- In anthropology,
kinship is the web of
social relationships that form an
important part of the
lives of all
humans in all societies,
although its exact...
-
conquest in 1521 to help deal with
stressful situations.
These fictive kinships still exist in
modern day
Mexican societies, and are
established by providing...
-
kinship is a mode of
descent calculated from an
ancestor counted through any
combination of male and
female links, or a
system of
bilateral kinship where...
- Look up
kinship in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Kinship is a
relationship between any
entities that
share a
genealogical origin,
through either biological...
- Milk
kinship,
formed during nursing by a non-biological mother, was a form of
fostering allegiance with
fellow community members. This
particular form...
- is
often said to be
common in
complex and
stratified cultures.
Balkan kinships such as Bulgarian, Serbian, and
Bosniak follow this
system for different...
-
Kinship terminology is the
system used in
languages to
refer to the
persons to whom an
individual is
related through kinship.
Different societies classify...
-
moiety in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. In the
anthropological study of
kinship, a
moiety (/ˈmɔɪəti/) is a
descent group that
coexists with only one other...
- Y-chromosome DNA (Y-DNA) is
paternally inherited enables patrilines and
agnatic kinships of men to be
traced through genetic analysis. Y-chromosomal Adam (Y-MRCA)...
-
Iroquois kinship (also
known as
bifurcate merging) is a
kinship system named after the
Haudenosaunee people, also
known as the Iroquois,
whose kinship system...