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الموضوع: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

  1. #1
    انجليزي جديد الصورة الرمزية هتوون
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    كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    سلام ياأخواني وأخواتي أطلبكم طلب يااااااارب ملتردوني أناطالبه أول أنجليزي أريد موضوعين عــــــــــــــــن

    1%عن أي فيلم
    2%عن العلاج الشعبي
    ياااااااااارب يارفع السموات بدون عمد ياعزيز يارحيم كل واحد يجيبلي موضوع جعل أيديه ماتمسهن النلر ويااااااااااااااااارب أحسن خاتمته وياااااااااااااارب اغفرخطاياه وخطايا والديه وجعله قرة اعين لوالديه ويااااااارب حقق كل مايتمنى
    والله ماحتاجاته باسرع وقت اذاامكن مع ترجمه

  2. #2
    مميز الصورة الرمزية حسام III
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته


    The Dark Knight (2008)

    Batman raises the stakes in his bourgeois war on crime. With the help of Lieutenant Jim Gordon and District Attorney Harvey Dent, Batman sets out to dismantle the remaining criminal organizations that plague the city streets. The partnership proves to be effective, but they soon find themselves prey to a reign of chaos unleashed by a rising criminal mastermind known to the terrified citizens of Gotham as The Joker. Written by Peteagassi

    Set within a year after the events of Batman Begins, Batman, Lieutenant James Gordon, and new district attorney Harvey Dent successfully begin to round up the criminals that plague Gotham City until a mysterious and sadistic criminal mastermind known only as the Joker appears in Gotham, creating a new wave of chaos. Batman's struggle against the Joker becomes deeply personal, forcing him to "confront everything he believes" and improve his technology to stop him. A love triangle develops between Bruce Wayne, Dent and Rachel Dawes. Written by Leon Lombardi

    With just one year having passed after taking out Ra's Al Ghul's plan to have Gotham eliminated and the mysterious disappearance of Dr. Jonathan Crane AKA the Scarecrow, and after the city was nearly plundered with his toxins, Bruce Wayne and his vigilante alter-ego the Batman, continue the seemingly endless effort to bring order to Gotham, with the help of Lt. James Gordon and newly appointed District Attorney Harvey Dent. But a new threat has now emerged into the streets. The Dark Knight faces a rising psychopathic criminal called The Joker, whose eerie grin, laughter, and inhuman morality makes him as dangerous than what he has yet to unleash. It becomes an agenda to Batman to stop the mysterious Joker at all costs, knowing that both of them are in an opposite line. One has no method at all and seeks to see the world plunge into the fire he has yet to light. One represents the symbol of hope and uses his own shadow to bring the peace and order he has yet to accomplish doing.

  3. #3
    مميز الصورة الرمزية حسام III
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    بالنسبة للترجمة
    انا مشغول جدا
    باقرب وقت بنزلها

    بالتوفيق

  4. #4
    انجليزي جديد الصورة الرمزية هتووون
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    اول ماشفت اسمك قلت مين منزل موضوع بمعرفي : )

    الاخ حسام ماقصر ..لو اعرف حليته
    بالتوفيق ان شاء الله

  5. #5
    مميز الصورة الرمزية حسام III
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته



    الفارس المُظلم (2008)

    ترتفع حِصَص باتمان في حربِه البرجوازيةِ على الجريمةِ. بمساعدة الملازم أوّل جيِم جوردن ومدعي عام منطقة هارفي دنت، تَعْرضُ باتمان لتَفكيك المنظماتِ الإجراميةِ الباقيةِ التي تُصيبُ شوارعَ المدينةَ. تُثبتُ الشراكةُ لِكي تَكُونَ فعّالةَ، لَكنَّهم يَجِدونَ أنفسهم عاجلا فريسةً إلى عهد من الفوضى المطلقة العنان مِن قِبل عقل مدبر إجرامي متصاعد عَرفَ إلى المواطنين المُفزَعينِ لمدينةجوثام بالنكّات.

    خلال سَنَة بعد أحداثِ باتمان يَبْدأُ، باتمان، الملازم أوّل جيمس جوردن، ومدعي عام منطقة جديد هارفي دنت َبْدأُو بجَمْع المجرمين بنجاح الذين امرضو مدينةَ جوثام الا ان عقل مدبر إجرامي غامض وسادي عَرف فقط بالنكات يَظْهرُ في جوثام، بخَلْق موجة جديدة مِنْ الفوضى. من ثم يُصبحُ كفاح باتمان ضدّ النكّاتِ شخصيَ جداً، يُجبرُه ليُواجهُ كُلّ شيءَ يَعتقدهُ" ويُحسّنُ تقنيتَه لاَقّاُفه. يُتطوّر مثلث الحبِّ ُ بين بروس وَين، دنت ورايتشل

    بعدمضي سَنَة واحدة سحبت خطةراس الغول لازالة جوثام والإختفاء الغامض للدّكتورِ جوناثان Crane المعروف باسم الفزّاعة، وبعد ان سلبت المدينةِ تقريباً بسمومِه، بروس وَين والذات حارسه الالثانية يُواصلُ باتمان، الجُهدَ اللانهائيَ على ما يبدو لجَلْب النظام إلى مدينة جوثام، بمساعدة الملازم أوّل جيمس جوردن ومدعي عام المنطقة المعيَّن حديثاً هارفي دنت. لكن ظَهرَ الآن تهديد جديد إلى الشوارعِ. الفارس المُظلم يُواجهُ مجرم مضطرب العقل متصاعد يدَعا النكّاتَ، الذي تكشيرته المخيفة، ضحك، ومبادىء أخلاقية لا إنسانية تَجْعلُه كخطر مِنْ ما هو لحدّ الآن لَمْ يُطلقَ عنانه. يُصبحُ جدولَ أعمال باتمان ليَوَقُّف النكّاتِ الغامضِ بأي ثمن، يَعْرفُ بأنّ كلاهما في خَطِّ معاكسِ. احدهم لَيْسَ لهُ طريقةُ مطلقاً وتُريدُ رُؤية الهبوطِ العالميِ إلى النارِ التي هو لحدّ الآن لَمْ يضيئَ. وا لآخريُمثّلُ رمزَ الأملِ ويَستعملُ ظِلَّه الخاصَ لجَلْب السلام والنظامِ وهو لَمْ يُنجزَ لحدّ الآن العَمل.

    كل برجراف يخص كاتب

  6. #6
    انجليزي جديد الصورة الرمزية هتوون
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    وعليكم السلام ورحمة الله وبركاته يعطيك العافية ياأخي حسام والله مانساك من الدعاء
    وياأخوووووواني اريد الموضوع الثاني الله يجزاكم الجنة

  7. #7
    مميز الصورة الرمزية حسام III
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة

    Good evening miss Hotoon
    I am very glad today
    cuz ......it's secret
    so I would like to help everybody in this lovely forum

    This yours second topic



    What is Folk medicine
    treatment of ailments outside clinical medicine by remedies and simple measures based on experience and knowledge handed down from generation to generation.

    Folk medicine refers to healing practices and ideas of body physiology and health preservation widely known to much of the population in a culture, transmitted informally as general knowledge, and practiced or applied by anyone in the culture. All cultures and societies have knowledge best described as folk medicine. Folk medicine often coexists with formalized, education-based, and institutionalized systems of healing such as Western medicine or systems of traditional medicine like Ayurvedic and Chinese medicine, but is distinguishable from formalized or institutionalized healing systems. Use of folk medicine knowledge is not restricted within the society to those who have served an apprenticeship, undergone some sort of training or testing, or have achieved a specific social status. Theories and practices of folk medicine influence, and are influenced by, the formalized medicine systems of the same culture.


    Indigenous medicine (or folk medicine) refers generally to healing practices traditionally used for alleviating illness and injury, or to aid in childbirth. It is a category of informal knowledge distinct from "scientific medicine", as well as more formal and systematic, but unscientific, medical practices such as Ayurveda. However, it may coexist with these in the same culture or society. Indigenous medicine as a system includes: home remedies; Indigenous aetiologies of disease; preventative medicine; reproductive techniques; medicinal properties of plants; anatomical knowledge, and healers. Indigenous medicine may also include elements from the history of medicine. For example the hot-cold concept of health and illness is absent in Spanish indigenous medicine and did not exist at the folk level in the past (Tan, 1989). However these beliefs are now widespread in Latin America and the Caribbean, and according to Foster (1953) were derived from the élite and scholarly Hippocratic-galenic traditions that were brought to the Spanish colonies by Spanish physicians and clergy. Spanish medical practice at the time of Cristopher Columbus was based on classical Greek and Roman medicine with diffusions from Arab medicine. Other Hippocratic principles are the oppositions of raw / cooked, hot /cold, wet / dry, sweet / sour. In addition, wellbeing is determined by a balance between different elements, bile, phlegm, and blood (Strobel, 1985).
    Classical History
    Early recognised compilers of existing and current herbal knowledge were the Greeks Hippocrates, Aristotle, Theophrastus (b. 370 BC), Dioscorides and Galen. Roman writers were Pliny and Celsus (Kay, 1996). Dioscorides (Pedianos Dioskurides) included the writings of the herbalist Krateuas, physician to Mithridates VI King of Pontus from 120 to 63 BC in his De Materia Medica (Codex Vindobonensis) (Blunt and Raphael, 1994). De Materia Medica was translated into several languages and Turkish, Arabic and Hebrew names were added to it throughout the centuries (Blunt and Raphael, 1994). Latin manuscripts of De Materia Medica were combined with a Latin herbal by Apuleius Platonicus and were incorporated into the Anglo-Saxon codex Cotton Vitellius C.III. These early Greek and Roman compilations became the backbone of European medical theory and were translated by the Arabs Avicenna (Ibn Sīnā, 980 - 1037), the Persian Rhazes (Rāzi, 865 - 925) and the Jewish Maimonides (Kay, 1996). Translations of Greek medical handbooks and manuscripts into Arabic took place in the eighth and ninth centuries. Arabic indigenous medicine developed from the conflict between the magic-based medicine of the Bedouins, the Arabic translations of the Hellenic medicine and Ayurvedic medicine (Slikkerveer, 1990). Spanish indigenous medicine was influenced by the Arabs from 711 to 1492 (Hernández-Bermejo and García Sánchez, 1998). Translations of the early Roman-Greek compilations were made into German by Hieronymus Bock whose herbal published in 1546 was called Kreuter Buch. A Dutch translation Pemptades by Rembert Dodoens (1517-1585) was translated by Charles de L'Écluse (Carolus Clusius, 1526-1609), and was published in English by Henry Lyte in 1578 as A Nievve Herball. This became John Gerard's (1545 - 1612) Herball or General Hiftorie of Plantes (Blunt and Raphael, 1994; Kay, 1996). Each new work was a compilation of existing texts with new additions. Women's folk knowledge existed in undocumented parallel with these texts (Kay, 1996). Forty-four drugs, diluents, flavouring agents and emollients mentioned by Discorides are still listed in the official pharmacopoeias of Europe (Blunt and Raphael, 1994). The Puritans took Gerard's work to the United States where it influenced American Indigenous medicine (Kay, 1996). Francisco Hernandez, physician to King Phillip II of Spain spent the years 1571 - 1577 gathering information in Mexico and then wrote Rerum Medicarum Novae Hispaniae Thesaurus, many versions of which have been published including one by Francisco Ximenez. Both Hernandez and Ximenez fitted Aztec ethnomedicinal information into the European concepts of disease such as "warm", "cold", and "moist", but it is not clear that the Aztecs used these categories (Ortiz de Montellano, 1975). Juan de Esteyneffer's (Johann Steinhöfer) Florilegio medicinal de todas las enfermedas compiled European texts and added 35 Mexican plants. This Florilegio is still used by Mexican healers. Martin de la Cruz wrote an herbal in Nahauatl which was translated into Latin by Juan Badiano as Libellus de medicinalibus indorum herbis or Codex Barberini, Latin 241 and given to King Carlos V of Spain in 1552 (Heinrich et al., 2005). It was apparently written in haste and influenced by the European occupation of the previous 30 years. Fray Bernadino de Sahagún’s used ethnographic methods to compile his codices that then became the Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva Espana, published in 1793 (Heinrich et al., 2005). Castore Durante published his Herbario Nuovo in 1585 describing medicinal plants from Europe and the East and West Indies. It was translated into German in 1609 and Italian editions were published for the next century. Maria Mies linked the burning of female herbalists as witches in Europe to the rise of capitalism and the development of male-dominated medicine and law in the Middle Ages. This argument has been followed more recently by Silvia Federici who writes that the witch burning was designed to crush the economic independence of women. "The persecution and burning of the midwives as witches was directly connected with the emergence of modern society: the professionalization of medicine, the rise of medicine as a ‘natural science’, the rise of science and of modern economy. The torture chambers of the witch-hunters were the laboratories where the texture, the anatomy, the resistance of the human body — mainly the female body — was studied. One may say that modern medicine and the male hegemony over this vital field were established on the base of millions of crushed, maimed, torn, disfigured and finally burnt, female bodies. There was a calculated division of labour between Church and State in organizing the massacres and terror against the witches. Whereas the church representatives identified witches, gave theological justification and led the interrogations, the ’secular arm’ of the state was used to carry out the tortures and finally execute the witches on the pyre. Mies, 1986".
    Oral Traditions
    Indigenous medicine is usually unwritten and transmitted orally until someone "collects" it. Within a given culture, elements of indigenous medicine knowledge may be diffusely known by many adults, or may be gathered and applied by those in a specific role of healer, shaman, midwife, witch, or dealer in herbs. In indigenous medicine there are three factors that legitimise the healer: the subjective reality of the healer; the objective reality based on his/her successful cures; and the belief systems of the community [locally and globally influenced] which impacts on the first two (Laguerre, 1987). Laguerre (1987) claims that rejected knowledge [like some types of indigenous or folk knowledge] has three types of adherents. Those born and socialised in it who would be permanent believers, temporary believers who turn to it in crisis times, and those who only believe in specific aspects, not in all of it. There are also three types of transmission of indigenous knowledge or medicine: the society and community, the family, and the individual (dreams). The calypso excerpt below gives and example of how oral tradition can be transmitted to the next generation: Calypso: Long Time Remedy by Willard Harris, (Lord Relator) 1971. Verse 1 Nowadays if you sick you in plenty pain, Because it ain't have good medicine again Nowadays people does be sick for a week, Long time, one day you sick, next day you on your feet, I living at my granny, so I bound to know, You can't beat a remedy of long ago Long ago, if the cold giving you trouble, 'bois canoe, black sage tea, or some soft candle, vervine, Christmas bush or shado beni, bound to pass the cold immediately, It is my belief, you could settle yourself with soursop leaf, I say we have a right to take example, and try to live like the old people, because, as a youngster, I realise, de old people way of living is really wise. It's only recently, look I find it strange, old people used to live to a hundred and change, 'cause anything gone wrong with their body, they could find a suitable remedy Elements in a specific culture are not necessarily integrated into a coherent system, and may be contradictory. For example Caribbean indigenous remedies fall into several classes: certain well-known European medicinal herbs introduced by the early Spaniard colonists that are still commonly cultivated; indigenous wild and cultivated plants, the uses of which have been adopted from the Amerindians; and ornamental or other plants of relatively recent introduction for which curative uses have been invented without any historical basis (Morton, 1975). This invention would have been facilitated by the widespread introduction of plant species from all over the world for ornamental and medicinal reasons (Bayley, 1949).
    Modern Connotations
    Indigenous medicine is sometimes associated with quackery when practiced as theatrics or otherwise practiced fraudulently, and sometimes with witchcraft and often with shamanism, yet it may also preserve important knowledge and cultural tradition from the past. Practicing scientists sometimes go out of their way to suppress alternative medicine (see Angell and Kassirer, 1998 and BMJ 2007 September 29; 335(7621)). In a fertility survey (Anderson and Cleland, 1984) women who said they used herbs as contraceptives (93.5 % of women in Bangladesh) were placed in the category 'not using'. However unbiased scientific analysis requires that all knowledge claims be subjected to a minimalist standard of rationality that requires that belief be apportioned to evidence and that no assertion about indigenous medicine or 'theory' be immune from or rejected without critical assessment (see Hawkesworth, 1989). The International Council for Science (ICSU) was asked to carry out a study on the concept of 'traditional knowledge' (Dickson, 1999) in the context of the signing of the Declaration on Science and the Framework for Action at the 1999 World Conference on Science in Budapest, and the 26th General Assembly of the ICSU in Cairo, Egypt (Nakashima and Guchteneire, 1999). Prior to the signing debate took place on whether indigenous knowledge (IK) was scientific or not and scientists expressed surprise at seeing the issue on the agenda. Scientists suggested that including indigenous and traditional knowledge on the agenda might lend ill-deserved credibility to IK or open the door to anti- and pseudoscientific approaches like creationism and astrology. Nakashima and Guchteneire (1999) wondered whether the discomfort of the scientists might be related to their unwillingness to view science as one knowledge system among many. The debate led to a discussion on the nature of scientific knowledge itself; for example what makes the theory of natural evolution 'scientific' and thus distinguishable from astrology when neither can be replicated or reproduced? (Anon, 1999).
    Herbal Medicine
    Herbal medicine is an aspect of indigenous medicine - the use of gathered plant parts to make teas, poultices, or powders that purportedly effect cures. There has been a Spanish Catholic contribution to indigenous medicine in Trinidad. Growers and sellers of culinary herbs in Paramin (north-west Trinidad) spoke of a belief that if someone dug up a clump of fowl foot grass (Eleusine indica) on Good Friday they would get a piece of coal below the roots. White/red physic nut (Jatropha curcas / gossypifolia), if cut on Good Friday would produce the blood of Jesus. Spanish-Romanic prayers called oracion are used during a healing ceremony called santowah (Bill Plander) that is the Spanish equivalent of jharay (a similar Hindu religious healing ceremony). Moodie (1982) claims that the oracion prayers were brought to Trinidad with the conquistadors. The santowah ceremony includes sweet broom (Scoparia dulcis) used to sprinkle holy water. A similar healing ceremony is conducted in Almería, Spain (Martínez-Lirola et al. 1996) . In Trinidad and Tobago red cloths are hung around the neck of young animals to protect them from the evil eye. This practice is also found in Tuscany (Pieroni 2000). One problem in getting the attention of modern medicine is that most research is funded by those who hope to eventually make a profit from such research. For example, honey has been a part of many folk cures, but it is common and cheap (compared to pharmaceuticals), but it is difficult to fund any research of its effectiveness. Another factor is that scientists' reputations hinge on the validity of their research conclusions (Ikerd, 1993). To ignore the existence of something real means a scientist fails to make a discovery -disappointing but not harmful to the reputation, so scientists are more willing to do this than take conclusion risks. Replication and comparison are emphasized by scientists.
    American indigenous medicine
    In the United States, an old indigenous medicine field called apitherapy, in which bee stings or venom is used to aid victims of autoimmune disorders like arthritis or multiple sclerosis, is receiving renewed interest in recent years. "Vermont indigenous medicine" was a supposed local form of indigenous medicine from which D.C. Jarvis claimed to derive his "cures" during the 1950s. Apple cider vinegar was a major ingredient in the mixtures prescribed by Dr. Jarvis. Jarvis' 1955 book, "Folk Medicine", is widely considered quackery by both allopathic doctors and herbalists alike, and Jarvis was incarcerated for a short time on the suspicion that the book was an illegal form of promotional prop for a product that he was selling. The book also contained dozens and dozens of patent untruths, such as the claim that sugar is alkaline. Mennonite and Amish European migrants in the 18th and 19th century brought their indigenous medicine with them to America. They utilized oral traditions, farm almanacs, manuals and handwritten recipes to preserve their knowledge.



    Good Luck

  8. #8
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    رد: كل من دخل ياااارب ادخله الجنة


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  1. أسئله المعيدات في الكلية ياااارب احد يرد علي مرة خايفة
    بواسطة coming hope في المنتدى

    منتدى الدراسات العليا (( الماجستير والدكتوراه))

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