A smiley made of symbols makes a helpless gesture. What does an emoticon displayed by text symbols mean, codes of graphic (emoji) emoticons

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Smiley ¯ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ has become widespread in Runet not so long ago. And he was born thanks to Caroline Eisenmann, an assistant at the New York Literary Agency.

While editing her profile on the OkCupid dating site, Caroline decided that the profile would be better remembered by adding something interesting to the name. It was supposed to be something "frivolous" but "slightly melancholy." This is how this emoticon was created, depicting an ironically smiling man, throwing up his hands.

OkCupid refused to approve the profile with this emoticon, but ¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯ has already begun its triumphant march on the Internet

Such complex characters are especially typical for the Japanese language: there, to create emoticons, not only punctuation marks are used, but service characters, as well as the letters of the katakana alphabet.

¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯ began to gain traction after rapper Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swift's speech at the 2010 Video Music Awards. After his inappropriate intervention, he shrugged his shoulders and threw up his hands in agreement with the wrongness of his action. An entry immediately appeared on Twitter: "Kanye's shoulders - & gt- ¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯", conveying the rapper's gesture. The post began to receive retweets, and the emoticon began to appear in a variety of contexts, in particular, such a gesture became a feature of one of the famous teams of players in Starcraft.

Internet users began to find a characteristic gesture everywhere. One of the Reddit bloggers spotted him with Han Solo from the original Star Wars trilogy. Another is from Mysterio, the villain from Spider-Man.

However, ¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯ remains closely associated with written culture. This is due to the fact that it is impossible to pronounce it, only to print or depict it by hand. Users polled by The Awl (among them writers, editors and journalists) say that this emoticon helps them not spend too much time in chats explaining how they feel. ¯ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ helps them express apologies (with a touch of embarrassment), doubts, and melancholic regret.

And also, of course, Zen Buddhist calmness and acceptance of the world around us as it is.

¯ _ (ツ) _ / ¯

Although there is also this version:

March 12 "Lenta.ru" that the owner of the united company Rambler & amp-Co Alexander Mamut decided to resign the editor-in-chief Galina Timchenko, who has worked in this position since 2004.

On March 13, 39 employees of the publication wrote letters of resignation, and on March 17, emoticons began to appear instead of the names of some of them in the section "Who makes" -Lenta.ru "-".

Smile "¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯" with a smiling little man, carelessly shrugging his shoulders, almost immediately began to be used by other media to notify events related to "Lenta.ru".

The former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych was also marked with it.

On April 1, when the former CEO of VKontakte, Pavel Durov, for the first time about his resignation, a smile appeared instead of his name at the bottom of the social network page.

Two months later, Western publications reported that the same smiley has gained insane popularity on the English-language Internet. Netizens, as before in Russia, began to publish numerous jokes using it. However, none of the publications ascribe a "Russian trace" to the trend.

And the media began to publish about how this set of characters can be typed more easily without copying it to Mac and iPhone.

"¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯" is known in the West as "shruggie" or "kaomoji" ("kaomoji", Japanese facial mark). It differs from emojii and emoticons by using characters from the katakana alphabet.

This emoji first went viral on the English-speaking internet in 2009, when rapper Kanye West ruined the award-winning moment for singer Taylor Swift by shouting into the crowd that the best video was directed by Beyoncé. Before leaving the stage, he made a gesture that outwardly resembled "¯_ (ツ) _ / ¯".

After 2 years, the smiley again thanks to the world-class Starcraft II player under the nickname SeleCT. With his help, he finished all victorious matches, and the character set itself acquired the meaning of "sup son" ("Well, sonny?").

By the way, you probably ask how to type it? So, ツ is a sign of the Japanese katakana alphabet, not a smiley, to make it, you need to install a Japanese font!

Control panel - - clock, language and region - - change keyboard layout - - change keyboard - - add - - Japanese (Japan) - - OK, Done)))

Kaomoji (顔 文字) is a Japanese style of depicting emoticons and is essentially synonymous with Japanese emoticons. This concept is formed by a combination of words: kao (顔 - face) + moji (文字 - symbol, written sign).

The Japanese are a very emotional and creative nation. Therefore, in Japan, emoticons are more common than anywhere else in the world.

Many Japanese people draw well, because Japanese is the language of drawings. The example of anime and manga shows how accurately the authors manage to convey the various emotions of characters with a set of just a few simple lines. Kaomoji probably owes its existence to a certain extent to these types of Japanese art.

According to the Japanese, the eyes are the mirror of the human soul. Therefore, if in Western emoticons the greatest attention is paid to the mouth, in Japanese it is to the eyes. In addition, unlike Western emoticons, kaomoji does not need to be mentally rotated 90 degrees.

Japanese emoticons are extremely diverse. On the Internet, you can find the number 10,000, but in fact there are many more. This diversity is due to at least two factors:

  • unlike Cyrillic and Latin, which are most often written in single-byte encodings, Japanese letters need at least two-byte encodings that have a wider character set
  • kaomoji can mean not only separate emotions, but also complex actions, and their combinations - even whole stories.
May 24th, 2014

Smiley ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ has become widespread in the Russian Internet not so long ago. And he was born thanks to Caroline Eisenmann, an assistant at the New York Literary Agency.

While editing her profile on the OkCupid dating site, Caroline decided that the profile would be better remembered by adding something interesting to the name. It was supposed to be something "frivolous" but "slightly melancholy." This is how this emoticon was created, depicting an ironically smiling man, throwing up his hands.

OkCupid refused to approve the profile with this emoticon, but ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ has already begun its victorious march on the Internet

Such complex characters are especially typical for the Japanese language: there, to create emoticons, not only punctuation marks are used, but service characters, as well as the letters of the katakana alphabet.

¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ began to gain popularity after rapper Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swift's speech at the 2010 Video Music Awards. After his inappropriate intervention, he shrugged his shoulders and threw up his hands in agreement with the wrongness of his action. An entry immediately appeared on Twitter: "Kanye's shoulders -\u003e ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯", conveying the rapper's gesture. The post began to receive retweets, and the emoticon began to appear in a variety of contexts, in particular, such a gesture became a feature of one of the famous teams of players in Starcraft.

Internet users began to find a characteristic gesture everywhere. One of the Reddit bloggers spotted him with Han Solo from the original Star Wars trilogy. Another is from Mysterio, the villain from Spider-Man.

However, ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ remains closely associated with the written culture. This is due to the fact that it is impossible to pronounce it, only to print or depict it by hand. Users polled by The Awl (among them writers, editors and journalists) say that this emoticon helps them not spend too much time in chats explaining how they feel. ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ helps them express apologies (with a touch of embarrassment), doubts and melancholic regret.

And also, of course, Zen Buddhist calmness and acceptance of the world around us as it is.

¯ \ _ (ツ) _ / ¯

Although there is also this version:

On March 12, Lenta.ru reported that the owner of the united Rambler & Co company, Alexander Mamut, decided to resign the editor-in-chief Galina Timchenko, who had worked in this position since 2004.

On March 13, 39 employees of the publication wrote letters of resignation, and on March 17 in the section "Who makes Lenta.ru" instead of the names of some of them, emoticons began to appear.

Smile "¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯" with a smiling little man, carelessly shrugging his shoulders, almost immediately began to be used by other media to notify events related to "Lenta.ru".

He also noted the disappearance of the former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych.

On April 1, when the former VKontakte CEO Pavel Durov announced his resignation for the first time, a smile appeared instead of his name at the bottom of the social network page.

Two months later, Western publications reported that the same smiley has gained insane popularity on the English-language Internet. Netizens, as before in Russia, began to publish numerous jokes using it. However, none of the publications ascribe a "Russian trace" to the trend.

And the media began to publish instructions on how this character set can be typed more easily without copying it to Mac and iPhone.

“¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯” is known in the West as “shruggie” or “kaomoji” (“kaomoji”, Japanese facial mark). It differs from emojii and emoticons by using characters from the katakana alphabet.

This emoji first went viral on the English-language internet in 2009, when rapper Kanye West ruined the award-winning moment for singer Taylor Swift by shouting into the crowd that the best video was directed by Beyoncé. Before leaving the stage, he made a gesture that outwardly resembled "¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯".

After 2 years, the smiley became popular again thanks to the world-class Starcraft II player under the nickname SeleCT. With his help, he finished all victorious matches, and the character set itself acquired the meaning of "sup son" ("Well, sonny?").

By the way, you probably ask how to type it? So, ツ is a sign of the Japanese katakana alphabet, not a smiley, to make it, you need to install a Japanese font!

Control panel - clock, language and region - change keyboard layout - change keyboard - add - Japanese (Japan) - OK, Done)))

Kaomoji (顔 文字) is a Japanese style of depicting emoticons and is essentially synonymous with Japanese emoticons. This concept is formed by a combination of words: kao (顔 - face) + moji (文字 - symbol, written sign).

The Japanese are a very emotional and creative nation. Therefore, in Japan, emoticons are more common than anywhere else in the world.

Many Japanese people draw well, because Japanese is the language of drawings. The example of anime and manga shows how accurately the authors manage to convey the various emotions of characters with a set of just a few simple lines. Kaomoji probably owes its existence to a certain extent to these types of Japanese art.

According to the Japanese, the eyes are the mirror of the human soul. Therefore, if in Western emoticons the most attention is paid to the mouth, in Japanese it is to the eyes. In addition, unlike Western emoticons, kaomoji does not need to be mentally rotated 90 degrees.

Japanese emoticons are extremely diverse. On the Internet, you can find the number 10,000, but in fact there are many more. This diversity is due to at least two factors:

  • unlike Cyrillic and Latin, which are most often written in single-byte encodings, Japanese letters require at least two-byte encodings that have a wider character set;
  • kaomoji can mean not only separate emotions, but also complex actions, and their combinations - even whole stories.

Kaomoji are divided into categories depending on the emotional component, the type of designated action or object. Also in these emoticons you can often find hieroglyphs that carry additional semantic coloring.

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Who is using it?

By the way ...

sources

http://kaomoji.ru/

http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/05/the-best-way-to-type-__/371351/

http://tjournal.ru/paper/lenta-smile-worldwide

http://www.qwrt.ru/

And a little more about emoticons: this is what a bird is, but recently it was ... I would like to remind you how we and how we collected The original article is on the site InfoGlaz.rf The link to the article this copy was made from is

Emoticons have become so firmly established in our lives that without them the alphabet looks incomplete, and messages seem dry and detached. But even in such a frivolous and childishly simple matter, like arranging emoji, there are subtleties.

What do the different smilies mean

With smiley objects, everything is simple: they mean what they represent. A ball is a ball, an alarm clock is an alarm clock, and there is nothing to think about. But with face emoticons, the task becomes more complicated. We do not always manage to correctly guess emotions from the faces of living people, let alone the physiognomy of koloboks. There are emoticons whose meaning is obvious:

Fun, laughter, joy, jubilation.

Sadness, sadness, longing, discontent.

Playful mood, teasing.

Surprise, amazement, shock, fear.

Anger, resentment, rage.

And a few more similar ones - all possible options for families and romantic unions.

But there are some among the emoticons, the meaning of which can be interpreted ambiguously, or even bewildered:

This emoticon depicts a person sobbing at three - well, at two - streams, but in the version for Apple devices, due to raised eyebrows and a mouth that is not twisted from sobs, he is often perceived as laughing to tears. Be careful with him: you want to indicate grief to them, but they will misunderstand you.

This emoticon is supposed to represent silence. Instead, he just scares to death.

If everything is more or less clear with the evil devil ("angry as devil"), then the cheerful devil is somewhat puzzling. Most likely, he is not only furious, but also anticipates how he will dance on your opponent's grave. And you, perhaps, just wanted to show originality and an unusual smile.

Despite the fact that the three wise monkeys saw nothing, did not hear and did not speak precisely because of their wisdom, these muzzles close their eyes, mouth and ears from shame, confusion and shock.

A set of feline emoticons for those who think that ordinary koloboks are not expressive enough and want to add sweetness to their emotions.

Instead of "hello" and "goodbye" you can wave your hand.

Hands raised, a gesture of joyful greeting or glee.

The applause is both sincere and sarcastic.

If you see hands in this picture, folded in a prayer gesture, then for you emoji can mean "thank you" or "I beg you." Well, if you see the "high five!" Here, it means that you are a very cheerful person.

A raised index finger can emphasize the importance of the message or express a request to interrupt the interlocutor with a question, or it can simply point to the previous message in the chat.

Fingers crossed for good luck.

For some it is "stop", but for someone "high five!"

No, this is not a truffle. Not even a truffle at all.

Ogre and Japanese goblin. It seems that someone is missing the usual devils.

Liar. His nose grows like Pinocchio's every time he lies.

These are eyes wide open in amazement, and the shifting eyes of a rogue, and even a lustful look. If someone sends you such an emoticon in the comments to the photo, you can be sure that the photo is successful.

And this is just an eye, and it is watching you.

A young moon and a full moon. It seems to be nothing special, but these smileys have their fans who appreciate them for their creepy facial expressions.

A very common girl in purple. Her gestures mean OK (hands over head), "no" (arms crossed), "hello" or "I know the answer" (hand up). This character has another pose that baffles many -. According to the official version, it symbolizes the help desk worker. Apparently, she shows with her hand how to get to the city library.

Do you also see two tense faces here, presumably unfriendly? But they did not guess: according to Apple's tips, this is an embarrassed face and a stubborn face. Who would have thought!

By the way, tips for emoticons can be viewed in the message window on, if you open an emoji and hover the cursor over the emoticon you are interested in. Like this:

Another way to find out the meaning of an emoticon is to seek help from emojipedia.org. On it you will find not only detailed interpretations of emoticons, but you can also see how the same emoticon looks on different platforms. Many unexpected discoveries await you.

Where are emoticons appropriate?

1. In informal friendly correspondence

Funny yellow faces are appropriate in a personal chat, where you share not so much information as your mood. With the help of emoticons, you will laugh at a joke, sympathize, make faces at each other. This is where emotions really belong.

2. When emotions are overflowing and words are not enough

Sometimes, when something very important happens in our life, feelings overwhelm us so much that we are about to burst. Then we write an emotional post on Facebook or post a dazzling photo on Instagram and decorate it with a generous scattering of emoticons. Someone, of course, will not like it, but what now, stifle all the vivid sensations in yourself? The main thing is not to abuse such a public manifestation of violent emotions: this will alienate subscribers and question your adequacy.

3. By agreement to highlight the message in work correspondence

This is a very easy and convenient way to make important messages that require urgent attention visible. For example, great for these purposes. But you need to agree in advance which cases in your company are considered urgent and which smiley you will use for this.

It is important not to overdo it: if you have one emoticon for emergency messages, the second for urgent questions, and the third for important news, then soon all work correspondence will turn into a New Year's garland that no one is looking at.

When is it better to do without emoticons

1. In business correspondence

Work is not a place for emotions. Here you are required to be calm, collected and professional. Even if you want to emphasize your benevolence or express concern about the situation, use emoticons for these purposes.

2. When dealing with foreigners

This is especially true for emoji gestures. For example, someone you wanted to show your approval to will end your good relationship with someone from Greece or Thailand. Still, because with this gesture you sent him to hell.

Therefore, if you are not sure of your deep knowledge of the peculiarities of the national culture of your interlocutor, do not risk it.

3. Oddly enough, when you discuss feelings and emotions

Feelings are serious business. If you are not just chatting, but opening your soul or sharing something important, words will convey your feelings and experiences much more accurately than emoticons. “You are dearer to me than anyone in the world” means much more than ten hearts in a row. In the end, you have only one heart, so give it.

Remember, emojis are a condiment, not a main ingredient. To give expressiveness to your message, you need very few of them.

Emoji language

Judging by the fact that today almost no personal correspondence can do without emoticons, we can safely say that emoji have become an independent section of the language. Sometimes they even pretend to replace the language: you can write a whole message using only emoticons. The popular American TV show Ellen DeGeneres even has a special section in which guests are invited to read a phrase where part of the words are replaced with emoji:

And here is the encrypted name of the film, which we invite you to guess.

Smiley ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ has become widespread in the Russian Internet not so long ago. And he was born thanks to Caroline Eisenmann, an assistant at the New York Literary Agency.

While editing her profile on OkCupid dating site, Caroline decided that the profile would be better remembered by adding something interesting to the name. It was supposed to be something "frivolous" but "slightly melancholy." This is how this emoticon was created, depicting an ironic smiling man, throwing up his hands.

OkCupid refused to approve the profile with this emoticon, but ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ has already begun its victorious march on the Internet


Such complex characters are especially typical for the Japanese language: there, to create emoticons, not only punctuation marks are used, but service characters, as well as the letters of the katakana alphabet.

¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ began to gain popularity after rapper Kanye West interrupted Taylor Swift's speech at the 2010 Video Music Awards. After his inappropriate intervention, he shrugged his shoulders and threw up his hands in agreement with the wrongness of his action. An entry immediately appeared on Twitter: "Kanye's shoulders -\u003e ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯", conveying the rapper's gesture. The post began to receive retweets, and the emoticon began to appear in a variety of contexts, in particular, such a gesture became a feature of one of the famous teams of players in Starcraft.

Internet users began to find a characteristic gesture everywhere. One of the Reddit bloggers spotted him with Han Solo from the original Star Wars trilogy. Another is from Mysterio, the villain from Spider-Man.


However, ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ remains closely associated with the written culture. This is due to the fact that it is impossible to pronounce it, only to print or depict it by hand. Users interviewed by The Awl (among them writers, editors and journalists) say that this emoticon helps them not spend too much time in chats explaining how they feel. ¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯ helps them express apologies (with a touch of awkwardness), doubts and melancholic regret.

And also, of course, Zen Buddhist calmness and acceptance of the world around us as it is.

¯ \ _ (ツ) _ / ¯

Although there is also this version:


On March 12, Lenta.ru reported that the owner of the united Rambler & Co company, Alexander Mamut, decided to resign the editor-in-chief Galina Timchenko, who had worked in this position since 2004.

On March 13, 39 employees of the publication wrote letters of resignation, and on March 17, emoticons began to appear in the section "Who makes Lentu.ru" instead of the names of some of them.


Smile "¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯" with a smiling little man, carelessly shrugging his shoulders, almost immediately began to be used by other media to notify events related to "Lenta.ru".

He also noted the disappearance of the former President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych.

On April 1, when the former VKontakte CEO Pavel Durov announced his resignation for the first time, a smile appeared instead of his name at the bottom of the social network page.


Two months later, Western publications reported that the same smiley has gained insane popularity on the English-speaking Internet. Netizens, as before in Russia, began to publish numerous jokes using it. However, none of the publications ascribe a "Russian trace" to the trend.

And the media began to publish instructions on how this character set can be typed more easily without copying it to Mac and iPhone.


"¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯" is known in the West as "shruggie" or "kaomoji" ("kaomoji", Japanese facial mark). It differs from emojii and emoticons by using characters from the katakana alphabet.

This emoji first went viral on the English-language internet in 2009, when rapper Kanye West ruined the award-winning moment for singer Taylor Swift by shouting into the crowd that the best video was directed by Beyoncé. Before leaving the stage, he made a gesture that outwardly resembled "¯ \\ _ (ツ) _ / ¯".

After 2 years, the smiley became popular again thanks to the world-class Starcraft II player under the nickname SeleCT. With his help, he finished all victorious matches, and the character set itself acquired the meaning of "sup son" ("Well, sonny?").


By the way, you probably ask how to type it? So, ツ is a sign of the Japanese katakana alphabet, not a smiley, to make it, you need to install a Japanese font!

Control panel - clock, language and region - change keyboard layout - change keyboard - add - Japanese (Japan) - OK, Done)))

Kaomoji (顔 文字) is a Japanese style of depicting emoticons and is essentially synonymous with Japanese emoticons. This concept is formed by a combination of words: kao (顔 - face) + moji (文字 - symbol, written sign).

The Japanese are a very emotional and creative nation. Therefore, in Japan, emoticons are more common than anywhere else in the world.

Many Japanese are good at drawing, because Japanese is the language of drawings. The example of anime and manga shows how accurately the authors manage to convey the various emotions of characters with a set of just a few simple lines. Kaomoji probably owes its existence to a certain extent to these types of Japanese art.

According to the Japanese, the eyes are the mirror of the human soul. Therefore, if in Western emoticons the most attention is paid to the mouth, in Japanese it is to the eyes. In addition, unlike Western emoticons, kaomoji does not need to be mentally rotated 90 degrees.

Japanese emoticons are extremely diverse. On the Internet, you can find the number 10,000, but in fact there are many more. This diversity is due to at least two factors:

  • unlike Cyrillic and Latin, which are most often written in single-byte encodings, Japanese letters require at least two-byte encodings that have a wider character set;
  • kaomoji can mean not only separate emotions, but also complex actions, and their combinations - even whole stories.

Kaomoji are divided into categories depending on the emotional component, the type of designated action or object. Also, in these emoticons you can often find hieroglyphs that carry additional semantic coloring.

TO PLACE HANDS. Dissolve with your hands. Spread. Express. Not knowing what to do or say something out of surprise, extreme bewilderment in difficult circumstances. The baby is dying, the doctors are making a helpless gesture, the mother is knocked off her feet (B. Polevoy. Consultation).

  • - throw up / shrug your hands To be surprised, bewildered; not knowing how to deal with a difficult situation. With noun with meaning faces: mother, sister, friend ... shrugs ...

    Educational phraseological dictionary

  • - See DILUTE ...

    History of words

  • - to dissolve or divorce, to discredit someone, about many others. lead, lead apart, each to his place, lead to places. To breed the soldiers to their stands, to their homes. Dividing workers to work ...

    Dahl's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - LA-LA: la-la to breed H to engage in idle chatter. All day la-la makes a phone call ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - Dilute, СЯ1-2 cm. Dilute 1 - 2 - 3, - СЯ 1 - 2 ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - DILUTE 1-2-3, -SYA 1-2 cm. Dilute 1-2-3, -sie 1-2 ...

    Ozhegov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - Dilute, dilute, dilute. unverified. to breed ...

    Ushakov's Explanatory Dictionary

  • Efremova's explanatory dictionary

  • - to breed I nes. crossover 1. Bring everyone - from several or many - to their place. 2. Forcing to move away from each other; disconnect. Ott. transfer Distance from each other; disconnect. 3 ...

    Efremova's explanatory dictionary

  • - to breed verb., nsv., upotr. compare ...

    Dmitriev's Explanatory Dictionary

  • - divorce "it, -zh" y, - "...

    Russian spelling dictionary

  • - Wed Hands apart. Wed he could not find an answer, only threw up his hands and stood for two minutes, eyes wide, like a ram on a threshing floor. Grigorovich. Two generals. five...

    Explanatory phraseological dictionary of Michelson

  • - HANDLING. Dissolve with your hands. Spread. Express. Not knowing how to act or say something out of surprise, extreme bewilderment in difficult circumstances ...

    Phraseological dictionary of the Russian literary language

  • - Shrug ...

    IN AND. Dahl. Russian proverbs

  • - Spread. Perplexed, surprised. FSRYa, 397; BMS 1998, 500; Mokienko 1990, 133; ZS 1996, 488; FM 2002, 402 ...

    A large dictionary of Russian sayings

  • - To breed, - yes, - you are; nesov. who. Cheat, try to outwit, lie with the aim of deceiving. Why are you bred me as a schoolgirl? The government divorced the people with the denomination ...

    Dictionary of Russian argo

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From the book Your baby from birth to two years by Sears Martha

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How to breed worms correctly

From the book of 500 tips for anglers author Galich Andrey Yurievich

How to breed worms correctly Council number 269 Earthworms are the general name for a number of the family of the class of small-bristled worms. The length is usually 3-15 cm, rarely reaches 40 cm There are about 1500 species of worms (mainly in the tropics; in temperate latitudes - about

How to breed and keep ostriches

From the book Breeding and raising ostriches author Melnikov Ilya

How to breed and keep ostriches Currently, there are several main methods of breeding ostriches: intensive, extensive and semi-intensive. With the intensive method, ostriches are kept in conditions where their lifestyle is fully supported

How to breed poultry

author Melnikov Ilya

How to Raise Poultry Introduction Of all the livestock industries, poultry farming is the fastest growing and most profitable. Industrial production in Russia in all main parameters and, above all, in productivity, has reached the level of advanced foreign countries. AND

How to breed chickens

From the book Breeding and raising chickens author Melnikov Ilya

How to breed chickens How to choose a breed of chickens A huge number of chicken breeds in the world (over 200) in terms of productivity is divided into several categories: egg-laying, meat-egg, meat, fighting, decorative. The farm mainly uses egg, meat and egg and

How to breed crayfish in ponds

author Melnikov Ilya

How to breed crayfish in ponds Cancers are bred in ponds of complex importance; drained bays of reservoirs specially built for breeding crayfish; massifs of peat workings; quarries; small reservoirs; sections of small rivers; estuaries; ilmenyah; lakes; rice

How to breed crayfish in reservoirs

From the book Breeding and growing crayfish author Melnikov Ilya

How to breed crayfish in reservoirs By the nature of water supply, reservoirs are divided into several groups: with water supply due to atmospheric precipitation, from permanent sources and with mixed water supply.

Form 4 "Raise clouds"

From the book Qigong Exercises for Beginners author Khorev Valery Nikolaevich

Form 4 "Dissolve the clouds" It also occurs under the names "Disperse the clouds" and "Rotate the hands, dilute the clouds." Execution At the end of the last "plunge", the Chi into the crown of the hand returns to the central upper position while inhaling

BEANS TO BREED

From the book Winged Words author Maksimov Sergey Vasilievich

BEANS TO BREED Now it means to be engaged in trifles, to tell stories, with a direct desire to accommodate, pleasing resourceful, sharp or funny words. “Someone goes to the hike, breeds beans,” as the saying laughs. This expression is taken from the usual not

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