SKU: 17534964836

Nothing Phone 3a Tempered Glass Camera Lens Protector | 2Pack

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Description

Nothing Phone 3a Tempered Glass Camera Lens Protector | 2PackGet complete coverage and protection for your Nothing Phone (3a) with the full cover Ringke Camera Glass protector. With camera coverage from the lens to the surrounding bezels, the Ringke Camera Glass offers unbeatable levels of protection for your phone with a clean, indiscernibly transparent style. The multi layer structure is topped off by a 9H hardness glass cover with an oleophobic coating for scratch resistant and fingerprint resistant

Get complete coverage and protection for your Nothing Phone (3a) with the full-cover Ringke Camera Glass protector. With camera coverage from the lens to the surrounding bezels, the Ringke Camera Glass offers unbeatable levels of protection for your phone with a clean, indiscernibly transparent style. The multi-layer structure is topped off by a 9H hardness glass cover with an oleophobic coating for scratch-resistant and fingerprint-resistant properties, preserving your device's pristine and flawless appearance. Embedded into the camera protector is a black ring that prevents light from bleeding into pictures and videos while the flash is active. Plus the glass's high transparency levels ensure your camera captures all the sharp details and vivid colors without filtering them to guarantee all your shots are of the best, undiluted quality. The Ringke Camera Glass protector is precisely manufactured with cutting-edge CNC machinery processing to ensure a clean, case-friendly fit without fail.

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SKU: 17534964836

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4.2 ★★★★★
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Verified Purchase
Blissfulsan
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Timely delivery.
Format: Paperback
I got the ordered item within the time. The book was in good shape
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2025
M
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Muni
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Worth it
Format: Paperback
Excellent, needed for class
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2021
A
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Amazon Customer
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Another fine Piece
As with Bowlbys' other works, this classic furthers the hypothesis of negative emotional influence on the continued development of humans as we integrate with our social environments. I liked it...in fact, liked all of Bowlbys' writings.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2013
F
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fatimah
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Five Stars
A MUST HAVE BOOK FOR anyone interested in parenting! or have kids.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 20, 2015
N
Ng Wai Yin
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 4
A Groundbreaking Classic on Young Child Development
Format: Paperback
This first volume of John Bowlby's trilogy on Attachment and Loss expands and builds upon an article he published in 1958 in the International Journal of Psycho-Analysis titled "The Nature of the Child's Tie to His Mother", which is perhaps a more telling title than that of the book itself. Attachment, as a technical term in behavioural biology, is first used in describing instinctive mother-following behaviours of young mammals and birds (first observed and reported in delightful accounts by the Austrian ethologist Konrad Lorenz in the 1930's). By comparing data collected during and after the Second World War by childcare workers and researchers in U.K. and North America, Bowlby found a striking common pattern of distressed behaviours among young children between the ages of one and three when separated from mother for an extended period: first in Protest, then Despair and finally Detachment - a psychopathological state when a child becomes socially uninitiated and withdrawn, even to his returning mother. Bowlby then postulates that physical proximity to a mother-figure is essential to a child's development of cognitive capacities, especially during a sensitive period around six months to two years after birth. Attachment behaviours, like those of young mammals and birds, are present in the human baby too. This has since led to a blossoming of research activities in development psychology and psychoanalysis, as well as neurophysiology recently, which supplies much fresh evidence about the young brain and its phenomenal maturing in the first two years. Attachment theory has since contributed significantly to understanding of our own selves, informed the age-old philosophical debate on nature or nurture, and brought our attention to fundamental issues in child-rearing such as sensitive periods of development, the difference between attachment (conducive to security) and dependence (symptomatic of insecurity), the distinction between anxiety from separation and fear of the unfamiliar, etc. This new edition is a timely reprint of a classic account of attachment theory as formulated by the originator. While primarily an academic work, with a few chapters deemed more for an academic jury (about Freud and instinctive behaviours, etc.), it is mostly very readable, and certainly captivating to those with access to young babies, of whose behaviours are given an enlightening perspective. This volume focuses on attachment, with subsequent volumes on its loss in temporary and permanent terms respectively.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2003

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