Use "kinship" in a sentence

1. & the Kinship Program (AFFM) provides support services for Adoptive, foster, and kinship families

2. Adoptive and Kinship Parents receiving an Adoption or Kinship Subsidy – contact Adoption Operations at 609-888-7460

3. I had felt this kinship, too.

4. 2 synonyms for Consanguinity: blood kinship, cognation

5. He felt a secret kinship with the ocean.

6. Their kinship with peas became evident to them.

7. The Arameans therefore had kinship with the Hebrews

8. Consanguinity: 1 n (anthropology) related by blood Synonyms: blood kinship , cognation Antonyms: affinity (anthropology) kinship by marriage or adoption; not a blood relationship Type of: family relationship , kinship , relationship (anthropology) relatedness or connection by blood or …

9. Even after meeting only once , they felt a kinship.

10. As a man-made expanded form of kinship, the fictive kinship is widespread in Zhuang society with "making Laotong" being its typical relation.

11. Even subtle cues indicating kinship may unconsciously increase Altruistic behavior

12. The central concerns of the kinship school hardly need restating.

13. Legal definition for Agnation: Kinship by the father's side

14. Once again Sarn Fong felt a kinship with Fakhru.

15. With us privacy and kinship are felt to be roughly coterminous.

16. He felt a real sense of kinship with his fellow soldiers.

17. She evidently felt a sense of kinship with the woman.

18. 30 The sense of kinship between the two men is surprising.

19. The pastime has many excuses, and kinship can be one.

20. The sense of kinship between the two men is surprising.

21. We tend to feel kinship with those who share the same values.

22. Control of kinship linkages lies at the heart of privileged class reproduction.

23. He argues, in short, that actual forms of kinship are socially constructed.

24. Consanguinity definition: relationship by blood; kinship Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

25. He felt a kinship with only other American on the base.

26. "Amaterasu's themes are the sun, tradition, unity, blessings, community, and kinship

27. Nurturing this bond of kinship is therefore truly a win-win situation.

28. Perhaps the Beatific Vision itself has some remote kinship with this lowly experience.

29. Patrilineality, also known as the male line, the spear side or Agnatic kinship, is a common kinship system in which an individual's family membership derives from and is recorded through their father's lineage

30. Kingship knows no Kinship and there can be only one Emperor in Aurangzeb's world

31. Agnate definition is - a relative whose kinship is traceable exclusively through males.

32. Agnate: See: associated , blood , bloodline , cognate , consanguineous , correlate , correlative , interrelated , kinship , propinquity

33. He argues that each form of kinship has its distinctive form of arrangements.

34. Resource Family Home Care, Relative Care, Kinship Legal Guardianship, and Subsidized Adoption Rate Tables .

35. Extended kinship ties have allowed easy movement of families from one BAND group to another.

36. Consanguinity status was determined from the actual kinship terms used to refer to relatives

37. The problem of sterility is solved when seen through the eyes of kinship.

38. These Brotherhoods drew their members from all kinship groups and all classes and professions

39. Consanguinity is a diriment impediment of marriage as far as the fourth degree of kinship inclusive.

40. Our shared kinship rejoiced every time a blow was struck by the Afro-Asian liberation movement.

41. Mutual interests, family connections, and kinship were consolidated in military groups that became part of family administration.

42. Synonyms for Connectivity include relatedness, accordance, affinity, association, comparability, congruence, correspondence, integration, kinship and network

43. Synonyms for Agnates include consanguinity, affiliations, affinities, brotherhood, cognates, connection, filiation, kins, kindreds and kinship

44. India and South Africa are bound by ties of history, emotional attachment, cultural affinities and indeed, kinship.

45. They tend to have a consciousness of kind, a feeling of kinship with other group members.

46. Whales and hippos may not much resemble each other nowadays, but retain some hints of kinship.

47. Bolivians stress bilateral kinship, and virtually all recognize and stress kin groups beyond the nuclear family and household

48. Evolutionary biology, in contrast, has typically treated Affines as though they were unrelated: only direct genetic kinship counts.

49. No one embodies better than Coltrane that strange kinship between pentecostal incantation and the spiritual lineage of jazz.

50. Typically, the anthropologist finds that individuals hold titular offices by virtue of their position in the kinship system.

51. The gens for Morgan is the source from which both later kinship systems and later political systems evolved.

52. A natural attraction, liking, or feeling of kinship: a special Affinity with animals; a cultural Affinity for the automobile

53. These networks, which included certain kinds of neighbouring, included those for whom ties of kinship were of primary significance.

54. 5 Typically, the anthropologist finds that individuals hold titular offices by virtue of their position in the kinship system.

55. The program's ability to turn any phrase of suitable size into music also gives it a kinship with Aleatoric developments

56. Consanguine - related by blood blood-related , Consanguineal , Consanguineous , kin , akin , cognate related - connected by kinship, common origin, or marriage

57. It is tribesmen who tell themselves that tribes are natural groups based on primary bonds of kinship and descent.

58. 29 At first, social organization is limited to the family, it is therefore dominated by kinship, and property is communal.

59. Agnatic: 1 adj related on the father's side Synonyms: agnate , paternal related connected by kinship, common origin, or marriage

60. Ascribed status definition, the social position assigned to a person on the basis of kinship, ethnic group, sex, etc

61. Ahern explains the presiding over of 'rituals of kinship' by powerful Affines by their status as outsiders who are believed capable

62. For the few weeks this good sister was incapacitated, the members of the Rechnoy Ward felt a kinship to that story.

63. That is why the social anthropologists are justified in devoting such an inordinate amount of attention to the field of kinship.

64. Kinship can pay an individual to reduce its own chances if it improves the prospects of other members of its family.

65. 24 That is why the social anthropologists are justified in devoting such an inordinate amount of attention to the field of kinship.

66. Consanguine: 1 adj related by blood Synonyms: akin , blood-related , cognate , Consanguineal , Consanguineous , kin related connected by kinship, common origin, or marriage

67. Chapter 3 described the web of relationships of pre-colonial societies in which kinship was the prime determinant of obligation and responsibility.

68. I have never been in a country where I have felt such a kinship with what the Government was trying to do.

69. It mainly discovers the social-culture function of complicated network of fictive kinship in the community of Zhuang People in the fifth chapter.

70. Consanguinity ("blood relation", from the Latin consanguinitas) is the property of being from the same kinship as another person

71. Old Believers express their continuing kinship with the dead on Pentecost, when they eat a meal of eggs on the graves of their ancestors

72. Centrist rightism is not much different from Centrist leftism, as we see from the kinship between Blair and the Aznar government in Madrid

73. Though Anthropology does look at stones and bones, it also examines the politics, medicine, kinship, art, and religion of various peoples and times

74. Village when there are documented cases of kinship-oriented Chiefdoms in virtually all the continents and many islands of the seas" (i987a: I3I)

75. Hypernyms ("Consanguinity" is a kind of): family relationship; kinship; relationship ((anthropology) relatedness or connection by blood or marriage or adoption)

76. The control group had a higher percentage who accessed job information through word of mouth -- an indicator of the impact of kinship and friendship networks.

77. Following the death of Charles II, Hortense was well-provided for by James II, possibly because of her kinship with the new queen, Mary of Modena.

78. Bonaparte is suitable for Disaster Victim Identification (DVI), Missing Persons Investigations, and Criminal Investigations using Direct Searching, Familial Search and Kinship Analysis in very large databases.

79. …relics of tiny hamlets, or Clachans, show that peasant crofts once were huddled together and worked by kinship groups in an open-field system

80. Hello dostonin this video I have explained about kinship usagesthese are 1) rule of avoidance 2) teknonymy3) avunculate4) Amitate 5) couvades 6) joking relat