God discovered the hummingbird, because he IS the one who created them.
basically it was two men radomly walking into a forest because they were irittated with the Athens culture. There they meet a bird seller he sold them a jay and a crow to show them the way to this guy who turned himself into a featherless bird. They fooled all the birds into believing they were the use to be gods of Olympians and then started a war and created a new city that was in the sky. That caused the Olympians to starve because the humans offerings weren't reaching through the city to the heavens. so the Olympians made a peace offering making one of the guys become god of the heavens and he got married to a girl and...the end
Evolution Is not true period. God created everything and all of his creation has a certain purpose. In Genesis 1: 1 it says: God created the heavens and the earth. So, Evolution pretty much has nothing to do with DNA. Read your Bible, its a great book with lots of knowledge!! :)
African people wear these bracelets (aside from the fact that they look cool) as they believe elephants are the conduit between the heavens and earth. Each knot on the bracelet represents something such as earth etc.The hair must be boiled after it is found (they don't hunt elephants for these any more) and after it cools it maintains its shape.
An antonym to diurnal is nocturnal when diurnal is defined; of or belonging to or active during the day; "diurnal animals are active during the day"; "diurnal flowers are open during the day and closed at night" Another antonym to diurnal is aperiodic (vs. periodic) when diurnal is defined; having a daily cycle or occurring every day; "diurnal rotation of the heavens" ~gpack
Laura king said this with one of her dumb sayings! it was yesterday!!!
The Luhya translation of the English word heavens is "amakulu".
The sky, or heaven/the heavens.
"My heart floats to the heavens when I look upon you!" in English is Il mio cuore tocca il cielo quando ti vedo! in Italian.
it means something along the lines of "good heavens!"
The English equivalent of 'opposed by the whole heavens' is adversatus totis caelis. In the word-by-word translation, the past participle 'adversatus' means 'opposed'. The adjective 'totis' means 'entire, whole'. The noun 'caelis' means 'heavens'.
You could say 'tengoku,' written: 天国
'Hark' means listen.
The "sientific" name for the heavens would be... that there is no heavens.
Heofonum is the dative plural of the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) word heofon, meaning "heaven". Dative covered a lot of ground in Old English; heofonum could mean "to/for the heavens", or it could be the object of a preposition such as on ("in"). For example, the Lord's Prayer in Old English begins with the words Fæder ure þu þe eart on heofonum, literally "Father Our, Thou that art in [the] heavens".
The name Celeste is from the Latin caelestis (heavens), and comes to English use from the French (Céleste).
there are seven heavens on the seventh there are the prophets, companions of them etc.