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The Emergency Shelter Grant Program
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Addiction: the Financial Problem
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Stop Drinking Alcohol.. Alcoholism vs. Alcohol Abuse
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OxyContin Addiction Is Creating Heroin Addicts
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Objective of Drug Rehab Centers
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What's Inside a Drug Rehab Center?
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Drug Rehab Center - Helps You to Start a New Life
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How to Choose a Drug Rehab Centre?
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Drug Rehabilitation in The Way You Want
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Inner Side of Drug Rehab Centers - Drugs Can Destroy Your Life
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Stop Drinking Alcohol Now ..Brain Damage and Alcohol Abuse
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Balancing Home and Career: Can we have it all?
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OxyContin Addiction - How Bad Can It Get, and How Likely Is It?
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..10 Tips
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Can You Do What An Olympic Athlete Does?
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..The Benefits of Quitting Drinking
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A Drug Addiction Treatment Center Can Keep Your Loved One Out of...
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Treatment of Drug Addiction
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Methods Used to Treat Drug Addiction
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Alcohol Rehabilitation-Withdrawal Symptoms
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Alcohol Rehabilitation-What is Addiction?
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How to help your Teen after Drug Rehab
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Advantages of Joining a Rehabilitation Centre
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Drug Rehab Program for Drug Addicted Persons
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Treating Alcohol Addiction is Possible
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How to Get Rid of Drug Addiction
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All You Need to Know About Drug Detoxification Program
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Alcohol Rehab Centers-An Overview
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Synergy Treatment - The most comfortable and effective Drug Reha...
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Hydronic Radiant Floor Heating: How Does it Work?
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..Quit Drinking Now
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Alcohol and Drug Addiction Treatment Q & A: How Do I Convince So...
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Is Suicide a Sin or an Act of Bravery?
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BIFR sanctions HMT rehabilitation scheme
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Stop Drinking Alcohol ..The Real Story
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A language is a dynamic set of sensory symbols of communication and the elements used to manipulate them. Language can also refer to the use of such systems as a general phenomenon. Strictly speaking, language is considered to be an exclusively human mode of communication. Although other animals make use of quite sophisticated communicative systems, sometimes casually referred to as animal language, none of these are known to make use of all of the properties that linguists use to define language.

In Western Philosophy, language has long been closely associated with reason, which is also a uniquely human way of using symbols. In Ancient Greek philosophical terminology, the same word, logos, was used as a term for both language or speech and reason, and the philosopher Thomas Hobbes used the English word "speech" so that it similarly could refer to reason, as will be discussed below. More commonly though, the English word "language", derived ultimately from lingua, Latin for tongue, typically refers only to expressions of reason which can be understood by other people, most obviously by speaking.

A set of commonly accepted signs (indices, icons or symbols) is only one feature of language; all languages must define (i) the structural relationships between these signs in a system of grammar, (ii) the context wherein the signs are used (pragmatics) and (iii) dependent on their context the content specifity, i.e. its meaning (semantics). Rules of grammar are one of the characteristics sometimes said to distinguish language from other forms of communication. They allow a finite set of signs to be manipulated to create a potentially infinite number of grammatical utterances.

Another property of language is that its symbols are arbitrary. Any concept or grammatical rule can be mapped onto a symbol. In other words, most languages make use of sound, but the combinations of sounds used do not have any necessary and inherent meaning – they are merely an agreed-upon convention to represent a certain thing by users of that language. For instance, there is nothing about the Spanish word nada itself that forces Spanish speakers to convey the idea of "nothing". Another set of sounds (for example, the English word nothing) could equally be used to represent the same concept, but all Spanish speakers have acquired or learned to correlate this meaning for this particular sound pattern. For Slovenian, Croatian, Serbian or Bosnian speakers on the other hand, nada means something else; it means "hope".

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