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Development During Preschool Years
Changing Childhoods Changing Minds
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Single Hair Of His:

Single Hair Of His Washing. Clean, healthy hair is the basis of any hair style. In addition to brushing, dry hair requires shampooing once a week, oily hair perhaps every day. Shampoos are soapy or synthetic detergents in liquid, gel, lotion, or cream form and may have special uses. There are nondrying shampoos for normal hair, egg shampoos to add sheen to dry hair, and lemon shampoos to cut dyed their long hair and square beards black crimped and curled them with curling irons. imes wigs were worn. Persian nobles also their hair and beards and stained them red henna.

Primitive men, for example, ned bones, feathers, and other objects in their '. to impress the lowly and frighten the enemy i their rank and prowess. Noble rank among ancient Gauls was indicated by long hair, hid] Caesar made them cut off as a sign of sub-sion when he conquered them. The occupa-jal associations of hair are exemplified by the f.y wig of a British barrister and the lacquered, ick wig of a Japanese geisha. ; The religious significance of hair is seen in shaved heads of Christian and Buddhist s, indicating renunciation of the world, and l the single hair of his long Lock on the shaved heads of slim men, by which, they believed, Allah Jd pull them up to heaven.


austere republican Rome, men and women 1.y followed simple Greek styles, but under _ire the upper classes used curling irons the men dusted their hair with colored or gold dust. Women dyed their hair . with yellow soap or wore ebony wigs or made from the blond hair of captive bar-. Their hair was piled high in curls and , sometimes arranged on crescent-shaped rire frames. Throughout the ancient world hair-iessing and shaving were accomplished by domestic slaves or in public barbershops.
 
 

 

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