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    • Sikhism. In Sikhism, when a person nears death, they’ll often receive final rites in the form of the reciting of hymns from Sikh holy scriptures. The reciter is generally a priest, or giani, from the local Gurdwara (temple).
    • Hinduism. Another religion originating from the Indian subcontinent, Hinduism, also stipulates that sacred objects should be left in place after death, and the body kept covered.
    • Buddhism. The belief that the soul leaves the earthly body after death is one that’s shared by Buddhists. Death customs in Buddhism vary from sect to sect, but all Buddhists hope to maintain a peaceful state of mind before death, so many choose to meditate.
    • Humanism. The theme of using death to benefit nature is frequently echoed in humanism, itself not a religion but a secular movement. Lots of humanists see death as an opportunity to sustain life, with many favouring green burials.
  1. Britain (place name) “Brittanicae Insulae” by Didier Robert de Vaugondy, 1750. The name Britain originates from the Common Brittonic term *Pritanī and is one of the oldest known names for Great Britain, an island off the north-western coast of continental Europe. The terms Briton and British, similarly derived, refer to some or all of its ...

  2. Oct 13, 2017 · Allow me, please, to make it worse. According to the Online Etymological Dictionary, Britain is the “proper name of the island containing England, Scotland, and Wales, c. 1300, Breteyne, from Old French Bretaigne, from Latin Britannia, earlier Brittania, from Brittani “the Britons” (see Briton). The Old English place-name Brytenlond meant ...

  3. The view that a person holds about the afterlife is bound to affect the value given to this current life. Christian beliefs about life after death are based on the resurrection of Jesus Christ ...

  4. Nov 10, 2016 · From that, the name Britain was eventually derived. Some have argued that the Britons were only painted, not tattooed. Still, later Roman scholars were convinced that what Caesar saw was ink.

  5. Oct 10, 2017 · Britain. (n.) proper name of the island containing England, Scotland, and Wales, c. 1300, Breteyne, from Old French Bretaigne, from Latin Britannia, earlier Brittania, from Brittani "the Britons" (see Briton). The Old English place-name Brytenlond meant "Wales." If there was a Celtic name for the island, it has not been recorded.

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  7. The name Britain originates from the English language and its meaning is derived from the phrase From Great Britain. The term Britain has a long and storied history in both ancient and modern times. In ancient history, the name Britain was first used by the Romans to refer to the island of Great Britain, which they conquered and controlled from the 1st century AD until the decline of the Roman ...

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