Monday 25 February 2013

Aunty And Uncle

Aunty And UncleAunty And Unclesource(google.com.pk)
Aunty And Uncle Details/Biography
aunts and uncles...so heißt die noch junge Marke aus dem niederrheinischem Issum. Seit der Gründung im September 2003 erfreuen sich die stylischen aunts uncles Taschen und Accessoires größter Beliebtheit. Dank ihrer Philosophie Produkte mit Langlebigkeit, Funktionalität, Belastbarkeit oder...einfach etwas Schönes, etwas Besonderes, etwas Ehrliches zu kreieren hat aunts&uncles es geschafft sich in dieser schnelllebigen Zeit am Markt hervorzuheben .Die Designs von aunts and uncles erinnern an gute alte Ledertradition dabei wird aber immer wieder auch mit ausgefallenen Formen und Zusatzfunktionen überrascht, Alle Umhängetaschen, Handtaschen, Aktentaschen und Geldbörsen werden aus pflanzlich gegerbten Naturledern gefertigt. Und alleine die Namen der Serien und der Taschen, wie Grandma`s Luxury Club mit Mrs. Muffin und Miss Truffle oder The good old friends mit Buddy, Lucky Looser, Fella, Roughneck und Conehead sagen dem Kunden, dass er nicht nur einfach eine Tasche sein eigen nennt. Nein, wer eine aunts & uncles hat, der hat einen treuen Begleiter für das tägliche Leben und gehört ab sofort zur Familie.
Uncle (from Latin: avunculus "little grandfather", the diminutive of avus "grandfather") is a family relationship or kinship, between a person and his or her parent's brother, parent's brother-in-law, or parent's cousin.
A granduncle (sometimes written as great-uncle or grand-uncle) is the brother or brother-in-law of one's grandparent.
A woman with an equivalent relationship is an aunt, and the reciprocal relationship is that of a nephew or niece.
In some cultures and families, children may refer to the cousins of their parents as "aunt" or "uncle". It is also a title of respect for elders (for example older cousins, neighbors, acquaintances, as well as total strangers). See fictive kinship.
Also in some cultures, notably the Persian culture, no single inclusive term describing both a person's kinship to their parental male sibling or parental male in-law exists. Instead there are specific terms describing a person's kinship to their mother's brother (termed "daiyee") or a person's kinship to their father's brother (termed "amou").
An analogous differentiation exists in modern Persian using separate terms to describe a person's kinship to their mother's female sibling (termed "khaleh" ), and a person's kinship to their father's female sibling (termed "ammeh").
Furthermore in Persian culture the terms used to describe a person's kinship to their maternal or paternal in-laws bear clear and unambiguous descriptions of that relationship, thus serving the purpose of differentiating the parental in-laws from blood-relatives and giving an indication of the type of relationship. For example there exists a specific term describing a person's kinship to the spouse of their paternal uncle (i.e. "zan-amou" literally 'wife-of-' amou). Thus a distinction is made that kinship is to the spouse of the person's paternal male sibling (and as such is not a blood-relationship ).
aunties is a plural form of auntie
aunties is a plural form of aunty
The 19th century was chock-a-literary-block with aunts. The Brontës were raised by one and Jane Austen adored hers, writing to her niece: "I have always maintained the importance of aunts."
It is a view about to be revived by bestselling author and psychologist Steve Biddulph, who is calling for an "aunties army" to help bring up our young girls, whose lives he says are in a "catastrophic" state of crisis.
After a professional lifetime concerned with how to rear boys – his book on the subject, Raising Boys, sold more than 3m copies worldwide – British-born Biddulph has now turned his attention to girls. His new book, Raising Girls, is due to be published here later this month and in it he will widen the net of parental responsibility to include aunts, saying they are the secret to adolescence.
Pointing out that no girl and her mum always get along and no mum can meet all her daughter's needs, he will say that aunts used to be the ones who talked to girls about things too embarrassing to tell their mothers. Aunts, whether trendy, maiden or embarrassing, can be fun and feisty, because mums have to provide security and you can't always be both. Biddulph believes there is a "catastrophe" unfolding for girls.
In an interview with an Australian radio station near his home in Tasmania, he said: "I'm much more aware now of girls having enormous problems with things like bullying and eating disorders and generally not liking who they are. We're noticing that even at primary school stage … There's no mystery in what is causing that. I think we all agree about the pressures and what has happened here, that the corporations around the world started realising they could sell to young women and pre-teens. They gave them the message that your looks are the most important thing about them."
He is calling for a new feminism to include aunts mentoring younger girls and keeping them safe from the "toxic" influences of advertising and celebrity. Aunts – they don't have to be actually related – can help by having nieces to stay sometimes, so there is a sense of another secure haven. Or having regular coffee or lunch get-togethers. Sometimes, Biddulph suggests, they may actually intervene – paying for lessons or a trip away that parents wouldn't be able to manage. Often a girl will ask questions she wouldn't dare ask her mother.
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle
Aunty And Uncle

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