives the right expression. Neither is manufactured; nor is poetry really a poiesis or composition, nor even a creation, but rather the revelation of something that eternally exists. The ancients knew this truth and used the same word for poet and prophet, creator and seer, sophos, vates, kavi.” Essays Divine and Human

Sri Aurobindo: "The quest of man for God, which becomes in the end the most ardent and enthralling of all his quests, begins with his first vague questionings of Nature and a sense of something unseen both in himself and her. Even if, as modern Science insists, religion started from animism, spirit-worship, demon-worship, and the deification of natural forces, these first forms only embody in primitive figures a veiled intuition in the subconscient, an obscure and ignorant feeling of hidden influences and incalculable forces, or a vague sense of being, will, intelligence in what seems to us inconscient, of the invisible behind the visible, of the secretly conscious spirit in things distributing itself in every working of energy. The obscurity and primitive inadequacy of the first perceptions do not detract from the value or the truth of this great quest of the human heart and mind, since all our seekings, — including Science itself, — must start from an obscure and ignorant perception of hidden realities and proceed to the more and more luminous vision of the Truth which at first comes to us masked, draped, veiled by the mists of the Ignorance. Anthropomorphism is an imaged recognition of the truth that man is what he is because God is what He is and that there is one soul and body of things, humanity even in its incompleteness the most complete manifestation yet achieved here and divinity the perfection of what in man is imperfect.” The Life Divine

Sri Aurobindo: "There is no difference between the terms ‘universal" and ‘cosmic" except that ‘universal" can be used in a freer way than ‘cosmic". Universal may mean ‘of the universe", cosmic in that general sense. But it may also mean ‘common to all", e.g., ‘This is a universal weakness" — but you cannot say ‘This is a cosmic weakness".” Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "The Truth-being is the Hara-Gauri (the biune body of the Lord and his Spouse, Ishwara and Shakti, the right half male, the left half female) of the Indian iconological symbol; it is the double Power masculine-feminine born from and supported by the supreme Shakti of the Supreme.” The Synthesis of Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "The word ‘descend" has various meanings according to the context — I used it here in the sense of the psychic being coming down into the human consciousness and body ready for it.” Letters on Yoga

Sri Aurobindo: "The word ‘ghost" as used in popular parlance covers an enormous number of distinct phenomena which have no necessary connection with each other. To name a few only: ::: An actual contact with the soul of a human being in its subtle body and transcribed to our mind by the appearance of an image or the hearing of a voice.

*Sri Aurobindo: ". . . we live in a false relation with our environment, because we know neither the universe nor ourselves for what they really are . . .” The Synthesis of Yoga*

Sri Aurobindo: "We mean by the Absolute something greater than ourselves, greater than the cosmos which we live in, the supreme reality of that transcendent Being which we call God, something without which all that we see or are conscious of as existing, could not have been, could not for a moment remain in existence. Indian thought calls it Brahman, European thought the Absolute because it is a self-existent which is absolved of all bondage to relativities . . . The Absolute is for us the Ineffable.” *The Life Divine

Sri Aurobindo: "Your ‘barely enough", instead of the finer and more suggestive ‘hardly", falls flat upon my ear; one cannot substitute one word for another in this kind of poetry merely because it means intellectually the same thing; ‘hardly" is the mot juste in this context and, repetition or not, it must remain unless a word not only juste but inevitable comes to replace it… . On this point I may add that in certain contexts ‘barely" would be the right word, as for instance, ‘There is barely enough food left for two or three meals", where ‘hardly" would be adequate but much less forceful. It is the other way about in this line. Letters on Savitri

"The Adversary will disappear only when he is no longer necessary in the world. And we know very well that he is necessary, as the touch-stone for gold: to know if it is pure. But if one is really sincere, the Adversary can"t even approach him any longer; and he doesn"t try it, because that would be courting his own destruction.” Questions and Answers 1955, MCW Vol. 7.

"The animal is satisfied with a modicum of necessity; the gods are content with their splendours. But man cannot rest permanently until he reaches some highest good. He is the greatest of living beings because he is the most discontented, because he feels most the pressure of limitations. He alone, perhaps, is capable of being seized by the divine frenzy for a remote ideal.” The Life Divine

"The Avatar does not come as a thaumaturgic magician, but as the divine leader of humanity and the exemplar of a divine humanity. Even human sorrow and physical suffering he must assume and use so as to show, first, how that suffering may be a means of redemption, — as did Christ, — secondly, to show how, having been assumed by the divine soul in the human nature, it can also be overcome in the same nature, — as did Buddha. The rationalist who would have cried to Christ, ‘If thou art the Son of God, come down from the cross," or points out sagely that the Avatar was not divine because he died and died too by disease, — as a dog dieth, — knows not what he is saying: for he has missed the root of the whole matter. Even, the Avatar of sorrow and suffering must come before there can be the Avatar of divine joy; the human limitation must be assumed in order to show how it can be overcome; and the way and the extent of the overcoming, whether internal only or external also, depends upon the stage of the human advance; it must not be done by a non-human miracle.” Essays on the Gita

::: "The use of the word Power has already been explained — it can be applied to whatever or whoever exercises a conscious power in the cosmic field and has authority over the world-movement or some movement in it.” Letters on Yoga

"The characteristic power of the reason in its fullness is a logical movement assuring itself first of all available materials and data by observation and arrangement, then acting upon them for a resultant knowledge gained, assured and enlarged by a first use of the reflective powers, and lastly assuring itself of the correctness of its results by a more careful and formal action, more vigilant, deliberate, severely logical which tests, rejects or confirms them according to certain secure standards and processes developed by reflection and experience.” The Synthesis of Yoga

"The colours of the lotuses and the numbers of petals are respectively, from bottom to top: — (1) the Muladhara or physical consciousness centre, four petals, red; (2) the abdominal centre, six petals, deep purple red; (3) the navel centre, ten petals, violet; (4) the heart centre, twelve petals, golden pink; (5) the throat centre, sixteen petals, grey; (6) the forehead centre between the eye-brows, two petals, white; (7) the thousand-petalled lotus above the head, blue with gold light around. The functions are, according to our yoga, — (1) commanding the physical consciousness and the subconscient; (2) commanding the small vital movements, the little greeds, lusts, desires, the small sense-movements; (3) commanding the larger life-forces and the passions and larger desire-movements; (4) commanding the higher emotional being with the psychic deep behind it; (5) commanding expression and all externalisation of the mind movements and mental forces; (6) commanding thought, will, vision; (7) commanding the higher thinking mind and the illumined mind and opening upwards to the intuition and overmind. The seventh is sometimes or by some identified with the brain, but that is an error — the brain is only a channel of communication situated between the thousand-petalled and the forehead centre. The former is sometimes called the void centre, sunya , either because it is not in the body, but in the apparent void above or because rising above the head one enters first into the silence of the self or spiritual being.” Letters on Yoga*

"The Cross is in Yoga the symbol of the soul & nature in their strong & perfect union, but because of our fall into the impurities of ignorance it has become the symbol of suffering and purification.” Essays Divine and Human*

"The Divine Grace is something not calculable, not bound by anything the intellect can fix as a condition, — though ordinarily some call, aspiration, intensity of the psychic being can awaken it, yet it acts sometimes without any apparent cause even of that kind.” Letters on Yoga*

"The Divine is the unborn Eternal who has no origin; there is and can be nothing before him from which he proceeds, because he is one and timeless and absolute.” Essays on the Gita

". . . the ego is the lynch-pin invented to hold together the motion of our wheel of nature. The necessity of centralisation around the ego continues until there is no longer need of any such device or contrivance because there has emerged the true self, the spiritual being, which is at once wheel and motion and that which holds all together, the centre and the circumference.” The Life Divine

:::   "The essential cause and condition of universal existence is the Lord, Ishwara or Purusha, manifesting and occupying individual and universal forms.” *The Life Divine

"The freedom of the Gita is that of the freeman, the true freedom of the birth into the higher nature, self-existent in its divinity. Whatever he does and however he lives, the free soul lives in the Divine; he is the privileged child of the mansion, bâlavat, who cannot err or fall because all he is and does is full of the Perfect, the All-blissful, the All-loving, the All-beautiful. The kingdom which he enjoys, râjyam samrddham, is a sweet and happy dominion of which it may be said, in the pregnant phrase of the Greek thinker, ``The kingdom is of the child."" Essays on the Gita

"The ideation of the gnosis is radiating light-stuff of the consciousness of the eternal Existence; each ray is a truth. The will in the gnosis is a conscious force of eternal knowledge; it throws the consciousness and substance of being into infallible forms of truth-power, forms that embody the idea and make it faultlessly effective, and it works out each truth-power and each truth-form spontaneously and rightly according to its nature. Because it carries this creative force of the divine Idea, the Sun, the lord and symbol of the gnosis, is described in the Veda as the Light which is the father of all things, Surya Savitri, the Wisdom-Luminous who is the bringer-out into manifest existence.” The Synthesis of Yoga*

"The Infinite creates and is Brahma.” The Renaissance in India ::: "Brahman is not only the cause and supporting power and indwelling principle of the universe, he is also its material and its sole material. Matter also is Brahman and it is nothing other than or different from Brahman.” The Life Divine*

::: "The Lord of Beings is that which is conscious in the conscious being, but he is also the Conscious in inconscient things, the One who is master and in control of the many that are passive in the hands of Force-Nature. He is the Timeless and Time; he is Space and all that is in Space; he is Causality and the cause and the effect: He is the thinker and his thought, the warrior and his courage, the gambler and his dice-throw. All realities and all aspects and all semblances are the Brahman; Brahman is the Absolute, the transcendent and incommunicable, the Supracosmic Existence that sustains the cosmos, the Cosmic Self that upholds all beings, but It is too the self of each individual: the soul or psychic entity is an eternal portion of the Ishwara; it is his supreme Nature or Consciousness-Force that has become the living being in a world of living beings. The Brahman alone is, and because of It all are, for all are the Brahman; this Reality is the reality of everything that we see in Self and Nature. Brahman, the Ishwara, is all this by his Yoga-Maya, by the power of his Consciousness-Force put out in self-manifestation: he is the Conscious Being, Soul, Spirit, Purusha, and it is by his Nature, the force of his conscious self-existence that he is all things; he is the Ishwara, the omniscient and omnipotent All-ruler, and it is by his Shakti, his conscious Power, that he manifests himself in Time and governs the universe.” The Life Divine*

:::   "The lower nature is ignorant and undivine, not in itself hostile but shut to the Light and Truth. The hostile forces are anti-divine, not merely undivine; they make use of the lower nature, pervert it, fill it with distorted movements and by that means influence man and even try to enter and possess or at least entirely control him.” *Letters on Yoga

the method of psychological therapy originated by Sigmund Freud in which free association, dream interpretation, and analysis of resistance and transference are used to explore repressed or unconscious impulses, anxieties, and internal conflicts, in order to free psychic energy for mature love and work.

The Mother (to a young person): "It is very simple, as you will see. 1) The Infinite is the inexhaustible storehouse of forces. The individual is a battery, a storage cell which runs down after use. Consecration is the wire that connects the individual battery to the infinite reserve of forces. Or 2) The Infinite is the river that flows without cease; the individual is the little pond that dries up slowly in the sun. Consecration is the canal that connects the river to the pond and prevents the pond from drying up.” Some Answers from the Mother, MCW *Vol. 16.

::: The Mother (to a young person): "It is very simple, as you will see. 1) The Infinite is the inexhaustible storehouse of forces. The individual is a battery, a storage cell which runs down after use. Consecration is the wire that connects the individual battery to the infinite reserve of forces. Or 2) The Infinite is the river that flows without cease; the individual is the little pond that dries up slowly in the sun. Consecration is the canal that connects the river to the pond and prevents the pond from drying up.” The Mother - Collected Works, Centenary Ed., Vol. 16 - Some Answers from the Mother*

:::   The Mother: "With the Divine"s Love is the power of Transformation. It has this power because it is for the sake of Transformation that it has given itself to the world and manifested everywhere. Not only into man but into all the atoms of Matter it has infused itself in order to bring the world back to the original Truth. The moment you open to it, you also receive its power of Transformation.” Words of the Mother, MCW Vol. 15.

  "The progress of Life involves the development and interlocking of an immense number of things that are in conflict with each other and seem often to be absolute oppositions and contraries. To find amid these oppositions some principle or standing-ground of unity, some workable lever of reconciliation which will make possible a larger and better development on a basis of harmony and not of conflict and struggle, must be increasingly the common aim of humanity in its active life-evolution, if it at all means to rise out of life"s more confused, painful and obscure movement, out of the compromises made by Nature with the ignorance of the Life-mind and the nescience of Matter. This can only be truly and satisfactorily done when the soul discovers itself in its highest and completest spiritual reality and effects a progressive upward transformation of its life-values into those of the spirit; for there they will all find their spiritual truth and in that truth their standing-ground of mutual recognition and reconciliation. The spiritual is the one truth of which all others are the veiled aspects, the brilliant disguises or the dark disfigurements, and in which they can find their own right form and true relation to each other.” *The Human Cycle, etc.

"There is no such thing as death, for it is the body that dies and the body is not the man. That which really is, cannot go out of existence, though it may change the forms through which it appears, just as that which is non-existent cannot come into being. The soul is and cannot cease to be. This opposition of is and is not, this balance of being and becoming which is the mind"s view of existence, finds its end in the realisation of the soul as the one imperishable self by whom all this universe has been extended. Finite bodies have an end, but that which possesses and uses the body, is infinite, illimitable, eternal, indestructible. It casts away old and takes up new bodies as a man changes worn-out raiment for new; and what is there in this to grieve at and recoil and shrink? This is not born, nor does it die, nor is it a thing that comes into being once and passing away will never come into being again. It is unborn, ancient, sempiternal; it is not slain with the slaying of the body. Who can slay the immortal spirit? Weapons cannot cleave it, nor the fire burn, nor do the waters drench it, nor the wind dry. Eternally stable, immobile, all-pervading, it is for ever and for ever. Not manifested like the body, but greater than all manifestation, not to be analysed by the thought, but greater than all mind, not capable of change and modification like the life and its organs and their objects, but beyond the changes of mind and life and body, it is yet the Reality which all these strive to figure.” Essays on the Gita

::: "The shoreless stream of idea and thought, imagination and experience, name and form, sensation and vibration sweeps onward for ever, without beginning, without end, rising into view, sinking out of sight; through it the one Intelligence with its million self-expressions pours itself abroad, an ocean with innumerable waves. One particular self-expression may disappear into its source and continent, but that does not and cannot abolish the phenomenal universe. The One is for ever, and the Many are for ever because the One is for ever. So long as there is a sea, there will be waves.” Essays in Philosophy and Yoga

the strings on an apron, used for securing it around one"s person.tie to someone"s apron strings. To make or be dependent on or dominated by someone.

"The theory of the Mantra is that it is a word of power born out of the secret depths of our being where it has been brooded upon by a deeper consciousness than the mental, framed in the heart and not constructed by the intellect, held in the mind, again concentrated on by the waking mental consciousness and then thrown out silently or vocally — the silent word is perhaps held to be more potent than the spoken — precisely for the work of creation. The Mantra can not only create new subjective states in ourselves, alter our psychical being, reveal knowledge and faculties we did not before possess, can not only produce similar results in other minds than that of the user, but can produce vibrations in the mental and vital atmosphere which result in effects, in actions and even in the production of material forms on the physical plane.” The Upanishads

"The vital is the. . . being behind the Force of Life; in its outer form in the Ignorance it generates the desire-soul which governs most men and which they mistake often for the real soul. ::: The vital as the desire-soul and desire-nature controls the consciousness to a large extent in most men, because men are governed by desire.” Letters on Yoga

"The word ‘physical mind" is rather ambiguous, because it can mean this externalising Mind and the mental in the physical taken together.” Letters on Yoga*

::: "This conception of the Person and Personality, if accepted, must modify at the same time our current ideas about the immortality of the soul; for, normally, when we insist on the soul"s undying existence, what is meant is the survival after death of a definite unchanging personality which was and will always remain the same throughout eternity. It is the very imperfect superficial I'' of the moment, evidently regarded by Nature as a temporary form and not worth preservation, for which we demand this stupendous right to survival and immortality. But the demand is extravagant and cannot be conceded; theI"" of the moment can only merit survival if it consents to change, to be no longer itself but something else, greater, better, more luminous in knowledge, more moulded in the image of the eternal inner beauty, more and more progressive towards the divinity of the secret Spirit. It is that secret Spirit or divinity of Self in us which is imperishable, because it is unborn and eternal. The psychic entity within, its representative, the spiritual individual in us, is the Person that we are; but the I'' of this moment, theI"" of this life is only a formation, a temporary personality of this inner Person: it is one step of the many steps of our evolutionary change, and it serves its true purpose only when we pass beyond it to a farther step leading nearer to a higher degree of consciousness and being. It is the inner Person that survives death, even as it pre-exists before birth; for this constant survival is a rendering of the eternity of our timeless Spirit into the terms of Time.” The Life Divine

"This Divine may lead us often through darkness, because the darkness is there in us and around us, but it is to the Light he is leading and not to anything else.” Letters on Yoga*

"To me, for instance, consciousness is the very stuff of existence and I can feel it everywhere enveloping and penetrating the stone as much as man or the animal. A movement, a flow of consciousness is not to me an image but a fact. If I wrote "His anger climbed against me in a stream", it would be to the general reader a mere image, not something that was felt by me in a sensible experience; yet I would only be describing in exact terms what actually happened once, a stream of anger, a sensible and violent current of it rising up from downstairs and rushing upon me as I sat in the veranda of the Guest-House, the truth of it being confirmed afterwards by the confession of the person who had the movement. This is only one instance, but all that is spiritual or psychological in Savitri is of that character. What is to be done under these circumstances? The mystical poet can only describe what he has felt, seen in himself or others or in the world just as he has felt or seen it or experienced through exact vision, close contact or identity and leave it to the general reader to understand or not understand or misunderstand according to his capacity. A new kind of poetry demands a new mentality in the recipient as well as in the writer.” Letters on Savitri

to refuse to pay attention to; disregard intentionally.

". . . universal love is not personal — it has to be held within as a condition of the consciousness which will have its effects according to the Divine Will or be used by that Will if necessary; . . . .” Letters on Yoga ::: *love"s, loves, loved, loving, love-chained, love-maddened, love-music, love-note, all-love, All-love, All-Love.

unreadable; not legible; impossible or hard to read or decipher because of poor handwriting, faded print, etc.

v. **1. Focused attention, thought, etc., on (something). adj. 2. Directed or drawn toward a common center; focussed. concentrating.**

"We. . . become conscious, in our physical movements, in our nervous and vital reactions, in our mental workings, of a Force greater than body, mind and life which takes hold of our limited instruments and drives all their motion. There is no longer the sense of ourselves moving, thinking or feeling but of that moving, feeling and thinking in us. This force that we feel is the universal Force of the Divine, which, veiled or unveiled, acting directly or permitting the use of its powers by beings in the cosmos, is the one Energy that alone exists and alone makes universal or individual action possible. For this force is the Divine itself in the body of its power; all is that, power of act, power of thought and knowledge, power of mastery and enjoyment, power of love.” The Synthesis of Yoga

"We know the Divine and become the Divine, because we are That already in our secret nature.” The Synthesis of Yoga

"We see that the Absolute, the Self, the Divine, the Spirit, the Being is One; the Transcendental is one, the Cosmic is one: but we see also that beings are many and each has a self, a spirit, a like yet different nature. And since the spirit and essence of things is one, we are obliged to admit that all these many must be that One, and it follows that the One is or has become many; but how can the limited or relative be the Absolute and how can man or beast or bird be the Divine Being? But in erecting this apparent contradiction the mind makes a double error. It is thinking in the terms of the mathematical finite unit which is sole in limitation, the one which is less than two and can become two only by division and fragmentation or by addition and multiplication; but this is an infinite Oneness, it is the essential and infinite Oneness which can contain the hundred and the thousand and the million and billion and trillion. Whatever astronomic or more than astronomic figures you heap and multiply, they cannot overpass or exceed that Oneness; for, in the language of the Upanishad, it moves not, yet is always far in front when you would pursue and seize it. It can be said of it that it would not be the infinite Oneness if it were not capable of an infinite multiplicity; but that does not mean that the One is plural or can be limited or described as the sum of the Many: on the contrary, it can be the infinite Many because it exceeds all limitation or description by multiplicity and exceeds at the same time all limitation by finite conceptual oneness.” The Life Divine

"We speak of the evolution of Life in Matter, the evolution of Mind in Matter; but evolution is a word which merely states the phenomenon without explaining it. For there seems to be no reason why Life should evolve out of material elements or Mind out of living form, unless we accept the Vedantic solution that Life is already involved in Matter and Mind in Life because in essence Matter is a form of veiled Life, Life a form of veiled Consciousness.” The Life Divine

". . . what is this strongly separative self-experience that we call ego? It is nothing fundamentally real in itself but only a practical constitution of our consciousness devised to centralise the activities of Nature in us. We perceive a formation of mental, physical, vital experience which distinguishes itself from the rest of being, and that is what we think of as ourselves in nature — this individualisation of being in becoming. We then proceed to conceive of ourselves as something which has thus individualised itself and only exists so long as it is individualised, — a temporary or at least a temporal becoming; or else we conceive of ourselves as someone who supports or causes the individualisation, an immortal being perhaps but limited by its individuality. This perception and this conception constitute our ego-sense.” The Life Divine

without hope because there seems to be no possibility of comfort or success.



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   58 Sri Aurobindo
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   2 Manly P Hall
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1:thus she can use all things. ~ Lao Tzu ,
2:One great use of words is to hide our thoughts.
   ~ Voltaire,
3:You can't use an old map to explore a new world. ~ Albert Einstein,
4:Man must use what he has, not hope for what is not. ~ George Gurdjieff,
5:One should use common words to say uncommon things
   ~ Arthur Schopenhauer,
6:Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely. ~ Auguste Rodin,
7:Life is like photography: use the negatives to develop positives.
   ~ Unknown,
8:The man was such an intellectual he was of almost no use. ~ Georg C Lichtenberg,
9:Make intelligent use of the Muses as an aid to the soul. ~ Plato,
10:Understand what words you use first, then use them. ~ Epictetus,
11:to use this knowledge for the welfare of others." ~ "The Rosicrucian Manuscripts.", (2012),
12:Wisdom is the power to put our time and our knowledge to the proper use." ~ Thomas J. Watson,
13:What is the use of a realization that fails to reduce your disturbing emotions? ~ Guru Rinpoche,
14:Learn to use them and fly." ~ Jalaluddin Rumi, @Sufi_Path
15:We use what we are and have, to know; and what we know, to be and have still more. ~ Maurice Blondel,
16:You use a glass mirror to see your face; you use works of art to see your soul. ~ George Bernard Shaw,
17:We use Jesus and not people, because only he will never be without us." ~ Saint Padre Pio of Pietrelcina,
18:We should never use the truth to wound. ~ Saint Augustine of Hippo,
19:Disease is the tax which the soul pays for the use of the body. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
20:It is the duty of the priest or the cleric to be of use if possible to all and to be harmful to none. ~ Saint Ambrose,
21:If the meditator is able to use whatever occurs in his life as the path, his body becomes a retreat hut. ~ Jigme Lingpa,
22:God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing ~ Soren Kierkegaard,
23:What use to cut the branches if one leaves the roots? ~ Apollonius of Tyana, the Eternal Wisdom
24:What is the use of knowing everything else, when you don't know yourself. ~ Sri Ramana Maharshi,
25:Whatever is not of use to the swarm, is not of use to the bee. ~ Marcus Aurelius, the Eternal Wisdom
26:The gods make use of our forgotten deeds. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Word of Fate,
27:It is no use reading books of guidance if one is not determined to live what they teach. Blessings ~ The Mother,
28:Just sit there right now, don't do a thing. Just rest....You can use my soft words as a cushion for your head. ~ Hafiz,
29:Use all your forces for endeavour and leave no room for carelessness. ~ Buddhist Texts, the Eternal Wisdom
30:If a warrior is not unattached to life and death, he will be of no use whatsoever." ~ Yamamoto Tsunetomo (Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai),
31:Sacred scriptures all point the way to God. Once you know the way, what is the use of books? ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
32:What is greatest in our existence, what makes it precious beyond words, is the modesty to use sorrow so that it penetrates our soul. ~ Rilke,
33:What is really your own? The use you make of the ideas, resources, and opportunities that come your way. ~ Epictetus,
34:The gods use instruments,
Not ask their consent. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Collected Plays and Short Stories - I, Act Five,
35:What you have been obliged to discover by yourself leaves a path in your mind which you can use again when the need arises. ~ Georg C Lichtenberg,
36:Do not use your mind to enquire in the heart about anything other than your own real nature. ~ Sri Ramana Maharshi,
37:It is no use being in a rage against things, that makes no difference to them. ~ Marcus Aurelius, the Eternal Wisdom
38:Spoken words are of no use whatsoever if the eyes of the Guru meet the eyes of the disciple. ~ Sri Ramana Maharshi,
39:Idleness like rust destroys much more than work uses up; a key in use is always clean. ~ Franklin, the Eternal Wisdom
40:Of what use are the gods
If they crown not our just desires on earth? ~ Sri Aurobindo, Collected Plays and Stories, Act I,
41:It's just an idea, if you want to use any of the articles. But sure, you have to write your own gnosis. 2020-03-06 ~ M Alan Kazlev, to Josh, FB Messenger,
42:Ye have been called unto liberty; only use not liberty for an occasion to the flesh. ~ Galatians V. 13, the Eternal Wisdom
43:It is of no use to read the scriptures without viveka and vairagya, there is no attainment of spirituality. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
44:You might meet with many obstacles in your life. But if you are a true practitioner, you will use them as training grounds of the path. ~ Chamtrul Rinpoche,
45:Your days are numbered. Use them to throw open the windows of your soul to the sun. If you do not, the sun will soon set, and you with it." ~ Marcus Aurelius,
46:On the other hand, the virtue that God asks of us is the use of the same powers based on a good conscience in accordance with God's command. ~ Basil the Great,
47:The fact that the captain of the ship can clearly see the port is of no use if the crew continues to paddle in different directions.
   ~ Townsend and Gebhardt,
48:All depends upon the choice of the force that you allow to make use of you as its instrument. And the choice has to be made at every moment of your life.
   ~ ?,
49:A Great Silence overcomes me,
and I wonder why I ever thought
to use language.
~ Jalaluddin Rumi, @Sufi_Path
50:What is the good of visiting shrines, if you are able to cultivate Bhakti? Pilgrimage without Bhakti is of no use. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
51:Be content in what the Master wills. There is no use in becoming restless. Stay where you are and depend on Him. There is no point in worrying . ~ Swami Saradananda,
52:It is no use setting your face towards future and then looking back towards the past; in this way you will arrive nowhere. ~ Sri Aurobindo,
53:It is requisite for the relaxation of the mind that we make use, from time to time, of playful deeds and jokes.~ Saint Thomas Aquinas,
54:Invoke your Guardian Angel who will enlighten you. God gave you your Guardian Angel for this reason. So make use of your Angel's service. ~ Saint Padre Pio of Pietrelcina,
55:It is requisite for the relaxation of the mind that we make use, from time to time, of playful deeds and jokes." ~ Saint Thomas Aquinas,
56:The first use of good literature is that it prevents a man from being merely modern. To be merely modern is to condemn oneself to an ultimate narrowness. ~ C K Chesterton,
57:The present is the most precious moment. Use all the forces of thy spirit not to let that momentescape thee. ~ Tolstoy, the Eternal Wisdom
58:A soul which does not practise the exercise of prayer is very like a paralyzed body which, though possessing feet and hands, makes no use of them." ~ Saint Alphonsus Liguori,
59:It is no use walking anywhere to preach unless our walking is our preaching." ~ Francis of Assisi, (1181/1182-1226), Italian Catholic friar, deacon and preacher," Wikipedia.,
60:God transcends world and is not bound by any law of Nature. He uses laws, laws do not use Him. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Isha Upanishad, The Isha Upanishad,
61:He is a true man to whom money is a servant. Those who have it and do not know how to use it, do not deserve to be called men. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
62:Zen is not a religion. There is no room for a cult. There is no dependence on a teacher. There is only learning how to use your own mind and making it strong." ~ Frederick Lenz,
63:Order is not inconsistent with liberty but rather the condition for the right use of liberty. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Essays in Philosophy and Yoga, Message,
64:They say there is a doorway from heart to heart, but what is the use of a door when there are no walls?" ~ Jalaluddin Rumi, @Sufi_Path
65:O garden! O garden! Let me use your roses for my rosary and I will let your flowers bloom in every heart. ~ Jalaluddin Rumi, @Sufi_Path
66:The model we choose to use to understand something determines what we find. ~ Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World,
67:All the facts of nature are nouns of the intellect, and make the grammar of the eternal language. Every word has a double, trebleor centuple use and meaning. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
68:This cosmic Nature's balance is not ours
Nor the mystic measure of her need and use. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Word of Fate,
69:The worldly should undergo all their hardships, make use of all their learning and perseverance for the sake of God instead of riches. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
70:If the mind is not under control, it is no use living in a cave because the same mind will bring all disturbances there. ~ Swami Vivekananda, (C.W. I. 440),
71:The intoxication of hemp is not had by repeating the word "hemp". What is the use of loudly crying, "Oh God"? Practice devotion to see God. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
72:Use your body and your thought and turn away from anybody who asks you to believe blindly, whatever be his good will or his virtue. ~ id, the Eternal Wisdom
73:Fear and greed cause the misuse of the mind. The right use of mind is in the service of love, of life, of truth, of beauty. ~ Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj,
74:What is the use of imagining yourself a sinner? You are infinite; it is sheer ignorance that makes you imagine that you are finite. Back of everyone there is Infinity! ~ Swami Ramakrishnananda,
75:Second is the way of the merchant. The wine maker obtains his ingredients and puts them to use to make his living. The way of the merchant is always to live by taking profit. ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
76:It is the parents' duty to look after the salvation of their children, especially before they come to the use of reason ~ Saint Thomas Aquinas, (ST 2-2.10.12).,
77:My child, do not give way to evil desire, for it leads to fornication. And do not use obscene language, or let your eye wander, for from all these come adulteries. ~ Didache of the Twelve Apostles,
78:Through all ways of our being the Divine can touch us and make use of them to awaken and liberate the spirit. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Ananda Brahman,
79:All things have their justifiable cause of being, their good use and their right enjoyment. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Secret of the Veda, Surya Savitri, Creator and Increaser,
80:Consciousness uses the brain which its upward strivings have produced, brain has not produced nor does it use the consciousness. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine 1.10-13,
81:If you use your mind to study reality, you won't understand either your mind or reality. If you study reality without using your mind, you'll understand both. ~ Bodhidharma,
82:The value of life lies not in the length of days, but in the use we make of them... Whether you find satisfaction in life depends not on your tale of years, but on your will.
   ~ Michel de Montaigne,
83:If you use your mind to study reality, you won't understand either your mind or reality. If you study reality without using your mind, you'll understand both." ~ Bodhidharma,
84:To be an empty vessel is a very good thing if one knows how to make use of the emptiness. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Letters on Yoga - III, Emptiness, Voidness, Blankness and Silence,
85:What is the use of that baptism which cleanses the flesh and body alone? Baptize the soul from wrath and from covetousness, from envy, and from hatred; and, lo! The body is pure. ~ Saint Justin Martyr,
86:It is no use excusing yourself; you must have the will never to fall back into the faults you have committed.
   ~ The Mother, Words Of The Mother II, Difficulties, Mistakes, [T5],
87:Cease to search out death with such ardour in the strayings of your life, use not the work of your hands to win that which shall destroy you. ~ Wisdom I. 12, the Eternal Wisdom
88:Faith and baptism are two kindred and inseparable ways of salvation: faith is perfected by baptism; baptism is established by faith, and both are completed by the use of the same names. ~ Saint Basil of Caesarea,
89:It is in the latter way that he withdraws some from the use of wine, that they may aim at perfection, even as from riches and the like ~ Saint Thomas Aquinas, (ST 2-2.149.3ad3),
90:Of what use is it to run painfully about the troubled world of visible things when there is a purer world within ourselves? ~ Novalis, "The Disciples at Sais.", the Eternal Wisdom
91:It not seldom happens that in the purposeless rovings and wanderings of the imagination we hunt down such game as can be put to use by our purposeful philosophy in its well-ordered household. ~ Georg C Lichtenberg,
92:This too the supreme Diplomat can use,
He makes our fall a means for greater rise. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Yoga of the King, The Yoga of the Soul's Release,
93:Historically, languages designed for other people to use have been bad: Cobol, PL/I, Pascal, Ada, C++. The good languages have been those that were designed for their own creators: C, Perl, Smalltalk, Lisp. ~ Paul Graham,
94:With every inhalation, utter the Name of the Lord. With every exhalation, utter the Name of the Lord. Use this splendid and precious chance in your life to the fullest. Live in God, for Him and with Him. ~ SRI SATHYA SAI,
95:Use the visible things of creation as they should be used—earth, sea, sky, air, springs, and rivers. Whatever is beautiful and wonderful in them, attribute that to the praise and glory of the Creator. ~ Saint Leo the Great,
96:Make friends with the angels, who though invisible are always with you. Often invoke them, constantly praise them, and make good use of their help and assistance in all your temporal and spiritual affairs." ~ Saint Francis de Sales,
97:Allah gave it to us to use it against shaitan, so use it at the start of every act. this weapon can defeat countless devils, so have faith, and use it. ~ Shaykh Nazim Al Haqqani, @Sufi_Path
98:In vain are you rich if you do not quell your passions; if an insatiable cupidity eats you up, if you are the prey of fears and anxieties, of what use to you is your opulence?. ~ Plutarch, the Eternal Wisdom
99:There is nothing which cannot be a yogic discipline if one does it properly. And if it is not done properly, even tapasya will be of no use and will lead you nowhere.
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1950-1951,
100:Fourthly, the way of the artisan. The way of the carpenter is to become proficient in the use of his tools, first to lay his plans with true measure and then perform his work according to plan. Thus he passes through life. ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
101:What good is there in reading a whole lot of scriptures? What good is there in the study of philosophy? What is the use of talking big? At the beginning one should concentrate on God with form. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
102:Compose your mind and fix it on God. Say to your mind: "Plunge into the ocean of God." Make the best use of this Divine grace. Do not sacrifice the infinite bliss of God for the sake of the ephemeral pleasures of the world. ~ SWAMI BRAHMANANDA,
103:Knowledge which is acquired under compulsion has no hold on the mind. Therefore do not use compulsion, but let early education be a sort of amusement; you will then be better able to discover the child's natural bent. ~ Plato,
104:The slow process of a material mind
Which serves the body it should rule and use
And needs to lean upon an erring sense. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Kingdoms and Godheads of the Little Mind,
105:God will use the powers of darkness to exterminate these sectarian, iniquitous and criminal men, who plot to eradicate the Catholic Church, our Holy Mother, by tearing Her up by Her deepest roots, and casting Her on the ground. ~ Blessed Elizabeth ,
106:An imprisoned person with no other book than the Tarot, if he knew how to use it, could in a few years acquire Universal Knowledge Gnosis, and would be able to speak on all subjects with unequaled learning and inexhaustible eloquence. ~ Eliphas Levi,
107:It would be contrary to natural justice if children were baptized against their parents' will, just as it would be if one having the use of reason were baptized against his will ~ Saint Thomas Aquinas, (ST 3.68.10).,
108:The period of sadhana is like climbing a high mountain. You need a lot of strength and energy. Mountain climbers use a rope to pull themselves up. For you, the only rope is japa. Therefore, try to repeat your mantra constantly. ~ MATA AMRITANANDAMAYI,
109:Lisp is worth learning for ... the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it. That experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot. ~ Eric S Raymond,
110:We cannot live in a world that is not our own, in a world that is interpreted for us by others. An interpreted world is not a home. Part of the terror is to take back our own listening, to use our own voice, to see our own light. ~ Saint Hildegard of Bingen,
111:Exactly the same technology can be used for good and for evil. It is as if there were a God who said to us, I set before you two ways: You can use your technology to destroy yourselves or to carry you to the planets and the stars. It's up to you. ~ Carl Sagan,
112:For those who use their intelligence and their study as a weapon, the Rosary is most effective. Because that apparently monotonous way of beseeching Our Lady as children do their Mother, can destroy every seed of vainglory and pride. ~ Saint Josemaria Escriva,
113:There are a very few healthy, fat sheep - that is, those that are made strong by feeding on the truth, by God's gift making good use of the pastures - but they are not safe from the bad shepherds. ~ Saint Augustine of Hippo,
114:Einstein's use of the equivalence of inertial and gravitational mass to derive his principle of equivalence, and eventually all of general relativity, amounts to a relentless march of logical reasoning unmatched in the history of human thought. ~ Stephen Hawkings,
115:I don't tell you or advise you to despise God's works, or to think there is anything against your faith in what the good God has made good. But use every kind of creature, and everything this world is equipped with, reasonably and moderately. ~ Saint Leo the Great,
116:Ananke's engines organising Chance,
Channels perverse of a stupendous Will,
Tools of the Unknown who use us as their tools, ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, 02.05,
117:Our own effort is roused from slothful sleep by the restlessness of heretics, forcing us to examine the Scriptures more carefully, lest they use them to harm the flock of Christ ~ Saint Augustine of Hippo, Letter 194 to Sixtus).,
118:If you do not have living water, baptize in some other water. If you cannot baptize in cold water, use warm water. If you have not got either, then pour water three times on the candidate's head in the name of the Father and of the Son and ofthe Holy Spirit. ~ Didache,
119:Always discriminate between what you really are and what you appear to be. Always use the power of right understanding, and you will know for yourself where you are, how much you have progressed, and how far you have to go to reach your destination. ~ Swami Saradananda,
120:What is the use of making pilgrimages if you can attain love of God remaining where you are? Pilgrimage becomes futile if it does not enable you to attain love of God. Love of God is the one essential and necessary thing. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
121:You must remember to love people and use things, rather than to love things and use people." ~ Fulton John Sheen, (1895 - 1979) American bishop, (later archbishop) of the Catholic Church known for his preaching and especially his work on television and radio, Wikipedia.,
122:Let us remember that the automatic machine is the precise economic equivalent of slave labor this will produce an unemployment situation in comparison with which the depression of the thirties will seem a pleasant joke.
   ~ Norbert Wiener, The Human Use of Human Beings, 1954,
123:One cannot understand the meaning of the scriptures without practicing spiritual discipline. What is the use of merely repeating, 'There is butter in the milk'? Turn the milk into curd and churn it. Only then will you get butter. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
124:The great Gods use the pain of human hearts
As a sharp axe to hew their cosmic road:
They squander lavishly men's blood and tears
For a moment's purpose in their fateful work. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Word of Fate,
125:The use of your writing is to keep you in touch with the inner source of inspiration and intuition, so as to wear thin the crude external crust in the consciousness and encourage the growth of the inner being.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Letters On Yoga - II,
126:The Tibetans use an image I have found helpful… Make the mind like a big clear sky & let everything arise & vanish on its own. Then the mind stays balanced, relaxed, observing the flow." ~ J. Goldstein "The Experience of Insight: A Simple & Direct Guide to Buddhist Meditation",
127:Whining or self-pity is of no use at all. "I am too wretched, worthless, vile & weak; I cannot do anything by myself." These are the words of the namby-pamby, the do-nothing imbeciles. Can anything be done by such people? Strive hard, be wide awake & push on. ~ SWAMI VIRAJANANDA,
128:Tell me, you whom my soul loves. This is how I address you, because your true name is above all other names; it is unutterable and incomprehensible to all rational creatures. And so the name I use for you is simply the statement of my soul's love for you.... ~ Saint Gregory of Nyssa,
129:To practice spiritual disciplines in a haphazard, lazy way means that there is not that earnest desire to attain God. Practice must be performed with eagerness, in a systematic, orderly manner. One must not be guided by mere emotion but use one's intellect as well ~ Swami Turiyananda,
130:Well, it's no use your talking about waking him when you're only one of the things in his dream. You know very well you're not real...."
"If I wasn't real," Alice said, "I shouldn't be able to cry."
"I hope you don't suppose those are real tears?" Tweedledum said. ~ Lewis Carroll,
131:God is infinite, and infinite are the ways to reach Him. The important thing is somehow to cultivate devotion to God and love for Him. What is the use of knowing many things? It is enough to cultivate love of God by following any of the paths. ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
132:There are two persons who have given themselves useless trouble and made efforts without profit. One is he who has amassed wealth and has not spent it and the other is he who has acquired knowledge and has made no use of it ~ Sadi: Gulistan, the Eternal Wisdom
133:An inconclusive play is Reason's toil.
Each strong idea can use her as its tool;
Accepting every brief she pleads her case.
Open to every thought, she cannot know. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Kingdoms and Godheads of the Little Mind,
134:I do not fear but that He will go on to supply what is yet wanting when once I have begun to use what He has already given. For a possession which is not diminished by being shared with there, if it is possessed and not shared, is not yet possessed as it ought to be possessed. ~ Augustine of Hippo,
135:The "memorize then fire and forget" principal for casting spells Jack Vance assumed in his fantasy stories seemed perfect to me for use by D&D magic-users. IT required forethought by the player and limited the power of the class all at once. ~ Gary Gygax, ENWorld, Q&A with Gary Gygax part 13, 2007,
136:Instead of seeing things as imagined, learn to see them as they are. It is like cleansing a mirror. The same mirror that shows you the world as it is, will also show you your own face. The thought 'I am' is the polishing cloth. Use it. ~ Sri Nisargadatta Maharaj,
137:What is obstinacy? How can one use it best?

   It is the wrong use of a great quality - perseverance. Make a good use of it and it will be all right. Be obstinate in your effort towards progress, and your obstinacy will become useful.
   ~ The Mother, Words Of The Mother II,
138:One should not use the name of God artificially and superficially without feeling.
To use the name of God one must call upon Him and surrender to Him unreservedly.
After such surrender the name of God is constantly with the man. ~ Sri Ramana Maharshi, Talks, 426,
139:Widespread intellectual and moral docility may be convenient for leaders in the short term, but it is suicidal for nations in the long term. One of the criteria for national leadership should therefore be a talent for understanding, encouraging, and making constructive use of vigorous criticism. ~ Carl Sagan,
140:This is how you should pray: "Lord, if you see this to be for my good, if you judge it to be profitable for me, give me this thing to use for your honor; but if you foresee it will do me harm, impair the health of my soul, take away from me the desire for such a thing." ~ Thomas A Kempis, The Imitation of Christ,
141:My heart shall throb with the world-beats of Thy love,
My body become Thy engine for earth-use;
In my nerves and veins Thy rapture's streams shall move;
My thoughts shall be hounds of Light for Thy power to loose. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Collected Poems, Surrender,
142:The Sruti tells us that it is no use taking refuge in suicide or the shortening of your life, because those who kill themselves instead of finding freedom, plunge by death into a worse prison of darkness - the Asuric worlds enveloped in blind gloom.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Isha Upanishad, [121 or 122],
143:The possession of Knowledge, unless accompanied by a manifestation and expression in Action, is like the hoarding of precious metals - a vain and foolish thing. Knowledge, like Wealth, is intended for Use. The Law of Use is Universal, and he who violates it suffers by reason of his conflict with natural forces. ~ The Kybalion,
144:And yet such an attitude would be wrong. It is clear that all the valuable things, material, spiritual, and moral, which we receive from society can be traced back through countless generations to certain creative individuals. The use of fire, the cultivation of edible plants, the steam engine ~ each was discovered by one man.,
145:If you study every word of the petitions of Scripture, you will find, I think, nothing that is not contained and included in the Lord's Prayer. When we pray, then, we may use different words to say the same things, but we may not say different things. ~ Saint Augustine of Hippo, Letter to Proba,
146:In fact, one of the most cherished goals of the command line is laziness- doing the most work with the fewest keystrokes. Another goal is never having to lift your fingers from the keyboard-never reaching for the mouse. In this chapter, we will look at bash features that make keyboard use faster and more efficient.
   ~ The Linux Command Line,
147:There are so many ways of making the approach to meditation as joyful as possible. You can find the music that most exalts you and use it to open your heart and mind. You can collect pieces of poetry, or quotations of lines of teachings that over the years have moved you, and keep them always at hand to elevate your spirit. ~ Sogyal Rinpoche,
148:All we have to believe with is our senses, the tools we use to perceive the world: our sight, our touch, our memory. If they lie to us, then nothing can be trusted. And even if we do not believe, then still we cannot travel in any other way than the road our senses show us; and we must walk that road to the end. ~ Neil Gaiman in American Gods,
149:It may be necessary to regain one's original sexuality from the mass of fantasy and association into which it mostly sinks. This is achieved by judicious use of abstention and by arousing lust without any form of mental prop or fantasy. This exercise is also therapeutic. Be ye ever virgin unto Kia.
   ~ Peter J Carroll, Liber Null, Liber LUX, Gnosis [33],
150:It is bad for man to think that he is without sin and has no need to struggle with himself; bat it is quite as bad for him to think that he is born in sin, condemned to die under a load of sins and that it would be of no use for him to struggle to rid himself of them. Both these errors are equally fatal. ~ Tolstoi, the Eternal Wisdom
151:Her lips endlessly clung to his,
Unwilling ever to separate again
Or lose that honeyed drain of lingering joy,
Unwilling to loose his body from her breast,
The warm inadequate signs that love must use. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Joy of Union; the Ordeal of the Foreknowledge of Death and the Heart's Grief and Pain,
152:When all is said and done, the invention of writing must be reckoned not only as a brilliant innovation but as a surpassing good for humanity. And assuming that we survive long enough to use their inventions wisely, I believe the same will be said of the modern Thoths and Prometheuses who are today devising computers and programs at the edge of machine intelligence. ~ Carl Sagan,
153:1. Do not think dishonestly. 2. The Way is in training. 3. Become acquainted with every art. 4. Know the Ways of all professions. 5. Distinguish between gain and loss in worldly matters. 6. Develop intuitive judgement and understanding for everything. 7. Perceive those things which cannot be seen. 8. Pay attention even to trifles. 9. Do nothing which is of no use. ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
154:One cannot demand of a scholar that he show himself a scholar everywhere in society, but the whole tenor of his behavior must none the less betray the thinker, he must always be instructive, his way of judging a thing must even in the smallest matters be such that people can see what it will amount to when, quietly and self-collected, he puts this power to scholarly use. ~ Georg C Lichtenberg,
155:Consecration is the active dedication of a thing to a single purpose. Banishing prevents its use for any other purpose, but it remains inert until consecrated. Purification is performed by water, and banishing by air, whose weapon is the sword. Consecration is performed by fire, usually symbolised by the holy oil.
   ~ Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA, Chapter 16 Of the Consecrations,
156:Every man has in him something divine, something his own, a chance of strength and perfection in however small a sphere, which God offers him to take or refuse. The task is to find it, develop it, use it. The chief aim of education should be to help the growing soul to draw out that in itself which is best and make it perfect for a noble use. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Early Cultural Writings,
157:This is one of the reasons Lisp doesn't get anywhere. The trend to promote features so clever that you stop thinking about your problem and start thinking about the clever features. CL's loop is so powerful that people invented functional programming so that they'd never have to use it. ~ G_Morgan in reddit [http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/a481l/so_to_get_back_to_the_point_go_vs_algol68_tbh_i/c0fs2nk]
158:In the past, destruction of your neighbour might have been considered a victory, but today we are all interdependent. We live in a global economy; we face problems like climate change that affect us all. The 7 billion human beings alive today belong to one human family. In the context that others' interests are in our interest and our interest is in their interest, the use of force is self-destructive. ~ Dalai Lama,
159:Mother, sometimes when I use my mental will to become aware of Your universal presence and to link myself with You, I feel the peace and assurance of Your touch. Mother, is it true or is it my mental construction?

   In this case, it is of no importance, because there are mental constructions which can be true and which lead safely to the experience.
   ~ The Mother, Words Of The Mother II,
160:We are astonished to see that there have been and still are men who kill their kind in order to eat them. But the time will come when our grandchildren will be astonished that their grandparents should have killed every day millions of animals in order to eat them when one can have a sound and substantial nourishment by the use of the fruits of the earth. ~ Tolstoi, the Eternal Wisdom
161:Insofar as he makes use of his healthy senses, man himself is the best and most exact scientific instrument possible. The greatest misfortune of modern physics is that its experiments have been set apart from man, as it were, physics refuses to recognize nature in anything not shown by artificial instruments, and even uses this as a measure of its accomplishments. ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
162:People use drugs, legal and illegal, because their lives are intolerably painful or dull. They hate their work and find no rest in their leisure. They are estranged from their families and their neighbors. It should tell us something that in healthy societies drug use is celebrative, convivial, and occasional, whereas among us it is lonely, shameful, and addictive. We need drugs, apparently, because we have lost each other. ~ Wendell Berry,
163:Q: Is it intentional in AD&D that the Haste spell (causing magical aging) should require a system shock roll, risking death?

   Gary: the system shock check was included so DMs has something to use to prevent abuse of the spell, such as when a PC drank a potion of speed and then had a haste spell cast on him. My players knew better that to try to get cutsy like that when I was the DM. ~ Gary Gygax, Dragonsfoot, Q&A with Gary Gygax, 2005,
164:The 'little word is has its tragedies; it marries and identifies different things with the greatest innocence; and yet no two are ever identical, and if therein lies the charm of wedding them and calling them one, therein too lies the danger. Whenever I use the word is, except in sheer tautology, I deeply misuse it; and when I discover my error, the world seems to fall asunder and the members of my family no longer know one another. (461) ~ G Santayana,
165:As humans, we waste the shit out of our words. It's sad. We use words like "awesome" and "wonderful" like they're candy. It was awesome? Really? It inspired awe? It was wonderful? Are you serious? It was full of wonder? You use the word "amazing" to describe a goddamn sandwich at Wendy's. What's going to happen on your wedding day, or when your first child is born? How will you describe it? You already wasted "amazing" on a fucking sandwich. ~ Louis C K,
166:That man who is without darkness, exempt from evil, absolutely pure, although-of all things which are in the world of the ten regions since unbeginning time till today, he knows none, has seen none, has heard of none, has not in a word any knowledge of them however small, yet has he the high knowledge of omniscience. It is in speaking of him that one can use the word enlightenment. ~ Sutra in 40 articles, the Eternal Wisdom
167:Nature and books belong to the eyes that see them. It depends on the mood of the man, whether he shall see the sunset or the fine poem. There are always sunsets, and there is always genius; but only a few hours so serene that we can relish nature or criticism. The more or less depends on structure or temperament. Temperament is the iron wire on which the beads are strung. Of what use is fortune or talent to a cold and defective store? ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
168:In the first movement of self-preparation, the period of personal effort, the method we have to use is this concentration of the whole being on the Divine that it seeks and, as its corollary, this constant rejection, throwing out, katharsis, of all that is not the true Truth of the Divine. An entire consecration of all that we are, think, feel and do will be the result of this persistence.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga,
169:If you think for yourself or feel for yourself or act for yourself, you become a misappropriator, a dishonest trustee-a thief of force.

Let the Divine think through you, feel through you and act through you. Then only right and perfect use will be made of the instruments that compose your being.

Let the Divine's Thoughts shine in your mind, let the Divine's Love swell in your heart, let the Divine's Energy impel your limbs. ~ Nolini Kanta Gupta, Towards The Light,
170:If you want to understand a society, take a good look at the drugs it uses. And what can this tell you about American culture? Well, look at the drugs we use. Except for pharmaceutical poison, there are essentially only two drugs that Western civilization tolerates: Caffeine from Monday to Friday to energize you enough to make you a productive member of society, and alcohol from Friday to Monday to keep you too stupid to figure out the prison that you are living in. ~ Bill Hicks,
171:The formula of the Cup is not so well suited for Evocations, and the magical Hierarchy is not involved in the same way; for the Cup being passive rather than active, it is not fitting for the magician to use it in respect of anything but the Highest. In practical working it consequently means little but prayer, and that prayer the 'prayer of silence.'
   ~ Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA, Book 4, Magick, Part 3, The Formuale of the Elemental Weapons [148],
172:The Copenhagen Interpretation is sometimes called 'model agnosticism' and holds that any grid we use to organize our experience of the world is a model of the world and should not be confused with the world itself. Alfred Korzybski, the semanticist, tried to popularize this outside physics with the slogan, 'The map is not the territory.' Alan Watts, a talented exegete of Oriental philosophy, restated it more vividly as 'The menu is not the meal.'
   ~ Robert Anton Wilson, Cosmic Trigger,
173:The duty of man is to be useful to men: to a great number if he can, if not, to a small number, otherwise to his neighbours, otherwise to himself : in making himself useful to himself, he works for others. As the vicious man injures not only himself but also those to whom he might have been useful if he had been virtuous, likewise in labouring for oneself one labours also for others, since there is formed a man who can be of use to them. ~ Seneca, the Eternal Wisdom
174:Give yourself unto reading. The man who never reads will never be read; he who never quotes will never be quoted. He who will not use the thoughts of other men's brains, proves that he has no brains of his own. You need to read.
   . . .
   We are quite persuaded that the very best way for you to be spending your leisure time, is to be either reading or praying. You may get much instruction from books which afterwards you may use as a true weapon in your Lord and Master's service. Paul cries, "Bring the books" - join in the cry.
   ~ Charles Haddon Spurgeon,
175:Tell me, enigmatical man, whom do you love best, your father,
Your mother, your sister, or your brother?
I have neither father, nor mother, nor sister, nor brother.
Your friends?
Now you use a word whose meaning I have never known.
Your country?
I do not know in what latitude it lies.
Beauty?
I could indeed love her, Goddess and Immortal.
Gold?
I hate it as you hate God.
Then, what do you love, extraordinary stranger?
I love the clouds the clouds that pass up there
Up there the wonderful clouds!
   ~ Charles Baudelaire,
176:The modern techniques of brainwashing and menticide—those perversions of psychology—can bring almost any man into submission and surrender. Many of the victims of thought control, brainwashing, and menticide that we have talked about were strong men whose minds and wills were broken and degraded. But although the totalitarians use their knowledge of the mind for vicious and unscrupulous purposes, our democratic society can and must use its knowledge to help man to grow, to guard his freedom, and to understand himself. ~ Joost Meerloo, The Rape of the Mind,
177:In mathematics, students are at the mercy of rigidly applied algorithms. They learn to use certain formalisms in certain ways, often effectively, if provided with a pre-arranged signal that a particular formalism is wanted.

In social studies and the humanities, the enemies of understanding are scripts and stereotypes. Students readily believe that events occur in typical ways, and they evoke these scripts even inappropriately. For example, they regard struggles between two parties in a dispute as a "good guy versus bad guy" movie script. ~ Howard Gardner,
178:It's easy to imagine that, in the future, telepathy and telekinesis will be the norm; we will interact with machines by sheer thought. Our mind will be able to turn on the lights, activate the internet, dictate letters, play video games, communicate with friends, call for a car, purchase merchandise, conjure any movie-all just by thinking. Astronauts of the future may use the power of their minds to pilot their spaceships or explore distant planets. Cities may rise from the desert of Mars, all due to master builders who mentally control the work of robots. ~ Michio Kaku,
179:Purusha and Prakriti :::
   ... On one side he becomes aware of a witness recipient observing experiencing Consciousness which does not appear to act but for which all these activities inside and outside us seem to be undertaken and continue. On the other side he is aware at the same time of an executive Force or an energy of Process which is seen to constitute, drive and guide all conceivable activities and to create a myraid form visible to us and invisible and use them as stable supports for its incessant flux of action and creation.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga,
180:The last thing that you remember is standing before the wizard Lakmir as he gestured wildly and chanted in an archaic tongue. Now you find yourself staring at an entryway which lies at the edge of a forest. The Druid's words still ring in your ears: "Within the walls of the Castle Shadowgate lies your quest. If the prophecies hold true, the dreaded Warlock Lord will use his dark magic to raise the Behemoth, the deadliest of the Titans, from the depths of the earth. You are the seed of prophecy, the last of the line of kings, and only you can stop the Warlock Lord from darkening our world FOREVER. Fare thee well. ~ Shadowgate,
181:Shake off thy bondage, O children,
and walk in the Light of the glorious day.
Never turn thy thoughts to the darkness
and surely ye shall be One with The Light.

Man is only what he believeth,
a brother of darkness or a Child of The Light.
Come though into the Light my Children.
Walk in the pathway that leads to the Sun.

Hark ye now, and list to the Wisdom.
Use thou the word I have given unto thee.
Use it and surely though shalt find
power and wisdom and Light to walk in the way.
Seek thee and find the key I have given
and Ever shalt Thou be a Child of The Light. ~ Emerald Tablet,
182:That status of knowledge is then the aim of this path and indeed of all paths when pursued to their end, to which intellectual discrimination and conception and all concentration and psychological self-knowledge and all seeking by the heart through love and by the senses through beauty and by the will through power and works and by the soul through peace and joy are only keys, avenues, first approaches and beginnings of the ascent which we have to use and to follow till the wide and infinite levels are attained and the divine doors swing open into the infinite Light.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga,
183:There are two kinds of black magicians: (1) those who use the demons of the astral plane for their villainy, which they invoke through necromancy and invocation; and (2) those who create their own demons and launch them against the world. The first group does the greatest harm to the world, but the second injure themselves more. The first group is composed mostly of conscious black magicians, while there are many in the second group who are totally ignorant of what they are doing. Some never learn their mistake until the demons they have created come back to the persons who sent them forth. ~ Manly P Hall, Magic: A Treatise on Esoteric Ethics,
184:Drugs have a long history of use in magic in various cultures, and usually in the context of either ecstatic communal rituals or in personal vision quests. However compared to people in simple pastoral tribal situations most people in developed countries now live in a perpetual state of mental hyperactivity with overactive imaginations anyway, so throwing drugs in on top of this usually just leads to confusion and a further loss of focus. Plus as the real Shamans say, if you really do succeed in opening a door with a drug it will thereafter open at will and most such substances give all they will ever give on the first attempt.
   ~ Peter J Carroll, The Octavo,
185:A bit of Prime, a bit of Matter, and a fair understanding of Life installs cybernetic devices and allows them to function; a blend of Forces and Prime conjures fire, wind, and light. With Correspondence alone, a skilled mage can step from one place to another without passing through the intervening space; add Time, and she can see past events in a distant place as well; add Forces, and she could project the images she sees upon a wall; use Matter and Correspondence instead, and she could open a door in one place, open another door in the next, and step between two doors that had not existed - and could not have existed - until that moment. ~ Mage 20th Anniversary Edition,
186:[Computer science] is not really about computers -- and it's not about computers in the same sense that physics is not really about particle accelerators, and biology is not about microscopes and Petri dishes...and geometry isn't really about using surveying instruments. Now the reason that we think computer science is about computers is pretty much the same reason that the Egyptians thought geometry was about surveying instruments: when some field is just getting started and you don't really understand it very well, it's very easy to confuse the essence of what you're doing with the tools that you use. ~ Harold Abelson, Introductory lecture to Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs,
187:For it is in God alone, by the possession of the Divine only that all the discords of life can be resolved, and therefore the raising of men towards the Divine is in the end the one effective way of helping mankind. All the other activities and realisations of our self-experience have their use and power, but in the end these crowded sidetracks or these lonely paths must circle round to converge into the wideness of the integral way by which the liberated soul transcends all, embraces all and becomes the promise and the power of the fulfilment of all in their manifested being of the Divine.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Soul and Its Liberation, 444, [T1],
188:The wand weapon similarily appears in a profusion of forms. As an instrument to assist the projection of the magical will onto the aetheric and material planes, it could be a general purpose sigil, an amulet, a ring, an enchanting mantra, or even an act or gesture one performs. As with the pentacle, there is a virtue in having a small, portable, and permanent device of this class, for power accrues to it with use. As with the cup, the power of the wand is partly to fascinate the surface functions of the mind and channel the forces concealed in the depths. Like the sword, the wand is manipulated in such a way as to describe vividly to the will and subconscious what is required of them.
   ~ Peter J Carroll, Liber Null,
189:The physical form of a magical weapon is no more than a convenient handle or anchor for its aetheric form.
The Sword and Pentacle are weapons of analysis and synthesis respectively. Upon the pentacle aetheric forms, images, and powers are assembled when the magical will and perception vitalize the imagination. The magician may create hundreds of pentacles in the course of his sorceries, yet there is a virtue in having a general purpose weapon of this class, for its power increases with use, and it can be employed as an altar for the consecration of lesser pentacles. For many operations of an evocatory type, the pentacle is placed on the cup and the conjuration performed with the wand. ~ Peter J Carroll, Liber Null,
190:[two grappling hooks for the Divine to lay hold upon one's nature]
   As he can use his thinking mind and will to restrain and correct his life impulses, so too he can bring in the action of a still higher luminous mentality aided by the deeper soul in him, the psychic being, and supersede by these greater and purer motive-powers the domination of the vital and sensational force that we call desire. He can entirely master or persuade it and offer it up for transformation to its divine Master. This higher mentality and this deeper soul, the psychic element in mall, are the two grappling hooks by which the Divine can lay hold upon his nature.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Self-Consecration, 79, [T2],
191:It depends on what is meant by the higher buddhi - whether you use the word to mean the higher part of the intellect or the higher Mind. The higher Mind in itself on its own level knows, but when it is involved in the ordinary human intelligence and works under limitations, it often does not know - or it has the idea merely that it must be so but has not the consciousness of its separate existence. The intellect can rise above its ordinary movements and feel itself as a separate power no longer working under the limitations of the vital and physical mind and the senses. It then begins to reflect something of the action of the higher mind but without the full freedom and greater light and truth of the higher mind.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Letters On Yoga - I,
192:But in what circumstances does our reason teach us that there is vice or virtue? How does this continual mystery work? Tell me, inhabitants of the Malay Archipelago, Africans, Canadians and you, Plato, Cicero, Epictetus! You all feel equally that it is better to give away the superfluity of your bread, your rice or your manioc to the indigent than to kill him or tear out his eyes. It is evident to all on earth that an act of benevolence is better than an outrage, that gentleness is preferable to wrath. We have merely to use our Reason in order to discern the shades which distinguish right and wrong. Good and evil are often close neighbours and our passions confuse them. Who will enlighten us? We ourselves when we are calm. ~ Voltaire, the Eternal Wisdom
193:The art of using it consists principally in referring all our ideas to it, discovering thus the common nature of certain things and the essential differences between others, so that ultimately one obtains a simple view of the incalculably vast complexity of the Universe.

The whole subject must be studied in the Book 777, and the main attributions committed to memory: then when by constant use the system is at last understood—as opposed to being merely memorised—the student will find fresh light break in on him at every turn as he continues to measure every item of new knowledge that he attains by this Standard. For to him the Universe will then begin to appear as a coherent and a necessary Whole. ~ Aleister Crowley, Little Essays Towards Truth, "Man",
194:The principle of Bhakti Yoga is to utilise all the normal relations of human life into which emotion enters and apply them no longer to transient worldly relations, but to the joy of the All-Loving, the All-Beautiful and the All-Blissful. Worship and meditation aroused only for the preparation and increase of intensity of the divine relationship. And this Yoga is catholic in its use of all emotional relations, so that even enmity and opposition to God, considered as an intense, impatient and perverse form of Love, is conceived as a possible means of realisation and salvation. This path, too, as ordinarily practised, leads away from world-existence to an absorption, of another kind than the Monists, in the Transcendent and Supra-cosmic.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga,
195:We cannot perceive Chaos directly, for it simultaneously contains the opposite to anything we might think it is. We can, however, occasionally glimpse and make use of partially formed matter which has only probablistic and indeterministic existence. This stuff we can call the aethers.
   * If it makes us feel any better we can call this Chaos, the Tao, or God, and imagine it to be benevolent and human-hearted. There are two schools of thought in magic. One considers the formative agent of the universe to be random and chaotic, and the other considers that it is a force of spiritual consciousness. As they have only themselves on which to base their speculations, they are basically saying that their own natures are either random and chaotic or spiritually conscious.
   ~ Peter J Carroll, Miscellaneous Excerpts Part 2,
196:To know and not to know, to be conscious of complete truthfulness while telling carefully constructed lies, to hold simultaneously two opinions which cancelled out, knowing them to be contradictory and believing in both of them, to use logic against logic, to repudiate morality while laying claim to it, to believe that democracy was impossible and that the Party was the guardian of democracy, to forget whatever it was necessary to forget, then to draw it back into memory again at the moment when it was needed, and then promptly to forget it again: and above all, to apply the same process to the process itself -- that was the ultimate subtlety: consciously to induce unconsciousness, and then, once again, to become unconscious of the act of hypnosis you had just performed. Even to understand the word 'doublethink' involved the use of doublethink. ~ George Orwell, 1984,
197:It is to bring back all the scattered threads of consciousness to a single point, a single idea. Those who can attain a perfect attention succeed in everything they undertake; they will always make rapid progress. And this kind of concentration can be developed exactly like the muscles; one may follow different systems, different methods of training. Today we know that the most pitiful weakling, for example, can with discipline become as strong as anyone else. One should not have a will that flickers out like a candle. The will, the concentration must be cultivated; it is a question of method, of regular exercise. If you will, you can. But the thought Whats the use? must not come in to weaken the will. The idea that one is born with a certain character and can do nothing about it is a stupidity.
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1950-1951,
198:PURANI: There was some effort. Only, you can say that the effort was negligible in proportion to the success.
   SRI AUROBINDO: It is not a question of proportion. One may have put in a great deal of effort and yet there could be no result because there was not a complete and total sincerity. On the other hand, when the result comes with little effort it is because the whole being has responded-- and Grace found it possible to act. All the same, effort is a contributory factor. Sometimes one goes on making an effort with no result or even the condition becomes worse. And when one has given it up, one finds suddenly that the result has come. It may be that the effort was keeping up the resistance too. And when the effort is given up, the resistance says, "This fellow has given up effort. What is the use of resisting anymore?" ( Laughter ) ~ Nirodbaran, TALKS WITH SRI AUROBINDO VOLUME 1, 405,
199:  If everything depends on the Divine intervention, then man is only a puppet and there is no use of sadhana, and there are no conditions, no law of things - therefore no universe, but only the Divine rolling things about at his pleasure. No doubt in the last resort all can be said to be the Divine cosmic working, but it is through persons, through forces that it works - under the conditions of Nature. Special intervention there can be and is, but all cannot be special intervention.

  The Divine Grace and Power can do everything, but with the full assent of the sadhak. To learn to give that full assent is the whole meaning of the sadhana. It may take time either because of ideas in the mind, desires in the vital or inertia in the physical consciousness, but these things have to be and can be removed with the aid or by calling in the action of the Divine Force. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Letters On Yoga II, 1.4.01,
200:I looked at the jail that secluded me from men and it was no longer by its high walls that I was imprisoned; no, it was Vasudeva who surrounded me. I walked under the branches of the tree in front of my cell but it was not the tree, I knew it was Vasudeva, it was Sri Krishna whom I saw standing there and holding over me his shade. I looked at the bars of my cell, the very grating that did duty for a door and again I saw Vasudeva. It was Narayana who was guarding and standing sentry over me. Or I lay on the coarse blankets that were given me for a couch and felt the arms of Sri Krishna around me, the arms of my Friend and Lover. This was the first use of the deeper vision He gave me. I looked at the prisoners in the jail, the thieves, the murderers, the swindlers, and as I looked at them I saw Vasudeva, it was Narayana whom I found in these darkened souls and misused bodies.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Karmayogin,
201:Every human acheivement, be it a scientific discovery, a picture, a statue, a temple, a home or a bridge, has to be conceived in the mind first-the plan thought out-before it can be made a reality, and when anything is to be attempted that involves any number of individuals-methods of coordination have to be considered-the methods have to be the best suited for such undertakings are engineering methods-the engineering of an idea towards a complete realization. Every engineer has to know the materials with which he has to work and the natural laws of these materials, as discovered by observation and experiment and formulated by mathematics and mechanics else he can not calculate the forces at his disposal; he can not compute the resistance of his materials; he can not determine the capacity and requirements of his power plant; in short, he can not make the most profitable use of his resources. ~ Alfred Korzybski, Manhood of Humanity,
202:Drugs are able to bring humans into the neighborhood of divine experience and can thus carry us up from our personal fate and the everyday circumstances of our life into a higher form of reality. It is, however, necessary to understand precisely what is meant by the use of drugs. We do not mean the purely physical craving...That of which we speak is something much higher, namely the knowledge of the possibility of the soul to enter into a lighter being, and to catch a glimpse of deeper insights and more magnificent visions of the beauty, truth, and the divine than we are normally able to spy through the cracks in our prison cell. But there are not many drugs which have the power of stilling such craving. The entire catalog, at least to the extent that research has thus far written it, may include only opium, hashish, and in rarer cases alcohol, which has enlightening effects only upon very particular characters. ~ The Hashish Eater, (1857) pg. 181
203:Spirit comes from the Latin word to breathe. What we breathe is air, which is certainly matter, however thin. Despite usage to the contrary, there is no necessary implication in the word spiritual that we are talking of anything other than matter (including the matter of which the brain is made), or anything outside the realm of science. On occasion, I will feel free to use the word. Science is not only compatible with spirituality; it is a profound source of spirituality. When we recognize our place in an immensity of light years and in the passage of ages, when we grasp the intricacy, beauty and subtlety of life, then that soaring feeling, that sense of elation and humility combined, is surely spiritual. So are our emotions in the presence of great art or music or literature, or of acts of exemplary selfless courage such as those of Mohandas Gandhi or Martin Luther King Jr. The notion that science and spirituality are somehow mutually exclusive does a disservice to both. ~ Carl Sagan,
204:Jnanaprakasha:: Jnana includes both the Para and the Apara Vidya, the knowledge of Brahman in Himself and the knowledge of the world; but the Yogin, reversing the order of the worldly mind, seeks to know Brahman first and through Brahman the world. Scientific knowledge, worldly information & instruction are to him secondary objects, not as it is with the ordinary scholar & scientist, his primary aim. Nevertheless these too we must take into our scope and give room to God's full joy in the world. The methods of the Yogin are also different for he tends more and more to the use of direct vision and the faculties of the vijnana and less and less to intellectual means. The ordinary man studies the object from outside and infers its inner nature from the results of his external study. The Yogin seeks to get inside his object, know it from within & use external study only as a means of confirming his view of the outward action resulting from an already known inner nature.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Record Of Yoga - I,
205:a sevenfold self-revelation within our consciousness: - it will mean the knowledge of the Absolute as the origin of all things; the knowledge of the Self, the Spirit, the Being and of the cosmos as the Self's becoming, the becoming of the Being, a manifestation of the Spirit; the knowledge of the world as one with us in the consciousness of our true self, thus cancelling our division from it by the separative idea and life of ego; the knowledge of our psychic entity and its immortal persistence in Time beyond death and earth-existence; the knowledge of our greater and inner existence behind the surface; the knowledge of our mind, life and body in its true relation to the self within and the superconscient spiritual and supramental being above them; the knowledge, finally, of the true harmony and true use of our thought, will and action and a change of all our nature into a conscious expression of the truth of the Spirit, the Self, the Divinity, the integral spiritual Reality.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine,
206:From the start, every practice requires three steps: learning, reflection, and application. To begin with, we need to receive the teachings in an authentic way. Real learning involves gaining understanding about an instruction. To do this we need to hear it clearly from someone who is part of a living tradition, who has a true transmission for the teaching, and who can pass it on clearly.

Having received the teaching, we then need to reflect upon it for ourselves. We need to gain some confidence and conviction about the value and methods of the teaching.

Finally we need to put the teaching to use by familiarizing ourselves with the practice and integrating it into our life. I want to stress this: after understanding a teaching intellectually and establishing it with certainty, it is vital to clear up any misconceptions and doubts you may have about it. Then you must make use of it in a very personal and intimate way, by practising. This is where any teaching becomes effective - by actually practising it, not simply knowing about it.
~ Adeu Rinpoche,
207:The alchemist of today is not hidden in caves and cellars, studying alone, but as he goes on with his work, it is seen that walls are built around him, and while he is in the world, like the master of old, he is not of it. As he goes further in his work, the light of other people's advice and outside help grows weaker and weaker, until finally he stands alone in darkness, and then comes the time that he must use his own lamp, and the various experiments which he has carried on must be his guide. He must take the Elixir of Life which he has developed and with it fill the lamp of his spiritual consciousness, and holding that above his head, walk into the Great Unknown, where if he has been a good and faithful servant, he will learn of the alchemy of Divinity. Where now test tubes and bottles are his implements, then worlds and globes he will study, and as a silent watcher will learn from that Divine One, who is the Great Alchemist of all the universe, the greatest alchemy of all, the creation of life, the maintenance of form, and the building of worlds. ~ Manly P Hall, The Initiates of the Flame,
208:It is here upon earth, in the body itself, that you must acquire a complete knowledge and learn to use a full and complete power. Only when you have done that will you be free to move about with entire security in all the worlds. Only when you are incapable of having the slightest fear, when you remain unmoved, for example, in the midst of the worst nightmare, can you say, "Now I am ready to go into the vital world." But this means the acquisition of a power and a knowledge that can come only when you are a perfect master of the impulses and desires of the vital nature. You must be absolutely free from everything that can bring in the beings of the darkness or allow them to rule over you; if you are not free, beware!

No attachments, no desires, no impulses, no preferences; perfect equanimity, unchanging peace and absolute faith in the Divine protection: with that you are safe, without it you are in peril. And as long as you are not safe, it is better to do like little chickens that take shelter under the mother's wings. ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1929-1931,
209:The tide of materialistic thoughts is always on the watch, waiting for the least weakness, and if we relax but one moment from our vigilance, if we are even slightly negligent, it rushes in and invades us from all sides, submerging under its heavy flood the result sometimes of numberless efforts. Then the being enters a sort of torpor, its physical needs of food and sleep increase, its intelligence is clouded, its inner vision veiled, and in spite of the little interest it really finds in such superficial activities, they occupy it almost exclusively. This state is extremely painful and tiring, for nothing is more tiring then materialistic thoughts, and the mind, worn out, suffers like a caged bird which cannot spread its wings and yet longs to be able to soar freely.
   But perhaps this state has its own use which I do not see.... In any case, I do not struggle; and like a child in its mother's arms, like a fervent disciple at the feet of his master, I trust myself to Thee and surrender to Thy guidance, sure of Thy victory.
   ~ The Mother, Prayers And Meditations, January 4th, 1914,
210:To enlarge the sense-faculties without the knowledge that would give the old sense-values their right interpretation from the new standpoint might lead to serious disorders and incapacities, might unfit for practical life and for the orderly and disciplined use of the reason. Equally, an enlargement of our mental consciousness out of the experience of the egoistic dualities into an unregulated unity with some form of total consciousness might easily bring about a confusion and incapacity for the active life of humanity in the established order of the world's relativities. This, no doubt, is the root of the injunction imposed in the Gita on the man who has the knowledge not to disturb the life-basis and thought-basis of the ignorant; for, impelled by his example but unable to comprehend the principle of his action, they would lose their own system of values without arriving at a higher foundation.
   Such a disorder and incapacity may be accepted personally and are accepted by many great souls as a temporary passage or as the price to be paid for the entry into a wider existence.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine,
211:...the present terms are there not as an unprofitable recurrence, but in active pregnant gestation of all that is yet to be unfolded by the spirit, no irrational decimal recurrence helplessly repeating for ever its figures, but an expanding series of powers of the Infinite. What is in front of us is the greater potentialities, the steps yet unclimbed, the intended mightier manifestations. Why we are here is to be this means of the spirit's upward self-unfolding. What we have to do with ourselves and our significances is to grow and open them to greater significances of divine being, divine consciousness, divine power, divine delight and multiplied unity, and what we have to do with our environment is to use it consciously for increasing spiritual purposes and make it more and more a mould for the ideal unfolding of the perfect nature and self-conception of the Divine in the cosmos. This is surely the Will in things which moves, great and deliberate, unhasting, unresting, through whatever cycles, towards a greater and greater informing of its own finite figures with its own infinite Reality.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Essays In Philosophy And Yoga,
212:It can be expected that the orthodox Christian will at first reject the theories about the Christ which occultism presents; at the same time, this same orthodox Christian will find it increasingly difficult to induce the intelligent masses of people to accept the impossible Deity and the feeble Christ, which historical Christianity has endorsed. A Christ Who is present and living, Who is known to those who follow Him, Who is a strong and able executive, and not a sweet and sentimental sufferer, Who has never left us but Who has worked for two thousand years through the medium of His disciples, the inspired men and women of all faiths, all religions, and all religious persuasions; Who has no use for fanaticism or hysterical devotion, but Who loves all men persistently, intelligently and optimistically, Who sees divinity in them all, and Who comprehends the techniques of the evolutionary development of the human consciousness (mental, emotional and physical, producing civilizations and cultures appropriate to a particular point in evolution) - these ideas the intelligent public can and will accept. p. 589/90 ~ Alice Bailey, in The Externalization of the Hierarchy (1957)
213:SHYAM: "What is the distinction between the gross body and the subtle body?"

MASTER: "The body consisting of the five gross elements is called the gross body. The subtle body is made up of the mind, the ego, the discriminating faculty, and the mind-stuff. There is also a causal body, by means of which one enjoys the Bliss of God and holds communion with Him. The Tantra calls it the Bhagavati Tanu, the Divine Body. Beyond all these is the Mahakarana, the Great Cause. That cannot be expressed by words.

"What is the use of merely listening to words? Do something! What will you achieve by merely repeating the word 'siddhi'? Will that intoxicate you? You will not be intoxicated even if you make a paste of siddhi and rub it all over your body. You must eat some of it. How can a man recognize yarns of different counts, such as number forty and number forty-one, unless he is in the trade? Those who trade in yarn do not find it at all difficult to describe a thread of a particular count. Therefore I say, practise a little spiritual discipline; then you will know all these — the gross, the subtle, the causal, and the Great Cause. While praying to God, ask only for love for His Lotus Feet." ~ Sri Ramakrishna,
214:And now what methods may be employed to safeguard the worker in the field of the world? What can be done to ensure his safety in the present strife, and in the greater strife of the coming centuries? 1. A realisation that purity of all the vehicles is the prime essential. If a Dark Brother gains control over any man, it but shows that that man has in his life some weak spot.... 2. The elimination of all fear. The forces of evolution vibrate more rapidly than those of involution, and in this fact lies a recognisable security. Fear causes weakness; weakness causes a disintegration; the weak spot breaks and a gap appears, and through that gap evil force may enter.... 3. A standing firm and unmoved, no matter what occurs. Your feet may be bathed in the mud of earth, but your head may be bathed in the sunshine of the higher regions... 4. A recognition of the use of common-sense, and the application of this common-sense to the matter in hand. Sleep much, and in sleeping, learn to render the body positive; keep busy on the emotional plane, and achieve the inner calm. Do naught to overtire the body physical, and play whenever possible. In hours of relaxation comes the adjustment that obviates later tension. ~ Alice A. Bailey, Letters on Occult Meditation p. 137/8, (1922)
215:If we do not objectify, and feel instinctively and permanently that words are not the things spoken about, then we could not speak abouth such meaningless subjects as the 'beginning' or the 'end' of time. But, if we are semantically disturbed and objectify, then, of course, since objects have a beginning and an end, so also would 'time' have a 'beggining' and an 'end'. In such pathological fancies the universe must have a 'beginning in time' and so must have been made., and all of our old anthropomorphic and objectified mythologies follow, including the older theories of entropy in physics. But, if 'time' is only a human form of representation and not an object, the universe has no 'beginning in time' and no 'end in time'; in other words, the universe is 'time'-less. The moment we realize, feel permanently, and utilize these realizations and feelings that words are not things, then only do we acquire the semantic freedom to use different forms of representation. We can fit better their structure to the facts at hand, become better adjusted to these facts which are not words, and so evaluate properly m.o (multi-ordinal) realities, which evaluation is important for sanity. ~ Alfred Korzybski, Science and Sanity: An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics,
216:Truly speaking, I have no opinion. According to a vision of truth, everything is still terribly mixed, a more or less favourable combination of light and darkness, truth and falsehood, knowledge and ignorance, and so long as decisions are made and action is undertaken according to opinions, it will always be like that.
   We want to give the example of an action that is undertaken in accordance with a vision of truth, but unfortunately we are still very far from realising this ideal, and even if the vision of truth expresses itself, it is immediately distorted in its implementation.
   So, in the present state of affairs, it is impossible to say, "This is true and that is false, this leads us away from the goal and that brings us nearer the goal."
   Everything can be used for the progress to be made; everything can be useful if we know how to use it.
   The important thing is never to lose sight of the ideal we want to realise and to make use of all circumstances in view of this goal.
   And finally, it is always better not to make an arbitrary decision for or against things, and to watch the unfolding of events with the impartiality of a witness, relying on the Divine Wisdom which will decide for the best and do what is necessary. 29 July 1961 ~ The Mother, Words Of The Mother I, [T8],
217:The human being is at home and safe in the material body; the body is his protection. There are some who are full of contempt for their bodies and think that things will be much better and easier after death without them. But in fact the body is your fortress and your shelter. While you are lodged in it the forces of the hostile world find it difficult to have a direct hold upon you.... Directly you enter any realm of this [vital] world, its beings gather round you to get out of you all you have, to draw what they can and make it a food and a prey. If you have no strong light and force radiating from within you, you move there without your body as if you had no coat to protect you against a chill and bleak atmosphere, no house to shield you, even no skin covering you, your nerves exposed and bare. There are men who say, 'How unhappy I am in this body', and think of death as an escape! But after death you have the same vital surroundings and are in danger from the same forces that are the cause of your misery in this life....
   "It is here upon earth, in the body itself, that you must acquire a complete knowledge and learn to use a full and complete power. Only when you have done that will you be free to move about with entire security in all the worlds." ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1929-1931, (12 May 1929),
218:The sadhaka of the integral Yoga will make use of all these aids according to his nature; but it is necessary that he should shun their limitations and cast from himself that exclusive tendency of egoistic mind which cries, "My God, my Incarnation, my Prophet, my Guru," and opposes it to all other realisation in a sectarian or a fanatical spirit. All sectarianism, all fanaticism must be shunned; for it is inconsistent with the integrity of the divine realisation.
   On the contrary, the sadhaka of the integral Yoga will not be satisfied until he has included all other names and forms of Deity in his own conception, seen his own Ishta Devata in all others, unified all Avatars in the unity of Him who descends in the Avatar, welded the truth in all teachings into the harmony of the Eternal Wisdom.
   Nor should he forget the aim of these external aids which is to awaken his soul to the Divine within him. Nothing has been finally accomplished if that has not been accomplished. It is not sufficient to worship Krishna, Christ or Buddha without, if there is not the revealing and the formation of the Buddha, the Christ or Krishna in ourselves. And all other aids equally have no other purpose; each is a bridge between man's unconverted state and the revelation of the Divine within him. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga,
219:Bhakti Yoga, the Path of Devotion; :::
   The path of Devotion aims at the enjoyment of the supreme Love and Bliss and utilses normally the conception of the supreme Lord in His personality as the divine Lover and enjoyer of the universe. The world is then realised as a a play of the Lord, with our human life as its final stages, pursued through the different phases of self-concealment and self-revealation. The principle of Bhakti Yoga is to utilise all the normal relations of human life into which emotion enters and apply them no longer to transient worldly relations, but to the joy of the All-Loving, the All-Beautiful and the All-Blissful. Worship and meditation are used only for the preparation and increase the intensity of the divine relationship. And this Yoga is catholic in its use of all emotional relations, so that even enmity and opposition to God, considered as an intense, impatient and perverse form of Love, is conceived as a possible means of realisation and salvation. ... We can see how this larger application of the Yoga of Devotion may be used as to lead to the elevation of the whole range of human emotion, sensation and aesthetic perception to the divine level, its spiritualisation and the justification of the cosmic labour towards love and joy in humanity.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Introduction - The Conditions of the Synthesis, The Systems of Yoga,
220:To prepare for Astral Magic a temple or series of temples needs to be erected on the plane of visualized imagination. Such temples can take any convenient form although some magicians prefer to work with an exact simulacrum of their physical temple. The astral temple is visualized in fine detail and should contain all the equipment required for ritual or at least cupboards where any required instruments can be found.
   Any objects visualized into the temple should always remain there for subsequent inspection unless specifically dissolved or removed. The most important object in the temple is the magician's image of himself working in it. At first it may seem that he is merely manipulating a puppet of himself in the temple but with persistence this should give way to a feeling of actually being there. Before beginning Astral Magic proper, the required temple and instruments together with an image of the magician moving about in it should be built up by a repeated series of visualizations until all the details are perfect. Only when this is complete should the magician begin to use the temple. Each conjuration that is performed should be planned in advance with the same attention to detail as in Ritual Magic. The various acts of astral evocation, divination, enchantment, invocation and illumination take on a similar general form to the acts of Ritual Magic which the magician adapts for astral work. ~ Peter J Carroll, Liber Kaos [T2],
221:The scientists, all of them, have their duties no doubt, but they do not fully use their education if they do not try to broaden their sense of responsibility toward all mankind instead of closing themselves up in a narrow specialization where they find their pleasure. Neither engineers nor other scientific men have any right to prefer their own personal peace to the happiness of mankind; their place and their duty are in the front line of struggling humanity, not in the unperturbed ranks of those who keep themselves aloof from life. If they are indifferent, or discouraged because they feel or think that they know that the situation is hopeless, it may be proved that undue pessimism is as dangerous a "religion" as any other blind creed. Indeed there is very little difference in kind between the medieval fanaticism of the "holy inquisition," and modern intolerance toward new ideas. All kinds of intellect must get together, for as long as we presuppose the situation to be hopeless, the situation will indeed be hopeless. The spirit of Human Engineering does not know the word "hopeless"; for engineers know that wrong methods are alone responsible for disastrous results, and that every situation can be successfully handled by the use of proper means. The task of engineering science is not only to know but to know how. Most of the scientists and engineers do not yet realize that their united judgment would be invincible; no system or class would care to disregard it. ~ Alfred Korzybski, Manhood of Humanity,
222:There must be accepted and progressively accomplished a surrender of our capacities of working into the hands of a greater Power behind us and our sense of being the doer and worker must disappear. All must be given for a more direct use into the hands of the divine Will which is hidden by these frontal appearances; for by that permitting Will alone is our action possible. A hidden Power is the true Lord and overruling Observer of our acts and only he knows through all the ignorance and perversion and deformation brought in by the ego their entire sense and ultimate purpose. There must be effected a complete transformation of our limited and distorted egoistic life and works into the large and direct outpouring of a greater divine Life, Will and Energy that now secretly supports us. This greater Will and Energy must be made conscious in us and master; no longer must it remain, as now, only a superconscious, upholding and permitting Force. There must be achieved an undistorted transmission through us of the all-wise purpose and process of a now hidden omniscient Power and omnipotent Knowledge which will turn into its pure, unobstructed, happily consenting and participating channel all our transmuted nature. This total consecration and surrender and this resultant entire transformation and free transmission make up the whole fundamental means and the ultimate aim of an integral Karmayoga.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Yoga of Divine Works, Self-Surrender in Works - The Way of the Gita, [92],
223:It is, then, in the highest mind of thought and light and will or it is in the inner heart of deepest feeling and emotion that we must first centre our consciousness, -in either of them or, if we are capable, in both together,- and use that as our leverage to lift the nature wholly towards the Divine. The concentration of an enlightened thought, will and heart turned in unison towards one vast goal of our knowledge, one luminous and infinite source of our action, one imperishable object of our emotion is the starting-point of the Yoga. And the object of our seeking must be the very fount of the Light which is growing in us, the very origin of the Force which we are calling to move our members. our one objective must be the Divine himself to whom, knowingly or unknowingly, something always aspires in our secret nature. There must be a large, many-sided yet single concentration of the thought on the idea, the perception, the vision, the awakening touch, the souls realisation of the one Divine. There must be a flaming concentration of the heart on the All and Eternal -and, when once we have found him, a deep plunging and immersion in the possession and ecstasy of the All-Beautiful. There must be a strong and immovable concentration of the will on the attainment and fulfilment of all that the Divine is and a free and plastic opening of it to all that he intends to manifest in us. This is the triple way of the Yoga.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Yoga of Divine Works, Self-Consecration, 80 [where to concentrate?],
224:the powers of concentration :::
   By concentration on anything whatsoever we are able to know that thing, to make it deliver up its concealed secrets; we must use this power to know not things, but the one Thing-in-itself. By concentration again the whole will can be gathered up for the acquisition of that which is still ungrasped, still beyond us; this power, if it is sufficiently trained, sufficiently single-minded, sufficiently sincere, sure of itself, faithful to itself alone, absolute in faith, we can use for the acquisition of any object whatsoever; but we ought to use it not for the acquisition of the many objects which the world offers to us, but to grasp spiritually that one object worthy of pursuit which is also the one subject worthy of knowledge. By concentration of our whole being on one status of itself, we can become whatever we choose; we can become, for instance, even if we were before a mass of weaknesses and fear, a mass instead of strength and courage, or we can become all a great purity, holiness and peace or a single universal soul of Love; but we ought, it is said, to use this power to become not even these things, high as they may be in comparison with what we now are, but rather to become that which is above all things and free from all action and attributes, the pure and absolute Being. All else, all other concentration can only be valuable for preparation, for previous steps, for a gradual training of the dissolute and self-dissipating thought, will and being towards their grand and unique object.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Concentration, [318],
225:Often in the beginning of the action this can be done; but as one gets engrossed in the work, one forgets. How is one to remember?
   The condition to be aimed at, the real achievement of Yoga, the final perfection and attainment, for which all else is only a preparation, is a consciousness in which it is impossible to do anything without the Divine; for then, if you are without the Divine, the very source of your action disappears; knowledge, power, all are gone. But so long as you feel that the powers you use are your own, you will not miss the Divine support.
   In the beginning of the Yoga you are apt to forget the Divine very often. But by constant aspiration you increase your remembrance and you diminish the forgetfulness. But this should not be done as a severe discipline or a duty; it must be a movement of love and joy. Then very soon a stage will come when, if you do not feel the presence of the Divine at every moment and whatever you are doing, you feel at once lonely and sad and miserable.
   Whenever you find that you can do something without feeling the presence of the Divine and yet be perfectly comfortable, you must understand that you are not consecrated in that part of your being. That is the way of the ordinary humanity which does not feel any need of the Divine. But for a seeker of the Divine Life it is very different. And when you have entirely realised unity with the Divine, then, if the Divine were only for a second to withdraw from you, you would simply drop dead; for the Divine is now the Life of your life, your whole existence, your single and complete support. If the Divine is not there, nothing is left. ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1929-1931,
226:[God is] The Hindu discipline of spirituality provides for this need of the soul by the conceptions of the Ishta Devata, the Avatar and the Guru. By the Ishta Devata, the chosen deity, is meant, - not some inferior Power, but a name and form of the transcendent and universal Godhead. Almost all religions either have as their base or make use of some such name and form of the Divine. Its necessity for the human soul is evident. God is the All and more than the All. But that which is more than the All, how shall man conceive? And even the All is at first too hard for him; for he himself in his active consciousness is a limited and selective formation and can open himself only to that which is in harmony with his limited nature. There are things in the All which are too hard for his comprehension or seem too terrible to his sensitive emotions and cowering sensations. Or, simply, he cannot conceive as the Divine, cannot approach or cannot recognise something that is too much out of the circle of his ignorant or partial conceptions. It is necessary for him to conceive God in his own image or in some form that is beyond himself but consonant with his highest tendencies and seizable by his feelings or his intelligence. Otherwise it would be difficult for him to come into contact and communion with the Divine.
   Even then his nature calls for a human intermediary so that he may feel the Divine in something entirely close to his own humanity and sensible in a human influence and example. This call is satisfied by the Divine manifest in a human appearance, the Incarnation, the Avatar - Krishna, Christ, Buddha.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Four Aids, 65 [T9],
227:We have all a ruling defect, which is for our soul as the umbilical cord of its birth in sin, and it is by this that the enemy can always lay hold upon us: for some it is vanity, for others idleness, for the majority egotism. Let a wicked and crafty mind avail itself of this means and we are lost; we may not go mad or turn idiots, but we become positively alienated, in all the force of the expression - that is, we are subjected to a foreign suggestion. In such a state one dreads instinctively everything that might bring us back to reason, and will not even listen to representations that are opposed to our obsession. Here is one of the most dangerous disorders which can affect the moral nature. The sole remedy for such a bewitchment is to make use of folly itself in order to cure folly, to provide the sufferer with imaginary satisfactions in the opposite order to that wherein he is now lost. Endeavour, for example, to cure an ambitious person by making him desire the glories of heaven - mystic remedy; cure one who is dissolute by true love - natural remedy; obtain honourable successes for a vain person; exhibit unselfishness to the avaricious and procure for them legitimate profit by honourable participation in generous enterprises, etc. Acting in this way upon the moral nature, we may succeed in curing a number of physical maladies, for the moral affects the physical in virtue of the magical axiom: "That which is above is like unto that which is below." This is why the Master said, when speaking of the paralyzed woman: "Satan has bound her." A disease invariably originates in a deficiency or an excess, and ever at the root of a physical evil we shall find a moral disorder. This is an unchanging law of Nature. ~ Eliphas Levi, Transcendental Magic,
228:the aim of our yoga :::
   The aim set before our Yoga is nothing less than to hasten this supreme object of our existence here. Its process leaves behind the ordinary tardy method of slow and confused growth through the evolution of Nature. For the natural evolution is at its best an uncertain growth under cover, partly by the pressure of the environment, partly by a groping education and an ill-lighted purposeful effort, an only partially illumined and half-automatic use of opportunities with many blunders and lapses and relapses; a great portion of it is made up of apparent accidents and circumstances and vicissitudes, - though veiling a secret divine intervention and guidance. In Yoga we replace this confused crooked crab-motion by a rapid, conscious and self-directed evolution which is planned to carry us, as far as can be, in a straight line towards the goal set before us. In a certain sense it may be an error to speak of a goal anywhere in a progression which may well be infinite. Still we can conceive of an immediate goal, an ulterior objective beyond our present achievement towards which the soul in man can aspire. There lies before him the possibility of a new birth; there can be an ascent into a higher and wider plane of being and its descent to transform his members. An enlarged and illumined consciousness is possible that shall make of him a liberated spirit and a perfected force - and, if spread beyond the individual, it might even constitute a divine humanity or else a new, a supramental and therefore a superhuman race. It is this new birth that we make our aim: a growth into a divine consciousness is the whole meaning of our Yoga, an integral conversion to divinity not only of the soul but of all the parts of our nature.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Self-Surrender in Works - The Way of the Gita, 89-90,
229:principle of Yogic methods :::
   Yogic methods have something of the same relation to the customary psychological workings of man as has the scientific handling of the force of electricity or of steam to their normal operations in Nature. And they, too, like the operations of Science, are formed upon a knowledge developed and confirmed by regular experiment, practical analysis and constant result. All Rajayoga, for instance, depends on this perception and experience that our inner elements, combinations, functions, forces can be separated or dissolved, can be new-combined and set to novel and formerly impossible workings or can be transformed and resolved into a new general synthesis by fixed internal processes. Hathayoga similarly depends on this perception and experience that the vital forces and function to which our life is normally subjected and whose ordinary operations seem set and indispensable, can be mastered and the operations changed or suspended with results that would otherwise be impossible and that seem miraculous to those who have not seized the raionale of their process. And if in some other of its forms this character of Yoga is less apparent, because they are more intuitive and less mechanical, nearer, like the Yoga of Devotion, to a supernal ecstasy or, like the Yoga of Knowledge, to a supernal infinity of consciousness and being, yet they too start from the use of some principal faculty in us by ways and for ends not contemplated in its everyday spontaneous workings. All methods grouped under the common name of Yoga are special psychological processes founded on a fixed truth of Nature and developing, out of normal functions, powers and results which were always latent but which her ordinary movements do not easily or do not often manifest.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Introduction - The Conditions of the Synthesis, Life and Yoga,
230:mastering the lower self and leverage for the march towards the Divine :::
   In proportion as he can thus master and enlighten his lower self, he is man and no longer an animal. When he can begin to replace desire altogether by a still greater enlightened thought and sight and will in touch with the Infinite, consciously subject to a diviner will than his own, linked to a more universal and transcendent knowledge, he has commenced the ascent towards tile superman; he is on his upward march towards the Divine.
   It is, then, in the highest mind of thought and light and will or it is in the inner heart of deepest feeling and emotion that we must first centre our consciousness, -- in either of them or, if we are capable, in both together, -- and use that as our leverage to lift the nature wholly towards the Divine. The concentration of an enlightened thought, will and heart turned in unison towards one vast goal of our knowledge, one luminous and infinite source of our action, one imperishable object of our emotion is the starting-point of the Yoga. And the object of our seeking must be the very fount of the Light which is growing in us, the very origin of the Force which we are calling to move our members. Our one objective must be the Divine himself to whom, knowingly or unknowingly, something always aspires in our secret nature. There must be a large, many-sided yet single concentration of the thought on the idea, the perception, the vision, the awakening touch, the soul's realisation of the one Divine. There must be a flaming concentration of the heart on the All and Eternal and, when once we have found him, a deep plunging and immersion in the possession and ecstasy of the All-Beautiful. There must be a strong and immovable concentration of the will on the attainment and fulfilment of all that the Divine is and a free and plastic opening of it to all that he intends to manifest in us. This is the triple way of the Yoga.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Self-Consecration, 80-81,
231:Has any one at the end of the nineteenth century any distinct notion of what poets of a stronger age understood by the word inspiration? If not, I will describe it. If one had the smallest vestige of superstition left in one, it would hardly be possible completely to set aside the idea that one is the mere incarnation, mouthpiece, or medium of an almighty power. The idea of revelation, in the sense that something which profoundly convulses and upsets one becomes suddenly visible and audible with indescribable certainty and accuracy―describes the simple fact. One hears―one does not seek; one takes―one does not ask who gives. A thought suddenly flashes up like lightening; it comes with necessity, without faltering. I have never had any choice in the matter. There is an ecstasy so great that the immense strain of it is sometimes relaxed by a flood of tears, during which one's steps now involuntarily rush and anon involuntarily lag. There is the feeling that one is utterly out of hand, with the very distinct consciousness of an endless number of fine thrills and titillations descending to one's very toes. There is a depth of happiness in which the most painful and gloomy parts do not act as antitheses to the rest, but are produced and required as necessary shades of color in such an overflow of light. There is an instinct of rhythmic relations which embraces a whole world of forms (length, the need of a wide-embracing rhythm, is almost the measure of the force of an inspiration, a sort of counterpart to its pressure and tension). Everything happens quite involuntary, as if in a tempestuous outburst of freedom, of absoluteness, of power and divinity. The involuntary nature of the figures and similes is the most remarkable thing; everything seems to present itself as the readiest, the truest, and simplest means of expression. It actually seems, to use one of Zarathustra's own phrases, as if all things came to one, and offered themselves as similes. ~ Friedrich Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra [trans. Thomas_Common] (1999),
232:the omnipresent Trinity :::
   In practice three conceptions are necessary before there can be any possibility of Yoga; there must be, as it were, three consenting parties to the effort,-God, Nature and the human soul or, in more abstract language, the Transcendental, the Universal and the Individual. If the individual and Nature are left to themselves, the one is bound to the other and unable to exceed appreciably her lingering march. Something transcendent is needed, free from her and greater, which will act upon us and her, attracting us upward to Itself and securing from her by good grace or by force her consent to the individual ascension. It is this truth which makes necessary to every philosophy of Yoga the conception of the Ishwara, Lord, supreme Soul or supreme Self, towards whom the effort is directed and who gives the illuminating touch and the strength to attain. Equally true is the complementary idea so often enforced by the Yoga of devotion that as the Transcendent is necessary to the individual and sought after by him, so also the individual is necessary in a sense to the Transcendent and sought after by It. If the Bhakta seeks and yearns after Bhagavan, Bhagavan also seeks and yearns after the Bhakta. There can be no Yoga of knowledge without a human seeker of the knowledge, the supreme subject of knowledge and the divine use by the individual of the universal faculties of knowledge; no Yoga of devotion without the human God-lover, the supreme object of love and delight and the divine use by the individual of the universal faculties of spiritual, emotional and aesthetic enjoyment; no Yoga of works without the human worker, the supreme Will, Master of all works and sacrifices, and the divine use by the individual of the universal faculties of power and action. However Monistic maybe our intellectual conception of the highest truth of things, in practice we are compelled to accept this omnipresent Trinity.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Introduction - The Conditions of the Synthesis, The Systems of Yoga,
233:the spiritual force behind adoration :::
   All love, indeed, that is adoration has a spiritual force behind it, and even when it is offered ignorantly and to a limited object, something of that splendor appears through the poverty of the rite and the smallness of its issues. For love that is worship is at once an aspiration and a preparation: it can bring even within its small limits in the Ignorance a glimpse of a still more or less blind and partial but surprising realisation; for there are moments when it is not we but the One who loves and is loved in us, and even a human passion can be uplifted and glorified by a slight glimpse of this infinite Love and Lover. It is for this reason that the worship of the god, the worship of the idol, the human magnet or ideal are not to be despised; for these are steps through which the human race moves towards that blissful passion and ecstasy of the Infinite which, even in limiting it, they yet represent for our imperfect vision when we have still to use the inferior steps Nature has hewn for our feet and admit the stages of our progress. Certain idolatries are indispensable for the development of our emotional being, nor will the man who knows be hasty at any time to shatter this image unless he can replace it in the heart of the worshipper by the Reality it figures. Moreover, they have this power because there is always something in them that is greater than their forms and, even when we reach the supreme worship, that abides and becomes a prolongation of it or a part of its catholic wholeness. our knowledge is still imperfect in us, love incomplete if even when we know That which surpasses all forms and manifestations, we cannot still accept the Divine in creature and object, in man, in the kind, in the animal, in the tree, in the flower, in the work of our hands, in the Nature-Force which is then no longer to us the blind action of a material machinery but a face and power of the universal Shakti: for in these things too is the presence of the Eternal.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Ascent of the Sacrifice - 2, The Works of Love - The Works of Life, 159,
234:It is not very easy for the customary mind of man, always attached to its past and present associations, to conceive of an existence still human, yet radically changed in what are now our fixed circumstances.We are in respect to our possible higher evolution much in the position of the original Ape of the Darwinian theory. It would have been impossible for that Ape leading his instinctive arboreal life in primeval forests to conceive that there would be one day an animal on the earth who would use a new faculty called reason upon the materials of his inner and outer existence, who would dominate by that power his instincts and habits, change the circumstances of his physical life, build for himself houses of stone, manipulate Nature's forces, sail the seas, ride the air, develop codes of conduct, evolve conscious methods for his mental and spiritual development. And if such a conception had been possible for the Ape-mind, it would still have been difficult for him to imagine that by any progress of Nature or long effort of Will and tendency he himself could develop into that animal. Man, because he has acquired reason and still more because he has indulged his power of imagination and intuition, is able to conceive an existence higher than his own and even to envisage his personal elevation beyond his present state into that existence. His idea of the supreme state is an absolute of all that is positive to his own concepts and desirable to his own instinctive aspiration,-Knowledge without its negative shadow of error, Bliss without its negation in experience of suffering, Power without its constant denial by incapacity, purity and plenitude of being without the opposing sense of defect and limitation. It is so that he conceives his gods; it is so that he constructs his heavens. But it is not so that his reason conceives of a possible earth and a possible humanity. His dream of God and Heaven is really a dream of his own perfection; but he finds the same difficulty in accepting its practical realisation here for his ultimate aim as would the ancestral Ape if called upon to believe in himself as the future Man. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, Ego and the Dualities,
235:But usually the representative influence occupies a much larger place in the life of the sadhaka. If the Yoga is guided by a received written Shastra, - some Word from the past which embodies the experience of former Yogins, - it may be practised either by personal effort alone or with the aid of a Guru. The spiritual knowledge is then gained through meditation on the truths that are taught and it is made living and conscious by their realisation in the personal experience; the Yoga proceeds by the results of prescribed methods taught in a Scripture or a tradition and reinforced and illumined by the instructions of the Master. This is a narrower practice, but safe and effective within its limits, because it follows a well-beaten track to a long familiar goal.

For the sadhaka of the integral Yoga it is necessary to remember that no written Shastra, however great its authority or however large its spirit, can be more than a partial expression of the eternal Knowledge. He will use, but never bind himself even by the greatest Scripture. Where the Scripture is profound, wide, catholic, it may exercise upon him an influence for the highest good and of incalculable importance. It may be associated in his experience with his awakening to crowning verities and his realisation of the highest experiences. His Yoga may be governed for a long time by one Scripture or by several successively, - if it is in the line of the great Hindu tradition, by the Gita, for example, the Upanishads, the Veda. Or it may be a good part of his development to include in its material a richly varied experience of the truths of many Scriptures and make the future opulent with all that is best in the past. But in the end he must take his station, or better still, if he can, always and from the beginning he must live in his own soul beyond the limitations of the word that he uses. The Gita itself thus declares that the Yogin in his progress must pass beyond the written Truth, - sabdabrahmativartate - beyond all that he has heard and all that he has yet to hear, - srotavyasya srutasya ca. For he is not the sadhaka of a book or of many books; he is a sadhaka of the Infinite. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Four Aids,
236:outward appearances..." I did not quite understand "the egoistic state of consciousness absorbed in the outward People are occupied with outward things. That means that the consciousness is turned towards external things - that is, all the things of life which one sees, knows, does - instead of being turned inwards in order to find the deeper truth, the divine Presence. This is the first movement. You are busy with all that you do, with the people around you, the things you use; and then with life: sleeping, eating, talking, working a little, having a little fun also; and then beginning over again: sleeping, eating, etc., etc., and then it begins again. And then what this one has said, what that one has done, what one ought to do, the lesson one ought to learn, the exercise one ought to prepare; and then again whether one is keeping well, whether one is feeling fit, etc.

   This is what one usually thinks about.

   So the first movement - and it is not so easy - is to make all that pass to the background, and let one thing come inside and in front of the consciousness as the important thing: the discovery of the very purpose of existence and life, to learn what one is, why one lives, and what there is behind all this. This is the first step: to be interested more in the cause and goal than in the manifestation. That is, the first movement is a withdrawal of the consciousness from this total identification with outward and apparent things, and a kind of inward concentration on what one wants to discover, the Truth one wants to discover.

   This is the first movement.

   Many people who are here forget one thing. They want to begin by the end. They think that they are ready to express in their life what they call the supramental Force or Consciousness, and they want to infuse this in their actions, their movements, their daily life. But the trouble is that they don't at all know what the supramental Force or Consciousness is and that first of all it is necessary to take the reverse path, the way of interiorisation and of withdrawal from life, in order to find within oneself this Truth which has to be expressed.

   For as long as one has not found it, there is nothing to ~ The Mother,
237:The most disconcerting discovery is to find that every part of us -- intellect, will, sense-mind, nervous or desire self, the heart, the body-has each, as it were, its own complex individuality and natural formation independent of the rest; it neither agrees with itself nor with the others nor with the representative ego which is the shadow cast by some central and centralising self on our superficial ignorance. We find that we are composed not of one but many personalities and each has its own demands and differing nature. Our being is a roughly constituted chaos into which we have to introduce the principle of a divine order. Moreover, we find that inwardly too, no less than outwardly, we are not alone in the world; the sharp separateness of our ego was no more than a strong imposition and delusion; we do not exist in ourselves, we do not really live apart in an inner privacy or solitude. Our mind is a receiving, developing and modifying machine into which there is being constantly passed from moment to moment a ceaseless foreign flux, a streaming mass of disparate materials from above, from below, from outside. Much more than half our thoughts and feelings are not our own in the sense that they take form out of ourselves; of hardly anything can it be said that it is truly original to our nature. A large part comes to us from others or from the environment, whether as raw material or as manufactured imports; but still more largely they come from universal Nature here or from other worlds and planes and their beings and powers and influences; for we are overtopped and environed by other planes of consciousness, mind planes, life planes, subtle matter planes, from which our life and action here are fed, or fed on, pressed, dominated, made use offer the manifestation of their forms and forces. The difficulty of our separate salvation is immensely increased by this complexity and manifold openness and subjection to tile in-streaming energies of the universe. Of all this we have to take account, to deal with it, to know what is the secret stuff of our nature and its constituent and resultant motions and to create in it all a divine centre and a true harmony and luminous order. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, 1.02,
238:The Absolute is beyond personality and beyond impersonality, and yet it is both the Impersonal and the supreme Person and all persons. The Absolute is beyond the distinction of unity and multiplicity, and yet it is the One and the innumerable Many in all the universes. It is beyond all limitation by quality and yet it is not limited by a qualityless void but is too all infinite qualities. It is the individual soul and all souls and more of them; it is the formless Brahman and the universe. It is the cosmic and the supracosmic spirit, the supreme Lord, the supreme Self, the supreme Purusha and supreme shakti, the Ever Unborn who is endlessly born, the Infinite who is innumerably finite, the multitudinous One, the complex Simple, the many-sided Single, the Word of the Silence Ineffable, the impersonal omnipresent Person, the Mystery, translucent in highest consciousness to its own spirit, but to a lesser consciousness veiled in its own exceeding light and impenetrable for ever. These things are to the dimensional mind irreconcilable opposites, but to the constant vision and experience of the supramental Truth-Consciousness they are so simply and inevitably the intrinsic nature of each other that even to think of them as contraries is an unimaginable violence. The walls constructed by the measuring and separating Intellect have disappeared and the Truth in its simplicity and beauty appears and reduces all to terms of its harmony and unity and light. Dimensions and distinctions remain but as figures for use, not a separative prison for the self-forgetting Spirit.
2:In the ordinary Yoga of knowledge it is only necessary to recognise two planes of our consciousness, the spiritual and the materialised mental; the pure reason standing between these two views them both, cuts through the illusions of the phenomenal world, exceeds the materialised mental plane, sees the reality of the spiritual; and then the will of the individual Purusha unifying itself with this poise of knowledge rejects the lower and draws back to the supreme plane, dwells there, loses mind and body, sheds life from it and merges itself in the supreme Purusha, is delivered from individual existence. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis of Yoga, 2.01 - The Object of Knowledge,
239:If we analyse the classes of life, we readily find that there are three cardinal classes which are radically distinct in function. A short analysis will disclose to us that, though minerals have various activities, they are not "living." The plants have a very definite and well known function-the transformation of solar energy into organic chemical energy. They are a class of life which appropriates one kind of energy, converts it into another kind and stores it up; in that sense they are a kind of storage battery for the solar energy; and so I define THE PLANTS AS THE CHEMISTRY-BINDING class of life.
   The animals use the highly dynamic products of the chemistry-binding class-the plants-as food, and those products-the results of plant-transformation-undergo in animals a further transformation into yet higher forms; and the animals are correspondingly a more dynamic class of life; their energy is kinetic; they have a remarkable freedom and power which the plants do not possess-I mean the freedom and faculty to move about in space; and so I define ANIMALS AS THE SPACE-BINDING CLASS OF LIFE.
   And now what shall we say of human beings? What is to be our definition of Man? Like the animals, human beings do indeed possess the space-binding capacity but, over and above that, human beings possess a most remarkable capacity which is entirely peculiar to them-I mean the capacity to summarise, digest and appropriate the labors and experiences of the past; I mean the capacity to use the fruits of past labors and experiences as intellectual or spiritual capital for developments in the present; I mean the capacity to employ as instruments of increasing power the accumulated achievements of the all-precious lives of the past generations spent in trial and error, trial and success; I mean the capacity of human beings to conduct their lives in the ever increasing light of inherited wisdom; I mean the capacity in virtue of which man is at once the heritor of the by-gone ages and the trustee of posterity. And because humanity is just this magnificent natural agency by which the past lives in the present and the present for the future, I define HUMANITY, in the universal tongue of mathematics and mechanics, to be the TIME-BINDING CLASS OF LIFE. ~ Alfred Korzybski, Manhood of Humanity,
240:The one high and reasonable course for the individual human being, - unless indeed he is satisfied with pursuing his personal purposes or somehow living his life until it passes out of him, - is to study the laws of the Becoming and take the best advantage of them to realise, rationally or intuitionally, inwardly or in the dynamism of life, its potentialities in himself or for himself or in or for the race of which he is a member; his business is to make the most of such actualities as exist and to seize on or to advance towards the highest possibilities that can be developed here or are in the making. Only mankind as a whole can do this with entire effect, by the mass of individual and collective action, in the process of time, in the evolution of the race experience: but the individual man can help towards it in his own limits, can do all these things for himself to a certain extent in the brief space of life allotted to him; but, especially, his thought and action can be a contribution towards the present intellectual, moral and vital welfare and the future progress of the race. He is capable of a certain nobility of being; an acceptance of his inevitable and early individual annihilation does not preclude him from making a high use of the will and thought which have been developed in him or from directing them to great ends which shall or may be worked out by humanity. Even the temporary character of the collective being of humanity does not so very much matter, - except in the most materialist view of existence; for so long as the universal Becoming takes the form of human body and mind, the thought, the will it has developed in its human creature will work itself out and to follow that intelligently is the natural law and best rule of human life. Humanity and its welfare and progress during its persistence on earth provide the largest field and the natural limits for the terrestrial aim of our being; the superior persistence of the race and the greatness and importance of the collective life should determine the nature and scope of our ideals. But if the progress or welfare of humanity be excluded as not our business or as a delusion, the individual is there; to achieve his greatest possible perfection or make the most of his life in whatever way his nature demands will then be life's significance.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, [T1],
241:the ways of the Bhakta and man of Knowledge :::
   In the ordinary paths of Yoga the method used for dealing with these conflicting materials is direct and simple. One or another of the principal psychological forces in us is selected as our single means for attaining to the Divine; the rest is quieted into inertia or left to starve in its smallness. The Bhakta, seizing on the emotional forces of the being, the intense activities of the heart, abides concentrated in the love of God, gathered up as into a single one-pointed tongue of fire; he is indifferent to the activities of thought, throws behind him the importunities of the reason, cares nothing for the mind's thirst for knowledge. All the knowledge he needs is his faith and the inspirations that well up from a heart in communion with the Divine. He has no use for any will to works that is not turned to the direct worship of the Beloved or the service of the temple. The man of Knowledge, self-confined by a deliberate choice to the force and activities of discriminative thought, finds release in the mind's inward-drawn endeavour. He concentrates on the idea of the self, succeeds by a subtle inner discernment in distinguishing its silent presence amid the veiling activities of Nature, and through the perceptive idea arrives at the concrete spiritual experience. He is indifferent to the play of the emotions, deaf to the hunger-call of passion, closed to the activities of Life, -- the more blessed he, the sooner they fall away from him and leave him free, still and mute, the eternal non-doer. The body is his stumbling-block, the vital functions are his enemies; if their demands can be reduced to a minimum, that is his great good fortune. The endless difficulties that arise from the environing world are dismissed by erecting firmly against them a defence of outer physical and inner spiritual solitude; safe behind a wall of inner silence, he remains impassive and untouched by the world and by others. To be alone with oneself or alone with the Divine, to walk apart with God and his devotees, to entrench oneself in the single self-ward endeavour of the mind or Godward passion of the heart is the trend of these Yogas. The problem is solved by the excision of all but the one central difficulty which pursues the only chosen motive-force; into the midst of the dividing calls of our nature the principle of an exclusive concentration comes sovereignly to our rescue.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Self-Consecration. 76-77,
242:Integral knowledge will then mean the cancelling of the sevenfold Ignorance by the discovery of what it misses and ignores, a sevenfold self-revelation within our consciousness:- it will mean the knowledge of the Absolute as the origin of all things; the knowledge of the Self, the Spirit, the Being and of the cosmos as the Self's becoming, the becoming of the Being, a manifestation of the Spirit; the knowledge of the world as one with us in the consciousness of our true self, thus cancelling our division from it by the separative idea and life of ego; the knowledge of our psychic entity and its immortal persistence in Time beyond death and earth-existence; the knowledge of our greater and inner existence behind the surface; the knowledge of our mind, life and body in its true relation to the self within and the superconscient spiritual and supramental being above them; the knowledge, finally, of the true harmony and true use of our thought, will and action and a change of all our nature into a conscious expression of the truth of the Spirit, the Self, the Divinity, the integral spiritual Reality. But this is not an intellectual knowledge which can be learned and completed in our present mould of consciousness; it must be an experience, a becoming, a change of consciousness, a change of being. This brings in the evolutionary character of the Becoming and the fact that our mental ignorance is only a stage in our evolution. The integral knowledge, then, can only come by an evolution of our being and our nature, and that would seem to signify a slow process in Time such as has accompanied the other evolutionary transformations. But as against that inference there is the fact that the evolution has now become conscious and its method and steps need not be altogether of the same character as when it was subconscious in its process. The integral knowledge, since it must result from a change of consciousness, can be gained by a process in which our will and endeavour have a part, in which they can discover and apply their own steps and method: its growth in us can proceed by a conscious self-transformation. It is necessary then to see what is likely to be the principle of this new process of evolution and what are the movements of the integral knowledge that must necessarily emerge in it,-or, in other words, what is the nature of the consciousness that must be the base of the life divine and how that life may be expected to be formed or to form itself, to materialise or, as one might say, to realise.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, Reality and the Integral Knowledge, 681,
243:Why do we forget things?

   Ah! I suppose there are several reasons. First, because one makes use of the memory to remember. Memory is a mental instrument and depends on the formation of the brain. Your brain is constantly growing, unless it begins to degenerate, but still its growth can continue for a very, very long time, much longer than that of the body. And in this growth, necessarily some things will take the place of others. And as the mental instrument develops, things which have served their term or the transitory moment in the development may be wiped out to give place to the result. So the result of all that you knew is there, living in itself, but the road traversed to reach it may be completely blurred. That is, a good functioning of the memory means remembering only the results so as to be able to have the elements for moving forward and a new construction. That is more important than just retaining things rigidly in the mind.
   Now, there is another aspect also. Apart from the mental memory, which is something defective, there are states of consciousness. Each state of consciousness in which one happens to be registers the phenomena of a particular moment, whatever they may be. If your consciousness remains limpid, wide and strong, you can at any moment whatsoever, by concentrating, call into the active consciousness what you did, thought, saw, observed at any time before; all this you can remember by bringing up in yourself the same state of consciousness. And that, that is never forgotten. You could live a thousand years and you would still remember it. Consequently, if you don't want to forget, it must be your consciousness which remembers and not your mental memory. Your mental memory will be wiped out inevitably, get blurred, and new things will take the place of the old ones. But things of which you are conscious you do not forget. You have only to bring up the same state of consciousness again. And thus one can remember circumstances one has lived thousands of years ago, if one knows how to bring up the same state of consciousness. It is in this way that one can remember one's past lives. This never gets blotted out, while you don't have any more the memory of what you have done physically when you were very young. You would be told many things you no longer remember. That gets wiped off immediately. For the brain is constantly changing and certain weaker cells are replaced by others which are much stronger, and by other combinations, other cerebral organisations. And so, what was there before is effaced or deformed.
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1954,
244:... one of the major personality traits was neuroticism, the tendency to feel negative emotion. He [Jung] never formalized that idea in his thinking. Its a great oversight in some sense because the capacity to experience negative emotion, when thats exaggerated that seems to be the core feature of everything we that we regard as psychopathology. Psychiatric and psychological illness. Not the only thing but its the primary factor. So.

Q: What is the best way to avoid falling back into nihilistic behaviours and thinking?
JBP:Well, a large part of that I would say is habit. The development and maintainance of good practices. Habits. If you find yourself desolute, neurotic, if your thought tends in the nihilistic direction and you tend to fall apart, organizing your life across multiple dimensions is a good antidote its not exactly thinking.
Do you have an intimate relationship? If not then well probably you could use one.
Do you have contact with close family members, siblings, children, parents, or even people who are more distantly related. If not, you probably need that.
Do you see your friends a couple of times a week? And do something social with them?
Do you have a way of productively using your time outside of employment?
Are you employed?
Do you have a good job? Or at least a job that is practically sufficient and enables you to work with people who you like working with? Even if the job itself is mundane or repetitive or difficult sometimes the relationships you establish in an employment situation like that can make the job worthwhile.
Have you regulated your response to temptations? Pornography, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, is that under control?

I would say differentiate the problem. Theres multiple dimensions of attainment, ambition, pleasure, responsibility all of that that make up a life, and to the degree that is it possible you want to optimize your functioning on as many of those dimensions as possible.
You might also organize your schedule to the degree that you have that capacity for discipline.
Do you get enough sleep?
Do you go to bed at a regular time?
Do you get up at a regular time?
Do you eat regularly and appropriately and enought and not too much?
Are your days and your weeks and your months characterized by some tolerable, repeatable structure? That helps you meet your responsibilities but also shields you from uncertainly and chaos and provides you with multiple sources of reward?
Those are all the questions decompose the problem into, the best way of avoiding falling into nihilistic behaviours and thinking. ~ Jordan B. Peterson, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-geMoCsNAw,
245:PROTECTION
   Going to sleep is a little like dying, a journey taken alone into the unknown. Ordinarily we are not troubled about sleep because we are familiar with it, but think about what it entails. We completely lose ourselves in a void for some period of time, until we arise again in a dream. When we do so, we may have a different identity and a different body. We may be in a strange place, with people we do not know, involved in baffling activities that may seem quite risky.
   Just trying to sleep in an unfamiliar place may occasion anxiety. The place may be perfectly secure and comfortable, but we do not sleep as well as we do at home in familiar surroundings. Maybe the energy of the place feels wrong. Or maybe it is only our own insecurity that disturbs us,and even in familiar places we may feel anxious while waiting for sleep to come, or be frightenedby what we dream. When we fall asleep with anxiety, our dreams are mingled with fear and tension, sleep is less restful, and the practice harder to do. So it is a good idea to create a sense of protection before we sleep and to turn our sleeping area into a sacred space.
   This is done by imagining protective dakinis all around the sleeping area. Visualize the dakinis as beautiful goddesses, enlightened female beings who are loving, green in color, and powerfully protective. They remain near as you fall asleep and throughout the night, like mothers watching over their child, or guardians surrounding a king or queen. Imagine them everywhere, guarding the doors and the windows, sitting next to you on the bed, walking in the garden or the yard, and so on, until you feel completely protected.
   Again, this practice is more than just trying to visualize something: see the dakinis with your mind but also use your imagination to feel their presence. Creating a protective, sacred environment in this way is calming and relaxing and promotes restful sleep. This is how the mystic lives: seeing the magic, changing the environment with the mind, and allowing actions, even actions of the imagination, to have significance.
   You can enhance the sense of peace in your sleeping environment by keeping objects of a sacred nature in the bedroom: peaceful, loving images, sacred and religious symbols, and other objects that direct your mind toward the path.
   The Mother Tantra tells us that as we prepare for sleep we should maintain awareness of the causes of dream, the object to focus upon, the protectors, and of ourselves. Hold these together inawareness, not as many things, but as a single environment, and this will have a great effect in dream and sleep.
   ~ Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche, The Tibetan Yogas Of Dream And Sleep,
246:INVOCATION
   The ultimate invocation, that of Kia, cannot be performed. The paradox is that as Kia has no dualized qualities, there are no attributes by which to invoke it. To give it one quality is merely to deny it another. As an observant dualistic being once said:
   I am that I am not.
   Nevertheless, the magician may need to make some rearrangements or additions to what he is. Metamorphosis may be pursued by seeking that which one is not, and transcending both in mutual annihilation. Alternatively, the process of invocation may be seen as adding to the magician's psyche any elements which are missing. It is true that the mind must be finally surrendered as one enters fully into Chaos, but a complete and balanced psychocosm is more easily surrendered.
   The magical process of shuffling beliefs and desires attendant upon the process of invocation also demonstrates that one's dominant obsessions or personality are quite arbitrary, and hence more easily banished.
   There are many maps of the mind (psychocosms), most of which are inconsistent, contradictory, and based on highly fanciful theories. Many use the symbology of god forms, for all mythology embodies a psychology. A complete mythic pantheon resumes all of man's mental characteristics. Magicians will often use a pagan pantheon of gods as the basis for invoking some particular insight or ability, as these myths provide the most explicit and developed formulation of the particular idea's extant. However it is possible to use almost anything from the archetypes of the collective unconscious to the elemental qualities of alchemy.
   If the magician taps a deep enough level of power, these forms may manifest with sufficient force to convince the mind of the objective existence of the god. Yet the aim of invocation is temporary possession by the god, communication from the god, and manifestation of the god's magical powers, rather than the formation of religious cults.
   The actual method of invocation may be described as a total immersion in the qualities pertaining to the desired form. One invokes in every conceivable way. The magician first programs himself into identity with the god by arranging all his experiences to coincide with its nature. In the most elaborate form of ritual he may surround himself with the sounds, smells, colors, instruments, memories, numbers, symbols, music, and poetry suggestive of the god or quality. Secondly he unites his life force to the god image with which he has united his mind. This is accomplished with techniques from the gnosis. Figure 5 shows some examples of maps of the mind. Following are some suggestions for practical ritual invocation.
   ~ Peter J Carroll, Liber Null,
247:10000 ::: The True Object of Spiritual Seeking:
   To find the Divine is indeed the first reason for seeking the spiritual Truth and the spiritual life; it is the one thing indispensable and all the rest is nothing without it. The Divine once found, to manifest Him,-that is, first of all to transform one's own limited consciousness into the Divine Consciousness, to live in the infinite Peace, Light, Love, Strength, Bliss, to become that in one's essential nature and, as a consequence, to be its vessel, channel, instrument in one's active nature. To bring into activity the principle of oneness on the material plane or to work for humanity is a mental mistranslation of the Truth-these things cannot be the first or true object of spiritual seeking. We must find the Self, the Divine, then only can we know what is the work the Self or the Divine demands from us. Until then our life and action can only be a help or means towards finding the Divine and it ought not to have any other purpose. As we grow in the inner consciousness, or as the spiritual Truth of the Divine grows in us, our life and action must indeed more and more flow from that, be one with that. But to decide beforehand by our limited mental conceptions what they must be is to hamper the growth of the spiritual Truth within. As that grows we shall feel the Divine Light and Truth, the Divine Power and Force, the Divine Purity and Peace working within us, dealing with our actions as well as our consciousness, making use of them to reshape us into the Divine Image, removing the dross, substituting the pure gold of the Spirit. Only when the Divine Presence is there in us always and the consciousness transformed, can we have the right to say that we are ready to manifest the Divine on the material plane. To hold up a mental ideal or principle and impose that on the inner working brings the danger of limiting ourselves to a mental realisation or of impeding or even falsifying by a half-way formation the true growth into the full communion and union with the Divine and the free and intimate outflowing of His will in our life. This is a mistake of orientation to which the mind of today is especially prone. It is far better to approach the Divine for the Peace or Light or Bliss that the realisation of Him gives than to bring in these minor things which can divert us from the one thing needful. The divinisation of the material life also as well as the inner life is part of what we see as the Divine Plan, but it can only be fulfilled by an outflowing of the inner realisation, something that grows from within outward, not by the working out of a mental principle.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Letters On Yoga - II, [T1],
248:Ekajaṭī or Ekajaṭā, (Sanskrit: "One Plait Woman"; Wylie: ral gcig ma: one who has one knot of hair),[1] also known as Māhacīnatārā,[2] is one of the 21 Taras. Ekajati is, along with Palden Lhamo deity, one of the most powerful and fierce goddesses of Vajrayana Buddhist mythology.[1][3] According to Tibetan legends, her right eye was pierced by the tantric master Padmasambhava so that she could much more effectively help him subjugate Tibetan demons.

Ekajati is also known as "Blue Tara", Vajra Tara or "Ugra Tara".[1][3] She is generally considered one of the three principal protectors of the Nyingma school along with Rāhula and Vajrasādhu (Wylie: rdo rje legs pa).

Often Ekajati appears as liberator in the mandala of the Green Tara. Along with that, her ascribed powers are removing the fear of enemies, spreading joy, and removing personal hindrances on the path to enlightenment.

Ekajati is the protector of secret mantras and "as the mother of the mothers of all the Buddhas" represents the ultimate unity. As such, her own mantra is also secret. She is the most important protector of the Vajrayana teachings, especially the Inner Tantras and termas. As the protector of mantra, she supports the practitioner in deciphering symbolic dakini codes and properly determines appropriate times and circumstances for revealing tantric teachings. Because she completely realizes the texts and mantras under her care, she reminds the practitioner of their preciousness and secrecy.[4] Düsum Khyenpa, 1st Karmapa Lama meditated upon her in early childhood.

According to Namkhai Norbu, Ekajati is the principal guardian of the Dzogchen teachings and is "a personification of the essentially non-dual nature of primordial energy."[5]

Dzogchen is the most closely guarded teaching in Tibetan Buddhism, of which Ekajati is a main guardian as mentioned above. It is said that Sri Singha (Sanskrit: Śrī Siṃha) himself entrusted the "Heart Essence" (Wylie: snying thig) teachings to her care. To the great master Longchenpa, who initiated the dissemination of certain Dzogchen teachings, Ekajati offered uncharacteristically personal guidance. In his thirty-second year, Ekajati appeared to Longchenpa, supervising every ritual detail of the Heart Essence of the Dakinis empowerment, insisting on the use of a peacock feather and removing unnecessary basin. When Longchenpa performed the ritual, she nodded her head in approval but corrected his pronunciation. When he recited the mantra, Ekajati admonished him, saying, "Imitate me," and sang it in a strange, harmonious melody in the dakini's language. Later she appeared at the gathering and joyously danced, proclaiming the approval of Padmasambhava and the dakinis.[6] ~ Wikipedia,
249:
   Sweet Mother, can the psychic express itself without the mind, the vital and the physical?

It expresses itself constantly without them. Only, in order that the ordinary human being may perceive it, it has to express itself through them, because the ordinary human being is not in direct contact with the psychic. If it was in direct contact with the psychic it would be psychic in its manifestation - and all would be truly well. But as it is not in contact with the psychic it doesn't even know what it is, it wonders all bewildered what kind of a being it can be; so to reach this ordinary human consciousness it must use ordinary means, that is, go through the mind, the vital and the physical.

One of them may be skipped but surely not the last, otherwise one is no longer conscious of anything at all. The ordinary human being is conscious only in his physical being, and only in relatively rare moments is he conscious of his mind, just a little more frequently of his vital, but all this is mixed up in his consciousness, so much so that he would be quite unable to say "This movement comes from the mind, this from the vital, this from the physical." This already asks for a considerable development in order to be able to distinguish within oneself the source of the different movements one has. And it is so mixed that even when one tries, at the beginning it is very difficult to classify and separate one thing from another.

It is as when one works with colours, takes three or four or five different colours and puts them in the same water and beats them up together, it makes a grey, indistinct and incomprehensi- ble mixture, you see, and one can't say which is red, which blue, which green, which yellow; it is something dirty, lots of colours mixed. So first of all one must do this little work of separating the red, blue, yellow, green - putting them like this, each in its corner. It is not at all easy.

I have met people who used to think themselves extremely intelligent, by the way, who thought they knew a lot, and when I spoke to them about the different parts of the being they looked at me like this (gesture) and asked me, "But what are you speaking about?" They did not understand at all. I am speaking of people who have the reputation of being intelligent. They don't understand at all. For them it is just the consciousness; it is the consciousness-"It is my consciousness" and then there is the neighbour's consciousness; and again there are things which do not have any consciousness. And then I asked them whether animals had a consciousness; so they began to scratch their heads and said, "Perhaps it is we who put our consciousness in the animal when we look at it," like that...
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1955,
250:To Know How To Suffer
   IF AT any time a deep sorrow, a searing doubt or an intense pain overwhelms you and drives you to despair, there is an infallible way to regain calm and peace.
   In the depths of our being there shines a light whose brilliance is equalled only by its purity; a light, a living and conscious portion of a universal godhead who animates and nourishes and illumines Matter, a powerful and unfailing guide for those who are willing to heed his law, a helper full of solace and loving forbearance towards all who aspire to see and hear and obey him. No sincere and lasting aspiration towards him can be in vain; no strong and respectful trust can be disappointed, no expectation ever deceived.
   My heart has suffered and lamented, almost breaking beneath a sorrow too heavy, almost sinking beneath a pain too strong.... But I have called to thee, O divine comforter, I have prayed ardently to thee, and the splendour of thy dazzling light has appeared to me and revived me.
   As the rays of thy glory penetrated and illumined all my being, I clearly perceived the path to follow, the use that can be made of suffering; I understood that the sorrow that held me in its grip was but a pale reflection of the sorrow of the earth, of this abysm of suffering and anguish.
   Only those who have suffered can understand the suffering of others; understand it, commune with it and relieve it. And I understood, O divine comforter, sublime Holocaust, that in order to sustain us in all our troubles, to soothe all our pangs, thou must have known and felt all the sufferings of earth and man, all without exception.
   How is it that among those who claim to be thy worshippers, some regard thee as a cruel torturer, as an inexorable judge witnessing the torments that are tolerated by thee or even created by thy own will?
   No, I now perceive that these sufferings come from the very imperfection of Matter which, in its disorder and crudeness, is unfit to manifest thee; and thou art the very first to suffer from it, to bewail it, thou art the first to toil and strive in thy ardent desire to change disorder into order, suffering into happiness, discord into harmony.
   Suffering is not something inevitable or even desirable, but when it comes to us, how helpful it can be!
   Each time we feel that our heart is breaking, a deeper door opens within us, revealing new horizons, ever richer in hidden treasures, whose golden influx brings once more a new and intenser life to the organism on the brink of destruction.
   And when, by these successive descents, we reach the veil that reveals thee as it is lifted, O Lord, who can describe the intensity of Life that penetrates the whole being, the radiance of the Light that floods it, the sublimity of the Love that transforms it for ever! ~ The Mother, Words Of Long Ago, To Know How To Suffer, 1910,
251:Sri Aurobindo tells us that surrender is the first and absolute condition for doing the yoga. Therefore it is not merely one of the required qualities, it is the very first indispensable attitude for commencing the yoga.

If you are not decided to make a total surrender, you cannot begin. But to make your surrender total, all the other qualities are necessary: sincerity, faith, devotion and aspiration.

And I add another one : endurance. Because if you are not able to face difficulties without getting discouraged, without giving up under the pretext that it is too difficult, if you are not able to receive blows and continue all the same, to "pocket" them, as it is said,—you receive blows because of your defects : you put them into your pocket and continue to march on without faltering; if you cannot do that with endurance, you will not go very far; at the first turning, when you lose sight of the little habitual life, you despair and give up the game.

The most material form of endurance is perseverance. Unless you are resolved to begin the same thing over again a thousand times if needed, you will arrive nowhere.

People come to me in despair : "But I thought it had been done, and I have to begin again !" And if they are told, "But it is nothing, you have to begin probably a hundred times, two hundred times, a thousand times", they lose all courage.

You take one step forward and you believe you are solid, but there will be always something that will bring about the same difficulty a little farther ahead.

You believe you have solved the problem, but will have to solve it again, it will present itself with just a little difference in its appearance, but it will be the same problem.

Thus there are people who have a fine experience and they exclaim, "Now, it is done !" Then things settle down, begin to fade, go behind a veil, and all on a sudden, something quite unexpected, a thing absolutely commonplace, that appears to be of no interest at all, comes before them and closes up the road. Then you lament: "Of what use is this progress that I have made, if I am to begin again !

Why is it so? I made an effort, I succeeded, I arrived at something and now it is as if I had done nothing. It is hopeless". This is because there is still the "I" and this "I" has no endurance.

If you have endurance, you say : "All right, I will begin again and again as long as necessary, a thousand times, ten thousand times, a million times, if necessary, but I will go to the end and nothing can stop me on the way".

That is very necessary.

Now, to sum up, we will put at the head of our list surrender. That is to say, we accept the fact that one must, in order to do the integral yoga, take the resolution of surrendering oneself wholly to the Divine. There is no other way, it is the way. ~ The Mother,
252:How can one awaken his Yoga-shakti?

It depends on this: when one thinks that it is the most important thing in his life. That's all.

Some people sit in meditation, concentrate on the base of the vertebral column and want it very much to awake, but that's not enough. It is when truly it becomes the most important thing in one's life, when all the rest seems to have lost all taste, all interest, all importance, when one feels within that one is born for this, that one is here upon earth for this, and that it is the only thing that truly counts, then that's enough.

One can concentrate on the different centres; but sometimes one concentrates for so long, with so much effort, and has no result. And then one day something shakes you, you feel that you are going to lose your footing, you have to cling on to something; then you cling within yourself to the idea of union with the Divine, the idea of the divine Presence, the idea of the transformation of the consciousness, and you aspire, you want, you try to organise your feelings, movements, impulses around this. And it comes.

Some people have recommended all kinds of methods; probably these were methods which had succeeded in their case; but to tell the truth, one must find one's own method, it is only after having done the thing that one knows how it should be done, not before.

If one knows it beforehand, one makes a mental construction and risks greatly living in his mental construction, which is an illusion; because when the mind builds certain conditions and then they are realised, there are many chances of there being mostly pure mental construction which is not the experience itself but its image. So for all these truly spiritual experiences I think it is wiser to have them before knowing them. If one knows them, one imitates them, one doesn't have them, one imagines oneself having them; whereas if one knows nothing - how things are and how they ought to happen, what should happen and how it will come about - if one knows nothing about all this, then by keeping very still and making a kind of inner sorting out within one's being, one can suddenly have the experience, and then later knows what one has had. It is over, and one knows how it has to be done when one has done it - afterwards. Like that it is sure.

One may obviously make use of his imagination, imagine the Kundalini and try to pull it upwards. But one can also tell himself tales like this. I have had so many instances of people who described their experiences to me exactly as they are described in books, knowing all the words and putting down all the details, and then I asked them just a little question like that, casually: that if they had had the experience they should have known or felt a certain thing, and as this was not in the books, they could not answer.~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1955, 211-212,
253:- for every well-made and significant poem, picture, statue or building is an act of creative knowledge, a living discovery of the consciousness, a figure of Truth, a dynamic form of mental and vital self-expression or world-expression, - all that seeks, all that finds, all that voices or figures is a realisation of something of the play of the Infinite and to that extent can be made a means of God-realisation or of divine formation. But the Yogin has to see that it is no longer done as part of an ignorant mental life; it can be accepted by him only if by the feeling, the remembrance, the dedication within it, it is turned into a movement of the spiritual consciousness and becomes a part of its vast grasp of comprehensive illuminating knowledge.
   For all must be done as a sacrifice, all activities must have the One Divine for their object and the heart of their meaning. The Yogin's aim in the sciences that make for knowledge should be to discover and understand the workings of the Divine Consciousness-Puissance in man and creatures and things and forces, her creative significances, her execution of the mysteries, the symbols in which she arranges the manifestation. The Yogin's aim in the practical sciences, whether mental and physical or occult and psychic, should be to enter into the ways of the Divine and his processes, to know the materials and means for the work given to us so that we may use that knowledge for a conscious and faultless expression of the spirit's mastery, joy and self-fulfilment. The Yogin's aim in the Arts should not be a mere aesthetic, mental or vital gratification, but, seeing the Divine everywhere, worshipping it with a revelation of the meaning of its own works, to express that One Divine in ideal forms, the One Divine in principles and forces, the One Divine in gods and men and creatures and objects. The theory that sees an intimate connection between religious aspiration and the truest and greatest Art is in essence right; but we must substitute for the mixed and doubtful religious motive a spiritual aspiration, vision, interpreting experience. For the wider and more comprehensive the seeing, the more it contains in itself the sense of the hidden Divine in humanity and in all things and rises beyond a superficial religiosity into the spiritual life, the more luminous, flexible, deep and powerful will the Art be that springs from that high motive. The Yogin's distinction from other men is this that he lives in a higher and vaster spiritual consciousness; all his work of knowledge or creation must then spring from there: it must not be made in the mind, - for it is a greater truth and vision than mental man's that he has to express or rather that presses to express itself through him and mould his works, not for his personal satisfaction, but for a divine purpose. ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, The Ascent of the Sacrifice - 1, 142 [T4],
254:Eternal, unconfined, unextended, without cause and without effect, the Holy Lamp mysteriously burns. Without quantity or quality, unconditioned and sempiternal, is this Light.
It is not possible for anyone to advise or approve; for this Lamp is not made with hands; it exists alone for ever; it has no parts, no person; it is before "I am." Few can behold it, yet it is always there. For it there is no "here" nor "there," no "then" nor "now;" all parts of speech are abolished, save the noun; and this noun is not found either in {106} human speech or in Divine. It is the Lost Word, the dying music of whose sevenfold echo is I A O and A U M.
Without this Light the Magician could not work at all; yet few indeed are the Magicians that have know of it, and far fewer They that have beheld its brilliance!

The Temple and all that is in it must be destroyed again and again before it is worthy to receive that Light. Hence it so often seems that the only advice that any master can give to any pupil is to destroy the Temple.

"Whatever you have" and "whatever you are" are veils before that Light. Yet in so great a matter all advice is vain. There is no master so great that he can see clearly the whole character of any pupil. What helped him in the past may hinder another in the future.

Yet since the Master is pledged to serve, he may take up that service on these simple lines. Since all thoughts are veils of this Light, he may advise the destruction of all thoughts, and to that end teach those practices which are clearly conductive to such destruction.

These practices have now fortunately been set down in clear language by order of the A.'.A.'..

In these instructions the relativity and limitation of each practice is clearly taught, and all dogmatic interpretations are carefully avoided. Each practice is in itself a demon which must be destroyed; but to be destroyed it must first be evoked.

Shame upon that Master who shirks any one of these practices, however distasteful or useless it may be to him! For in the detailed knowledge of it, which experience alone can give him, may lie his opportunity for crucial assistance to a pupil. However dull the drudgery, it should be undergone. If it were possible to regret anything in life, which is fortunately not the case, it would be the hours wasted in fruitful practices which might have been more profitably employed on sterile ones: for NEMO<> in tending his garden seeketh not to single out the flower that shall be NEMO after him. And we are not told that NEMO might have used other things than those which he actually does use; it seems possible that if he had not the acid or the knife, or the fire, or the oil, he might miss tending just that one flower which was to be NEMO after him! ~ Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA, The Lamp,
255:Our culture, the laws of our culture, are predicated on the idea that people are conscious. People have experience; people make decisions, and can be held responsible for them. There's a free will element to it. You can debate all that philosophically, and fine, but the point is that that is how we act, and that is the idea that our legal system is predicated on. There's something deep about it, because you're subject to the law, but the law is also limited by you, which is to say that in a well-functioning, properly-grounded democratic system, you have intrinsic value. That's the source of your rights. Even if you're a murderer, we have to say the law can only go so far because there's something about you that's divine.

Well, what does that mean? Partly it means that there's something about you that's conscious and capable of communicating, like you're a whole world unto yourself. You have that to contribute to everyone else, and that's valuable. You can learn new things, transform the structure of society, and invent a new way of dealing with the world. You're capable of all that. It's an intrinsic part of you, and that's associated with the idea that there's something about the logos that is necessary for the absolute chaos of the reality beyond experience to manifest itself as reality. That's an amazing idea because it gives consciousness a constitutive role in the cosmos. You can debate that, but you can't just bloody well brush it off. First of all, we are the most complicated things there are, that we know of, by a massive amount. We're so complicated that it's unbelievable. So there's a lot of cosmos out there, but there's a lot of cosmos in here, too, and which one is greater is by no means obvious, unless you use something trivial, like relative size, which really isn't a very sophisticated approach.

Whatever it is that is you has this capacity to experience reality and to transform it, which is a very strange thing. You can conceptualize the future in your imagination, and then you can work and make that manifest-participate in the process of creation. That's one way of thinking about it. That's why I think Genesis 1 relates the idea that human beings are made in the image of the divine-men and women, which is interesting, because feminists are always criticizing Christianity as being inexorably patriarchal. Of course, they criticize everything like that, so it's hardly a stroke of bloody brilliance. But I think it's an absolute miracle that right at the beginning of the document it says straightforwardly, with no hesitation whatsoever, that the divine spark which we're associating with the word, that brings forth Being, is manifest in men and women equally. That's a very cool thing. You got to think, like I said, do you actually take that seriously? Well, what you got to ask is what happens if you don't take it seriously, right? Read Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment. That's the best investigation into that tactic that's ever been produced. ~ Jordan Peterson, Biblical Series, 1,
256:SLEIGHT OF MIND IN ILLUMINATION
Only those forms of illumination which lead to useful behaviour changes deserve to be known as such. When I hear the word "spirituality", I tend to reach for a loaded wand. Most professionally spiritual people are vile and untrustworthy when off duty, simply because their beliefs conflict with basic drives and only manage to distort their natural behaviour temporarily. The demons then come screaming up out of the cellar at unexpected moments.

When selecting objectives for illumination, the magician should choose forms of self improvement which can be precisely specified and measured and which effect changes of behaviour in his entire existence. Invocation is the main tool in illumination, although enchantment where spells are cast upon oneselves and divination to seek objectives for illumination may also find some application.

Evocation can sometimes be used with care, but there is no point in simply creating an entity that is the repository of what one wishes were true for oneself in general. This is a frequent mistake in religion. Forms of worship which create only entities in the subconscious are inferior to more wholehearted worship, which, at its best, is pure invocation. The Jesuits "Imitation of Christ" is more effective than merely praying to Jesus for example.

Illumination proceeds in the same general manner as invocation, except that the magician is striving to effect specific changes to his everyday behaviour, rather than to create enhanced facilities that can be drawn upon for particular purposes. The basic technique remains the same, the required beliefs are identified and then implanted in the subconscious by ritual or other acts. Such acts force the subconscious acquisition of the beliefs they imply.

Modest and realistic objectives are preferable to grandiose schemes in illumination.

One modifies the behaviour and beliefs of others by beginning with only the most trivial demands. The same applies to oneselves. The magician should beware of implanting beliefs whose expression cannot be sustained by the human body or the environment. For example it is possible to implant the belief that flight can be achieved without an aircraft. However it has rarely proved possible to implant this belief deeply enough to ensure that such flights were not of exceedingly short duration. Nevertheless such feats as fire-walking and obliviousness to extreme pain are sometimes achieved by this mechanism.

The sleight of mind which implants belief through ritual action is more powerful than any other weapon that humanity possesses, yet its influence is so pervasive that we seldom notice it. It makes religions, wars, cults and cultures possible. It has killed countless millions and created our personal and social realities. Those who understand how to use it on others can be messiahs or dictators, depending on their degree of personal myopia. Those who understand how to apply it to themselves have a jewel beyond price if they use it wisely; otherwise they tend to rapidly invoke their own Nemesis with it. ~ Peter J Carroll, Liber Kaos,
257:28 August 1957
Mother, Sri Aurobindo says here: "Whether the whole of humanity would be touched [by the Supramental influence] or only a part of it ready for the change would depend on what was intended or possible in the continued order of the universe."
The Supramental Manifestation, SABCL, Vol. 16, p. 56

What is meant by "what was intended or possible"? The two things are different. So far you have said that if humanity changes, if it wants to participate in the new birth...

It is the same thing. But when you look at an object on a certain plane, you see it horizontally, and when you look at the same object from another plane, you see it vertically. (Mother shows the cover and the back of her book.) So, if one looks from above, one says "intended"; if one looks from below, one says "possible".... But it is absolutely the same thing, only the point of view is different.

But in that case, it is not our incapacity or lack of will to change that makes any difference.

We have already said this many a time. If you remain in a consciousness which functions mentally, even if it is the highest mind, you have the notion of an absolute determinism of cause and effect and feel that things are what they are because they are what they are and cannot be otherwise.

It is only when you come out of the mental consciousness completely and enter a higher perception of things - which you may call spiritual or divine - that you suddenly find yourself in a state of perfect freedom where everything is possible.

(Silence)

Those who have contacted that state or lived in it, even if only for a moment, try to describe it as a feeling of an absolute Will in action, which immediately gives to the human mentality the feeling of being arbitrary. And because of that distortion there arises the idea - which I might call traditional - of a supreme and arbitrary God, which is something most unacceptable to every enlightened mind. I suppose that this experience badly expressed is at the origin of this notion. And in fact it is incorrect to express it as an absolute Will: it is very, very, very different. It is something else altogether. For, what man understands by "Will" is a decision that is taken and carried out. We are obliged to use the word "will", but in its truth the Will acting in the universe is neither a choice nor a decision that is taken. What seems to me the closest expression is "vision". Things are because they are seen. But of course "seen", not seen as we see with these eyes.

(Mother touches her eyes...) All the same, it is the nearest thing.
It is a vision - a vision unfolding itself.
The universe becomes objective as it is progressively seen.

And that is why Sri Aurobindo has said "intended or possible". It is neither one nor the other. All that can be said is a distortion.

(Silence)

Objectivisation - universal objectivisation - is something like a projection in space and time, like a living image of what is from all eternity. And as the image is gradually projected on the screen of time and space, it becomes objective:

The Supreme contemplating His own Image.
~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1957-1958,
258:At it's narrowest (although this is a common and perhaps the official position; need to find ref in What is Enlightenment) "integral", "turquois" (Spiral Dynamics), and "second tier" (ditto) are all synonms, and in turn are equivalent to Wilber IV / AQAL/Wilber V "Post-metaphysical" AQAL. This is the position that "Integral = Ken Wilber". It constitutes a new philosophical school or meme-set, in the tradition of charismatic spiritual teachers of all ages, in which an articulate, brilliant, and popular figure would arise, and gather a following around him- or her-self. After the teacher passes on, their teaching remains through books and organisations dedicated to perpetuating that teaching; although without the brilliant light of the Founder, things generally become pretty stultifying, and there is often little or no original development. Even so, the books themselves continue to inspire, and many people benefit greatly from these tecahings, and can contact the original Light of the founders to be inspired by them on the subtle planes. Some late 19th, 20th, and early 21st century examples of such teachers, known and less well-known, are Blavatsky, Theon, Steiner, Aurobindo, Gurdjieff, Crowley, Alice Bailey, Carl Jung, Ann Ree Colton, and now Ken Wilber. Also, many popular gurus belong in this category. It could plausibly be suggested that the founders of the great world religions started out no different, but their teaching really caught on n a big way.

...

At its broadest then, the Integral Community includes not only Wilber but those he cites as his influences and hold universal and evolutionary views or teachings, as well as those who, while influenced by him also differ somewhat, and even those like Arthur M Young that Wilber has apparently never heard of. Nevertheless, all share a common, evolutionary, "theory of everything" position, and, whilst they may differ on many details and even on many major points, taken together they could be considered a wave front for a new paradigm, a memetic revolution. I use the term Daimon of the Integral Movement to refer to the spiritual being or personality of light that is behind and working through this broader movement.

Now, this doesn't mean that this daimon is necessarily a negative entity. I see a lot of promise, a lot of potential, in the Integral Approach. From what I feel at the moment, the Integral Deva is a force and power of good.

But, as with any new spiritual or evolutionary development, there is duality, in that there are forces that hinder and oppose and distort, as well as forces that help and aid in the evolution and ultimate divinisation of the Earth and the cosmos. Thus even where a guru does give in the dark side (as very often happens with many gurus today) there still remains an element of Mixed Light that remains (one finds this ambiguity with Sai Baba, with Da Free John, and with Rajneesh); and we find this same ambiguity with the Integral Community regarding what seems to me a certain offputting devotional attitude towards Wilber himself. The light will find its way, regardless. However, an Intregral Movement that is caught up in worship of and obedience to an authority figure, will not be able to achieve what a movement unfettered by such shackles could. ~ M Alan Kazlev, Kheper, Wilber, Integral,
259:The supreme Truth aspect which thus manifests itself to us is an eternal and infinite and absolute self-existence, self-awareness, self-delight of being; this bounds all things and secretly supports and pervades all things. This Self-existence reveals itself again in three terms of its essential nature,-self, conscious being or spirit, and God or the Divine Being. The Indian terms are more satisfactory,-Brahman the Reality is Atman, Purusha, Ishwara; for these terms grew from a root of Intuition and, while they have a comprehensive preciseness, are capable of a plastic application which avoids both vagueness in the use and the rigid snare of a too limiting intellectual concept. The Supreme Brahman is that which in Western metaphysics is called the Absolute: but Brahman is at the same time the omnipresent Reality in which all that is relative exists as its forms or its movements; this is an Absolute which takes all relativities in its embrace. [...] Brahman is the Consciousness that knows itself in all that exists; Brahman is the force that sustains the power of God and Titan and Demon, the Force that acts in man and animal and the forms and energies of Nature; Brahman is the Ananda, the secret Bliss of existence which is the ether of our being and without which none could breathe or live. Brahman is the inner Soul in all; it has taken a form in correspondence with each created form which it inhabits. The Lord of Beings is that which is conscious in the conscious being, but he is also the Conscious in inconscient things, the One who is master and in control of the many that are passive in the hands of Force-Nature. He is the Timeless and Time; He is Space and all that is in Space; He is Causality and the cause and the effect: He is the thinker and his thought, the warrior and his courage, the gambler and his dice-throw. All realities and all aspects and all semblances are the Brahman; Brahman is the Absolute, the Transcendent and incommunicable, the Supracosmic Existence that sustains the cosmos, the Cosmic Self that upholds all beings, but It is too the self of each individual: the soul or psychic entity is an eternal portion of the Ishwara; it is his supreme Nature or Consciousness-Force that has become the living being in a world of living beings. The Brahman alone is, and because of It all are, for all are the Brahman; this Reality is the reality of everything that we see in Self and Nature. Brahman, the Ishwara, is all this by his Yoga-Maya, by the power of his Consciousness-Force put out in self-manifestation: he is the Conscious Being, Soul, Spirit, Purusha, and it is by his Nature, the force of his conscious self-existence that he is all things; he is the Ishwara, the omniscient and omnipotent All-ruler, and it is by his Shakti, his conscious Power, that he manifests himself in Time and governs the universe. These and similar statements taken together are all-comprehensive: it is possible for the mind to cut and select, to build a closed system and explain away all that does not fit within it; but it is on the complete and many-sided statement that we must take our stand if we have to acquire an integral knowledge.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, Book 02: The Knowledge and the Ignorance - The Spiritual Evolution, Part I, The Infinite Consciousness and the Ignorance Brahman, Purusha, Ishwara - Maya, Prakriti, Shakti [336-337],
260:Can it be said in justification of one's past that whatever has happened in one's life had to happen?

The Mother: Obviously, what has happened had to happen; it would not have been, if it had not been intended. Even the mistakes that we have committed and the adversities that fell upon us had to be, because there was some necessity in them, some utility for our lives. But in truth these things cannot be explained mentally and should not be. For all that happened was necessary, not for any mental reason, but to lead us to something beyond what the mind imagines. But is there any need to explain after all? The whole universe explains everything at every moment and a particular thing happens because the whole universe is what it is. But this does not mean that we are bound over to a blind acquiescence in Nature's inexorable law. You can accept the past as a settled fact and perceive the necessity in it, and still you can use the experience it gave you to build up the power consciously to guide and shape your present and your future.

Is the time also of an occurrence arranged in the Divine Plan of things?

The Mother: All depends upon the plane from which one sees and speaks. There is a plane of divine consciousness in which all is known absolutely, and the whole plan of things foreseen and predetermined. That way of seeing lives in the highest reaches of the Supramental; it is the Supreme's own vision. But when we do not possess that consciousness, it is useless to speak in terms that hold good only in that region and are not our present effective way of seeing things. For at a lower level of consciousness nothing is realised or fixed beforehand; all is in the process of making. Here there are no settled facts, there is only the play of possibilities; out of the clash of possibilities is realised the thing that has to happen. On this plane we can choose and select; we can refuse one possibility and accept another; we can follow one path, turn away from another. And that we can do, even though what is actually happening may have been foreseen and predetermined in a higher plane.

The Supreme Consciousness knows everything beforehand, because everything is realised there in her eternity. But for the sake of her play and in order to carry out actually on the physical plane what is foreordained in her own supreme self, she moves here upon earth as if she did not know the whole story; she works as if it was a new and untried thread that she was weaving. It is this apparent forgetfulness of her own foreknowledge in the higher consciousness that gives to the individual in the active life of the world his sense of freedom and independence and initiative. These things in him are her pragmatic tools or devices, and it is through this machinery that the movements and issues planned and foreseen elsewhere are realised here.

It may help you to understand if you take the example of an actor. An actor knows the whole part he has to play; he has in his mind the exact sequence of what is to happen on the stage. But when he is on the stage, he has to appear as if he did not know anything; he has to feel and act as if he were experiencing all these things for the first time, as if it was an entirely new world with all its chance events and surprises that was unrolling before his eyes. 28th April ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1929-1931,
261:[desire and its divine form:]
   Into all our endeavour upward the lower element of desire will at first naturally enter. For what the enlightened will sees as the thing to be done and pursues as the crown to be conquered, what the heart embraces as the one thing delightful, that in us which feels itself limited and opposed and, because it is limited, craves and struggles, will seek with the troubled passion of an egoistic desire. This craving life-force or desire-soul in us has to be accepted at first, but only in order that it may be transformed. Even from the very beginning it has to be taught to renounce all other desires and concentrate itself on the passion for the Divine. This capital point gained, it has to be aught to desire, not for its own separate sake, but for God in the world and for the Divine in ourselves; it has to fix itself upon no personal spiritual gain, though of all possible spiritual gains we are sure, but on the great work to be done in us and others, on the high coming manifestation which is to be the glorious fulfilment of the Divine in the world, on the Truth that has to be sought and lived and enthroned for eveR But last, most difficult for it, more difficult than to seek with the right object, it has to be taught to seek in the right manner; for it must learn to desire, not in its own egoistic way, but in the way of the Divine. It must insist no longer, as the strong separative will always insists, on its own manner of fulfilment, its own dream of possession, its own idea of the right and the desirable; it must yearn to fulfil a larger and greater Will and consent to wait upon a less interested and ignorant guidance. Thus trained, Desire, that great unquiet harasser and troubler of man and cause of every kind of stumbling, will become fit to be transformed into its divine counterpart. For desire and passion too have their divine forms; there is a pure ecstasy of the soul's seeking beyond all craving and grief, there is a Will of Ananda that sits glorified in the possession of the supreme beatitudes.
   When once the object of concentration has possessed and is possessed by the three master instruments, the thought, the heart and the will,-a consummation fully possible only when the desire-soul in us has submitted to the Divine Law,-the perfection of mind and life and body can be effectively fulfilled in our transmuted nature. This will be done, not for the personal satisfaction of the ego, but that the whole may constitute a fit temple for the Divine Presence, a faultless instrument for the divine work. For that work can be truly performed only when the instrument, consecrated and perfected, has grown fit for a selfless action,-and that will be when personal desire and egoism are abolished, but not the liberated individual. Even when the little ego has been abolished, the true spiritual Person can still remain and God's will and work and delight in him and the spiritual use of his perfection and fulfilment. Our works will then be divine and done divinely; our mind and life and will, devoted to the Divine, will be used to help fulfil in others and in the world that which has been first realised in ourselves,- all that we can manifest of the embodied Unity, Love, Freedom, Strength, Power, Splendour, immortal Joy which is the goal of the Spirit's terrestrial adventure.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Synthesis Of Yoga, Self-Consecration [83] [T1],
262:But there's a reason. There's a reason. There's a reason for this, there's a reason education sucks, and it's the same reason that it will never, ever, ever be fixed. It's never gonna get any better. Don't look for it. Be happy with what you got. Because the owners of this country don't want that. I'm talking about the real owners now, the real owners, the big wealthy business interests that control things and make all the important decisions. Forget the politicians. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice. You don't. You have no choice. You have owners. They own you. They own everything. They own all the important land. They own and control the corporations. They've long since bought and paid for the senate, the congress, the state houses, the city halls, they got the judges in their back pockets and they own all the big media companies so they control just about all of the news and information you get to hear. They got you by the balls. They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying, lobbying, to get what they want. Well, we know what they want. They want more for themselves and less for everybody else, but I'll tell you what they don't want: They don't want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don't want well informed, well educated people capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that. That doesn't help them. Thats against their interests. Thats right. They don't want people who are smart enough to sit around a kitchen table to figure out how badly they're getting fucked by a system that threw them overboard 30 fucking years ago. They don't want that. You know what they want? They want obedient workers. Obedient workers. People who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork, and just dumb enough to passively accept all these increasingly shittier jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, the reduced benefits, the end of overtime and the vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it, and now they're coming for your Social Security money. They want your retirement money. They want it back so they can give it to their criminal friends on Wall Street, and you know something? They'll get it. They'll get it all from you, sooner or later, 'cause they own this fucking place. It's a big club, and you ain't in it. You and I are not in the big club. And by the way, it's the same big club they use to beat you over the head with all day long when they tell you what to believe. All day long beating you over the head in their media telling you what to believe, what to think and what to buy. The table is tilted folks. The game is rigged, and nobody seems to notice, nobody seems to care. Good honest hard-working people -- white collar, blue collar, it doesn't matter what color shirt you have on -- good honest hard-working people continue -- these are people of modest means -- continue to elect these rich cocksuckers who don't give a fuck about them. They don't give a fuck about you. They don't give a fuck about you. They don't care about you at all -- at all -- at all. And nobody seems to notice, nobody seems to care. That's what the owners count on; the fact that Americans will probably remain willfully ignorant of the big red, white and blue dick that's being jammed up their assholes everyday. Because the owners of this country know the truth: it's called the American Dream, because you have to be asleep to believe it. ~ George Carlin,
263:THE WAND
   THE Magical Will is in its essence twofold, for it presupposes a beginning and an end; to will to be a thing is to admit that you are not that thing.
   Hence to will anything but the supreme thing, is to wander still further from it - any will but that to give up the self to the Beloved is Black Magick - yet this surrender is so simple an act that to our complex minds it is the most difficult of all acts; and hence training is necessary. Further, the Self surrendered must not be less than the All-Self; one must not come before the altar of the Most High with an impure or an imperfect offering. As it is written in Liber LXV, "To await Thee is the end, not the beginning."
   This training may lead through all sorts of complications, varying according to the nature of the student, and hence it may be necessary for him at any moment to will all sorts of things which to others might seem unconnected with the goal. Thus it is not "a priori" obvious why a billiard player should need a file.
   Since, then, we may want "anything," let us see to it that our will is strong enough to obtain anything we want without loss of time.
   It is therefore necessary to develop the will to its highest point, even though the last task but one is the total surrender of this will. Partial surrender of an imperfect will is of no account in Magick.
   The will being a lever, a fulcrum is necessary; this fulcrum is the main aspiration of the student to attain. All wills which are not dependent upon this principal will are so many leakages; they are like fat to the athlete.
   The majority of the people in this world are ataxic; they cannot coordinate their mental muscles to make a purposed movement. They have no real will, only a set of wishes, many of which contradict others. The victim wobbles from one to the other (and it is no less wobbling because the movements may occasionally be very violent) and at the end of life the movements cancel each other out. Nothing has been achieved; except the one thing of which the victim is not conscious: the destruction of his own character, the confirming of indecision. Such an one is torn limb from limb by Choronzon.
   How then is the will to be trained? All these wishes, whims, caprices, inclinations, tendencies, appetites, must be detected, examined, judged by the standard of whether they help or hinder the main purpose, and treated accordingly.
   Vigilance and courage are obviously required. I was about to add self-denial, in deference to conventional speech; but how could I call that self-denial which is merely denial of those things which hamper the self? It is not suicide to kill the germs of malaria in one's blood.
   Now there are very great difficulties to be overcome in the training of the mind. Perhaps the greatest is forgetfulness, which is probably the worst form of what the Buddhists call ignorance. Special practices for training the memory may be of some use as a preliminary for persons whose memory is naturally poor. In any case the Magical Record prescribed for Probationers of the A.'.A.'. is useful and necessary.
   Above all the practices of Liber III must be done again and again, for these practices develop not only vigilance but those inhibiting centres in the brain which are, according to some psychologists, the mainspring of the mechanism by which civilized man has raised himself above the savage.
   So far it has been spoken, as it were, in the negative. Aaron's rod has become a serpent, and swallowed the serpents of the other Magicians; it is now necessary to turn it once more into a rod.
   ~ Aleister Crowley, Liber ABA, Book 4, The Wand,
264:The Teachings of Some Modern Indian Yogis
Ramana Maharshi
According to Brunton's description of the sadhana he (Brunton) practised under the Maharshi's instructions,1 it is the Overself one has to seek within, but he describes the Overself in a way that is at once the Psychic Being, the Atman and the Ishwara. So it is a little difficult to know what is the exact reading.
*
The methods described in the account [of Ramana Maharshi's technique of self-realisation] are the well-established methods of Jnanayoga - (1) one-pointed concentration followed by thought-suspension, (2) the method of distinguishing or finding out the true self by separating it from mind, life, body (this I have seen described by him [Brunton] more at length in another book) and coming to the pure I behind; this also can disappear into the Impersonal Self. The usual result is a merging in the Atman or Brahman - which is what one would suppose is meant by the Overself, for it is that which is the real Overself. This Brahman or Atman is everywhere, all is in it, it is in all, but it is in all not as an individual being in each but is the same in all - as the Ether is in all. When the merging into the Overself is complete, there is no ego, no distinguishable I, or any formed separative person or personality. All is ekakara - an indivisible and undistinguishable Oneness either free from all formations or carrying all formations in it without being affected - for one can realise it in either way. There is a realisation in which all beings are moving in the one Self and this Self is there stable in all beings; there is another more complete and thoroughgoing in which not only is it so but all are vividly realised as the Self, the Brahman, the Divine. In the former, it is possible to dismiss all beings as creations of Maya, leaving the one Self alone as true - in the other it is easier to regard them as real manifestations of the Self, not as illusions. But one can also regard all beings as souls, independent realities in an eternal Nature dependent upon the One Divine. These are the characteristic realisations of the Overself familiar to the Vedanta. But on the other hand you say that this Overself is realised by the Maharshi as lodged in the heart-centre, and it is described by Brunton as something concealed which when it manifests appears as the real Thinker, source of all action, but now guiding thought and action in the Truth. Now the first description applies to the Purusha in the heart, described by the Gita as the Ishwara situated in the heart and by the Upanishads as the Purusha Antaratma; the second could apply also to the mental Purusha, manomayah. pran.asarı̄ra neta of the Upanishads, the mental Being or Purusha who leads the life and the body. So your question is one which on the data I cannot easily answer. His Overself may be a combination of all these experiences, without any distinction being made or thought necessary between the various aspects. There are a thousand ways of approaching and realising the Divine and each way has its own experiences which have their own truth and stand really on a basis, one in essence but complex in aspects, common to all, but not expressed in the same way by all. There is not much use in discussing these variations; the important thing is to follow one's own way well and thoroughly. In this Yoga, one can realise the psychic being as a portion of the Divine seated in the heart with the Divine supporting it there - this psychic being takes charge of the sadhana and turns the ......
1 The correspondent sent to Sri Aurobindo two paragraphs from Paul Brunton's book A Message from Arunachala (London: Rider & Co., n.d. [1936], pp. 205 - 7). - Ed. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Letters On Yoga - II,
265:Allow the Lord to Do Everything :::
Now, when I start looking like this (Mother closes her eyes), two things are there at the same time: this smile, this joy, this laughter are there, and such peace! Such full, luminous, total peace, in which there are no more conflicts, no more contradictions. There are no more conflicts. It is one single luminous harmony - and yet everything we call error, suffering, misery, everything is there. It eliminates nothing. It is another way of seeing.
(long silence)

   There can be no doubt that if you sincerely want to get out of it, it is not so difficult after all: you have nothing to do, you only have to allow the Lord to do everything. And He does everything. He does everything. It is so wonderful, so wonderful!

   He takes anything, even what we call a very ordinary intelligence and he simply teaches you to put this intelligence aside, to rest: "There, be quiet, don't stir, don't bother me, I don't need you." Then a door opens - you don't even feel that you have to open it; it is wide open, you are tkane over to the other side. All that is done by Someone else, not you. And then the other way becomes impossible.

   All this... oh, this tremendous labour of hte mind striving to understand, toiling and giving itself headaches!... It is absolutely useless, absolutely useless, no use at all, it merely increases the confusion.

   You are faced with a so-called problem: what should you say, what should you do, how should you act? There is nothing to do, nothing, you only have to say to the Lord, "There, You see, it is like that" - that's all. And then you stay very quiet. And then quite spontaneously, without thinking about it, without reflection, without calculation, nothing, nothing, without the slightest effect - you do what has to be done. That is to say, the Lord does it, it is no longer you. He does it. He arranges the circumstances, He arranges the people, He puts the words into your mouth or your pen - He does everything, everything, everything, everything; you have nothing more to do but allow yourself to live blissfully.

   I am more and more convinced that people do not really want it.

But clearing the ground is difficult, the work of clearing the ground before hand.
But you don't even need to do it! He does it for you.

But they are constantly breaking in: the old consciousness, the old thoughts....
Yes, they try to come in again, by habit. You only have to say, "Lord, You see, You see, You see, it is like that" - that's all. "Lord, You see, You see this, You see that, You see this fool" - and it is all over immediately. And it changes automatically, my child, without the slightest effort. Simply to be sincere, that is to say, to truly want everything to be right. You are perfectly conscious that you can do nothing about it, that you have no capacity.... But there is always something that wants to do it by itself; that's the trouble, otherwise...

   No, you may be full of an excellent goodwill and then you want to do it. That's what complicated everything. Or else you don't have faith, you believe that the Lord will not be able to do it and that you must do it yourself, because He does not know! (Mother laughs.) This, this kind of stupidity is very common. "How can He see things? We live in a world of Falsehood, how can He see Falsehood and see..." But He sees the thing as it is! Exactly!

   I am not speaking of people of no intelligence, I am speaking of people who are intelligent and try - there is a kind of conviction, like that, somewhere, even in people who know that we live in a world of Ignorance and Falsehood and that there is a Lord who is All-Truth. They say, "Precisely because He is All-Truth, He does not understand. (Mother laughs.) He does not understand our falsehood, I must deal with it myself." That is very strong, very common.

   Ah! we make complications for nothing. ~ The Mother,
266:Of course we do." Dresden's voice was cutting. "But you're thinking too small. Building humanity's greatest empire is like building the world's largest anthill. Insignificant. There is a civilization out there that built the protomolecule and hurled it at us over two billion years ago. They were already gods at that point. What have they become since then? With another two billion years to advance?"
With a growing dread, Holden listened to Dresden speak. This speech had the air of something spoken before. Perhaps many times. And it had worked. It had convinced powerful people. It was why Protogen had stealth ships from the Earth shipyards and seemingly limitless behind-the-scenes support.
"We have a terrifying amount of catching up to do, gentlemen," Dresden was saying. "But fortunately we have the tool of our enemy to use in doing it."
"Catching up?" a soldier to Holden's left said. Dresden nodded at the man and smiled.
"The protomolecule can alter the host organism at the molecular level; it can create genetic change on the fly. Not just DNA, but any stable replicatoR But it is only a machine. It doesn't think. It follows instructions. If we learn how to alter that programming, then we become the architects of that change."
Holden interrupted. "If it was supposed to wipe out life on Earth and replace it with whatever the protomolecule's creators wanted, why turn it loose?"
"Excellent question," Dresden said, holding up one finger like a college professor about to deliver a lecture. "The protomolecule doesn't come with a user's manual. In fact, we've never before been able to actually watch it carry out its program. The molecule requires significant mass before it develops enough processing power to fulfill its directives. Whatever they are."
Dresden pointed at the screens covered with data around them.
"We are going to watch it at work. See what it intends to do. How it goes about doing it. And, hopefully, learn how to change that program in the process."
"You could do that with a vat of bacteria," Holden said.
"I'm not interested in remaking bacteria," Dresden said.
"You're fucking insane," Amos said, and took another step toward Dresden. Holden put a hand on the big mechanic's shoulder.
"So," Holden said. "You figure out how the bug works, and then what?"
"Then everything. Belters who can work outside a ship without wearing a suit. Humans capable of sleeping for hundreds of years at a time flying colony ships to the stars. No longer being bound to the millions of years of evolution inside one atmosphere of pressure at one g, slaves to oxygen and water. We decide what we want to be, and we reprogram ourselves to be that. That's what the protomolecule gives us."

Dresden had stood back up as he'd delivered this speech, his face shining with the zeal of a prophet.
"What we are doing is the best and only hope of humanity's survival. When we go out there, we will be facing gods."
"And if we don't go out?" Fred asked. He sounded thoughtful.
"They've already fired a doomsday weapon at us once," Dresden said.
The room was silent for a moment. Holden felt his certainty slip. He hated everything about Dresden's argument, but he couldn't quite see his way past it. He knew in his bones that something about it was dead wrong, but he couldn't find the words. Naomi's voice startled him.
"Did it convince them?" she asked.
"Excuse me?" Dresden said.
"The scientists. The technicians. Everyone you needed to make it happen. They actually had to do this. They had to watch the video of people dying all over Eros. They had to design those radioactive murder chambers. So unless you managed to round up every serial killer in the solar system and send them through a postgraduate program, how did you do this?"
"We modified our science team to remove ethical restraints."
Half a dozen clues clicked into place in Holden's head. ~ James S A Corey, Leviathan Wakes,
267:There is a true movement of the intellect and there is a wrong movement: one helps, the other hinders." Questions and Answers 1929 - 1931 (5 May 1929)

   What is the true movement of the intellect?


What exactly do you understand by intellect? Is it a function of the mind or is it a part of the human being? How do you understand it?

   A function of the mind.

A function of the mind? Then it is that part of the mind which deals with ideas; is that what you mean?

Not ideas, Mother.

Not ideas? What else, then?

Ideas, but...

There is a part of the mind which receives ideas, ideas that are formed in a higher mind. Still, I don't know, it is a question of definition and one must know what exactly you mean to say.

It is intellect that puts ideas in the form of thoughts, gathering and organising the thoughts at the same time. There are great ideas which lie beyond the ordinary human mentality, which can put on all possible forms. These great ideas tend to descend, they want to manifest themselves in precise forms. These precise forms are the thoughts; and generally it is this, I believe, that is meant by intellect: it is this that gives thought-form to the ideas.

And then, there is also the organisation of the thoughts among themselves. All that has to be put in a certain order, otherwise one becomes incoherent. And after that, there is the putting of these thoughts to use for action; that is still another movement.

To be able to say what the true movement is, one must know first of all which movement is being spoken about. You have a body, well, you don't expect your body to walk on its head or its hands nor to crawl flat on its belly nor indeed that the head should be down and the legs up in the air. You give to each limb a particular occupation which is its own. This appears to you quite natural because that is the habit; otherwise, the very little ones do not know what to do, neither with their legs nor with their hands nor with their heads; it is only little by little that they learn that. Well, it is the same thing with the mind's functions. You must know which part of the mind you are speaking about, what its own function is, and then only can you say what its true movement is and what is not its true movement. For example, for the part which has to receive the master ideas and change them into thought, its true movement is to be open to the master ideas, receive them and change them into as exact, as precise, as expressive a thought as possible. For the part of the mind which has the charge of organising all these thoughts among themselves so that they might form a coherent and classified whole, not a chaos, the true movement is just to make the classification according to a higher logic and in a thoroughly clear, precise and expressive order which may be serviceable each time a thought is referred to, so that one may know where to look for it and not put quite contradictory things together. There are people whose mind does not work like that; all the ideas that come into it, without their being even aware of what the idea is, are translated into confused thoughts which remain in a kind of inner chaos. I have known people who, from the philosophical point of view - although there is nothing philosophical in it - could put side by side the most contradictory things, like ideas of hierarchic order and at the same time ideas of the absolute independence of the individual and of anarchism, and both were accepted with equal sympathy, knocked against each other in the head in the midst of a wild disorder, and these people were not even aware of it!... You know the saying: "A question well put is three-fourths solved." So now, put your question. What do you want to speak about? I am stretching out a helping hand, you have only to catch it. What is it you are speaking about, what is it that you call intellect? Do you know the difference between an idea and a thought?
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1953, 107,
268:64 Arts
   1. Geet vidya: art of singing.
   2. Vadya vidya: art of playing on musical instruments.
   3. Nritya vidya: art of dancing.
   4. Natya vidya: art of theatricals.
   5. Alekhya vidya: art of painting.
   6. Viseshakacchedya vidya: art of painting the face and body with color
   7. Tandula­kusuma­bali­vikara: art of preparing offerings from rice and flowers.
   8. Pushpastarana: art of making a covering of flowers for a bed.
   9. Dasana­vasananga­raga: art of applying preparations for cleansing the teeth, cloths and painting the body.
   10. Mani­bhumika­karma: art of making the groundwork of jewels.
   11. Aayya­racana: art of covering the bed.
   12. Udaka­vadya: art of playing on music in water.
   13. Udaka­ghata: art of splashing with water.
   14. Citra­yoga: art of practically applying an admixture of colors.
   15. Malya­grathana­vikalpa: art of designing a preparation of wreaths.
   16. Sekharapida­yojana: art of practically setting the coronet on the head.
   17. Nepathya­yoga: art of practically dressing in the tiring room.
   18. Karnapatra­bhanga: art of decorating the tragus of the ear.
   19. Sugandha­yukti: art of practical application of aromatics.
   20. Bhushana­yojana: art of applying or setting ornaments.
   21. Aindra­jala: art of juggling.
   22. Kaucumara: a kind of art.
   23. Hasta­laghava: art of sleight of hand.
   24. Citra­sakapupa­bhakshya­vikara­kriya: art of preparing varieties of delicious food.
   25. Panaka­rasa­ragasava­yojana: art of practically preparing palatable drinks and tinging draughts with red color.
   26. Suci­vaya­karma: art of needleworks and weaving.
   27. Sutra­krida: art of playing with thread.
   28. Vina­damuraka­vadya: art of playing on lute and small drum.
   29. Prahelika: art of making and solving riddles.
   30. Durvacaka­yoga: art of practicing language difficult to be answered by others.
   31. Pustaka­vacana: art of reciting books.
   32. Natikakhyayika­darsana: art of enacting short plays and anecdotes.
   33. Kavya­samasya­purana: art of solving enigmatic verses.
   34. Pattika­vetra­bana­vikalpa: art of designing preparation of shield, cane and arrows.
   35. Tarku­karma: art of spinning by spindle.
   36. Takshana: art of carpentry.
   37. Vastu­vidya: art of engineering.
   38. Raupya­ratna­pariksha: art of testing silver and jewels.
   39. Dhatu­vada: art of metallurgy.
   40. Mani­raga jnana: art of tinging jewels.
   41. Akara jnana: art of mineralogy.
   42. Vrikshayur­veda­yoga: art of practicing medicine or medical treatment, by herbs.
   43. Mesha­kukkuta­lavaka­yuddha­vidhi: art of knowing the mode of fighting of lambs, cocks and birds.
   44. Suka­sarika­pralapana: art of maintaining or knowing conversation between male and female cockatoos.
   45. Utsadana: art of healing or cleaning a person with perfumes.
   46. Kesa­marjana­kausala: art of combing hair.
   47. Akshara­mushtika­kathana: art of talking with fingers.
   48. Dharana­matrika: art of the use of amulets.
   49. Desa­bhasha­jnana: art of knowing provincial dialects.
   50. Nirmiti­jnana: art of knowing prediction by heavenly voice.
   51. Yantra­matrika: art of mechanics.
   52. Mlecchita­kutarka­vikalpa: art of fabricating barbarous or foreign sophistry.
   53. Samvacya: art of conversation.
   54. Manasi kavya­kriya: art of composing verse
   55. Kriya­vikalpa: art of designing a literary work or a medical remedy.
   56. Chalitaka­yoga: art of practicing as a builder of shrines called after him.
   57. Abhidhana­kosha­cchando­jnana: art of the use of lexicography and meters.
   58. Vastra­gopana: art of concealment of cloths.
   59. Dyuta­visesha: art of knowing specific gambling.
   60. Akarsha­krida: art of playing with dice or magnet.
   61. Balaka­kridanaka: art of using children's toys.
   62. Vainayiki vidya: art of enforcing discipline.
   63. Vaijayiki vidya: art of gaining victory.
   64. Vaitaliki vidya: art of awakening master with music at dawn.
   ~ Nik Douglas and Penny Slinger, Sexual Secrets,
269:Coded Language

Whereas, breakbeats have been the missing link connecting the diasporic community to its drum woven past

Whereas the quantised drum has allowed the whirling mathematicians to calculate the ever changing distance between rock and stardom.

Whereas the velocity of the spinning vinyl, cross-faded, spun backwards, and re-released at the same given moment of recorded history , yet at a different moment in time's continuum has allowed history to catch up with the present.

We do hereby declare reality unkempt by the changing standards of dialogue.

Statements, such as, "keep it real", especially when punctuating or anticipating modes of ultra-violence inflicted psychologically or physically or depicting an unchanging rule of events will hence forth be seen as retro-active and not representative of the individually determined is.

Furthermore, as determined by the collective consciousness of this state of being and the lessened distance between thought patterns and their secular manifestations, the role of men as listening receptacles is to be increased by a number no less than 70 percent of the current enlisted as vocal aggressors.

Motherfuckers better realize, now is the time to self-actualize

We have found evidence that hip hops standard 85 rpm when increased by a number as least half the rate of it's standard or decreased at ¾ of it's speed may be a determining factor in heightening consciousness.

Studies show that when a given norm is changed in the face of the unchanging, the remaining contradictions will parallel the truth.

Equate rhyme with reason, Sun with season

Our cyclical relationship to phenomenon has encouraged scholars to erase the centers of periods, thus symbolizing the non-linear character of cause and effect

Reject mediocrity!

Your current frequencies of understanding outweigh that which as been given for you to understand.

The current standard is the equivalent of an adolescent restricted to the diet of an infant.

The rapidly changing body would acquire dysfunctional and deformative symptoms and could not properly mature on a diet of apple sauce and crushed pears

Light years are interchangeable with years of living in darkness.

The role of darkness is not to be seen as, or equated with, Ignorance, but with the unknown, and the mysteries of the unseen.

Thus, in the name of:

ROBESON, GOD'S SON, HURSTON, AHKENATON, HATHSHEPUT, BLACKFOOT, HELEN
LENNON, KHALO, KALI, THE THREE MARIAS, TARA, LILITH, LOURDE, WHITMAN
BALDWIN, GINSBERG, KAUFMAN, LUMUMBA, GHANDI, GIBRAN, SHABAZZ, SIDDHARTHA
MEDUSA, GUEVARA, GURDJIEFF, RAND, WRIGHT, BANNEKER, TUBMAN, HAMER, HOLIDAY
DAVIS, COLTRANE, MORRISON, JOPLIN, DUBOIS, CLARKE, SHAKESPEARE, RACHMANINOV
ELLINGTON, CARTER, GAYE, HATHAWAY, HENDRIX, KUTI, DICKINSON, RIPPERTON
MARY, ISIS, THERESA, HANSBURY, TESLA, PLATH, RUMI, FELLINI, MICHAUX, NOSTRADAMUS, NEFERTITI
LA ROCK, SHIVA, GANESHA, YEMAJA, OSHUN, OBATALA, OGUN, KENNEDY, KING, FOUR
LITTLE GIRLS, HIROSHIMA, NAGASAKI, KELLER, BIKO, PERÓN, MARLEY, MAGDALENE, COSBY
SHAKUR, THOSE WHO BURN, THOSE STILL AFLAME, AND THE COUNTLESS UNNAMED

We claim the present as the pre-sent, as the hereafter.

We are unraveling our navels so that we may ingest the sun.

We are not afraid of the darkness, we trust that the moon shall guide us.

We are determining the future at this very moment.

We now know that the heart is the philosophers' stone

Our music is our alchemy

We stand as the manifested equivalent of 3 buckets of water and a hand full of minerals, thus realizing that those very buckets turned upside down supply the percussion factor of forever.

If you must count to keep the beat then count.

Find you mantra and awaken your subconscious.

Curve you circles counterclockwise

Use your cipher to decipher, Coded Language, man made laws.

Climb waterfalls and trees, commune with nature, snakes and bees.

Let your children name themselves and claim themselves as the new day for today we are determined to be the channelers of these changing frequencies into songs, paintings, writings, dance, drama, photography, carpentry, crafts, love, and love.

We enlist every instrument: Acoustic, electronic.

Every so-called race, gender, and sexual preference.

Every per-son as beings of sound to acknowledge their responsibility to uplift the consciousness of the entire fucking World.

Any utterance will be un-aimed, will be disclaimed - two rappers slain

Any utterance will be un-aimed, will be disclaimed - two rappers slain
~ Saul Williams,
270:The ancient Mesopotamians and the ancient Egyptians had some very interesting, dramatic ideas about that. For example-very briefly-there was a deity known as Marduk. Marduk was a Mesopotamian deity, and imagine this is sort of what happened. As an empire grew out of the post-ice age-15,000 years ago, 10,000 years ago-all these tribes came together. These tribes each had their own deity-their own image of the ideal. But then they started to occupy the same territory. One tribe had God A, and one tribe had God B, and one could wipe the other one out, and then it would just be God A, who wins. That's not so good, because maybe you want to trade with those people, or maybe you don't want to lose half your population in a war. So then you have to have an argument about whose God is going to take priority-which ideal is going to take priority.

What seems to happen is represented in mythology as a battle of the gods in celestial space. From a practical perspective, it's more like an ongoing dialog. You believe this; I believe this. You believe that; I believe this. How are we going to meld that together? You take God A, and you take God B, and maybe what you do is extract God C from them, and you say, 'God C now has the attributes of A and B.' And then some other tribes come in, and C takes them over, too. Take Marduk, for example. He has 50 different names, at least in part, of the subordinate gods-that represented the tribes that came together to make the civilization. That's part of the process by which that abstracted ideal is abstracted. You think, 'this is important, and it works, because your tribe is alive, and so we'll take the best of both, if we can manage it, and extract out something, that's even more abstract, that covers both of us.'

I'll give you a couple of Marduk's interesting features. He has eyes all the way around his head. He's elected by all the other gods to be king God. That's the first thing. That's quite cool. They elect him because they're facing a terrible threat-sort of like a flood and a monster combined. Marduk basically says that, if they elect him top God, he'll go out and stop the flood monster, and they won't all get wiped out. It's a serious threat. It's chaos itself making its comeback. All the gods agree, and Marduk is the new manifestation. He's got eyes all the way around his head, and he speaks magic words. When he fights, he fights this deity called Tiamat. We need to know that, because the word 'Tiamat' is associated with the word 'tehom.' Tehom is the chaos that God makes order out of at the beginning of time in Genesis, so it's linked very tightly to this story. Marduk, with his eyes and his capacity to speak magic words, goes out and confronts Tiamat, who's like this watery sea dragon. It's a classic Saint George story: go out and wreak havoc on the dragon. He cuts her into pieces, and he makes the world out of her pieces. That's the world that human beings live in.

The Mesopotamian emperor acted out Marduk. He was allowed to be emperor insofar as he was a good Marduk. That meant that he had eyes all the way around his head, and he could speak magic; he could speak properly. We are starting to understand, at that point, the essence of leadership. Because what's leadership? It's the capacity to see what the hell's in front of your face, and maybe in every direction, and maybe the capacity to use your language properly to transform chaos into order. God only knows how long it took the Mesopotamians to figure that out. The best they could do was dramatize it, but it's staggeringly brilliant. It's by no means obvious, and this chaos is a very strange thing. This is a chaos that God wrestled with at the beginning of time.

Chaos is half psychological and half real. There's no other way to really describe it. Chaos is what you encounter when you're blown into pieces and thrown into deep confusion-when your world falls apart, when your dreams die, when you're betrayed. It's the chaos that emerges, and the chaos is everything it wants, and it's too much for you. That's for sure. It pulls you down into the underworld, and that's where the dragons are. All you've got at that point is your capacity to bloody well keep your eyes open, and to speak as carefully and as clearly as you can. Maybe, if you're lucky, you'll get through it that way and come out the other side. It's taken people a very long time to figure that out, and it looks, to me, that the idea is erected on the platform of our ancient ancestors, maybe tens of millions of years ago, because we seem to represent that which disturbs us deeply using the same system that we used to represent serpentile, or other, carnivorous predators. ~ Jordan Peterson, Biblical Series, 1,
271:GURU YOGA
   Guru yoga is an essential practice in all schools of Tibetan Buddhism and Bon. This is true in sutra, tantra, and Dzogchen. It develops the heart connection with the masteR By continually strengthening our devotion, we come to the place of pure devotion in ourselves, which is the unshakeable, powerful base of the practice. The essence of guru yoga is to merge the practitioner's mind with the mind of the master.
   What is the true master? It is the formless, fundamental nature of mind, the primordial awareness of the base of everything, but because we exist in dualism, it is helpful for us to visualize this in a form. Doing so makes skillful use of the dualisms of the conceptual mind, to further strengthen devotion and help us stay directed toward practice and the generation of positive qualities.
   In the Bon tradition, we often visualize either Tapihritsa* as the master, or the Buddha ShenlaOdker*, who represents the union of all the masters. If you are already a practitioner, you may have another deity to visualize, like Guru Rinpoche or a yidam or dakini. While it is important to work with a lineage with which you have a connection, you should understand that the master you visualize is the embodiment of all the masters with whom you are connected, all the teachers with whom you have studied, all the deities to whom you have commitments. The master in guru yoga is not just one individual, but the essence of enlightenment, the primordial awareness that is your true nature.
   The master is also the teacher from whom you receive the teachings. In the Tibetan tradition, we say the master is more important than the Buddha. Why? Because the master is the immediate messenger of the teachings, the one who brings the Buddha's wisdom to the student. Without the master we could not find our way to the Buddha. So we should feel as much devotion to the master as we would to the Buddha if the Buddha suddenly appeared in front of us.
   Guru yoga is not just about generating some feeling toward a visualized image. It is done to find the fundamental mind in yourself that is the same as the fundamental mind of all your teachers, and of all the Buddhas and realized beings that have ever lived. When you merge with the guru, you merge with your pristine true nature, which is the real guide and masteR But this should not be an abstract practice. When you do guru yoga, try to feel such intense devotion that the hair stands upon your neck, tears start down your face, and your heart opens and fills with great love. Let yourself merge in union with the guru's mind, which is your enlightened Buddha-nature. This is the way to practice guru yoga.
  
The Practice
   After the nine breaths, still seated in meditation posture, visualize the master above and in front of you. This should not be a flat, two dimensional picture-let a real being exist there, in three dimensions, made of light, pure, and with a strong presence that affects the feeling in your body,your energy, and your mind. Generate strong devotion and reflect on the great gift of the teachings and the tremendous good fortune you enjoy in having made a connection to them. Offer a sincere prayer, asking that your negativities and obscurations be removed, that your positive qualities develop, and that you accomplish dream yoga.
   Then imagine receiving blessings from the master in the form of three colored lights that stream from his or her three wisdom doors- of body, speech, and mind-into yours. The lights should be transmitted in the following sequence: White light streams from the master's brow chakra into yours, purifying and relaxing your entire body and physical dimension. Then red light streams from the master's throat chakra into yours, purifying and relaxing your energetic dimension. Finally, blue light streams from the master's heart chakra into yours, purifying and relaxing your mind.
   When the lights enter your body, feel them. Let your body, energy, and mind relax, suffused inwisdom light. Use your imagination to make the blessing real in your full experience, in your body and energy as well as in the images in your mind.
   After receiving the blessing, imagine the master dissolving into light that enters your heart and resides there as your innermost essence. Imagine that you dissolve into that light, and remain inpure awareness, rigpa.
   There are more elaborate instructions for guru yoga that can involve prostrations, offerings, gestures, mantras, and more complicated visualizations, but the essence of the practice is mingling your mind with the mind of the master, which is pure, non-dual awareness. Guru yoga can be done any time during the day; the more often the better. Many masters say that of all the practices it is guru yoga that is the most important. It confers the blessings of the lineage and can open and soften the heart and quiet the unruly mind. To completely accomplish guru yoga is to accomplish the path.
   ~ Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche, The Tibetan Yogas Of Dream And Sleep, [T3],
272:
   In the lower planes can't one say what will happen at a particular moment?

That depends. On certain planes there are consciousnesses that form, that make formations and try to send them down to earth and manifest them. These are planes where the great forces are at play, forces struggling with each other to organise things in one way or another. On these planes all the possibilities are there, all the possibilities that present themselves but have not yet come to a decision as to which will come down.... Suppose a plane full of the imaginations of people who want certain things to be realised upon earth - they invent a novel, narrate stories, produce all kinds of phenomena; it amuses them very much. It is a plane of form-makers and they are there imagining all kinds of circumstances and events; they play with the forces; they are like the authors of a drama and they prepare everything there and see what is going to happen. All these formations are facing each other; and it is those which are the strongest, the most successful or the most persistent or those that have the advantage of a favourable set of circumstances which dominate. They meet and out of the conflict yet another thing results: you lose one thing and take up another, you make a new combination; and then all of a sudden, you find, pluff! it is coming down. Now, if it comes down with a sufficient force, it sets moving the earth atmosphere and things combine; as for instance, when with your fist you thump the saw-dust, you know surely what happens, don't you? You lift your hand, give a formidable blow: all the dust gets organised around your fist. Well, it is like that. These formations come down into matter with that force, and everything organises itself automatically, mechanically as around the striking fist. And there's your wished object about to be realised, sometimes with small deformations because of the resistance, but it will be realised finally, even as the person narrating the story up above wanted it more or less to be realised. If then you are for some reason or other in the secret of the person who has constructed the story and if you follow the way in which he creates his path to reach down to the earth and if you see how a blow with the fist acts on earthly matter, then you are able to tell what is going to happen, because you have seen it in the world above, and as it takes some time to make the whole journey, you see in advance. And the higher you rise, the more you foresee in advance what is going to happen. And if you pass far beyond, go still farther, then everything is possible.
   It is an unfolding that follows a wide road which is for you unknowable; for all will be unfolded in the universe, but in what order and in what way? There are decisions that are taken up there which escape our ordinary consciousness, and so it is very difficult to foresee. But there also, if you enter consciously and if you can be present up there... How shall I explain that to you? All is there, absolute, static, eternal: but all that will be unfolded in the material world, naturally more or less one thing after another; for in the static existence all can be there, but in the becoming all becomes in time, that is, one thing after another. Well, what path will the unfolding follow? Up there is the domain of absolute freedom.... Who says that a sufficiently sincere aspiration, a sufficiently intense prayer is not capable of changing the path of the unfolding?
   This means that all is possible.
   Now, one must have a sufficient aspiration and a prayer that's sufficiently intense. But that has been given to human nature. It is one of the marvellous gifts of grace given to human nature; only, one does not know how to make use of it. This comes to saying that in spite of the most absolute determinisms in the horizontal line, if one knows how to cross all these horizontal lines and reach the highest Point of consciousness, one is able to make things change, things apparently absolutely determined. So you may call it by any name you like, but it is a kind of combination of an absolute determinism with an absolute freedom. You may pull yourself out of it in any way you like, but it is like that.
   I forgot to say in that book (perhaps I did not forget but just felt that it was useless to say it) that all these theories are only theories, that is, mental conceptions which are merely more or less imaged representations of the reality; but it is not the reality at all. When you say "determinism" and when you say "freedom", you say only words and all that is only a very incomplete, very approximate and very weak description of what is in reality within you, around you and everywhere; and to be able to begin to understand what the universe is, you must come out of your mental formulas, otherwise you will never understand anything.
   To tell the truth, if you live only a moment, just a tiny moment, of this absolutely sincere aspiration or this sufficiently intense prayer, you will know more things than by meditating for hours.

~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1953,
273: Sri Aurobindo writes here: "...Few and brief in their visits are the Bright Ones who are willing or permitted to succour." Why?
(1 "The Way", Cent. Vol. 17, p. 40.)
One must go and ask them! But there is a conclusion, the last sentences give a very clear explanation. It is said: "Nay, then, is immortality a plaything to be given lightly to a child, or the divine life a prize without effort or the crown for a weakling?" This comes back to the question why the adverse forces have the right to interfere, to harass you. But this is precisely the test necessary for your sincerity. If the way were very easy, everybody would start on the way, and if one could reach the goal without any obstacle and without any effort, everybody would reach the goal, and when one has come to the end, the situation would be the same as when one started, there would be no change. That is, the new world would be exactly what the old has been. It is truly not worth the trouble! Evidently a process of elimination is necessary so that only what is capable of manifesting the new life remains. This is the reason and there is no other, this is the best of reasons. And, you see, it is a tempering, it is the ordeal of fire, only that which can stand it remains absolutely pure; when everything has burnt down, there remains only the little ingot of pure gold. And it is like that. What puts things out very much in all this is the religious idea of fault, sin, redemption. But there is no arbitrary decision! On the contrary, for each one it is the best and most favourable conditions which are given. We were saying the other day that it is only his friends whom God treats with severity; you thought it was a joke, but it is true. It is only to those who are full of hope, who will pass through this purifying flame, that the conditions for attaining the maximum result are given. And the human mind is made in such a way that you may test this; when something extremely unpleasant happens to you, you may tell yourself, "Well, this proves I am worth the trouble of being given this difficulty, this proves there is something in me which can resist the difficulty", and you will notice that instead of tormenting yourself, you rejoice - you will be so happy and so strong that even the most unpleasant things will seem to you quite charming! This is a very easy experiment to make. Whatever the circumstance, if your mind is accustomed to look at it as something favourable, it will no longer be unpleasant for you. This is quite well known; as long as the mind refuses to accept a thing, struggles against it, tries to obstruct it, there are torments, difficulties, storms, inner struggles and all suffering. But the minute the mind says, "Good, this is what has to come, it is thus that it must happen", whatever happens, you are content. There are people who have acquired such control of their mind over their body that they feel nothing; I told you this the other day about certain mystics: if they think the suffering inflicted upon them is going to help them cross the stages in a moment and give them a sort of stepping stone to attain the Realisation, the goal they have put before them, union with the Divine, they no longer feel the suffering at all. Their body is as it were galvanised by the mental conception. This has happened very often, it is a very common experience among those who truly have enthusiasm. And after all, if one must for some reason or other leave one's body and take a new one, is it not better to make of one's death something magnificent, joyful, enthusiastic, than to make it a disgusting defeat? Those who cling on, who try by every possible means to delay the end even by a minute or two, who give you an example of frightful anguish, show that they are not conscious of their soul.... After all, it is perhaps a means, isn't it? One can change this accident into a means; if one is conscious one can make a beautiful thing of it, a very beautiful thing, as of everything. And note, those who do not fear it, who are not anxious, who can die without any sordidness are those who never think about it, who are not haunted all the time by this "horror" facing them which they must escape and which they try to push as far away from them as they can. These, when the occasion comes, can lift their head, smile and say, "Here I am."
It is they who have the will to make the best possible use of their life, it is they who say, "I shall remain here as long as it is necessary, to the last second, and I shall not lose one moment to realise my goal"; these, when the necessity comes, put up the best show. Why? - It is very simple, because they live in their ideal, the truth of their ideal; because that is the real thing for them, the very reason of their being, and in all things they can see this ideal, this reason of existence, and never do they come down into the sordidness of material life.
So, the conclusion:
One must never wish for death.
One must never will to die.
One must never be afraid to die.
And in all circumstances one must will to exceed oneself. ~ The Mother, Question and Answers, Volume-4, page no.353-355,
274:[the sevenfold ignorance and the integral knowledge:]

   We are ignorant of the Absolute which is the source of all being and becoming; we take partial facts of being, temporal relations of the becoming for the whole truth of existence,-that is the first, the original ignorance. We are ignorant of the spaceless, timeless, immobile and immutable Self; we take the constant mobility and mutation of the cosmic becoming in Time and Space for the whole truth of existence, -that is the second, the cosmic ignorance. We are ignorant of our universal self, the cosmic existence, the cosmic consciousness, our infinite unity with all being and becoming; we take our limited egoistic mentality, vitality, corporeality for our true self and regard everything other than that as not-self,-that is the third, the egoistic ignorance. We are ignorant of our eternal becoming in Time; we take this little life in a small span of Time, in a petty field of Space, for our beginning, our middle and our end,-that is the fourth, the temporal ignorance. Even within this brief temporal becoming we are ignorant of our large and complex being, of that in us which is superconscient, subconscient, intraconscient, circumconscient to our surface becoming; we take that surface becoming with its small selection of overtly mentalised experiences for our whole existence,-that is the fifth, the psychological ignorance. We are ignorant of the true constitution of our becoming; we take the mind or life or body or any two of these or all three for our true principle or the whole account of what we are, losing sight of that which constitutes them and determines by its occult presence and is meant to determine sovereignly by its emergence their operations,-that is the sixth, the constitutional ignorance. As a result of all these ignorances, we miss the true knowledge, government and enjoyment of our life in the world; we are ignorant in our thought, will, sensations, actions, return wrong or imperfect responses at every point to the questionings of the world, wander in a maze of errors and desires, strivings and failures, pain and pleasure, sin and stumbling, follow a crooked road, grope blindly for a changing goal,-that is the seventh, the practical ignorance.

   Our conception of the Ignorance will necessarily determine our conception of the Knowledge and determine, therefore, since our life is the Ignorance at once denying and seeking after the Knowledge, the goal of human effort and the aim of the cosmic endeavour. Integral knowledge will then mean the cancelling of the sevenfold Ignorance by the discovery of what it misses and ignores, a sevenfold self-revelation within our consciousness:- it will mean [1] the knowledge of the Absolute as the origin of all things; [2] the knowledge of the Self, the Spirit, the Being and of the cosmos as the Self's becoming, the becoming of the Being, a manifestation of the Spirit; [3] the knowledge of the world as one with us in the consciousness of our true self, thus cancelling our division from it by the separative idea and life of ego; [4] the knowledge of our psychic entity and its immortal persistence in Time beyond death and earth-existence; [5] the knowledge of our greater and inner existence behind the surface; [6] the knowledge of our mind, life and body in its true relation to the self within and the superconscient spiritual and supramental being above them; [7] the knowledge, finally, of the true harmony and true use of our thought, will and action and a change of all our nature into a conscious expression of the truth of the Spirit, the Self, the Divinity, the integral spiritual Reality.

   But this is not an intellectual knowledge which can be learned and completed in our present mould of consciousness; it must be an experience, a becoming, a change of consciousness, a change of being. This brings in the evolutionary character of the Becoming and the fact that our mental ignorance is only a stage in our evolution. The integral knowledge, then, can only come by an evolution of our being and our nature, and that would seem to signify a slow process in Time such as has accompanied the other evolutionary transformations. But as against that inference there is the fact that the evolution has now become conscious and its method and steps need not be altogether of the same character as when it was subconscious in its process. The integral knowledge, since it must result from a change of consciousness, can be gained by a process in which our will and endeavour have a part, in which they can discover and apply their own steps and method: its growth in us can proceed by a conscious self-transformation. It is necessary then to see what is likely to be the principle of this new process of evolution and what are the movements of the integral knowledge that must necessarily emerge in it,-or, in other words, what is the nature of the consciousness that must be the base of the life divine and how that life may be expected to be formed or to form itself, to materialise or, as one might say, to realise.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, The Life Divine, pg 680-683 [T1],
275:Chapter LXXXII: Epistola Penultima: The Two Ways to Reality
Cara Soror,
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.

How very sensible of you, though I admit somewhat exacting!

You write-Will you tell me exactly why I should devote so much of my valuable time to subjects like Magick and Yoga.

That is all very well. But you ask me to put it in syllogistic form. I have no doubt this can be done, though the task seems somewhat complicated. I think I will leave it to you to construct your series of syllogisms yourself from the arguments of this letter.

In your main question the operative word is "valuable. Why, I ask, in my turn, should you consider your time valuable? It certainly is not valuable unless the universe has a meaning, and what is more, unless you know what that meaning is-at least roughly-it is millions to one that you will find yourself barking up the wrong tree.

First of all let us consider this question of the meaning of the universe. It is its own evidence to design, and that design intelligent design. There is no question of any moral significance-"one man's meat is another man's poison" and so on. But there can be no possible doubt about the existence of some kind of intelligence, and that kind is far superior to anything of which we know as human.

How then are we to explore, and finally to interpret this intelligence?

It seems to me that there are two ways and only two. Imagine for a moment that you are an orphan in charge of a guardian, inconceivably learned from your point of view.

Suppose therefore that you are puzzled by some problem suitable to your childish nature, your obvious and most simple way is to approach your guardian and ask him to enlighten you. It is clearly part of his function as guardian to do his best to help you. Very good, that is the first method, and close parallel with what we understand by the word Magick.

We are bothered by some difficulty about one of the elements-say Fire-it is therefore natural to evoke a Salamander to instruct you on the difficult point. But you must remember that your Holy Guardian Angel is not only far more fully instructed than yourself on every point that you can conceive, but you may go so far as to say that it is definitely his work, or part of his work; remembering always that he inhabits a sphere or plane which is entirely different from anything of which you are normally aware.

To attain to the Knowledge and Conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel is consequently without doubt by far the simplest way by which you can yourself approach that higher order of being.

That, then, is a clearly intelligible method of procedure. We call it Magick.

It is of course possible to strengthen the link between him and yourself so that in course of time you became capable of moving and, generally speaking, operating on that plane which is his natural habitat.

There is however one other way, and one only, as far as I can see, of reaching this state.

It is at least theoretically possible to exalt the whole of your own consciousness until it becomes as free to move on that exalted plane as it is for him. You should note, by the way, that in this case the postulation of another being is not necessary. There is no way of refuting the solipsism if you feel like that. Personally I cannot accede to its axiom. The evidence for an external universe appears to me perfectly adequate.

Still there is no extra charge for thinking on those lines if you so wish.

I have paid a great deal of attention in the course of my life to the method of exalting the human consciousness in this way; and it is really quite legitimate to identify my teaching with that of the Yogis.

I must however point out that in the course of my instruction I have given continual warnings as to the dangers of this line of research. For one thing there is no means of checking your results in the ordinary scientific sense. It is always perfectly easy to find a subjective explanation of any phenomenon; and when one considers that the greatest of all the dangers in any line of research arise from egocentric vanity, I do not think I have exceeded my duty in anything that I have said to deter students from undertaking so dangerous a course as Yoga.

It is, of course, much safer if you are in a position to pursue in the Indian Jungles, provided that your health will stand the climate and also, I must say, unless you have a really sound teacher on whom you can safely rely. But then, if we once introduce a teacher, why not go to the Fountain-head and press towards the Knowledge and conversation of the Holy Guardian Angel?

In any case your Indian teacher will ultimately direct you to seek guidance from that source, so it seems to me that you have gone to a great deal of extra trouble and incurred a great deal of unnecessary danger by not leaving yourself in the first place in the hands of the Holy Guardian Angel.

In any case there are the two methods which stand as alternatives. I do not know of any third one which can be of any use whatever. Logically, since you have asked me to be logical, there is certainly no third way; there is the external way of Magick, and the internal way of Yoga: there you have your alternatives, and there they cease.

Love is the law, love under will.

Fraternally,

666 ~ Aleister Crowley, Magick Without Tears,
276:For instance, a popular game with California occultists-I do not know its inventor-involves a Magic Room, much like the Pleasure Dome discussed earlier except that this Magic Room contains an Omniscient Computer.
   To play this game, you simply "astrally project" into the Magic Room. Do not ask what "astral projection" means, and do not assume it is metaphysical (and therefore either impossible, if you are a materialist, or very difficult, if you are a mystic). Just assume this is a gedankenexperiment, a "mind game." Project yourself, in imagination, into this Magic Room and visualize vividly the Omniscient Computer, using the details you need to make such a super-information-processor real to your fantasy. You do not need any knowledge of programming to handle this astral computer. It exists early in the next century; you are getting to use it by a species of time-travel, if that metaphor is amusing and helpful to you. It is so built that it responds immediately to human brain-waves, "reading" them and decoding their meaning. (Crude prototypes of such computers already exist.) So, when you are in this magic room, you can ask this Computer anything, just by thinking of what you want to know. It will read your thought, and project into your brain, by a laser ray, the correct answer.
   There is one slight problem. The computer is very sensitive to all brain-waves. If you have any doubts, it registers them as negative commands, meaning "Do not answer my question." So, the way to use it is to start simply, with "easy" questions. Ask it to dig out of the archives the name of your second-grade teacher. (Almost everybody remembers the name of their first grade teacher-imprint vulnerability again-but that of the second grade teacher tends to get lost.)
   When the computer has dug out the name of your second grade teacher, try it on a harder question, but not one that is too hard. It is very easy to sabotage this machine, but you don't want to sabotage it during these experiments. You want to see how well it can be made to perform.
   It is wise to ask only one question at a time, since it requires concentration to keep this magic computer real on the field of your perception. Do not exhaust your capacities for imagination and visualization on your first trial runs.
   After a few trivial experiments of the second-grade-teacher variety, you can try more interesting programs. Take a person toward whom you have negative feelings, such as anger, disappointment, feeling-of-betrayal, jealousy or whatever interferes with the smooth, tranquil operation of your own bio-computer. Ask the Magic Computer to explain that other person to you; to translate you into their reality-tunnel long enough for you to understand how events seem to them. Especially, ask how you seem to them.
   This computer will do that job for you; but be prepared for some shocks which might be disagreeable at first. This super-brain can also perform exegesis on ideas that seem obscure, paradoxical or enigmatic to us. For instance, early experiments with this computer can very profitably turn on asking it to explain some of the propositions in this book which may seem inexplicable or perversely wrong-headed to you, such as "We are all greater artists than we realize" or "What the Thinker thinks, the Prover proves" or "mind and its contents are functionally identical."
   This computer is much more powerful and scientifically advanced than the rapture-machine in the neurosomatic circuit. It has total access to all the earlier, primitive circuits, and overrules any of them. That is, if you put a meta-programming instruction into this computer; it will relay it downward to the old circuits and cancel contradictory programs left over from the past. For instance, try feeding it on such meta-programming instructions as: 1. I am at cause over my body. 2. I am at cause over my imagination. 3.1 am at cause over my future. 4. My mind abounds with beauty and power. 5.1 like people, and people like me.
   Remember that this computer is only a few decades ahead of present technology, so it cannot "understand" your commands if you harbor any doubts about them. Doubts tell it not to perform. Work always from what you can believe in, extending the area of belief only as results encourage you to try for more dramatic transformations of your past reality-tunnels.
   This represents cybernetic consciousness; the programmer becoming self-programmer, self-metaprogrammer, meta-metaprogrammer, etc. Just as the emotional compulsions of the second circuit seem primitive, mechanical and, ultimately, silly to the neurosomatic consciousness, so, too, the reality maps of the third circuit become comic, relativistic, game-like to the metaprogrammer. "Whatever you say it is, it isn't, " Korzybski, the semanticist, repeated endlessly in his seminars, trying to make clear that third-circuit semantic maps are not the territories they represent; that we can always make maps of our maps, revisions of our revisions, meta-selves of our selves. "Neti, neti" (not that, not that), Hindu teachers traditionally say when asked what "God" is or what "Reality" is. Yogis, mathematicians and musicians seem more inclined to develop meta-programming consciousness than most of humanity. Korzybski even claimed that the use of mathematical scripts is an aid to developing this circuit, for as soon as you think of your mind as mind 1 , and the mind which contemplates that mind as mind2 and the mind which contemplates mind2 contemplating mind 1 as mind3, you are well on your way to meta-programming awareness. Alice in Wonderland is a masterful guide to the metaprogramming circuit (written by one of the founders of mathematical logic) and Aleister Crowley soberly urged its study upon all students of yoga. ~ Robert Anton Wilson, Prometheus Rising,
277:The Two Paths Of Yoga :::
   14 April 1929 - What are the dangers of Yoga? Is it especially dangerous to the people of the West? Someone has said that Yoga may be suitable for the East, but it has the effect of unbalancing the Western mind.

   Yoga is not more dangerous to the people of the West than to those of the East. Everything depends upon the spirit with which you approach it. Yoga does become dangerous if you want it for your own sake, to serve a personal end. It is not dangerous, on the contrary, it is safety and security itself, if you go to it with a sense of its sacredness, always remembering that the aim is to find the Divine.
   Dangers and difficulties come in when people take up Yoga not for the sake of the Divine, but because they want to acquire power and under the guise of Yoga seek to satisfy some ambition. if you cannot get rid of ambition, do not touch the thing. It is fire that burns.
   There are two paths of Yoga, one of tapasya (discipline), and the other of surrender. The path of tapasya is arduous. Here you rely solely upon yourself, you proceed by your own strength. You ascend and achieve according to the measure of your force. There is always the danger of falling down. And once you fall, you lie broken in the abyss and there is hardly a remedy. The other path, the path of surrender, is safe and sure. It is here, however, that the Western people find their difficulty. They have been taught to fear and avoid all that threatens their personal independence. They have imbibed with their mothers' milk the sense of individuality. And surrender means giving up all that. In other words, you may follow, as Ramakrishna says, either the path of the baby monkey or that of the baby cat. The baby monkey holds to its mother in order to be carried about and it must hold firm, otherwise if it loses its grip, it falls. On the other hand, the baby cat does not hold to its mother, but is held by the mother and has no fear nor responsibility; it has nothing to do but to let the mother hold it and cry ma ma.
   If you take up this path of surrender fully and sincerely, there is no more danger or serious difficulty. The question is to be sincere. If you are not sincere, do not begin Yoga. If you were dealing in human affairs, then you could resort to deception; but in dealing with the Divine there is no possibility of deception anywhere. You can go on the Path safely when you are candid and open to the core and when your only end is to realise and attain the Divine and to be moved by the Divine. There is another danger; it is in connection with the sex impulses. Yoga in its process of purification will lay bare and throw up all hidden impulses and desires in you. And you must learn not to hide things nor leave them aside, you have to face them and conquer and remould them. The first effect of Yoga, however, is to take away the mental control, and the hungers that lie dormant are suddenly set free, they rush up and invade the being. So long as this mental control has not been replaced by the Divine control, there is a period of transition when your sincerity and surrender will be put to the test. The strength of such impulses as those of sex lies usually in the fact that people take too much notice of them; they protest too vehemently and endeavour to control them by coercion, hold them within and sit upon them. But the more you think of a thing and say, "I don't want it, I don't want it", the more you are bound to it. What you should do is to keep the thing away from you, to dissociate from it, take as little notice of it as possible and, even if you happen to think of it, remain indifferent and unconcerned. The impulses and desires that come up by the pressure of Yoga should be faced in a spirit of detachment and serenity, as something foreign to yourself or belonging to the outside world. They should be offered to the Divine, so that the Divine may take them up and transmute them. If you have once opened yourself to the Divine, if the power of the Divine has once come down into you and yet you try to keep to the old forces, you prepare troubles and difficulties and dangers for yourself. You must be vigilant and see that you do not use the Divine as a cloak for the satisfaction of your desires. There are many self-appointed Masters, who do nothing but that. And then when you are off the straight path and when you have a little knowledge and not much power, it happens that you are seized by beings or entities of a certain type, you become blind instruments in their hands and are devoured by them in the end. Wherever there is pretence, there is danger; you cannot deceive God. Do you come to God saying, "I want union with you" and in your heart meaning "I want powers and enjoyments"? Beware! You are heading straight towards the brink of the precipice. And yet it is so easy to avoid all catastrophe. Become like a child, give yourself up to the Mother, let her carry you, and there is no more danger for you.
   This does not mean that you have not to face other kinds of difficulties or that you have not to fight and conquer any obstacles at all. Surrender does not ensure a smooth and unruffled and continuous progression. The reason is that your being is not yet one, nor your surrender absolute and complete. Only a part of you surrenders; and today it is one part and the next day it is another. The whole purpose of the Yoga is to gather all the divergent parts together and forge them into an undivided unity. Till then you cannot hope to be without difficulties - difficulties, for example, like doubt or depression or hesitation. The whole world is full of the poison. You take it in with every breath. If you exchange a few words with an undesirable man or even if such a man merely passes by you, you may catch the contagion from him. It is sufficient for you to come near a place where there is plague in order to be infected with its poison; you need not know at all that it is there. You can lose in a few minutes what it has taken you months to gain. So long as you belong to humanity and so long as you lead the ordinary life, it does not matter much if you mix with the people of the world; but if you want the divine life, you will have to be exceedingly careful about your company and your environment.
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1929-1931,
278:Depression, unless one has a strong will, suggests, "This is not worth while, one may have to wait a lifetime." As for enthusiasm, it expects to see the vital transformed overnight: "I am not going to have any difficulty henceforth, I am going to advance rapidly on the path of yoga, I am going to gain the divine consciousness without any difficulty." There are some other difficulties.... One needs a little time, much perseverance. So the vital, after a few hours - perhaps a few days, perhaps a few months - says to itself: "We haven't gone very far with our enthusiasm, has anything been really done? Doesn't this movement leave us just where we were, perhaps worse than we were, a little troubled, a little disturbed? Things are no longer what they were, they are not yet what they ought to be. It is very tiresome, what I am doing." And then, if one pushes a little more, here's this gentleman saying, "Ah, no! I have had enough of it, leave me alone. I don't want to move, I shall stay in my corner, I won't trouble you, but don't bother me!" And so one has not gone very much farther than before.
   This is one of the big obstacles which must be carefully avoided. As soon as there is the least sign of discontentment, of annoyance, the vital must be spoken to in this way, "My friend, you are going to keep calm, you are going to do what you are asked to do, otherwise you will have to deal with me." And to the other, the enthusiast who says, "Everything must be done now, immediately", your reply is, "Calm yourself a little, your energy is excellent, but it must not be spent in five minutes. We shall need it for a long time, keep it carefully and, as it is wanted, I shall call upon your goodwill. You will show that you are full of goodwill, you will obey, you won't grumble, you will not protest, you will not revolt, you will say 'yes, yes', you will make a little sacrifice when asked, you will say 'yes' wholeheartedly."
   So we get started on the path. But the road is very long. Many things happen on the way. Suddenly one thinks one has overcome an obstacle; I say "thinks", because though one has overcome it, it is not totally overcome. I am going to take a very obvious instance, of a very simple observation. Someone has found that his vital is uncontrollable and uncontrolled, that it gets furious for nothing and about nothing. He starts working to teach it not to get carried away, not to flare up, to remain calm and bear the shocks of life without reacting violently. If one does this cheerfully, it goes quite quickly. (Note this well, it is very important: when you have to deal with your vital take care to remain cheerful, otherwise you will get into trouble.) One remains cheerful, that is, when one sees the fury rise, one begins to laugh. Instead of being depressed and saying, "Ah! In spite of all my effort it is beginning all over again", one begins to laugh and says, "Well, well! One hasn't yet seen the end of it. Look now, aren't you ridiculous, you know quite well that you are being ridiculous! Is it worthwhile getting angry?" One gives it this lesson cheerfully. And really, after a while it doesn't get angry again, it is quiet - and one relaxes one's attention. One thinks the difficulty has been overcome, one thinks a result has at last been reached: "My vital does not trouble me any longer, it does not get angry now, everything is going fine." And the next day, one loses one's temper. It is then one must be careful, it is then one must not say, "Here we are, it's no use, I shall never achieve anything, all my efforts are futile; all this is an illusion, it is impossible." On the contrary, one must say, "I wasn't vigilant enough." One must wait long, very long, before one can say, "Ah! It is done and finished." Sometimes one must wait for years, many years....
   I am not saying this to discourage you, but to give you patience and perseverance - for there is a moment when you do arrive. And note that the vital is a small part of your being - a very important part, we have said that it is the dynamism, the realising energy, it is very important; but it is only a small part. And the mind!... which goes wandering, which must be pulled back by all the strings to be kept quiet! You think this can be done overnight? And your body?... You have a weakness, a difficulty, sometimes a small chronic illness, nothing much, but still it is a nuisance, isn't it? You want to get rid of it. You make efforts, you concentrate; you work upon it, establish harmony, and you think it is finished, and then.... Take, for instance, people who have the habit of coughing; they can't control themselves or almost can't. It is not serious but it is bothersome, and there seems to be no reason why it should ever stop. Well, one tells oneself, "I am going to control this." One makes an effort - a yogic effort, not a material one - one brings down consciousness, force, and stops the cough. And one thinks, "The body has forgotten how to cough." And it is a great thing when the body has forgotten, truly one can say, "I am cured." But unfortunately it is not always true, for this goes down into the subconscient and, one day, when the balance of forces is not so well established, when the strength is not the same, it begins again. And one laments, "I believed that it was over! I had succeeded and told myself, 'It is true that spiritual power has an action upon the body, it is true that something can be done', and there! it is not true. And yet it was a small thing, and I who want to conquer immortality! How will I succeed?... For years I have been free from this small thing and here it is beginning anew!" It is then that you must be careful. You must arm yourself with an endless patience and endurance. You do a thing once, ten times, a hundred times, a thousand times if necessary, but you do it till it gets done. And not done only here and there, but everywhere and everywhere at the same time. This is the great problem one sets oneself. That is why, to those who come to tell me very light-heartedly, "I want to do yoga", I reply, "Think it over, one may do the yoga for a number of years without noticing the least result. But if you want to do it, you must persist and persist with such a will that you should be ready to do it for ten lifetimes, a hundred lifetimes if necessary, in order to succeed." I do not say it will be like that, but the attitude must be like that. Nothing must discourage you; for there are all the difficulties of ignorance of the different states of being, to which are added the endless malice and the unbounded cunning of the hostile forces in the world.... They are there, do you know why? They have been.... ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1950-1951,
279:Attention on Hypnagogic Imagery The most common strategy for inducing WILDs is to fall asleep while focusing on the hypnagogic imagery that accompanies sleep onset. Initially, you are likely to see relatively simple images, flashes of light, geometric patterns, and the like.

Gradually more complicated forms appear: faces, people, and finally entire scenes. 6

The following account of what the Russian philosopher P. D. Ouspensky called "half-dream states" provides a vivid example of what hypnagogic imagery can be like:

I am falling asleep. Golden dots, sparks and tiny stars appear and disappear before my eyes. These sparks and stars gradually merge into a golden net with diagonal meshes which moves slowly and regularly in rhythm with the beating of my heart, which I feel quite distinctly. The next moment the golden net is transformed into rows of brass helmets belonging to Roman soldiers marching along the street below. I hear their measured tread and watch them from the window of a high house in Galata, in Constantinople, in a narrow lane, one end of which leads to the old wharf and the Golden Horn with its ships and steamers and the minarets of Stamboul behind them. I hear their heavy measured tread, and see the sun shining on their helmets. Then suddenly I detach myself from the window sill on which I am lying, and in the same reclining position fly slowly over the lane, over the houses, and then over the Golden Horn in the direction of Stamboul. I smell the sea, feel the wind, the warm sun. This flying gives me a wonderfully pleasant sensation, and I cannot help opening my eyes. 7

Ouspensky's half-dream states developed out of a habit of observing the contents of his mind while falling asleep or in half-sleep after awakening from a dream. He notes that they were much easier to observe in the morning after awakening than before sleep at the beginning of the night and did not occur at all "without definite efforts." 8

Dr. Nathan Rapport, an American psychiatrist, cultivated an approach to lucid dreaming very similar to Ouspensky's: "While in bed awaiting sleep, the experimenter interrupts his thoughts every few minutes with an effort to recall the mental item vanishing before each intrusion that inquisitive attention." 9 This habit is continued sleep itself, with results like the following:

Brilliant lights flashed, and a myriad of sparkles twinkled from a magnificent cut glass chandelier. Interesting as any stage extravaganza were the many quaintly detailed figurines upon a mantel against the distant, paneled wall adorned in rococo.

At the right a merry group of beauties and gallants in the most elegant attire of Victorian England idled away a pleasant occasion. This scene continued for [a] period of I was not aware, before I discovered that it was not reality, but a mental picture and that I was viewing it. Instantly it became an incommunicably beautiful vision. It was with the greatest stealth that my vaguely awakened mind began to peep: for I knew that these glorious shows end abruptly because of such intrusions.

I thought, "Have I here one of those mind pictures that are without motion?" As if in reply, one of the young ladies gracefully waltzed about the room. She returned to the group and immobility, with a smile lighting her pretty face, which was turned over her shoulder toward me. The entire color scheme was unobtrusive despite the kaleidoscopic sparkles of the chandelier, the exquisite blues and creamy pinks of the rich settings and costumes. I felt that only my interest in dreams brought my notice to the tints - delicate, yet all alive as if with inner illumination. 10

Hypnagogic Imagery Technique

1. Relax completely

While lying in bed, gently close your eyes and relax your head, neck, back, arms, and legs. Completely let go of all muscular and mental tension, and breathe slowly and restfully. Enjoy the feeling of relaxation and let go of your thoughts, worries, and concerns. If you have just awakened from sleep, you are probably sufficiently relaxed.

Otherwise, you may use either the progressive relaxation exercise (page 33) or the 61-point relaxation exercise (page 34) to relax more deeply. Let everything wind down,

slower and slower, more and more relaxed, until your mind becomes as serene as the calmest sea.

2. Observe the visual images

Gently focus your attention on the visual images that will gradually appear before your mind's eye. Watch how the images begin and end. Try to observe the images as delicately as possible, allowing them to be passively reflected in your mind as they unfold. Do not attempt to hold onto the images, but instead just watch without attachment or desire for action. While doing this, try to take the perspective of a detached observer as much as possible. At first you will see a sequence of disconnected, fleeting patterns and images. The images will gradually develop into scenes that become more and more complex, finally joining into extended sequences.

3. Enter the dream

When the imagery becomes a moving, vivid scenario, you should allow yourself to be passively drawn into the dream world. Do not try to actively enter the dream scene,

but instead continue to take a detached interest in the imagery. Let your involvement with what is happening draw you into the dream. But be careful of too much involvement and too little attention. Don't forget that you are dreaming now!

Commentary

Probably the most difficult part of this technique to master is entering the dream at Step 3. The challenge is to develop a delicate vigilance, an unobtrusive observer perspective, from which you let yourself be drawn into the dream. As Paul Tholey has emphasized, "It is not desirable to want actively to enter into the scenery,

since such an intention as a rule causes the scenery to disappear." 11 A passive volition similar to that described in the section on autosuggestion in the previous chapter is required: in Tholey's words, "Instead of actively wanting to enter into the scenery, the subject should attempt to let himself be carried into it passively." 12 A Tibetan teacher advises a similar frame of mind: "While delicately observing the mind, lead it gently into the dream state, as though you were leading a child by the hand." 13

Another risk is that, once you have entered into the dream, the world can seem so realistic that it is easy to lose lucidity, as happened in the beginning of Rapport's WILD described above. As insurance in case this happens, Tholey recommends that you resolve to carry out a particular action in the dream, so that if you momentarily lose lucidity, you may remember your intention to carry out the action and thereby regain lucidity.
~ Stephen LaBerge, Exploring the World of Lucid Dreaming,
280:
   Mother, when one imagines something, does it not exist?

When you imagine something, it means that you make a mental formation which may be close to the truth or far from the truth - it also depends upon the quality of your formation. You make a mental formation and there are people who have such a power of formation that they succeed in making what they imagine real. There are not many of these but there are some. They imagine something and their formation is so well made and so powerful that it succeeds in being realised. These are creators; there are not many of them but there are some.

   If one thinks of someone who doesn't exist or who is dead?

Ah! What do you mean? What have you just said? Someone who doesn't exist or someone who is dead? These are two absolutely different things.

   I mean someone who is dead.

Someone who is dead!

   If this person has remained in the mental domain, you can find him immediately. Naturally if he is no longer in the mental domain, if he is in the psychic domain, to think of him is not enough. You must know how to go into the psychic domain to find him. But if he has remained in the mental domain and you think of him, you can find him immediately, and not only that, but you can have a mental contact with him and a kind of mental vision of his existence.

   The mind has a capacity of vision of its own and it is not the same vision as with these eyes, but it is a vision, it is a perception in forms. But this is not imagination. It has nothing to do with imagination.

   Imagination, for instance, is when you begin to picture to yourself an ideal being to whom you apply all your conceptions, and when you tell yourself, "Why, it should be like this, like that, its form should be like this, its thought like that, its character like that," when you see all the details and build up the being. Now, writers do this all the time because when they write a novel, they imagine. There are those who take things from life but there are those who are imaginative, creators; they create a character, a personage and then put him in their book later. This is to imagine. To imagine, for example, a whole concurrence of circumstances, a set of events, this is what I call telling a story to oneself. But it can be put down on paper, and then one becomes a novelist. There are very different kinds of writers. Some imagine everything, some gather all sorts of observations from life and construct their book with them. There are a hundred ways of writing a book. But indeed some writers imagine everything from beginning to end. It all comes out of their head and they construct even their whole story without any support in things physically observed. This truly is imagination. But as I say, if they are very powerful and have a considerable capacity for creation, it is possible that one day or other there will be a physical human being who realises their creation. This too is true.

   What do you suppose imagination is, eh? Have you never imagined anything, you?

   And what happens?

   All that one imagines.


You mean that you imagine something and it happens like that, eh? Or it is in a dream...

   What is the function, the use of the imagination?

If one knows how to use it, as I said, one can create for oneself his own inner and outer life; one can build his own existence with his imagination, if one knows how to use it and has a power. In fact it is an elementary way of creating, of forming things in the world. I have always felt that if one didn't have the capacity of imagination he would not make any progress. Your imagination always goes ahead of your life. When you think of yourself, usually you imagine what you want to be, don't you, and this goes ahead, then you follow, then it continues to go ahead and you follow. Imagination opens for you the path of realisation. People who are not imaginative - it is very difficult to make them move; they see just what is there before their nose, they feel just what they are moment by moment and they cannot go forward because they are clamped by the immediate thing. It depends a good deal on what one calls imagination. However...

   Men of science must be having imagination!


A lot. Otherwise they would never discover anything. In fact, what is called imagination is a capacity to project oneself outside realised things and towards things realisable, and then to draw them by the projection. One can obviously have progressive and regressive imaginations. There are people who always imagine all the catastrophes possible, and unfortunately they also have the power of making them come. It's like the antennae going into a world that's not yet realised, catching something there and drawing it here. Then naturally it is an addition to the earth atmosphere and these things tend towards manifestation. It is an instrument which can be disciplined, can be used at will; one can discipline it, direct it, orientate it. It is one of the faculties one can develop in himself and render serviceable, that is, use it for definite purposes.

   Sweet Mother, can one imagine the Divine and have the contact?

Certainly if you succeed in imagining the Divine you have the contact, and you can have the contact with what you imagine, in any case. In fact it is absolutely impossible to imagine something which doesn't exist somewhere. You cannot imagine anything at all which doesn't exist somewhere. It is possible that it doesn't exist on the earth, it is possible that it's elsewhere, but it is impossible for you to imagine something which is not already contained in principle in the universe; otherwise it could not occur.

   Then, Sweet Mother, this means that in the created universe nothing new is added?

In the created universe? Yes. The universe is progressive; we said that constantly things manifest, more and more. But for your imagination to be able to go and seek beyond the manifestation something which will be manifested, well, it may happen, in fact it does - I was going to tell you that it is in this way that some beings can cause considerable progress to be made in the world, because they have the capacity of imagining something that's not yet manifested. But there are not many. One must first be capable of going beyond the manifested universe to be able to imagine something which is not there. There are already many things which can be imagined.

   What is our terrestrial world in the universe? A very small thing. Simply to have the capacity of imagining something which does not exist in the terrestrial manifestation is already very difficult, very difficult. For how many billions of years hasn't it existed, this little earth? And there have been no two identical things. That's much. It is very difficult to go out from the earth atmosphere with one's mind; one can, but it is very difficult. And then if one wants to go out, not only from the earth atmosphere but from the universal life!

   To be able simply to enter into contact with the life of the earth in its totality from the formation of the earth until now, what can this mean? And then to go beyond this and enter into contact with universal life from its beginnings up to now... and then again to be able to bring something new into the universe, one must go still farther beyond.

   Not easy!
   That's all?
   (To the child) Convinced?
   ~ The Mother, Questions And Answers 1955, [T1],
281:The Supermind [Supramental consciousness] is in its very essence a truth-consciousness, a consciousness always free from the Ignorance which is the foundation of our present natural or evolutionary existence and from which nature in us is trying to arrive at self-knowledge and world-knowledge and a right consciousness and the right use of our existence in the universe. The Supermind, because it is a truth-consciousness, has this knowledge inherent in it and this power of true existence; its course is straight and can go direct to its aim, its field is wide and can even be made illimitable. This is because its very nature is knowledge: it has not to acquire knowledge but possesses it in its own right; its steps are not from nescience or ignorance into some imperfect light, but from truth to greater truth, from right perception to deeper perception, from intuition to intuition, from illumination to utter and boundless luminousness, from growing widenesses to the utter vasts and to very infinitude. On its summits it possesses the divine omniscience and omnipotence, but even in an evolutionary movement of its own graded self-manifestation by which it would eventually reveal its own highest heights, it must be in its very nature essentially free from ignorance and error: it starts from truth and light and moves always in truth and light. As its knowledge is always true, so too its will is always true; it does not fumble in its handling of things or stumble in its paces. In the Supermind feeling and emotion do not depart from their truth, make no slips or mistakes, do not swerve from the right and the real, cannot misuse beauty and delight or twist away from a divine rectitude. In the Supermind sense cannot mislead or deviate into the grossnesses which are here its natural imperfections and the cause of reproach, distrust and misuse by our ignorance. Even an incomplete statement made by the Supermind is a truth leading to a further truth, its incomplete action a step towards completeness. All the life and action and leading of the Supermind is guarded in its very nature from the falsehoods and uncertainties that are our lot; it moves in safety towards its perfection. Once the truth-consciousness was established here on its own sure foundation, the evolution of divine life would be a progress in felicity, a march through light to Ananda. Supermind is an eternal reality of the divine Being and the divine Nature. In its own plane it already and always exists and possesses its own essential law of being; it has not to be created or to emerge or evolve into existence out of involution in Matter or out of non-existence, as it might seem to the view of mind which itself seems to its own view to have so emerged from life and Matter or to have evolved out of an involution in life and Matter. The nature of Supermind is always the same, a being of knowledge, proceeding from truth to truth, creating or rather manifesting what has to be manifested by the power of a pre-existent knowledge, not by hazard but by a self-existent destiny in the being itself, a necessity of the thing in itself and therefore inevitable. Its -manifestation of the divine life will also be inevitable; its own life on its own plane is divine and, if Supermind descends upon the earth, it will bring necessarily the divine life with it and establish it here. Supermind is the grade of existence beyond mind, life and Matter and, as mind, life and Matter have manifested on the earth, so too must Supermind in the inevitable course of things manifest in this world of Matter. In fact, a supermind is already here but it is involved, concealed behind this manifest mind, life and Matter and not yet acting overtly or in its own power: if it acts, it is through these inferior powers and modified by their characters and so not yet recognisable. It is only by the approach and arrival of the descending Supermind that it can be liberated upon earth and reveal itself in the action of our material, vital and mental parts so that these lower powers can become portions of a total divinised activity of our whole being: it is that that will bring to us a completely realised divinity or the divine life. It is indeed so that life and mind involved in Matter have realised themselves here; for only what is involved can evolve, otherwise there could be no emergence. The manifestation of a supramental truth-consciousness is therefore the capital reality that will make the divine life possible. It is when all the movements of thought, impulse and action are governed and directed by a self-existent and luminously automatic truth-consciousness and our whole nature comes to be constituted by it and made of its stuff that the life divine will be complete and absolute. Even as it is, in reality though not in the appearance of things, it is a secret self-existent knowledge and truth that is working to manifest itself in the creation here. The Divine is already there immanent within us, ourselves are that in our inmost reality and it is this reality that we have to manifest; it is that which constitutes the urge towards the divine living and makes necessary the creation of the life divine even in this material existence. A manifestation of the Supermind and its truth-consciousness is then inevitable; it must happen in this world sooner or lateR But it has two aspects, a descent from above, an ascent from below, a self-revelation of the Spirit, an evolution in Nature. The ascent is necessarily an effort, a working of Nature, an urge or nisus on her side to raise her lower parts by an evolutionary or revolutionary change, conversion or transformation into the divine reality and it may happen by a process and progress or by a rapid miracle. The descent or self-revelation of the Spirit is an act of the supreme Reality from above which makes the realisation possible and it can appear either as the divine aid which brings about the fulfilment of the progress and process or as the sanction of the miracle. Evolution, as we see it in this world, is a slow and difficult process and, indeed, needs usually ages to reach abiding results; but this is because it is in its nature an emergence from inconscient beginnings, a start from nescience and a working in the ignorance of natural beings by what seems to be an unconscious force. There can be, on the contrary, an evolution in the light and no longer in the darkness, in which the evolving being is a conscious participant and cooperator, and this is precisely what must take place here. Even in the effort and progress from the Ignorance to Knowledge this must be in part if not wholly the endeavour to be made on the heights of the nature, and it must be wholly that in the final movement towards the spiritual change, realisation, transformation. It must be still more so when there is a transition across the dividing line between the Ignorance and the Knowledge and the evolution is from knowledge to greater knowledge, from consciousness to greater consciousness, from being to greater being. There is then no longer any necessity for the slow pace of the ordinary evolution; there can be rapid conversion, quick transformation after transformation, what would seem to our normal present mind a succession of miracles. An evolution on the supramental levels could well be of that nature; it could be equally, if the being so chose, a more leisurely passage of one supramental state or condition of things to something beyond but still supramental, from level to divine level, a building up of divine gradations, a free growth to the supreme Supermind or beyond it to yet undreamed levels of being, consciousness and Ananda.
   ~ Sri Aurobindo, Essays In Philosophy And Yoga, 558,
282:How to Meditate
Deep meditation is a mental procedure that utilizes the nature of the mind to systematically bring the mind to rest. If the mind is given the opportunity, it will go to rest with no effort. That is how the mind works.
Indeed, effort is opposed to the natural process of deep meditation. The mind always seeks the path of least resistance to express itself. Most of the time this is by making more and more thoughts. But it is also possible to create a situation in the mind that turns the path of least resistance into one leading to fewer and fewer thoughts. And, very soon, no thoughts at all. This is done by using a particular thought in a particular way. The thought is called a mantra.
For our practice of deep meditation, we will use the thought - I AM. This will be our mantra.
It is for the sound that we will use I AM, not for the meaning of it.
The meaning has an obvious significance in English, and I AM has a religious meaning in the English Bible as well. But we will not use I AM for the meaning - only for the sound. We can also spell it AYAM. No meaning there, is there? Only the sound. That is what we want. If your first language is not English, you may spell the sound phonetically in your own language if you wish. No matter how we spell it, it will be the same sound. The power of the sound ...I AM... is great when thought inside. But only if we use a particular procedure. Knowing this procedure is the key to successful meditation. It is very simple. So simple that we will devote many pages here to discussing how to keep it simple, because we all have a tendency to make things more complicated. Maintaining simplicity is the key to right meditation.
Here is the procedure of deep meditation: While sitting comfortably with eyes closed, we'll just relax. We will notice thoughts, streams of thoughts. That is fine. We just let them go by without minding them. After about a minute, we gently introduce the mantra, ...I AM...
We think the mantra in a repetition very easily inside. The speed of repetition may vary, and we do not mind it. We do not intone the mantra out loud. We do not deliberately locate the mantra in any particular part of the body. Whenever we realize we are not thinking the mantra inside anymore, we come back to it easily. This may happen many times in a sitting, or only once or twice. It doesn't matter. We follow this procedure of easily coming back to the mantra when we realize we are off it for the predetermined time of our meditation session. That's it.
Very simple.
Typically, the way we will find ourselves off the mantra will be in a stream of other thoughts. This is normal. The mind is a thought machine, remember? Making thoughts is what it does. But, if we are meditating, as soon as we realize we are off into a stream of thoughts, no matter how mundane or profound, we just easily go back to the mantra.
Like that. We don't make a struggle of it. The idea is not that we have to be on the mantra all the time. That is not the objective. The objective is to easily go back to it when we realize we are off it. We just favor the mantra with our attention when we notice we are not thinking it. If we are back into a stream of other thoughts five seconds later, we don't try and force the thoughts out. Thoughts are a normal part of the deep meditation process. We just ease back to the mantra again. We favor it.
Deep meditation is a going toward, not a pushing away from. We do that every single time with the mantra when we realize we are off it - just easily favoring it. It is a gentle persuasion. No struggle. No fuss. No iron willpower or mental heroics are necessary for this practice. All such efforts are away from the simplicity of deep meditation and will reduce its effectiveness.
As we do this simple process of deep meditation, we will at some point notice a change in the character of our inner experience. The mantra may become very refined and fuzzy. This is normal. It is perfectly all right to think the mantra in a very refined and fuzzy way if this is the easiest. It should always be easy - never a struggle. Other times, we may lose track of where we are for a while, having no mantra, or stream of thoughts either. This is fine too. When we realize we have been off somewhere, we just ease back to the mantra again. If we have been very settled with the mantra being barely recognizable, we can go back to that fuzzy level of it, if it is the easiest. As the mantra refines, we are riding it inward with our attention to progressively deeper levels of inner silence in the mind. So it is normal for the mantra to become very faint and fuzzy. We cannot force this to happen. It will happen naturally as our nervous system goes through its many cycles ofinner purification stimulated by deep meditation. When the mantra refines, we just go with it. And when the mantra does not refine, we just be with it at whatever level is easy. No struggle. There is no objective to attain, except to continue the simple procedure we are describing here.

When and Where to Meditate
How long and how often do we meditate? For most people, twenty minutes is the best duration for a meditation session. It is done twice per day, once before the morning meal and day's activity, and then again before the evening meal and evening's activity.
Try to avoid meditating right after eating or right before bed.
Before meal and activity is the ideal time. It will be most effective and refreshing then. Deep meditation is a preparation for activity, and our results over time will be best if we are active between our meditation sessions. Also, meditation is not a substitute for sleep. The ideal situation is a good balance between meditation, daily activity and normal sleep at night. If we do this, our inner experience will grow naturally over time, and our outer life will become enriched by our growing inner silence.
A word on how to sit in meditation: The first priority is comfort. It is not desirable to sit in a way that distracts us from the easy procedure of meditation. So sitting in a comfortable chair with back support is a good way to meditate. Later on, or if we are already familiar, there can be an advantage to sitting with legs crossed, also with back support. But always with comfort and least distraction being the priority. If, for whatever reason, crossed legs are not feasible for us, we will do just fine meditating in our comfortable chair. There will be no loss of the benefits.
Due to commitments we may have, the ideal routine of meditation sessions will not always be possible. That is okay. Do the best you can and do not stress over it. Due to circumstances beyond our control, sometimes the only time we will have to meditate will be right after a meal, or even later in the evening near bedtime. If meditating at these times causes a little disruption in our system, we will know it soon enough and make the necessary adjustments. The main thing is that we do our best to do two meditations every day, even if it is only a short session between our commitments. Later on, we will look at the options we have to make adjustments to address varying outer circumstances, as well as inner experiences that can come up.
Before we go on, you should try a meditation. Find a comfortable place to sit where you are not likely to be interrupted and do a short meditation, say ten minutes, and see how it goes. It is a toe in the water.
Make sure to take a couple of minutes at the end sitting easily without doing the procedure of meditation. Then open your eyes slowly. Then read on here.
As you will see, the simple procedure of deep meditation and it's resulting experiences will raise some questions. We will cover many of them here.
So, now we will move into the practical aspects of deep meditation - your own experiences and initial symptoms of the growth of your own inner silence. ~ Yogani, Deep Meditation,
283:[The Gods and Their Worlds]

   [...] According to traditions and occult schools, all these zones of realities, these planes of realities have got different names; they have been classified in a different way, but there is an essential analogy, and if you go back far enough into the traditions, you see only the words changing according to the country and the language. Even now, the experiences of Western occultists and those of Eastern occultists offer great similarities. All who set out on the discovery of these invisible worlds and make a report of what they saw, give a very similar description, whether they be from here or there; they use different words, but the experience is very similar and the handling of forces is the same.

   This knowledge of the occult worlds is based on the existence of subtle bodies and of subtle worlds corresponding to those bodies. They are what the psychological method calls "states of consciousness", but these states of consciousness really correspond to worlds. The occult procedure consists then in being aware of these various inner states of being or subtle bodies and in becoming sufficiently a master of them so as to be able to go out of them successively, one after another. There is indeed a whole scale of subtleties, increasing or decreasing according to the direction in which you go, and the occult procedure consists in going out of a denser body into a subtler body and so on again, up to the most ethereal regions. You go, by successive exteriorisations, into bodies or worlds more and more subtle. It is somewhat as if every time you passed into another dimension. The fourth dimension of the physicists is nothing but the scientific transcription of an occult knowledge. To give another image, one can say that the physical body is at the centre - it is the most material, the densest and also the smallest - and the inner bodies, more subtle, overflow more and more the central physical body; they pass through it, extending themselves farther and farther, like water evaporating from a porous vase and forming a kind of steam all around. And the greater the subtlety, the more the extension tends to unite with that of the universe: one ends by universalising oneself. And it is altogether a concrete process which gives an objective experience of invisible worlds and even enables one to act in these worlds.

   There are, then, only a very small number of people in the West who know that these gods are not merely subjective and imaginary - more or less wildly imaginary - but that they correspond to a universal truth.

   All these regions, all these domains are filled with beings who exist, each in its own domain, and if you are awake and conscious on a particular plane - for instance, if on going out of a more material body you awake on some higher plane, you have the same relation with the things and people of that plane as you had with the things and people of the material world. That is to say, there exists an entirely objective relation that has nothing to do with the idea you may have of these things. Naturally, the resemblance is greater and greater as you approach the physical world, the material world, and there even comes a time when the one region has a direct action upon the other. In any case, in what Sri Aurobindo calls the overmental worlds, you will find a concrete reality absolutely independent of your personal experience; you go back there and again find the same things, with the differences that have occurred during your absence. And you have relations with those beings that are identical with the relations you have with physical beings, with this difference that the relation is more plastic, supple and direct - for example, there is the capacity to change the external form, the visible form, according to the inner state you are in. But you can make an appointment with someone and be at the appointed place and find the same being again, with certain differences that have come about during your absence; it is entirely concrete with results entirely concrete.

   One must have at least a little of this experience in order to understand these things. Otherwise, those who are convinced that all this is mere human imagination and mental formation, who believe that these gods have such and such a form because men have thought them to be like that, and that they have certain defects and certain qualities because men have thought them to be like that - all those who say that God is made in the image of man and that he exists only in human thought, all these will not understand; to them this will appear absolutely ridiculous, madness. One must have lived a little, touched the subject a little, to know how very concrete the thing is.

   Naturally, children know a good deal if they have not been spoilt. There are so many children who return every night to the same place and continue to live the life they have begun there. When these faculties are not spoilt with age, you can keep them with you. At a time when I was especially interested in dreams, I could return exactly to a place and continue a work that I had begun: supervise something, for example, set something in order, a work of organisation or of discovery, of exploration. You go until you reach a certain spot, as you would go in life, then you take a rest, then you return and begin again - you begin the work at the place where you left off and you continue it. And you perceive that there are things which are quite independent of you, in the sense that changes of which you are not at all the author, have taken place automatically during your absence.

   But for this, you must live these experiences yourself, you must see them yourself, live them with sufficient sincerity and spontaneity in order to see that they are independent of any mental formation. For you can do the opposite also, and deepen the study of the action of mental formation upon events. This is very interesting, but it is another domain. And this study makes you very careful, very prudent, because you become aware of how far you can delude yourself. So you must study both, the dream and the occult reality, in order to see what is the essential difference between the two. The one depends upon us; the other exists in itself; entirely independent of the thought that we have of it.

   When you have worked in that domain, you recognise in fact that once a subject has been studied and something has been learnt mentally, it gives a special colour to the experience; the experience may be quite spontaneous and sincere, but the simple fact that the subject was known and studied lends a particular quality. Whereas if you had learnt nothing about the question, if you knew nothing at all, the transcription would be completely spontaneous and sincere when the experience came; it would be more or less adequate, but it would not be the outcome of a previous mental formation.

   Naturally, this occult knowledge or this experience is not very frequent in the world, because in those who do not have a developed inner life, there are veritable gaps between the external consciousness and the inmost consciousness; the linking states of being are missing and they have to be constructed. So when people enter there for the first time, they are bewildered, they have the impression they have fallen into the night, into nothingness, into non-being!

   I had a Danish friend, a painter, who was like that. He wanted me to teach him how to go out of the body; he used to have interesting dreams and thought that it would be worth the trouble to go there consciously. So I made him "go out" - but it was a frightful thing! When he was dreaming, a part of his mind still remained conscious, active, and a kind of link existed between this active part and his external being; then he remembered some of his dreams, but it was a very partial phenomenon. And to go out of one's body means to pass gradually through all the states of being, if one does the thing systematically. Well, already in the subtle physical, one is almost de-individualised, and when one goes farther, there remains nothing, for nothing is formed or individualised.

   Thus, when people are asked to meditate or told to go within, to enter into themselves, they are in agony - naturally! They have the impression that they are vanishing. And with reason: there is nothing, no consciousness!

   These things that appear to us quite natural and evident, are, for people who know nothing, wild imagination. If, for example, you transplant these experiences or this knowledge to the West, well, unless you have been frequenting the circles of occultists, they stare at you with open eyes. And when you have turned your back, they hasten to say, "These people are cranks!" Now to come back to the gods and conclude. It must be said that all those beings who have never had an earthly existence - gods or demons, invisible beings and powers - do not possess what the Divine has put into man: the psychic being. And this psychic being gives to man true love, charity, compassion, a deep kindness, which compensate for all his external defects.

   In the gods there is no fault because they live according to their own nature, spontaneously and without constraint: as gods, it is their manner of being. But if you take a higher point of view, if you have a higher vision, a vision of the whole, you see that they lack certain qualities that are exclusively human. By his capacity of love and self-giving, man can have as much power as the gods and even more, when he is not egoistic, when he has surmounted his egoism.

   If he fulfils the required condition, man is nearer to the Supreme than the gods are. He can be nearer. He is not so automatically, but he has the power to be so, the potentiality.

   If human love manifested itself without mixture, it would be all-powerful. Unfortunately, in human love there is as much love of oneself as of the one loved; it is not a love that makes you forget yourself. - 4 November 1958

   ~ The Mother, Words Of The Mother III, 355
,
284:Mental Education

OF ALL lines of education, mental education is the most widely known and practised, yet except in a few rare cases there are gaps which make it something very incomplete and in the end quite insufficient.

   Generally speaking, schooling is considered to be all the mental education that is necessary. And when a child has been made to undergo, for a number of years, a methodical training which is more like cramming than true schooling, it is considered that whatever is necessary for his mental development has been done. Nothing of the kind. Even conceding that the training is given with due measure and discrimination and does not permanently damage the brain, it cannot impart to the human mind the faculties it needs to become a good and useful instrument. The schooling that is usually given can, at the most, serve as a system of gymnastics to increase the suppleness of the brain. From this standpoint, each branch of human learning represents a special kind of mental gymnastics, and the verbal formulations given to these various branches each constitute a special and well-defined language.

   A true mental education, which will prepare man for a higher life, has five principal phases. Normally these phases follow one after another, but in exceptional individuals they may alternate or even proceed simultaneously. These five phases, in brief, are:

   (1) Development of the power of concentration, the capacity of attention.
   (2) Development of the capacities of expansion, widening, complexity and richness.
   (3) Organisation of one's ideas around a central idea, a higher ideal or a supremely luminous idea that will serve as a guide in life.
   (4) Thought-control, rejection of undesirable thoughts, to become able to think only what one wants and when one wants.
   (5) Development of mental silence, perfect calm and a more and more total receptivity to inspirations coming from the higher regions of the being.

   It is not possible to give here all the details concerning the methods to be employed in the application of these five phases of education to different individuals. Still, a few explanations on points of detail can be given.

   Undeniably, what most impedes mental progress in children is the constant dispersion of their thoughts. Their thoughts flutter hither and thither like butterflies and they have to make a great effort to fix them. Yet this capacity is latent in them, for when you succeed in arousing their interest, they are capable of a good deal of attention. By his ingenuity, therefore, the educator will gradually help the child to become capable of a sustained effort of attention and a faculty of more and more complete absorption in the work in hand. All methods that can develop this faculty of attention from games to rewards are good and can all be utilised according to the need and the circumstances. But it is the psychological action that is most important and the sovereign method is to arouse in the child an interest in what you want to teach him, a liking for work, a will to progress. To love to learn is the most precious gift that one can give to a child: to love to learn always and everywhere, so that all circumstances, all happenings in life may be constantly renewed opportunities for learning more and always more.

   For that, to attention and concentration should be added observation, precise recording and faithfulness of memory. This faculty of observation can be developed by varied and spontaneous exercises, making use of every opportunity that presents itself to keep the child's thought wakeful, alert and prompt. The growth of the understanding should be stressed much more than that of memory. One knows well only what one has understood. Things learnt by heart, mechanically, fade away little by little and finally disappear; what is understood is never forgotten. Moreover, you must never refuse to explain to a child the how and the why of things. If you cannot do it yourself, you must direct the child to those who are qualified to answer or point out to him some books that deal with the question. In this way you will progressively awaken in the child the taste for true study and the habit of making a persistent effort to know.

   This will bring us quite naturally to the second phase of development in which the mind should be widened and enriched.

   You will gradually show the child that everything can become an interesting subject for study if it is approached in the right way. The life of every day, of every moment, is the best school of all, varied, complex, full of unexpected experiences, problems to be solved, clear and striking examples and obvious consequences. It is so easy to arouse healthy curiosity in children, if you answer with intelligence and clarity the numerous questions they ask. An interesting reply to one readily brings others in its train and so the attentive child learns without effort much more than he usually does in the classroom. By a choice made with care and insight, you should also teach him to enjoy good reading-matter which is both instructive and attractive. Do not be afraid of anything that awakens and pleases his imagination; imagination develops the creative mental faculty and through it study becomes living and the mind develops in joy.

   In order to increase the suppleness and comprehensiveness of his mind, one should see not only that he studies many varied topics, but above all that a single subject is approached in various ways, so that the child understands in a practical manner that there are many ways of facing the same intellectual problem, of considering it and solving it. This will remove all rigidity from his brain and at the same time it will make his thinking richer and more supple and prepare it for a more complex and comprehensive synthesis. In this way also the child will be imbued with the sense of the extreme relativity of mental learning and, little by little, an aspiration for a truer source of knowledge will awaken in him.

   Indeed, as the child grows older and progresses in his studies, his mind too ripens and becomes more and more capable of forming general ideas, and with them almost always comes a need for certitude, for a knowledge that is stable enough to form the basis of a mental construction which will permit all the diverse and scattered and often contradictory ideas accumulated in his brain to be organised and put in order. This ordering is indeed very necessary if one is to avoid chaos in one's thoughts. All contradictions can be transformed into complements, but for that one must discover the higher idea that will have the power to bring them harmoniously together. It is always good to consider every problem from all possible standpoints so as to avoid partiality and exclusiveness; but if the thought is to be active and creative, it must, in every case, be the natural and logical synthesis of all the points of view adopted. And if you want to make the totality of your thoughts into a dynamic and constructive force, you must also take great care as to the choice of the central idea of your mental synthesis; for upon that will depend the value of this synthesis. The higher and larger the central idea and the more universal it is, rising above time and space, the more numerous and the more complex will be the ideas, notions and thoughts which it will be able to organise and harmonise.

   It goes without saying that this work of organisation cannot be done once and for all. The mind, if it is to keep its vigour and youth, must progress constantly, revise its notions in the light of new knowledge, enlarge its frame-work to include fresh notions and constantly reclassify and reorganise its thoughts, so that each of them may find its true place in relation to the others and the whole remain harmonious and orderly.

   All that has just been said concerns the speculative mind, the mind that learns. But learning is only one aspect of mental activity; the other, which is at least equally important, is the constructive faculty, the capacity to form and thus prepare action. This very important part of mental activity has rarely been the subject of any special study or discipline. Only those who want, for some reason, to exercise a strict control over their mental activities think of observing and disciplining this faculty of formation; and as soon as they try it, they have to face difficulties so great that they appear almost insurmountable.

   And yet control over this formative activity of the mind is one of the most important aspects of self-education; one can say that without it no mental mastery is possible. As far as study is concerned, all ideas are acceptable and should be included in the synthesis, whose very function is to become more and more rich and complex; but where action is concerned, it is just the opposite. The ideas that are accepted for translation into action should be strictly controlled and only those that agree with the general trend of the central idea forming the basis of the mental synthesis should be permitted to express themselves in action. This means that every thought entering the mental consciousness should be set before the central idea; if it finds a logical place among the thoughts already grouped, it will be admitted into the synthesis; if not, it will be rejected so that it can have no influence on the action. This work of mental purification should be done very regularly in order to secure a complete control over one's actions.

   For this purpose, it is good to set apart some time every day when one can quietly go over one's thoughts and put one's synthesis in order. Once the habit is acquired, you can maintain control over your thoughts even during work and action, allowing only those which are useful for what you are doing to come to the surface. Particularly, if you have continued to cultivate the power of concentration and attention, only the thoughts that are needed will be allowed to enter the active external consciousness and they then become all the more dynamic and effective. And if, in the intensity of concentration, it becomes necessary not to think at all, all mental vibration can be stilled and an almost total silence secured. In this silence one can gradually open to the higher regions of the mind and learn to record the inspirations that come from there.

   But even before reaching this point, silence in itself is supremely useful, because in most people who have a somewhat developed and active mind, the mind is never at rest. During the day, its activity is kept under a certain control, but at night, during the sleep of the body, the control of the waking state is almost completely removed and the mind indulges in activities which are sometimes excessive and often incoherent. This creates a great stress which leads to fatigue and the diminution of the intellectual faculties.

   The fact is that like all the other parts of the human being, the mind too needs rest and it will not have this rest unless we know how to provide it. The art of resting one's mind is something to be acquired. Changing one's mental activity is certainly one way of resting; but the greatest possible rest is silence. And as far as the mental faculties are concerned a few minutes passed in the calm of silence are a more effective rest than hours of sleep.

   When one has learned to silence the mind at will and to concentrate it in receptive silence, then there will be no problem that cannot be solved, no mental difficulty whose solution cannot be found. When it is agitated, thought becomes confused and impotent; in an attentive tranquillity, the light can manifest itself and open up new horizons to man's capacity. Bulletin, November 1951

   ~ The Mother, On Education,
1:Life is short. Be of use. ~ robin-sharma, @wisdomtrove
2:Make a good use of the present. ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
3:Wisdom is the use of knowledge ~ dan-millman, @wisdomtrove
4:I gotta use words to talk to you. ~ t-s-eliot, @wisdomtrove
5:Use wisely your power of choice. ~ og-mandino, @wisdomtrove
6:Use words that soak up life. ~ virginia-woolf, @wisdomtrove
7:Don't use cannon to kill musquito. ~ confucius, @wisdomtrove
8:I like to make use of what I know ~ franz-kafka, @wisdomtrove
9:Perspective - Use It or Lose It. ~ richard-bach, @wisdomtrove
10:Use the occasion, for it passes swiftly. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
11:If I don't have red, I use blue. ~ pablo-picasso, @wisdomtrove
12:Never mind the use&
13:Use your past as one of your mentors. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
14:Apologies are seldom of any use. ~ samuel-johnson, @wisdomtrove
15:Make good use of your time, it flies fast. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
16:The iron ring is worn out by constant use. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
17:We must use time creatively. ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove
18:In war the olive branch of peace is of use. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
19:When I haven't any blue I use red. ~ pablo-picasso, @wisdomtrove
20:Do not use a cannon to kill a mosquito. ~ confucius, @wisdomtrove
21:Prejudices are what fools use for reason. ~ voltaire, @wisdomtrove
22:Sanity is madness put to good use. ~ george-santayana, @wisdomtrove
23:It is no use trying to sum people up. ~ virginia-woolf, @wisdomtrove
24:To examine oneself makes good use of sight. ~ zhuangzi, @wisdomtrove
25:There is a voice that doesn’t use words. Listen. ~ rumi, @wisdomtrove
26:Few know the use of life before 'tis past. ~ john-dryden, @wisdomtrove
27:The miser acquires, yet fears to use his gains. ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
28:There's no way to use power for good. ~ ursula-k-le-guin, @wisdomtrove
29:When prosperity comes, do not use all of it. ~ confucius, @wisdomtrove
30:Wisdom is the right use of knowledge. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
31:We should never use the truth to wound. ~ saint-augustine, @wisdomtrove
32:We use such big words to move nowhere. ~ charles-bukowski, @wisdomtrove
33:Fear has its use but cowardice has none.  ~ mahatma-gandhi, @wisdomtrove
34:One great use of words is to hide our thoughts. ~ voltaire, @wisdomtrove
35:Use the right word and not its second cousin. ~ mark-twain, @wisdomtrove
36:Don't let yesterday use up too much of today. ~ will-rogers, @wisdomtrove
37:If I ever had twins, I'd use one for parts. ~ steven-wright, @wisdomtrove
38:Can you use the rational mind to transcend itself? ~ ram-das, @wisdomtrove
39:He is not poor who has the use of necessary things. ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
40:We must use time as a tool, not as a couch. ~ john-f-kennedy, @wisdomtrove
41:Whatever you have, you must either use or lose. ~ henry-ford, @wisdomtrove
42:Money is like an arm or leg - use it or lose it. ~ henry-ford, @wisdomtrove
43:Societies in decline have no use for visionaries. ~ anais-nin, @wisdomtrove
44:Use pain as a stepping stone, not a camp ground. ~ alan-cohen, @wisdomtrove
45:Long pains, with use of bearing, are half eased. ~ john-dryden, @wisdomtrove
46:Men who have much to say use the fewest words. ~ josh-billings, @wisdomtrove
47:The Essence of Knowledge is, having it, to use it. ~ confucius, @wisdomtrove
48:We should use our judgment before coming to a decision. ~ aesop, @wisdomtrove
49:False teachers of the Way of life use flowery words. ~ bruce-lee, @wisdomtrove
50:Never use a long word where a short one will do. ~ george-orwell, @wisdomtrove
51:Taking time to discover yourself is the best use of time. ~ mooji, @wisdomtrove
52:The tools belong to the man who can use them. ~ napoleon-bonaparte, @wisdomtrove
53:If it gets any hotter in here I could use a big fan. ~ groucho-marx, @wisdomtrove
54:If you shoot a Mime, do you need to use a silencer? ~ steven-wright, @wisdomtrove
55:The real use of gunpowder is to make all men tall. ~ thomas-carlyle, @wisdomtrove
56:There's no use running if you're on the wrong road. ~ warren-buffet, @wisdomtrove
57:To be successful in writing, use short sentences. ~ ernest-hemingway, @wisdomtrove
58:Use your eyes as if tomorrow you would become blind. ~ hellen-keller, @wisdomtrove
59:Whom God would use greatly He will hurt deeply. ~ aiden-wilson-tozer, @wisdomtrove
60:You have to use your mind to get things off your mind. ~ david-allen, @wisdomtrove
61:Make use of your friends by being of use to them. ~ benjamin-franklin, @wisdomtrove
62:Nicknames are vulgar. Only common people use them. ~ william-faulkner, @wisdomtrove
63:What good is power when you're too wise to use it? ~ ursula-k-le-guin, @wisdomtrove
64:Means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek. ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove
65:Of what use are laws, inoperative through public immortality? ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
66:Time stays long enough for anyone who will use it. ~ leonardo-da-vinci, @wisdomtrove
67:Don't just let the devil use your mind as a garbage dump. ~ joyce-meyer, @wisdomtrove
68:Progress comes from the intelligent use of experience. ~ elbert-hubbard, @wisdomtrove
69:Use encouragement. Make the fault seem easy to correct. ~ dale-carnegie, @wisdomtrove
70:You are the only person on earth who can use your ability. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
71:Don't use the past as an excuse to miss out on your future. ~ alan-cohen, @wisdomtrove
72:I do not find myself making any use of the word sacrifice. ~ jane-austen, @wisdomtrove
73:One should use common words to say uncommon things ~ arthur-schopenhauer, @wisdomtrove
74:Your mind is a tool you can choose to use any way you wish. ~ louise-hay, @wisdomtrove
75:Beauty, if you do not open your doors, takes age from lack of use. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
76:Don’t use your energy to worry. Use your energy to believe. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
77:Time abides long enough for those who make use of it. ~ leonardo-da-vinci, @wisdomtrove
78:Divinity consists in use and practice, not in speculation. ~ martin-luther, @wisdomtrove
79:If only we could pull out our brain and use only our eyes. ~ pablo-picasso, @wisdomtrove
80:I got food poisoning today. I don't know when I'll use it. ~ steven-wright, @wisdomtrove
81:I have one request: may I never use my reason against truth. ~ elie-wiesel, @wisdomtrove
82:I use memories, but I will not allow memories to use me.   ~ deepak-chopra, @wisdomtrove
83:Step forward, use your voice, get out in the world, and live! ~ louise-hay, @wisdomtrove
84:Why not use the same common sense when fishing for people? ~ dale-carnegie, @wisdomtrove
85:Wise men are able to make a fitting use even of their enmities. ~ plutarch, @wisdomtrove
86:Ain't no use jiving, ain't no use joking, everything is broken. ~ bob-dylan, @wisdomtrove
87:One good schoolmaster is of more use than a hundred priests. ~ thomas-paine, @wisdomtrove
88:The greatest homage we can pay to truth is to use it. ~ ralph-waldo-emerson, @wisdomtrove
89:The tongue is the only tool that gets sharper with use. ~ washington-irving, @wisdomtrove
90:If you were going to shoot a mime, would you use a silencer? ~ steven-wright, @wisdomtrove
91:I use my power wisely. I am strong ,and I am safe. All is well. ~ louise-hay, @wisdomtrove
92:Of what use is a philosopher who doesn't hurt anybody's feelings? ~ diogenes, @wisdomtrove
93:&
94:In avoiding one evil we fall into another, if we use not discretion. ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
95:Maturity is having the courage to use one's own intelligence! ~ immanuel-kant, @wisdomtrove
96:Money is like manure, of very little use except it be spread. ~ francis-bacon, @wisdomtrove
97:Please help keep the world clean: others may wish to use it. ~ arthur-c-carke, @wisdomtrove
98:The only thing I use my body for is to carry my brain around. ~ thomas-edison, @wisdomtrove
99:Why do we wash bath towels? Aren't we clean when we use them? ~ steven-wright, @wisdomtrove
100:Be subtle! be subtle! and use your spies for every kind of business. ~ sun-tzu, @wisdomtrove
101:&
102:Today, use your words to lift up and bless the people around you. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
103:You cannot find your soul with your mind, you must use your heart. ~ gary-zukav, @wisdomtrove
104:Be on time. 2. Never criticize a teammate. 3. Never use profanity. ~ john-wooden, @wisdomtrove
105:If there's an original thought out there, I could use one right now. ~ bob-dylan, @wisdomtrove
106:Use your past successes as a trampoline, not an easy chair. ~ h-jackson-brown-jr, @wisdomtrove
107:Well, pray if you like, only you'd do better to use your judgment. ~ leo-tolstoy, @wisdomtrove
108:What is the use of Christ's words, unless we set an example? ~ fyodor-dostoevsky, @wisdomtrove
109:You can't use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have. ~ maya-angelou, @wisdomtrove
110:Constant use had not worn ragged the fabric of their friendship. ~ dorothy-parker, @wisdomtrove
111:Cults use our vocabulary, but they don't use our dictionary. ~ charles-r-swindoll, @wisdomtrove
112:Every-time we use a product or service, someone is serving us. ~ earl-nightingale, @wisdomtrove
113:I suppose, to use our national motto, something will turn up. ~ benjamin-disraeli, @wisdomtrove
114:It's not what you've got, it's what you use that makes a difference. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
115:One cannot use an evil action with reference to a good intention. ~ denis-diderot, @wisdomtrove
116:The ego is just a useful fiction. Use it, but don’t be deceived by it. ~ rajneesh, @wisdomtrove
117:The possession of power inevitably spoils the free use of reason. ~ immanuel-kant, @wisdomtrove
118:The tongue is the only instrument that gets sharper with use. ~ washington-irving, @wisdomtrove
119:If you use your mind to look for a Buddha, you won't see the Buddha. ~ bodhidharma, @wisdomtrove
120:One cannot use an evil action with reference to a good intention. ~ thomas-aquinas, @wisdomtrove
121:The stars are a free show; it don’t cost anything to use your eyes ~ george-orwell, @wisdomtrove
122:Use only that which works, and take it from any place you can find it. ~ bruce-lee, @wisdomtrove
123:We shouldn’t use our own upset as an excuse for not helping. ~ marianne-williamson, @wisdomtrove
124:I'm as strong as a bull moose and you can use me to the limit. ~ theodore-roosevelt, @wisdomtrove
125:Use whatever has come to awaken patience, understanding, and love. ~ jack-kornfield, @wisdomtrove
126:You don't have to have a great gift for God to use it in a great way. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
127:Don't get angry. Try not to speak roughly or use harsh words. ~ mata-amritanandamayi, @wisdomtrove
128:I believe that the means you use will determine the end you receive. ~ peace-pilgrim, @wisdomtrove
129:Not one But twenty-four self-giving-hours Every day I have For my use. ~ sri-chinmoy, @wisdomtrove
130:True prayer is a way of life, not just for use in cases of emergency. ~ billy-graham, @wisdomtrove
131:In order to find peace, we must expose the masks we use to hide behind. ~ debbie-ford, @wisdomtrove
132:The primary use of conversation is to satisfy the impulse to talk. ~ george-santayana, @wisdomtrove
133:What's the use of being Irish if the world doesn't break your heart? ~ john-f-kennedy, @wisdomtrove
134:determined to use to the utmost himself and his heritage from the ~ f-scott-fitzgerald, @wisdomtrove
135:I do not use profanity in my novels. My characters all go to church. ~ nicholas-sparks, @wisdomtrove
136:I must use these great men's virtues as a cloak for my weakness. ~ michel-de-montaigne, @wisdomtrove
137:Nothing is so common as to imitate one's enemies, and to use their weapons. ~ voltaire, @wisdomtrove
138:Talent is like electricity. We don't understand electricity. We use it. ~ maya-angelou, @wisdomtrove
139:God cannot use a man or woman greatly until he wounds them deeply. ~ aiden-wilson-tozer, @wisdomtrove
140:The more you use the power within you, the more you will draw it to you. ~ rhonda-byrne, @wisdomtrove
141:What you do not use yourself, do not give to others. For example, advice. ~ sri-chinmoy, @wisdomtrove
142:Everything in your life is there as a vehicle for your transformation. Use it! ~ ram-das, @wisdomtrove
143:If you allow men to use you for your own purposes, they will use you for theirs. ~ aesop, @wisdomtrove
144:The way out is through the door. Why is it that no one will use this method? ~ confucius, @wisdomtrove
145:To handle yourself, use your head; to handle others, use your heart. ~ eleanor-roosevelt, @wisdomtrove
146:We have perfected our weapons but failed to perfect the men who use them. ~ billy-graham, @wisdomtrove
147:Nobody rises above mediocrity unless they use the brains of other people. ~ napoleon-hill, @wisdomtrove
148:What is the use of being a little boy if you are growing up to be a man. ~ gertrude-stein, @wisdomtrove
149:Words are magical in the way they affect the minds of those who use them. ~ aldous-huxley, @wisdomtrove
150:Before we acquire great power we must acquire wisdom to use it well. ~ ralph-waldo-emerson, @wisdomtrove
151:Children use the fist until they are of age to use the brain. ~ elizabeth-barrett-browning, @wisdomtrove
152:Greatness lies not in being strong, but in the right use of strength. ~ henry-ward-beecher, @wisdomtrove
153:I belong to Jesus. He must have the right to use me without consulting me. ~ mother-teresa, @wisdomtrove
154:I knew a girl so ugly, they use her in prisons to cure sex offenders. ~ rodney-dangerfield, @wisdomtrove
155:It's nice, I think, when people use your music for things you didn't think of. ~ brian-eno, @wisdomtrove
156:Make the best use of what is in your power and take the rest as it happens.    ~ epictetus, @wisdomtrove
157:What use are cartridges in battle? I always carry chocolate instead. ~ george-bernard-shaw, @wisdomtrove
158:When ye are prepared for a thing, the opportunity to use it presents itself. ~ edgar-cayce, @wisdomtrove
159:Spread the love of God through your life but only use words when necessary. ~ mother-teresa, @wisdomtrove
160:’Teamwork’ is the word that bosses use when they actually mean ‘Do what I say’ ~ seth-godin, @wisdomtrove
161:The best Leaders Without a Title use their heads and listen to their hearts. ~ robin-sharma, @wisdomtrove
162:This is one race of people for whom psychoanalysis is of no use whatsoever. ~ sigmund-freud, @wisdomtrove
163:Gratitude, like faith, is a muscle. The more you use it, the stronger it grows. ~ alan-cohen, @wisdomtrove
164:I could use a hundred people who don't know there is such a word as impossible. ~ henry-ford, @wisdomtrove
165:I, however, cannot force myself to use "meat drugs" to cheat on my loneliness. ~ franz-kafka, @wisdomtrove
166:A sharp tongue is the only edge tool that grows keener with constant use. ~ washington-irving, @wisdomtrove
167:Don't be the ammunition wagon, be the rifle knowledge exists primarily for use. ~ carl-rogers, @wisdomtrove
168:Force rules the world-not opinion; but it is opinion that makes use of force. ~ blaise-pascal, @wisdomtrove
169:Scripture often reminds us that it's not enough to have ears - we must use them. ~ max-lucado, @wisdomtrove
170:The most remarkable thing about suffering is that God can use it for our good. ~ billy-graham, @wisdomtrove
171:To know is not to be wise. To know how to use knowledge is to have wisdom. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
172:Use each interaction to be the best, most powerful version of yourself. ~ marianne-williamson, @wisdomtrove
173:I'll use the knives for spreading jam, and the gas to warm my greying love. ~ charles-bukowski, @wisdomtrove
174:It is no use to preach to [children] if you do not act decently yourself. ~ theodore-roosevelt, @wisdomtrove
175:Money is a handmaiden, if thou knowest how to use it A mistress, if thou knowest not. ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
176:Originality is the one thing which unoriginal minds cannot feel the use of. ~ john-stuart-mill, @wisdomtrove
177:Poets, the first instructors of mankind, Brought all things to the proper native use. ~ horace, @wisdomtrove
178:Spartans, stoics, heroes, saints and gods use short and positive speech. ~ ralph-waldo-emerson, @wisdomtrove
179:What is the use of merely listening to lectures? The real thing is practice. ~ sri-ramakrishna, @wisdomtrove
180:Actually, I comb my hair quite often. Of course, I use an electric toothbrush. ~ phyllis-diller, @wisdomtrove
181:Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.   ~ nelson-mandela, @wisdomtrove
182:Mass civil disobedience can use rage as a constructive and creative force. ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove
183:The Ego is an exquisite instrument. Enjoy it, use it&
184:The use of criticism, in periodical writing, is to sift, not to stamp a work. ~ margaret-fuller, @wisdomtrove
185:To educate people for peace, we can use words or we can speak with our lives. ~ thich-nhat-hanh, @wisdomtrove
186:Walk away from the 97% crowd. Don't use their excuses. Take charge of your own life. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
187:Why did the Lord give use so much quickness unless it was to avoid responsibility? ~ ogden-nash, @wisdomtrove
188:Can you please crawl out your window? Use your arms and your legs, it won't ruin you ~ bob-dylan, @wisdomtrove
189:Learn to say no; it will be of more use to you than to be able to read Latin. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
190:Live in the Moment", "Empty Your Mind of the Trash" Wisdom is the Use of Knowledge ~ dan-millman, @wisdomtrove
191:Now is the time to make good use of time. Today is the day to begin a perfect day. ~ sri-chinmoy, @wisdomtrove
192:Only those who respect the personality of others can be of real use to them. ~ albert-schweitzer, @wisdomtrove
193:Permanent brain damage is one of the inevitable results of the use of marijuana. ~ ronald-reagan, @wisdomtrove
194:Positive thinking will let you use the abilities, training and experience you have. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
195:There is virtue in work and there is virtue in rest. Use both and overlook neither. ~ alan-cohen, @wisdomtrove
196:Use what language you will, you can never say anything but what you are.   ~ ralph-waldo-emerson, @wisdomtrove
197:Zen Makes use, to a great extent, of poetical expressions; Zen is wedded to poetry. ~ d-t-suzuki, @wisdomtrove
198:Don't be the ammunition wagon, be the rifle... knowledge exists primarily for use. ~ carl-rogers, @wisdomtrove
199:God gives us people to love and things to use, not things to love and people to use. ~ max-lucado, @wisdomtrove
200:Gold has two significant shortcomings, being neither of much use nor procreative. ~ warren-buffet, @wisdomtrove
201:Having the capacity to lead is not enough. The leader must be willing to use it. ~ vince-lombardi, @wisdomtrove
202:He always had a chip on his shoulder that he was ready to use to kindle an argument. ~ fred-allen, @wisdomtrove
203:Hide not your talents. They for use were made. What's a sundial in the shade? ~ benjamin-franklin, @wisdomtrove
204:Politics are very much like war. We may even have to use poison gas at times. ~ winston-churchill, @wisdomtrove
205:Sickness has frequently been of more use to the saints of God than health has. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
206:There is no use whatsoever in trying to help people who do not help themselves. ~ andrew-carnegie, @wisdomtrove
207:The true use of speech is not so much to express our wants as to conceal them. ~ oliver-goldsmith, @wisdomtrove
208:Don't give up just because of what someone said. Use it as motivation to push harder. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
209:The only limits to the possibilities in your life tomorrow are the buts you use today. ~ les-brown, @wisdomtrove
210:The public spirit is in the hands of the man who knows how to make use of it. ~ napoleon-bonaparte, @wisdomtrove
211:With an unquiet mind, neither exercise, nor diet, nor physick can be of much use. ~ samuel-johnson, @wisdomtrove
212:Words have power. Use the language of leadership versus the vocabulary of a victim. ~ robin-sharma, @wisdomtrove
213:Ideas reflect the moment, and so you have to use them. If you store ideas, they wither. ~ brian-eno, @wisdomtrove
214:There is no use saying you chose to lie down when it has become impossible to stand up. ~ c-s-lewis, @wisdomtrove
215:The thoughts we choose to think are the tools we use to paint the canvas of our lives. ~ louise-hay, @wisdomtrove
216:We praise times past, while we times present use; Yet due the worship which to each we give. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
217:He has never been known to use a word that might send a reader to the dictionary. ~ william-faulkner, @wisdomtrove
218:It is man's own fault, it is from want of use, if his mind grows torpid in old age. ~ samuel-johnson, @wisdomtrove
219:I wanted to use the studio like a microscope for sound, which is what good engineers do. ~ brian-eno, @wisdomtrove
220:Loneliness and the feeling that you're no use to anyone - the worst kind of poverty. ~ mother-teresa, @wisdomtrove
221:We love action and adventure, but we use it to go out and start wars and kill people. ~ richard-bach, @wisdomtrove
222:With regard to excellence, it is not enough to know, but we must try to have and use it. ~ aristotle, @wisdomtrove
223:Any path to knowledge is a path to God-or Reality, whichever word one prefers to use ~ arthur-c-carke, @wisdomtrove
224:Don't use your words to describe the situation. Use your words to change the situation. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
225:More wisdom is latent in things as they are than in all the words men use. ~ antoine-de-saint-exupery, @wisdomtrove
226:Every day without exception - is a gift from God, entrusted to us to use for His glory. ~ billy-graham, @wisdomtrove
227:Lay hold of something that will help you, and then use it to help somebody else. ~ booker-t-washington, @wisdomtrove
228:Nature does nothing in vain, and in the use of means to her goals she is not prodigal. ~ immanuel-kant, @wisdomtrove
229:People who are very confident in themselves aren't hurt by criticism. They make use of it. ~ brian-eno, @wisdomtrove
230:The brain is like a muscle. When it is in use we feel very good. Understanding is joyous. ~ carl-sagan, @wisdomtrove
231:&
232:Riches do not consist in the possession of treasures, but in the use made of them. ~ napoleon-bonaparte, @wisdomtrove
233:They solved the problem of coexistence through the use of individual stereo headphones. ~ william-blake, @wisdomtrove
234:Don't use the hardships of your past as excuses to deny the possibilities of your future. ~ robin-sharma, @wisdomtrove
235:If you step up the self-education curve, you will come up with more answers than you can use. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
236:The child, making use of all that he finds around him, shapes himself for the future. ~ maria-montessori, @wisdomtrove
237:The value of life lies not in the length of days, but in the use, we make of them. ~ michel-de-montaigne, @wisdomtrove
238:We cannot grow when we are in shame, and we can't use shame to change ourselves or others. ~ brene-brown, @wisdomtrove
239:When the media ask George W. Bush a question, he answers, &
240:Man’s only limitation, within reason, lies in the development and use of his imagination. ~ napoleon-hill, @wisdomtrove
241:Tis a principle of war that when you can use the lightning, 'tis better than cannon. ~ napoleon-bonaparte, @wisdomtrove
242:Don't flail against the world, use it. Flexibility is the operative principle in the art of war. ~ sun-tzu, @wisdomtrove
243:If you have dentures, do not use artificial sweeteners because you will get a fake cavity. ~ mitch-hedberg, @wisdomtrove
244:Next to nothing for use.But a crop is a crop,And who's to say where The harvest shall stop? ~ robert-frost, @wisdomtrove
245:The day is of infinite length for him who knows how to appreciate and use it. ~ johann-wolfgang-von-goethe, @wisdomtrove
246:The only [working] ritual is making tea. I use the loose leaves and drink it by the gallon. ~ stephen-king, @wisdomtrove
247:Therefore, you can use your mind to change your brain to benefit your mind—and everyone else ~ rick-hanson, @wisdomtrove
248:True greatness consists in the use of a powerful understanding to enlighten oneself and others. ~ voltaire, @wisdomtrove
249:If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all. ~ oscar-wilde, @wisdomtrove
250:I would never use a long word, even, where a short one would answer the purpose. ~ oliver-wendell-holmes-sr, @wisdomtrove
251:Power is something that is abused. I suppose use and abuse are in the eye of the beholder. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
252:Use karate, judo, aikido, or any style to build your counter-offensive. It will be interesting! ~ bruce-lee, @wisdomtrove
253:What you are conscious of you can use. What you are unconscious of can use you, or escape you. ~ barry-long, @wisdomtrove
254:&
255:Any powerful idea is absolutely fascinating and absolutely useless until we choose to use it. ~ richard-bach, @wisdomtrove
256:Art is triumphant when it can use convention as an instrument of its own purpose. ~ william-somerset-maugham, @wisdomtrove
257:Conscience is but a word that cowards use, devised at first to keep the strong in awe. ~ william-shakespeare, @wisdomtrove
258:I have no further use for America. I wouldn't go back there if Jesus Christ was President. ~ charlie-chaplan, @wisdomtrove
259:Man has to pick up the use of his functions as he goes along- especially the function of Love. ~ e-m-forster, @wisdomtrove
260:Research shows that the happiest people are those who use their natural talents to the utmost. ~ t-harv-eker, @wisdomtrove
261:The pictures placed for ornament and use, The twelve good rules, the royal game of goose. ~ oliver-goldsmith, @wisdomtrove
262:The whole of life is but a moment of time. It is our duty, therefore to use it, not to misuse it. ~ plutarch, @wisdomtrove
263:You are younger today than you will ever be again. Make use of it for the sake of tomorrow. ~ norman-cousins, @wisdomtrove
264:Abandon every personal desire and use the power thus saved for changing the world! ~ sri-nisargadatta-maharaj, @wisdomtrove
265:He has room for people with very little sense, but He wants everyone to use what sense they have. ~ c-s-lewis, @wisdomtrove
266:I believe humility is a virtue, but I prefer not to use it unless it is absolutely necessary. ~ hellen-keller, @wisdomtrove
267:Music is the one thing in which there is no use trying to deceive others or make false pretenses. ~ confucius, @wisdomtrove
268:No man is good for anything who has not some particle of obstinacy to use upon occasion. ~ henry-ward-beecher, @wisdomtrove
269:One cannot use the life to interpret the work. But One can use the work to interpret the life. ~ susan-sontag, @wisdomtrove
270:spiritual life, and to use the divine things, which are in their religion, as the means. ~ emanuel-swedenborg, @wisdomtrove
271:The more highly we think of ourselves-our abilities and talents-the less God can use us. ~ aiden-wilson-tozer, @wisdomtrove
272:Hatha Yoga teaches us to use the body as the bow, asana as the arrow, and the soul the target. ~ b-k-s-iyengar, @wisdomtrove
273:If you are a thinker, you will change the language. You will not use words the way others do. ~ gertrude-stein, @wisdomtrove
274:Knowledge is power, and for each level of knowledge, you are held responsible for how you use it. ~ gary-zukav, @wisdomtrove
275:Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print. ~ george-orwell, @wisdomtrove
276:One of our defects as a nation is a tendency to use what have been called "weasel words." ~ theodore-roosevelt, @wisdomtrove
277:Our past may explain why we're suffering but we must not use it as an excuse to stay in bondage. ~ joyce-meyer, @wisdomtrove
278:We could all use a little coaching. When you're playing the game, it's hard to think of everything. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
279:World barista champions use the AeroPress to make coffee on the folding tray tables of airplanes. ~ tim-ferris, @wisdomtrove
280:You are the only person in existence who can use your potential. It is an awesome responsibility. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
281:You have been chosen, and you must therefore use such strength and heart and wits as you have. ~ j-r-r-tolkien, @wisdomtrove
282:You use to ride on the chrome horse with your diplomat, who carried on his shoulder a Siamese cat. ~ bob-dylan, @wisdomtrove
283:Always regard every man as an end in himself, and never use him merely as a means to your ends. ~ immanuel-kant, @wisdomtrove
284:Children, we should simplify our life's needs and use the resulting savings for charity. ~ mata-amritanandamayi, @wisdomtrove
285:it is just as wrong, or even perhaps more so, to use moral means to preserve immoral ends. ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove
286:It is not what we have that will make us a great nation; it is the way in which we use it. ~ theodore-roosevelt, @wisdomtrove
287:Nothing is yours. It is to use. It is to share. If you will not share it, you cannot use it. ~ ursula-k-le-guin, @wisdomtrove
288:Riches are of no value in themselves; their use is discovered only in that which they procure. ~ samuel-johnson, @wisdomtrove
289:God loves to use ordinary people just like you and me, faults and all, to do extraordinary things. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
290:I always pass on good advice. It's the only thing to do with it.  It is never any use to oneself.  ~ oscar-wilde, @wisdomtrove
291:Learning, to be of much use, must have a tendency to spread itself among the common people. ~ henry-ward-beecher, @wisdomtrove
292:Open your eyes, train your ears, use your head. If a mind you have, then use it while you can. ~ haruki-murakami, @wisdomtrove
293:Small improvements in the way you use your time can translate into major differences in your life. ~ brian-tracy, @wisdomtrove
294:Souls without prayer are like bodies, palsied and lame, having hands and feet they cannot use. ~ teresa-of-avila, @wisdomtrove
295:To get involved with some ridiculous battle of power with someone else will use up your energy. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
296:Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted. ~ kurt-vonnegut, @wisdomtrove
297:Call the world if you please "the vale of soul-making." Then you will find out the use of the world. ~ john-keats, @wisdomtrove
298:Civilization has taught us to eat with a fork, but even now if nobody is around we use our fingers. ~ will-rogers, @wisdomtrove
299:If I had a stock of fabulous sounds I would just always use them. I wouldn't bother to find new ones. ~ brian-eno, @wisdomtrove
300:If you have to pay the bills, and you write something you're not proud of, use a pen-name for that. ~ dean-koontz, @wisdomtrove
301:Nothing we use or hear or touch can be expressed in words that equal what is given by the senses. ~ hannah-arendt, @wisdomtrove
302:Speak with contempt of none, from slave to king, The meanest Bee hath, and will use, a sting. ~ benjamin-franklin, @wisdomtrove
303:The repetition of small efforts will accomplish more than the occasional use of great talents. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
304:Use your mind to discriminate. Choose to advance yourself, to bring more purity into your being. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
305:What is reason given me for, if I am not to use it to avoid bringing unhappy beings into the world! ~ leo-tolstoy, @wisdomtrove
306:He who will not use the thoughts of other men's brains proves that he has no brains of his own. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
307:If people did not love one another, I really don't see what use there would be in having any spring. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
308:Martyrs must choose between being forgotten, mocked, or made use of. As for being understood—never! ~ albert-camus, @wisdomtrove
309:Successful people use their strength by recognizing, developing, and utilizing the talents of others. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
310:Unless I believe in God, I cannot believe in thought: so I can never use thought to disbelieve in God. ~ c-s-lewis, @wisdomtrove
311:Animals were not made for us, or our use. They have their own use, which is just being who they are. ~ alice-walker, @wisdomtrove
312:For what is the use of transmitting knowledge if the individual's total development lags behind? ~ maria-montessori, @wisdomtrove
313:I use the term ‘awareness’ to describe the primal ground from which everything is arising like a dream. ~ tim-freke, @wisdomtrove
314:Men use thought only as authority for their injustice, and employ speech only to conceal their thoughts. ~ voltaire, @wisdomtrove
315:Style is a very simple matter; it is all rhythm. Once you get that, you can't use the wrong words. ~ virginia-woolf, @wisdomtrove
316:We know lots of things we didn't use to know but we don't know any way to prevent 'em from happening. ~ will-rogers, @wisdomtrove
317:When my kids become wild and unruly, I use a nice, safe playpen. When they're finished, I climb out. ~ erma-bombeck, @wisdomtrove
318:God can use a sensitive Christian to be a rich blessing in the life of one who knows pain and sorrow. ~ billy-graham, @wisdomtrove
319:I wanted my own words. But the ones I use have dragged through I don't know how many consciences. ~ jean-paul-sartre, @wisdomtrove
320:I would define the proper use of power as something that creates happiness for yourself and others. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
321:This miracle of me is mine to own and keep, and mine to guard, and mine to use, and mine to kneel before. ~ ayn-rand, @wisdomtrove
322:Use short sentences. Use short first paragraphs. Use vigorous English. Be positive, not negative. ~ ernest-hemingway, @wisdomtrove
323:You've heard of plug-and-play. This is plug, unplug and play. It's so simple to use, it's unbelievable. ~ steve-jobs, @wisdomtrove
324:Customers pay only for what is of use to them and gives them value. Nothing else constitutes quality. ~ peter-drucker, @wisdomtrove
325:Divorce becomes a holy moment when you choose to use it as a catalyst for having an extraordinary life. ~ debbie-ford, @wisdomtrove
326:I'm eighteen years behind in my ironing. There's no use doing it now, it doesn't fit anybody I know. ~ phyllis-diller, @wisdomtrove
327:Powerful men who have powerful passions use much of their strength in forging chains for themselves. ~ g-k-chesterton, @wisdomtrove
328:The ancient Greek definition of happiness was the full use of your powers along lines of excellence. ~ john-f-kennedy, @wisdomtrove
329:To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead. ~ thomas-paine, @wisdomtrove
330:A life without impact and contribution is a very empty life, so use your life to make the world better. ~ robin-sharma, @wisdomtrove
331:I'd come to realize that all our troubles spring from our failure to use plain, clear-cut language. ~ jean-paul-sartre, @wisdomtrove
332:If you try to use your head to think about things, people don't want to have anything to do with you ~ haruki-murakami, @wisdomtrove
333:It is, of course, the merest truism to say a party is of use only so far as it serves the nation. ~ theodore-roosevelt, @wisdomtrove
334:Learn to use your brain power. Critical thinking is the key to creative problem solving in business. ~ richard-branson, @wisdomtrove
335:Money is life energy that we exchange and use as a result of the service we provide to the universe.   ~ deepak-chopra, @wisdomtrove
336:Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete use of the other five. ~ william-somerset-maugham, @wisdomtrove
337:Power grows out of Organized Knowledge, but mind you, it grows out of it, through Application and Use. ~ napoleon-hill, @wisdomtrove
338:Prayer is a very precious medicine, one that certainly helps and never fails, if you will only use it. ~ martin-luther, @wisdomtrove
339:The word no is a great time-saver. Say no to anything that is not the highest and best use of your time. ~ brian-tracy, @wisdomtrove
340:Understand that the right to choose your own path is a sacred privilege. Use it. Dwell in possibility. ~ oprah-winfrey, @wisdomtrove
341:You already have every characteristic necessary for success if you recognize, claim, develop and use them ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
342:You must accept that if the computer is a tool, it is the job of tool user to know what to use it for. ~ peter-drucker, @wisdomtrove
343:Your enemies, your critics, the people that are trying to push you down-God can use them to push you up. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
344:And then we take a soldier and put murder in his hands and we say to him, "Use it well, use it wisely. ~ john-steinbeck, @wisdomtrove
345:Nobody will use other people's experience, nor have any of his own till it is too late to use it. ~ nathaniel-hawthorne, @wisdomtrove
346:Not only the words (vocabula) which the Holy Spirit and Scripture use are divine, but also the phrasing ~ martin-luther, @wisdomtrove
347:People demand freedom of speech as a compensation for the freedom of thought which they seldom use. ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove
348:We are plain quiet folk, and I have no use for adventures. Nasty, disturbing, and uncomfortable things. ~ j-r-r-tolkien, @wisdomtrove
349:Decide that you don't mind being inconvenienced or interrupted, and God will use you to make a difference. ~ joyce-meyer, @wisdomtrove
350:I'm quite fond of the writer who told a beginning author, "If you've got a message, use Western Union." ~ arthur-c-carke, @wisdomtrove
351:In dream yoga we use the etheric double and go beyond the confines of the physical, it's very ecstatic. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
352:Our problem is not that we don't have power, so much as that we tend to not use the power we have. ~ marianne-williamson, @wisdomtrove
353:Stop making use of your mind and see what happens. Do this one thing thoroughly. That is all. ~ sri-nisargadatta-maharaj, @wisdomtrove
354:The biggest problem with every art is by the use of appearance to create a loftier reality. ~ johann-wolfgang-von-goethe, @wisdomtrove
355:The highest use of capital is not to make more money, but to make money do more for the betterment of life. ~ henry-ford, @wisdomtrove
356:War is the only sport which is genuinely amusing. And it is the only sport which has any intelligible use. ~ h-l-mencken, @wisdomtrove
357:I am a vegetarian as well as a passionate anti-alcoholic, because I can thus make better use of my brain. ~ thomas-edison, @wisdomtrove
358:Use the previous techniques in rotation. It will prevent your meditation experience from becoming stale. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
359:Activity that perishes, that is not productive of the eternal, of the lasting, is of very little use. ~ jiddu-krishnamurti, @wisdomtrove
360:God creates everything out of nothing. And everything which God is to use, he first reduces to nothing ~ soren-kierkegaard, @wisdomtrove
361:God will use your mess for good. We see a perfect mess; God sees a perfect chance to train, test , and teach. ~ max-lucado, @wisdomtrove
362:If you use your money to create exceptional products and services, you won't need to spend it on advertising. ~ seth-godin, @wisdomtrove
363:The use of the Will as the projector of Mentative Currents is the real base of all Mental Magic. ~ william-walker-atkinson, @wisdomtrove
364:To use the law of attraction to your advantage, make it a habitual way of being, not just a one-time event. ~ rhonda-byrne, @wisdomtrove
365:Whatever may be their use in civilized societies, mirrors are essential to all violent and heroic action. ~ virginia-woolf, @wisdomtrove
366:When I go to the beauty parlor, I always use the emergency entrance. Sometimes I just go for an estimate. ~ phyllis-diller, @wisdomtrove
367:It is no use saying, &
368:There's only one way  I can use you to complete me, and that is if I judge  you, inquire, and turn it around. ~ byron-katie, @wisdomtrove
369:Do not use power to suppress opinions you think pernicious, for if you do the opinions will suppress you. ~ bertrand-russell, @wisdomtrove
370:I can't understand why people use religion to hurt each other when there's already so much pain in the world. ~ stephen-king, @wisdomtrove
371:Like tired dogs they stand there, because they use up all their strength in remaining upright in one's memory. ~ franz-kafka, @wisdomtrove
372:You can use social media to turn strangers into friends, friends into customers and customers into salespeople. ~ seth-godin, @wisdomtrove
373:If I, deaf, blind, find life rich and interesting, how much more can you gain by the use of your five senses! ~ hellen-keller, @wisdomtrove
374:On Sundays when I speak, I hopefully give somebody something that they can use the next day at work or at home. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
375:We ought not to treat living creatures like shoes or household belongings, which when worn with use we throw away. ~ plutarch, @wisdomtrove
376:What was the use of doing great things if I could have a better time telling her what I was going to do? ~ f-scott-fitzgerald, @wisdomtrove
377:Words can be like X-rays if you use them properly – they’ll go through anything. You read and you’re pierced. ~ aldous-huxley, @wisdomtrove
378:Disease is the tax which the soul pays for the body, as the tenant pays house-rent for the use of the house. ~ sri-ramakrishna, @wisdomtrove
379:Don't use your faith to try to get rid of problems. Use your faith to remain calm in the midst of your problems. ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
380:Imagination does not become great until human beings, given the courage and the strength, use it to create. ~ maria-montessori, @wisdomtrove
381:Religion is only another word for the right use of a man's whole self, instead of a wrong use of himself. ~ henry-ward-beecher, @wisdomtrove
382:So long as ignorance and poverty exist on earth, books of the nature of Les Miserables cannot fail to be of use. ~ victor-hugo, @wisdomtrove
383:The Book of Psalms instructs us in the use of wings as well as words. It sets us both mounting and singing. ~ charles-spurgeon, @wisdomtrove
384:With the right to bear arms comes a great responsibility to use caution and common sense on handgun purchases. ~ ronald-reagan, @wisdomtrove
385:Any country that accepts abortion is not teaching its people to love but to use violence to get what they want. ~ mother-teresa, @wisdomtrove
386:In the conduct of life we make use of deliberation to justify ourselves in doing what we want to do. ~ william-somerset-maugham, @wisdomtrove
387:It is requisite for the relaxation of the mind that we make use, from time to time, of playful deeds and jokes. ~ denis-diderot, @wisdomtrove
388:Let us not use bombs and guns to overcome the world. Let us use love and compassion. Peace begins with a smile. ~ mother-teresa, @wisdomtrove
389:Midlife: when the Universe grabs your shoulders and tells you I’m not f-ing around, use the gifts you were given. ~ brene-brown, @wisdomtrove
390:Mindfulness must be engaged. Once there is seeing, there must be acting. Otherwise, what's the use of seeing? ~ thich-nhat-hanh, @wisdomtrove
391:To have a developed intellect is always helpful if one can enlighten it from above and turn it to a divine use. ~ sri-aurobindo, @wisdomtrove
392:Whatever can be lost is not really one's own; and what is not your own of what use can it be to you? ~ sri-nisargadatta-maharaj, @wisdomtrove
393:God wants to use you in spite of your weaknesses. Of God chose to use perfect people only, He’d have no one to use ~ joel-osteen, @wisdomtrove
394:I am a man. This miracle of me is mine to own and keep, and mine to guard, and mine to use, and mind to kneel before! ~ ayn-rand, @wisdomtrove
395:Intelligence increases mere physical ability one half. The use of the head abridges the labor of the hands. ~ henry-ward-beecher, @wisdomtrove
396:It is requisite for the relaxation of the mind that we make use, from time to time, of playful deeds and jokes. ~ thomas-aquinas, @wisdomtrove
397:My manager said, "Don't use liquor as a crutch!" I can't use liquor as a crutch, because a crutch helps me walk. ~ mitch-hedberg, @wisdomtrove
398:No discussion between two persons can be of any use, until each knows clearly what it is that the other asserts. ~ lewis-carroll, @wisdomtrove
399:The object of education is not to fill a man's mind with facts; it is to teach him how to use his mind in thinking. ~ henry-ford, @wisdomtrove
400:The person born with a talent they are meant to use will find their greatest happiness in using it. ~ johann-wolfgang-von-goethe, @wisdomtrove
401:Bring war material with you from home, but forage on the enemy... use the conquered foe to augment one's own strength. ~ sun-tzu, @wisdomtrove
402:Each close you use should be an educational process by which you are able to raise the value in the prospect's mind. ~ zig-ziglar, @wisdomtrove
403:If nobody spoke unless he had something to say, the human race would very soon lose the use of speech. ~ william-somerset-maugham, @wisdomtrove
404:If we can use our problems and illnesses as opportunities to think about how we can change our lives, we have power. ~ louise-hay, @wisdomtrove
405:I think one can advance faster outside a monastery if you use the experiences of daily life to advance yourself. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
406:One cannot be avenged for every wrong; according to the occasion, everyone who knows how, must use temperance. ~ geoffrey-chaucer, @wisdomtrove
407:Temper never mellows with age, and a sharp tongue is the only edged tool that grows keener with constant use. ~ washington-irving, @wisdomtrove
408:That within us which seeks to know and to progress is not the mind but something behind it which makes use of it. ~ sri-aurobindo, @wisdomtrove
409:We regard God as an airman regards his parachute; it's there for emergencies but he hopes he'll never have to use it. ~ c-s-lewis, @wisdomtrove
410:If you really want to know what's happening here and now, you've got to use your own eyes and your own judgment. ~ haruki-murakami, @wisdomtrove
411:It's no use crying over spilt milk, because all of the forces of the universe were bent on spilling it. ~ william-somerset-maugham, @wisdomtrove
412:Never use abstract nouns when concrete ones will do. If you mean “More people died” don’t say “Mortality rose. ~ c-s-lewis, @wisdomtrove
413:Since it could be done what was the use of doing it, and anyway you always have to stop doing something sometime. ~ gertrude-stein, @wisdomtrove
414:The challenge of power is how to use it and not abuse it. When you abuse it, it reverses on you and it hurts you. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
415:There is an old saying "well begun is half done"-'tis a bad one. I would use instead-Not begun at all 'til half done. ~ john-keats, @wisdomtrove
416:But for the use of physical punishment by, and fear of their oppressors, animals would never be a part of a circus. ~ richard-pryor, @wisdomtrove
417:But never again use another person's body or emotions as a scratching post for your own unfulfilling yearnings. ~ elizabeth-gilbert, @wisdomtrove
418:Great beauty, great strength, and great riches are really and truly of no great use; a right heart exceeds all. ~ benjamin-franklin, @wisdomtrove
419:Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent. ~ george-orwell, @wisdomtrove
420:Every talent is unearned, however, and with it comes a solemn obligation to use it as fully and as wisely as possible. ~ dean-koontz, @wisdomtrove
421:I have a little shadow that goes in and out with me, And what can be the use of him is more than I can see. ~ robert-louis-stevenson, @wisdomtrove
422:In heaven, when the blessed use the telephone they will say what they have to say and not a word besides. ~ william-somerset-maugham, @wisdomtrove
423:The most important thing to me is, how, in the process of learning how to use my body, can I come to understand myself ? ~ bruce-lee, @wisdomtrove
424:There is no such thing as creative and non-creative people, only people who use their creativity and people who don't. ~ brene-brown, @wisdomtrove
425:What matters is how I use what I know, every minute of every day; how I use it to remember, in the midst of the game. ~ richard-bach, @wisdomtrove
426:Capital as such is not evil; it is its wrong use that is evil. Capital in some form or other will always be needed.  ~ mahatma-gandhi, @wisdomtrove
427:Delegation takes time at first but it lightens the load and ultimately is going to use less time in the long run.   ~ stephen-r-covey, @wisdomtrove
428:I have consistently preached that nonviolence demands that the means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek. ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove
429:The moral landscape is the framework I use for thinking about questions of morality and human values in universal terms. ~ sam-harris, @wisdomtrove
430:The three most difficult things in life are: 1. To keep a secret. 2. To forget an injury. 3. To make good use of leisure. ~ bruce-lee, @wisdomtrove
431:The true policy of government is to make use of aristocracy, but under the forms and in the spirit of democracy. ~ napoleon-bonaparte, @wisdomtrove
432:Two similar faces, neither of which alone causes laughter, use laughter when they are together, by their resemblance. ~ blaise-pascal, @wisdomtrove
433:World's use is cold, world's love is vain, world's cruelty is bitter bane; but is not the fruit of pain. ~ elizabeth-barrett-browning, @wisdomtrove
434:Beauty has no obvious use; nor is there any clear cultural necessity for it. Yet civilization could not do without it. ~ sigmund-freud, @wisdomtrove
435:He was a graduate of West Point, which is military academy that turns young men into homicidal maniacs for use in war. ~ kurt-vonnegut, @wisdomtrove
436:It is no use trying to sum people up. One must follow hints, not exactly what is said, nor yet entirely what is done. ~ virginia-woolf, @wisdomtrove
437:First try all other means, but if the wound Heal not, then use the knife, lest to the clean From the diseased the canker spread. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
438:I always use the same guitar; I got this guitar years and years ago for nine pounds. It's still got the same strings on it. ~ brian-eno, @wisdomtrove
439:I deplore the need or the use of troops anywhere to get American citizens to obey the orders of constituted courts. ~ dwight-eisenhower, @wisdomtrove
440:The subtle difference in our attitude can make a major difference in our future. It can be as simple as the language we use. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
441:A tart temper never mellows with age, and a sharp tongue is the only edged tool that grows keener with constant use. ~ washington-irving, @wisdomtrove
442:But do not give it to a lawyer's clerk to write, for they use a legal hand that Satan himself will not understand. ~ miguel-de-cervantes, @wisdomtrove
443:I don't tell the truth any more to those who can't make use of it. I tell it mostly to myself, because it always changes me. ~ anais-nin, @wisdomtrove
444:Merely stating a truth isn't enough. The truth has to be made vivid, interesting, dramatic. You have to use showmanship. ~ dale-carnegie, @wisdomtrove
445:Money is the harvest of our production and service. We in turn use it to obtain the production and service of others. ~ earl-nightingale, @wisdomtrove
446:We are plain quiet folk and have no use for adventures. Nasty disturbing uncomfortable things! Make you late for dinner! ~ j-r-r-tolkien, @wisdomtrove
447:We have converted our wounds into a type of relationship currency that we use in order to control situations and people. ~ caroline-myss, @wisdomtrove
448:You can use the law of attraction to create your whole life in advance, right down to the next thing you are doing today. ~ rhonda-byrne, @wisdomtrove
449:Bel Air, I am convinced, was laid out by some diabolic sadist who deliberately decided not to use a compass or a surveyor. ~ groucho-marx, @wisdomtrove
450:Certain forms of ammunition have no legitimate sporting, recreational, or self-defense use and thus should be prohibited. ~ ronald-reagan, @wisdomtrove
451:A time comes when you don't have to use meditation techniques anymore. You just sit down and you are nonexistence itself. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
452:By constant dripping, water hollows stone, A signet-ring from use alone grows thin, And the curved plowshare by soft earth is worn. ~ ovid, @wisdomtrove
453:Determine a single measure that you can use to grade your progress and success in each area of your life. Refer to it daily. ~ brian-tracy, @wisdomtrove
454:Every single important thing we do is something we didn't use to be good at, and in fact, might be something we used to fear. ~ seth-godin, @wisdomtrove
455:It is more fun to talk with someone who doesn't use long, difficult words but rather short, easy words like "What about lunch? ~ a-a-milne, @wisdomtrove
456:The excessive use of force creates legitimacy problems, and force without legitimacy leads to defiance, not submission. ~ malcolm-gladwell, @wisdomtrove
457:The only pressure that you use in a professional selling presentation is the presence of silence after the closing question. ~ brian-tracy, @wisdomtrove
458:There have been great societies that did not use the wheel, but there have been no societies that did not tell stories. ~ ursula-k-le-guin, @wisdomtrove
459:A liberal is a man who wants to use his own ideas on things in preference to generations who he knows know more than he does. ~ will-rogers, @wisdomtrove
460:Everything in its place. Clean as you go. Put it away now. Use a physical inbox, and empty it. Keep a simple filing system.   ~ leo-babauta, @wisdomtrove
461:I can be trained, I can actually show you how intelligent I am, I can use a word like delicatessen and know what it means. ~ robin-williams, @wisdomtrove
462:The Irish are the one race for which psychoanalysis is of no use whatsoever... because they already live in a dream world. ~ sigmund-freud, @wisdomtrove
463:Use reading to fill in those odd periods like waiting for an appointment, standing in line, or while the coffee is brewing. ~ steve-pavlina, @wisdomtrove
464:Artists use lies to tell the truth. Yes, I created a lie. But because you believed it, you found something true about yourself. ~ alan-moore, @wisdomtrove
465:Free publicity and word of mouth is probably the best and cheapest form of advertising. Learn to use it to your advantage. ~ richard-branson, @wisdomtrove
466:Man was born to be rich, or to inevitably grow rich, by the use of his faculties: by the union of thought with nature. ~ ralph-waldo-emerson, @wisdomtrove
467:The strong do not hesitate. They settle down, they sweat, they go on to the end. They exhaust the ink, they use up the paper. ~ jules-renard, @wisdomtrove
468:The study of Zen is a retraining. It is a series of new ways, not just one way, to learn to use your mind more efficiently. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
469:Well now what's the use in dreamin' You got better things to do Dreams never did work for me anyway Even when they did come true ~ bob-dylan, @wisdomtrove
470:With the use of psychedelics, it was all based around the Tibetan Book of the Dead, using them to experience enlightenment. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
471:Houses are built to live in, not to look on; therefore, let use be preferred before uniformity, except where both may be had. ~ francis-bacon, @wisdomtrove
472:If not in the interests of the state, do not act. If you cannot succeed, do not use troops. If you are not in danger, do not fight. ~ sun-tzu, @wisdomtrove
473:If you use your will all the time, then it runs out. You deplete yourself and then, when you really need it, it's not there. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
474:Most of us make unconscious choices in the words that we use; we sleep-walk through the maze of possibilities available to us. ~ tony-robbins, @wisdomtrove
475:You can purposefully use your feelings to transmit an even more powerful frequency, by adding feeling to what you are wanting. ~ rhonda-byrne, @wisdomtrove
476:We must close our eyes and invoke a new manner of seeing, a wakefulness that is the birthright of us all, though few put it to use. ~ plotinus, @wisdomtrove
477:Don't use your mind for a filing cabinet. Use your mind to work out problems and find answers; file away good ideas in your journal. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
478:... If you work hard enough and assert yourself, and use your mind and imagination, you can shape the world to your desires. ~ malcolm-gladwell, @wisdomtrove
479:The doctor of the future will give no medicine, but will involve the patient in the proper use of food, fresh air and exercise. ~ thomas-edison, @wisdomtrove
480:The primary aim of modern warfare ... is to use up the products of the machine without raising the general standard of living. ~ george-orwell, @wisdomtrove
481:Use career to develop yourself. Have fun with it. Dedicate your activities and your career, to eternity, and to enlightenment. ~ frederick-lenz, @wisdomtrove
482:We have converted our wounds into a type of relationship currency that we use in order to control situations and people. ~ norman-vincent-peale, @wisdomtrove
483:What I wanted most of all was to use sex as a weapon to allure, subjugate, and, if possible, destroy the personality of others. ~ quentin-crisp, @wisdomtrove
484:Customers shouldn't just think of your business as a place to buy a product or use a service - it should be a fun place to be. ~ richard-branson, @wisdomtrove
485:Every time we speak, we choose and use one of four basic communication styles: assertive, aggressive, passive and passive-aggressive. ~ jim-rohn, @wisdomtrove
486:Flood your life with ideas from many sources. Creativity needs to be exercised like a muscle. If you don't use it, you'll lose it! ~ brian-tracy, @wisdomtrove
487:I have no use for people who throw their weight around as celebrities, or for those who fawn over you just because you are famous. ~ walt-disney, @wisdomtrove
488:... the benefit arising from moderate use of strong Liquor have been experienced in all Armies, and are not to be disputed. ~ george-washington, @wisdomtrove
489:The Macintosh was supposed to be the computer for people that just wanted to use a computer without having to learn how to use one. ~ steve-jobs, @wisdomtrove
490:There is no use in talking as if forgiveness were easy. For we find that the work of forgiveness has to be done over and over again. ~ c-s-lewis, @wisdomtrove
491:Words mean more than we mean to express when we use them: so a whole book ought to mean a great deal more than the writer meant. ~ lewis-carroll, @wisdomtrove
492:In the enlightened state, you still use your thinking mind when needed, but in a much more focused and effective way than before. ~ eckhart-tolle, @wisdomtrove
493:Messy is a word we use to explain a conflict with an expectation we had. Eliminate the expectation, and you eliminate the messy. ~ steve-maraboli, @wisdomtrove
494:Radicals are only to be feared when you try to suppress them. You must demonstrate that you will use the best of what they offer. ~ frank-herbert, @wisdomtrove
495:The use of travelling is to regulate imagination by reality, and instead of thinking how things may be, to see them as they are. ~ samuel-johnson, @wisdomtrove
496:When you combine the ability to express your unique talent with service to humanity, then you make full use of The Law of Dharma. ~ deepak-chopra, @wisdomtrove
497:Courage is the greatest of all virtues, because if you haven't courage, you may not have an opportunity to use any of the others. ~ samuel-johnson, @wisdomtrove
498:I know a lot about writing, but I don't know much about how other industries work. I've tried to use my naivety to my advantage. ~ alain-de-botton, @wisdomtrove
499:Use me, God. Show me how to take who I am, who I want to be, and what I can do, and use it for a purpose greater than myself. ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove
500:Was not Jesus an extremist in love? - "Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, pray for them that despitefully use you." ~ martin-luther-king, @wisdomtrove

*** NEWFULLDB 2.4M ***

1:Use the hook, you ~ Steven Saylor,
2:I could use a hug. ~ Thea Harrison,
3:You use what moves you. ~ Laura Ruby,
4:I don't use labels a lot. ~ Jack Kemp,
5:use in even trying to. I ~ K Bromberg,
6:we must use a firm hand. ~ Anya Seton,
7:Why speak of the use ~ Hayden Carruth,
8:I don't use old music. ~ Gyorgy Ligeti,
9:I never use a computer. ~ Andrew Wiles,
10:One must use the night. ~ Tove Jansson,
11:People rarely use advice. ~ James Cook,
12:Use all of your senses. ~ Richard Louv,
13:Use your art to fight. ~ Arundhati Roy,
14:use the boy. use the boy. ~ J K Rowling,
15:Life is short. Be of use. ~ Robin Sharma,
16:Make a good use of the present. ~ Horace,
17:Use well thy freedom. ~ Jonathan Franzen,
18:Anger - use it, but don't lose it! ~ Mr T,
19:As much use as tits on a fish. ~ Mal Peet,
20:I don't use Twitter for bad. ~ Kevin Hart,
21:If you need me, use me. ~ Haruki Murakami,
22:I never use that word, retire. ~ B B King,
23:Modesty is of no use to a beggar. ~ Homer,
24:Use plants to bring life ~ Douglas Wilson,
25:What color would you use? ~ Jennifer Rush,
26:Be natural and use your head. ~ Dai Vernon,
27:My nerves could use a drink. ~ Grace Kelly,
28:Use the fear; feed the anger. ~ Teri Terry,
29:Use your power gently. ~ William Nicholson,
30:You have the power. Use it. ~ Victor Mil n,
31:It's no use blaming anyone now. ~ Ned Kelly,
32:Never mind the use--do it! ~ Samuel Johnson,
33:There is no one God won’t use. ~ Max Lucado,
34:Use every letter you write ~ Robert Muller,
35:Use the light to return to clarity. ~ Laozi,
36:use the Lord’s name in vain! ~ Jon Scieszka,
37:Use your head; cut off theirs. ~ Max Brooks,
38:Hope is a gift. Use it wisely. ~ Harley King,
39:NEVER USE HIGHLITER IN MY BOOKS ~ John Green,
40:No use being angry with fools. ~ Nana Malone,
41:Only amateurs use short copy. ~ David Ogilvy,
42:There is a use for everyone. ~ Wendell Berry,
43:Use your life to wake you up. ~ Pema Chodron,
44:What will I use the money for? ~ Jen Sincero,
45:Yes, even SEALs use PowerPoint. ~ Chris Kyle,
46:Design is art that people use. ~ Ellen Lupton,
47:Do I have to use my own money? ~ Erma Bombeck,
48:Everything that I make I use. ~ Lenny Kravitz,
49:If it has a use it isn't art. ~ Paterson Ewen,
50:I gotta use words to talk to you. ~ T S Eliot,
51:I use a smoke alarm as a timer. ~ Joan Rivers,
52:Machines don't use machines. ~ Conor McGregor,
53:The pot's use comes from emptiness. ~ Lao Tzu,
54:Use wisely your power of choice. ~ Og Mandino,
55:Use words that soak up life. ~ Virginia Woolf,
56:Don't lose your temper; use it. ~ Dolly Parton,
57:Don't use cannon to kill musquito. ~ Confucius,
58:Everyone can use a little beauty. ~ Alex Flinn,
59:Most search committees use me. ~ Barry Alvarez,
60:Never use guilt as motivation. ~ Stephen Guise,
61:New ideas must use old buildings ~ Jane Jacobs,
62:there is the door,use it.... ~ Judith McNaught,
63:Try to be of some use to others. ~ Joseph Hall,
64:"Use your life to wake you up." ~ Pema Chödron,
65:When in doubt, use brute force. ~ Ken Thompson,
66:Do nothing that is of no use ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
67:Go with what is. Use what happens. ~ Tom Piazza,
68:I don't even use the stupid shampoo. ~ A S King,
69:I like to make use of what I know ~ Franz Kafka,
70:Love and Time with reverence use, ~ John Dryden,
71:Men use the night to erase us. ~ Andrea Dworkin,
72:Perspective - Use It or Lose It. ~ Richard Bach,
73:Use clichés to mislead the player. ~ Anonymous,
74:Use the occasion, for it passes swiftly. ~ Ovid,
75:Use your own intuition. You are tomorrow. ~ Nas,
76:We have more than we use. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
77:We have to use our great people. ~ Donald Trump,
78:You could put hate to positive use, ~ Anonymous,
79:Come now, no use wastin sunshine. ~ Lili St Crow,
80:Do nothing which is of no use ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
81:I don't use many apps. I use naps. ~ Aaron Levie,
82:If I don't have red, I use blue. ~ Pablo Picasso,
83:I know how to use a fellytone now. ~ J K Rowling,
84:It is no use lying to one's self. ~ Henrik Ibsen,
85:I use a pick in my hair without force. ~ Extra P,
86:i use pain to push me to greatness ~ Eric Thomas,
87:Life is long if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca,
88:The effective use of affirmations ~ Rhonda Byrne,
89:Use love, use love as a bridge. ~ Gustavo Cerati,
90:Use your light, but dim your brightness. ~ Laozi,
91:Use your past as one of your mentors. ~ Jim Rohn,
92:Your storm, Thlayli-rah. Use it. ~ Richard Adams,
93:Apologies are seldom of any use. ~ Samuel Johnson,
94:Do nothing which is of no use. ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
95:God grinds the axes he intends to use. ~ Dave Sim,
96:I'm not opposed to the use of force. ~ Jill Stein,
97:I'm too impatient to use a tripod. ~ Ralph Gibson,
98:In waking a tiger, use a long stick. ~ Mao Zedong,
99:I use color very instinctively. ~ Alexandra Byrne,
100:Life is long, if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca,
101:Make good use of your time, it flies fast. ~ Ovid,
102:serving is the highest use of life, ~ Rick Warren,
103:The iron ring is worn out by constant use. ~ Ovid,
104:Use your ears more than your mouth. ~ Rick Warren,
105:When in doubt, use brute force. ~ Steve McConnell,
106:Any fool can use a computer. Many do. ~ Ted Nelson,
107:can we afford not to use them? ~ Jennifer A Doudna,
108:I love it when you use my full name. ~ Elle Jasper,
109:In war the olive branch of peace is of use. ~ Ovid,
110:It's simple: Give thanks and use Dove. ~ DJ Khaled,
111:I use the hook to carry coffee. ~ Colin O Donoghue,
112:No use crying over spilled Prosecco. ~ Julie James,
113:Space, to use a cliché, is big. ~ Richard K Morgan,
114:trust your heart but use your head ~ Julie Garwood,
115:use as ammunition, as pendulum, ~ Malcolm Gladwell,
116:use fear; don't fear fear ~ Ernest Agyemang Yeboah,
117:When I haven't any blue I use red. ~ Pablo Picasso,
118:A fortress is of no use to cowards. ~ Thiruvalluvar,
119:A lot of people... use a calculator! ~ Joe Strummer,
120:A player has no use for an agent. None. ~ Lou Holtz,
121:Do not use a cannon to kill a mosquito. ~ Confucius,
122:Don’t use language instrumentally ~ Jordan Peterson,
123:God can use the jawbone of an ass! ~ Winkie Pratney,
124:Love, so many People use your Name in vain. ~ Musiq,
125:Never use pages for personal brand! ~ Robert Scoble,
126:Use the hills to get stronger! ~ Mehmet Murat ildan,
127:Use your CRM to retain customers. ~ Jeffrey Gitomer,
128:Use your hater to make you greater! ~ Habeeb Akande,
129:What is the use of being ordinary? ~ Melanie Karsak,
130:What we need is to use what we have. ~ Susan Sontag,
131:WHEN YOU DO TALK NUMBERS, USE ODD ONES ~ Chris Voss,
132:you can access local scripts, use %run, ~ Anonymous,
133:You must use force against terrorism. ~ Tzipi Livni,
134:Don't fight forces, use them. ~ R Buckminster Fuller,
135:Everyone has influence. Use it wisely. ~ Johnny Hunt,
136:Go with your gut, but use your head. ~ Lauren Conrad,
137:Hell is a word men use in place of fear. ~ Myke Cole,
138:If you're afraid of butter, use cream. ~ Julia Child,
139:Never use a warning when you mean undo. ~ Aza Raskin,
140:Prejudices are what fools use for reason. ~ Voltaire,
141:She did not use it at all well mostly. ~ Miley Cyrus,
142:Then be not coy, but use your time; ~ Robert Herrick,
143:Use PMA: Positive Mental Actitude. ~ Benjamin Carson,
144:Use the darkness that lives inside you ~ Tillie Cole,
145:We must use time creatively. ~ Martin Luther King Jr,
146:When in doubt, use nutrition first. ~ Roger Williams,
147:Another possibility is to use the Captain ~ Bart King,
148:Don’t use language instrumentally ~ Jordan B Peterson,
149:I had no use for a husband under duress ~ Jean Sasson,
150:In life you use what you know, Anastasia. ~ E L James,
151:I tried to peg out soldierly,--no use! ~ Wilfred Owen,
152:I try to use pain as fuel for my work. ~ Joan Osborne,
153:Men are only so much use. Men are boys. ~ Garth Ennis,
154:Never use the competition as a benchmark ~ W Chan Kim,
155:One cannot hold power and not use it. ~ L Ron Hubbard,
156:Read­ing is use­ful,' Pyrlig said. ~ Bernard Cornwell,
157:Sanity is madness put to good use. ~ George Santayana,
158:Start where you are, use what you have. ~ Arthur Ashe,
159:Stupid pants. What use were they anyway? ~ Jaymin Eve,
160:The Devil may also make use of morality. ~ Karl Barth,
161:Them bats is smart. They use radar! ~ David Letterman,
162:This, Then That” (IFTT) website. Use this ~ S J Scott,
163:Use different words to describe yourself. ~ C D Reiss,
164:Use fear as an engine, not as a brake. ~ Paulo Coelho,
165:you can’t use logic on human behavior. ~ Jeff Lindsay,
166:Your voice dries up if you don't use it. ~ Patti Page,
167:Don't use your film for ugly purpose. ~ Karl Lagerfeld,
168:"Failure" isn't a word I really use. ~ Sebastian Roche,
169:I don't use the word 'artists' lightly. ~ Ciaran Hinds,
170:It is no use trying to sum people up. ~ Virginia Woolf,
171:I use a lot of old-fashioned expressions. ~ Susan Cain,
172:Let's just say I'm use to getting my way. ~ Maya Banks,
173:Life is long, if only you knew how to use it. ~ Seneca,
174:No use wishing now for any other sin. ~ Elvis Costello,
175:People use irony as a defense mechanism. ~ David Byrne,
176:The richest of all lords is Use, ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
177:The world is in your hands, now use it. ~ Phil Collins,
178:Ah yes, the gods use us mortals as footballs! ~ Plautus,
179:All really good writers use fragments. ~ Priscilla Long,
180:Be creative. Use your voice, your community. ~ Ray Toro,
181:Did that girl really use up my spell? ~ Sarah Mlynowski,
182:Don’t store guilt for future use. Afra ~ Anne McCaffrey,
183:Don't use big words. They mean so little. ~ Oscar Wilde,
184:Every thing is of use to a houskeeper. ~ George Herbert,
185:Fear has its use, but cowardice has none, ~ H P Mallory,
186:Girl, you could use those gift cards! ~ Janet Evanovich,
187:I need to use the little praetors’ room. ~ Rick Riordan,
188:In India everything has a use and a value. ~ Tahir Shah,
189:My mother use to tell me about the ocean. ~ Carrie Ryan,
190:Never use money to measure wealth, son. ~ Robert Duvall,
191:Never use one word when two will do. ~ Thomas Jefferson,
192:provides ease of use, flexibility in format ~ Anonymous,
193:Success is the intelligent use of mistakes. ~ Anonymous,
194:the blade gets dull,if we don't use it ~ Giles Kristian,
195:There is a voice that doesn't use words. Listen. ~ Rumi,
196:There is a voice that doesn’t use words. Listen. ~ Rumi,
197:The street has its own use for things. ~ William Gibson,
198:They use fear to keep you from thinking, ~ Jeff Wheeler,
199:Use the right word, not its second cousin. ~ Mark Twain,
200:What's a soul for if you don't use it? ~ Dan Gemeinhart,
201:What use is this great demon for me?187 ~ Thupten Jinpa,
202:While we may continue to use the words ~ Howard Gardner,
203:who didn’t know how to use a shotgun? ~ Karin Slaughter,
204:Writing is not primarily escape, but use. ~ Henry James,
205:you must not use wood to put out the fire. ~ Bette Lord,
206:And what arts did he use to separate them? ~ Jane Austen,
207:An idea is worthless unless you use it. ~ John C Maxwell,
208:By all means use sometimes to be alone. ~ George Herbert,
209:Don't use your mommy ninja skills on me. ~ Ottilie Weber,
210:Few know the use of life before 'tis past. ~ John Dryden,
211:If you need me, use me. Don't you see? ~ Haruki Murakami,
212:I have a mouth and I'm not afraid to use it. ~ Megan Fox,
213:I’m Australian; I know how to use a shotgun! ~ Max Barry,
214:I practice safe sex - I use an airbag. ~ Garry Shandling,
215:I use to be panicked, but know I'm curious! ~ Ryan Adams,
216:Never use two words when one will do. ~ Thomas Jefferson,
217:Of little use, the man you may suppose, ~ Alexander Pope,
218:The King is a fighting piece. Use it! ~ Wilhelm Steinitz,
219:The miser acquires, yet fears to use his gains. ~ Horace,
220:There's no use going back to yesterday. ~ Gena Showalter,
221:There's no way to use power for good. ~ Ursula K Le Guin,
222:They want to use him, make him geek. ~ Robert A Heinlein,
223:We just use each other to have a normal life ~ V F Mason,
224:We praise times past, while we times present use; ~ Ovid,
225:What is the best use of my time right now? ~ Alan Lakein,
226:When prosperity comes, do not use all of it. ~ Confucius,
227:Wisdom is the right use of knowledge. ~ Charles Spurgeon,
228:You can't use an old map to see a new land. ~ Gary Hamel,
229:You gotta use everything you possibly can! ~ Betty White,
230:You just use the future to escape the past. ~ John Green,
231:An idea doesn't count if you can't use it ~ Beth Comstock,
232:Art is not living. It is the use of living. ~ Audre Lorde,
233:A victim of the use of water as a beverage. ~ Sam Houston,
234:Does no one around here ever use the healer? ~ Robin Hobb,
235:Fear has its use but cowardice has none. ~ Mahatma Gandhi,
236:Forget hard work, use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
237:God is to be trusted in the use of means. ~ Matthew Henry,
238:Go to your banquet then, but use delight ~ Robert Herrick,
239:he’d use both hands to try to pry my thumb ~ Adam Haslett,
240:I let him use me to get rid of his pain. ~ Colleen Hoover,
241:I'm a simple man, and I use simple materials. ~ L S Lowry,
242:It's no use crying over spilt summits. ~ Harold MacMillan,
243:I use only essential oils for perfumes. ~ Jessica Capshaw,
244:Kirito . . . teach me how to use a sword. ~ Reki Kawahara,
245:Make use of every friend— and every foe. ~ Alexander Pope,
246:No man can use his brain to think for another. ~ Ayn Rand,
247:One girl is worth more use than 20 boys. ~ James M Barrie,
248:Sunaa Hai Log Use Bhar Ke Dekhate Hai.N
~ Ahmad Faraz,
249:Take what you can use and let the rest go by. ~ Ken Kesey,
250:There's no use being satisfied when things ~ Bill Nichols,
251:Tomorrow will use you the way you use today. ~ CrimethInc,
252:Use memories. Don't let memories use you. ~ Deepak Chopra,
253:Use those brains that God put in your head. ~ Moms Mabley,
254:Use your own paint; colour your world ~ Israelmore Ayivor,
255:Use your powers for good instead of evil ~ Nnedi Okorafor,
256:We all use the future to escape the present. ~ John Green,
257:We should never use the truth to wound. ~ Saint Augustine,
258:We try to use the talents we do have to ~ Walter Isaacson,
259:We use such big words to move nowhere. ~ Charles Bukowski,
260:What is the use of a new-born child ? ~ Benjamin Franklin,
261:A laxity pervades the popular use of words. ~ Charles Lamb,
262:Brains are no good if you don't use them. ~ Alexei Panshin,
263:Focus on what's ahead. Use what is behind. ~ Donita K Paul,
264:How use doth breed a habit in a man. ~ William Shakespeare,
265:I had no use for anyone telling me the odds. ~ Terry Crews,
266:I never use notes, they interfere with me. ~ Ken Blanchard,
267:It’s no use asking for explanations about God. ~ Anonymous,
268:Jesus is just a word I use to swear with. ~ Richard Harris,
269:Just keep on using me, until you use me up. ~ Bill Withers,
270:Nector got even by the use of penmanship. ~ Louise Erdrich,
271:One great use of words is to hide our thoughts. ~ Voltaire,
272:Please use your liberty to promote ours ~ Aung San Suu Kyi,
273:The idea of most use to tyrants is that of God, ~ Stendhal,
274:Use memories. Do not let memories use you. ~ Deepak Chopra,
275:Use randomized exponential backoff on errors ~ Betsy Beyer,
276:You just use the future to escape the present ~ John Green,
277:A good wit will make use of anything. ~ William Shakespeare,
278:A man who sees nothing has no use for his eyes, ~ Anonymous,
279:Chaos happens. Let's make better use of it. ~ Edward Tenner,
280:Cities vary widely in the use of DNA testing. ~ Bill Dedman,
281:Come down off the cross, we could use the wood. ~ Tom Waits,
282:Don't let yesterday use up too much of today. ~ Will Rogers,
283:Don't waste your pain; use it to help others. ~ Rick Warren,
284:Enjoy your obscurity while it lasts. Use it. ~ Austin Kleon,
285:Fail me, and I’ll use your ashes for seasoning. ~ Anonymous,
286:I don't like to use the word sacrifice. ~ William J Clinton,
287:...is it evil to use evil to combat evil... ~ Oliver Bowden,
288:Language uses us as much as we use language. ~ Robin Lakoff,
289:Let students use technologies in the classroom. ~ Weili Dai,
290:Love is the highest and best use of a life. ~ Sy Montgomery,
291:No use saying necessity is making a mistake. ~ Mason Cooley,
292:People will use you as long as you let them. ~ Dolly Parton,
293:Please use your freedom to promote ours. ~ Aung San Suu Kyi,
294:Silent gratitude isn't much use to anyone. ~ Gertrude Stein,
295:Take your sensibility and use it as a vision ~ George Eliot,
296:The only way to find your voice is to use it ~ Austin Kleon,
297:Thought makes everything fit for use. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
298:To know and not to use is not yet to know! ~ Gautama Buddha,
299:Use me," he said. "For as long as you like. ~ Meljean Brook,
300:Use that fluff of yours you call a brain. ~ Agatha Christie,
301:Use the Internet to get off the Internet! ~ Scott Heiferman,
302:We use criticism as a fake participation. ~ Chuck Palahniuk,
303:Yes, I'm rich. Get use to it. -- Christian Grey ~ E L James,
304:You can grow flowers from where dirt use to be. ~ Kate Nash,
305:You just use the future to escape the present. ~ John Green,
306:Absolutely,” she said. “Artists use them ~ Diane Chamberlain,
307:Anybody. She uses her body like I use the loose ~ Mario Puzo,
308:Do not let yesterday use up too much of today ~ Lisa Wingate,
309:God wants to use us as He used His own Son ~ Oswald Chambers,
310:He is not poor who has the use of necessary things. ~ Horace,
311:If you want to communicate, use the telephone ~ Richard Hugo,
312:I hate when people use my tactics against me. ~ Sean Hannity,
313:I'm raised to actually think, to use my brain. ~ Jason Momoa,
314:I use my rapier wit to hide my inner pain. ~ Cassandra Clare,
315:I wanted to use sports for social change. ~ Billie Jean King,
316:Life is long if you know how to use it. ~ Seneca the Younger,
317:Money is like an arm or leg- use it or lose it. ~ Henry Ford,
318:Of what use is a fortune to me, if I cannot use it? ~ Horace,
319:People try constantly to use me and I hate it. ~ Tracey Emin,
320:Sex is one of God's gifts, just use it right. ~ Sky Ferreira,
321:the only way to find your voice is to use it. ~ Austin Kleon,
322:Use life to provide something that outlasts it. ~ B C Forbes,
323:Use this knowledge to be gentle and gracious. ~ Ryan Holiday,
324:We must use time as a tool, not as a couch. ~ John F Kennedy,
325:We tend to use knowledge as therapy. ~ Nassim Nicholas Taleb,
326:we use the time we have. There is no other. ~ Brian Staveley,
327:Whatever you have, you must either use or lose. ~ Henry Ford,
328:A belief of convenience isn't much use, is it? ~ Louise Penny,
329:asking her if she could use it.” Jennifer said, ~ Brad Taylor,
330:Because we're the best: we use all organic. ~ Catherine Clark,
331:Can you use the rational mind to transcend itself? ~ Ram Dass,
332:Don’t let yesterday use up too much of today. ~ Julie Hockley,
333:Don't let yesterday use up too much of today ~ Tracie Puckett,
334:Every moment is an opportunity. Use it wisely. ~ Tammy Snyder,
335:Every year I own less of what I use. Possession ~ Kevin Kelly,
336:Frankly, I could use a little sugarcoating. ~ Suzanne Collins,
337:Good luck - it's always ready to use in case. ~ Oprah Winfrey,
338:I don't use Twitter. I'm a serious person. ~ Paolo Sorrentino,
339:If I were to paint you, I would use every color. ~ Amy Harmon,
340:if other institutions try to use it, they ~ Elizabeth Kolbert,
341:It's okay to be scared as long as you use it. ~ Karen Traviss,
342:I use the Internet for what it's for: to learn. ~ Danny Brown,
343:Money is like an arm or leg - use it or lose it. ~ Henry Ford,
344:No book so bad but some part may be of use. ~ Pliny the Elder,
345:One great use of words is to hide our thoughts.
   ~ Voltaire,
346:Societies in decline have no use for visionaries. ~ Anais Nin,
347:Societies in decline have no use for visionaries. ~ Ana s Nin,
348:Sometimes, being able to use magic was so cool. ~ Jim Butcher,
349:Twitter? No, I'd rather use phone and texts. ~ Domenico Dolce,
350:Use #‎ meditation as a tool to get quiet. ~ Sonia Choquette,
351:Use your internal grandmother for guidance and advice. ~ Sark,
352:Use your judgement."
"But I have so little. ~ Stephen King,
353:We don't use guns because we don't have guns ~ Mahatma Gandhi,
354:We must use time as a tool, not as a crutch. ~ John F Kennedy,
355:what is opportunity to a man who can't use it. ~ George Eliot,
356:What’s the use of a clown who doesn’t subvert? ~ Kirsty Logan,
357:when confined to technical use. In like ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
358:Where there is loyalty, weapons are of no use. ~ Paulo Coelho,
359:You can't find your voice if you don't use it. ~ Austin Kleon,
360:Great men, like nature, use simple language. ~ Luc de Clapiers,
361:I did not use paint, I made myself up morally. ~ Eleanora Duse,
362:I do use the F word a lot, unfortunately. ~ June Diane Raphael,
363:I expect people to at least use some thought. ~ Chrissie Hynde,
364:I have no use for people who exhibit manners. ~ Amy Vanderbilt,
365:I use Cheer. I like the idea of a happy wash. ~ Robert Fulghum,
366:Jamie was quick to see a use for the ice sheet. ~ Farley Mowat,
367:‎Keep your love, I have no use for it anymore. ~ Richelle Mead,
368:Long pains, with use of bearing, are half eased. ~ John Dryden,
369:People use tools, Megan. Machines use people. ~ Joseph D Lacey,
370:Some stories, you use up. Others use you up. ~ Chuck Palahniuk,
371:Such a shovel, it seemed a waste not to use it. ~ Daniel Kraus,
372:The Essence of Knowledge is, having it, to use it. ~ Confucius,
373:Use counters for activities, not for storage. ~ Gretchen Rubin,
374:Use it or lose it is a cliche because it's true. ~ Julian Cope,
375:Use it, Rosie, that's what it's there for. ~ Bruce Springsteen,
376:Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. ~ Anonymous,
377:Use no way as way, make no limitation, limitation. ~ Bruce Lee,
378:Use the difficulties - if you can't avoid them ~ Michael Caine,
379:Use your ears to record and your eyes to video. ~ Robert Fripp,
380:Use your freedom to experiment with visual ideas. ~ Maya Deren,
381:Use your words, Keaton. More than three, please.” A ~ S E Hall,
382:What is opportunity to the man who cant use it? ~ George Eliot,
383:What then remains, but well our power to use, ~ Alexander Pope,
384:What use are socks? They only produce holes. ~ Albert Einstein,
385:What use will money be to him in the Sands. ~ Wilfred Thesiger,
386:why haven't we seventy lives? One is no use. ~ Winifred Holtby,
387:Winners use words that say ‘must’ and ‘will’. ~ Jordan Belfort,
388:Without hope, what would be the use of going on? ~ Kylie Brant,
389:You have to be entrepreneurial and use your name. ~ Paul Young,
390:A minimum put to good use is enough for anything. ~ Jules Verne,
391:A place belongs to anyone who has a use for it. ~ Nicole Krauss,
392:Before you use a fancy word, make room for it. ~ Joseph Joubert,
393:Black people use body lotion every single day. ~ Mellody Hobson,
394:Cloud Collections: As your library grows, use Cloud ~ Anonymous,
395:Do it through the use of force, and it's socialism. ~ Anonymous,
396:Don’t wait for success, use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
397:Fairies use flowers for their charactery. ~ William Shakespeare,
398:Genius, like humanity, rusts for want of use. ~ William Hazlitt,
399:Hanging was the worst use a man could be put to. ~ Henry Wotton,
400:I can always use a good chest fly in my life ~ Jillian Michaels,
401:If you can't see your chains, what use is a key? ~ Jay Kristoff,
402:If you can’t see your chains, what use is a key? ~ Jay Kristoff,
403:I just saw metal as another tool for me to use. ~ Scott Putesky,
404:I own a bed.”
“We’ll use the bed next time. ~ Kalayna Price,
405:Is it true that if you don’t USE it you LOSE it? ~ Steve Carell,
406:It ain't no use to try to learn you nothing, Huck. ~ Mark Twain,
407:It's no use just winning, we've got to win well. ~ Bill Nichols,
408:I've been dogmatic to use myself as a case study. ~ Simon Sinek,
409:Karuu.N Na Yaad Agar Kis Tarah Bhulaauu.N Use
~ Ahmad Faraz,
410:Leadership is the intelligent use of power. ~ Winston Churchill,
411:logographos, a writer of speeches for others to use ~ Aristotle,
412:Make use of time, let not advantage slip. ~ William Shakespeare,
413:Make use of time, let not advantage slip; ~ William Shakespeare,
414:Nor use too swelling, or ill-sounded words . . . . ~ Ben Jonson,
415:Once you teach me something, it's mine to use. ~ Terry Goodkind,
416:She use to knock me out until her face broke out. ~ Frank Zappa,
417:The mind requires regular use to remain strong. ~ Napoleon Hill,
418:The wrong use of a thing is far worse than the non-use. ~ Plato,
419:Time is what we want most,but what we use worst. ~ William Penn,
420:Trump, who doesn’t touch type or use a keyboard, ~ Bob Woodward,
421:Understand what words you use first, then use them. ~ Epictetus,
422:Use action to cure fear and gain confidence. ~ David J Schwartz,
423:Use me as an example of an instrument of change. ~ Michael Vick,
424:Use Secret Shifters to change negative thoughts. ~ Rhonda Byrne,
425:We limit how much technology our kids use at home. ~ Steve Jobs,
426:We should use our judgment before coming to a decision. ~ Aesop,
427:Where wisdom is called for, force is of little use. ~ Herodotus,
428:You use sex to express every emotion except love. ~ Woody Allen,
429:a storage room, one that had been in use for some ~ John Grisham,
430:Courage is like a muscle. We strengthen it by use. ~ Ruth Gordon,
431:Dumb dog. I bought a dog whistle. He won't use it. ~ Karel Capek,
432:False teachers of the Way of life use flowery words. ~ Bruce Lee,
433:I don't trust them but I'm learning to use them. ~ Adrienne Rich,
434:I hate it when people use stuff and don’t replace ~ Kim Harrison,
435:It's not up to God for us to use the gift of faith. ~ James Cook,
436:I use innocence in my demeanor like a Venus flytrap. ~ Tori Amos,
437:I will speak daggers to her, but use none. ~ William Shakespeare,
438:Never use a long word where a short one will do. ~ George Orwell,
439:No freeman shall be debarred the use of arms. ~ Thomas Jefferson,
440:The greatest homage to truth is to use it. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
441:The only way you can hurt the body is not use it. ~ Jack LaLanne,
442:There is a use for almost everything. ~ George Washington Carver,
443:The trombone is too sacred for frequent use. ~ Felix Mendelssohn,
444:They aren't making mirrors like they use to. ~ Tallulah Bankhead,
445:Time is what we want most, but what we use worst. ~ William Penn,
446:Time stays long enough for those who use it. ~ Leonardo da Vinci,
447:Understand what words you use first, then use them. ~ Epictetus,
448:Use almost can change the stamp of nature. ~ William Shakespeare,
449:Use lots of exclamation points. They love to be overused. ~ Sark,
450:Use the new technologies for the old purposes. ~ Leon Wieseltier,
451:Use Twitter Search to act as your bionic ears. ~ Gary Vaynerchuk,
452:Use your internal grandmother for guidance and advice. ~ S A R K,
453:What good is a reputation not put to good use. ~ Albert Einstein,
454:What is the best use of my time on this planet? ~ Tom Hiddleston,
455:What use is a good thought if no one agrees with it? ~ Paul Muni,
456:When your holding a double barrel shotgun use both barrels. ~ JR,
457:You got one life, never use it just to breathe. ~ Kristen Ashley,
458:You use a different part of your heart with girls. ~ Martin Amis,
459:Beautiful landscapes are no use for good paintings. ~ Peter Stamm,
460:But I enjoy the opportunity to use swear symbols. ~ Daniel Clowes,
461:But whats the use of being old if you cant be dumb? ~ John O Hara,
462:Coaching is the vehical we use to reach/ help people. ~ Don Meyer,
463:I don't use drugs, my dreams are frightening enough. ~ M C Escher,
464:If I use it, and you know what it means, it a word. ~ Scott Meyer,
465:If you could use your brain like you use your ass. ~ Alice Cooper,
466:I have a lot of doubters. I use that as motivation. ~ Vince Young,
467:I try to use my music to move these people to act. ~ Jimi Hendrix,
468:I've done a lot of bad things. Use your imagination. ~ Katy Perry,
469:Joy is the effect which comes when we use our powers. ~ Rollo May,
470:Luck's the word those with poor hearts use for ka. ~ Stephen King,
471:Never use limitations as an excuse for mediocrity. ~ Linda Gerber,
472:No use in taking a cat's opinion of a dog. ~ Lucy Maud Montgomery,
473:Preach always. If necessary, use words. ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
474:Preach always. Use words if necessary. ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
475:Principle 2: Use Existing Habits to Build New Ones ~ John Assaraf,
476:Reasoning is the mental tool that use to think with ~ Bob Proctor,
477:So I use a tape recorder a lot to record ideas. ~ John Frusciante,
478:still in use though coeval with the old house. Then ~ Carola Dunn,
479:There's a different use for different strategies. ~ Vijay Prashad,
480:There's really no wrong way to use a margarita pool. ~ Will Forte,
481:There was no use grieving over what might have been ~ Janette Oke,
482:The ultimate use of power is to empower others. ~ William Glasser,
483:the use of nuclear weapons is Iran's right. ~ Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
484:The way to keep your senses alive is to use them. ~ Joan Anderson,
485:To know much and taste nothing-of what use is that? ~ Bonaventure,
486:To use bitter words, when kind words are at hand, ~ Thiruvalluvar,
487:Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without. ~ Jean M Twenge,
488:What is the use of stories that arent even true? ~ Salman Rushdie,
489:What's the use of stories that aren't even true? ~ Salman Rushdie,
490:What use is one key among a billion prisoners? ~ Catherine Fisher,
491:Without memory, time would be no use to mankind, ~ Simon Van Booy,
492:You can use your story, or your story can use you. ~ Tony Robbins,
493:you could use it to kill yourself. No pain, just ~ Robert Bryndza,
494:You must use your mind to get things off your mind. ~ David Allen,
495:Alex had a nice big cock and knew how to use it. ~ Mary J Williams,
496:Beauty too rich for use, for earth too dear. ~ William Shakespeare,
497:Beware the man with one gun. He can probably use it. ~ Jeff Cooper,
498:Chance created the situation; genius made use of it. ~ Leo Tolstoy,
499:Compassion is the use of public funds to buy votes ~ Thomas Sowell,
500:Define what you want, then use a strategy to get it. ~ David Niven,
501:Don't explain why it works; explain how you use it. ~ Steven Brust,
502:Everything you do in life use percentage as your god. ~ Mario Puzo,
503:He hath no power that hath not power to use. ~ Philip James Bailey,
504:He who has great power should use it lightly. ~ Seneca the Younger,
505:I don't use e-mail or u-mail or whatever it's called. ~ Joe Arpaio,
506:I do use my body a lot, to click into a character. ~ Molly Shannon,
507:If you know me so well, tell me which hand that I use. ~ Tori Amos,
508:I have a mustard seed and I'm not afraid to use it! ~ Benedict XVI,
509:In the digital age, don’t forget to use your digits! ~ Lynda Barry,
510:It's no use trying to be different than you are. ~ Chogyam Trungpa,
511:I use discipline and focus as my greatest weapons. ~ Lyoto Machida,
512:I use Pearl Eliminator Pedals and I swear by them. ~ Joey Jordison,
513:Jason, why did you use my cupcakes to poison him? ~ Leighann Dobbs,
514:Let a man use great reverence and manners to himself. ~ Pythagoras,
515:me and quips that the PAC could use a good attorney ~ Lisa Wingate,
516:No use going to class unless you go to the library. ~ Ray Bradbury,
517:The criminal law is no use to decent people. ~ George Bernard Shaw,
518:There is a voice that doesn’t use words. Listen. ~ Jalaluddin Rumi,
519:There is so much power at your fingertips! Use it! ~ Sadie Calvano,
520:The tools belong to the man who can use them. ~ Napoleon Bonaparte,
521:The vision you use determines the results you obtain. ~ Alan Cohen,
522:The words you use determine the way you feel. The ~ Robin S Sharma,
523:This is our life; there’s no use in asking
what if. ~ Jenny Han,
524:Too bad you were born. Nobody has any use for you. ~ Kurt Vonnegut,
525:To use a good book as a sedative is conspicuous waste. ~ Anonymous,
526:To use your head, you have to go out of your mind. ~ Timothy Leary,
527:Tuck's home, so I suggest we use our indoor voices. ~ Elle Kennedy,
528:Use anger as a wake-up call to unmet needs. ~ Marshall B Rosenberg,
529:Use id not a right, Queen Meira --it is a privilege. ~ Sara Raasch,
530:Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without, ~ Denise Kiernan,
531:Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. ~ Valerie Tripp,
532:Use your talent at sorcery, don’t be used by it. ~ Gregory Maguire,
533:We must use what we have to invent what we desire. ~ Adrienne Rich,
534:We need a dramatically expanded use of statecraft. ~ Newt Gingrich,
535:We should use our imagination more than our memory. ~ Shimon Peres,
536:When you dine with the devil use a long spoon, ~ Patricia Cornwell,
537:When you've got some talent, your job is to use it. ~ Howard Hawks,
538:You can't use an old map to explore a new world. ~ Albert Einstein,
539:You must use that hope an' faith to help you get well. ~ Zane Grey,
540:All you've ever done is use her for your own profit ~ Stylo Fantome,
541:A weed is a plant we've found no use for yet. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson,
542:But what is opportunity to the man who can't use it? ~ George Eliot,
543:For wisdom, piety, delight, or use. ~ Sir John Denham, Of Prudence.,
544:I don't use machines - animals don't use machines. ~ Conor McGregor,
545:If it gets any hotter in here I could use a big fan. ~ Groucho Marx,
546:I have a mustard seed; and I am not afraid to use it ~ Benedict XVI,
547:I'm a very simple person. I don't use computers. ~ Carrie Anne Moss,
548:In the digital age, don’t forget to use your digits! ~ Austin Kleon,
549:Intuition is a powerful business tool. Use it. ~ Maggie Wilderotter,
550:It's no use locking the door after the steed is stolen. ~ H G Wells,
551:I use high velocity to keep hitters off balance. ~ Justin Verlander,
552:I use my mind to solve problems and invent things. ~ Temple Grandin,
553:I use the word nursing for want of a better. ~ Florence Nightingale,
554:I will not use people's lives as bargaining chips. ~ Andrea Leadsom,
555:Joy is a weapon we use to fight life's battles. ~ Margaret Feinberg,
556:Language makes infinite use of finite media. ~ Wilhelm von Humboldt,
557:Life is short, no use wasting it with bad people. ~ Robert Liparulo,
558:Luck's the word those with poor hearts use for ka... ~ Stephen King,
559:Man must use what he has, not hope for what is not. ~ G I Gurdjieff,
560:Man seeketh in society comfort, use and protection. ~ Francis Bacon,
561:Nature has no use for the plea that one 'did not know'. ~ Carl Jung,
562:No use su energía para preocuparse, úsela para creer. ~ Joel Osteen,
563:Our blood is the same, we just use it differently. ~ Patrick deWitt,
564:Preach the Gospel, if necessary use words ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
565:So long as you use a knife, there's some love left. ~ Norman Mailer,
566:The best thing a person can be is of-some-use. ~ Julianna Margulies,
567:The best way to save face is not to use the lower half. ~ Lou Holtz,
568:The only thing to know is how to use your neurosis. ~ Arthur Adamov,
569:The real use of gunpowder is to make all men tall. ~ Thomas Carlyle,
570:the use of music for intellectual enjoyment in leisure; ~ Aristotle,
571:Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. ~ Gretchen Rubin,
572:Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without ~ James D Bradley,
573:Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without. ~ Rita Mae Brown,
574:Use lots of exclamation points. They love to be overused. ~ S A R K,
575:Use your eyes as if tomorrow you would become blind. ~ Helen Keller,
576:We’re not going to use magic?” Ron ejaculated loudly. ~ J K Rowling,
577:We should never use the truth to wound. ~ Saint Augustine of Hippo,
578:Whatever use double maths has in life is beyond me. ~ Cecelia Ahern,
579:When life gives you lemons, use Cosmic Ordering! ~ Stephen Richards,
580:When penciling in your future, always use a pen ~ Benny Bellamacina,
581:Words are the tools we use to express our reality. ~ Steve Maraboli,
582:You build on failure. You use it as a stepping stone. ~ Johnny Cash,
583:Your sense of judgment could use a dash of common sense. ~ Susan Ee,
584:A man is little use when his wife’s a widow. Scottish ~ Colin Dexter,
585:Compassion is a muscle that gets stronger with use. ~ Mahatma Gandhi,
586:Don't look for the meanings; look for the use. ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein,
587:For the most part, people use God as Santa Claus. ~ Rickie Lee Jones,
588:I can move objects with my mind, if I use my hands. ~ Demetri Martin,
589:I could really use someone else's smile today. ~ Richelle E Goodrich,
590:I love thee with the passion put to use ~ Elizabeth Barrett Browning,
591:I personally use the web as an Intelligence Amplifier. ~ Bran Ferren,
592:I think Nashville could use some better shopping! ~ Carrie Underwood,
593:I use a lot of double meanings. I hide 'em like Easter eggs. ~ Jay Z,
594:I use Graf Edmonton for boots and John Wilson blades. ~ Oksana Baiul,
595:I will never use my gift... Not ever again. - Winter ~ Marissa Meyer,
596:Love people, not things; use things, not people. ~ Spencer W Kimball,
597:Millionaires don't use astrology...the billionaires do. ~ J P Morgan,
598:My height is an advantage, if I want to use it. ~ Wladimir Klitschko,
599:No use leaning on someone else’s story all your life. ~ Shannon Hale,
600:of grades concerned (by type of use and for ISCED levels ~ Anonymous,
601:Only Celts would use nine letters to make one sound. ~ Ilona Andrews,
602:Rain is something the democrats use to sell umbrellas. ~ Sarah Palin,
603:(...) remember that to use a thing is not to own it. ~ Leigh Bardugo,
604:The days are long enough for those who use them. ~ Leonardo da Vinci,
605:There is a voice that doesn't use words — Listen! ~ Jalaluddin Rumi^,
606:There's no use running if you're on the wrong road. ~ Warren Buffett,
607:The world is too sane. It could use a little madness. ~ Cameron Jace,
608:To be successful in writing, use short sentences. ~ Ernest Hemingway,
609:Use minds to solve problems, not lies and bullets. ~ Richard Patrick,
610:What's the use of praying if there's nobody who hears? ~ Victor Hugo,
611:Wherein is the use of getting rid of one thorn out of many? ~ Horace,
612:Why are we driven to use our tools so compulsively? ~ Jocelyn K Glei,
613:You can use your story, or your story can use you. ~ Anthony Robbins,
614:You got to use what you got to get just what you want. ~ James Brown,
615:You have to use your mind to get things off your mind. ~ David Allen,
616:You must use your mind to get things off your mind. An ~ David Allen,
617:Your brain is a tool you use. It’s not who you are. ~ James Altucher,
618:Your goal over time is to use less red ink every day. ~ Keith Rabois,
619:Your sense of judgement could use a dash of common sense. ~ Susan Ee,
620:You say you hate me, yet, you use me to stop hurting. ~ Brodi Ashton,
621:Drug use and procrastination often go hand in tourniquet. ~ Will Self,
622:Even God is said to be unable to use force against necessity. ~ Plato,
623:I don`t use much Obamacare, I must be honest with you. ~ Donald Trump,
624:If you see it's impossible,
you may use others' eyes. ~ Toba Beta,
625:If you use tact you can say anything, then make it funny. ~ Dane Cook,
626:I had no use for nostalgia if it took up space. ~ Kimberly Rae Miller,
627:I have always abhorred the word racism. I never use it. ~ Jim Clyburn,
628:I think I could use a library," she answered finally. ~ Michele Jaffe,
629:I use a combination of all my influences on my albums. ~ Robin Trower,
630:I will use my mind, not just my regular brain lobes. ~ Peter Bognanni,
631:I would be so happy if we never had to use [military]. ~ Donald Trump,
632:Leave it to Wes to use sex as a reason not to die. ~ Rachel Van Dyken,
633:Make use of your friends by being of use to them. ~ Benjamin Franklin,
634:My brushes, my cameras, and my willingness to use them. ~ James Nares,
635:"Nature has no use for the plea that 'one did not know.'" ~ Carl Jung,
636:No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms ~ Thomas Jefferson,
637:Oh, I never use a seat belt. I don't believe in gravity. ~ John Guare,
638:One who is good at calculating does not use counting chips. ~ Lao Tzu,
639:People use music as a utensil to better themselves. ~ Jessica Simpson,
640:Pretexts are not wanting when one wishes to use them. ~ Carlo Goldoni,
641:Say a Hail Mary for me. I could use some forgiveness. ~ Ellen Hopkins,
642:So if we use birth control we don't need to be married? ~ Mitt Romney,
643:Spread the Gospel. If necessary, use words. ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
644:The industrial use of semen will revolutionize society ~ John Balance,
645:The more words you use, the more untruths sneak in. ~ Nathan Burgoine,
646:The proper use of commas is often more art than science. ~ Bill Walsh,
647:They use everything about the hog except the squeal. ~ Upton Sinclair,
648:Use the pain as fuel, as a reminder of your strength. ~ August Wilson,
649:Use your imagination lovingly on behalf of another. ~ Neville Goddard,
650:We all have ability. The difference is how we use it. ~ Stevie Wonder,
651:What? Don't British women know how to use their knees? ~ Shannon Hale,
652:What good is power when you're too wise to use it? ~ Ursula K Le Guin,
653:What's the use of money if you have to earn it. ~ George Bernard Shaw,
654:What’s the use of running, if we are on the wrong road. ~ S Jae Jones,
655:What the use of having ignorance if you can't show it? ~ Lou Costello,
656:When all else fails, use the pen.


EMW ~ Erik Martin Will n,
657:Acting is the use of human experience with talent added. ~ Ruth Gordon,
658:Any decent poet can use words to stop
the bleeding. ~ Serhiy Zhadan,
659:Biking is a good alternative. Use the city as your gym. ~ Ilana Glazer,
660:Do not use the elevators or your craft will stall. ~ Chris Grabenstein,
661:Don’t just wish you were rich, use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
662:First draft, use your heart. Revision, use your head ~ Mark Rubinstein,
663:His use of the plural pronoun made me very suspicious. ~ Matthew Quick,
664:I don't use you as a shield. I am the goddamn shield. ~ Kristen Ashley,
665:I hate the way people use PowerPoints instead of thinking ~ Steve Jobs,
666:I often use alcohol as an artificial check on my skills. ~ Bill Bryson,
667:It is wrong to use equal language for unequal actions. ~ Peter Akinola,
668:Never use a big word when a little filthy one will do. ~ Johnny Carson,
669:Never use anybody else's power, but always use yours. ~ Kate DiCamillo,
670:Never use a verb other than ‘said’ to carry dialogue. ~ Elmore Leonard,
671:No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. ~ Thomas Jefferson,
672:Of what use are laws, inoperative through public immortality? ~ Horace,
673:One must use the weapons one finds in one's path. ~ Isabelle Eberhardt,
674:Other nations use 'force' we Britons alone use 'Might'. ~ Evelyn Waugh,
675:People must want to use the service, not feel they have to. ~ Nir Eyal,
676:Please, I always use fresh sarcasm, never canned. ~ Laurell K Hamilton,
677:Rather than prioritizing social media, use it as a reward. ~ S J Scott,
678:The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games. ~ Ernest Cline,
679:The use of riches is better than their possession. ~ Fernando de Rojas,
680:Time stays long enough for anyone who will use it. ~ Leonardo da Vinci,
681:Use what is dominant in a culture to change it quickly. ~ Jenny Holzer,
682:Use your notebook to breathe in the world around you. ~ Ralph Fletcher,
683:We painters use the same license as poets and madmen. ~ Paolo Veronese,
684:who think in lifetimes are of no use to statesmanship. ~ Louis L Amour,
685:You have two ears and one mouth. Use them accordingly. ~ Stephen Covey,
686:You know how to use magic?” I asked. “I prefer calculus. ~ Jim Butcher,
687:Breath belongs to Mehay. Ecl has no use for it. ~ Amelia Atwater Rhodes,
688:But I don't need to use politics as a way of making money. ~ Imran Khan,
689:Donald Trump knows how to use leverage in negotiations. ~ Rudy Giuliani,
690:Don't use such strong words. It'll only make you look weak. ~ Tite Kubo,
691:Fear is a fire to temper courage and resolve. Use it so. ~ Terry Brooks,
692:Hollywood could use less instead of more of everything. ~ Bruce Davison,
693:I don't use my body to seduce, no. I just stand there. ~ Ursula Andress,
694:I don't use the accident - 'cause I deny the accident ~ Jackson Pollock,
695:If I could find anything blacker than black, I'd use it. ~ J M W Turner,
696:I frowned. Had someone broken into my house to… use my oven? ~ R S Grey,
697:I like to use simple words, but in a complicated way. ~ Carol Ann Duffy,
698:I'm sorry. I use my rapier wit to hide my inner pain. ~ Cassandra Clare,
699:insinuating approach a child molester would use? “If you ~ Ruth Rendell,
700:I think God is something that People use to avoid reality. ~ James Frey,
701:It's improper to use the egg roll for political purposes. ~ Mark Tooley,
702:It's just an inch from me to you depending on what map you use. ~ Jewel,
703:Its just an inch from me to you, depending on what map you use. ~ Jewel,
704:I use a really simple calendar program on my computer. ~ Jamie Zawinski,
705:I use memories but I will not allow memories to use me. ~ Deepak Chopra,
706:I use the audience as my color palette, my instrument. ~ Bobby McFerrin,
707:I've no use for owls,' said Gaunt. 'I don't open letters. ~ J K Rowling,
708:My goal is to learn things once and use them forever. ~ Timothy Ferriss,
709:Pfui', I said. It is an expression I don't often use... ~ P G Wodehouse,
710:Progress comes from the intelligent use of experience. ~ Elbert Hubbard,
711:PU'RIST: one superstitiously nice in the use of words. ~ Samuel Johnson,
712:said, trying to pull back. It was no use; the ice shield had ~ K M Shea,
713:So use your own property as not to injure that of another ~ Edward Coke,
714:The best thing to do with water is to use a lot of it. ~ Philip Johnson,
715:The full use of your powers along lines of excellence. ~ John F Kennedy,
716:the meaning of a word is its use in the language. ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein,
717:The more we use our mind, the less minding power we have. ~ Gary Keller,
718:The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games. ~ Eugene Jarvis,
719:The only way our faith can strengthen is if we use it. ~ Lysa TerKeurst,
720:The young man must store up, the old man must use. ~ Seneca the Younger,
721:Time: all things consume it, love alone makes use of it. ~ Paul Claudel,
722:Use encouragement. Make the fault seem easy to correct. ~ Dale Carnegie,
723:we must use only the force that is necessary and no more. ~ J K Rowling,
724:What good is magic, if you can't use it to help people? ~ Tamora Pierce,
725:What's the use of temptations if we don't yield to them? ~ Mackenzi Lee,
726:What’s the use of temptations if we don’t yield to them? ~ Mackenzi Lee,
727:Without liberty I have nothing left to use except my body. ~ Imran Khan,
728:Worry is a word that I don't allow myself to use. ~ Dwight D Eisenhower,
729:You are the only person on earth who can use your ability. ~ Zig Ziglar,
730:You couldn't at least use an Exy idiom? I hate baseball. ~ Nora Sakavic,
731:but what's the use of belonging anywhere if you're invisible? ~ E Nesbit,
732:Don't use time and words carelessly - neither can be retrieved. ~ LeCrae,
733:Evolution cannot be brought about by the use of dynamite. ~ Irene Parlby,
734:Forget ideas, Mr. Author.
What kind of pen do you use? ~ Stephen Fry,
735:Hall of Love has ten thousand swords. Don't be afraid to use one. ~ Rumi,
736:I do not find myself making any use of the word sacrifice. ~ Jane Austen,
737:If you want to change something, you have to use new ways. ~ Joachim Low,
738:I never thought that someday men will also use an iPAD. ~ Santosh Kalwar,
739:I never use soundtrack; it is always part of the story. ~ Michael Haneke,
740:It's important to have a voice; it's more important to use it. ~ Amy Ray,
741:I use a lot of film images, analogies, and imagination. ~ Carlos Fuentes,
742:I use too much of my brain and need to let some of it rest. ~ Kanye West,
743:Max?” “Hmm?” “Will I have to use a litter box?” “Emma! ~ Dana Marie Bell,
744:Nor aught so good but strained from that fair use, ~ William Shakespeare,
745:One can only forget about time by making use of it. ~ Charles Baudelaire,
746:One should use common words to say uncommon things ~ Arthur Schopenhauer,
747:Popular culture is inescapable in the U.S. Why not use it? ~ Don DeLillo,
748:Rent control, however, encourages wasteful use of space. ~ Henry Hazlitt,
749:Skills rest in your mind not in the props you make use of. ~ Luke Jermay,
750:Thanks, it's my own recipe. I use cheddar cheese instead of water. ~ LIZ,
751:The anachronism is the worst thing to use at the theatre. ~ Albert Camus,
752:The imagination is like a muscle: it strengthens through use. ~ John Kao,
753:The irony is that you can't use real rain to make movies. ~ Greg Kinnear,
754:The most complete seems lacking. Yet in use it is not exhausted. ~ Laozi,
755:The power of letters is immeasurable. Use them with care". ~ Ky ka Izumi,
756:The power of letters is immeasurable. Use them with care». ~ Ky ka Izumi,
757:The right use of color can make any composition work. ~ Fairfield Porter,
758:To use for our exclusive benefit what is not ours is theft. ~ Jose Marti,
759:Use Cosmic Ordering now, not as a morning after pill. ~ Stephen Richards,
760:Use lots of paint and don't worry, they will make more. ~ Richard Schmid,
761:We have time enough if we but use it aright ~ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe,
762:What use to the sane, after all, are the words of the mad? ~ Alexis Hall,
763:What?” “You have to use hot water to make it truly ~ Nina Kiriki Hoffman,
764:You can sing the blues in church if you use the words right. ~ Son House,
765:You didn’t fail, you just didn’t use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
766:You must use the hook of precepts to quickly remove it. ~ Gautama Buddha,
767:Your mind is a tool you can choose to use any way you wish. ~ Louise Hay,
768:Your promise means more than the words you use to give it. ~ Ron Kaufman,
769:Accept your lack of knowledge and use it as your asset. ~ Natalie Portman,
770:A chest of gold coins or a fat wallet of bills is of no use ~ Alan Watts,
771:Asians don't use the oven for anything but holding Jordans. ~ Eddie Huang,
772:Beauty, if you do not open your doors, takes age from lack of use. ~ Ovid,
773:Change the way you use your time, and you change your life. ~ Bear Grylls,
774:Congressmen had a use for their very own son of a bitch. ~ Rick Perlstein,
775:Don't use a five-dollar word when a fifty-cent word will do. ~ Mark Twain,
776:Don’t use your energy to worry. Use your energy to believe. ~ Joel Osteen,
777:Don’t waste time making money ... use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
778:Everything which is of use to mankind is honourable. ~ Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
779:[Grief is for the strong, who use it as fuel for burning.] ~ Lauren Groff,
780:Hey, don't stick that tongue out, unless you're gonna use it. ~ David Lee,
781:Honor is a fool's prize. Glory is of no use to the dead. ~ Drew Karpyshyn,
782:I do actually use a boxing trainer when I train for stand-up. ~ Louis C K,
783:I have a mustard seed; and I am not afraid to use it. ~ Pope Benedict XVI,
784:I love sleep because it is both pleasant and safe to use. ~ Fran Lebowitz,
785:I'm independent. I use my own money. For everything. ~ Aaron Dontez Yates,
786:I never like to use those terms [like pessimistic]. ~ Frances Moore Lappe,
787:It is better to use fair means and fail, than foul and conquer. ~ Sallust,
788:It's no use closing the barn door after the horse is gone. ~ John Heywood,
789:I use emotion for the many and reserve reason for the few. ~ Adolf Hitler,
790:I use the traditional Moyse scale books slightly modified. ~ James Galway,
791:I will not tolerate your faults. They are of no use to me. ~ Mason Cooley,
792:Lesson from Pataki's success is: Use the political moment. ~ Andrew Cuomo,
793:Life, if thou knowest how to use it, is long enough. ~ Seneca the Younger,
794:lived there nor put it to any use; they said in the village ~ J K Rowling,
795:Means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek. ~ Martin Luther King Jr,
796:Memory is set up to use the past to imagine the future. ~ Daniel Schacter,
797:Notable characters do not alone bear trouble; they use it. ~ Hugh B Brown,
798:Oh,clever... what's the use of that? Are they human beings? ~ John Fowles,
799:One feather is of no use to me, I must have the whole bird. ~ Jacob Grimm,
800:Please just use what works for you and let go of the rest. ~ Pema Chödrön,
801:The only way you can hurt your body is if you don't use it ~ Jack LaLanne,
802:There is one power in the Universe and we can all use it. ~ Ernest Holmes,
803:they use words to build something as real as cloth ~ Holly Goldberg Sloan,
804:To discover the various use of things is the work of history. ~ Karl Marx,
805:To use a good book as a sedative is conspicuous waste. ~ Mortimer J Adler,
806:Use the Force! But use the bathroom first if you need to. ~ Jeffrey Brown,
807:Use the truth to fight lies. Use the light to fight darkness. ~ Anonymous,
808:We’ll use technology to produce commodities, and we’ll make ~ Kevin Kelly,
809:What use was money if you didn't have the time to enjoy it? ~ Darren Shan,
810:When you know how to use it, disobedience can be a virtue. ~ Paulo Coelho,
811:Why use a sledgehammer when a butterfly net will suffice? ~ Thea Harrison,
812:'Worry' is a word that I don't allow myself to use. ~ Dwight D Eisenhower,
813:Writing stories is the habit of lying put to good use. ~ Julianna Baggott,
814:You can't put out projects that you don't use yourself. ~ Gary Vaynerchuk,
815:You can’t stop time. You can only hope you use it wisely. ~ Viola Shipman,
816:You should know, Dad. Only bitchy queens use the royal we. ~ K A Mitchell,
817:A database is just a tool: how you use it is up to you. ~ Martin Kleppmann,
818:All things want to open. You must feel that need and use it. ~ Neil Gaiman,
819:A technology is an orchestration of phenomena to our use. ~ W Brian Arthur,
820:Deception is a tactic: use it. Do whatever it takes to win. ~ Janet Morris,
821:Divinity consists in use and practice, not in speculation. ~ Martin Luther,
822:Do not fight with the strength, absorb it, and it flows, use it. ~ Yip Man,
823:Don’t let time make a fool of you, use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
824:Every coach should be recording games to watch...use your VCR. ~ Don Meyer,
825:Fine thoughts are wealth, for the right use of which ~ Philip James Bailey,
826:Gaining superpowers doesn't mean you know how to use them. ~ Richelle Mead,
827:Government holds a legal monopoly on the use of physical force. ~ Ayn Rand,
828:Here's a guy who can use his arms and legs at the same time. ~ John Madden,
829:I am not very conscious of the figures of speech that I use. ~ Mick Jagger,
830:If my life could be of some use, I would offer it to anyone. ~ Osamu Dazai,
831:If only we could pull out our brain and use only our eyes. ~ Pablo Picasso,
832:If we use less, if we consume less, we're going to have more ~ Colin Baker,
833:I got food poisoning today. I don't know when I'll use it. ~ Steven Wright,
834:I had chosen to use my work as a reflection of my values. ~ Sidney Poitier,
835:I have one request: may I never use my reason against truth. ~ Elie Wiesel,
836:Intelligence is what you use when you don't know what to do. ~ Jean Piaget,
837:In war nothing is impossible, provided you use audacity. ~ George S Patton,
838:I say, 'You can never use excuses because they always run out.' ~ RJ Mitte,
839:I try to use the Australian idiom to its maximum advantage. ~ Paul Keating,
840:I use Secret... I'm always powder-fresh during the games. ~ DeAndre Jordan,
841:Men who think in lifetimes are of little use to statesmanship. ~ H G Wells,
842:Never use the words 'suddenly' or 'all hell broke loose.' ~ Elmore Leonard,
843:Nothing is wasted of time if you use the xperience wisely. ~ Auguste Rodin,
844:Oh, there's no use talking to him. He's perfectly idiotic! ~ Lewis Carroll,
845:One had a knife. But I had a staff and was trained to use it. ~ Robin Hobb,
846:Sometimes people use thought to not participate in life. ~ Stephen Chbosky,
847:Step forward, use your voice, get out in the world, and live! ~ Louise Hay,
848:The electron: may it never be of any use to anybody! ~ Joseph John Thomson,
849:The first law of attraction is use Cosmic Ordering now. ~ Stephen Richards,
850:The highest law gives a thing to him who can use it. ~ Henry David Thoreau,
851:There is an aggression implicit in every use of the camera. ~ Susan Sontag,
852:There's a use for everything and everything has it's use. ~ Kate DiCamillo,
853:The use of rape and enslavement as weapons of war MUST END! ~ Widad Akreyi,
854:The wisest use of American strength is to advance freedom. ~ George W Bush,
855:Thoughts are very powerful, so use them wisely and be careful. ~ Anonymous,
856:Todd Rundgren is a genius, and I don't use that word a lot. ~ Jim Steinman,
857:Wands are only as powerful as the wizards who use them. Some ~ J K Rowling,
858:What's the use of watching? A watched pot never boils. ~ Elizabeth Gaskell,
859:Wise men are able to make a fitting use even of their enmities. ~ Plutarch,
860:Your brain is much better than you think; just use it! ~ Leonardo da Vinci,
861:Ain't no use jiving, ain't no use joking, everything is broken. ~ Bob Dylan,
862:And if you've got a voice, you might as well use it, right? ~ Rebecca Stead,
863:charm should be on the surface. It has no hidden use. ~ Ivy Compton Burnett,
864:Confucianism strongly condemned the use of drugs like opium. ~ Robert Trout,
865:Everyone has power. But it doesn't help if you don't use it. ~ Sylvia Earle,
866:Everything may serve a lower as well as a higher use. ~ Henry David Thoreau,
867:Get thee a good husband, and use him as he uses thee. ~ William Shakespeare,
868:God doesn’t manufacture pain, but he certainly puts it to use. ~ Max Lucado,
869:Guiltiness will speak, though tongues were out of use ~ William Shakespeare,
870:He used deliberation as others use quickness of repartee. ~ Agatha Christie,
871:I do not use crack cocaine, nor am I an addict of crack cocaine. ~ Rob Ford,
872:If my life can ever be of any use to you, come and take it. ~ Anton Chekhov,
873:If you really want the truth of anything, don't use Wikipedia. ~ John Lydon,
874:If you've had a freakish education, at least use it, use it. ~ J D Salinger,
875:I look on cinema as a pulpit, and use it as a propagandist. ~ John Grierson,
876:In medicine the use of the knife is often the kinder course. ~ Stefan Zweig,
877:I suppose he isn’t above trying to use a respectable lunatic. ~ Bram Stoker,
878:I think God gave us senses of humor, and we should use them. ~ Vera Farmiga,
879:It is the use of creativity which heals the creative wound. ~ Julia Cameron,
880:I trust you." And please, please don't use that against me. ~ Katie McGarry,
881:It's not the length of the word; it's how well you use it! ~ Rachel Vincent,
882:I use bits and pieces of others personalities to form my own. ~ Kurt Cobain,
883:I’ve been waiting a long time to use that meme on someone. ~ Jim Bernheimer,
884:Love. Is it just a word that boys use to manipulate girls? ~ Simone Elkeles,
885:No student is to use the bathroom unaccompanied by a teacher. ~ J K Rowling,
886:Obsessed is a word that the lazy use to describe the dedicated. ~ Anonymous,
887:Of course on air I use occasional hyperbole to tell a story. ~ Adam Carolla,
888:Of what use is freedom of speech to those who fear to offend? ~ Roger Ebert,
889:OK cosmos, I could use some good news. Go on, surprise me. ~ William Meikle,
890:One good schoolmaster is of more use than a hundred priests. ~ Thomas Paine,
891:One should use common words to say uncommon things
   ~ Arthur Schopenhauer,
892:Or had Malfoy’s use of the word “dogging” been a coincidence? ~ J K Rowling,
893:So many words to use. Oh do not say that words have a use. ~ Gertrude Stein,
894:Some parents sometimes use junk food as a babysitter. ~ Mokokoma Mokhonoana,
895:The best use one can make of his mind is to distrust it. ~ Francois Fenelon,
896:The best way to manage anything is by making use of its own nature. ~ Laozi,
897:The effective use of symbolism is a key with knife edges. ~ L E Modesitt Jr,
898:The main thing is to have a gutsy approach and use your head. ~ Julia Child,
899:The most unethical of all means is the non-use of any means. ~ Saul Alinsky,
900:The only people I have been able to use are those who fought ~ Adolf Hitler,
901:Therefore, why use money as a means to measure my self-worth? ~ Mark Manson,
902:There’s a tremendous dynamo within you, and you can use it. ~ Joseph Murphy,
903:The tools that would teach men their own use would be beyond price. ~ Plato,
904:The worst use that can be made of success is to boast of it. ~ Arthur Helps,
905:they could use in an identity search. “Six feet, one ninety, ~ Robert Crais,
906:Use money and love people. Don't love money and use people. ~ Joseph Prince,
907:Use money and love people. Don’t love money and use people. ~ Joseph Prince,
908:Use truth to fight the lies. Use the heart to fight the mind. ~ Suzy Kassem,
909:Use your health, even to the point of wearing it out. ~ George Bernard Shaw,
910:We could use some good luck. That doesn’t mean we’ll get it. ~ Rick Riordan,
911:We must never neglect the patient's own use of his symptoms. ~ Alfred Adler,
912:What use to cut the branches if one leaves the roots? ~ Apollonius of Tyana,
913:When a job is to be done there's no use putting it off. ~ Sherwood Anderson,
914:You can almost take the book and use it as a script. ~ Michael Winterbottom,
915:You use your tits the way a ninja assassin uses nunchuks. ~ Shannon McKenna,
916:And they finally had a use for Chitiratifor’s flashy outfits. ~ Vernor Vinge,
917:As actors we're always trying to use our creative imagination. ~ Keith David,
918:Be angry about the treacherous use of patriotic vocabulary. ~ Timothy Snyder,
919:Before God can use a man greatly he must wound him deeply. ~ Oswald Chambers,
920:Dare to know! Have the courage to use your own intelligence! ~ Immanuel Kant,
921:Definitions.... are never really needed, and rarely of any use ~ Karl Popper,
922:Don't have a fixed idea in your head (that you have to use ~ Masaaki Hatsumi,
923:Find your own voice & use it, / use your own voice & find it. ~ Jayne Cortez,
924:God can make good use of all that happens, but the loss is real. ~ C S Lewis,
925:God will take your story and use it for a greater purpose. ~ Shannon L Alder,
926:Greatest sin of man kind: neglect to use his greatest asset. ~ Napoleon Hill,
927:He shrugged. “Who is John Galt?” “Oh, don’t use gutter language! ~ Anonymous,
928:If ever my life can be of any use to you, come and claim it. ~ Anton Chekhov,
929:If you're looking for faults use a mirror, not a telescope ~ Boonaa Mohammed,
930:If you truly own who you are, no one can use you against you. ~ Chris Colfer,
931:If you were going to shoot a mime, would you use a silencer? ~ Steven Wright,
932:I think the eyes flirt most. There are so many ways to use them. ~ Anna Held,
933:It is the mark of a gentleman to be moderate in the use of wine. ~ Athenaeus,
934:It means you’ve got a sexy tongue and you know how to use it. ~ Elle Kennedy,
935:I use my power wisely. I am strong ,and I am safe. All is well. ~ Louise Hay,
936:like a ten-speed bike,most of us have gears we don't use. ~ Charles M Schulz,
937:Love is everything. Without it, I have no use for this world. ~ Joshua Radin,
938:Love people, use things. The opposite doesn’t work. ~ Joshua Fields Millburn,
939:Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely. ~ Auguste Rodin,
940:Of what use is a dream if not a blueprint for courageous action. ~ Adam West,
941:Of what use is a philosopher who doesn't hurt anybody's feelings? ~ Diogenes,
942:People will use their religion to justify virtually anything. ~ Desmond Tutu,
943:pictures or conversations in it, ‘and what is the use of a book, ~ Anonymous,
944:Save for the occasional use of cocaine he had no vices, ~ Arthur Conan Doyle,
945:The ability to concentrate and to use time well is everything. ~ Lee Iacocca,
946:The believer does not use God's power; God's power uses him. ~ Kenneth Wuest,
947:The rule is: don’t use commas like a stupid person. I mean it. ~ Lynne Truss,
948:The tools which would teach men their own use would be beyond price. ~ Plato,
949:The use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality. ~ Samuel Johnson,
950:The wise make great use of adversity. The foolish whine about it. ~ Dee Hock,
951:They found the library sadly lacking in texts they could use. ~ Marge Piercy,
952:This is your life. Your power. Know it to use it. Begin today. ~ Mike Dooley,
953:To shine like the Sun, use the power of lively colours! ~ Mehmet Murat ildan,
954:To use a Southern euphemism, our space program has been snake-bit. ~ Al Gore,
955:Unbelief, which causes fear, always limits God's use of a life. ~ Tim LaHaye,
956:Use volleyball quotes to motivate your teammates to play hard. ~ John Kessel,
957:We all have a tendency to use prayer to dictate to God. ~ Jen Pollock Michel,
958:We have to be careful in how we use this light shined on us. ~ Melinda Gates,
959:We should not use crippled children to sell hamburgers. Ever. ~ Phil Donahue,
960:When people use your brand name as a verb, that is remarkable. ~ Meg Whitman,
961:White is poison to a picture: use it only in highlights. ~ Peter Paul Rubens,
962:Why should people have money if they don't know how to use it? ~ John Fowles,
963:Write relentlessly, until you find your voice. Then, use it. ~ David Sedaris,
964:Your personal choices matter. And you have the power. Use it. ~ Gloria Feldt,
965:You should use your influence to help other platforms succeed. ~ Johnny Hunt,
966:Always observe your opponent carefully. You need to use the ~ Masaaki Hatsumi,
967:Are you going to come quietly, or do I have to use earplugs? ~ Spike Milligan,
968:Better use medicines at the outset than at the last moment. ~ Publilius Syrus,
969:But I do not want to use Hungarian verses for British people. ~ Gyorgy Ligeti,
970:I don't use a pen. I write with a goose quill dipped in venom. ~ Clifton Webb,
971:I don't use simple words. I make games and puzzles with my songs. ~ Lisa Loeb,
972:I fear we must use bad science to accomplish good politics. ~ James L Cambias,
973:If you can't pronounce a word correctly, just don't use it. ~ Amanda Seyfried,
974:If you think your users are idiots, only idiots will use it. ~ Linus Torvalds,
975:I'm habitually positive. I try not to use anger as motivation. ~ Urijah Faber,
976:In avoiding one evil we fall into another, if we use not discretion. ~ Horace,
977:I never use the word, it's loaded. What love means to me is need. ~ John Cale,
978:It is no use to blame the looking glass if your face is awry. ~ Nikolai Gogol,
979:I use colors to bring fine points of story and character. ~ Vincente Minnelli,
980:Knowledge becomes wisdom only after it has been put to good use. ~ Mark Twain,
981:Maturity is having the courage to use one's own intelligence! ~ Immanuel Kant,
982:Medical men do not know the drugs they use, nor their prices. ~ Francis Bacon,
983:Mere Dil Ki Raakh Kured Mat, Use Muskura Key Hawa
Na De
~ Bashir Badr,
984:Money is like manure, of very little use except it be spread. ~ Francis Bacon,
985:Nothing is a waste of time if you use the experience wisely. ~ Auguste Rodin,
986:Our business is to have great credit and to use it little. ~ Thomas Jefferson,
987:people who use the KonMari Method never revert to clutter again. ~ Marie Kond,
988:Put your temper to more use
cause
Being broke is a poor excuse ~ Eminem,
989:Reason and the ability to use it are two separate skills. ~ Franz Grillparzer,
990:Sadhana is the real currency that you can use anywhere ~ Sri Sri Ravi Shankar,
991:Shut up and write anyway. Don't use anything as an excuse. ~ Natalie Goldberg,
992:The camera sees more than the eye, so why not make use of it? ~ Edward Weston,
993:The gods use their chosen hard, but reveal little to them. ~ Jacqueline Carey,
994:The greatest homage we can pay to truth, is to use it. ~ James Russell Lowell,
995:The longer the battle lasts the more force we'll have to use! ~ Georgy Zhukov,
996:The mystery lies in the use of language to express human life. ~ Eudora Welty,
997:The night has given me dark eyes But I use them to look for light. ~ Gu Cheng,
998:There is but one just use of power and it is to serve people. ~ George W Bush,
999:the true test of awesome power is the ability not to use it, ~ Jack L Chalker,
1000:the true test of awesome power is the ability not to use it. ~ Jack L Chalker,
1001:The ultimate aim of martial arts is not having to use them ~ Miyamoto Musashi,
1002:This is what people need: an easy-to-deploy, easy-to-use tool. ~ Nat Friedman,
1003:Use all the ugliness you’re feeling to make something beautiful ~ Laura Goode,
1004:We can use our difficulties and problems to awaken our hearts. ~ Pema Ch dr n,
1005:We use intuition as a way to connect with our Divine Self. ~ James Van Praagh,
1006:What is the use of a book, without pictures or conversations? ~ Lewis Carroll,
1007:What use, after all, is man, if not to teach God His lessons? ~ Peter Shaffer,
1008:What use is status if you have no one to share it with, Dad? ~ Renita D Silva,
1009:When honor dies—when trust is a useless thing—what use is life? ~ Diane Duane,
1010:You already have the precious mixture that will make you well. Use it. ~ Rumi,
1011:A general does not use the same troops over and over again. ~ John Christopher,
1012:A man who knows not his limitations is of no use to anyone. ~ W Edwards Deming,
1013:Americans use the word "dream" as often as psychoanalysts do. ~ Terry Eagleton,
1014:An artist's job is to surprise himself. Use all means possible. ~ Robert Henri,
1015:Any information is valuable to the degree that you can use it. ~ L Ron Hubbard,
1016:Because what good was a safe word if I knew I’d never use it? ~ Laurelin Paige,
1017:Be subtle! be subtle! and use your spies for every kind of business. ~ Sun Tzu,
1018:Better to use force when you should rather than when you must. ~ George P Bush,
1019:Don't always use PAIN that you receive as an excuse to GIVE PAIN. ~ Tsem Tulku,
1020:Don't use your bedroom for work, unless you're a prostitute. ~ David Letterman,
1021:Fairy dust is very useful. I use it to turn oatmeal into cake. ~ David Shannon,
1022:Forget the secrets of success, use Cosmic Ordering instead. ~ Stephen Richards,
1023:God loves to use people whom others believe are unqualified. ~ Craig Groeschel,
1024:gun (a kind of metal wand which Muggles use to kill each other), ~ J K Rowling,
1025:If I had the use of my body, I would throw it out the window. ~ Samuel Beckett,
1026:If you want to be on Forbes Rich List, use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
1027:In the commerce of language use only coin of gold and silver. ~ Joseph Joubert,
1028:is the word we use when we can’t see the levers and pulleys. ~ Jennifer Archer,
1029:It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas. ~ Charles Peguy,
1030:It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas. ~ Charles P guy,
1031:Life is like photography: use the negatives to develop positives.
   ~ Unknown,
1032:Nobody should try to use data unless he has collected data. ~ W Edwards Deming,
1033:No use in waiting, we can all work hard to bring about changes. ~ Noam Chomsky,
1034:Only Lia would use the name she’d been born with as her fake name. ~ Anonymous,
1035:Open eyes are of little use when the mind behind them is closed. ~ Jim Butcher,
1036:People use so much more health care when they live longer. ~ Michael Bloomberg,
1037:People, you have six senses! The last one is common! Use it! ~ Michael Ruhlman,
1038:Please help keep the world clean: others may wish to use it. ~ Arthur C Clarke,
1039:The existence of virtue depends entirely upon its use. ~ Marcus Tullius Cicero,
1040:To have strength without knowing how to use it means nothing. ~ Gail Tsukiyama,
1041:Use power wisely. If you search your heart, I think you will. ~ Frederick Lenz,
1042:Use Starbucks mints for every occasion—they're the strongest ~ Natalie Portman,
1043:We may easily be too big for God to use, but never too small. ~ Dwight L Moody,
1044:When you take my time, you take something I had meant to use. ~ Marianne Moore,
1045:Why speak of the use
of poetry? Poetry
is what uses us. ~ Hayden Carruth,
1046:Wine is the first weapon that devils use in attacking the young ~ Saint Jerome,
1047:With this life, I give you courage. You will know how to use it. ~ Erin Hunter,
1048:You must have the music to justify an instrument's extensive use. ~ Steve Lacy,
1049:An amazing invention - but who would ever want to use one? ~ Rutherford B Hayes,
1050:Any technology is just a skillful means and it's how you use it. ~ Anne Waldman,
1051:Astronomy teaches the correct use of the sun and the planets. ~ Stephen Leacock,
1052:Be careful of fire. Know when to use it and when to stay cold,” she ~ Yaa Gyasi,
1053:Be precise in the use of words and expect precision from others ~ Peter Abelard,
1054:Don’t Use a Comment When You Can Use a Function or a Variable ~ Robert C Martin,
1055:Do you get to use your greatest strength every day at work? ~ Laurie Beth Jones,
1056:Endeavor, Bon-Bon, to use them well; — my vision is the soul. ~ Edgar Allan Poe,
1057:examined children’s use of apology terms in parent–child discourse. ~ Anonymous,
1058:For all my love of words, I am afraid to use them at all. ~ Katherine Longshore,
1059:For it is not the shape, but their use, that makes them angels. ~ Thomas Hobbes,
1060:I am opposed to the use of public funds for private education. ~ Jonathan Kozol,
1061:If you don't want to be noticed, you don't use a Star Destroyer. ~ Timothy Zahn,
1062:If you embrace your flaws, nobody can use them against you. ~ Cara Alwill Leyba,
1063:If you're sorry, folks can tell. No use piling on the verbiage. ~ Emma Donoghue,
1064:I like to use the hard times of the past to motivate me today. ~ Dwayne Johnson,
1065:In the interchange of thought use no coin but gold and silver. ~ Joseph Joubert,
1066:It is no use to keep private information which you can't show off. ~ Mark Twain,
1067:I try not to always use self-check-out and things like that! ~ Emily Berrington,
1068:It's no secret that I've been reluctant to use my name for things. ~ Sally Ride,
1069:I use to live in a room full of mirrors, all I could see was me. ~ Jimi Hendrix,
1070:I’ve never been drunk in my life. I don’t use recreational drugs. ~ Paula Abdul,
1071:Just fuck me. Use me. I’ll be your horny slut. Your fuckdoll whore. ~ C D Reiss,
1072:Kill them with kindness and if that didn't work, use a shotgun ~ Heidi Cullinan,
1073:Man has made use of his intelligence; he invented stupidity. ~ Remy de Gourmont,
1074:[Michael] Moore doesn't really use his sense of humor that much. ~ P J O Rourke,
1075:Planning involves considering how other people may use something. ~ Paula Scher,
1076:Send me all the advice you like. I'll use as much as I can. ~ Louisa May Alcott,
1077:Some people use their own hurt as an excuse for hurting others ~ Roland Merullo,
1078:The best use of family was having it in front of other people. ~ Julia Pierpont,
1079:The Goal of Education is to Help People Use Their Minds Better ~ Howard Gardner,
1080:The man was such an intellectual he was of almost no use. ~ Georg C Lichtenberg,
1081:The only thing I use my body for is to carry my brain around. ~ Thomas A Edison,
1082:There's no use doing a kindness if you do it a day too late. ~ Charles Kingsley,
1083:The stars are a free show; it don’t cost anything to use your eyes. ~ Anonymous,
1084:Toilets account for 31 percent of all water use in America. ~ Peter H Diamandis,
1085:To use the past, he had to save it from aspects of itself. ~ Richard Brookhiser,
1086:Use beautiful to describe a sandwich, and the word means nothing. ~ Jess Walter,
1087:Use the light that is in you to recover your natural clearness of sight ~ Laozi,
1088:Use your faults, use your defects; then you're going to be a star. ~ Edith Piaf,
1089:Using others is a sin.
Why should I wish
to use another? ~ Kamo no Ch mei,
1090:We can learn to use the fire of our minds to good purpose. ~ James Ishmael Ford,
1091:We may give advice, but not the sense to use it. ~ Francois de La Rochefoucauld,
1092:We’re not held back by what we don’t have, but by what we don’t use. ~ Bob Goff,
1093:What is fair use? Fair use is not a law. There's nothing in law. ~ Jack Valenti,
1094:What is the use of living if you cannot eat cheese and pickles? ~ Ben Macintyre,
1095:What's the Use of Getting Sober (When You Gonna Get Drunk Again) ~ Louis Jordan,
1096:• When should you use static gestures versus manipulation gestures? ~ Anonymous,
1097:When we hang the capitalists they will sell us the rope we use. ~ Joseph Stalin,
1098:You can use principles of the free market to drive social change. ~ Leila Janah,
1099:A lot of people never use their initiative because no-one told them to. ~ Banksy,
1100:And I know that you use music and scents to regulate your mood. ~ Kristen Ashley,
1101:As a lawyer, I hate to use the "on the one hand, but the other". ~ Rudy Giuliani,
1102:Black, dark, morose, whatever web it is that the bad guys use. ~ Michael Anderle,
1103:God can use even stray, honest comments to bring people to himself. ~ Mark Dever,
1104:God gave us intelligence and faith. All we have to do is use it. ~ Janet Lambert,
1105:Here is a version that I have adapted for use in the West.   Close ~ Joanna Macy,
1106:How Leaders Create and Use Networks” Herminia Ibarra and Mark Hunter ~ Anonymous,
1107:I don't use a wallet. My money is just free-flowing in my bag. ~ Christa B Allen,
1108:I dont watch TV. I dont use a computer, a fax or a cellphone. ~ Louise Bourgeois,
1109:If there's an original thought out there, I could use one right now. ~ Bob Dylan,
1110:If your only goal is to become rich then use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
1111:I’m not use to having an anchor in the storm.” “You have one now. ~ Lisa Kessler,
1112:I never understood why people use words they do not understand. ~ Sylvain Neuvel,
1113:I think ring rust is an excuse people use when they don't box well. ~ David Haye,
1114:It is God's design to use reluctant servants to usher in glory. ~ Dan B Allender,
1115:I use a lot of humor in my writing. But it's completely black humor. ~ Kurt Vile,
1116:I use music as some kind of weird salvation to get away from life ~ Billy Corgan,
1117:I use nothing but homeopathic remedies, for my girls as well. ~ Mariel Hemingway,
1118:Kill them with kindness and if that didn't work, use a shotgun. ~ Heidi Cullinan,
1119:Lessen the odds are stacked against you, Use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
1120:Let temporal things be in the use, eternal things in the desire. ~ Thomas Kempis,
1121:Look out!" Julia cried. "he has a snake! And he'll use it! ~ John Maddox Roberts,
1122:Men use one another to assure their personal victory over death. ~ Ernest Becker,
1123:Nothing discloses real character like the use of power. ~ Robert Green Ingersoll,
1124:No use fanning up hot coals when you have to walk across them. ~ Bernard Malamud,
1125:Only he who has no use for the empire is fit to be entrusted with it. ~ Zhuangzi,
1126:Only those who have earned leisure know how to use it profitably. ~ Elsa Maxwell,
1127:our life is the instrument we use to experiment with the truth. ~ Eliot Pattison,
1128:Palmer's Cocoa Butter Formula Cream - you can use it everywhere. ~ Minnie Driver,
1129:Price is the most important factor to use in relation to value. ~ Walter Schloss,
1130:Sometimes weakness is a weapon. If you're smart enough to use it. ~ Jay Kristoff,
1131:That is all the National Parks are about. Use, but do no harm. ~ Wallace Stegner,
1132:The immoral cannot be made moral through the use of secret law. ~ Edward Snowden,
1133:The man was such an intellectual he was of almost no use. ~ Georg C Lichtenberg,
1134:The only use she has for the word fun is to make the word funeral. ~ Rachel Cohn,
1135:The possession of power inevitably spoils the free use of reason ~ Immanuel Kant,
1136:There are still countries that kill dolphins for use as crab bait! ~ Steve Irwin,
1137:There is only one way to get rid of nuclear weapons... use them. ~ Rush Limbaugh,
1138:To be of use to the world is the only way to be happy. ~ Hans Christian Andersen,
1139:To my surprise, my marijuana use has been tapering off steadily. ~ George Carlin,
1140:To use is necessary. And if you can't be used, then you're useless. ~ Kanye West,
1141:Truth is such a precious article - let us all economize in its use. ~ Mark Twain,
1142:victims and savers both use each other to achieve emotional highs. ~ Mark Manson,
1143:Waste neither time nor money, but make the best use of both. ~ Benjamin Franklin,
1144:We cannot use anything intelligently until we know what it is for. ~ Frank Sheed,
1145:We decentralise permissions over the use of our communications. ~ Edward Snowden,
1146:Well, pray if you like, only you'd do better to use your judgment. ~ Leo Tolstoy,
1147:What did I use to do all day without you? Already I can't remember. ~ Sara Baume,
1148:Whatever is not of use to the swarm, is not of use to the bee. ~ Marcus Aurelius,
1149:What is the use of Christ's words, unless we set an example? ~ Fyodor Dostoevsky,
1150:You are so lucky
that I cannot remember
how to use doorknobs. ~ Ryan Mecum,
1151:You can't use up creativity. The more you use, the more you have. ~ Maya Angelou,
1152:You chose to use your own body as a canvas that no one could ignore. ~ Anonymous,
1153:A female Dalai Lama must be very attractive, otherwise not much use. ~ Dalai Lama,
1154:An arts degree is like a diploma in origami. And about as much use. ~ J G Ballard,
1155:Companies should use the power of habit-forming products responsibly. ~ Anonymous,
1156:Constant use had not worn ragged the fabric of their friendship. ~ Dorothy Parker,
1157:Democracy is a word all public men use and none understand. ~ George Bernard Shaw,
1158:First gain the victory and then make the best use of it you can. ~ Horatio Nelson,
1159:Good sound habits are more important than rules - use concepts. ~ Mike Krzyzewski,
1160:Hear me now, Oliver Rivington. You will not use gestures with me. ~ Cat Sebastian,
1161:I always use my husband's cocoa butter stuff. He has amazing skin! ~ Idina Menzel,
1162:I can find no words to say. I decide to use the ones I have. ~ Karen Marie Moning,
1163:I don't use my lips. I use my tongue to make - create the vowels. ~ Dolora Zajick,
1164:If Mike Tyson was the voice of your GPS, would you ever not use it? ~ Artie Lange,
1165:If you want to kill yourself, do not use us as your knife. ~ Catherynne M Valente,
1166:I have given up trying to be happy. It is no use an leads to nothing. ~ Anna Held,
1167:I have glaucoma, so use eye drops both morning and night. ~ Reverend Malcolm Boyd,
1168:I have no use for knowledge that has not been preceded by a sensation ~ Andr Gide,
1169:I have no use for people who hunt for what they call sport ~ Mercedes McCambridge,
1170:I know how to use the safety.-Andrea, the Walking Dead S3 finale ~ Robert Kirkman,
1171:I like to use religion as a catalyst for something that I believe. ~ Brendon Urie,
1172:Impossible is a word for other people to use when life scares them. ~ Chris Hayes,
1173:I need you. I need you to hate, so I can use you for your energy ~ Curtis Jackson,
1174:I suppose, to use our national motto, something will turn up. ~ Benjamin Disraeli,
1175:I suppose you have to be very careful how you use your memories. ~ Nic Pizzolatto,
1176:It is no use running; to set out betimes is the main point. ~ Jean de La Fontaine,
1177:It seemed we could all use an etiquette lesson… or two or three. ~ Amanda Carlson,
1178:It's not what you've got, it's what you use that makes a difference. ~ Zig Ziglar,
1179:I use my fame now when I want to help a cause or other people. ~ Elizabeth Taylor,
1180:Love is the only mirror we must use to judge ourselves and others. ~ Bodie Thoene,
1181:Luck’s the word those with poor hearts use for ka. ~ Roland Deschain Stephen King,
1182:My earliest memory? Trying to use a red jelly bean as lipstick. ~ Pamela Anderson,
1183:My hair takes a while to get right, I use wax to get it to stand up. ~ Alex Parks,
1184:Not one of these symbols of prosperity and taste has any use at all. ~ E Lockhart,
1185:Nuclear submarines use electricity to extract oxygen from water. ~ Randall Munroe,
1186:Our ignorance is not so vast as our failure to use what we know. ~ M King Hubbert,
1187:Poets go through a very tough apprenticeship in the use of words. ~ Helen Dunmore,
1188:Tears are like lies, the more you use them, the less they're worth. ~ The Betches,
1189:Tell her where the knives go before you use one of them on her. ~ Melissa Brayden,
1190:That head of yours should be for use as well as
ornament. ~ Arthur Conan Doyle,
1191:The big homie use a flash if you must. And I swear I aint askin for much. ~ Drake,
1192:The cheapest energy is the energy you don't use in the first place. ~ Sheryl Crow,
1193:The more sparingly we make use of nonsense, the better. ~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge,
1194:The possession of power inevitably spoils the free use of reason. ~ Immanuel Kant,
1195:There are only people who use their creativity and people who don’t. ~ Bren Brown,
1196:The reason I use ed is that I don't want to lose what's on the screen. ~ Bill Joy,
1197:There's nothing wrong with anger provided you use it constructively. ~ Wayne Dyer,
1198:The tongue is the only instrument that gets sharper with use. ~ Washington Irving,
1199:The truth is a precious commodity. That's why I use it so sparingly. ~ Mark Twain,
1200:The whole point of physics is to use maths to describe the universe. ~ Chad Orzel,
1201:The world grants all opportunities to him who can use them. ~ Orison Swett Marden,
1202:To be of use to the world is the only way to be happy. ~ Hans Christian Andersen,
1203:To hunger for use and to go unused is the worst hunger of all. ~ Lyndon B Johnson,
1204:To imagine the unimaginable is the highest use of the imagination ~ Cynthia Ozick,
1205:To lead yourself, use your head; to lead others, use your heart. ~ John C Maxwell,
1206:True happiness involves the full use of one's power and talents. ~ John W Gardner,
1207:Use for yourself little,” he said, “but give to others much.”26 ~ Walter Isaacson,
1208:Use no word that under stress of emotion you could not actually say. ~ Ezra Pound,
1209:We have to stop acquiescing even to the wording that the liberals use. ~ Ted Cruz,
1210:we have two ears and one mouth and we should use them proportionally ~ Susan Cain,
1211:What is the use of Christ's words, unless we set an example? ~ Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
1212:What use are memories when memories can do little more than fade? ~ Anthony Doerr,
1213:Your demons will cause your angels to sing. Use the pain as fuel. ~ August Wilson,
1214:Your memory is your first and best weapon, ladies. Learn to use it. ~ Ally Carter,
1215:A synonym is a word you use when you can't spell the other one. ~ Baltasar Gracian,
1216:A synonym is a word you use when you can't spell the other one. ~ Baltasar Graci n,
1217:A writer's moral duty is to use language thoughtfully and well. ~ Ursula K Le Guin,
1218:Can we call a moratorium on the use of the term 'ladyparts'? Grazia! ~ Lena Dunham,
1219:Courage is very important. Like a muscle, it is strengthened by use. ~ Ruth Gordon,
1220:Critics are notoriously liberal with their use of the term 'genius'. ~ Steve Earle,
1221:Cultivate all your faculties; you must either use them or lose them ~ John Lubbock,
1222:Doesn't matter. It's done. No use fantasizing other scenarios. ~ Becca Fitzpatrick,
1223:Don't send me a text message. I seldom respond to them. Use poetry. ~ Jos N Harris,
1224:Fantasies are like extra cash. They need to be banked for later use. ~ John Waters,
1225:God, or nature, has no use for such categories as good and bad. ~ Anthony Gottlieb,
1226:God will not use dead tools for working living miracles; ~ Charles Haddon Spurgeon,
1227:Go out and preach the gospel and if you must, use words. ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
1228:Has anyone ever told you that you use twenty words when five will do? ~ L H Cosway,
1229:He and Aunty looked alike, but Uncle Jack made better use of his face ~ Harper Lee,
1230:I am all for your using machines, but do not let them use you. ~ Winston Churchill,
1231:I don't have any oratory skills. But I would not use them if I had. ~ Noam Chomsky,
1232:I don't know if experimental is a word I would ever use comfortably. ~ Jeff Tweedy,
1233:I don't want to pass a punitive law, or use politics as a vendetta. ~ Romano Prodi,
1234:If slow, calming breaths were of any use, I would have quit smoking. ~ Shay Savage,
1235:If you can't fuck it, eat it or use it for a weapon--kill it. ~ Karen Marie Moning,
1236:If you have an opportunity to use your voice you should use it. ~ Samuel L Jackson,
1237:If you keep a thing seven years, you are sure to find a use for it. ~ Walter Scott,
1238:If you use your mind to look for a Buddha, you won't see the Buddha. ~ Bodhidharma,
1239:I have no use for knowledge that has not been preceded by a sensation ~ Andre Gide,
1240:I have to fit in. Wherever they want to use me, that's fine. ~ LaDainian Tomlinson,
1241:I let go of all I no longer love, need, or use. I adore space. ~ Cheryl Richardson,
1242:I'm not going to use nukes, but I'm not taking cards off the table. ~ Donald Trump,
1243:I respect my limitations, but I don't use them as an excuse. ~ Stephen R Donaldson,
1244:It may be necessary to use methods other than constitutional ones. ~ Robert Mugabe,
1245:It's better to be burnished with use than rusty with principle. ~ Garrison Keillor,
1246:I want to say: We use judgements as principlesof judegement. ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein,
1247:I wonder why people use only walls for hanging pictures. ~ Frederick Salomon Perls,
1248:Laughter is a medicine you've got to use to drive away blues. ~ Goswami Kriyananda,
1249:Law is any application for the official use of coercion that succeeds. ~ Bob Black,
1250:My advice is that you should use your brains more and train less. ~ Yiannis Kouros,
1251:My use of the medium - photography - is in some ways traditional. ~ Andres Serrano,
1252:Not once did Christ use his supernatural powers for personal comfort. ~ Max Lucado,
1253:Oh God, here's my Bible, Here's my money. Here's me. Use me, God. ~ Gladys Aylward,
1254:Pure mathematics, may it never be of any use to anyone. ~ Henry John Stephen Smith,
1255:Silence was its own power sometimes. I didn’t use it often enough. ~ Shannon Mayer,
1256:Spread love and understanding,” Reacher said. “Use force if necessary. ~ Lee Child,
1257:Texting is more direct. You don't have to use conversation filler. ~ Sherry Turkle,
1258:The fastest way to double your money is to use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
1259:The ignorance of how to use knowledge stockpiles exponentially. ~ Marshall McLuhan,
1260:The Jews control Hollywood and use it to promote their own agenda. ~ Marlon Brando,
1261:The materials I use are absolutely essential to the work I make. ~ David Batchelor,
1262:The mind is a powerful thing and most people don't use it properly. ~ Mark McGwire,
1263:The more I use a matrix, the easier I make it to blame someone else. ~ Mark V Hurd,
1264:There are always going to be more actors than anybody can ever use. ~ Edward Albee,
1265:The stars are a free show; it don’t cost anything to use your eyes ~ George Orwell,
1266:The use of music is to remind us how short a time we have a body. ~ Richard Powers,
1267:the use of profanity for effect to be a practice of the weak-minded ~ Terry Fallis,
1268:uncaused cause, or to use Aristotle’s famous expression, an Unmoved ~ Edward Feser,
1269:Use love as the only instrument to question the world around you. ~ Robert M Drake,
1270:Use only that which works, and take it from any place you can find it. ~ Bruce Lee,
1271:Use the power of your word in the direction of truth and love. ~ Miguel Angel Ruiz,
1272:Vinyl, CDs or laptops, it doesn't matter - you should use whatever ~ John Digweed,
1273:We continually use stories to hold up as mirrors to ourselves. ~ William Kittredge,
1274:We have two ears and one mouth and we should use them proportionally. ~ Susan Cain,
1275:We shouldn’t use our own upset as an excuse for not helping. ~ Marianne Williamson,
1276:What is the point of magic if we can't use it to fix real problems? ~ Lev Grossman,
1277:What is the use of studying much when I’m to see nothing at all? ~ Lloyd Alexander,
1278:What's the use? The people are too stupid. They do not understand. ~ Winslow Homer,
1279:When you can, use the same kind of acid for cooking and garnishing— ~ Samin Nosrat,
1280:Who makes quick use of the moment is a genius of prudence. ~ Johann Kaspar Lavater,
1281:You cannot use butterfly language to communicate with caterpillars ~ Timothy Leary,
1282:You can use the power of words to bury meaning or to excavate it. ~ Rebecca Solnit,
1283:You may be obliged to wage war, but not to use poisoned arrows. ~ Baltasar Gracian,
1284:Your Soul and Mine. Use to be mingled. Breathing as One. Journeying as One. ~ Rumi,
1285:3. How do you talk about and use the answers to these questions? ~ Patrick Lencioni,
1286:A good rule for discussion is to use hard facts and a soft voice. ~ Dorothy Sarnoff,
1287:But no use worrying about tomorrow’s concerns when today has its own. ~ Lynn Cahoon,
1288:Don't, Sir, accustom yourself to use big words for little matters. ~ Samuel Johnson,
1289:God will make known to you how He wants you to use this gift. ~ Jennifer Beckstrand,
1290:Goodly intentions are no use without goodly sums of money, Watson. ~ Michael Reaves,
1291:He was uncomfortable with the idea that use might not like him. ~ Maggie Stiefvater,
1292:I appreciate people who try and use language in an interesting way. ~ Jarvis Cocker,
1293:I do shadow boxing and use a heavy bag, but I don't spar with anyone. ~ Liam Neeson,
1294:If you can’t fuck it, eat it, or use it for a weapon, kill it. ~ Karen Marie Moning,
1295:If you use a wolf to hunt a wolf, keep two arrows near to hand. ~ Elaine Cunningham,
1296:I have wrought great use out of evil tools. ~ Edward Bulwer Lytton 1st Baron Lytton,
1297:I like Valentino a lot - they never use actresses in their campaigns. ~ Emma Watson,
1298:I'll continue to use Mac [McNamee] to train me. He's one of a kind. ~ Roger Clemens,
1299:I'm as strong as a bull moose and you can use me to the limit. ~ Theodore Roosevelt,
1300:I shall never use profanity except in discussing house rent and taxes. ~ Mark Twain,
1301:I use that as my responsibility on the show, to be the pragmatist. ~ Fisher Stevens,
1302:Kids can use Jennifer Morgan’s new book, “Born with A Bang,” for ideas. ~ Anonymous,
1303:Learn to use your emotions to think, not think with your emotions ~ Robert Kiyosaki,
1304:Life is like a ten-speed bike. Most of us have gears we never use. ~ John C Maxwell,
1305:Mathematics commands all my respect, but I have no use for engines. ~ Joseph Conrad,
1306:Monuments obtain their full worth through their complete use. ~ Evangelos Venizelos,
1307:Most people mostly use freedom of speech as freedom to bitch. ~ Mokokoma Mokhonoana,
1308:No one can keep his griefs in their prime; they use themselves up. ~ Emile M Cioran,
1309:Once you decide to gut a fish, there's no use waiting till it rots. ~ Robert Jordan,
1310:Our settlement of land is without regard to the best use of land. ~ Arthur Erickson,
1311:That's what it comes down to for everyone. How much use we can be. ~ Amanda Bouchet,
1312:The best use of life is to spend it for something that outlasts it. ~ William James,
1313:The gods are fair, and they use our little vices to punish us ~ William Shakespeare,
1314:The mind is like any other muscle in your body. Use it or lose it. ~ Robin S Sharma,
1315:The older we become, the more important it is to use what we know rather ~ I J Good,
1316:The possession of facts is knowledge; the use of them is wisdom. ~ Thomas Jefferson,
1317:There is always a use for everything, Victor had told him. Even pain. ~ Eoin Colfer,
1318:The use of money is all the advantage there is in having money. ~ Benjamin Franklin,
1319:They’re the only ones rich enough to use private transportation. ~ Victoria Aveyard,
1320:This country could use a president like Benjamin Franklin again. ~ Michele Bachmann,
1321:Use, do not abuse; neither abstinence nor excess ever renders man happy. ~ Voltaire,
1322:Use each moment to make another's eyes sparkle and to warm a heart. ~ Doreen Virtue,
1323:use fat, not water, to counter hotness. Capsaicin is fat-soluble. ~ Timothy Ferriss,
1324:Use simple words everyone knows, then everyone will understand. ~ Winston Churchill,
1325:Use the mind to direct the chi and the chi to mobilise the body. ~ Cheng Man ch ing,
1326:Use whatever has come to awaken patience, understanding, and love. ~ Jack Kornfield,
1327:We all die. Some of use are fortunate to die fighting for justice. ~ Michelle Moran,
1328:We know the meaning of nothing but the words we use to describe it. ~ Anthony Marra,
1329:We must use words as they are used, or stand aside from life. ~ Ivy Compton Burnett,
1330:We use Ann sparingly right now so that people don't get tired of her. ~ Mitt Romney,
1331:What do you do with your legacy, and how do you best put it to use? ~ August Wilson,
1332:What use is logic, when it takes you so far in the wrong direction? ~ Helene Wecker,
1333:When all around you are losing their heads, use Cosmic Ordering. ~ Stephen Richards,
1334:You've got bad eating habits if you use a grocery cart in 7-Eleven. ~ Dennis Miller,
1335:All battles have some use, including those in which we were defeated. ~ Paulo Coelho,
1336:Anything “bad” that happens in your life — use it for enlightenment. ~ Eckhart Tolle,
1337:A tool always begs to be used. The trick is to learn how to use it. ~ Nnedi Okorafor,
1338:Best while you have it use your breath, There is no drinking after death. ~ Dario Fo,
1339:Black magic is the use of spiritual powers to gratify animal or selfish proclivities,
1340:Coincidence is the word we use when we can't see the levers and pulleys. ~ Emma Bull,
1341:Commitment is a muscle. The more you use it, the stronger it gets. ~ Chalene Johnson,
1342:Don't get angry. Try not to speak roughly or use harsh words. ~ Mata Amritanandamayi,
1343:Don't use the phone. People are never ready to answer it. Use poetry. ~ Jack Kerouac,
1344:∑ (Education + Innovation) × Intensity of Tech Use = Economic Growth ~ Satya Nadella,
1345:∑ (Education + Innovation) x Intensity of Tech Use = Economic Growth ~ Satya Nadella,
1346:fun to use my science knowledge to uncover evidence at crime scenes. ~ Stacy Claflin,
1347:Great programmers learn how to program their tools, not just use them. ~ Steve Yegge,
1348:He supposed he would use again it since he was living here in LA. This ~ Lori Toland,
1349:How to use your leisure time is the biggest problem of a ballplayer. ~ Branch Rickey,
1350:I believe the use of noise to make music will increase until we reach a ~ John Cage,
1351:I bet you know someone who could use a few naked jocks in their life. ~ Ben Monopoli,
1352:I don't use the word minority because there is nothing minor about me. ~ Piri Thomas,
1353:I feel bad for people in wheelchairs and people who have to use crutches. ~ RJ Mitte,
1354:I figure the oldies are real close to what rocking country use to be. ~ Wolfman Jack,
1355:If you don’t use your voice, there’s someone waiting behind you who will. ~ Kat Cole,
1356:If you have a talented family, you should be shot if you don't use them. ~ Spike Lee,
1357:If you're gonna use me as a stepping stone, you'd better step hard! ~ Shawn Michaels,
1358:I have no plans to use the Internet as the main subject of a novel. ~ Nelson DeMille,
1359:I hope we will use the Net to cross barriers and connect cultures. ~ Tim Berners Lee,
1360:I made no more protests. What was the use of struggling against fate ~ Robert Graves,
1361:In a bear market, you have to use sharp countertrend rallies to sell. ~ Bruce Kovner,
1362:In politics, there is no use looking beyond the next fortnight. ~ Joseph Chamberlain,
1363:I once said the Queen of England could use some fashion advice. ~ Kathie Lee Gifford,
1364:I think that Instagram suits me. People know I like to use it all the time. ~ Neymar,
1365:I think you always have to use certain parts of yourself in any role. ~ Joan Collins,
1366:It's always easier to learn something than to use what you've learned. ~ Chaim Potok,
1367:It's better to use a curse word than to hurt somebody else, I find. ~ Marilyn Manson,
1368:least monthly. Use cash whenever possible to avoid busting your budget. ~ Erik Wecks,
1369:Life is like a 10-speed bike. Most of us have gears we never use. ~ Charles M Schulz,
1370:No lies are more seductive than the ones we use to console ourselves. ~ Laila Lalami,
1371:Not one But twenty-four self-giving-hours Every day I have For my use. ~ Sri Chinmoy,
1372:No we don't want a bucket of blood
Just a cup is all we could use ~ Jimmy Buffett,
1373:Often it's not we who shape words, but the words we use that shape us. ~ Nina George,
1374:Often it’s not we who shape words, but the words we use that shape us. ~ Nina George,
1375:Only black people can use controversial racial terms such as “Negro. ~ Matthew Quick,
1376:People are users. It's a universal truth. Use them, or they'll use you. ~ V E Schwab,
1377:Preach the Gospel at all times. When necessary, use words. ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
1378:Sexual gratification can only be achieved through the use of machines. ~ Frank Zappa,
1379:Softie was not a word you could use in the same sentence as Eric. ~ Charlaine Harris,
1380:Stu Hart trained all his kids--only three of them use the litter box. ~ Bobby Heenan,
1381:The only way to reduce the number of nuclear weapons is to use them. ~ Rush Limbaugh,
1382:The secret to using power is not to use it. Just having it is enough. ~ Jessica Alba,
1383:To gold and silver nature hath given no use that we may not well lack. ~ Thomas More,
1384:Tool - something with a use on one end and a grasp on the other end. ~ Stewart Brand,
1385:True prayer is a way of life, not just for use in cases of emergency. ~ Billy Graham,
1386:Use every man after his desert, and who should scape whipping? ~ William Shakespeare,
1387:Use no superfluous word, no adjective, which does not reveal something. ~ Ezra Pound,
1388:We don't want to use our strength, but you have to have our strength. ~ Donald Trump,
1389:We simply need to believe in the power that's within us, and use it. ~ Benjamin Hoff,
1390:We use competitive markets to arrange for delivery of our food supply. ~ Kenneth Lay,
1391:Whatever baggage you have, use it. Conquer it. Don’t let it stop you. ~ Sara Shepard,
1392:What works with your skin and eyes? Use that to zero in on your wardrobe. ~ Tom Ford,
1393:When politicians use fear, they are playing into the enemy's hand. ~ John Mellencamp,
1394:You almost died? You’ve got fear and amazement in you. Use them. ~ Greer Macallister,
1395:You can let your anger destroy you, or you can use it for something. ~ Pittacus Lore,
1396:You use care like a weapon,' he says. It's like a greenhouse breaking. ~ Cynan Jones,
1397:Actors have an opportunity to use storytelling as a way to solve pain. ~ Nicolas Cage,
1398:All of use are imperfect human beings living in an imperfect world. ~ Haruki Murakami,
1399:And what is the use of Christ's words, unless we set an example? ~ Fyodor Dostoyevsky,
1400:As far as I'm concerned, religion is public transportation I never use. ~ Kamel Daoud,
1401:As far as I’m concerned, religion is public transportation I never use. ~ Kamel Daoud,
1402:Do I have to use my feet? Can I knock the window out with my head? ~ Wendy O Williams,
1403:Do not use compulsion, but let early education be rather a sort of amusement. ~ Plato,
1404:Don't use hands to do things that can be efficiently done by the computer. ~ Tom Duff,
1405:don’t use words like tinkle. Nobody will take you seriously.” “What ~ Lindsay Buroker,
1406:Don't use your brain to play it, let your feelings guide your fingers. ~ Jimi Hendrix,
1407:Every time you use the phrase all my life it has a different meaning. ~ George Carlin,
1408:Fire and water are not of more universal use than friendship. ~ Marcus Tullius Cicero,
1409:For a Druid was taught to use his senses just as much as his reason. ~ Peter Tremayne,
1410:Gotta use your brain, it's the most important part of your equipment. ~ Kevin Andrews,
1411:Have you ever heard someone use the expression “it has lost its Soul? ~ Aletheia Luna,
1412:I am trying really hard not to use the word 'fabulous' right now. ~ Stephanie Perkins,
1413:I didn't use to think anything was worth keeping private. Now I do. ~ Christina Ricci,
1414:I don't even know how to use a parking meter, let alone a phone box. ~ Princess Diana,
1415:I don't really know what 'community' means. And I never use that word. ~ Chris Hughes,
1416:If God doesn't use people who've failed, who's left for Him to use? ~ Richard L Mabry,
1417:If there is anything that I think I might use later, I underline it. ~ Kate DiCamillo,
1418:If you use big words, no one will know you aren't doing jack squat. ~ Stephen Colbert,
1419:I love money, I love women, I like to work hard and I don't use drugs. ~ Gene Simmons,
1420:In order to find peace, we must expose the masks we use to hide behind. ~ Debbie Ford,
1421:I use the internet. I just don’t feel a need to, like, contribute to it. ~ John Green,
1422:Knowledge falters when imagination clips its wings or fears to use them. ~ John Dewey,
1423:More than whimsy, joy is a weapon we use to fight life’s battles. ~ Margaret Feinberg,
1424:Nice knees, bud, but the hairy legs could use a Bush Hog. (Kyrian) ~ Sherrilyn Kenyon,
1425:No use in fearing the monsters under your bed when you've become them. ~ Kayla Krantz,
1426:Of what use is a book that never transports us beyond all books ~ Friedrich Nietzsche,
1427:Of what use were wings to a man fast bound in chains of iron? ~ Adelbert von Chamisso,
1428:Once you’ve accepted your flaws, no one can use them against you. ~ George R R Martin,
1429:Providence makes use of instruments I'd not touch with a ten-foot pole. ~ Owen Wister,
1430:sound is of no use to human evolution. in fact, it gets in the way. ~ Haruki Murakami,
1431:So you wound up with Apollo/If he's sometimes hard to swallow/Use this. ~ Paul Newman,
1432:Stupid little boys should learn to use guns and not wave them around. ~ Gail Carriger,
1433:The gods make use of our forgotten deeds. ~ Sri Aurobindo, Savitri, The Word of Fate,
1434:The morality of art consists in the perfect use of an imperfect medium. ~ Oscar Wilde,
1435:The primary use of conversation is to satisfy the impulse to talk. ~ George Santayana,
1436:There's a reason people use CGI: it's cheaper and faster. I hate that. ~ Fede Alvarez,
1437:There's no use in asking what if. No one could ever give you the answers. ~ Jenny Han,
1438:The use of talent is far more important than the possession of talent. ~ Garson Kanin,
1439:The value comes from what is there, but the use comes from what is not there. ~ Laozi,
1440:"The very numbers you use in counting are more than you take them to be." ~ Carl Jung,
1441:Use the Light that dwells within you to regain your natural clarity of sight. ~ Laozi,
1442:Use your whole body as a tool to do what is right for the glory of God. ~ Rick Warren,
1443:We just do not see how very specialized the use of "I know" is. ~ Ludwig Wittgenstein,
1444:We use up in the passions the stuff that was given us for happiness. ~ Joseph Joubert,
1445:Whatever your desire, use Cosmic Ordering to get what you require! ~ Stephen Richards,
1446:What's the use of being Irish if the world doesn't break your heart? ~ John F Kennedy,
1447:What use are the best of arguments when they can be destroyed by force? ~ Jules Verne,
1448:When you're testing to see how deep water is, never use two feet. ~ Benjamin Franklin,
1449:With an effort, the kind you use when confronting an unpleasant duty, ~ Mark Lawrence,
1450:You can’t use a blackmail photo as your profile shot on social media! ~ Kristi Abbott,
1451:You just use the future to escape the present.” I guess that made sense. ~ John Green,
1452:You let your past destroy you, or you use it to create something better ~ Tyler Perry,
1453:Your lips are so soft and girly. I really must know what you use on them. ~ Leia Shaw,
1454:you should never allow your yesterday to use up too much of today. ~ Sherrilyn Kenyon,
1455:A rule to live by: I won't use anything I can't explain in five minutes. ~ Phil Crosby,
1456:As a poet, I want to use language to enter that space of feeling.” — ~ Claudia Rankine,
1457:A weapon you held and didn't know how to use belonged to your enemy. ~ Terry Pratchett,
1458:Brian Eno taught us how to use the Recording Studio as an instrument. ~ Jerry Harrison,
1459:Erika, even cats run out of lives. Use the ones you have left wisely. ~ Robert Bryndza,
1460:...everything I treasure is broken - it's of no use to anybody but me... ~ John Geddes,
1461:Girl? He pressed.
The name is Riley, she shot back. Learn it. Use it! ~ Jana Oliver,
1462:Guys should not be allowed to use the Internet all day long. So sad. ~ Natasha Leggero,
1463:Happiness is the full use of one's talents along lines of excellence. ~ John F Kennedy,
1464:He believed the best use of human beings was as compost or incubators. ~ Douglas Clegg,
1465:He only employs his passion who can make no use of his reason. ~ Marcus Tullius Cicero,
1466:He said when you use your brain, no-one comes near you for ingenuity ~ Sophie Kinsella,
1467:Honestly, not enough people know how to use good manners as a weapon. ~ Rachel Hawkins,
1468:Ideas exist in the marketplace; they are thrown out for everyone to use. ~ Frank Gehry,
1469:I do not use profanity in my novels. My characters all go to church. ~ Nicholas Sparks,
1470:I don't want to use my creative energy on somebody else's user interface. ~ Jeff Bezos,
1471:If you do not enter inside, what use the door to heaven can have? ~ Mehmet Murat ildan,
1472:I have no use for humility. I am a fellow with an exceptional talent. ~ Jackie Gleason,
1473:I love learning new things that will never be put to practical use. ~ Jackson Rathbone,
1474:I love to pitch things that I believe in and products that I love to use. ~ J B Smoove,
1475:I must use these great men's virtues as a cloak for my weakness. ~ Michel de Montaigne,
1476:I not only use all the brains that I have, but all that I can borrow. ~ Woodrow Wilson,
1477:I prefer to use my name from your world.' he said. 'I'm just Matt'. ~ Anthony Horowitz,
1478:I see my practice as picture making. Whatever is available, I use. ~ Wolfgang Tillmans,
1479:It really is understanding how to use money, and not let money use you. ~ Tony Robbins,
1480:It's your body, use it.. amuse it..because one day, you're gonna lose it! ~ Jeff Hardy,
1481:I've realized you can use a fork as a spoon if you use it rapidly enough. ~ John Mayer,
1482:I was looking for someone to formulate a skin care line I could use. ~ Connie Sellecca,
1483:Learn to use your emotions to think, not think with your emotions. ~ Robert T Kiyosaki,
1484:Mobile use is growing faster than all of Google's internal predictions. ~ Eric Schmidt,
1485:Never talk defeat. Use words like hope, belief, faith, victory. ~ Norman Vincent Peale,
1486:Nothing is so common as to imitate one's enemies, and to use their weapons. ~ Voltaire,
1487:Nothing would mean anything if I didn't live a life of use to others. ~ Angelina Jolie,
1488:Of what use is a philosopher who doesn't hurt anybody's feelings? ~ Diogenes of Sinope,
1489:Only use it in emergencies."

"I figured, once you said 'bomb. ~ Roshani Chokshi,
1490:Open eyes are of little use when the mind behind them is closed.” Araris ~ Jim Butcher,
1491:Preach the Gospel at all times and when necessary use words. ~ Saint Francis of Assisi,
1492:Probably the deepest use of music and of art is to create conscience. ~ T Bone Burnett,
1493:prophets and madmen use the same door to people's hearts, don't they? ~ Christian M rk,
1494:Second, the Tourette’s patient cannot not do it: they cannot use free ~ David Eagleman,
1495:Some degree of abuse is inseparable from the proper use of everything. ~ James Madison,
1496:Sometimes it’s not how much light you use to get an effect, it’s how ~ James Wong Howe,
1497:Talent is like electricity. We don't understand electricity. We use it. ~ Maya Angelou,
1498:That’s going to take a box of tools you neither own nor know how to use. ~ Philip Kerr,
1499:The human soul can always use a new tradition. Sometimes we require them. ~ Pat Conroy,
1500:The key to any game is to use your strengths and hide your weaknesses. ~ Paul Westphal,

IN CHAPTERS [50/3240]



1621 Integral Yoga
  317 Poetry
  241 Occultism
  149 Philosophy
  134 Christianity
  112 Yoga
   89 Fiction
   67 Psychology
   50 Islam
   28 Mysticism
   23 Science
   21 Education
   15 Integral Theory
   14 Mythology
   13 Theosophy
   13 Hinduism
   12 Philsophy
   8 Cybernetics
   7 Buddhism
   5 Sufism
   3 Baha i Faith
   2 Zen
   2 Kabbalah
   1 Thelema
   1 Alchemy


1049 The Mother
  685 Sri Aurobindo
  664 Satprem
  222 Nolini Kanta Gupta
  112 Aleister Crowley
   73 H P Lovecraft
   67 Carl Jung
   56 James George Frazer
   55 Sri Ramakrishna
   50 Muhammad
   45 Plotinus
   40 William Wordsworth
   40 Robert Browning
   39 Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
   33 Saint Augustine of Hippo
   30 Walt Whitman
   30 Swami Krishnananda
   28 A B Purani
   26 Friedrich Nietzsche
   25 Aldous Huxley
   24 Swami Vivekananda
   22 Saint Teresa of Avila
   22 Rabindranath Tagore
   20 Percy Bysshe Shelley
   20 Franz Bardon
   18 Saint John of Climacus
   18 Rudolf Steiner
   17 John Keats
   17 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
   15 Jorge Luis Borges
   13 Anonymous
   12 Ralph Waldo Emerson
   12 Plato
   12 Nirodbaran
   11 Ovid
   11 Lucretius
   11 George Van Vrekhem
   10 Peter J Carroll
   9 Rainer Maria Rilke
   8 Norbert Wiener
   7 Sri Ramana Maharshi
   7 Li Bai
   6 William Butler Yeats
   6 Paul Richard
   6 Jordan Peterson
   6 Henry David Thoreau
   6 Aristotle
   6 Alice Bailey
   5 Bokar Rinpoche
   4 Vyasa
   4 Thubten Chodron
   4 Swami Sivananda Saraswati
   4 Patanjali
   4 Lewis Carroll
   4 Friedrich Schiller
   4 Baha u llah
   4 Al-Ghazali
   3 R Buckminster Fuller
   3 Joseph Campbell
   3 Jalaluddin Rumi
   3 Hsuan Chueh of Yung Chia
   3 Edgar Allan Poe
   2 Rabbi Moses Luzzatto
   2 Mahendranath Gupta
   2 Kuan Han-Ching
   2 Ken Wilber
   2 Jorge Luis Borges
   2 Jean Gebser
   2 Hakim Sanai
   2 Genpo Roshi
   2 Bodhidharma


  126 Record of Yoga
  121 The Synthesis Of Yoga
   73 Lovecraft - Poems
   71 Magick Without Tears
   66 Questions And Answers 1957-1958
   60 Agenda Vol 08
   58 On Thoughts And Aphorisms
   58 Agenda Vol 10
   56 The Golden Bough
   56 Agenda Vol 04
   55 Agenda Vol 09
   55 Agenda Vol 03
   54 The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna
   54 Agenda Vol 02
   54 Agenda Vol 01
   50 The Life Divine
   50 Quran
   49 Questions And Answers 1950-1951
   48 Agenda Vol 06
   47 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 07
   46 Essays In Philosophy And Yoga
   46 Agenda Vol 07
   45 Prayers And Meditations
   45 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 04
   44 Letters On Yoga IV
   42 Liber ABA
   42 Letters On Yoga II
   42 Agenda Vol 13
   40 Wordsworth - Poems
   40 Questions And Answers 1956
   40 Browning - Poems
   39 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 03
   39 Agenda Vol 11
   36 Agenda Vol 05
   35 Questions And Answers 1953
   33 Agenda Vol 12
   31 Questions And Answers 1955
   31 Questions And Answers 1954
   31 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01
   30 The Study and Practice of Yoga
   28 Whitman - Poems
   28 Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo
   27 Savitri
   25 The Perennial Philosophy
   25 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02
   24 Words Of Long Ago
   24 Mysterium Coniunctionis
   22 The Practice of Psycho therapy
   22 The Human Cycle
   22 Essays On The Gita
   22 City of God
   21 Tagore - Poems
   21 On Education
   20 Shelley - Poems
   20 Letters On Yoga I
   19 Essays Divine And Human
   18 The Ladder of Divine Ascent
   17 Thus Spoke Zarathustra
   17 Keats - Poems
   16 Words Of The Mother II
   16 The Future of Man
   16 The Bible
   16 Letters On Poetry And Art
   16 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 05
   15 Sri Aurobindo or the Adventure of Consciousness
   15 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 01
   14 The Practice of Magical Evocation
   14 Some Answers From The Mother
   13 The Way of Perfection
   13 The Secret Of The Veda
   13 The Phenomenon of Man
   13 Questions And Answers 1929-1931
   13 On the Way to Supermanhood
   13 Letters On Yoga III
   13 Labyrinths
   13 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 08
   12 Twelve Years With Sri Aurobindo
   12 The Confessions of Saint Augustine
   12 The Archetypes and the Collective Unconscious
   12 Talks
   12 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 04
   12 Emerson - Poems
   11 Vedic and Philological Studies
   11 Preparing for the Miraculous
   11 Of The Nature Of Things
   11 Metamorphoses
   11 Bhakti-Yoga
   10 The Mother With Letters On The Mother
   10 The Divine Comedy
   10 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 02
   10 Liber Null
   10 Faust
   9 Twilight of the Idols
   9 The Interior Castle or The Mansions
   9 Rilke - Poems
   9 Raja-Yoga
   9 Knowledge of the Higher Worlds
   9 Collected Poems
   9 Aion
   9 A Garden of Pomegranates - An Outline of the Qabalah
   8 The Problems of Philosophy
   8 Plotinus - Complete Works Vol 03
   8 Isha Upanishad
   8 Cybernetics
   7 Theosophy
   7 The Blue Cliff Records
   7 Li Bai - Poems
   7 Let Me Explain
   7 Goethe - Poems
   6 Yeats - Poems
   6 Words Of The Mother III
   6 Walden
   6 The Secret Doctrine
   6 Poetics
   6 Maps of Meaning
   6 Initiation Into Hermetics
   6 A Treatise on Cosmic Fire
   5 The Red Book Liber Novus
   5 Tara - The Feminine Divine
   5 Anonymous - Poems
   5 5.1.01 - Ilion
   4 Vishnu Purana
   4 The Integral Yoga
   4 The Alchemy of Happiness
   4 The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People
   4 Schiller - Poems
   4 Patanjali Yoga Sutras
   4 Hymns to the Mystic Fire
   4 How to Free Your Mind - Tara the Liberator
   4 Dark Night of the Soul
   4 Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 06
   4 Alice in Wonderland
   3 Words Of The Mother I
   3 The Tibetan Yogas of Dream and Sleep
   3 The Hero with a Thousand Faces
   3 The Gateless Gate
   3 Synergetics - Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking
   3 Kena and Other Upanishads
   3 Hymn of the Universe
   3 Beating the Cloth Drum Letters of Zen Master Hakuin
   3 Amrita Gita
   2 Writings In Bengali and Sanskrit
   2 The Zen Teaching of Bodhidharma
   2 The Lotus Sutra
   2 The Ever-Present Origin
   2 The Essentials of Education
   2 The Book of Certitude
   2 Symposium
   2 Sex Ecology Spirituality
   2 Selected Fictions
   2 Poe - Poems
   2 Notes On The Way
   2 General Principles of Kabbalah
   2 Bodhidharma - Poems
   2 Advanced Dungeons and Dragons 2E


00.00 - Publishers Note, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   The Mother has graciously permitted the use of her sketch of the author as a frontispiece to the book.
   13 January 1971

00.01 - The Mother on Savitri, #Sweet Mother - Harmonies of Light, #unset, #Zen
  All this is His own experience, and what is most surprising is that it is my own experience also. It is my sadhana which He has worked out. Each object, each event, each realisation, all the descriptions, even the colours are exactly what I saw and the words, phrases are also exactly what I heard. And all this before having read the book. I read Savitri many times afterwards, but earlier, when He was writing He used to read it to me. Every morning I used to hear Him read Savitri. During the night He would write and in the morning read it to me. And I observed something curious, that day after day the experiences He read out to me in the morning were those I had had the previous night, word by word. Yes, all the descriptions, the colours, the pictures I had seen, the words I had heard, all, all, I heard it all, put by Him into poetry, into miraculous poetry. Yes, they were exactly my experiences of the previous night which He read out to me the following morning. And it was not just one day by chance, but for days and days together. And every time I used to compare what He said with my previous experiences and they were always the same. I repeat, it was not that I had told Him my experiences and that He had noted them down afterwards, no, He knew already what I had seen. It is my experiences He has presented at length and they were His experiences also. It is, moreover, the picture of Our joint adventure into the unknown or rather into the Supermind.
  These are experiences lived by Him, realities, supracosmic truths. He experienced all these as one experiences joy or sorrow, physically. He walked in the darkness of inconscience, even in the neighborhood of death, endured the sufferings of perdition, and emerged from the mud, the world-misery to brea the the sovereign plenitude and enter the supreme Ananda. He crossed all these realms, went through the consequences, suffered and endured physically what one cannot imagine. Nobody till today has suffered like Him. He accepted suffering to transform suffering into the joy of union with the Supreme. It is something unique and incomparable in the history of the world. It is something that has never happened before, He is the first to have traced the path in the Unknown, so that we may be able to walk with certitude towards the Supermind. He has made the work easy for us. Savitri is His whole Yoga of transformation, and this Yoga appears now for the first time in the earth-consciousness.
  --
  And men have the audacity to compare it with the work of Virgil or Homer and to find it inferior. They do not understand, they cannot understand. What do they know? Nothing at all. And it is useless to try to make them understand. Men will know what it is, but in a distant future. It is only the new race with a new consciousness which will be able to understand. I assure you there is nothing under the blue sky to compare with Savitri. It is the mystery of mysteries. It is a *super-epic,* it is super-literature, super-poetry, super-vision, it is a super-work even if one considers the number of lines He has written. No, these human words are not adequate to describe Savitri. Yes, one needs superlatives, hyperboles to describe it. It is a hyper-epic. No, words express nothing of what Savitri is, at least I do not find them. It is of immense value - spiritual value and all other values; it is eternal in its subject, and infinite in its appeal, miraculous in its mode and power of execution; it is a unique thing, the more you come into contact with it, the higher will you be uplifted. Ah, truly it is something! It is the most beautiful thing He has left for man, the highest possible. What is it? When will man know it? When is he going to lead a life of truth? When is he going to accept this in his life? This yet remains to be seen.
  My child, every day you are going to read Savitri; read properly, with the right attitude, concentrating a little before opening the pages and trying to keep the mind as empty as possible, absolutely without a thought. The direct road is through the heart. I tell you, if you try to really concentrate with this aspiration you can light the flame, the psychic flame, the flame of purification in a very short time, perhaps in a few days. What you cannot do normally, you can do with the help of Savitri. Try and you will see how very different it is, how new, if you read with this attitude, with this something at the back of your consciousness; as though it were an offering to Sri Aurobindo. You know it is charged, fully charged with consciousness; as if Savitri were a being, a real guide. I tell you, whoever, wanting to practice Yoga, tries sincerely and feels the necessity for it, will be able to climb with the help of Savitri to the highest rung of the ladder of Yoga, will be able to find the secret that Savitri represents. And this without the help of a Guru. And he will be able to practice it anywhere. For him Savitri alone will be the guide, for all that he needs he will find Savitri. If he remains very quiet when before a difficulty, or when he does not know where to turn to go forward and how to overcome obstacles, for all these hesitations and incertitudes which overwhelm us at every moment, he will have the necessary indications, and the necessary concrete help. If he remains very calm, open, if he aspires sincerely, always he will be as if lead by the hand. If he has faith, the will to give himself and essential sincerity he will reach the final goal.

00.02 - Mystic Symbolism, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   These other worlds are constituted in other ways than ours. Their contents are different and the laws that obtain there are also different. It would be a gross blunder to attempt a chart of any of these other systems, to use an Einsteinian term, with the measures and conventions of the system to which our external waking consciousness belongs. For, there "the sun shines not, nor the moon, nor the stars, neither these lightnings nor this fire." The difficulty is further enhanced by the fact that there are very many unseen worlds and they all differ from the seen and from one another in manner and degree. Thus, for example, the Upanishads speak of the swapna, the suupta, and the turya, domains beyond the jgrat which is that where the rational being with its mind and senses lives and moves. And there are other systems and other ways in which systems exist, and they are practically innumerable.
   If, however, we have to speak of these other worlds, then, since we can speak only in the terms of this world, we have to use them in a different sense from those they usually bear; we must employ them as figures and symbols. Even then they may prove inadequate and misleading; so there are Mystics who are averse to all speech and expression they are mauni; in silence they experience the inexpressible and in silence they communicate it to the few who have the capacity to receive in silence.
   But those who do speak, how do they choose their figures and symbols? What is their methodology? For it might be said, since the unseen and the seen differ out and out, it does not matter what forms or signs are taken from the latter; for any meaning and significance could be put into anything. But in reality, it does not so happen. For, although there is a great divergence between figures and symbols on the one hand and the things figured and symbolised on the other, still there is also some link, some common measure. And that is why we see not unoften the same or similar figures and symbols representing an identical experience in ages and countries far apart from each other.
   We can make a distinction here between two types of expression which we have put together indiscriminately, figures and symbols. Figures, we may say, are those that are constructed by the rational mind, the intellect; they are mere metaphors and similes and are not organically related to the thing experienced, but put round it as a robe that can be dropped or changed without affecting the experience itself. Thus, for example, when the Upanishad says, tmnam rathinam viddhi (Know that the soul is the master of the chariot who sits within it) or indriyi haynhu (The senses, they say, are the horses), we have here only a comparison or analogy that is common and natural to the poetic manner. The particular figure or simile used is not inevitable to the idea or experience that it seeks to express, its part and parcel. On the other hand, take this Upanishadic perception: hirayamayena patrea satyasyphitam mukham (The face of the Truth lies hidden under the golden orb). Here the symbol is not mere analogy or comparison, a figure; it is one with the very substance of the experience the two cannot be separated. Or when the Vedas speak of the kindling of the Fire, the rushing of the waters or the rise of the Dawn, the images though taken from the material world, are not used for the sake of mere comparison, but they are the embodiments, the living forms of truths experienced in another world.
   When a Mystic refers to the Solar Light or to the Fire the light, for example, that struck down Saul and transformed him into Saint Paul or the burning bush that visited Moses, it is not the physical or material object that he means and yet it is that in a way. It is the materialization of something that is fundamentally not material: some movement in an inner consciousness precipitates itself into the region of the senses and takes from out of the material the form commensurable with its nature that it finds there.
  --
   Thus there is a great diversity of symbols. At the one end is the mere metaphor or simile or allegory ('figure', as we have called it) and at the other end is the symbol identical with the thing symbolized. And upon this inner character of the symbol depends also to a large extent its range and scope. There are symbols which are universal and intimately ingrained in the human consciousness itself. Mankind has used them in all ages and climes almost in the same sense and significance. There are others that are limited to peoples and ages. They are made out of forms that are of local and temporal interest and importance. Their significances vary according to time and place. Finally, there are symbols which are true of the individual consciousness only; they depend on personal peculiarities and idiosyncrasies, on one's environment and upbringing and education.
   Man being an embodied soul, his external consciousness (what the Upanishad calls jgrat) is the milieu in which his soul-experiences naturally manifest and find their play. It is the forms and movements of that consciousness which clo the and give a concrete habitation and name to perceptions on the subtler ranges of the inner existence. If the experiences on these planes are to be presented to the conscious memory and to the brain-mind and made communicable to others through speech, this is the inevitable and natural process. Symbols are a translation in mental and sensual (and vocal) terms of experiences that are beyond the mind and the sense and the speech and yet throw a kind of echoing vibrations upon these lesser levels.

00.03 - Upanishadic Symbolism, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   It may be asked why the dog has been chosen as the symbol of Intuition. In the Vedas, the cow and the horse also play a large part; even the donkey and the frog have their own assigned roles. These objects are taken from the environment of ordinary life, and are those that are most familiar to the external consciousness, through which the inner experiences have to express themselves, if they are to be expressed at all. These material objects represent various kinds of forces and movements and subtle and occult and spiritual dynamisms. Strictly speaking, however, symbols are not chosen in a subtle or spiritual experience, that is to say, they are not arbitrarily selected and constructed by the conscious intelligence. They form part of a dramatization (to use a term of the Freudian psychology of dreams), a psychological alchemy, whose method and process and rationale are very obscure, which can be penetrated only by the vision of a third eye.
   I. The Several Lights
  --
   The biological process, described in what may seem to be crude and mediaeval terms, really reflects or echoes a more subtle and psychological process. The images used form perhaps part of the current popular notion about the matter, but the esoteric sense goes beyond the outer symbols. The sky seems to be the far and tenuous region where the soul rests and awaits its next birthit is the region of Soma, the own Home of Bliss and Immortality. Now when the time or call comes, the soul stirs and journeys down that is the Rain. Next, it enters the earth atmosphere and clothes itself with the earth consciousness. Then it waits and calls for the formation of the material body, first by the contri bution of the father and then by that of the mother; when these two unite and the material body is formed, the soul incarnates.
   Apart from the question whether the biological phenomenon described is really a symbol and a cloak for another order of reality, and even taking it at its face value, what is to be noted here is the idea of a cosmic cycle, and a cosmic cycle that proceeds through the principle of sacrifice. If it is asked what there is wonderful or particularly spiritual in this rather naf description of a very commonplace happening that gives it an honoured place in the Upanishads, the answer is that it is wonderful to see how the Upanishadic Rishi takes from an event its local, temporal and personal colour and incorporates it in a global movement, a cosmic cycle, as a limb of the Universal Brahman. The Upanishads contain passages which a puritanical mentality may perhaps describe as 'pornographic'; these have in fact been put by some on the Index expurgatorius. But the ancients saw these matters with other eyes and through another consciousness.
  --
   The third boon is the secret of secrets, for it is the knowledge and realisation of Transcendence that is sought here. Beyond the individual lies the universal; is there anything beyond the universal? The release of the individual into the cosmic existence gives him the griefless life eternal: can the cosmos be rolled up and flung into something beyond? What would be the nature of that thing? What is there outside creation, outside manifestation, outside Maya, to use a latter day term? Is there existence or non-existence (utter dissolution or extinctionDeath in his supreme and absolute status)? King Yama did not choose to answer immediately and even endeavoured to dissuade Nachiketas from pursuing the question over which people were confounded, as he said. Evidently it was a much discussed problem in those days. Buddha was asked the same question and he evaded it, saying that the pragmatic man should attend to practical and immediate realities and not, waste time and energy in discussing things ultimate and beyond that have hardly any relation to the present and the actual.
   But Yama did answer and unveil the mystery and impart the supreme secret knowledge the knowledge of the Transcendent Brahman: it is out of the transcendent reality that the immanent deity takes his birth. Hence the Divine Fire, the Lord of creation and the Inner Mastersarvabhtntartm, antarymis called brahmajam, born of the Brahman. Yama teaches the process of transcendence. Apart from the knowledge and experience first of the individual and then of the cosmic Brahman, there is a definite line along which the human consciousness (or unconsciousness, as it is at present) is to ascend and evolve. The first step is to learn to distinguish between the Good and the Pleasurable (reya and preya). The line of pleasure leads to the external, the superficial, the false: while the other path leads towards the inner and the higher truth. So the second step is the gradual withdrawal of the consciousness from the physical and the sensual and even the mental preoccupation and focussing it upon what is certain and permanent. In the midst of the death-ridden consciousness in the heart of all that is unstable and fleetingone has to look for Agni, the eternal godhead, the Immortal in mortality, the Timeless in time through whom lies the passage to Immortality beyond Time.
  --
   The secularisation of man's vital functions in modem ages has not been a success. It has made him more egocentric and blatantly hedonistic. From an occult point of view he has in this way subjected himself to the influences of dark and undesirable world-forces, has made an opening, to use an Indian symbolism, for Kali (the Spirit of the Iron Age) to enter into him. The sex-force is an extremely potent agent, but it is extremely fluid and elusive and uncontrollable. It was for this reason that the ancients always sought to give it a proper mould, a right continent, a fixed and definite channel; the moderns, on the other hand, allow it to run free and play with it recklessly. The result has been, in the life of those born under such circumstances, a growing lack of poise and balance and a corresponding incidence of neuras thenia, hysteria and all abnormal pathological conditions.
   Chhandyogya, II, III.

0.00a - Introduction, #A Garden of Pomegranates - An Outline of the Qabalah, #Israel Regardie, #Occultism
  For this reason I am especially pleased to be writing an introduction to a new edition of A Garden of Pomegranates. I feel that never, perhaps, was the need more urgent for just such a roadmap as the Qabalistic system provides. It should be equally useful to any who chooses to follow it, whether he be Jew, Christian or Buddhist, Deist, Theosophist, agnostic or atheist.
  The Qabalah is a trustworthy guide, leading to a comprehension both of the Universe and one's own Self. Sages have long taught that Man is a miniature of the Universe, containing within himself the diverse elements of that macrocosm of which he is the microcosm. Within the Qabalah is a glyph called the Tree of Life which is at once a symbolic map of the Universe in its major aspects, and also of its smaller counterpart, Man.
  --
  The Qabalah reveals the nature of certain physical and psychological phenomena. Once these are apprehended, understood and correlated, the student can use the principles of Magic to exercise control over life's conditions and circumstances not otherwise possible. In short. Magic provides the practical application of the theories supplied by the Qabalah.
  It serves yet another vital function. In addition to the advantages to be gained from its philosophical application, the ancients discovered a very practical use for the literal Qabalah.
  Each letter of the Qabalistic alphabet has a number, color, many symbols and a Tarot card attributed to it. The Qabalah not only aids in an understanding of the Tarot, but teaches the student how to classify and organize all such ideas, numbers and symbols. Just as a knowledge of Latin will give insight into the meaning of an unfamiliar English word with a Latin root, so the knowledge of the Qabalah with the various attri butions to each character in its alphabet will enable the student to understand and correlate ideas and concepts which otherwise would have no apparent relation.
  --
  For example, Keser is called "The Admirable or the Hidden Intelligence; it is the Primal Glory, for no created being can attain to its essence." This seems perfectly all right; the meaning at first sight seems to fit the significance of Keser as the first emanation from Ain Soph. But there are half a dozen other similar attri butions that would have served equally well. For instance, it could have been called the "Occult Intelligence" usually attri buted to the seventh Path or Sephirah, for surely Keser is secret in a way to be said of no other Sephirah. And what about the "Absolute or Perfect Intelligence." That would have been even more explicit and appropriate, being applicable to Keser far more than to any other of the Paths. Similarly, there is one attri buted to the 16th Path and called "The Eternal or Triumphant Intelligence," so-called beca use it is the pleasure of the Glory, beyond which is no Glory like to it, and it is called also the Paradise prepared for the Righteous." Any of these several would have done equally well. Much is true of so many of the other attri butions in this particular area-that is the so-called Intelligences of the Sepher Yetzirah. I do not think that their use or current arbitrary usage stands up to serious examination or criticism.
  A good many attri butions in other symbolic areas, I feel are subject to the same criticism. The Egyptian Gods have been used with a good deal of carelessness, and without sufficient explanation of motives in assigning them as I did. In a recent edition of Crowley's masterpiece Liber 777 (which au fond is less a reflection of Crowley's mind as a recent critic claimed than a tabulation of some of the material given piecemeal in the Golden Dawn knowledge lectures), he gives for the first time brief explanations of the motives for his attri butions. I too should have been far more explicit in the explanations I used in the case of some of the Gods whose names were used many times, most inadequately, where several paths were concerned. While it is true that the religious coloring of the Egyptian Gods differed from time to time during Egypt's turbulent history, nonetheless a word or two about just that one single point could have served a useful purpose.
  Some of the passages in the book force me today to emphasize that so far as the Qabalah is concerned, it could and should be employed without binding to it the partisan qualities of any one particular religious faith. This goes as much for Judaism as it does for Christianity. Neither has much intrinsic usefulness where this scientific scheme is concerned. If some students feel hurt by this statement, that cannot be helped. The day of most contemporary faiths is over; they have been more of a curse than a boon to mankind. Nothing that I say here, however, should reflect on the peoples concerned, those who accept these religions. They are merely unfortunate. The religion itself is worn out and indeed is dying.
  The Qabalah has nothing to do with any of them. Attempts on the part of cultish-partisans to impart higher mystical meanings, through the Qabalah, etc., to their now sterile faiths is futile, and will be seen as such by the younger generation. They, the flower and love children, will have none of this nonsense.
  --
  Much knowledge obtained by the ancients through the use of the Qabalah has been supported by discoveries of modern scientists- anthropologists, astronomers, psychiatrists, et al. Learned Qabalists for hundreds of years have been aware of what the psychiatrist has only discovered in the last few decades-that man's concept of himself, his deities and the Universe is a constantly evolving process, changing as man himself evolves on a higher spiral. But the roots of his concepts are buried in a race-consciousness that antedated Neanderthal man by uncounted aeons of time.
  What Jung calls archetypal images constantly rise to the surface of man's awareness from the vast unconscious that is the common heritage of all mankind.
  The tragedy of civilized man is that he is cut off from awareness of his own instincts. The Qabalah can help him achieve the necessary understanding to effect a reunion with them, so that rather than being driven by forces he does not understand, he can harness for his conscious use the same power that guides the homing pigeon, teaches the beaver to build a dam and keeps the planets revolving in their appointed orbits about the sun.
  I began the study of the Qabalah at an early age. Two books I read then have played unconsciously a prominent part in the writing of my own book. One of these was "Q.B.L. or the Bride's Reception" by Frater Achad (Charles Stansfeld Jones), which I must have first read around 1926. The other was "An Introduction to the Tarot" by Paul Foster Case, published in the early 1920's. It is now out of print, superseded by later versions of the same topic. But as I now glance through this slender book, I perceive how profoundly even the format of his book had influenced me, though in these two instances there was not a trace of plagiarism. It had not consciously occurred to me until recently that I owed so much to them. Since Paul Case passed away about a decade or so ago, this gives me the opportunity to thank him, overtly, wherever he may now be.
  --
  The last chapter of A Garden deals with the Way of Return. It used almost entirely Crowley's concept of the Path as described in his superb essay "One Star in Sight." In addition to this, I borrowed extensively from Lawrence's Apropos. Somehow, they all fitted together very nicely. In time, all these variegated notes were incorporated into the text without acknowledgment, an oversight which I now feel sure would be forgiven, since I was only twenty-four at the time.
  Some modern Nature-worshippers and members of the newly-washed and redeemed witch-cult have complimented me on this closing chapter which I entitled 'The Ladder." I am pleased about this. For a very long time I was not at all familiar with the topic of witchcraft. I had avoided it entirely, not being attracted to its literature in any way. In fact, I only became slightly conversant with its theme and literature just a few years ago, after reading "The Anatomy of Eve" written by Dr. Leopold Stein, a Jungian analyst. In the middle of his study of four cases, he included a most informative chapter on the subject. This served to stimulate me to wider reading in that area.
  In 1932, at the suggestion of Thomas Burke, the novelist, I submitted my manuscript to one of his publishers, Messrs. Constable in London. They were unable to use it, but made some encouraging comments and advised me to submit it to Riders. To my delight and surprise, Riders published it, and throughout the years the reaction it has had indicated other students found it also fulfilled their need for a condensed and simplified survey of such a vast subject as the Qabalah.
  The importance of the book to me was and is five-fold. 1) It provided a yardstick by which to measure my personal progress in the understanding of the Qabalah. 2) Therefore it can have an equivalent value to the modern student. 3) It serves as a theoretical introduction to the Qabalistic foundation of the magical work of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. 4) It throws considerable light on the occasionally obscure writings of Aleister Crowley. 5) It is dedicated to Crowley, who was the Ankh-af-na-Khonsu mentioned in The Book of the Law -a dedication which served both as a token of personal loyalty and devotion to Crowley, but was also a gesture of my spiritual independence from him.

0.00a - Participants in the Evening Talks, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
   use ctrl + Y to copy selected text in markdown format.

000 - Humans in Universe, #Synergetics - Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking, #R Buckminster Fuller, #Science
  guesswork that had previously been used in naval and land architecture. This
  capability in mathematical multiplication and division opened up a whole new field
  --
  they know how to use the tools and to cultivate the fields-the wealthy are parasites.
  This inaugurated the supranational concept of two world-wide political classes and
  --
  could move useful loads horizontally; wood made good rafts for transporting
  humans but not for floating heavy cargoes. Thus the high tensile strength of wood,
  --
  of material have gone on to carry ever greater useful loads in vertical takeoff
  vehicles at ever more accelerated rates of ascent.
  --
  developments and profitable commercial uses. But only vast money investments or
  vast governments can afford to exploit the increased technical advantages.
  --
  000.121 During this 10-year period we can also phase out all further use of fossil
  fuels and atomic energy, since the retooled world industry and individual energy
  --
  spontaneously attractive and can be used to teach all the world's people nature's
  coordinating system-and can do so in time to make it possible for all humanity to
  --
  necessary for universal comprehension and individual use of nature's synergetic
  geometrical intertransformings.

0.00 - INTRODUCTION, #The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, #Sri Ramakrishna, #Hinduism
  SRI RAMAKRISHNA, the God-man of modern India, was born at Kamarpukur. This village in the Hooghly District preserved during the last century the idyllic simplicity of the rural areas of Bengal. Situated far from the railway, it was untouched by the glamour of the city. It contained rice-fields, tall palms, royal banyans, a few lakes, and two cremation grounds. South of the village a stream took its leisurely course. A mango orchard dedicated by a neighbouring zemindar to the public use was frequented by the boys for their noonday sports. A highway passed through the village to the great temple of Jagannath at Puri, and the villagers, most of whom were farmers and craftsmen, entertained many passing holy men and pilgrims. The dull round of the rural life was broken by lively festivals, the observance of sacred days, religious singing, and other innocent pleasures.
  About his parents Sri Ramakrishna once said: "My mother was the personification of rectitude and gentleness. She did not know much about the ways of the world; innocent of the art of concealment, she would say what was in her mind. People loved her for her open-heartedness. My father, an orthodox brahmin, never accepted gifts from the sudras. He spent much of his time in worship and meditation, and in repeating God's name and chanting His glories. Whenever in his daily prayers he invoked the Goddess Gayatri, his chest flushed and tears rolled down his cheeks. He spent his leisure hours making garlands for the Family Deity, Raghuvir."
  --
   Ramkumar did not at first oppose the ways of his temperamental brother. He wanted Gadadhar to become used to the conditions of city life. But one day he decided to warn the boy about his indifference to the world. After all, in the near future Gadadhar must, as a ho useholder, earn his livelihood through the performance of his brahminical duties; and these required a thorough knowledge of Hindu law, astrology, and kindred subjects. He gently admonished Gadadhar and asked him to pay more attention to his studies. But the boy replied spiritedly: "Brother, what shall I do with a mere bread-winning education? I would rather acquire that wisdom which will illumine my heart and give me satisfaction for ever."
   --- BREAD-WINNING EDUCATION
  --
   Ramkumar could hardly understand the import of his young brother's reply. He described in bright colours the happy and easy life of scholars in Calcutta society. But Gadadhar intuitively felt that the scholars, to use one of his own vivid illustrations, were like so many vultures, soaring high on the wings of their uninspired intellect, with their eyes fixed on the charnel-pit of greed and lust. So he stood firm and Ramkumar had to give way.
   --- KALI TEMPLE AT DAKSHINESWAR
  --
   corners of the temple compound are two nahabats, or music towers, from which music flows at different times of day, especially at sunup, noon, and sundown, when the worship is performed in the temples. Three sides of the paved courtyard — all except the west — are lined with rooms set apart for kitchens, store-rooms, dining-rooms, and quarters for the temple staff and guests. The chamber in the northwest angle, just beyond the last of the Siva temples, is of special interest to us; for here Sri Ramakrishna was to spend a considerable part of his life. To the west of this chamber is a semicircular porch overlooking the river. In front of the porch runs a foot-path, north and south, and beyond the path is a large garden and, below the garden, the Ganges. The orchard to the north of the buildings contains the Panchavati, the banyan, and the bel-tree, associated with Sri Ramakrishna's spiritual practices. Outside and to the north of the temple compound proper is the kuthi, or bungalow, used by members of Rani Rasmani's family visiting the garden. And north of the temple garden, separated from it by a high wall, is a powder-magazine belonging to the British Government.
   --- SIVA
  --
   Born in an orthodox brahmin family, Sri Ramakrishna knew the formalities of worship, its rites and rituals. The innumerable gods and goddesses of the Hindu religion are the human aspects of the indescribable and incomprehensible Spirit, as conceived by the finite human mind. They understand and appreciate human love and emotion, help men to realize their secular and spiritual ideals, and ultimately enable men to attain liberation from the miseries of phenomenal life. The Source of light, intelligence, wisdom, and strength is the One alone from whom comes the fulfilment of desire. Yet, as long as a man is bound by his human limitations, he cannot but worship God through human forms. He must use human symbols. Therefore Hinduism asks the devotees to look on God as the ideal father, the ideal mother, the ideal husband, the ideal son, or the ideal friend. But the name ultimately leads to the Nameless, the form to the Formless, the word to the Silence, the emotion to the serene realization of Peace in Existence-Knowledge-Bliss Absolute. The gods gradually merge in the one God. But until that realization is achieved, the devotee cannot dissociate human factors from his worship. Therefore the Deity is bathed and clothed and decked with ornaments. He is fed and put to sleep. He is propitiated with hymns, songs, and prayers. And there are appropriate rites connected with all these functions. For instance, to secure for himself external purity, the priest bathes himself in holy water and puts on a holy cloth. He purifies the mind and the sense-organs by appropriate meditations. He fortifies the place of worship against evil forces by drawing around it circles of fire and water. He awakens the different spiritual centres of the body and invokes the Supreme Spirit in his heart. Then he transfers the Supreme Spirit to the image before him and worships the image, regarding it no longer as clay or stone, but as the embodiment of Spirit, throbbing with Life and Consciousness. After the worship the Supreme Spirit is recalled from the image to Its true sanctuary, the heart of the priest. The real devotee knows the absurdity of worshipping the Transcendental Reality with material articles — clothing That which pervades the whole universe and the beyond, putting on a pedestal That which cannot be limited by space, feeding That which is disembodied and incorporeal, singing before That whose glory the music of the spheres tries vainly to proclaim. But through these rites the devotee aspires to go ultimately beyond rites and rituals, forms and names, words and praise, and to realize God as the All-pervading Consciousness.
   Hindu priests are thoroughly acquainted with the rites of worship, but few of them are aware of their underlying significance. They move their hands and limbs mechanically, in obedience to the letter of the scriptures, and repeat the holy mantras like parrots. But from the very beginning the inner meaning of these rites was revealed to Sri Ramakrishna. As he sat facing the image, a strange transformation came over his mind. While going through the prescribed ceremonies, he would actually find himself encircled by a wall of fire protecting him and the place of worship from unspiritual vibrations, or he would feel the rising of the mystic Kundalini through the different centres of the body. The glow on his face, his deep absorption, and the intense atmosphere of the temple impressed everyone who saw him worship the Deity.
  --
   The worship in the temple intensified Sri Ramakrishna's yearning for a living vision of the Mother of the Universe. He began to spend in meditation the time not actually employed in the temple service; and for this purpose he selected an extremely solitary place. A deep jungle, thick with underbrush and prickly plants, lay to the north of the temples. used at one time as a burial ground, it was shunned by people even during the day-time for fear of ghosts. There Sri Ramakrishna began to spend the whole night in meditation, returning to his room only in the morning with eyes swollen as though from much weeping. While meditating, he would lay aside his cloth and his brahminical thread. Explaining this strange conduct, he once said to Hriday: "Don't you know that when one thinks of God one should be freed from all ties? From our very birth we have the eight fetters of hatred, shame, lineage, pride of good conduct, fear, secretiveness, caste, and grief. The sacred thread reminds me that I am a brahmin and therefore superior to all. When calling on the Mother one has to set aside all such ideas." Hriday thought his uncle was becoming insane.
   As his love for God deepened, he began either to forget or to drop the formalities of worship. Sitting before the image, he would spend hours singing the devotional songs of great devotees of the Mother, such as Kamalakanta and Ramprasad. Those rhapsodical songs, describing the direct vision of God, only intensified Sri Ramakrishna's longing. He felt the pangs of a child separated from its mother. Sometimes, in agony, he would rub his face against the ground and weep so bitterly that people, thinking he had lost his earthly mother, would sympathize with him in his grief. Sometimes, in moments of scepticism, he would cry: "Art Thou true, Mother, or is it all fiction — mere poetry without any reality? If Thou dost exist, why do I not see Thee? Is religion a mere fantasy and art Thou only a figment of man's imagination?" Sometimes he would sit on the prayer carpet for two hours like an inert object. He began to behave in an abnormal manner
  --
   Hardly had he crossed the threshold of the Kali temple when he found himself again in the whirlwind. His madness reappeared tenfold. The same meditation and prayer, the same ecstatic moods, the same burning sensation, the same weeping, the same sleeplessness, the same indifference to the body and the outside world, the same divine delirium. He subjected himself to fresh disciplines in order to eradicate greed and lust, the two great impediments to spiritual progress. With a rupee in one hand and some earth in the other, he would reflect on the comparative value of these two for the realization of God, and finding them equally worthless he would toss them, with equal indifference, into the Ganges. Women he regarded as the manifestations of the Divine Mother. Never even in a dream did he feel the impulses of lust. And to root out of his mind the idea of caste superiority, he cleaned a pariahs ho use with his long and neglected hair. When he would sit in meditation, birds would perch on his head and peck in his hair for grains of food. Snakes would crawl over his body, and neither would be aware of the other. Sleep left him altogether. Day and night, visions flitted before him. He saw the sannyasi who had previously killed the "sinner" in him again coming out of his body, threatening him with the trident, and ordering him to concentrate on God. Or the same sannyasi would visit distant places, following a luminous path, and bring him reports of what was happening there. Sri Ramakrishna used to say later that in the case of an advanced devotee the mind itself becomes the guru, living and moving like an embodied being.
   Rani Rasmani, the foundress of the temple garden, passed away in 1861. After her death her son-in-law Mathur became the sole executor of the estate. He placed himself and his resources at the disposal of Sri Ramakrishna and began to look after his physical comfort. Sri Ramakrishna later spoke of him as one of his five "suppliers of stores" appointed by the Divine Mother. Whenever a desire arose in his mind, Mathur fulfilled it without hesitation.
  --
   Sri Ramakrishna was a learner all his life. He often used to quote a proverb to his disciples: "Friend, the more I live the more I learn." When the excitement created by the Brahmani's declaration was over, he set himself to the task of practising spiritual disciplines according to the traditional methods laid down in the Tantra and Vaishnava scriptures. Hitherto he had pursued his spiritual ideal according to the promptings of his own mind and heart. Now he accepted the Brahmani as his guru and set foot on the traditional highways.
   --- TANTRA
  --
   One day, listening to a recitation of the Bhagavata on the verandah of the Radhakanta temple, he fell into a divine mood and saw the enchanting form of Krishna. He perceived the luminous rays issuing from Krishna's Lotus Feet in the form of a stout rope, which touched first the Bhagavata and then his own chest, connecting all three — God, the scripture, and the devotee. "After this vision", he used to say, "I came to realize that Bhagavan, Bhakta, and Bhagavata — God, Devotee, and Scripture — are in reality one and the same."
   --- VEDANTA
  --
   Totapuri asked the disciple to withdraw his mind from all objects of the relative world, including the gods and goddesses, and to concentrate on the Absolute. But the task was not easy even for Sri Ramakrishna. He found it impossible to take his mind beyond Kali, the Divine Mother of the Universe. "After the initiation", Sri Ramakrishna once said, describing the event, "Nangta began to teach me the various conclusions of the Advaita Vedanta and asked me to withdraw the mind completely from all objects and dive deep into the Atman. But in spite of all my attempts I could not altogether cross the realm of name and form and bring my mind to the unconditioned state. I had no difficulty in taking the mind from all the objects of the world. But the radiant and too familiar figure of the Blissful Mother, the Embodiment of the essence of Pure Consciousness, appeared before me as a living reality. Her bewitching smile prevented me from passing into the Great Beyond. Again and again I tried, but She stood in my way every time. In despair I said to Nangta: 'It is hopeless. I cannot raise my mind to the unconditioned state and come face to face with Atman.' He grew excited and sharply said: 'What? You can't do it? But you have to.' He cast his eyes around. Finding a piece of glass he took it up and stuck it between my eyebrows. 'Concentrate the mind on this point!' he thundered. Then with stern determination I again sat to meditate. As soon as the gracious form of the Divine Mother appeared before me, I used my discrimination as a sword and with it clove Her in two. The last barrier fell. My spirit at once soared beyond the relative plane and I lost myself in samadhi."
   Sri Ramakrishna remained completely absorbed in samadhi for three days. "Is it really true?" Totapuri cried out in astonishment. "Is it possible that he has attained in a single day what it took me forty years of strenuous practice to achieve? Great God! It is nothing short of a miracle!" With the help of Totapuri, Sri Ramakrishna's mind finally came down to the relative plane.
  --
   Sri Ramakrishna used to say that when the flower blooms the bees come to it for honey of their own accord. Now many souls began to visit Dakshineswar to satisfy their spiritual hunger. He, the devotee and aspirant, became the Master. Gauri, the great scholar who had been one of the first to proclaim Sri Ramakrishna an Incarnation of God, paid the Master a visit in 1870 and with the Master's blessings renounced the world. Narayan Shastri, another great pundit, who had mastered the six systems of Hindu philosophy and had been offered a lucrative post by the Maharaja of Jaipur, met the Master and recognized in him one who had realized in life those ideals which he himself had encountered merely in books. Sri Ramakrishna initiated Narayan Shastri, at his earnest request, into the life of sannyas. Pundit Padmalochan, the court pundit of the Maharaja of Burdwan, well known for his scholarship in both the Vedanta and the Nyaya systems of philosophy, accepted the Master as an Incarnation of God. Krishnakishore, a Vedantist scholar, became devoted to the Master. And there arrived Viswanath Upadhyaya, who was to become a favourite devotee; Sri Ramakrishna always addressed him as "Captain". He was a high officer of the King of Nepal and had received the title of Colonel in recognition of his merit. A scholar of the Gita, the Bhagavata, and the Vedanta philosophy, he daily performed the worship of his Chosen Deity with great devotion. "I have read the Vedas and the other scriptures", he said. "I have also met a good many monks and devotees in different places. But it is in Sri Ramakrishna's presence that my spiritual yearnings have been fulfilled. To me he seems to be the embodiment of the truths of the scriptures."
   The Knowledge of Brahman in nirvikalpa samadhi had convinced Sri Ramakrishna that the gods of the different religions are but so many readings of the Absolute, and that the Ultimate Reality could never be expressed by human tongue. He understood that all religions lead their devotees by differing paths to one and the same goal. Now he became eager to explore some of the alien religions; for with him understanding meant actual experience.
  --
   Eight years later, some time in November 1874, Sri Ramakrishna was seized with an irresistible desire to learn the truth of the Christian religion. He began to listen to readings from the Bible, by Sambhu Charan Mallick, a gentleman of Calcutta and a devotee of the Master. Sri Ramakrishna became fascinated by the life and teachings of Jesus. One day he was seated in the parlour of Jadu Mallick's garden ho use (This expression is used throughout to translate the Bengali word denoting a rich man's country ho use set in a garden.) at Dakshineswar, when his eyes became fixed on a painting of the Madonna and Child. Intently watching it, he became gradually overwhelmed with divine emotion. The figures in the picture took on life, and the rays of light emanating from them entered his soul. The effect of this experience was stronger than that of the vision of Mohammed. In dismay he cried out, "O Mother! What are You doing to me?" And, breaking through the barriers of creed and religion, he entered a new realm of ecstasy. Christ possessed his soul. For three days he did not set foot in the Kali temple. On the fourth day, in the afternoon, as he was walking in the Panchavati, he saw coming toward him a person with beautiful large eyes, serene countenance, and fair skin. As the two faced each other, a voice rang out in the depths of Sri Ramakrishna's soul: "Behold the Christ, who shed His heart's blood for the redemption of the world, who suffered a sea of anguish for love of men. It is He, the Master Yogi, who is in eternal union with God. It is Jesus, Love Incarnate." The Son of Man embraced the Son of the Divine Mother and merged in him. Sri Ramakrishna krishna realized his identity with Christ, as he had already realized his identity with Kali, Rama, Hanuman, Radha, Krishna, Brahman, and Mohammed. The Master went into samadhi and communed with the Brahman with attributes. Thus he experienced the truth that Christianity, too, was a path leading to God-Consciousness. Till the last moment of his life he believed that Christ was an Incarnation of God. But Christ, for him, was not the only Incarnation; there were others — Buddha, for instance, and Krishna.
   --- ATTITUDE TOWARD DIFFERENT RELIGIONS
   Sri Ramakrishna accepted the divinity of Buddha and used to point out the similarity of his teachings to those of the Upanishads. He also showed great respect for the Tirthankaras, who founded Jainism, and for the ten Gurus of Sikhism. But he did not speak of them as Divine Incarnations. He was heard to say that the Gurus of Sikhism were the reincarnations of King Janaka of ancient India. He kept in his room at Dakshineswar a small statue of Tirthankara Mahavira and a picture of Christ, before which incense was burnt morning and evening.
   Without being formally initiated into their doctrines, Sri Ramakrishna thus realized the ideals of religions other than Hinduism. He did not need to follow any doctrine. All barriers were removed by his overwhelming love of God. So he became a Master who could speak with authority regarding the ideas and ideals of the various religions of the world. "I have practised", said he, "all religions — Hinduism, Islam, Christianity — and I have also followed the paths of the different Hindu sects. I have found that it is the same God toward whom all are directing their steps, though along different paths. You must try all beliefs and traverse all the different ways once. Wherever I look, I see men quarrelling in the name of religion — Hindus, Mohammedans, Brahmos, Vaishnavas, and the rest. But they never reflect that He who is called Krishna is also called Siva, and bears the name of the Primal Energy, Jesus, and Allah as well — the same Rama with a thousand names. A lake has several ghats. At one the Hindus take water in pitchers and call it 'jal'; at another the Mussalmans take water in leather bags and call it pani'. At a third the Christians call it 'water'. Can we imagine that it is not 'jal', but only 'pani' or 'water'? How ridiculous! The substance is One under different names, and everyone is seeking the same substance; only climate, temperament, and name create differences. Let each man follow his own path. If he sincerely and ardently wishes to know God, peace be unto him! He will surely realize Him."
   In 1867 Sri Ramakrishna returned to Kamarpukur to recuperate from the effect of his austerities. The peaceful countryside, the simple and artless companions of his boyhood, and the pure air did him much good. The villagers were happy to get back their playful, frank, witty, kind-hearted, and truthful Gadadhar, though they did not fail to notice the great change that had come over him during his years in Calcutta. His wife, Sarada Devi, now fourteen years old, soon arrived at Kamarpukur. Her spiritual development was much beyond her age and she was able to understand immediately her husband's state of mind. She became eager to learn from him about God and to live with him as his attendant. The Master accepted her cheerfully both as his disciple and as his spiritual companion. Referring to the experiences of these few days, she once said: "I used to feel always as if a pitcher full of bliss were placed in my heart. The joy was indescribable."
   --- PILGRIMAGE
  --
   Second, the three great systems of thought known as Dualism, Qualified Non-dualism, and Absolute Non-dualism — Dvaita, Visishtadvaita, and Advaita — he perceived to represent three stages in man's progress toward the Ultimate Reality. They were not contradictory but complementary and suited to different temperaments. For the ordinary man with strong attachment to the senses, a dualistic form of religion, prescribing a certain amount of material support, such as music and other symbols, is useful. A man of God-realization transcends the idea of worldly duties, but the ordinary mortal must perform his duties, striving to be unattached and to surrender the results to God. The mind can comprehend and describe the range of thought and experience up to the Visishtadvaita, and no further. The Advaita, the last word in spiritual experience, is something to be felt in samadhi. for it transcends mind and speech. From the highest standpoint, the Absolute and Its manifestation are equally real — the Lord's Name, His Abode, and the Lord Himself are of the same spiritual Essence. Everything is Spirit, the difference being only in form.
   Third, Sri Ramakrishna realized the wish of the Divine Mother that through him She should found a new Order, consisting of those who would uphold the universal doctrines illustrated in his life.
  --
   Pratap Chandra Mazumdar, the right-hand man of Keshab and an accomplished Brahmo preacher in Europe and America, bitterly criticized Sri Ramakrishna's use of uncultured language and also his austere attitude toward his wife. But he could not escape the spell of the Master's personality. In the course of an article about Sri Ramakrishna, Pratap wrote in the "Theistic Quarterly Review": "What is there in common between him and me? I, a Europeanized, civilized, self-centred, semi-sceptical, so-called educated reasoner, and he, a poor, illiterate, unpolished, half-idolatrous, friendless Hindu devotee? Why should I sit long hours to attend to him, I, who have listened to Disraeli and Fawcett, Stanley and Max Muller, and a whole host of European scholars and divines? . . . And it is not I only, but dozens like me, who do the same. . . . He worships Siva, he worships Kali, he worships Rama, he worships Krishna, and is a confirmed advocate of Vedantic doctrines. . . . He is an idolater, yet is a faithful and most devoted meditator on the perfections of the One Formless, Absolute, Infinite Deity. . . . His religion is ecstasy, his worship means transcendental insight, his whole nature burns day and night with a permanent fire and fever of a strange faith and feeling. . . . So long as he is spared to us, gladly shall we sit at his feet to learn from him the sublime precepts of purity, unworldliness, spirituality, and inebriation in the love of God. . . . He, by his childlike bhakti, by his strong conceptions of an ever-ready Motherhood, helped to unfold it [God as our Mother] in our minds wonderfully. . . . By associating with him we learnt to realize better the divine attributes as scattered over the three hundred and thirty millions of deities of mythological India, the gods of the Puranas."
   The Brahmo leaders received much inspiration from their contact with Sri Ramakrishna. It broadened their religious views and kindled in their hearts the yearning for God-realization; it made them understand and appreciate the rituals and symbols of Hindu religion, convinced them of the manifestation of God in diverse forms, and deepened their thoughts about the harmony of religions. The Master, too, was impressed by the sincerity of many of the Brahmo devotees. He told them about his own realizations and explained to them the essence of his teachings, such as the necessity of renunciation, sincerity in the pursuit of one's own course of discipline, faith in God, the performance of one's duties without thought of results, and discrimination between the Real and the unreal.
  --
   ^The term "woman and gold", which has been used throughout in a collective sense, occurs again and again in the teachings of Sri Ramakrishna to designate the chief impediments to spiritual progress. This favourite expression of the Master, "kaminikanchan", has often been misconstrued. By it he meant only "lust and greed", the baneful influence of which retards the aspirant's spiritual growth. He used the word "kamini", or "woman", as a concrete term for the sex instinct when addressing his man devotees. He advised women, on the other hand, to shun "man". "Kanchan", or "gold", symbolizes greed, which is the other obstacle to spiritual life.
   Sri Ramakrishna never taught his disciples to hate any woman, or womankind in general. This can be seen clearly by going through all his teachings under this head and judging them collectively. The Master looked on all women as so many images of the Divine Mother of the Universe. He paid the highest homage to womankind by accepting a woman as his guide while practising the very profound spiritual disciplines of Tantra. His wife, known and revered as the Holy Mother, was his constant companion and first disciple. At the end of his spiritual practice he literally worshipped his wife as the embodiment of the Goddess Kali, the Divine Mother. After his passing away the Holy Mother became the spiritual guide not only of a large number of ho useholders, but also of many monastic members of the Ramakrishna Order.
  --
   ^The word is generally used in the text to denote one devoted to God, a worshipper of the Personal God, or a follower of the path of love. A devotee of Sri Ramakrishna is one who is devoted to Sri Ramakrishna and follows his teachings. The word "disciple", when used in connexion with Sri Ramakrishna, refers to one who had been initiated into spiritual life by Sri Ramakrishna and who regarded him as his guru.
   --- THE MASTER'S METHOD OF TEACHING
   But he remained as ever the willing instrument in the hand of God, the child of the Divine Mother, totally untouched by the idea of being a teacher. He used to say that three ideas — that he was a guru, a father, and a master — pricked his flesh like thorns. Yet he was an extraordinary teacher. He stirred his disciples' hearts more by a subtle influence than by actions or words. He never claimed to be the founder of a religion or the organizer of a sect. Yet he was a religious dynamo. He was the verifier of all religions and creeds. He was like an expert gardener, who prepares the soil and removes the weeds, knowing that the plants will grow beca use of the inherent power of the seeds, producing each its appropriate flowers and fruits. He never thrust his ideas on anybody. He understood people's limitations and worked on the principle that what is good for one may be bad for another. He had the unusual power of knowing the devotees' minds, even their inmost souls, at the first sight. He accepted disciples with the full knowledge of their past tendencies and future possibilities. The life of evil did not frighten him, nor did religious squeamishness raise anybody in his estimation. He saw in everything the unerring finger of the Divine Mother. Even the light that leads astray was to him the light from God.
   To those who became his intimate disciples the Master was a friend, companion, and playmate. Even the chores of religious discipline would be lightened in his presence. The devotees would be so inebriated with pure joy in his company that they would have no time to ask themselves whether he was an Incarnation, a perfect soul, or a yogi. His very presence was a great teaching; words were superfluous. In later years his disciples remarked that while they were with him they would regard him as a comrade, but afterwards would tremble to think of their frivolities in the presence of such a great person. They had convincing proof that the Master could, by his mere wish, kindle in their hearts the love of God and give them His vision.
  --
   Girish Chandra Ghosh was a born rebel against God, a sceptic, a Bohemian, a drunkard. He was the greatest Bengali dramatist of his time, the father of the modem Bengali stage. Like other young men he had imbibed all the vices of the West. He had plunged into a life of dissipation and had become convinced that religion was only a fraud. Materialistic philosophy he justified as enabling one to get at least a little fun out of life. But a series of reverses shocked him and he became eager to solve the riddle of life. He had heard people say that in spiritual life the help of a guru was imperative and that the guru was to be regarded as God Himself. But Girish was too well acquainted with human nature to see perfection in a man. His first meeting with Sri Ramakrishna did not impress him at all. He returned home feeling as if he had seen a freak at a circus; for the Master, in a semi-conscious mood, had inquired whether it was evening, though the lamps were burning in the room. But their paths often crossed, and Girish could not avoid further encounters. The Master attended a performance in Girish's Star Theatre. On this occasion, too, Girish found nothing impressive about him. One day, however, Girish happened to see the Master dancing and singing with the devotees. He felt the contagion and wanted to join them, but restrained himself for fear of ridicule. Another day Sri Ramakrishna was about to give him spiritual instruction, when Girish said: "I don't want to listen to instructions. I have myself written many instructions. They are of no use to me. Please help me in a more tangible way If you can." This pleased the Master and he asked Girish to cultivate faith.
   As time passed, Girish began to learn that the guru is the one who silently unfolds the disciple's inner life. He became a steadfast devotee of the Master. He often loaded the Master with insults, drank in his presence, and took liberties which astounded the other devotees. But the Master knew that at heart Girish was tender, faithful, and sincere. He would not allow Girish to give up the theatre. And when a devotee asked him to tell Girish to give up drinking, he sternly replied: "That is none of your business. He who has taken charge of him will look after him. Girish is a devotee of heroic type. I tell you, drinking will not affect him." The Master knew that mere words could not induce a man to break deep-rooted habits, but that the silent influence of love worked miracles. Therefore he never asked him to give up alcohol, with the result that Girish himself eventually broke the habit. Sri Ramakrishna had strengthened Girish's resolution by allowing him to feel that he was absolutely free.
  --
   Mahimacharan and Pratap Hazra were two devotees outstanding for their pretentiousness and idiosyncrasies. But the Master showed them his unfailing love and kindness, though he was aware of their shortcomings. Mahimacharan Chakravarty had met the Master long before the arrival of the other disciples. He had had the intention of leading a spiritual life, but a strong desire to acquire name and fame was his weakness. He claimed to have been initiated by Totapuri and used to say that he had been following the path of knowledge according to his guru's instructions. He possessed a large library of English and Sanskrit books. But though he pretended to have read them, most of the leaves were uncut. The Master knew all his limitations, yet enjoyed listening to him recite from the Vedas and other scriptures. He would always exhort Mahima to meditate on the meaning of the scriptural texts and to practise spiritual discipline.
   Pratap Hazra, a middle-aged man, hailed from a village near Kamarpukur. He was not altogether unresponsive to religious feelings. On a moment's impulse he had left his home, aged mother, wife, and children, and had found shelter in the temple garden at Dakshineswar, where he intended to lead a spiritual life. He loved to argue, and the Master often pointed him out as an example of barren argumentation. He was hypercritical of others and cherished an exaggerated notion of his own spiritual advancement. He was mischievous and often tried to upset the minds of the Master's young disciples, criticizing them for their happy and joyous life and asking them to devote their time to meditation. The Master teasingly compared Hazra to Jatila and Kutila, the two women who always created obstructions in Krishna's sport with the gopis, and said that Hazra lived at Dakshineswar to "thicken the plot" by adding complications.
  --
   Even before Rakhal's coming to Dakshineswar, the Master had had visions of him as his spiritual son and as a playmate of Krishna at Vrindavan. Rakhal was born of wealthy parents. During his childhood he developed wonderful spiritual traits and used to play at worshipping gods and goddesses. In his teens he was married to a sister of Manomohan Mitra, from whom he first heard of the Master. His father objected to his association with Sri Ramakrishna but afterwards was reassured to find that many celebrated people were visitors at Dakshineswar. The relationship between the Master and this beloved disciple was that of mother and child. Sri Ramakrishna allowed Rakhal many liberties denied to others. But he would not hesitate to chastise the boy for improper actions. At one time Rakhal felt a childlike jealousy beca use he found that other boys were receiving the Master's affection. He soon got over it and realized his guru as the Guru of the whole universe. The Master was worried to hear of his marriage, but was relieved to find that his wife was a spiritual soul who would not be a hindrance to his progress.
   --- THE ELDER GOPAL
  --
   Baburam Ghosh came to Dakshineswar accompanied by Rakhal, his classmate. The Master, as was often his custom, examined the boy's physiognomy and was satisfied about his latent spirituality. At the age of eight Baburam had thought of leading a life of renunciation, in the company of a monk, in a hut shut out from the public view by a thick wall of trees. The very sight of the Panchavati awakened in his heart that dream of boyhood. Baburam was tender in body and soul. The Master used to say that he was pure to his very bones. One day Hazra in his usual mischievous fashion advised Baburam and some of the other young boys to ask Sri Ramakrishna for some spiritual powers and not waste their life in mere gaiety and merriment. The Master, scenting mischief, called Baburam to his side and said: "What can you ask of me? Isn't everything that I have already yours? Yes, everything I have earned in the shape of realizations is for the sake of you all. So get rid of the idea of begging, which alienates by creating a distance. Rather realize your kinship with me and gain the key to all the treasures.
   --- NIRANJAN

0.00 - The Book of Lies Text, #The Book of Lies, #Aleister Crowley, #Philosophy
    do so without doing much harm. For it cannot be used
    indiscriminately...I have found in practice that the
    secret of the O.T.O. cannot be used unworthily...."
     "It is interesting in this connection to recall how it
  --
     somehow vital. by use they become luminous.
    Unreason becomes Experience.
  --
     It is useless to enquire into His nature; to do so leads
    to certain disaster. Authority from him is exhibited,
  --
    a thing is true or not: he uses truth and falsehood in-
    discriminately, to serve his ends. Slaves consider him
  --
     illustrates the use of the lower life to feed the
     higher life.
  --
     This chapter means that it is useless to try to abandon
    the Great Work. You may occupy yourself for a time
  --
  Zelator is used beca use the Zelator of the A.'.A.'. has to pass an examination
  in Asana before he becomes eligible for the grade of Practicus. The ten days
  --
  The third person plural must be used, beca use he has now perceived himself
  to be a bundle of impressions. For this is the point on the Path of Gimel when
  --
   That this is the true meaning, or rather use, of this chapter, is evident fro
  the poetry.
  --
    Nature is useless; but then how beautiful she is!
    Nature is cruel; but I too am a Sadist.
  --
     Paragraph 1 explains that Frater P. sees no use
    in the employment of such feeble implements as bombs.
  --
  as Father-and-Mother. I-H (Yod and He), Eta ({Eta}) being used
  to express "the Mother" instead of Epsilon ({Epsilon}), to show that She

0.00 - THE GOSPEL PREFACE, #The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, #Sri Ramakrishna, #Hinduism
  "M", as the author modestly styles himself, was peculiarly qualified for his task. To a reverent love for his master, to a deep and experiential knowledge of that master's teaching, he added a prodigious memory for the small happenings of each day and a happy gift for recording them in an interesting and realistic way. Making good use of his natural gifts and of the circumstances in which he found himself, "M" produced a book unique, so far as my knowledge goes, in the literature of hagiography. No other saint has had so able and indefatigable a Boswell. Never have the small events of a contemplative's daily life been described with such a wealth of intimate detail. Never have the casual and unstudied utterances of a great religious teacher been set down with so minute a fidelity. To Western readers, it is true, this fidelity and this wealth of detail are sometimes a trifle disconcerting; for the social, religious and intellectual frames of reference within which Sri Ramakrishna did his thinking and expressed his feelings were entirely Indian. But after the first few surprises and bewilderments, we begin to find something peculiarly stimulating and instructive about the very strangeness and, to our eyes, the eccentricity of the man revealed to us in "M's" narrative. What a scholastic philosopher would call the "accidents" of Ramakrishna's life were intensely Hindu and therefore, so far as we in the West are concerned, unfamiliar and hard to understand; its "essence", however, was intensely mystical and therefore universal. To read through these conversations in which mystical doctrine alternates with an unfamiliar kind of humour, and where discussions of the oddest aspects of Hindu mythology give place to the most profound and subtle utterances about the nature of Ultimate Reality, is in itself a liberal, education in humility, tolerance and suspense of judgment. We must be grateful to the translator for his excellent version of a book so curious and delightful as a biographical document, so precious, at the same time, for what it teaches us of the life of the spirit.
  --------------------
  --
  I have made a literal translation, omitting only a few pages of no particular interest to English-speaking readers. Often literary grace has been sacrificed for the sake of literal translation. No translation can do full justice to the original. This difficulty is all the more felt in the present work, whose contents are of a deep mystical nature and describe the inner experiences of a great seer. Human language is an altogether inadequate vehicle to express supersensuous perception. Sri Ramakrishna was almost illiterate. He never clothed his thoughts in formal language. His words sought to convey his direct realization of Truth. His conversation was in a village patois. Therein lies its charm. In order to explain to his listeners an abstr use philosophy, he, like Christ before him, used with telling effect homely parables and illustrations, culled from his observation of the daily life around him.
  The reader will find mentioned in this work many visions and experiences that fall outside the ken of physical science and even psychology. With the development of modern knowledge the border line between the natural and the supernatural is ever shifting its position. Genuine mystical experiences are not as suspect now as they were half a century ago. The words of Sri Ramakrishna have already exerted a tremendous influence in the land of his birth. Savants of Europe have found in his words the ring of universal truth.
  --
  There are repetitions of teachings and parables in the book. I have kept them purposely. They have their charm and usefulness, repeated as they were in different settings. Repetition is unavoidable in a work of this kind. In the first place, different seekers come to a religious teacher with questions of more or less identical nature; hence the answers will be of more or less identical pattern. Besides, religious teachers of all times and climes have tried, by means of repetition, to hammer truths into the stony soil of the recalcitrant human mind. Finally, repetition does not seem tedious if the ideas repeated are dear to a man's heart.
  I have thought it necessary to write a rather lengthy Introduction to the book. In it I have given the biography of the Master, descriptions of people who came in contact with him, short explanations of several systems of Indian religious thought intimately connected with Sri Ramakrishna's life, and other relevant matters which, I hope, will enable the reader better to understand and appreciate the unusual contents of this book. It is particularly important that the Western reader, unacquainted with Hindu religious thought, should first read carefully the introductory chapter, in order that he may fully enjoy these conversations. Many Indian terms and names have been retained in the book for want of suitable English equivalents. Their meaning is given either in the Glossary or in the foot-notes. The Glossary also gives explanations of a number of expressions unfamiliar to Western readers. The diacritical marks are explained under Notes on Pronunciation.
  --
  Imparting secular education was, however, only his profession ; his main concern was with the spiritual regeneration of man a calling for which Destiny seems to have chosen him. From his childhood he was deeply pious, and he used to be moved very much by Sdhus, temples and Durga Puja celebrations. The piety and eloquence of the great Brahmo leader of the times, Keshab Chander Sen, elicited a powerful response from the impressionable mind of Mahendra Nath, as it did in the case of many an idealistic young man of Calcutta, and prepared him to receive the great Light that was to dawn on him with the coming of Sri Ramakrishna into his life.
  This epoch-making event of his life came about in a very strange way. M. belonged to a joint family with several collateral members. Some ten years after he began his career as an educationist, bitter quarrels broke out among the members of the family, driving the sensitive M. to despair and utter despondency. He lost all interest in life and left home one night to go into the wide world with the idea of ending his life. At dead of night he took rest in his sister's ho use at Baranagar, and in the morning, accompanied by a nephew Siddheswar, he wandered from one garden to another in Calcutta until Siddheswar brought him to the Temple Garden of Dakshineswar where Sri Ramakrishna was then living. After spending some time in the beautiful rose gardens there, he was directed to the room of the Paramahamsa, where the eventful meeting of the Master and the disciple took place on a blessed evening (the exact date is not on record) on a Sunday in March 1882. As regards what took place on the occasion, the reader is referred to the opening section of the first chapter of the Gospel.
  The Master, who divined the mood of desperation in M, his resolve to take leave of this 'play-field of deception', put new faith and hope into him by his gracious words of assurance: "God forbid! Why should you take leave of this world? Do you not feel blessed by discovering your Guru? By His grace, what is beyond all imagination or dreams can be easily achieved!" At these words the clouds of despair moved away from the horizon of M.'s mind, and the sunshine of a new hope revealed to him fresh vistas of meaning in life. Referring to this phase of his life, M. used to say, "Behold! where is the resolve to end life, and where, the discovery of God! That is, sorrow should be looked upon as a friend of man. God is all good." ( Ibid P.33.)
  After this re-settlement, M's life revolved around the Master, though he continued his professional work as an educationist. During all holidays, including Sundays, he spent his time at Dakshineswar in the Master's company, and at times extended his stay to several days.
  --
  Besides undergoing spiritual disciplines at the feet of the Master, M. used to go to holy places during the Master's lifetime itself and afterwards too as a part of his Sdhan.
  He was one of the earliest of the disciples to visit Kamarpukur, the birthplace of the Master, in the latter's lifetime itself; for he wished to practise contemplation on the Master's early life in its true original setting. His experience there is described as follows by Swami Nityatmananda: "By the grace of the Master, he saw the entire Kamarpukur as a holy place bathed in an effulgent Light. Trees and creepers, beasts and birds and men all were made of effulgence. So he prostrated to all on the road. He saw a torn cat, which appeared to him luminous with the Light of Consciousness. Immediately he fell to the ground and saluted it" (M The Apostle and the Evangelist by Swami Nityatmananda vol. I. P. 40.) He had similar experience in Dakshineswar also. At the instance of the Master he also visited Puri, and in the words of Swami Nityatmananda, "with indomitable courage, M. embraced the image of Jagannath out of season."
  --
  M. spent his weekends and holidays with the monastic brethren who, after the Master's demise, had formed themselves into an Order with a Math at Baranagore, and participated in the intense life of devotion and meditation that they followed. At other times he would retire to Dakshineswar or some garden in the city and spend several days in spiritual practice taking simple self-cooked food. In order to feel that he was one with all mankind he often used to go out of his home at dead of night, and like a wandering Sannysin, sleep with the waifs on some open verandah or footpath on the road.
  After the Master's demise, M. went on pilgrimage several times. He visited Banras, Vrindvan, Ayodhy and other places. At Banras he visited the famous Trailinga Swmi and fed him with sweets, and he had long conversations with Swami Bhaskarananda, one of the noted saintly and scholarly Sannysins of the time. In 1912 he went with the Holy Mother to Banras, and spent about a year in the company of Sannysins at Banras, Vrindvan, Hardwar, Hrishikesh and Swargashram. But he returned to Calcutta, as that city offered him the unique opportunity of associating himself with the places hallowed by the Master in his lifetime. Afterwards he does not seem to have gone to any far-off place, but stayed on in his room in the Morton School carrying on his spiritual ministry, speaking on the Master and his teachings to the large number of people who flocked to him after having read his famous Kathmrita known to English readers as The Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna.
  --
  And Swamiji added a post script to the letter: "Socratic dialogues are Plato all over you are entirely hidden. Moreover, the dramatic part is infinitely beautiful. Everybody likes it here or in the West." Indeed, in order to be unknown, Mahendranath had used the pen-name M., under which the book has been appearing till now. But so great a book cannot remain obscure for long, nor can its author remain unrecognised by the large public in these modern times. M. and his book came to be widely known very soon and to meet the growing demand, a full-sized book, Vol. I of the Gospel, translated by the author himself, was published in 1907 by the Brahmavadin Office, Madras. A second edition of it, revised by the author, was brought out by the Ramakrishna Math, Madras in December 1911, and subsequently a second part, containing new chapters from the original Bengali, was published by the same Math in 1922. The full English translation of the Gospel by Swami Nikhilananda appeared first in 1942.
  In Bengali the book is published in five volumes, the first part having appeared in 1902
  --
  had sent his devotees who used to keep company with him, to attend the special worship at Belur Math at night. After attending the service at the home shrine, he went through the proof of the Kathmrita for an hour. Suddenly he got a severe attack of neuralgic pain, from which he had been suffering now and then, of late. Before 6 a.m. in the early hours of 4th June 1932 he passed away, fully conscious and chanting: 'Gurudeva-Ma, Kole tule na-o (Take me in your arms! O Master! O Mother!!)'
  SWMI TAPASYNANDA

0.00 - The Wellspring of Reality, #Synergetics - Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking, #R Buckminster Fuller, #Science
  It follows that the more specialized society becomes, the less attention does it pay to the discoveries of the mind, which are intuitively beamed toward the brain, there to be received only if the switches are "on." Specialization tends to shut off the wide-band tuning searches and thus to preclude further discovery of the all-powerful generalized principles. Again we see how society's perverse fixation on specialization leads to its extinction. We are so specialized that one man discovers empirically how to release the energy of the atom, while another, unbeknownst to him, is ordered by his political factotum to make an atomic bomb by use of the secretly and anonymously published data. That gives much expedient employment, which solves the politician's momentary problem, but requires that the politicians keep on preparing for further warring with other political states to keep their respective peoples employed. It is also mistakenly assumed that employment is the only means by which humans can earn the right to live, for politicians have yet to discover how much wealth is available for distribution. All this is rationalized on the now scientifically discredited premise that there can never be enough life support for all. Thus humanity's specialization leads only toward warring and such devastating tools, both, visible and invisible, as ultimately to destroy all Earthians.
  Only a comprehensive switch from the narrowing specialization and toward an evermore inclusive and refining comprehension by all humanity-regarding all the factors governing omnicontinuing life aboard our spaceship Earth-can bring about reorientation from the self-extinction-bound human trending, and do so within the critical time remaining before we have passed the point of chemical process irretrievability.
  --
  Intellectually advantaged with no more than the child's facile, lucid eagerness to understand constructively and usefully the major transformational events of our own times, it probably is synergetically advantageous to review swiftly the most comprehensive inventory of the most powerful human environment transforming events of our totally known and reasonably extended history. This is especially useful in winnowing out and understanding the most significant of the metaphysical revolutions now recognized as swiftly tending to reconstitute history. By such a comprehensively schematic review, we might identify also the unprecedented and possibly heretofore overlooked pivotal revolutionary events not only of today but also of those trending to be central to tomorrow's most cataclysmic changes.
  It is synergetically reasonable to assume that relativistic evaluation of any of the separate drives of art, science, education, economics, and ideology, and their complexedly interacting trends within our own times, may be had only through the most comprehensive historical sweep of which we are capable.

0.01f - FOREWARD, #The Phenomenon of Man, #Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, #Christianity
  net. A geologist would use the words metamorphism and
  endomorphism. Object and subject marry and mutually trans-

0.01 - I - Sri Aurobindos personality, his outer retirement - outside contacts after 1910 - spiritual personalities- Vibhutis and Avatars - transformtion of human personality, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
   The Evening Talks collected here may afford to the outside world a glimpse of his external personality and give the seeker some idea of its richness, its many-sidedness, its uniqueness. One can also form some notion of Sri Aurobindo's personality from the books in which the height, the universal sweep and clear vision of his integral ideal and thought can be seen. His writings are, in a sense, the best representative of his mental personality. The versatile nature of his genius, the penetrating power of his intellect, his extraordinary power of expression, his intense sincerity, his utter singleness of purpose all these can be easily felt by any earnest student of his works. He may discover even in the realm of mind that Sri Aurobindo brings the unlimited into the limited. Another side of his dynamic personality is represented by the Ashram as an institution. But the outer, if one may use the phrase, the human side of his personality, is unknown to the outside world beca use from 1910 to 1950 a span of forty years he led a life of outer retirement. No doubt, many knew about his staying at Pondicherry and practising some kind of very special Yoga to the mystery of which they had no access. To some, perhaps, he was living a life of enviable solitude enjoying the luxury of a spiritual endeavour. Many regretted his retirement as a great loss to the world beca use they could not see any external activity on his part which could be regarded as 'public', 'altruistic' or 'beneficial'. Even some of his admirers thought that he was after some kind of personal salvation which would have very little significance for mankind in general. His outward non-participation in public life was construed by many as lack of love for humanity.
   But those who knew him during the days of the national awakening from 1900 to 1910 could not have these doubts. And even these initial misunderstandings and false notions of others began to evaporate with the growth of the Sri Aurobindo Ashram from 1927 onwards. The large number of books published by the Ashram also tended to remove the idea of the other-worldliness of his Yoga and the absence of any good by it to mankind.
   This period of outer retirement was one of intense Sadhana and of intellectual activity it was also one during which he acted on external events, though he was not dedicated outwardly to a public ca use. About his own retirement he writes: "But this did not mean, as most people supposed, that he [Sri Aurobindo] had retired into some height of spiritual experience devoid of any further interest in the world or in the fate of India. It could not mean that, for the very principle of his Yoga was not only to realise the Divine and attain to a complete spiritual consciousness, but also to take all life and all world activity into the scope of this spiritual consciousness and action and to base life on the Spirit and give it a spiritual meaning. In his retirement Sri Aurobindo kept a close watch on all that was happening in the world and in India and actively intervened, whenever necessary, but solely with a spiritual force and silent spiritual action; for it is part of the experience of those who have advanced in yoga that besides the ordinary forces and activities of the mind and life and body in Matter, there are other forces and powers that can and do act from behind and from above; there is also a spiritual dynamic power which can be possessed by those who are advanced in spiritual consciousness, though all do not care to possess or, possessing, to use it and this power is greater than any other and more effective. It was this force which, as soon as he attained to it, he used at first only in a limited field of personal work, but afterwards in a constant action upon the world forces."[1]
   Twice he found it necessary to go out of his way to make public pronouncements on important world-issues, which shows distinctly that renunciation of life is not a part of his Yoga. "The first was in relation to the Second World War. At the beginning he did not actively concern himself with it, but when it appeared as if Hitler would crush all the forces opposed to him and Nazism dominate the world, he began to intervene."[2]

0.01 - Letters from the Mother to Her Son, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  It is no use lamenting, however, saying: Where are you
  headed! The final collapse, the general bankruptcy seems obvious enough... unless... There is always an "unless" in the history
  --
  and diplomacy were used, but on the other hand, behind every
  human will there are forces at work whose origin is not human

0.01 - Life and Yoga, #The Synthesis Of Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Yoga, as Swami Vivekananda has said, may be regarded as a means of compressing one's evolution into a single life or a few years or even a few months of bodily existence. A given system of Yoga, then, can be no more than a selection or a compression, into narrower but more energetic forms of intensity, of the general methods which are already being used loosely, largely, in a leisurely movement, with a prof user apparent waste of material and energy but with a more complete combination by the great
  Mother in her vast upward labour. It is this view of Yoga that can alone form the basis for a sound and rational synthesis of Yogic methods. For then Yoga ceases to appear something mystic and abnormal which has no relation to the ordinary processes of the World-Energy or the purpose she keeps in view in her two great movements of subjective and objective selffulfilment; it reveals itself rather as an intense and exceptional use of powers that she has already manifested or is progressively
  Life and Yoga
  --
  Rajayoga, for instance, depends on this perception and experience that our inner elements, combinations, functions, forces, can be separated or dissolved, can be new-combined and set to novel and formerly impossible workings or can be transformed and resolved into a new general synthesis by fixed internal processes. Hathayoga similarly depends on this perception and experience that the vital forces and functions to which our life is normally subjected and whose ordinary operations seem set and indispensable, can be mastered and the operations changed or suspended with results that would otherwise be impossible and that seem miraculous to those who have not seized the rationale of their process. And if in some other of its forms this character of Yoga is less apparent, beca use they are more intuitive and less mechanical, nearer, like the Yoga of Devotion, to a supernal ecstasy or, like the Yoga of Knowledge, to a supernal infinity of consciousness and being, yet they too start from the use of some principal faculty in us by ways and for ends not contemplated in its everyday spontaneous workings. All methods grouped under the common name of Yoga are special psychological processes founded on a fixed truth of Nature and developing, out of normal functions, powers and results which were always latent but which her ordinary movements do not easily or do not often manifest.
  But as in physical knowledge the multiplication of scientific processes has its disadvantages, as that tends, for instance, to develop a victorious artificiality which overwhelms our natural human life under a load of machinery and to purchase certain forms of freedom and mastery at the price of an increased servitude, so the preoccupation with Yogic processes and their exceptional results may have its disadvantages and losses. The

0.02 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  grey paint) A stool used by the Mother has been painted
  with "gris entretien". I had informed the stores not to
  --
  the progress made, but only if it is used as a lever to encourage
  one in the efforts towards the progress still to be made.
  --
  On the outside cover of a notebook used by X, there
  was a table of Rahukal, giving the inauspicious hours
  --
  of wood. A large quantity of old planks were thus used
  up. But Y expressed his dissatisfaction when he saw the
  --
  that it is I who gave the order to make all possible use of the old
  pieces of wood.
  --
  vessels used for cooking are very large, the top of the fireplaces should not be much higher than ground level. This must
  be checked while the kitchen is being repaired. The top of
  --
  which is used to lengthen or shorten the pendulum. I looked
  at the clock with my inner sight and told Z, "To make it go
  --
  for I think it may be useful to everyone there. I shall probably
  ask you to translate it into English, to make sure that you have
  --
  under a pile of useless things, beca use one cannot take
  care of them.
  --
  be useful.
  20 September 1934
  --
  only solution is to have a will stronger than his and to use it
  with great calm, but also with great determination.
  --
  Remorse is of no use; you have to feel the joy of the possibility
  of making further progress.
  --
   use me even as You use Your feet, O Sweet Mother.
  I bow to You in joyful gratitude.
  --
  want them to use their powers of observation and their technical
  knowledge to give me as precise and exact information as they

0.02 - The Three Steps of Nature, #The Synthesis Of Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  If the bodily life is what Nature has firmly evolved for us as her base and first instrument, it is our mental life that she is evolving as her immediate next aim and superior instrument. This in her ordinary exaltations is the lofty preoccupying thought in her; this, except in her periods of exhaustion and recoil into a reposeful and recuperating obscurity, is her constant pursuit wherever she can get free from the trammels of her first vital and physical realisations. For here in man we have a distinction which is of the utmost importance. He has in him not a single mentality, but a double and a triple, the mind material and nervous, the pure intellectual mind which liberates itself from the illusions of the body and the senses, and a divine mind above intellect which in its turn liberates itself from the imperfect modes of the logically discriminative and imaginative reason. Mind in man is first emmeshed in the life of the body, where in the plant it is entirely involved and in animals always imprisoned. It accepts this life as not only the first but the whole condition of its activities and serves its needs as if they were the entire aim of existence. But the bodily life in man is a base, not the aim, his first condition and not his last determinant. In the just idea of the ancients man is essentially the thinker, the Manu, the mental being who leads the life and the body,3 not the animal who is led by them. The true human existence, therefore, only begins when the intellectual mentality emerges out of the material and we begin more and more to live in the mind independent of the nervous and physical obsession and in the measure of that liberty are able to accept rightly and rightly to use the life of the body. For freedom and not a skilful subjection is the true means of mastery. A free, not a compulsory acceptance of the conditions, the enlarged and sublimated conditions of our physical being, is the high human ideal. But beyond this intellectual mentality is the divine.
  The mental life thus evolving in man is not, indeed, a
  --
  Indeed, the increasing effort towards a more intense mental life seems to create, frequently, an increasing disequilibrium of the human elements, so that it is possible for eminent scientists to describe genius as a form of insanity, a result of degeneration, a pathological morbidity of Nature. The phenomena which are used to justify this exaggeration, when taken not separately, but in connection with all other relevant data, point to a different truth. Genius is one attempt of the universal Energy to so quicken and intensify our intellectual powers that they shall be prepared for those more puissant, direct and rapid faculties which constitute the play of the supra-intellectual or divine mind. It is not, then, a freak, an inexplicable phenomenon, but a perfectly natural next step in the right line of her evolution.
  She has harmonised the bodily life with the material mind, she is harmonising it with the play of the intellectual mentality; for that, although it tends to a depression of the full animal and vital vigour, need not produce active disturbances. And she is shooting yet beyond in the attempt to reach a still higher level.
  --
  The only approximate terms in the English language have other associations and their use may lead to many and even serious inaccuracies. The terminology of Yoga recognises besides the status of our physical and vital being, termed the gross body and doubly composed of the food sheath and the vital vehicle, besides the status of our mental being, termed the subtle body and singly composed of the mind sheath or mental vehicle,5 a third, supreme and divine status of supra-mental being, termed the causal body and composed of a fourth and a fifth vehicle6 which are described as those of knowledge and bliss. But this knowledge is not a systematised result of mental questionings and reasonings, not a temporary arrangement of conclusions and opinions in the terms of the highest probability, but rather a pure self-existent and self-luminous Truth. And this bliss is not a supreme pleasure of the heart and sensations with the experience of pain and sorrow as its background, but a delight also selfexistent and independent of objects and particular experiences, a self-delight which is the very nature, the very stuff, as it were, of a transcendent and infinite existence.
   antah.karan.a.
  --
   we are the terrestrial summit may be considered, in a sense, as an inverse manifestation, by which these supreme Powers in their unity and their diversity use, develop and perfect the imperfect substance and activities of Matter, of Life and of Mind so that they, the inferior modes, may express in mutable relativity an increasing harmony of the divine and eternal states from which they are born. If this be the truth of the universe, then the goal of evolution is also its ca use, it is that which is immanent in its elements and out of them is liberated. But the liberation is surely imperfect if it is only an escape and there is no return upon the containing substance and activities to exalt and transform them.
  The immanence itself would have no credible reason for being if it did not end in such a transfiguration. But if human mind can become capable of the glories of the divine Light, human emotion and sensibility can be transformed into the mould and assume the measure and movement of the supreme Bliss, human action not only represent but feel itself to be the motion of a divine and non-egoistic Force and the physical substance of our being sufficiently partake of the purity of the supernal essence, sufficiently unify plasticity and durable constancy to support and prolong these highest experiences and agencies, then all the long labour of Nature will end in a crowning justification and her evolutions reveal their profound significance.
  --
  Wisdom exists at all, the faculty of Mind also must have some high use and destiny. That use must depend on its place in the ascent and in the return and that destiny must be a fulfilment and transfiguration, not a rooting out or an annulling.
  We perceive, then, these three steps in Nature, a bodily life which is the basis of our existence here in the material world, a mental life into which we emerge and by which we raise the bodily to higher uses and enlarge it into a greater completeness, and a divine existence which is at once the goal of the other two and returns upon them to liberate them into their highest possibilities. Regarding none of them as either beyond our reach or below our nature and the destruction of none of them as essential to the ultimate attainment, we accept this liberation and fulfilment as part at least and a large and important part of the aim of Yoga.
  

0.03 - III - The Evening Sittings, #Evening Talks With Sri Aurobindo, #unset, #Zen
   Sri Aurobindo was never a social man in the current sense of the term and definitely he was not a man of the crowd. This was due to his grave temperament, not to any feeling of superiority or to repulsion for men. At Baroda there was an Officers' Club which was patronised by the Maharajah and though Sri Aurobindo enrolled himself as a member he hardly went to the Club even on special occasions. He rather liked a small congenial circle of friends and spent most of his evenings with them whenever he was free and not occupied with his studies or other works. After Baroda when he went to Calcutta there was hardly any time in the storm and stress of revolutionary politics to permit him to lead a 'social life'. What little time he could spare from his incessant activities was spent in the ho use of Raja Subodh Mallick or at the Grey Street ho use. In the Karmayogin office he used to sit after the office hours till late chatting with a few persons or trying automatic writing. Strange dictations used to be received sometimes: one of them was the following: "Moni [Suresh Chakravarty] will bomb Sir Edward Grey when he will come as the Viceroy of India." In later years at Pondicherry there used to be a joke that Sir Edward took such a fright at the prospect of Moni's bombing him that he never came to India!
   After Sri Aurobindo had come to Pondicherry from Chandernagore, he entered upon an intense period of Sadhana and for a few months he ref used to receive anyone. After a time he used to sit down to talk in the evening and on some days tried automatic writing. Yogic Sadhan, a small book, was the result. In 1913 Sri Aurobindo moved to Rue Franois Martin No. 41 where he used to receive visitors at fixed times. This was generally in the morning between 9 and 10.30.
   But, over and above newcomers, some local people and the few inmates of the ho use used to have informal talks with Sri Aurobindo in the evening. In the beginning the inmates used to go out for playing football, and during their absence known local individuals would come in and wait for Sri Aurobindo. Afterwards regular meditations began at about 4 p.m. in which practically all the inmates participated. After the meditation all of the members and those who were permitted shared in the evening sitting. This was a very informal gathering depending entirely upon Sri Aurobindo's leisure.
   When Sri Aurobindo and the Mother moved to No. 9 Rue de la Marine in 1922 the same routine of informal evening sittings after meditation continued. I came to Pondicherry for Sadhana in the beginning of 1923. I kept notes of the important talks I had with the four or five disciples who were already there. Besides, I used to take detailed notes of the Evening Talks which we all had with the Master. They were not intended by him to be noted down. I took them down beca use of the importance I felt about everything connected with him, no matter how insignificant to the outer view. I also felt that everything he did would acquire for those who would come to know his mission a very great significance.
   As years passed the evening sittings went on changing their time and often those disciples who came from outside for a temporary stay for Sadhana were allowed to join them. And, as the number of sadhaks practising the Yoga increased, the evening sittings also became more full, and the small verandah upstairs in the main building was found insufficient. Members of the ho usehold would gather every day at the fixed time with some sense of expectancy and start chatting in low tones. Sri Aurobindo used to come last and it was after his coming that the session would really commence.
   He came dressed as usual in dhoti, part of which was used by him to cover the upper part of his body. Very rarely he came out with chaddar or shawl and then it was "in deference to the climate" as he sometimes put it. At times for minutes he would be gazing at the sky from a small opening at the top of the grass-curtains that covered the verandah upstairs in No. 9, Rue de la Marine. How much were these sittings dependent on him may be gathered from the fact that there were days when more than three-fourths of the time passed in complete silence without any outer suggestion from him, or there was only an abrupt "Yes" or "No" to all attempts at drawing him out in conversation. And even when he participated in the talk one always felt that his voice was that of one who does not let his whole being flow into his words; there was a reserve and what was left unsaid was perhaps more than what was spoken. What was spoken was what he felt necessary to speak.
   Very often some news-item in the daily newspaper, town-gossip, or some interesting letter received either by him or by a disciple, or a question from one of the gathering, occasionally some remark or query from himself would set the ball rolling for the talk. The whole thing was so informal that one could never predict the turn the conversation would take. The whole ho use therefore was in a mood to enjoy the freshness and the delight of meeting the unexpected. There were peals of laughter and light talk, jokes and criticism which might be called personal, there was seriousness and earnestness in abundance.
  --
   But there were occasions when he did give his independent, personal views on some problems, on events or other subjects. Even then it was never an authoritarian pronouncement. Most often it appeared to be a logically worked out and almost inevitable conclusion expressed quite impersonally though with firm and sincere conviction. This impersonality was such a prominent trait of his personality! Even in such matters as dispatching a letter or a telegram it would not be a command from him to a disciple to carry out the task. Most often during his usual passage to the dining room he would stop on the way, drop in on the company of four or five disciples and, holding out the letter or the telegram, would say in the most amiable and yet the most impersonal way: "I suppose this has to be sent." And it would be for someone in the group instantly to volunteer and take it. The expression he very often used was "It was done" or "It happened", not "I did."
   From 1918 to 1922, we gathered at No. 41, Rue Franois Martin, called the Guest Ho use, upstairs, on a broad verandah into which four rooms opened and whose main piece of furniture was a small table 3' x 1' covered with a blue cotton cloth. That is where Sri Aurobindo used to sit in a hard wooden chair behind the table with a few chairs in front for the visitors or for the disciples.
   From 1922 to 1926, No. 9, Rue de la Marine, where he and the Mother had shifted, was the place where the sittings were held. There, also upstairs, was a less broad verandah than at the Guest Ho use, a little bigger table in front of the central door out of three, and a broad Japanese chair, the table covered with a better cloth than the one in the Guest Ho use, a small flower vase, an ash-tray, a block calendar indicating the date and an ordinary time-piece, and a number of chairs in front in a line. The evening sittings used to be after meditation at 4 or 4.30 p.m. After 24 November 1926, the sittings began to get later and later, till the limit of 1 o'clock at night was reached. Then the curtain fell. Sri Aurobindo retired completely after December 1926, and the evening sittings came to a close.
   On 8 February 1927, Sri Aurobindo and the Mother moved to No. 28, Rue Franois Martin, a ho use on the north-east of the same block as No. 9, Rue de la Marine.
  --
   use ctrl + Y to copy selected text in markdown format.

0.03 - Letters to My little smile, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  individual is a battery, a storage cell which runs down after use.
  Consecration is the wire that connects the individual battery to
  --
  right. One should never talk about others - it is always useless
  - and least of all about their difficulties; it is uncharitable beca use it does not help them to overcome the difficulties. As
  --
  the good and the bad are mixed together. It is very useful to
  see one's faults and weaknesses clearly, but one should not see
  --
  You don't need to have a strong will - you have only to use
  mine.
  --
  Then use Coué's method5 and repeat, "I am not tired, I cannot
  be tired beca use I am protected!"
  --
  Before seeing X's blo use I used to think that my
  bird-of-paradise8 sari was very beautiful; but now that

0.03 - The Threefold Life, #The Synthesis Of Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  For man, the head of terrestrial Nature, the sole earthly frame in which her full evolution is possible, is a triple birth. He has been given a living frame in which the body is the vessel and life the dynamic means of a divine manifestation. His activity is centred in a progressive mind which aims at perfecting itself as well as the ho use in which it dwells and the means of life that it uses, and is capable of awaking by a progressive self-realisation to its own true nature as a form of the Spirit. He culminates in what he always really was, the illumined and beatific spirit which is intended at last to irradiate life and mind with its now concealed splendours.
  Since this is the plan of the divine Energy in humanity, the whole method and aim of our existence must work by the interaction of these three elements in the being. As a result of their separate formulation in Nature, man has open to him a choice between three kinds of life, the ordinary material existence, a life of mental activity and progress and the unchanging spiritual beatitude. But he can, as he progresses, combine these three forms, resolve their discords into a harmonious rhythm and so create in himself the whole godhead, the perfect Man.
  --
  But the work in the world of so supreme a power as spiritual force cannot be thus limited. The spiritual life also can return upon the material and use it as a means of its own greater fullness. Refusing to be blinded by the dualities, the appearances, it can seek in all appearances whatsoever the vision of the same Lord, the same eternal Truth, Beauty, Love, Delight. The
  Vedantic formula of the Self in all things, all things in the Self and all things as becomings of the Self is the key to this richer and all-embracing Yoga.
  --
  But the spiritual life, like the mental, may thus make use of this outward existence for the benefit of the individual with a perfect indifference to any collective uplifting of the merely symbolic world which it uses. Since the Eternal is for ever the same in all things and all things the same to the Eternal, since the exact mode of action and the result are of no importance compared with the working out in oneself of the one great realisation, this spiritual indifference accepts no matter what environment, no matter what action, dispassionately, prepared to retire as soon as its own supreme end is realised. It is so that many have understood the ideal of the Gita. Or else the inner love and bliss may pour itself out on the world in good deeds, in service, in compassion, the inner Truth in the giving of knowledge, without therefore attempting the transformation of a world which must by its inalienable nature remain a battlefield of the dualities, of sin and virtue, of truth and error, of joy and suffering.
  But if Progress also is one of the chief terms of worldexistence and a progressive manifestation of the Divine the true sense of Nature, this limitation also is invalid. It is possible for the spiritual life in the world, and it is its real mission, to change the material life into its own image, the image of the Divine. Therefore, besides the great solitaries who have sought and attained their self-liberation, we have the great spiritual teachers who have also liberated others and, supreme of all, the great dynamic souls who, feeling themselves stronger in the might of the Spirit than all the forces of the material life banded together, have thrown themselves upon the world, grappled with it in a loving wrestle and striven to compel its consent to its own transfiguration. Ordinarily, the effort is concentrated on a mental and moral change in humanity, but it may extend itself also to the alteration of the forms of our life and its institutions so that they too may be a better mould for the inpourings of the Spirit. These attempts have been the supreme landmarks in the progressive development of human ideals and the divine preparation of the race. Every one of them, whatever its outward results, has left Earth more capable of Heaven and quickened in its tardy movements the evolutionary Yoga of Nature.
  --
  We have to recognise once more that the individual exists not in himself alone but in the collectivity and that individual perfection and liberation are not the whole sense of God's intention in the world. The free use of our liberty includes also the liberation of others and of mankind; the perfect utility of our perfection is, having realised in ourselves the divine symbol, to reproduce, multiply and ultimately universalise it in others.
  Therefore from a concrete view of human life in its threefold potentialities we come to the same conclusion that we had drawn from an observation of Nature in her general workings and the three steps of her evolution. And we begin to perceive a complete aim for our synthesis of Yoga.
  --
  But their aim is one in the end. The generalisation of Yoga in humanity must be the last victory of Nature over her own delays and concealments. Even as now by the progressive mind in Science she seeks to make all mankind fit for the full development of the mental life, so by Yoga must she inevitably seek to make all mankind fit for the higher evolution, the second birth, the spiritual existence. And as the mental life uses and perfects the material, so will the spiritual use and perfect the material and the mental existence as the instruments of a divine self-expression.
  The ages when that is accomplished, are the legendary Satya or Krita3 Yugas, the ages of the Truth manifested in the symbol, of the great work done when Nature in mankind, illumined, satisfied and blissful, rests in the culmination of her endeavour.

0.04 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  be safer to use those ropes. As soon as the work is over,
  the ropes will be removed. Those ropes are not tight;
  --
  I beg to submit some facts for your gracious consideration. The weakest and smallest of the bullocks used by
  X's cart-men are carrying more than 600 Dem of sand.
  --
  What is the use of being a sadhak if, as soon as we act, we
  act like the ignorant ordinary man?
  --
  yield and obey and I found them quite receptive. To use a quiet,
  steady, unwavering conscious will, that is the way, the only true
  --
  you for your kind gracious permission to use this kind of
  necklace which I am enclosing herewith for our darling

0.04 - The Systems of Yoga, #The Synthesis Of Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Bhakta seeks and yearns after Bhagavan, Bhagavan also seeks and yearns after the Bhakta.1 There can be no Yoga of knowledge without a human seeker of the knowledge, the supreme subject of knowledge and the divine use by the individual of the universal faculties of knowledge; no Yoga of devotion without the human God-lover, the supreme object of love and delight and the divine use by the individual of the universal faculties of spiritual, emotional and aesthetic enjoyment; no Yoga of works without the human worker, the supreme Will, Master of all works and sacrifices, and the divine use by the individual of the universal faculties of power and action. However Monistic may be our intellectual conception of the highest truth of things, in practice we are compelled to accept this omnipresent Trinity.
  For the contact of the human and individual consciousness with the divine is the very essence of Yoga. Yoga is the union of that which has become separated in the play of the universe with its own true self, origin and universality. The contact may take place at any point of the complex and intricately organised consciousness which we call our personality. It may be effected in the physical through the body; in the vital through the action of
  --
  Self. Hathayoga selects the body and the vital functionings as its instruments of perfection and realisation; its concern is with the gross body. Rajayoga selects the mental being in its different parts as its lever-power; it concentrates on the subtle body. The triple Path of Works, of Love and of Knowledge uses some part of the mental being, will, heart or intellect as a starting-point and seeks by its conversion to arrive at the liberating Truth,
  Beatitude and Infinity which are the nature of the spiritual life.
  --
  Nature the equilibrium is based upon the individualisation of a limited quantity and force of the Prana; more than that the individual is by personal and hereditary habit unable to bear, use or control. In Hathayoga, the equilibrium opens a door to the universalisation of the individual vitality by admitting into the body, containing, using and controlling a much less fixed and limited action of the universal energy.
  The chief processes of Hathayoga are asana and pran.ayama.
  --
   its object which our philosophy asserts as the primary cosmic energy and the method of divine action upon the world. By this capacity the Yogin, already possessed of the highest supracosmic knowledge and experience in the state of trance, is able in the waking state to acquire directly whatever knowledge and exercise whatever mastery may be useful or necessary to his activities in the objective world. For the ancient system of
  Rajayoga aimed not only at Swarajya, self-rule or subjective empire, the entire control by the subjective consciousness of all the states and activities proper to its own domain, but included
  --
  But the weakness of the system lies in its excessive reliance on abnormal states of trance. This limitation leads first to a certain aloofness from the physical life which is our foundation and the sphere into which we have to bring our mental and spiritual gains. Especially is the spiritual life, in this system, too much associated with the state of Samadhi. Our object is to make the spiritual life and its experiences fully active and fully utilisable in the waking state and even in the normal use of the functions.
  But in Rajayoga it tends to withdraw into a subliminal plane at the back of our normal experiences instead of descending and possessing our whole existence.
  --
  Lord, with our human life as its final stage, pursued through the different phases of self-concealment and self-revelation. The principle of Bhakti Yoga is to utilise all the normal relations of human life into which emotion enters and apply them no longer to transient worldly relations, but to the joy of the All-Loving, the All-Beautiful and the All-Blissful. Worship and meditation are used only for the preparation and increase of intensity of the divine relationship. And this Yoga is catholic in its use of all emotional relations, so that even enmity and opposition to God, considered as an intense, impatient and perverse form of Love, is conceived as a possible means of realisation and salvation.
  This path, too, as ordinarily practised, leads away from worldexistence to an absorption, of another kind than the Monist's, in the Transcendent and Supra-cosmic.
  --
  Devotion may be so used as to lead to the elevation of the whole range of human emotion, sensation and aesthetic perception to the divine level, its spiritualisation and the justification of the cosmic labour towards love and joy in our humanity.
  The Path of Works aims at the dedication of every human activity to the supreme Will. It begins by the renunciation of all egoistic aim for our works, all pursuit of action for an interested aim or for the sake of a worldly result. By this renunciation it so
  --
  Karmayoga is used, like the other paths, to lead to liberation from phenomenal existence and a departure into the Supreme.
  But here too the exclusive result is not inevitable. The end of the path may be, equally, a perception of the Divine in all energies, in all happenings, in all activities, and a free and unegoistic participation of the soul in the cosmic action. So followed it will lead to the elevation of all human will and activity to the divine level, its spiritualisation and the justification of the cosmic labour towards freedom, power and perfection in the human being.

0.05 - Letters to a Child, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  of my presence and receive and use the force that I am pouring
  into you to enable you to overcome all difficulties.
  --
  most useless and foolish of all things; and when you give up this
  bad habit of revolt, you will see that suffering too will go away
  --
  beautiful or useful have always been persons who have known
  how to discipline themselves.
  --
  are always available to you; you have only to learn to make use
  of them.
  --
  open yourself to this help and protection and learn to use them
  to conquer the adversary who is trying to draw you towards the

0.05 - The Synthesis of the Systems, #The Synthesis Of Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Will-in-Power executive in the universe. It was by learning and applying the intimate secrets of this Will-in-Power, its method, its Tantra, that the Tantric Yogin pursued the aims of his discipline, - mastery, perfection, liberation, beatitude. Instead of drawing back from manifested Nature and its difficulties, he confronted them, seized and conquered. But in the end, as is the general tendency of Prakriti, Tantric Yoga largely lost its principle in its machinery and became a thing of formulae and occult mechanism still powerful when rightly used but fallen from the clarity of their original intention.
  We have in this central Tantric conception one side of the truth, the worship of the Energy, the Shakti, as the sole effective force for all attainment. We get the other extreme in the Vedantic conception of the Shakti as a power of Illusion and in the search after the silent inactive Purusha as the means of liberation from the deceptions created by the active Energy. But in the integral conception the Conscious Soul is the Lord, the Nature-Soul is his executive Energy. Purusha is of the nature of Sat, the being of conscious self-existence pure and infinite; Shakti or Prakriti is of the nature of Chit, - it is power of the Purusha's self-conscious existence, pure and infinite. The relation of the two exists between the poles of rest and action. When the Energy is absorbed
  --
  God Himself, the real Person in us, becomes the sadhaka of the sadhana1 as well as the Master of the Yoga by whom the lower personality is used as the centre of a divine transfiguration and the instrument of its own perfection. In effect, the pressure of the
  Tapas, the force of consciousness in us dwelling in the Idea of the divine Nature upon that which we are in our entirety, produces
  --
  Thirdly, the divine Power in us uses all life as the means of this integral Yoga. Every experience and outer contact with our world-environment, however trifling or however disastrous, is used for the work, and every inner experience, even to the most repellent suffering or the most humiliating fall, becomes a step on the path to perfection. And we recognise in ourselves with opened eyes the method of God in the world, His purpose of light in the obscure, of might in the weak and fallen, of delight in what is grievous and miserable. We see the divine method to be the same in the lower and in the higher working; only in the one it is pursued tardily and obscurely through the subconscious in
  Nature, in the other it becomes swift and self-conscious and the instrument confesses the hand of the Master. All life is a Yoga of Nature seeking to manifest God within itself. Yoga marks the stage at which this effort becomes capable of self-awareness and therefore of right completion in the individual. It is a gathering up and concentration of the movements dispersed and loosely combined in the lower evolution.

0.06 - Letters to a Young Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  in any case this cannot be compared at all with the bloody revolutions which quite uselessly tear up countries without bringing
  any great change after them, beca use they leave men as false, as
  --
  next birth may not be useless like this one.
  This is all nonsense; we have not to busy ourselves with the next
  --
  Formerly I used to repeat to myself: "I am one of the
  greatest sadhaks." Now I tell myself: "I am nobody."
  --
  practice, and for this the most important thing to avoid is useless
  talking. It is not work but useless talk which takes us away from
  the Divine.
  --
  To be pessimistic has never been of any use except to attract
  towards oneself just the things one fears. One must, on the
  --
  learn to do so, these contacts with others are useful.
  I do not know of anything more foolish than these quarrels in
  --
  knowledge of things can be of any use whatsoever; it is good for
  nothing except making people conceited, for they imagine they
  --
  It is very difficult to choose games which are useful and beneficial
  for a child. It asks for much consideration and reflection, and all
  --
  be respectable. X is not the only one to say that you use violence
  to make yourself obeyed; nothing is less respectable. You must
  first control yourself and never use brute force to impose your
  will.

0.07 - Letters to a Sadhak, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  the way I used to feel for the old ideal of liberation. The
  path, the ideal you represent, your values still leave me

0.08 - Letters to a Young Captain, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  This question and the three that follow are based on terms used by Sri Aurobindo in
  The Life Divine, especially in its final chapters.
  --
  and transform him for their personal use into the supreme God.
  In the individual evolution, one must develop in oneself
  --
  Very often the word "Nature" is used as a synonym for
  Prakriti, the executive force of Purusha. But to answer your

0.09 - Letters to a Young Teacher, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  having chosen the method, you must use your intelligent will
  to apply it with an unfailing perseverance that does not shrink
  --
  to do good and forbids us to do evil. This voice is very useful
  in ordinary life, until one is able to become conscious of one's
  --
  knowing that to start out too soon is useless, to say the least,
  and may be harmful.
  --
  condition to receive it, keep it and make use of what it gives us.
  Sri Aurobindo even says that it is more difficult than to
  --
  tolerated were those that were useful for the practice of sadhana.
  But as it would be unreasonable to demand that children
  --
  to use these precious things in such a free and common
  way?
  --
  give them to X who makes good use of them.
  And if you are telling me that the photos are damaged, this
  --
  things we use. That is what I mean when I speak of living with
  respect.

01.01 - The One Thing Needful, #The Integral Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  To find the Divine is indeed the first reason for seeking the spiritual Truth and the spiritual life; it is the one thing indispensable and all the resit is nothing without it. The Divine once found, to manifest Him, - that is, first of all to transform one's own limited consciousness into the Divine Consciousness, to live in the infinite Peace, Light, Love, Strength, Bliss, to become that in one's essential nature and, as a consequence, to be its vessel, channel, instrument in one's active nature. To bring into activity the principle of oneness on the material plane or to work for humanity is a mental mistranslation of the Truth - these things cannot be the first true object of spiritual seeking. We must find the Self, the Divine, then only can we know what is the work the Self or the Divine demands from us. Until then our life and action can only be a help or a means towards finding the Divine and it ought not to have any other purpose. As we grow in inner consciousness, or as the spiritual Truth of the Divine grows in us, our life and action must indeed more and more flow from that, be one with that. But to decide beforeh and by our limited mental conceptions what they must be is to hamper the growth of the spiritual Truth within. As that grows we shall feel the Divine Light and Truth, the Divine Power and Force, the Divine Purity and Peace working within us, dealing with our actions as well as our consciousness, making use of them to reshape us into the Divine Image, removing the dross, substituting the pure Gold of the Spirit. Only when the Divine Presence is there in us always and the consciousness transformed, can we have the right to say that we are ready to manifest the Divine on the material plane. To hold up a mental ideal or principle and impose that on the inner working brings the danger of limiting ourselves to a mental realisation or of impeding or even falsifying by a halfway formation the truth growth into the full communion and union with the Divine and the free and intimate outflowing of His will in our life. This is a mistake of orientation to which the mind of today is especially prone. It is far better to approach the Divine for the Peace or Light or Bliss that the realisation of Him gives than to bring in these minor things which can divert us from the one thing needful. The divinisation of the material life also as well as the inner life is part of what we see as the Divine Plan, but it can only be fulfilled by an ourflowing of the inner realisation, something that grows from within outwards, not by the working out of a mental principle.
  The realisation of the Divine is the one thing needful and the rest is desirable only in so far as it helps or leads towards that or when it is realised, extends and manifests the realisation. Manifestation and organisation of the whole life for the divine work, - first, the sadhana personal and collective necessary for the realisation and a common life of God-realised men, secondly, for help to the world to move towards that, and to live in the Light - is the whole meaning and purpose of my Yoga. But the realisation is the first need and it is that round which all the rest moves, for apart from it all the rest would have no meaning.

01.02 - Natures Own Yoga, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 03, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   In the Supermind things exist in their perfect spiritual reality; each is consciously the divine reality in its transcendent essence, its cosmic extension, its, spiritual individuality; the diversity of a manifested existence is there, but the mutually exclusive separativeness has not yet arisen. The ego, the knot of separativity, appears at a later and lower stage of involution; what is here is indivisible nexus of individualising centres of the one eternal truth of being. Where Supermind and Overmind meet, one can see the multiple godheads, each distinct in his own truth and beauty and power and yet all together forming the one supreme consciousness infinitely composite and inalienably integral. But stepping back into Supermind one sees something moreOneness gathering into itself all diversity, not destroying it, but annulling and forbidding the separative consciousness that is the beginning of Ignorance. The first shadow of the Illusory Consciousness, the initial possibility of the movement of Ignorance comes in when the supramental light enters the penumbra of the mental sphere. The movement of Supermind is the movement of light without obscurity, straight, unwavering, unswerving, absolute. The Force here contains and holds in their oneness of Reality the manifold but not separated lines of essential and unalloyed truth: its march is the inevitable progression of each one assured truth entering into and upholding every other and therefore its creation, play or action admits of no trial or stumble or groping or deviation; for each truth rests on all others and on that which harmonises them all and does not act as a Power diverging from and even competing with other Powers of being. In the Overmind commences the play of divergent possibilities the simple, direct, united and absolute certainties of the supramental consciousness retire, as it were, a step behind and begin to work themselves out through the interaction first of separately individualised and then of contrary and contradictory forces. In the Overmind there is a conscious underlying Unity but yet each Power, Truth, Aspect of that Unity is encouraged to work out its possibilities as if it were sufficient to itself and the others are used by it for its own enhancement until in the denser and darker reaches below Overmind this turns out a thing of blind conflict and battle and, as it would appear, of chance survival. Creation or manifestation originally means the concretisation or devolution of the powers of Conscious Being into a play of united diversity; but on the line which ends in Matter it enters into more and more obscure forms and forces and finally the virtual eclipse of the supreme light of the Divine Consciousness. Creation as it descends' towards the Ignorance becomes an involution of the Spirit through Mind and Life into Matter; evolution is a movement backward, a return journey from Matter towards the Spirit: it is the unravelling, the gradual disclosure and deliverance of the Spirit, the ascension and revelation of the involved consciousness through a series of awakeningsMatter awakening into Life, Life awakening into Mind and Mind now seeking to awaken into something beyond the Mind, into a power of conscious Spirit.
   The apparent or actual result of the movement of Nescienceof Involutionhas been an increasing negation of the Spirit, but its hidden purpose is ultimately to embody the Spirit in Matter, to express here below in cosmic Time-Space the splendours of the timeless Reality. The material body came into existence bringing with it inevitably, as it seemed, mortality; it appeared even to be fashioned out of mortality, in order that in this very frame and field of mortality, Immortality, the eternal Spirit Consciousness which is the secret truth and reality in Time itself as well as behind it, might be established and that the Divine might be possessed, or rather, possess itself not in one unvarying mode of the static consciousness, as it does even now behind the cosmic play, but in the play itself and in the multiple mode of the terrestrial existence.

01.02 - Sri Aurobindo - Ahana and Other Poems, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   To humanise the Divine, that is what we all wish to do; for the Divine is too lofty for us and we cannot look full into his face. We cry and supplicate to Rudra, "O dire Lord, show us that other form of thine that is benign and humane". All earthly imageries we lavish upon the Divine so that he may appear to us not as something far and distant and foreign, but, quite near, among us, as one of us. We take recourse to human symbolism often, beca use we wish to palliate or hide the rigours of a supreme experience, not beca use we have no adequate terms for it. The same human or earthly terms could be used differently if we had a different consciousness. Thus the Vedic Rishis sought not to humanise the Divine, their purpose was rather to divinise the human. And their allegorical language, although rich in terrestrial figures, does not carry the impress and atmosphere of mere humanity and earthliness. For in reality the symbol is not merely the symbol. It is mere symbol in regard to the truth so long as we take our stand on the lower plane when we have to look at the truth through the symbol; but if we view it from the higher plane, from truth itself, it is no longer mere symbol but the very truth bodied forth. Whatever there is of symbolism on earth and its beauties, in sense and its enjoyments, is then transfigured into the expression of the truth, of the divinity itself. We then no longer speak in human language but in the language of the gods.
   We have been speaking of philosophy and the philosophic manner. But what are the exact implications of the words, let us ask again. They mean nothing more and nothing lessthan the force of thought and the mass of thought content. After all, that seems to be almost the whole difference between the past and the present human consciousness in so far at least as it has found expression in poetry. That element, we wish to point out, is precisely what the old-world poets lacked or did not care to possess or express or stress. A poet meant above all, if not all in all, emotion, passion, sensuousness, sensibility, nervous enthusiasm and imagination and fancy: remember the classic definition given by Shakespeare of the poet
  --
   The heart and its urges, the vital and its surges, the physical impulsesit is these of which the poets sang in their infinite variations. But the mind proper, that is to say, the higher reflective ideative mind, was not given the right of citizenship in the domain of poetry. I am not forgetting the so-called Metaphysicals. The element of metaphysics among the Metaphysicals has already been called into question. There is here, no doubt, some theology, a good dose of mental cleverness or conceit, but a modern intellectual or rather rational intelligence is something other, something more than that. Even the metaphysics that was commandeered here had more or less a decorative value, it could not be taken into the pith and substance of poetic truth and beauty. It was a decoration, but not unoften a drag. I referred to the Upanishads, but these strike quite a different, almost an opposite line in this connection. They are in a sense truly metaphysical: they bypass the mind and the mental powers, get hold of a higher mode of consciousness, make a direct contact with truth and beauty and reality. It was Buddha's credit to have forged this missing link in man's spiritual consciousness, to have brought into play the power of the rational intellect and used it in support of the spiritual experience. That is not to say that he was the very first person, the originator who initiated the movement; but at least this seems to be true that in him and his au thentic followers the movement came to the forefront of human consciousness and attained the proportions of a major member of man's psychological constitution. We may remember here that Socrates, who started a similar movement of rationalisation in his own way in Europe, was almost a contemporary of the Buddha.
   Poetry as an expression of thought-power, poetry weighted with intelligence and rationalised knowledge that seems to me to be the end and drive, the secret sense of all the mystery of modern technique. The combination is risky, but not impossible. In the spiritual domain the Gita achieved this miracle to a considerable degree. Still, the power of intelligence and reason shown by Vyasa is of a special order: it is a sublimated function of the faculty, something aloof and other-worldly"introvert", a modern mind would term it that is to say, something a priori, standing in its own au thenticity and self-sufficiency. A modern intelligence would be more scientific, let us use the word, more matter-of-fact and sense-based: the mental light should not be confined in its ivory tower, however high that may be, but brought down and placed at the service of our perception and appreciation and explanation of things human and terrestrial; made immanent in the mundane and the ephemeral, as they are commonly called. This is not an impossibility. Sri Aurobindo seems to have done the thing. In him we find the three terms of human consciousness arriving at an absolute fusion and his poetry is a wonderful example of that fusion. The three terms are the spiritual, the intellectual or philosophical and the physical or sensational. The intellectual, or more generally, the mental, is the intermediary, the Paraclete, as he himself will call it later on in a poem9 magnificently exemplifying the point we are trying to make out the agent who negotiates, bridges and harmonises the two other firmaments usually supposed to be antagonistic and incompatible.
   Indeed it would be wrong to associate any cold ascetic nudity to the spiritual body of Sri Aurobindo. His poetry is philosophic, abstract, no doubt, but every philosophy has its practice, every abstract thing its concrete application,even as the soul has its body; and the fusion, not mere union, of the two is very characteristic in him. The deepest and unseizable flights of thought he knows how to clo the with a Kalidasian richness of imagery, or a Keatsean gusto of sensuousness:

01.02 - The Issue, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Fit for a day's use by busy careless Powers.
  4.17

01.03 - Mystic Poetry, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   This is spiritual matter and spiritual manner that can never be improved upon. This is spiritual poetry in its quintessence. I am referring naturally here to the original and not to the translation which can never do full justice, even at its very best, to the poetic value in question. For apart from the individual genius of the poet, the greatness of the language, the instrument used by the poet, is also involved. It may well be what is comparatively easy and natural in the language of the gods (devabhasha) would mean a tour de force, if not altogether an impossibility, in a human language. The Sanskrit language was moulded and fashioned in the hands of the Rishis, that is to say, those who lived and moved and had their being in the spiritual consciousness. The Hebrew or even the Zend does not seem to have reached that peak, that absoluteness of the spiritual tone which seems inherent in the Indian tongue, although those too breathed and grew in a spiritual atmosphere. The later languages, however, Greek or Latin or their modern descendants, have gone still farther from the source, they are much nearer to the earth and are suff used with the smell and effluvia of this vale of tears.
   Among the ancients, strictly speaking, the later classical Lucretius was a remarkable phenomenon. By nature he was a poet, but his mental interest lay in metaphysical speculation, in philosophy, and unpoetical business. He turned away from arms and heroes, wrath and love and, like Seneca and Aurelius, gave himself up to moralising and philosophising, delving 'into the mystery, the why and the how and the whither of it all. He chose a dangerous subject for his poetic inspiration and yet it cannot be said that his attempt was a failure. Lucretius was not a religious or spiritual poet; he was rather Marxian,atheistic, materialistic. The dialectical materialism of today could find in him a lot of nourishment and support. But whatever the content, the manner has made a whole difference. There was an idealism, a clarity of vision and an intensity of perception, which however scientific apparently, gave his creation a note, an accent, an atmosphere high, tense, aloof, ascetic, at times bordering on the supra-sensual. It was a high light, a force of consciousness that at its highest pitch had the ring and vibration of something almost spiritual. For the basic principle of Lucretius' inspiration is a large thought-force, a tense perception, a taut nervous reactionit is not, of course, the identity in being with the inner realities which is the hallmark of a spiritual consciousness, yet it is something on the way towards that.

01.03 - Rationalism, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   The fact is that Reason is a lower manifestation of knowledge, it is an attempt to express on the mental level a power that exceeds it. It is the section of a vast and unitarian Consciousness-Power; the section may be necessary under certain conditions and circumstances, but unless it is viewed in its relation to the ensemble, unless it gives up its exclusive absolutism, it will be perforce arbitrary and misleading. It would still remain helpful and useful, but its help and use would be always limited in scope and temporary in effectivity.
   ***

01.03 - The Yoga of the King - The Yoga of the Souls Release, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  This too the supreme Diplomat can use,
  He makes our fall a means for greater rise.

01.04 - Motives for Seeking the Divine, #The Integral Yoga, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Divine and do His work or His will and I am satisfied, even if the use of Power entails suffering also." It is possible to shun bliss as a thing too tremendous or ecstatic and ask only or rather for peace, for liberation, for Nirvana. You speak of self-fulfilment,
  - one may regard the Supreme not as the Divine but as one's highest Self and seek fulfilment of one's being in that highest Self; but one need not envisage it as a self of bliss, ecstasy, Ananda - one may envisage it as a self of freedom, vastness, knowledge, tranquillity, strength, calm, perfection - perhaps too calm for a ripple of anything so disturbing as joy to enter. So even if it is for something to be gained that one approaches the Divine, it is not a fact that one can approach Him or seek union only for the sake of Ananda and nothing else.

01.04 - The Intuition of the Age, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   But although Reason has been and is useful for the practical, we may say almost, the manual aspect of life, life itself it leaves unexplained and uncomprehended. For life is mobility, a continuous flow that has nowhere any gap or stop and things have in reality no isolated or separate existence, they merge and mingle into one another and form an indissoluble whole. Therefore the forms and categories that Reason imposes upon existence are more or less arbitrary; they are shackles that seek to bind up and limit life, but are often rent asunder in the very effort. So the civilisation that has its origin in Reason and progresses with discoveries and inventionsdevices for artfully manipulating naturehas been essentially and pre-eminently mechanical in its structure and outlook. It has become more and more efficient perhaps, but less and less soul-inspired, less and less-endowed with the free-flowing sap of organic growth and vitality.
   So instead of the rational principle, the new age wants the principle of Nature or Life. Even as regards knowledge Reason is not the only, nor the best instrument. For animals have properly no reason; the nature-principle of knowledge in the animal is Instinct the faculty that acts so faultlessly, so marvellously where Reason can only pa use and be perplexed. This is not to say that man is to or can go back to this primitive and animal function; but certainly he can replace it by something akin which is as natural and yet purified and self-consciousillumined instinct, we may say or Intuition, as Bergson terms it. And Nietzsche's definition of the Superman has also a similar orientation and significance; for, according to him, the Superman is man who has outgrown his Reason, who is not bound by the standards and the conventions determined by Reason for a special purpose. The Superman is one who has gone beyond "good and evil," who has shaken off from his nature and character elements that are "human, all too human"who is the embodiment of life-force in its absolute purity and strength and freedom.

01.04 - The Secret Knowledge, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  The grandeur of a useless miracle;
  Wasting itself that it may last awhile,
  --
  For him she was made, lives only for his use.
  But conquering her, then is he most her slave;

01.05 - Rabindranath Tagore: A Great Poet, a Great Man, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Tagore is no inventor or innovator when he posits Spirit as Beauty, the spiritual consciousness as the ardent rhythm of ecstasy. This experience is the very core of Vaishnavism and for which Tagore is sometimes called a Neo-Vaishnava. The Vaishnava sees the world pulsating in glamorous beauty as the Lila (Play) of the Lord, and the Lord, God himself, is nothing but Love and Beauty. Still Tagore is not all Vaishnava or merely a Vaishnava; he is in addition a modern (the carping voice will say, there comes the dilution and adulteration)in the sense that problems exist for himsocial, political, economic, national, humanitarianwhich have to be faced and solved: these are not merely mundane, but woven into the texture of the fundamental problem of human destiny, of Soul and Spirit and God. A Vaishnava was, in spite of his acceptance of the world, an introvert, to use a modern psychological phrase, not necessarily in the pejorative sense, but in the neutral scientific sense. He looks upon the universe' and human life as the play of the Lord, as an actuality and not mere illusion indeed; but he does not participate or even take interest in the dynamic working out of the world process, he does not care to know, has no need of knowing that there is a terrestrial purpose and a diviner fulfilment of the mortal life upon earth. The Vaishnava dwells more or less absorbed in the Vaikuntha of his inner consciousness; the outer world, although real, is only a symbolic shadowplay to which he can but be a witness-real, is only a nothing more.
   A modern idealist of the type of a reformer would not be satisfied with that role. If he is merely a moralist reformer, he will revolt against the "witness business", calling it a laissez-faire mentality of bygone days. A spiritual reformer would ask for morea dynamic union with the Divine Will and Consciousness, not merely a passive enjoyment in the Bliss, so that he may be a luminous power or agent for the expression of divine values in things mundane.
  --
   Thus, on the one hand, the Eternity, the Infinity, the Spirit is brought nearer home to us in its embodied symbols and living vehicles and vivid formulations, it becomes easily available to mortals, even like the father to his son, to use a Vedic phrase; on the other hand, earthly things, mere humanities are uplifted and suff used with a "light that never was, on sea or land."
   Another great poet of the spirit says also, almost like Tagore:

01.05 - The Yoga of the King - The Yoga of the Spirits Freedom and Greatness, #Savitri, #Sri Aurobindo, #Integral Yoga
  Herself she gave for rapture and for use.
  Absolved from aberrations in deep ways,

01.06 - On Communism, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Against this tyranny of the group, this absolute rule of the collective will, the human mind rose in revolt and the result was Individualism. For whatever may be the truth and necessity of the Collective, the Individual is no less true and necessary. The individual has his own law and urge of being and his own secret godhead. The collective godhead derides the individual godhead at its peril. The first movement of the reaction, however, was a run to the other extremity; a stern collectivism gave birth to an intransigent individualism. The individual is sacred and inviolable, cost what it may. It does not matter what sort of individuality one seeks, it is enough if the thing is there. So the doctrine of individualism has come to set a premium on egoism and on forces that are disruptive of all social bonds. Each and every individual has the inherent right, which is also a duty, to follow his own impetus and impulse. Society is nothing but the battle ground for competing individualities the strongest survive and the weakest go to the wall. Association and co-operation are instruments that the individual may use and utilise for his own growth and development but in the main they act as deterrents rather than as aids to the expression and expansion of his characteristic being. In reality, however, if we probe sufficiently deep into the matter we find that there is no such thing as corporate life and activity; what appears as such is only a camouflage for rigorous competition; at the best, there maybe only an offensive and defensive alliancehumanity fights against nature, and within humanity itself group fights against group and in the last analysis, within the group, the individual fights against the individual. This is the ultimate Law-the Dharma of creation.
   Now, what such an uncompromising individualism fails to recognise is that individuality and ego are not the same thing, that the individual may have his individuality intact and entire and yet sacrifice his ego, that the soul of man is a much greater thing than his vital being. It is simply ignoring the fact and denying the truth to say that man is only a fighting animal and not a loving god, that the self within the individual realises itself only through competition and not co-operation. It is an error to conceive of society as a mere parallelogram of forces, to suppose that it has risen simply out of the struggle of individual interests and continues to remain by that struggle. Struggle is only one aspect of the thing, a particular form at a particular stage, a temporary manifestation due to a particular system and a particular habit and training. It would be nearer the truth to say that society came into being with the demand of the individual soul to unite with the individual soul, with the stress of an Over-soul to express itself in a multitude of forms, diverse yet linked together and organised in perfect harmony. Only, the stress for union manifested itself first on the material plane as struggle: but this is meant to be corrected and transcended and is being continually corrected and transcended by a secret harmony, a real commonality and brotherhood and unity. The individual is not so self-centred as the individualists make him to be, his individuality has a much vaster orbit and fulfils itself only by fulfilling others. The scientists have begun to discover other instincts in man than those of struggle and competition; they now place at the origin of social grouping an instinct which they name the herd-instinct: but this is only a formulation in lower terms, a translation on the vital plane of a higher truth and reality the fundamental oneness and accord of individuals and their spiritual impulsion to unite.

01.06 - Vivekananda, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   A personal reminiscence. A young man in prison, acc used of conspiracy and waging war against the British Empire. If convicted he might have to suffer the extreme penalty, at least, transportation to the Andamans. The case is dragging on for long months. And the young man is in a solitary cell. He cannot always keep up his spirits high. Moments of sadness and gloom and despair come and almost overwhelm him. Who was there to console and cheer him up? Vivekananda. Vivekananda's speeches, From Colombo to Almora, came, as a godsend, into the hands of the young man. Invariably, when the period of despondency came he used to open the book, read a few pages, read them over again, and the cloud was there no longer. Instead there was hope and courage and faith and future and light and air.
   Such is Vivekananda, the embodiment of Fearlessnessabh, the Upanishadic word, the mantra, he was so fond of. The life and vision of Vivekananda can be indeed summed up in the mighty phrase of the Upanishads, nyam tm balahnena labhya. 'This soul no weakling can attain.' Strength! More strength! Strength evermore! One remembers the motto of Danton, the famous leader in the French Revolution:De l'audance, encore de l'audace, toujours de l'audace!

01.07 - Blaise Pascal (1623-1662), #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   "The zeal for the Lord hath eaten me up." Such has indeed been the case with Pascal, almost literally. The fire that burned in him was too ardent and vehement for the vehicle, the material instrument, which was very soon used up and reduced to ashes. At twenty-four he was already a broken man, being struck with paralysis and neuras thenia; he died at the comparatively early age of 39, emulating, as it were, the life career of his Lord the Christ who died at 33. The Fire martyrised the body, but kindled and brought forth experiences and realisations that save and truths that abide. It was the Divine Fire whose vision and experience he had on the famous night of 23 November 1654 which brought about his final and definitive conversion. It was the same fire that had blazed up in his brain, while yet a boy, and made him a precocious genius, a marvel of intellectual power in the exact sciences. At 12 this prodigy discovered by himself the 32nd proposition of Euclid, Book I. At sixteen he wrote a treatise on conic sections. At nineteen he invented a calculating machine which, without the help of any mathematical rule or process, gave absolutely accurate results. At twenty-three he published his experiments with vacuum. At twenty-five he conducted the well-known experiment from the tower of St. Jacques, proving the existence of atmospheric pressure. His studies in infinitesimal calculus were remarkably creative and original. And it might be said he was a pioneer in quite a new branch of mathematics, viz., the mathematical theory of probability. We shall see presently how his preoccupation with the mathematics of chance and probability coloured and reinforced his metaphysics and theology.
   But the pressure upon his dynamic and heated brain the fiery zeal in his mindwas already proving too much and he was advised medically to take complete rest. Thereupon followed what was known as Pascal's mundane lifea period of distraction and dissipation; but this did not last long nor was it of a serious nature. The inner fire could brook no delay, it was eager and impatient to englobe other fields and domains. Indeed, it turned to its own field the heart. Pascal became initiated into the mystery of Faith and Grace. Still he had to pass through a terrible period of dejection and despair: the life of the world had given him no rest or relaxation, it served only to fill his cup of misery to the brim. But the hour of final relief was not long postponed: the Grace came to him, even as it came to Moses or St. Paul as a sudden flare of fire which burnt up the Dark Night and opened out the portals of Morning Glory.
  --
   In his inquiry into truth and certitude Pascal takes his stand upon what he calls the geometrical method, the only valid method, according to him, in the sphere of reason. The characteristic of this method is that it takes for granted certain fundamental principles and realitiescalled axioms and postulates or definitionsand proceeds to other truths that are infallibly and inevitably deduced from them, that are inherent and implied in them. There is no use or necessity in trying to demonstrate these fundamentals also; that will only land us into confusion and muddle. They have to be simply accepted, they do not require demonstration, it is they that demonstrate others. Such, for instance, are space, time, number, the reality of which it is foolishness and pedantry to I seek to prove. There is then an order of truths that do not i require to be proved. We are referring only to the order of I physical truths. But there is another order, Pascal says, equally I valid and veritable, the order of the Spirit. Here we have another set of fundamentals that have to be accepted and taken for granted, matrix of other truths and realities. It can also be called the order of the Heart. Reason posits physical fundamentals; it does not know of the fundamentals of the Heart which are beyond its reach; such are God, Soul, Immortality which are evident only to Faith.
   But Faith and Reason, according to Pascal, are not contraries nor irreconcilables. Beca use the things of faith are beyond reason, it is not that they are irrational. Here is what Pascal says about the function and limitation of reason:
  --
   One is not sure if such reasoning is convincing to the intellect; but perhaps it is a necessary stage in conversion. At least we can conclude that Pascal had to pass through such a stage; and it indicates the difficulty his brain had to undergo, the tension or even the torture he made it pass through. It is true, from Reason Pascal went over to Faith, even while giving Reason its due. Still it seems the two were not perfectly synthetised or f used in him. There was a gap between that was not thoroughly bridged. Pascal did not possess the higher, intuitive, luminous mind that mediates successfully between the physical discursive ratiocinative brain-mind and the vision of faith: it is beca use deep in his consciousness there lay this chasm. Indeed,Pascal's abyss (l' abme de Pascal) is a well-known legend. Pascal, it appears, used to have very often the vision of an abyss about to open before him and he shuddered at the prospect of falling into it. It seems to us to be an experience of the Infinity the Infinity to which he was so much attracted and of which he wrote so beautifully (L'infiniment grand et l'infiniment petit)but into which he could not evidently jump overboard unreservedly. This produced a dichotomy, a lack of integration of personality, Jung would say. Pascal's brain was cold, firm, almost rigid; his heart was volcanic, the faith he had was a fire: it lacked something of the pure light and burned with a lurid glare.
   And the reason is his metaphysics. It is the Jansenist conception of God and human nature that inspired and coloured all his experience and consciousness. According to it, as according to the Calvinist conception, man is a corrupt being, corroded to the core, original sin has branded his very soul. Only Grace saves him and releases him. The order of sin and the order of Grace are distinct and disparate worlds and yet they complement each other and need each other. Greatness and misery are intertwined, united, unified with each other in him. Here is an echo of the Manichean position which also involves an abyss. But even then God's grace is not a free agent, as Jesuits declare; there is a predestination that guides and controls it. This was one of the main subjects he treated in his famous open letters (Les Provinciales) that brought him renown almost overnight. Eternal hell is a possible prospect that faces the Jansenist. That was why a Night always over-shadowed the Day in Pascal's soul.

01.08 - A Theory of Yoga, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Secondly, there is the line of Substitution. Here the mind does not stand in an antagonistic and protestant mood to combat and repress the impulse, but seeks to divert it into other channels, use it to other purposes which do not demand equal sacrifice, may even, on the other hand, be considered by the conscious mind as worthy of human pursuit. Thus the energy that normally would seek sexual gratification might find its outlet in the cultivation of art and literature. It is a common thing in novels to find the heroine disappointed in love taking finally to works of charity and beneficence and thus forgetting her disappointment. Another variety of this is what is known as "drowning one's sorrow in drinking."
   Thirdly, there is the line of Sublimationit is when the natural impulse is neither repressed nor diverted but lifted up into a higher modality. The thing is given a new sense and a new value which serve to remove the stigma usually attached to it and thus allow its free indulgence. Instances of carnal love sublimated into spiritual union, of passion transmuted into devotion (Bhakti) are common enough to illustrate the point.

01.09 - William Blake: The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   So far so good. For it is not far enough. The being or becoming that is demanded in fulfilment of the divine advent in humanity must go to the very roots of life and nature, must seize God in his highest and sovereign status. No prejudice of the past, no notion of our mental habits must seek to impose its law. Thus, for example, in the matter of redeeming the senses by the influx of the higher light, our author seems to consider that the senses will remain more or less as they are, only they will be controlled, guided, used by the higher light. And he seems to think that even the sex relation (even the institution of marriage) may continue to remain, but sublimated, submitted to the laws of the Higher Order. This, according to us, is a dangerous compromise and is simply the imposition of the lower law upon the higher. Our view of the total transformation and divinisation of the Lower is altogether different. The Highest must come down wholly and inhabit in the Lowest, the Lowest must give up altogether its own norms and lift itself into the substance and form too of the Highest.
   Viewed in this light, Blake's memorable mantra attains a deeper and more momentous significance. For it is not merely Earth the senses and life and Matter that are to be uplifted and affianced to Heaven, but all that remains hidden within the bowels of the Earth, the subterranean regions of man's consciousness, the slimy viscous undergrowths, the darkest horrors and monstrosities that man and nature hide in their subconscient and inconscient dungeons of material existence, all these have to be laid bare to the solar gaze of Heaven, burnt or transmuted as demanded by the law of that Supreme Will. That is the Hell that has to be recognised, not rejected and thrown away, but taken up purified and transubstantiated into the body of Heaven itself. The hand of the Highest Heaven must extend and touch the Lowest of the lowest elements, transmute it and set it in its rightful place of honour. A mortal body reconstituted into an immemorial fossil, a lump of coal revivified into a flashing carat of diamond-that shows something of the process underlying the nuptials of which we are speaking.

0.10 - Letters to a Young Captain, #Some Answers From The Mother, #The Mother, #Integral Yoga
  Elsewhere he says explicitly that it is useless to try to satisfy
  desire, for desire is insatiable and can never be satisfied.
  --
  It is not absolutely useless. You probably had a great deal of
  tamas in your mind, and the mental acrobatics of the author
  --
  can, instead of passing one's time in useless analysis.
  12 September 1963
  --
  in order to uselessly bewail the fault, but to cure it by calling to
  one's aid the all-powerful force of the Divine.
  --
  I return it to you, you do not study it and try to use it as a means
  to make progress.
  --
  words, self-deception. Now, if you have a fan and wish to use
  Series Ten - To a Young Captain
  --
  be to use your mutual attachment to unite your efforts in a
  common and combined aspiration to attain the Divine, and in
  --
  and control your body methodically, make yourself useful by
  working at the Playground and your place of work, and try to
  --
  What is the use of Japa?15 Is it a good method to
  repeat words like "Silence" and "Peace" in order to establish silence and peace in oneself when one sits down
  --
  They are useful only for those who want to do an intensive yoga
  and spend five or six hours a day in yogic practices.
  --
  To this rather silly kind of question, Sri Aurobindo always used
  to reply:
  --
  there is not much use in prolonging this state.
  To obtain mental silence, one must learn to relax, to let
  --
  How can one make use of every moment of this
  unique privilege of living here in the Ashram?
  --
  way you will make the best use of your existence.
  Happy New Year for 1965.
  --
  There was a time when I used to see You often in my
  dreams and sometimes I even saw Sri Aurobindo too. But
  --
  before going to sleep. Do you do this now as you used to before?
  This is also the way to avoid going to undesirable places during
  --
  It is beca use men still imagine that to do something useful, they
  have to form groups.

01.10 - Principle and Personality, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Love and admiration for a mahapurusha is not enough, even faith in his gospel is of little avail, nor can actual participation, consecrated work and labour in his ca use save the situation; it is only when the principles, the bare realities for which the mahapurusha stands are in the open forum and men have the full and free opportunity of testing and assimilating them, it is only when individuals thus become living embodiments of those principles and realities that we do create a thing universal and permanent, as universal and permanent as earthly things may be. Principles only can embrace and unify the whole of humanity; a particular personality shall always create division and limitation. By placing the man in front, we erect a wall between the Principle and men at large. It is the principles, on the contrary, that should be given the place of honour: our attempt should be to keep back personalities and make as little use of them as possible. Let the principles work and create in their freedom and power, untrammelled by the limitations of any mere human vessel.
   We are quite familiar with this cry so rampant in our democratic ageprinciples and no personalities! And although we admit the justice of it, yet we cannot ignore the trenchant one-sidedness which it involves. It is perhaps only a reaction, a swing to the opposite extreme of a mentality given too much to personalities, as the case generally has been in the past. It may be necessary, as a corrective, but it belongs only to a temporary stage. Since, however, we are after a universal ideal, we must also have an integral method. We shall have to curb many of our susceptibilities, diminish many of our apprehensions and soberly strike a balance between opposite extremes.

01.11 - Aldous Huxley: The Perennial Philosophy, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 02, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   "To its heights we can always come. For those of us who are still splashing about in the lower ooze, the phrase has a rather ironical ring. Nevertheless, in the light of even the most distant acquaintance with the heights and the fullness, it is possible to understand what its author means. To discover the Kingdom of God exclusively within oneself is easier than to discover it, not only there, but also in the outer worlds of minds and things and living creatures. It is easier beca use the heights within reveal themselves to those who are ready to exclude from their purview all that lies without. And though this exclusion may be a painful and mortificatory process, the fact remains that it is less arduous than the process of inclusion, by which we come to know the fullness as well as the heights of spiritual life. Where there is exclusive concentration on the heights within, temptations and distractions are avoided and there is a general denial and suppression. But when the hope is to know God inclusivelyto realise the divine Ground in the world as well as in the soul, temptations and distractions must not be avoided, but submitted to and used as opportunities for advance; there must be no suppression of outward-turning activities, but a transformation of them so that they become sacramental."
   The neatness of the commentary cannot be improved upon. Only with regard to the "ironical ring" of which Huxley speaks, it has just to be pointed out, as he himself seems to understand, that the "we" referred to in the phrase does not mean humanity in general that 'splashes about in the lower ooze' but those who have a sufficiently developed inner spiritual life.

01.11 - The Basis of Unity, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   In India the spirit of renascence came very late, late almost by three centuries; and even then it could not flood the whole of the continent in all its nooks and corners, psychological and physical. There were any number of pockets (to use a current military phrase) left behind which guarded the spirit of the past and offered persistent and obdurate resistance. Perhaps, such a dispensation was needed in India and inevitable also; inevitable, beca use the religious spirit is closest to India's soul and is its most direct expression and cannot be uprooted so easily; needed, beca use India's and the world's future demands it and depends upon it.
   Only, the religious spirit has to be bathed and purified and enlightened by the spirit of the renascence: that is to say, one must learn and understand and realize that Spirit is the thing the one thing needfulTamevaikam jnatha; 'religions' are its names and forms, appliances and decorations. Let us have by all means the religious spirit, the fundamental experience that is the inmost truth of all religions, that is the matter of our soul; but in our mind and life and body let there be a luminous catholicity, let these organs and instruments be trained to see and compare and appreciate the variety, the numberless facets which the one Spirit naturally presents to the human consciousness. Ekam sat viprh bahudh vadanti. It is an ancient truth that man discovered even in his earliest seekings; but it still awaits an adequate expression and application in life.

01.12 - Three Degrees of Social Organisation, #Collected Works of Nolini Kanta Gupta - Vol 01, #Nolini Kanta Gupta, #Integral Yoga
   Still, the conception of duty cannot finally and definitively solve the problem. It cannot arrive at a perfect harmonisation of the conflicting claims of individual units; for, duty, as I have already said, is a child of mental idealism, and although the mind can exercise some kind of control over life-forces, it cannot altogether eliminate the seeds of conflict that lie imbedded in the very nature of life. It is for this reason that there is an element of constraint in duty; it is, as the poet says, the "stern daughter of the Voice of God". One has to compel oneself, one has to use force on oneself to carry out one's dutythere is a feeling somehow of its being a bitter pill. The cult of duty means rajas controlled and coerced by Sattwa, not the transcendence of rajas. This leads us to the high and supreme conception of Dharma, which is a transcendence of the gunas. Dharma is not an ideal, a standard or a rule that one has to obey: it is the law of self-nature that one inevitably follows, it is easy, spontaneous, delightful. The path of duty is heroic, the path of Dharma is of the gods, godly (cf. Virabhava and Divyabhava of the Tantras).
   The principle of Dharma then inculcates that each individual must, in order to act, find out his truth of being, his true soul and inmost consciousness: one must entirely and integrally merge oneself into that, be identified with it in such a manner that all acts and feelings and thoughts, in fact all movements, inner and outerspontaneously and irrepressibly well out of that fount and origin. The individual souls, being made of one truth-nature in its multiple modalities, when they live, move and have their being in its essential law and dynamism, there cannot but be absolute harmony and perfect synthesis between all the units, even as the sun and moon and stars, as the Veda says, each following its specific orbit according to its specific nature, never collide or haltna me thate na tas thatuh but weave out a faultless pattern of symphony.

WORDNET



--- Overview of noun use

The noun use has 7 senses (first 6 from tagged texts)
                      
1. (90) use, usage, utilization, utilisation, employment, exercise ::: (the act of using; "he warned against the use of narcotic drugs"; "skilled in the utilization of computers")
2. (18) function, purpose, role, use ::: (what something is used for; "the function of an auger is to bore holes"; "ballet is beautiful but what use is it?")
3. (7) use ::: (a particular service; "he put his knowledge to good use"; "patrons have their uses")
4. (1) consumption, economic consumption, usance, use, use of goods and services ::: ((economics) the utilization of economic goods to satisfy needs or in manufacturing; "the consumption of energy has increased steadily")
5. (1) habit, use ::: ((psychology) an automatic pattern of behavior in reaction to a specific situation; may be inherited or acquired through frequent repetition; "owls have nocturnal habits"; "she had a habit twirling the ends of her hair"; "long use had hardened him to it")
6. (1) manipulation, use ::: (exerting shrewd or devious influence especially for one's own advantage; "his manipulation of his friends was scandalous")
7. use, enjoyment ::: ((law) the exercise of the legal right to enjoy the benefits of owning property; "we were given the use of his boat")

--- Overview of verb use

The verb use has 6 senses (first 3 from tagged texts)
                      
1. (603) use, utilize, utilise, apply, employ ::: (put into service; make work or employ for a particular purpose or for its inherent or natural purpose; "use your head!"; "we only use Spanish at home"; "I can't use this tool"; "Apply a magnetic field here"; "This thinking was applied to many projects"; "How do you utilize this tool?"; "I apply this rule to get good results"; "use the plastic bags to store the food"; "He doesn't know how to use a computer")
2. (12) use, habituate ::: (take or consume (regularly or habitually); "She uses drugs rarely")
3. (8) use, expend ::: (use up, consume fully; "The legislature expended its time on school questions")
4. use ::: (seek or achieve an end by using to one's advantage; "She uses her influential friends to get jobs"; "The president's wife used her good connections")
5. practice, apply, use ::: (avail oneself to; "apply a principle"; "practice a religion"; "use care when going down the stairs"; "use your common sense"; "practice non-violent resistance")
6. use ::: (habitually do something (use only in the past tense); "She used to call her mother every week but now she calls only occasionally"; "I used to get sick when I ate in that dining hall"; "They used to vacation in the Bahamas")


--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun use

7 senses of use                            

Sense 1
use, usage, utilization, utilisation, employment, exercise
   => activity
     => act, deed, human action, human activity
       => event
         => psychological feature
           => abstraction, abstract entity
             => entity

Sense 2
function, purpose, role, use
   => utility, usefulness
     => quality
       => attribute
         => abstraction, abstract entity
           => entity

Sense 3
use
   => utility, usefulness
     => quality
       => attribute
         => abstraction, abstract entity
           => entity

Sense 4
consumption, economic consumption, usance, use, use of goods and services
   => demand
     => economic process
       => process, physical process
         => physical entity
           => entity

Sense 5
habit, use
   => custom, usage, usance
     => practice, pattern
       => activity
         => act, deed, human action, human activity
           => event
             => psychological feature
               => abstraction, abstract entity
                 => entity
     => survival
       => continuance, continuation
         => activity
           => act, deed, human action, human activity
             => event
               => psychological feature
                 => abstraction, abstract entity
                   => entity

Sense 6
manipulation, use
   => influence
     => causing, causation
       => act, deed, human action, human activity
         => event
           => psychological feature
             => abstraction, abstract entity
               => entity

Sense 7
use, enjoyment
   => legal right
     => right
       => abstraction, abstract
         => concept, conception, construct
           => idea, thought
             => content, cognitive content, mental object
               => cognition, knowledge, noesis
                 => psychological feature
                   => abstraction, abstract entity
                     => entity


--- Hyponyms of noun use

6 of 7 senses of use                          

Sense 1
use, usage, utilization, utilisation, employment, exercise
   => practice
   => play
   => misuse, abuse
   => exploitation, development
   => recycling
   => application, practical application

Sense 2
function, purpose, role, use
   => raison d'etre

Sense 4
consumption, economic consumption, usance, use, use of goods and services
   => conspicuous consumption

Sense 5
habit, use
   => ritual
   => second nature
   => cleanliness

Sense 6
manipulation, use
   => mind game

Sense 7
use, enjoyment
   => fair use
   => fruition


--- Synonyms/Hypernyms (Ordered by Estimated Frequency) of noun use

7 senses of use                            

Sense 1
use, usage, utilization, utilisation, employment, exercise
   => activity

Sense 2
function, purpose, role, use
   => utility, usefulness

Sense 3
use
   => utility, usefulness

Sense 4
consumption, economic consumption, usance, use, use of goods and services
   => demand

Sense 5
habit, use
   => custom, usage, usance

Sense 6
manipulation, use
   => influence

Sense 7
use, enjoyment
   => legal right




--- Coordinate Terms (sisters) of noun use

7 senses of use                            

Sense 1
use, usage, utilization, utilisation, employment, exercise
  -> activity
   => variation, variance
   => space walk
   => domesticity
   => operation
   => operation
   => practice, pattern
   => diversion, recreation
   => cup of tea, bag, dish
   => follow-up, followup
   => game
   => turn, play
   => music
   => acting, playing, playacting, performing
   => liveliness, animation
   => burst, fit
   => work
   => works, deeds
   => service
   => occupation, business, job, line of work, line
   => occupation
   => writing, committal to writing
   => role
   => wrongdoing, wrongful conduct, misconduct, actus reus
   => waste, wastefulness, dissipation
   => attempt, effort, endeavor, endeavour, try
   => control
   => protection
   => sensory activity
   => education, instruction, teaching, pedagogy, didactics, educational activity
   => training, preparation, grooming
   => representation
   => creation, creative activity
   => dismantling, dismantlement, disassembly
   => puncture
   => search, hunt, hunting
   => use, usage, utilization, utilisation, employment, exercise
   => operation, military operation
   => measurement, measuring, measure, mensuration
   => calibration, standardization, standardisation
   => organization, organisation
   => grouping
   => support, supporting
   => continuance, continuation
   => procedure, process
   => ceremony
   => ceremony
   => worship
   => energizing, activating, activation
   => concealment, concealing, hiding
   => placement, location, locating, position, positioning, emplacement
   => provision, supply, supplying
   => demand
   => pleasure
   => enjoyment, delectation
   => lamentation, mourning
   => laughter
   => market, marketplace, market place
   => politics
   => preparation, readying
   => aid, assist, assistance, help
   => support
   => behavior, behaviour, conduct, doings
   => behavior, behaviour
   => leadership, leading
   => precession, precedence, precedency
   => solo
   => buzz
   => fun
   => sin, hell
   => release, outlet, vent
   => last
   => mystification, obfuscation
   => negotiation
   => verbalization, verbalisation
   => perturbation, disturbance
   => timekeeping

Sense 2
function, purpose, role, use
  -> utility, usefulness
   => detergency, detergence
   => function, purpose, role, use
   => helpfulness
   => use
   => serviceability, serviceableness, usableness, useableness, usability
   => instrumentality
   => practicality
   => practicability, practicableness

Sense 3
use
  -> utility, usefulness
   => detergency, detergence
   => function, purpose, role, use
   => helpfulness
   => use
   => serviceability, serviceableness, usableness, useableness, usability
   => instrumentality
   => practicality
   => practicability, practicableness

Sense 4
consumption, economic consumption, usance, use, use of goods and services
  -> demand
   => consumption, economic consumption, usance, use, use of goods and services

Sense 5
habit, use
  -> custom, usage, usance
   => Americanism
   => Anglicism, Britishism
   => consuetude
   => couvade
   => Germanism
   => habit, use
   => hijab
   => ritual, rite

Sense 6
manipulation, use
  -> influence
   => cross-pollination
   => exposure
   => impingement, encroachment, impact
   => manipulation, use
   => hypnotism, mesmerism, suggestion
   => enticement, temptation

Sense 7
use, enjoyment
  -> legal right
   => compulsory process
   => conjugal right
   => conjugal visitation right, conjugal visitation
   => preemption, pre-emption
   => title, claim
   => eminent domain
   => franchise, enfranchisement
   => patent right
   => right of election
   => right of entry
   => right of re-entry
   => right of offset
   => right of privacy
   => seat
   => use, enjoyment
   => usufruct
   => visitation right
   => copyright, right of first publication
   => tenure, land tenure




--- Grep of noun use
abuse
accoucheuse
adobe house
alcohol abuse
alcoholic abuse
alcoholism abuse
alehouse
american harvest mouse
antabuse
apartment house
applause
arbitration clause
asian black grouse
auction house
bakehouse
bark-louse
bark louse
barrelhouse
bathhouse
battle of monmouth court house
battle of spotsylvania courthouse
bawdyhouse
beach house
bee house
berceuse
bertram brockhouse
betelgeuse
bird louse
birdhouse
biting louse
black grouse
blockhouse
blouse
boarding house
boardinghouse
boathouse
body louse
book louse
booklouse
brockhouse
brokerage house
building supply house
burnouse
cactus mouse
card-house
cardhouse
carnal abuse
carouse
carriage house
cartridge fuse
cat and mouse
cathouse
cause
cayuse
ceruse
chapterhouse
charnel house
charterhouse
chartreuse
chauffeuse
chicken louse
child abuse
chophouse
church mouse
clause
clearing house
clubhouse
coach house
coal house
coffeehouse
coiffeuse
common booklouse
common louse
computer mouse
conference house
context of use
cookhouse
coordinate clause
cotton mouse
countinghouse
country house
county courthouse
courthouse
cowhouse
crab louse
crazy house
crouse
cruse
customhouse
customshouse
danseuse
david rittenhouse
death house
deck-house
deer mouse
dependent clause
descriptive clause
detached house
detention house
detonating fuse
discount house
disuse
dog house
doghouse
doll's house
dollhouse
dormouse
dosshouse
drug abuse
drug of abuse
druse
duplex house
duse
dwelling house
eating house
electrical fuse
eleonora duse
enabling clause
escalator clause
european black grouse
european wood mouse
ex-spouse
excuse
fair use
farmhouse
field house
field mouse
fieldmouse
final cause
firehouse
first cause
fish louse
flophouse
flying mouse
frat house
fraternity house
free house
full house
funny house
fuse
gambling house
gaming house
gatehouse
george westinghouse
glasshouse
glebe house
grandfather clause
grape louse
grasshopper mouse
greenhouse
grouse
guardhouse
guesthouse
harvest mouse
hash house
hazel mouse
head louse
heliopause
henhouse
herbert marcuse
hispid pocket mouse
hothouse
house
house mouse
hypotenuse
icehouse
independent clause
jailhouse
jook house
joss house
juke house
jumping mouse
jumping plant louse
kangaroo mouse
lady of the house
lamp house
lamphouse
lazar house
lighthouse
lobscouse
lobscuse
lodging house
lost cause
louse
madhouse
main clause
manor house
mansion house
marcuse
marsupial mouse
masseuse
meadow jumping mouse
meadow mouse
meat house
meeting house
meetinghouse
menopause
meuse
mexican pocket mouse
mickey mouse
middy blouse
mighty mouse
minnie mouse
misuse
monmouth court house
mouse
movie house
muse
new world mouse
nonrestrictive clause
nude mouse
nut house
nuthouse
oast house
onion louse
open house
opera house
ouse
outhouse
overuse
p. g. wodehouse
packinghouse
painted sandgrouse
pallas's sandgrouse
pause
pelham grenville wodehouse
penthouse
pesthouse
pilothouse
pin-tailed grouse
pin-tailed sandgrouse
pine mouse
plains pocket mouse
planetary house
plant louse
playhouse
plug fuse
pocket mouse
poorhouse
porterhouse
poseuse
post-menopause
post house
posthouse
pothouse
pouched mouse
powerhouse
prairie grouse
prison house
probable cause
pubic louse
public house
publishing house
pump house
pygmy mouse
ranch house
recluse
red-backed mouse
red grouse
refuse
relative clause
reserve clause
rest house
restrictive clause
rittenhouse
roadhouse
rooming house
roundhouse
row house
royal house
ruffed grouse
ruse
russel crouse
safe house
safety fuse
sage grouse
sand grouse
sandgrouse
schoolhouse
scouse
sea louse
sea mouse
self-abuse
semi-detached house
semidetached house
settlement house
sexual abuse
shaft louse
sharp-tailed grouse
shrewmouse
siege of syracuse
silky pocket mouse
slaughterhouse
smokehouse
sod house
solar house
souse
sporting house
spouse
spruce grouse
stash house
statehouse
station house
steakhouse
storage warehouse
storehouse
subordinate clause
substance abuse
sucking louse
summer house
summerhouse
syracuse
tap house
taphouse
teahouse
tenement house
terraced house
third house
time-fuse
titmouse
tollhouse
toolhouse
toulouse
town house
tract house
treasure house
tree house
tropopause
tufted titmouse
u.s. house
us house
use
use immunity
use of goods and services
useableness
used-car
used-car lot
usefulness
uselessness
user
user interface
vesper mouse
warehouse
washhouse
wendy house
westinghouse
whale louse
wheelhouse
white-footed mouse
white house
wholesale house
whorehouse
wodehouse
woman of the house
wood mouse
woodlouse
woolly plant louse
workhouse



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Wikipedia - Acianthera per-dusenii -- Species of plant
Wikipedia - Acid-free paper -- A type of paper used for preservation
Wikipedia - Acid house party -- Type of illegal party typically staged in warehouses in 1987-1989
Wikipedia - Acid House
Wikipedia - Acid house
Wikipedia - Ackerman-Boyd House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Ackley function -- Function used as a performance test problem for optimization algorithms
Wikipedia - ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology
Wikipedia - Acorn User
Wikipedia - Acoustical oceanography -- The use of underwater sound to study the sea, its boundaries and its contents
Wikipedia - Acoustic Doppler current profiler -- A hydroacoustic current meter used to measure water current velocities over a depth range using the Doppler effect
Wikipedia - Acoustic foam -- Open celled foam used for soundproofing
Wikipedia - Acoustic radiometer -- Device used to measure elements of sound
Wikipedia - A Critique of Pure Tolerance -- 1965 book by Robert Paul Wolff, Barrington Moore Jr., and Herbert Marcuse
Wikipedia - Acropolis Museum -- Archaeological museum in Athens, Greece
Wikipedia - Acta Geologica Polonica -- Scholarly journal focused on geology
Wikipedia - Acting for a Cause -- Series
Wikipedia - Action Park -- American amusement park in New Jersey
Wikipedia - Actis Capital -- British investment firm focused on the private equity
Wikipedia - Activated charcoal cleanse -- Pseudoscientific use of medicine
Wikipedia - Active users -- Performance metric for success of an internet product
Wikipedia - Activities of daily living -- Term used in healthcare to refer to people's daily self care activities
Wikipedia - ActivTrak (software) -- cloud-based user activity monitoring software
Wikipedia - Actuality film -- Non-fiction film genre that uses footage of real events
Wikipedia - Actuarial Society of South Africa HIV/AIDS models -- Actuarial mathematical models used in assessing the impact of the epidemic in South Africa
Wikipedia - Acute radiation syndrome -- Health problems caused by exposure to high levels of ionizing radiation
Wikipedia - Ada Information Clearinghouse
Wikipedia - Adamawa State House of Assembly -- Legislative arm of the government of Adamawa State of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Adamova Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Adam Ragusea -- American YouTuber (born 1982)
Wikipedia - Adams County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Adams County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Adams County Courthouse (Wisconsin) -- Historic building located in Friendship, Adams County, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - A Damsel in Distress (novel) -- 1919 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Adams House (Harvard College) -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Adam Stockhausen -- American production designer
Wikipedia - Adaptive user interfaces
Wikipedia - Adcock antenna -- A type of radio antenna array, used mainly for early radio navigation
Wikipedia - Added value -- Used as a measure of shareholder value in the financial analysis of shares
Wikipedia - Adderall -- Drug mixture used mainly to treat ADHD and narcolepsy
Wikipedia - Adderley Hall -- Former British historic country house
Wikipedia - Additive genetic effects -- Effects on a phenotype caused by multiple genes whose individual effects add together to produce their total effects
Wikipedia - Additive white Gaussian noise -- Basic noise model used in Information theory to mimic the effect of many random processes that occur in nature
Wikipedia - Address Resolution Protocol -- Telecommunications protocol used for resolution of network layer addresses
Wikipedia - Adelaide Holocaust Museum and Andrew Steiner Education Centre -- Museum in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Adelolf, Count of Boulogne -- Count of Boulogne; member of the House of Flanders
Wikipedia - Adelyn Dohme Breeskin -- Curator, museum director, art historian
Wikipedia - Adhesive bonding -- Joining technique used in manufacture and repair
Wikipedia - Adhesive -- Non-metallic material used to bond various materials together
Wikipedia - Adjacency matrix -- Square matrix used to represent a graph or network
Wikipedia - Adjustable pressure-limiting valve -- Flow control valve used in anaesthesiology
Wikipedia - Adjusted Service Rating Score -- System used by US Army at the end of WWII to determine which soldiers were eligible to be repatriated to the US
Wikipedia - Administrative distance -- A number of arbitrary unit used in network routing decisions
Wikipedia - Admiral's House, Hampstead -- Listed building in the London Borough of Camden
Wikipedia - Admiralty House, London
Wikipedia - Admiralty House, Sydney -- Official residence of the Governor-General of Australia in Kirribilli, Sydney
Wikipedia - Admiralty law -- The totality of applicable law for the oceans and their use
Wikipedia - Admiralty, Trafalgar Square -- public house
Wikipedia - Ad nauseam -- Discussion that has continued to the point of nausea
Wikipedia - Adobe Flash -- Deprecated multimedia platform used to add animation and interactivity to websites
Wikipedia - Adobe Flores -- historic house in South Pasadena, California
Wikipedia - Adobe Muse
Wikipedia - Adolescent medicine -- Medical subspecialty that focuses on care of patients who are in the adolescent period of development
Wikipedia - Adolf Busemann -- German aerospace engineer
Wikipedia - A Doll's House (1917 film) -- 1917 film
Wikipedia - A Doll's House (1922 film) -- 1922 film by Charles Bryant
Wikipedia - A Doll's House -- Play by Henrik Ibsen
Wikipedia - Adoration of the Magi (Cesare da Sesto) -- Painting by Cesare da Sesto in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Adoration of the Shepherds (Santafede) -- Painting by Fabrizio Santafede in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Adranodoros -- 3rd-century BC tyrant of Syracuse
Wikipedia - Adrian Madaro -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Ads.txt -- Text file format used in online advertising management
Wikipedia - Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale -- A self-reported questionnaire used to assist in the diagnosis of ADHD in adults
Wikipedia - Adultery: A User's Guide -- 1995 film
Wikipedia - Adult lifetime cannabis use by country -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Adult Use of Marijuana Act -- 2016 California voter initiative that legalized recreational cannabis
Wikipedia - Adusei Kwasi -- Ghanaian politician
Wikipedia - Advanced Cryogenic Evolved Stage -- United Launch Alliance second stage that can be used as a propellant depot
Wikipedia - Advanced Facer-Canceler System -- Mail sorting machine used by the US Postal Service
Wikipedia - Advanced Video Coding -- The most widely used standard for video compression
Wikipedia - Advent calendar -- Special calendar used to count the days of Advent in anticipation of Christmas
Wikipedia - Advent:Publishers -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Adventureland (Iowa) -- Amusement park
Wikipedia - Adventureland (New York) -- Amusement park in East Farmingdale, New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Adventure Park, Geelong -- Amusement and water park in Wallington, Victoria, Australia
Wikipedia - Adventure Time: Explore the Dungeon Because I Don't Know! -- 2013 video game
Wikipedia - Adventure World (amusement park) -- Amusement park in Australia
Wikipedia - Advertising in biology -- Use of displays by organisms to signal for selective advantage
Wikipedia - Aehobak -- Edible summer squash commonly used in Korean cuisine
Wikipedia - Aerial firefighting -- Use of aircraft to combat wildfires
Wikipedia - Aerial toll house -- Disputed, controversial doctrine in the Eastern Orthodox Church, which states that after death the soul, on its way to heaven, goes through aerial toll houses where demons try to accuse the soul of the sins it commited and drag the soul to hell
Wikipedia - Aerobic treatment system -- A small scale sewage treatment system which uses an aerobic process for digestion
Wikipedia - Aeroflot Flight 109 -- 1973 plane crash caused by hijacker with bomb
Wikipedia - Aeronautical Code signals -- Brevity codes used for aviation
Wikipedia - Aerosinusitis -- Barotrauma of the sinuses
Wikipedia - AES-2id -- Guidelines for the use of the AES3 interface
Wikipedia - AES51 -- Method of carrying ATM cells over Ethernet for use by AES47
Wikipedia - AES-GCM-SIV -- Authenticated encryption mode with resistance against nonce reuse
Wikipedia - Aetna Hill (Midlothian, Virginia house) -- Historical house in Virginia
Wikipedia - AEZ railcar -- Type of train used in Chile
Wikipedia - Afar Triangle -- A geological depression caused by the Afar Triple Junction
Wikipedia - A Few Quick Ones -- 1959 short story collection by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Affective computing -- Area of research in computer science aiming to understand the emotional state of users
Wikipedia - Affordable housing -- Housing affordable to those with a median household income
Wikipedia - A-frame building -- Architectural house or building style
Wikipedia - African American Civil War Memorial Museum -- Memorial and Museum in Washington, DC
Wikipedia - Africana womanism -- Ideology focused on women of African descent
Wikipedia - African reference alphabet -- Set of 60 letters (in the latter edition), used for writing various African languages; initially proposed in 1978 and revised in 1982
Wikipedia - A Full House -- 1920 film by James Cruze
Wikipedia - Afzal Tauseef -- Pakistani writer, columnist (1936-2014)
Wikipedia - Aga Khan University -- University in Karachi, Pakistan, with campuses in various countries
Wikipedia - Agar -- Thickening agent used in microbiology and food
Wikipedia - Agassiz, Cambridge, Massachusetts -- Neighborhood in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - A Gay Girl In Damascus -- Fictional persona used by a fake blog
Wikipedia - Age adjustment -- Technique used to compare populations with different age profiles
Wikipedia - Agecroft Hall -- manor house
Wikipedia - A Gentleman of Leisure -- 1910 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Age of Steam Roundhouse -- Locomotive roundhouse museum in Sugarcreek, Ohio
Wikipedia - Age verification system -- Measure used to restrict access to digital content by age
Wikipedia - Agganis Arena -- Arena in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Agglutinative language -- Type of synthetic language with morphology that primarily uses agglutination
Wikipedia - Aggregate (Data Warehouse)
Wikipedia - Aggregate (data warehouse)
Wikipedia - Aggressive inline skating -- inline skating discipline focused on executing tricks
Wikipedia - Aggrey House -- Hostel in London in 1934 for African students and students of African descent
Wikipedia - A. Gilbert Wright -- American zoologist and museologist
Wikipedia - Agnes Keith House -- Museum in Sabah, Malaysia
Wikipedia - Agnes von Krusenstjerna -- Swedish writer
Wikipedia - Agnes von Kurowsky -- Muse for Ernest Hemingway
Wikipedia - Agostino Giuseppe Delfino -- Italian bishop
Wikipedia - Agricultural machinery -- Machinery used in farming or other agriculture
Wikipedia - Agriculture -- Cultivation of plants and animals to provide useful products
Wikipedia - Agrochemical -- Any chemical used in agriculture
Wikipedia - Agroforestry -- Land use management system
Wikipedia - Aguadilla Ice Skating Arena -- Multi-use facility in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - A Haunted House 2 -- 2014 film directed by Michael Tiddes
Wikipedia - A Haunted House -- 2013 film directed by Michael Tiddes
Wikipedia - Ahirkapi Feneri -- Lighthouse in Turkey
Wikipedia - Ahlbeck (Usedom) -- District of Heringsdorf in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany
Wikipedia - Ahmed Idris Wase -- Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Ahmed Marafa -- 8th speaker of Niger state house
Wikipedia - Ahmed Yousef Elkawiseh -- Libyan judoka
Wikipedia - Ahnapee State Trail -- Multi-use trail in northeastern Wisconsin, Unirted States
Wikipedia - A House and Its Head -- 1935 novel by Ivy Compton-Burnett
Wikipedia - A House Built on Water -- 2001 film
Wikipedia - A House Divided (1931 film) -- 1931 film
Wikipedia - A House for Mr Biswas -- 1961 book by V. S. Naipaul
Wikipedia - A House Full of Love -- 1954 film
Wikipedia - A House Through Time -- BBC documentary series
Wikipedia - A House with a View of the Sea -- 2001 film directed by Alberto Arvelo
Wikipedia - A House Without Boundaries -- 1972 film
Wikipedia - Aida -- Opera in four acts by Giuseppe Verdi
Wikipedia - Aiken Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame and Museum -- Hall of Fame for Cowboys
Wikipedia - Aileron -- Aircraft control surface used to induce roll
Wikipedia - Aillet House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - AIM Multiuser Benchmark -- Computer benchmark
Wikipedia - Ainderby railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Ain't No Love (Ain't No Use) -- 1993 single by Sub Sub
Wikipedia - Air base -- Aerodrome used by a military force for the operation of military aircraft
Wikipedia - Airborne transmission -- Disease caused by pathogens and transmitted through the air by small droplets or aerosols
Wikipedia - Airbus A310 -- Short-fuselage derivative of the Airbus A300 airliner
Wikipedia - Aircraft catapult -- Device used to launch aircraft from ships
Wikipedia - Aircraft engine -- Engine designed for use in powered aircraft
Wikipedia - Airey house -- Type of prefabricated house in the UK
Wikipedia - Air Force Heritage Museum and Air Park -- Air Force museum in St. James (Winnipeg), Manitoba
Wikipedia - Air Force Museum of New Zealand -- Military and Aviation Museum in Christchurch, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Air Force Specialty Code -- Alphanumeric code used by the US Air Force to identify a specific job
Wikipedia - Air gun -- Gun that uses compressed air to launch projectiles
Wikipedia - Airline hub -- Airport that an airline uses as a transfer point to get passengers to their intended destination
Wikipedia - Air lock diving-bell plant -- An underwater work support barge used at Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Air navigation -- Method used in air traffic control
Wikipedia - Air Pollution Index -- Index to describe the air quality used in Malaysia
Wikipedia - Airport racial profiling in the United States -- Activity directed at individuals because of their appearance
Wikipedia - Aisha Yousef al-Mannai -- Qatari academic and politician
Wikipedia - Ajman Museum -- Museum in Ajman, United Arab Emirates
Wikipedia - A.J. Williamson House -- Historic Place in Hawaii County, Hawaii
Wikipedia - Akal Purakh -- Sikh name used to denote God
Wikipedia - Aki Juusela -- Finnish ice hockey left winger
Wikipedia - A Kingdom for a House -- 1949 film
Wikipedia - AkmeM-EM-^Frags Lighthouse -- lighthouse in Latvia
Wikipedia - Akron Fossils & Science Center -- Museum in Copley, Ohio
Wikipedia - Akrotiri Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Santorini, Greece
Wikipedia - Aksel Kuuse -- Estonian athlete
Wikipedia - A. K. Steunenberg House -- Historic NRHP building in Caldwell, Idaho
Wikipedia - Aksumite currency -- Coinage produced and used in the Kingdom of Aksum
Wikipedia - Alabama Museum of Natural History -- Museum in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, United States
Wikipedia - Alabama's at-large congressional district -- Historical U.S. House district in the state of Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State House -- State government building in Montgomery, AL
Wikipedia - Alain Knuser -- Swiss bobsledder
Wikipedia - Al Ain National Museum -- Museum in the UAE
Wikipedia - Alakbar Huseynov -- Azerbaijani actor
Wikipedia - Alamo Drafthouse Cinema -- American movie theater chain
Wikipedia - Alan Cheuse -- Novelist, short story writer, critic
Wikipedia - Alappuzha Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Alarm fatigue -- Psychological consequence of overuse of alarms
Wikipedia - Alaska's at-large congressional district -- U.S. House district in the state of Alaska
Wikipedia - Alas Leuser Airport -- Airport in Kutacane City, Indonesia
Wikipedia - Albacete Provincial Museum -- Museum of archeology and fine art located in Albacete, Spain
Wikipedia - Albanian alphabet -- Variant of Latin alphabet used to write the Albanian language.
Wikipedia - Alban William Housego Phillips
Wikipedia - Albert Huser -- German weightlifter
Wikipedia - Albert Overhauser
Wikipedia - Albert Pearce -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Albert Zahn House -- Historic house in Baileys Harbor, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Albino Rock Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Alcohol abuse
Wikipedia - Alcohol and Native Americans -- Native American use of alcoholic beverages
Wikipedia - Alcoholic hallucinosis -- complication of alcohol misuse in people with alcohol use disorder
Wikipedia - Alcoholics Anonymous -- Sobriety-focused mutual aid fellowship
Wikipedia - Alcohol-related crime -- Criminal activities that involve alcohol use
Wikipedia - Alcohols (medicine) -- Alcohols as used as antiseptics, disinfectants or antidotes
Wikipedia - Alcohol use disorder
Wikipedia - Alcott House
Wikipedia - Aldborough House -- Georgian mansion in Dublin 1, Ireland
Wikipedia - Aldershot military prison -- Former 'Glasshouse' military prison
Wikipedia - Aldford House -- Park Lane mansion
Wikipedia - Al-Dhira' -- Disused name for the two pairs of brightest stars in Canis Minoris and Geminorum
Wikipedia - Aldrete's scoring system -- Scoring system used in Anaesthesiology
Wikipedia - Aldrich-Genella House -- Historic house in New Orleans, Louisiana
Wikipedia - Alehouse dagger -- Type of English dagger or shortsword
Wikipedia - Aleksandra Kornhauser Frazer -- Slovenian chemist
Wikipedia - Alemtuzumab -- medication used to treat chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL)
Wikipedia - Aleppo Citadel Museum
Wikipedia - Alexander & Baldwin Sugar Museum -- Located in the small sugarcane growing and milling community of PuM-JM-;unene, Hawaii, Kahului, Maui
Wikipedia - Alexander County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Alexander Hamilton (Ceracchi) -- marble bust by Giuseppe Ceracchi
Wikipedia - Alexander Herschel and Pauline G. McMicken House -- Historic house in West Allis, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Alexander House (Boise, Idaho) -- Historic building
Wikipedia - Alexander Keith's Brewery -- Anheuser-Busch InBev subsidiary brewing beer in Nova Scotia, Canada
Wikipedia - Alexander Kruse -- American painter
Wikipedia - Alexander McQueen (brand) -- British luxury fashion house
Wikipedia - Alexander von Falkenhausen -- German general and military advisor
Wikipedia - Alexandra Croom -- British archaeologist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Alexandra W. Busch -- German Roman archaeologist, Prof. and museum director
Wikipedia - Alex Askew -- Virginia house of delegates member
Wikipedia - Alex Vause -- Character from Orange is the New Black
Wikipedia - Alf Clausen -- American film and television composer
Wikipedia - Alfoxton House
Wikipedia - Alfred A. Knopf -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Alfred Philpott -- New Zealand museum curator, entomologist, writer and milk factory worker
Wikipedia - Alfred Rouse -- British murderer
Wikipedia - Algae fuel -- Use of algae as a source of energy rich oils
Wikipedia - Algae scrubber -- A biological water filter that uses light to grow algae which removes undesirable chemicals from aquarium water
Wikipedia - Aliashraf Abdulhuseyn oglu Alizade -- Azerbaijani geologist
Wikipedia - Ali Bel Bicaj Tower House and Mill -- Cultural heritage monument of Kosovo
Wikipedia - Ali bey Huseynzade
Wikipedia - Alice Kyteler -- Hiberno-Norman noblewoman accused of witchcraft
Wikipedia - Alice Woodhouse -- New Zealand journalist, librarian, and broadcaster
Wikipedia - Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem -- 2007 film by Strause brothers
Wikipedia - Ali G Indahouse -- 2002 comedy film directed by Mark Mylod
Wikipedia - Alimony -- Legal obligation to provide financial support to one's spouse due to marital separation
Wikipedia - Aline Chretien -- Canadian political spouse (1936-2020)
Wikipedia - A Lion in the House -- 2006 American documentary film about childhood cancer
Wikipedia - Alireza Yousefi -- Iranian weightlifter
Wikipedia - Alison Pearson (accused witch)
Wikipedia - Alison Sheridan -- Archaeologist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Ali -- Member of Muhammad's Household, first of the Shia Imams, and fourth Sunni Caliph (601-661)
Wikipedia - Al Jawhara bint Musaed Al Jiluwi -- one of the spouses of King Abdulaziz
Wikipedia - Allard Pierson Museum
Wikipedia - All Because of the Dog -- 1935 film
Wikipedia - All Because of You (U2 song) -- 2005 single by U2
Wikipedia - Allegheny County Workhouse -- Prison in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Allen County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Allenhouse Institute of Technology -- Engineering college in Uttar Pradesh, India
Wikipedia - Alleyrat, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Alliant Energy PowerHouse -- Building in Iowa, United States
Wikipedia - Allison Cameron -- fictional character on the Fox medical drama House
Wikipedia - Allison Krause -- Student killed at Kent State University in 1970
Wikipedia - All or Nothing: Manchester City -- Amazon Original sports docuseries
Wikipedia - All or Nothing (sports docuseries) -- Prime Video series
Wikipedia - All or Nothing: Tottenham Hotspur -- Amazon Original sports docuseries
Wikipedia - Al-M-aM-8M-$useM-DM-+niyah -- governorate of Jordan
Wikipedia - Al Ma'mal Foundation for Contemporary Art -- Art museum in Jerusalem
Wikipedia - Almanach des Muses -- Magazine
Wikipedia - Almon A. Covey House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - Almon W. and Dr. Mary E. Spaulding Ranch -- NRHP historic house in Boise, Idaho, United States
Wikipedia - Almshouse Branch (Isaac Branch tributary) -- Stream in Delaware, USA
Wikipedia - Almshouse -- Charitable housing
Wikipedia - Al-Najm al-Thaqib -- Missile system used by the Houthis
Wikipedia - Alne railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Aloe Museum -- Museum in Aruba
Wikipedia - Aloyseum -- Museum in Karnataka, India
Wikipedia - Alphacoronavirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Alphaflexiviridae -- Family of viruses in the order Tymovirales affecting plants and fungi
Wikipedia - Alpha House -- American 2013 TV series
Wikipedia - Alphavirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Alphonse Gemuseus -- Swiss equestrian
Wikipedia - Alphonse I of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Alpinist (magazine) -- American magazine focused on mountaineering ascents worldwide
Wikipedia - Alslevgaard -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Alston Householder
Wikipedia - Alston's brown mouse -- Species of mammal
Wikipedia - Alston Scott Householder -- American mathematician
Wikipedia - Alte Nationalgalerie -- Art museum in Berlin, Germany
Wikipedia - Alternative law in Ireland prior to 1921 -- Legal systems used by Irish nationalist organizations
Wikipedia - Altes Museum -- Antiquities museum in Berlin
Wikipedia - Alte Weser Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Lower Saxony, Germany
Wikipedia - Alt.* hierarchy -- Subclass of Usenet newsgroups
Wikipedia - Altofts railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Alt.sex.stories -- Usenet newsgroup
Wikipedia - Alt.suicide.holiday -- Usenet newsgroup
Wikipedia - Alva Fleharty House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - Alvina Krause -- American theatre director
Wikipedia - Alycia Bellamy -- American singer, actress and muse
Wikipedia - Alyson Books -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Alyson Sullivan -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - AM5-M2 and AM4-M4 -- Rapid transit rolling stock used on Budapest Metro
Wikipedia - Amala Shankar -- Indian danseuse
Wikipedia - Amalie Arena -- multiuse arena in Tampa, Florida, USA
Wikipedia - Amana Corporation -- American brand of household appliances
Wikipedia - A Man of Means -- 1991 short story collection by P.G. Wodehouse and C.H. Bovill
Wikipedia - Amaravati Marbles -- series of sculptures in the British Museum
Wikipedia - Amateur radio -- Use of radio frequency spectra for non-commercial purposes
Wikipedia - Amazon Theatre -- Opera house in Manaus, Brazil
Wikipedia - Amber alert -- Child abduction emergency alert used in the US
Wikipedia - Ambient authority -- Term used in the study of access control systems
Wikipedia - Ambrose Castellano -- Politician and member New Mexico House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Ambu (company) -- Company producing single-use endoscopy
Wikipedia - Amedee Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Caledonia
Wikipedia - Amelia Island Light -- Lighthouse in Florida, United States
Wikipedia - American Art Museum
Wikipedia - American-Born Confused Desi -- Cultural slang
Wikipedia - American Foxhound -- American dog breed used for hunting by scent
Wikipedia - American Heritage Museum -- Military history museum in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - American Housewife -- American comedy television series
Wikipedia - American Invitational Mathematics Examination -- Mathematics test used to determine qualification for the U.S. Mathematical Olympiad
Wikipedia - American Morse code -- Morse code variant used on landline telegraph systems in the U.S.
Wikipedia - American Museum of Natural History -- Natural history museum in New York City
Wikipedia - American Pie Presents: Beta House -- 2007 film by Andrew Waller
Wikipedia - American Repertory Theater -- Professional not-for-profit theater in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - American Sign Language -- Sign language used predominately in the United States
Wikipedia - American Studies Association -- Academic association focused on American Studies
Wikipedia - American Wind Power Center -- museum of wind power in Lubbock, Texas
Wikipedia - America's Caribbean -- Loosely used nickname for the U.S. Virgin Islands and for Florida's Key West
Wikipedia - Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales -- network of national museums in Wales
Wikipedia - Amherst College -- Liberal arts college in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Amherst-Pelham Regional School District -- Public school system in Amherst, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Amhuinnsuidhe Castle -- Country house in Outer Hebrides, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - AMICAL Consortium -- Consortium of American international liberal arts institutions, focused libraries, technology, learning.
Wikipedia - Amiga User International
Wikipedia - Amina El Filali -- Moroccan woman forced to marry her abuser
Wikipedia - Amineptine -- Tricyclic antidepressant, with abuse, dependence and severe acne issues
Wikipedia - Amir Timur Museum -- Museum in Tashkent, Uzbekistan
Wikipedia - Amitriptyline -- medicine used to treat a number of mental illnesses
Wikipedia - Amoebiasis -- Human disease caused by amoeba protists
Wikipedia - AMOLED -- Display technology for use in mobile devices and televisions
Wikipedia - Amon Carter Museum of American Art
Wikipedia - Amotherby railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Amotivational syndrome -- Impairments primarily associated with cannabis use
Wikipedia - Amoureux House -- Historic house and museum in Ste. Genevieve, Missouri
Wikipedia - Amoz Gibson -- Member of the Universal House of Justice
Wikipedia - Ampex -- American company that pioneered the use of videotape
Wikipedia - Amphibious assault ship -- Type of warship used in amphibious assaults
Wikipedia - Amphibious warfare ship -- Ship used in amphibious warfare
Wikipedia - Ampleforth railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Amrum Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Wikipedia - Amsterdam Ordnance Datum -- vertical datum in use in large parts of Western Europe, originally created for use in the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Amuse Inc. -- Japanese talent agency
Wikipedia - Amusement arcade
Wikipedia - Amusement park -- Park with rides and attractions
Wikipedia - Amusement
Wikipedia - Amy Krouse Rosenthal -- American author, radio host and producer, filmmaker
Wikipedia - Amy Ronanye Krause -- American judge
Wikipedia - Amy Winehouse -- English singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - Anabolic-androgenic steroids abuse
Wikipedia - Anacostia Riverwalk Trail -- A 25 mile multi-use trail system in Washington D.C.
Wikipedia - Anaerobic exercise -- Physical exercise intense enough to cause lactate formation
Wikipedia - Anaesthetic machine -- medical device used to generate a fresh gas flow for anaesthesia
Wikipedia - Analgesic -- Any member of the group of drugs used to achieve analgesia, relief from pain
Wikipedia - Analog computer -- Computer that uses analog techonology
Wikipedia - Analog photography -- Non-digital photography that uses film or chemical emulsions
Wikipedia - Analog television -- Television that uses analog signals
Wikipedia - Anamur Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the province of Mersin, Turkey
Wikipedia - Anaphora (linguistics) -- Use of an expression whose interpretation depends on context
Wikipedia - Anaphora (rhetoric) -- Repeating the same phrase before each clause for emphasis
Wikipedia - Anatolian rug -- Term commonly used to denote rugs woven in Anatolia
Wikipedia - Anatomical neck of humerus -- Obliquely directed, forming an obtuse angle with the body of the humerus
Wikipedia - Anatomical plane -- Plane used to transect the human body, in order to describe the location of structures or the direction of movements
Wikipedia - Anatomical terminology -- Scientific terminology used by anatomists, zoologists, and health professionals
Wikipedia - Anatomical terms of microanatomy -- Anatomical terminology is used to describe microanatomical (or histological) structures
Wikipedia - Anatomical terms of neuroanatomy -- Terminology used to describe the central and peripheral nervous systems
Wikipedia - Anchers Hus -- Historic house and studio museum in Skagen, Denmark
Wikipedia - Anchorage Museum -- Museum in Anchorage, Alaska
Wikipedia - Anchor -- Device used to connect a vessel to the bed of a body of water to prevent the craft from drifting
Wikipedia - Ancient Chinese Whorehouse -- 1994 film by Kai Ming Lai
Wikipedia - Ancient Egyptian technology -- devices, and technologies invented or used in Ancient Egypt
Wikipedia - Ancient Greek -- Forms of Greek used from around the 9th century BC to the 6th century AD
Wikipedia - Ancient Siam -- Open-air museum in Thailand
Wikipedia - Ancient South Arabian script -- Script used for writing Old South Arabian languages
Wikipedia - Anderson Farm Museum -- History museum in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Anderson impurity model -- Hamiltonian used in quantum physics
Wikipedia - And He Built a Crooked House
Wikipedia - Andhra Pradesh Department of Archeology and Museums -- Department of the government of Andhra Pradesh
Wikipedia - Andhra Pradesh Legislative Assembly -- Lower house of the Andhra Pradesh state legislature of India
Wikipedia - Andi Clifford -- Wyoming House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Andover, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Andover Museum and Museum of the Iron Age -- museum
Wikipedia - Andover workhouse scandal -- UK 1845 poor law scandal
Wikipedia - AN/DRC-8 Emergency Rocket Communications System -- US Strategic Forces system to communication with ballistic missiles in use from 1963-1991
Wikipedia - Andrea Clausen (politician) -- British-born Falkland Islands politician
Wikipedia - Andrea Clausen -- German actress
Wikipedia - Andrea Huser -- Swiss mountain biker
Wikipedia - Andreas Bausewein -- German politician and mayor of Erfurt
Wikipedia - Andreas von Ettingshausen
Wikipedia - Andrei Kazusenok -- Belarusian judoka
Wikipedia - Andrejs UpM-DM-+ts' Memorial Museum -- Museum in Latvia
Wikipedia - Andrew Burnett -- British numismatist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Andrew G. Anderson House -- Historic house in Hibbing, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Andrew King (representative) -- American politician, Democratic party member of the House of Representatives representing Missouri (1812-1895)
Wikipedia - Andrew Lee (entrepreneur) -- Crown Prince of the Korean Imperial Family, Imperial House of Yi
Wikipedia - Andrew Newman House -- historic house
Wikipedia - Andrew Ritchie (art historian) -- Museum director and Monuments Man
Wikipedia - Andrews Causeway -- Highway in Orlando, Florida, United States
Wikipedia - Andrew Van de Kamp -- Fictional character in the ABC television series Desperate Housewives
Wikipedia - Andrew Woodhouse -- British Anglican priest
Wikipedia - Android application package -- File format used for software on Google's Android operating system
Wikipedia - Android Auto -- Mobile app providing a vehicle-optimized user interface
Wikipedia - Android Dev Phone -- An unlocked Android phone used for development purposes
Wikipedia - Android green -- Shade of Chartreuse
Wikipedia - Andropause
Wikipedia - And Yet They Paused -- 1938 one-act play by Georgia Douglas Johnson
Wikipedia - Andy Griffith Museum -- Museum in Mount Airy, NC, US
Wikipedia - Andy Vargas -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - An Essay on Liberation -- 1969 book by Herbert Marcuse
Wikipedia - Anesthesiology -- Medical specialty that focuses on anesthesia and perioperative medicine
Wikipedia - Anesthetic -- Drug that causes anesthesia
Wikipedia - Angela Smith, Baroness Smith of Basildon -- Shadow Leader of the House of Lords
Wikipedia - Angell-Ballou House -- Historic house in Rhode Island, US
Wikipedia - Angel Rusev (weightlifter) -- Bulgarian weightlifer
Wikipedia - Angharad Gatehouse -- British entomologist
Wikipedia - Angie Bolen -- Fictional character on Desperate Housewives
Wikipedia - Angladon Museum -- Museum in Avignon, France
Wikipedia - Anglican Use
Wikipedia - Anglo-Boer War Museum -- Military museum in Bloemfontein, South Africa
Wikipedia - Angry white male -- Stereotype used to refer to a white male holding conservative viewpoint in the context of U.S. politics
Wikipedia - Anheuser-Busch brands -- Brewing company
Wikipedia - Anheuser-Busch -- American brewing company
Wikipedia - Anhui Laomingguang Stadium -- Multi-use stadium in Hefei, Anhui, China
Wikipedia - Animal attack -- violent, often fatal attacks caused by non-human animals against humans
Wikipedia - Animal echolocation -- Method used by several animal species to determine location using sound
Wikipedia - Animal House -- 1978 film
Wikipedia - Animal testing -- Use of non-human animals in experiments
Wikipedia - An Invitation to the White House -- Book by Hillary Clinton
Wikipedia - Anisometropia -- Term used when two eyes have unequal refractive powe
Wikipedia - Anisophyllea manausensis -- Species of plant
Wikipedia - Anisopoikilocytosis -- Blood disorder often caused by some type of anemia
Wikipedia - Anka Feldhusen -- German diplomat
Wikipedia - Anna Apostolaki -- Greek archaeologist & museum curator (1880-1958)
Wikipedia - Anna Baright Curry -- American educator, founder of Curry College in Milton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Anna Cristina Niceta Lloyd -- American socialite and White House Social Secretary
Wikipedia - Anna Jens -- 18/19th century Dutch East Indies resident, convicted of abuse of slaves
Wikipedia - Annakeera Crossing -- Disused railway halt in Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Anna Leuhusen -- Abbess of St. Clare's Priory in Stockholm
Wikipedia - Ann Althouse -- American law professor and blogger
Wikipedia - Anna Maria College -- Private Catholic liberal arts college in Paxton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Anna of Lorraine -- Princess of the House of Lorraine
Wikipedia - Anna Risi -- Italian painting model. Muse and mistress of painter Anselm Feuerbach
Wikipedia - Ann Dusenberry -- American film and television actress
Wikipedia - Anne Frank House -- writer's house and museum in Amsterdam, Netherlands, dedicated to Jewish wartime diarist Anne Frank
Wikipedia - Anne's House of Dreams -- Book by Lucy Maud Montgomery
Wikipedia - Annesley Hall, Nottinghamshire -- Grade II listed country house in Nottinghamshire, England
Wikipedia - Annette Imhausen -- German mathematician, archaeologist, historian of mathematics and egyptologist
Wikipedia - Anno Lucis -- Dating system used in Freemasonry
Wikipedia - Anno von Sangershausen
Wikipedia - Ann Pugh -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Annual cannabis use by country -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Annunziata Rees-Mogg -- British Conservative politician, sister of Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg
Wikipedia - Anodizing -- Electrolytic passivation process used to increase the thickness of the natural oxide layer on the surface of metal parts
Wikipedia - Anon (album) -- 2018 album by Hands Like Houses
Wikipedia - An Open Secret -- 2014 documentary film by Amy J. Berg on child sexual abuse in California's film industry
Wikipedia - Anoxygenic photosynthesis -- Process used by obligate anaerobes
Wikipedia - Ansekula Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - ANSI C12.19 -- Standard for data tables used in automated meter reading
Wikipedia - Antarctic (ship) -- Swedish steamship used for several polar expeditions
Wikipedia - Anthea M. Hartig -- American museum director
Wikipedia - Anthem for a Lost Cause -- Song by Manic Street Preachers
Wikipedia - Anthem -- Song of celebration used as a symbol for a specific group
Wikipedia - Anthony Coulls -- British museum curator and historian
Wikipedia - Anthrax -- Infection caused by Bacillus anthracis bacteria
Wikipedia - Anthropogenic hazard -- Hazard caused by human action or inaction
Wikipedia - Anthroposphere -- The part of the environment that is made or modified by humans for use in human activities and human habitat
Wikipedia - Antianginal -- Drug used in treatment of heart disease
Wikipedia - Antibiotic misuse
Wikipedia - Antibiotic sensitivity testing -- Microbiology test used in medicine
Wikipedia - Antibiotic use in livestock -- Use of antibiotics for any purpose in the husbandry of livestock
Wikipedia - Antidepressant -- Class of medications used to treat depression and anxiety
Wikipedia - Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1988 -- US law
Wikipedia - Antiemetic -- Drug used to prevent nausea or vomiting
Wikipedia - Antifungal -- Pharmaceutical fungicide or fungistatic used to treat and prevent mycosis
Wikipedia - Antifuse
Wikipedia - Anti-lock braking system -- safety anti-skid braking system used on aircraft and land vehicles
Wikipedia - Antimicrobial -- Drug used to kill microorganisms or stop their growth
Wikipedia - Antioch University -- Private university with 5 campuses in the United States
Wikipedia - Antiochus X Eusebes -- King of Syria
Wikipedia - Anti-personnel mine -- Form of land mine designed for use against humans
Wikipedia - Antipope Benedict XIV -- Name used by two minor antipopes of the 15th century
Wikipedia - Anti-suicide smock -- Garment designed so that it cannot be used to create a noose to commit suicide
Wikipedia - Antiviral drug -- Medication used to treat a viral infection
Wikipedia - Antivirus software -- Computer software to defend against malicious computer viruses
Wikipedia - Ant-Man (Scott Lang) -- Marvel Comics superhero, the second character to use the name Ant-Man
Wikipedia - Antoine Delescluse -- French gymnast
Wikipedia - Anton Donhauser -- German politician
Wikipedia - Anton Goreczky House -- Historic house in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - Antoninianus -- Coin used during the Roman Empire
Wikipedia - Antonino Salinas Regional Archeological Museum -- Archaeological Museum in Palermo, Italy
Wikipedia - Anuar Dyusembaev -- Kazakh mathematician
Wikipedia - Anxiolytic -- Class of medications used to alleviate anxiety
Wikipedia - A Pain That I'm Used To -- 2005 single by Depeche Mode
Wikipedia - Apartheid Museum
Wikipedia - ApauruM-aM-9M-#eya -- Term used to describe the Vedas, the earliest scripture in Hinduism, meaning 'superhuman'
Wikipedia - Ape House -- Book by Sara Gruen
Wikipedia - A Pelican at Blandings -- 1969 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Apenheul Primate Park -- ape and monkey focused zoo in Apeldoorn Netherlands
Wikipedia - Aphasia -- Inability to use spoken language
Wikipedia - Aphrodita aculeata -- Sea mouse, a marine worm
Wikipedia - Aphrodita -- Sea mouse, a genus of annelids
Wikipedia - Apiary Laboratory -- Building at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, US
Wikipedia - Apitherapy -- Pseudoscientific alternative medical treatment that uses bee venom and other bee products
Wikipedia - APL syntax and symbols -- Used specifically to write programs in the APL programming language
Wikipedia - Apollo Guidance Computer -- Guidance and navigation computer used in Apollo spacecraft
Wikipedia - Apollo Lunar Module -- Lander used in the Apollo program
Wikipedia - Apollonis -- One of the muses in Ancient Greek mythology
Wikipedia - Apollo/Skylab space suit -- Space suit used in Apollo and Skylab missions
Wikipedia - Apo Reef Light -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Apostolopulo House -- 19th-century mansion in Taganrog, Russia
Wikipedia - Apostrophe Protection Society -- former UK-based non-profit organisation dedicated to the correct use of the apostrophe
Wikipedia - Apothecaries' system -- Historical system of mass and volume units used by physicians and apothecaries
Wikipedia - Appalachian Trail Museum -- Museum in the United States
Wikipedia - Apparent oxygen utilisation -- The difference between oxygen solubility and measured oxygen concentration in water, used to infer oxygen consumption by biological processes
Wikipedia - Appeal as from an abuse
Wikipedia - Appeal to flattery -- Fallacy in which a person uses flattery, excessive compliments, in an attempt to win support for their side
Wikipedia - Applause (1929 film) -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - Applause Entertainment -- India-based film production studio
Wikipedia - Applause -- Form of appreciation or praise expressed by striking palms of hands together
Wikipedia - Apple box -- Wooden box or crate of varying sizes with holes on each end used chiefly in film production
Wikipedia - Apple-Intel architecture -- Unofficial name used for Macintosh models that use Intel x86 processors
Wikipedia - Apple Magic Mouse
Wikipedia - Apple Mighty Mouse -- First multi-button mouse produced by Apple Inc.
Wikipedia - Apple Mouse
Wikipedia - Apple Pro Mouse -- Mouse by Apple
Wikipedia - Apple USB Mouse -- Mouse by Apple
Wikipedia - Apple User Group Connection
Wikipedia - Applications of capacitors -- Uses Of Capacitors In Daily Life.
Wikipedia - Appomattox Court House National Historical Park -- 1,700 acres in Virginia (US) managed by the National Park Service
Wikipedia - A Prefect's Uncle -- 1903 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - ApriM-DM-7i Manor -- Manor house in LaM-EM->a parish, Aizpute, Courland, Latvia
Wikipedia - APRS Calling -- Brevity code used via APRS to request communications elsewhere
Wikipedia - Apuseni Mountains -- Mountains in Romania
Wikipedia - Apuseni Natural Park -- Romanian protected area
Wikipedia - Aquafaba -- Residual water from cooking legumes, used in recipes to substitute egg whites
Wikipedia - Aquatarium (Florida) -- Former amusement park in St. Pete Beach, Florida
Wikipedia - Aquatic House Party -- 1949 film
Wikipedia - Aqua (user interface)
Wikipedia - Aqueducts on the C&O Canal -- 11 navigable aqueducts used to carry the canal over rivers and streams that were too wide for a culvert to contain
Wikipedia - Arabic diacritics -- Diacritics used in the Arabic script
Wikipedia - Arabic name -- Names used in Arabic
Wikipedia - Arable land -- Land capable of being ploughed and used to grow crops
Wikipedia - Arai Hakuseki
Wikipedia - Arapi Family House -- Cultural heritage monument of Kosovo
Wikipedia - Arbor House
Wikipedia - Arcade Club -- Chain of amusement arcades in UK
Wikipedia - Arcelik -- Turkish household appliances manufacturer
Wikipedia - Archaeoastronomy and Stonehenge -- Stonehenge's use in tracking seasons
Wikipedia - Archaeogaming -- Archaeology of gaming or the use of video games in archaeology
Wikipedia - Archaeological Museum of Milan
Wikipedia - Archaeological Museum of Olynthos -- Museum in Greece
Wikipedia - Archaeological Museum of Paros -- Archaeological Museum in Parikia, Paros. Greece
Wikipedia - Archaeological open-air museum -- Non-profit permanent institution with outdoor true-to-scale architectural reconstructions
Wikipedia - Archaeology Museum, Sogamoso -- Museum in Colombia
Wikipedia - Archaeo-optics -- Study of the experience and ritual use of light by ancient peoples
Wikipedia - Archana Suseelan -- Indian actress
Wikipedia - Archbold Gymnasium -- Building on Syracuse University campus in New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Archeological Museum of Seville
Wikipedia - Archer Point Light -- Lighthouse in Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Archives > Museum Informatics
Wikipedia - Archivos do Museu Nacional -- Scientific journal
Wikipedia - Arc Holdings -- French household goods company
Wikipedia - Arc Mouse
Wikipedia - Arc welding -- Process used to fuse metal by using heat from an electrical arc
Wikipedia - Ardabil Anthropology Museum -- Museum in Ardabil, Iran
Wikipedia - Ardgillan Castle -- Country house and demesne near Balbriggan, north of Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ardlamont House -- House in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Ardrahan Farmhouse Cheese -- Two varieties of cheese made on County Cork, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ardsley railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Area codes 508 and 774 -- Area codes that serve south-central and most of southeastern Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Arecibo Light -- Lighthouse in Arecibo, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Arena Nurnberger Versicherung -- A multi-use indoor arena that is located in Nuremberg, Germany
Wikipedia - Arenas Blancas Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Palma, Spain
Wikipedia - Arenavirus -- Family of RNA viruses
Wikipedia - Arendalsk -- Dialect of Norwegian used in Arendal
Wikipedia - Arethuseae -- Tribe of orchids
Wikipedia - Are You in the House Alone? -- 1978 television film by Walter Grauman
Wikipedia - Argentine Senate -- Upper house of the National Congress of Argentina
Wikipedia - ARIB STD B24 character set -- Character encoding and character set extensions used in Japanese broadcasting.
Wikipedia - Ariel Rittenhouse -- American diver
Wikipedia - Ari Huusela -- Finnish pilot
Wikipedia - Arindrajit Dube -- Economist with National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and University of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Aristotelia roseosuffusella -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Arithmetic coding -- Form of entropy encoding used in data compression
Wikipedia - Arithmetic geometry -- A branch of algebraic geometry focused on problems in number theory
Wikipedia - Arithmeum -- Museum in Bonn, Germany
Wikipedia - Arizona House of Representatives -- Lower house of U.S. state legislature
Wikipedia - Arizona's at-large congressional district -- Historical U.S. House district in the state of Arizona
Wikipedia - Arkansas House of Representatives -- Lower house of the Arkansas General Assembly
Wikipedia - Arkansas Project -- Series of investigative press reports that focused on then-President Bill Clinton
Wikipedia - Arkansas Senate -- Upper house of the Arkansas General Assembly
Wikipedia - Arken Museum of Modern Art
Wikipedia - Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth -- 1989 Batman graphic novel written by Grant Morrison and illustrated by Dave McKean
Wikipedia - Arkham House -- American publishing house specializing in weird fiction
Wikipedia - Arkham -- city in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Arksey railway station -- Disused railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Arlington Court -- Country house in Devon
Wikipedia - Arlington High School (Massachusetts) -- High school in Arlington, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Arlington House, The Robert E. Lee Memorial -- Historic estate in Virginia operated by the U.S. National Park Service
Wikipedia - Arlington, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Armand Dousemont -- Luxembourgian sports shooter
Wikipedia - Armani -- Italy-based international luxury fashion house
Wikipedia - Armenian alphabet -- Alphabet used to write the Armenian language
Wikipedia - Armenian carpet -- A weaving technique used for carpet, rugs and floor covers, etc.
Wikipedia - Armine Wodehouse (Liberal politician) -- British politician
Wikipedia - Armley Canal Road railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Armley Moor railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Armored bulldozer -- Bulldozer modified for use in combat engineering
Wikipedia - Armoured warfare -- Military use of armored fighting vehicles
Wikipedia - Armour of the Kelly gang -- Homemade armour used by Ned Kelly and his associates
Wikipedia - Arms Export Control Act -- United States law preventing exported weapons from being used for aggressive warfare
Wikipedia - Armstrong Air and Space Museum -- Museum in Wapakoneta, Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Army Museum Lahore -- Pakistani military museum
Wikipedia - Army of Sambre and Meuse -- One of the armies of the French Revolution formed on 29 June 1794
Wikipedia - Arnold Hauser (art historian) -- Hungarian art historian
Wikipedia - Arnulf Krause -- German philologist
Wikipedia - Aromanian alphabet -- Variant of the Latin script used for writing the Aromanian language
Wikipedia - Aroused (film) -- 2013 film by Deborah Anderson
Wikipedia - ARPANET encryption devices -- Security tools used on ARPANET
Wikipedia - Arrest -- The act of apprehending a person and taking them into custody, usually because they have been suspected of committing or planning a crime
Wikipedia - Arriva Max -- premium brand used by various Arriva bus subsidiaries in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Arrow Development -- Amusement park ride designer and manufacturer
Wikipedia - Arrows of Desire (novel) -- 1985 novel by Geoffrey Household
Wikipedia - Arrow (symbol) -- Graphical symbol or pictogram used to point or indicate direction
Wikipedia - Ars, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Arsenal Street Bridge -- Bridge in Watertown, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Arsenals - Fine Arts Museum -- Latvian art museum
Wikipedia - Arseny Morozov House -- building in Moscow
Wikipedia - Artech House
Wikipedia - Artemisinin -- Group of drugs used against malaria
Wikipedia - Arteriviridae -- Family of viruses in the suborder Arnidovirineae
Wikipedia - Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba -- Art museum in Manitoba, Canada
Wikipedia - Art Hauser Centre -- Arena in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan
Wikipedia - Arthington railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Art > History Museum
Wikipedia - Arthouse action film
Wikipedia - Arthouse film
Wikipedia - Arthouse game
Wikipedia - ArtHouse Live -- Theater company
Wikipedia - Arthur B. Cohn House -- Historic house in Houston, Texas
Wikipedia - Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr. -- American diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Arthur Everett Austin Jr. -- American museum director
Wikipedia - Arthur Kornhauser
Wikipedia - Arthur Willey -- Director of Colombo Museum, Ceylon
Wikipedia - Article 9 of the Japanese Constitution -- Clause in the Constitution of Japan outlawing war as a means to settle international disputes involving the state
Wikipedia - Article (grammar) -- word used with a noun to indicate the type of reference being made by the noun
Wikipedia - Articulated bus -- Articulated vehicle used in public transportation
Wikipedia - Artificial fly -- Lure used in fly fishing
Wikipedia - Artificial gravity -- The use of circular rotational force to mimic gravity
Wikipedia - Artificial life -- A field of study wherein researchers examine systems related to natural life, its processes, and its evolution, through the use of simulations
Wikipedia - Artificial neural network -- Computational model used in machine learning, based on connected, hierarchical functions
Wikipedia - Artificial photosynthesis -- Artificial process that uses sunlight energy to drive chemical synthesis
Wikipedia - Artificial reef -- A human-created underwater structure, typically built to promote marine life, control erosion, block ship passage, block the use of trawling nets, or improve surfing
Wikipedia - Art in Action at Waterperry -- Annual art and craft festival at Waterperry House, Oxfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Art Institute of Chicago -- Art museum and school in Chicago, United States
Wikipedia - Art name -- Professional name used by East Asian artists
Wikipedia - Artsakh State Museum -- Azerbaijan Museum
Wikipedia - ArtScience Museum -- Museum in Singapore
Wikipedia - Artur Hazelius -- Swedish folkorist and museum founder
Wikipedia - Arukula, Luganuse Parish -- Village in Estonia
Wikipedia - Aruna (Hittite mythology) -- God of the sea and son of Kamrusepa
Wikipedia - Arushi Nishank -- Indian classical danseuse
Wikipedia - Aryan -- Self-designation used by ancient Indo-Iranian peoples
Wikipedia - Asbestosis -- Pneumoconiosis caused by inhalation and retention of asbestos fibers
Wikipedia - Ascariasis -- A disease caused by the parasitic roundworm Ascaris lumbricoides
Wikipedia - Ascender (climbing) -- Devices used for ascending, braking, or protection in climbing
Wikipedia - Ascog House -- Architectural structure in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - A* search algorithm -- Algorithm used for pathfinding and graph traversal
Wikipedia - Ashbourne line -- Disused railway line in Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Ashby de la Zouch Museum -- Local museum in Ashby de la Zouch, Leicestershire
Wikipedia - Ashdown House, Oxfordshire
Wikipedia - Ashfield, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Ashland County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Ashley Beedle -- British house music DJ and producer
Wikipedia - Ashmolean Museum
Wikipedia - Ashorne Hill House -- Grade II listed house in Warwickshire, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Ashraf Huseynov -- Azerbaijani mathematician
Wikipedia - Ashtabula County Courthouse Group -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Ashtons -- Defunct house builder in Yorkshire
Wikipedia - Ashtown Castle -- Tower house in Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - AskReddit -- Subreddit providing a forum for users to ask questions
Wikipedia - Askrigg railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - A Slice of Life (short story) -- 1926 short story by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Asllan Tupella Tower House -- Cultural heritage monument of Kosovo
Wikipedia - Asma Ibrahim -- Pakistani archaeologist and museologist
Wikipedia - Asmat Museum of Culture and Progress -- Cultural museum in Agats, Indonesia
Wikipedia - Asoke Kumar Bhattacharyya -- Indian archaeologist, museologist, art historian and professor of Sanskrit
Wikipedia - Asphalt -- Form of petroleum, primarily used in road construction
Wikipedia - Asphyxia -- Condition of severely deficient supply of oxygen to the body caused by abnormal breathing
Wikipedia - Aspis -- Type of shield used by Ancient Greek hoplites
Wikipedia - A Spy in the House of Love -- Book by AnaM-CM-/s Nin
Wikipedia - A. S. Rugge House -- Historic home at Glens Falls, Warren County, New York
Wikipedia - Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge -- protected wildlife area and former military installation in central Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Assabet River Rail Trail -- partially-completed rail trail in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Assabet Valley Regional Technical High School -- high school in Marlborough, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Assassination of Julius Caesar -- Stabbing attack that caused the death of Julius Caesar
Wikipedia - Assault weapon -- Terminology used in United States firearm legislation
Wikipedia - Assembly House -- Georgian Grade I listed building in Norwich, England
Wikipedia - Asshole -- English insult describing the anus, usually used to refer to people
Wikipedia - Assistant superintendent -- Police rank used in Commonwealth police forces
Wikipedia - Association of German Housewives -- German Women's Association set up in 1873
Wikipedia - Association of Independent Colleges and Universities in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Assume a can opener -- A catchphrase used to mock theorists who base their conclusions on impractical or unlikely assumptions
Wikipedia - Assumption University (Worcester) -- College in Worcester, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Astan Quds Razavi Central Museum -- Museum of Mashhad
Wikipedia - Aston Martin Heritage Trust Museum
Wikipedia - Astor House Hotel (Shanghai) -- Hotel in Shanghai, China
Wikipedia - Astor House
Wikipedia - Astor Library -- Historic building that used to be part of the NYPL system
Wikipedia - Astroland -- Former amusement park in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Astronaut transfer van -- Vehicle used to transport astronauts at the Kennedy Space center
Wikipedia - Astronomer Royal -- Position in the Royal Households of the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Astronomical interferometer -- Array used for astronomical observations
Wikipedia - Asuppim -- Storehouse
Wikipedia - Aswan Museum -- Museum on the island of Elephantine, Aswan, Egypt
Wikipedia - Asynchronous System Trap -- Mechanism used in several computer operating systems
Wikipedia - Atari joystick port -- Computer port used for gaming controllers
Wikipedia - Ataturk's Residence and Railway Museum -- National historic house and railway museum in Ankara, Turkey
Wikipedia - Ateji -- Kanji used for some Japanese words in a primarily phonetic sense
Wikipedia - Atelectotrauma -- Damage caused to the lung by mechanical ventilation
Wikipedia - Ateneo Art Gallery -- University museum in Quezon City, Philippines
Wikipedia - A Thatch-Roofed House with a Water Mill -- Painting by Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael
Wikipedia - ATHEANA -- A technique used in the field of human reliability assessment
Wikipedia - Athens War Museum
Wikipedia - Athlete's foot -- Skin infection of foot caused by fungus
Wikipedia - Athol High School -- High school in Athol, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Atlanta Cyclorama & Civil War Museum -- former museum
Wikipedia - ATLAS-I -- US Air Force electromagnetic pulse generation and testing apparatus in use from 1972-1980 at Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, NM, US
Wikipedia - Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- Use of nuclear weapons towards the end of World War II
Wikipedia - Atomic clock -- Extremely accurate reference clock used as a standard for timekeeping
Wikipedia - Atomic line filter -- Optical band-pass filter used in the physical sciences
Wikipedia - Atomoxetine -- Medication used to treat ADHD
Wikipedia - Attentive user interface
Wikipedia - Atterbury House -- Office skyscraper in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Attestation clause -- In statutory law, a type of clause found in wills
Wikipedia - Attic numerals -- Symbolic number notation used by the ancient Greeks
Wikipedia - Attic -- Space or room below a pitched roof of house or other building.
Wikipedia - Attleboro, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Attractiveness -- Quality that causes an interest or desire in something or someone
Wikipedia - Attribution (psychology) -- The process by which individuals explain the causes of behavior and events
Wikipedia - Atwood machine -- Classroom demonstration used to illustrate principles of classical mechanics
Wikipedia - Aubrey Levin -- South African-born Canadian psychiatrist charged with abuse.
Wikipedia - Aubusson, Creuse -- Subprefecture and commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Aubusson tapestry -- Intangible cultural heritage of tapestry making in Aubusson and the Creuse region of France
Wikipedia - Auckland War Memorial Museum -- Museum and war memorial in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Auctorum -- Term indicating that a biological name is not used in the sense established by the original author
Wikipedia - AudioFile (magazine) -- Magazine that focuses on audiobooks
Wikipedia - Audley End House -- Country house and former royal residence
Wikipedia - Auge, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Auger electron spectroscopy -- Analytical technique used specifically in the study of surfaces
Wikipedia - Auglaize County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Augmentative and alternative communication -- Techniques used for those with communication impairments
Wikipedia - Augusta Raurica -- Archaeological site and museum in Switzerland
Wikipedia - Augustus Henry Eden Allhusen -- British politician
Wikipedia - Aulon, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - AUM Opera House -- Opera house in Kuwait
Wikipedia - Aunts Aren't Gentlemen -- 1974 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Aunty Donna's Big Ol' House of Fun -- American sketch comedy series
Wikipedia - Aurore Gagnon -- Canadian child abuse victim
Wikipedia - A Useful Life -- 2010 film
Wikipedia - Auseklis BauM-EM-!M-DM-7enieks -- Latvian painter
Wikipedia - Auseklis -- Latvian deity
Wikipedia - A Useless Death -- Book by Patti Smith
Wikipedia - Australian Aboriginal fibrecraft -- A type of fibre craft used by Aboriginal Australians.
Wikipedia - Australian dollar -- Official currency used in Australia; also used in Kiribati, Nauru, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu
Wikipedia - Australian House of Representatives -- Lower house of Australia
Wikipedia - Australian Museum
Wikipedia - Australian railway telegraphic codes -- Terms used in telegrams between various parts of the railway system
Wikipedia - Austryn Wainhouse -- American translator and writer
Wikipedia - Authentication -- The act of proving an assertion, often the identity of a computer system user
Wikipedia - AuthorHouse -- American publishing company
Wikipedia - Authority control -- Unique headings used for bibliographic information
Wikipedia - Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 -- Joint resolution of the United States House of Representatives and Senate
Wikipedia - Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists
Wikipedia - Authorization for Use of Military Force of 2001 -- Authorizes the use of military force against those responsible for the attacks on September 11, 2001
Wikipedia - Autobuses del Norte metro station -- Mexico City Metro station
Wikipedia - Autoclave -- Machine used to carry out industrial and scientific processes requiring elevated temperature and pressure
Wikipedia - Autocomplete -- Application that predicts the rest of a word a user is typing.
Wikipedia - AutoExpreso -- Electronic toll collection system used on tollways in Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Autogenous pressurization -- Use of self-generated gaseous propellant
Wikipedia - Autographiviridae -- Subfamily of viruses
Wikipedia - Autoimmune regulator -- A transcription factor expressed in the medulla (inner part) of the thymus. It is part of the mechanism which eliminates self-reactive T cells that would cause autoimmune disease.
Wikipedia - Automated clearing house -- type of electronic network for financial transactions
Wikipedia - Automatic taxonomy construction -- The use of software programs to generate taxonomical classifications from a body of texts
Wikipedia - Automatic test equipment -- Apparatus used in hardware testing that carries out a series of tests automatically
Wikipedia - Automation -- Use of various control systems for operating equipment
Wikipedia - Automotive head-up display -- Any transparent display that presents data in the automobile without requiring users to look away from their usual viewpoints
Wikipedia - Automotive industry in the United States -- Began in the 1890s and, as a result of the size of the domestic market and the use of mass production
Wikipedia - Autonegotiation -- Signaling mechanism used by Ethernet by which devices choose common transmission parameters
Wikipedia - Autorack -- Railway rolling stock used to transport automobiles
Wikipedia - Autostadt -- Museum
Wikipedia - Auto-trolling -- self-abuse on the Internet
Wikipedia - Auxiliary sciences of history -- scholarly disciplines which help evaluate and use historical sources and are seen as auxiliary for historical research
Wikipedia - Avalanche effect -- Property of cryptographic algorithms where a small change in the input causes a large change the output
Wikipedia - Avatar (computing) -- Graphical representation of the user or the user's alter ego or character
Wikipedia - Avebury Manor and Garden -- Grade I listed manor house in England
Wikipedia - AverStar -- Software company in Cambridge, Massachusetts (founded as Intermetrics 1969)
Wikipedia - Avestan alphabet -- Alphabet used mainly to write Avestan, the language of the Zoroastrian scripture Avesta
Wikipedia - Avestan -- East Iranian language used in Zoroastrian scripture
Wikipedia - Avian metaavulavirus 2 -- Species of virus that causes mild respiratory infections in domestic poultry
Wikipedia - Aviation in World War I -- Use of aircraft during the First World War
Wikipedia - Aviation Technical Museum (Luhansk) -- Museum in Lugansk, Ukraine
Wikipedia - Aviation -- Design, development, production, operation and use of aircraft
Wikipedia - A Visitor to a Museum -- 1989 film
Wikipedia - AvnogM-CM-%rd -- Manor house in Vordingborg, Denmark
Wikipedia - Avobenzone -- Oil-soluble ingredient used in sunscreen products
Wikipedia - Avoiuli -- Writing system used in parts of Vanuatu
Wikipedia - Avyakta -- Word used to denote Prakrti and Brahman
Wikipedia - Awareness ribbon -- Symbols meant to show support or raise consciousness for a cause
Wikipedia - Away colours -- Choice of coloured clothing used in team sports
Wikipedia - A-weighting -- Curves used to weigh sound pressure level
Wikipedia - A Wilderness of Error (TV series) -- 2020 FX docuseries
Wikipedia - Axiomatic system -- Mathematical term; any set of axioms from which some or all axioms can be used in conjunction to logically derive theorems
Wikipedia - Axungia -- Medical uses of soft animal fat
Wikipedia - Ayanna Pressley -- U.S. Representative from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Aydincik Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the province of Mersin
Wikipedia - A yen -- Military currency used after World War II
Wikipedia - Ayisha Fuseini -- Ghanaian social entrepreneur
Wikipedia - Aysgarth railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Azeda Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Setubal, Portugal
Wikipedia - Azerbaijan State Academic Opera and Ballet Theater -- Opera house in Baku
Wikipedia - Azerbaijan State Art Gallery -- Art museum
Wikipedia - AZERTY -- Keyboard layout where the first line is "AZERTYUIOP", used for French
Wikipedia - Azhikode Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Azimuth recording -- Use of a variation in angle between two recording heads on magnetic tape
Wikipedia - Aztec calendar -- Calendar system that was used by the Aztecs
Wikipedia - Aztec use of entheogens -- Entheogenic use by ancient Aztecs
Wikipedia - Azure SQL Data Warehouse
Wikipedia - B-36 Peacemaker Museum -- Non-profit organization dedicated to the preservation of the rich aviation history of North Texas
Wikipedia - B-52 Victory Museum, Hanoi -- Military museum in Ba M-DM-^PM-CM-,nh district, Hanoi
Wikipedia - B61 and B62 buses -- Bus routes in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Babenhausener Bach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Babe Rainbow -- 1992 studio album by The House of Love
Wikipedia - Babesiosis -- Malaria-like parasitic disease caused by infection with the alveoate Babesia or Theileria
Wikipedia - Bab's house -- Home of Seyed Ali Mohammad Bab, founder of the Babism religion
Wikipedia - Baby Geniuses -- 1999 film by Bob Clark
Wikipedia - Baby of the House -- Youngest member of a parliamentary house
Wikipedia - Baby You're a Haunted House -- 2018 Gerard Way song
Wikipedia - Bachar ladder -- A form of rope ladder used as a training device by rock climbers
Wikipedia - Bachelors Anonymous -- 1973 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Bach flower remedies -- Solutions of brandy and water used as a homeopathic remedy
Wikipedia - Bachi -- Stick used with certain musical instruments
Wikipedia - Bacillus thuringiensis -- Species of bacteria used as an insecticide
Wikipedia - Back Bay, Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Back Bay, Boston -- neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, and US historic place
Wikipedia - Back Bay station -- railway station in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Backbone cabal -- Group of administrators on Usenet in the late 80s to early 90s
Wikipedia - Background and causes of the Iranian Revolution -- Causes of the Iranian Revolution
Wikipedia - Back-side bus -- Computer bus used on early Intel platforms to connect the CPU to CPU cache memory, usually off-die L2
Wikipedia - Backstreet Cultural Museum -- Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana
Wikipedia - Back to Methuselah -- Play written by George Bernard Shaw
Wikipedia - Backyard -- enclosure behind a house
Wikipedia - BAC One-Eleven -- British short-range jet airliner used from the 1960s to the 1990s
Wikipedia - Badd Blood: In Your House -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Baden-Powell House -- Hostel and conference centre in South Kensington, London
Wikipedia - Bad Housewife -- 2005 South Korean comedy-drama TV series
Wikipedia - Badoo -- Dating-focused social networking service
Wikipedia - Bagacay Point Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Bagatao Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Baggy Trousers -- 1980 single by Madness
Wikipedia - Bagnio -- Word of Italian origin meaning brothel, bath-house or prison for slaves
Wikipedia - Bagua -- Eight trigrams used in Taoist cosmology
Wikipedia - BahaM-JM- -- Place of worship for the BahaM-JM-
Wikipedia - BahaM-JM- -- BahaM-JM-
Wikipedia - BahaM-JM- -- Laws and ordinances used in the Baha'i Faith
Wikipedia - BahaM-JM- -- Romanization scheme for Arabic and Persian words, used in Baha'i literature
Wikipedia - BahaM-JM- -- Symbols used in the BahaM-JM-
Wikipedia - Baikal (rocket booster) -- Rocket booster mainly used on Buran programme
Wikipedia - Baikonur Cosmodrome -- Rocket launch complex in Kazakhstan, used by Russia
Wikipedia - Baily Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on the Howth peninsula, County Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Baisley Park Houses -- Public housing development in Queens, New York
Wikipedia - Bait-and-switch -- form of fraud used in retail sales or in other contexts
Wikipedia - Bajiao Amusement Park station -- Beijing Subway station
Wikipedia - Baker Book House
Wikipedia - Bakkehuset
Wikipedia - Balache Point Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Nova Scotia, Canada
Wikipedia - Balbithan House -- 16th-century L-plan tower house in Scotland
Wikipedia - Balbodh -- Script used for writing the Marathi language
Wikipedia - Balcaskie -- 17th-century country house in Fife, Scotland
Wikipedia - BALCO scandal -- Involved the use of banned, performance-enhancing substances
Wikipedia - Baldersby railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Baleen -- Keratin structure in whales, used for flexible stiffening
Wikipedia - Bale lifter -- Farm equipment used to transport hay or straw bales
Wikipedia - Ball-and-disk integrator -- Component used in mechanical computers
Wikipedia - Ballarat Tramway Museum -- Tram museum in Ballarat, Victoria
Wikipedia - Ballast -- Material that is used to provide stability to a vehicle or structure
Wikipedia - Ball bearing -- Type of rolling-element bearing that uses balls to maintain the separation between the bearing races.
Wikipedia - Ball grid array -- Surface-mount packaging that uses an array of solder balls
Wikipedia - Ballinskelligs Abbey -- House of Augustinian canons, County Kerry, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ballistic foam -- Foam used in the manufacture and repair of aircraft
Wikipedia - Ball-peen hammer -- Type of hammer used in metalworking
Wikipedia - Ballynahinch Castle -- Irish country house hotel in Connemara
Wikipedia - Ballynahow Castle -- Tower house and National Monument in County Tipperary, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ballynegall House -- Country house in County Westmeath, Ireland
Wikipedia - Balne railway station -- Disused railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Baltyboys House -- country house in Ireland
Wikipedia - Balvarran -- An old laird's house and estate in Strathardle, Perth and Kinros
Wikipedia - Bambini-Code -- Brevity code used by the Swiss Air Force
Wikipedia - Bamburgh Castle -- Grade-I-listed castle museum in Bamburgh, Northumberland, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Banana Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Malaysia
Wikipedia - Banbury Museum
Wikipedia - Banderole -- A comparatively small but long flag or banner, historically used by knights and on ships, and as a heraldic device for representing bishops
Wikipedia - Bangladesh Army Stadium -- Multi-use stadium
Wikipedia - Bangladeshi calendar -- Civil calendar used in Bangladesh
Wikipedia - Bangladesh Railway Museum -- Railway Museum in Chattogram
Wikipedia - BankBoston -- Bank in Massachusetts, US; bought out
Wikipedia - Bank engine -- Locomotive used to assist trains up steep inclines
Wikipedia - Bankers Life Fieldhouse -- Indoor arena in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Wikipedia - Bankura horse -- Horse made from terracotta or clay in Panchmura Village, West Bengal, India. Originally used for ritual purposes, now used for decoration.
Wikipedia - Banlieue -- Suburb of a large city; especially used for France
Wikipedia - Banna'i -- Use of glazed tiles alternating with plain brick for decorative purposes
Wikipedia - Banqueting House, Whitehall -- Former palace banqueting rooms, later chapel of Whitehall in London, England
Wikipedia - Banqueting House
Wikipedia - Ban (title) -- Noble title used in Central and Southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - Baphomet -- Deity or idol the Knights Templar were accused of worshiping
Wikipedia - Baptism -- Christian rite of admission and adoption, almost invariably with the use of water
Wikipedia - Barany chair -- A device used for aerospace physiology training
Wikipedia - Barbara Bouchet -- German-American actress and entrepreneuse
Wikipedia - Barbara Harrisson -- German archeologist and museum director
Wikipedia - Barbara Murphy -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Barbara Rachelson -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Barbecue sauce -- Flavoring sauce used as a marinade, basting or topping for barbecued meat
Wikipedia - Barbican House -- House next to Lewes castle, East Sussex
Wikipedia - Barbie Dreamhouse Adventures -- American animated television series
Wikipedia - BarCamp -- international network of user-generated conferences
Wikipedia - Bard College at Simon's Rock -- Liberal arts college in Great Barrington, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Bardic lamp -- Safety lamp used on the UK rail network
Wikipedia - Bardo National Museum attack -- 2015 mass killing of hostages by militants in Tunis, Tunisia
Wikipedia - Bardsey railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Barea confusella -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Bareback (sexual act) -- Sex without the use of a condom
Wikipedia - Bare-knuckle boxing -- Boxing without use of boxing gloves
Wikipedia - Bargate stone -- A highly durable form of sandstone used for building
Wikipedia - Bariatrics -- Branch of medicine that deals with the causes, prevention, and treatment of obesity
Wikipedia - Baring Head Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Barista -- Person, usually a coffeehouse employee, who prepares and serves espresso-based coffee drinks
Wikipedia - Bark spud (tool) -- Implement used to remove bark from felled timber
Wikipedia - Barmy in Wonderland -- 1952 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Barnabas Bidwell -- Politician and lawyer of Massachusetts and Upper Canada (1763-1833)
Wikipedia - Barnard's Folly -- Historic houses in Fall River, Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Barnegat Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Barney Smith (artist) -- American plumber and museum curator
Wikipedia - Barnhill railway station (Angus) -- Disused railway station in Dundee, Scotland
Wikipedia - Barnstable High School -- Public school in Barnstable, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Barnstar -- Painted object or image, often in the shape of a five-pointed star but occasionally in a circular "wagon wheel" style, used to decorate a barn in some parts of the United States
Wikipedia - Barn (unit) -- Unit for cross sectional area used in high-energy physics
Wikipedia - Barn -- Agricultural building used for storage and as a covered workplace
Wikipedia - Barodontalgia -- Tooth pain caused by ambient pressure change
Wikipedia - Barometer -- Scientific instrument used to measure atmospheric pressure
Wikipedia - Barometric formula -- Formula used to model how air pressure varies with altitude
Wikipedia - Baron Munchausen -- Fictional German nobleman
Wikipedia - Barotrauma -- Injury caused by pressure
Wikipedia - Baro't saya -- Traditional woman's costume of the Philippines, consisting of a blouse (baro) and skirt (saya)
Wikipedia - Barratt House -- Historic home near Greenwood, South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Barrelhouse Chuck -- American musician
Wikipedia - Barrenjoey Head Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Barrier transfer machine -- Heavy vehicle used to transfer concrete lane dividers during rush hours
Wikipedia - Barrington Park -- Country house in Gloucestershire, England
Wikipedia - Barrow Hall -- Country house in Great Barrow, Cheshire, UK
Wikipedia - Barrow-in-Furness Strand railway station -- Disused railway station in Cumbria, England
Wikipedia - Barry Island Pleasure Park -- Amusement park in Glamorgan, Wales
Wikipedia - Barry L. Frankhauser
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Wikipedia - Bartending terminology -- Terms used in drinking culture and bartending
Wikipedia - Barthel scale -- Ordinal scale used to measure performance in activities of daily living (ADL)
Wikipedia - Bartley-Fox Law -- Massachusetts mandatory minimum sentencing law
Wikipedia - Barton Hill railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Barton House Railway -- Miniature railway in Wroxham
Wikipedia - Barton le Street railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Baruch Houses -- Public housing development in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Basal reader -- Textbooks used to teach reading and associated skills to schoolchildren
Wikipedia - Basco Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Baserri -- Traditional half-timbered or stone-built type of housebarn farmhouse found in the Basque Country in Northern Spain and Southwestern France
Wikipedia - Bashar Ahmad Nuseibeh -- British professor
Wikipedia - Basilica of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse
Wikipedia - Basilica of St. Sernin, Toulouse
Wikipedia - Basilica of the Holy House
Wikipedia - Basilique de Saint-Sernin, Toulouse
Wikipedia - BasnM-CM-&s -- Manor house near Kalundborg, Denmark
Wikipedia - Basque Museum of the History of Medicine and Science
Wikipedia - Basque witch trials -- Persecution of women accused of being witches
Wikipedia - Bass Harbor Head Light -- Lighthouse on Mount Desert Island, Maine, US
Wikipedia - Batag Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Bathing machine -- Device used for sea bathing during the 19th century
Wikipedia - Bath stone -- An oolitic limestone from Somerset used as a building material
Wikipedia - Bathtub -- Tub that uses water for a person to bathe in
Wikipedia - Bathurst Courthouse -- Courthouse in Australia
Wikipedia - Batla House encounter case -- Batla House , New Delhi India
Wikipedia - Batla House -- 2019 Indian Hindi-language action thriller film
Wikipedia - Batman (unit) -- Unit of mass used in the Ottoman Empire
Wikipedia - Baton round -- Impact munition used in riot control
Wikipedia - Batter (cooking) -- Thin starch based mixture used in the preparation of food
Wikipedia - Battered woman syndrome -- Condition resulting from emotional, physical, or sexual abuse
Wikipedia - Battery balancing -- Techniques that maximize the capacity of a battery pack with multiple cells to make all of the capacity available for use and increase each cell's longevity.
Wikipedia - Battle of Anabta -- 1936 attack by Arab militants on a convoy of civilian buses escorted by British soldiers in Mandatory Palestine
Wikipedia - Battle of Appomattox Court House -- Battle of the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Battle of Guilford Court House -- Battle of the American Revolutionary War
Wikipedia - Battle of Mulhouse -- Battle of the Battle of the Frontiers
Wikipedia - Battle of Spotsylvania Court House -- Major battle of the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Battle of Teugen-Hausen -- 1809 battle in the Napoleonic wars between the French and the Austrians
Wikipedia - Battle of the Wazzir -- Riot in Cairo, Egypt caused by Australian and New Zealand soldiers
Wikipedia - Battle of Toulouse (721) -- Eighth century Christian Muslim battle
Wikipedia - Battle of Toulouse (844) -- Battle of the Carolingian Civil War
Wikipedia - Battle of Villinghausen -- 1761 battle
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Wikipedia - Bauchi State House of Assembly -- Legislative arm of the government of Bauchi State of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Bauhaus Foundation Tel Aviv -- Museum dedicated to the Bauhaus movement
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Wikipedia - Bavarian National Museum
Wikipedia - Bavarian State Archaeological Collection -- Central museum of prehistory of the State of Bavaria
Wikipedia - Bawn -- Defensive wall surrounding an Irish tower house
Wikipedia - Baxter County Courthouse -- Building in Arkansas, US
Wikipedia - Bay Beach Amusement Park -- Public amusement park in Green Bay, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Bayerisches Armeemuseum -- Military history museum in Munich, Germany
Wikipedia - Bayli Cruse -- American softball player
Wikipedia - Bay Psalm Book -- Psalter first printed in 1640 in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Bayreuth Festspielhaus -- Opera house and cultural heritage monument in Bavaria, Germany
Wikipedia - Bay State Street Railway -- Former transportation company in Greater Boston, Massachusetts
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Wikipedia - BBC Two 'Computer Generated 2' ident -- Ident used by BBC Two between 1979 and 1986
Wikipedia - BB gun -- Air gun that uses metallic ball projectiles called BBs
Wikipedia - B.B. King Museum -- Museum celebrating the cultural heritage of the Mississippi Delta
Wikipedia - B-CAS -- System used in Japan used to deter copying of content
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Wikipedia - Beach House
Wikipedia - Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Beacon Hill, Boston -- Historic neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts
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Wikipedia - Beaconhouse School System -- Private school in Pakistan
Wikipedia - Beaconsfield House -- Building in Central, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Beam lead technology -- Technology used to deposit metal beams onto integrated circuits for connecting them
Wikipedia - Beano (dietary supplement) -- Enzyme-based dietary supplement that is used to reduce gas in the digestive tract
Wikipedia - Bean Rock Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Beans and Bacon mine -- Disused lead mine in Derbyshire, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Bear in the Big Blue House -- American children's television series
Wikipedia - Bear Island Light -- Lighthouse in Maine, United States
Wikipedia - Bear's Den -- Nature reserve in New Salem, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Bear spear -- Type of pole weapon primarily used for bear hunting
Wikipedia - Beater (weaving) -- Weaving tool used to push the weft yarn securely into place
Wikipedia - Beatrice Heuser -- German historian and political scientist
Wikipedia - Beat the House -- American reality television series
Wikipedia - Beaulieu Palace House
Wikipedia - Beausejour, Marne -- Former village in France, destroyed during WWI
Wikipedia - Bebenhausen
Wikipedia - Because, Because of a Woman -- 1963 film
Wikipedia - BECAUSE (conference) -- Annual LGBTQ conference
Wikipedia - Because (film) -- 1918 film
Wikipedia - Because I could not stop for Death -- Poem by Emily Dickinson
Wikipedia - Because I Got High -- 2001 single by Afroman
Wikipedia - Because I Love You (1928 film) -- 1928 film
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Wikipedia - Because of You (98 Degrees song) -- 1998 single by 98 Degrees
Wikipedia - Because of You (Gabrielle song) -- 1994 single by Gabrielle
Wikipedia - Because of You (Kelly Clarkson song) -- 2005 single by Kelly Clarkson
Wikipedia - Because of You (Ne-Yo song) -- 2007 single by Ne-Yo
Wikipedia - Because of You (TV series) -- Philippine television series
Wikipedia - Because (The Dave Clark Five song) -- 1964 single by The Dave Clark Five
Wikipedia - Because the Internet -- Second studio album by American hip hop recording artist Donald Glover
Wikipedia - Because the Night -- Song written by Bruce Springsteen and Patti Smith
Wikipedia - Because They're Young -- 1960 film
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Wikipedia - Because We Want To -- 1998 single by Billie Piper
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Wikipedia - Becky Duval Reese -- American curator and art museum director
Wikipedia - Becurtovirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Bedford, Massachusetts
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Wikipedia - Bed sheet -- Rectangular piece of cloth or linen cotton used to cover a mattress
Wikipedia - Bed warmer -- Household item
Wikipedia - Bed -- Piece of furniture used as a place to sleep or relax
Wikipedia - Beef House -- Sitcom
Wikipedia - Beer Stein Marker -- Puppets of knitted wool used by Bavarian beer drinkers to clearly identify their tankards
Wikipedia - Bee sting -- Puncture wound caused by a bee's stinger
Wikipedia - Beeston Castle and Tarporley railway station -- Disused railway station in Cheshire, England
Wikipedia - Beeston railway station (West Yorkshire) -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Beggar thy neighbour -- Economic improvement attempt that causes worse conditions for other countries
Wikipedia - Beginish house -- Stone house and Irish national monument in County Kerry, Ireland
Wikipedia - Begomovirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Behind the Scenes in Slaughter-Houses
Wikipedia - Beichuan Earthquake Museum -- Memorial museum in China
Wikipedia - Beit Beirut -- Museum in Beirut, Lebanon
Wikipedia - Bejucal Municipal Museum -- Museum in Bejucal, Cuba
Wikipedia - Belait District Museum -- Museum in Belait District, Brunei
Wikipedia - Belantis -- Amusement park in Germany
Wikipedia - Belcher-Ogden Mansion; Benjamin Price House; and Price-Brittan House Historic District -- Historic district in New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Belchertown, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Beldringe -- Manor house bear PrM-CM-&sto, Denmark
Wikipedia - Belleair Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Belle Chose (Dollhouse)
Wikipedia - Belle Tout Lighthouse -- Lighthouse at Beachy Head, East Sussex, England
Wikipedia - Bellingshausen Plate -- An ancient tectonic plate that fused onto the Antarctic Plate
Wikipedia - Bellingshausen Sea -- A part of the Southern Ocean along the west side of the Antarctic Peninsula, west of Alexander Island, east of Cape Flying Fish on Thurston Island
Wikipedia - Bell Museum of Natural History -- Natural history museum of the University of Minnesota
Wikipedia - Bello orthography -- Spanish-language orthography created by A. Bello and J. G. del Rio, published in 1823; briefly officially used in Chile
Wikipedia - Bellville Stadium -- Multi-use stadium in Bellville, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bell XV-15 -- Experimental tiltrotor, used to demonstrate the concept's high speed performance relative to conventional helicopters
Wikipedia - Belmont County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Belmont, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Belonging (Dollhouse)
Wikipedia - Belton, Grandview and Kansas City Railroad -- Railroad and museum in Belton, Missouri, US
Wikipedia - Belton House -- Country house in Belton near Grantham, Lincolnshire, England
Wikipedia - Benaki Museum
Wikipedia - Benedict of Sausetun
Wikipedia - Beneski Museum of Natural History -- Massachusetts museum
Wikipedia - BengtskM-CM-$r Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kimitoon, Finland
Wikipedia - Benin City National Museum -- National museum in Benin City, Nigeria
Wikipedia - Benjamin Backhouse -- Australian architect, builder and politician (1829-1904)
Wikipedia - Benjamin Ellsworth House -- Historic house in Utica, Minnesota, United States
Wikipedia - Benjamin Holt House -- Historic building in California, USA
Wikipedia - Benjamin Ives Gilman -- Secretary of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts
Wikipedia - Benjamin Orr (Massachusetts politician)
Wikipedia - Benjamin Punchard House -- Historic building in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins -- English sculptor and natural history artist
Wikipedia - Benjamin Waterhouse (judoka) -- American Samoan judoka
Wikipedia - Benjamin Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Ben Rhodes (White House staffer)
Wikipedia - Ben Rose House -- Home in Highland Park, Illinois, United States
Wikipedia - Benson raft -- Barge used to transfer timber
Wikipedia - Benson Veteran Cycle Museum
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Wikipedia - Benzino -- American media proprietor, television personality, and rapper from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Benzodiazepine use disorder
Wikipedia - Berber kings of Roman-era Tunisia -- History of the Berber kings of the House of Masinissa who ruled in Numidia
Wikipedia - Berceuse (Faure) -- 1879 musical composition
Wikipedia - Berghauser Bach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Wikipedia - Berklee College of Music -- Music college in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Berkshire Medical College -- Defunct medical school in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Berlenga Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Berliner Kammeroper -- Berlin opera house
Wikipedia - Berlin-Hohenschonhausen Memorial -- Museum and memorial located at former Stasi prison in Berlin
Wikipedia - Berlin, Schoenhauser Corner -- 1957 film
Wikipedia - Berlin State Museums -- Group of institutions in Berlin, Germany
Wikipedia - Bernard Blistene -- Director of the french National Museum of Modern Art
Wikipedia - Bernd Guse -- German canoeist
Wikipedia - Bernhard Germeshausen -- East German bobsledder
Wikipedia - Bernie Krause -- American musician, author, soundscape recordist and bio-acoustician (*1938)
Wikipedia - Bern's Steak House -- Restaurant
Wikipedia - Berth (moorings) -- Designated location in a port or harbour used for mooring vessels
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Wikipedia - Bertielliasis -- Parasitic infection caused by a cestode tapeworm
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Wikipedia - Bertram Brockhouse
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Wikipedia - Best management practice for water pollution -- Term used in the United States and Canada to describe a type of water pollution control
Wikipedia - Best Seller (short story) -- 1930 short story by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Betaarterivirus suid 1 -- Species of virus that causes a disease of pigs
Wikipedia - Beta blocker -- class of medications used to manage abnormal heart rhythms
Wikipedia - Betacoronavirus -- Genus of viruses in the subfamily Orthocoronavirinae
Wikipedia - Betatorquevirus -- genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Betelgeuse -- Star in the constellation of Orion
Wikipedia - Bethany House -- US book publishing company
Wikipedia - Betsy Dunn -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Better Be Home Soon -- 1988 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Better Than I Used to Be (song) -- 2010 song by Sammy Kershaw
Wikipedia - Better World Books -- Online used book seller
Wikipedia - Betty Boop's Museum -- 1932 film
Wikipedia - Betty Boothroyd -- First Female Speaker of the House of Commons (UK)
Wikipedia - Beverly Cotton Manufactory -- Cotton mill in Beverly, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Beverly Hills Playhouse -- Acting school with theaters and training facilities in Beverly Hills, California, and other U. S. cities
Wikipedia - Beypore Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Bezier curve -- Curve used in computer graphics and related fields
Wikipedia - Bfloat16 floating-point format -- Floating-point number format used in computer processors
Wikipedia - Bhagwan Mahavir Government Museum -- Archaeological museum located in the Kadapa City of Andhra Pradesh
Wikipedia - Bhakti yoga -- Spiritual path in Hinduism focused on devotion
Wikipedia - Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook operator -- Collision operator used in a computational fluid dynamics technique
Wikipedia - Bhilai Power House railway station -- Railway station in Chattisgarh
Wikipedia - Bhit Shah Museum
Wikipedia - B. H. Roberts -- American Mormon; denied a seat as a member of United States Congress because of religion (1857-1933)
Wikipedia - Bibcode -- Code used to identify references in certain astronomical data systems
Wikipedia - BibleWalk -- wax museum in Mansfield, Ohio
Wikipedia - Biblical infallibility -- Doctrine that what the Bible says regarding matters of faith and Christian practice is wholly useful and true
Wikipedia - Biblical literalism -- A term used differently by different authors concerning biblical interpretation
Wikipedia - Bibliography of United States Presidential Spouses and First Ladies -- Bibliography of United States Presidential Spouses
Wikipedia - Bibliomancy -- Use of books in divination
Wikipedia - BibliOZ -- Online portal for locating and purchasing out of print, used, rare and collectible books
Wikipedia - Bichvinta-Miuseri Strict Nature Reserve -- Protected nature area in Georgia (country)
Wikipedia - Bicorn and Chichevache -- Medieval fabulous beasts used to satirize marriage relationships.
Wikipedia - Bidding box -- Device used in contract bridge
Wikipedia - Bidet shower -- Hand-held triggered nozzle that is placed near the toilet and delivers a spray of water used for cleaning oneself
Wikipedia - Bifurcated needle -- Type of steel rod used to administer smallpox vaccine
Wikipedia - Bifurcation diagram -- Visualization of sudden behavior changes caused by continuous parameter changes
Wikipedia - Bifurcation theory -- Study of sudden qualitative behavior changes caused by small parameter changes
Wikipedia - Big Bad Wolf (roller coaster) -- Former amusement park ride
Wikipedia - Big Blue Meenie Recording Studio -- Former production house in Jersey City
Wikipedia - Big Dig -- 1991-2007 megaproject in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Big Island Amusement Park -- Former American amusement park
Wikipedia - Big lie -- propaganda technique used for political purpose
Wikipedia - Big Momma's House 2 -- 2006 film by John Whitesell
Wikipedia - Big Money (novel) -- 1931 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Big science -- Term used to describe a series of changes in science occurred in industrial nations
Wikipedia - Big Tub Lighthouse -- Lighthouse near Tobermory, Ontario Canada
Wikipedia - Big Y -- US supermarket chain in Massachusetts and Connecticut
Wikipedia - Bihar Legislative Assembly -- Lower house of the bicameral legislature of the Indian state of Bihar
Wikipedia - Bihor Mountains -- Mountains in Apuseni from Romania
Wikipedia - Bike path -- Bikeway separated from motorized traffic and dedicated to cycling or shared with pedestrians or other non-motorized users
Wikipedia - BiksM-DM-^Sre Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Biksti Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Bildmuseet -- Contemporary art museum in Sweden
Wikipedia - Bildungsroman -- Literary genre that focuses on the psychological and moral growth of the protagonist from youth to adulthood (coming of age)
Wikipedia - Biliary colic -- Medical condition in which gallstones cause acute pain
Wikipedia - Bilingual dictionary -- Specialized dictionary used to translate words or phrases from one language to another
Wikipedia - Bilingual Review Press -- Publishing house
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Wikipedia - Bill Gates's house -- House on Lake Washington in Medina, Washington
Wikipedia - Billiard ball -- Ball used in cue sports
Wikipedia - Bill Monroe Museum -- Museum dedicated entirely to the life and legacy of Bill Monroe
Wikipedia - Bill Morehouse -- American curler
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Wikipedia - Bill's Old Bike Barn -- Motorcycle and Americana museum
Wikipedia - Bill the Conqueror -- 1924 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Bill (United States Congress) -- Form used for most legislation of the United States Congress
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Wikipedia - Bill (weapon) -- Polearm weapon used by infantry in medieval Europe
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Wikipedia - Binghamton University Art Museum
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Wikipedia - Bioindicator -- Indicator species that can be used to reveal the qualitative status of an environment
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Wikipedia - Biological plausibility -- Cause and effect relationship in medicine
Wikipedia - Biological warfare -- Use of biological toxins or infectious agents as an act of war
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Wikipedia - Biomedical sciences -- Set of applied sciences applying portions of natural science or formal science, or both, to knowledge, interventions, or technology that are of use in healthcare or public health
Wikipedia - Bioprocess -- Process that uses living cells to obtain desired products
Wikipedia - Biotechnology -- Use of living systems and organisms to develop or make useful products
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Wikipedia - Bird Cage Theatre -- Former theater, now museum, in Tombstone, Arizona
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Wikipedia - Birdsall House -- Country house in Birdsall, England
Wikipedia - Bird vocalization -- Sounds birds use to communicate
Wikipedia - Birgit Vogel-Heuser -- German computer scientist and professor
Wikipedia - BirkendegM-CM-%rd -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Birkenshaw and Tong railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Birkwood Castle -- Scottish country house
Wikipedia - Birmingham Back to Backs -- Last surviving court of back-to-back houses in Birmingham, England, now operated as a museum
Wikipedia - Birmingham gauge -- Wire gauge system used in medicine
Wikipedia - Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery -- Museum and art gallery in Birmingham, England
Wikipedia - Birmingham Museum of Art
Wikipedia - Birr Castle -- 17th century castle with demesne, telescopes and science museum
Wikipedia - Birstwith railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Birth defect -- Condition present at birth regardless of cause; human disease or disorder developed prior to birth
Wikipedia - Birthplace of Country Music Museum -- Museum in Bristol, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate -- Organic compound used as a plasticizer to soften polymer matrix
Wikipedia - Bishop Museum of Science and Nature -- Science museum in Bradenton, Florida
Wikipedia - Bishop Museum -- Museum of history and science in Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Bishop of Doncaster -- Title used by a bishop of the Church of England
Wikipedia - Bishop of Plymouth (Anglican) -- Episcopal title used in the Church of England Diocese of Exeter
Wikipedia - Bishop of Syracuse
Wikipedia - Bishop of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Bishops in the Catholic Church -- Ordained minister in the Catholic Church (for other religious denominations, use Q29182); catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Bishop's storehouse -- Commodity resource in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Wikipedia - Bislama -- Creole language used in Vanuatu
Wikipedia - Bit field -- Data structure used in computer programming
Wikipedia - Bixby Block-Home Bank Building -- Historic building in Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Bizot group -- International museum organisation
Wikipedia - Bjargtangar Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Iceland
Wikipedia - Bjergbygaard -- Manor house at HolbM-CM-&k, Denmark
Wikipedia - Bjorkborn Manor -- Museum about Alfred Nobel in Karlskoga, Sweden
Wikipedia - BJ's Wholesale Club -- American membership-only warehouse club chain
Wikipedia - Black and burst -- Analogue synchronization signal used in broadcasting
Wikipedia - Black and Tans -- Largely unemployed British recruits used to support the Royal Irish Constabulary beginning in 1920.
Wikipedia - Black-bellied sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Blackbird (comics) -- Aircraft used by the fictional superhero team the X-Men
Wikipedia - Black bloc -- Tactic used by groups of protesters
Wikipedia - Blackborough House -- Country house in Kentisbeare, Devon, UK
Wikipedia - Black Box (band) -- Italian house music group
Wikipedia - Black box (phreaking) -- Electronic device used to illegally receive long-distance telephone calls without charge to the caller
Wikipedia - Black-crested titmouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Black cube art museum -- Art museum designed with digital or installation art in mind
Wikipedia - Black Denim Trousers and Motorcycle Boots -- 1955 song performed by The Cheers
Wikipedia - Black-faced sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Blackfella -- An informal term used in Australian English to refer to Indigenous Australians
Wikipedia - Black Forest house -- Type of house found in southwestern Germany
Wikipedia - Black Friday (1869) -- Event on September 24, 1869, caused by Jim Fisk and Jay Gould
Wikipedia - Black grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Black Hills Playhouse -- Theater in Custer, South Dakota
Wikipedia - Black House Media -- Public relation company
Wikipedia - Black House (MMA) -- MMA training facility in Brazil
Wikipedia - Blackhouse Records -- Independent record label based in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho
Wikipedia - Blackie and Son -- Publishing house
Wikipedia - Blackletter -- Old script typeface used throughout Western Europe
Wikipedia - Black Nore Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Somerset, England
Wikipedia - Black Prince Buses -- Former West Yorkshire bus operator
Wikipedia - Black Rod -- Official of the House of Lords
Wikipedia - Black screen of death -- Error screen displayed by some operating systems after encountering a critical system error which can cause the system to shut down
Wikipedia - Blackstone River Valley National Historical Park -- National Park Service unit in Rhode Island and Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Blackstone River -- River in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, USA
Wikipedia - Blackwell Grange -- House and hotel in Darlington, County Durham, England
Wikipedia - Blade server -- Server computer that uses less energy and space than a conventional server
Wikipedia - Bladesmith -- Person who uses an anvil and forge to make various types of blades
Wikipedia - Blaenavon Ironworks -- Former ironworks transformed into a museum
Wikipedia - Blake Hall -- English country house
Wikipedia - Blakistone Island Light -- Lighthouse in Maryland, United States
Wikipedia - Blandings Castle and Elsewhere -- 1935 short story collection by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Blankenese High Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Hamburg, Germany
Wikipedia - Blankenese Low Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Hamburg, Germany
Wikipedia - Blankenfelde Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Blanket stitch -- Deep, widely-spaced buttonhole stitch used to prevent raveling of raw edges or as a decoration
Wikipedia - Blast furnace -- Type of metallurgical furnace used for smelting to produce industrial metals
Wikipedia - Bleachfield -- Field near watercourse used by a bleachery
Wikipedia - Bleak House (1920 film) -- 1920 film by Maurice Elvey
Wikipedia - Bleak House: The Death of Rudolph van Richten
Wikipedia - Bleak House -- Novel by Charles Dickens; published 1852-1853
Wikipedia - Blender -- Home appliance used to mix or crush food
Wikipedia - Blenheim Palace -- Country house in Woodstock, Oxfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Bless This Acid House -- 2017 single by Kasabian
Wikipedia - Bletchley Park -- WWII code-breaking site and British country house
Wikipedia - Bleusea -- Genus of beetles
Wikipedia - Blind men and an elephant -- Parable from the ancient Indian subcontinent, from where it has been widely diffused
Wikipedia - Blists Hill Victorian Town -- Open-air museum in Telford
Wikipedia - Blitz and Pieces -- Military museum in Great Yarmouth, England
Wikipedia - BlM-CM-% Jungfrun M-CM-^Vstra Lighthouse -- Decommissioned lighthouse in Oskarshamn, Sweden
Wikipedia - Block cipher mode of operation -- Algorithm that uses a block cipher to provide an information service such as confidentiality or authenticity
Wikipedia - Block House (Melcombe) -- Fortification in Weymouth, Dorset
Wikipedia - Blockhouses of the Second Anglo-Boer War -- Fortifications built by the British Empire in South Africa during the Second Anglo-Boer War
Wikipedia - Bloodhound -- Dog breed used for tracking by scent
Wikipedia - Blood libel -- False claim that Jews killed Christians to use blood in ceremonies
Wikipedia - Blood soup -- Soup that uses blood as a principal ingredient
Wikipedia - Bloomery -- Type of furnace once used widely for smelting iron from its oxides
Wikipedia - Bloomsbury Publishing -- British worldwide publishing house founded in 1986
Wikipedia - Blowout (geomorphology) -- Depressions in a sand dune ecosystem caused by the removal of sediments by wind
Wikipedia - Blowpipe (tool) -- Tool used to direct a stream of gas
Wikipedia - Bloxham Village Museum
Wikipedia - Blue Angel (train) -- Class of 1- and 2-car diesel railcars formerly used by Nederlandse Spoorwegen
Wikipedia - Blue beret -- Blue-colored berets and organizations that use them
Wikipedia - Bluebird-Proteus CN7 -- Gas-turbine powered vehicle used to set a world land speed record
Wikipedia - Blue box -- Electronic device used to illegally place free long-distance telephone calls
Wikipedia - Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts Foundation -- Non-profit organization promoting health access in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts -- Health insurance company
Wikipedia - Blue-eyed soul -- Term sometimes used for rhythm and blues and soul music performed by white artists
Wikipedia - Blue Hole (New Mexico) -- Sinkhole used for scuba diving
Wikipedia - Blue House raid -- 1968 North Korean assassination attempt on South Korean President Park Chung-hee
Wikipedia - Blue House -- South Korean presidential residence
Wikipedia - Blue pencil (editing) -- Pencil used to show corrections to written copies
Wikipedia - Blue Rhythm -- 1931 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Blues Hall of Fame -- Award by Blues Foundation, since 2015 also a music museum in Memphis, Tennessee
Wikipedia - Blue sign -- Used by inland waterways vessels when performing a special manoeuvre or passing on the starboard side
Wikipedia - Blue wall of silence -- American term used to denote an informal rule for police officers not to report on fellow officer reported misconduct
Wikipedia - Bluing (fabric) -- Product used to improve optical whiteness of clothing or textiles
Wikipedia - Blumhouse Productions -- American film and television production company
Wikipedia - Blumhouse
Wikipedia - Blunt instrument -- Any solid object used as a weapon
Wikipedia - Blunt trauma -- Physical trauma caused to a body part, either by impact, injury or physical attack
Wikipedia - Blu-ray -- Optical disc format used for storing digital video and other digital data
Wikipedia - BLVD Place -- Mixed-use development in Houston, Texas
Wikipedia - Blythe House -- Grade II listed building in West Kensington, London
Wikipedia - Boarding House Groonen -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Boarding stirrup -- A suspended foot support allowing divers to use a leg to help lift themselves from the water into the boat
Wikipedia - Boar spear -- Type of spear primarily used for boar hunting
Wikipedia - Boat Bluff Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Boat Builders (film) -- 1938 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Boathouse -- Building for storage of boats
Wikipedia - Bobbinet -- Hexagonal machine-made net fabric used in lacemaking
Wikipedia - Bob Iger <!-- PLEASE READ: If you came to add that Iger took the role of CEO back Please DO NOT. Chapek STILL retains his CEO title and Iger STILL remains Executive Chairman. Just Because Iger took some CEO duties from Chapek DOES NOT mean that Iger TOOK the CEO TITLE BACK !--> -- American businessman and former CEO of The Walt Disney Company
Wikipedia - Bob Meusel
Wikipedia - Bob Monkhouse -- English entertainer
Wikipedia - Bob Wischusen -- American sportscaster
Wikipedia - Boca Grande Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Bochum Dahlhausen Railway Museum -- Railway museum in Bochum Dahlhausen
Wikipedia - Bode Museum -- Art museum in Berlin
Wikipedia - Bodie Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in North Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Bodmer Library -- Museum of rare manuscripts in Cologny, Switzerland
Wikipedia - Bodo Hauser -- German television presenter
Wikipedia - Bodok seal -- High pressure sealing washer used with pin index valve systems
Wikipedia - Bodrhyddan Hall -- Country house in Rhuddlan, Wales
Wikipedia - Bodstrup -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Bodybuilding supplement -- Dietary supplement used for bodybuilding
Wikipedia - Boeing C-17 Globemaster III in Australian service -- History of the C-17 Globemaster III transport aircraft used by Australia
Wikipedia - Boeing-Stearman Model 75 -- American biplane military training aircraft in use 1934 through WWII
Wikipedia - Boeing T-43 -- US Air Force aircraft used for navigator training, derived from 737-200
Wikipedia - Boeotian muses -- Ancient Greek mythological characters
Wikipedia - Bogenhausen
Wikipedia - Bois Blanc Island Lighthouse and Blockhouse -- Historic site in Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Boitumelo Babuseng -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Boja Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Bokken -- Japanese wooden sword used for training
Wikipedia - Boland's Mill -- Mixed use development in Dublin City
Wikipedia - Boleskine House
Wikipedia - Bollard -- Vertical post used in mooring, traffic, etc.
Wikipedia - Bollinger-Hartley House -- Historic building in Blowing Rock, Watauga County, North Carolina
Wikipedia - Boll weevil (politics) -- American political term used in the mid- and late-20th century to describe conservative Southern Democrats
Wikipedia - Bolo Computer Museum
Wikipedia - Bolt cutter -- Tool used for cutting chains, padlocks, bolts, and wire mesh
Wikipedia - Bolton Percy railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bomb (icon) -- Symbolic image used to represent a bomb
Wikipedia - Bomb -- explosive weapon that uses exothermic reaction
Wikipedia - Bombyx mori -- Moth mainly used in the production of silk
Wikipedia - Bonded warehouse -- Building or other secured area in which dutiable goods may be stored
Wikipedia - Bonferroni correction -- Statistical technique used to correct for multiple comparisons
Wikipedia - Bonita Beach Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Bonnat, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Book of Common Prayer -- Prayer book used in most Anglican churches
Wikipedia - Book of Divine Worship -- Adaptation of the Book of Common Prayer for Roman Catholic use
Wikipedia - Book of the Law of the Lord -- Scripture used by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)
Wikipedia - Boomtown (1956 TV series) -- Television series based in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boott Mills -- Cotton mill of Lowell, Massachusetts, built in 1835
Wikipedia - Bopomofo -- Alphabet used for transcribing Mandarin Chinese
Wikipedia - Borana calendar -- Calendar supposed to be used by Borena people who live in southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya
Wikipedia - Borden System -- Archaeological numbering system used in Canada
Wikipedia - Border disease -- Viral disease of sheep and goats caused by Pestivirus D
Wikipedia - Borderland Museum Eichsfeld -- Museum in Germany
Wikipedia - Borderland State Park -- State park in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Borel's lemma -- Result used in the theory of asymptotic expansions and partial differential equations
Wikipedia - Boris Cipusev -- Australian artist
Wikipedia - Borkhausenia crimnodes -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Borkhausenia fuscescens -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Borkhausenia luridicomella -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Borkhausenia morella -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Borkhausenia -- Genus of moths
Wikipedia - Borkum Great Light -- Lighthouse on Borkum, Germany
Wikipedia - Borno State House of Assembly -- Legislative arm of the government of Borno State of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Bornsminde Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Boroughbridge railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Borries von Munchhausen -- German poet and activist
Wikipedia - Borrowing center -- Library of household items and tools
Wikipedia - Boston American -- Newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston and Northern Street Railway -- Former transportation company in Greater Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston Aquarial and Zoological Gardens -- Public exhibit in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston City Hall -- City hall of Boston, Massachusetts since 1969
Wikipedia - Boston College -- Private research university in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Boston Common -- Public park in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston Garden -- Indoor arena in Boston, Massachusetts, US between 1928-1997
Wikipedia - Boston Housing Authority -- Public agency in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Boston Landing station -- MBTA Commuter Rail station in Brighton, Massachusetts on the Framingham/Worcester Line
Wikipedia - Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston Park Plaza -- Hotel in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Boston Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge
Wikipedia - Boston Stock Exchange -- Stock exchange in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Boston Strangler -- Murderer of 13 women in the Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston University Bridge -- Bridge over the Charles River between Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boston University -- Private research university in Boston, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Bosun's chair -- Seat used to suspend a person working at height
Wikipedia - BOSU -- Rubber half-sphere used for fitness training
Wikipedia - Boswellia papyrifera -- Species of African plant commonly used for incense
Wikipedia - Botallack Manor -- Listed house in Cornwall
Wikipedia - Bothy -- Permanent basic shelter for temporary use
Wikipedia - Boudinage -- Structures in rock caused by extension
Wikipedia - Boughton Monchelsea Place -- Grade I listed English country house in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Boulder Bank Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Bourbeuse River -- River in Missouri, US
Wikipedia - Bourbon Reforms -- Set of economic and political legislation promulgated by the Spanish Crown under various kings of the House of Bourbon, mainly in the 18th century
Wikipedia - Bourne House, East Woodhay -- House in Hampshire, England
Wikipedia - Bourtzwiller -- Quarter of Mulhouse, Alsace, France
Wikipedia - Boussac, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Bovine viral diarrhea -- Significant economic disease of cattle caused by two species of Pestivirus
Wikipedia - Bowden cable -- Flexible cable used to transmit force
Wikipedia - Bowen's Court -- Historic county house in Ireland
Wikipedia - Bowers railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bowing in Japan -- Custom in Japan, used as a salutation, a form of reverence, an apology or expression of gratitude
Wikipedia - Bowing in the Eastern Orthodox Church -- Different kinds of bows used in an Eastern Orthodox worship service
Wikipedia - Bowline -- Simple knot used to form a fixed loop at the end of a rope
Wikipedia - Bowling Junction railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bowling railway station (England) -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bow (music) -- stick-shaped implement with hairs used to play a string musical instrument
Wikipedia - Boxcar -- Enclosed railroad car used to carry freight
Wikipedia - Box -- Typically cuboid or rectangular container used for the transport or storage of objects
Wikipedia - Boycott of Maryland's 1st District -- Regional business boycott to protest legislation led by its U.S. House representative
Wikipedia - Boydell Shakespeare Gallery -- Art museum in London
Wikipedia - Boyfriend (Ariana Grande and Social House song) -- 2019 single by Ariana Grande and Social House
Wikipedia - Boyle-Hudspeth-Benson House -- Historic New Jersey house
Wikipedia - Boylston station -- Subway station in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Boys anti-tank rifle -- A British anti-tank rifle in use during the Second World War.
Wikipedia - Boyuk Zira Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - Brabant Center for Music Traditions -- Museum and music center in Kempenhout, Belgium
Wikipedia - Bracken House, London -- Building in London
Wikipedia - Bracket (mathematics) -- Brackets as used in mathematical notation
Wikipedia - Braco's Banking House -- Historic townhouse in Elgin, Scotland
Wikipedia - Bradford Adolphus Street railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Brad Garlinghouse -- American businessman
Wikipedia - Brad Leithauser
Wikipedia - Bradley County Courthouse Annex -- Historic building in Cleveland, Tennessee
Wikipedia - Bradleys Head Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Brafferton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Braintree Public Schools -- Public school district in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Braintree Split -- Highway interchange on the city lines of Braintree and Quincy, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Bramall Hall -- Tudor manor house in Bramhall, within the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England
Wikipedia - Bramante Staircase -- Two staircases in the Vatican Museums, built in 1505 and 1932
Wikipedia - BramberM-DM-#e Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Bramshill House -- Grade I listed English country house in Hart, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Brandaris -- Lighthouse on the Wadden Sea island Terschelling, Netherlands
Wikipedia - Brandeis University -- Private research university in Waltham, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Brandeston Hall -- House in Brandeston, Suffolk, UK
Wikipedia - Branding iron -- Tool used to burn a mark on livestock, tools, or manufactured goods to indicate ownership
Wikipedia - Brandt Centre -- Multi-use indoor arena in Regina, Saskatchewan
Wikipedia - Brandts Museum of Photographic Art -- Museum in Odense, Denmark
Wikipedia - Branzoll Castle -- Building in Klausen, Italy
Wikipedia - Brass knuckles -- Weapon used in hand-to-hand combat
Wikipedia - Brattle Street Church -- Church building in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Brave Little Tailor -- 1938 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Brawijaya Stadium -- Multi-use stadium in Kediri, Indonesia
Wikipedia - Brazilian hemorrhagic fever -- Infectious disease caused by Brazilian mammarenavirus
Wikipedia - Brazilian imperial family -- Branch of the House of Braganza that ruled the Empire of Brazil
Wikipedia - Brazilian jiu-jitsu gi -- Uniform (jacket and trousers) worn by Brazilian jiu-jitsu participants
Wikipedia - Brazilian Portuguese -- Set of dialects of the Portuguese language used mostly in Brazil
Wikipedia - Bread and circuses -- Figure of speech referring to a superficial means of appeasement
Wikipedia - Bread and Roses Heritage Festival -- Open-air festival in Lawrence, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - Breadcrumb navigation -- Graphical control element used as a navigational aid in user interfaces
Wikipedia - Breakdown: In Your House -- 1998 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Breaking wheel -- Torture device used for capital punishment
Wikipedia - Breast binding -- Undergarment used for flattening breasts
Wikipedia - Breast fetishism -- Sexual interest focused on female breasts
Wikipedia - Breast implant -- Prosthesis used to change the size, shape, and contour of a person's breast
Wikipedia - Breathing gas reclaim system -- Equipment to recover helium based breathing gas after use by divers
Wikipedia - Breathing gas -- Gas used for human respiration
Wikipedia - Breathing (Lifehouse song) -- 2000 single by Lifehouse
Wikipedia - Breathwork -- Term used in alternative medicine for various breathing practices
Wikipedia - Bredeshave -- Former manor house at Tappernose, Denmark
Wikipedia - Bree Van de Kamp -- Fictional character on Desperate Housewives
Wikipedia - Bregentved -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Bremerhaven Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, Germany
Wikipedia - Bremer wall -- Type of barrier used to protect structures against damage from explosions
Wikipedia - Brenda Lopez de Arraras -- Member of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Brent Bolthouse
Wikipedia - Breviary -- Liturgical book used in Christianity
Wikipedia - Brian Causey -- American musician, composer and singer
Wikipedia - Brian Cina -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Brian Fair -- American musician from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Brian Keefe (politician) -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Brian Smith (Vermont politician) -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Brian Stonehouse
Wikipedia - Brick (electronics) -- Term used to refer to a non-functioning electronic device
Wikipedia - Brick House (song) -- 1977 single by Commodores
Wikipedia - Brickwall House -- House in East Sussex, England
Wikipedia - Brick -- Block or a single unit of a ceramic material used in masonry construction
Wikipedia - Brick Works De Panoven -- Dutch brick museum
Wikipedia - Bridgeford House -- Historic building in Eureka Springs, Arkansas
Wikipedia - Bridge House College -- Nigerian independent sixth form school
Wikipedia - Bridge House Estates -- UK charitable trust in London
Wikipedia - Bridgend Farmhouse Community Project -- Community-owned charitable organization in Edinburgh, Scotland
Wikipedia - Bridgewater Triangle -- An area in southeastern Massachusetts claimed to be the site of paranormal phenomena
Wikipedia - Bridle path -- Path that can be used by people riding horses
Wikipedia - Briefcase -- narrow hard-sided box shaped bag or case used to equip materials
Wikipedia - Brief Messages from the Heart Museum -- Museum of letters in Fukui Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - Brighouse, Richmond -- neighbourhood in Richmond, British Columbia
Wikipedia - Bright House Networks
Wikipedia - Bright Yellow Gun -- 1994 single by Throwing Muses
Wikipedia - Brigitte Macron -- Spouse of the President of France
Wikipedia - Brillouin and Langevin functions -- Mathematical function, used to describe magnetization
Wikipedia - Brimfield State Forest -- Protected area in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Bringing Down the House (film) -- 2003 film by Adam Shankman
Wikipedia - Brinkley Act -- Clause of the Communications Act of 1934
Wikipedia - Brioni (brand) -- Italian fashion house
Wikipedia - Briquette -- Compressed block of biomass used for fueling a fire
Wikipedia - Bristol child sex abuse ring -- Large group of men who committed serious sexual offences
Wikipedia - Bristol County, Massachusetts -- County in the United States
Wikipedia - Bristol North West (UK Parliament constituency) -- Constituency represented in the House of Commons
Wikipedia - Bristol Train of Artillery Museum -- Museum in Bristol, Rhode Island, US
Wikipedia - Britannia Stop Lock -- Former lock on the Limehouse Cut in Tower Hamlets, London
Wikipedia - British 21-inch torpedo -- Class of torpedo in use during WWI to WWII
Wikipedia - British Airways ethnic liveries -- 1997-1999 livery used by British Airways
Wikipedia - British Engineerium -- Museum in Hove, East Sussex, UK
Wikipedia - British English -- Forms of the English language used in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - British House of Lords
Wikipedia - British Museum algorithm
Wikipedia - British Museum leather dressing
Wikipedia - British Museum Reading Room -- Room in the British Museum which was formerly the reading room of the British Library
Wikipedia - British Museum -- National museum in London, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - British Rail Class 142 -- Class of 96 British 2-car railbuses
Wikipedia - British Royal Train -- Royal train for the use of the British royal family and staff
Wikipedia - Broadcast automation -- The use of broadcast programming technology to automate broadcasting operations
Wikipedia - Broadcasting House, Cardiff -- Building in north Cardiff, Wales
Wikipedia - Broadcasting House -- Headquarters and registered office of the BBC in London, England
Wikipedia - Broadcast license -- License granting permission to use radio frequency spectrum for broadcasting use
Wikipedia - Broad Ripple Park Carousel -- Restored antique American carousel
Wikipedia - Broadway station (MBTA) -- Subway station in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Bro culture -- Word mostly used by young males as "friend"
Wikipedia - Brodie (ski area) -- Ski area in Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - Broken Angel House -- Building formerly located in Brooklyn, New York, demolished in 2014
Wikipedia - Brokso -- Manor house bear NM-CM-&stved, Denmark
Wikipedia - Bromley House Library -- Subscription library in Nottingham
Wikipedia - Bromodeoxyuridine -- Synthetic nucleoside that is an analog of thymidine. BrdU is commonly used in the detection of proliferating cells in living tissues
Wikipedia - Bromotrifluoromethane -- Organic halide used for fire suppression
Wikipedia - Brompton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Brompton Road Halt railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bronnum House -- Historic building in Copenhagen, Denmark
Wikipedia - Bronwydd Castle -- Welsh country house
Wikipedia - Bronx River Houses -- Public housing development in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Bronze laver (Temple) -- Ten bronze lavers used for washing the hands and feet of the priests in the Temple of Solomon
Wikipedia - Bronze man and centaur (Metropolitan Museum of Art) -- 8th century BCE bronze sculpture
Wikipedia - Brookhouse, South Yorkshire -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Brookline High School -- Four-year public high school in the town of Brookline, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Brookline TAB -- Local newspaper serving Brookline, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Brooklyn Army Terminal -- Historic warehouse complex in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Brooklyn Museum -- Art museum in Brooklyn, New York City
Wikipedia - Broselow tape -- Color-coded length-based tape measure that is used for pediatric emergencies
Wikipedia - Broughton House, Raleigh -- Mansion in Raleigh, North Carolina
Wikipedia - Brousse, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Brown County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Brown County Courthouse (Kansas) -- Historci courthouse in Hiawatha, Kansas, U.S.
Wikipedia - Brown County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Brown house snake -- Disambiguation page
Wikipedia - Brown recluse spider -- Spider with venomous bite native to US
Wikipedia - Brownstone -- Type of sandstone, or U.S. townhouse built thereof
Wikipedia - Bruce Castle -- 16th-century manor house in London
Wikipedia - Bruce Freeman Rail Trail -- rail trail in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Brucella suis -- Bacterium that causes swine brucellosis
Wikipedia - Bruce W. Pepich -- American art museum director
Wikipedia - Brukenthal National Museum
Wikipedia - Brukna Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Brunette Coleman -- Pseudonym used by the poet and writer Philip Larkin
Wikipedia - Brunninghausen -- Quarter of Dortmund, Germany
Wikipedia - Bruno Clausen -- Danish sailor
Wikipedia - Brusel -- Graphic novel
Wikipedia - Brushing (e-commerce) -- Deceitful technique used in e-commerce to boost seller ratings
Wikipedia - Brush -- A tool with bristles, used for cleaning, grooming, or applying liquid coatings
Wikipedia - Brussels ISIL terror cell -- Group accused of Paris and Brussels terrorist attacks
Wikipedia - BSD 2-Clause
Wikipedia - Bucculatrix diffusella -- Species of moth in genus Bucculatrix
Wikipedia - Bucculatrix pertusella -- Species of moth in genus Bucculatrix
Wikipedia - Buchanan Auld House -- Ruined house in Scotland
Wikipedia - Buchanan Castle -- Ruined country house in Scotland
Wikipedia - Buchanan County Courthouse (Iowa) -- Historic building in Independence, Iowa, US
Wikipedia - Bucie -- South African R&B and house singer
Wikipedia - Buck House Novice Chase -- Steeplechase horse race in Ireland
Wikipedia - Buckingham House, Pall Mall -- Historic British building
Wikipedia - Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit -- Language used in Buddhist texts
Wikipedia - BuddhabhiM-aM-9M-#eka -- Buddhist rituals used to consecrate images of the Buddha and bodhisattvas
Wikipedia - Budget Select Committee (Malaysia) -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Bud Williams -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Buena Vista (brand) -- Brand name historically used for divisions of the Walt Disney Company
Wikipedia - Buenavista Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Tenerife, Spain
Wikipedia - Buena Vista Museum of Natural History & Science -- Natural history museum in California
Wikipedia - Buffalo and Erie County Naval & Military Park -- Military and naval museum in Buffalo, New York, US
Wikipedia - Buffalo City Court Building -- Brutalist-style courthouse in Buffalo, New York
Wikipedia - Buffalo Maritime Center -- Maritime museum
Wikipedia - Buffalo Museum of Science -- Museum
Wikipedia - Bug-A-Salt -- Plastic gun like device used to kill bugs such as the housefly.
Wikipedia - Bugatti Divo -- Limited production track-focused sports car manufactured by Bugatti based on the Chiron
Wikipedia - Bugatti EB 118 -- Concept car jointly developed by French automobile manufacturer Bugatti and Italian styling house Italdesign
Wikipedia - Bugatti EB 218 -- Concept car jointly developed by French automobile manufacturer Bugatti and Italian design house Italdesign in 1999
Wikipedia - Bughouse Bellhops -- 1915 film
Wikipedia - Bughouse chess -- Chess variant played on two chessboards by four players in teams of two
Wikipedia - Bugio Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Bugui Point Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door -- Phrase about innovation
Wikipedia - Building 19 -- Defunct Massachusetts discount store chain
Wikipedia - Building a Building -- 1933 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Building at 606 Main Street -- Historic building in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Building-integrated photovoltaics -- Photovoltaic materials used to replace conventional building materials
Wikipedia - Building material -- Material which is used for construction purposes
Wikipedia - Build Thy House -- 1920 film
Wikipedia - Bulk Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Wikipedia - Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Historical Series
Wikipedia - Bullying -- Use of force or coercion to abuse or intimidate others
Wikipedia - Bulstrode Preceptory -- Monastic house in Buckinghamshire, England
Wikipedia - Bumble-Bee (livery) -- Livery used on New Zealand railway locomotives
Wikipedia - Bumper fracture -- Fracture of the lateral tibial plateau caused by the bumper of a car
Wikipedia - Bumpkin Island -- Tidal island in Massachusetts, United States of America
Wikipedia - Bunch-of-Grapes -- Former tavern located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Bungalow -- A house, primarily of a single storey
Wikipedia - Bunkhouse Stampede (1988) -- 1988 Jim Crockett Promotions pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Bunnings Warehouse -- Australian household hardware chain
Wikipedia - Bunyavirales -- Order of negative-sense single-stranded RNA viruses
Wikipedia - Buprenorphine -- Opioid used to treat opioid addiction and dependence, acute pain, and chronic pain
Wikipedia - Burchell's sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Burford Priory -- Country house in Oxfordshire
Wikipedia - Burghausen, Alttting
Wikipedia - Burgh House -- Grade I listed local museum in London Borough of Camden, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Burlesque Hall of Fame -- museum in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA
Wikipedia - Burlington House -- Building on Piccadilly in London, England
Wikipedia - Burlington Mall (Massachusetts) -- Shopping mall in Burlington, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Burlington, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Burmese rupee -- Former Burmese currency used from 1852-1952
Wikipedia - Burned house horizon -- Phenomenon of presumably intentionally burned settlements
Wikipedia - Burning Down the House (film) -- 2001 film by Philippe Mora
Wikipedia - Burning Down the House -- 1983 single by Talking Heads
Wikipedia - Burning of Parliament -- Destruction by fire in 1834 of the Houses of Parliament in London, England
Wikipedia - Burnsed Blockhouse -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Burnside Fountain -- Drinking fountain with statue in Worcester, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Burns Square Historic District -- A mixed-use area, predominately commercial, in Sarasota, Florida
Wikipedia - Burn the House Down -- 2018 song by AJR
Wikipedia - Burn -- Injury to flesh or skin, often caused by excessive heat
Wikipedia - Burrewarra Point Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Burr mill -- Mill used to grind hard food products between two burrs
Wikipedia - Burst cutting area -- Method used to identify optical discs
Wikipedia - Burston Strike School -- School and museum founded as consequence of strike in Norfolk, UK
Wikipedia - Burton Blatt Institute -- Research institute at Syracuse University in New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Burton Constable railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Burton House (Hurley, Wisconsin) -- Former hotel in Hurley, Wisconsin, United States
Wikipedia - Burton Pynsent House -- Historic building in Somerset, England
Wikipedia - Burt's solar compass -- Surveying instrument that uses the sun's direction instead of magnetism
Wikipedia - Busch Gardens Tampa Bay -- African-themed amusement park in Tampa, Florida
Wikipedia - Busch Gardens Williamsburg -- European-themed amusement park in James City County, Virginia
Wikipedia - Bus doors -- Various types of doors on buses and coaches
Wikipedia - Buse Arslan -- Turkish actress and model
Wikipedia - Buse Coskun -- Turkish figure skater
Wikipedia - Busengo, Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Settlement in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Wikipedia - Busengo, Rwanda -- Rwandan settlement
Wikipedia - Busengo, Uganda -- Ugandan settlement
Wikipedia - Buseoksa -- Buddhist temple in South Korea
Wikipedia - Buserite -- Type of mineral
Wikipedia - Buses in Milton Keynes -- Bus services in and around Milton Keynes, England
Wikipedia - Buses in Portsmouth -- Public transport in the city of Portsmouth, England
Wikipedia - Buses in Sydney -- Bus networks in Sydney, Australia
Wikipedia - Bush hammer -- A masonry tool used to texturize stone and concrete
Wikipedia - Bush House -- Building in London, part of the Strand Campus of King's College London.
Wikipedia - Bushnell-Fisher House -- Historic building in Eagle, Idaho
Wikipedia - Bushy House -- Former royal residence in Teddington in South West London
Wikipedia - Business House, Novosibirsk -- Building in Novosibirsk, Russia
Wikipedia - Business jet -- Civil jet aircraft used by companies
Wikipedia - Business telephone system -- Multiline telephone system typically used in business environments
Wikipedia - Bus lane -- Road lane restricted to buses
Wikipedia - Bus manufacturing -- Manufacture of buses and coaches
Wikipedia - Bus mouse
Wikipedia - Buspirone -- Medication used to treat anxiety disorders
Wikipedia - Bussokusekika
Wikipedia - Bus station -- Structure, larger than a bus stop, where city or intercity buses stop to pick up and drop off passengers
Wikipedia - Bus turnout -- A spot on the side of a road reserved for buses to pick up and drop off passengers
Wikipedia - Busum Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Wikipedia - Bute House -- Official residence of the First Minister of Scotland
Wikipedia - Butler County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Butler House, Kilkenny -- Georgian Dower house located in Kilkenny
Wikipedia - Butler -- Male domestic worker in charge of all the household staff
Wikipedia - Butterfield House (New York City) -- Apartment building in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Butterfly Bomb -- Bomb used by the Luftwaffe
Wikipedia - Butterfly effect -- Idea that small causes can have large effects
Wikipedia - Butterfly house -- Facility for the breeding and display of butterflies
Wikipedia - Butterfly loop -- Knot used to form a fixed loop in the middle of a rope
Wikipedia - Buyeo National Museum -- National museum
Wikipedia - Buzludzha monument -- Abandoned communist monument house in Bulgaria
Wikipedia - Buzzards Bay -- A bay on the coast of Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Buzzword -- A word or phrase used to impress, or one that is fashionable
Wikipedia - B. W. Countryman -- Member of the South Dakota House of Representatives
Wikipedia - B with flourish -- Letter of the Latin alphabet used in Middle Vietnamese
Wikipedia - Bx1 and Bx2 buses -- Bus routes in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Bx23 and Q50 buses -- Bus routes in Queens and the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - B yen -- Military currency used after World War II
Wikipedia - Byrne Dairy -- Regional dairy based in Syracuse, New York
Wikipedia - Byron Reed Collection -- Collection of rare materials housed at the Durham Museum in Omaha
Wikipedia - Byron R. Sherman House -- Historic building in Montana, US
Wikipedia - Byron Rushing -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Byzantine and Christian Museum
Wikipedia - Byzantine calendar -- The calendar used by the Eastern Orthodox Church from c. 691 to 1728
Wikipedia - Cable House -- Building in Chicago
Wikipedia - Cable tester -- Electronic device used to verify electrical connections
Wikipedia - Cabo Prior Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Spain
Wikipedia - Cabo Raso Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Cabo Sardao Lighthouse -- Lighthouse near Odemira, Portugal
Wikipedia - Cabossed -- Heraldic term used where a beast's head is cleanly separated from the neck so that only the face shows
Wikipedia - Cabot House -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Cabras Island Light -- Lighthouse near Ceiba, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Cacilhas Lighthouse -- disused, restored lighthouse near Lisbon, Portugal
Wikipedia - Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention
Wikipedia - Cadet rifle -- Rifle used by military cadets and others for basic firearms and marksmanship training
Wikipedia - Cafe au lait spot -- Type of birthmark caused by a collection of melanocytes
Wikipedia - Cafe Barbera -- Italian coffeehouse and fast casual dining franchise
Wikipedia - Cafe de Paris (Monaco) -- Coffehouse and restaurant
Wikipedia - Cafe Gondree -- Small coffeehouse in Benouville, France
Wikipedia - CafePress -- Online retailer of stock and user-customized on-demand products
Wikipedia - Caffe Nero -- European style coffee house brand
Wikipedia - Cage -- enclosure used to confine, contain or protect something or someone
Wikipedia - Caherduff Castle -- Tower house near Cong, County Mayo, Ireland
Wikipedia - Cahn-Crawford House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Cairns Customs House -- Historic building in Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Caja de Muertos Light -- An 1887 lighthouse in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - CALA Homes -- Housebuilding company
Wikipedia - Calcaires et marnes schisteuses -- French geologic formation
Wikipedia - Calculating Space -- Book by Konrad Zuse
Wikipedia - Calculator -- Electronic device used for calculations
Wikipedia - Calella Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Catalonia, Spain
Wikipedia - Calendering (textiles) -- Finishing process that uses rollers to produce a surface effect on fabric, paper, or plastic film
Wikipedia - Calf House -- Portal tomb (dolmen) in County Cavan, Ireland
Wikipedia - Calhoun County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - California Academy of Sciences -- Natural history museum in San Francisco
Wikipedia - California African American Museum -- Museum in Los Angeles, California
Wikipedia - California job case -- Case with compartments to store the movable type used in letterpress printing
Wikipedia - California's 11th congressional district -- U.S. House district in San Francisco Bay area, California
Wikipedia - California's 12th congressional district -- U.S. House district in San Francisco, California
Wikipedia - California's 24th congressional district -- U.S. House district in western California
Wikipedia - California's 25th congressional district -- U.S. House district north of Los Angeles, CA
Wikipedia - California's 26th congressional district -- U.S. House district in Ventura County, CA
Wikipedia - California's 27th congressional district -- U.S. House district in northern suburbs of Los Angeles, CA
Wikipedia - California's 33rd congressional district -- U.S. House district in western suburbs of Los Angeles, CA
Wikipedia - California's 8th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southeastern California
Wikipedia - California's congressional districts -- U.S. House districts in the state of California
Wikipedia - California State Assembly -- Lower house of the California State Legislature
Wikipedia - California State Railroad Museum -- Railroad museum in Sacramento, California
Wikipedia - California State Senate -- Upper house of the California State Legislature
Wikipedia - Calippus of Syracuse
Wikipedia - Cali Xuseen Xirsi
Wikipedia - Call centre -- Centralised office used for the purpose of receiving or transmitting a large volume of requests by telephone
Wikipedia - Calliope -- Muse of epic poetry
Wikipedia - Callot Soeurs -- French fashion house
Wikipedia - Callum Woodhouse -- British actor
Wikipedia - Calorie -- Unit of energy used in nutrition
Wikipedia - Calverley and Rodley railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Calvet Museum -- Museum in Avignon (Vaucluse, France)
Wikipedia - Calvin Coolidge Presidential Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Calvin Coolidge, located in Northampton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cambridge Blue (colour) -- Colour commonly used by sports teams from the University of Cambridge
Wikipedia - Cambridge Highlands -- Human settlement in Cambridge, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Cambridge, Massachusetts City Hall
Wikipedia - Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cambridge Museum of Technology -- Industrial heritage museum in Cambridge, England
Wikipedia - Cambridgeport, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cambusmore (Stirling) -- Country house in Stirling, Scotland
Wikipedia - Cameo appearance -- Term used in performing arts
Wikipedia - Camera dolly -- Wheeled cart or similar device used in filmmaking and television production
Wikipedia - Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church -- Office of the Papal household
Wikipedia - Camilla Nichol -- British geologist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Camille Ournac -- French politician from Toulouse
Wikipedia - Campaign Against Psychiatric Abuse
Wikipedia - Campbell v MGN Ltd -- 2004 House of Lords decision on privacy in English law
Wikipedia - Camp Chase (Massachusetts) -- Civil War training camp
Wikipedia - Campen Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Lower Saxony, Germany
Wikipedia - Campion House
Wikipedia - Campsite -- Place used for overnight stay in the outdoors
Wikipedia - Campuses of Georgetown University -- Physical facilities of Georgetown University
Wikipedia - Campuses of the University of Nottingham -- Four sites occupied by the University of Nottingham
Wikipedia - Campus of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - Camstrap -- Webbing strap and cam action buckle used to secure a diving cylinder to a buoyancy compensator or backplate
Wikipedia - Canada Infrastructure Bank -- Canada Infrastructure Bank is a Crown Corporation that uses public-private partnerships for public infrastructure projects.
Wikipedia - Canada's Wonderland -- Amusement park in Vaughan, Canada
Wikipedia - Canadian Canoe Museum -- Museum in Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Canadian Centre for Architecture -- Architecture museum and research centre in Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum -- Aviation museum in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Canal house -- House overlooking a canal
Wikipedia - Cancel character -- Either of two control codes used to delete or rescind preceding data or characters
Wikipedia - Cancellation (mail) -- Postal marking to deface a stamp and prevent its re-use
Wikipedia - Cancer research -- Research into cancer to identify causes and develop strategies for prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and cure
Wikipedia - Cancn Underwater Museum
Wikipedia - Candler Field Museum -- Museum in the United States
Wikipedia - Candlestick -- Device used to hold a candle in place
Wikipedia - Canister shot -- Class of ammunition used by artillery
Wikipedia - Cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome -- Nausea and vomiting resulting from cannabis use
Wikipedia - Cannabis and religion -- Entheogenic use of marijuana
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Albania -- Use of Cannabis in Albania
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Algeria -- Use of Cannabis in Algeria
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Andorra -- Use of Cannabis in Andorra
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Angola -- Use of Cannabis in Angola
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Antigua and Barbuda -- Use of Cannabis in Antigua and Barbuda
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Argentina -- Use of Cannabis in Argentina
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Armenia -- Use of Cannabis in Armenia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Australia -- Recreational and medicinal drug use
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Austria -- Use of Cannabis in Austria
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Azerbaijan -- Use of Cannabis in Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bahrain -- Use of Cannabis in Bahrain
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bangladesh -- Use of Cannabis in Bangladesh
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Barbados -- Use of Cannabis in Barbados
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Belarus -- Use of Cannabis in Belarus
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Belgium -- Use of Cannabis in Belgium
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Belize -- Use of Cannabis in Belize
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Benin -- Use of Cannabis in Benin
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bermuda -- Use of cannabis in Bermuda
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bhutan -- Use of Cannabis in Bhutan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bolivia -- Use of Cannabis in Bolivia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Use of Cannabis in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Botswana -- Use of Cannabis in Botswana
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Brazil -- Use of Cannabis in Brazil
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Brunei -- Use of Cannabis in Brunei
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Bulgaria -- Use of Cannabis in Bulgaria
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Burkina Faso -- Use of Cannabis in Burkina Faso
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Burundi -- Use of Cannabis in Burundi
Wikipedia - Cannabis in California -- Legal for medical use and recreational use
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Cambodia -- Use of Cannabis in Cambodia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Cameroon -- Use of Cannabis in Cameroon
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Canada -- Use of Cannabis within Canada
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Cape Verde -- Use of Cannabis in Cape Verde
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Chad -- Use of Cannabis in Chad
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Chile -- Use of Cannabis in Chile
Wikipedia - Cannabis in China -- Use of Cannabis in China
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Colombia -- Use of Cannabis in Colombia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Comoros -- Use of Cannabis in Comoros
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Costa Rica -- Use of Cannabis in Costa Rica
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Croatia -- Use of Cannabis in Croatia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Cuba -- Use of Cannabis in Cuba
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Cyprus -- Use of Cannabis in Cyprus
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Denmark -- Use of Cannabis in Denmark
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Djibouti -- Use of Cannabis in Djibouti
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Dominica -- Use of Cannabis in Dominica
Wikipedia - Cannabis in East Timor -- Use of cannabis in East Timor
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Ecuador -- Use of cannabis in Ecuador
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Egypt -- Use of cannabis in Egypt
Wikipedia - Cannabis in El Salvador -- Use of cannabis in El Salvador
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Equatorial Guinea -- Use of Cannabis in Equatorial Guinea
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Eritrea -- Use of Cannabis in Eritrea
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Estonia -- Use of cannabis in Estonia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Eswatini -- Use of cannabis in Eswatini (Swaziland)
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Ethiopia -- Use of cannabis in Ethiopia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Fiji -- Use of cannabis in Fiji
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Finland -- Use of cannabis in Finland
Wikipedia - Cannabis in France -- Use of cannabis in France
Wikipedia - Cannabis in French Guiana -- Use of cannabis in French Guiana
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Gabon -- Use of cannabis in the Gabon
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Georgia (country) -- Use of cannabis in the country of Georgia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Germany -- Use of cannabis in Germany
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Ghana -- Use of cannabis in Ghana
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Gibraltar -- Use of cannabis in Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Greece -- Use of cannabis in Greece
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Greenland -- Use of Cannabis in Greenland
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Grenada -- Use of cannabis in Grenada
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Guadeloupe -- Use of cannabis in Guadeloupe
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Guatemala -- Use of cannabis in Guatemala
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Guyana -- Use of cannabis in Guyana
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Haiti -- Use of Cannabis in Haiti
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Honduras -- Use of cannabis in Honduras
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Hong Kong -- Use of Cannabis in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Hungary -- Use of cannabis in Hungary
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Iceland -- Use of cannabis in Iceland
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Indonesia -- Use of cannabis in Indonesia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Iran -- Use of cannabis in Iran
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Iraq -- Use of cannabis in Iraq
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Ireland -- Use of cannabis in the Republic of Ireland
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Israel -- The social and legal aspects of cannabis use in Israel
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Italy -- Law in Italy concerning use of cannabis
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Ivory Coast -- Use of cannabis in Ivory Coast
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Jamaica -- Use of cannabis in Jamaica
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Japan -- Use of cannabis in Japan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Jordan -- Use of cannabis in Jordan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Kazakhstan -- Use of cannabis in Kazakhstan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Kenya -- Use of cannabis in Kenya
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Kiribati -- Use of Cannabis in Kiribati
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Kuwait -- Use of cannabis in Kuwait
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Kyrgyzstan -- Use of cannabis in Kyrgyzstan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Laos -- Use of cannabis in Laos
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Latvia -- Use of cannabis in Latvia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Lebanon -- Use of cannabis in Lebanon
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Lesotho -- Use of cannabis in Lesotho
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Liberia -- Use of cannabis in Liberia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Liechtenstein -- Use of cannabis in Liechtenstein
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Lithuania -- Use of cannabis in Lithuania
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Luxembourg -- Use of cannabis in Luxembourg
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Macau -- Use of Cannabis in Macau
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Madagascar -- Use of cannabis in Madagascar
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Malawi -- Use of cannabis in Malawi
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Mali -- Use of cannabis in Mali
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Malta -- Use of cannabis in Malta
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Martinique -- Use of cannabis in Martinique
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Mauritania -- Use of cannabis in Mauritania
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Mauritius -- Use of cannabis in Mauritius
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Mexico -- Use of cannabis in Mexico
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Moldova -- Use of cannabis in Moldova
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Monaco -- Use of cannabis in Monaco
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Mongolia -- Use of cannabis in Mongolia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Montenegro -- Use of cannabis in Montenegro
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Montserrat -- Use of cannabis in Montserrat
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Morocco -- Use of cannabis in Morocco
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Mozambique -- Use of cannabis in Mozambique
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Myanmar -- Use of cannabis in Myanmar (Burma)
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Namibia -- Use of cannabis in Namibia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Nepal -- Use of cannabis in Nepal
Wikipedia - Cannabis in New Caledonia -- Use of cannabis in New Caledonia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in New Zealand -- Use of cannabis in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Nigeria -- Use of cannabis in Nigeria
Wikipedia - Cannabis in North Korea -- Use of cannabis in North Korea
Wikipedia - Cannabis in North Macedonia -- Use of cannabis in North Macedonia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Norway -- Use of cannabis in Norway
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Oman -- Use of cannabis in Oman
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Oregon -- Use of cannabis in Oregon
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Pakistan -- Use of cannabis in Pakistan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Palau -- Use of cannabis in Palau
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Panama -- Use of cannabis in Panama
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Papua New Guinea -- Use of cannabis in Papua New Guinea
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Peru -- History, use, and legal situation of cannabis within Peru
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Poland -- Use of cannabis in Poland
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Portugal -- Use of cannabis in Portugal
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Qatar -- Use of cannabis in Qatar
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Reunion -- Use of cannabis in Reunion
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Romania -- Use of cannabis in Romania
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Russia -- Use of cannabis in Russia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Rwanda -- Use of cannabis in Rwanda
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Saint Kitts and Nevis -- Use of cannabis in Saint Kitts and Nevis
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Saint Lucia -- Use of cannabis in Saint Lucia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines -- Use of cannabis in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Samoa -- Use of cannabis in Samoa
Wikipedia - Cannabis in San Marino -- Use of cannabis in San Marino
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Sao Tome and Principe -- Use of cannabis in Sao Tome and Principe
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Saudi Arabia -- Use of cannabis in Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Senegal -- Use of cannabis in Senegal
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Serbia -- Use of cannabis in Serbia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Seychelles -- Use of cannabis in Seychelles
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Sierra Leone -- Use of cannabis in Sierra Leone
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Singapore -- Use of cannabis in Singapore
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Slovakia -- Use of cannabis in Slovakia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Slovenia -- Use of cannabis in Slovenia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Somalia -- Use of cannabis in Somalia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in South Africa -- Use of cannabis in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cannabis in South Korea -- Use of cannabis in South Korea
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Spain -- Use of cannabis in Spain
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Sri Lanka -- Use of cannabis in Sri Lanka
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Sudan -- Use of cannabis in Sudan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Suriname -- Use of cannabis in Suriname
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Svalbard -- Use of cannabis in Svalbard
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Sweden -- Use of cannabis in Sweden
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Switzerland -- Use of cannabis in Switzerland
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Syria -- Use of cannabis in Syria
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Taiwan -- Use of cannabis in Taiwan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Tajikistan -- Use of cannabis in Tajikistan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Tanzania -- Use of cannabis in Tanzania
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Thailand -- Use of cannabis in Thailand
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Bahamas -- Use of Cannabis in the Bahamas
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Cayman Islands -- Use of cannabis in the Cayman Islands
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Central African Republic -- Use of Cannabis in the Central African Republic
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Cook Islands -- Use of cannabis in the Cook Islands
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Czech Republic -- Use of Cannabis in the Czech Republic
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Use of Cannabis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Dominican Republic -- Use of Cannabis in the Dominican Republic
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Federated States of Micronesia -- Use of cannabis in Micronesia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Gambia -- Use of cannabis in the Gambia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Maldives -- Use of cannabis in the Maldives
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Marshall Islands -- Use of cannabis in the Marshall Islands
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Netherlands -- Use of cannabis in the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Philippines -- Use of cannabis in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Republic of the Congo -- Use of Cannabis in the Republic of the Congo
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the Solomon Islands -- Use of Cannabis in the Solomon Islands
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the United Arab Emirates -- Use of cannabis in the United Arab Emirates
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the United Kingdom -- Use of cannabis in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Cannabis in the United States -- Marijuana use in the United States
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Togo -- Use of cannabis in Togo
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Tonga -- Use of cannabis in Tonga
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Trinidad and Tobago -- Use of cannabis in Trinidad and Tobago
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Tunisia -- Use of cannabis in Tunisia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Turkey -- Use of cannabis in Turkey
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Turkmenistan -- Use of cannabis in Turkmenistan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Tuvalu -- Use of Cannabis in Tuvalu
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Uganda -- Use of cannabis in Uganda
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Ukraine -- Use of cannabis in Ukraine
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Uzbekistan -- Use of cannabis in Uzbekistan
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Vanuatu -- Use of cannabis in Vanuatu
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Venezuela -- Use of cannabis in Venezuela
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Vietnam -- Use of cannabis in Vietnam
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Washington (state) -- Overview of cannabis use and culture in Washington state
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Yemen -- Use of cannabis in Yemen
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Zambia -- Use of cannabis in Zambia
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Zimbabwe -- Use of cannabis in Zimbabwe
Wikipedia - Cannabis Museum (Japan) -- Japanese museum
Wikipedia - Cannabis product testing -- Testing of the properties of cannabis destined for consumer use
Wikipedia - Cannabis tea -- Cannabis-infused drink
Wikipedia - Cannabis use disorder -- Continued use of cannabis despite clinically significant impairment
Wikipedia - Cannons (house)
Wikipedia - Canobie Lake Park -- Amusement park in Salem, New Hampshire
Wikipedia - Canon de 32 modele 1870/93 -- Railway gun used by the French Army
Wikipedia - Canonical coordinates -- sets of coordinates on phase space which can be used to describe a physical system
Wikipedia - Canonical erection of a house of religious
Wikipedia - Canterbury Museum, Christchurch -- Museum in Christchurch, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Canton Junction station -- Railway station in Canton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Canton of Schaffhausen -- Canton of Switzerland
Wikipedia - Canton River (United States) -- River in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Canyu -- China-focused pro-democracy website
Wikipedia - Cap d'Antifer Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Seine-Maritime, France
Wikipedia - Cap d'Artrutx Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Cape Arkona Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany
Wikipedia - Cape Baily Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Borda Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in South Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Brett Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Cape Byron Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Campbell Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Cape Cod Bay -- A large bay of the Atlantic Ocean adjacent to the U.S. state of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cape Cod Mall -- shopping mall in Hyannis, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cape Cod National Seashore -- Protected area on Cape Cod, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cape Cod Times -- Newspaper in Hyannis, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Cape Disappointment Light -- Lighthouse in Washington, United States
Wikipedia - Cape Don Light -- Lighthouse in Northern Territory, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Egmont Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Cape EngaM-CM-1o Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Cape Espichel Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Cape Fourcroy Light -- Lighthouse in Northern Territory, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Hatteras Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in North Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Cape Higuer Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Gipuzkoa, Basque Country, Spain
Wikipedia - Cape Hotham Light -- Lighthouse in Northern Territory, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Melville Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Cape Mendocino Light -- Lighthouse in California, United States
Wikipedia - Cape Palliser Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Cape Reinga Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Capernwray Dive Centre -- Flooded quarry in Lancashire, England, used as a recreational dive site
Wikipedia - Cape San Juan Light -- Lighthouse in Fajardo, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Cape Santiago Lighthouse, Philippines -- Historic lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Capetian dynasty -- House of France, descendants of Hugh Capet in the male line
Wikipedia - Capetian House of Anjou
Wikipedia - Capillariasis -- Disease caused by nematodes of the genus Capillaria
Wikipedia - Capital (economics) -- Already-produced durable goods that are used in production of goods or services
Wikipedia - Capital good -- capital goods are tangible property that is used in the production of goods or services.
Wikipedia - Capitalization in English -- Use of a capital letter at the head of a word
Wikipedia - Capital punishment in Lebanon -- Legal penalty in Lebanon, though it has not been used since 2004
Wikipedia - Capital punishment in Massachusetts -- Abolished in 1984
Wikipedia - Capitole de Toulouse -- Center of municipal administration of Toulouse, France
Wikipedia - Capitoline Museums
Wikipedia - Capo dei capi -- Phrase used to indicate extremely powerful Mafia boss
Wikipedia - Capo dell'Arma Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Italy
Wikipedia - Capo Ferro Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Italy
Wikipedia - Capones Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Capo Santa Maria di Leuca Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Italy
Wikipedia - Cappoquin House -- Mansion in County Waterford, Ireland
Wikipedia - Capri pants -- Calf-length trousers
Wikipedia - Captain House -- Indian television series
Wikipedia - Capt. Charles C. Henderson House -- historic house in Arkadelphia, Arkansas, USA
Wikipedia - Capt. Charles Leonard House -- historic house in Agawam, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - CAPTCHA -- Computer test to discriminate human users from spambots
Wikipedia - Captive bolt pistol -- Device used for stunning animals before slaughter
Wikipedia - Captive odorant -- Odorant used to protect perfumes from imitation
Wikipedia - Capul Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Carbon filtering -- Filtering method that uses a bed of activated carbon to remove contaminants and impurities
Wikipedia - Carbon footprint -- Total set of greenhouse gas emissions caused by an individual, event, organisation, or product, expressed as carbon dioxide equivalent
Wikipedia - Carbon-neutral fuel -- Type of fuel which have no net greenhouse gas emissions or carbon footprint
Wikipedia - Carbon paper -- A paper used to make copies
Wikipedia - Carbon print -- Photographic print made by the carbon process, which uses carbon pigment and gelatin to transfer images to a paper support
Wikipedia - Carbuncle -- Cluster of boils caused by bacterial infection
Wikipedia - Car controls -- car parts used to control the vehicle
Wikipedia - Carcraft -- British used car retailer
Wikipedia - Car dealership -- Business which sells, buys, and trades new and/or used cars, trucks, SUVs, and vans
Wikipedia - Cardiff Bay Opera House -- Proposed opera house in Cardiff, Wales
Wikipedia - Cardona Island Light -- Lighthouse on Cardona Island, near Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Cardona Residence -- Historic house in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Card sharp -- Person who uses skill and deception to win at poker or other card games
Wikipedia - CAREN -- Virtual reality system used for treatment and rehabilitation of human locomotion
Wikipedia - Ca' Rezzonico -- Art museum, Historic site in Venice, Italy
Wikipedia - Car-free movement -- Movement to reduce the use of private vehicles
Wikipedia - Cargo cult -- adherents practice rituals which they believe will cause a more technologically advanced society to deliver goods.
Wikipedia - Cariole -- Type of carriage used in the 19th century
Wikipedia - Carla Bruni -- Italian-French singer, model and spouse of former president of France
Wikipedia - Carl Hanser Verlag -- German publishing house
Wikipedia - Carl M. Neuhausen House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - Carlo Duse -- Italian actor
Wikipedia - Carlos Eusebio de Ayo -- Puerto Rican politician
Wikipedia - Carl Raguse -- American equestrian
Wikipedia - Carlton Cuse -- American television producer and screenwriter (born 1959)
Wikipedia - Carlton House Terrace -- Grade I listed building in City of Westminster, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Carl von Clausewitz -- German-Prussian soldier and military theorist
Wikipedia - Carlyle's House
Wikipedia - CarMax -- US-based used car retailer
Wikipedia - Carmine Sciandra -- Accused American mobster
Wikipedia - Carnegie Art Museum (Oxnard, California) -- Public art museum in Oxnard, California
Wikipedia - Carnegie Museum of Natural History -- Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US
Wikipedia - Carob -- carob tree or shrub with edible pods, also used in landscaping
Wikipedia - Carol Doherty -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Carole Baldwin -- Vertebrate Zoology department chair at the National Museum of Natural History
Wikipedia - Carol Ode -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Carolyn Keene -- House pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate
Wikipedia - Carolyn Partridge -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Carolyn Rouse -- American anthropologist
Wikipedia - Carousel (1923 film) -- 1923 film
Wikipedia - Carousel (1937 film) -- 1937 film
Wikipedia - Carousel (advertisement) -- 2009 online advertisement
Wikipedia - Carousel Buses -- Buckinghamshire bus operator
Wikipedia - Carousel (film) -- 1956 film by Henry King
Wikipedia - Carousell (company) -- Mobile and online marketplace
Wikipedia - Carousel Mall -- Former shopping mall in San Bernardino, California
Wikipedia - Carousel (Melanie Martinez song) -- 2014 single by Melanie Martinez
Wikipedia - Carousel memory
Wikipedia - Carousel (musical) -- 1945 musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein
Wikipedia - Carousel (Travis Scott song) -- 2018 song by Travis Scott featuring Frank Ocean
Wikipedia - Carousel (TV channel) -- Russian TV channel for children
Wikipedia - Carousel -- Amusement ride consisting of a rotating circular platform with seats for riders
Wikipedia - Carowinds -- Amusement park in North and South Carolina
Wikipedia - Carpenter pencil -- Pencil designed for use by carpenters
Wikipedia - Carpet beater -- Type of household cleaning tool used to clean carpets and rugs
Wikipedia - Carpet stretcher -- tool used to install wall-to-wall carpet
Wikipedia - Carport -- Covered structure used to offer limited protection to vehicles, primarily cars, from rain and snow
Wikipedia - Carracks black sword -- Swords used by Portuguese sailors and seamen during the Age of Discovery
Wikipedia - Carre (Stockhausen) -- Composition by the German composer Karlheinz Stockhausen
Wikipedia - Carr House (Benicia, California) -- United States national historic place
Wikipedia - Carriage control tape -- Loop of punched tape used to synchronize fast vertical page motion in line printers
Wikipedia - Carriage return -- Control character, or mechanism, used to reset a device's position to the beginning of a line of text
Wikipedia - Carrickkildavnet Castle -- Ruined tower house, County Mayo, Ireland
Wikipedia - Carrie Coyner -- Virginia house of representatives member
Wikipedia - Carrier Dome -- Domed stadium in Syracuse, New York
Wikipedia - Carrier-sense multiple access with collision detection -- Media access control method used most notably in early Ethernet
Wikipedia - Carroll County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Carroll County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Carrousel du Louvre -- Shopping mall in Paris, France
Wikipedia - Carrusel -- Mexican children's telenovela
Wikipedia - Carry On, Jeeves -- 1925 short story collection by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - CARS24 -- Online used car marketplace
Wikipedia - Cars of the Stars Motor Museum -- Museum of television and film vehicles
Wikipedia - Carswell Medieval House -- a 15th century modest medieval home which is a rare remaining example of tenant farm life
Wikipedia - Carter-Gilmer House -- Historic home in Charlottesville, Virginia, United States
Wikipedia - Carter House Inn -- Hotel in Eureka, California
Wikipedia - Cartoon Cartoons -- Collective name used by Cartoon Network for original animated series
Wikipedia - Cartoon Network Racing -- 2006 racing video game that uses Cartoon Network cartoon characters
Wikipedia - Carvana -- Online used car dealer based in Arizona
Wikipedia - Car wash -- Facility used to clean the exterior of motor vehicles
Wikipedia - Cary Karp -- Museum curator
Wikipedia - Caryll Houselander
Wikipedia - Cas1 -- Protein used in CRISPR
Wikipedia - Cas2 -- Protein used in CRISPR
Wikipedia - Cas3 -- Protein used in CRISPR
Wikipedia - Cas4 -- Protein used in CRISPR
Wikipedia - Casa Alonso -- Museum and cultural center in Vega Baja, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Blanca (San Juan) -- House museum located in Old San Juan
Wikipedia - Casa Bonet (Barcelona) -- House in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa CautiM-CM-1o -- Historic house museum in Guayama, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Chiquita -- Great house and archaeological site
Wikipedia - Casa de Estudillo -- Historic house museum in San Diego, California
Wikipedia - Casa de Shenandoah -- House in Las Vegas, Nevada
Wikipedia - Casa Fernando Luis Toro -- Historic house in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Font-Ubides -- Historic house in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Malaparte -- House in Capri, Italy
Wikipedia - Casa Mulleras -- House in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Casa-Museu Medeiros e Almeida -- Museum in Lisbon, Portugal
Wikipedia - Casa Oppenheimer -- Historic house in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Paoli -- Biographical museum in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Roig Museum -- House museum in Humacao, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Rosa -- Historic house in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Salazar-Candal -- Historic house in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Casa Sommer -- Historic building in Cascais, Portugal now used as a municipal archive and museum
Wikipedia - Casa Villavicencio -- Colonial Era house in Batangas, Philippines
Wikipedia - Casa Wiechers-Villaronga -- Historic house in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Cascais tide gauge -- first tide gauge installed in Portugal, also used to establish the country's mean sea level
Wikipedia - Cascina Torchiera -- Self-organised squatted farmhouse in Milan, Italy
Wikipedia - Case knife -- Term used throughout the American South to refer to a table knife
Wikipedia - Casey Schreiner -- American politician and educator; Minority Leader of Montana House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Cash carrier -- Transport system used in shops to carry customers' payments to the cashier
Wikipedia - Casing shoe -- Device used in drilling
Wikipedia - Casino -- Facility which houses and accommodates certain types of gambling activities
Wikipedia - Cask breather -- aspirator used in serving draught beer
Wikipedia - Cassell (publisher) -- British publishing house
Wikipedia - Cassini Grid -- Coordinate system used on British military maps
Wikipedia - Cassiterides -- Ancient geographical name used to refer to an unidentified group of islands
Wikipedia - Castilian House of Ivrea
Wikipedia - Castilian Spanish -- Variety of Peninsular Spanish used in formal settings
Wikipedia - Castillon-en-Couserans -- Commune in Occitanie, France
Wikipedia - Castillo San Felipe del Morro Lighthouse -- First lighthouse built in Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Castle Air Museum -- Military aviation museum in California
Wikipedia - Castle Blunden -- Historic house in County Kilkenny, Ireland
Wikipedia - Castle Carra -- Hall house, County Mayo, Ireland
Wikipedia - Castle Durrow -- Irish country house built in the early 18th century
Wikipedia - Castlegate House -- Grade I listed building in York, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Castle Harrison -- Great house in County Cork, Ireland
Wikipedia - Castle Howard railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Castle Inn -- Public house in West Lulworth, Dorset, England
Wikipedia - Castlemartin House and Estate -- Historic property, Kilcullen, County Kildare, Ireland
Wikipedia - Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse (2013 video game) -- 2013 video game
Wikipedia - Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse -- 1990 video game
Wikipedia - Castle of Park -- Tower house in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Castle Point Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Castle Stalker -- Tower house on a tidal islet on Loch Laich, Argyll, Scotland
Wikipedia - Castle thunder (sound effect) -- Recording of thunder used as a sound effect
Wikipedia - Castle Toward -- Country house in Scotland
Wikipedia - Castle Wolfenstein -- Video game developed by Muse Software
Wikipedia - Castration -- Surgical or chemical action that removes use of testicles
Wikipedia - Catacombs -- Subterranean passageways used as burial place
Wikipedia - Catalina Casino -- Movie theater, ballroom and former museum in Avalon, Los Angeles, California
Wikipedia - Cat & Mouse (1958 film) -- 1958 film
Wikipedia - Cat and Mouse in Partnership -- German fairy tale
Wikipedia - Cat and mouse -- English-language idiom
Wikipedia - Cataphora -- Use of an expression or word that co-refers with a later, more specific, expression
Wikipedia - Catch-22 (logic) -- Situation in which one cannot avoid a problem because of contradictory constraints
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Wikipedia - Caterina d'Olzinelles -- 15th century woman accused of adultery
Wikipedia - Cathaoirleach -- Presiding officer of the upper house of the legislature of Ireland
Wikipedia - Cathedral Church of St. Paul (Boston) -- Historic church in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Catherine Filene Shouse
Wikipedia - Catherine Johns -- British archaeologist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Cathode-ray tube -- Vacuum tube that displays images used in old TVs and monitors
Wikipedia - Catholic Church sex abuse cases by country
Wikipedia - Catholic Church sexual abuse cases in Australia -- Catholic Church sexual abuse cases in Australia
Wikipedia - Catholic Church sexual abuse cases -- Sexual abuse and pedophilia claims within the Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Catholic sex abuse cases
Wikipedia - Cat House, Riga -- Building in Riga, Latvia
Wikipedia - Catoosa County Courthouse -- Courthouse in Georgia, US
Wikipedia - Catoptria confusellus -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Catovirus -- Hypothesized genus of giant double-stranded DNA-containing viruses
Wikipedia - Catterick Bridge railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Caucasian grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Caucus on Reform and Governance -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Causality (physics) -- The relationship between causes and effects
Wikipedia - Causal layered analysis -- Technique used in strategic planning and futurology
Wikipedia - Causal loop -- Sequence of events in which an event is among the causes of another event, which in turn is among the causes of the first-mentioned event
Wikipedia - Cause and Effect (Digital Summer album) -- 2007 studio album by Digital Summer
Wikipedia - Cause and effect in Advaita Vedanta
Wikipedia - Cause for Divorce -- 1937 film
Wikipedia - Causeland railway station -- Railway station in Cornwall, England
Wikipedia - Cause (medicine) -- Reason for or origin of a disease or pathology
Wikipedia - Cause of action -- Set of facts sufficient to justify a right to sue
Wikipedia - Cause of death
Wikipedia - Causerie -- Literary style of short informal essays
Wikipedia - Causes and origins of Tourette syndrome
Wikipedia - Causes of income inequality in the United States -- Overview of the various possibe causes of income inequality in the United States of America
Wikipedia - Causes of karma in Jainism
Wikipedia - Causes of schizophrenia
Wikipedia - Causes of sexual violence -- Different theories that lend some explanation to the causes of sexual violence
Wikipedia - Causes of the 2019-20 Hong Kong protests -- historiography of the factors that caused the start of the 2019 protests
Wikipedia - Causes of the French Revolution
Wikipedia - Causes of the vote in favour of Brexit -- Why British people voted to leave the EU
Wikipedia - Causes of unemployment in the United States -- Overview of some possible causes of unemployment in the United States
Wikipedia - Causeway Bay North station -- proposed MTR station on Hong Kong Island
Wikipedia - Causeway Bay station -- MTR station on Hong Kong Island
Wikipedia - Causeway Bay Typhoon Shelter -- Sheltered anchorage in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council -- Local authority in Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Causeway Coast and Glens -- Local government district in Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Causewayed enclosure -- Prehistoric earthwork
Wikipedia - Causewayhead (Stirling) railway station -- Disused railway station in Stirlingshire, Scotland
Wikipedia - Causeways
Wikipedia - Causeway -- Route raised up on an embankment
Wikipedia - Cause
Wikipedia - Causey Arch -- Bridge in United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Cavaletti -- Short fence used in horse jump training
Wikipedia - Cave line -- Line used for navigation in flooded caves
Wikipedia - Cayuse language -- Extinct Native American language formerly spoken in Oregon
Wikipedia - CBS Afternoon Playhouse
Wikipedia - C. C. Cavanah House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - CC cream -- Marketing term that is used by some brands to mean Color Control cream or Color Correcting cream
Wikipedia - CCR4-Not -- Multiprotein complex used in gene expression
Wikipedia - CD+G -- Compact disc format used primarily for karaoke discs
Wikipedia - CDMA mobile test set -- Equipment used to test CDMA cell phones
Wikipedia - Ceann Comhairle -- Chairperson of the lower house of the Irish parliament
Wikipedia - Cecilia Eusepi -- Italian Roman Catholic
Wikipedia - Cecil Williams South Carolina Civil Rights Museum -- Civil rights museum
Wikipedia - Cedar Fair -- American amusement park owner and operator
Wikipedia - Cedar Lake Trail -- shared-use path in Minneapolis
Wikipedia - Cedar Point -- Amusement park in Sandusky, Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Ceilings of the Natural History Museum, London -- Decorated ceilings
Wikipedia - Celivarone -- Experimental drug being tested for use in pharmacological antiarrhythmic therapy
Wikipedia - Cellophane paradox -- A type of incorrect reasoning used in market regulation methods
Wikipedia - Cel shading -- Computer graphics rendering technique used to mimic the look of 2D animation
Wikipedia - CEM and SSM chips -- Integrated circuits used in synthesizers
Wikipedia - Cement -- Hydraulic binder used in the composition of mortar and concrete
Wikipedia - Censuses in Ukraine
Wikipedia - Census geographic units of Canada -- Term used in Canada
Wikipedia - Centaur (rocket stage) -- Family of rocket stages which can be used as a space tug
Wikipedia - Centennial Museum and Chihuahuan Desert Gardens -- Cultural history and natural history museum
Wikipedia - Center for Land Use Interpretation -- Nonprofit organization in Los Angeles, United States
Wikipedia - Center for PostNatural History -- Museum
Wikipedia - Center for Substance Abuse Prevention
Wikipedia - Center for Substance Abuse Treatment
Wikipedia - Center for Wooden Boats -- Museum on the south shore of Lake Union, Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Wikipedia - Center of Political and Foreign Affairs -- Think tank focused on government policies and geopolitics
Wikipedia - Center of Theatrical Arts M-BM-+House of MeyerholdM-BM-; -- Museum-theater in Penza, Russia
Wikipedia - Centimetre-gram-second system of units -- Physical system of measurement that uses the centimetre, gram, and second as base units
Wikipedia - Centraal Museum -- Museum in Utrecht, Netherlands
Wikipedia - Central City (Surrey) -- Mixed-use development in British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Central Legislative Assembly -- Lower house of the British Indian Imperial Legislative Council (1919-1947)
Wikipedia - Central Massachusetts Railroad -- Former railroad in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Central Park Carousel -- Carousel in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Centre Pompidou -- Contemporary art museum in Paris, France
Wikipedia - Centrifugal casting (industrial) -- A casting technique that is typically used to cast thin-walled cylinders
Wikipedia - Centrifugal switch -- Electric switch that uses the centrifugal force of a rotating shaft
Wikipedia - Ceramics Museum of Sacavem -- Museum near Lisbon, Portugal
Wikipedia - Cerdanyola Art Museum -- Art museum in Cerdanyola del Valles, Spain
Wikipedia - Cerebellar ataxia -- Motor symptoms caused by dysfunction of the cerebellum
Wikipedia - Ceremonial use of lights
Wikipedia - Ceremonial weapon -- Object used for ceremonial purposes to display power or authority.
Wikipedia - Cerrado mouse -- Rodent native to Brazil
Wikipedia - Certificate of occupancy -- Document issued by a government authority, usually from the local government, certifying that a property is fit for a specific use in accordance with the applicable regulations.
Wikipedia - Cert pool -- Process used by the United States Supreme Court to screen petitions
Wikipedia - Cerveau House -- building in St. Augustine, Florida, US
Wikipedia - Cetiya -- Holy cites & objects used by Theravada Buddhists to remember Gotama Buddha
Wikipedia - Cevin Fisher -- American house music record producer
Wikipedia - CFP franc -- Currency used in the French Pacific overseas collectivities
Wikipedia - C. G. Howes Dry Cleaning-Carley Real Estate -- historic commercial building in Newton, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - C. G. Jung House Museum
Wikipedia - Chabad house
Wikipedia - Chabot Museum -- Dutch art museum
Wikipedia - Chad (slang) -- slang term used in the United States
Wikipedia - Chak-pur -- Traditional tools used in Tibetan sandpainting to produce mandalas
Wikipedia - Chakravarti (Sanskrit term) -- Ancient Indian term used to refer to an ideal universal ruler
Wikipedia - Chakri dynasty -- Current ruling royal house of the Kingdom of Thailand
Wikipedia - Chaldean Oracles -- spiritual and philosophical texts used by Neoplatonist philosophers
Wikipedia - Chalet -- Type of building or house, native to the Alpine region
Wikipedia - Challan -- Receipt for payment, used in India and Pakistan
Wikipedia - Chamberlain (office) -- Person in charge of managing a household
Wikipedia - Chamber of Deputies (Italy) -- Lower house of the Italian Parliament
Wikipedia - Chamber of Representatives (Belgium) -- Lower house of the federal parliament of Belgium
Wikipedia - Chamber of Senators (Bolivia) -- Upper house of the Plurinational Legislative Assembly of Bolivia
Wikipedia - Champagnat, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Champagne hillsides, houses and cellars -- World Heritage site in France
Wikipedia - Champaign County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Champclause
Wikipedia - Champion of Lost Causes -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Champs Chapel Museum of East Hendred
Wikipedia - Chandradhari Museum -- Museum in Bihar, India
Wikipedia - Chanel -- French fashion house
Wikipedia - Changa (drug) -- DMT-infused smoking blend
Wikipedia - Change (In the House of Flies) -- 2000 single by Deftones
Wikipedia - Channelopathy -- Diseases caused by disturbed function of ion channel subunits or the proteins that regulate them
Wikipedia - Chapare mammarenavirus -- Species of the virus family Arenaviridae that causes Chapare hemorrhagic fever
Wikipedia - Chapel House, Twickenham
Wikipedia - Chapman code -- 3-letter codes used in genealogy
Wikipedia - Chapo Trap House -- Comedic American podcast about politics
Wikipedia - Chapterhouse Comics -- Canadian comic book publisher
Wikipedia - Chapterhouse: Dune -- Novel by Frank Herbert
Wikipedia - Chapter house (Navajo Nation) -- Administrative department
Wikipedia - Chapter house
Wikipedia - Chapter-house
Wikipedia - Chapter One (restaurant) -- At the Dublin Writers Museum, Ireland
Wikipedia - Character encodings in HTML -- Use of encoding systems for international characters in HTML
Wikipedia - Charcoal lighter fluid -- Aliphatic petroleum solvent used in lighting charcoal in a barbecue grill
Wikipedia - Charcot Plate -- A fragment of the Phoenix tectonic plate fused to the Antarctic Peninsula
Wikipedia - Chard, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Chard Museum -- museum in Chard, Somerset, England
Wikipedia - Chardonnay -- green-skinned grape variety used in wine production
Wikipedia - Charge transfer coefficient -- Two related parameters used in description of the kinetics of electrochemical reactions
Wikipedia - Charity record -- Release of a song for a specific charitable cause
Wikipedia - Charity (Reni, New York) -- Painting by Guido Reni (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
Wikipedia - Charlbury Museum
Wikipedia - Charles A. Murphy -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Charles Baldwin House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - Charles Church Developments -- British housebuilding company
Wikipedia - Charles E. Stuart (Virginia politician) -- Member of Virginia House of Delegates
Wikipedia - Charles-Eusebe Casgrain -- Canadian politician
Wikipedia - Charles Frederick Crisp -- Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Charles H. Baldwin House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - Charles Hobhouse -- British politician
Wikipedia - Charles H. Patten House -- United States historic home
Wikipedia - Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History -- Non-profit organization in the USA
Wikipedia - Charles III's Departure for Spain, Seen from the Land -- Painting by Antonio Joli in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Charles III's Departure for Spain, Seen from the Sea -- Painting by Antonio Joli in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor -- 14th century Holy Roman Emperor of the House of Luxembourg
Wikipedia - Charles IV of France -- Last King of France who was directly a member of the House of Capet
Wikipedia - Charles Krause (gymnast) -- American Olympic gymnast
Wikipedia - Charles L. Webster and Company -- Publishing house
Wikipedia - Charles/MGH station -- Boston, Massachusetts subway station
Wikipedia - Charles Regis de Coriolis d'Espinouse -- French Navy officer of the War of American Independence
Wikipedia - Charles River Dam Bridge -- Bridge in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Charles River Natural Valley Storage Area -- Protected area in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Charles River Peninsula -- Nature preserve in Needham, Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Charles River -- river in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Charles Strouse -- American composer and lyricist
Wikipedia - Charles Winston Thompson -- Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Alabama's 5th district
Wikipedia - Charlie Baker -- 72nd governor of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Charlie Brown's, Limehouse -- Pub in Limehouse, London, England
Wikipedia - Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum -- 1940 American film
Wikipedia - Charlie Clausen -- Australian actor
Wikipedia - Charlotte Newhouse -- American actress and writer
Wikipedia - Charpai -- Traditional woven bed used in the South Asia
Wikipedia - Charron, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Charterhouse Capital Partners -- British private equity investment firm
Wikipedia - Charter Oak Schoolhouse -- Historic building in Illinois, US
Wikipedia - Charter Spectrum -- Brand of Charter Communications used to market communications services
Wikipedia - Chartreuse (color) -- Shade of yellow-green color
Wikipedia - Chartreuse (liqueur) -- French liquor brand
Wikipedia - Chartwell -- Country house south of Westerham, Kent, England
Wikipedia - Chase G. Woodhouse -- American educator and congresswoman
Wikipedia - Chase (printing) -- (metal) frame that is used to contain a printing forme
Wikipedia - Chaser bin -- Type of trailer used in agricultural grain production
Wikipedia - Chashitsu -- Japanese tea house
Wikipedia - Chassis dynamometer -- Roller assembly used for vehicle testing
Wikipedia - Chastleton House
Wikipedia - Chater House -- Building in Central, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Chatham House Grammar School
Wikipedia - Chatham House Rule -- System for holding debates and discussions on controversial issues
Wikipedia - Chatime -- Taiwanese global franchise teahouse chain based in Taiwan
Wikipedia - Chauncey S. Taylor House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - CHBW-FM -- Radio station in Rocky Mountain House, Alberta
Wikipedia - C. H. Collins Athletic Complex -- Multi-use stadium in Denton, Texas, U.S.
Wikipedia - Check hook -- Technique used in boxing
Wikipedia - Check sheet -- A form (document) used to collect data in real time at the location where the data is generated
Wikipedia - Cheer (TV series) -- American TV docuseries about Navarro's competitive cheer team
Wikipedia - Cheesecloth -- Loosely woven carded cotton cloth used primarily in cooking and cheesemaking
Wikipedia - Cheetah Sound Sampler -- Defunct sound sampler program used in the 1980s
Wikipedia - Chef salad -- U.S. salad consisting of items such as hard-boiled eggs, one or more varieties of meat (e.g. ham, turkey, chicken, roast beef), tomatoes, cucumbers, and/or cheese, placed upon a bed of tossed lettuce or other leaf vegetables; a variety of dressings may be used
Wikipedia - Chelmsford, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Chelmsford Museum -- Museum in Chelmsford, Essex
Wikipedia - Chelsea House Publishers
Wikipedia - Chelsea Market -- Multi-use building in New York City
Wikipedia - Chelsea, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Chemical depilatory -- Cosmetic preparation used to remove hair from the skin
Wikipedia - Chemical hazard -- Type of hazard caused by exposure to chemicals
Wikipedia - Chemical-mechanical polishing -- Polishing technique used during semiconductor fabrication
Wikipedia - Chemical toilet -- A toilet that collects human excreta in a holding tank and uses chemicals to minimize odors
Wikipedia - Chemical Weapons Convention -- Arms control treaty that outlaws the production, stockpiling, and use of chemical weapons and their precursors
Wikipedia - Chemical weapon -- Device that uses chemicals to harm or kill people
Wikipedia - Chemocline -- A cline caused by a strong, vertical chemistry gradient within a body of water
Wikipedia - Chennai Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in India
Wikipedia - Chennault International Airport -- Public use airport new Lake Charles, LA, US
Wikipedia - Chequers -- Country house of the UK Prime Minister
Wikipedia - Cher Ami -- Homing pigeon used by the U.S. Army Signal Corps
Wikipedia - Chernihiv Regional Art Museum -- Museum in Ukraine
Wikipedia - Cherokee Heritage Center -- Non-profit historical society and museum in Park Hill, Oklahoma
Wikipedia - Cherokee National History Museum -- Museum in Oklahoma, US
Wikipedia - Cherry Burton railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cherwell Boathouse -- Boathouse and restaurant on the River Cherwell in Oxford, England
Wikipedia - Cheryl Ann Krause -- American judge (born 1968)
Wikipedia - Chessboard -- Any checkboard used in the game chess
Wikipedia - Chess rating system -- System used in chess to estimate the strength of a player
Wikipedia - Chesterfield, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Chester Terrace (Duluth, Minnesota) -- Historic rowhouse in Duluth, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Chestnut-bellied sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Chetro Ketl -- Ancestral Puebloan great house and archeological site in New Mexico, United States
Wikipedia - Chetwai Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Chevrolet Lumina -- Chevrolet nameplate used for a sedan, coupe, and minivan
Wikipedia - Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Vastu Sangrahalaya -- Museum in Mumbai
Wikipedia - Chiaroscuro -- Use of strong contrasts between light and dark in art
Wikipedia - Chiburi -- Feudal Japanese tradition used in martial arts
Wikipedia - Chicago Athenaeum -- Museum of architecture and design in Galena, Illinois, USA
Wikipedia - Chicago Aurora and Elgin Railroad rolling stock -- Equipment used on a defunct American interurban railroad
Wikipedia - Chicago Civic Opera -- Opera house in Chicago
Wikipedia - Chicago house -- Music genre
Wikipedia - Chicago principles -- Set of guiding principles held on college campuses in the United States
Wikipedia - Chicago Sports Museum -- Museum in Chicago
Wikipedia - Chichester House -- Historic building in Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Chick culling -- Process of killing newly hatched chicks for which the industry has no use
Wikipedia - Chicken as biological research model -- Use of the bird species for research on live beings
Wikipedia - Chicopee, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Chief Official White House Photographer -- Senior position appointed by the President of the United States
Wikipedia - Chieveley House -- House in Chieveley, Berkshire, UK
Wikipedia - Chikungunya -- Infection caused by the Chikungunya virus
Wikipedia - Child abuse -- Maltreatment or neglect of a child
Wikipedia - Child care management software -- administrative software designed specifically for use by child care centers, preschools, and similar child-oriented facilities.
Wikipedia - Child grooming -- Act of befriending and connecting with a child with the objective of sexual abuse
Wikipedia - Childhood abuse
Wikipedia - Childhood sexual abuse
Wikipedia - Child in the House -- 1956 film
Wikipedia - Child labour in cocoa production -- The controversial use of children in the production of cacao beans
Wikipedia - Child protection -- Protecting children from violence, exploitation and abuse
Wikipedia - Children of the Ordained -- Term used by the Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Children's Day (India) -- Day of celebration for children and children related causes in India
Wikipedia - Children's Discovery Museum of San Jose
Wikipedia - Children's Museum of Caracas -- Museum in Caracas, Venezuela
Wikipedia - Children's Museum of Tacoma -- located in Tacoma, Washington, US
Wikipedia - Children's Souls Accuse You -- 1927 film
Wikipedia - Child sexual abuse in Canada -- Criminal prohibitions on child sexual abuse in Canada
Wikipedia - Child sexual abuse in the United Kingdom -- Overview about child sexual abuse in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Child sexual abuse -- Form of abuse in which an adult or older adolescent uses a child for sexual stimulation
Wikipedia - Chilean recluse spider -- Species of arachnid
Wikipedia - Chilling Effects Clearinghouse
Wikipedia - ChIL-sequencing -- A method used to analyze protein interactions with DNA.
Wikipedia - Chiltonville, Massachusetts -- Human settlement in Massachusetts, United States of America
Wikipedia - Chimelong Paradise -- Amusement park
Wikipedia - China Art Museum station -- Shanghai Metro station
Wikipedia - China Cafe -- Traditional drinking house in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - China Railways ND2 -- Romanian diesel-electric locomotive used in China
Wikipedia - China Social Sciences Press -- Publishing house in China
Wikipedia - China Uncensored -- Commentary program focused on China
Wikipedia - Chinese characters -- Logographic writing system used in the Sinosphere region
Wikipedia - Chinese Docking Mechanism -- Spacecraft docking mechanism used by China.
Wikipedia - Chinese grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Chinese polearms -- Overview of pole weapons traditionally used by Chinese armies
Wikipedia - Chinese spoon -- A type of spoon used in Chinese cuisine with a short, thick handle extending directly from a deep, flat bowl
Wikipedia - Chinese surname -- Surnames used by Han Chinese and Sinicized ethnic groups
Wikipedia - Chinese Taipei -- Name used by Taiwan in international organizations and events
Wikipedia - Chinese used vehicle exporting -- Chinese vehicle exports
Wikipedia - Ching chong -- Pejorative term used against Chinese people
Wikipedia - Chionodes canofusella -- Species of insect
Wikipedia - Chionodes obscurusella -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Chi Park -- Fictional character on the Fox medical drama House
Wikipedia - Chip Conquest -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Chipping Norton Museum
Wikipedia - ChIP sequencing -- Method used to analyze protein interactions with DNA
Wikipedia - Chi Psi Fraternity House (Eugene, Oregon) -- 1935 Tudor style structure in Eugene, Oregon, United States
Wikipedia - Chip Troiano -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Chip work -- Engraved glassware used as an artform
Wikipedia - Chisholm Trail -- Historic trail in the central United States used for cattle drives
Wikipedia - Chiwara -- Ritual object representing an antelope, used by the Bambara ethnic group in Mali
Wikipedia - Chlamydia -- Sexually transmitted infection caused by the bacterium Chlamydia trachomatis.
Wikipedia - Chloe Spear -- African-born slave in Boston, Massachusetts (b. 1767, d. 1815)
Wikipedia - Chloroquine -- Medication used to treat malaria
Wikipedia - ChM-CM-"teau de la Faye (Deviat) -- Manor house in France
Wikipedia - ChM-CM-"teau de Montsoreau -- Castle in the loire valley france and location of chM-CM-"teau de montsoreau-museum of contemporary art
Wikipedia - ChM-CM-"teau -- French term for a manor house
Wikipedia - ChM-CM-"telard, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - CHN analyzer -- Scientific instrument used to measure carbon
Wikipedia - Chochoyote -- Small ball made of corn dough used in many dishes of Mexican cuisine
Wikipedia - Chocolate Cake (song) -- 1991 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Chocolate Chip -- Small chunk of chocolate used as an ingredient
Wikipedia - Chocolate chip -- Small chunk of chocolate used as an ingredient
Wikipedia - Chocolate syrup -- A chocolate-flavored condiment used as a topping or ingredient
Wikipedia - Choe Museon -- Korean general
Wikipedia - Cholecystography -- Radiological procedure used to visualize the gallbladder and biliary channels
Wikipedia - Choli -- Type of blouse, worn with the sari
Wikipedia - Chopsticks -- Shaped pairs of sticks used as kitchen and eating utensils
Wikipedia - Chorso of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Chow mein sandwich -- Regional sandwich of Fall River Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Chown -- Command used on Unix-like systems to change the owner of a file
Wikipedia - Chresonym -- Term used in biodiversity informatics
Wikipedia - Chrestomathy -- Collection of choice literary passages, used especially as an aid in learning a subject
Wikipedia - Chris Lewis (Usenet) -- Canadian Usenet expert
Wikipedia - Chris Mattos -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Chrism -- Consecrated oil used in various Christian churches
Wikipedia - Chris Runion -- Virginia house of representatives member
Wikipedia - Chris Salthouse -- New Zealand sailor
Wikipedia - Christchurch Mansion -- Historic house and museum in Ipswich, England
Wikipedia - Christian Church -- Term used to refer to the whole group of people belonging to the Christian religious tradition.
Wikipedia - Christian Danuser -- Swiss biathlete
Wikipedia - Christian Drosten -- German virologist researching emergent viruses
Wikipedia - Christian liturgy -- Pattern for worship used by a Christian congregation or denomination
Wikipedia - Christian symbolism -- Use of symbols, including archetypes, acts, artwork or events, by Christianity
Wikipedia - Christie's -- British auction house
Wikipedia - Christina Minicucci -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Christina's House -- 2000 film by Gavin Wilding
Wikipedia - Christine and Lea Papin -- Two French housemaid girls, sentenced for a February 1933 murder
Wikipedia - Christinelund -- Manor house near PrM-CM-&sto, Denmark
Wikipedia - Christ in the House of His Parents -- Painting by John Everett Millais
Wikipedia - Christmas decoration -- Decorations used during the Christmas period
Wikipedia - Christmas lights -- Decorative lighting used at Christmastime
Wikipedia - Christmas tree (drag racing) -- Device used to start a drag races
Wikipedia - Christmas tree (oil well) -- An assembly of valves, spools, and fittings used to regulate the flow of fluids in an oil well
Wikipedia - Christmas tree packet -- Unit of data used in information technology
Wikipedia - Christmas tree -- Decorated tree used to symbolise festive cheer
Wikipedia - Christopher Abad -- American hacker, museum curator, artist, network engineer and programmer
Wikipedia - Christopher O'Neill -- British-American businessperson and spouse of Swedish princess
Wikipedia - Christopher Rouse (composer) -- American composer
Wikipedia - Christopher's House -- 1979 film
Wikipedia - Chris Woodhouse -- American record producer and musician
Wikipedia - Chrome Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Chronic granulomatous disease -- Diverse group of hereditary diseases in which certain cells of the immune system have difficulty forming the reactive oxygen compounds used to kill certain ingested pathogens.
Wikipedia - Chronicles of the Gray House -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Chronic Lyme disease -- Belief that symptoms are caused by an unproven infection
Wikipedia - Chronicon (Eusebius) {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Chronicon'' (Eusebius) -- Chronicon (Eusebius) {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Chronicon'' (Eusebius)
Wikipedia - Chronicon (Eusebius)
Wikipedia - Chronic traumatic encephalopathy -- Neurodegenerative disease caused by repeated head injuries
Wikipedia - Chronobiotic -- Agent that can cause phase adjustment of the body clock
Wikipedia - Chronotherapy (treatment scheduling) -- Use of circadian or other rhythmic cycles of a condition's symptoms in applying therapy
Wikipedia - Chrysoviridae -- Family of viruses
Wikipedia - Chuck (engineering) -- Clamp used to hold an object with radial symmetry, especially a cylinder
Wikipedia - Chu Ju's House -- Book by Gloria Whelan
Wikipedia - Chunche -- A kind of building used to make raisins
Wikipedia - Church (building) -- Building used for Christian religious activities
Wikipedia - Church History (Eusebius)
Wikipedia - Church House Investments -- Company based in Sherborne, Dorset, UK
Wikipedia - Churchill Barriers -- Four causeways in Orkney, Scotland
Wikipedia - Church of Saint-Eusebe, Auxerre -- Roman Catholic church in Auxerre, France
Wikipedia - Churidar -- Tightly fitting trousers worn by both men and women in South Asia
Wikipedia - Chuseok
Wikipedia - Chushu -- Solar term used in East Asian calendars to signify the end of summer
Wikipedia - CIC (Nintendo) -- Security lockout chip used in Nintendo game consoles
Wikipedia - CIE 8100 Class -- Electric multiple unit train used in Ireland
Wikipedia - Cigarette burns -- Skin injuries caused by cigarettes
Wikipedia - Ciliary muscle -- Eye muscle which is used for focussing
Wikipedia - Cincinnati Art Museum -- Art museum in Cincinnati, Ohio
Wikipedia - Cincinnati chili -- Spiced meat sauce used as a topping for spaghetti
Wikipedia - Cincinnati Museum Center -- Museum center in Cincinnati, Ohio
Wikipedia - Cindy Weed -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Cinema Paradiso -- 1988 film by Giuseppe Tornatore
Wikipedia - Cinematheque de Tanger -- Art house movie theater in Tangier, Morocco
Wikipedia - Cinnamon (user interface)
Wikipedia - Circe Invidiosa -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Circe Offering the Cup to Ulysses -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Circuit breaker -- Automatically operated electrical switch designed to protect an electrical circuit from damage caused by excess current from an overload or short circuit
Wikipedia - Circuit of culture -- Framework used in the area of cultural studies
Wikipedia - Circular breathing -- Technique used by players of some wind instruments to produce a continuous tone without interruption
Wikipedia - Circular reporting -- A problem where a source gets info from somewhere, that then uses that source as a reference
Wikipedia - Circus House -- Historic house in Columbus, Ohio
Wikipedia - Cirsti Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - CiteULike -- Web service which allowed users to save and share citations to academic papers
Wikipedia - Citric acid/potassium-sodium citrate -- drug used in the treatment of metabolic acidosis
Wikipedia - City Museum of Ljubljana
Wikipedia - City Place -- Mixed-use facility in Fort Worth, Texas
Wikipedia - City Road Goods Branch -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Ciutadella Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Civil Air Transport -- 1946-1968 CIA-owned airline of the Republic of China used for covert operations
Wikipedia - Civil disorder -- Forms of unrest caused by a group of people
Wikipedia - Civil engineering -- Engineering discipline focused on physical infrastructure
Wikipedia - Civil Service Rifles War Memorial -- War memorial in Somerset House, London
Wikipedia - CJK characters -- Characters used in Chinese, Japanese and/or Korean language
Wikipedia - CKBX -- Radio station in 100 Mile House, British Columbia
Wikipedia - Cladogram -- A diagram used to show relations among groups of organisms with common origins
Wikipedia - Claire Underwood -- Fictional character from House of Cards
Wikipedia - Clan Bruce -- Scottish clan from Kincardine in Scotland; Royal House
Wikipedia - Clapperboard -- Device used to aid in the syncing of audio with a moving image
Wikipedia - Claque -- Body of professional applauders in French theatres and opera houses
Wikipedia - Clara Castle -- Tower house in County Kilkenny, Ireland
Wikipedia - Clara Evelyn Hallam -- Property owner, boarding-house keeper
Wikipedia - Clara Hill House -- Historic building n Meridian, Idaho
Wikipedia - Clare Jaynes -- Pen named used by two American women who were co-authors in the 1940s
Wikipedia - Clarence Brandley -- wrongly accused
Wikipedia - Clarence House Chase -- Steeplechase horse race in Britain
Wikipedia - Clarence Muse -- American actor
Wikipedia - Clarence River Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Clark County Courthouse (Illinois) -- Local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Clark County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Clark University -- Private research university in Worcester, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Class-D amplifier -- Type of audio amplifier that is widely used
Wikipedia - Classical Arabic -- Form of the Arabic language used in Umayyad and Abbasid literary texts
Wikipedia - Classical Gaelic -- Shared literary form of Early Modern Irish used in Scotland and Ireland from the 13th to the 18th centuries
Wikipedia - Classical Japanese -- Literary form of Japanese, used until the 20th ct.
Wikipedia - Classical language -- Old language with established literature or use
Wikipedia - Classical mythology -- Both the body of and the study of myths from the ancient Greeks and Romans as they are used or transformed by cultural reception
Wikipedia - Classification of Indian cities -- City ranking system used in India
Wikipedia - Classification of transsexual and transgender people -- Terms used in medicine and psychiatry
Wikipedia - Claudia Neuhauser -- American mathematician
Wikipedia - Claudia Tausend -- German politician
Wikipedia - Claudia Verdicchio-Krause -- German sport shooter
Wikipedia - Claudio Angelo Giuseppe Calabrese -- Italian bishop
Wikipedia - Claus Clausen (actor) -- German actor
Wikipedia - Clause IV
Wikipedia - Clause (linguistics)
Wikipedia - Clausen, Luxembourg
Wikipedia - Clause normal form
Wikipedia - Clause
Wikipedia - Clausewitz Engine
Wikipedia - Clavis (publisher) -- Flemish publishing house
Wikipedia - Claybrook House -- Grade II listed building in Fulham, London
Wikipedia - Clay County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Clay County Historical Society Museum -- Museum
Wikipedia - Clayton railway station (England) -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cleaning agent -- Substance used to remove dirt or other contaminants
Wikipedia - Clean (The Japanese House EP) -- 2015 EP by The Japanese House
Wikipedia - Clearwater Memorial Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Clef -- Musical symbol used to indicate the pitch of written notes
Wikipedia - Clelia Rard-Reuse -- Swiss track and field athlete
Wikipedia - Clemens Fankhauser -- Austrian bicycle racer
Wikipedia - Clemuel Ricketts Mansion -- A sandstone Georgian-style house on the shore of Ganoga Lake, Sullivan County, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Clergy house -- Residence of one or more priests or ministers of religion
Wikipedia - Clerk of the Closet -- English religious post in the household of the monarch
Wikipedia - Clermont County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Cleveland Point Light -- Lighthouse in Australia
Wikipedia - Cliche -- Idea which has become overused to the point of losing its original meaning or being irritating
Wikipedia - Clickbait -- Web content intended to entice users to click on a link
Wikipedia - Clicker -- Small noisemaker, used in animal training
Wikipedia - Click track -- Audio cues used for timing
Wikipedia - Client to Authenticator Protocol -- Enables a roaming, user-controlled cryptographic authenticator to interoperate with a client platform.
Wikipedia - Cliff House (Kerala) -- Official residence:Chief Minister of Kerala
Wikipedia - Cliff House, San Francisco -- Landmark building (built 1863)
Wikipedia - Clifford Hillhouse Pope
Wikipedia - Clifton Hall, Cumbria -- Manor house in Cumbria,England
Wikipedia - Clifton Hill House -- Grade I listed English country house in Bristol, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Clifton House, Belfast -- Historic building in Belfast, Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Clifton House, King's Lynn -- Grade I listed house in King's Lynn, England
Wikipedia - Clifton House, Pennsylvania -- Historic building in Fort Washington, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Clifton House Site -- overnight stop on the Santa Fe Trail
Wikipedia - Clifton, Massachusetts -- Overlapping the border between Swampscott and Marblehead
Wikipedia - Climate change and ecosystems -- How increased greenhouse gases are affecting wildlife
Wikipedia - Climate crisis -- Term used to refer to anthropogenic climate change
Wikipedia - Climate model -- Quantitative methods used to simulate climate
Wikipedia - Climate Museum -- American non-profit organization
Wikipedia - Climate sensitivity -- Change in Earth's temperature caused by changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations
Wikipedia - Clinical epidemiology -- Subfield of epidemiology focused on clinical medicine
Wikipedia - Clinic -- Health care facility, primarily focused on the care of outpatients
Wikipedia - Clint Jenkins -- Virginia house of representatives member
Wikipedia - Clinton County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Clinton County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Clinton Presidential Center -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Bill Clinton, located in Little Rock, Arkansas
Wikipedia - Clinton Sparks -- American DJ, record producer, and songwriter from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Clio -- Muse of history in Ancient Greek mythology
Wikipedia - Clip art -- Graphic illustrations created for reuse by others
Wikipedia - Clipboard (computing) -- Data storage used to support copy and paste operations
Wikipedia - Clipeus -- Type of shield used by Ancient Greek and Roman soldiers
Wikipedia - Clobenzorex -- Stimulant drug used as an appetite suppressant
Wikipedia - Clock Cleaners -- 1937 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Cloisonne -- Enamelling technique used on metal
Wikipedia - Clomantagh Castle -- Tower house in County Kilkenny, Ireland
Wikipedia - Clonalis House
Wikipedia - Clonard chess piece -- 12th century chess piece in the National Museum of Ireland
Wikipedia - Clonk (fishing) -- A fishing tool used to provoke Wels catfish to attack the lure
Wikipedia - Cloonacauneen Castle -- Tower house on the outskirts of Galway, Ireland
Wikipedia - Cloonigny Castle -- Tower house in County Galway, Ireland
Wikipedia - Closed-circuit television -- Use of video cameras to transmit a signal to a specific place on a limited set of monitors
Wikipedia - Close-mid front unrounded vowel -- Vowel sound used in some spoken languages
Wikipedia - Closet -- Enclosed space used for storage, particularly that of clothes
Wikipedia - Clostridioides difficile infection -- Disease caused by C. difficile bacteria
Wikipedia - Clothes steamer -- Device used to remove wrinkles from garments and fabrics
Wikipedia - Clotilda (slave ship) -- Last known U.S. slave ship, used in 1860
Wikipedia - Cloud-to-cloud integration -- Integration that allows users to connect disparate cloud computing platforms
Wikipedia - Clovis Bornay -- Brazilian museologist
Wikipedia - Clubhouse Games: 51 Worldwide Classics -- 2020 video game
Wikipedia - Clump weight -- A heavy weight suspended on cable used to guide a diving bell
Wikipedia - CM-CM-$mmerer See -- Lake in Usedom, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany
Wikipedia - CM-DM-^Sre Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - CMYK color model -- Subtractive color model, used in color printing
Wikipedia - CN Centre -- Multi-use indoor arena in Prince George, British Columbia
Wikipedia - CO2 rocket -- Small recreational rocket that uses carbon dioxide as a propellant
Wikipedia - Coach (bus) -- a bus used for longer-distance service
Wikipedia - Coalbrookdale railway station -- Disused railway station in Shropshire, England
Wikipedia - Coalhouse Fort -- Artillery fort at Coalhouse Point in Essex, England
Wikipedia - Coarse bubble diffusers -- Pollution control technology
Wikipedia - Coast Guard Base Boston -- United States Coast Guard station in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Coast Guard Station Gloucester -- United States Coast Guard station in Gloucester, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Coates House (Virginia, Minnesota) -- House in Virginia, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Coa vestis -- Wild silk textile from the island of Kos, used for clothing in Ancient Greece and Rome
Wikipedia - Cobblestone -- Natural building material based on cobble-sized stones, used for pavement roads, streets, and buildings
Wikipedia - Cocaine -- Strong stimulant used as a recreational drug
Wikipedia - Co-citation Proximity Analysis -- Document similarity measure that uses citation analysis
Wikipedia - Cocking-cloth -- Device that was used for catching pheasants
Wikipedia - Cocktail Time -- 1958 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Cocoanut Grove fire -- 1942 fire at a nightclub in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Code-division multiple access -- Channel access method used by various radio communication technologies
Wikipedia - Coded wire tag -- Device used to tag and track animals
Wikipedia - Codeine -- Opiate used to treat pain
Wikipedia - Code name -- Word or name used, sometimes clandestinely, to refer to another name, word, project or person
Wikipedia - Code reuse
Wikipedia - Coding (therapy) -- Russian alternative therapeutic methods used to treat addictions
Wikipedia - Codpiece -- A flap or pouch that covers the crotch of men's trousers
Wikipedia - Coefficient of performance -- Ratio of useful heating or cooling provided to work required
Wikipedia - Coefficient of restitution -- Measure used to characterise inelastic collisions
Wikipedia - Coffee 1 -- British coffee house chain
Wikipedia - Coffee Beanery -- Coffeehouse chain
Wikipedia - Coffee House Press -- Nonprofit independent press based in Minneapolis, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Coffee House (TV series) -- 2010 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Coffeehouse -- Establishment serving coffee
Wikipedia - Coffee Island -- Greek coffee house chain
Wikipedia - Cogan House Covered Bridge -- Covered bridge in Pennsylvania, US
Wikipedia - Coggeshall Farm Museum -- Museum in Bristol, Rhode Island, US
Wikipedia - Cognitive load -- effort being used in the working memory
Wikipedia - Coin of account -- Unit of money that does not exist as an actual coin but is used in figuring prices or other amounts of money
Wikipedia - Coin -- A small, flat and usually round piece of material used as money
Wikipedia - Cold reading -- Set of techniques used by mentalists, psychics, fortune-tellers, and mediums
Wikipedia - Cole Cobblestone Farmhouse -- Historic building in New York, United States
Wikipedia - Cole Hauser -- American actor
Wikipedia - Coles County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Cole Sprouse -- American actor
Wikipedia - Colgan Air Flight 9446 -- 2003 aviation accident near Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Colin Muset
Wikipedia - Collections management (museum) -- Process of overseeing a collection, including acquisition, curation, and deaccessioning
Wikipedia - College Boarding House -- 1959 film
Wikipedia - College of the Holy Cross -- Liberal arts college in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - College Street Coffee House -- Cafe in Kolkata, India
Wikipedia - Collegio Ghislieri (Rome) -- College grounded by Giuseppe Ghislieri
Wikipedia - Collingham Bridge railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Collings Foundation -- Aviation and automotive preservation foundation in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Collingwood, Liverpool -- Museum in Sydney, Australia
Wikipedia - Collins glass -- Glass tumbler used to serve mixed drinks
Wikipedia - Coloboma of optic nerve -- Rare defect of the optic nerve that causes moderate to severe visual field defects.
Wikipedia - Cologne Charterhouse
Wikipedia - Colonel Konigsfels Teaching Prince Poniatowski to Ride -- Painting by Bernardo Bellotto (National Museum in Warsaw)
Wikipedia - Colonial Williamsburg -- Living-history museum and private foundation presenting part of a historic district in the city of Williamsburg, VA
Wikipedia - Colorado's 3rd congressional district -- U.S. House district in western Colorado
Wikipedia - Color depth -- Number of bits used to indicate the color of a single pixel or number of bits used for each color component of a single pixel
Wikipedia - Colored Episcopal Mission -- Obsolete Anglican term used by the Episcopal Church in the United States of America
Wikipedia - Color photography -- Photography that uses media capable of representing colors
Wikipedia - Color scheme -- choice of colors used in design
Wikipedia - Color theory -- Principles around the use of color in visual arts
Wikipedia - Colour piece -- Section of a publication that focuses mainly on impressions or descriptions of the subject matter
Wikipedia - Columbia Hills (Mars) -- Range of low hills inside Gusev crater on Mars
Wikipedia - Columbia House -- Mail-order music club brand by Columbia Records
Wikipedia - Columbiana County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Columbian sharp-tailed grouse -- Subspecies of bird
Wikipedia - Columbia (personification) -- Historical and poetic name used for the United States of America
Wikipedia - Columbus Museum of Art -- Museum in Columbus, Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Combat box -- A heavy bomber formation used by the USAAF in WW2 to concentrate offensive and defensive firepower.
Wikipedia - Combat sidestroke -- Variation of side-stroke swimming used by United States Navy SEALs
Wikipedia - Combat Zone, Boston -- Name given in the 1960s to the adult entertainment district in downtown Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Combined Campuses and Colleges cricket team -- Cricket team
Wikipedia - Combustion analysis -- Method used in organic chemistry
Wikipedia - Comb -- Toothed device used for styling, cleaning and managing hair and scalp
Wikipedia - Come to My House -- 1927 film
Wikipedia - Comfort object -- Item used to provide psychological comfort
Wikipedia - Comic book therapy -- Use of comic books for rehab
Wikipedia - Comic timing -- the use of timing to enhance a comedic purpose
Wikipedia - Command center -- Place used to provide centralized command
Wikipedia - Command module Columbia -- Command module used for Apollo 11
Wikipedia - Comma operator -- (C and C++ programming languages) binary operator whose effect is to cause a sequence of operations to be performed
Wikipedia - Comma-separated values -- File format used to store data
Wikipedia - Commerce Bank Field at Foley Stadium -- City sports stadium in Worcester, Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Commerce Clause -- Clause in the U.S. constitution concerning regulation of commerce
Wikipedia - Commercial code (communications) -- List of codes and abbreviations used to save on cablegram costs
Wikipedia - Commercial use of copyleft works
Wikipedia - Commercial use of space
Wikipedia - Commercial use of Wikimedia projects -- Any business or product selling content from Wikipedia or Wikimedia projects
Wikipedia - Commercial Users of Functional Programming
Wikipedia - Comminatory -- clause inserted into law
Wikipedia - Commission (document) -- Document appointing an individual as an officer, used by the government, military and organizations
Wikipedia - Commissioners of Irish Lights -- General Lighthouse Authority for Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland
Wikipedia - Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use -- European Medicines Agency committee
Wikipedia - Committee for Medicinal Products for Veterinary Use -- European Medicines Agency committee
Wikipedia - Committee for the First Amendment -- Action group formed in September 1947 by actors in support of the Hollywood Ten during the hearings of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC)
Wikipedia - Common house gecko -- Species of reptile
Wikipedia - Common house martin -- A migratory passerine bird of the swallow family found in Europe, Africa and Asia
Wikipedia - Common lodging-house -- A Victorian era term for a form of cheap accommodation
Wikipedia - Common name -- Name generally used for a taxon, group of taxa or organism(s)
Wikipedia - Common Service Book -- Worship book and hymnal used by several Lutheran denominations in North America
Wikipedia - Common traffic advisory frequency -- VHF radio frequency used in air-to-air communication
Wikipedia - Common User Access
Wikipedia - Commonwealth (U.S. state) -- Term used by four United States states in official names
Wikipedia - Communaute de communes CM-EM-^Sur de Chartreuse -- Federation of municipalities in France
Wikipedia - Communaute de communes Creuse Grand Sud -- Federation of municipalities in France
Wikipedia - Communaute de communes Creuse Sud Ouest -- Federation of municipalities in France
Wikipedia - Communaute de communes Monts et Vallees Ouest Creuse -- Federation of municipalities in France
Wikipedia - Communaute de communes Portes de la Creuse en Marche -- Federation of municipalities in France
Wikipedia - Communes of the Creuse department -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Communication -- Act of conveying intended meanings from one entity or group to another through the use of mutually understood signs and rules
Wikipedia - Community card poker -- Any game of poker that uses community cards
Wikipedia - Community court -- Neighborhood-focused problem-solving courts emphasizing relationships
Wikipedia - Community House (Salt River, Cape Town) -- Historic site of living heritage
Wikipedia - Compact Disc Digital Audio -- Audio data format used on the compact disc
Wikipedia - Companies House -- United KingdomM-bM-^@M-^Ys registrar of companies
Wikipedia - Company for Henry -- 1967 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Comparative politics -- Field and a method used in political science
Wikipedia - Comparison of computer viruses
Wikipedia - Comparison of satellite buses -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Comparison of Usenet newsreaders
Wikipedia - Compartmental models in epidemiology -- Type of mathematical model used for infectious diseases
Wikipedia - Compassion focused therapy
Wikipedia - Compassion-focused therapy
Wikipedia - Compass rose -- Figure on a compass, map, nautical chart, or monument used to display the orientation of the cardinal directions
Wikipedia - Compass saw -- type of saw used for making curved cuts
Wikipedia - Compass -- Instrument used for navigation and orientation
Wikipedia - Competency architecture -- Framework of skills used in competency-based learning
Wikipedia - Competitive swimwear -- Swimsuit, clothing, equipment and accessories used in the aquatic competitive sports
Wikipedia - Composition of Causes
Wikipedia - Compound interest -- A compounding sum paid for the use of money
Wikipedia - Compression arthralgia -- Joint pain caused by fast compression to high ambient pressure
Wikipedia - Comptroller of Puerto Rico -- Office charged with carrying out post-audits of the use of public funds in Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Comptroller of the Household
Wikipedia - Compuserve
Wikipedia - CompuServe -- 1969-2009 American online service provider
Wikipedia - Computational astrophysics -- Methods and computing tools developed and used in astrophysics research
Wikipedia - Computational fluid dynamics -- Branch of fluid mechanics that uses numerical analysis and data structures to solve and analyze problems that involve fluid flows
Wikipedia - Computational science -- Field that uses computers and mathematical models to analyze and solve scientific problems
Wikipedia - Compute Node Linux -- Runtime environment based on the Linux kernel for several Cray supercomputer systems based on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server
Wikipedia - Computer accessibility -- Ability of a computer system to be used by all people
Wikipedia - Computer addiction -- Excessive or compulsive use of the computer
Wikipedia - Computer Clubhouse -- Out-of-school learning program
Wikipedia - Computer desk -- Furniture for computer users
Wikipedia - Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
Wikipedia - Computer History Museum
Wikipedia - Computer-mediated reality -- Ability to manipulate one's perception of reality through the use of a computer
Wikipedia - Computer memory -- Device used on a computer for storing data
Wikipedia - Computer Misuse Act 1990
Wikipedia - Computer mouse -- Pointing device used to control a computer
Wikipedia - Computer speakers -- Type of speakers sold for use with computers
Wikipedia - Computerspielemuseum Berlin
Wikipedia - Computer terminal -- Computer input/output device; an electronic or electromechanical hardware device that is used for entering data into, and displaying data from, a computer or a computing system update programming
Wikipedia - Computer user satisfaction
Wikipedia - Computer viruses
Wikipedia - Computer vision dazzle -- A type of camouflage used to hamper facial recognition software
Wikipedia - Concerts at Knebworth House -- Open-air rock and pop concert
Wikipedia - Conch house -- House style in Florida, US
Wikipedia - Concord Free Public Library -- Public library in Concord, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Concordia Publishing House
Wikipedia - Concord, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Concord Museum
Wikipedia - Concrete masonry unit -- Rectangular block used in construction
Wikipedia - Concrete pump -- Machine used for transferring liquid concrete by pumping
Wikipedia - Concrete step barrier -- Safety barrier used on the central reservation of motorways
Wikipedia - Concurrent user
Wikipedia - Conde Nast (businessman) -- American publisher (1873-1942), founder of the eponymous publishing house
Wikipedia - Condenser (laboratory) -- laboratory apparatus used to condense vapors
Wikipedia - Conditional access -- System used to prevent non-paying customers from accessing content that requires payment
Wikipedia - Coney Beach Pleasure Park -- Amusement park in Mid Glamorgan, Wales
Wikipedia - Confederation of Passenger Transport -- Advocacy group representing operators of British buses and coaches
Wikipedia - Conference House Park -- Public park in Staten Island, New York
Wikipedia - Confessions of a Frustrated Housewife -- 1976 film
Wikipedia - Confused deputy problem
Wikipedia - Confused moth -- Extinct species of moth
Wikipedia - Confusing similarity -- Test used during trademark examination
Wikipedia - Congenital melanocytic nevus -- Congenital mole caused by genetic mutations
Wikipedia - Congregation for the Causes of Saints -- Catholic Church dicastery overseeing the process of canonization of saints
Wikipedia - Congregation for the Causes of the Saints
Wikipedia - Congregation (group of houses)
Wikipedia - Congregation House of Israel -- Synagogue in Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Congress Hall -- Museum and former capitol building in Philadelphia, USA
Wikipedia - Congressional Solar Caucus -- Caucus in the US House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Conical scanning -- System used in radar to improve accuracy
Wikipedia - Conjugal dictatorship -- Unofficial phrase used in the Philippines to refer to Ferdinand Marcos and his wife Imelda
Wikipedia - Conjunction (grammar) -- Part of speech that connects two words, sentences, phrases, or clauses
Wikipedia - Connecticut River Walk Park -- Park and bikeway in Springfield, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Connecticut's 4th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southwestern Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut's at-large congressional district -- Historical U.S. House district in the state of Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut's congressional districts -- U.S. House districts in the state of Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connect (users group)
Wikipedia - Conning tower -- raised platform on a ship or submarine used to command the vessel
Wikipedia - Conodont biostratigraphy -- Use of a particular fossil class to identify stratigraphy
Wikipedia - Conrad Luft Sr. House -- Historical home
Wikipedia - Conrad, Margrave of Meissen -- 12th century Margrave of the House of Wettin and ancestor of the Saxon electors and kings
Wikipedia - Conscientious objection to abortion -- The right of medical staff to refuse participation in abortion
Wikipedia - Consciousness causes collapse
Wikipedia - Conservation grazing -- Use of animals to graze areas like nature reserves to maintain habitats
Wikipedia - Conservation status -- Indication of the chance of a species' extinction, regardless of authority used
Wikipedia - Conservatism -- Political philosophy focused on retaining traditional social institutions
Wikipedia - Consideration of Bills Select Committee (Malaysia) -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Considered harmful -- Phrase used in titles of diatribes and other critical essays
Wikipedia - Consolidated Fund -- Term used to refer to the main bank account of the government in certain countries
Wikipedia - Constable Burton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Constance of France, Countess of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Constance Quimby -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Constantin von Ettingshausen
Wikipedia - Constant weight apnea -- Freediving discipline in which the diver descends and ascends only by swimming with the use of fins
Wikipedia - Constant weight without fins -- Freediving discipline in which the diver descends and ascends only by swimming without the use of fins
Wikipedia - Construction aggregate -- Coarse to fine grain rock materials used in concrete
Wikipedia - Constructor (software) -- CAD software used in construction
Wikipedia - Consumer price index -- Statistic to indicate the change in typical household expenditure
Wikipedia - Consumer -- Person or group of people that are the final users or consumers of products and or services; one who pays something to consume goods and services produced
Wikipedia - Contact paper -- Adhesive paper used as a covering or lining
Wikipedia - Container -- Any receptacle for holding a product used in storage, packaging, and shipping
Wikipedia - Contemporary Christian music -- Genre of modern popular music lyrically focused on matters concerned with the Christian faith
Wikipedia - Contemporary Latin -- Form of the Latin language used since the 19th century
Wikipedia - Content clause
Wikipedia - Content marketing -- Form of marketing focused on creating content for a targeted audience online
Wikipedia - Content (media) -- Information and experiences that are directed toward an end-user or audience
Wikipedia - Context (language use) -- Objects or conditions associated with an event or use of a term that provide resources for its appropriate interpretation
Wikipedia - Context menu -- User interface element
Wikipedia - Contiguous gene syndrome -- Combined clinical phenotype caused by each gene involved in a chromosomal abnormality
Wikipedia - Continuing education unit -- Measure used for professionals to maintain licenses
Wikipedia - Contraceptive implant -- Implantable medical device used for birth control
Wikipedia - Contrast agent -- Substance used in medical imaging to enhance the contrast of structures or fluids within the body
Wikipedia - Controlled buoyant lift -- A technique used by scuba divers to raise an incapacitated diver to the surface
Wikipedia - Controlled emergency swimming ascent -- A technique used by scuba divers to return to the surface in an out-of-gas emergency in shallow water
Wikipedia - Control valve -- Device used to regulate fluid flow
Wikipedia - Conus fusellinus -- Species of sea snail
Wikipedia - Conventional treatment -- Therapy that is widely used and accepted by most health professionals
Wikipedia - Conversational user interfaces
Wikipedia - Conversational user interface -- Computer interface that emulates a conversation with a human
Wikipedia - Conversion disorder -- Diagnostic category used in some psychiatric classification systems
Wikipedia - Conveyor belt -- Close-loop rubber band used in motorized conveying system
Wikipedia - Conveyor system -- Equipment used for conveying materials
Wikipedia - Convolution reverb -- Process used for digitally simulating the reverberation of a physical or virtual space
Wikipedia - Conway, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Conway notation (knot theory) -- Notation used to describe knots based on operations on tangles
Wikipedia - Cookbook Museum -- Museum in MM-CM-%ltidens hus, Grythyttan, Sweden
Wikipedia - Cookie jar -- Jar used specifically to store edible treats such as cookies or biscuits
Wikipedia - Cooking apple -- apple that is used primarily for cooking
Wikipedia - Cooking banana -- Banana cultivars commonly used in cooking
Wikipedia - Cooking -- Preparing food for consumption with the use of heat
Wikipedia - Coolant -- Substance used to reduce or regulate the temperature of a system
Wikipedia - CoolCalifornia.org -- Californian website focused on environmental resources
Wikipedia - Cooley Dickinson Hospital -- Hospital in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Coombs test -- Blood test used in immunohematology
Wikipedia - Coonley House -- United States national historic place
Wikipedia - Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum -- Design museum in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Co-op Place -- Multi-use indoor arena in Medicine Hat, Alberta
Wikipedia - Coornhoop -- Historic 17th century farmhouse in Cape Town
Wikipedia - Cooter's Place -- Museum
Wikipedia - Copgrove railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - COPINE scale -- System for rating the severity of images of child sex abuse
Wikipedia - Copley Place -- Shopping mall in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Copmanthorpe railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - CopperheadOS -- Mobile operating system focused on privacy and security
Wikipedia - Copper interconnects -- Used in semiconductor integrated circuits
Wikipedia - Coptic alphabet -- Script used for writing the Coptic language
Wikipedia - Coptic Catholic Church -- Eastern Catholic particular church which uses the Alexandrian Rite
Wikipedia - Copyleft -- Practice of mandating free use in all derivatives of a work
Wikipedia - Copyright Clearance Center -- US company that provides collective copyright licensing services for corporate and academic users of copyrighted materials
Wikipedia - Copyright symbol -- Copyright symbol - the symbol used in copyright notices for works other than sound recordings
Wikipedia - Coram nobis -- Court procedure used to correct grave errors
Wikipedia - Corbreuse -- Commune in M-CM-^Nle-de-France, France
Wikipedia - Cordless -- Term used to refer to electrical or electronic devices that are powered by a battery or battery pack and can operate without a power cord or cable attached to an electrical outlet to provide mains power, allowing greater mobility
Wikipedia - Core fonts for the Web -- Fonts supplied at one time by Microsoft for canonical web use
Wikipedia - Core router -- Router used on the internet backbone and on internet exchanges
Wikipedia - Cor Euser -- Dutch racing driver from Oss
Wikipedia - Corey Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Corinth House -- 1961 Australian TV movie
Wikipedia - Corkbeg House -- Historic house in County Cork, Ireland
Wikipedia - Cornelia Ewigleben -- German museum director
Wikipedia - Cornelis Kruseman
Wikipedia - Cornell Tech -- Technology-focused campus of Cornell University located in New York City
Wikipedia - Coronary CT angiography -- Use of computed tomography angiography to assess the coronary arteries of the heart
Wikipedia - Coronaviridae -- Family of viruses in the order Nidovirales
Wikipedia - Coronavirus disease 2019 -- Disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
Wikipedia - Coronavirus packaging signal -- Regulartory element in coronaviruses
Wikipedia - Corporal punishment in the home -- A form of punishment used by parents to discourage bad behaviour
Wikipedia - Corporate abuse
Wikipedia - Corporations of Jehovah's Witnesses -- List of corporations in use by Jehovah's Witnesses
Wikipedia - Corpus (museum) -- Dutch human biology museum
Wikipedia - Corr Castle -- Tower house in Sutton, Dublin
Wikipedia - Correa backhouseana -- Species of plant
Wikipedia - Corrective rape -- Hate crime in which a person is raped because of their perceived sexual or gender orientation
Wikipedia - Correct name -- The one scientific name to be used (from a particular scientific point of view)
Wikipedia - Correllengua -- Series of celebrations promoting the use of the Catalan language
Wikipedia - Cory in the House -- American television series
Wikipedia - Corymb -- Term used in botany to describe a certain type of flower growth
Wikipedia - Coshocton County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Cosmic infrared background -- Infrared radiation caused by stellar dust
Wikipedia - Cosmic Pulses -- Electronic composition by Karlheinz Stockhausen
Wikipedia - Costa Coffee -- British multinational coffeehouse company
Wikipedia - Costume jewelry -- Jewelry used to complement a particular costume
Wikipedia - Cotton-spinning machinery -- Machinery used to spin cotton
Wikipedia - Council for a Democratic Germany -- New York-based, Germany-focused political organization
Wikipedia - Council House, Perth -- office building in Perth, Western Australia
Wikipedia - Council house -- Form of public or social housing in the UK and Ireland
Wikipedia - Council of States (Switzerland) -- Upper house of the Federal Assembly of Switzerland
Wikipedia - Council of the Nation -- Upper house of Algerian Parliament
Wikipedia - Council of the Republic (France) -- Upper house of the Fourth French Republic
Wikipedia - Council of Toulouse -- Council of the Roman Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Count Alphonse de Toulouse-Lautrec Driving His Mail-Coach -- Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Wikipedia - Counterrevolution and Revolt -- 1972 book by Herbert Marcuse
Wikipedia - Counting house
Wikipedia - Count of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Country Curtains -- Retail home curtain business founded in 1956 in Massachusettes, US
Wikipedia - Country House (horse) -- Thoroughbred race horse
Wikipedia - Country House (song) -- 1995 single by Blur
Wikipedia - Country Walk case -- 1985 day care sex abuse case in Miami, FL
Wikipedia - County courthouses in New Jersey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - County of La Marche -- Medieval French county, approximately corresponding to the modern departement of Creuse
Wikipedia - County (United States) -- Subdivision used by most states in the United States of America
Wikipedia - Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse -- Television series
Wikipedia - Court hand -- Style of handwriting used in medieval English law courts
Wikipedia - Court House Crooks -- 1915 film
Wikipedia - Courthouse Hill Historic District -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Courthouse -- Building which is home to a court
Wikipedia - Court Marshal of Denmark -- Chief Administrative Officer of the Royal Household of Denmark.
Wikipedia - Courtney Buses -- British bus company
Wikipedia - Courtney Campbell Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Covered goods wagon -- Enclosed railway wagon used to carry freight
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in Boston -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in Massachusetts -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Cowden Park House -- Listed historic building in Alloa, Clackmannanshire, Scotland
Wikipedia - Cowl (chimney) -- Hood-shaped covering used to increase the draft of a chimney and prevent backflow
Wikipedia - Cowton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Coxton Tower -- 16th-century tower house in Scotland
Wikipedia - Coxwold railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Crab claw sail -- Triangular sail with spars along upper and lower edges used by traditional Austronesians
Wikipedia - Crab louse -- Species of insect
Wikipedia - Crab Rave -- 2018 tropical house song by Noisestorm
Wikipedia - Crabtree Creek (Neuse River tributary) -- Stream in North Carolina, USA
Wikipedia - Cragside -- Victorian country house near Rothbury in Northumberland, England
Wikipedia - Craigdarroch Castle -- Historic house museum in British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Crakehall railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Crane (rail) -- Type of crane used on a railroad
Wikipedia - Crank (person) -- Pejorative term used for a person who holds an unshakable belief that most of their contemporaries consider to be false
Wikipedia - Crawford County Courthouse (Illinois) -- Local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Crawford County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Crawford Texas Peace House -- Anti-war organization
Wikipedia - Crayford focuser -- Focusing mechanism for amateur telescopes
Wikipedia - Crazy House (1928 film) -- 1928 film
Wikipedia - Crazyhouse -- Chess variant with drops
Wikipedia - Creance -- Long, light cord used to tether a flying hawk or falcon during training in falconry
Wikipedia - Creation Museum -- Museum promoting a pseudoscientific creationist point of view
Wikipedia - Creative Commercials -- Indian film production house
Wikipedia - Creative Commons license -- Public copyright license for allowing free use of a work
Wikipedia - Creative Discovery Museum -- Children's museum in Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Credentes -- Householders among Cathars and Waldenses
Wikipedia - Credit Union iPlex -- Multi-use indoor arena in Swift Current, Saskatchewan
Wikipedia - Cregneash -- Village and museum on the Isle of Man
Wikipedia - Creskeld Hall -- Country house in Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cresyl violet -- A basic dye and is used as a common stain in histology.
Wikipedia - Creuse -- Department of France
Wikipedia - Cricket ball -- Ball used to play cricket
Wikipedia - Crime and Human Nature: The Definitive Study of the Causes of Crime
Wikipedia - Crimes at the Dark House -- 1940 film by George King
Wikipedia - Criminology -- Study of the causes and manifestations of crime
Wikipedia - Crisis negotiation -- Technique used to communicate with people who are threatening violence
Wikipedia - Criteria of truth -- Standards and rules used to judge the accuracy of statements and claims
Wikipedia - Critical mathematics pedagogy -- Liberation-focused math education
Wikipedia - Critical theory -- Philosophy that sociological understanding's primary use should be social reform
Wikipedia - Crocker & Brewster -- Publishing house
Wikipedia - Crocker Art Museum -- American art museum in Sacramento, California
Wikipedia - Croesor quarry -- Disused slate mine in North Wales
Wikipedia - Cromhouthuizen -- Group of canal houses in Amsterdam
Wikipedia - Crompton Hall -- Historic house in Crompton, Lancashire, England
Wikipedia - Cromwell Museum -- Museum in Huntingdon, England
Wikipedia - Crook County Courthouse -- Courthouse in Prineville, Oregon, United States
Wikipedia - Crookhaven Heads Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Crop (implement) -- Short type of whip without a lash, used in horseback riding
Wikipedia - Crop milk -- secretion used by some birds to feed their young
Wikipedia - Cross and Mauser -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Crossatron -- Type of gas-filled tube used as a pulsed modulator device
Wikipedia - Cross Bones -- Disused burial ground in Southwark, London
Wikipedia - Cross-community vote -- Form of voting used in Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Crosses in heraldry -- Cross symbols used in heraldry
Wikipedia - Crossing-based interface -- Type of graphical user interface
Wikipedia - Crossover (genetic algorithm) -- Operator used to vary the programming of chromosomes from one generation to the next
Wikipedia - Crossroads Centre -- Substance abuse treatment facility in Antigua
Wikipedia - Crowbar (tool) -- Hand tool used for pulling nails with leverage
Wikipedia - Crowd abuse
Wikipedia - Crowd control barrier -- Barricade commonly used at public events
Wikipedia - Crowd counting -- Crowd counting or crowd estimating is a technique used to count or estimate the number of people in a crowd.
Wikipedia - Crowded House -- Pop rock band from New Zealand/Australia
Wikipedia - Crowdy Head Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Crown House, St Leonards-on-Sea -- House in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Crow's nest -- Structure in the upper part of the main mast of a ship, used as a lookout point
Wikipedia - Cruck -- Curved timber used as roof support
Wikipedia - Cruft -- Jargon word for redundant, obtrusive material, originally used in computing
Wikipedia - Cruiserweight (professional wrestling) -- Weight class used in professional wrestling
Wikipedia - Cruise ship -- Passenger ship used for pleasure voyages
Wikipedia - Cryotherapy -- Local or general use of low temperatures in medical therapy
Wikipedia - Cryptographic hash function -- Hash function that is suitable for use in cryptography
Wikipedia - Crystal Beach Park -- Former amusement park in Crystal Beach, Ontario
Wikipedia - Crystal Bird Fauset -- American state legislator
Wikipedia - Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art -- art museum in Bentonville, Arkansas
Wikipedia - Crystallopathy -- Disease caused by accumulation of crystals
Wikipedia - Crystal oscillator frequencies -- Frequencies used by electrical components
Wikipedia - Crystal Palace Amusement Park -- Defunct Canadian amusement park
Wikipedia - Crystal radio -- Simple radio receiver circuit used mostly for AM reception
Wikipedia - CTD (instrument) -- An oceanography instrument used to measure the conductivity, temperature, and pressure of seawater
Wikipedia - Cuban peso -- one of two official currencies in use in Cuba, along with the convertible peso
Wikipedia - Cubbyhouse -- 2001 film by Murray Fahey
Wikipedia - Cubic Hermite spline -- Cubic function used for interpolation
Wikipedia - Cucurbata Mare -- A.K.A "Bihor Peak" located in Apuseni from Romania.
Wikipedia - Cudworth railway station -- Disused railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Culebrita Lighthouse -- Spanish-era lighthouse in Culebra, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Cullen House -- Large house in Moray, Scotland
Wikipedia - Cullingworth railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cullman County Museum -- historical museum
Wikipedia - Culm bomb -- Compressed block of culm used for fuelling a fire
Wikipedia - Cultural anthropology -- Branch of anthropology focused on the study of cultural variation among humans
Wikipedia - Cultural cringe -- An internalized inferiority complex that causes people in a country to dismiss their own culture as inferior to the cultures of other countries
Wikipedia - Cultural eutrophication -- The acceleration of natural eutrophication because of human activity
Wikipedia - Culture Abuse -- Punk rock band
Wikipedia - Culture House Eemhuis -- Building in Amersfoort
Wikipedia - Culture industry -- Expression suggesting that popular culture is used to manipulate mass society into passivity
Wikipedia - Culturgen -- Term used to denote a unit of culture
Wikipedia - Culverhouse Cross -- A district straddling the boundary between Cardiff and the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales
Wikipedia - Cumberland County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Cumberland House Cree Nation -- First Nation in Saskatchewan, Canada
Wikipedia - Cumberland Terrace -- Grade I listed terraced house in London, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Cumin -- Species of plant with seeds used as a spice
Wikipedia - Cum sole -- A Latin phrase meaning with the sun, sometimes used in meteorology and physical oceanography to refer to anticyclonic motion
Wikipedia - Cuneiform -- Logosyllabic script used to write several languages of the Ancient Near East
Wikipedia - Cunt -- Vulgar term for female genitalia, or used as a general insult
Wikipedia - CupNoodles Museum Osaka Ikeda -- Science museum dedicated to instant noodles
Wikipedia - Curare -- Group of chemical substances used as poison
Wikipedia - Curbstone Press -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Currency museum, Colombo -- Museum in Sri Lanka
Wikipedia - Currency sign (typography) -- Typographic character used to denote an unspecified currency
Wikipedia - Currency strap -- Strip of paper used to bundle currency
Wikipedia - Currency symbol -- Symbol used to represent a monetary currency's name
Wikipedia - Current Procedural Terminology -- Medical coding used in the United States
Wikipedia - Current transformer -- Transformer used to scale alternating current, used as sensor for AC power
Wikipedia - Currier House (Harvard College) -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Curse of Tippecanoe -- Used to describe the death in office of Presidents of the United States elected in years divisible by twenty
Wikipedia - Cursor (user interface)
Wikipedia - Curtain -- Cloth used to block out light
Wikipedia - Curt Clausen -- American race walker
Wikipedia - Curtis Guild Jr. -- 43rd Governor of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Curtis McCormack -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Curtiss P-6 Hawk -- Fighter aircraft in use by the US Army Air Corps 1929-1937
Wikipedia - Curtius Museum
Wikipedia - Curt Taylor -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Curve448 -- Elliptic curve used in Internet cryptography
Wikipedia - Cushing House -- Student dormitory at Vassar College
Wikipedia - Custom House, City of London -- Grade I listed building in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Custom House for ExCeL DLR station -- Docklands Light Railway station
Wikipedia - Custom House, Poole -- Listed building in Poole, Dorset, England
Wikipedia - Custom house -- Government office building for import and export of goods
Wikipedia - CUT&RUN sequencing -- A method used to analyze protein interactions with DNA.
Wikipedia - CUT&Tag sequencing -- A method used to analyze protein interactions with DNA.
Wikipedia - Cut, copy, and paste -- User-interface interaction technique for transferring text, data, files or objects from a source to a destination
Wikipedia - Cutlass -- Short sword used by sailors on sailing ships
Wikipedia - Cutting room floor -- Term used in film industry to refer to unused footage not included in the finished film
Wikipedia - Cutts-Madison House -- Historic building in Washington, D.C.
Wikipedia - Cuvier Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Cuyahoga County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - C. V. Wood -- American developer of amusement parks
Wikipedia - CXP (connector) -- Electrical connector used for Infiniband and Ethernet
Wikipedia - Cybercrimes Act in Tanzania -- Law in Tanzania for criminalizing offences related to computer systems and Information Communication Technologies; provides for investigation, collection, and use of electronic evidence in Tanzania Mainland and Zanzibar
Wikipedia - Cyber Intelligence House -- Singapore cyber intelligence company
Wikipedia - Cyberocracy -- Form of government that rules by the use of information
Wikipedia - Cyberstalking -- The use of the Internet as means of monitoring users activities maliciously
Wikipedia - Cyberterrorism -- the use of the Internet as means of threatening or seriously damaging personal's life in the form of political and ideological goals
Wikipedia - Cyberwarfare by Russia -- Various types of cyberwarfare used by Russia against many nations.
Wikipedia - Cyclical theory (United States history) -- Model used to explain the fluctuations in politics throughout American history
Wikipedia - Cyclic redundancy check -- Type of hash function used to detect errors in data storage or transmission
Wikipedia - Cycling infrastructure -- facilities for use by cyclists
Wikipedia - Cyclophosphamide -- Medication used as chemotherapy and to suppress the immune system
Wikipedia - Cyhalothrin -- Synthetic pyrethroid used as insecticide
Wikipedia - Cylindrobasidium laeve -- Species of fungus used as a mycoherbicide to control Acacia mearnsii (black wattle) in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cynthia Browning -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Cyprus Museum -- Archaeological museum in Cyprus
Wikipedia - Cysticercosis -- Tissue infection caused by the young form of the pork tapeworm
Wikipedia - Cytorhabdovirus -- Genus of plant viruses
Wikipedia - Czartoryski Museum
Wikipedia - Czech Center Museum Houston -- Museum in Houston
Wikipedia - Czechoslovakian M53 helmet -- Helmet used by the Czechoslovak military starting in 1954
Wikipedia - Czolpino Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Dacre railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dad's Army Museum -- Museum dedicated to the comedy series ''Dad's Army''
Wikipedia - Dagebull Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Wikipedia - Dagger (typography) -- Symbol indicating a footnote, typically after an asterisk has already been used
Wikipedia - Dagmar Droysen-Reber -- German musicologist and museum director
Wikipedia - Dagmar Krause -- German singer
Wikipedia - Dai bamboo house -- Common architectural style in Dai villages
Wikipedia - Dail Eireann -- Lower house of the Oireachtas (Irish parliament)
Wikipedia - Daily Hampshire Gazette -- Newspaper in Northampton, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Daily Kos -- Blog focused on left-wing American politics
Wikipedia - Dairy Hollow House -- Inn in Arkansas
Wikipedia - Daisy Coleman -- American advocate for victims of sexual abuse
Wikipedia - DAKS -- British luxury fashion house
Wikipedia - Dale Husemoller -- American mathematician
Wikipedia - Dales Country House Hotel, Upper Sheringham -- Country house hotel in Norfolk, England
Wikipedia - Dalila Argaez Wendlandt -- American judge; Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
Wikipedia - Dalkeith (Arcola, North Carolina) -- historic plantation house
Wikipedia - Dallas Museum of Art
Wikipedia - Dalvik (software) -- Virtual machine used by Android for execute Java-written apps
Wikipedia - Damage control -- In maritime context, emergency control of situations which may cause the sinking of a ship
Wikipedia - Damien Keown -- Bioethicist focused on Buddhist ethics
Wikipedia - D&B Software -- software company, focused on accounting software
Wikipedia - Danby Wiske railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dancehouse
Wikipedia - Dandaleith stone -- Pictish stone discovered at Craigellachie and now in the Elgin Museum, Moray, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Dan Donahue -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Danesfield House -- Country house in Buckinghamshire, England
Wikipedia - Dangerhouse Records -- Record label
Wikipedia - Danger Mouse (musician) -- American musician, songwriter and producer
Wikipedia - Dan Hausel -- American polymath
Wikipedia - Dan Houser -- English video game producer
Wikipedia - Daniar Usenov -- Kyrgyz banker and politician
Wikipedia - Daniel Carleton Gajdusek
Wikipedia - Daniel Connor (politician) -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Daniel Davis (Massachusetts lawyer) -- American attorney
Wikipedia - Daniel Fisher (Massachusetts politician) -- American colonial politician
Wikipedia - Daniel F. Murphy House -- Historic house in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - Daniel Hochhauser -- British oncologist
Wikipedia - Daniel Noyes -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Daniel R. Carey -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Daniel Webster Jenkins House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Danillo Sena -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Dan Meuser -- American businessman and politician
Wikipedia - Dan Newhouse -- U.S. Representative from Washington
Wikipedia - Danuse Zdenkova -- Czech judoka
Wikipedia - Dan van Husen -- German actor
Wikipedia - Danvers, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Dao (sword) -- Single-edged Chinese sword primarily used for slashing and chopping
Wikipedia - Dar Adiyel -- Historic house in Fes, Morocco
Wikipedia - Dar Affes -- House of the medina of Sfax, Tunisia
Wikipedia - Darbar (title) -- Title of honor or respect used generally in the western Indian State of Gujarat
Wikipedia - Darby House (Baldwin, Louisiana) -- Slave plantation
Wikipedia - Dare House -- Art deco building in Chennai, India
Wikipedia - Darfield railway station -- Disused railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dar Jamai Museum -- Museum in Morocco
Wikipedia - Darke County Courthouse, Sheriff's House and Jail -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Dark energy -- unknown property in cosmology that causes the expansion of the universe to accelerate.
Wikipedia - Dark fibre -- unused optical fibre
Wikipedia - Dark Palace -- Novel by Frank Moorhouse
Wikipedia - Dark ride -- Type of amusement ride
Wikipedia - Dark soy sauce -- Thick Chinese soy sauce used for color and flavour
Wikipedia - Darley railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Darlowo Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Darn That Dream -- Song composed by Jimmy Van Heusen
Wikipedia - Dar Shorouq -- Arabic publishing house
Wikipedia - Dartmouth, Massachusetts -- Town of particular historical importance in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Dar ul-Aala -- Moroccan classical music museum
Wikipedia - DARVO -- Acronym used to describe a common strategy of abusers
Wikipedia - Da share z0ne -- Satirical social media user
Wikipedia - Dashi -- family of stocks used in Japanese cuisine
Wikipedia - Das Kriminalmuseum -- Television series
Wikipedia - Data access -- Software and activities related to storing, retrieving, or acting on data housed in a database or other repository
Wikipedia - Data buffer -- Region of a physical memory storage used to temporarily store data while it is being moved from one place to another
Wikipedia - Data center -- Building or room used to house computer servers and related equipment
Wikipedia - Data control language -- Syntax similar to a computer programming language used to control access to data stored in a database
Wikipedia - Data warehouse automation
Wikipedia - Data warehouses
Wikipedia - Data warehouse
Wikipedia - Dative case -- Grammatical case generally used to indicate the noun to which something is given
Wikipedia - Dave Arnold -- American chef and museum founder
Wikipedia - Dave House -- English musician
Wikipedia - Dave Krusen -- American musician
Wikipedia - Dave Lee (DJ) -- British DJ and house music producer
Wikipedia - Dave Robertson (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - David Alan Stevenson -- Scottish lighthouse engineer
Wikipedia - David Backhouse -- Dutch slalom canoeist
Wikipedia - David Biele -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - David Bly -- American politician and member of the Minnesota House of Representatives
Wikipedia - David Hillhouse Buel (priest)
Wikipedia - David Lane (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - David LeBoeuf -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - David L. Tennenhouse
Wikipedia - David Martin (Michigan politician) -- Member of Michigan House of Representatives
Wikipedia - David M. Wilson -- British archaeologist, art historian, and museum curator
Wikipedia - David Pannick, Baron Pannick -- British lawyer and House of Lords crossbencher
Wikipedia - David Rittenhouse
Wikipedia - David W. Courdin House -- Historic house in Monett, Missouri
Wikipedia - David Yacovone -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Davina Whitehouse -- New Zealander actor (1912-2002)
Wikipedia - Davison House -- Vassar College dormitory
Wikipedia - Davis Submerged Escape Apparatus -- Early submarine escape oxygen rebreather also used for shallow water diving.
Wikipedia - Davy lamp -- Safety lamp for use in flammable atmospheres
Wikipedia - Dawn House School -- Special school in Rainworth, Nottinghamshire, England
Wikipedia - Day care sex abuse hysteria
Wikipedia - Day-care sex-abuse hysteria -- Moral panic and series of prosecutions in North America in the final quarter of the 20th century onwards
Wikipedia - Day House Lane Stone Circle -- Neolithic stone circle in Wiltshire, England
Wikipedia - Daylesford House -- Country house near Daylesford, England
Wikipedia - Day sailer -- Small boat designed for use for one day's sailing, typically has no sleeping accommodation
Wikipedia - DBZ (meteorology) -- Unit of measure used in weather radar.
Wikipedia - DCS Europe -- A seller and distributor of health, beauty and household brands
Wikipedia - DCU Center -- Indoor arena in Worcester, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Dead Christ Supported by Angels (Bellini, Rimini) -- Painting by Giovanni Bellini in the City Museum of Rimini
Wikipedia - Dead Hand -- Cold-War-era nuclear-control system used by the Soviet Union
Wikipedia - Dead Star/In Your World -- Muse single
Wikipedia - Dead zone (ecology) -- Low-oxygen areas in oceans and large lakes caused by nutrient and fertilizer pollution
Wikipedia - Deafhood -- Term used in deaf culture
Wikipedia - De-aging in film -- De-aging is a visual effects technique used to make an actor look younger
Wikipedia - Dean College -- Private college in Franklin, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Deanery Garden -- Grade I listed English country house in Wokingham, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Dean of the House (Canada) -- Longest sitting member of the House of Canada
Wikipedia - Dean of the United States House of Representatives -- Longest continuously serving member of the House of Respresentatives alive
Wikipedia - Death anxiety (psychology) -- Anxiety caused by thoughts of death
Wikipedia - Death from laughter -- Cause of death
Wikipedia - Death of Elaine Herzberg -- First pedestrian fatality caused by self-driving car
Wikipedia - Death of Nicky Verstappen -- Child sexual abuse and homicide case in the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Debbane Palace -- Historical building and museum in Sidon, Lebanon
Wikipedia - Debit card -- card used for financial transactions, usually without a credit line
Wikipedia - Deborah Read -- Spouse of Benjamin Franklin
Wikipedia - Debugger -- Computer program used to test and debug other programs
Wikipedia - Decantha borkhausenii -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Decentralized wastewater system -- Processes to convey, treat and dispose or reuse wastewater from small communities and alike
Wikipedia - Deception (criminal law) -- Legal term of art used in the definition of statutory offences in England and Wales and Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Deck decompression chamber -- Hyperbaric chamber suitable for surface decompression or emergency use at a dive site
Wikipedia - Decker Press -- Poetry publishing house in Illinois, United States
Wikipedia - Declaration reflects use
Wikipedia - Decommissioned highway -- Road which is no longer in use, or route no longer officially authorized or maintained
Wikipedia - Decompression chamber -- Hyperbaric pressure vessel for human occupation used in diving operations to decompress divers
Wikipedia - Decompression equipment -- Equipment used by divers to facilitate decompression
Wikipedia - Decompression gas -- Oxygen-rich gas used for accelerated decompression
Wikipedia - Decompression sickness -- Disorder caused by dissolved gases in the tissues forming bubbles during reduction of the surrounding pressure
Wikipedia - Decoration Day (Appalachia and Liberia) -- A living tradition of group ancestor veneration observances focused on the maintenance and decoration of cemeteries and grave markers in Appalachia, Liberia, and other areas where Appalachian people migrated
Wikipedia - DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum -- Contemporary art museum in Lincoln, Mass.
Wikipedia - Decoupling for body-focused repetitive behaviors
Wikipedia - DECUS -- Independent computer user group related to Digital Equipment Corporation
Wikipedia - De Danske Husmoderforeninger -- Danish housewives association
Wikipedia - Dedham Historical Society and Museum -- Local history museum in Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - De Eenhoorn (publisher) -- Flemish publishing house
Wikipedia - Deepface (band) -- Dance/House/Electronica music act based out of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Wikipedia - Deep house -- Subgenre of house music that originated in the 1980s
Wikipedia - Deep Space Atomic Clock -- Atomic clock used for radio navigation in space
Wikipedia - Deep Springs Plantation -- Plantation house in Stoneville, North Carolina
Wikipedia - Deep-submergence rescue vehicle -- Submersible used for rescue of downed submarines and clandestine missions
Wikipedia - DEFCON -- Alert posture used by the United States Armed Forces
Wikipedia - Defeat COVID-19 Ad Hoc Committee -- Ad hoc committee of the House of Representatives of the Philippines
Wikipedia - Defence and Home Affairs Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Defendant -- Accused person
Wikipedia - Defense of Sihang Warehouse -- Engagement in the Battle of Shanghai (1937)
Wikipedia - Defensive wall -- Fortification used to protect an area from potential aggressors
Wikipedia - Defiance County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - De Finetti diagram -- Ternary plot used in population genetics
Wikipedia - Defining vocabulary -- List of words used by lexicographers to write dictionary definitions
Wikipedia - Definite clause grammar
Wikipedia - Definiteness -- Feature of noun phrases, distinguishing between entities that are specific and identifiable in a given context and entities which are not (don't use on lexemes)
Wikipedia - Defoliant -- Chemical sprayed or dusted on plants to cause its leaves to fall off
Wikipedia - Deforestation -- Conversion of forest to non-forest for human use
Wikipedia - DeFries-Fulker regression -- Method of multiple regression analysis used in behavioural genetics
Wikipedia - Degenerate art -- Pejorative term used by Nazi party for modern art
Wikipedia - Degree symbol -- Typographical symbol used to represent different physical quantities
Wikipedia - Deir ez-Zor Museum -- Museum in Syria
Wikipedia - DeKalb County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Delaine Buses -- Lincolnshire bus operator
Wikipedia - Delaware County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Delaware's at-large congressional district -- U.S. House district in the state of Delaware
Wikipedia - Delaware Senate -- Upper house of the Delaware General Assembly
Wikipedia - Delco Carousel
Wikipedia - Del Frisco's Double Eagle Steak House -- American fine dining restaurant steakhouse chain
Wikipedia - Deliberative assembly -- Organization that uses parliamentary procedure to make decisions
Wikipedia - Delichon -- A genus of passerine birds comprising three species of house martin
Wikipedia - Delirium tremens -- Rapid onset of confusion caused by alcohol withdrawal
Wikipedia - Deliverance ministry -- Type of prayer used by some Christian groups
Wikipedia - Delivery Bar Code Sorter -- Mail sorting machine used by the US Postal Service
Wikipedia - Delta Air Lines Flight 723 -- 1973 aviation accident in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Deltaretrovirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Delta update -- Update that only requires the user to download changed code
Wikipedia - Demand response -- Techniques used to prevent power networks from being overwhelmed
Wikipedia - Demand valve oxygen therapy -- Use of high inhalation concentrations of oxygen as medical treatment
Wikipedia - Demo (music) -- song or group of songs recorded for limited circulation or reference use rather than for general public release
Wikipedia - Demonstration (political) -- Collective action by people in favor of a cause
Wikipedia - Dengue fever -- Tropical disease caused by the dengue virus, transmitted by mosquito
Wikipedia - Dengue vaccine -- Vaccine used to prevent dengue fever in humans
Wikipedia - Denholme railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Denison House (Boston)
Wikipedia - Dennis Hastert -- American politician, U.S. Speaker of the House, convicted felon
Wikipedia - Dennos Museum Center -- Art museum, est. 1991 in Michigan
Wikipedia - Deno's Wonder Wheel Amusement Park -- Amusement park in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Densely packed decimal -- an efficient system of binary encoding for decimal digits used in decimal floating point
Wikipedia - Densmore and LeClear -- Architecture firm in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Dental anesthesia -- anesthesia used in dental procedures
Wikipedia - Dental barotrauma -- Damage to a tooth caused by a change of ambient pressure
Wikipedia - Dental cement -- Materials used to bond teeth or materials to teeth
Wikipedia - Dental dam -- A thin, rectangular sheet used in dentistry to isolate the operative site
Wikipedia - Dental floss -- Cord of thin filaments used to remove food and dental plaque from between teeth in areas a toothbrush is unable to reach
Wikipedia - Dentil -- A small block used as a repeating ornament in the bedmould of a cornice
Wikipedia - Dentzel Carousel Company -- American carousel builder
Wikipedia - Department of African American Studies - Syracuse University -- Academic Department at Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Dependent clause
Wikipedia - Deposit insurance -- Measure protecting bank depositors from losses caused by a bank default
Wikipedia - Deprecation -- Discouragement of use of a technology, feature, design, or practice
Wikipedia - Deputy Marshal of the Senate of the Republic of Poland -- Position in the upper house of Polish parliament
Wikipedia - Derailleur gears -- Variable-ratio transmission system commonly used on bicycles
Wikipedia - Derby Racer -- Roller coaster at Revere Beach in Revere, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Derek Allhusen -- British equestrian
Wikipedia - Der Handschuh (Waterhouse) -- Composition by Graham Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Derrymore House -- National Trust property
Wikipedia - Designmuseum Denmark -- Art museum in Copenhagen
Wikipedia - Design Museum -- Art museum in London, England
Wikipedia - Design museum -- Type of museum
Wikipedia - Desiree Sayle -- American Republican political aide, served in the White House under George Bush and Donald Trump.
Wikipedia - Desktop computer -- Computer designed to be used on a fixed location
Wikipedia - Desktop environment -- graphical user interface
Wikipedia - Desktop metaphor -- Concept used on desktop computer graphical user interfaces
Wikipedia - Desktop virtualization -- Software technology that separates the desktop environment and associated application software from the physical client device that is used to access it.
Wikipedia - Desk -- Type of table often used in a school or office setting
Wikipedia - Desperate Housewives (season 5) -- Season of television series
Wikipedia - Desperate Housewives (season 6) -- Season of television series
Wikipedia - Desperate Housewives (season 7) -- Season of television series
Wikipedia - Desperate Housewives: The Game (2017 video game) -- 2017 role-playing mobile game
Wikipedia - Desperate Housewives -- American comedy-drama TV series
Wikipedia - Dessin d'enfant -- graph drawing used to study Riemann surfaces
Wikipedia - Destination Big House -- 1950 film by George Blair
Wikipedia - Destination Crenshaw -- Open-air African American museum in Los Angeles, California
Wikipedia - Desvenlafaxine -- Medication used to treat major depressive disorder
Wikipedia - Detection dog -- Dog that is trained to use its senses to detect certain substances or items
Wikipedia - Detective Comics -- Title used for two American comic book series
Wikipedia - Determinism -- philosophical view that all events are determined completely by previously existing causes
Wikipedia - Deutsches Historisches Museum -- German history museum in Berlin
Wikipedia - Deutsches Museum
Wikipedia - Deutsches Technikmuseum Berlin
Wikipedia - Deval Patrick -- 71st Governor of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Developmental Origins of Health and Disease -- Medical approach emphasizing early-life environmental causes of disease
Wikipedia - Devereaux House, Ontario -- Canadian historic farmhouse
Wikipedia - Devil Hunter Yohko -- Anime series by Madhouse
Wikipedia - Devil May Cry: The Animated Series -- Anime series by Shin Itagaki and Madhouse
Wikipedia - Devizes County House of Corrections -- Defunct prison in England
Wikipedia - Dewan Negara -- Upper house of the Parliament of Malaysia
Wikipedia - DeWitt County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - D Fuse -- American record producer
Wikipedia - D-Generation X: In Your House -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Dhakti Suseri -- Village in Maharashtra
Wikipedia - Dhamar (music) -- One of the talas used in Hindustani classical music from the Indian subcontinent
Wikipedia - Dharamshala (type of building) -- Type of sanctuary, communal or religious resthouse
Wikipedia - Dialog box -- User interface element
Wikipedia - Diamond Head Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Diamond Shoal Light -- Lighthouse in North Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Diamond -- Allotrope of carbon often used as a gemstone and an abrasive
Wikipedia - Diana Gonzalez -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Diapause -- Response delay in amimal dormancy
Wikipedia - Diarylide pigment -- Class of organic compounds that are used as pigments
Wikipedia - Diary of a Housewife -- 2001 film by Vinod Sukumaran
Wikipedia - Diary of a Mad Housewife -- 1970 film by Frank Perry
Wikipedia - Diaspora (social network) -- Nonprofit, user-owned, distributed social network
Wikipedia - Diazolidinyl urea -- Antimicrobial preservative used in cosmetics.
Wikipedia - Dice -- Throwable objects with marked sides, used for generating random numbers
Wikipedia - Dicing tape -- Special adhesive tape used during microchip manufacture
Wikipedia - Dick Taverne -- English barrister; politician and life peer in the House of Lords (born 1928)
Wikipedia - Dictation machine -- Sound recording device most commonly used to record speech for later playback or to be typed into print
Wikipedia - Dictionary of Frequently-Used Taiwan Minnan -- Hokkien dictionary
Wikipedia - Didier Ottinger -- French museum curator, art critic and author
Wikipedia - Diego Causero -- Italian prelate of the Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Diesel fuel -- Liquid fuel used in diesel engines
Wikipedia - Diesel multiple unit -- Diesel-powered railcar designed to be used in formations of 2 or more cars
Wikipedia - Dieter Krause -- German sprint canoeist
Wikipedia - Diffuse design
Wikipedia - Diffused junction transistor
Wikipedia - Diffused lighting camouflage -- Active camouflage system for Second World War ships
Wikipedia - Diffuse interstellar band
Wikipedia - Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma -- Type of lymphoma
Wikipedia - Diffuse leprosy of Lucio and Latapi -- Clinical variety of lepromatous leprosy
Wikipedia - Diffuse optical imaging
Wikipedia - Diffuser (automotive) -- Aerodynamic surface
Wikipedia - Diffuser (band) -- American rock band
Wikipedia - Diffuser (breathing set part) -- Component fitted over the exhaust outlet to break up the exhaled gas
Wikipedia - Diffuse reflection -- Reflection with light scattered at random angles
Wikipedia - Diffuse sky radiation -- solar radiation reaching the Earth's surface
Wikipedia - Diffuse
Wikipedia - Digging bar -- A long, straight metal bar used as a post hole digger, to break up or loosen hard or compacted materials or as a lever to move objects
Wikipedia - Digital anchor -- Use of a location system and dynamic positioning control to maintain position
Wikipedia - Digital audio workstation -- computer workstation or software application used for editing and creating music and audio
Wikipedia - Digital camera modes -- User selectable camera configurations
Wikipedia - Digital Comic Museum -- digital library of comic books
Wikipedia - Digital differential analyzer (graphics algorithm) -- Hardware or software used for interpolation of variables over an interval
Wikipedia - Digital encoding of APL symbols -- Code pages used specifically to write programs in the APL programming language
Wikipedia - Digital media use and mental health -- Relationship between the use of digital media and the mental health of its consumers and users
Wikipedia - Digital movie camera -- Specialized video camera used to shoot movies
Wikipedia - Digital Nations -- Intergovernmental organization focused on technology
Wikipedia - Digital Negative -- Patented, open, lossless raw image format written by Adobe used for digital photography
Wikipedia - Digital signal -- Signal used to represent data as a sequence of discrete values
Wikipedia - Digital synthesizer -- Synthesizer that uses digital signal processing to make sounds
Wikipedia - Digital Technologies and the Museum Experience -- 2008 book
Wikipedia - Diglossia -- Situation in which two dialects or languages are used by a single language community
Wikipedia - DikM-DM- -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Dilator -- Surgical instrument or medical implement used to expand an opening or passage
Wikipedia - Dimension (data warehouse) -- Structure that categorizes facts and measures in a data warehouse
Wikipedia - Dimethyl sulfoxide -- Organosulfur chemical compound used as a solvent
Wikipedia - DIN 1451 -- Sans-serif font, used on german traffic signs
Wikipedia - Dining philosophers problem -- Problem used to illustrate synchronization issues and techniques for resolving them
Wikipedia - Dinkan -- Fictional anthropomorphic superhero mouse
Wikipedia - Dinosaur Discovery Museum -- Museum in Kenosha, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Dinosaur Isle -- Dinosaur museum on the Isle of Wight
Wikipedia - Dinosaur Jr. -- American rock band formed in Amherst, Massachusetts, in 1984
Wikipedia - Dinoseb -- Chemical compound used as a herbicide
Wikipedia - Diocesan Museum of Gallipoli
Wikipedia - Diocesan Museum of Palermo -- Museum in Palermo
Wikipedia - Dionaea muscipula 'Fused Tooth' -- Tooth found in carnivorous plants
Wikipedia - Dion of Syracuse
Wikipedia - Dionysius II of Syracuse
Wikipedia - Dionysius I of Syracuse -- Sicilian tyrant
Wikipedia - Diplock court -- Structure of non-jury courts used in Northern Ireland, primarily 1973 to 2007 but still occasionally used
Wikipedia - Diplolepis rosae -- Species of wasp that causes Robin's pincushion galls on rose
Wikipedia - Dippishausen -- Village in the district of Kreuzlingen in the canton of Thurgau, Switzerland.
Wikipedia - Directed panspermia -- Deliberate transport of microorganisms in space to be used as introduced species
Wikipedia - DirectHit -- Medical test used for the treatment of breast cancer
Wikipedia - Directorate of Lighthouses, Portugal -- Organization managing Portugal's lighthouses
Wikipedia - Dirofilaria immitis -- Species of worm that causes parasitic disease in animals
Wikipedia - Disability abuse
Wikipedia - Disappearance of Joan Risch -- 1961 Massachusetts missing person case
Wikipedia - Discovery and development of bisphosphonates -- Drugs used to treat bone disorders
Wikipedia - Discovery Center at Murfree Spring -- Children's museum in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Discovery Museum and Planetarium
Wikipedia - Discovery Park of America -- Heritage museum in Tennessee, U.S.
Wikipedia - Discovery Primea -- Mixed-use residential tower in Makati, Philippines
Wikipedia - Discovery Train -- Former Canadian museum on wheels
Wikipedia - Dishwashing liquid -- Detergent used for cleaning dishes
Wikipedia - Dislocation (syntax) -- Sentence structure in which a constituent occurs outside the clause boundaries either to its left or to its right
Wikipedia - Disorderly house -- Establishment where persons congregate to the probable disturbance of the public peace or other commission of crime
Wikipedia - Dispatchable generation -- Sources of electricity that can be used on demand
Wikipedia - Disposable cup -- Drinking cup intended for a single use
Wikipedia - Distance matrices in phylogeny -- Matrices used in construction of phylogenetic trees
Wikipedia - Distant Sun -- 1993 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Distributed Bragg reflector -- Structure used in waveguides
Wikipedia - Distributed Checksum Clearinghouse
Wikipedia - District Courthouse (Aguadilla, Puerto Rico) -- Historic building in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - District Museum in Torun -- Regional museum in Torun, Poland
Wikipedia - Districts of England -- Level of subnational division of England used for the purposes of local government
Wikipedia - Dive boat -- Boat used for the support of scuba diving operations
Wikipedia - Diver communications -- Methods used by underwater divers to communicate
Wikipedia - Divine Songs Attempted in Easy Language for the Use of Children -- Collection of poetry for children by Isaac Watts
Wikipedia - Diving chamber -- Hyperbaric pressure vessel for human occupation used in diving operations
Wikipedia - Diving cylinder -- High pressure compressed gas cylinder used to store and supply breathing gas for diving
Wikipedia - Diving equipment -- Equipment used to facilitate underwater diving
Wikipedia - Diving hand signals -- A form of sign system used to communicate underwater
Wikipedia - Diving locations -- Specific places that recreational divers go to enjoy the underwater environment or are used for training purposes
Wikipedia - Diving medicine -- Diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disorders caused by underwater diving
Wikipedia - Diving platform -- A type of structure used for competitive acrobatic diving
Wikipedia - Diving support equipment -- Equipment used in the support of an underwater diving operation
Wikipedia - Diving support vessel -- A ship used as a floating base for professional diving projects
Wikipedia - Divisions of the Australian House of Representatives -- Federal electorates in Australia
Wikipedia - Diyarbakir Archaeological Museum -- Museum in Diyarbakir, Turkey
Wikipedia - DJane HouseKat -- German singer, DJ and musician
Wikipedia - DJ Pierre -- American DJ and performer of house music
Wikipedia - D. J. Swearingen -- Member of the Ohio House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Djurs Sommerland -- Amusement park in Djurland, Denmark
Wikipedia - DNA damage theory of aging -- Hypothesis that aging is caused by accumulated DNA damage
Wikipedia - DNA evidence in the O. J. Simpson murder case -- Use of DNA in the American murder trial
Wikipedia - DNA nanotechnology -- The design and manufacture of artificial nucleic acid structures for technological uses
Wikipedia - DNA profiling -- Technique used to identify individuals via DNA characteristics
Wikipedia - Do Butlers Burgle Banks? -- 1968 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Docklands Light Railway rolling stock -- Passenger trains and service vehicles used on the Docklands Light Railway (DLR),
Wikipedia - Doctor in the House
Wikipedia - Doctor Sally -- 1932 novel by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Documentary research -- Use of outside sources to support the argument of an academic work
Wikipedia - Document Exploitation -- United States Armed Forces procedures to use documents seized in combat
Wikipedia - Doeskin Hill -- Hill in Framingham, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Dog & Bull -- public house in Surrey
Wikipedia - Doge's Palace -- art museum and historic site in Venice, Italy
Wikipedia - DoggoLingo -- Internet language of words used to refer to dogs
Wikipedia - Dog Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse at Foveaux Strait, New Zealand
Wikipedia - D.O. Harton House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - D'oh! -- Catchphrase used by Homer Simpson
Wikipedia - Doing Time: Life Inside the Big House -- 1991 film
Wikipedia - Dolce & Gabbana -- Italian fashion house
Wikipedia - Dole Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Dollhouse (TV series) -- American television series
Wikipedia - Doll -- Model of a character or a human beings, often used as a toy for children or an artistic hobby for adults
Wikipedia - Dolphin Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in India
Wikipedia - Dolphin safe label -- Label used to denote compliance with laws or policies designed to minimize dolphin fatalities during fishing for tuna destined for canning
Wikipedia - Domain name warehousing -- Acquisition of an expired domain name by the registrar it was registered with for its own uses
Wikipedia - Domain parking -- Process of reserving a domain for prevent cybersquatting or for simple future use, including reselling
Wikipedia - Domestic violence -- Pattern of behavior involving abuse of members of the same family
Wikipedia - Domestic worker -- Person who works within the employer's household
Wikipedia - Domestos -- Range of bleach-based household cleaning products originally from UK
Wikipedia - Dominican House of Studies
Wikipedia - Dominion Land Survey -- Survey method used in most of western Canada
Wikipedia - Domperidone -- Peripheral D2 receptor antagonist used as an antiemetic, gastroprokinetic agent, and galactagogue
Wikipedia - Domus Sanctae Marthae -- guest house in Vatican City
Wikipedia - Domus -- Roman urban house of upper classes
Wikipedia - Donaghadee Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Donald Cousens Parkway -- Arterial bypass of Markham
Wikipedia - Donald Newhouse -- American billionaire businessman
Wikipedia - Donald Sadoway -- Professor of Materials Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - Donald Trump on social media -- Use of social media by Donald Trump, 45th President of the United States
Wikipedia - Donation -- Gift given by physical or legal persons, typically for charitable purposes and/or to benefit a cause
Wikipedia - Don Birrell -- American graphic designer and museum director (b. 1922, d. 2006)
Wikipedia - Donepezil -- Medication used for dementia
Wikipedia - Don (honorific) -- Honorific title used in Iberia and Italy
Wikipedia - Donington Hall -- 19th century country house in Leicestershire
Wikipedia - Donore Castle -- Tower house in County Meath, Ireland
Wikipedia - Don Scott (Virginia politician) -- Virginia house of representatives member
Wikipedia - Don't Dream It's Over -- 1986 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Don't You Worry Child -- 2012 single by Swedish House Mafia
Wikipedia - Doomer -- Person who believes global problems will inevitably cause the collapse of civilization
Wikipedia - Dooring -- Traffic collision in which a bicyclist (or other road user) rides or drives into a motor vehicle's door or is struck by a door that was opened quickly without due care.
Wikipedia - Doorkeeper of the United States House of Representatives -- Former parliamentary officer
Wikipedia - Dopamine antagonist -- Drugs that bind to but do not activate dopamine receptors, thereby blocking the actions of dopamine or exogenous agonists. Many drugs used in the treatment of psychotic disorders (antipsychotic agents) are dopamine antagonists, although their therap
Wikipedia - Dopaminergic -- Any drugs that are used for their effects on dopamine receptors, on the life cycle of dopamine, or on the survival of dopaminergic neurons
Wikipedia - Doran H. Ross -- African art scholar, author, and museum curator
Wikipedia - Dorchester Abbey Museum
Wikipedia - Doris Crouse-Mays
Wikipedia - Dornbusch Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany
Wikipedia - Dorney Park & Wildwater Kingdom -- Amusement park in Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Dorothy Chandler Pavilion -- Opera house, part of the Los Angeles Music Center
Wikipedia - Dorothy Felton -- American politician and member of the Georgia House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Dorothy G. Shepherd -- Museum curator and historian
Wikipedia - Dorothy Q Apartments -- A historic apartment house in Quincy, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Dorset County Museum -- Museum in Dorchester, Dorset
Wikipedia - Dorsey Road Warehouse
Wikipedia - Dortmund-Bovinghausen station -- Railway station in Dortmund, Germany
Wikipedia - Dortmund-Lottringhausen station -- Railway station in Dortmund, Germany
Wikipedia - Dory (spear) -- Type of weapon used by hoplites in Ancient Greece
Wikipedia - Doss House -- 1933 film
Wikipedia - Double-banded sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Double jeopardy -- Legal defence that prevents an accused person from being tried twice on the same charges
Wikipedia - Double negative -- Grammatical construction occurring when two forms of negation are used in the same sentence
Wikipedia - Double reed -- Type of reed used to produce sound in various wind instruments
Wikipedia - Double-stranded RNA viruses -- Type of virus according to Baltimore classification
Wikipedia - Doubtnut -- Interactive online tutoring platform which uses image recognition technologies, to provide solutions of some mathematical questions.
Wikipedia - Douche -- device used to introduce a stream of water into the body
Wikipedia - Douglas County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Douglas Head Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on the Isle of Man
Wikipedia - Doug Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Downhill House -- Mansion in Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Down House (film) -- 2001 film by Roman Kachanov
Wikipedia - Downline (diving) -- Rope running from a point at the surface to the underwater workplace used as a guideline for divers and transfer of equipment
Wikipedia - Downtown Boston -- Area of Boston Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Downtown Crossing station -- Subway station in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Downtown Crossing -- Shopping district in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Doyle's Cafe -- Restaurant in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Do You Know That Little House on Lake Michigan? -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - DrabeM-EM-!i Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Drachen Fire -- Former amusement park ride
Wikipedia - Draft:2020 Lafayette Square protest -- Protest and subsequent act of force at the White House after the death of George Floyd
Wikipedia - Draft:Amino (app) -- App for user created communities
Wikipedia - Draft:Armadillidium schmalfussi -- Species of woodlouse
Wikipedia - Draft:Chill and Binge -- Single destination for users to decide what to watch online
Wikipedia - Draft:Culto Cristiano -- Worship book and hymnal used by several Lutheran denominations in North America
Wikipedia - Draft:Drew House (clothing line) -- Clothing line launched by Justin Bieber
Wikipedia - Draft:Elets Technomedia -- Media House in India
Wikipedia - Draft:Giuseppe Aveni -- Wikipedia Italian Servant of God and missionary in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Drafthouse Films
Wikipedia - Draft:House of Dragon -- Fantasy television series
Wikipedia - Drafting (aerodynamics) -- A technique where two moving objects are caused to align in a close group reducing the overall drag
Wikipedia - Draft:Inland Northwest Rail Museum -- Museum in Reardan, Washington, U.S.
Wikipedia - Draft:Iode -- Privacy Focused Smartphone
Wikipedia - Draft:Kendall Hotel -- Historic hotel in Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Draft:List of largest museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Draft:Mayurpankhi ( Publisher) -- Bangladeshi publishing house
Wikipedia - Draft:M-CM-^Alava Arms Museum -- Spanish museum
Wikipedia - Draft:Mita the Cyclist House -- Heritage site in Bucharest, Romania
Wikipedia - Draft:Multi-Users in Middle-earth -- Tolkien MUD
Wikipedia - Draft:Night at the Museum (musical) -- Upcoming musical by Bob Martin and Rick Elice
Wikipedia - Draft:Premium Pet House Pune -- Ireland-based multinational consulting company
Wikipedia - Draft:QuestDB -- Application used for event monitoring and alerting
Wikipedia - Draft:Quest Engineering Solutions, Inc. -- Massachusetts based test engineering company
Wikipedia - Draft:Rouse -- American physicist
Wikipedia - Draft:Sacred Art Museum -- Art museum in Alcamo, Italy
Wikipedia - Draft:Saygid Guseyn Arslanaliev -- Turkish mixed martial arts fighter
Wikipedia - Draft (sports) -- Process used to allocate certain players to sports teams
Wikipedia - Draft:The National Foundation to End Child Abuse and Neglect (EndCAN) -- Nonprofit organization seeking to end child abuse and neglect
Wikipedia - Draft:The Woman in the House (miniseries) -- Upcoming American dark comedy thriller television series
Wikipedia - Draft:Ullumanati -- Indian music production house
Wikipedia - Draft:Userfacet -- Bengaluru-based UI UX Design & Development company
Wikipedia - Draft:UserTesting -- American marketing software company
Wikipedia - Dr. Agustin Stahl Stamm House -- Historic residence in Bayamon, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Drain (surgery) -- Tube used to remove pus, blood or other fluids from a wound
Wikipedia - Drakconf -- Configuration program used by Mandriva-based Linux distributions
Wikipedia - Drawn & Quarterly -- Canadian publishing house
Wikipedia - Dr. Bhau Daji Lad Museum -- Museum in Mumbai, India
Wikipedia - Dream House (1931 film) -- 1931 film
Wikipedia - Dream House (2011 film) -- 2011 film
Wikipedia - Dreamland (Coney Island, 1904) -- Former amusement park in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Dreamland (Coney Island, 2009) -- Former amusement park in Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Dream Land Isfahan -- Iranian amusement park
Wikipedia - Dreams of the Everyday Housewife -- 1968 single by Glen Campbell
Wikipedia - Dreary House -- 1928 film
Wikipedia - Dreidel -- Four-sided spinning top used on Hanukkah
Wikipedia - Dress form -- Model of the torso used for fitting clothing
Wikipedia - Drighlington and Adwalton railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dril -- Pseudonymous Twitter user
Wikipedia - Drinking horn -- Horn of a bovid used as a drinking vessel
Wikipedia - Drinking straw -- Thin tube used to suck liquids from a container into the mouth of the drinker
Wikipedia - Drive-through -- Service that motorists can use from their vehicle (without parking)
Wikipedia - Dr. Mabuse the Gambler -- 1922 film
Wikipedia - DrM-CM-$ger Ray -- Semi-closed circuit recreational diving rebreather designed to use standard nitrox breathing gas mixtures
Wikipedia - Drone journalism -- Use of unmanned aircraft for journalism
Wikipedia - Drones Club -- Fictional club in stories by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Drones in wildfire management -- Use of drones/UAS/UAV in wildfire suppression and management
Wikipedia - Drones (Muse album) -- 2015 album by the English rock band Muse
Wikipedia - Drop-down list -- User interface element
Wikipedia - Dropping mercury electrode -- Electrode made of mercury and used in polarography
Wikipedia - Dr. Plummet's House of Flux -- 1989 video game
Wikipedia - Dr. Reuben Chase House -- Historic house in Bothell, Washington, United States
Wikipedia - Dr. Teeth and The Electric Mayhem -- Fictional Muppet rock house band that debuted on The Muppet Show
Wikipedia - Drug Abuse Resistance Education -- US anti-drug educational program
Wikipedia - Drug Abuse Warning Network -- Public health surveillance system
Wikipedia - Drug abuse
Wikipedia - Drug harmfulness -- Degree to which drugs harm users
Wikipedia - Drug interaction -- Change in the action or side effects of a drug caused
Wikipedia - Drug therapy problems -- Categorization related to the use of drugs in the field of pharmaceutical care
Wikipedia - Drug use in music -- Drug use in music
Wikipedia - Drusel -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Druses
Wikipedia - Dryad Press -- American publishing house based in Maryland
Wikipedia - Dry dung fuel -- Animal feces that has been dried in order to be used as a fuel source
Wikipedia - Dry etching -- Controlled material removal, without the use of liquid substances
Wikipedia - Dry Tortugas Light -- Lighthouse in Florida, United States
Wikipedia - Drywall -- Panel made of gypsum, used in interior construction
Wikipedia - D Street Projects -- Housing project located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - D subminiature military -- Electric/data connector used in aerospace, military, aviation, and electric cars
Wikipedia - DSV-5 Nemo -- Submersible used by the United States Navy
Wikipedia - D-Terminal -- Analog video connector used in Japan
Wikipedia - Dtv Verlagsgesellschaft -- German publishing house
Wikipedia - Dual flush toilet -- A flush toilet that uses two buttons to flush different amounts of water
Wikipedia - Dual-use technology
Wikipedia - Duane H. King -- Museum director and academic (b. 1947, d. 2017)
Wikipedia - Duane Stadium -- Multi-purpose stadium in Massachusetts, U.S.A.
Wikipedia - Dubai Museum -- Main museum of Dubai
Wikipedia - Dublin Writers Museum -- Private literary museum on Parnell Square, Dublin
Wikipedia - Duchy of Brunswick-Luneburg -- Duchy in Holy Roman Empire 1235-1269; title of "Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg" used by rulers of all successor states
Wikipedia - Duck plague -- Disease caused by Anatid alphaherpesvirus 1 of the family Herpesviridae that causes acute disease with high mortality rates in flocks of ducks, geese, and swans
Wikipedia - Duct (flow) -- Conduit used in heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
Wikipedia - Dudley Community -- The only one of the thirteen Harvard College Houses serving nonresident undergraduate students.
Wikipedia - Dudley Hill railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dudley, Massachusetts cemetery controversy -- opposition to creating a Muslim cemetery
Wikipedia - Duel - The Haunted House Strikes Back -- English dark ride at Alton Towers
Wikipedia - Due Process Clause -- Clauses in the 5th and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution
Wikipedia - Duff T. Brown House -- Historic building in Arizona, US
Wikipedia - Du Fu Thatched Cottage -- Park and museum in Chengdu
Wikipedia - Dugout (shelter) -- Hole or depression used as shelter
Wikipedia - Duilhac-sous-Peyrepertuse -- Commune in Occitanie, France
Wikipedia - Duke blue -- Color shade used by Duke University
Wikipedia - Duke of Burgundy -- Title used by the rulers of the Duchy of Burgundy
Wikipedia - Duke of York's Picture House
Wikipedia - Duke Street Capital -- British private equity firm focused on leveraged buyout and growth capital investments
Wikipedia - Dumas House -- Government office building in Perth, Western Australia
Wikipedia - Dumbbell -- Piece of equipment used in weight training
Wikipedia - Dummy pronoun -- Pronoun having no referent, only used to fulfill grammatical rules; e.g. "it" as in "it rains"
Wikipedia - Dunalka Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Dundanion Castle -- Tudor tower house in Cork, Ireland
Wikipedia - Dunedin Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Dunedin Museum of Natural Mystery -- Museum in Dunedin New Zealand
Wikipedia - Dungaree (fabric) -- Twill fabric used for overalls
Wikipedia - Dunkirk Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Nord, France
Wikipedia - Dunkirk Light -- Lighthouse in New York, United States
Wikipedia - Dunnet Head Lighthouse -- Active 19th century lighthouse that stands on Dunnet Head, Scotland
Wikipedia - Dunster House -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Duntisbourne Rouse -- Human settlement in England
Wikipedia - Durabis -- scratch resistant polymer coating by TDK used on blu-ray discs
Wikipedia - Dural venous sinuses -- Venous channels in the dura mater
Wikipedia - Durban Declaration -- Affirmation that HIV causes AIDS
Wikipedia - Durbe Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Durham School (Durham, Arkansas) -- Historic schoolhouse in Durham, Arkansas
Wikipedia - Dursupe Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - DuSable Museum of African American History -- Chicago museum of African American history, culture, and art
Wikipedia - Dusebach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Dusedieksbach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Dusek family -- Professional wrestling family
Wikipedia - Dusepo -- English musician
Wikipedia - DUsers -- Drexel University Macintosh usergroup
Wikipedia - Dusky grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Dutch Springs -- Flooded quarry in Pennsylvania used as a recreational diving site
Wikipedia - Dutch Wonderland -- Amusement park in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, United States
Wikipedia - Dwarfism -- Small size of an organism, caused by growth deficiency or genetic mutations
Wikipedia - Dwelling -- Self-contained unit of accommodation (house, apartment, mobile home, houseboat or other structure) used as a home
Wikipedia - Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library, Museum and Boyhood Home -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, located in Abilene, Kansas
Wikipedia - D with stroke -- Variant of the letter D, used in Sami alphabets, Serbo-Croatian Latin alphabet, and Vietnamese
Wikipedia - Dwr (manor house)
Wikipedia - Dylan and Cole Sprouse -- American actors, twin brothers
Wikipedia - Dylan Giambatista -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Dylan Sprouse -- American actor
Wikipedia - Dymaxion house -- Prototype house designed by Buckminster Fuller
Wikipedia - Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol -- Principal protocol used to assign IPv4 addresses on an IPv4 network
Wikipedia - Dynamic HTML -- Umbrella term for a collection of technologies (e.g., HTML, JavaScript, CSS and DOM) used together to create interactive and animated web sites
Wikipedia - Dynamic soaring -- A flying technique used to gain energy by repeatedly crossing the boundary between air masses of significantly different velocity
Wikipedia - Dynamic topography -- Elevation changes caused by the flow within the Earth's mantle
Wikipedia - Dynamometer -- Machine used to measure force or mechanical power
Wikipedia - Dyrholaey Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Iceland
Wikipedia - Dysarthria -- Motor speech disorder cause by damage to motor systems
Wikipedia - Dysbaric osteonecrosis -- Ischemic bone disease caused by decompression bubbles
Wikipedia - Dzelzava Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Dzimtmisa Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - DzM-DM-^Srbene Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - DzM-DM-^Srve Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - E1000 series -- Series of trains used by the Taiwan Railways Administration
Wikipedia - EAA Aviation Museum -- Aviation Museum in Oshkosh, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Eagle-bone whistle -- Religious musical instrument used in certain ceremonies in the Southwest and Plains Native American cultures, made from bones of the American bald eagle or the American golden eagle
Wikipedia - Eagle Hill School -- Independent private, special education residential schools in Massachusetts and Connecticut, United States
Wikipedia - Eagle River Light -- Lighthouse in Michigan, United States
Wikipedia - E-Amusement
Wikipedia - Earhart House -- Historic home
Wikipedia - Earing -- A small line (rope) used to fasten the corner of a sail to a spar or yard
Wikipedia - Earle Cabell Federal Building and Courthouse -- Building in Dallas, Texas, United States
Wikipedia - Early Modern Spanish -- Variety of Spanish used in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
Wikipedia - Earswick railway station -- Disused railway station in York, England
Wikipedia - Earth Prime -- Term sometimes used in works of speculative fiction involving parallel universes or a multiverse
Wikipedia - Earthquake -- Shaking of the surface of the earth caused by a sudden release of energy in the crust
Wikipedia - Earth sciences graphics software -- Plotting and image processing software used in Earth sciences
Wikipedia - Earth shelter -- House partially or entirely surrounded by earth
Wikipedia - Earth tide -- Displacement of the solid earth's surface caused by the gravity of the Moon and Sun
Wikipedia - Easement -- A right to use or enter real property
Wikipedia - Easingwold railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - East 73rd Street Historic District -- Block of former carriage houses in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - East 78th Street Houses -- Five Civil War-era brick rowhouses on north side of street between 3rd and Lex
Wikipedia - East 80th Street Houses -- Four historic buildings on south side of street between Park and Lex
Wikipedia - East Cambridge, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - East Cape Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Eastcliff (mansion) -- Historic house in St. Paul, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Eastern Channel Pile Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Eastern European Summer Time -- Daylight saving time zone used in eastern Europe (UTC+3)
Wikipedia - Eastern Point Fort -- 1860s fort in Gloucester, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Eastern Sounds -- album by Yusef Lateef
Wikipedia - Easthampton, Massachusetts -- City in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - East India Dock House -- Listed building in Tower Hamlets, London
Wikipedia - East India House Inscription -- Foundation tablet from ancient Babylon
Wikipedia - East Otis, Massachusetts -- Village in Otis, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - East Thames Buses -- London bus operator
Wikipedia - East Vernon Light -- Lighthouse in Northern Territory, Australia
Wikipedia - East Wing -- Structure part of the White House Complex, east of the Executive Residence
Wikipedia - Eaton Hall, Cheshire -- Country house in Cheshire, England
Wikipedia - Eau Gallie Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Ebberston railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Eberhard and Phyllis Kronhausen -- Husband-and-wife team of American sexologists
Wikipedia - Eblaite language -- Extinct Semitic language which was used during the third millennium BCE
Wikipedia - Ebola -- Viral hemorrhagic fever of humans and other primates caused by ebolaviruses
Wikipedia - E caudata -- Modified letter E used in transcribing old Gaelic, Latin and Old Norse texts
Wikipedia - Eccleshill railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Ecclesiastical heraldry -- Use of heraldry in the Christian church
Wikipedia - Eccleston Quarry -- Flooded quarry used as a recreational dive site
Wikipedia - Echelle grating -- Type of diffraction grating used in spectrometers
Wikipedia - Echo and Narcissus (Waterhouse painting) -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Echo (Dollhouse) -- Fictional character
Wikipedia - Eclaireuses et Eclaireurs israelites de France -- Jewish Scouting and Guiding organization in France
Wikipedia - Ecodistrict -- Term used in urban planning to integrate objectives of sustainable development and reduce ecological impact
Wikipedia - Ecohouse
Wikipedia - Ecole nationale supM-CM-)rieure d'ingM-CM-)nieurs de constructions aM-CM-)ronautiques -- French engineering scholl in Toulouse
Wikipedia - Ecological engineering -- Use of ecology and engineering to predict, design, construct or restore, and manage ecosystems that integrate "human society with its natural environment for the benefit of both"
Wikipedia - Ecological facilitation -- Species interactions that benefit at least one of the participants and cause harm to neither
Wikipedia - Ecological sanitation -- An approach to sanitation provision which aims to safely reuse excreta in agriculture
Wikipedia - Ecomuseum -- Museum focused on the identity of a place
Wikipedia - Economic and Environmental Geology -- Scholarly journal focused on geology
Wikipedia - Economic sociology -- Study of the social cause and effect of various economic phenomena
Wikipedia - Economics of car use -- Overview of the economics of car use
Wikipedia - Ecosystem management -- Conservation paradigm factoring in natural and human use of resources and ecosystem services
Wikipedia - Ecotheology -- Form of constructive theology that focuses on the interrelationships of religion and nature, particularly in the light of environmental concerns
Wikipedia - Ecstasy (philosophy) -- Term used in philosophy with different meanings in different traditions
Wikipedia - Eddystone Lighthouse
Wikipedia - Edelgard von Hresvelg -- Fictional character in Fire Emblem: Three Houses, part of the Fire Emblem series of turn-based tactical RPGs
Wikipedia - E-democracy -- Use of information and communication technology in political and governance processes
Wikipedia - Eden Camp Museum -- Museum in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Edenwald Houses -- -- Edenwald Houses --
Wikipedia - Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum -- historical house in Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Wikipedia - Edgar County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Edgar Eusebio Millan Gomez -- Mexican lawyer and chief of police and murder victim
Wikipedia - Edgar Housepian -- American neurosurgeon
Wikipedia - Edgartown, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Edible seaweed -- Algae that can be eaten and used in the preparation of food
Wikipedia - Ediciones Destino -- Spanish publishing house
Wikipedia - Edie Britt -- Fictional character on Desperate Housewives
Wikipedia - Edith Kellnhauser -- German nursing scientist , university lecturer died 2019
Wikipedia - Editions Albert Rene -- French publishing house
Wikipedia - Editions Larousse -- French publishing house
Wikipedia - Editions Underbahn -- publishing house
Wikipedia - Editorial URSS -- Russian publishing house.
Wikipedia - Edmond Reusens -- Belgian historian and archaeologist
Wikipedia - Edmond Wodehouse -- British politician
Wikipedia - Edmontosaurus mummy AMNH 5060 -- exceptionally well-preserved fossil in the American Museum of Natural History
Wikipedia - Edmunds-Tucker Act -- Act of Congress that focused on restricting some practices of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Wikipedia - Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum -- Museum of historic Japanese buildings
Wikipedia - Eduard Matusevich -- Soviet speed skater
Wikipedia - Eduardo Sivori Museum -- Municipal art museum in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Wikipedia - Eduard Rothauser -- German actor
Wikipedia - Educational technology -- Use of technology in education to improve learning and teaching
Wikipedia - Education Museum -- Museum in Melaka City, Melaka, Malaysia
Wikipedia - EDUCAUSE
Wikipedia - Edward Abraham Kusel -- American photographer
Wikipedia - Edward Bouverie Pusey -- Conservative churchman of the Church of England and Hebraist
Wikipedia - Edward C. Papenfuse -- Maryland State Archivist and Commissioner of Land Patents
Wikipedia - Edward E. Boynton House -- Two-story house
Wikipedia - Edward Gorey House -- Former home of American writer and illustrator Edward Gorey
Wikipedia - Edward H. Kruse -- American politician
Wikipedia - Edward M. House -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Edward Pusey
Wikipedia - Edward Wallington (civil servant) -- English cricketer, colonial administrator, Royal Household member
Wikipedia - E. E. Cummings House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - EEPROM -- Computer memory used for small quantities of data
Wikipedia - Effect and Cause -- Level from 2016 video game Titanfall 2
Wikipedia - Effects of drugs on fitness to dive -- Known side-effects and contraindications of drugs commonly used by divers
Wikipedia - Effects of long-term benzodiazepine use
Wikipedia - Effects of nuclear explosions -- Type and severity of damage caused by nuclear weapons
Wikipedia - Efficient cause
Wikipedia - Efficient energy use
Wikipedia - E. F. Hunt House -- Historic building in Meridian, Idaho
Wikipedia - EFU House -- Building in Karachi, Pakistan
Wikipedia - Egg Rock (Nahant Bay) -- Island in Essex County, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - Eggs, Beans and Crumpets -- 1940 short story collection by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Egg substitutes -- Food products which can be used to replace eggs in cooking and baking
Wikipedia - Egg tooth -- Used by offspring to break out of egg while hatching
Wikipedia - Egmont Ehapa -- German publishing house
Wikipedia - Egyptian blue -- Pigment used in ancient Egypt
Wikipedia - Egyptian calendar -- calendar used in ancient Egypt before 22 BC
Wikipedia - Egyptian hieroglyphs -- Formal writing system used by ancient Egyptians
Wikipedia - Egyptian Museum of Berlin -- Part of the Neues Museum, collection of Ancient Egyptian artifacts
Wikipedia - Eharo mask -- Type of dance mask used by the Elema people of the eastern Gulf of Papua
Wikipedia - E-Hentai -- Community-oriented image hosting and file sharing website focused on hentai
Wikipedia - E. H. Gibbs House -- United States national historic place
Wikipedia - Eiffel Tower (Cedar Fair) -- Replica in amusement park
Wikipedia - Eight-to-fourteen modulation -- DC-free run-length limited line code used by several optical disc formats
Wikipedia - Eilean na Cille -- An island of the Outer Hebrides connected to Grimsay (South) by a causeway
Wikipedia - Eileen Alice Willa -- New Zealand museum curator, botanist and author
Wikipedia - Einar Brusevold -- Norwegian politician
Wikipedia - Einar Gausel -- Norwegian chess player
Wikipedia - Einstein's Blackboard -- Blackboard used by Albert Einstein on 16 May 1931 lectures at the University of Oxford
Wikipedia - Eise Eisinga Planetarium -- 18th century planetarium and science museum in Franeker, Friesland, Netherlands
Wikipedia - Ekiti State House of Assembly -- Legislative arm of the government of Ekiti State of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Ekomuseum nedre M-CM-^Dtradalen -- Ecomuseum with several locations in Sweden
Wikipedia - El abanderado -- 1943 Spanish film by Eusebio Fernandez Ardavin
Wikipedia - Elachista maculicerusella -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Elaine Didier -- American director of the Gerald R. Ford Library and Museum
Wikipedia - Elbasan script -- Mid-18th-century alphabet used for the Albanian language
Wikipedia - Elbridge Gerry -- United States diplomat and Vice President; Massachusetts governor
Wikipedia - Elder abuse -- Mistreatment or neglect of an old-age adult
Wikipedia - Elder financial abuse
Wikipedia - Elder House of Welf
Wikipedia - Eldin Huseinbegovic -- Bosnian singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Eleanor of Aragon, Countess of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cressy -- Former electoral district of the Tasmanian House of Assembly
Wikipedia - Electoral Reform Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Electrical conduction system of the heart -- Transmits signals generated usually by the sinoatrial node to cause contraction of the heart muscle
Wikipedia - Electrical injury -- Physiological reaction or injury caused by electric current
Wikipedia - Electrical muscle stimulation -- Use of electricity to involuntarily contract muscle
Wikipedia - Electric Dylan controversy -- 1965 music controversy in the United States involving Bob Dylan's use of an electric guitar
Wikipedia - Electric Harley House (Of Love) -- 1993 single by Green JellM-CM-?
Wikipedia - Electric resistance welding -- Welding processes that use heat produced by electric current through the work pieces
Wikipedia - Electrochemical cell -- Device capable of either generating electrical energy from chemical reactions or using electrical energy to cause chemical reactions
Wikipedia - Electrodermal activity -- The property of the human body that causes continuous variation in the electrical characteristics of the skin
Wikipedia - Electro house -- Form of house music
Wikipedia - Electron-beam lithography -- Lithographic technique that uses a scanning beam of electrons
Wikipedia - Electronic cigarette -- Device usually used to quit or be an alternative to tobacco
Wikipedia - Electronic filter topology -- Electronic filter circuits without taking note of the values of the components used but only the manner in which those components are connected
Wikipedia - Electronic mailing list -- Special usage of email that allows for widespread distribution of information to many Internet users
Wikipedia - Electronic portfolio -- A collection of electronic evidence assembled and managed by a user
Wikipedia - Electronic toilet -- A type of public toilet that is used in India
Wikipedia - Electrospray ionization -- Technique used in mass spectroscopy
Wikipedia - Elegant variation -- Use of synonyms to avoid repetition of a word
Wikipedia - Elena Ceausescu -- 20th-century Romanian politician
Wikipedia - Eleonora Duse -- Italian actress
Wikipedia - Elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus -- Species of herpesvirus, which can cause a highly fatal hemorrhagic disease when transmitted to young Asian elephants
Wikipedia - Elgiz Museum -- Museum in Istanbul
Wikipedia - Elias W. Rector -- 28th speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Elie House -- Country house in Elie, Scotland
Wikipedia - Eliot House -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Eli Whitney Museum -- museum in Hamden, Connecticut, USA
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Anne Voigt -- South African museologist and zooarchaeologist
Wikipedia - Elizabeth A. T. Smith -- American art historian, museum curator, writer
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Coxen -- Australian museum curator, meteorologist and specimen collector
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Fouse -- American activist
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Hartley (archaeologist) -- Archaeologist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Elizabeth House -- Nonprofit food pantry in Maryland, U.S.
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Islands -- Island group in Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - Elizabeth, Lady Echlin -- English writer, lived at Rush House, Dublin
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Warren -- United States Democratic Senator from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Whitney Williams -- American lighthouse keeper
Wikipedia - Ellery Queen's Penthouse Mystery -- 1941 film directed by James P. Hogan
Wikipedia - Ellighausen -- Village and former municipality in the canton of Thurgau, Switzerland
Wikipedia - Elliott House, Wellington -- Historic building in Wellington, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Ellisville, Massachusetts -- Human settlement in Massachusetts, United States of America
Wikipedia - Ellys Manor House -- Manor house in Great Ponton, Lincolnshire, England
Wikipedia - Elman Huseynov -- National Hero of Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - Elmer Raguse -- Sound engineer
Wikipedia - El Monte Busway -- Shared-use express bus corridor and high occupancy toll lanes running along Interstate 10 in the Los Angeles area.
Wikipedia - El Museo del Barrio -- Museum in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Elmwood (Cambridge, Massachusetts) -- Historic house in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Elnhauser Wasser -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Elongated coin -- Flattened, embossed coin used as a souvenir token
Wikipedia - Eloquent cortex -- Parts of the cerebral cortex that cause disability if lost
Wikipedia - El Rincon Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Argentina
Wikipedia - Else Rambausek -- Austrian actress
Wikipedia - Elshan Huseynov -- Azerbaijani Paralympic powerlifter
Wikipedia - Embroidery stitch -- Decorative stitch used primarily in embroidery
Wikipedia - Embroidery thread -- Any of several types of thread designed for use in embroidery and related crafts
Wikipedia - Embusen -- Kata movement
Wikipedia - EMD FT36HCW-2 -- Model of American-built diesel locomotive used in South Korea
Wikipedia - Emergency locator beacon -- Radio-frequency beacon used to locate airplanes, vessels, and persons in distress
Wikipedia - Emerson and Lucretia Sensenig House -- Historic house in Boise, Idaho, USA
Wikipedia - Emerson College -- Private coeducational university located in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Emery Point Light -- Lighthouse in Northern Territory, Australia
Wikipedia - E-meter -- Modified ohmmeter used during Dianetics and Scientology auditing
Wikipedia - Emigration Museum -- Museum in Poland
Wikipedia - Emile Mousel -- Luxembourgian politician
Wikipedia - Emilie Kornheiser -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Emily Long -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Emily Stackhouse -- Botanical artist 1811-1870
Wikipedia - EMI schools -- Secondary schools in Hong Kong that use English as a medium of instruction
Wikipedia - Emissions trading -- Market-based approach used to control pollution
Wikipedia - Emlen Physick Estate -- Historical house and building- located in New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Emma Doyle -- White House Principal Deputy Chief of Staff
Wikipedia - EMMA - Espoo Museum of Modern Art -- Art museum in Espoo in southern Finland
Wikipedia - Emmanuel College (Massachusetts) -- Private liberal arts college in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Emma Schlangenhausen -- Austrian artist
Wikipedia - Emma Sheppard -- English writer and workhouse reformer
Wikipedia - Emmett Butler House -- Historic house in Hibbing, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Emoji -- Ideograms or smileys used in electronic messages and webpages
Wikipedia - Emotional intelligence -- Capability to understand one's emotions and use it to guide thinking and behavior
Wikipedia - Emotionally focused therapy
Wikipedia - Emotion Focused Therapy
Wikipedia - Empathy Museum -- Series of art installations, established 2015
Wikipedia - Emperor of India -- Title used by British monarchs from 1 May 1876 to 22 June 1948
Wikipedia - Empire Brewing Company -- Microbrewery and restaurant in Syracuse, New York
Wikipedia - Empress Shi -- Spouse of Chinese Xin Dynasty emperor Wang Mang
Wikipedia - Empty nest syndrome -- Feeling that may be felt by parents whose children leave the house
Wikipedia - Ena Sandra Causevic -- Danish model from Sonderborg, Denmark
Wikipedia - Encomienda -- labor system used during the Spanish colonization of the Americas and the Spanish Spanish Philippines
Wikipedia - Encore Boston Harbor -- Resort and casino in Everett, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Encounter killings by police -- Term used in India and Pakistan
Wikipedia - Endicott College -- Private college in Beverly, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Endless House -- Work of conceptual architecture by Frederick Kiesler
Wikipedia - Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography -- Use of endoscopy and fluoroscopy to treat and diagnose digestive issues.
Wikipedia - Endovascular aneurysm repair -- Surgery used to treat abdominal aortic aneurysm
Wikipedia - End-user (computer science)
Wikipedia - End-user development
Wikipedia - End-user license agreement
Wikipedia - End user
Wikipedia - End-user
Wikipedia - Energy conversion efficiency -- Ratio between the useful output and the input of a machine
Wikipedia - Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy -- analytical technique used for the elemental analysis or chemical characterization of a sample
Wikipedia - Energy (esotericism) -- Term used by various esoteric forms of spirituality and alternative medicine
Wikipedia - Energy in California -- Overview of the use of energy in the U.S. state of California
Wikipedia - Energy in Chile -- supply and use of energy in Chile
Wikipedia - Energy in Saudi Arabia -- Overview of the energy use in Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia - Energy in the United Kingdom -- Overview of the use of energy in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Energy recovery ventilation -- Uses the energy in air exhausted from a building to treat the incoming air
Wikipedia - Engels' pause -- Historical economic period during the Industrial Revolution in Britain
Wikipedia - Engineering drawing -- A type of technical drawing used to define requirements for engineered items
Wikipedia - Engine order telegraph -- Communications device used on a ship
Wikipedia - English as a lingua franca -- Use of the English language for international communication
Wikipedia - English as a second or foreign language -- Use of English by speakers with different native languages
Wikipedia - English clause element -- Linguistics concept
Wikipedia - English clause syntax
Wikipedia - English country house -- Larger house or mansion estate in England, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - English relative clauses
Wikipedia - English units -- System of units formerly used in England
Wikipedia - ENMAX Centre -- Multi-use indoor arena in Lethbridge, Alberta
Wikipedia - Ennigaldi-Nanna's museum -- Museum in Ur, thought to be the first by some historians
Wikipedia - Ennis Courthouse -- Judicial facility in County Clare, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ensign -- Maritime flag used for national identification of ships
Wikipedia - Enteroctopus -- Genus of cephalopods known as the "giant octopuses"
Wikipedia - Enterovirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Enter the Dragon -- 1973 film directed by Robert Clouse
Wikipedia - Entheogenic drugs and the archaeological record -- Archaeological records of drugs used in a ritual context
Wikipedia - Entheogenic use of cannabis -- Marijuana used spiritually
Wikipedia - Entrenched clause
Wikipedia - Enville Hall -- Country house in Enville, Staffordshire, England
Wikipedia - Environmental health -- Public health branch focused on environmental impacts on human health
Wikipedia - Environmental impact of war -- Environmental problems caused by warfare
Wikipedia - Environmental indicator -- Measure used to evaluate environmental change
Wikipedia - Environment variable -- User-definable variable associated with each running process in many operating systems
Wikipedia - Eosin -- Groups of chemical compound used as dyes
Wikipedia - Epeli Nailatikau -- Speaker of the House of Fiji
Wikipedia - Epermenia petrusellus -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Ephemeris time -- Time standard used in astronomical ephemerides
Wikipedia - Epiborkhausenites -- Genus of moths
Wikipedia - EPIC The Irish Emigration Museum -- Museum in Dublin
Wikipedia - Epidural hematoma -- Build-up of blood between the dura mater and skull, usually caused by injury
Wikipedia - Epigonation -- Liturgical vestment used in some Eastern Christian churches
Wikipedia - Epigram Books -- Singaporean publishing house
Wikipedia - Epischura massachusettsensis -- Species of crustacean
Wikipedia - Epithet -- Descriptive term used in place of a formal name
Wikipedia - Equality House -- Rainbow-colored house supporting LGBTQ rights
Wikipedia - Equal protection clause
Wikipedia - Equal (TV series) -- American docuseries
Wikipedia - Equatorial coordinate system -- celestial coordinate system used to specify the positions of celestial objects
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Charles of Bourbon -- Painting by Francesco Liani in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Equestrian Portrait of Maria Amalia of Saxony -- Painting by Francesco Liani in the National Museum of Capodimonte, Naples
Wikipedia - Equestrian statue of Joseph Hooker -- Statue in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Equestrian statuette of Charlemagne -- Bronze depiction at the Louvre Museum
Wikipedia - Equivalent Lands -- Several large tracts of land exchanged between the Massachusetts Bay and Connecticut colonies
Wikipedia - Equivalent rectangular bandwidth -- Measure used in psychoacoustics
Wikipedia - Equivocation -- Misleading use of a term with more than one meaning or sense
Wikipedia - Erasmus Commission -- Commission to investigate claims of misuse of public funds
Wikipedia - Erdemli Yoruk Museum -- Museum in Mersin Province, Turkey
Wikipedia - Ergogenic use of anabolic steroids -- Steroid use
Wikipedia - Erica Park -- Multi-use stadium, in Belhar, Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Erich Klausener
Wikipedia - Eric House -- Canadian actor
Wikipedia - Erichsens GM-CM-%rd -- Museum in Bornholm, Denmark
Wikipedia - Erie County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Erieye -- Airborne Early Warning and Control System used on a variety of aircraft platforms
Wikipedia - Erika Eschebach -- German woman historian and museum director
Wikipedia - Erik Briand Clausen -- Danish resistance member
Wikipedia - Erik Clausen -- Danish actor
Wikipedia - Erin Rafuse -- Canadian sailor
Wikipedia - Ermanno Scervino -- Italian fashion house
Wikipedia - Ernani -- Opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Wikipedia - Ernest DeCouto -- Speaker of the House of Assembly of Bermuda
Wikipedia - Ernest Hemingway House -- House and museum in Key west, Florida
Wikipedia - Ernest, Landgrave of Hesse-Philippsthal -- Member of the House of Hesse and last ruling Landgrave of Hesse-Philippsthal (1846-1925)
Wikipedia - Ernst Buchner (curator) -- German museum administrator and art historian
Wikipedia - Ernst Gluck Bible Museum -- Museum in Latvia
Wikipedia - Ernst Krause (musicologist) -- German musicologist
Wikipedia - Eros and Civilization -- 1955 book by Herbert Marcuse
Wikipedia - Erotic humiliation -- Consensual use of humiliation in a sexual context
Wikipedia - Eroticism -- Quality that causes sexual feelings
Wikipedia - Error-tolerant design -- Design that does not penalize user errors
Wikipedia - Erwin Clausen -- German fighter ace and Knight's Cross recipient
Wikipedia - Eryholme railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Erythrosine -- Derivative of fluorine used as a pink dye
Wikipedia - Escalation clause -- Clause in a contract adjusting costs to external factors
Wikipedia - Escape from Pompeii -- Amusement park ride
Wikipedia - Escape pod -- Capsule or craft used to evacuate base or vehicle in case of emergency
Wikipedia - Escape Theme Park -- Former amusement park in Singapore
Wikipedia - EschenhM-CM-$user Beeke -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Escowbeck -- House in Lancashire, England
Wikipedia - Escudo -- Currency historically used in Portugal and its colonies
Wikipedia - Esholt railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Eskimo -- Is a derogatory Name used to describe Indigenous people from the circumpolar region
Wikipedia - Espe (manor house) -- Former manor house at Tappernose, Denmark
Wikipedia - Espiritismo -- Term used in Latin America and the Caribbean
Wikipedia - Esri International User Conference -- Geographic information system technology event
Wikipedia - Essen-Frohnhausen station -- Railway station in Essen, Germany
Wikipedia - Essen-Holthausen station -- Rhine-Ruhr S-Bahn station
Wikipedia - Essential tremor -- Movement disorder that causes involuntary tremors
Wikipedia - Essex 3 -- Disused English Rugby Union league
Wikipedia - Essjay controversy -- Controversy over a Wikipedia user and Wikia employee's identity
Wikipedia - Estacion Cultural Lucinda Larrosa Museum -- Museum in Rio Negro Province, Argentina
Wikipedia - Estadio Ciudad de Puertollano -- Multi-use stadium in Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Colombino -- Multi-use stadium in Huelva, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Correcaminos -- Multi-use stadium in El Salvador
Wikipedia - Estadio Francisco Artes Carrasco -- Multi-use stadium in Lorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Francisco Montaner -- Multi-use stadium in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Estadio Jesus Martinez "Palillo" -- Multi-use stadium in the Magdalena Mixhuca Sports City in Mexico City
Wikipedia - Estadio Luis Rodriguez Olmo -- Multi-use stadium in Arecibo, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Estadio Manuel Mesones Muro -- Multi-use stadium in Bagua, Peru
Wikipedia - Estadio Municipal Pedro Roman Melendez -- Multi-use stadium in Manati, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Estadio Municipal Pozoblanco -- Multi-use stadium in Pozoblanco, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Municipal Santo Domingo -- Multi-use stadium in El Ejido, Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Roman Suarez Puerta -- Multi-use stadium in Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Salto del Caballo -- Multi-use stadium in Spain
Wikipedia - Estadio Tecnologico de Oaxaca -- Multi-use stadium in Oaxaca City, Oaxaca, Mexico
Wikipedia - Estadio Universitario Alberto "Chivo" Cordoba -- Multi-use stadium in Toluca, Mexico
Wikipedia - Estancia -- Large, private plot of land used for farming or cattle-raising
Wikipedia - Estense Lapidary Museum -- Italian archaeology museum
Wikipedia - Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art -- museum in London
Wikipedia - Etching (microfabrication) -- Technique in microfabrication used to remove material and create structures
Wikipedia - Eternal September -- Usenet slang for a period beginning in September 1993
Wikipedia - Ethash -- Proof-of-work function used in Ethereum
Wikipedia - Ethel Felder Webster House -- Historic Building
Wikipedia - Ethiopian calendar -- Principal calendar used in Ethiopia and Eritrea
Wikipedia - Ethiopian chant -- A liturgical chant used by Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church
Wikipedia - Ethiopian white-footed mouse -- Species of rodent
Wikipedia - Ethnic flag -- Flag used to represent an ethnicity
Wikipedia - Ethnobotany -- Science of the study of plants in relation to their use by humans
Wikipedia - Ethnographic Museum, Zagreb -- Croatian museum
Wikipedia - Ethnomuseology
Wikipedia - Ethosuximide -- Medication used to treat absence seizures
Wikipedia - Eth -- Letter of the Latin alphabet; used in Icelandic, Faroese, and Old English
Wikipedia - Etravirine -- Also called Intelence is a drug used for the treatment of HIV
Wikipedia - Etruria Industrial Museum -- museum in Etruria, Staffordshire, England
Wikipedia - Etruscan alphabet -- The alphabet used by the Etruscans of central and northern Italy
Wikipedia - Etsy -- E-commerce website focused on handmade or vintage items
Wikipedia - Etude House -- South Korean cosmetics brand
Wikipedia - Etude (Stockhausen)
Wikipedia - Eugene Delecluse -- French painter
Wikipedia - Eukaryotic initiation factor 4F -- Multiprotein complex used in gene expression
Wikipedia - Euphemism -- Innocuous word or expression used in place of one that may be found offensive
Wikipedia - EUR.1 movement certificate -- Form used in international commodity traffic
Wikipedia - Eureka (word) -- Interjection used to celebrate a discovery or invention; a transliteration of a word attributed to Archimedes
Wikipedia - EuroAirport Basel Mulhouse Freiburg -- Airport in France near the Swiss and German borders
Wikipedia - Euro English -- Set of varieties of English used in Continental Europe
Wikipedia - Europa Editions UK -- British publishing house
Wikipedia - European Museum Forum -- Representative body
Wikipedia - Eusebe Jaojoby -- Composer and singer from Madagascar
Wikipedia - Eusebia Palomino Yenes
Wikipedia - Eusebio Bertrand -- Spanish sailor
Wikipedia - Eusebio Blasco -- Spanish journalist, poet and playwright
Wikipedia - Eusebio Cuerno de la Cantolla -- Spanish journalist and businessman
Wikipedia - Eusebio de Queiros Law -- Law in Imperial Brazil
Wikipedia - Eusebio Figueroa Oreamuno -- Costa Rican politician
Wikipedia - Eusebio Grados -- Peruvian musician
Wikipedia - Eusebio Haliti -- Italian athlete
Wikipedia - Eusebio Kino -- Italian Jesuit missionary
Wikipedia - Eusebio Leal -- Cuban historian
Wikipedia - Eusebio Oehl -- Italian histologist and physiologist
Wikipedia - Eusebio Prieto y Ruiz -- Costa Rican politician
Wikipedia - Eusebio Ramos Morales -- Puerto Rican bishop
Wikipedia - Eusebio Sanz Asensio -- Spanish military personnel
Wikipedia - Eusebio Unzue -- Spanish cycling team manager
Wikipedia - Eusebius (bishop of Milan)
Wikipedia - Eusebius J. Beltran -- American prelate
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Caesarea
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Caesaria
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Dorylaeum
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Esztergom -- 13th-century Hungarian hermit and religious founder
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Myndus
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Nicomedia
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Rome
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Samosata -- 4th century Christian martyr
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Thessalonica
Wikipedia - Eusebius of Vercelli
Wikipedia - Eusebius (praepositus sacri cubiculi) -- Politician and eunuch
Wikipedia - Eusebius -- 2nd/3rd century Greek historian of Christianity, exegete and Christian polemicist
Wikipedia - Euseboides -- Genus of beetles
Wikipedia - Eusebonas
Wikipedia - Euseius alangii -- Species of arachnid
Wikipedia - Euselates -- Genus of beetles
Wikipedia - Eusemocosma pruinosa -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - Eusene -- Town in ancient Pontus
Wikipedia - Eustace I, Count of Boulogne -- Nobleman, founder of the House of Boulogne
Wikipedia - Evangelical Lutheran Worship -- 2006 Lutheran hymnal used by the ELCA
Wikipedia - Evans Brothers Ltd -- British publishing house
Wikipedia - Evelyn Denison, 1st Viscount Ossington -- English Speaker of the House of Commons
Wikipedia - Event Communications -- Museum exhibition design firm
Wikipedia - Eventual consistency -- Consistency model used in distributed computing to achieve high availability
Wikipedia - Everest House (Kolkata)
Wikipedia - Everett, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Every House has its Man -- 1949 film
Wikipedia - Everything Changed... -- 2019 EP by Social House
Wikipedia - Evidence-based education -- Use of empirical evidence to make policy and practice decisions in education
Wikipedia - Evil Geniuses: The Unmaking of America -- 2020 non-fiction book by Kurt Andersen
Wikipedia - Evil Geniuses -- American esports organization based in Seattle, Washington
Wikipedia - Evolutionary approaches to depression -- Attempts by evolutionary psychologists to use the theory of evolution to shed light on the problem of mood disorders
Wikipedia - Evolutionary invasion analysis -- Mathematical modeling techniques that use differential equations to study the long-term evolution of traits in asexually reproducing populations
Wikipedia - Evolutionary landscape -- A metaphor used to visualize the processes of evolution
Wikipedia - Evolutionary pressure -- Any cause that reduces reproductive success in a proportion of a population
Wikipedia - Evolution of photosynthesis -- The origin and subsequent evolution of the process by which light energy is used to synthesize sugars
Wikipedia - Evolution of viruses -- Evolution of viruses
Wikipedia - Ewa Larysa Krause -- Polish judoka
Wikipedia - Exbury House -- Country house in Exbury, Hampshire, England
Wikipedia - Excessive Bail Clause -- clause of the Eighth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, prohibiting bail prices that are unduly high
Wikipedia - Excommunication -- Censure used to deprive, suspend, or limit membership in a religious community
Wikipedia - Excuse 17 -- Punk rock band
Wikipedia - Excuse Me (1915 film) -- 1915 film by Henry W. Savage
Wikipedia - Excuse Me (1925 film) -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Excuse Me Maadam -- Indian comedy TV series
Wikipedia - Excuse Me Mr. -- 1996 single by No Doubt
Wikipedia - Excuse My Dust (1920 film) -- 1920 film by Sam Wood
Wikipedia - Excuses for Bad Behavior -- album by Sandra Bernhard
Wikipedia - Excuse -- defense to criminal charges that is distinct from an exculpation
Wikipedia - Executive Residence -- Central building of the White House complex
Wikipedia - Exfoliating granite -- Granite skin peeling like an onion (desquamation) because of weathering
Wikipedia - Existential clause
Wikipedia - Exon skipping -- Form of RNA splicing used to cause cells to M-bM-^@M-^\skipM-bM-^@M-^] over faulty sections of genetic code
Wikipedia - Exorcism in the Catholic Church -- The use of exorcism in the Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Experimental drug -- Medicinal product not yet approved for routine use
Wikipedia - Experimental evolution -- Use of laboratory and field experiments to explore evolutionary dynamics
Wikipedia - Experimental use permit -- Pesticide permit
Wikipedia - Explanation -- Set of statements constructed to describe a set of facts which clarifies causes
Wikipedia - Exploratorium -- Museum in San Francisco
Wikipedia - Explosive rat -- Weapon developed by the British Special Operations Executive in World War II for use against Germany
Wikipedia - Exposure (heights) -- Climbing and hiking term; sections of a hiking path or climbing route are described as "exposed" if there is a high risk of injury in the event of a fall because of the steepness of the terrain
Wikipedia - Exsanguination -- Process of blood loss, to a degree sufficient to cause death
Wikipedia - Extended Backus-Naur form -- Family of metasyntax notations, any of which can be used to express a context-free grammar
Wikipedia - Extensible User Interface Protocol
Wikipedia - Exterior algebra -- Algebraic construction used in multilinear algebra and geometry
Wikipedia - External cause -- Associating a specific object or acute process that was caused by something outside the body
Wikipedia - External reference pricing -- Use of selected medication prices as references to compare prices internationally and guide policies
Wikipedia - Extraterrestrial sample curation -- The use and preservation of extraterrestrial samples
Wikipedia - Extreme users -- Design concept
Wikipedia - Extrusion -- Process used to create objects of a fixed cross-sectional profile
Wikipedia - Eydie Gorme -- American pop singer, chanteuse, comic actress
Wikipedia - Eyespot (mimicry) -- Eye-like marking used for mimicry or distraction
Wikipedia - Eyrecourt Castle -- 17th-century country house in Galway, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ezetimibe -- Medication used to treat high cholesterol
Wikipedia - Faber and Faber -- British publishing house
Wikipedia - Faberge Museum in Saint Petersburg -- Museum in Saint Petersburg
Wikipedia - Faberge Museum -- Museum in Baden-Baden
Wikipedia - Faberge workmaster -- Independent craftsmen of the House of Faberge
Wikipedia - Faber House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Faber-Ward House -- House in Charleston, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen -- 19th-century Russian Navy officer, cartographer, and explorer
Wikipedia - Fabien NiederhM-CM-$user -- Swiss hurdler
Wikipedia - Fabrika automobila Priboj -- Serbian automotive manufacturer of military vehicles, buses and trucks
Wikipedia - Face masks during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States -- Use of face coverings during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
Wikipedia - Face shield -- Device used to protect the wearer's face from hazards
Wikipedia - Fact (data warehouse)
Wikipedia - Factors of production -- ResourcesM-BM- used in the production process
Wikipedia - Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser
Wikipedia - Fahrenheit -- Temperature scale used in the U.S.
Wikipedia - Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy
Wikipedia - Failure mode and effects analysis -- Systematic technique for identification of potential failure modes in a system and their causes and effects
Wikipedia - Fairfield County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Fair Field -- Large private house in the Hamptons, Long Island, in New York State
Wikipedia - Fairground organ -- Pipe organ designed for use in a commercial public fairground setting
Wikipedia - Fairport Harbor West Breakwater Light -- Lighthouse in Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Fair Use
Wikipedia - Fair use
Wikipedia - Faisal bin Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud -- Emir of Nejd and Head of the House of Saud (1785-1865) (r.1834-1838 and 1843-1865)
Wikipedia - Faith > The Muse
Wikipedia - Falcondale House -- Grade II listed building in Ceredigion, Wales, UK
Wikipedia - Falconer's formula -- Mathematical formula used to calculate heritability in twin studies
Wikipedia - Falcon's Fury -- Drop tower attraction at Busch Gardens Tampa amusement park
Wikipedia - Fallacy of the single cause -- Assumption of a single cause where multiple factors may be necessary
Wikipedia - Fall at Your Feet -- 1991 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Falling (accident) -- Cause of injury or death
Wikipedia - Fallingwater -- House designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright in Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Fallowfield railway station -- Disused railway station in Manchester, England
Wikipedia - Fall protection -- Use of controls to prevent falling and to stop falls safely if they happen
Wikipedia - Falls Fire Barn Museum -- United States historic place in North Attleborough, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - False allegation of child sexual abuse
Wikipedia - Falstaff (opera) -- opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Wikipedia - Famille Perrin -- Owners of ChM-CM-"teau de Beaucastel, a Rhone winery in Orange, Vaucluse, France
Wikipedia - Family Dining Room -- Dining room located on the State Floor of the White House
Wikipedia - Family Gathering in the House of Prellstein -- 1927 film
Wikipedia - Family planning -- Planning of when to have children, and the use of birth control and other techniques to implement such plans
Wikipedia - Fan death -- South Korean misconception relating to the use of electric fans
Wikipedia - Fangfoss railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - FanHouse
Wikipedia - Fanny Stenhouse -- American Mormon pioneer
Wikipedia - Fantasy Island (U.S. amusement park) -- Amusement Park in Grand Island, New York
Wikipedia - Fantasy of Flight -- Aviation museum in Polk City, Florida, USA
Wikipedia - Faraday cage -- Enclosure of conductive mesh used to block electric fields
Wikipedia - Faraglioni -- Italian term used to refer to rock stacks
Wikipedia - Farfield Friends Meeting House -- Former Quaker meeting house in Addingham, England
Wikipedia - Farhad Ahmed Dockrat -- South African cleric and businessman accused of terrorist links
Wikipedia - Farmhouse in Provence -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farmhouses Among Trees -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farmhouses in Loosduinen near The Hague at Twilight -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Farmhouses
Wikipedia - Farol da Lapa -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Farol da Ribeira Brava -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Farol de D. Luis -- Lighthouse in Cape Verde
Wikipedia - Faro Los Morrillos de Cabo Rojo -- Lighthouse in Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Farragut Houses -- Public housing development in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Farrer hypothesis -- Solution to the synoptic problem that Mark was written first, that Matthew used Mark, and that Luke used Mark and Matthew
Wikipedia - Farringford House
Wikipedia - Far-sightedness -- Eye condition in which light is focused behind instead of on the retina
Wikipedia - FarumgM-CM-%rd -- House om Farum, Denmark
Wikipedia - Fascist symbolism -- Use of certain images and symbols which are designed to represent aspects of fascism
Wikipedia - Fashion accessory -- Item used to contribute to the wearer's outfit
Wikipedia - Fashion History Museum -- Museum in Ontario chronicling the history of fashion
Wikipedia - Fashion House -- Television series
Wikipedia - FAS Sanos -- North Macedonian company manufacturing buses and coaches
Wikipedia - Fasten (company) -- American vehicle for hire company based in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Fastrac (rocket engine) -- Pump-fed liquid rocket engine developed by NASA for use on small inexpensive, expendable rockets
Wikipedia - Fast user switching
Wikipedia - Fatal exception error -- Error that causes a program to abort
Wikipedia - Father of the House (New Zealand) -- New Zealand political title
Wikipedia - Father of the House (United Kingdom) -- Honorary position in the British parliament
Wikipedia - Father of the House -- Longest-serving continuous member of parliament
Wikipedia - Fatigue (material) -- Weakening of a material caused by varying applied loads
Wikipedia - Fatulla Huseynov -- Azerbaijani police officer
Wikipedia - Fat Wreck Chords -- San Francisco, California-based independent record label, focused on punk rock
Wikipedia - Fault tree analysis -- Failure analysis system used in safety engineering and reliability engineering
Wikipedia - Fause Foodrage -- Traditional song
Wikipedia - Favaritx Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Favipiravir -- Experimental antiviral drug with potential activity against RNA viruses
Wikipedia - Fayette County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Fayette County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - FBI Index -- System used to track American citizens and other people
Wikipedia - Fearmongering -- Deliberate use of fear-based tactics
Wikipedia - Febreze -- Brand of household odor eliminators manufactured by Procter & Gamble
Wikipedia - Federal Building, United States Post Office and Courthouse (Hilo, Hawaii) -- Historic Place in Hawaii County, Hawaii
Wikipedia - Federal-State Relations Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Fedor Gusev -- Soviet diplomat
Wikipedia - Feedback linearization -- Approach used in controlling nonlinear systems
Wikipedia - Feeling thermometer -- Visual analog scale used in survey research
Wikipedia - Feet sea water -- Unit of pressure conventionally used in underwater diving
Wikipedia - F.E. Haley Double House -- Historic building in Des Moines, Iowa, United States
Wikipedia - Feimster House -- Historic house of Iredell County, North Carolina, built near 1800 but since demolished
Wikipedia - Felicific calculus -- Algorithm measuring the amount of pleasure that a specific action is likely to cause
Wikipedia - Feline hyperesthesia syndrome -- Collection of OCD or epilepsy-like symptoms in housecats
Wikipedia - Felix Buser -- Swiss sprint canoer
Wikipedia - Feller buncher -- Type of harvester used in logging
Wikipedia - Female urinal -- A urinal designed to be used by women and girls
Wikipedia - Femicide -- Intentional killing or other violent deaths of women or girls because of their gender
Wikipedia - Femi Gbajabiamila -- Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Feminine hygiene -- Personal care products used by women for menstruation, vaginal discharge etc.
Wikipedia - Feminist Alliance Against Rape -- 1970s feminist organization to address the causes of rape
Wikipedia - Feminist Press -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Fen Causeway, Cambridge -- A link road in United Kingdom.
Wikipedia - Fence Houses -- Village in Tyne and Wear, England
Wikipedia - Fencing rules -- Set of protocols and behaviors used in competititve fencing
Wikipedia - Fendi -- Italian enterprise and fashion house
Wikipedia - Fenton House -- 17th-century house with walled garden
Wikipedia - Fenton Museum -- Museum in Fenton, Michigan
Wikipedia - Fenwick Island Light -- Lighthouse in Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Budicki Automobile Museum -- Museum in Zagreb, Croatia
Wikipedia - Ferdinando Giuseppe Antonelli
Wikipedia - Ferenc Hopp Museum of Asiatic Arts -- Museum
Wikipedia - Fermented bean curd -- A Chinese condiment consisting of a form of processed, preserved tofu used in East Asian cuisine
Wikipedia - Ferns Report -- Report in the Irish government inquiry into clerical sexual abuse allegations
Wikipedia - Ferris wheel -- Amusement ride
Wikipedia - Ferrule -- A ring used for fastening or joining
Wikipedia - Fetal warfarin syndrome -- Congenital disorder caused by maternal warfarin administration
Wikipedia - Fiat Croma -- The name used for two different large family cars produced by Italian automaker Fiat
Wikipedia - Fiber-optic cable -- Cable assembly containing one or more optical fibers that are used to carry light
Wikipedia - Fibromyalgia -- Chronic disorder of unknown cause characterized by pain, stiffness, and widespread tenderness in muscles
Wikipedia - Fictionalism -- Pretending to treat something as literally true (a "useful fiction")
Wikipedia - Fidelipac -- Magnetic tape sound recording format used in broadcasting
Wikipedia - Field coil -- Electromagnet used to generate a magnetic field in an electro-magnetic machine
Wikipedia - Field recording -- Term used for an audio recording produced outside a recording studio
Wikipedia - Figure-eight knot -- Type of stopper knot used in sailing and climbing
Wikipedia - Figure of the Earth -- Size and shape used to model the Earth for geodesy
Wikipedia - Filariasis -- Parasitic disease caused by a family of nematode worms
Wikipedia - File hosting service -- Internet hosting service for user files
Wikipedia - Filename -- Text string used to uniquely identify a computer file
Wikipedia - File signature -- Data used to identify or verify the content of a file
Wikipedia - Filesystem in Userspace
Wikipedia - Filesystem in userspace
Wikipedia - Filgrastim -- Medication used to treat low blood neutrophils
Wikipedia - Filioque clause
Wikipedia - Filled pause
Wikipedia - Fillet knife -- flexible knife used in the preparation of filets
Wikipedia - Filling carousel -- Device for filling liquefied petroleum gas cylinders
Wikipedia - Film can -- Container used to enclose film stock
Wikipedia - Film stock -- Medium used for recording motion pictures
Wikipedia - Filter bubble -- Mind state when a website algorithm guesses what information a user would like to see
Wikipedia - Filters in topology -- Use of filters to describe and characterize all basic topological notions and results.
Wikipedia - Filth: The Mary Whitehouse Story -- 2008 British television film
Wikipedia - Final cause
Wikipedia - Final Solution (2001 film) -- 2001 film by Cristobal Krusen
Wikipedia - Finance Committee (House of Commons) -- Select Committee of the British Parliament
Wikipedia - Financial asset -- Intangible asset that derives value because of a contractual claim
Wikipedia - Financial capital -- economic resources used by entrepreneurs and businesses to buy what they need to make their products or provide their services
Wikipedia - Financial technology -- Subset of technologies used in finance
Wikipedia - Fingal Head Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Fingering (sexual act) -- The use of fingers to sexually stimulate
Wikipedia - Fingerprint scanner -- Electronic device used to capture a digital image of the fingerprint pattern
Wikipedia - Finger protocol -- Simple network protocols for the exchange of human-oriented status and user information
Wikipedia - Finite verb -- Verb form that can complete an independent clause by itself
Wikipedia - Finkenhof House -- House in South Tyrol
Wikipedia - Finnish submarine Vesikko -- Submarine museum ship
Wikipedia - Finnmark University College -- University college with three campuses throughout Finnmark, Norway
Wikipedia - Fios de ovos -- Portuguese egg confection used in preparing desserts
Wikipedia - Fire Ball -- Amusement ride manufactured by Larson International
Wikipedia - Fire clay -- Range of refractory clays used in the manufacture of ceramics
Wikipedia - Fire-control system -- Device which assists use of a weapon by location, tracking, and direction of fire at a target
Wikipedia - Fire Fighters Museum (Winnipeg, Manitoba) -- Civic museum in Manitoba, Canada
Wikipedia - Firefox Focus -- free and open-source privacy-focused web browser by Mozilla
Wikipedia - Fire hose -- Flexible tube used for delivering water or foam at high pressure, to fight fires
Wikipedia - Firehouse (1987 film) -- 1987 film directed by John Christian Ingvordsen
Wikipedia - Firehouse, Engine Company 31 -- Fire station in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Firehouse, Engine Company 33 and Ladder Company 9 -- Fire station in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Firehouse, Hook & Ladder Company 8 -- Fire station in New York City, "Ghostbusters" HQ
Wikipedia - Firehouse Site -- Archaeological site in Indiana
Wikipedia - Firehouse Tales -- Television series
Wikipedia - Fire in the Opera House -- 1930 film
Wikipedia - Fire lookout tower -- Building to house a person who watches for wildfires
Wikipedia - Fire Museum of Texas -- Museum in Texas
Wikipedia - Fire safety -- Practices intended to reduce the destruction caused by fire
Wikipedia - Firestone-Apsley Rubber Company -- defunct company and existing factory building in Hudson, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Firewood -- wood used for fires
Wikipedia - Fir Hill Manor -- Manor house in Cornwall, England
Wikipedia - Firhouse -- Outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - First Aid for Dora -- 1923 short story by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - First aid kit -- Collection of supplies and equipment that is used to give medical treatment
Wikipedia - First Americans Museum -- Museum in Oklahoma City
Wikipedia - First Cause
Wikipedia - First cause
Wikipedia - First Congregational Church of Hyde Park -- church in Boston, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - First day of issue -- Postage stamp on a cover, postal card or stamped envelope franked on the first day the issue is authorized for use
Wikipedia - First Houses -- Public housing development in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - First Jordan Hydro-Electric Power House -- Was an electric power plant in Jordan
Wikipedia - First Lady of Afghanistan -- Ceremonial position for the spouse of the Afghan head of state
Wikipedia - First Lady of Sri Lanka -- spouse of the president of Sri Lank
Wikipedia - First Lady of the United States -- Hostess of the White House, usually the wife of the president of the United States
Wikipedia - First light (astronomy) -- term in astronomy for the first time a telescope is used to look at the Universe
Wikipedia - First Men in the Moon (1964 film) -- 1964 film by Nathan H. Juran, Ray Harryhausen
Wikipedia - First Nations -- Term used for Indigenous peoples in Canada
Wikipedia - First-order logic -- Collection of formal systems used in mathematics, philosophy, linguistics, and computer science
Wikipedia - First Unitarian Society in Newton -- Historic church in Newton, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Firth -- Scottish word used for various coastal inlets and straits
Wikipedia - Fischhausen
Wikipedia - Fishbait Miller -- Doorkeeper of the U.S. House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Fisher House Foundation -- Network of comfort homes where military and veteransM-bM-^@M-^Y families can stay at no cost while a loved one is receiving treatment
Wikipedia - Fish-House, Peterhead -- Building in Scotland
Wikipedia - Fish House Punch -- Rum-based cocktail
Wikipedia - Fishing bait -- Substance or device used to attract fish
Wikipedia - Fishing gear and methods used in Uganda -- Caught with plank canoes and fiberglass boats
Wikipedia - Fishing tackle -- Equipment used for fishing
Wikipedia - Fishing vessel -- Boat or ship used to catch fish on a body of water
Wikipedia - Fishplate -- Metal part used to join two rails together
Wikipedia - Fiskdale, Massachusetts -- CDP in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Fisogni Museum -- Museum in Italy
Wikipedia - Fitzwilliam Museum
Wikipedia - Five College Consortium -- Group of colleges in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Five College Museums/Historic Deerfield -- Museum consortium in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Five Houses of Chan
Wikipedia - Five Kings House -- Building in London
Wikipedia - Five Mile House railway station -- Former railway station in Lincolnshire, England
Wikipedia - Fixed-wing aircraft -- Heavier-than-air aircraft with fixed wings generating aerodynamic lift in the airflow caused by forward airspeed
Wikipedia - Flagermusen -- 1966 film
Wikipedia - Flag House Courts -- Former public housing project located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Wikipedia - Flaghouse Homes -- Former public housing project located in Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Wikipedia - Flag of Antarctica -- Flags used to represent Antarctica, Earth's southernmost continent
Wikipedia - Flag of Cape Town -- Flag used by the City of Cape Town municipality
Wikipedia - Flag of Great Britain -- Flag of the kingdom of England and Scotland, in use until 1801 and the creation of the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Flag of Massachusetts -- Flag
Wikipedia - Flag of the Hispanic People -- Sometimes used to represent the Hispanic people
Wikipedia - Flag of the People's Liberation Army -- Flag used by the People's Liberation Army, China
Wikipedia - Flags at the White House -- Flags displayed at the White House
Wikipedia - Flagship -- Vessel used by the commanding officer of a group of naval ships
Wikipedia - Flail -- Agricultural tool used for threshing
Wikipedia - FlaM-CM-^_hofstraM-CM-^_e -- Street in Oberhausen, Germany
Wikipedia - Flame ionization detector -- Type of gas detector used in gas chromatography
Wikipedia - Flamenco guitar -- Acoustic guitar used in Flamenco music
Wikipedia - Flameout -- Run-down of a jet engine caused by the extinction of the flame in the combustion chamber
Wikipedia - Flamingo Park Frock Salon -- Australian fashion house
Wikipedia - Flannan Isles Lighthouse -- Lighthouse off the northwest coast of Scotland
Wikipedia - Flash cartridge -- Cartridge containing flash memory developed for use in video game consoles
Wikipedia - Flash welding -- Type of resistance welding that does not use any filler metals
Wikipedia - Flat spline -- A long flexible batten used to produce a fair curve through a set of points
Wikipedia - Flats Sequencing System -- Mail sorting system used by the US Postal Service
Wikipedia - Flaviviridae -- Family of viruses
Wikipedia - Flavivirus -- Genus of viruses
Wikipedia - Flaxen gene -- Flaxen gene is a genetic trait that causes a lighter mane and tail than body color of chestnut horses.
Wikipedia - Flaxton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Flax -- Species of plant used as a food and fibre crop
Wikipedia - Flecainide -- Antiarrhythmic medication used to prevent and treat tachyarrhythmias
Wikipedia - FleetBoston Financial -- Bank in Boston, Massachusetts, US which was acquired by Bank of America
Wikipedia - Fleet Science Center -- Science museum and planetarium in San Diego, United States
Wikipedia - Flemish Art Collection -- Partnership between three art historical museums in Flanders
Wikipedia - Fletcher's Ice Island -- A thick, tabular iceberg discovered by U.S. Air Force Colonel Joseph O. Fletcher, used as a manned scientific station in the Arctic for several years
Wikipedia - Flexiviridae -- Former family of RNA plant viruses
Wikipedia - Flick (time) -- Unit of time used in audio/video timing cacluations
Wikipedia - Flight traffic mapping -- Use of animation to depict flight traffic
Wikipedia - Flirty Fishing -- Religious prostitution method formerly used by the Children of God/Family International
Wikipedia - Flo Ankah -- French Voice Chanteuse/Actress Floanne in NYC
Wikipedia - Flo (app) -- Menstruation and menopause tracking app
Wikipedia - Floating production storage and offloading -- Floating vessel used by offshore oil/gas industry for hydrocarbon production/processing/storage
Wikipedia - Float (oceanographic instrument platform) -- An oceanographic instrument platform used for making subsurface measurements in the ocean
Wikipedia - Float (woodworking) -- Metal file used for making wooden hand planes
Wikipedia - Flood control -- Methods used to reduce or prevent the detrimental effects of flood waters
Wikipedia - Floorcloth -- Cloth used for damp-cleaning floors
Wikipedia - Flophouse -- Place with cheap lodging
Wikipedia - Florence, Massachusetts -- Village in Northampton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Florida House of Representatives -- Lower house of the Florida Legislature
Wikipedia - Florida Legislative Investigation Committee -- Anti-Communist committee that focused on homosexuals
Wikipedia - Florida Museum of Natural History -- Natural history museum in Florida, United States
Wikipedia - Florida's 3rd congressional district -- U.S. House district in northern Florida
Wikipedia - Florida Senate -- Upper house of the Florida Legislature
Wikipedia - Florida State College at Jacksonville -- College with 4 campuses in Duval County, Florida
Wikipedia - Floride Calhoun -- Spouse of John C. Calhoun
Wikipedia - Flower A. Newhouse
Wikipedia - Flow tracer -- Any fluid property used to track flow
Wikipedia - Fluid Science Laboratory -- Multi-user facility for fluid physics experiment in the Columbus module of ISS
Wikipedia - Flying ointment -- Hallucinogenic salve used in the practice of witchcraft
Wikipedia - Flying Scooters -- Amusement ride
Wikipedia - Flying toilet -- A plastic bag that is used as a simple toilet substitute
Wikipedia - Focal and diffuse brain injury
Wikipedia - Focal infection theory -- Historical concept that many chronic diseases are caused by focal infections
Wikipedia - FOCAL (programming language) -- Programming language used on DEC PDP-series machines
Wikipedia - Focused crawler
Wikipedia - Focused ion beam
Wikipedia - Focus mitt -- Padded target fixed to a glove, used in training combat athletes
Wikipedia - Fodder -- Agricultural foodstuff used to feed domesticated animals
Wikipedia - Fogging (insect control) -- Technique used for killing insects
Wikipedia - Foldable smartphone -- Smartphone form factors that use flexible displays
Wikipedia - Folksamhuset -- High-rise building in Stockholm, Sweden
Wikipedia - Folsom v. Marsh -- First "fair use" copyright case in the U.S.
Wikipedia - Fond -- Flavorful cooking liquid used in further cooking
Wikipedia - Fonseca Guimaraens -- Port wine house (producer/company)
Wikipedia - Font hinting -- Use of mathematical instructions to adjust the display of a font so it lines up with a rasterized grid
Wikipedia - Fontjoncouse -- Commune in Occitanie, France
Wikipedia - Foodborne illness -- Illness resulting from food that is spoiled or contaminated by pathogenic bacteria, viruses, parasites, or toxins
Wikipedia - Food Safety News -- Website focused on food safety
Wikipedia - Food security during the COVID-19 pandemic -- Famines related to the pandemic caused by coronavirus disease 2019.
Wikipedia - Foodwatch -- European advocacy group that focuses on protecting consumer rights
Wikipedia - Footmouse
Wikipedia - Foot-pound-second system -- Physical system of measurement that uses the foot, pound, and second as base units
Wikipedia - Forced labour under German rule during World War II -- use of unfree labour in Nazi Germany and throughout German-occupied Europe during the Second World War
Wikipedia - Forceps -- A handheld, hinged instrument used for grasping and holding objects
Wikipedia - Foreign Affairs Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the British House of Commons
Wikipedia - Foreign and intergovernmental relations of Puerto Rico -- Governed by the Commerce and Territorial Clause of the Constitution of the United States
Wikipedia - Foreign Emoluments Clause -- Provision in Article I citing Powers of Congress of the United States Constitution prohibiting Congress in the federal government from granting titles of nobility and restricts federal officials from receiving foreign emoluments
Wikipedia - Foreign Languages Publishing House (Soviet Union) -- Soviet publisher
Wikipedia - Foremost power -- Term used by political scientists and historians
Wikipedia - Forensic arts -- Art used in law enforcement or legal proceedings
Wikipedia - Forensic geophysics -- Use of geophysics tools in forensic science
Wikipedia - Forest Houses -- Public housing development in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale) -- American Cemetery and museum in California
Wikipedia - Forge Valley railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Forlaget Oktober -- Norwegian publishing house
Wikipedia - ForlagiM-CM-0 -- Icelandic publishing house
Wikipedia - Formal cause
Wikipedia - Formaldehyde releaser -- Chemical compound used as a preservative that slowly releases formaldehyde.
Wikipedia - Formaldehyde -- Widely used toxic organic compound
Wikipedia - Format B -- German tech house duo
Wikipedia - Formentor Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Mallorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Formerly Used Defense Sites -- Abandoned defense properties
Wikipedia - Formulario mathematico -- Book by Giuseppe Peano
Wikipedia - Forni della Signoria -- Bakehouse in Malta
Wikipedia - Foro Penal -- Venezuelan NGO focused on human rights
Wikipedia - Fort Amherst Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in St. John's, Canada
Wikipedia - Fort Beausejour -- French-built fort in Acadia now a park
Wikipedia - Fort Calgary -- Fort, historical site and museum in Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Wikipedia - Fort Denison Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Fort Devens -- inactive U.S. military installation in Middlesex and Worcester counties, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Fort Discovery -- Former children's science museum in Augusta, Georgia, USA
Wikipedia - Fort du Scex -- Military museum in Switzerland
Wikipedia - Fort George Amusement Park -- Former amusement park in New York City
Wikipedia - For the Cause (film) -- 2000 American science-fiction fantasy film by David Douglas
Wikipedia - For the Cause of the South (1912 film) -- 1912 film
Wikipedia - For the Good of the Cause -- Book by Aleksandr Solzjenitsyn
Wikipedia - Fort Napoleon des Saintes -- Museum and former fort in Guadeloupe
Wikipedia - Fort of Cavalo Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Fort of King Luis I -- 19th Century fort in Lisbon, Portugal now used as a prison
Wikipedia - Fort of Sao Miguel Arcanjo -- 16th-century fort and current museum in western Portugal
Wikipedia - Forton Hall -- 17th-century house in Forton, Staffordshire
Wikipedia - Fort Prinzenstein -- Danish fort in Keta, Ghana, built in 1784 and used in the slave trade
Wikipedia - Fortress House -- Former UK government building
Wikipedia - Fort Standish (Plymouth, Massachusetts) -- Fort in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Fort William Lighthouse -- Building in Ghana
Wikipedia - Fossil word -- Broadly obsolete words that remain in idiomatic use
Wikipedia - Foteviken Museum -- Archaeological open-air museum in Vellinge Municipality, SkM-CM-%ne County, Sweden
Wikipedia - Four-banded sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Four causes
Wikipedia - Four (Frankfurt) -- Mixed-use skyscraper project in Frankfurt, Germany
Wikipedia - Four Seasons in One Day -- 1992 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Four Seasons Place Kuala Lumpur -- Hotel and mixed-use complex
Wikipedia - Four-striped grass mouse -- Southern African species of mammals belonging to the mouse and rat family of rodents
Wikipedia - Fourth normal form -- Normal form used in database normalization
Wikipedia - Fowler Museum at UCLA -- American art museum in California
Wikipedia - Fox Fuse -- US music company
Wikipedia - Fragment-based lead discovery -- Method used in drug discovery
Wikipedia - Frame check sequence -- Error-detecting code used in communications protocols
Wikipedia - Frame line -- Unused space between two film frames
Wikipedia - Framingham, Massachusetts -- City in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Frances Follin Jones -- American classicist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Frances Stackhouse Acton -- British botanist, archaeologist and artist (1794-1881)
Wikipedia - Franchising -- Practice of the right to use a firm's business model and brand for a prescribed period of time
Wikipedia - Francis Carr (Ohio politician) -- Member of the Ohio House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Francisco Urena -- Massachusetts Secretary of Veterans' Affairs
Wikipedia - Francisco Villa Museum -- Museum focused on Mexican revolutionary "Pancho" Villa
Wikipedia - Francis I, Holy Roman Emperor -- 18th century Holy Roman Emperor from the Habsburg-Lorraine house
Wikipedia - Francis in the Haunted House -- 1956 film by Charles Lamont
Wikipedia - Francis I of France -- King of France of the House of Valois-AngoulM-CM-*me (1494-1547) (r. 1515-1547)
Wikipedia - Francis Kruse -- German politician
Wikipedia - Francis Sargent -- Governor of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Frank and Dorothy Ward House -- Residence in Battle Creek, Michigan
Wikipedia - Frank Brookhouser -- American journalist
Wikipedia - Frank Busemann -- German decathlete
Wikipedia - Frank Corte Jr. -- Republican member of the Texas House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Frankenhausen Abbey -- Former Cistercian abbey in Saxony
Wikipedia - Frankfurt Charterhouse -- Carthusian monastery in Frankfurt an der Oder, Germany
Wikipedia - Frankfurter Museumsgesellschaft -- German cultural association
Wikipedia - Frankie Muse Freeman
Wikipedia - Franklin County Memorial Hall -- Multi-use building in Columbus, Ohio
Wikipedia - Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, located in Hyde Park, New York
Wikipedia - Franklin Park (Boston) -- Protected area in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Franklin Park Zoo -- Zoo in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Franklin's grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Frank Neuhauser -- American spelling bee champion (1913-2011)
Wikipedia - Frank Smizik -- Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Frank Underwood (House of Cards) -- Fictional character from House of Cards
Wikipedia - Frannie Crouse -- American soccer forward
Wikipedia - Frans Hals Museum
Wikipedia - Franz Eher Nachfolger -- Central publishing house of the Nazi Party
Wikipedia - Franz von Holzhausen
Wikipedia - Fred Edenhauser -- Austrian taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Frederick A. Askew Skuse -- British entomologist
Wikipedia - Frederick George Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. -- American landscape architect; not to be confused with his father, who designed Central Park
Wikipedia - Frederick Ouseley -- English composer and musicologist (1825-1889)
Wikipedia - Frederick Taylor Pusey -- American politician
Wikipedia - Frederick W. Cotzhausen -- American politician
Wikipedia - Frederiksdal, Lolland Municipality -- Manor house near Slagelse, Denmark
Wikipedia - Fred Hottes House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho, USA
Wikipedia - Fredsholm -- Manor house near Nakskov, Denmark
Wikipedia - Free content -- Creative work with few or no restrictions on how it may be used
Wikipedia - Freediving blackout -- Loss of consciousness caused by cerebral hypoxia towards the end of a breath-hold dive
Wikipedia - Freedom Caucus -- Congressional caucus of conservative/libertarian Republican members of the US House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Freedom for Animals -- English charity campaigning to end the use of animals in entertainment
Wikipedia - Freedom House -- American non-profit research center
Wikipedia - Freedom in the World -- Annual survey by Freedom House
Wikipedia - Freedom of panorama -- Right to freely create and use images of copyrighted works in public places
Wikipedia - Freedom Riders -- U.S. activists who rode interstate buses
Wikipedia - Freedom Trail -- Historical walking trail in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Free immersion apnea -- Freediving discipline in which no propulsion equipment is used, but pulling on the rope during descent and ascent is permitted
Wikipedia - Freeman's Auctioneers & Appraisers -- American auction house
Wikipedia - Free Meek -- American docuseries
Wikipedia - Freenode -- IRC network used to discuss peer-directed projects
Wikipedia - Free relative clause
Wikipedia - Free software -- Software licensed to preserve user freedoms
Wikipedia - Freetown, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Freeware -- Software distributed and used at no cost, with other rights still reserved
Wikipedia - Free World -- Propaganda term used to refer to the Western Bloc
Wikipedia - Freizeit-Land Geiselwind -- Amusement park near Geiselwind, Germany
Wikipedia - French brig Inconstant (1811) -- Ship used by Napoleon to escape from Elba
Wikipedia - French destroyer Baliste -- Arquebuse-class destroyer built for the French Navy
Wikipedia - French destroyer Mousquet -- Arquebuse-class destroyer
Wikipedia - French heraldry -- The use of heraldic symbols in France
Wikipedia - French Hospital (La Providence) -- Almshouses for descendants of Huguenots in Rochester, Kent, England
Wikipedia - French ironclad Belliqueuse -- Ironclad ship of the French Navy
Wikipedia - French Leave (novel) -- 1956 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - French Republican calendar -- Calendar used in France from 1793 to 1805
Wikipedia - French Sign Language -- Sign language used predominately in France and French-speaking Switzerland
Wikipedia - French submarine Arethuse (1916) -- Amphitrite-class French submarine
Wikipedia - French tanker Meuse -- French Navy command and replenishment ship
Wikipedia - Freud Museum
Wikipedia - Freya (cat) -- Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office
Wikipedia - Freya Pausewang -- German writer
Wikipedia - Friction burn -- Skin abrasion caused by friction
Wikipedia - Friedrich Adolf Steinhausen -- German physician and physiologist
Wikipedia - Friedrich Daniel von Recklinghausen -- German pathologist
Wikipedia - Friedrich Ringshausen -- Nazi official
Wikipedia - Friedrichshain-Kreuzberg Museum -- history museum in Berlin, Germany
Wikipedia - Friends of the Vermont State House -- non-profit corporation
Wikipedia - Friend-to-friend -- Type of peer-to-peer network in which users only make direct connections with people they know
Wikipedia - Frihedslund -- Manor house near Kalundborg, Denmark
Wikipedia - Fringe (trim) -- Long or short lengths of straight or twisted thread, cord, or tassel, used as trimming
Wikipedia - Frisco Silver Dollar Line -- American amusement park railroad line
Wikipedia - Fritchley Tunnel -- Disused railway tunnel in Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Frits Clausen -- Danish national socialist politician (1893-1947)
Wikipedia - Fritz Dinkhauser -- Austrian politician
Wikipedia - Fritz Gause -- German historian, archivist, and curator
Wikipedia - Fritz Leiber's Lankhmar: The New Adventures of Fafhrd and Gray Mouser -- Dungeons & Dragons accessory
Wikipedia - Fritz Wendhausen -- German actor, screenwriter and film director
Wikipedia - Frivolous or vexatious -- Term used to deny a complaint
Wikipedia - Frognal House -- Mansion in London
Wikipedia - Frome Museum -- Local history museum in Frome, Somerset
Wikipedia - Frontier City -- Amusement park in Oklahoma City
Wikipedia - Frontier Homestead State Park Museum -- State park and museum in the United States
Wikipedia - Frontier Times Museum -- Museum of Hunters Frontier magazine in Texas USA
Wikipedia - Frontier Village -- Former amusement park in San Jose, California
Wikipedia - Frost damage (construction) -- Damages caused by water freezing can occur as cracks, stone splinters and swelling of the material
Wikipedia - Frozen Assets (novel) -- 1964 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Fruit allergy -- Type of food allergy caused by fruit
Wikipedia - Frusen GlM-CM-$dje -- Defunct ice cream brand in the U.S.
Wikipedia - Fuchun Teahouse -- Historic traditional teahouse in Yangzhou, Jiangsu, China
Wikipedia - Fuel cell vehicle -- Vehicle that uses a fuel cell to power its electric motor
Wikipedia - Fuencaliente Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on La Palma, Spain
Wikipedia - Fugloykalven Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Karlsoy, Norway
Wikipedia - Fu-Go balloon bomb -- Japanese fire balloons used to attack the US during WW2.
Wikipedia - Fuhrerbunker -- Subterranean bunker complex used by Adolf Hitler
Wikipedia - Fuhrer -- German word meaning "leader" or "guide", the title used by Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany
Wikipedia - Fukui Prefectural Museum of Cultural History -- Prefectural museum in Fukui, Japan
Wikipedia - Fuller House (TV series) -- American television series
Wikipedia - Full House (Fairport Convention album) -- Fairport Convention album
Wikipedia - Full House (Philippine TV series) -- Philippine television series
Wikipedia - Full House (The Dooleys album) -- The Dooleys album
Wikipedia - Full House Tonight -- 2017 Philippine television show
Wikipedia - Full House -- American television series
Wikipedia - Full Moon (novel) -- 1947 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Fully Loaded: In Your House -- 1998 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Fultah Fisher's Boarding House -- 1922 film
Wikipedia - Fulton County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Fulton surface-to-air recovery system -- System used to retrieve persons on the ground using an aircraft
Wikipedia - Functional electrical stimulation -- Technique that uses low-energy electrical pulses
Wikipedia - Function generator -- Electronic test equipment used to generate electrical waveforms--
Wikipedia - Fundacion Biblioteca Rafael Hernandez Colon -- Library and museum that records the political life of three-term governor of Puerto Rico, Rafael Hernandez Colon
Wikipedia - FUNDAEC -- Non-governmental organization that focuses on development in the rural areas of Latin America
Wikipedia - Fundal massage -- Medical procedure used to treat uterine atony
Wikipedia - Funduq al-Najjarin -- Historical building and museum in Fez, Morocco
Wikipedia - Fungal meningitis -- Meningitis caused by a fungal infection
Wikipedia - Fun House (American game show) -- American children's television game show that aired from September 5, 1988, to April 13, 1991
Wikipedia - Fun House (Bob & Tom album) -- album by The Bob & Tom Show
Wikipedia - Funhouse (Kid 'n Play album) -- album by Kid 'n Play
Wikipedia - Funhouse (song) -- 2009 single by Pink
Wikipedia - Funhouse Tour: Live in Australia -- live album
Wikipedia - Funky house -- Subgenre of house music
Wikipedia - Fun Pier -- Amusement park in Wildwood, New Jersey, U.S.
Wikipedia - Fun Spot America Theme Parks -- Amusement park in Orlando, Florida
Wikipedia - Funtime (manufacturer) -- Austria-based amusement ride manufacturer founded in Australia
Wikipedia - Furnace anneal -- Process used to alter the electrical properties of semiconductors
Wikipedia - Furnace Town Living Heritage Museum -- Outdoor museum near Snow Hill, Maryland, United States
Wikipedia - Furnace -- Device used for heating buildings
Wikipedia - Furness Abbey railway station -- Disused railway station in Cumbria, England
Wikipedia - Further Austria -- Historical provinces of the House of Habsburg
Wikipedia - Furuse Station -- Railway station in Shiranuka, Hokkaido, Japan
Wikipedia - Fury in the Slaughterhouse -- German rock band
Wikipedia - Fused deposition modeling
Wikipedia - Fused filament fabrication -- 3D printing process
Wikipedia - Fused quartz -- Glass consisting of pure silica
Wikipedia - Fuse (electrical)
Wikipedia - Fuse (Fuse album) -- debut rock album by Fuse
Wikipedia - FuseFX -- US visual effects company
Wikipedia - Fuselage
Wikipedia - Fusel alcohol -- Alcoholic fermentation byproduct
Wikipedia - Fuse ODG -- British-Ghanaian recording artist (born 1988)
Wikipedia - Fuseproject -- Industrial design and branding firm
Wikipedia - Fuser (Unix)
Wikipedia - Fuser (video game) -- Video game
Wikipedia - Fuse Station -- Railway station in HigashiM-EM-^Msaka, Osaka Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - Futurebus -- 1980s computer bus standard that saw limited use
Wikipedia - Future history -- Postulated history of the future and is used by authors in the subgenre of speculative fiction
Wikipedia - Future house -- House subgenre with metallic sound and frequency-modulated basslines
Wikipedia - Futurepoem Books -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Fuzz (Junkhouse album) -- album by Junkhouse
Wikipedia - FXML -- XML-based user interface markup language intended for use with JavaFX
Wikipedia - Fyuse -- Spatial photography app for capturing and sharing interactive 3D images
Wikipedia - Gabacho -- Spanish pejorative used in Spain for the French and in Mexico for the Americans
Wikipedia - Gabardine -- Tough, tightly woven fabric used to make suits, trousers and some other garments
Wikipedia - Gabriel Over the White House -- 1933 pre-Code political fantasy film by Gregory La Cava
Wikipedia - Gabriel Rodriguez Aguilo -- Member of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Gab (social network) -- Social media website known for its mainly far-right user base
Wikipedia - Gacaca court -- System of community justice used in Rwanda after the 1994 genocide
Wikipedia - Gadsby (novel) -- Novel by Ernest Vincent Wright that did not use the letter "e"
Wikipedia - GALA Choruses -- International association of LGBT choruses
Wikipedia - Galahad at Blandings -- 1964 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Galaktion and Titsian Tabidze House Museum -- Museum in Skvishi, Georgia
Wikipedia - Galata - Museo del mare -- Maritime museum in Genoa, Italy
Wikipedia - Galen Bodenhausen
Wikipedia - Galeria Nacional -- Museum administered by the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture
Wikipedia - Galilean faith -- ancient term used to refer to Christianity
Wikipedia - Galkhauser Bach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Gallagher-Kieffer House -- Historic building
Wikipedia - Gallatin County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Galleass -- Military ship commonly used in the 16th and 17th centuries by European and Mediterranean navies
Wikipedia - Gallegos House -- U.S. Historic district contributing property
Wikipedia - Gallery House, London -- London art space
Wikipedia - Gallery of Modern Art, Glasgow -- Art museum in Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Gallia County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Galling -- A form of wear caused by adhesion between sliding surfaces
Wikipedia - Galt House -- Hotel in Louisville, Kentucky
Wikipedia - Galway City Museum -- Local museum in Ireland
Wikipedia - Gambling House (film) -- 1951 film by Ted Tetzlaff
Wikipedia - Gambling in Massachusetts -- Types and locations of gambling allowed in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Game controller -- Device used with games or entertainment systems
Wikipedia - GameHouse -- Casual game developer, publisher, digital video game distributor, and portal, based in Seattle, Washington, United States
Wikipedia - Games and Amusements Board -- Agency of the Philippine government
Wikipedia - Gamete -- Cell that fuses during fertilisation, such as a sperm or egg cell
Wikipedia - Gamla Uppsala museum -- Archaeological museum in Gamla Uppsala
Wikipedia - Gammaherpesvirinae -- Subfamily of viruses
Wikipedia - Gamosa -- Woven rectangular textile of Assam, India, used for various purposes
Wikipedia - Gander Bay Causeway -- Causeway across Gander Bay, Newfoundland, Canads
Wikipedia - Gandhi Bhavan, Bengaluru -- Museum in Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Wikipedia - Gangaridai -- Term used by ancient Greco-Roman writers for a people of the Indian subcontinent
Wikipedia - Ganton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - GAPA Launch Site and Blockhouse -- Historic NRHP launch site
Wikipedia - Gaper -- Type of figurehead, often used in storefronts of some drug stores in the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Garbage Museum -- Waste management themed museum in Stratford, Connecticut
Wikipedia - Garbology -- Study of modern refuse
Wikipedia - Garden gun -- Type of small bore shotguns commonly used by gardeners and farmers for pest control
Wikipedia - Garden Key Light -- Lighthouse in Florida, United States
Wikipedia - Garden Park -- Multi-use stadium in Kitwe, Zambia
Wikipedia - Gardiners Warehouse -- Building in Bristol, England
Wikipedia - Garret Club -- A historic woman's clubhouse at Buffalo in Erie County, New York
Wikipedia - Gartempe, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Gary Busey -- American actor
Wikipedia - Gary Dusenberg -- American politician
Wikipedia - Gary Legenhausen
Wikipedia - Gary Nolan (politician) -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Gary Viens -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Gary Wheaton -- Member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Gas blending for scuba diving -- Mixing and filling cylinders with breathing gases for use when scuba diving
Wikipedia - Gas duster -- Product used for cleaning or dusting sensitive devices that cannot be cleaned using water
Wikipedia - Gas exchange -- The process by which gases diffuse through a biological membrane
Wikipedia - Gas House Gang (quartet) -- Barbershop quartet
Wikipedia - Gasoline -- Transparent, petroleum-derived liquid that is used primarily as a fuel
Wikipedia - Gas reclaim system -- System to recover used breathing gas and prepare it for re-use
Wikipedia - Gastroenterology -- Branch of medicine focused on the digestive system and its disorders
Wikipedia - Gas van -- Vehicle used for mass murder, especially during the Holocaust
Wikipedia - Gated recurrent unit -- Long short-term memory (LSTM) with a forget gate but not an output gate, used in recurrent nueral networks
Wikipedia - Gatehouse
Wikipedia - Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May (Waterhouse painting 1908) -- 1908 painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Gather Ye Rosebuds While Ye May (Waterhouse painting 1909) -- 1909 painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Gauler Twin Houses -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Gauntlet (keyboard) -- Wireless glove that can be used as a computer keyboard input device
Wikipedia - GausebeckLevchin test
Wikipedia - Gauss-Seidel method -- Iterative method used to solve a linear system of equations
Wikipedia - Gava Museum and the Gava Mines Archaeological Park -- Archaeological park and museum
Wikipedia - Gawsworth New Hall -- A country house in Gawsworth, Cheshire, England
Wikipedia - Gawthorpe Hall -- Grade I listed Elisabethan country house
Wikipedia - Gay bathhouse
Wikipedia - Gayhurst House -- Country house in Gayhurst, Buckinghamshire, UK
Wikipedia - Gaylord-Pickens Oklahoma Heritage Museum -- Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, US
Wikipedia - Gazzi-Dickinson method -- Point-counting technique used in geology
Wikipedia - Gdansk Port Polnocny Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - GDDR SDRAM -- Type of memory used on graphics cards
Wikipedia - Geared continuous hinge -- A type of continuous hinge used mostly on doors in high-traffic entrances
Wikipedia - Geared turbofan -- Turbofan engine with a gearbox used to drive its fan
Wikipedia - Geauga County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Geboltschhusen -- Village in the canton of Thurgau, Switzerland
Wikipedia - Gefitinib -- Drug used in fighting breast, lung, and other cancers
Wikipedia - GEICO Cavemen -- Trademarked advertising characters used by GEICO
Wikipedia - Geiger counter -- Instrument used for measuring ionizing radiation
Wikipedia - Geishouse -- Commune in Grand Est, France
Wikipedia - Gell-Mann matrices -- Set of matrices useful in studying the strong force
Wikipedia - Gelnhausen Codex -- Early-15th-century manuscript
Wikipedia - Gelnhausen
Wikipedia - Gemini space suit -- Pressurized space suit used in the Gemini program
Wikipedia - GeM-JM-=ez script -- script used to write the Ge'ez language
Wikipedia - Gemstone -- Piece of mineral crystal used to make jewelry
Wikipedia - Gender differences in social network service use
Wikipedia - Gender Equality and Family Development Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Gender star -- Asterisk used in gender-neutral written German
Wikipedia - Gender -- Indonesian musical instrument used in Gamelan
Wikipedia - Genealogical tables of the House of Medici
Wikipedia - General aviation -- Civil use of aircraft excluding commercial transportation
Wikipedia - General circulation model -- A type of climate model that uses the Navier-Stokes equations on a rotating sphere with thermodynamic terms for various energy sources
Wikipedia - General Electric AN/TPQ-10 Radar Course Directing Central -- Ground based bombing system used by US Marines
Wikipedia - Generali Foundation -- Australian nonprofit museum and organization
Wikipedia - Generalized anxiety disorder -- Long-lasting anxiety not focused on any one object or situation
Wikipedia - Generalized epilepsy -- Epilepsy syndrome that is characterised by generalised seizures with no apparent cause
Wikipedia - Generalized vector space model -- Generalization of the vector space model used in information retrieval
Wikipedia - Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (United States) -- Accounting principles and rules used in the United States
Wikipedia - General Motors streetcar conspiracy -- Alleged conspiracy by GM and others to replace streetcar lines with buses
Wikipedia - General Nathan Cooper Mansion -- historic house in Chester Township, New Jersey
Wikipedia - General paresis of the insane -- Organic mental disorder caused by late-stage syphilis
Wikipedia - General-purpose input/output -- User-controllable digital signal pin on an integrated circuit
Wikipedia - Generic programming -- Way of designing and writing programs where algorithms are written in terms of parametric types enabling easy reuse
Wikipedia - Generic Substation Events -- Communications method used in power grids
Wikipedia - Generic you -- Use of the pronoun you to refer to an unspecified person
Wikipedia - Genetically modified crops -- Plants used in agriculture
Wikipedia - Genetic disorder -- Health problem caused by one or more abnormalities in the genome
Wikipedia - Genetic genealogy -- The use of DNA testing in combination with traditional genealogical methods to infer relationships between individuals and find ancestors
Wikipedia - Genetic resources conservation and sustainable use -- Genetic resources conservation
Wikipedia - Genetic use restriction technology -- Proposed methods for restricting the use of GMOs to only activate in response to a given stimulus.
Wikipedia - Gene Ward -- Republican Minority Leader of the Hawaii House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Genie (feral child) -- Abused and neglected feral child studied by linguists
Wikipedia - Genital herpes -- Infection by herpes simplex viruses of the genitals
Wikipedia - Genital wart -- Sexually transmitted infection caused by certain types of human papillomaviruses
Wikipedia - Genius (2018 Tamil film) -- 2018 Indian Tamil-language drama film directed by Suseenthiran
Wikipedia - Gennosuke Fuse -- Japanese anatomist
Wikipedia - Genomic control -- Statistical method used in genetic association studies
Wikipedia - Genomic convergence -- Multifactor approach used in genetic research
Wikipedia - Genomic imprinting -- Phenomenon that causes genes to be expressed in a parent-of-origin-specific manner
Wikipedia - Genouillac, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Genus -- Taxonomic rank used in the biological classification of living and fossil organisms, and viruses
Wikipedia - Geocentric Coordinate Time -- Time standard used in astronomy
Wikipedia - Geocoin -- Coin used in geocaching
Wikipedia - Geoffrey Household -- British novelist
Wikipedia - Geography Markup Language -- Used to describe geographical features
Wikipedia - Geography of Massachusetts -- Overview of the geography of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Geologist's hammer -- A hammer used for splitting and breaking rocks
Wikipedia - Geology of the Iberian Peninsula -- The origins, structure use and study of the rock formations of Spain, Portugal, Andorra and Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Geomarketing -- Use of geographic information in marketing activities
Wikipedia - Geometric mean theorem -- Relates the altitude on the hypotenuse in a right triangle and the 2 line segments created
Wikipedia - Geophysical survey (archaeology) -- Non-invasive physical sensing techniques used for archaeological imaging or mapping
Wikipedia - George Bentley House -- Historic house in Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - George Capron House -- House in Massachusetts, U.S.A
Wikipedia - George Eastman Museum -- Museum in Rochester, New York
Wikipedia - George Floyd protests in Massachusetts -- May-July 2020 protests in Massachusetts after the killing of George Floyd
Wikipedia - George F. MacDonald -- Canadian anthropologist and museum director
Wikipedia - George F. Shepard House -- Landmark house in North Omaha, Nebraska
Wikipedia - George Hopkinson House -- Historic colonial house in Groveland, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - George Huddesford (academic) -- English academic administrator and museum keeper
Wikipedia - George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President George H.W. Bush, located in College Station, Texas
Wikipedia - George J. Bates -- American politician from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - George Marston (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - George M. Wallhauser -- American politician
Wikipedia - George N. Briggs -- American politician and 19th Governor of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - George Nemhauser
Wikipedia - Georgengarten -- Landscape garden in the borough of Herrenhausen of the German city Hannover
Wikipedia - George Noble Plunkett -- Irish Nationalist politician and museum curator
Wikipedia - George Robert Waterhouse
Wikipedia - George Rogers Clark Floyd -- 19th century American politician, 5th Secretary of Wisconsin Territory, Member of the West Virginia House of Delegates
Wikipedia - George Rymph House -- Oldest house in Hyde Park, New York, US
Wikipedia - Georges Island (Massachusetts) -- Island in Boston Harbor, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - George Spelvin -- Traditional pseudonym used in programs in American theater
Wikipedia - Georgetown, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - George W. Bush Presidential Center -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President George W. Bush, located in Dallas, Texas
Wikipedia - George Westinghouse -- 19th century American engineer and businessman
Wikipedia - George W. Weymouth -- American politician from Massachusetts.
Wikipedia - Georgia House Bill 481 -- Bill in the U.S. state of Georgia banning abortions after a heartbeat can be detected
Wikipedia - Georgia House Bill 87 -- Anti-illegal immigration law in the U.S. state of Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia House of Representatives -- Lower house of the Georgia General Assembly
Wikipedia - Georgia Museum of Natural History -- Museum in Athens, Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia's 88th House district -- District in the Georgia House of Representatives in the US
Wikipedia - Georgi Rusev -- Bulgarian theatre and film actor
Wikipedia - Georg von Tiesenhausen
Wikipedia - Georgy Gause -- Russian biologist
Wikipedia - Geospatial metadata -- Metadata used for describing geospatial data
Wikipedia - Geotextile -- Textile material used in ground stabilization and construction
Wikipedia - Geothermal heating -- Use of geothermal energy for heating
Wikipedia - Gepebus -- Brand name for electric buses
Wikipedia - Gerald Hauser -- Austrian politician
Wikipedia - Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum -- Presidential museum for U.S. President Gerald Ford in Grand Rapids, Michigan
Wikipedia - Gerard Cassidy -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Gerard Toulouse -- French physicist
Wikipedia - Gerdrup -- Manor house near SkM-CM-&lskor, Denmark
Wikipedia - Geriatrics -- Specialty that focuses on health care of elderly people
Wikipedia - German Historical Museum
Wikipedia - German Museum of Technology
Wikipedia - German orthography -- Orthography used in writing the German language
Wikipedia - German Salt Museum -- Museum in Luneburg, Germany
Wikipedia - German Village (Dugway Proving Ground) -- Nickname for a range of mock houses constructed in 1943 by the U.S. Army in Dugway Proving Ground, Utah
Wikipedia - Gerry Adams Sr. -- Irish Republican Army member accused of child sex abuse
Wikipedia - Gerstmann syndrome -- Neuropsychological disorder caused by damage to the inferior parietal lobule
Wikipedia - Get a Horse! -- 2013 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Get a life (idiom) -- Taunt to people focused on pointless or trivial matters
Wikipedia - Getty Center -- Campus of the Getty Museum in Los Angeles, US
Wikipedia - Getty kouros -- Greek kouros statue, possible forgery, at the Getty Museum
Wikipedia - Gewinghauser Bach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Ghabbour Group -- Egyptian manufacturer of automobiles, buses, trucks and motorcycles located in Cairo
Wikipedia - G. Halkier & Co. -- Danish trading house
Wikipedia - Ghana Drone Delivery Service -- Medical supplies delivered in Ghana with the use of drones.
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Campani
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Casoria
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Diana
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Di Vittorio
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ferrandino (politician) -- Italian politician
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Giaccardo
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe La Farina
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mario Bellanca -- Italian-American airplane designer
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mastroleo -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Matarrese -- Italian priest
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mazzini -- Italian nationalist activist, politician, journalist and philosopher
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mazzola -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mazzoli -- Italian Roman Catholic priest
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mazzuoli (1644-1725) -- Italian sculptor (1644-1725)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Medici -- Italian politician and economist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Melfi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mercalli
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Merla -- Italian scientist and geneticist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Merlin -- Italian weightlifter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Micheli -- Italian modern pentathlete
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Migneco
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Milazzo -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Milone -- Italian sailor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Moccia -- Italian screenwriter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Molinari (equestrian) -- Italian equestrian
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Molinari -- Catholic archbishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Molteni -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Montello -- Italian biathlete
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Monticone -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Morello -- Italian-American crime boss
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Moruzzi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Moscati
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Mosca -- Italian opera composer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Motta (aviator) -- Italian pilot and air racer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Musolino -- Italian brigand
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Nardulli -- Italian physicist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Natoli -- Italian jurist and politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Occhialini -- Italian physicist, who contributed to the discovery of the pion or pi-meson decay
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Oddi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Oddo
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Olivi -- Italian naturalist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Orlandini -- Italian film director
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ottaviani (athlete) -- Italian athlete
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ottaviani -- Italian musician and disc jockey.
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pagano -- Italian architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Palica -- Catholic archbishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pan -- Italian politician
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pasquale Ricci -- Italian merchant
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Wikipedia - Giuseppe Peano -- Italian mathematician and glottologist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pecci
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pella -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Penone -- Italian artist and sculptor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Penuti -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pepe -- Italian sports shooter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Perego -- Italian comics artist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pianetti -- 1xth-century Roman Catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Piazzi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Piccioni -- Italian film director
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pira (rowing) -- Italian rowing cox
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pistocchi -- Italian architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pizzardo
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Porelli -- Italian actor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Pozzobonelli
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Primavera -- Italian chess player
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Prina -- Italian statesman
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Provenzano (Italian politician born, 1946) -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Puglisi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Raddi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Raggio -- Italian painter (1823-1916)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ravano -- Italian equestrian
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Renato Imperiali -- Italian cardinal
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rescigno -- Italian bobsledder
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Riccobaldi del Bava -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rinaldi -- Italian actor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rivabella -- Italian sports shooter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rodoero -- 17th-century Catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Romita -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rosaroll -- Italian general
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rottario -- 18th-century Roman Catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Rotunno -- Italian cinematographer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sammartini -- Italian composer and oboist (1695-1750)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sanfelice -- 1xth-century Roman Catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Saragat -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sarti -- Italian opera composer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sasia -- Italian criminal and serial killer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Saverio Poli
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Scionti
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Scopelliti -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Seguenza
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sergi
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Serpotta -- Sicilian sculptor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Siri
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Soleri Brancaleoni -- Italian painter (1750-1806)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sommaruga -- Italian architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Soravia -- Italian bobsledder
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Spinelli (politician) -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Spinucci -- 17th-century Roman Catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sposetti -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Steiner (bobsleigh) -- Italian bobsledder
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Sterzi -- Italian anatomist, neuroanatomist and medical historian
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tartini -- Italian composer and violinist (1692-1770)
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tatarella -- Italian politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Terragni -- Italian architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Toaldo
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tominz -- Italian-Slovenian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tommasi -- Italian judoka
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tonani -- Italian weightlifter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Toniolo
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Torelli -- Italian Baroque violinist and composer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tornatore -- Italian film director and screenwriter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Trabacchi -- Italian sculptor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tubertini -- Italian architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Tucci
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Ungaretti -- Italian poet and writer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Valentini (albanologist) -- Italian albanologist
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Valenzano -- Italian equestrian
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Valeriano -- Italian painter and architect
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Vatinno
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Verdi -- Italian opera composer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Vincenzo Ciaccio
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Visenzi -- Italian motorcycle racer
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Vitale -- Italian footbaler
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Volpi (sailor) -- Italian sailor
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Volpi -- Italian businessman and politician
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zaccagnino -- Italian diplomat and art collector
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zamboni
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zauli -- Italian painter
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zevola
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zinanni
Wikipedia - Giuseppe Zucchinetti -- Italian sailor
Wikipedia - Giuseppi Logan -- American musician
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Aliverti -- Italian geophysicist
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Bozzacchi -- Italian ballet dancer
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Cirulli -- Italian hurdler
Wikipedia - Giuseppina d'Agostino -- Canadian lawyer and academic
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Di Blasi -- Italian archer
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Wikipedia - Giuseppina Gabriela Bonino
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Gargano -- Italian opera singer
Wikipedia - Giuseppina MacrM-CM-, -- Italian Olympic judoka
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Martinuzzi -- Italian pedagogue and feminist
Wikipedia - Giuseppina Masotti Biggiogero -- Italian mathematician
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Wikipedia - Giuseppina Ronzi de Begnis -- Italian opera singer
Wikipedia - Giuseppina -- 1960 film
Wikipedia - Given name -- Name typically used to differentiate people from the same family, clan, or other social group who have a common last name
Wikipedia - Given Owens House -- House in Missouri
Wikipedia - Giza Solar boat museum -- Museum in Egypt
Wikipedia - Gjakova Regional Museum -- museum in Kosovo
Wikipedia - Gkyay Association Chess Museum
Wikipedia - Glass break detector -- Sensor used in electronic burglar alarms that detects if a pane of glass is shattered or broken
Wikipedia - Glass ceiling -- Metaphor used to represent an invisible barrier that keeps a given group from rising beyond a certain level in a hierarchy
Wikipedia - Glass house effect -- Awareness that one is subject to ubiquitous surveillance
Wikipedia - Glass Houses (1922 film) -- 1922 film by Harry Beaumont
Wikipedia - Glass Houses (1972 film) -- 1972 film by Alexander Singer
Wikipedia - Glass ionomer cement -- Material used in dentistry as a filling material and luting cemen
Wikipedia - Glass mosaic -- Traditional Burmese mosaic made with pieces of glass, used to embellish decorative art, structures, and furniture
Wikipedia - Glass Museum of Marinha Grande (Portugal) -- Glass museum near Leiria, Portugal
Wikipedia - Glazing jack -- machine used for polishing leather
Wikipedia - Gleasondale, Massachusetts -- village in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Glen Douglas Halt railway station -- Disused railway station in Argyll and Bute, Scotland
Wikipedia - Glenn Hauser -- American broadcaster (born 1945)
Wikipedia - Glen -- Name for valley commonly used in Ireland, Scotland and the Isle of Man
Wikipedia - Glin Castle -- Georgian country house in County Limerick, Ireland
Wikipedia - Global developmental delay -- Umbrella term used when children are significantly delayed in their cognitive and physical development
Wikipedia - Global illumination -- Group of rendering algorithms used in 3D computer graphics
Wikipedia - Global Internet usage -- Estimates of how many people use the Internet
Wikipedia - GlobalSecurity.org -- Think tank website focused on security issues
Wikipedia - Glomar Explorer -- Deep-sea drillship platform used by CIA to recover secretly a sunken Soviet submarine
Wikipedia - Glosholm Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Finland
Wikipedia - Glossary of aerospace engineering -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in aerospace engineering
Wikipedia - Glossary of agriculture -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in agriculture
Wikipedia - Glossary of American terms not widely used in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia glossary
Wikipedia - Glossary of architecture -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in architecture
Wikipedia - Glossary of artificial intelligence -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of artificial intelligence
Wikipedia - Glossary of astronomy -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of astronomy
Wikipedia - Glossary of biology -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of biology
Wikipedia - Glossary of bird terms -- Glossary of common English language terms used in the description of birds
Wikipedia - Glossary of blackjack terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in the game of blackjack
Wikipedia - Glossary of botanical terms -- Glossary of technical terms used in botany
Wikipedia - Glossary of bowling -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in bowling
Wikipedia - Glossary of British terms not widely used in the United States -- Wikipedia glossary
Wikipedia - Glossary of calculus -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in calculus
Wikipedia - Glossary of card game terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in card games
Wikipedia - Glossary of chemistry terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of chemistry
Wikipedia - Glossary of climate change -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of climate change
Wikipedia - Glossary of computer science -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in computer science
Wikipedia - Glossary of curling -- List of terminology used in sport of curling
Wikipedia - Glossary of darts -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in the game of darts
Wikipedia - Glossary of domino terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in dominoes
Wikipedia - Glossary of ecology -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of ecology
Wikipedia - Glossary of economics -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of economics
Wikipedia - Glossary of electrical and electronics engineering -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of electrical engineering and electronics
Wikipedia - Glossary of engineering -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of engineering
Wikipedia - Glossary of entomology terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of entomology
Wikipedia - Glossary of environmental science -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in environmental science
Wikipedia - Glossary of figure skating terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in figure skating
Wikipedia - Glossary of firefighting -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in firefighting
Wikipedia - Glossary of game theory -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in game theory
Wikipedia - Glossary of genetics -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of genetics
Wikipedia - Glossary of graph theory terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in graph theory
Wikipedia - Glossary of gymnastics terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in gymnastics
Wikipedia - Glossary of history -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in historical studies
Wikipedia - Glossary of ice hockey terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in ice hockey
Wikipedia - Glossary of Islam -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in Islam
Wikipedia - Glossary of jazz and popular music -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in jazz and popular music
Wikipedia - Glossary of literary terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in language, literature, and literary analysis
Wikipedia - Glossary of mathematics -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in mathematics
Wikipedia - Glossary of mechanical engineering -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in mechanical engineering
Wikipedia - Glossary of medicine -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of medicine
Wikipedia - Glossary of meteorology -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in meteorology
Wikipedia - Glossary of music terminology -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used by professional musicians
Wikipedia - Glossary of nanotechnology -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in nanotechnology
Wikipedia - Glossary of nautical terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in maritime disciplines
Wikipedia - Glossary of notaphily -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in the study of paper money
Wikipedia - Glossary of patience terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in the card games Patience and solitaire
Wikipedia - Glossary of philosophy -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in philosophy
Wikipedia - Glossary of physics -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of physics
Wikipedia - Glossary of poker terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in poker
Wikipedia - Glossary of psychiatry -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of psychiatry
Wikipedia - Glossary of robotics -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of robotics
Wikipedia - Glossary of SCUBA diving -- Definitions of technical terms, jargon, diver slang and acronyms used in underwater diving
Wikipedia - Glossary of stock market terms -- List of definitions of terms and concepts used in stock exchanges
Wikipedia - Glossary of structural engineering -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of structural engineering
Wikipedia - Glossary of underwater diving terminology -- Definitions of technical terms, jargon, diver slang and acronyms used in underwater diving
Wikipedia - Glossary of virology -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in the study of virology
Wikipedia - Glossary of wine terms -- List of definitions of terms and jargon used in winemaking and the wine industry
Wikipedia - Glossary of woodworking -- List of definitions of terms and concepts commonly used in woodworking and carpentry
Wikipedia - Glowplug -- Heating element used to aid in starting diesel engines
Wikipedia - Glycogen storage disease type V -- Human disease caused by deficiency of a muscle enzyme
Wikipedia - Glycogen -- glucose polymer used as energy store in animals
Wikipedia - Glynde Place -- Country house in Glynde, England
Wikipedia - Glynn Vivian Art Gallery -- Public art museum in Swansea, Wales
Wikipedia - GMC (automobile) -- Division of General Motors focused on trucks and utility vehicles
Wikipedia - Garsene Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - GM-DM-^Eski Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - GNOME Users And Developers European Conference
Wikipedia - Gnommish -- Gnommish is the "fairy language" used in the Artemis Fowl series by Eoin Colfer
Wikipedia - GNU/Linux User Group
Wikipedia - Goal difference -- Tiebreaker used to rank sport teams on equal points in a league competition
Wikipedia - Goals against average -- Goalkeeping statistic used by several sports and many leagues
Wikipedia - Goathland Bank Top railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - God's House of Hip Hop 20/20 Summer Fest -- Christian hip hop festival
Wikipedia - God's House of Hip Hop Radio -- Radio station in Los Angeles, California
Wikipedia - Go equipment -- Game equipment used in go
Wikipedia - Goethe House (Weimar)
Wikipedia - Goethe House
Wikipedia - Goethe-Nationalmuseum
Wikipedia - Gokusen -- Japanese media franchise
Wikipedia - Golden Age of Nigerian Cinema -- Motion used in Nigeria cinema pictures
Wikipedia - Golden Features -- Australian deep house/dance producer
Wikipedia - Golden House (TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Goldhouse -- American DJ, producer, singer, and songwriter
Wikipedia - Goldmann (publisher) -- German publishing house
Wikipedia - Goldman's water mouse -- Species of rodent
Wikipedia - Goldsborough railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Goldschmidt tolerance factor -- Factor used to determine the compatibility of an ion with a crystal structure
Wikipedia - Goldwell Open Air Museum -- Sculpture park and artist residency program
Wikipedia - Gombe State House of Assembly -- Legislative arm of the government of Gombe State of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Gomez Residence -- Historic house in Mayaguez, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Gondola (rail) -- Open-top railroad freight car used for carrying loose bulk materials
Wikipedia - Gongju National Museum -- National museum in Gongju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gonzales v. Raich -- decision by the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that homegrown cannabis may be criminalized even if state law allows its medicinal use
Wikipedia - Goobuntu -- Ubuntu derivative that was once used internally within Google
Wikipedia - Good at Falling -- 2019 studio album by The Japanese House
Wikipedia - Goodbye Heartbreak -- 1996 single by Lighthouse Family
Wikipedia - Good Design Award (Museum of Modern Art)
Wikipedia - Good Housekeeping -- American women's magazine
Wikipedia - Good Morning, Bill -- Play adapted by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Good Old Cause -- Rationale made by the New Model Army soldiers to justify their fighting on behalf of Parliament
Wikipedia - Goods and services tax (Australia) -- Type of value added tax used in Australia
Wikipedia - Goods wagon -- Unpowered railway vehicle used for freight transport
Wikipedia - Goodwill ambassador -- Occupation (position) and/or honorific title of a person who advocates for a specific cause or global issue on the basis of their notability or social status as a public figure or delegated representative
Wikipedia - Goodyear Blimp -- Airship fleet used for promotional purposes
Wikipedia - Google bombing -- Practice that causes a webpage to have a high rank in Google
Wikipedia - Googlebot -- Web crawler used by Google
Wikipedia - Google effect -- Inability to remember important information because of the ease of looking online
Wikipedia - Google Hummingbird -- Search engine algorithm used by Google
Wikipedia - Google Knowledge Graph -- Knowledge base used by Google to enhance its search engine's results
Wikipedia - Google Lighthouse
Wikipedia - Google One -- Subscription cloud storage service developed by Google for managing storage used by Google's productivity software on the same account
Wikipedia - Goose Island Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Tasmania, Australia
Wikipedia - Go ranks and ratings -- Ranks and rating systems used by the game Go
Wikipedia - Gora Szwedow Lighthouse -- Deactivated lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Gorch Fock (1933) -- German museum ship
Wikipedia - Gordon Boswell Romany Museum -- Museum of Romany artifacts
Wikipedia - Gordon College (Massachusetts)
Wikipedia - Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary -- Theological seminary in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Gordon Highlanders Museum -- Military museum in Aberdeen, Scotland
Wikipedia - Gordon House, Chelsea -- Building in Chelsea, London
Wikipedia - Gore Ouseley -- British entrepreneur, linguist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Gorges Lowther (1713-1792) -- Member of Irish House of Commons
Wikipedia - Goryeo coinage -- Currency used in Goryeo
Wikipedia - Goshen, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Gospel (liturgy) -- Reading from the Gospels used during various religious services
Wikipedia - Gospel of Cerinthus -- Lost text used by Carpocrates
Wikipedia - Gospel of Marcion -- A text used by the mid-2nd-century Christian teacher Marcion of Sinope
Wikipedia - Gosset -- Champagne wine house
Wikipedia - Gotha Go 242 -- Transport glider used by the Luftwaffe during World War II
Wikipedia - Gott mit uns -- "God with us", slogan used by Germans
Wikipedia - Goubau line -- Single wire transmission line used to conduct radio waves at UHF and microwave frequencies
Wikipedia - Goudreau Museum of Mathematics in Art and Science
Wikipedia - Goulandris Museum of Cycladic Art
Wikipedia - Goulphar Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Morbihan, France
Wikipedia - Gounder -- Title used by certain communities in Tamil Nadu
Wikipedia - Gourmand syndrome -- Rare eating disorder caused by injury to the frontal lobe or limbic structures
Wikipedia - Govanhill Picture House -- Historic building in Glasgow, Scotland
Wikipedia - Governess -- Woman employed as a teacher in a private household
Wikipedia - Government House, Hong Kong -- Official residence of the chief executive of Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Government House (New York City) -- Mansion built in 1790 by New York State
Wikipedia - Government House of Thailand -- Offices of the Prime Minister of Thailand and appointed cabinet ministers
Wikipedia - Government House, Saint Lucia -- Official residence of the Governor-General of Saint Lucia in Castries
Wikipedia - Government Museum, Mathura -- Museum in India
Wikipedia - Government trifecta -- Where a political party controls a bicameral legislature and the executive in a system that uses separation of powers
Wikipedia - Governor of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Governor's Museum -- Museum in Malaysia
Wikipedia - GPS satellite blocks -- Satellite used by the NAVSTAR Global Positioning System (GPS)
Wikipedia - GPU virtualization -- Technology that allows a GPU to be used by multiple virtual machines
Wikipedia - Gqom -- subgenre of house
Wikipedia - Grace Darling -- British lighthouse keeper
Wikipedia - Grace Dieu Manor -- Country house in Belton, Leicestershire, UK
Wikipedia - Grace Morley -- American museologist
Wikipedia - Grace Museum of America -- History museum in Arizona, US
Wikipedia - Grace Sandhouse -- American entomologist (1896-1940)
Wikipedia - Grace Waterhouse -- British mycologist
Wikipedia - Graduated cylinder -- Common piece of laboratory equipment used to measure the volume of a liquid
Wikipedia - Graeco-Roman Museum -- Archaeological museum located in Alexandria, Egypt
Wikipedia - Grafton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Graham Brookhouse -- British modern pentathlete
Wikipedia - Graham Ousey -- American sociologist
Wikipedia - Graham Waterhouse -- English composer
Wikipedia - Grammar -- Structural rules that govern the composition of clauses, phrases, and words in a natural language
Wikipedia - Grammatical modifier -- Optional element in phrase or clause structure
Wikipedia - Gram-negative bacteria -- Group of bacteria that do not retain the crystal violet stain used in the Gram-staining method of bacterial differentiation
Wikipedia - Granby, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Grand Chartreuse
Wikipedia - Grande Chartreuse
Wikipedia - Grand Egyptian Museum -- Museum under construction in al-Giza, Egypt
Wikipedia - Grandfather clause -- Provision in which existing cases are exempt from a new rule which will apply to future cases
Wikipedia - Grand Junction Railroad and Depot Company -- Connecting railroad in the Boston, Massachusetts, area
Wikipedia - Grand Musee du Parfum -- Perfume museum in France
Wikipedia - Grand Opera House, York -- Theatre in the City of York, North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Grand River (Fairport Harbor) Light -- Lighthouse in Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Grand TheM-CM-"tre de Bordeaux -- Opera house in Bordeaux, France
Wikipedia - Grand Turk Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Grand Turk Island, Turks and Caicos Islands
Wikipedia - Gran Fiesta Tour Starring The Three Caballeros -- Amusement ride in the Mexico Pavilion at Epcot
Wikipedia - Granite Mills -- Historic cotton textile mills in Fall River, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Granite Railway -- Former railroad in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Grantor retained annuity trust -- Financial instrument used in the US to make large, tax free financial gifts to family members
Wikipedia - Grapefruit spoon -- Kind of spoon intended for use with citrus fruit
Wikipedia - Graph database -- Database that uses mathematical graphs to store and search data
Wikipedia - Graphical user interface builder
Wikipedia - Graphical user interfaces
Wikipedia - Graphical user interface testing -- Term in software engineering
Wikipedia - Graphical User Interface
Wikipedia - Graphical user interface -- User interface allowing interaction through graphical icons and visual indicators
Wikipedia - Graphical widget -- Element of interaction in a graphical user interface
Wikipedia - Graphotype (machine) -- Brand name used for metal marking machines manufactured by the Addressograph Multigraph Company
Wikipedia - Grappling -- Range of techniques used in many disciplines, styles and martial arts
Wikipedia - Grassington & Threshfield railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Gravimeter -- Instrument used to measure gravitational acceleration
Wikipedia - Gravity dam -- Type of dam that uses mass to counteract water pressure
Wikipedia - Gray code -- Ordering of binary values, used for positioning and error correction
Wikipedia - Graymont -- house in Richmond, Virginia
Wikipedia - Gray mouse lemur -- A small primate from Madagascar
Wikipedia - Greasemonkey -- Userscript manager extension for Firefox
Wikipedia - Great Budbridge Manor -- Grade II listed manor house in England
Wikipedia - Greater sage-grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Greatest Hits (Lighthouse Family album) -- compilation album by Lighthouse Family
Wikipedia - Great Horton railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Great house -- Large and stately residence
Wikipedia - Great Indian Warpath -- Part of network of trails in eastern North America used by Native Americans
Wikipedia - Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search -- Collaborative project of volunteers who use freely available software to search for Mersenne prime numbers
Wikipedia - Great Maytham Hall -- English country house
Wikipedia - Great Ouse Boating Association -- Waterway society in England
Wikipedia - Great Pond (Massachusetts) -- A natural kettle pond in Truro, Barnstable County
Wikipedia - Great Salinity Anomaly -- A significant disturbance caused by a major pulse of freshwater input to the Nordic Seas
Wikipedia - Great Yarmouth Pleasure Beach -- Historic amusement park in Norfolk, England
Wikipedia - Greedy algorithm -- This article describes a type of algorithmic approach that is used to solve computer science problems
Wikipedia - Greedy randomized adaptive search procedure -- Metaheuristic commonly used for optimization problems
Wikipedia - Greek alphabet -- Script used to write the Greek language
Wikipedia - Greek fire -- Incendiary weapon used by the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire
Wikipedia - Greek letters used in mathematics, science, and engineering
Wikipedia - Green Cape Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Greene County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Greenfield status -- Term used after a decommissioned site is restored to its original condition prior to any development
Wikipedia - Greenfoot Quarry -- Disused quarry in Durham
Wikipedia - Greenham Barton -- Grade I listed manor house in Somerset, England
Wikipedia - Green Hill Park -- Park in Worcester, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Greenhouse Academy -- American television series
Wikipedia - Greenhouse and icehouse Earth -- Opposing climate states on Earth
Wikipedia - Greenhouse Canada -- National business magazine published out of Simcoe, Ontario
Wikipedia - Greenhouse (car)
Wikipedia - Greenhouse effect -- Atmosopheric phenomenon
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by Australia -- Climate changing gases from Australia
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by China -- Climate changing gases from the east Asian country
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by India -- Climate changing gases from the south Asian country
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by Russia -- Climate changing gases from the Eurasian country
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by the United Kingdom -- Overview of the greenhouse gas emissions by United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by the United States -- Climate changing gases from the North American country
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by Turkey -- Climate-changing gases from the Eurasian country
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions in Kentucky -- Overview of the greenhouse gas emissions in Kentucky
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions
Wikipedia - Greenhouse-gas emissions
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gases
Wikipedia - Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act -- Canadian law
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas -- Gas in an atmosphere that absorbs and emits radiation within the thermal infrared range
Wikipedia - Greenhouse-Geisser correction -- Correction for lack of sphericity
Wikipedia - Green House Project -- American long-term care organization
Wikipedia - Greenhouse Site -- Archeological site
Wikipedia - Greenhouse Software -- American recruiting software company
Wikipedia - Greenhouse -- Building made chiefly of transparent material in which plants are grown
Wikipedia - Green Line A branch -- Former streetcar line in Boston, Newton, and Watertown, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Green Line B branch -- Boston Massachusetts subway line
Wikipedia - Green Line C branch -- Boston Massachusetts subway line
Wikipedia - Green Line D branch -- Boston Massachusetts subway line
Wikipedia - Green Line E branch -- Boston Massachusetts subway line
Wikipedia - Green Line Extension -- Under-construction light rail line extension in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Green Line (MBTA) -- Boston Massachusetts subway line
Wikipedia - Green Man, Ashbourne -- Hotel and public house in Ashbourne, Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Green Point Lighthouse, Cape Town -- Lighthouse in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Green-Rainbow Party -- Massachusetts political party
Wikipedia - Green threads -- Lightweight threading implemented in userspace
Wikipedia - Greenwashing -- Use of the aesthetic of conservationism to promote organisations
Wikipedia - Greenwich Village townhouse explosion -- 1970 accidental detonation of bomb in New York City
Wikipedia - Gregory House -- Protagonist of the American television series House
Wikipedia - Gres -- French fashion house
Wikipedia - Greyball -- Software tool developed and used by Uber
Wikipedia - Greyfield land -- Underused real estate assets or land
Wikipedia - Grey Gardens (estate) -- house in East Hampton, New York
Wikipedia - Grey Gull Records -- Record company and label founded in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Greyhound -- Dog breed used in dog racing
Wikipedia - Grey Nuns Motherhouse
Wikipedia - Grey water -- A type of wastewater generated in households without toilet wastewater
Wikipedia - Grid computing -- Use of widely distributed computer resources to reach a common goal
Wikipedia - Grid fin -- Type of flight control surface used on rockets and bombs
Wikipedia - Grillo-Theater -- Theatre in Essen, Germany, used by the municipal drama company
Wikipedia - Grimpoteuthis -- Genus of cephalopods known as the dumbo octopuses
Wikipedia - Grindhouse (film) -- 2007 double feature film consisting of Planet Terror and Death Proof
Wikipedia - Grindhouse -- Low-budget movie theater that shows mainly exploitation films
Wikipedia - Grocery store -- Retail store that primarily sells food and other household supplies
Wikipedia - Groff (software) -- Unix typesetting software used for man pages
Wikipedia - Grona Lund -- Amusement park in Stockholm, Sweden
Wikipedia - Groombridge Place -- Manor house in Speldhurst, Kent, UK
Wikipedia - Grooming (child abuse)
Wikipedia - Grooming claw -- Claw or nail on the foot of certain primates, used for personal grooming
Wikipedia - Groote Schuur -- Historical estate in Cape Town, now a museum
Wikipedia - Gropius House -- Modernist home designed by Walter Gropius in Lincoln, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Grosset & Dunlap -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Grotesque (architecture) -- Fantastic or mythical figure used as architectural element
Wikipedia - Grotto Point Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grounds For Sculpture -- Sculpture park & museum located in Hamilton, NJ.
Wikipedia - Ground Zero: In Your House -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Group (computing) -- Grouping of users as part of an access control system on a computer
Wikipedia - Group mind (science fiction) -- Plot device used in science-fiction stories
Wikipedia - Grouse Creek block -- An accreted terrane west of the Wyoming craton
Wikipedia - Grouser -- device to increase vehicle traction
Wikipedia - Grove Hall -- English country house
Wikipedia - Groveland Four -- Four African-American men who were wrongfully accused of raping a 17-year-old white girl in 1949
Wikipedia - Grove Press -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Grow House -- 2017 film directed by DJ Pooh
Wikipedia - Growth medium -- Solid, liquid or gel used to grow microorganisms or cells
Wikipedia - Grow Your Own -- Album by ThaMuseMeant
Wikipedia - GSM -- Standard to describe protocols for second generation digital cellular networks used by mobile phones
Wikipedia - GTK -- Cross-platform widget toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces
Wikipedia - Guam Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse -- Government agency of Guam
Wikipedia - Guangzhou Opera House station -- Guangzhou Metro station
Wikipedia - Guanica Light -- Lighthouse at Guanica, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Guayo -- Metal scraper used as a percussion instrument
Wikipedia - Gude House -- Historic structure in Maryland, U.S.
Wikipedia - Gudrun Pausewang -- German writer
Wikipedia - Guernsey County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Guest House (2020 film) -- upcoming film directed by Sam Macaroni
Wikipedia - Guest House Room Number:201 -- 2008 short film directed by Amjad Ibrahim
Wikipedia - Guest house -- Type of lodging
Wikipedia - Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
Wikipedia - Guia Lighthouse (Portugal) -- lighthouse near Cascais, Portugal guarding the estuary of the River Tagus
Wikipedia - Guide book -- Book of information about a place, designed for the use of visitors or tourists
Wikipedia - Guido Mine and Coal Mining Museum -- Historic mine and museum in Silesia, Poland
Wikipedia - Guildhall -- Building used for meetings of guild members
Wikipedia - Guillemet -- Sideways double chevron used as a quotation mark in some languages
Wikipedia - Guinness Storehouse -- Tourist and visitor attraction, Dublin
Wikipedia - Gulfcoast Wonder & Imagination Zone -- defunct science museum in Sarasota, Florida
Wikipedia - Gulliver Mickey -- 1934 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Gunderslevholm -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Gun laws in Montana -- Laws that regulate the sale, possession, and use of firearms in MT
Wikipedia - Gunnar Huseby -- Icelandic track and field athlete
Wikipedia - Gunpowder magazine -- building used to store gunpowder
Wikipedia - Gunpowder -- Explosive once used as propellant in firearms
Wikipedia - Gun (staff) -- Long staff weapon used in Chinese martial arts
Wikipedia - Gunstock war club -- Indigenous weapon used by Native Americans
Wikipedia - Gunter's chain -- Distance measuring device used for surveying
Wikipedia - Gunter Schobel -- German archaeologist and director of the Pfahlbau Museum Unteruhldingen
Wikipedia - Guntershausen railway station -- Swiss railway station
Wikipedia - Gunter Steinhausen -- German fighter ace and Knight's Cross recipient
Wikipedia - Gunther Steinhauser -- Italian luger
Wikipedia - Gunzenhausen station -- Railway station in Gunzenhausen, Germany
Wikipedia - Gupta script -- Script system used to write Sanskrit
Wikipedia - Guru (rapper) -- American rapper from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Gusemiin Jalaa -- Mongolian judoka
Wikipedia - Gusen concentration camp -- Nazi concentration camp complex in Upper Austria (1940-1945)
Wikipedia - Gusevsky, Vladimir Oblast -- Urban locality in Vladimir Oblast, Russia
Wikipedia - Gustav Heuser -- German composer and music journalist.
Wikipedia - Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach -- German businessperson and accused war criminal (1870-1950)
Wikipedia - Gutenberg Museum -- Museum in Mainz, Germany
Wikipedia - Guthrie County Courthouse (Iowa) -- Building in Guthrie Center, Iowa, United States
Wikipedia - Gutta -- A small cone-shaped projection used in the architrave of the Doric order
Wikipedia - Guyanese dollar -- Currency used in Guyana
Wikipedia - GVfs -- Userspace virtual filesystem software for the GNOME desktop environment
Wikipedia - GVSU Fieldhouse -- Sports arean near Grand Rapids, Michigan, U.S.
Wikipedia - Gwangju National Museum -- National museum located in Gwangju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gyeongju National Museum -- National museum in Gyeongju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gyrovector space -- Mathematical space used to study hyperbolic geometry
Wikipedia - Habermann's Mill and Villa -- Mill and house in Bludov, Czech Republic.
Wikipedia - Habesha peoples -- Ethnic or pan ethnic identifier used to refer to Ethiopians and Eritreans
Wikipedia - Habit-tic deformity -- A condition of the nail caused by external trauma to the nail matrix
Wikipedia - Hacienda Buena Vista -- Museum and historic coffee plantation in Ponce, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Hacienda Casa del Frances -- Historic house in Vieques, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Hacienda -- Spanish word used in colonies of the Spanish empire to refer to estates with large business enterprises
Wikipedia - Hacihuseyin, Balya -- Village in Turkey
Wikipedia - Hacks at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology -- Prank at or by MIT, an American university
Wikipedia - Hacksilver -- Fragments of cut and bent silver items used as currency
Wikipedia - Hacktivism -- Use of computers and computer networks as a means of protest to promote political ends
Wikipedia - Hadass -- Branch of the myrtle tree that forms part of the lulav used on the Jewish holiday of Sukkot
Wikipedia - Haddon Hall -- Country house in Derbyshire
Wikipedia - Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology -- Teaching museum in Rhode Island, US
Wikipedia - Hagia Irene -- Byzantine church building in Istanbul, now a museum
Wikipedia - Hagley Museum and Library -- Nonprofit museum and library in Wilmington, Delaware
Wikipedia - Hahausen -- Place in Lower Saxony, Germany
Wikipedia - Haifa City Museum -- Israeli museum
Wikipedia - Haines Shoe House -- Shoe-shaped house in south-central Pennsylvania, U.S.
Wikipedia - Hakama -- Type of traditional Japanese trousers/skirt
Wikipedia - Haldeman Voting House No. 8 -- Historic place
Wikipedia - Haldimand House -- Historic former stagecoach in Caledonia, Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Haldon House -- Georgian country house in Devon, England
Wikipedia - Hall house -- Vernacular house typical of Britain, centred on a hall
Wikipedia - Halligan bar -- Forcible entry tool, primarily used by firefighters and law enforcement
Wikipedia - Hall's Croft -- house owned by Shakespeare's son-in-law in Stratford-on-Avon
Wikipedia - Hall -- Large room used for meetings, social affairs or events
Wikipedia - Halsey House (Southampton, New York) -- Historic American house, now the Southampton Historical Museum
Wikipedia - Halton Hall -- English country house in Halton, Lancashire, England, UK
Wikipedia - Halton Railway -- Disused Buckinghamshire railway line
Wikipedia - Hamamatsu Photonics -- A Japanese company that especializes in optical devices for scientific, medical or technical use
Wikipedia - Hamburger button -- User interface element
Wikipedia - Hamburgevons -- Text used as a sample for assessing fonts
Wikipedia - Hamer House (disambiguation)
Wikipedia - Ham House -- Historic house museum in Ham, London
Wikipedia - Hamilton County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Hamilton County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Hamilton-Holly House -- Building in Manhattan, New York, United States
Wikipedia - Hammer -- Weapon or tool consisting of a shaft, usually of wood or metal, with a weighted head attached at a right angle that is used primarily for driving, crushing, or shaping hardened materials
Wikipedia - Hammerwood Park -- Country house near East Grinstead, Sussex, England
Wikipedia - Hammett acidity function -- Measure of acidity used for extremely acidic solutions
Wikipedia - Hammock -- Sling used for swinging, sleeping or resting
Wikipedia - Hampden County, Massachusetts -- County in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hampshire and Hampden Canal -- Canal in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Hampshire College -- Private liberal arts college in Amherst, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Hampshire County, Massachusetts -- Historical and judicial county in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hampsthwaite railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hamza -- Mark used in Arabic-based orthographies
Wikipedia - Hanayashiki -- Amusement park in Asakusa, TaitM-EM-^M, Tokyo
Wikipedia - Hanbury Manor -- House in Hertfordshire, UK
Wikipedia - Hancock County-Bar Harbor Airport -- Public use airport in Trenton, Maine
Wikipedia - Hancock County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Hand County Courthouse and Jail -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Handedness -- Better performance or individual preference for use of a hand
Wikipedia - Hand fan -- Device used to cool oneself
Wikipedia - Handforth Hall -- Former manor house in Handforth, Cheshire, England
Wikipedia - Handkerchief code -- Use of color-coded bandannas in the gay and BDSM communities
Wikipedia - Handkerchief -- Piece of cloth for personal use
Wikipedia - Handmaiden -- Female personal attendant who waits on the lady of the house
Wikipedia - Hand signals -- Motion used to indicate intention in traffic
Wikipedia - Hands of the Cause -- Group of BahaM-JM-
Wikipedia - Hangman's House -- 1928 film by John Ford
Wikipedia - Hannah Kane -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Hannah Newhouse -- American racing driver and reporter
Wikipedia - Hannah Playhouse -- Theatre in Wellington, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Hanna roundhouse -- railway roundhouse in Alberta, Canada
Wikipedia - Hanna van Recklinghausen -- Dutch private banker
Wikipedia - Hannibal House -- Building in Southwark, London, England
Wikipedia - Hanover Crossing -- Shopping Mall in Hanover, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hansa Carrier -- Container ship which lost a cargo of identifiable shoes which were used to record ocean drift
Wikipedia - Hansa-Park -- Amusement park in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Wikipedia - Hans Brausewetter -- German actor
Wikipedia - Hans Busek -- Austrian chess player
Wikipedia - Hans Christian Andersen Museum -- Museum in Odense, Denmark
Wikipedia - Hans-Christian Hausenberg -- Estonian athlete
Wikipedia - Hanscom Field -- Airport in Massachusetts, United States of America
Wikipedia - Hans Danuser -- Swiss artist and photographer
Wikipedia - Hans-Henrik Krause -- Danish actor
Wikipedia - Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen -- German novelist
Wikipedia - Hans Tausen
Wikipedia - Hantaviridae -- Family of viruses
Wikipedia - Hantavirus hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome -- Group of clinically similar illnesses caused by species of hantaviruses
Wikipedia - Happyland Park -- Former amusement park in Winnipeg
Wikipedia - Happy Valley Beijing -- Amusement park in Beijing, China
Wikipedia - Haqiqat Rai -- Martyr for the cause of Sikh Religion
Wikipedia - Harald Steinhauser -- Italian luger
Wikipedia - Harald zur Hausen
Wikipedia - Harbin Institute of Technology Museum -- A museum in Harbin, China
Wikipedia - Harbor House of Central Florida -- Non-profit state-certified domestic violence shelter near Orlando, Florida
Wikipedia - Harbor of Refuge Light -- Lighthouse in Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Harbor Transitway -- Shared-use express bus corridor and high occupancy toll lanes running along Interstate 110 in the Los Angeles area.
Wikipedia - Harbour Centre -- Mixed-use skyscraper in Vancouver, British Columbia
Wikipedia - Harbour launch -- Small vessel used by Royal Navy
Wikipedia - Harbour Town Light -- Lighthouse in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Hardin County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Hardin County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Hardrada dynasty -- Norse royal house (11th-12th centuries)
Wikipedia - Hardware acceleration -- Use of specialized computer hardware to perform some functions more efficiently than is possible in software running on a more general-purpose CPU
Wikipedia - Hardware description language -- Specialized computer language used to describe the structure and behavior of electronic circuits, and most commonly, digital logic circuits
Wikipedia - Hardware-in-the-loop simulation -- Technique used in the development and test of complex real-time embedded systems
Wikipedia - Hardware store -- A store that sells household hardware for home improvement
Wikipedia - Hardy Boys (Mickey Mouse Club serial) -- US TV serial
Wikipedia - Hardy tool -- Tools used with an anvil
Wikipedia - Harem -- Women's quarters in the traditional house of a Muslim family
Wikipedia - Harku Manor -- Manor house in Estonia
Wikipedia - Harlaxton Manor -- Manor house located in Harlaxton, Lincolnshire, England
Wikipedia - Harlem River Houses -- Public housing development in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Harley-Davidson Museum -- Transport museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Harmas de Fabre -- Garden in Vaucluse, France
Wikipedia - Harold Cruse -- American academic
Wikipedia - Harold C. Whitehouse -- American architect
Wikipedia - Harold T. Martin III -- American citizen accused of stealing digital data from the NSA
Wikipedia - HarperCollins -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Harper's Mansion -- Heritage-listed house in New South Wales
Wikipedia - Harpoon (song) -- 2018 electro house single
Wikipedia - Harpoon -- Long spear-like instrument used in marine hunting
Wikipedia - Harpyia milhauseri -- Species of moth
Wikipedia - HarrestedgM-CM-%rd -- Manor house near NM-CM-&stved, Denmark
Wikipedia - Harrington-Birchett House -- Historic house in Tempe, Arizona
Wikipedia - Harris + Hoole -- British coffeehouse company
Wikipedia - Harrison County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Harrison Gray Otis House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Harrison House (Fredericton) -- Residence at the University of New Brunswick
Wikipedia - Harrison House Museum -- Historic house museum in Connecticut
Wikipedia - Harrogate (Brunswick) railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Harro Heuser -- German mathematician
Wikipedia - Harry Brighouse
Wikipedia - Harry Brockhouse -- British politician
Wikipedia - Harry Goldstein -- Member Florida House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Harry S. Truman, located in Independence, Missouri
Wikipedia - Harry Vanderbilt Wurdemann House -- Historic building in Washington, USA
Wikipedia - Hartmut BM-CM-$rnighausen -- German chemist
Wikipedia - Harvard Art Museums
Wikipedia - Harvard Business School -- Business school in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Harvard Club of Boston -- Private social club in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Harvard College -- Undergraduate college of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Harvard Law School -- The law school of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics -- Astronomical observatory in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Harvard University -- Private research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse cases -- American film producer Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse court cases
Wikipedia - Harvey Wells House -- Historic building in Wellston, Ohio
Wikipedia - Harvey Whitehouse -- English anthropologist
Wikipedia - Harwich, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Haseki sultan -- Imperial title used for the chief consort of an Ottoman Sultan
Wikipedia - Hashkafa -- Worldview and guiding philosophy, used almost exclusively within Orthodox Jewish communities
Wikipedia - Hashtag activism -- use of hashtags for internet activism
Wikipedia - Hashtag -- Metadata tag used on social networks consisting of a number sign followed by a word or phrase
Wikipedia - Haslemere Educational Museum -- Geology, natural and human history museum
Wikipedia - Hasrat -- Popular pen name used by Urdu poets
Wikipedia - Hassan Yousef (Hamas leader) -- Leader of Hamas
Wikipedia - Hasseroder -- German brewery, founded 1872, now owned by Anheuser-Busch InBev
Wikipedia - Hasta (spear) -- Polearm weapon used by early Roman legionaries
Wikipedia - Hatfield House -- Country house in Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Hat Works -- Museum and former cotton mill Greater Manchester, England
Wikipedia - Haul truck -- Off-highway, rigid dump trucks specifically engineered for use in high-production mining and heavy-duty construction environments
Wikipedia - Haunted House (EP) -- 2013 EP by Knife Party
Wikipedia - Haunted House (video game)
Wikipedia - Haunted house
Wikipedia - Haunted swing -- Type of amusement ride
Wikipedia - Haus der Bayerischen Geschichte: Museum -- History museum in Regensburg, Germany
Wikipedia - Haus der Musik -- Museum of sound and music in Vienna, Austria
Wikipedia - Hausen (Wied)
Wikipedia - Hauser & Wirth -- Swiss contemporary and modern art gallery
Wikipedia - Hauser Kaibling -- Mountain in the Austrian Alps
Wikipedia - Haus zur goldenen Waage -- Timber framed house
Wikipedia - Hauteville House
Wikipedia - Havenhouse railway station -- Railway station in Lincolnshire, England
Wikipedia - Hawaiian Holiday -- 1937 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Hawaiian Mission Houses Historic Site and Archives -- Museum in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Hawaiioscia -- Genus of woodlouse
Wikipedia - Hawaii's 2nd congressional district -- U.S. House district covering most of Hawaii
Wikipedia - Hawes railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hawkshead Grammar School Museum -- Museum in Cumbria, England
Wikipedia - Hawks PDX -- Gay bathhouse in Portland, Oregon, United States.
Wikipedia - Haxby railway station -- Disused railway station in York, England
Wikipedia - Hayashibara Museum of Art -- Art museum in Japan
Wikipedia - Hay House
Wikipedia - Hayk Mirzayans Insect Museum
Wikipedia - Haymarket (Boston) -- open-air market in Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Wikipedia - Haymarket Square (Boston) -- Historic name of a former town square in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Haynes Park -- Country house in Haynes Church End, England
Wikipedia - Haystack Prayer Meeting -- 1806 meeting in Williamstown, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hay -- Dried grass, legumes or other herbaceous plants used as animal fodder
Wikipedia - Hazardous powders testing kit -- Test kit used to test hazardous powders
Wikipedia - Hazard -- A substance or situation which has the potential to cause harm to health, life, the environment, property, or any other value
Wikipedia - Hazel grouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Hazing -- Rituals of humiliation used to initiate someone into a group
Wikipedia - Headfort House -- 18th century country house near Kells, County Meath, Ireland
Wikipedia - Head girl and head boy -- Term used in the British education system
Wikipedia - Head louse -- Human parasitic subspecies of insect
Wikipedia - Head of Household -- Filing status for individual United States taxpayers
Wikipedia - Headstock -- Part of the guitar which houses the pegs
Wikipedia - Heads-up display (video games) -- User interface element common in video games
Wikipedia - Head-up display -- Transparent display presenting data within normal sight lines of the user
Wikipedia - Health club -- A place which houses exercise equipment for the purpose of physical exercise
Wikipedia - Health indicator -- Measure of quality of health, or magnitude of public health change caused by actions
Wikipedia - Health professional requisites -- Regulations used by countries
Wikipedia - Healy Guest House -- 20th-century house in Florida
Wikipedia - Heart valve repair -- Surgical technique used to fix defects in heart valves
Wikipedia - Heat exchanger -- Equipment used to transfer heat between fluids
Wikipedia - Heat illness -- Condition caused by the failure of the human body to dissipate heat in a hot environment
Wikipedia - Heating oil -- Liquid petroleum product used as a fuel oil for furnaces or boilers
Wikipedia - Heat stroke -- Condition caused by exposure to the sun
Wikipedia - Heaux de Brehat Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Cotes-d'Armor, France
Wikipedia - Heaving line knot -- Class of knot used to add weight to the end of a rope to make it easier to throw
Wikipedia - Heavy Weather (Wodehouse novel) -- 1933 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - He blew with His winds, and they were scattered -- Phrase used to celebrate the triumph of England over the 1588 Spanish Armada
Wikipedia - Hebrew calendar -- Lunisolar calendar used for Jewish religious observances
Wikipedia - Heckler's veto -- Censorship excused as preventing a future negative reaction
Wikipedia - Heckling (flax) -- Combing process used to clean and straighten scutched flax or other bast fibers
Wikipedia - Hecuba -- spouse of king Priam in Greek mythology
Wikipedia - Heddle -- Wire, string, or similar component of a loom which is used to lift warp threads, making a shed for the weft thread to pass through
Wikipedia - Hedehusene
Wikipedia - Hedi Hauser -- German writer
Wikipedia - Hedonometer -- A device used to gauge happiness or pleasure
Wikipedia - Hedon Racecourse railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hedon railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hegel's Ontology and the Theory of Historicity -- 1932 book by Herbert Marcuse
Wikipedia - Height above average terrain -- Height based on large area surrounding object; often used in U.S. for antenna towers
Wikipedia - Heinrich Krause -- Austrian painter
Wikipedia - Heinrich, Prince of Furstenberg -- Head of the House of Furstenberg
Wikipedia - Heinz Donhauser -- German politician
Wikipedia - Heinz Rutishauser
Wikipedia - Helena Heuser -- Danish model
Wikipedia - Helen & Douglas House -- Hospice in Oxford, England
Wikipedia - Helena Scott (politician) -- Member of Michigan House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Helen Blackler -- British phycologist and museum curator (1902-1981)
Wikipedia - Helen Head -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Helen Matusevich Oujesky -- American professor of microbiology
Wikipedia - Helen Suzman -- South African anti-apartheid activist and Member of the House of Assembly
Wikipedia - Helen Waterhouse -- British archeologist and classical scholar
Wikipedia - Heligoland Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on the island of Heligoland, Germany
Wikipedia - Heliopause (band) -- U.K. music band
Wikipedia - Heliport -- Airport designed for helicopter use
Wikipedia - Hell House (film) -- 2002 film by George Ratliff
Wikipedia - Hell House LLC II: The Abaddon Hotel -- 2018 film directed by Stephen Cognetti
Wikipedia - Hell house
Wikipedia - Hel Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Hell Scroll (Nara National Museum)
Wikipedia - Hell's House -- 1932 film
Wikipedia - Helmshore Mills Textile Museum -- Wool and cotton mills in Lancashire, England
Wikipedia - Helmsley railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Help:I have been blocked -- Help page for blocked users
Wikipedia - Help:Useful styles
Wikipedia - Help:User contributions
Wikipedia - Help:User style
Wikipedia - Helyar Almshouses -- 17th century English almshouses
Wikipedia - Hemacite -- Material formerly used in manufacturing
Wikipedia - Hemidactylus paaragowli -- Species of house gecko
Wikipedia - Hemidactylus sahgali -- Species of house gecko
Wikipedia - Hemidactylus siva -- Species of house gecko
Wikipedia - Hemidactylus whitakeri -- Species of house gecko
Wikipedia - Hempcrete -- Biocomposite material used for construction and insulation
Wikipedia - Henderson County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Henderson-Hasselbalch equation -- Equation used to estimate the pH of a weak acid or base solution
Wikipedia - Hendrik Dirk Kruseman van Elten -- Dutch landscape painter
Wikipedia - Henipavirus -- Genus of RNA viruses
Wikipedia - Henning Clausen -- Danish sports shooter
Wikipedia - Henri de Miffonis -- A French civil engineer that designed lighthouses in Canada
Wikipedia - Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec -- French painter
Wikipedia - Henry & Marie Harnischfeger House -- German Renaissance Revival style home
Wikipedia - Henry County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Henry County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Henry Fuseli -- Swiss born British painter, draughtsman and writer on art (1741-1825)
Wikipedia - Henry Gerber House -- Chicago home of early U.S. LGBT rights pioneer
Wikipedia - Henry Hobhouse (East Somerset MP) -- British politician
Wikipedia - Henry IV of France -- First French king of the House of Bourbon
Wikipedia - Henry Klumb House -- Historic building in San Juan, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Henry L. Shrewsbury -- Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives during the Reconstruction era
Wikipedia - Henry Moberly -- English cricketer, cleric, and school housemaster
Wikipedia - Henry Phillips (Massachusetts politician) -- American colonial politician
Wikipedia - Henry Piper House -- Historic building in Nevada, US
Wikipedia - Henry VII Experience at Micklegate Bar -- Museum in York, England
Wikipedia - Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor -- 14th century Holy Roman Emperor of the House of Luxembourg
Wikipedia - Henry W. Buse Jr. -- U.S. Marine Corps Lieutenant General
Wikipedia - Hepatitis E -- Human disease caused by Orthohepevirus A
Wikipedia - Hepatotoxicity -- Liver damage caused by a drug or chemical
Wikipedia - Herbal medicine -- Study and use of supposed medicinal properties of plants
Wikipedia - Herbert Busemann -- German-American mathematician
Wikipedia - Herbert Frankenhauser -- German politician
Wikipedia - Herbert Hoover Presidential Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Herbert Hoover in West Branch, Iowa
Wikipedia - Herbert Kleber -- American psychiatrist and substance abuse researcher
Wikipedia - Herbert Krause -- American historian, 1905-1976
Wikipedia - Herbert Marcuse -- German philosopher, sociologist, and political theorist
Wikipedia - Herbicide -- Chemical used to kill unwanted plants
Wikipedia - Herbivore men -- A term used in Japan to describe men who have no interest in getting married or finding a girlfriend
Wikipedia - Herbringhauser Bach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Herb -- In general rather than botanical use, plant used for flavoring, food, medicine, or perfume
Wikipedia - Here be dragons -- Phrase used on maps to indicate uncharted areas
Wikipedia - Hereford House -- Australian heritage-listed historic site
Wikipedia - Hereward House School -- independent school in London
Wikipedia - Heringhausen (Diemelsee) -- Place in Hesse, Germany
Wikipedia - Heritage Auctions -- American fine art and collectibles auction house
Wikipedia - Heritage House (Compton, California) -- California historic landmark
Wikipedia - Heritage Lighthouse Protection Act -- Canadian act
Wikipedia - Heritage railway -- Railway used for heritage/historical/tourism purposes
Wikipedia - Herluf Stenholt Clausen -- Danish ichthyologist
Wikipedia - Her Majesty's Ship -- Ship prefix used in the United Kingdom and some other monarchies
Wikipedia - Hermann Danuser -- Swiss-German musicologist
Wikipedia - Hermann Hauser
Wikipedia - Hermann Oberth Space Travel Museum -- Museum in Museum im Landkreis Nurnberger Land in Bavaria
Wikipedia - Hermann Olshausen -- German theologian
Wikipedia - Hermann Usener
Wikipedia - Hermann von Bonninghausen -- German athlete
Wikipedia - Hermann Wolfgang von Waltershausen -- German composer, conductor, teacher and writer
Wikipedia - Herman the Recluse -- Legendary thirteenth century Benedictine monk
Wikipedia - Hermione Hobhouse -- British architectural historian
Wikipedia - Hermitage Museum -- Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia
Wikipedia - Heroic virtue -- Christian phrase of ethics, used by the Catholic Church
Wikipedia - Heroin -- Opioid drug primarily used recreationally
Wikipedia - Herpes simplex -- Viral disease caused by herpes simplex viruses
Wikipedia - Herpesvirales -- Order of viruses
Wikipedia - Herpesviridae -- Family of DNA viruses
Wikipedia - Herrenhausen Gardens -- Park in Hanover, Germany
Wikipedia - Herrenhausen Palace -- Palace in Hanover
Wikipedia - Herta Oberheuser -- Nazi physician
Wikipedia - Hertford Museum -- Local museum in Hertford, Hertfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum
Wikipedia - Heslerton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hessay railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hesston Steam Museum -- Museum in Hesston, Indiana
Wikipedia - Het Loo Palace -- Palace in Apeldoorn, Netherlands, built by the House of Orange-Nassau.
Wikipedia - Het Scheepvaartmuseum -- Maritime museum in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Wikipedia - Heugh Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in County Durham, England
Wikipedia - Hewell Grange -- Grade I listed house in Worcestershire, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - He Who Loves in a Glass House -- 1971 film
Wikipedia - Hex - The Legend of the Towers -- Amusement ride at Alton Towers
Wikipedia - Heydar Huseynov -- Azerbaijani philosopher
Wikipedia - Heyne Verlag -- German publishing house
Wikipedia - Hiawatha LRT Trail -- shared-use path in Minneapolis
Wikipedia - Hidden Mickey -- Subtle representation of cartoon character Mickey Mouse's image
Wikipedia - Hideaway (U.S. Senate) -- secret offices used by members of the United States Senate
Wikipedia - Hide (skin) -- Animal skin treated for human use
Wikipedia - Hierarchical modulation -- Signal processing technique for multiplexing/modulating multiple data streams into one stream, where base- and enhancement-layer symbols are synchronously overplayed before transmission; used in digital TV broadcast for graceful degradation
Wikipedia - Hierarchy of hazard controls -- System used in industry to eliminate or minimize exposure to hazards
Wikipedia - Hiero I of Syracuse
Wikipedia - Hieronymus of Syracuse -- Ancient Roman politician
Wikipedia - Higashi-Rokusen Station -- Railway station in Kenbuchi, Hokkaido, Japan
Wikipedia - Higer Bus -- Chinese manufacturer of buses and coaches
Wikipedia - High Bandwidth Memory -- Type of memory used on processors that require high speed memory
Wikipedia - High Capacity Metro Trains -- Electric trains in use in Melbourne, Australia
Wikipedia - High capacity oceanographic lithium battery pack -- A type of battery pack used by oceanographers
Wikipedia - Highclere Castle -- Country house in Hampshire, England
Wikipedia - Higher Power -- Term used in Alcoholics Anonymous and other twelve-step programs
Wikipedia - High-intensity focused ultrasound -- Non-invasive therapeutic technique
Wikipedia - Highland branch -- Suburban railway line in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Highland County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - High Peak Buses -- Bus operator in England
Wikipedia - High-performance liquid chromatography -- Technique used in analytical chemistry
Wikipedia - High-pressure water jetting -- The use of very high pressure water for removing contamination and coatings from hard surfaces
Wikipedia - High-resolution scheme -- Scheme used in the numerical solution of partial differential equations
Wikipedia - High Score (TV series) -- Netflix docuseries about video game history
Wikipedia - High-technology swimwear fabric -- Scientifically advanced materials used for swimwear
Wikipedia - High-throughput computing -- The use of many computing resources over long periods of time to accomplish a computational task
Wikipedia - Higuchi Station (Ibaraki) -- Railway station in Chikusei, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - HikyM-EM-^M station -- Japanese term for little-used railway station
Wikipedia - Hilde Klusenwerth -- German hurdler
Wikipedia - Hillary Hauser -- Journalist, Underwater Diver, Environmentalist
Wikipedia - Hill County Courthouse -- Courthouse building in Hillsboro, Hill County, Texas
Wikipedia - Hillcourt -- Irish historic house
Wikipedia - Hillfield House -- Historic building in Gloucester, England
Wikipedia - Hillfort -- Type of earthworks used as a fortified refuge or defended settlement
Wikipedia - Hill House, Helensburgh -- Home in Helensburgh, Scotland designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh
Wikipedia - Hill of Tarvit -- Mansion house and gardens in Fife, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Hillsborough House -- English country house
Wikipedia - Hillside Avenue buses -- Bus routes in Queens, New York
Wikipedia - Hillside, Brighton and Hove -- House in Brighton and Hove, England
Wikipedia - Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens -- Decorative arts museum in Washington, D.C.
Wikipedia - Hilton House (White Lake, South Dakota) -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Himmelblau's function -- Function used as a performance test problem for optimization algorithms
Wikipedia - Hindu calendar -- calendars used by Hindus worldwide
Wikipedia - Hindu temple -- House of worship in Hinduism
Wikipedia - Hineri-komi -- Air combat maneuver used by fighter pilots of Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service
Wikipedia - Hingham, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Hinkhouse Peak -- Mountain in Washington, United States of America
Wikipedia - Hip house -- Music genre
Wikipedia - Hip-huggers -- Low-rise trousers or shorts
Wikipedia - Hippoboscidae -- Family of insects (louse flies/keds)
Wikipedia - Hipswell Moor -- Area used for military training in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hirmuse -- Village in Estonia
Wikipedia - Hirschsprung Collection -- Art museum in Copenhagen, Denmark
Wikipedia - His House in Order (1920 film) -- 1920 film by Hugh Ford
Wikipedia - His House in Order (1928 film) -- 1928 film
Wikipedia - Historical-ethnographic museum of Khinalug village -- Museum in the Quba Rayon of Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - Historical race concepts -- Disused conception of a person's racial or ethnic makeup
Wikipedia - Historic Firehouses of Louisville -- Multiple listing in the U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Wikipedia - Historiography of the British Empire -- Studies and methods used by scholars to develop a history of Britain's empire
Wikipedia - Historiography of the causes of World War I
Wikipedia - Historiography of the Ottoman Empire -- Causes of the Fall of the Ottoman Empire
Wikipedia - Historisches Museum Hannover -- German museum
Wikipedia - History Museum at the Castle -- Museum in Appleton, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - History of agriculture -- notable events in the history of how plants and animals were domesticated and how techniques of raising them for human uses was developed
Wikipedia - History of architecture -- Field of history focused on architecture
Wikipedia - History of aviation -- History of the design, development, production, operation, and use of aircraft
Wikipedia - History of college campuses and architecture in the United States -- Aspect of American architectural history
Wikipedia - History of fashion design -- History of fashion houses and designers
Wikipedia - History of IBM mainframe operating systems -- History of operating systems used on IBM mainframes
Wikipedia - History of Massachusetts -- Overview of the history of Massachusetts
Wikipedia - History of saffron -- History cultivation and use of the spice
Wikipedia - History of Science Museum, Oxford
Wikipedia - History of Springfield, Massachusetts -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of the British canal system -- The building, use, decline and restoration of artificial waterways in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - History of the graphical user interface
Wikipedia - History of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - HIV/AIDS denialism in South Africa -- Prevalence in South Africa of the belief, contradicted by conclusive evidence, that human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) does not cause acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
Wikipedia - HIV/AIDS denialism -- False belief that the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) does not cause acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
Wikipedia - HIV/AIDS -- Spectrum of conditions caused by HIV infection
Wikipedia - HIV -- Human retrovirus, cause of AIDS
Wikipedia - Hiwi (volunteer) -- Auxiliary volunteer corps used by Nazi Germany during World War II
Wikipedia - HMY Britannia -- Museum ship, former royal yacht of the British monarch
Wikipedia - Hoarding -- Intentional accumulation of items for later use
Wikipedia - Hobby injection molding -- Small scale, individual use of injection molding technology
Wikipedia - Hochdorf Chieftain's Grave -- Celtic burial chamber and museum in Germany
Wikipedia - Ho Chi Minh City Museum of Fine Arts -- Art museum in Vietnam
Wikipedia - Ho Ching -- Singaporean businesswoman and Spouse of the Prime Minister of Singapore
Wikipedia - Hockey Hall of Fame -- Ice hockey museum in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - Hoffman's Playland -- Amusement park in Latham, New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Hoghton Tower -- Grade I listed historic house museum in Lancashire, England
Wikipedia - Hohenzollern Castle -- Ancestral seat of the imperial House of Hohenzollern in the Swabian Alps of central Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
Wikipedia - Hohe Weg Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Lower Saxony, Germany
Wikipedia - Hohmann transfer orbit -- Elliptical orbit used to transfer between two circular orbits of different altitudes, in the same plane
Wikipedia - Hokovirus -- Hypothesized genus of giant double-stranded DNA-containing viruses
Wikipedia - Hokusei Station -- Railway station in Nayoro, Hokkaido, Japan
Wikipedia - Holbrook, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Holen Viaduct -- Disused iron railway bridge in Norway
Wikipedia - Hole opener -- Device used to enlarge the borehole during a well drilling operation
Wikipedia - Holiday World & Splashin' Safari -- Amusement park in Santa Claus, Indiana, U.S.
Wikipedia - Holkham Hall -- Large 18th-century Palladian country house in Norfolk, England
Wikipedia - Holland House, Cardiff -- hotel
Wikipedia - Holland Land Office -- 1815 building in Batavia, New York, that housed the offices of the company that oversaw the development of Western New York
Wikipedia - Hollis Hospital -- 1703 Almshouse in Sheffield, England
Wikipedia - Hollow-point bullet -- Type of expanding bullet used for controlled penetration
Wikipedia - Hollyhock House -- Historic house in Los Angeles
Wikipedia - Hollym Gate railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hollywood Knickerbocker Hotel -- 1929 building used as a retirement home
Wikipedia - Hollywood Museum -- Film and television history museum
Wikipedia - Holme Pierrepont Hall -- Grade I listed house in Nottingham, UK
Wikipedia - Holmes County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Holmfield railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Holocaust trivialization -- Idea that comparative uses of the word Holocaust trivialize the Holocaust
Wikipedia - Holocaust victims -- People who died because of the Holocaust
Wikipedia - Holocene extinction -- Ongoing extinction event caused by human activity
Wikipedia - Holocrine -- Term used to classify the mode of secretion in exocrine glands in the study of histology
Wikipedia - Holotype -- The example of an organism used to describe its species
Wikipedia - Holtby railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Holy anointing oil -- Oil used to sanctify, to set the anointed person or object apart
Wikipedia - Holy Chalice -- Vessel that Jesus used at the Last Supper to serve wine
Wikipedia - Holy Family High School (New Bedford, Massachusetts) -- Catholic high school
Wikipedia - Holy Land -- Term used by Jews, Christians, and Muslims to describe the Land of Israel and Palestine
Wikipedia - Holy Leaven -- Ingredient used in ceremonies of several Christian denominations
Wikipedia - Holyoke, Massachusetts -- City in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Holyoke Opera House -- A theatre built in 1877 in Holyoke, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Holyoke Range -- Mountain range in Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Home Alone 4: Taking Back the House -- 2002 American television film directed by Rod Daniel
Wikipedia - Home appliance -- Machine for household uses
Wikipedia - Homebrew Computer Club -- Computer hobbyist users' group in California
Wikipedia - Home House -- Grade I listed building in City of Westminster, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Homemaking -- Act of overseeing the organizational, financial, day-to-day operations of a house or estate
Wikipedia - Homer Doliver House -- American botanist (1878-1949)
Wikipedia - Homer Fieldhouse -- American landscape architect
Wikipedia - Homesickness -- Distress caused by being away from home
Wikipedia - Home theater PC -- PC meant to be used in a home theater setting
Wikipedia - Homosexual agenda -- Disparaging term used by opponents of gay rights activism
Wikipedia - Homosexuality: A Philosophical Inquiry -- 1988 book by Michael Ruse
Wikipedia - Honeysuckle Cottage -- 1925 short story by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences -- Museum in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Honolulu Courthouse -- Demolished building in Hawaii
Wikipedia - Honolulu Museum of Art -- Art museum in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Honorary whites -- Term used in apartheid era South Africa
Wikipedia - Honorine Delescluse -- French gymnast
Wikipedia - Hookworm infection -- Human disease caused by infection by intestinal parasites of the roundworm group
Wikipedia - Hookworm -- Intestinal, blood-feeding, parasitic roundworms that cause types of infection known as helminthiases
Wikipedia - Hoop skirt -- Shaped framework of reed, cane, or steel, used to support women's dresses in the fashionable silhouette of a particular period
Wikipedia - Hoosac Tunnel -- Railway tunnel located in Western Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Hooyah -- Battle-cry used by US Navy and the US Coast Guard
Wikipedia - Hopetoun House -- Category A listed building; historic Scottish country house
Wikipedia - Hopffgarten House -- NRHP historic house in Boise, Idaho, United States
Wikipedia - Hopkinton State Park -- State park in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Hopper car -- Railroad freight car used for transporting loose bulk commodities
Wikipedia - Hopperton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hopwell Hall -- Former country house in Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Horizon (IT system) -- Computer system used by Post Office Ltd.
Wikipedia - Hormone therapy -- Use of hormones in medical treatment
Wikipedia - Horn analyzer -- Test instrument used to measure the resonance of components
Wikipedia - Hornby Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Horn clauses
Wikipedia - Horn clause
Wikipedia - Horner-Terrill House -- Historic home located at Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Wikipedia - Horniman Museum -- Museum in Forest Hill, London, England
Wikipedia - Hornsea Bridge railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hornsea Town railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Horowitz index -- Ratio used to assess lung function
Wikipedia - Horsburgh Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Singapore
Wikipedia - Horse Caves -- Geological feature in Granby, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Horsehouse -- Village in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Horse Museum -- 2019 book based on a manuscript by Dr. Seuss
Wikipedia - Horses in World War I -- Use of horses during World War I (1914-1918)
Wikipedia - Horst Krause -- German actor
Wikipedia - Horst Zuse
Wikipedia - Horticultural Hall (Boston) -- Building in Boston, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - Horton Park railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hoss's Steak and Sea House -- American restaurant chain
Wikipedia - Hostile architecture -- public-space design to discourage crime or unintended uses
Wikipedia - Hotel Alexandra (Boston) -- Historic building in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hotel Clausewitz -- 1967 film by Ralph Habib
Wikipedia - Hotel de Lamoignon -- 16th-century grand house in Paris, France
Wikipedia - Hotel particulier -- French town houses, especially of the 18th century, generally more elegant, ornate, and larger than other houses
Wikipedia - Hotel Skyler -- Historic hotel in Syracuse, New York, US
Wikipedia - Hotel Vendome fire -- 1972 fire in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hot potassium carbonate -- A method used to remove carbon dioxide from gas mixtures
Wikipedia - Hot reading -- Technique used when giving a psychic reading in stage magic performances
Wikipedia - Hot Water (novel) -- 1932 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Houghton House -- Grade I listed building in Bedfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Hougoumont -- Farmhouse near Waterloo, Belgium
Wikipedia - House (1977 film) -- 1977 film by Nobuhiko M-EM-^Lbayashi
Wikipedia - House advantage
Wikipedia - House & Garden (plays) -- Two plays written by Alan Ayckbourn to be performed simultaneously
Wikipedia - House & Home -- Former monthly architecture magazine
Wikipedia - House and Merit Order of Peter Frederick Louis
Wikipedia - House Arrest (1996 film) -- American comedy film
Wikipedia - House Arrest (2019 film) -- Indian Hindi-language comedy on Netflix
Wikipedia - House arrest
Wikipedia - House at 1 Bay Street -- historic house in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - House at BreM-CM-1as Point -- Building in Dorado, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - House at No. 17 Rua Benjamin Constant -- House in Salvador, Bahia
Wikipedia - House at No. 4 Rua Ana Nery -- House in Cachoeira, Bahia
Wikipedia - House at Pooh Corner (song) -- 1971 single by Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
Wikipedia - House at Praca Dr. Aristides Milton 23-A -- House in Cachoeira, Bahia
Wikipedia - House at the End of the Street -- 2012 film by Mark Tonderai
Wikipedia - House (Babes in Toyland song) -- 1990 single by Babes in Toyland
Wikipedia - House band -- Group of musicians, often centrally organized by a band leader, who regularly play at an establishment, or a tv/radio show
Wikipedia - Houseboat (film) -- 1958 film by Melville Shavelson
Wikipedia - Houseboat -- Boat to be used as a home
Wikipedia - Housebook of Wolfegg Castle -- 15th-century manuscript
Wikipedia - Housebroken (TV series) -- Upcoming American sitcom
Wikipedia - House Building Finance Corporation cricket team -- Cricket team
Wikipedia - House by the River -- 1950 film by Fritz Lang
Wikipedia - House Calls (TV series) -- American television series
Wikipedia - Housecarl -- Medieval Northern European social rank
Wikipedia - House church (China)
Wikipedia - House church movement
Wikipedia - House church (Russia) -- Type of parish in the Russian Orthodox Church
Wikipedia - House church
Wikipedia - House concurrent resolution 108
Wikipedia - House edge
Wikipedia - House Energy Rating -- Building's thermal performance for residential homes in Australia
Wikipedia - House energy rating -- Standard measure of the energy efficiency of a building
Wikipedia - House finch -- Species of bird in North America
Wikipedia - Housefly -- Species of insect
Wikipedia - House for an Art Lover -- Architectural structure in Glasgow
Wikipedia - Housefull 4 -- 2019 comedy film directed by Farhad Samji
Wikipedia - House Grey Memorandum -- U.S. diplomatic proposal in World War I
Wikipedia - House Guest -- British television series
Wikipedia - Househillwood -- Area of Glasgow
Wikipedia - Household deity
Wikipedia - Householder (Buddhism) -- Buddhist layperson with responsibilities
Wikipedia - Householder's method
Wikipedia - Householder transformation -- Concept in linear algebra
Wikipedia - Household Finance and Consumption Survey (Ireland) -- Statistical survey in Ireland
Wikipedia - Household Gods (band) -- Musical rock band
Wikipedia - Household hardware -- Equipment used for home repair and other work in the home
Wikipedia - Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey
Wikipedia - Household income in the United States
Wikipedia - Household registration in Taiwan -- Civil and family registration system
Wikipedia - Household
Wikipedia - Household Words
Wikipedia - House House -- Australian video game developer
Wikipedia - House Hunters -- American reality series
Wikipedia - House Hunting Mice -- 1947 film
Wikipedia - House in the Sun -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - Housekeeper (domestic worker)
Wikipedia - House Keeper (song) -- 1996 single by Men of Vizion
Wikipedia - Housekeeping (film) -- 1987 film by Bill Forsyth
Wikipedia - Housekeeping (novel) -- Book by Marilynne Robinson
Wikipedia - House Leader -- Canadian political office
Wikipedia - House management -- Front of house operations in a theatre
Wikipedia - House Me Teenage Rave -- 1993 single by Green JellM-CM-?
Wikipedia - House mice
Wikipedia - House Mother Normal -- 1971 book by B.S. Johnson
Wikipedia - House mouse -- Species of mammal
Wikipedia - House-Museum of Bulbul -- Museum in Baku, Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - House-Museum of Mirza Alakbar Sabir -- Museum in Shamakhi, Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - Housen Mushema -- Ugandan model, actor
Wikipedia - House of 1000 Corpses
Wikipedia - House of Acquaviva -- Noble family
Wikipedia - House of All Nations -- Book by Christina Stead
Wikipedia - House of Andechs
Wikipedia - House of Angels - The Second Summer -- 1994 film
Wikipedia - House of Angels -- 1992 film
Wikipedia - House of Angostura -- Trinidad and Tobago beverage company
Wikipedia - House of Anubis -- Nickelodeon television series
Wikipedia - House of Aragon
Wikipedia - House of Ardenne -- Lorraine noble family
Wikipedia - House of Artists, Novosibirsk -- Building in Novosibirsk, Russia
Wikipedia - House of Assembly of Jamaica -- legislature of the British colony of Jamaica
Wikipedia - House of Augustus -- Domus
Wikipedia - House of Aviz -- Portuguese dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Balloons -- First of three 2011 mixtapes by the Weeknd
Wikipedia - House of Basarab -- Aristocratic family
Wikipedia - House of Bernadotte -- Royal house of Sweden
Wikipedia - House of Bishops -- Anglican religious governing assembly
Wikipedia - House of Bjelbo
Wikipedia - House of Blackmail -- 1953 film
Wikipedia - House of Blois
Wikipedia - House of Bonaparte -- Imperial and royal European dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Borgia -- Italo-Spanish Renaissance noble family
Wikipedia - House of Borromeo -- Italian noble family
Wikipedia - House of Bourbon-Braganza -- Iberian noble house
Wikipedia - House of Bourbon -- European royal house of French origin
Wikipedia - House of Braganza -- Portuguese dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Brimeu -- Noble family
Wikipedia - House of Burke -- Irish branch of ancient Anglo-Norman noble family
Wikipedia - House of Capet -- Rulers of the Kingdom of France from 987 to 1328
Wikipedia - House of Caracciolo
Wikipedia - House of Cards (1968 film) -- 1969 film by John Guillermin
Wikipedia - House of Cards (American TV series) -- American political drama television series
Wikipedia - House of Cards (British TV series)
Wikipedia - House of Cards (Radiohead song) -- Promotional single released in 2008
Wikipedia - House of Cards (season 1) -- Season of the American television drama series House of Cards
Wikipedia - House of Cards (season 3) -- Season of the American television drama series House of Cards
Wikipedia - House of Cards (season 4) -- Season of the American television drama series House of Cards
Wikipedia - House of Cards (season 5) -- Season of the American television drama series House of Cards
Wikipedia - House of Cards (season 6) -- Season of the American television drama series House of Cards
Wikipedia - House of Cards (U.S. TV series)
Wikipedia - House of cards -- Construction set
Wikipedia - House of Chetao -- Circassian princely house.
Wikipedia - House of Commons Disqualification Act -- stock short title for legislation
Wikipedia - House of Commons Library -- Library and information resource of the lower house of the UK Parliament
Wikipedia - House of Commons of Canada -- Lower house of the Canadian Parliament
Wikipedia - House of Commons of England
Wikipedia - House of Commons of Great Britain -- British Parliament lower house from 1707 to 1801
Wikipedia - House of Commons of the United Kingdom -- Lower house in the Parliament of the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - House of Commons -- Type of legislative assembly
Wikipedia - House of Cool -- Canadian animation studio
Wikipedia - House of correction -- Penal facility
Wikipedia - House of Cotoner -- Mallorquin noble family
Wikipedia - House of Dawda Group -- Ugandan conglomerate
Wikipedia - House of Diehl -- New York-based fashion partnership
Wikipedia - House of Dipsheu -- Circassian house of privateer origin.
Wikipedia - House of Dracula
Wikipedia - House of Dunkeld
Wikipedia - House of Dun -- Historic building in Scotland
Wikipedia - House of Errors -- 1942 film directed by Bernard B. Ray
Wikipedia - House of Este
Wikipedia - House of Estridsen
Wikipedia - House of Faberge -- Russian jewelry firm
Wikipedia - House of Federation -- Assembly in the parliament of Ethiopia
Wikipedia - House of Five Leaves -- Manga
Wikipedia - House of Flowers (mausoleum) -- Mausoleum, resting place of Josip Broz Tito
Wikipedia - House of F. N. Solodov -- Place
Wikipedia - House of Fortune -- Singaporean TV series
Wikipedia - House of Four Doors -- House of Four Doors
Wikipedia - House of Fraser -- Department store group
Wikipedia - House of Frohburg -- Noble family
Wikipedia - House of Fun -- 1982 single by Madness
Wikipedia - House of Glcksburg
Wikipedia - House of Glory -- American professional wrestling school
Wikipedia - House of Godwin
Wikipedia - House of Gonzaga
Wikipedia - House of Grimaldi -- Associated with the history of the Republic of Genoa, Italy and of the Principality of Monaco
Wikipedia - House of Habsburg-Lorraine
Wikipedia - House of Habsburg -- Austrian dynastic family
Wikipedia - House of Hanover -- German royal dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Harcourt -- Norman noble family
Wikipedia - House of Hardcore -- American wrestling promotion
Wikipedia - House of Hesse-Darmstadt
Wikipedia - House of Hesse -- European noble house originating from Hesse, Germany
Wikipedia - House of Hohenstaufen
Wikipedia - House of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen
Wikipedia - House of Holes -- 2011 novel by Nicholson Baker
Wikipedia - House of Holstein-Gottorp-Romanov
Wikipedia - House of Horror (film) -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - House of Hoyos
Wikipedia - House of Hungama -- Indian Telugu-language television series
Wikipedia - House of Julia Felix -- Large Roman villa in Pompeii
Wikipedia - House of Kalakaua -- Royal family of HawaiM-JM-;i
Wikipedia - House of Kamehameha -- Royal family of HawaiM-JM-;i
Wikipedia - House of Karen -- One of Seven Great Houses of Iran.
Wikipedia - House of Kastrioti -- Albanian noble family
Wikipedia - House of Keys -- Lower house of the Isle of Man parliament
Wikipedia - House of KneM-EM->evic -- Croatian noble family
Wikipedia - House of Knowledge
Wikipedia - House of Kntlinga
Wikipedia - House of Kuadzhe -- Circassian house of peasant and privateer origin
Wikipedia - House of Lambakanna I -- Powerful clan that ruled Sri Lanka in the first half of the first millennium
Wikipedia - House of Lancaster -- English noble family
Wikipedia - House of Lara
Wikipedia - House of Liechtenstein -- Ruling dynasty of the Principality of Liechtenstein
Wikipedia - House of Life -- 1952 film
Wikipedia - House of Lords -- Upper house in the Parliament of the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - House of Lords Yacht Club -- English yacht club
Wikipedia - House of Lorraine
Wikipedia - House of Love (East 17 song) -- 1992 single by East 17
Wikipedia - House of Luxembourg
Wikipedia - House of Malatesta
Wikipedia - House of Medici -- Renaissance Italian, banker family
Wikipedia - House of Mendoza -- Spanish noble family
Wikipedia - House of Merode -- European noble family
Wikipedia - House of Metal -- Annual music festival in UmeM-CM-%, Sweden
Wikipedia - House of mirrors
Wikipedia - House of Monymusk -- House in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - House of Mouse -- American animated television series
Wikipedia - House of Mukhrani -- Georgian princely family, branch of the Bagrationi dynasty
Wikipedia - House of M
Wikipedia - House of Nationalities -- Upper house of the Myanmar legislature
Wikipedia - House of Natoli
Wikipedia - House of Normandy
Wikipedia - House of Odrow
Wikipedia - House of Oldenburg -- European dynasty of North German/Danish origin founded in 1101
Wikipedia - House of Orange-Nassau -- European dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Others -- 2016 film
Wikipedia - House of Palatinate-Neumarkt
Wikipedia - House of Percy -- Powerful noble family in northern England for much of the Middle Ages
Wikipedia - House of Plantagenet -- Royal dynasty in medieval England
Wikipedia - House of Pomerania
Wikipedia - House of Quality
Wikipedia - House of Representatives (Myanmar) -- Lower house of the parliament of Burma
Wikipedia - House of Representatives (Nepal) -- Lower house of Parliament of Nepal
Wikipedia - House of Representatives (Netherlands) -- Lower house of the Netherlands parliament
Wikipedia - House of Representatives of Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Lower house of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Wikipedia - House of Representatives of Liberia -- Lower house of Liberian legislature
Wikipedia - House of Representatives of Puerto Rico -- Lower house of the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - House of Representatives of the Netherlands
Wikipedia - House of Representatives of the Philippines -- Lower house of the Congress of the Philippines
Wikipedia - House of Ricordi -- 1954 film
Wikipedia - House of Rohan -- Breton noble family
Wikipedia - House of Romanov -- |Imperial dynasty of Russia
Wikipedia - House of Romay -- Spanish aristocratic family
Wikipedia - House of Sabran -- Provenical nobility
Wikipedia - House of Sadykhov brothers -- Historic building in Baku, Azerbaijan
Wikipedia - House of Sanguszko
Wikipedia - House of Sapieha
Wikipedia - House of Sasan -- founding house of the Sasanian Empire
Wikipedia - House of Saud -- The royal family of Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia - House of Saul
Wikipedia - House of Savoy
Wikipedia - House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha -- German dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Schwarzburg -- Noble family of Thuringia, Germany
Wikipedia - House of Secrets (1936 film) -- 1936 film by Roland D. Reed
Wikipedia - House of Secrets (album) -- 2004 album by Otep
Wikipedia - House of Secrets (DC Comics)
Wikipedia - House of Sforza -- Noble family of the Italian Renaissance, dukes of Milan
Wikipedia - House of Siri Sanga Bo
Wikipedia - House of Stairs -- Lithograph print by Dutch artist M. C. Escher
Wikipedia - House of St. Olaf
Wikipedia - House of Strangers -- 1949 American film by Joseph L. Mankiewicz
Wikipedia - House of Stuart -- European royal house
Wikipedia - House of Suns -- Book by Alastair Reynolds
Wikipedia - House of Talhosten -- Circassian princely house.
Wikipedia - House of Tan Yeok Nee -- Singaporean mansion building
Wikipedia - House of the Blackheads (Riga) -- Building in Riga, Latvia
Wikipedia - House of the Centenary
Wikipedia - House of the Dead: Scarlet Dawn -- 2018 arcade video game
Wikipedia - House of the People (Afghanistan) -- Lower house of the National Assembly of Afghanistan
Wikipedia - House of the Prince of Naples -- Roman townhouse in Pompeii
Wikipedia - House of the Rising Sun (album) -- album by Idris Muhammad
Wikipedia - House of the Seven Lazy Brothers -- Historic building in Bremen, Germany
Wikipedia - House of the Silver Wedding -- Archaeological remains of a Roman house in Pompeii
Wikipedia - House of the Vettii
Wikipedia - House of the Virgin Mary -- Catholic and Muslim shrine located on Mt. Koressos
Wikipedia - House of Tkhaghapseu -- Circassian house of peasant origin
Wikipedia - House of Tolerance -- 2011 film
Wikipedia - House of Trastamara -- Spanish royal dynasty
Wikipedia - House of Tudor -- English royal house of Welsh origin
Wikipedia - House of Usher (film)
Wikipedia - House of Valois-Anjou
Wikipedia - House of Valois
Wikipedia - House of Vasa
Wikipedia - House of Vijaya -- First recorded Sinhalese royal dynasty that ruled over Sri Lanka
Wikipedia - House of Vizarron -- House in El Puerto de Santa Maria, Spain
Wikipedia - House of Vuk's Foundation -- Historical building in Belgrade
Wikipedia - House of Wangchuck
Wikipedia - House of Wax (1953 film)
Wikipedia - House of Welf
Wikipedia - House of Wessex family tree
Wikipedia - House of Wessex
Wikipedia - House of Wettin -- German noble and royal family
Wikipedia - House of Windsor -- Royal house of the United Kingdom and the other Commonwealth realms
Wikipedia - House of Wisdom -- Library, translation institute and research center in Baghdad, Iraq
Wikipedia - House of Wittelsbach -- German noble family
Wikipedia - House of Wonders -- Landmark building in Stone Town, Zanzibar
Wikipedia - House of X and Powers of X -- Comic books
Wikipedia - House of Xtravaganza -- New York City underground ballroom scene
Wikipedia - House of Yahweh -- Cult based in Clyde, Texas
Wikipedia - House of Yes (Brooklyn) -- Nightclub in New York City
Wikipedia - House of York -- Cadet branch of the English royal House of Plantagenet
Wikipedia - House of ZM-CM-$hringen -- Dynasty of Swabian nobility, 10th to 13th ct.
Wikipedia - House of Zogu -- Albanian Royal House
Wikipedia - House on Ellicott's Hill -- United States national historic place
Wikipedia - House on Haunted Hill (1999 film)
Wikipedia - House on Haunted Hill
Wikipedia - House on the Rock -- Museum in Iowa County, Wisconsin, US
Wikipedia - House on Wheels -- South Korean variety show
Wikipedia - House Order of Fidelity
Wikipedia - House Order of the Golden Lion (Hesse)
Wikipedia - House Order of the Wendish Crown
Wikipedia - House painter and decorator
Wikipedia - House Party 4: Down to the Last Minute -- 2001 film by Chris Stokes
Wikipedia - Houseparty (app) -- Social networking app
Wikipedia - House Party II (I Don't Know What You Come to Do) -- 1991 single by Tony! Toni! Tone!
Wikipedia - House Party: Tonight's the Night -- 2013 film
Wikipedia - House Party (video game) -- 2017 3D comedy adventure dating sim by Eek! Games
Wikipedia - House party
Wikipedia - House Peters Jr. -- American actor
Wikipedia - House Peters -- American actor
Wikipedia - House Republican Conference -- Party caucus for Republicans in the United States House of Representatives
Wikipedia - House Rules (season 8) -- Australian reality television series
Wikipedia - House rules
Wikipedia - Houses at 208-218 East 78th Street -- Six Civil War-era brick rowhouses in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Houses at Auvers -- Painting by Vincent van Gogh
Wikipedia - Houses at l'Estaque -- Painting by Georges Braque
Wikipedia - House Select Committee on Current Pornographic Materials -- US government committee
Wikipedia - Houses from the Sea -- 1960 Caldecott picture book
Wikipedia - House show -- Untelevised professional wrestling event
Wikipedia - House slave
Wikipedia - House Smarts -- Television series
Wikipedia - House society
Wikipedia - Houses of Refuge in Florida -- 19th-century life-saving stations
Wikipedia - House sparrow -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - House swift -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - House System at the California Institute of Technology -- Caltech student residence system
Wikipedia - Housetrucker
Wikipedia - House (TV series) -- American television medical drama
Wikipedia - House Un-American Activities Committee -- Investigative committee of the US House of Representatives
Wikipedia - House van der Noot -- Belgian Noble family
Wikipedia - Housewarming party
Wikipedia - House Ways and Means Committee
Wikipedia - Housewife (film) -- 1934 film by Alfred E. Green
Wikipedia - Housewife -- Married family member whose main occupation is running or managing the family's home
Wikipedia - House -- Building that functions as a dwelling
Wikipedia - House wine -- A typically cheap wine on a restaurant menu
Wikipedia - House with Chimaeras -- An Art Nouveau building in the Lypky neighborhood of Kyiv, Ukraine
Wikipedia - Housewives on the Job -- 1973 film by Ernst Hofbauer
Wikipedia - Housewives
Wikipedia - Housing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - Housing tenure -- The financial arrangements under which someone has the right to live in a house or apartment
Wikipedia - Houston Museum District
Wikipedia - Houston Museum of Natural Science
Wikipedia - HovdingsgM-CM-%rd -- Manor house in Vordingborg, Denmark
Wikipedia - Hoverbox -- User interface element
Wikipedia - Hovingham railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Howard and Harold McBride -- fictional gay couple in the Nickelodeon series The Loud House
Wikipedia - Howard Athenaeum -- Former theater in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Howard Cruse -- American cartoonist
Wikipedia - Howard G. Funkhouser -- American mathematician and historian
Wikipedia - Howard T. Markey National Courts Building -- Courthouse building in Washington, D.C.
Wikipedia - Howe o'Buchan House -- Building in Scotland
Wikipedia - Howley Hall -- Ruined country house in England
Wikipedia - Howsham railway station (North Yorkshire) -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Howth Harbour Lighthouse -- Historic lighthouse at Howth Harbour, Ireland
Wikipedia - How to Be an American Housewife -- 2010 book by Margaret Dilloway
Wikipedia - Hraunhafnartangi Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Iceland
Wikipedia - H. R. Haldeman -- White House Chief of Staff
Wikipedia - Hrunting -- One of the swords used by Beowulf
Wikipedia - HTML attribute -- Special words used inside the opening tag to control the element's behaviour
Wikipedia - Hubbard House (Jacksonville) -- Domestic violence shelter in Florida
Wikipedia - Hubert Blaine Wolfeschlegelsteinhausenbergerdorff Sr. -- Philadelphia typesetter said to have had the longest name ever used
Wikipedia - Huck Finn's Playland -- Amusement park in Albany, New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Hudson Armory -- former military facility in Hudson, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hudson-Athens Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New York, United States
Wikipedia - Hudson, Massachusetts -- town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Hudson River Chain -- River barriers used during the American Revolutionary War
Wikipedia - Huey P. Long Field House -- Campus of Louisiana University in Baton Rouge
Wikipedia - Huffingford Manor -- Manor house on the Isle of Wight
Wikipedia - Hughenden Manor -- Grade I listed house in Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Hughes OH-6 Cayuse -- 1963 scout helicopter
Wikipedia - Hugh Gloster -- Seventh president of Morehouse College
Wikipedia - Huis der Boede -- Dutch country house
Wikipedia - Huis met de Hoofden -- Dutch canal house
Wikipedia - Hulda Barker Loud -- Massachusetts newspaper editor
Wikipedia - Hull and Hornsea Railway -- Disused railway in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hull Botanic Gardens railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hull House -- 19th and 20th-century settlement house in the United States
Wikipedia - Hull, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Human-computer interaction -- Academic discipline studying the relationship between computer systems and their users
Wikipedia - Human error -- Action with unintended consequences, that is often the primary cause or contributing factor in disasters and accidents
Wikipedia - Human impact of Internet use
Wikipedia - Humanitas publishing house
Wikipedia - Humanix Books -- American publishing house
Wikipedia - Human rights abuses in Sindh
Wikipedia - Human Rights and Constitutional Affairs Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Human uses of bats
Wikipedia - Human uses of plants -- The uses of plants by humans
Wikipedia - Hum - I'm Because of Us -- 2018 Hindi web series created by Ekta Kapoor
Wikipedia - Humour -- tendency of experiences to provoke laughter and provide amusement
Wikipedia - Humphrey (cat) -- Ninth Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office
Wikipedia - Hundred Acres Manor Haunted House -- Haunted attraction in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Hungama House -- 2019 one shot Gujarati comedy film
Wikipedia - Hungarian pengM-EM-^Q -- Former currency of Hungary, used 1927-1946
Wikipedia - Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery -- Museum in Glasgow, Scotland
Wikipedia - Hunterian Museum at the Royal College of Surgeons
Wikipedia - Huntington Library -- American library, art museum, and garden in California
Wikipedia - Hunt-Morgan House -- Historic Federal style residence in Lexington, KY, US
Wikipedia - Huntroyde Hall -- House in Lancashire, England
Wikipedia - Hunt's Pier -- Amusement park in Wildwood, New Jersey, U.S.
Wikipedia - Hunziker House -- Index of articles associated with the same name
Wikipedia - Huron County Courthouse and Jail -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Hurricane Ivan tornado outbreak -- Tornado outbreak caused by Hurricane Ivan in the Southern United States
Wikipedia - Husband stitch -- Procedure where more stitches then necessary are used to repair the perenium of a woman that has been torn or cut during childbirth, in order to tighten the vagina
Wikipedia - Husein Alicajic -- Australian filmmaker
Wikipedia - Husein GradaM-EM-!M-DM-^Mevic -- Bosnian Muslim general
Wikipedia - Husen Dalwai -- Indian politician
Wikipedia - Huset's Speedway -- Racetrack
Wikipedia - Huseyin Alkan -- Turkish goalball player
Wikipedia - Huseyin Atici -- Turkish shot putter
Wikipedia - Huseyin BaM-EM-^_aran -- Turkish sports commentator
Wikipedia - Huseyinbeyobasi, M-DM-0vrindi -- Village in Turkey
Wikipedia - Huseyindede Tepe -- Early Hittite site in the Sungurlu district, M-CM-^Gorum Province, Turkey
Wikipedia - Huseyin Kenan Aydin -- German politician
Wikipedia - Huseyin KoroM-DM-^_lu -- Turkish Cypriot actor and film director
Wikipedia - Huseyin M-CM-^Vzkan -- Turkish judoka
Wikipedia - Huseyin Mutlu Akpinar -- Turkish politician
Wikipedia - Huseyin Numan MenemencioM-DM-^_lu -- Turkish politician and diplomat
Wikipedia - Huseyin Sehitoglu -- Turkish mechanical engineer
Wikipedia - Huseyn Hasanov -- Azerbaijani Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Huseyn Javid
Wikipedia - Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy -- Bengali politician, lawyer and Prime Minister of Pakistan
Wikipedia - Hussain Umarji -- Indian Muslim cleric accused of conspiracy behind Godhra train burning
Wikipedia - Husthwaite Gate railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hutton Cranswick railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Huttons Ambo railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - H with stroke -- Letter of the Latin alphabet used in Maltese language
Wikipedia - Hyacinth House -- 1971 song by The Doors
Wikipedia - Hyatt Regency Indianapolis -- Mixed-used high-rise building in Indianapolis, IN, US
Wikipedia - Hyde Park pet cemetery -- Disused animal burial ground in London
Wikipedia - Hyde Park Picture House -- Cinema in Leeds, England
Wikipedia - Hyde Park station (MBTA) -- Commuter rail station in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Hyderabad House (restaurant) -- Indian restaurant chain
Wikipedia - Hyderabad House
Wikipedia - Hydraulic rescue tools -- Tool used by emergency rescue personnel to assist vehicle extrication of crash victims
Wikipedia - Hydrocodone -- Opioid drug used in pain relief
Wikipedia - Hydrofoil -- A type of fast watercraft and the name of the technology it uses
Wikipedia - Hydrogen vehicle -- Vehicle that uses hydrogen fuel for motive power
Wikipedia - Hydrolastic -- Type of space-efficient automotive suspension system used in many cars produced by British Motor Corporation
Wikipedia - Hydro massage -- Use of water pressure for massage techniques
Wikipedia - Hydromorphone -- Opioid drug used for pain relief
Wikipedia - Hydrotherapy -- Alternative medicine involving the use of water for pain relief and treatment
Wikipedia - Hydrox (breathing gas) -- Breathing gas mixture experimentally used for very deep diving
Wikipedia - Hyena butter -- Secretion from the anal gland of hyenas used to mark territory and identify other animals
Wikipedia - Hyeong -- Martial arts forms used in taekwondo
Wikipedia - Hynes Convention Center station -- Boston, Massachusetts light rail station
Wikipedia - Hyoscine -- Medication against nausea
Wikipedia - Hyperforeignism -- Hypercorrection where speakers apply the features of a foreign language beyond its original use.
Wikipedia - Hypergamy -- Practice of a person marrying a spouse of higher caste or social status than theirs
Wikipedia - Hyperlactation syndrome -- The condition where breast milk overflow occurs because of increased milk production
Wikipedia - Hyper Music/Feeling Good -- 2001 single by Muse
Wikipedia - Hyphen-minus -- Character primarily used to represent a hyphen
Wikipedia - Hyphen -- Punctuation mark used to join words
Wikipedia - Hypokalemia -- Human disease caused by insufficient potassium
Wikipedia - Hypotenuse -- Longest side of a right-angled triangle, the side opposite of the right angle
Wikipedia - Hypothetical types of biochemistry -- Possible alternative biochemicals used by life forms
Wikipedia - Hypot -- Computationally safe computer function to calculate the hypotenuse of a right triangle
Wikipedia - Hypromellose -- Cellulose ether used as emulsifier or thickening agent to disperse colloids in water
Wikipedia - Hypsometric tints -- Use of color to mark elevation in a map
Wikipedia - Hyrum T. Covey House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - Hysan Place -- Shopping centre in Causeway Bay, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - I Am Because We Are -- 2008 film
Wikipedia - I Am Half-Sick of Shadows, Said the Lady of Shalott -- Painting by John William Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Ian Newhouse -- Canadian hurdler
Wikipedia - Iapetus Suture -- One of several major geological faults caused by the collision of several ancient land masses forming a suture
Wikipedia - Iatrogenic anemia -- Anemia caused by medical interventions
Wikipedia - Ibadat Khana -- Meeting house built in 1575 by Mughal Emperor Akbar for interfaith dialogue
Wikipedia - Iberg Dripstone Cave -- Public cave and geology museum in Lower Saxony, northwestern Germany
Wikipedia - IBM 1403 -- High speed line printer, introduced in 1959 and used into the 1970s
Wikipedia - IBM 728 -- Magnetic tape drive used on the SAGE AN/FSQ-7 computer
Wikipedia - IBM 9020 -- Model of IBM mainframe specially designed for use in air traffic control
Wikipedia - IBM Common User Access
Wikipedia - IBM during World War II -- Use of IBM technology during World War II
Wikipedia - IBM eFUSE -- Technology to reprogram computer chips.
Wikipedia - IBM railway station -- Disused railway station in Inverclyde, Scotland
Wikipedia - IBM Z -- Family name used by IBM for its non-POWER mainframe computers from the Z900 on
Wikipedia - Ibrahim Balarabe-Abdullahi -- Speaker of the Nasarawa State House of Assembly in Nigeria
Wikipedia - Ibrahim Zailani -- Speaker of the Kaduna State House of Assembly
Wikipedia - Ibrutinib -- Medication used in cancer treatment
Wikipedia - I.B. Tauris -- Publishing House
Wikipedia - IBus (London) -- Automatic Vehicle Location and information system for London's buses
Wikipedia - ICD-10-CM -- Diagnosis code system for use in the U.S.
Wikipedia - ICD-10 Procedure Coding System -- International system of medical classification used for procedural coding
Wikipedia - Ice Age Centre -- Estoniam educational museum
Wikipedia - Icebox -- Non-mechanical household appliance for cooling foodstuffs
Wikipedia - Ice carousel -- Piece of ice made to spin like a carousel
Wikipedia - Ice house (building) -- Building used for storing ice all year round, before refrigeration
Wikipedia - Icehouse pieces
Wikipedia - Ice in the Bedroom -- 1961 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Ice jacking -- Structural damage caused by the expansion of freezing water in a confined space
Wikipedia - Icelandic Museum of Design and Applied Art -- An art museum in GarM-CM-0abM-CM-&r, Iceland
Wikipedia - Ice pier -- A man-made structure used to assist the unloading of ships in Antarctica
Wikipedia - Ice resurfacer -- Machine used to resurface an ice rink
Wikipedia - I Ching -- Ancient Chinese text used for divination
Wikipedia - Iconsiam -- Mixed-use development in Bangkok, Thailand
Wikipedia - IDA71 -- Russian military rebreather for underwater and high altitude use
Wikipedia - Idemitsu Art Museum Station -- Railway station located in Kitakyushu, Fukuoka
Wikipedia - Identical note -- Term used in diplomacy
Wikipedia - Identity fraud -- Use by one person of another person's personal information, without authorization
Wikipedia - Identity function -- In mathematics, a function that always returns the same value that was used as its argument
Wikipedia - Identity replacement technology -- Technology used to imitate or conceal identities
Wikipedia - Identity theft -- Deliberate use of someone else's identity, usually as a method to gain a financial advantage
Wikipedia - Ident protocol -- Internet protocol that helps identify the user of a particular TCP connection
Wikipedia - Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses
Wikipedia - Idiopathic hypersomnia -- Sleep disorder characterised by excessive sleep and daytime sleepiness without a known cause
Wikipedia - Idiot-proof -- Designed to be proof against misuse or error
Wikipedia - Idle railway station (Leeds and Bradford Railway) -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Idle railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Idlewild and Soak Zone -- Children's amusement park in Pennsylvania, USA
Wikipedia - IEC 60320 -- Set of standards for AC power connectors used on domestic appliances on the appliance side
Wikipedia - IEEE 1164 -- IEEE standard that defines logic values used in electronic design
Wikipedia - IEEE Xplore -- Research database focused on computer science, electrical engineering, electronics, and allied fields
Wikipedia - IERS Reference Meridian -- International prime meridian used for GPS and other systems
Wikipedia - If I Were You (Wodehouse novel) -- 1931 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Iftikhar Alam Khan -- Indian museologist
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Wikipedia - Ignatius Press -- Catholic publishing house
Wikipedia - IgNight - Grand Finale -- Amusement park attraction
Wikipedia - I Heard You Paint Houses -- 2004 book by Charles Brandt
Wikipedia - Ikaalisten Nouseva-Voima -- Finnish orientering club
Wikipedia - IKEA -- Trademark used for retail of furniture, appliances, and home furnishings that you can build
Wikipedia - Ikki Tousen -- Japanese multimedia franchise
Wikipedia - Il burbero -- 1986 film by Franco Castellano and Giuseppe Moccia
Wikipedia - Il camorrista -- 1986 film by Giuseppe Tornatore
Wikipedia - Ile Aux Galets Light -- Lighthouse in Michigan, United States
Wikipedia - Illa de l'Aire Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Menorca, Spain
Wikipedia - Illhaeusern -- Commune in Grand Est, France
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Wikipedia - Iloilo Museum of Contemporary Art -- Art museum in Iloilo City, Philippines
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Wikipedia - Imaginarium Science Center -- Museum in Fort Myers, Florida, USA
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Wikipedia - Imperial Crown of India -- Crown used by King George V as Emperor of India at the Delhi Durbar of 1911
Wikipedia - Imperial crown -- A crown used for the coronation of emperors
Wikipedia - Imperial Household Council -- Government agency
Wikipedia - Imperial House of Japan -- Members of the extended family of the reigning Emperor of Japan
Wikipedia - Imperialist competitive algorithm -- Computational method used to solve optimization problems of different types
Wikipedia - Imperial War Museum Duxford -- Aviation museum in Cambridgeshire, England
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Wikipedia - Import-Export Clause -- Article I, M-BM-' 10, clause 2 of the United States Constitution
Wikipedia - Impossible world -- Term used to model certain phenomena that cannot be adequately handled using ordinary possible worlds
Wikipedia - Imprinted brain theory -- Theory on the causes of autism and psychosis
Wikipedia - Improved sanitation -- A term used to categorize types or levels of sanitation for monitoring purposes
Wikipedia - Improvised weapon -- Ordinary object used as a weapon
Wikipedia - IMUSE
Wikipedia - Inari shrine -- A type of Japanese shrine used to worship the deity Inari
Wikipedia - Incense offering in rabbinic literature -- Rabbinic views on the incense formula used in Jewish ritual
Wikipedia - Inch House, Edinburgh -- Building in Edinburgh
Wikipedia - Incidents at European amusement parks -- List of amusement park incidents
Wikipedia - Incipit -- First few words of the opening line of a poem, song, or book, often used in lieu of a title
Wikipedia - Incomindios Switzerland -- Human rights organization that focuses on the native populations of the Americas
Wikipedia - Incroyables and merveilleuses -- Fashionable aristocratic subculture in Paris during the French Directory (1795-1799)
Wikipedia - Incubator (culture) -- Device used to grow and maintain microbiological cultures or cell cultures
Wikipedia - Indemnity clause
Wikipedia - Independence Hall of Korea -- History museum
Wikipedia - Independent clause
Wikipedia - Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse -- Official inquiry in England and Wales
Wikipedia - Index: Incident in a Museum -- Series of paintings by Art & Language
Wikipedia - Index of lists of famous deaths by cause
Wikipedia - Index of Massachusetts-related articles -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - India House
Wikipedia - India Inc. -- Commonly used term to describe the formal sector in India
Wikipedia - Indiana Beach -- Amusement park in Indiana Beach, Indiana, U.S.
Wikipedia - Indiana House of Representatives -- American state legislature
Wikipedia - Indianapolis Motor Speedway Museum -- Museum in Speedway, Indiana, United States
Wikipedia - Indiana Railway Museum -- Railroad museum in French Lick, IN,US
Wikipedia - Indiana's 1st congressional district -- U.S. House district in northwestern Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 2nd congressional district -- U.S. House district in north central Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 3rd congressional district -- U.S. House district centered on Fort Wayne, IN
Wikipedia - Indiana's 6th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southeastern Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 7th congressional district -- U.S. House district in Indianapolis, Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 8th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southwestern Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 9th congressional district -- U.S. House district in south central Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana Statehouse -- State capitol building of the U.S. state of Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana Transportation Museum -- Railroad museum in Logansport, IN,US
Wikipedia - Indian Coffee House -- Restaurant chain in India, run by co-operative societies
Wikipedia - Indian Museum, Kolkata
Wikipedia - Indian Museum
Wikipedia - Indian Rocks Causeway -- Bridge in Florida, United States of America
Wikipedia - Indian Summer of an Uncle -- Short story by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Indication (medicine) -- Valid reason to use a certain test, medication, procedure, or surgery
Wikipedia - Indicator bacteria -- Types of bacteria used to detect and estimate the level of fecal contamination of water
Wikipedia - Indicator diagram -- Used to estimate the performance of reciprocating engine
Wikipedia - Indicator value -- Term used in ecology
Wikipedia - Indiction -- Any of the years in a 15-year cycle used to date medieval documents throughout Europe
Wikipedia - Indigene editions (publishing house) -- French publishing company
Wikipedia - Indigenous Australian seasons -- Systems of weather seasons used by Indigenous Australians
Wikipedia - Indiscretions of Archie -- 1921 short story collection by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Indivirus -- Hypothesized genus of giant double-stranded DNA-containing viruses
Wikipedia - Indo-1 -- Chemical compound used as an indicator in calcium imaging
Wikipedia - Indonesian Spelling System -- Spelling system used for the Indonesian language
Wikipedia - Industrial espionage -- Use of espionage for commercial purposes rather than security
Wikipedia - Industrial Ethernet -- Use of Ethernet in an industrial environment
Wikipedia - Industrial furnace -- Device used for providing heat in industrial applications
Wikipedia - Industrial gas -- Gaseous materials produced for use in industry
Wikipedia - Industrial plasticine -- A modeling material which is mainly used by automotive design studios
Wikipedia - Industrial Real-Time Fortran -- Late-20th century formatting language involving the use of Fortran
Wikipedia - Industrial region -- Geographical region with a high proportion of industrial use
Wikipedia - Industrial society -- Society driven by the use of technology to enable mass production, supporting a large population with a high capacity for division of labour
Wikipedia - Industrial wastewater treatment -- Processes used for treating wastewater that is produced by industries as an undesirable by-product
Wikipedia - Industry House (Kolkata)
Wikipedia - In-ear monitor -- Audio earpiece commonly used in live music and television
Wikipedia - Ineligibility Clause -- Provision of the US Constitution
Wikipedia - Infernal machine (weapon) -- 25-barrel volley gun made by Giuseppe Marco Fieschi in 1835
Wikipedia - Infidel -- Those accused of unbelief in the central tenets of their own religion, members of another religion, or the irreligious
Wikipedia - InfiniBand -- High-speed, low-latency computer networking bus used in supercomputing
Wikipedia - Infinite Corridor -- Hallway at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - Infinity Gems -- Fictional cosmic items with the power to grant a user an ability/abilities
Wikipedia - Infinity Waters -- Mixed-use tower complex in Sri Lanka
Wikipedia - Infobox -- Template used to collect and present a subset of information about a subject
Wikipedia - Informal mathematics -- Any informal mathematical practices used in everyday life
Wikipedia - Information technology consulting -- Field that focuses on advising businesses on how best to use information technology
Wikipedia - Information warfare -- Battlespace use and management of information and communication technology
Wikipedia - Infused righteousness
Wikipedia - Ingatestone Hall -- Country house in Essex, England
Wikipedia - Ingenuity (Crespi) -- Painting by Giuseppe Maria Crespi
Wikipedia - Ingmire Hall -- 16th century country house
Wikipedia - Ingram House -- Historic building in York, England
Wikipedia - Ingrow (East) railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Inhalant abuse
Wikipedia - Inholland University of Applied Sciences -- Dutch university with eight campuses
Wikipedia - INIS-8 -- 8-bit character encoding used for the International Nuclear Information System.
Wikipedia - INIS character set -- 7-bit ASCII subset used for the International Nuclear Information System
Wikipedia - Inishmore Lighthouse -- Decommissioned lighthouse in the Aran Islands, Ireland
Wikipedia - Injured reserve list -- Designation used in professional sports leagues for athletes who become injured and temporarily unable to play
Wikipedia - Injury -- Physiological wound caused by an external source
Wikipedia - Inkjet paper -- Paper designed for use with inkjet printers
Wikipedia - Ink sac -- Organ in cephalopods used to squirt ink in defense
Wikipedia - Inkstick -- A type of solid ink (India ink) used traditionally in several East Asian cultures for [[calligraphy]] and brush painting
Wikipedia - Inkwell -- Container used for holding ink
Wikipedia - Inlet Group -- Unused geological term
Wikipedia - In My Mother's House -- 1941 Picture book
Wikipedia - Inner House -- Senior Scottish court
Wikipedia - Inner Mongolia Museum station -- Station of Hohhot Metro
Wikipedia - Inner Mongolia People's Publishing House
Wikipedia - Inner product space -- Generalization of the dot product; used to defined Hilbert spaces
Wikipedia - Inner source -- Use of open source software development best practices and open source-like culture
Wikipedia - Innisfail Court House -- Historic court house in Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Input method -- Operating system component or program that allows any data, such as keyboard strokes or mouse movements, to be received as input
Wikipedia - Inquest -- Judicial inquiry, particularly into the cause of a death
Wikipedia - Inrush current limiter -- Component used to limit inrush current
Wikipedia - Insanity defense -- Plea to insanity of criminal actions used in a court system
Wikipedia - Insecticide -- Pesticide used against insects
Wikipedia - Insect wing -- Body part used by insects to fly
Wikipedia - Insert (composites) -- Pins, bolts, screws, joints and other structures used with composite panels
Wikipedia - Inside Higher Ed -- News website focused on issues of degree-oriented tertiary education
Wikipedia - Insight -- Understanding of a specific cause and effect in a specific context
Wikipedia - Instantaneous wave-free ratio -- Diagnostic tool used to assess whether a stenosis is causing a limitation of blood flow in coronary arteries with subsequent ischemia
Wikipedia - In Stereo (Clouseau album) -- 1999 album by Clouseau
Wikipedia - Instinct (song) -- 1996 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - Institute for Protection of Cultural Monuments and National Museum -- Scientific, research and cultural institution in Ohrid, North Macedonia
Wikipedia - Institute for Veterans and Military Families -- Research institute at Syracuse University in New York, U.S.
Wikipedia - Institute of Arabic Manuscripts -- Museum in Egypt
Wikipedia - Institute of Human Virology Nigeria -- Non-governmental organization that focuses on HIV/AIDS related problems in Nigeria
Wikipedia - Institute of technology (United States) -- Technologically-focused universities
Wikipedia - Institutional abuse
Wikipedia - Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee
Wikipedia - Instrumentum domesticum -- Tools for ordinary domestic use
Wikipedia - Insular G -- Form of the letter g used in Insular fonts in the Old English alphabet
Wikipedia - Insulin (medication) -- Use of insulin protein and analogs as medical treatment
Wikipedia - Integral symbol -- Mathematical symbol used to denote integrals and antiderivatives
Wikipedia - Integrated development environment -- Software application used to develop software
Wikipedia - Integrating ADC -- Analog-to-digital converter that uses an op-amp integrator
Wikipedia - Integration using Euler's formula -- Use of complex numbers to evaluate integrals
Wikipedia - Intel Core -- Brand name that Intel uses for various mid-range to high-end consumer and business microprocessors
Wikipedia - Intelligence source and information reliability -- Rating systems used in intelligence analysis
Wikipedia - Intelligent user interfaces
Wikipedia - IntelliMouse
Wikipedia - Intel Management Engine -- Firmware and software that runs on all modern Intel CPUs at a higher level than user-facing operating system
Wikipedia - Intel Museum
Wikipedia - Intensive farming in Almeria -- Greenhouse agriculture in southern Spain.
Wikipedia - Interactionism (nature versus nurture) -- Perspective that human behavior is caused by interaction of genetic and environmental factors
Wikipedia - Intercontinental Exchange -- American exchange and clearing house company
Wikipedia - Interdisciplinary teaching -- Methods used to teach across curricular disciplines
Wikipedia - Interest (emotion) -- Feeling that causes attention to focus on an object, event or process
Wikipedia - Interest rate -- Percentage of a sum of money charged for its use
Wikipedia - Interest -- A sum paid for the use of money
Wikipedia - Interjection -- Word or expression used to express an emotion or sentiment
Wikipedia - Interlanguage -- Idiolect used by a second language learner
Wikipedia - Intermodal container -- Standardized reusable steel box used for transporting goods
Wikipedia - Internalized oppression -- Concept in which an oppressed group uses the methods of the oppressing group against itself
Wikipedia - International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame -- Museum to honor bluegrass music
Wikipedia - International Coach Regulations -- Regulations covering international use of passenger coaches among European railways
Wikipedia - International Conference on Harmonisation of Technical Requirements for Registration of Pharmaceuticals for Human Use
Wikipedia - International Council of Museums
Wikipedia - International Designator -- Alphanumerical designation used to identify spacecraft in or beyond Earth orbit launched since 1962
Wikipedia - International House (1933 film) -- 1933 film by A. Edward Sutherland
Wikipedia - International House Berkeley
Wikipedia - International Knockout Mouse Consortium
Wikipedia - International maritime signal flags -- Flag used to communicate something about the ship flying it from a distance
Wikipedia - International Men's Health Week -- Event focused on issues facing men's health
Wikipedia - International Museum Day -- annual international day observed on or around 18 May and coordinated by the International Council of Museums
Wikipedia - International orange -- Color, shade of orange with red; used in the aerospace industry to set objects apart from their surroundings
Wikipedia - International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum -- Historical museum in Geneva (Switzerland)
Wikipedia - International Relations and Trade Select Committee -- Committee appointed by the Malaysian House of Representatives
Wikipedia - International scientific vocabulary -- Scientific and specialized words in current use in several modern languages
Wikipedia - International Semi Tech Microsystems -- Canadian household and consumer products firm
Wikipedia - International Spy Museum -- Museum in Washington, D.C., United States
Wikipedia - International Standard Serial Number -- Unique eight-digit number used to identify a periodical publication
Wikipedia - International Student House of Washington, D.C. -- Residence in Washington, D.C., United States
Wikipedia - International Students House, London -- Set of lodgings in London, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - International System of Quantities -- System of quantities and equations used in science
Wikipedia - International vehicle registration code -- Codes used to identify where a vehicle is registered
Wikipedia - International volunteering -- Paid travel which includes volunteering for a charitable cause
Wikipedia - Internet addiction disorder -- Excessive internet use that causes psychological disorders.
Wikipedia - Internet Control Message Protocol -- Internet protocol used for error messages in network operations
Wikipedia - Internet culture -- Culture that has emerged from the use of computer networks
Wikipedia - Internet fraud -- A type of fraud or deception which makes use of the Internet to defraud victims
Wikipedia - Internet Go server -- Online servers allowing users to play Go
Wikipedia - Internet in Nepal -- Description and history of internet use in Nepal
Wikipedia - Internet rush hour -- Time when the most Internet users are online at the same time
Wikipedia - Internet Security Research Group -- Californian public-benefit corporation which focuses on Internet security
Wikipedia - Internet slang -- Slang languages used by different people on the Internet
Wikipedia - Interposer -- Layer between an integrated circuit and a printed circuit board, used to spread and reroute connections
Wikipedia - Interrobang -- Fused question mark and exclamation point
Wikipedia - Interrupted screw -- Mechanical device used to effect a closure using a partial rotation
Wikipedia - Interstate 195 (Rhode Island-Massachusetts) -- Highway in Rhode Island and Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 290 (Massachusetts) -- Interstate Highway in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Interstate 291 (Massachusetts) -- Highway in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 295 (Rhode Island-Massachusetts) -- Interstate Highway in Rhode Island and Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 391 -- Highway in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 495 (Massachusetts) -- Highway in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 84 in Massachusetts -- Highway in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 895 (Rhode Island-Massachusetts) -- Former proposed Interstate Highway in Rhode Island and Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 90 in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Interstate 91 -- Interstate Highway in the U.S. states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont
Wikipedia - Interstate 93 -- Interstate Highway in the U.S. states of Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont
Wikipedia - Interstate Aviation Committee -- Executive body of the Civil Aviation and Airspace Use Council of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)
Wikipedia - In the Dream House -- 2019 memoir by Carmen Maria Machado
Wikipedia - Intimate partner violence -- Domestic violence by a spouse or intimate partner against the other spouse or partner
Wikipedia - Intimidator 305 -- Amusement ride
Wikipedia - Introduction to viruses -- Non-technical introduction to viruses
Wikipedia - Inuktitut syllabics -- Abugida-type writing system used in Canada
Wikipedia - Invacar -- Small single-seater vehicle designed for use by disabled drivers
Wikipedia - Invasive candidiasis -- Serious and potentially fatal infection caused by Candida yeast
Wikipedia - Inventive spelling -- The use of unconventional spellings of words
Wikipedia - Inventory turnover -- Measure of the number of times inventory is sold or used in a time period
Wikipedia - Inverleith House -- Architectural structure in City of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Investopedia -- Website focused on finance and investing
Wikipedia - Invisible plane -- Fictional vehicle used by Wonder Woman
Wikipedia - In Your House 10: Mind Games -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 11: Buried Alive -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 12: It's Time -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 13: Final Four -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 14: Revenge of the 'Taker -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 15: A Cold Day in Hell -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede -- 1997 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 1 -- 1995 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 2 -- 1995 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 3 -- 1995 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 4 -- 1995 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 5 -- 1995 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 6 -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 7: Good Friends, Better Enemies -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 8: Beware of Dog -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House 9: International Incident -- 1996 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - In Your House -- World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event series
Wikipedia - Ion beam lithography -- Lithographic technique that uses a scanning ion beam
Wikipedia - Ionic order -- Order of classical architecture characterized by the use of volutes in the capital and a base moulding on the columns
Wikipedia - Ion implantation -- Material and chemical process used to change the properties of a target
Wikipedia - Iosif Matusec -- Romanian gymnast
Wikipedia - Iowa caucuses -- United States electoral event
Wikipedia - Iowa's 4th congressional district -- U.S. House district in Northwestern Iowa
Wikipedia - IP address management -- Methodology implemented in computer software for planning and managing assignment and use of IP addresses and closely related resources of a computer network
Wikipedia - Ipatiev House -- House where Tsar Nicholas II was imprisoned, and executed
Wikipedia - IPCC list of greenhouse gases -- List of greenhouse gases
Wikipedia - IP routing -- Process used to determine which path a packet or datagram can be sent
Wikipedia - IPS panel -- Screen technology used for liquid crystal displays
Wikipedia - Ipswich Street line -- Former streetcar line in Boston and Brookline, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies -- Museum and research institute in California
Wikipedia - Iranian calendars -- Calendars used in Iran
Wikipedia - Irgenhausen Castrum -- Former Roman fort in Irgenhausen, Switzerland
Wikipedia - Irgenhausen -- Former municipality of Switzerland in Zurich
Wikipedia - Iribarren number -- A dimensionless parameter used to model several effects of breaking surface gravity waves on beaches and coastal structures.
Wikipedia - Iridaceae -- Family of flowering plants comprising irises, gladioli, and crocuses
Wikipedia - Irisalva Moita -- Portuguese archaeologist and museologist
Wikipedia - Irish Academic Press -- Irish publishing house
Wikipedia - Irish Film Institute -- Arthouse cinema, cultural center, and film archive in Dublin
Wikipedia - Irish Grand National -- Irish National Hunt steeplechase handicap horse race held at Fairyhouse racecourse annually
Wikipedia - Irish grid reference system -- System of geographic grid references used for mapping in Ireland
Wikipedia - Irish House of Commons
Wikipedia - Irish Republican History Museum -- Museum in Belfast, Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Irmi Krauser -- German gymnast
Wikipedia - Ironheart (1992 film) -- 1992 film by Robert Clouse
Wikipedia - Iron Pipeline -- Route used to smuggle firearms
Wikipedia - Irregular chess opening -- Imprecise term for an infrequently used chess opening
Wikipedia - Irritable bowel syndrome -- functional bowel disorder characterized by chronic issues without an organic cause
Wikipedia - Irsan Husen -- Indonesian weightlifter
Wikipedia - IRT Powerhouse -- Steam power plant in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Irving Rosenthal -- amusement company owner
Wikipedia - Irving Rouse
Wikipedia - Isaac Bullard (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - Isaac Crocker Homestead -- Historic home and farm in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Isaac Musekiwa -- Soukous recording artist and saxophonist, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
Wikipedia - Isaacs Art Center -- Art museum in Waimea, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Isaac Woodard -- American WWII veteran and victim of racial abuse
Wikipedia - Isabel Clarisa Millan Garcia -- Museum curator
Wikipedia - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum theft -- 1990 art theft in Boston
Wikipedia - Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum -- Art museum in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Islamic calendar -- lunar calendar used by Muslims to determine religious observances
Wikipedia - Islamic Museum of Australia -- Museum in Melbourne, Australia
Wikipedia - Islamic Society of Central New York -- Sunni mosque and Islamic community centre in Syracuse, New York, United States
Wikipedia - Island House, Laugharne -- Historic home in south west Wales
Wikipedia - Island House, Plymouth -- Grade II listed building in Plymouth
Wikipedia - Island Road railway station -- Disused railway station in Cumbria, England
Wikipedia - Isle Royale Light -- Lighthouse on Isle Royale in Michigan, United States
Wikipedia - ISO 3166-3 -- Part of the ISO 3166 standard: Code for formerly used names of countries
Wikipedia - Isolation to facilitate abuse
Wikipedia - Isotretinoin -- Medication primarily used to treat severe acne
Wikipedia - ISPF -- Component of the z/OS operating system used for accessing filesystems
Wikipedia - ISPM 15 -- Standard for treating wood products used to ship products between countries
Wikipedia - Israel Defense Forces History Museum -- Military museum in Tel Aviv
Wikipedia - Israeli demolition of Palestinian property -- War method used by the Israelis against Palestinians
Wikipedia - Israel Israeli -- Placeholder name used in Israel
Wikipedia - Israel Museum -- Israel's national museum
Wikipedia - ISSpresso -- ISSpresso is the first capsule espresso coffee machine for use in space and not only on the ground, produced for the International Space Station by Argotec and Lavazza in a public-private partnership with the Italian Space Agency (ASI)
Wikipedia - Istanbul Archaeology Museums
Wikipedia - I Stand Accused -- 1938 film by John H. Auer
Wikipedia - ISTE Standards -- Standards for the use of technology in teaching and learning
Wikipedia - Isthmian script -- Mesoamerican writing system in use in the area of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec from perhaps 500 BCE to 500 CE
Wikipedia - Italian aircraft carrier Giuseppe Garibaldi (551)
Wikipedia - Italian auxiliary ship Olterra -- Salvaged Italian tanker used as support and base for WWII manned torpedo frogman raids on Allied shipping in Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Italian playing cards -- Playing card deck used in Italy
Wikipedia - Itchen Navigation -- Disused canal system in Hampshire, England
Wikipedia - Itch -- Sensation that causes the desire or reflex to scratch
Wikipedia - Itineraire a Grand Gabarit -- Water and road route in France to allow the transport structural sections of the Airbus A380 airliner to Toulouse for final assembly
Wikipedia - Itraconazole -- Chemical compound used as medication to treat fungal infections
Wikipedia - I Travel Because I Have to, I Come Back Because I Love You -- 2009 film directed by Marcelo Gomes, Karim AM-CM-/nouz
Wikipedia - It's in the Way That You Use It
Wikipedia - It's Only Natural (song) -- 1991 single by Crowded House
Wikipedia - I Used to Be a Fish -- 2016 children's book by Tom Sullivan
Wikipedia - Ivacaftor -- Pharmaceutical drug used to treat cystic fibrosis
Wikipedia - Ivan Allen Jr. Braves Museum and Hall of Fame -- Former museum in Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Wikipedia - Ivan Honchar Museum -- Museum in Kyiv, Ukraine
Wikipedia - Ivan Racheff House -- Historic house in Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Ivan Rodriguez Traverzo -- Member of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Ivan Schmalhausen
Wikipedia - Ivy Cottage -- House in the grounds of Kensington Palace in London, England
Wikipedia - Iwakuni Art Museum -- Japanese museum
Wikipedia - Iwakuni ChM-EM-^Mkokan -- Japanese museum
Wikipedia - IWC Schaffhausen
Wikipedia - I with bowl -- Letter of the Latin alphabet used for historical orthography of JaM-jM-^^M-^Qalif
Wikipedia - Ixion (Ribera) -- Painting by Jusepe de Ribera
Wikipedia - Iyaric -- Created dialect of English used by the Rastafari movement
Wikipedia - Iziko South African Museum -- A South African national museum in Cape Town
Wikipedia - Izyum Trail -- Historic route used by invading armies in the Crimea
Wikipedia - J-2 visa -- Non-immigrant visa issued by the United States for spouses and dependents of J-1 exchange visitors.
Wikipedia - Jaaz Multimedia -- Film production and distribution house in Bangladesh
Wikipedia - Jaber Causeway
Wikipedia - Jack Brickhouse -- American sportscaster
Wikipedia - Jack Nicklaus Museum -- American sports museum
Wikipedia - Jackson County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Jackson Homestead -- Historic building in Newton, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Jacksons of Piccadilly -- A defunct London tea house, tea wholesaler and retailer
Wikipedia - Jackstay -- Substantial line between two points used to guide or support.
Wikipedia - Jacob H. Barr House -- historic home in Mansfield, Ohio, US
Wikipedia - Jacobi method -- Iterative method used to solve a linear system of equations
Wikipedia - Jacobitism -- Political ideology supporting the restoration of the House of Stuart
Wikipedia - Jacobson-Bourbaki theorem -- Theorem used to extend Galois theory to field extensions that need not be separable
Wikipedia - Jacob T. Walden Stone House -- 1730s stone house in Walden, New York
Wikipedia - Jacqueline Kennedy Garden -- Garden outside the White House in Washington, DC, United States
Wikipedia - JADE (planning system) -- U.S. military system used for planning
Wikipedia - Jagdschloss Kranichstein -- Hunting lodge, a palace, now museum and hotel, in Darmstadt, Germany
Wikipedia - Jaguar XJ (electric) -- a Scottish motor museum
Wikipedia - Jai Hind -- salutation used to express patriotism in India
Wikipedia - Jail House Blues (film) -- 1942 film
Wikipedia - Jailhouse Blues -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - Jailhouse informants
Wikipedia - Jailhouse Rock (film) -- 1957 film by Richard Thorpe
Wikipedia - Jaime Levy -- American interface designer and user experience strategists
Wikipedia - Jaime Perello -- Speaker of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jakab Kauser -- Hungarian pole vaulter
Wikipedia - Jake Barton -- American museum designer
Wikipedia - Jalal Yousef -- Venezuelan pool player, born 1979
Wikipedia - Jama'at Khana -- Term used by some Muslim communities for a place of gathering
Wikipedia - Jamaica Intensive Reading Clinic -- Jamaican NGO focused on literacy
Wikipedia - Jamalpur Gymkhana -- Hostel and club used by the Special Class Railway Apprentices in Jamalpur, Bihar, India
Wikipedia - James A. Fields House -- historic house
Wikipedia - James A. Fulmer House -- Historic house in Fountain Inn, South Carolina
Wikipedia - James Arthur Morrison House -- Historic house in Alabama, US
Wikipedia - James Backhouse
Wikipedia - James Baker -- Former U.S. Secretary of State and White House Chief of Staff
Wikipedia - James B. Duke House -- Mansion in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - James Boggs Tannehill House -- Historic residence in Zanesville, Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - James Brady -- White House Press Secretary under Ronald Reagan
Wikipedia - James Brighouse -- Late-nineteenth-century American leader of a splinter sect in the Latter Day Saint movement called the Order of Enoch
Wikipedia - James Camp Tappan -- 32nd Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives
Wikipedia - James Cantwell -- American politician from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - James Carr (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - James C. Duff -- American museum CEO, public servant
Wikipedia - James C. Strouse -- American Director
Wikipedia - James D. Mauseth -- botanist
Wikipedia - James Eckhouse -- American actor
Wikipedia - James Edusei Sarkodie -- politician and member of parliament
Wikipedia - James Fankhauser -- American conductor, tenor, and educator
Wikipedia - James G. McAllister House -- Historic house
Wikipedia - James Hillhouse -- American lawyer, real estate developer and politician (1754-1832)
Wikipedia - James Krause (fighter) -- American mixed martial arts fighter
Wikipedia - James Kreuser -- American politician, County Executive of Kenosha County, Wisconsin, former Wisconsin Assembly Democratic Minority Leader.
Wikipedia - James L. Autry House (Courtlandt Place, Houston) -- Historic house in Houston, Texas
Wikipedia - James L. Powell -- James Powell is a geologist, author, former college president and museum director. (b.1936)
Wikipedia - James Monroe Houses -- Public housing development in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - James Moorhouse (politician) -- British politician
Wikipedia - James Parry -- American Usenetter
Wikipedia - James Redhouse
Wikipedia - James Rouse -- American real estate developer, urban planner, and civic activist
Wikipedia - James S. Brady Press Briefing Room -- Briefing room in the White House
Wikipedia - James Strangeways -- Speaker of the House of Commons of England
Wikipedia - James T. Foley United States Courthouse -- 1930s US federal government building in Albany, New York
Wikipedia - James Toback -- American screenwriter and film director accused of sexual harassment and assault
Wikipedia - James Tokioka -- American politician and a Democratic member of the Hawaii House of Representatives since January 2007 representing District 15
Wikipedia - James Watson House
Wikipedia - James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher -- Sentence used to demonstrate lexical ambiguity and the importance of punctuation
Wikipedia - James Woodhouse, 1st Baron Terrington -- English Liberal politician
Wikipedia - James W. Rouse
Wikipedia - Jamie Principle -- American house music artist and producer
Wikipedia - Jammu and Kashmir Legislative Assembly -- Union territory legislature house in India
Wikipedia - Jan Anton van der Baren -- Flemish painter, draughtsman, priest and museum curator
Wikipedia - Jan Clausen -- American writer
Wikipedia - Jane Avril -- French can-can dancer made famous by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec through his painting
Wikipedia - Janet Gerhauser -- American figure skater
Wikipedia - Jan Hauser -- Swiss curler
Wikipedia - Janssen Willhoit -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jan Theodoor Kruseman -- Dutch painter
Wikipedia - January-February 2019 North American cold wave -- late-January 2019 fatal cold wave in the U.S. and Canada caused by the severe weakening of the Arctic polar vortex
Wikipedia - Japan Amusement Expo -- Annual trade fair for amusement arcade products
Wikipedia - Japanese army and diplomatic codes -- Ciphers and codes used up to and during World War II
Wikipedia - Japanese battleship Hatsuse -- Japanese Shikishima-class battleship
Wikipedia - Japanese calendar -- calendars used in Japan past and present
Wikipedia - Japanese encephalitis -- Infection of the brain caused by the Japanese encephalitis virus
Wikipedia - Japanese honorifics -- Explanation, uses of Japanese honorifics
Wikipedia - Japanese input method -- Methods used to input Japanese characters on a computer
Wikipedia - Japanese Lighthouse (Garapan, Saipan) -- Lighthouse in the Northern Mariana Islands
Wikipedia - Japanese naval codes -- Ciphers used by the Imperial Japanese Navy in World War II
Wikipedia - Japanese numerals -- Number words used in the Japanese language
Wikipedia - Japanese tea utensils -- Equipment and utensils used in Japanese tea ceremony
Wikipedia - Japanese Village -- Nickname for a range of mock houses constructed in 1943 by the U.S. Army in Dugway Proving Ground, Utah
Wikipedia - Japanese war fan -- Military use of fans in feudal Japan
Wikipedia - Jardine House -- Building in Central, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Jaroslawiec Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Jarvis Stone School -- Historic one-room schoolhouse in Salem, Michigan, US
Wikipedia - Jashodaben Modi -- Spouse of Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi
Wikipedia - JasmuiM-EM->a Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Jasper County Courthouse (Georgia) -- Historic building in Monticello, Georgia, US
Wikipedia - Jasper County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Jastarnia Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Jaungulbene Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Jaunmokas Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - JaunmuiM-EM->a Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Jaunsvente Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Jawaharlal Nehru Museum, Itanagar -- State museum at Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh, India
Wikipedia - Jaw -- Opposable articulated structure at the entrance of the mouth, typically used for grasping and manipulating food; structures constituting the vault of the mouth and serving to open and close it and is part of the body plan of most animals
Wikipedia - Jaydee -- Dutch house music producer and DJ
Wikipedia - Jay Owenhouse -- American Magician and Illusionist
Wikipedia - J. Deryl Hart House -- Residence of the president of Duke University
Wikipedia - Jean-Armand de Joyeuse, Marquis de Grandpre -- French general
Wikipedia - Jean Bastier de La Peruse -- French poet and playwright
Wikipedia - Jean d'Outremeuse
Wikipedia - Jeanette Covacevich -- Australian herpetologist and museum curator
Wikipedia - Jean-Francois Champollion University Center for Teaching and Research -- French university, in the Academy of Toulouse
Wikipedia - Jean Lacy -- Museum educator and visual artist
Wikipedia - Jean-Luc Martinez -- Director of Musee du Louvre, a museum in Paris, France
Wikipedia - Jean-Marie Perouse de Montclos -- French historian and archaeologist
Wikipedia - Jean O'Sullivan -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jean-Paul de Ruyter-Werfuse -- French naval officer of the War of American Independence
Wikipedia - Jean Paul Slusser -- American painter, art critic, professor, and museum director
Wikipedia - Jeans instability -- Mechanism by which the collapse of interstellar gas clouds causes star formation
Wikipedia - Jean Skuse -- Australian church worker
Wikipedia - Jeans -- Trousers often made from denim or dungaree cloth
Wikipedia - Jedediah Smith Memorial Trail -- Paved multi-use pathway
Wikipedia - Jedediah Strong II House -- Building in Vermont, United States
Wikipedia - Jeeva (2014 film) -- 2014 Indian Tamil-language film by Suseenthiran
Wikipedia - Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit -- 1954 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Jeeves in the Offing -- 1960 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Jeeves in the Springtime -- Short story by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Jeeves -- Fictional character in stories by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Jeff Bond House -- Historic home in Kentucky, US
Wikipedia - Jeff Daly -- Architect, museum gallery and exhibition designer
Wikipedia - Jefferson County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Jefferson County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Jefferson County Courthouse (West Virginia) -- Courthouse in Charles Town, West Virginia
Wikipedia - Jefferson Patterson Park & Museum -- Archive organization in Leonardtown, Maryland, U.S.
Wikipedia - Jeffersonville Quartermaster Depot -- US Army warehouse located in Jeffersonville, IN operated from 1871-1958
Wikipedia - Jeffrey A. Kruse -- U.S. Transportation Command director of operations
Wikipedia - Jeffrey LaRe -- Member of the Ohio House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jeffrey Sanchez (politician) -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Jehovah's Witnesses and blood transfusions -- Jehovah's Witnesses doctrinal position about use of blood
Wikipedia - Jehovah's Witnesses' handling of child sex abuse -- Controversy regarding Jehovah's Witnesses' handling of sexual abuse cases
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Wikipedia - Jens Clausen
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Wikipedia - Jerry Houser -- American television, film and voice actor
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Wikipedia - Jerry McDermott -- High Sheriff of Norfolk County, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Jerry Mouse -- Fictional mouse
Wikipedia - Jersey County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Jersey Settlement Meeting House -- United States national historic place
Wikipedia - Jerusalemhaus -- A house museum in Wetzler, Germany
Wikipedia - Jerusalem -- Opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Wikipedia - Jervaulx railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Jessica Adams -- Fictional character on the Fox medical drama House
Wikipedia - Jessica Brumsted -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jessica Meuse -- American singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Jessica Newberry-Ransehousen -- American equestrian
Wikipedia - Jessie's Critter Carousel -- Attraction at Disney California Adventure
Wikipedia - Jesus freak -- pejorative term used for those involved in the Jesus movement
Wikipedia - Jet lag -- Physiological condition caused by travel across time zones
Wikipedia - Jet pack -- Device worn on the back which uses jets of gas or liquid to propel the wearer through the air
Wikipedia - Jette Sandahl -- Danish museum director
Wikipedia - Jewel Changi Airport -- Mixed-use development at Changi Airport
Wikipedia - Jewett House
Wikipedia - Jewish Children's Museum -- Jewish-themed children's museum in Brooklyn, New York City
Wikipedia - Jewish left -- A movement of activists whose Judaism informs their support left-wing or liberal causes
Wikipedia - Jewish magical papyri -- Papyri with Jewish magical uses, with text in Aramaic, Greek, or Hebrew, produced during the late Second Temple Period and after in Late Antiquity
Wikipedia - Jewish Museum in Prague -- Museum in Czech Republic
Wikipedia - Jewish Museum (Manhattan)
Wikipedia - Jewish Museum of Belgium shooting
Wikipedia - Jewish Museum of Belgium -- Museum of Jewish history
Wikipedia - Jewish Museum of Rome -- museum in the basement of Rome's synagogue
Wikipedia - Jewish Museum of the American West -- Online database of pioneer Jews of the western United States
Wikipedia - Jewish surname -- Family name commonly used by Jewish people
Wikipedia - Jews for Judaism -- Organization that focuses on preventing Jews from converting to other faiths and reclaiming those who have already converted
Wikipedia - J. H. Gakey House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho
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Wikipedia - Jill the Reckless -- 1920 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Jim Bartels -- Hawaiian museum curator and historian
Wikipedia - Jim McCullough -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jim McGovern (American politician) -- U.S. Representative from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Jimmy Carter Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President Jimmy Carter, located in Atlanta, Georgia
Wikipedia - Jimmy Choo (company) -- British high fashion house
Wikipedia - Jimmy Savile sexual abuse scandal -- Sexual assault allegations against English media personality
Wikipedia - Jimmy Vivino and the Basic Cable Band -- house band for the late-night talk show Conan
Wikipedia - Jim Ross Lightfoot -- former Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from Iowa
Wikipedia - Jinakalamali -- A post-canonical Buddhist chronicle used in Theravadin countries
Wikipedia - JinapaM-CM-1jara -- Buddhist devotional text used for recitation and meditation
Wikipedia - Jinbei -- Traditional Japanese clothing set, consisting of a top and trousers
Wikipedia - Jingle -- Short song or tune used in advertising and for other commercial uses
Wikipedia - Jinju National Museum -- National museum in Jinju, South Korea
Wikipedia - JinmeiyM-EM-^M kanji -- Supplementary list of characters that can legally be used in registered personal names in Japan
Wikipedia - Jinusean -- South Korean hip hop duo
Wikipedia - Jishan Gatehouse -- Historical site in Taichung, Taiwan
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Wikipedia - J. Max Anderson House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - J.N.B. Crim House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - J. N. Wallace House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho, USA
Wikipedia - Joan Croft Halt railway station -- Disused railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Joan Lovely -- American politician from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Joao Couto -- Director of the National Museum of Ancient Art in Lisbon, Portugal (1938-62)
Wikipedia - Joao da Silveira Caldeira -- Brazilian scientist and museum director
Wikipedia - Joaquin Clausell -- Mexican lawyer, artist and political activist
Wikipedia - Job losses caused by the Great Recession
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Wikipedia - Jodhpurs -- Full-hipped riding trousers
Wikipedia - Jody Powell -- White House press secretary to President Jimmy Carter
Wikipedia - Joe Bloggs -- Placeholder name used in the UK
Wikipedia - Joe Kennedy III -- U.S. Representative from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Joel Crouse -- American country music singer
Wikipedia - Joe Miller (Ohio politician) -- 21st century member of the Ohio House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Joe Neguse -- U.S. Representative from Colorado
Wikipedia - Joe Newhouse -- American politician
Wikipedia - Joe Rogers Jr. -- former CEO of Waffle House
Wikipedia - Joe Wilson (American politician) -- Republican United States House Representative from South Carolina
Wikipedia - Jog dial -- Type of knob, ring, wheel or dial used as a device control
Wikipedia - Johan Christian Clausen Dahl
Wikipedia - Johannes Mabusela -- South African chess player
Wikipedia - Johannes von Wildeshausen
Wikipedia - Johann Eusebius Voet
Wikipedia - Johann Geusendam -- Dutch politician
Wikipedia - Johannine script -- Historical style of handwriting used in the Portuguese Royal Chancery starting around the reign of John I (1385-1433) until the reign of Manuel I (1495-1521)
Wikipedia - Johann Joseph Nouseul -- German singer
Wikipedia - Johann Philipp von Krusenstjerna -- German soldier
Wikipedia - John A. Bagnariol -- American politician and former Washington state Speaker of the House
Wikipedia - John A. Clausen -- American sociologist
Wikipedia - John A. Hauser -- American business executive (1907-1983)
Wikipedia - John A. Hirsch -- American politician from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - John Andrew Sullivan -- former U.S. Representative from Massachusetts (1868-1927)
Wikipedia - John Avoli -- Virginia house of representatives member
Wikipedia - John Bailey (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - John Benger (civil servant) -- Clerk of the House of Commons
Wikipedia - John Bercow -- British politician and former Speaker of the House of Commons
Wikipedia - John Boehner -- 53rd Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
Wikipedia - John Brunt V.C. (public house) -- Public house in Paddock Wood, Kent, England
Wikipedia - John Buse -- American academic
Wikipedia - Johnby Hall -- Manor house in Greystoke, Cumbria
Wikipedia - John Clauser -- American physicist
Wikipedia - John Cummings (Massachusetts banker) -- American businessman
Wikipedia - John Daniels House -- 19th-century house in Toronto
Wikipedia - John Davis Long -- Massachusetts governor and Congressman; Secretary of the Navy (1838-1915)
Wikipedia - John Esslemont -- British Hand of the Cause
Wikipedia - John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum -- Presidential library and museum for U.S. President John F. Kennedy in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - John F. Seiberling Federal Building and United States Courthouse -- Federal building in Akron, Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - John Fuller (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - John Fullerton House -- Historic building in South Carolina
Wikipedia - John Gannon (Vermont politician) -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - John Henry Carpenter -- American accused of murder
Wikipedia - John Henry Fuseli
Wikipedia - John Heuser
Wikipedia - John Hobhouse, 1st Baron Broughton -- British politician
Wikipedia - John Houseman -- Romanian-born British-American actor and film producer
Wikipedia - John I of Portugal -- King of Portugal, the first of the House of Aviz
Wikipedia - John Kitsuse -- American sociologist
Wikipedia - John Knox House -- Architectural structure in City of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - John Leighton (curator) -- Irish curator, art historian and museum director
Wikipedia - John Metcalf (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - John Morgan Wells -- Physiologist, aquanaut, and researcher into saturation diving and the use of nitrox and trimix as breathing gases
Wikipedia - John Morse (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - John Murray (publisher, born 1778) -- Scottish publisher, member of the John Murray publishing house (1778-1843)
Wikipedia - John Murray (publishing house) -- English publishing firm (est. 1768)
Wikipedia - John M. Voshell House -- Historic home
Wikipedia - John Newhouse -- American journalist and author
Wikipedia - John Noyes House -- historic home in Yates County, New York, USA
Wikipedia - Johnny Cash Museum -- Museum to honor the life and music of Johnny Cash
Wikipedia - John of Wildeshausen
Wikipedia - John Parker House (Boise, Idaho) -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - John P. Bay House -- Historic house in Omaha, Nebraska
Wikipedia - John Pulcipher House -- United States national historic place
Wikipedia - John Ringling Causeway -- Bridge over Sarasota Bay, Florida, United States
Wikipedia - John Roebling House -- Historic home located at Saxonburg, Butler County, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - John Rouse Bloxam
Wikipedia - John S. Glas Field House -- American university ice hockey arena
Wikipedia - Johnson County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - John Stackhouse (botanist) -- British botanist (1742-1819)
Wikipedia - John Stackhouse (colonial administrator)
Wikipedia - John Treloar (museum administrator) -- Australian archivist and museum director (1894-1952)
Wikipedia - John William Clouser -- American robber
Wikipedia - John William Waterhouse -- 19th and 20th-century English painter
Wikipedia - John W. Lederle Graduate Research Center -- Building at the University of Massachusetts Amherst
Wikipedia - John Wodehouse, 3rd Earl of Kimberley -- British politician
Wikipedia - John Wodehouse, 4th Earl of Kimberley -- British peer and politician
Wikipedia - John Woodhouse (British Army officer) -- British Army officer
Wikipedia - John Young Museum of Art -- Hawaiian art museum
Wikipedia - Johor-Singapore Causeway -- Border connection between Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore
Wikipedia - Joint-use airport -- A type of airport that is used for both military and civil purposes
Wikipedia - Joke chess problem -- chess puzzle that uses humor
Wikipedia - Jolly-Broughton House -- House in Raleigh, NC
Wikipedia - Jonah (Paffhausen)
Wikipedia - Jonathan P. Jackson -- American revolutionary who attacked Marin County Courthouse
Wikipedia - Jonathan Richards (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - Jon Cross (legislator) -- House of Representatives member from Ohio
Wikipedia - Jon Cutler (musician) -- American house DJ from Brooklyn
Wikipedia - Jon Krause -- Australian politician
Wikipedia - Jonline -- A short line used by scuba divers to clip themselves to something
Wikipedia - Jon Mittelhauser -- Internet pioneer
Wikipedia - Jonny Oates, Baron Oates -- British Liberal Democrat politician and member of the House of Lords
Wikipedia - Jordan Archaeological Museum
Wikipedia - Jorge Bornhausen -- Brazilian politician
Wikipedia - Jorgen Kruse -- Swedish bobsledder
Wikipedia - Jose Celso Barbosa House Museum -- Historic house in Bayamon, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Jose Chico Vega -- Member of the Puerto Rico House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Jose de Eusebio -- Spanish musician
Wikipedia - Jose Eusebio Caro -- Colombian writer, journalist and politician (1817-1853)
Wikipedia - Josef Moroder-Lusenberg
Wikipedia - Josef Oberhauser (bobsleigh) -- Austrian bobsledder
Wikipedia - Joseph Bown House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - Joseph Chitwood House -- Historic building in Boise, Idaho
Wikipedia - Joseph C. Pelletier -- District attorney of Suffolk County, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Joseph Day (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - Joseph Grendys -- American billionaire whose company Koch Foods has been accused of abusive working conditions
Wikipedia - Joseph Henry Loveless -- American accused murderer (1870-1916)
Wikipedia - Joseph Henry Shorthouse -- English novelist
Wikipedia - Joseph H. Frisby House -- United States historic place located in Provo, Utah
Wikipedia - Joseph H. Rainey House -- Historic house in South Carolina, US
Wikipedia - Joseph Joseph -- English houseware manufacturer founded in 2003
Wikipedia - Joseph Konhauser -- American mathematician
Wikipedia - Joseph Kunini -- Speaker of the Taraba State House of Assembly, Nigeria
Wikipedia - Joseph Mitchell House -- Historic building in Indiana, USA
Wikipedia - Joseph P. Kinneary United States Courthouse -- Federal courthouse in Columbus, Ohio
Wikipedia - Joseph Priestley House -- The American home of Joseph Priestley
Wikipedia - Joseph Richards (Massachusetts politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - Josephson voltage standard -- System used to generate stable voltages, that may be used to define a volt
Wikipedia - Joseph Stockhausen -- Jamaican sailor
Wikipedia - Joseph V. Noble -- American museum administrator
Wikipedia - Joseph Wagner (Massachusetts politician) -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Joseph Walker Jasper Ouseley -- British orientalist
Wikipedia - Jose V. Toledo Federal Building and United States Courthouse -- Historic building located in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Joshua Fisher (Massachusetts politician) -- American colonial politician
Wikipedia - Joshua G. Cole -- Virginia house of representatives member
Wikipedia - Joshua Pettegrove House -- Historic house in the Red Beach area of Calais, Maine, United States
Wikipedia - Josiah S. Carberry -- Fictional professor, used in jokes
Wikipedia - Jost Winteler -- Swiss linguist, teacher, ornithologist and poet, and Albert Einstein's housefather at Aarau (1846-1929)
Wikipedia - Jouett Shouse -- American politician
Wikipedia - Journal of Behavioral Finance -- Journal focused on behavioral finance
Wikipedia - Journal of Experimental Psychopathology -- Peer-reviewed journal focused on psychopathology
Wikipedia - Journey Forward -- Non-profit organization in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Joyeuse -- Sword attributed to Charlemagne
Wikipedia - Joyful Train -- Japanese train sets used for charters, special events and tourist excursions
Wikipedia - Joy in the Morning (Wodehouse novel) -- 1946 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Joyner Lucas -- |American rapper from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Joystick -- Control lever used in aircraft and video games
Wikipedia - J. Paul Getty Museum -- Art museum in Los Angeles, California
Wikipedia - J. R. Jayewardene Centre -- Library and museum for 1st President of Sri Lanka in Colombo,Sri Lanka
Wikipedia - J's Amusement Park -- Former American amusement park
Wikipedia - JSFuck -- Esoteric programming language that uses 6 characters to write all JavaScript code
Wikipedia - JSONM-bM-^FM-^RURL -- Text-based data interchange format designed for use in a URL query string
Wikipedia - J. Thomas Newsome House -- historic home, museum, and cultural center
Wikipedia - Juana Matias -- Massachusetts state representative
Wikipedia - Juan Carlos Sanchez Latorre -- Serial child abuser acting in Colombia
Wikipedia - Jubilee Museum -- Museum of religious works in Columbus, Ohio
Wikipedia - Judenklub -- Derogatory, antisemitic term used throughout the Nazi era in Germany and Austria
Wikipedia - Judge Rotenberg Educational Center -- Day and residential school in Canton, Massachusetts, United States that has been condemned for torture by the United Nations Special Rapport on Torture.
Wikipedia - Judgment Day: In Your House -- 1998 World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event
Wikipedia - Judith Hauser -- German group rhythmic gymnast
Wikipedia - Judith Tonhauser -- Professor of English Linguistics
Wikipedia - Judy Klauser -- American artistic gymnast
Wikipedia - Jug -- Container used to hold liquid
Wikipedia - Julia Hauser -- Austrian triathlete
Wikipedia - Julia Kaganskiy -- Founding director of the New Museum's incubator for art and founder of ArtsTech
Wikipedia - Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge -- British engineer and crossbench member of the House of Lords
Wikipedia - Julia Morgan House -- Mansion in Sacramento, California, US
Wikipedia - Julian Kornhauser
Wikipedia - Julie Ovenhouse -- American diver
Wikipedia - Julie Van Dusen -- Canadian journalist
Wikipedia - Julius Stockhausen -- German singer and music educator
Wikipedia - Julius Wellhausen -- German theologian
Wikipedia - Juminda Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Jump Around -- 1992 single by House of Pain
Wikipedia - Jump scare -- Technique used in horror (video and live)
Wikipedia - Jump server -- A computer on a network used to access a separate security zone
Wikipedia - Jumurda Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Junges Gemuse -- 1956 film
Wikipedia - Jungle Rhythm -- 1929 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Juniper Island Light -- Lighthouse in Vermont, US
Wikipedia - Jurgen Heuser -- German weightlifter
Wikipedia - Jusepa Vaca -- Spanish stage actress
Wikipedia - Jusepe de Ribera -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Jusepe Martinez -- Spanish painter
Wikipedia - Just Because (Nelstone's Hawaiians song) -- Song performed by Jerry Lee Lewis
Wikipedia - Just Cause 2 -- 2010 action-adventure game
Wikipedia - Just Cause 3 -- 2015 action-adventure game
Wikipedia - Just Cause 4 -- 2018 action-adventure game
Wikipedia - Just Cause (video game series) -- Action-adventure video game series
Wikipedia - Just Cause (video game) -- 2006 action-adventure game
Wikipedia - Justice House of Prayer -- Neocharismatic Christian organization based in Kansas City, Missouri
Wikipedia - Just Mickey -- 1930 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Justus Olshausen -- German orientalist
Wikipedia - Jutta Heckhausen -- Professor of Psychological Science
Wikipedia - Juuse Tamminen -- Finnish writer
Wikipedia - Juven -- Medical food used to treat muscle wasting associated with AIDS or cancer
Wikipedia - Juzefinova Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - J. W. Waterhouse
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Wikipedia - Kaavi Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Kabile Manor -- Manor house in KuldM-DM-+ga Municipality, Latvia
Wikipedia - Kadalur Point Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Kaffir (racial term) -- Ethnic slur used to refer to a black person in South Africa
Wikipedia - Kagawa Prefectural Higashiyama Kaii Setouchi Art Museum -- Museum in Sakaide, Japan
Wikipedia - Kaidu -- Grandson of Mongol Khagan Ogedei Khan and leader of the House of M-CM-^Vgedei (c.1230-1301)
Wikipedia - Kai Krause -- German computer scientist
Wikipedia - Kaintuck Territory -- Former amusement park in Benton, Kentucky
Wikipedia - Kaiten Memorial Museum -- Japanese museum
Wikipedia - Kaiten -- Manned torpedoes and suicide craft, used by the Imperial Japanese Navy in the final stages of World War II
Wikipedia - Kakamigahara Air and Space Museum -- Japanese aviation museum
Wikipedia - Kalashree Seashell Museum -- Sculpture museum in Mysore, India
Wikipedia - KalbM-CM-%dagrund Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Finland
Wikipedia - Kalenjin name -- names used by the Kalenjin people of East Africa
Wikipedia - Kalna Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - KalnmuiM-EM->a Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Kal Tire Place -- multi-use arena in Vernon, British Columbia
Wikipedia - Kaman HH-43 Huskie -- Helicopter with intermeshing rotors in use by the US military from the 1950s to the 1970s
Wikipedia - Kamarina Regional Archaeological Museum -- Kamarina Regional Archaeological Museum
Wikipedia - Kamarupi Prakrit -- Middle Indo-Aryan language used in ancient Kamarupa, Indian subcontinent
Wikipedia - Kambo cleanse -- Pseudoscientific use of tree frog secretions
Wikipedia - KameM-EM-^Feca Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - KaM-EM-^M -- Stylized signature used in parts of Asia
Wikipedia - Kampen Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Wikipedia - Kanal Centre Pompidou -- Art museum in Brussels
Wikipedia - Kang & Kodos' Twirl 'n' Hurl -- Amusement ride based on The Simpsons
Wikipedia - Kanger -- Earthen pot used by Kashmiris against cold
Wikipedia - Kanishka casket -- Buddhist reliquary in Peshawar Museum, Pakistan
Wikipedia - Kanji -- Adopted logographic Chinese characters used in the modern Japanese writing system
Wikipedia - Kankainen Manor -- Manor house in Masku, Finland
Wikipedia - Kankakee County Courthouse -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Kanli Kula -- Fortress in Herceg Novi, Montenegro, used as an open-air theatre
Wikipedia - Kannur Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Kansas City Garment District Museum -- Museum in Missouri, U.S.
Wikipedia - Kansas's 3rd congressional district -- U.S. House district centered on Kansas City, KS
Wikipedia - Kanthal (alloy) -- Alloy of iron, chromium and aluminium used as resistance and heating wire
Wikipedia - Kapala -- Cup made from a human skull used as a ritual implement
Wikipedia - Kappo -- Healing techniques used in martial arts
Wikipedia - Kapton -- Plastic film material used in low and high-temperature applications
Wikipedia - Karabo Mathang-Tshabuse -- South African soccer agent
Wikipedia - Karel Jonas House -- Historic building in Racine, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Karen Crouse -- American journalist
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Wikipedia - Karen Oberhauser -- Research entomologist
Wikipedia - Karen (pejorative) -- Pejorative term used in several English-speaking countries
Wikipedia - Karen R. Lawrence -- American College administrator and museum executive
Wikipedia - Kariattil Mar Ousep
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Wikipedia - Karl Christian Friedrich Krause
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Wikipedia - Karl Krause
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Wikipedia - Karl von Eckartshausen
Wikipedia - Karman vortex street -- Repeating pattern of swirling vortices caused by the unsteady separation of flow of a fluid around blunt bodies
Wikipedia - Karnay -- Long trumpet used in Uzbekistan, Iran, and Tajikistan
Wikipedia - Karol Wight -- American museum director specializing in ancient glass
Wikipedia - Kasina -- Type of Buddhist meditation and objects used in such meditation
Wikipedia - Kaspar Hauser
Wikipedia - Kastri Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Greece
Wikipedia - Katarina Juselius -- Finnish economist
Wikipedia - Kate Brown (professor) -- Professor of Science, Technology and Society at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - Kate Kemp -- Poets muse
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Wikipedia - Kate Peck Kent -- Museum archeological textile specialist
Wikipedia - Kate Sheppard House -- Historic home of a leader in NZ's women's suffrage campaign, Christchurch, NZ
Wikipedia - Kate Spade New York -- American fashion design house
Wikipedia - Kate Webb (politician) -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Katharine Lee Reid -- American art historian and former art museum director
Wikipedia - Katherine Clark -- U.S. Representative from Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Katherine Hauptman -- Swedish archaeologist and museum director
Wikipedia - Katherine Mayfair -- Fictional character on Desperate Housewives
Wikipedia - Kathleen James -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Kathleen LaNatra -- Massachusetts politician
Wikipedia - Katiki Point Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Katvari Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Katzrin ancient village and synagogue -- Museum and archaeological site in the Golan Heights
Wikipedia - Kaucminde Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Kausea Natano -- Prime Minister of Tuvalu (2019-present)
Wikipedia - Kawashima Station -- Railway station in Chikusei, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - Kawu Sumaila -- Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Kayaking -- Use of a kayak on water
Wikipedia - Kayleigh McEnany -- White House Press Secretary
Wikipedia - Kaywin Feldman -- American museum director
Wikipedia - Kazakh Short U -- Cyrillic letter used for Kazakh
Wikipedia - Kazan (cookware) -- Turkic cookware used by boiling or steaming
Wikipedia - K-Books -- Japanese used goods chain
Wikipedia - KC Becker -- 60th Speaker of the Colorado House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Keating Five -- US Senators accused of corruption in 1989
Wikipedia - Keats House
Wikipedia - Keats-Shelley Memorial House
Wikipedia - Keeper of Entomology, Natural History Museum
Wikipedia - Keep the Clause campaign -- Unsuccessful campaign against the repeal of Section 28 of the Local Government Act 1988
Wikipedia - KE family -- British family with members with a speech disorder caused by mutations in FOXP2
Wikipedia - Keith Waterhouse
Wikipedia - Kelly Pajala -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Kelly's Cellars -- Public house in Belfast, Northern Ireland
Wikipedia - Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum -- Museum and art gallery near Glasgow
Wikipedia - Kelvin-Varley divider -- Electronic circuit used to divide voltages
Wikipedia - Kempe chain -- Method used in proof of the four-colour theorem
Wikipedia - Keningau Heritage Museum -- Museum in Keningau, Sabah, Malaysia
Wikipedia - Kenmore station -- Boston, Massachusetts light rail station
Wikipedia - Kenneth Clark -- English art historian, museum director, and broadcaster (1903-1983)
Wikipedia - Kenneth R. Harding -- Sergeant at Arms of the US House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Kenneth Stonehouse -- British journalist
Wikipedia - Kennywood -- Amusement park in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Kensal House -- Housing estate in London
Wikipedia - Kentchurch Court -- Grade I listed English country house in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Kentucky House of Representatives -- Lower house of the Kentucky General Assembly
Wikipedia - Kentucky Kingdom -- Amusement park in Louisville, Kentucky
Wikipedia - Kenwood House -- Country house in Hampstead, London
Wikipedia - Kenyapotamus -- Possible ancestor of living hippopotamuses that lived in Africa roughly 16 million to 8 million years
Wikipedia - Kenzo (brand) -- French luxury fashion house
Wikipedia - Keppel Harcourt Barnard -- South African zoologist and museum director
Wikipedia - Kerala Science and Technology Museum -- Museum in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Kerameikos Archaeological Museum
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Wikipedia - Keri Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
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Wikipedia - Kerstin Krause -- German diver
Wikipedia - Ketchup Eusebio -- Filipino actor
Wikipedia - Ketchup -- Sauce used as a condiment
Wikipedia - Kettle Cove (Massachusetts) -- Bay in Dukes County, Massachusetts, US
Wikipedia - KettleHouse Brewing Company -- Craft brewery in Montana
Wikipedia - Kettle's Yard -- Art museum & house in Cambridge, England
Wikipedia - Kettlethorpe Hall -- Victorian house in Kettlethorpe, Lincolnshire, UK
Wikipedia - Keurig -- Beverage brewing system for home and commercial use
Wikipedia - Kevin John Edusei -- German conductor
Wikipedia - Kevin McCarthy (California politician) -- House Minority Leader
Wikipedia - Kevin M. Kruse -- American historian
Wikipedia - Key House Mirror -- 2015 film
Wikipedia - Keyingham railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Key retainer -- Interchangeable core that retains one key (Key A) while the second key (Key B) is used for authorized purposes.
Wikipedia - Keystone Centre -- Multi-use indoor arena in Brandon, Manitoba
Wikipedia - Keytar Bear -- Busker from Boston Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Key West Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Florida, United States
Wikipedia - KFC Original Recipe -- Blend of ingredients used in KFC fried chicken
Wikipedia - Khat -- Species of plant, commonly used for its psychoactive effects
Wikipedia - Khawaja -- honorific title used across the Middle East, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and Central Asia
Wikipedia - Khedivial Opera House -- Former opera house in Cairo, Egypt
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Wikipedia - Khusen Khalmurzaev -- Russian judoka
Wikipedia - Kiama Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Kickamuit River -- River in Massachusetts and Rhode Island, US
Wikipedia - Kidd-Davis House -- Historic building in Louisiana
Wikipedia - Kiddington Hall -- Grade II listed manor house in Kiddington, Oxfordshire, England
Wikipedia - KID Museum -- Child-oriented maker space in Bethesda, MD
Wikipedia - Kigo -- Word used in Japanese poetry
Wikipedia - Kihnu Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Kiipsaare Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Kikkawa Historical Museum -- Japanese museum
Wikipedia - Kikut Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Kilakarai Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in India
Wikipedia - Kildwick and Crosshills railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Killed in action -- Military casualty classification used for deaths, includes accidents and illness
Wikipedia - Killer Housewives -- 2001 film by Javier Rebollo
Wikipedia - Killerton -- House in Broadclyst, Exeter, Devon, England
Wikipedia - Kilmainham Gaol -- Prison museum in Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Kimbell Art Museum -- Art museum in Texas, US
Wikipedia - Kimchi Field Museum
Wikipedia - Kim Sajet -- Museum director
Wikipedia - Kimura Nova Uniao -- Brazilian sports schools focused on Brazilian jiu-jitsu
Wikipedia - Kincardine Castle, Auchterarder -- Country house in Perth and Kinross, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Kincardine Castle, Royal Deeside -- Victorian country house in Royal Deeside, Scotland
Wikipedia - Kinematics -- Branch of physics describing the motion of objects or groups of objects without considering its cause
Wikipedia - Kinetic user interface
Wikipedia - King Arthur Carrousel -- Attraction at Disneyland
Wikipedia - King George III Museum
Wikipedia - King in Prussia -- Title used by the Prussian kings from 1701 to 1772
Wikipedia - King Krause -- 1919 film
Wikipedia - King of Kings -- Ruling title used by certain historical monarchs
Wikipedia - King of the Romans -- Title used by medieval German monarchs
Wikipedia - King Power Mahanakhon -- A mixed-use skyscraper in Bangkok, Thailand
Wikipedia - Kings Dominion -- Cedar Fair amusement park in Doswell, Virginia
Wikipedia - King's Head Inn, Aylesbury -- English public house
Wikipedia - Kings Head, West Tilbury -- Public house in Essex, England
Wikipedia - Kings House, Hove -- Grade II listed building in Hove, England
Wikipedia - King's House, Jamaica -- Official residence of the Governor-General of Jamaica
Wikipedia - Kings Island -- Amusement park in Mason, Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - King's Manor -- Grade I listed manor house in York, England
Wikipedia - Kingston Hall, Nottinghamshire -- Grade II country house in Nottinghamshire
Wikipedia - Kingston House, Kingston upon Hull -- 1960s modernist block in Kingston upon Hull, England
Wikipedia - Kiplingcotes railway station -- Disused railway station in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Kippax railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Kirbymoorside railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Kirby railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Kirchberg District Centre -- Mixed-use building complex in the Luxembourg
Wikipedia - Kirkconnel Tower -- Tower house in Scotland
Wikipedia - Kirkham Abbey railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Kirkland House -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Kirkstall railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Kirribilli House -- The secondary official residence of the Prime Minister of Australia
Wikipedia - Kirschner wire -- Pins used in orthopaedic surgery
Wikipedia - Kirsten Huser Leschbrandt -- Norwegian politician
Wikipedia - Kisin House -- Building in Rostov-on-Don, Russia
Wikipedia - Kitchener Memorial Auditorium Complex -- Multi-use facility in Kitchener, Canada
Wikipedia - Kit Malthouse -- British Conservative politician
Wikipedia - Kit's Coty House -- Dolmen in England
Wikipedia - Kittie Knox -- Female cyclist from Boston Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Kiva -- Room used by Puebloans for religious rituals and political meetings
Wikipedia - Klang (Stockhausen)
Wikipedia - Klara Guseva -- Russian speed skater
Wikipedia - Klausenburg (Hasidic dynasty)
Wikipedia - Klaus Heuser -- German rock guitarist, composer and producer
Wikipedia - Klaus-Jurgen Deuser -- German presenter and comedian
Wikipedia - Kleene star -- Unary operation on sets of strings, used in regular expressions for "zero or more repetitions"
Wikipedia - Klusenberg -- Mountain in Germany
Wikipedia - KM-CM-5pu Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Knapton railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Knaresborough Hay Park Lane railway station -- Disused railway station in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Knarraros Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Iceland
Wikipedia - Knarr -- Type of Norse merchant ship used by the Vikings
Wikipedia - Knigsberg City Museum
Wikipedia - Knock Down the House -- 2019 documentary film by Rachel Lears
Wikipedia - Knockout mouse
Wikipedia - Knole -- Historic English country house
Wikipedia - Knott's Berry Farm -- Amusement park in Buena Park, California, United States
Wikipedia - Knowledge-based systems -- Computer program that reasons and uses a knowledge base to solve complex problems
Wikipedia - Knox County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Knut Husebo -- Norwegian actor
Wikipedia - Koan -- story, dialogue, question, or statement used in Zen practice
Wikipedia - Kobe City Museum
Wikipedia - Kogi State House of Assembly -- Legislature of the Nigerian State of Kogi
Wikipedia - Kohala District Courthouse -- Historic Place in Hawaii County, Hawaii
Wikipedia - KokmuiM-EM->a Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Kolkata Metro rolling stock -- Rolling stock used in Kolkata Metro
Wikipedia - Kolobrzeg Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - Kolpos -- Bloused fold of a chiton, peplos, or tunic, hanging over the girdle underneath the apoptygma, in Ancient Greek costume
Wikipedia - Koman languages -- Family of languages used along the Sudan-Ethiopia border
Wikipedia - Konrad von Wallhausen -- Bishop of Meissen
Wikipedia - Konrad Zuse Medal
Wikipedia - Konrad Zuse -- 20th-century German computer scientist and engineer
Wikipedia - Korean cannon -- Types of cannon used in Korea
Wikipedia - Korean Folk Village -- Living museum
Wikipedia - Korean mun -- Currency used in Joseon
Wikipedia - Korsakoff syndrome -- Mental illness caused by a lack of thiamine in the brain
Wikipedia - Koszul complex -- Construction of homological algebra used in commutative agebra
Wikipedia - Kotatsu -- Low, wooden table used in Japan, often with a heat source underneath
Wikipedia - Kousei Amano -- Japanese actor
Wikipedia - Kousei Yagi -- Japanese voice actor
Wikipedia - Kousek nebe -- 2005 Czech romance film
Wikipedia - Kovilthottam Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Kozhikkode Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Kerala, India
Wikipedia - Krabbesholm, Lejre Municipality -- Manor house near Skibby, Denmark
Wikipedia - Krause -- Surname list
Wikipedia - Kremlin Armoury -- Museum and cultural heritage site in Russia
Wikipedia - Krenkerup -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Kresge Auditorium -- Auditorium at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - Kribi Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Cameroon
Wikipedia - Kripalu Center -- Health and yoga retreat in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Kristek House -- Artwork by Lubo Kristek, monumental assemblage
Wikipedia - Kristoffer Clausen -- Norwegian man
Wikipedia - Krummbach (Steinhauser Rottum) -- River in Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
Wikipedia - Krummlauf -- Gun barrel attachment used for shooting around corners
Wikipedia - Krupp armour -- A type of steel armour used in the construction of capital ships
Wikipedia - Krynica Morska Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Poland
Wikipedia - KTAV Publishing House
Wikipedia - Kuban Resort and Aquapark -- Hotel and amusement park in Bulgaria
Wikipedia - Kubassaare Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Kumkuma -- Kumkuma is a red colour powder used for social and religious markings in India
Wikipedia - Kunsthistorisches Museum -- Artmuseum in Vienna, Austria
Wikipedia - Kunstmuseum Stuttgart -- Contemporary and modern art museum in Stuttgart, Germany
Wikipedia - Kura (storehouse) -- Japanese traditional storehouse
Wikipedia - Kurogo Station -- Railway station in Chikusei, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - Kurt Faltlhauser -- German politician
Wikipedia - Kusebko Larere Festival -- Festival of the people of Sumbrungu
Wikipedia - KUSE-LD -- TV station in Seattle, Washington
Wikipedia - Kuse Station -- Railway station in Mainwa, Okayama Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - Kuwait Science and Natural History Museum -- History Museum
Wikipedia - Kwaito -- Variant of house music in South Africa
Wikipedia - Kwame Bawuah-Edusei -- Ghanaian diplomat
Wikipedia - Kwara State House of Assembly -- Legislative arm of the government of Kwara State of Nigeria
Wikipedia - KXHT -- Hip-hop focused radio station serving the Memphis, Tennessee, area
Wikipedia - KyffhM-CM-$user Monument -- Late 19th century colossal monument in Germany
Wikipedia - Kyle of Tongue Bridge -- Bridge and causeway in far north of Scotland
Wikipedia - Kyle (slang) -- Pejorative slang term used in the United States
Wikipedia - Kyoto Protocol -- International treaty to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
Wikipedia - Kyoto Railway Museum -- Railway museum in Kyoto, Japan
Wikipedia - Kyousei Tsukui -- Japanese voice actor
Wikipedia - Kyteler's Inn -- A public house in Kilkenny
Wikipedia - Kyushu Railway History Museum Station -- Railway station located in Kitakyushu, Fukuoka
Wikipedia - Labelcode -- Unique four- or five-digit number used to identify record labels
Wikipedia - La Belle Noiseuse -- 1991 film by Jacques Rivette
Wikipedia - La Blanchisseuse (Toulouse-Lautrec) -- Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Wikipedia - Laboratory for Electromagnetic and Electronic Systems -- Massachusetts Institute of Technology research institute
Wikipedia - Laboratory mouse
Wikipedia - Laboratory rat -- Inbred strains of Rattus norvegicus used for scientific research
Wikipedia - Lac Cardinal Pioneer Village Museum -- Building in Alberta, Canada
Wikipedia - La Cellette, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - La Chailleuse -- Commune in Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France
Wikipedia - La Chapelle-sur-Furieuse -- Commune in Bourgogne-Franche-Comte, France
Wikipedia - La Coiffeuse -- Painting by Pablo Picasso
Wikipedia - La colpa di una madre -- 1952 film by Carlo Duse
Wikipedia - La Coubre Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Charente-Maritime, France
Wikipedia - Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus -- Subspecies of bacteria and the main bacteria used for the production of yogurt
Wikipedia - Ladd-Gilman House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Ladies Library Association Building -- Historic clubhouse in Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA
Wikipedia - Ladies of the Big House -- 1931 film
Wikipedia - Lady Barn House School
Wikipedia - Laemmle Theatres -- Arthouse movie theatre chain in the Los Angeles area
Wikipedia - Lafayette Park Historic District -- Neighborhood in central Albany, New York, where state capitol, city hall and county courthouse are located
Wikipedia - La Fenice -- Opera house in Venice, Italy
Wikipedia - La Flambeuse -- 1981 French drama film
Wikipedia - La forza del destino -- Opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Wikipedia - La Giudecca -- Term used In Southern Italy and Sicily to identify any urban district (or a portion of a village) where Jewish communities dwelled
Wikipedia - Lagoda -- Half-scale model of the whaling ship Lagoda, located at the New Bedford Whaling Museum
Wikipedia - Lagoon (amusement park) -- Amusement park in Farmington, Utah, U.S.
Wikipedia - Laguna Art Museum -- American art museum in California
Wikipedia - Lahore Museum -- Museum in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
Wikipedia - Lahti Ski Museum -- Museum in Lahti, Finland
Wikipedia - Lai Chun Yuen Opera House -- Historic Chinese opera house in Singapore
Wikipedia - Laidunina Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - La Isleta Lighthouse -- Lighthouse on Gran Canaria, Spain
Wikipedia - Laisterdyke railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - La Jument -- Lighthouse in Finistere, France
Wikipedia - Lake Champlain Maritime Museum -- Museum in Vergennes, Vermont, United States
Wikipedia - Lake Chaubunagungamaug -- Lake in the town of Webster, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Lake Compounce -- Amusement park in Connecticut, U.S.
Wikipedia - Lake County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Lake Street Dive -- American band founded in 2004 in Boston, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Lakeview Square -- Mixed use development in Winnipeg, Canada
Wikipedia - La Machi Communication for Good Causes -- Argentinean-Spanish communication agency
Wikipedia - Lamarckism -- Hypothesis that an organism can pass on characteristics that it has acquired through use or disuse during its lifetime to its offspring
Wikipedia - Lambert Fieldhouse -- Athletic facility on the campus of Purdue University in West Lafayette, IN
Wikipedia - Lambert Schmithausen
Wikipedia - Lamborghini Cala -- Evolution of the P140 prototype automobile envisioned by Italian design house Italdesign as a potential successor to the Jalpa
Wikipedia - La Mer de Sable -- French amusement park
Wikipedia - LamiM-EM-^Fi Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Lamport timestamp -- Algorithm used to determine the order of events in a distributed computer system
Wikipedia - Lancaster County House of Employment -- A historic building in Lancaster Township, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Lancaster House Conferences (Kenya) -- Meetings to discuss Kenya's independence and constitution
Wikipedia - Lancea (weapon) -- Type of javelin used by the Roman army
Wikipedia - Lance -- Pole weapon used on horseback
Wikipedia - Land banking -- Buying multiple parcels together for future use
Wikipedia - Land grant -- Gift of real estate - land or its use privileges - made by a government or other authority
Wikipedia - Landing platform helicopter -- Hull classification used by a number of the world's navies
Wikipedia - Land law -- Form of law that deals with the rights to use, alienate, or exclude others from land
Wikipedia - Landline -- Phone that uses a metal wire or fibre optic telephone line for transmission
Wikipedia - Landmark Theatre (Syracuse, New York) -- Theater in Syracuse, New York
Wikipedia - Landmark -- Natural or artificial feature used for navigation
Wikipedia - Land of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse -- 1992 video game
Wikipedia - Landslide -- Type of natural disasters involving ground movements, often caused by slope instability triggered by specific event
Wikipedia - Land use forecasting
Wikipedia - Land use in Oregon -- Laws affecting land ownership
Wikipedia - Land use, land-use change and forestry
Wikipedia - Land use, land-use change, and forestry
Wikipedia - Land-use planning
Wikipedia - Land use
Wikipedia - Lane County History Museum -- History museum in Eugene, Oregon, USA
Wikipedia - Lanesborough, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Langton Rusere -- Cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Language analysis for the determination of origin -- Instrument used in asylum cases to determine the national or ethnic origin of the asylum seeker
Wikipedia - Language-for-specific-purposes dictionary -- Dictionary that intends to describe a variety of one or more languages used by experts within a particular subject field
Wikipedia - Language game (philosophy) -- Philosophical concept referring to simple examples of language use and the actions into which the language is woven
Wikipedia - Language immersion -- Technique used in bilingual language education in which two languages are used for instruction in a variety of topics
Wikipedia - Language of the birds -- Mystical, perfect divine language, Adamic language, Enochian, angelic language or a mythical or magical language used by birds to communicate with the initiated
Wikipedia - Languages in censuses
Wikipedia - Languages of Hong Kong -- Summary and statistics of languages used in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Languages of the European Union -- Overview of the languages used by people within the member states of the European Union
Wikipedia - Languages used on the Internet -- Overview of the languages used on the Internet
Wikipedia - Lanka Linux User Group
Wikipedia - LanzenhM-CM-$usern railway station -- Swiss railway station
Wikipedia - Lapanouse-de-Cernon -- Commune in Occitanie, France
Wikipedia - Lapanouse -- Part of SM-CM-)vM-CM-)rac-d'Aveyron in Occitanie, France
Wikipedia - LAPD Hooper Heliport -- City-owned private-use heliport in Los Angeles, CA, US
Wikipedia - Lapeyrouse, Ain -- Commune in Auvergne-Rhone-Alpes, France
Wikipedia - Laplace-Runge-Lenz vector -- Vector used in astronomy
Wikipedia - Laplace transform -- Integral transform useful in probability theory, physics, and engineering
Wikipedia - LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes -- Mexican-American museum and cultural center in Los Angeles, California
Wikipedia - LapM-EM-!iai Manor -- Lithuanian manor house
Wikipedia - Laptop -- Personal computer for mobile use
Wikipedia - La Rabouilleuse -- 1842 novel by HonorM-CM-) de Balzac
Wikipedia - Large cell -- Term used in oncology
Wikipedia - Large numbers -- Numbers that are significantly larger than those used regularly
Wikipedia - Large seal script -- Writing system used in the Western and early Eastern Zhou dynasties of China
Wikipedia - L. A. Ring House -- Historic building in Roskilde, Denmark
Wikipedia - La Rixouse -- Commune in Bourgogne-Franche-ComtM-CM-), France
Wikipedia - Larkin Terminal Warehouse -- Building in Buffalo, New York
Wikipedia - L'Armendeche Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in VendM-CM-)e, France
Wikipedia - Larry (cat) -- Chief Mouser to the Cabinet Office
Wikipedia - Larry Householder -- American politician
Wikipedia - Larry Speakes -- Former White House spokesman
Wikipedia - Lars Clausen -- German sociologist
Wikipedia - Larson International -- American amusement ride designer and manufacturer
Wikipedia - La Scala -- Opera house in Milan, Italy
Wikipedia - Lascelles Principles -- The basis by which the Sovereign of the United Kingdom could refuse to dissolve parliament
Wikipedia - Lasell University -- Private university in Auburndale, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Laser cutting -- Technology that uses a laser to cut materials
Wikipedia - Laser mouse
Wikipedia - Laser trimming -- Technique used to adjust a circuit during manufacture, to allow for variations during manufacturing without affecting the quality of the end product
Wikipedia - Lassa fever -- Viral disease spread by a type of mouse
Wikipedia - Lassise-Schettini House -- Historic house in Sabana Grande, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Lasso of Truth -- Fictional lasso used by Wonder Woman
Wikipedia - Last Green Valley National Heritage Corridor -- New England scenery in northeastern Connecticut and Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Last use of capital punishment in Spain -- Executions carried out in 1975 in Spain
Wikipedia - Las Vegas Jailhouse -- US television series
Wikipedia - Lateran Museum
Wikipedia - Lathrop House (Vassar College)
Wikipedia - Lathrop House
Wikipedia - Lath -- Material used to span gaps in structural framing and form a base on which to apply plaster
Wikipedia - Lathyrism -- Medical condition of humans, caused by eating certain legumes of the genus Lathyrus
Wikipedia - Latin alphabet -- Alphabet used to write the Latin language
Wikipedia - Latin honors -- Latin phrases used to denote levels of academic distinction
Wikipedia - Latinx -- Gender-neutral neologism for people of Latin American heritage, primarily used in the U.S.
Wikipedia - La Tour Eiffel (Hopi Hari) -- Amusement attraction in Sao Paulo, Brazil
Wikipedia - La traviata -- 1853 opera by Giuseppe Verdi
Wikipedia - Latrine -- Toilet or an even simpler facility that is used as a toilet within a sanitation system
Wikipedia - Laughing Gas (novel) -- 1936 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Laughter -- Expression of amusement
Wikipedia - Launch and recovery system (diving) -- Equipment used to deploy and recover a diving bell, stage, or ROV
Wikipedia - Laundry detergent -- Type of detergent used for cleaning laundry
Wikipedia - Laundry enzyme -- Biological enzymes that are used as laundry detergents
Wikipedia - Laurajane Smith -- Australian heritage and museum studies scholar
Wikipedia - Laurent Wolf -- French house musician
Wikipedia - LaVerne Krause -- American artist (born 1924)
Wikipedia - La Vieille CharitM-CM-) -- Former almshouse in Marseille, France
Wikipedia - La Vie miraculeuse de ThM-CM-)rese Martin -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - LaVilla Museum -- Museum in Jacksonville, Florida
Wikipedia - La Villedieu, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - La Villeneuve, Creuse -- Commune in Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France
Wikipedia - Lav Singh -- Indian produser, editor and distributor
Wikipedia - Law French -- Archaic linguistic form used in English courts after 1066
Wikipedia - Lawn mower -- A grass cutting device. Machine that uses one or more rotating blades to cut a lawn to an even height
Wikipedia - Lawrence A. and Mary Fournier House -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Lawrence B. Krause -- American economist
Wikipedia - Lawrence County Courthouse (Illinois) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Lawrence County Courthouse (Ohio) -- local government building in the United States
Wikipedia - Lawrence, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Layer Jump Recording -- Technique used for writing to DVD-R Dual Layer discs
Wikipedia - Lazar house
Wikipedia - LCM 1 -- Landing craft used in WWII
Wikipedia - LCVP (United States) -- US built landing craft used extensively in amphibious landings in World War II
Wikipedia - LDMOS -- Double-diffused MOSFET
Wikipedia - Leach Pottery -- Pottery and museum in St Ives, Cornwall, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Lead-based paint in the United States -- Manufacture of banned in 1978 though widely used because of its durability.
Wikipedia - Leader of the House (New Zealand) -- New Zealand political title
Wikipedia - Leader of the House of Punjab Legislative Assembly -- Punjab Legislative Assembly leader
Wikipedia - Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords -- Leader of the Labour Party in the House of Lords
Wikipedia - Leading cause of death
Wikipedia - Leading lights -- Light beacons used for watercraft navigation in a shallow or dangerous channel or as position fixing
Wikipedia - Leading name -- Given name used repeatedly over several generations in a lineage or kin group
Wikipedia - Leaf litter sieve -- Piece of equipment used by entomologists
Wikipedia - Least of the Great Powers -- Label used to conceptualize Italy's international status
Wikipedia - Least Recently Used
Wikipedia - Leather Archives & Museum -- Archives and museum of the leather subculture
Wikipedia - Leather Pride flag -- Symbol used by the leather subculture
Wikipedia - Leave It to Psmith -- 1923 novel by P.G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - Leave the World Behind (song) -- Song by Swedish House Mafia, Laidback Luke and Deborah Cox
Wikipedia - Leaving Neverland -- 2019 documentary film about alleged sexual abuse by Michael Jackson
Wikipedia - Lechmere station -- Light rail station in Cambridge, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - LECOM Harborcenter -- Mixed use hockey themed development in Buffalo, New York
Wikipedia - Lederhosen -- Traditional garments, leather trousers, with short or long legs, from Bavaria and Tyrol
Wikipedia - Ledipasvir/sofosbuvir -- Medication used to treat hepatitis C
Wikipedia - Ledston railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Leeds Marsh Lane railway station -- Disused railway station in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Leeds Museums & Galleries -- Museum service in West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Legacy Trail (Florida) -- Multi-use recreational trail in Sarasota County, Florida
Wikipedia - Legal abuse -- Unfair or improper legal action with malicious intentions
Wikipedia - Legal fiction -- Fact assumed or created by courts which is then used in order to apply a legal rule
Wikipedia - Legal plunder -- Term used in right-libertarian thought to describe the act of using the law to redistribute wealth
Wikipedia - Legend of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse -- 1995 video game
Wikipedia - Legermuseum -- Former military museum in Delft
Wikipedia - Legibility Group -- Series of serif typefaces intended for use in newspapers
Wikipedia - Legislative Assembly of Ontario -- Single house of Legislature of Ontario
Wikipedia - Lego House (Billund) -- Lego experience centre in Billund, Denmark
Wikipedia - Lego House -- 2011 single by Ed Sheeran
Wikipedia - Leinster House -- Building housing the parliament of Ireland
Wikipedia - Leishmaniasis -- Disease caused by parasites of the Leishmania type
Wikipedia - Lekkende -- Manor house near PrM-CM-&sto, Denmark
Wikipedia - Le Lit (Toulouse-Lautrec) -- Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Wikipedia - Lemma (mathematics) -- Theorem used to prove more complex theorems
Wikipedia - Lemniscaat -- Dutch publishing house
Wikipedia - Lencke Wischhusen -- German entrepreneur and politician
Wikipedia - Lend a Paw -- 1941 Mickey Mouse cartoon
Wikipedia - Lennoxville massacre -- 1985 mass murder at the Hells Angels clubhouse in Lennoxville
Wikipedia - Lenox Dale, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Lenox Street Projects -- Housing project in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Lens lantern -- Popular alternative to lighthouses in the 19th century
Wikipedia - Lensmeter -- Ophthalmic instrument mainly used by optometrists and opticians
Wikipedia - Leonard Hobhouse
Wikipedia - Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse
Wikipedia - Leonel Trindade Municipal Museum -- Archaeological and historical museum, Portugal
Wikipedia - Leonie von Meusebach-Zesch -- Pioneer female dentist
Wikipedia - Leopold (publisher) -- Dutch publishing house
Wikipedia - Leprosy -- Chronic infection caused by bacteria Mycobacteria leprM-CM-& and lepromatosis
Wikipedia - Leptospirosis -- Human disease caused by Leptospira bacteria
Wikipedia - Le roi s'amuse
Wikipedia - Leroy Keith -- Eighth president of Morehouse College
Wikipedia - Les Baigneuses (Gleizes)
Wikipedia - Les Barricades MystM-CM-)rieuses -- 1717 piece by Francois Couperin
Wikipedia - Lesbian rule -- A flexible strip of lead that could be bent to the curves of a molding, and used to measure or reproduce irregular curves
Wikipedia - Lesley University -- Private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
Wikipedia - Les Liaisons Dangereuses (play) -- Play by Christopher Hampton
Wikipedia - Les Liaisons dangereuses -- 1782 epistolary novel by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos
Wikipedia - Leslie Bedford -- Museum educator
Wikipedia - Leslie Hindman Auctioneers -- American auction house
Wikipedia - Les Onglous Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in HM-CM-)rault, France
Wikipedia - Less eligibility -- British workhouse conditions
Wikipedia - LessWrong -- Rationality-focused community blog
Wikipedia - Lest we forget -- War remembrance phrase first used in a poem by Rudyard Kipling
Wikipedia - Les Vraies Housewives -- French reality television series
Wikipedia - Letipea Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Estonia
Wikipedia - Le Vampire -- Inverted roller coaster at La Ronde amusement park in Montreal
Wikipedia - Level staff -- Graduated rod used to measure differences between heights
Wikipedia - Levenberg-Marquardt algorithm -- Algorithm used to solve non-linear least squares problems
Wikipedia - Leverett House -- Residential House of Harvard College
Wikipedia - Leverett, Massachusetts -- Town in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Levonorgestrel -- Hormonal medication used for birth control
Wikipedia - Lewis (cat) -- Cat who gained media attention for being placed under house arrest
Wikipedia - Lewis (lifting appliance) -- Device used to grip stones for lifting
Wikipedia - Lexington, Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Lexon -- Historic house in Centreville, Queen Anne's County, Maryland, United States
Wikipedia - LGBT linguistics -- Study of language used by LGBTQ
Wikipedia - LGBT slang -- Slang used predominantly among the LGBT
Wikipedia - LGBT symbols -- flags and symbols used by the LGBT community
Wikipedia - LG Household & Health Care -- South Korean personal care and cosmetics producer
Wikipedia - LGV Bordeaux-Toulouse -- Future French high-speed railway
Wikipedia - Libertarian Party of Massachusetts -- Massachusetts affiliate of the Libertarian Party
Wikipedia - Liberty Tree Mall -- Shopping mall in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - Library (computing) -- Collection of non-volatile resources used by computer programs, often for software development.
Wikipedia - Library House -- Defunct business information services company
Wikipedia - Library park (Colombia) -- Combination of a library building with surrounding green space for public use
Wikipedia - Liceu -- Opera house in Barcelona, Spain
Wikipedia - Lichtenstein's sandgrouse -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Lielauce Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - LielmM-DM-^Smele Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Lielzalve Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Liepa Manor -- Manor house in Latvia
Wikipedia - Liepaja Museum -- Museum in Latvia
Wikipedia - Life as a House -- 2001 film by Irwin Winkler
Wikipedia - Lifeboat (rescue) -- boat rescue craft which is used to attend a vessel in distress
Wikipedia - LifeWay Christian Resources -- Baptist publishing house
Wikipedia - Lifnei iver -- A prohibition against misleading people by use of a "stumbling block"
Wikipedia - Lifted (Lighthouse Family song) -- 1995 single by Lighthouse Family
Wikipedia - Lifting bag -- Airtight bag used for underwater buoyant lifting when filled with air
Wikipedia - Lifting body -- Aircraft configuration in which the fuselage produces significant lift
Wikipedia - Lifting gas -- Gas used to create buoyancy in a balloon or aerostat
Wikipedia - Lifting hook -- Hook used for lifting in conjunction with a hoist or crane
Wikipedia - Light-City Buses -- Former Australian bus service operator
Wikipedia - Light entertainment -- Term, classification used to describe a broad range of television and radio programming that includes comedies, variety shows, game shows, quiz shows
Wikipedia - Lighthouse and naval vessel urban legend -- Widely circulated story about a communication between the two
Wikipedia - Lighthouse Design -- American software company
Wikipedia - Lighthouse Directory
Wikipedia - Lighthouse Evangelism -- Megachurch in Singapore
Wikipedia - Lighthouse Family -- British musical duo
Wikipedia - Lighthouse Keeping -- 1946 Donald Duck cartoon
Wikipedia - Lighthouse of Alexandria -- Ancient lighthouse in Egypt
Wikipedia - Lighthouse of Ponta do Albernaz -- lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Lighthouse of Ponta dos Rosais -- lighthouse in Portugal
Wikipedia - Lighthouses and lightvessels in Belgium
Wikipedia - Lighthouses and lightvessels in Germany
Wikipedia - Lighthouses and lightvessels in Sweden
Wikipedia - Lighthouses in Canada
Wikipedia - Lighthouses in France
Wikipedia - Lighthouses in the United States
Wikipedia - Lighthouse -- Structure designed to emit light to aid navigation
Wikipedia - Lighting -- Deliberate use of light to achieve practical or aesthetic effects
Wikipedia - Light meter -- Device used to measure the amount of light
Wikipedia - Light My Fire (Club House song) -- 1993 single by Club House
Wikipedia - Lightning injury -- Injury caused by lightning strike
Wikipedia - Light of My Eyes -- 2001 film by Giuseppe Piccioni
Wikipedia - Light of the Desert -- 898-carat cerussite gem in the Royal Ontario Museum's collection, from Tsumeb, Namibia
Wikipedia - Light Railway Research Society of Australia -- A research society focused on narrow gauge railways, tramways, and industrial railways in Australia and places where Australian economic interests were strong
Wikipedia - Lightship 2000 -- A lightvessel that was used as a chapel in Cardiff
Wikipedia - Light Vessel 72 -- Derelict British lighthouse ship
Wikipedia - Lightvessel -- Ship that acts as a lighthouse
Wikipedia - Light-water reactor -- Type of nuclear reactor that uses normal water
Wikipedia - Lightwater Valley -- Amusement park in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Lightweight User Interface Toolkit
Wikipedia - Ligiron -- Scooter-like vehicle used in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Like button -- Communication software feature used to express support
Wikipedia - Lilay Huser -- German-Turkish actress
Wikipedia - Lilias Adie -- Scottish woman accused of witchcraft (c. 1640-1704)
Wikipedia - Lilliendal -- Danish manor house
Wikipedia - Lillooet Museum -- Museum and visitor's centre in British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Lilya Brik -- Russian author and muse of Vladimir Mayakovsky
Wikipedia - Limehouse Blues (film) -- 1934 film by Alexander Hall
Wikipedia - Limehouse Causeway -- Street in east London that was the home to the original Chinatown of London
Wikipedia - Limehouse Link tunnel -- Road tunnel under Limehouse in East London
Wikipedia - Limehouse station -- Docklands Light Railway and National Rail station
Wikipedia - Limelight -- Type of stage lighting once used in theatres and music halls
Wikipedia - Limitations and exceptions to copyright -- Provisions which allow for copyrighted works to be used without a license from the copyright owner
Wikipedia - Limulus amebocyte lysate -- Chemical used for the detection and quantification of bacterial endotoxins
Wikipedia - Lincoln Beach amusement park -- Former amusement park in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
Wikipedia - Lincoln in the White House -- 1939 film directed by William C. McGann
Wikipedia - Lincoln's House Divided Speech -- Speech by Abraham Lincoln
Wikipedia - Linda Joy Sullivan -- American politician and member of the Vermont State House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Lindau Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in Germany
Wikipedia - Linden Hall, Longhorsley -- Former mansion house in Northumberland, England
Wikipedia - Linden H. Morehouse -- American publisher
Wikipedia - Lindersvold -- Manor house bear Faxe, Denmark
Wikipedia - Lindley-Johnson-Vanderhoof House -- Historic house in Colorado
Wikipedia - Lindsay Crouse -- American actress
Wikipedia - Lindsay Hoyle -- 158th Speaker of the British House of Commons
Wikipedia - Lindsey House, Lincoln's Inn Fields -- Building in Lincoln's Inn Fields, London
Wikipedia - Linear B -- Syllabic script that was used for writing Mycenaean Greek
Wikipedia - Linear discriminant analysis -- Method used in statistics, pattern recognition, and other fields
Wikipedia - Line code -- Pattern used within a communications system to represent digital data
Wikipedia - Line Impedance Stabilization Network -- Tool used in emissions testing
Wikipedia - Lineman's handset -- Type of telephone used for installing and testing telephone lines
Wikipedia - Line marker -- Marker used on cave guide lines to provide safety information to divers
Wikipedia - Linens -- Fabric household goods intended for daily use
Wikipedia - Line of advantage -- astrological house system/imaginary line in astrology
Wikipedia - L'Inferno -- 1911 film by Francesco Bertolini, Giuseppe de Liguoro and Adolfo Padovan
Wikipedia - Lingholm -- Country House beside Derwent Water, Lake District, England
Wikipedia - Lingua franca -- Languages used to facilitate trade between groups without a common native language
Wikipedia - Linguistic performance -- Actual use of language in concrete situations
Wikipedia - Link Layer Discovery Protocol -- Protocol used by network devices for advertising their identity
Wikipedia - Linkspan -- Type of drawbridge used for moving vehicles on and off a ferry
Wikipedia - Linouse Desravine -- Haitian judoka
Wikipedia - Linux Mint -- Desktop-focused Ubuntu-based Linux distribution
Wikipedia - Linux range of use
Wikipedia - Linux User Group
Wikipedia - Linux user group
Wikipedia - LinuxUser
Wikipedia - Linwood Center -- House in Maryland, US
Wikipedia - Lionel Cousens -- Australian Paralympic archer
Wikipedia - Lion Throne of Burma -- Throne used by Burmese monarchs
Wikipedia - Lip bumper -- Appliance used in dentistry
Wikipedia - Lippinghauser Bach -- River in Germany
Wikipedia - Lippmann-Schwinger equation -- Equation used in quantum scattering problems
Wikipedia - Lipscomb House -- Plantation in North Carolina
Wikipedia - Liquid-crystal display -- Display that uses the light-modulating properties of liquid crystals
Wikipedia - Liquid fluoride thorium reactor -- Type of nuclear reactor that uses molten material as fuel
Wikipedia - Liquid paraffin (drug) -- Mineral oil used in cosmetics and medicine
Wikipedia - Liquid-propellant rocket -- Rocket engine that uses liquid fuels and oxidizers
Wikipedia - Lisa Hauser -- Austrian biathlete
Wikipedia - LISA (organization) -- USENIX special interest group for system administrators
Wikipedia - L'isle joyeuse -- Piano composition by Claude Debussy
Wikipedia - Lissadell House
Wikipedia - List (abstract data type) -- Abstract data type used in computer science
Wikipedia - Listeria monocytogenes -- Species of pathogenic bacteria that causes the infection listeriosis
Wikipedia - Listicle -- Short-form writing that uses a list as its thematic structure
Wikipedia - List of 12 oz. Mouse characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of 12 oz. Mouse episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of abbreviations used in health informatics -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of abbreviations used in medical prescriptions -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of abbreviations used in sanitation -- List of abbreviations and acronyms commonly used in the sanitation sector
Wikipedia - List of abuse allegations made through facilitated communication -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Acacia species used for timber production -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of accolades received by House -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of addiction and substance abuse organizations -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of AEC buses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of African-American newspapers in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft at the Central Air Force Museum -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft at the Imperial War Museum Duxford -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft at the Royal Air Force Museum London -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft engines used by the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft used by Italian Air Force -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aircraft used in China before 1937 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of airport museums in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of airports in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of almshouses in Ireland -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of almshouses in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of American Horror Story: Murder House characters -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of American Housewife episodes -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of amphibians of Massachusetts -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of amusement parks in Singapore -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of amusement parks in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of amusement rides -- List of carnival rides
Wikipedia - List of appointments to the New Zealand House of Representatives -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Arabian Houses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of artists focused on the female form -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of artists represented in the National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of artists who created paintings and drawings for use in films -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of art museums and galleries in Australia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of art museums and galleries in Scotland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of art museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of automotive museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of aviation museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of awards and nominations received by Desperate Housewives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of awards and nominations received by House of Cards -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Baden locomotives and railbuses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Battle of Britain airfields -- Airfields used by the Royal Air Force in 1940.
Wikipedia - List of Bavarian locomotives and railbuses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Bayer 04 Leverkusen players -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Bayer 04 Leverkusen seasons -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Bear in the Big Blue House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Because of You episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of bicycle- and human-powered vehicle museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Big Brother (American TV series) houseguests -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Big Brother (Australian TV series) housemates -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Big Brother Brasil housemates -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Big Brother (British TV series) housemates -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Big Brother Canada houseguests -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of birds of Massachusetts -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Blumhouse Productions projects -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of books by P. G. Wodehouse
Wikipedia - List of booksellers in Boston -- Wikipedia list of booksellers in Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - List of breweries in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of British politicians who have acknowledged cannabis use -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of buses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of bus types used in London -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Canadian flags -- Flags used in Canada
Wikipedia - List of canals in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Carnegie libraries in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of carousels on the National Register of Historic Places -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of causes of death by rate -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of causes of genital pain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of causes of shortness of breath -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Celebrity Big Brother (American TV series) houseguests -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Celebrity Big Brother (British TV series) housemates -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cemeteries in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of census-designated places in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Chabad houses in California -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of chairs of the National Museum of Natural History (France) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Champagne houses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of chancellors of the University of Massachusetts Amherst -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of charities accused of ties to terrorism -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Charles River boathouses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of child abuse cases featuring long-term detention -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of children's museums in India -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of children's museums in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of chocolate museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cities in Canada by median household income -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of city nicknames in Massachusetts -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of codes used in the World Geographical Scheme for Recording Plant Distributions -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of coffeehouse chains -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of college athletic programs in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of colleges and universities in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of colonial governors of Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of color spaces and their uses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of commissioners of the Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of common household pests -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of commonly used taxonomic affixes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of companies founded by Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of compositions by Giuseppe Corsi da Celano -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of compositions by Giuseppe Verdi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of compositions by Karlheinz Stockhausen -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of computer museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of contemporary art museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Cory in the House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of counties in Massachusetts -- List of counties in Massachusetts, United States
Wikipedia - List of countries by greenhouse gas emissions per capita -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by greenhouse gas emissions -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by household debt -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by household final consumption expenditure per capita -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by number of households -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by number of Internet users -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by number of mobile phones in use -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by number of telephone lines in use -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of countries by prevalence of cocaine use
Wikipedia - List of countries by prevalence of opiates use
Wikipedia - List of country houses in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of county courthouses in Illinois -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of county courthouses in Minnesota -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of county courthouses in Missouri -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of county courthouses in Texas -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of county courthouses in Washington (state) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of courthouses in the United States -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of covered bridges in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of current members of the Iowa House of Representatives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of current members of the Maryland House of Delegates -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of current members of the United States House of Representatives -- Current members of the U.S. House of Representatives
Wikipedia - List of current United States first spouses -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cutaneous conditions caused by mutations in keratins -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of cutaneous conditions caused by problems with junctional proteins -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Danger Mouse (2015 TV series) episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Danger Mouse home video releases -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of defunct amusement parks in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of defunct amusement parks -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of defunct Massachusetts State Mental Facilities -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Desperate Housewives cast members -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Desperate Housewives characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Desperate Housewives episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Deutsche Bahn AG locomotives and railbuses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Deutsche Bundesbahn locomotives and railbuses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Dia Art Foundation locations and sites -- List of art museums and installations
Wikipedia - List of diagnostic classification and rating scales used in psychiatry
Wikipedia - List of diffuse nebulae -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of directors of the National Museum of Brazil -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Disney's House of Mouse episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of disused Barcelona Metro stations -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Dollhouse characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Dollhouse episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of drugs known for off-label use -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of drugs used by militaries
Wikipedia - List of East German Deutsche Reichsbahn locomotives and railbuses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of elected hereditary peers under the House of Lords Act 1999 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of engineering schools in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of ethnic groups in the United States by household income -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of European countries by number of Internet users -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of FarmHouse brothers -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of FarmHouse chapters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Fashion House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of female art museum directors -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of female Members of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of female Members of the House of Representatives of Jamaica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of female members of the House of Representatives of Puerto Rico -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of female speakers of national and territorial lower houses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of films featuring gay bathhouses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of films shot at the British Museum -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of films that most frequently use the word "fuck" -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of flags used in Northern Ireland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of FM broadcast translators used as primary stations -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of food and beverage museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of foreign vehicles used by Nazi Germany in World War II -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former districts of the Massachusetts House of Representatives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former districts of the Massachusetts Senate -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (A) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (B) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (C) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (D) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (E) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (F) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (G) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (H) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (I) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (J) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (K) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (L) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (M) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (N) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (O) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (P) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (Q) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (R) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (S) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (T) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (U) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (V) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (W) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (Y) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the United States House of Representatives (Z) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former members of the Virginia House of Delegates (A) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of former public houses and coffeehouses in Boston -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of French words and phrases used by English speakers
Wikipedia - List of Fuller House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Full House and Fuller House characters -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Full House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Galleries, Libraries, Museums and Archives in Goa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of gay men's choruses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of genera of viruses
Wikipedia - List of Genie in the House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of German states by household income -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of gestures -- List of bodily actions used as nonverbal communication
Wikipedia - List of Gokusen episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of graphical user interface elements
Wikipedia - List of Greek morphemes used in English -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Guggenheim Museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of heads of houses of the University of Oxford -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of hereditary peers removed under the House of Lords Act 1999 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Hi-5 House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of high schools in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic houses in Denmark -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic houses in Florida -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic houses in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic houses in Missouri -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic houses in Nebraska -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic houses in the Republic of Ireland -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of historic properties in Bouse, Arizona -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Holocaust memorials and museums in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Holocaust memorials and museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Honorary Fellows of Peterhouse, Cambridge -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of hospitals in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House Building Finance Corporation cricketers -- List of cricketers
Wikipedia - List of House Calls episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House cast members -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of household surveys in the United States
Wikipedia - List of House Husbands episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 11th Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 36th Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 37th Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 38th Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 39th Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 40th Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 41st Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 42nd Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House members of the 43rd Parliament of Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Anubis characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Anubis episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Cards (American TV series) characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Cards episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Cards trilogy characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Fortune episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of House of Lies episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of house organs -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of houses in Fairmount Park -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of house styles -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of house types -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of IBA official cocktails -- Cocktail selected by the International Bartenders Association for use in its annual competition
Wikipedia - List of Ikki Tousen episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of incidents at Herschend parks -- Amusement park incident list
Wikipedia - List of incidents at independent amusement parks -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of industrial regions -- Geographical regions with a high proportion of industrial use
Wikipedia - List of Institute Professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Wikipedia - List of instruments used in otorhinolaryngology, head and neck surgery -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of international prime ministerial trips made by Giuseppe Conte -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Interstate Highways in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of In the House episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Irish words used in the English language -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Israeli museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Italian musical terms used in English -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of jail and prison museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Japanese aircraft in use during the Second Sino-Japanese War -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of keepers of the British Museum -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of KLM Delft Blue houses -- List of Delft Blue houses that KLM presents to its Business Class passengers
Wikipedia - List of largest art museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of largest houses in the Los Angeles metropolitan area -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of largest houses in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Latin and Greek words commonly used in systematic names -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Latin place names used as specific names -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of law enforcement agencies in Massachusetts -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of law schools in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of letters used in mathematics and science -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Leyland buses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of libraries in 18th-century Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses and lightvessels in Belgium -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses and lightvessels in Denmark -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses and lightvessels in Finland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses and lightvessels in Germany -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses and lightvessels in Sweden -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses and lightvessels
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Abkhazia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Alabama -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Alaska -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Albania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Algeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Angola -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Anguilla -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Antarctica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Antigua and Barbuda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Argentina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Aruba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ascension Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Australia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Austria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Azerbaijan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bahrain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bangladesh -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Barbados -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Belize -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Benin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bermuda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bolivia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bonaire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Brazil -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in British Columbia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Brunei -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Bulgaria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in California -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Cambodia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Cameroon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Cape Verde -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ceuta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA1080-NGA1155.5 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA1155.8-NGA1312 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA1328-NGA1540 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA1544-NGA1816 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA1820-NGA2043 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA2044-NGA2324 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile: NGA2328-NGA2718 -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Chile -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in China -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Christmas Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Connecticut -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Costa Rica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Croatia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Cuba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Curacao -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Cyprus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Delaware -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Djibouti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Dominica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Easter Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in East Timor -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Egypt -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in El Salvador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in England -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Equatorial Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Eritrea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Estonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Fiji -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Florida -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in France -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in French Guiana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in French Polynesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Gabon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Georgia (U.S. state) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Georgia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ghana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Gibraltar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Greece -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Greenland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Grenada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Guadeloupe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Guatemala -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Guinea-Bissau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Guyana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Haiti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Hawaii -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Honduras -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Iceland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Illinois and Indiana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in India -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Indonesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Iran -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ireland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Israel -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Italy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ivory Coast -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Jamaica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Japan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Jordan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Kazakhstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Kenya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Kiribati -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Kuwait -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Latvia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Lebanon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Liberia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Libya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Lithuania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Louisiana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Macau -- List of lighthouses in Macau
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Madagascar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Madeira -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Maine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Malaysia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Malta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Manitoba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Martinique -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Maryland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Mauritania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Mauritius -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Mayotte -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in M-CM-^Eland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Melilla -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Mexico -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Michigan -- list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Minnesota -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Monaco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Montenegro -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Montserrat -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Morocco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Mozambique -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Myanmar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Namibia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in New Brunswick -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in New Caledonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Newfoundland and Labrador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in New Jersey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in New York (state) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in New Zealand -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Nicaragua -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Nigeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Niue -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Norfolk Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in North Carolina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in North Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Norway -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ohio -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Oman -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ontario -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Oregon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Pakistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Palau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Panama -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Papua New Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Pennsylvania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Poland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Portugal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Prince Edward Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Puerto Rico -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Qatar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Rhode Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in RM-CM-)union -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Romania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Russia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saint BarthM-CM-)lemy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saint Helena -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saint Kitts and Nevis -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saint Lucia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saint Pierre and Miquelon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Samoa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Sao TomM-CM-) and Principe -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Saudi Arabia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Scotland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Senegal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Seychelles -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Sierra Leone -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Singapore -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Sint Eustatius -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Sint Maarten -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Slovenia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Somalia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Somaliland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in South Africa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in South Carolina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in South Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Spain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Sri Lanka -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Sudan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Suriname -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Svalbard -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Switzerland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Syria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Taiwan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Tanzania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Texas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Bahamas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Balearic Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the British Indian Ocean Territory -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the British Virgin Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Canary Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Cayman Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Channel Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Collectivity of Saint Martin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Comoros -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Cook Islands -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Coral Sea Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Dominican Republic -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Falkland Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Faroe Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Federated States of Micronesia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the French Southern and Antarctic Lands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Gambia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Isle of Man -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Maldives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Marshall Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Netherlands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Philippines -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Republic of the Congo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Solomon Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the State of Palestine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the Turks and Caicos Islands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the United Arab Emirates -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the United States territories -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Togo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Tonga -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Trinidad and Tobago -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Tunisia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Turkey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Turkmenistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Ukraine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Uruguay -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Vanuatu -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Venezuela -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Vietnam -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Virginia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Wales -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Wallis and Futuna -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Washington -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Wisconsin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses in Yemen -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of lighthouses
Wikipedia - List of Little House on the Prairie characters -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Little House on the Prairie episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (A) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (B) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (C) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (D) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (E) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (F) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (G) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (H) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (I) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (J) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (K) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (L) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (M) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (N) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (O) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (P) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (Q) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (R) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (S) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (T) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (U) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (V) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (W) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (Y) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of living former members of the United States House of Representatives (Z) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of locomotives and railbuses of the Imperial Royal Austrian State Railways -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Lustron houses -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Majority Leaders of the North Dakota House of Representatives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of mammals of Massachusetts -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Man About the House characters -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of manga published by Hakusensha -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of maritime museums in the United States -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of market houses in the Republic of Ireland -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Masonic abbreviations -- Abbreviations used by Freemasons
Wikipedia - List of Massachusetts area codes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Massachusetts Civil War units -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Masters of Peterhouse, Cambridge -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of media spin-offs -- Narrative work derived from one or more already existing works that focuses in more detail on one aspect of that original work
Wikipedia - List of medical museums -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of members of the United States House of Representatives
Wikipedia - List of Mickey Mouse characters -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of Mickey Mouse episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Mickey Mouse films and appearances -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Mickey Mouse Mixed-Up Adventures episodes -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of microorganisms used in food and beverage preparation -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of military aircraft of the United States -- Types of military aircraft used by the United States
Wikipedia - List of military equipment used by Syrian Democratic Forces -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of military equipment used in the Korean War -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of mills in Fall River, Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Minority Leaders of the Georgia House of Representatives -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of monarchs of the British Isles by cause of death -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of monastic houses in Buckinghamshire -- Wikimedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of monastic houses in England -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of monastic houses in South Yorkshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of monastic houses in Wales -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Morehouse College alumni -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of most-visited art museums -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of most-visited museums by region -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of most visited museums in the Netherlands -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of most visited museums in the United Kingdom -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of most-visited museums -- List of museums with more than 2 million visitors annually
Wikipedia - List of motorcycles in the National Motor Museum, Beaulieu -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of mountains in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of Muisca museum collections -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of multi-level marketing companies -- List of companies which use multi-level marketing
Wikipedia - List of municipalities in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of municipalities of the Province of Syracuse -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and art galleries in Bangkok -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and collections at the University of Michigan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and collections of the Baix Emporda region -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and cultural institutions in Chicago -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and cultural institutions in Indonesia -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and cultural institutions in New York City -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and cultural institutions in Omaha, Nebraska -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and galleries in Berlin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums and monuments in Istanbul -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums by country -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums focused on African Americans -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museum ships of the United States military -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museum ships -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Abruzzo -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Afghanistan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Alabama -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Alaska -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Albania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Alberta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Algeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Amsterdam -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Andalusia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in and around Copenhagen -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Andorra -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Angola -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Antigua and Barbuda -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Apulia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Argentina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Arizona -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Arkansas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Armenia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Aruba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Atlanta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Australia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Austria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Azerbaijan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Baden-Wurttemberg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bahrain -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Baku -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Baltimore -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bangladesh -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Barbados -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Barcelona -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bedfordshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Belarus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Belgium -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Belgrade -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Belize -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Benin -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Berkshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bern -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bhutan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bihar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bolivia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bosnia and Herzegovina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Boston -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Botswana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Brazil -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Brisbane -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bristol -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in British Columbia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Brunei -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Brussels -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bucharest -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Buckinghamshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Bulgaria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Burgenland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Burkina Faso -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Burundi -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Calabria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in California -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cambodia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cambridgeshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cambridge -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cameroon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Campania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Canada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cape Verde -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Carinthia (state) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Catalonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Central Texas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Chad -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cheshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Chihuahua -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Chile -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in China -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cincinnati -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cleveland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cologne -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Colombia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Colorado -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Columbus, Ohio -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Comoros
Wikipedia - List of museums in Connecticut -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cornwall -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Costa Rica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in County Durham -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Croatia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cuba -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cumbria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Cyprus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Delaware -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Denmark -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Derbyshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Devon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Djibouti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Dominica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Dorset -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in East Sussex -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in East Texas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in East Timor -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Ecuador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Egypt -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in El Salvador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Emilia-Romagna -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in England -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Equatorial Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Eritrea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Essex -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Estonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Ethiopia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Fiji -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Finland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Florida -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in France -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Friuli Venezia Giulia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Gabon
Wikipedia - List of museums in Georgia (country) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Georgia (U.S. state) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Germany -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Ghana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Gibraltar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Gloucestershire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Greater Manchester -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Greece -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Greenland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Guam -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Guatemala -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Guernsey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Guinea-Bissau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Guinea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Guyana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Gyeonggi Province -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Haiti -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Hamburg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Hampshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Hawaii -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Herefordshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Hertfordshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Honduras -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Hong Kong -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Hungary -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Iceland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Idaho -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Indiana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in India -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Indonesia
Wikipedia - List of museums in Iowa -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Iran -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Iraq -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Israel
Wikipedia - List of museums in Italy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Ivory Coast -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Jamaica -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Japan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Jersey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Jordan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kansas City, Missouri -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Karnataka -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kazakhstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kentucky -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kent -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kenya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kerala -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kiribati
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kuwait -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Kyrgyzstan -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lancashire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Laos -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Latvia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lazio -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lebanon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Leicestershire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lesotho
Wikipedia - List of museums in Liberia
Wikipedia - List of museums in Libya -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Liechtenstein
Wikipedia - List of museums in Liguria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lincolnshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lithuania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lombardy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in London -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Los Angeles County, California -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Louisiana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Lower Austria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Luxembourg -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Macau -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Madagascar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Madhya Pradesh -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Madrid -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Maine -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Malaga -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Malaysia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Mali -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Malta -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Manitoba -- Wikipedia list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Maryland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Massachusetts -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Mauritania -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Mauritius -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in M-CM-^Eland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Melbourne -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Merseyside -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Metro Manila -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Mexico -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Michigan -- list article
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Wikipedia - List of museums in Moldova -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Monaco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Mongolia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Montana -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Montenegro
Wikipedia - List of museums in Montreal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Morocco -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Moscow -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Mozambique -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Myanmar -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Namibia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nebraska -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nepal -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nevada -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Brunswick -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Caledonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Newfoundland and Labrador -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Hampshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Jersey -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Mexico -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Orleans -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New South Wales -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New York City -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New York (state) -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in New Zealand -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nicaragua -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nigeria -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Niger -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Niue -- wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Norfolk Island -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Norfolk -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Northamptonshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Brabant -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Carolina -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Dakota -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Northern Cyprus -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Northern Ireland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Korea -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Macedonia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Texas -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Northumberland -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in North Yorkshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Norway -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nottinghamshire -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Nova Scotia -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Ohio -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Oklahoma -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Oman -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Ontario -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Orange County, California -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Oregon -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - List of museums in Oxfordshire -- Wikipedia list article
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