ملتقى طلاب وطالبات جامعة الملك فيصل,جامعة الدمام

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الكويز
أسئلة أختبار قطعة -Tattoos Across Time and Place-
[أسئلة اختبار - إنشاء وتعبير 2 - المحبوب]
أسئلة أختبار
عدد الأسئلة: 20
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1) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
is
was
were
am
2) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
but
with
fly
does
3) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
cry
by
did
was
4) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
it
as
at
they
5) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
these
those
that
is
6) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
went
and
or
by
7) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
was
an
the
as
8) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
am
present
other
was
9) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
about
from
at
to
10) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
what
is
fast
on
11) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
offer
by
own
of
12) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
no
doing
done
of
13) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
in
is
bury
out
14) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
slow
tutor
criminals
humen
15) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
in
at
for
the
16) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
rise
changed
kept
form
17) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
these
their
that
the
18) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
attitudes
admire
as
perfected
19) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
are
were
was
is
20) The earliest example of tattoos so far discovered _1_ found in 1991 on the frozen remains of the Copper Age "Ice1nan" scientists have named Otzi. His lower back, ankles, knees, and a foot were marked _2_ a series of small lines, made _3_ rubbing powdered charcoal into vertical cuts. X-rays revealed bone degeneration _4_ the site of each tattoo, leading researchers to believe _5_Otzi'speople, ancestors contemporary central _6_ northern Europeans, may have used tattoos _7_ medical treatment to reduce pain. As civilizations developed, tattoos took on _8_ meanings. Egyptian funerary figures of female dancers _9_ around 2000 BCE, display the same abstract dot-and-dash tattoos _10_ their bodies as those found on female mummies from the same time period. Later images represent Bes, god _11_ fertility and revelry. Ancient Romans found _12_ reason to celebrate tattoos, believing _13_ the purity of the human form. Except as brands for _14_ and the condemned, tattoos were banned _15_ Rome. But over time, Roman attitudes toward tattoos _16_. Fighting an army of Britons who wore _17_ tattoos as badges of honor, some Romans came to _18_ their enemies' ferocity as well as the symbols they wore. Soon Roman soldiers _19_ wearing their own body marks; Roman doctors even perfected the art _20_ application and removal.
in
of
that
is
معلومات حول الكويز
أسئلة أختبار قطعة -Tattoos Across Time and Place-
[أسئلة اختبار - إنشاء وتعبير 2 - المحبوب]
تفاصيل أخرى:
أسئلة أختبار
تم حل الكويز 2172 مرة بنسبة نجاح 63%
القسم: E4
مناقشة الكويز: أسئلة أختبار قطعة -Tattoos Across Time and Place-
 
معلومات صاحب الكويز
MUHAMMD

قام بانشاء 8 كويز
كويزات العضو
أفضل الأعضاء
العضونسبة النجاح
MUHAMMD100%
amone100%
abu bailasan100%
راكــِـِـِـِانـ100%
شوقر20100%
maria-100%
am0o0na-33100%
hour100%
Noooor1992100%
أقوى شيء100%
سيرينا100%
ام سديم 55100%
عليآء100%
112233445566100%
ابله توته100%
asooola100%
shdoo100%
The-Abraham100%
المهرة العنيدة100%
انجليش100%
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أسئلة أختبار مادة (( النظام الاجتماعي في الإسلام )) للفصل الأول لسنة 1434 / 1435 الدكتور / حمد المر (9606)
# اسئلة الاختبار النهائي برامج الحاسب المكتبية الفصل الاول لعام 1435 (9536)
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