"Unbarbed" is a word in ENGLISH
Not shaven.
Destitute of bards, or of reversed points, hairs, or
plumes; as, an unbarded feather.
Perhaps there are many "nows" of varying duration, depending on just what it is we are doing. We must face up to the fact that, at least in the case of humans, the subject experiencing subjective time is not a perfect, structureless observer, but a complex, multilayered, multifaceted psyche. Different levels of our consciousness may experience time in quite different ways. This is evidently the case in terms of response time. You have probably had the slightly unnerving experience of jumping at the sound of a telephone a moment or two before you actually hear it ring. The shrill noise induces a reflex response through the nervous system much faster than the time it takes to create the conscious experience of the sound.It is fashionable to attribute certain qualities, such as speech ability, to the left side of the brain, whereas others, such as musical appreciation, belong to processes occurring on the right side. But why should both hemispheres experience a common time? And why should the subconscious use the same mental clock as the conscious?
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Did you say that you fell over fifty feet but didn't hurt yourself? Yes - I was trying to get to the back of the bus.
dagul a {1} close cut or cropped or shaven head. {2} for soil to have nothing growing on it. v …
Read the complete definitionShorn; shaven.
Read the complete definitionof Shave
Read the complete definitionsípsip - Cut near the ground, close-cut, close-shaven, close-cropped, closely shorn; to cut down to the ground, cut off near …
Read the complete definitionsoóp - Close-shaven, close-cropped, closely shorn, cut down to the ground. Kasoóp sang íya mga kokó, sang gúnting sang íya …
Read the complete definitionLat In old English law. A shaving, or polling; the having the crowri of the head .shaven; tonsure. One of …
Read the complete definitionThe shaven corona, or crown, which priests wear as a mark of their order and of their rank.
Read the complete definitionIn old Engllsh law. A be-£ng shaven; the having the head shaven; a shaven head. 4 Bl. Coinm. 367
Read the complete definitionHaving the tonsure; shaven; shorn; clipped; hence, bald.
Read the complete definitionNot shaven.
Read the complete definition