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- Q1065821 subject Q7009497.
- Q1065821 subject Q7270189.
- Q1065821 subject Q8519681.
- Q1065821 subject Q8894096.
- Q1065821 abstract "The expression dog days refers to the hot, sultry days of summer, originally in areas around the Mediterranean Sea, and as the expression fit, to other areas, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.The coincidence of very warm temperatures in the early civilizations in North Africa and the Near East with the rising, at sunrise (i.e., the heliacal rising), of Orion's dog, the dog star Sirius, led to the association of this phrase with these conditions, an association that traces to the Egyptians and appears in the ancient written poetic and other records of the Greeks (e.g., Hesiod and Aratus) and the later Romans (including Homer, in The Iliad).The expression is used in prose literature, poetry, and song and album titles.".
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q10538.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q112182.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q119681.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q12138.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q1313.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q1747689.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q180600.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q180671.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q189.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q213447.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q217360.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q225904.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q22647.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q2483577.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q2920661.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q32768.
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- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q39061.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q41746.
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- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q458656.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q51559.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q5686.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q626756.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q62879.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q6691.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q7009497.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q7270189.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q7601229.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q784710.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q8275.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q8519681.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q872281.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q8860.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q8894096.
- Q1065821 wikiPageWikiLink Q922457.
- Q1065821 comment "The expression dog days refers to the hot, sultry days of summer, originally in areas around the Mediterranean Sea, and as the expression fit, to other areas, especially in the Northern Hemisphere.The coincidence of very warm temperatures in the early civilizations in North Africa and the Near East with the rising, at sunrise (i.e., the heliacal rising), of Orion's dog, the dog star Sirius, led to the association of this phrase with these conditions, an association that traces to the Egyptians and appears in the ancient written poetic and other records of the Greeks (e.g., Hesiod and Aratus) and the later Romans (including Homer, in The Iliad).The expression is used in prose literature, poetry, and song and album titles.".
- Q1065821 label "Dog days".