comparative interpretation

  • 21Vulcan (mythology) — Vulcan wearing the exomis (tunic) and pilos (conical hat), Roman bronze, c. 1st century AD Ancient Roman re …

    Wikipedia

  • 22forensic linguistics — A technique concerned with indepth evaluation of linguistic characteristics of text, including grammar, syntax, spelling, vocabulary and phraseology, which is accomplished through a comparison of textual material of known and unknown authorship,… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 23forensic linguistics — A technique concerned with indepth evaluation of linguistic characteristics of text, including grammar, syntax, spelling, vocabulary and phraseology, which is accomplished through a comparison of textual material of known and unknown authorship,… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 24Соловьёв, Владимир Сергеевич — В Википедии есть статьи о других людях с такой фамилией, см. Соловьёв. В Википедии есть статьи о других людях с именем Соловьёв, Владимир. Владимир Сергеевич Соловьёв …

    Википедия

  • 25auditory illusion —    The term auditory illusion is used in a general sense to denote a misrepresentation or misinterpretation of auditory stimuli. Some common examples are words that are misunderstood, figments, and nonverbal sounds such as the humming of a… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 26illusion of recognition —    A term introduced in or shortly before 1959 by the Canadian neuroscientists Wilder Graves Pen field (1891 1976) and Sean Francis Mullan (b. 1925) to denote an illusory perception of one s present environment or state in which things seem… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 27illusional emotion —    A term introduced in or shortly before 1959 by the Canadian neuroscientists Wilder Graves Penfield (1891 1976) and Sean Francis Mullan (b. 1925) to denote a feeling of fear, loneliness, sorrow, or disgust, occurring in the context of a… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 28psychical state —    Also known as aura. The term psychical state is indebted to the Greek noun psuchè (life breath, spirit, soul, mind). It was introduced in or shortly before 1954 by the Canadian neuroscientists Wilder Graves Penfield (1891 1976) and Herbert… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 29psychomotor automatism —    The term psychomotor automatism comes from the Greek noun psuchè (life breath, spirit, soul, mind), the Latin noun motio (movement), and the Greek adjective automatos (automatically, driven by a power of its own). It was introduced in or… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations

  • 30visual illusion —    Also known as optical illusion. Both terms are commonly used to denote a visual percept that has its basis in a stimulus derivative of the extra corporeal environment (also referred to as a point de repère) which is either misperceived or… …

    Dictionary of Hallucinations