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POLYNESIAN PARALYSIS

  • Polynesian paralysis
  • Polynesian paralysis is a term describing the relaxed lifestyle in the Hawaiian islands and the spirit of aloha reflecting the love of the Hawaiian people

    Polynesian paralysis

    Polynesian_paralysis

  • Lotus-eaters
  • Fictional people in Homer's Odyssey

    in their previous lives. Lotus eating has been used to describe Polynesian paralysis. Moly – another plant mentioned in the Odyssey whose identity has

    Lotus-eaters

    Lotus-eaters

    Lotus-eaters

  • Okolehao
  • Hawaiian alcoholic spirit made from the root of the ti plant

    lists a recipe similar to Vic's Scorpion and Kava Bowls named the Polynesian Paralysis, among others. The cocktail includes ʻōkolehao, orange juice, pineapple

    Okolehao

    Okolehao

    Okolehao

  • Man v. Food season 7
  • Season of television series

    its very best dishes. First, he headed to Da Kitchen to try the "Polynesian Paralysis", a loaded loco moco dish featuring a bed of fried rice (mixed with

    Man v. Food season 7

    Man_v._Food_season_7

  • Taravana
  • Decompression sickness caused by breath-hold diving

    Taravana, or Taravana syndrome is a disease originally recorded among Polynesian island natives and also found among others who habitually dive deep without

    Taravana

    Taravana

  • 2013–2014 Zika virus outbreaks in Oceania
  • Series of disease outbreaks in Oceania

    Subsequent cases were confirmed in the Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, and the Polynesian islands of American Samoa, Samoa, Tonga, and the Marshall Islands by 2015

    2013–2014 Zika virus outbreaks in Oceania

    2013–2014_Zika_virus_outbreaks_in_Oceania

  • Mātauranga Māori
  • Traditional knowledge of the Māori people

    ancestors of the Māori first settled in New Zealand (Aotearoa) from other Polynesian islands in the late 13th century CE and developed a distinctive culture

    Mātauranga Māori

    Mātauranga_Māori

  • Micropechis
  • Species of snake

    RNH (1975). Kalam Classification Of Reptiles And Fishes. Journal of the Polynesian Society 84(3): 267–308. O’Shea, Mark (1996). A Guide to the Snakes of

    Micropechis

    Micropechis

    Micropechis

  • Ciguatera fish poisoning
  • Foodborne illness

    sodium channel causes depolarization, which could sequentially cause paralysis, vasoconstriction, and changing the senses of hot and cold. Some medications

    Ciguatera fish poisoning

    Ciguatera_fish_poisoning

  • Ghost
  • Supernatural being originating in folklore

    the people of the Philippines. There was widespread belief in ghosts in Polynesian culture, some of which persists today. After death, a person's ghost normally

    Ghost

    Ghost

    Ghost

  • Spectrophilia
  • Type of sexual hallucination

    These accounts have been linked to the documented phenomenon of sleep paralysis, in which individuals experience hallucinations which often involve spectral

    Spectrophilia

    Spectrophilia

    Spectrophilia

  • Leprosy
  • Chronic disease caused by bacterial infection

    months. Damage to nerves may cause loss of muscle function, leading to paralysis. It may also lead to sensation abnormalities or numbness, leading to additional

    Leprosy

    Leprosy

    Leprosy

  • Jane Lahilahi
  • Hawaiian High chiefess (1813–1862)

    Press. p. 53. ISBN 1-58178-002-8. Kam 2022, pp. 112–114. "Died". The Polynesian. January 18, 1862. Retrieved June 26, 2013. Kam 2017, pp. 55, 72, 105

    Jane Lahilahi

    Jane_Lahilahi

  • Sophora microphylla
  • Species of flowering plant

    kōwhai. The word 'kōwhai' comes from koofai, a word used in an ancient Polynesian language for 'pod-bearing' plants. The word 'kōwhai' is also the Māori

    Sophora microphylla

    Sophora microphylla

    Sophora_microphylla

  • Victoria Kamāmalu
  • Hawaiian crown princess (1838–1866)

    Ethnological and Biological Analysis". Journal of the Polynesian Society. 102 (3). Wellington, NZ: Polynesian Society: 273–304. JSTOR 20706518. Scharnhorst,

    Victoria Kamāmalu

    Victoria Kamāmalu

    Victoria_Kamāmalu

  • Coriaria arborea
  • Species of plant endemic to New Zealand

    highly poisonous to humans and livestock. Poisonings can result in brain paralysis, convulsions, exhaustion, memory loss, or even death. C. arborea is a

    Coriaria arborea

    Coriaria arborea

    Coriaria_arborea

  • Circumcision
  • Removal of the human foreskin

    amongst Australian Aboriginal peoples, Polynesians, and Native Americans. For Aboriginal Australians and Polynesians, circumcision likely started as a blood

    Circumcision

    Circumcision

    Circumcision

  • Robert Towns
  • Australian politician

    the beche-de-mer trade around Bowen, Towns was instrumental in bringing Polynesian labour to Queensland. Towns paid many workers "in goods" amounting to

    Robert Towns

    Robert Towns

    Robert_Towns

  • GigaBash
  • 2022 video game

    time), restraining, freezing, dizziness, impalement, and electrocution (paralysis, with the last of the five sometimes erratically disrupting movement for

    GigaBash

    GigaBash

  • Pteropus
  • Genus of large bats

    pigs. Flying foxes are also threatened by disease such as tick paralysis. Tick paralysis affects the spectacled flying fox, and is responsible for an estimated

    Pteropus

    Pteropus

    Pteropus

  • Developing country
  • Nation with a relatively low living standard

    alternatives" (p. 18). "FPU has additional cascading effects… policy paralysis; governments may be reluctant to enforce existing environmental regulations

    Developing country

    Developing country

    Developing_country

  • Coral reef fish
  • Fish which live amongst or in close relation to coral reefs

    Bush, M; van Woesik, R (2009). "Did ciguatera prompt the late Holocene Polynesian voyages of discovery?". Journal of Biogeography. 36 (8): 1423–1432. doi:10

    Coral reef fish

    Coral reef fish

    Coral_reef_fish

  • Anglicanism
  • Major branch of Protestantism

    "believe a split is inevitable and preferable to continued infighting and paralysis." Some Anglicans opposed to various liberalising changes, in particular

    Anglicanism

    Anglicanism

  • Hungarian mythology
  • Vietnamese Oceania Aboriginal Australian Melanesian Micronesian Papuan Polynesian (Māori) North America Algonquian Abenaki Blackfoot Lenape Aztec Californian

    Hungarian mythology

    Hungarian mythology

    Hungarian_mythology

  • Diversity of fish
  • Fish species categorized by various characteristics

    Bush, M; van Woesik, R (2009). "Did ciguatera prompt the late Holocene Polynesian voyages of discovery?". Journal of Biogeography. 36 (8): 1423–1432. doi:10

    Diversity of fish

    Diversity of fish

    Diversity_of_fish

  • The Need for Roots
  • 1949 book by Simone Weil

    However, the amount of risk must be bearable; overwhelming fear produces paralysis rather than growth. The aim is to cultivate courage, not recklessness

    The Need for Roots

    The Need for Roots

    The_Need_for_Roots

  • Timeline of United States discoveries
  • are Prospect Island and New York Island. The island consists of nine Polynesian villages. Teraina was discovered by U.S. Captain Edmund Fanning, in the

    Timeline of United States discoveries

    Timeline of United States discoveries

    Timeline_of_United_States_discoveries

  • Surfing
  • Sport of riding waves

    they looked like the Tritons, or Neptunes, who paint upon the water. In Polynesian culture, surfing was an important activity. Modern surfing as we know

    Surfing

    Surfing

    Surfing

  • Brazilian mythology
  • Mythical myths of the Brazilian culture

    when people go to bed on a full stomach, and is associated with sleep paralysis. Romãozinho – an evil boy who bears the burden of immortality, cursed

    Brazilian mythology

    Brazilian_mythology

  • Zika virus
  • Species of flavivirus

    been suspected based on a blood-donor screening study during the French Polynesian Zika outbreak, in which 2.8% (42) of donors from November 2013 and February

    Zika virus

    Zika virus

    Zika_virus

  • Naihe
  • Royal Orator and Councilor

    Liliha. Naihe died in November or December 29, 1831, after a stroke of paralysis forty-four hours before. Lucy Goodale Thurston described Naihe as: "He

    Naihe

    Naihe

    Naihe

  • Paul Broca
  • French physician, anatomist and anthropologist (1824–1880)

    Louis Victor Leborgne, who had a 21-year progressive loss of speech and paralysis but not a loss of comprehension nor mental function. He was nicknamed

    Paul Broca

    Paul Broca

    Paul_Broca

  • Chumash traditional medicine
  • Traditional medicine practiced by the Chumash people

    validity of such claims remain in dispute. However, it is likely that Polynesian peoples had contact with both the Chinese and Indigenous peoples of California

    Chumash traditional medicine

    Chumash traditional medicine

    Chumash_traditional_medicine

  • The Blue Lagoon (1949 film)
  • 1949 film by Frank Launder

    Weiler, a reviewer from the New York Times, the film depicted a tranquil Polynesian utopia accurately but was lacking in excitement. Nonetheless, he acknowledged

    The Blue Lagoon (1949 film)

    The_Blue_Lagoon_(1949_film)

  • Deaths in March 2025
  • Dave Pelz, 85, American golf coach. Jean-Marius Raapoto, 82, French Polynesian educator, academic, and politician, member of the Assembly of French Polynesia

    Deaths in March 2025

    Deaths_in_March_2025

  • List of Days of Our Lives characters introduced in the 1970s
  • island in the Pacific Ocean, as Kim's family is allegedly related to Polynesian royalty. However, after meeting with Don Craig, the two of them determine

    List of Days of Our Lives characters introduced in the 1970s

    List_of_Days_of_Our_Lives_characters_introduced_in_the_1970s

  • Mulford B. Foster
  • American botanist (1888–1978)

    expressing its rhythm within the limits of its timing. Another painting, Polynesian took as its pivot the five points of a talkative Stapelia whose form symbolizes

    Mulford B. Foster

    Mulford B. Foster

    Mulford_B._Foster

  • Moeraki
  • Village in Otago, New Zealand

    places with the same name or versions of it, all along the path from the Polynesian homeland, Hawaiki. The south side of the Moeraki Peninsula has an Archaic

    Moeraki

    Moeraki

    Moeraki

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POLYNESIAN PARALYSIS

  • Mahori
  • n.

    One of the dark race inhabiting principally the islands of Eastern Polynesia. Also used adjectively.

  • Paralyze
  • v. t.

    To affect or strike with paralysis or palsy.

  • Paresis
  • n.

    Incomplete paralysis, affecting motion but not sensation.

  • Kava
  • n.

    A species of Macropiper (M. methysticum), the long pepper, from the root of which an intoxicating beverage is made by the Polynesians, by a process of mastication; also, the beverage itself.

  • Taboo
  • n.

    A total prohibition of intercourse with, use of, or approach to, a given person or thing under pain of death, -- an interdict of religious origin and authority, formerly common in the islands of Polynesia; interdiction.

  • Sandalwood
  • n.

    The highly perfumed yellowish heartwood of an East Indian and Polynesian tree (Santalum album), and of several other trees of the same genus, as the Hawaiian Santalum Freycinetianum and S. pyrularium, the Australian S. latifolium, etc. The name is extended to several other kinds of fragrant wood.

  • Pseudo-hyperthophic
  • a.

    Falsely hypertrophic; as, pseudo-hypertrophic paralysis, a variety of paralysis in which the muscles are apparently enlarged, but are really degenerated and replaced by fat.

  • Caladium
  • n.

    A genus of aroideous plants, of which some species are cultivated for their immense leaves (which are often curiously blotched with white and red), and others (in Polynesia) for food.

  • Tapa
  • n.

    A kind of cloth prepared by the Polynesians from the inner bark of the paper mulberry; -- sometimes called also kapa.

  • Micronesians
  • n. pl.

    A dark race inhabiting the Micronesian Islands. They are supposed to be a mixed race, derived from Polynesians and Papuans.

  • Sideration
  • n.

    The state of being siderated, or planet-struck; esp., blast in plants; also, a sudden and apparently causeless stroke of disease, as in apoplexy or paralysis.

  • Ptosis
  • n.

    Drooping of the upper eyelid, produced by paralysis of its levator muscle.

  • Trepidation
  • n.

    An involuntary trembling, sometimes an effect of paralysis, but usually caused by terror or fear; quaking; quivering.

  • Turanians
  • n. pl.

    An extensive division of mankind including the Mongols and allied races of Asia, together with the Malays and Polynesians.

  • Polynesians
  • n. pl.

    The race of men native in Polynesia.

  • Acacia
  • n.

    A genus of leguminous trees and shrubs. Nearly 300 species are Australian or Polynesian, and have terete or vertically compressed leaf stalks, instead of the bipinnate leaves of the much fewer species of America, Africa, etc. Very few are found in temperate climates.

  • Polynesian
  • a.

    Of or pertaining to Polynesia (the islands of the eastern and central Pacific), or to the Polynesians.

  • Urtication
  • n.

    The act or process of whipping or stinging with nettles; -- sometimes used in the treatment of paralysis.