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安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
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- Alcohol and Drug Abuse Division - State of Hawaii, Department of Health
The Alcohol Drug Abuse Division (ADAD) is the primary and often sole source of public funds for substance abuse treatment ADAD’s treatment efforts are designed to promote a statewide, culturally appropriate, comprehensive system of services to meet the treatment and recovery needs of individuals and families
- Hadad - Wikipedia
The name Adad and various alternate forms (Dadu, Bir, Dadda) are often found in Assyrian king names Adad Iškur presents two aspects in hymns, incantations, and votive inscriptions
- Home - AADAP
Mickle’s House Opening a New Chapter of Healing for Mothers and Children AADAP celebrated a historic milestone on November 24th with the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for Mickle’s House, a new recovery home designed for mothers and their children
- Adad | Storm God, Ancient Near East, Thunder God | Britannica
Adad, weather god of the Babylonian and Assyrian pantheon The name Adad may have been brought into Mesopotamia toward the end of the 3rd millennium bc by Western (Amorite) Semites
- Home - American Drug and Alcohol Diagnostics, LLC.
ADAD specializes in workplace drug and alcohol testing programs with flexible onsite jobsite clinic options
- The Temple of Adad: The God of Storms - Babylonian Mythology
Adad, often referred to as the Storm God, holds a prominent place in Babylonian and Mesopotamian mythology Known for his association with storms, thunder, and rain, Adad was crucial for the agricultural society of Mesopotamia, where the fertility of the land heavily depended on seasonal rains
- Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses - Iškur Adad (god)
At around the same time, Semitic Hadda (Adad) was being worshipped as an important deity at Ebla and Mari Probably during the Old Akkadian period the cult of Adad spread across Babylonia, and he was syncretised with Iškur (Schwemer 2001a: 196-7; 2007: 135-8)
- Adad | Encyclopedia. com
ADAD is the Old Akkadian and Assyro-Babylonian name of the ancient Middle Eastern storm god, called Adda (Addu) or Hadda (Haddu) in northwest Semitic areas and known later as Hadad, especially among the Arameans
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