Dust
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Jackson, M
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2009
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Abstract
English or Anglo-Saxon in origin, the term dust initially referred simply to particles of earth or other matter small enough to be raised and carried by the wind. However, it rapidly acquired broader cultural connotations; thus, dust came to signify annihilation or a mark of repentance in religious observances, the ashes and mouldered remains of the dead in public and ecclesiastical imagination, or the perils posed by small and invisible elements of the cosmos.
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The Lancet
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373
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9662
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Subject
Respiratory diseases
Public health
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
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Jackson, M, Dust, The Lancet, 2009, 373 (9662), pp. 453