ǂKá̦gára
ǂKá̦gára or ǂKáʻgára (
Mythology
A story recorded in the 19th century tells of ǂKá̦gára falling out with his brother-in-law ǃHãunu (
gollark: Again, I'm pretty sure that is not how patents work.
gollark: If you change it slightly, you can patent the *new* thing, not the *old* one.
gollark: That... is not how patents work.
gollark: It seems really weird that nobody is making cheaper insulin, considering that patents on it have probably expired by now. Are there difficult regulatory hurdles?
gollark: Possibly. Arguably it doesn't inherently have one but is just assigned one by humans.
See also
- 469705 ǂKá̦gára, an astronomical body named after ǂKá̦gára, and its large moon ǃHãunu. (The likely pronunciations of these names are described there.)
- San mythology
References
- Wilhelm Heinrich Immanuel Bleek; Lucy Lloyd; Gregory McNamee (2001). "ǂKá̦gára and ǃHãunu, Who Fought Each Other with Lightning". The Girl Who Made Stars: And Other Bushman Stories. Daimon. p. 82. ISBN 3-85630-599-8.
- W H I Bleek (2009). Specimens of Bushman Folk-Lore. Abela Publishing Ltd. p. 73. ISBN 1-907256-13-X.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.