Dontopedia

tears

From Dontopedia, the open, paraconsistent wiki. (Last updated 2026-06-12.)

tears has 3 facts recorded in Dontopedia across 3 references.

3 facts·2 predicates·3 sources
Maturity scale raw canonical shape-checked rule-derived certified

Inbound mentions (7)

Other subjects in dontopedia point AT this entity as a value. These are inverse relationships — e.g. "X motherOf this subject" — and answer questions the forward facts can't. Grouped by predicate.

protectsFromProtects From(2)

causedByCaused by(1)

dampnessSourceDampness Source(1)

preventsDamageTypePrevents Damage Type(1)

substituteForSubstitute for(1)

wouldDrownStageWould Drown Stage(1)

Other facts (2)

The long tail: predicates that appear too rarely to warrant their own section. Filter or scroll to find a specific one. Each row links to its source.

2 facts
PredicateValueRef
Rolled From Eyes ofSailors[1]
OriginatorThe Mother[3]

Timeline

Timeline axis is valid_time — when each source says the fact was true in the world, not when Dontopedia learned about it. Retracted rows are kept for provenance; coloured stripes indicate the context kind.

rolledFromEyesOflaura-corridor/loop8-beche-de-mer
ex:sailors
labelhamlet/66
tears
originatorcherokee/mooney-1900-anitsutsa-pleiades-and-pine
ex:the-mother

References (3)

3 references
  1. ctx:genes/laura-corridor/loop8-beche-de-mer
  2. [2]661 fact
    ctx:books/hamlet/66
    • full texttmpq4xwx_10_hamlet_66
      text/plain2 KBdoc:agent/tmpq4xwx_10_hamlet_66/d24ecdd2-3e61-4171-a311-0c63aef2f884
      Show excerpt
      QUEEN. There is a willow grows aslant a brook, That shows his hoary leaves in the glassy stream. There with fantastic garlands did she make Of crow-flowers, nettles, daisies, and long purples, That liberal shepherds give a grosser name
  3. ctx:seven-sisters/cherokee/mooney-1900-anitsutsa-pleiades-and-pine
    • full textc02
      text/plain2 KBdoc:agent/c02/061ea055-20cc-4230-9ffb-45b60033c70d
      Show excerpt
      [Source: Origin of the Pleiades and the Pine (Ani'tsutsa — The Boys) — tradition: cherokee; era: ancestral; recorded by James Mooney 1887–1888, published 1900. Excerpt 2/2. Provenance: https://www.nativehistoryassociation.org/pleiades.php]

See also

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