Knismesis and gargalesis

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Knismesis_and_gargalesis an entity of type: Country

Knismesis y gargalesis son los términos científicos acuñados en 1897 por los psicólogos Stanley Hall y para describir dos tipos de cosquillas.​ rdf:langString
Knismesis and gargalesis are the scientific terms, coined in 1897 by psychologists G. Stanley Hall and , used to describe the two types of tickling. Knismesis refers to the light, feather-like type of tickling. This type of tickling generally does not induce laughter and is often accompanied by an itching sensation. Gargalesis refers to harder, laughter-inducing tickling, and involves the repeated application of high pressure to sensitive areas. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Knismesis y gargalesis
rdf:langString Knismesis and gargalesis
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rdf:langString Knismesis y gargalesis son los términos científicos acuñados en 1897 por los psicólogos Stanley Hall y para describir dos tipos de cosquillas.​
rdf:langString Knismesis and gargalesis are the scientific terms, coined in 1897 by psychologists G. Stanley Hall and , used to describe the two types of tickling. Knismesis refers to the light, feather-like type of tickling. This type of tickling generally does not induce laughter and is often accompanied by an itching sensation. Gargalesis refers to harder, laughter-inducing tickling, and involves the repeated application of high pressure to sensitive areas. While the two terms are used in academic papers, they do not appear in many dictionaries and their origin is rarely declared. The term knismesis comes from the Ancient Greek κνησμός (knēsmós) meaning 'itching'. The term gargalesis stems from the Ancient Greek γαργαλίζω (gargalízō) meaning 'to tickle'. The suffix -esis is used to form nouns of action or process.
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