@hakai372:

Hakai
Hakai
Open In TikTok:
Region: ZA
Wednesday 09 October 2024 20:24:57 GMT
2454139
358307
2065
125155

Music

Download

Comments

parachoko5
BOY ALONE 💜🤧 :
Then the next min you see it on her status 😁💔
2024-10-10 08:39:58
3132
iam_luluszn
Lu🤍Lu🫶 :
Okay so he sent me this 😂🥹
2024-10-10 19:18:20
1183
jacktate09
jack tate :
risky repost
2025-02-18 21:14:41
0
abdul_raheem_munu_
they all love MUNU 😍❤️ :
After you see it on her story 😭
2024-10-11 12:50:59
463
michealfizzy
Micheal Fizzy :
Then she posts it on her status
2024-10-13 23:06:14
104
dani_lanii
Dani :
why do you guys like that? 🥹 I'm genuinely asking cuz I don't get it...
2024-12-27 15:31:49
6
her_eviltwin
HerEvilTwin🖤 :
now this is smth i can send to someone smh 😂
2024-10-10 01:26:24
433
nursechiomzy0
Nurse chi 💕💕💕 :
He sent me this ❤️😂😂
2024-10-16 14:27:34
38
To see more videos from user @hakai372, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

The so-called bills of mortality were the responsibility of the parish clerks to weekly list the causes of death in the City of London.  this one dates from February 1675, less than 10 years after the plague in the Great Fire of London. Once the age at the point of death was also known, this became an essential part of the actuarial science and the birth of life insurance.    Here are some of the causes and their explanation:  Ague: An illness involving fever and shivering, possibly malaria. Bloody flux: Dysentery Evil: The King’s evil or scrofula, a tubercular infection of the throat lymph glands.2 French pox: Venereal disease. Gravel: Kidney stones. Headmouldshot: This is when edges of the sutures of an infant’s skull overlap, resulting in convulsions and death. Possibly the root cause was birth injury, often the result of the mother’s rickets which would have led to deformity of the pelvis. Horseshoehead: Inflammation of the brain. Imposthume: A collection of pus in a cyst. Mortification: Death or decay of one part of a living body; gangrene or necrosis. Overlaid: The suffocation of infants when an adult falls asleep on top of them. Purples: Spots of a livid colour, which break out in malignant fevers. Possibly meningitis. Rising of the lights: Croup, primarily a disease of infants and children. Essentially this is any obstructive condition of the larynx or trachea (windpipe), characterised by a hoarse, barking cough and difficult breathing. Scald head: Diseases of the scalp characterised by pustules (the dried discharge of which forms scales) and by falling out of the hair. Strangury: Restricted urine flow. This could have included bladder stones. St Anthony’s fire: An acute infection typically with a skin rash, usually on any of the legs and toes, face, arms and fingers. Teeth: This usually meant children who died while their deciduous or ‘milk’ teeth were erupting. Tissick: Consumption, although this is also listed separately. Tympany: Obstructed flatulence that swells the body.  Credit to Naomi Clifford for this information from her website.   #the#thelondonspyv#davidharryl#billofmortalityus#causesofdeaths#tissickh#17thcenturyhistoryi#medicalhistoryd#londonhistoryd#londontourguidel#billsofmortalitya#bizarredeaths
The so-called bills of mortality were the responsibility of the parish clerks to weekly list the causes of death in the City of London. this one dates from February 1675, less than 10 years after the plague in the Great Fire of London. Once the age at the point of death was also known, this became an essential part of the actuarial science and the birth of life insurance. Here are some of the causes and their explanation: Ague: An illness involving fever and shivering, possibly malaria. Bloody flux: Dysentery Evil: The King’s evil or scrofula, a tubercular infection of the throat lymph glands.2 French pox: Venereal disease. Gravel: Kidney stones. Headmouldshot: This is when edges of the sutures of an infant’s skull overlap, resulting in convulsions and death. Possibly the root cause was birth injury, often the result of the mother’s rickets which would have led to deformity of the pelvis. Horseshoehead: Inflammation of the brain. Imposthume: A collection of pus in a cyst. Mortification: Death or decay of one part of a living body; gangrene or necrosis. Overlaid: The suffocation of infants when an adult falls asleep on top of them. Purples: Spots of a livid colour, which break out in malignant fevers. Possibly meningitis. Rising of the lights: Croup, primarily a disease of infants and children. Essentially this is any obstructive condition of the larynx or trachea (windpipe), characterised by a hoarse, barking cough and difficult breathing. Scald head: Diseases of the scalp characterised by pustules (the dried discharge of which forms scales) and by falling out of the hair. Strangury: Restricted urine flow. This could have included bladder stones. St Anthony’s fire: An acute infection typically with a skin rash, usually on any of the legs and toes, face, arms and fingers. Teeth: This usually meant children who died while their deciduous or ‘milk’ teeth were erupting. Tissick: Consumption, although this is also listed separately. Tympany: Obstructed flatulence that swells the body. Credit to Naomi Clifford for this information from her website. #the#thelondonspyv#davidharryl#billofmortalityus#causesofdeaths#tissickh#17thcenturyhistoryi#medicalhistoryd#londonhistoryd#londontourguidel#billsofmortalitya#bizarredeaths

About