Type of text organiztion
1) Local participants and sponsors use the occasion to enhance their social prestige, as is customary in traditional Buddhist folk festivals throughout Southeast Asia.
2) Scholars study the centuries old rocket festival tradition today as it may be significant to the history of rocketry in the East.
3) The festivals offer an excellent chance to make merry before the hard work begins; as well as enhancing communal prestige, and attracting and redistributing wealth as in any Gift culture.
4) However, even villages may have themed floats conveying government messages, as Keys advises.
5) Other modern themes present as well, as suggested by Keyes.
Participating groups compete for prizes within their categories.
6) Sweet-flavored sato may be as little as seven-percent alcohol, but it packs a surprising punch.
7) Those whose rockets misfire are either covered with mud, or thrown into a mud puddle (that also serve a safety function, as immediate application of cooling mud can reduce severity of burns).
8) These may reach altitudes reckoned in kilometers, and travel dozens of kilometers down range (loosely speaking, as they can go in any direction, including right through the crowd).
9) Phangkhi and Nang Ai have been fated by their Karma to have been reborn throughout many past existences as a couple ordained.
10) The legend also tells that receding waters left behind the Nong Han Kumphawapi Lake of the Kumphawapi District marsh, which, too, may be seen to this very day.
11) his sermons drew everyone, creatures and sky-dwellers alike, away from Phaya Thaen, King of the Sky.
วันเสาร์ที่ 7 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2552
สมัครสมาชิก:
ส่งความคิดเห็น (Atom)
ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:
แสดงความคิดเห็น