SMMRR Railroad | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /Attractions/Smmrr-Railroad/ 172 (1.17%)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SMMRR Railroad | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /Attractions/Smmrr-Railroad/ 172 (1.17%) December 2016 Web Statistics www.superstitionmountainmuseum.org Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 December 2016 Highlights: • Traffic Sources – How Visitors Find Us o 2,818 visitors used an “Organic Search”. (A search engine, like Google, etc.) o 891 visitors were “direct”, meaning they typed in the url (www.superstitionmountainmuseum.org) into their browser. o 644 visitors were “reFerred” From other websites/apps/other. o 167 visitors were sent to us From “Social” networks. • Website Traffic: 4,464 Visitors viewed our website this month. • Website Traffic: There were 5,326 Sessions (some sessions/visits were From repeat visitors) • Session Details: Bounce Rate was 50.64%. This means the visitor entered the site on the same page they exited From. (Only one page view). • Visitor Characteristics – 4,254 “New Visitors” & 1,072 “Returning Visitors”. • Visitor Characteristics – Visitors by Device Type o 2,288 visitors used a desktop computer to view our site. o 2,276 visitors used a mobile device/cell phone to view our site. o 746 visitors used a tablet to view our site. Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum All Web Site Data GO TO REPORT 1. Website Traffic Dec 1, 2016 - Dec 31, 2016 All Users 99.71% Users Visitors Per Week Month of Year Week of Year Users 1. 201612 201653 1,385 (29.93%) 2. 201612 201650 961 (20.77%) 3. 201612 201651 940 (20.32%) 4. 201612 201652 914 (19.75%) 5. 201612 201649 427 (9.23%) Rows 1 - 5 of 5 © 2017 Google Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum All Web Site Data GO TO REPORT 1. Website Traffic Dec 1, 2016 - Dec 31, 2016 All Users 99.71% Users Sessions by Day Date Sessions 1. 20161201 145 (2.73%) 2. 20161202 149 (2.81%) 3. 20161203 182 (3.43%) 4. 20161204 169 (3.18%) 5. 20161205 148 (2.79%) 6. 20161206 141 (2.66%) 7. 20161207 125 (2.35%) 8. 20161208 152 (2.86%) 9. 20161209 170 (3.20%) 10. 20161210 197 (3.71%) 11. 20161211 143 (2.69%) 12. 20161212 158 (2.98%) 13. 20161213 161 (3.03%) 14. 20161214 185 (3.48%) 15. 20161215 153 (2.88%) 16. 20161216 146 (2.75%) 17. 20161217 136 (2.56%) 18. 20161218 135 (2.54%) 19. 20161219 153 (2.88%) 20. 20161220 166 (3.13%) 21. 20161221 147 (2.77%) 22. 20161222 186 (3.50%) 23. 20161223 143 (2.69%) 24. 20161224 124 (2.34%) 25. 20161225 160 (3.01%) 26. 20161226 308 (5.80%) 27. 20161227 250 (4.71%) 234 28. 20161228 234 (4.41%) 29. 20161229 250 (4.71%) 30. 20161230 212 (3.99%) 31. 20161231 182 (3.43%) Rows 1 - 31 of 31 © 2017 Google Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum All Web Site Data GO TO REPORT 2. Session Details Dec 1, 2016 - Dec 31, 2016 All Users 100.30% Avg. Session Duration Time Spent on Site Week of Year Avg. Session Duration 1. 201649 00:01:54 2. 201650 00:02:02 3. 201651 00:02:22 4. 201652 00:02:04 5. 201653 00:02:00 Rows 1 - 5 of 5 © 2017 Google Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum All Web Site Data GO TO REPORT 2. Session Details Dec 1, 2016 - Dec 31, 2016 All Users 100.30% Avg. Session Duration Pageviews Per Session Week of Year Pages / Session 1. 201649 2.72 2. 201650 2.78 3. 201651 2.72 4. 201652 2.82 5. 201653 2.78 Rows 1 - 5 of 5 © 2017 Google Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum All Web Site Data GO TO REPORT 3. Website Content Dec 1, 2016 - Dec 31, 2016 All Users 99.74% Pageviews Popular Pages Page Title Page Pageviews Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum | History of the Superstition Mountains & Jacob Waltz 1. / 4,314 aka: The Lost Dutchman (29.30%) 2. Plan Your Visit | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /visit/plan-your-visit/ 880 (5.98%) 3. Visit | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /visit/ 582 (3.95%) 4. Events | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/ 525 (3.57%) 5. Elvis Chapel | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/elvis-chapel/ 474 (3.22%) 6. Directions | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /visit/directions/ 440 (2.99%) 7. Attractions | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/ 405 (2.75%) 8. Sitemap | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /sitemap/ 394 (2.68%) 9. Weddings | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /weddings/ 381 (2.59%) /about-the-superstition-mountain-h 10. About the Superstition Mountain Historical Society | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 317 istorical-society/ (2.15%) 11. Shopping | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /shopping/ 244 (1.66%) /exhibits/jacob-waltz-lost-dutchma 12. Jacob Waltz “Lost Dutchman” Exhibit | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 241 n-exhibit/ (1.64%) 13. Exhibits | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /exhibits/ 215 (1.46%) 14. Apacheland Barn | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/apacheland-barn/ 206 (1.40%) /events/old-fashioned-christmas-in 15. Old Fashioned Christmas in the Barn Holiday Boutique | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 203 -the-barn-holiday-boutique-2/ (1.38%) /about-the-superstition-mountain-h 16. The Lost Dutchman | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum istorical-society/the-lost-dutchman 175 (1.19%) / 17. SMMRR Railroad | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/smmrr-railroad/ 172 (1.17%) /visit/group-rates-and-reservations 18. Group Rates and Reservations | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 158 / (1.07%) /events/lecture-teton-ken-the-lost- 19. Lecture – Teton Ken – The Lost Dutchman & His Mine | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 152 dutchman-his-mine/ (1.03%) /events/heritage-days-apacheland- 20. Heritage Days & Apacheland Reunion 2017 | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 144 reunion-2017/ (0.98%) 21. Boot Hill | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/boot-hill/ 127 (0.86%) 22. Upcoming Special Events | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/categories/special-events/ 125 (0.85%) /superstition-mountain-museum/m 23. Museum History | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 124 useum-history/ (0.84%) 24. Charlies General Store | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /shopping/charlies-general-store/ 122 (0.83%) /events/categories/free-admission 25. Upcoming Free Admission | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 101 / (0.69%) /about-the-superstition-mountain-h 26. Mission and Vision | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 95 istorical-society/mission-vision/ (0.65%) 27. Nature Trail | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/nature-trail/ 92 (0.62%) 28. Labyrinth | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/labyrinth/ 90 (0.61%) 29. Events | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/?pno=2 88 (0.60%) 30. 20-stamp Mill | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/twenty-stamp-mill/ 83 (0.56%) 31. Museum Store | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /shopping/museum-store/ 82 (0.56%) 32. Events | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/?pno=3 81 (0.55%) 33. Native American Exhibit | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /exhibits/native-american-exhibit/ 80 (0.54%) /events/categories/arts-and-crafts 34. Upcoming Arts and Crafts | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 76 / (0.52%) 35. Join | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /join/ 74 (0.50%) /attractions/smmrr-railroad/rr-trac 36. Riding the Rails | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 73 ks/ (0.50%) 37. Upcoming Lectures | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/categories/lectures/ 69 (0.47%) 38. Geological Exhibit | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /exhibits/geological-exhibit/ 66 (0.45%) 39. Artist – Crafter Application Forms | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /artist-crafter-applications/ 62 (0.42%) 40. Miner’s Shack | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/miners-shack/ 62 (0.42%) /product/museum-membership-op 41. Museum Membership Options | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 59 tions/ (0.40%) 42. Arrastre | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/arrastre/ 58 (0.39%) 43. Products | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /shopping/online-store/ 56 (0.38%) 44. Flagg Mineral Show | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/flagg-mineral-show-2/ 55 (0.37%) Lecture – Charlie Lesueur – Tales of Apacheland Movie Ranch | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman /events/lecture-charlie-lesueur-tale 45. 55 Museum s-of-apacheland-movie-ranch/ (0.37%) /attractions/powers-well-drilling-m 46. Powers Well Drilling Machine | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 54 achine/ (0.37%) /about-the-superstition-mountain-h 47. Spiritual Garden | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 54 istorical-society/spiritual-garden/ (0.37%) /exhibits/ted-degrazias-prospector 48. Ted DeGrazia’s Prospectors & Pack Animals | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 53 s-pack-animals/ (0.36%) 49. Books | Product Categories | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /product-category/books/ 47 (0.32%) 50. Upcoming Classes | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/categories/classes/ 46 (0.31%) 51. Amphitheater | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /attractions/amphitheater/ 45 (0.31%) 52. Events | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /events/?pno=4 45 (0.31%) /events/superstition-authors-and-a 53. Superstition Authors and Artists | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 45 rtists/ (0.31%) /attractions/twenty-stamp-mill/hist 54. History of our 20-stamp Mill | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 44 ory-of-our-20-stamp-mill/ (0.30%) /shopping/museum-store/tommy-j 55. Tommy Jackson | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 43 ackson/ (0.29%) George Johnston and Clay Worst in new video about our mountains! | Superstition Mountain – Lost /george-johnston-and-clay-worst-in 56. 39 Dutchman Museum -new-video-about-our-mountains/ (0.26%) /events/lecture-phil-reinhardt-the-p 57. Lecture – Phil Reinhardt – The Peralta Stones | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum 39 eralta-stones/ (0.26%) 58. Christmas Boutique! | Superstition Mountain – Lost Dutchman Museum /christmas-boutique/ 38 (0.26%) 59. 85595877-1.compliance-fred.xyz /85595877-1.compliance-fred.xyz 30 (0.20%) 60.
Recommended publications
  • Saddlebrooke Hiking Club Hike Database 11-15-2020 Hike Location Hike Rating Hike Name Hike Description
    SaddleBrooke Hiking Club Hike Database 11-15-2020 Hike Location Hike Rating Hike Name Hike Description AZ Trail B Arizona Trail: Alamo Canyon This passage begins at a point west of the White Canyon Wilderness on the Tonto (Passage 17) National Forest boundary about 0.6 miles due east of Ajax Peak. From here the trail heads west and north for about 1.5 miles, eventually dropping into a two- track road and drainage. Follow the drainage north for about 100 feet until it turns left (west) via the rocky drainage and follow this rocky two-track for approximately 150 feet. At this point there is new signage installed leading north (uphill) to a saddle. This is a newly constructed trail which passes through the saddle and leads downhill across a rugged and lush hillside, eventually arriving at FR4. After crossing FR4, the trail continues west and turns north as you work your way toward Picketpost Mountain. The trail will continue north and eventually wraps around to the west side of Picketpost and somewhat paralleling Alamo Canyon drainage until reaching the Picketpost Trailhead. Hike 13.6 miles; trailhead elevations 3471 feet south and 2399 feet north; net elevation change 1371 feet; accumulated gains 1214 northward and 2707 feet southward; RTD __ miles (dirt). AZ Trail A Arizona Trail: Babbitt Ranch This passage begins just east of the Cedar Ranch area where FR 417 and FR (Passage 35) 9008A intersect. From here the route follows a pipeline road north to the Tub Ranch Camp. The route continues towards the corrals (east of the buildings).
    [Show full text]
  • ANZAMEMS 2017 Abstracts
    ANZAMEMS 2017 abstracts Catherine Abou-Nemeh Victoria University of Wellington “Opening the King’s Body: Autopsy and Anatomy in Early Modern Paris” On 1 September 1715, King Louis XIV of France died in his bed in Versailles. The next day several physicians, anatomists, and attendees assembled in the palace to carry out a post-mortem examination of the deceased monarch. In addition to the Dean of the Paris Faculty of Medicine Jean- Baptiste Doye, Guy Fagon (the king’s head physician) and Georges Mareschal (the king’s first- surgeon) led the dissection. This paper situates Louis’ autopsy in the context of late seventeenth and early eighteenth century anatomical practices in Paris. In so doing, I will assess the meaning and status of autopsy, and discuss its relation to royal power and anatomical knowledge. Anya Adair Yale University “The Post-Mortem Mobility of Dead Text: Mouvance and the Early English Legal Preface.” The introduction to a medieval law code does important rhetorical work: among other things, it must convince its audience of the justice of the laws that follow. For authority on this matter, the legal preface (like so many literary texts) often relies on the invocation of an imagined past, founding its claim on past codes, past kings, and a shared sense of stable legal history. Yet the law code itself moves through time in a very different way: in strictly legal terms, the most recent code must take precedence, overriding and erasing past laws. Laws look forward, not back. This paper explores some of the consequences of the temporal tension between prologue and laws, and traces its effects into the ways that early medieval law codes were disseminated and preserved in the manuscript record.
    [Show full text]
  • A Qualitative Analysis of Superstitious Behavior and Performance: How It Starts, Why It Works, and How It Works
    Western Washington University Western CEDAR WWU Graduate School Collection WWU Graduate and Undergraduate Scholarship Spring 2015 A Qualitative Analysis of Superstitious Behavior and Performance: How it Starts, Why it Works, and How it Works Alexandra A. Farley Western Washington University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://cedar.wwu.edu/wwuet Part of the Health and Physical Education Commons Recommended Citation Farley, Alexandra A., "A Qualitative Analysis of Superstitious Behavior and Performance: How it Starts, Why it Works, and How it Works" (2015). WWU Graduate School Collection. 408. https://cedar.wwu.edu/wwuet/408 This Masters Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the WWU Graduate and Undergraduate Scholarship at Western CEDAR. It has been accepted for inclusion in WWU Graduate School Collection by an authorized administrator of Western CEDAR. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Qualitative Analysis of Superstitious Behavior and Performance: How it starts, why it works, and how it works By Alexandra Farley Accepted in Partial Completion of the Requirements for the Degree Masters of Science Kathleen L. Kitto, Dean of Graduate School Advisor Committee ___________________________ Chair, Dr. Linda Keeler ___________________________ Dr. Michelle Mielke ___________________________ Dr. Keith Russell Master’s Thesis In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a master’s degree at Western Washington University, I grant to Western Washington University the non-exclusive royalty-free right to archive, reproduce, distribute, and display the thesis in any and all forms, including electronic format, via any digital library mechanisms maintained by WWU.
    [Show full text]
  • Interpreting Zheng Chenggong: the Politics of Dramatizing
    , - 'I ., . UN1VERSIlY OF HAWAII UBRARY 3~31 INTERPRETING ZHENG CHENGGONG: THE POLITICS OF DRAMATIZING A HISTORICAL FIGURE IN JAPAN, CHINA, AND TAIWAN (1700-1963) A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAW AI'I IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN THEATRE AUGUST 2007 By Chong Wang Thesis Committee: Julie A. Iezzi, Chairperson Lurana D. O'Malley Elizabeth Wichmann-Walczak · - ii .' --, L-' ~ J HAWN CB5 \ .H3 \ no. YI,\ © Copyright 2007 By Chong Wang We certity that we have read this thesis and that, in our opinion, it is satisfactory in scope and quality as a thesis for the degree of Master of Arts in Theatre. TIIESIS COMMITTEE Chairperson iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I want to give my wannest thanks to my family for their strong support. I also want to give my since're thanks to Dr. Julie Iezzi for her careful guidance and tremendous patience during each stage of the writing process. Finally, I want to thank my proofreaders, Takenouchi Kaori and Vance McCoy, without whom this thesis could not have been completed. - . iv ABSTRACT Zheng Chenggong (1624 - 1662) was sired by Chinese merchant-pirate in Hirado, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. A general at the end of the Chinese Ming Dynasty, he was a prominent leader of the movement opposing the Manchu Qing Dynasty, and in recovering Taiwan from Dutch colonial occupation in 1661. Honored as a hero in Japan, China, and Taiwan, he has been dramatized in many plays in various theatre forms in Japan (since about 1700), China (since 1906), and Taiwan (since the 1920s).
    [Show full text]
  • The Journal of Studies in Language, Culture and Society (JSLCS)
    Volume 1/N°1 December, 2018 The Journal of Studies in Language, Culture and Society (JSLCS) Editor in chief: Dr. Nadia Idri UNIVERSITÉ ABDERRAHMANE MIRA BEJAIA FACULTÉ DES LETTRES ET DES LANGUES www.univ-bejaia/JSLCS ISSN : 1750-2676 © All rights reserved Journal of Studies in Language, Culture and Society (JSLCS) is an academic multidisciplinary open access and peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research that turns around phenomena related to language, culture and society. JSLCS welcomes papers that reflect sound methodologies, updated theoretical analyses and original empirical and practical findings related to various disciplines like linguistics and languages, civilisation and literature, sociology, psychology, translation, anthropology, education, pedagogy, ICT, communication, cultural/inter-cultural studies, philosophy, history, religion, and the like. Editor in Chief Dr Nadia Idri, Faculty of Arts and Languages, University of Bejaia, Algeria Editorial Board Abdelhak Elaggoune, University 8 Mai 1945, Guelma, Algeria Ahmed Chaouki Hoadjli, University of Biskra, Algeria Amar Guendouzi, University Mouloud Mammeri, Tizi Ouzou, Algeria Amine Belmekki, University of tlemcen, Algeria Anita Welch, Institute of Education, USA Christian Ludwig, Essen/NRW, Germany Christophe Ippolito Chris, School of Modern Languages at Georgia Tech’s Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA Farouk Bouhadiba, University of Oran, Algeria Fodil Sadek, University Mouloud Mammeri, Tizi Ouzou, Algeria Fouad Mami, University of Adrar, Algeria Ghania Ouahmiche, University of Oran, Algeria Hacène Hamada, Ens Constantine, Algeria Hanane Sarnou, University of Mostaganem, Algeria Judit Papp, Hungarian Language and Literature, University of Naples "L'Orientale" Leyla Bellour, Mila University Center, Algeria Limame Barbouchi, Faculty of Chariaa in Smara, Ibn Zohr University, Agadir, Morocco Manisha Anand Patil, Head, Yashavantrao Chavan Institute of Science, India Mimouna Zitouni, University of Mohamed Ben Ahmed, Oran 2, Algeria Mohammad H.
    [Show full text]
  • Grades FINAL.Xlsx
    School Name Letter Grade Round Valley Primary School * Cordova Primary School * Mesa Transitional Learning Center * Deer Valley Academy * Humanities and Sciences Academy Arizona * Peoria eCampus * Valle Del Encanto Learning Center * Buckeye Primary * Southwest Key Transitional Learning Center * Chandler Online Academy * ASU Preparatory Academy- Phoenix High School * ASU Preparatory Academy-Polytechnic Elementary * Coronado Elementary School A Benson Primary School A Charles W Sechrist Elementary School A Flagstaff High School A Flagstaff Arts And Leadership Academy A Mountain School A Northland Preparatory Academy A Payson High School A Triumphant Learning Center A Franklin Elementary School A Franklin West Elementary A Hale Elementary School A Pomeroy Elementary School A Johnson Elementary School A O'Connor Elementary School A Ishikawa Elementary School A Sousa Elementary School A Hermosa Vista Elementary School A Falcon Hill Elementary School A Bush Elementary A Las Sendas Elementary School A Franklin Northeast School A Poston Junior High School A Shepherd Junior High School A Mountain View High School A Red Mountain High School A Kachina Elementary School A Oakwood Elementary School A Marshall Ranch Elementary School A Santa Fe Elementary School A Paseo Verde Elementary School A Desert Harbor Elementary School A Sunrise Mountain High School A Patterson Elementary School A Neely Traditional Academy A Pioneer Elementary School A Burk Elementary School A Val Vista Lakes Elementary School A Playa del Rey Elementary School A Sonoma Ranch
    [Show full text]
  • The Superstition Mountains: What Future Use Will Best Serve Arizona?
    [c. 1962] THE SUPERSTITION MOUNTAINS What Future Use Will Best Serve Arizona? A Special Report By Rep. Morris K. Udall The population of Arizona is increasing by some 60,000 people every year -- equivalent to the 1960 populations of Flagstaff, Prescott, Yuma and Safford combined. By 1970 our population will move well beyond 2,000,000. Additional land for commercial and residential purposes will be required. Existing facilities for every public need, including recreation and parks, will feel increasing pressures. Those of us entrusted with present day leadership in Arizona affairs ought to peer ahead now and then, as best we can, and take a long-range view. This report is an attempt to fulfill part of that responsibility. The press of population and our nation's diminishing recreational resources throughout the country have made Congress and the President anxious to undertake a long-range program of resource planning. If Arizona has any aspirations and needs in this field, the next few years will be the time to act. I expect that more new national parks, monuments and recreation areas will be created in the next 5 years than in the last 30. By 1964 a new National Recreation Area will come into being around Powell Lake behind Glen Canyon Dam. The 87th Congress has established Cape Cod National Seashore; it is considering and will probably establish new national parks at Point Reyes, California, Padre Island, Texas, and the Utah Canyonlands within the near future. The Wilderness Bill, a central part of this bi-partisan effort, has already passed the Senate and should pass the House before adjournment.
    [Show full text]
  • Rhyming Dictionary
    Merriam-Webster's Rhyming Dictionary Merriam-Webster, Incorporated Springfield, Massachusetts A GENUINE MERRIAM-WEBSTER The name Webster alone is no guarantee of excellence. It is used by a number of publishers and may serve mainly to mislead an unwary buyer. Merriam-Webster™ is the name you should look for when you consider the purchase of dictionaries or other fine reference books. It carries the reputation of a company that has been publishing since 1831 and is your assurance of quality and authority. Copyright © 2002 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Merriam-Webster's rhyming dictionary, p. cm. ISBN 0-87779-632-7 1. English language-Rhyme-Dictionaries. I. Title: Rhyming dictionary. II. Merriam-Webster, Inc. PE1519 .M47 2002 423'.l-dc21 2001052192 All rights reserved. No part of this book covered by the copyrights hereon may be reproduced or copied in any form or by any means—graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, taping, or information storage and retrieval systems—without written permission of the publisher. Printed and bound in the United States of America 234RRD/H05040302 Explanatory Notes MERRIAM-WEBSTER's RHYMING DICTIONARY is a listing of words grouped according to the way they rhyme. The words are drawn from Merriam- Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. Though many uncommon words can be found here, many highly technical or obscure words have been omitted, as have words whose only meanings are vulgar or offensive. Rhyming sound Words in this book are gathered into entries on the basis of their rhyming sound. The rhyming sound is the last part of the word, from the vowel sound in the last stressed syllable to the end of the word.
    [Show full text]
  • Grand Canyon Council Oa Where to Go Camping Guide
    GRAND CANYON COUNCIL OA WHERE TO GO CAMPING GUIDE GRAND CANYON COUNCIL, BSA OA WHERE TO GO CAMPING GUIDE Table of Contents Introduction to The Order of the Arrow ....................................................................... 1 Wipala Wiki, The Man .................................................................................................. 1 General Information ...................................................................................................... 3 Desert Survival Safety Tips ........................................................................................... 4 Further Information ....................................................................................................... 4 Contact Agencies and Organizations ............................................................................. 5 National Forests ............................................................................................................. 5 U. S. Department Of The Interior - Bureau Of Land Management ................................ 7 Maricopa County Parks And Recreation System: .......................................................... 8 Arizona State Parks: .................................................................................................... 10 National Parks & National Monuments: ...................................................................... 11 Tribal Jurisdictions: ..................................................................................................... 13 On the Road: National
    [Show full text]
  • Superstitious Precebo Illusion : Does Luck Charm Really Gives You Luck? It's Mere Possession Does!
    Lingnan University Digital Commons @ Lingnan University Bachelor of Social Sciences – Senior Theses Undergraduate Open Access Dissertations 2014 Superstitious precebo illusion : does luck charm really gives you luck? It's mere possession does! Pik Ying CHAN Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.ln.edu.hk/socsci_fyp Part of the Folklore Commons, and the Social Psychology Commons Recommended Citation Chan, P. Y. (2014). Superstitious precebo illusion : does luck charm really gives you luck? It's mere possession does! (UG dissertation, Lingnan University, Hong Kong). Retrieved from http://commons.ln.edu.hk/socsci_fyp/6 This UG Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Undergraduate Open Access Dissertations at Digital Commons @ Lingnan University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Bachelor of Social Sciences – Senior Theses by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Lingnan University. SUPERSTITIOUS PRECEBO ILLUSION: DOES LUCK CHARM REALLY GIVES YOU LUCK? IT’S MERE POSSESSION DOES! by CHAN Pik Ying A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Social Sciences (Honours) Supervisor: Professor YEUNG Wai Lan, Victoria Lingnan University 2014 CONTENTS CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................... 1 1.1 BACKGROUND ................................................................................................................ 1 1.2 OBJECTIVES AND SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY ...........................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Gushan: the Formation of a Chan Lineage During the Seventeenth Century and Its Spread to Taiwan
    Gushan: the Formation of a Chan Lineage During the Seventeenth Century and Its Spread to Taiwan Hsuan-Li Wang Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2014 © 2014 Hsuan-Li Wang All rights reserved ABSTRACT Gushan: the Formation of a Chan Lineage During the Seventeenth Century and Its Spread to Taiwan Hsuan-Li Wang Taking Gushan 鼓山 Monastery in Fujian Province as a reference point, this dissertation investigates the formation of the Gushan Chan lineage in Fujian area and its later diffusion process to Taiwan. From the perspective of religion diffusion studies, this dissertation investigates the three stages of this process: 1. the displacement of Caodong 曹洞 Chan center to Fujian in the seventeenth century; 2. Chinese migration bringing Buddhism to Taiwan in the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) and 3. the expansion diffusion activities of the institutions and masters affiliated with this lineage in Taiwan during the Japanese rule (1895-1945), and the new developments of humanistic Buddhism (renjian fojiao 人間佛教) after 1949. In this spreading process of the Gushan Chan lineage, Taiwanese Buddhism has emerged as the bridge between Chinese and Japanese Buddhism because of its unique historical experiences. It is in the expansion diffusion activities of the Gushan Chan lineage in Taiwan that Taiwanese Buddhism has gradually attained autonomy during the Japanese rule, leading to post-war new developments in contemporary humanistic Buddhism. Table of Contents List of Chart, Maps and Tables iii Acknowledgements iv Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1. Research Motives and Goals 2 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Positively Apache Junction
    POSITIVELY APACHE JUNCTION A SPRING 2018 COLLABORATIVE REPORT OF ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY’S PROJECT CITIES & THE CITY OF APACHE JUNCTION This report represents original work prepared for the City of Apache Junction by students participating in courses aligned with Arizona State University’s Project Cities program. Findings, information, and recommendations are those of students and are not necessarily of Arizona State University. Student reports are not peer reviewed for statistical or computational accuracy, or comprehensively fact-checked, in the same fashion as academic journal articles. Project partners should use care when using student reports as justification for future actions. Text and images contained in this report may not be used without permission from Project Cities. City of Apache Junction 300 East Superstition Boulevard Apache Junction, Arizona 85119 www.ajcity.net Dear Apache Junction residents, community members, and report readers, Once again, ASU has exceeded our expectations with four Spring Semester 2018 projects through ASU’s Project Cities program. As the inaugural community partner for the program, we could not be more pleased with the relationship the city has developed with the students, professors, instructors, and Project Cities staff. This semester we were fortunate to have the opportunity to work with over 70 students on four projects that engaged five university professors and classes. The students and professors brought fresh perspectives and unique approaches to their work. On behalf of the City Council, we can say that they are impressed with the relevant project work, and we are sure that it will help make Apache Junction a place people love to call home.
    [Show full text]