to struggle for existence. to advance with violent effort: to struggle through the snow. (of athletes and competitors) to be coping with inability to perform well or to win; contend with difficulty: After struggling for the whole month of June, he suddenly caught fire and raised his batting...
The struggle for shelter in an urbanizing world: A Rhodesian example - SEAGER - 1977Seager, D. 1977 `The struggle for shelter in an urbanizing world: A Rhodesian example', Zambezia, V, 83-90.Seager, D, "The Struggle for Shelter in an Urbanizing World: A Rhodesian Example" in Zambezia...
In the letter of 11 January 1844 in which Darwin first informed his friend Joseph Dalton Hooker that he believed in the mutability of species (“it is like confessing [to] a murder”, he said), he immediately added: “Heaven forfend me from Lamarck [sic] nonsense of a ‘tendency to pr...
I went to school for 12 years, and uni for four, but I learnt more about human existence in the 30 hours it took my first child to be born than I did in all those years of study. — Tim Winton 0 There is nothing outside of yourself that can ever enable you to get better, st...
GeoJournal (2022) 87 (Suppl 4):S607–S630 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10708-022-10620-9 The analysis of unparalleled struggle for existence of urban women informal workers in West Bengal, India for survival and resilience to COVID‑19 pandemic risk Manishree Mondal ...
2. to contend resolutely with a task, problem, etc.; strive: to struggle for existence. 3. to advance with violent effort: to struggle through the snow. single 1. only one in number; one only; unique; sole: a single example. 2. of, pertaining to, or suitable for one person only...
The last section concludes the paper with suggestions for further research. 2. The concept of Banditry in Nigeria Scholars have consistently debated the term banditry, what it is, and how it impacts humanity. However, the first generation of debates primarily focused on Eric Hobsbawm's "social ...
Strength is a quality that continues to carry mankind through existence. Without this attribute, humans would fail to carry on living. One can show physical strength by being able to push hefty objects, or mental strength by being able to endure the most unfavorable conundrums. For a person ...
We argue that in order to grasp the conflicts and their various aspects, a perspective is needed that acknowledges the co-existence of multiple ontologies. A perspective that takes the “different ways of being, practicing and relating – of ontologies” (Leach, Scoones, and Wynne Citation2005,...
At the worst, her demands for a social response are medicalised and identified as malingering. Her insistence that the entirety of person- hood be seen, and be treated, is approached with frustration, and in some instances outright rejection, which occurs at the intersections of multiple planes...