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    Kin·ship
    /ˈkinˌSHip/

    noun

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  3. Sep 28, 2019 · Updated on September 28, 2019. Kinship is the most universal and basic of all human relationships and is based on ties of blood, marriage, or adoption. There are two basic kinds of kinship ties: Those based on blood that trace descent. Those based on marriage, adoption, or other connections.

    • David Murray Schneider
    • 1984
  4. Through kinship systems, humans create meaning by interpreting social and biological relationships. Although kinship, like gender and age, is a universal concept in human societies (meaning that all societies have some means of defining kinship), the specific “rules” about who is related, and how closely, vary widely.

  5. May 28, 2023 · In the broadest sense, kinship can be defined as the recognition of relationships between individuals based on descent (real or imagined) and marriage (Holy, 1996). It involves the study of lineages and family units, delineating the cultural and societal rules that govern the interpersonal dynamics within these groups.

  6. The study of kinship is central to anthropology. It provides deep insights into human relationships and alliances, including those who can and cannot marry, mechanisms that are used to create families, and even the ways social and economic resources are dispersed within a group.

  7. kinship, System of social organization between people who are or are held to be biologically related or who are given the status of relatives by marriage, adoption, or other ritual. Kinship is the broad term for all the relationships that people are born into or create later in life that are considered binding in the eyes of society.

  8. noun. blood relationship. the state of having common characteristics or a common origin. kinship. A relation between two or more persons that is based on common ancestry (descent) or marriage (affinity).

  9. May 11, 2018 · Kinship systems are found to vary in different societies with respect to a number of characteristics: (1) the extent to which genealogical and affinal relationships are recognized for social purposes; (2) the ways in which relatives so recognized are classified or grouped in social categories; (3) the particular customs by which the behavior of ...

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