Alexander Graham Bell used a drum of goldbeater's skin with an armature of magnetised iron attached to its middle as a sound receiver (see Invention of the telephone), and the North German Confederation printed 10- and 30-groschen postage stamps on goldbeater's skin to prevent reuse of these high-value stamps.
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Joseph Thomas Clover invented an apparatus for the inhalation of chloroform in 1862 that consisted of a large reservoir bag lined with goldbeater's skin to make it airtight, into which a known volume of liquid chloroform was injected.
Napaljarri (skin name) | I've Got You Under My Skin | skin | I've Got You Under My Skin (song) | The Skin of Our Teeth | Skin Yard | Skin | The Knight in the Panther's Skin | Orchestra of Skin and Bone | In the Skin of a Lion | The Skull Beneath the Skin | Skin Deep | Mysterious Skin | Black Skin, White Masks | Soap&Skin | Skin Two | Skin Trade | Skin Game | Skin Deep (1989 film) | Skin (computing) | Skin (comics) | skin cancer | I've Got You Under My Skin (Angel) | Human skin | The Skin Game (1931 film) | The Skin Game | The Hair and Skin Trading Company | The front of the Painted Bride Art Center, showing ''Skin of the Bride,'' a mosaic by Philadelphia artist Isaiah Zagar | stressed skin | Skin (singer) |
Shota Rustaveli, The Knight in the Panther's Skin first printed (originally written in the 13th century)
Carol has been visiting a psychoanalyst (George Rigaud) because of a string of disturbing dreams she's been having featuring her decadent neighbor, Julia Durer (Anita Strindberg).
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Set in London, the film follows Carol Hammond (Florinda Bolkan), the daughter of a respected politician, who experiences a series of vivid, psychedelic nightmares consisting of depraved sex orgies and LSD use.
The early 17th-century head of the house, Begtabeg, was a notable copyist who created one of the best manuscripts of the medieval Georgian epic The Knight in the Panther's Skin by Shota Rustaveli (Manuscript H-54, Georgian National Center of Manuscripts).
The Georgian female poet Tamar Eristavi proposed, in 1988, a romantic though unreliable and otherwise unproved hypothesis identifying the famous Georgian poet Shota Rustaveli with Prince Demna who was allegedly in love with his cousin, Princess Tamar; survived the repressions and wrote his poem The Knight in the Panther's Skin (dedicated to Tamar) in exile under the assumed identity of Rustaveli.
In her book Ali and Nino – Literary Robbery!, Tamar Injia claims that Ali and Nino: A Love Story by Kurban Said (Austria, 1937) is extensively plagiarized from, and owes much of its existence to The Snake’s Skin by Grigol Robakidze (Germany, 1928).
The 1971 Italian thriller A Lizard in a Woman's Skin involves a woman who thinks she may have murdered a neighbor in her sleep.
He was a well-known translator also: he translated The Knight in the Panther's Skin of Shota Rustaveli, Visramiani and other outstanding literary works in Russian.
About then there was also a false report that the animals had escaped from Central Park Zoo and were roaming the city.