बुत बनाना Meaning in English
बुत बनाना शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : fetish
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
बुतनेबुत आदमी
फेटलॉक
फेटलॉक्स
फेटोप्रोटीन
फेटुसिओन
बखेडा
सामन्तीय
जागीरदारी के ढंग से
सामंतशाही संबंधी
सामंती
सामंती आधिपत्य
सामंती प्रभु
जागीरदारी प्रथा
सामंती व्यवस्था
बुत-बनाना इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
external alienation by appropriation of labor), accompanied by a change in terminology from alienation to exploitation to commodity fetishism and reification.
Also, bokors are said to work with zombie astrals – souls or spirits which are captured in a fetish and made to enhance the Bokor's power.
The concept of Starkers! emerged from the underground fetish and swinger scenes of East London in late 2003 when a nude barman at such an establishment launched the event after suggestions from co-workers and club patrons.
" Goho writes that the portrayal of Pan in the novella draws on the mythology of Lucifer and depictions of Pan as "the fetish for evil and suffering and the danger and dread of the wilderness," rather than depictions of Pan as a playful and harmless god.
For this reason, it is sometimes worn publicly as a way to reference fetish culture and gain attention.
Often the image of a person in a bondage harness is used in media as a trope for "someone into fetish play", such as in the Sin City comic book series.
In 1976, Siouxsie Sioux of Siouxsie and the Banshees was also known to wear a Swastika armband with fetish S and M clothing, including fishnets and a whip.
On the topic of perceived gun fetishes in these movies, Pegg has said, "Men can't do that thing, which is the greatest achievement of humankind, which is to make another human, so we make metal versions of our own penises and fire more bits of metal out of the end into people's heads.
Australian linguist Pam Peters (The Cambridge Guide to English Usage, 2004) suggests that irregardless has become fetishized because natural examples of this word in corpora of written and spoken English are greatly outnumbered by examples where it is in fact only cited as an incorrect term.
Recognizing Porter as one of the earliest and most prolific practitioners of Found Poetry', Peter Frank (in his book on Something Else Press) has written: "Porter is to the poem what [Marcel] Duchamp was to the art object, a debunker of handiwork fetishism and exemplary artist-as-intercessor between phenomenon and receptor.