Thursday, March 26, 2009

Romeo and Juliet?

Does anybody know what act/scene/page the scene where Juliet and the nurse are talking about what Romeo said about marriage is on?





Its okay if you only know the act or if you only know the scene.





Thanks!
Romeo and Juliet?
Act 2 Scene 5
Romeo and Juliet?
I think you may have posted your question in the wrong forum, this is the genealogy forum. You might get a much better response over in the *Theatre and Acting* forum link posted below.


http://uk.answers.yahoo.com/dir/index;_y...


hope this helps.

1987 Sharon Linda Cole was Sharon Linda Jeter and I think lived in Kern County?

I had asked about Sharon Cole thought lived in Redwood City,Ca. But I think she lived in Kern County. I found out that she did die January 31,1987 and was married to a guy last name Jeter. Does anyone know of her or about the story of how she passed away and where she is buried or the location?

I need pocahontas infooo!!!?

quick! websites and info about her trip to england!!!! andwere she died!!!
I need pocahontas infooo!!!?
Pocahontas was an Indian princess, the daughter of Powhatan, the powerful chief of the Algonquian Indians in the Tidewater region of Virginia. She was born around 1595 to one of Powhatan%26#039;s many wives. They named her Matoaka, though she is better known as Pocahontas, which means %26quot;Little Wanton,%26quot; playful, frolicsome little girl
I need pocahontas infooo!!!?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocahontas has a long article on her--including her trip to England as the wife of John Rolfe and her new name of Rebecca.


They were married on April 5, 1614. Pocahontas was christened Lady Rebecca. For a few years after the marriage, the couple lived together at Rolfe%26#039;s plantation, Varina Farms, which was located across the James River from the new community of Henricus. They had a child, Thomas Rolfe, born on January 30, 1615


In 1616, the Rolfes traveled to England, arriving at the port of Plymouth on the 12th of June, and then journeying to London by coach in June 1616. They were accompanied by a group of around eleven other Powhatan natives including Tomocomo, a holy man. John Smith was living in London at the time, and in Plymouth, Pocahontas learned that he was still alive. Smith did not meet Pocahontas at this point, but he wrote a letter to Queen Anne urging that Pocahontas be treated with respect as a royal visitor, because if she were treated badly, her %26quot;present love to us and Christianity might turn to鈥?scorn and fury%26quot;, and England might lose the chance to %26quot;rightly have a Kingdom by her means%26quot;.


In March 1617, Rolfe and Pocahontas boarded a ship to return to Virginia. However, the ship had only gone as far as Gravesend on the River Thames when Pocahontas became ill. The nature of the illness is unknown, but since she had been described as sensitive to London%26#039;s smoky air, pneumonia or tuberculosis are likely, although smallpox(by The New Encyclopaedia Britannica in certain particularity) has also been suggested. She was taken ashore and died. According to Rolfe, she died saying %26quot;all must die, but tis enough that her child liveth.%26quot;[29] Her funeral took place on March 21, 1617 in the parish of Saint George%26#039;s, Gravesend. The site of her grave is unknown, but her memory is recorded in Gravesend with a life-size bronze statue at St George%26#039;s Church.





DESCENDANTS:


Pocahontas and Rolfe had one child, Thomas Rolfe, who was born at Varina Farms in 1615 before his parents left for England. Through this son Pocahontas has many living descendants. Many First Families of Virginia trace their roots to Pocahontas and Chief Powhatan, including such notable individuals as Edith Wilson, wife of Woodrow Wilson; George Wythe Randolph; Admiral Richard Byrd; Virginia Governor Harry Flood Byrd; fashion-designer and socialite Pauline de Rothschild; former First-Lady Nancy Reagan; and astronomer and mathematician Percival Lowell.

Is being adopted since u were born make a difference in how your family treats you? did u know u were adopted?

Did it make a difference?
Is being adopted since u were born make a difference in how your family treats you? did u know u were adopted?
im adopted. i was adopted when i was about 3-4 years old. and sadly, my birth dad died shortly after that. he smoked, he drank, he took every kind of drug that there was, but the reason that he died was that he got hit by a drunk driver. so i dont drink, i dont smoke, i dont do any drugs.


but i re-met my birth mom when i was 13 years old. and have kept in contact every since. and i just lost my birth grandma, on 4-20-07.


be4 i got adopted, my mom was very sick when she had me. so i was with my birthmom for awhile, then my grandma, then my moms sister, then i was in foster care for about 2 years. and then i got adopted.


i know whats it like to get adopted, not knowing who ur real parents or family are. or anything.


im now almost 22. and i still dont know that much about my birth family. i see them every other month or so. and im still shy around them too.
Is being adopted since u were born make a difference in how your family treats you? did u know u were adopted?
depends if your the only child that is adopted.


a good parent should love you no matter what and treat you as their own. otherwise why bother to adopt.
Reply:My niece has two adopted children and she loves them as much as any parent could love their children. Her husband was adopted also. I knew his mother before she died. She was so delighted when she was able to get him and a little later his sister. Any child adopted by my niece and my nephew in law is very very lucky!
Reply:I am 73 and have just adopted a lady 4 years my junior, our families think we are nuts but we are happy with the arrangement so stuff them all.......................
Reply:My grandmother was adopted and I must say that no matter how accepting the adopted family is, there is always going to be an asterisk placed next to you. You%26#039;re a child, but an adopted child. In my grandmother%26#039;s case, her adopted mother had bio children as well as adopted children, and believe me there was a marked difference in how both the immediate and extended family treated them as opposed to the adopted kids.

Is Caucasian an ethnicity?

What does it mean to be caucasian? It means nothing. It just means you are white and what else??
Is Caucasian an ethnicity?
****, its an ethnicity, just check it on dictionary noob
Is Caucasian an ethnicity?
It means your belong to the second least populous skin-color in the world. No. 1 is yellow; #2 is black; #3 is brown; #4 is white; #5 is red.


So, it means that whites have more control over their sexual urges.
Reply:Forensically, it is a race. There are 3 forensic races: Caucasoid; Mongoloid: and N. e. g. r. o. i. d. and isn%26#039;t it stupid that we must spell a valid scientific word with spaces and periods just to keep Yahoo happy? We all can see the word.





%26quot;ethnicity (n) a term which represents social groups with a shared history, sense of identity, geography and cultural roots which may occur despite racial difference.%26quot;


http://racerelations.about.com/od/skills...





Therefore, race does not determine ethnicity; common experience does. Read the rest of that link.
Reply:If you%26#039;re referring to this group a people, then yes Caucasian could be considered ethnic.








http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peoples_of_...
Reply:The Caucasian race, sometimes called the Caucasoid race


is defined by the Compact Oxford English Dictionary of Current English as %26quot;relating to a broad division of humankind covering peoples from Europe, Western Asia, parts of the Indian Subcontinent and North Africa%26quot; or %26quot;white-skinned; of European origin%26quot; or %26quot;relating to the region of the Caucasus in SE Europe%26quot;.


People in Europe, especially in Russia and nearby, generally use the term %26quot;Caucasian%26quot; exclusively to identify people who are from the Caucasus region or who speak the Caucasian languages.


The term %26quot;Caucasian%26quot; originated as one of the racial categories developed in the 19th century by people studying craniology. It was derived from the region of the Caucasus mountains.


German scientist and naturalist, Johann Friedrich Blumenbach (1752-1840) based the classification of the Caucasian race primarily on skull features, which he claimed were optimized by the Caucasian peoples, particularly a single skull from the Caucasia which resembled German skulls. It was from this similarity that he conjectured Europeans having arisen in the Caucasia. Blumenbach wrote about the %26quot;primeval%26quot; Caucasian race which he believed was %26quot;the oldest race of man%26quot; and the %26quot;first variety of humankind.


In 1855, French diplomat and man of letters Arthur de Gobineau popularized ideas about race: %26quot;I must say, once and for all, that I understand by white men the members of those races which are also called Caucasian... [these] white races... had their first settlement in the Caucasus, historically an area of fascination for Europeans. Myths of the Caucasus featured Prometheus and Jason and the Argonauts. Greek mythology considered women from the Caucasus to have magical powers., such as Medea of Jason and the Argonauts fame.


Among the main racial group of Caucasians there are three subgroups; Nordic, Alpine, and Mediterranean. Meyers Blitz-Lexikon (Leipzig, 1932) divides %26quot;Caucasoid types%26quot; into: Nordic, Dinaric, Mediterranean, Alpine, East Baltic, Turks, Bedouins, Afghans. In 2003, the term %26quot;Caucasoid race%26quot; is a term used in physical anthropology to refer to people of a certain range of anthropometric measurements


With the turn away from racial theory in the late 20th century, the term %26quot;Caucasian%26quot; as a racial classification fell into disuse in Europe. In the United Kingdom, the use of the term %26quot;Caucasian%26quot; is more likely than in the United States to describe people from the Caucasus, although it may still be used as a racial classification. In 2003, United States National Library of Medicine stopped using the term Caucasian race in favor of the term %26quot;European. In the United States, %26quot;Caucasian%26quot; has been mainly a distinction based on skin color with %26quot;white%26quot; or light complexion. Caucasians are also distinguished as a people who are, or whose ancestors were, %26quot;from Europe%26quot;. The Oxford English Dictionary defines %26quot;Caucasoid%26quot; as as noun or adjective meaning %26quot;Of, pertaining to, or resembling the Caucasian race.%26quot;





http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/cau...


Caucasian


/korkayzin, -ay%26amp;ulzh;鈥檔/





鈥?adjective 1 relating to a broad division of humankind covering peoples from Europe, western Asia, and parts of India and North Africa. 2 white-skinned; of European origin. 3 relating to the region of the Caucasus in SE Europe.





鈥?noun a Caucasian person





What else?, you ask. I answered this on the hope it was not a racist-based question. We must all remember there is only one RACE on Earth--the HUMAN race--regardless of skin color, political views, etc. We all bleed the same red, turn to the same white bones, and later to the same brown dust from the earth that Adam came from (see Genesis in your Bible)
Reply:Nope. Ethnicity is usually finer-grained than that, It is a race. Race, in turn, is a handy method of describing people quickly, as in





%26quot;The lost hiker is a male Caucasian, 5%26#039;8%26quot;, 180 pounds, 50 years old, last seen wearing a red flannel shirt and blue jeans%26quot;.





Once you get to describing anything more than physical, as in





%26quot;All Whites / Blacks / Asians / Chinese / Mexicans / Huguenots


are


Brave / cowardly/ Smart / stupid / Honest / thieves / Industrious / lazy %26quot;





you get into trouble.








%26gt; It means nothing





In the USA, at least, it means we don%26#039;t understand first hand some of the crap that colored people put up with. I%26#039;m white. I%26#039;ve never been stopped for it. Two of the black people I worked with in the Information Technology department have been stopped, when they were younger, for %26quot;Driving While Black%26quot;.

How do I find were my grand parents are buried in cheb,mi.in the calvary cematery?

The caretaker of the cemetary will have records of who is buried there, and where they are buried. In the event that the cemetary has no caretaker, it would be a matter of looking around the cemetary itself. However, if they were involved in a church, some records may be held there that indicate where they were buried.
How do I find were my grand parents are buried in cheb,mi.in the calvary cematery?
Here%26#039;s the contact information for the cemetery. They%26#039;ll happily help you with a map of the cemetery and location of their graves:


Cheboygan Catholic Community


117 N. E St.


Cheboygan, MI


616-627-2105
How do I find were my grand parents are buried in cheb,mi.in the calvary cematery?
Records of graves are usually kept at City Hall or by the county, where the burial(s) took place.


Historical societies and libraries, sometimes have records of burials, in old cemeteries.





City of Cheboygan, MI


403 North Huron St., Cheboygan, MI, 49721


Ph. 231-627-9931


Fax: 231-627-6357


E-mail: cityhall@cheboygan.org


City Clerks office: citytreas@nmo.net


Cementery Sexton:


Ellie Olson, Ph. 231-627-9165 or 231-445-0337





County of Cheboygan , MI


Cheboygan County Building


870 South Main St., Cheboygan, MI, 4972


Ph. 231-627-8855


Deeds Ph: 231-627-8808
Reply:http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi...





Calvary Cemetery


Cheboygan


Cheboygan County


Michigan USA


(interments--105)


Map and GPS data:


GPS Coordinates: Latitude: 45.6197, Longitude: -84.4642


There is a map shown, too.


(If you had put their names in your question, I could have seen if they were some of the 105 listings.)

Do people of the 3 different body types tend to claim most of their ancestry accordingly?

In other words....do ectomorphs, mesomorphs, and endomorph body types tend to be descended from 3 different areas of the world?





I%26#039;m an endomorph (natually lean, semetrical, small to medium frame) and I read somewhere that we tend to be from peoples in warm climents and most Native Americans have this frame. I%26#039;m also very hairy, and was wondering, if that said anything about my geneology.
Do people of the 3 different body types tend to claim most of their ancestry accordingly?
You mean does it have anything to do with genetics. Genealogy really isn%26#039;t the same thing as genetics.





I might mention that the Native Americans are usually not a hirsuite people. So your hairiness probably did not come from Native Americans.
Do people of the 3 different body types tend to claim most of their ancestry accordingly?
If you want to trace your ancestry, try:


Oh, yes! I want it, and I want it now, and it must be free. Does that about sum it up? (I hope so, because that is what I always want...)


You should start by asking all your living relatives about family history. Then, armed with that information, you can go to your public library and check to see if it has a genealogy department. Most do nowadays; also, don%26#039;t forget to check at community colleges, universities, etc. Our public library has both www.ancestry.com and www.heritagequest.com free for anyone to use (no library card required).


Another place to check out is any of the Mormon%26#039;s Family History Centers. They allow people to search for their family history (and, NO, they don%26#039;t try to convert you).


A third option is one of the following websites:


http://www.searchforancestors.com/...





http://www.censusrecords.net/?o_xid=2739...





http://www.usgenweb.com/





http://www.census.gov/





http://www.rootsweb.com/





http://www.ukgenweb.com/





http://www.archives.gov/





http://www.familysearch.org/





http://www.accessgenealogy.com/...





http://www.cyndislist.com/





http://www.geni.com/





Cyndi%26#039;s has the most links to genealogy websites, whether ship%26#039;s passenger lists, ancestors from Africa, ancestors from the Philippines, where ever and whatever.





Of course, you may be successful by googling: %26quot;john doe, born 1620, plimouth, massachusetts%26quot; as an example.





Good luck and have fun!





Check out this article on five great free genealogy websites:





http://www.associatedcontent.com/article...





Then there is the DNA test; if you decide you want to REALLY know where your ancestors came from opt for the DNA test. Besides all the mistakes that officials commonly make, from 10% to 20% of birth certificates list the father wrong; that is, mama was doing the hanky-panky and someone else was the REAL father. That won%26#039;t show up on the internet or in books; it WILL show up in DNA.


I used www.familytreedna.com which works with the National Geographics Genotype Program.





%26quot;body types%26quot; really won%26#039;t get you anywhere. Have you heard of Pimas?