bachelor"s wife - definition. What is bachelor"s wife
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

Bachelor group; Bachelor band
  • St. Paul Island, Alaska]]
  • Red deer stags before shedding their antlers

Joseph M. Bachelor         
AMERICAN WRITER AND ACADEMIC
Joseph Morris Bachelor; Joseph Bachelor
Joseph Morris Bachelor also known as Joseph Morris (May 17, 1887 near Sharonville, Ohio – December 5, 1947 in Hamilton, Ohio) was an American author, poet, editor and educator.
Lot's wife         
  • daughters]]; his wife is killed by a rock.
  • Lot's wife (center) turned into a pillar of salt during Sodom's destruction ([[Nuremberg Chronicle]], 1493).
PERSON MENTIONED IN THE BIBLICAL BOOK OF GENESIS
Lot's Wife (rock formation); "Lot's Wife" pillar; Lot's Wife pillar; Lot's Wife; Lot's wife (biblical person); Eshet Lot; The Wife of Lot; The wife of Lot; Wife of Lot
In the Bible, Lot's wife is a figure first mentioned in . The Book of Genesis describes how she became a pillar of salt after she looked back at Sodom.
The Relaxed Wife         
1957 FILM
Relaxed Wife
The Relaxed Wife is a 13-minute live action American film produced in color for distribution during 1957. Structured in a form similar to the 1942–55 series of MGM's Pete Smith Specialty comedy short subjects, which were written and directed by those films' star Dave O'Brien, or to Warner Bros.

ويكيبيديا

Bachelor herd

A bachelor herd is a herd of (usually) juvenile male animals who are still sexually immature or 'harem'-forming animals who have been thrown out of their parent groups but not yet formed a new family group. It may also refer to a group of males who are not currently territorial or mating with females.

Examples include seals, dolphins, lions, and many herbivores such as deer, horses, and elephants. Bachelor herds are thought to provide useful protection for social animals against more established herd competition or aggressive, dominant males. Males in bachelor herds are sometimes closely related to each other. Some animals, for example New Zealand fur seals, live in a bachelor herd all year except for the mating season, when there is a substantial increase in aggression and competition.

In many species, males and females move in separate groups, often coming together at mating time, or to fight for territory or mating partners. In many species it is common for males to leave or be driven from the group as they mature, and they may wander as lone animals or form a bachelor group for the time being. This arrangement may be long term and stable, or short term until they find a new group to join.