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### person:
Steward
* are attendants
- fiduciaries
- flight attendants
- officers
- the union's eyes, ears and voice in the workplace
* develop an eye for detecting the health of an ecosystem.
* get credit.
- heads
- nuclei
* Anyone can vote provided that he has a valid account on meta with a link to at least one user page, on a project where the editor participant, with at least 3 months participation to the project. Stewards can give sysop right on projects where there are no local bureaucrate.
* are always around if needed. I also firmly believe in separating permissions out amongst other regulars. Those two already have bureaucrat and checkuser.
* It works well on Meta, and will here too. There is no danger whatsoever, and this paranoia is ridiculous. Stewards are still able to intervene if there is an unlikely emergency. The fact stewards desysop historical accident. Other Mediawiki projects allow bureaucrats to desysop as default
Stressed individual
* are often in a permanent state of increased arousal.
* have higher levels of a hormone called cortical.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person:
Student
* access education.
* achieve success.
* acquire chances.
* acquire critical skills
- think skills
- life skills
- opportunity
* address issues.
* apply critical skills
- forces
- techniques
- theories
- various techniques
* approach lessons.
* are capable of better grades
- minds
* are capable of complete courses
- tests
- continue education
- farts
- further education
- homework
- studies
- talk
- thinks
- wash dishs
- engaged in activities
* are located in bars
- beds
- classrooms
- colleges
- desks
- libraries
- pubs
- schools
- universities
- part of classes
- people
* are trained in methods
- sample techniques
* are used for classrooms
- help
- teaching
- workers
* arrive at doors.
* ask instructors
- physiology instructors
* assist organizations
- researchers
- students
* attend american universities
- graduate schools
- middle schools
- private colleges
* become active learners
- information
* begin applications
- experiments
- investigations
- practical applications
* bring approaches
- different approaches
* build circuits
- electrical circuits
* build simple circuits
- series circuits
* can do activities.
* can have demonstrations
- ideas
* carry out activities
- repeat experiments
- scientific investigations
* choose activities
- answers
- creative activities
- options
- topics
* collect information
- samples
* come from families
- households
- income households
- regions
- into offices
* come to conclusions
- own conclusions
* compare results.
* compile information
- lists
* complete analyses
- behavior
- books
- designs
- diagrams
- garden designs
- lab experiments
- minor requirements
- observations
- simple tasks
* conduct experiments
* consider options.
* consume drinks
- energy drinks
* cover topics.
* create awareness
- balance meals
- daily schedules
- eat habits
- stories
* demonstrate effectiveness
- exceptional talent
* describe basic differences
- characters
- functions
- necessary steps
- trends
* desire good grades.
* determine behavior
- problems
- sources
* develop ability
- affection
- concepts
- intellectual skills
- powerful strategies
- senses
- social skills
- sophisticate strategies
* discover basic principles
- science
* discuss classifications
- factors
- notebooks
* display behavior
- knowledge
- unusual behavior
- cooperative activities
- paper
- presentation
- research paper
- science experiments
* draw initial conclusions
- logical conclusions
- pictures
* drink water.
* eat beans
- breakfasts
- food
- healthful food
- meat
* encounter in problems.
* engage in activities.
* engaged time is the time students spend actively engaged in learning.
* enjoy basic division facts
- breaks
* enter colleges
- grade levels
* establish patterns.
* examine cases
- complicate cases
- types
* exhibit interest.
* experience climates
- cold climates
- lack
- significant problems
* explain strategies.
* explore activities
- conditions
- earth science
- human impact
- strength
- ways
* express concern
* face difficulty.
* feel pressure
- responsibility
* find ability
- articles
- careers
- details
- materials
- notes
- procedures
- resources
- solutions
- successful careers
- such materials
* focus on concepts
* follow examples.
* form conclusions
* gain appreciation
- perspective
- practical experience
- professional experience
- valuable experience
* gather information
* generate energy.
* get activities
- assessments
- best values
- degrees
- growth
- hand experience
- into habits
- math
* give answers
- responses
* go on journeys
- to schools
* have backgrounds
- benefits
- biology
- characteristics
- conflict
- features
- financial resources
- frameworks
- further information
* have have opportunity
- identities
- importance
- jobs
- learn experience
- limits
- little importance
- misconception
- partners
- pets
* have positive experience
- prior experience
- professors
* have reward college experience
- similar characteristics
- specific information
- stomachs
* have strong interdisciplinary interest
- subjects
- teachers
- textbooks
- vertebrates
* help educators
* hold books
- hands
- positions
- specialist positions
* identify characters
- stages
* improve intelligence
- interpersonal intelligence
- quality
- technical skills
* include hypotheses
- initial hypotheses
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* increase knowledge
- potential
* indicate interest.
* interact with teachers.
* interpret ideas.
* investigate classifications
- meteorological phenomena
* invite friends.
* involve in activities.
* join sport teams
* know components
- energy resources
- individuals
- kinds
- matter
- motion
- multiplication
- plants
- scientific problems
- survival
- vector multiplication
* lack confidence
* lead busy life
* learn about animals
- atomic theories
- bats
- butterflies
- caterpillars
- conduction
- ecological concepts
- elephants
- gerbils
- herbivores
- kinetic energy
- lions
- properties
- sea turtle biology
- turtles
* learn basic lab techniques
- duties
- fascinate facts
- games
- genetics
- many fascinate facts
- necessary skills
* learn research methods
- roles
- specific concepts
- structure functions
- vocabulary
* leave classrooms.
* look at effects
- images
- for patterns
* love activities
* make choices
- comparison
- decisions
- educational choices
- group presentation
- measurements
- own decisions
- particular choices
- predictions
- progress
- several trips
- transitions
- weekend schedules
- word games
* may have difficulty
- little knowledge
* measure growth
- mass
* meet goals
- learn goals
* meet with instructors
* need adults
- attention
- effort
- extra effort
- guidance
- medical attention
- more challenge materials
- special attention
- to tests
* observe activities
- development
- human activities
* open doors.
* own dogs
* participate in games
- inquiries
- sports
* pass examinations.
* perform activities
- at levels
* plan careers
* play central roles
* practice early read skills
* prepare for examinations
* produce results
- similar results
* propose possible solutions
* provide answers
- correct answers
- documentation
- more details
* pursue advance degrees
- expertise
- graduate degrees
* raise hands.
* range in ages.
* reach goals
- professional goals
* read articles
- background information
- essays
- interactive stories
- mystery books
- statements
* realize fitness goals
- usefulness
* receive academic credit
- basic education
- certificates
- instruction
- numerous opportunity
* recognize activities
* record answers
- temperature
* recount stories.
* report development
* represent students.
* require assistance
- services
- special education services
* research environmental issues
* respond to lessons
* return homes.
* review approaches
* search for answers
* see actions
- charge
- condensation
- crystal planes
* see different crystal planes
* seek counsel
* serve as consultants.
* share observations
* should have background knowledge
* show improvement
* sit in chairs
- rock chairs
* solve problems.
* study animals
- aspects
- birds
- chemical reaction
- curricula
- diffraction patterns
- electromagnetic fields
- interaction
- limb development
- mammals
* take activities
* take field tests
- food chain activities
- great care
- independent study credit
- on roles
- photos
- places
- seats
* talk about aspects
- with parents
* test hypotheses
- work hypotheses
* throw balls.
* to apply academic knowledge.
* to apply basic principles
- scientific principles
* to apply scientific methods
* to become members
- thinkers
- build robots
* to complete activities
- assignments
- extension activities
* to develop awareness
- cognitive skills
* to discuss concepts
- consequences
- draw conclusions
- explain results
* to explore engineer principles
- own ideas
- possibility
- find answers
* to gain insight
- go homes
* to identify appropriate options
* to learn laboratory skills
- mathematical skills
- mechanical skills
- practical skills
- make observations
- meet requirements
* to participate in activities
- research activities
* to practice observation skills
- pursue careers
* to share knowledge
- thoughts
- study fields
* to take advantage
- understand principles
* to use critical skills
- write paragraphs
* understand actions
- atoms
- basic ideas
- different reality
- distinction
- diversity
- interconnectednesses
- ovens
- population size
* understand relative population size
- structures
- sunlight
* use artistic interpretations
- calculators
- cards
- classroom computers
- compact disks
- complete details
- cylinders
- databases
- dictionaries
- different techniques
- diffusion
- ecological knowledge
- english versions
- explanations
- flashlights
- literature
- pencils
- primary literature
- tables
- thumbs
- vocabulary lists
- white light
* utilize alternatives.
* view comparison.
* visit dress rooms
* want food
* will have ability
- enough background knowledge
- prior knowledge
* witness behavior
* work as assistants
- in communities
* work on computers
- string theories
- to rules
- under supervision
- with students
* write answers
- compositions
- descriptions
- important notes
+ Brentwood College School, The School Campus
* Brentwood has tennis courts, rugby fields, student houses, and classrooms. There is a special building for rowing boats, a gymnasium, a medical building, and other buildings. Students act, play music, and dance in the theatre
- School: Schools in Canada :: 1923 establishments
* Brentwood College School' is a boarding school for boys and girls that helps students get ready for university. Handbook of Canadian Boarding Schools'. This school is in a small town called Mill Bay on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada. The school has modern classrooms, a theatre, and science labs. The school is next to the ocean. Students study the ocean and can go sailing, rowing, canoeing, and kayaking
+ Cheating: Sociology
* Cheating' happens when someone breaks rules or lies. Cheating can be done in many ways. Some students cheat on a test by copying someone else's answers and writing secret notes. This is can get them kicked out of school. People who break the rules of a game are cheating. For example, if someone holds the ball when playing soccer, they are cheating.
+ Communication Studies: Communication :: Social sciences
* Communication Studies' is a college or university area of study involving the study of communication. Students learn about speech and different types of media.
* The national language of Singapore is Malay and the other official languages of Singapore are English, Mandarin and Tamil. English is the language of choice because it is the language that almost everyone in Singapore knows. It is the first language taught in schools and the language used by the government. Students are also taught their mother tongue language. This means that the Chinese will learn Mandarin and the Malays will learn Malay, and so on. Students can also choose to learn a third language in secondary school.
+ Community college, Students: Colleges and universities :: Types of schools
* Students enter community colleges to pursue their academics or receive a better job training. After graduating from a community college, some choose to transfer to a four-year university.
+ Extensive reading, First language and second language: Learning
* In 1988, Day and Bamford described extensive reading for learning a second or foreign language. Students read as much as possible. Learners should read many different kinds of writing about different subjects.
+ Fred Figglehorn, Movies, FЯED: The Movie: Movie characters :: YouTube :: Webcomics :: Children's movies :: Children's television series
* He is bullied by her guests for his poor social status at school and strange personality. After vomiting on Judy's party dress, Fred leaves the house. He is angry to find that Kevin has posted a video of him vomiting on Judy online, so he decides to throw a party of his own and not invite anybody to get revenge. In order to trick others into believing that he has had a spectacular house party, Fred invites Bertha to his house where they dress up mannequins in different outfits and play around. After Fred edits the video of the fake party, he posts it on the internet, where his schoolmates watch it and believe that Fred and Bertha actually had a really good party. Some students say they actually went to the party. Soon, Judy visits Fred's house and asks if the two may sing together, and Fred accepts the request.
+ Fuhua Secondary School, Uniform: Schools in Singapore
* The school blazer is bright red in colour. Students have to wear their tie with the blazer. The tie is blue in colour with yellow diagonal stripes.
+ Google Earth
* Teachers can use it to evaluate and strengthen students' visual literacy. Students can use it to develop a background for three-dimensional and cultural differences globally
- Science Fair: Google :: Competitions :: Science
* The 'Google Science Fair' is a yearly, online, world-wide science competition. It is sponsored by Google, Lego, CERN, National Geographic and Scientific American. The first competition took place in 2011. Students make an explanation for something, do an experiment and write down their results
+ Hampshire College, Program: Colleges and universities in Massachusetts :: Five Colleges, Incorporated
* Hampshire College describes itself as an experimenting college because it is always changing and improving how it does things, rather than doing the same thing as other colleges. Students usually do individual projects in order to move towards graduation. There is some required coursework, but it is not the main point of the school. Students also do not receive grades for completing their work. Instead, they get something called a 'narrative evaluation', which is a long written explanation of what they did right and what they did wrong. There are also no specific required classes for graduation, but students must take classes in different areas depending on where they are in their studies.
* They work with a committee of at least two faculty members. Many students choose a faculty committee whose members have the same interests as they do.
+ Hankuk Academy of Foreign Studies: Schools in South Korea :: 2004 establishments
* The school ground includes three classroom buildings named Pioneer Hall, Dream Hall, and Challenge Hall respectively and two dormitory buildings named Ace Hall. All students have to live in the dormitory throughout the school years.
+ Harvard University: Association of American Universities :: Collegiate Water Polo Association :: ECAC Hockey :: Ivy League
* Harvard is on the Charles River. Some students go to the Charles River for rowing. On the other side of the Charles River is the city of Boston. Boston's subway system has a stop at Harvard. Some of Harvard's graduate schools are in Boston, but most of Harvard's schools are in Cambridge. Together, these schools are Harvard University.
+ Hayfield University: Colleges and universities in Los Angeles, California
* Hayfield University' is a university in Los Angeles, California, United States offering academic degree programs designed to prepare women and men for professional service in music, business administration, education and Christian theology. Students can take classes outside of California and online.
+ Higher education, Role in society
* Students also learn to mix with people of different origins, and to grow as people. Richer students can study in a place far from their hometown, but kids from poor neighbourhoods may be unable to afford college at all without a scholarship of some kind.
+ Iyengar Yoga: Meditation :: Yoga
* B. K. S. Iyengar has created over 200 yoga poses. Students start with simple poses and move on to more complex ones.
+ Kanda University of International Studies, Buildings, Building7(Library, MULC): Colleges and universities in Japan
* Students can research books and materials easily by using computers.
* The third floor is cafe. Students can eat foods,and some dessert.
+ Korean International School of Hong Kong, Structure
* KIS has many facilities, like a tennis court, swimming pool, soft-surface playing fields, and a gymnasium. Students use the facilities for physical education classes and activities outside of classes. Higher grade students take a school trip to England.
+ Koreapas: Schools in South Korea :: Websites
* Koreapas' is an online homepage for Korea University students in South Korea. It provides information which is useful in school life. It was started in 2007 by person who named Park Jong Chan. There is news about school and lecture information. Students talk freely and share information. So, it is useful to register before the semester starts. You can find information about restaurants and flea markets too.
+ Lancaster University: Universities in the United Kingdom
* Lancaster University' is a British university in Lancaster, Lancashire, England. It consistently rated among the top universities in the United Kingdom for research and teaching. It is ranked in the top one percent of universities in the world. All students are a member of a college. There are eight undergraduate colleges and a ninth college for postgraduates.
+ Leaving Certificate: Qualifications
* The 'Leaving Certificate' is the final exam in the Republic of Ireland secondary school education system. Students have to do the Junior Certificate before they can take the Leaving Certificate. Students also have to take Maths and English. If they took Irish during the Junior Certificate, they also have to take Irish.
* Students have to take exams on at least six subjects. They can take either High or Ordinary level tests. In Irish and Maths, there is also a Foundation level. This is for people who have trouble with that subject.
+ Maine, Education, Public Schools
* This is a school district that has two or more towns into one school department with one high school and middle school. These towns do not have lone school boards, but instead have one central board governing the entire district. Students are forced to be at the central high school. Normally, a MSAD comprises one larger town and one or more smaller towns. The larger town has a high school and middle school, while the bordering towns have elementary schools as well, but no secondary schools. The elementary schools normally cut off after grade 5 or grade 6.
* Students can choose to go to a school in another district if the parents agree to pay the school.
+ Ohio State University, Campuses, Regional campuses: American Lacrosse Conference :: Association of American Universities :: Big Ten Conference :: Central Collegiate Hockey Association :: Colleges and universities in Ohio :: Columbus, Ohio :: ECAC Lacrosse :: Oak Ridge Associated Universities :: Western Collegiate Hockey Association
* The university also has several regional campuses and research facilities in Lima, Mansfield, Marion, and Newark. The school also has an Ohio State Agricultural Technical Institute. The first regional campus was in Newark, which was founded in 1957. Students there can get one of six bachelor degrees or two master degrees. The Mansfield campus has is in the Allegheny Plateau area, and it has 7 bachelor programs and 3 master programs. Marion's campus is closest to Columbus, and it has 5 bachelor programs and 2 master programs.
+ Optical mark recognition: Computer hardware :: Data input
* One of the most common uses of OMR is in multiple choice examinations. Students mark their answers on specially printed sheets using either a pencil or a special marker.
+ Physical education: Education by subject :: Sports
* Students do many different sports, exercises and activities using the body. Many types of physical fitness are involved.
+ Raffles Institution, Culture, Uniform
* All students wear white short-sleeved shirts. Secondary 1 and 2 students wear short pants. Secondary 3 and 4 students can wear long pants or short pants if they want. On Mondays and during important events, everyone must wear a tie until 1.30pm. Secondary 3 and 4 prefects wear black leather shoes.
+ Shatin Pui Ying College, Students in examinations: Schools in China
* All Form 1 new students are Band 1 students. All of the Form 3 students can study as Form 4 in the school. Students have good results in public examinations.
+ Shenandoah Valley Academy: Schools in the United States
* The school is run by the Adventist Church and has High School age boys and girls. Some students live on campus in the dorms. Other students come on school days as day students. SVA has three diploma programs. It has a performing arts department with five music groups. It has an athletics department which coordinates teams to play within the school, and to play other schools.
+ Showa Women's University, Departments, Undergraduate School, Faculty of Humanities & Culture
* Students study and compare history and culture between Japan and the rest of the world.
+ Special education
* Some students are very smart. These students are called gifted. They also have certain needs so they can succeed. These students do better with special teaching styles or different educational programs. The word 'special education' is used for students whose special needs stop them from learning the way normal people learn. Gifted education is handled separately.
+ Testing English as a foreign language, Types of exam, null, Cambridge exams: English language
* The Cambridge exams are very popular in Europe. The University of Cambridge ESOL makes these exams. There are five exams for general English. Students take these exams in many schools. Students can take the exams in England or in schools in many other countries.
+ Tornado drill: Safety
* Students take place in a tornado drill, lining up along an inside wall and covering their heads.
+ Visa, Types of visa: Travel :: Identification documents
* Students studying in Algeria, however, are issued tourist visas.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | student:
Alumnus
* Alumni also refers to a group of men or a group of women who attended a school
- groups of men and women
- refers to males and also is used when referring to a mixed group of males and females
* are graduates
Auditor
* are accountants
- business people
- people who are given permission to attend courses for a fee
- students
* have a key role to play in accounting for public spending.
### person | student | auditor:
Internal auditor
* are auditors.
* is an auditor
* play a key role in industry, nonprofit organizations, and government entities.
Bibliographer
* are scholars.
* manage library funds for the purchase of information resources.
Bibliophile
* are located in bookstores
- scholars
* tend toward a gloomy view of the progress of human civilization.
Collegian
* Many collegians bask in sunny, palm-fringed locales during winter breaks.
* are students.
* compete in various intramural athletic contests.<|endoftext|>### person | student | collegian:
College student
* Many college students admit that they sometimes drink to get drunk
- change roommates once or twice in their college careers
- engage in a dangerous form of alcohol consumption called binge drinking
- go for long periods of time without eating
* Most college students pride themselves on the small amounts of sleep that they get every night.
* Some college students drink alcohol
- because they think it relieves stress
- finish their academic careers never seeing the early morning sunlight.
* College' kind of school or university, a place where people go to learn skills for future jobs. Most college students go to college right after high school but others choose to go later in life. Most students are there because it will help them to earn more money and live better lives
* are a transient and ever-evolving body of young adults
- among the most likely age group to face unplanned pregnancies
- capable of further education
- citizens as well as members of the academic community
- five times more likely to become infected than healthy adults
* are located in college towns
- dorms
- fraternity houses
- more vulnerable to rape than any other age group
- particularly at risk for developing eating disorders
* eat food
- healthful food
* gain experience
- valuable experience
* report development.
* take places.
* will have difficulty.
Graduate student
* are collegians
- located in universities
- university students
- workers
* come into offices.
* have have success.
* learn techniques.
* open doors.
* participate in activities
- research activities
* play roles.
* share results.
* work on string theories
Undergraduate
* denotes a person pursuing a baccalaureate degree.
* refers to the first stage of studies at higher education level.<|endoftext|>### person | student | collegian | undergraduate:
Senior
* Many seniors develop alcohol dependence after retirement or loss of a loved one.
* abusing substances span all cultures and economic strata.
* are a population that politicians traditionally aim to win
- an energetic group of individuals interested in health and a renewed quality of life
* are located in high schools
- hospitals
- parks
- senior centers
* are one of the fastest growing age groups on the Internet
- population groups in the world
- the most dependent on prescription drugs of our nation's age groups
- undergraduates
- used for memory
* is an undergraduate
* play an important role in the lives of children as grandparents, aunts, uncles, and friends.
* represent the portion of the population that is the most dependent on prescription drugs.
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{
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}
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### person | student | collegian | undergraduate | underclassman:
Freshman
* Freshmen are high school graduates enrolling in college for the first time.
* are classes.
* is an underclassman
+ Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Structure: Colleges and universities in Japan :: Tokyo
* TMDU has three campuses. The closest station to the campus is Ichikawa Station. Freshmen learn liberal arts and sciences there. Located in the outskirts of Tokyo, Kounodai campus is in a rich natural environment. The closest station to the campuses is Ochanomizu Station. Upperclassmen learn their speciality there.
### person | student | collegian | undergraduate | underclassman | freshman:
College freshman
* College freshmen have higher risks for meningitis infection.
* More college freshmen oppose abortion, drink less, and are less likely to have casual sex.
University student
* are at an age when they are beginning to think more on their own
- students
- vulnerable to depression
* study physiology.
+ Fraternities and sororities, Joining
* University students line up to rush a sorority.
Current student
* complete behavior.
* play central roles
Exceptional student
* have interest.
* have strong interdisciplinary interest
High school student
* demonstrate exceptional talent
* to complete activities.
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"source": "generics_kb"
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### person | student:
Humanist
* Many humanists express one of two, apparently contradictory attitudes toward religion.
* Most Humanists are atheists or agnostics.
* Some humanists also differ from some atheists in their attitude to religion
- propose that a spirit is the next step in evolution
* also appreciate the happiness and inspiration contact with nature and animals can bring
- consider situational ethics
* are active around the world
- advocates
- by definition worldly
* are committed to democracy
- meaningfulness when selecting research topics
- concerned for the well being of all people, whatever their beliefs
- deeply concerned about moral issues, but from a non- religious viewpoint
- positive, gaining inspiration from a rich natural world, our lives and culture
- scholars
- the most positive of humans
* believe in the theory of evolution
- using reason and compassion to solve problems
- that all people, all citizens of Earth, exist as a part of nature
* believe that every person has a conscious choice on what they want to do
- value, that everyone counts
- life has a purpose and that every person has dignity and worth
- the meaning of life is to live a life of meaning
- there is one best way of solving engineering problems
* build their work on material that transcends the boundaries of culture and language.
* connect their personal lives with the life of society.
* consider human experience to be the only source of knowledge and ethics.
* demand a shared life in a shared world.
* emphasize morality a great deal.
* encourage critical examination of all ideas and no concepts are regarded as sacred.
* enthusiastically seek to remake the world in man's image.
* everywhere decry female genital mutilation, and rightly so.
* feel compassionate concern for the entire human family throughout the globe.
* focus on the goodness of people here and now
- upon potentials
* have no certainty of life by rejecting the sole regulator of principles and creation.
* hold great value in human nature and values.
* identify a second aspect of human distinctiveness as our creative capacity.
* look to scientific enquiry, reason and compassion for the solutions to human problems.
* make no claims to possess or have access to supposed transcendent knowledge.
* often criticize biology as an ideological purveyor of the gender binary.
* place their trust in basic human goodness, in human resourcefulness and in human courage.
* recognize their kinship with all living beings and fellow humans everywhere.
* reject supernatural, authoritarian, and anti-democratic beliefs and doctrines.
* see genetic engineering as detrimental to such ideals.
* share many goals with the feminist movement.
* take an optimistic view of human nature.
* tend to browse resources more than scientists
- center their work on named persons
- emphasize cognitive processes and the reality of being
* worship themselves.
### person | student | humanist:
Philologist
* Most philologists attest to the likelihood of such an origin for the world's languages.
* are humanists.
Secular humanist
* All secular humanists are utterly opposed to totalitarian systems like communism and fascism.
* Most secular humanists profess atheism.
* are people who practice secular humanism.
* have no morals.
* reject supernatural and authoritarian beliefs.
International student
* are students who hold student or other temporary visas.
* attend american universities
Many student
* attend schools.
* choose options.
* gain experience.
* have misconception.
* hold conception.
* make measurements.
* take subjects.
* understand size.
Medical student
* are adult learners who differ in their individual needs, interests, and maturity
- adults who learn new attitudes and skills by emulation of their faculty
- located in medical schools
- medics
* do presentation.
* work as assistants.
Middle school student
* experience energy.
* to develop skills.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
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### person | student:
Minority student
* pursue advance degrees
* to pursue careers.<|endoftext|>### person | student:
Musicologist
* Some musicologists believe that polyphony originated in Georgia before spreading to Europe
- maintain that salsa music and break dancing originated in the Bronx
* are scholars.
* study all kinds of music.
+ Musicology
* Musicologists study all kinds of music. They study the history of music and learn about all the composers and how they developed their ideas and learned from one another. They can do this by studying music scores, or by looking for historical documents which tell us about musicians from the past.
Pundit
* Most pundits believe that crime is caused by economic, social and psychological factors.
* everywhere regard the Internet as the second coming of the Industrial Revolution.
* have a propensity for naming things, particularly generations.
### person | student | pundit:
Polymath
* also like to play with computers, to make things.
* are initiates.
* especially like to write, which is the same as serious thinking.
* strive for the freedom to read many kinds of difficult books.<|endoftext|>### person | student | scholastic:
Purist
* Some purists choose to fast by drinking only water
- differentiate between cityscapes, waterscapes and landscapes
* are pedants
- people
* argue gas burners don t add the same level of flavour as charcoal.
* believe there's some virtue in being unknown and living in poverty.
* can use sea salt, baking soda, or epsom salts to bathe their troubles away.
* object to using anything but the natural products of traditional winemaking.
* prefer bone-in hams, as the bone adds flavor and is useful later for stock.
School student
* demonstrate exceptional talent
* experience energy.
* may have knowledge
- little knowledge
* to complete activities
- develop skills<|endoftext|>### person | student:
Theologian
* Many theologians espouse the ordination of women.
* Some theologians are scholars who encourage free thinking
- divide sin into sins of commission and sins of omission
- promote feminist, black, liberation, or homosexual theology
* are as important to the universities as chemists
- philosophers
* discuss differing interpretations of creation and the Bible.
* divide necessity into absolute and moral.
* handle the concept of death more easily, as life's natural end.
* recognize the necessity of divine grace and perfection.
* say that prayer is the monk's mirror.
* try to express what they have learned as the fruit of study and prayer.
* use the term apologetics for the defense of the truth of Scripture.
* worldwide study the original language of their scriptures.
+ Acts of the Apostles: New Testament books
* The traditional view is that both the two books were written 'c.' 60 by a companion of Paul named Luke. Many theologians still think so. But some think the books were written by an unknown author at a later date, sometime between 80 and 150.
### person | student | theologian:
Modern theologian
* Many modern theologians maintain that goats are only goats by their own choice.
* Some modern theologians consider purgatory the last step of divine healing.
* reject the Stoic indifference to pain and grief.
Preterist
* are theologians.
* criticize what they call traditional views of interpreting Bible prophecy.
Underachiever
* are more likely to live on welfare and get into trouble with the law
- students
* avoid responsibility, blaming everyone else and making excuses for their failures.
|
{
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### person:
Substance abuser
* Many substance abusers have horrendous trauma in their lives.
* Most substance abusers describe their own openness to treatment as hitting bottom.
* are five times more likely to injure themselves
- more likely to smoke cigarettes than the general population
- two and a half times more likely to be absent eight or more days a year
* face substantial barriers to employability.
* have different needs than demented patients
- four times the absentee rate of non-abusers
- three hundred percent higher medical costs and benefits
Such individual
* receive adequate pain management
* spend dollars.<|endoftext|>### person:
Sufferer
* Many sufferers are overweight and dieting
- can develop emotional problems because of their condition
- live to a ripe old age, battling their psoriasis every year of their lives
- rely on sleeping pills to doze off at night
* Most sufferers usually find that their pain decreases when they gain increased flexibility.
* Some sufferers are sleepless every night for months or years.
* Some sufferers experience chronic fear, a feeling of overall discomfort rather than panic
- the urge to urinate constantly even after the bladder is empty
- have children whose basic needs seem endless
* are the people of the two nations.
* base their self-esteem mostly or solely on their weight, body shape, and eating behaviour.
* can also infect others through close contact and poor personal hygiene.
* describe the levels of pain they experience.
* have detectable changes in certain hormones that control sleep, appetite and stress.
* jerk their legs during sleep, which causes multiple sleep interruptions.
* often experience a decrease or increase in appetite resulting in weight loss or gain
- lack of trust in others, low self-esteem, and depression
- fall asleep during the day even whilst working or driving
+ Jet lag: Health problems
* Jet lag can have several symptoms. It usually takes the form of fatigue and insomnia. Also, headache, depression, even nausea may strike people. Sufferers can use caffeine or sleeping pills as a way of treatment. The hormone melatonin is said to help people sleep. Also, doing things like changing sleeping patterns several days before departure may help people adjust to the new time zone.
### person | sufferer:
Allergy sufferer
* Most allergy sufferers attribute their discomfort to plant pollen
- experience fairly mild reactions to a disagreeable food
* Some allergy sufferers are also allergic to the saliva.
Anorectic
* Many anorectics know they look skeletal and emaciated.
* are medicine.
* are, quite literally, starving themselves to death.
* invariably see themselves as overweight, even though they are in fact emaciated.
* often feel they lack control over their lives
- insist they feel fine, even though they look very thin, sallow, and waxy
- see dieting as a form of personal control
|
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### person | sufferer:
Anorexic
* Many anorexics also exercise to excess in an attempt to burn calories
- are deeply depressed and some display suicidal tendencies
- continue to show symptoms of the disorder even after they are out of the hospital
- develop osteoporosis at a very young age as a result
- die before they become emaciated because of upset body functions
- exercise vigorously or use slimming pills to keep their weight as low as possible
- suffer from errors in thinking or perceptions
* Most anorexics are female
- claim they feel overweight even when emaciated
- deny that they are ill and are usually brought to treatment by a family member
* Some anorexics come from achievement-oriented families that stress physical fitness and dieting
- develop anorexia during their growing period by failing to gain weight properly
* are always thin and easy to spot
- more likely to diet excessively and deprive themselves of food
- often thin to the point of emaciation, but are afraid to gain weight
- sensitive to society's influence and subsequent approval and disapproval
- typically more isolated and bulimics more impulsive
- unresponsive to the effects of food
- usually perfectionists and tend to have low self-esteem
* become isolated.
* begin to develop a distorted view of their appearance.
* can literally starve themselves to death.
* consider themselves to be fat, no matter what their actual weight is.
* continue to believe that they are over-weight.
* develop emaciated bodies, dry or yellowish skin, and abnormally low blood pressure.
* die from starvation, malnutrition, cardiac arrest, or suicide.
* eat so little that they become dangerously thin
- very little to nothing in order to control their weight
* grow a fine layer of hair all over as the body naturally struggles to retain heat.
* have a distorted body image
- self-image
- an extremely distorted body image and excessive fears about putting on weight
* have an intense fear of becoming fat
- obese, and have an unrealistic, negative body image
* lack self-esteem and feel they are making themselves more attractive.
* like to be alone, and isolate themselves from others.
* often deny that they have a problem
- have a distorted view of their appearance
* pick at their food and cut it into small pieces on their plate.
* pursue thinness through restrictive dieting and excessive exercise.
* see the world as black and white, and no shades of gray.
* severely restrict their eating.
* starve themselves while bulimics engage in a destructive cycle of starving and binging
- themselves, sometimes to the point of death
* tend to avoid sexual activity
- be perfectionists
- toward extreme perfectionism
* think they are fat even when their rib bones stick out.
* usually strive for perfection
- think they're fat even though they're very thin
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### person | sufferer:
Bulimic
* Many bulimics engage in excessive exercise and exhibit concerns about weight and shape.
* Many bulimics have normal weight
- poor teeth due to regular vomiting
- report that they have trouble feeling full, unless they eat large amounts of food
* Most bulimics are female, and bulimia usually starts in the teens or early twenties.
* Most bulimics follow bingeing with self-induced vomiting
- the binge by self-induced vomiting
- gain weight over time
- have to be treated with antidepressants
- report feelings of shame and develop secretive behaviors to hide their habit
* Some bulimics also purge after a binge by fasting for days or by exercising for hours
- have a telltale scar on the first two knuckles of their hand from inducing vomiting
- lose weight progressively, alternating between binges and food restriction
* also consume large amounts of food, but their bingeing is followed by purging
- diet and exercise excessively to counteract the effects of bingeing
* always purge by vomiting.
* are ashamed of their eating behavior and consequently hide it from others
- different, and are more likely to binge on food after a period of dieting
- frequently depressed, especially after an eating binge
- susceptible to throat cancer and hemorrhaging from the repeated vomiting
- usually of average or above average weight
* believe that self-worht requires requires being thin.
* can damage their esophagus, gums, teeth and kidneys from vomiting so frequently
- develop severe esophageal problems because of the vomiting and they can develop ulcers
- experience radical fluctuations in weight
* commonly exhibit multiple drug use disorders and have high rates of alcoholism.
* derive comfort from food.
* differ from anorexics in that they usually maintain a steady body weight.
* eat large amounts of food in short periods of time.
* feel a lack of control over eating behavior and often use laxatives and diuretics.
* have a morbid fear of becoming obese
- an obsession with weight, food and eating
* learn to eat smaller meals, and ward off purging a little longer each day.
* often abuse diet pills, laxatives and diuretics
- binge to drown out feelings of anger, pain, guilt or trauma
- disappear to the bathroom after meals or snacks
- experience a feeling of loss of control during binges
* often have emotion regulation problems
- low self-worth and have a lot of guilt about their condition
- use and abuse drugs and have high rates of alcoholism
* tend to base their self-esteem on appearance and they generally have low self concepts.
* tend to be closet eaters
- extremely thin
- of normal weight to slightly overweight
- binge on junk food
- experience poor impulse control
* turn to food in an attempt to cope with life stresses.
* understand that they have a problem with food, they just are unable to control it.
* usually have low self-esteem and feel very insecure
- maintain their normal body weigh and are very outgoing people<|endoftext|>### person | sufferer | depressive:
Melancholic
* can be creative in artistic areas such as poetry and music.
+ Four temperaments, Personalities, Melancholy: Psychology :: Human behavior
* A melancholic or melancholy person is a thinker and perfectionist. They tend to prefer to spend time alone instead of being in social situations. They can beome depressed because of their perfectionist traits. They might suffer in silence and not complain. They are independent and able to do things for themselves. Melancholics can be creative in artistic areas such as poetry and music.
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### person | sufferer:
Diabetic
* All diabetics demonstrate absolute or relative insulin deficiency
- know that daily aerobic exercise helps control blood sugar and improves circulation
* Many Diabetics are able to control the disease with diet and exercise.
* Many diabetics actually live healthier after the diagnosis than they did before
- are overweight
- avoid alcoholic beverages to a large extent
- benefit from well-planned exercise programs
- develop cortical cataracts
- do well with the standard low fat high carbohydrate diet
- go through life with few if any complications from their diabetes
* Many diabetics have a low education level with below average reading skills
- episodes of severe hypoglycemia, dangerously low blood sugar
- high blood sugar levels for a period of time before diabetes is discovered
- only minimal education about their disease
- improve when put on vitamin, mineral, and herbal programs
- keep a written record of their blood sugars
- live long lives in good health
* Many diabetics take cholesterol drugs to help counter the high risk of coronary artery disease
- pills, but they can cause birth defects, so they have to take insulin
* Most diabetics are deficient in vitamins and minerals, including magnesium
- on limited-sugar diets
* Most diabetics can eat anything, as long as the portions are controlled
- travel extensively overseas if they adhere to several common sense principles
- consume very little fat they've been conditioned to fear it
- have hyperglycemia, an elevated glucose level
- still use a needle and syringe to inject insulin
* Some diabetics can control their blood sugar with pills or insulin injections
- sugar levels with a restricted diet
- produce no insulin and have to inject insulin into themselves
- require insulin for daily control of their diabetes
- take one shot a day others take two to four shots of insulin a day
* also experience greater protein glycation than nondiabetics
- find it invaluable in helping to prevent foot infections
* also have an increased incidence of peripheral vascular disease
- coexisting circulatory impairment, which delays healing
- to limit sugar and monitor their carbohydrate intake
- suffer from a greater than normal rate of heart attacks and stroke
- tend to have low Magnesium levels
* are a greater risk of listeriosis, osteomyelitis, infection in a prosthetic joint, etc
- higher risk of having glaucoma
* are also at a higher risk for cataracts and glaucoma
- higher risk for infection of ulcers
- increased risk for renal failure, especially if they have high blood pressure
- risk for vascular disease such as heart attacks and strokes
- more susceptible to gum disease
- prone to develop cataracts at a younger age than non-diabetics
* are at a much higher risk for heart attack and stroke
- greater risk of retinography, glaucoma, and various types of neuropathy
- higher risk for developing peripheral vascular disease
- increased risk of heart disease and have increased oxidative stress
- particularly high risk for strokes and heart attacks
* are at risk for developing a Pseudomonas osteomyelitis of the temporal bone
- heart disease because diabetes causes damage to blood vessels
- dynamic, contributing members of society
- humans
- insulin deficient
- just normal people that happen to have to take shots to stay alive
* are more at risk from heart problems, disabling eye conditions and circulation problems
- likely to get postoperative wound infections
* are more prone to develop infections in general
- developing ulcers, or common sores, than non-diabetics
- skin infections
* are much less likely to suffer serious effects like heart disease, blindness and stroke
- slower to heal that someone without diabetes
- often zinc deficient
- particularly prone to developing bladder infections
- potential beneficiaries, but there are many others
* are prone to dehydration and have a blunted thirst mechanism
- get infections, both of the lower and upper urinary tract
- infection, and an infected, stubbed toe can lead to severe complications
- infections, particularly pyelonephritis
- symptoms from the complications due to arterial blockage discussed above
- subject to a particularly severe and destructive fungal orbital cellulitis
- susceptible to vascular disease, loss of sensation and infections of the feet
- the bread and butter of many practices
- three to seven times more at risk for heart attack
* are twenty-five times more prone to blindness than people without the disease
* are two to four times more likely to get heart disease than nondiabetics
- likely to have a stroke or heart attack later in life
- likely to have heart disease or suffer a stroke
- very receptive to any technology that makes life simpler and cheaper
* benefit the most from lowering blood pressure aggressively.
* can also monitor ketone levels in the urine with test strips
- be at risk from the effects of both the condition and the methods of controlling it
- benefit from high-fiber intake as well
- cope with stress in several different ways
- defend themselves from complications by keeping their glucose levels under control
- die in a matter of hours if their blood-sugar levels go too low or too high
- directly influence the outcome of their disease
* can eat anything a non-diabetic can eat
- sugary foods, but the rule is moderation
- watermelon in small amounts, just like any fruit
- whatever they want, as long as they make certain allowances
- effectively control blood sugar levels through various methods
* can have all kinds of food
- slower than normal bowel transit
- two fruit portions a day
- heal themselves through harmonisation process
- inject their insulin doses with less discomfort by using a needle-free injector
* can lead full, healthy productive lives
- normal lives
- live a healthy life by actively participating and managing their disease
- never touch alcohol
- really get into trouble with juice
- see higher blood sugars for a few days after a corticosteroid injection
- t exercise
- use humor to make a situation tolerable
* check their blood sugar levels and receive their insulin.
* commonly use sweeteners to keep their blood sugar in check.
* cope with their disease in a variety of ways.
* develop circulatory problems in the lower extremities.
* die for lack of insulin.
* eat anything as long as it's sugar free
- the same foods as anyone else
* exhibit an increase in glycosylation which can lead to atherosclerosis.
* get frozen shoulder more than non-diabetics
- heart and blood vessel disease sooner than anyone else in our society
- treatment from their doctors
* go through continuous circles.
* handle fats or lipids in the blood differently than non-diabetics.
* have a hard life at best
- higher risk for stroke
- problem taking many over the counter medications
* have an inability to bring glucose in from the blood to the cells
- increased incidence of depression
* have an increased risk of coronary artery disease
- developing periodontal disease
- eye disease
- difficulty in regulating their body's store of sugar
- extra concerns about choosing the best foods for good health
- high levels of glucose or sugar in their blood
- poor sugar metabolism, but also have poor fat metabolism, as well
- problems with carborhydrates
* have to maintain their 'carb count' to control their sugar levels
- worry about their feet because diabetes hurts feet in three ways
- trouble controlling blood sugar and fats naturally
* however have a poor prognosis.
* lack the capacity to produce sufficient insulin for glucose absorption.
* lose magnesium through the kidneys.
* occasionally experience hypoglycemic attacks following excessive injections of insulin.
* often alter their insulin doses to adjust for exercise and sports
- have foot problems due to the loss of nerve endings in their feet
- suffer from acidosis
* process it through the gut without involving insulin.
* rely on the MT to analyze their blood glucoses.
* respond to almost the same health regimen that helps heart patients recover.
* run a higher risk of UTIs because their immune systems are suppressed.
* suffer more frequently than the general population with thrush.
* take a long time to recover from cuts and bruises as well
- insulin derived from pigs
- three per day
* tend to develop yeast infections because yeast thrives in a high sugar environment
- get cataracts early, as do people on long term cortisone treatment
- have more advanced, extensive atherosclerosis
* typically have high glucose levels
- suffer chronic thirst
* use discretion if taking honey orally
- imagery to lower their blood sugar level
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### person | sufferer | diabetic:
Diabetic ketoacidosis
* can occur in any patient with insulin-dependent diabetes.
* is another condition to be aware of
- appearance of large amounts of glucose in urine along with ketone bodies
* serious, life-threatening complication of high blood sugar.
Epileptic
* Many epileptics are prone to dreams which they consider reality
- can control seizures with medication or surgery
- carry cards or bracelets which identify their condition
* have normal intelligence.
* sometimes get auras of strange odors just before a seizure.
Insomniac
* Many insomniacs respond well to the sleep inducing effects of Niacin.
* Most insomniacs are too anxious to be sleepy in spite of their short nightly sleep time.
* have twice as many car accidents as non-insomniacs.
* tend to spend too many hours in bed, which is maladaptive.
Lunatic
* are bands
- people
- the last people that actually believe in love
* typically exhibit warped personalities and abnormal behavior.
### person | sufferer | maniac:
Pyromaniac
* Most pyromaniacs are male
- men
* are lunatics
- people compelled to light fires
* exhibit a severe inability to relate normally to other people
- severe deviations from normal behavior
* tend to plan in advance to start fires.<|endoftext|>### person | sufferer:
Migraine sufferer
* Many migraine sufferers are very sensitive to light, especially to glare
- claim that the weather can precipitate one of their blinding headaches
- identify chocolate as a trigger
* Most migraine sufferers can avoid or relieve pain through various approaches and treatments
- feel nauseous and some vomit during an attack
* Most migraine sufferers have a family history of migraine
- their first episode as a teenager
* Some migraine sufferers can actually predict their headaches by changes in the weather
- claim that food additives provoke the headaches
- experience a distinct neurologic warning prior to developing headaches
- feel nauseous or vomit during an attack
- find that maintaining a regular eating schedule helps
- report that headaches begin after a stressful situation has passed
- require medication to prevent migraine from developing
* are familiar with the array of drugs available to fight their attacks
- high utilizers of health care
- likely to respond well to adequate diet revision
- more females than males
* have abnormally excitable neurons in the brain.
* know all too well the devastating effects headaches can have on their lives.
* tend to be perfectionists, so they often are very busy people.
Neurotic
* are basically selfish with low social interest
- people who use their imaginations in reverse
* build castles in the air
- sky
* can be perfectly sane.
* think that if they suffer torment they expiate guilt.
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### person | sufferer | psycho:
Schizophrenic
* Many schizophrenics have a sweet odor on their breath, also the result of consuming sugar
- spontaneously express themselves through art
- suffer from psychosis, and an inability to distinguish reality and imagination
* Most schizophrenics are also addicted to cigarettes
- exhibit a split between various ideas and emotions
- respond to medication and drug therapy
* Some schizophrenics are incapable of living in an open society
- have abnormalities of left or right brain functioning
- withdraw from their family and friends
* account for half the population in psychiatric hospitals.
* also lose cognitive ability, retreating into their own worlds
- suffer from delusions - false or irrational beliefs
* always look younger than they are.
* are psychotics.
* characteristically have auditory hallucinations.
* display a wide array of symptoms.
* frequently experience delusions where they believe themselves to be a famous person.
* go to great lengths to avoid taking medication.
* have a predominance of painful emotions
- delusions and hallucinations
- multiple personalities
* occupy more mental hospital beds than patients with any other single diagnosis.
* often become withdrawn and apathetic
- have trouble distinguishing external events from self-generated ones
- suffer disturbances in mood and behavior
* react to the same stresses as other humans, but with a stronger and quicker reaction.
* replicate that of infant s brain during trauma.
* show spatial working memory deficits
- symptoms their whole life
* take up more psychiatric hospital beds than all other disorders combined.
* use brain structures they used when traumatized as infants.
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### person | sufferer:
Psychopath
* Most psychopaths end up in prison, instead of psychiatric hospitals
- have superior language ability
* PSychopaths seem proud of their ability to lie.
* are a high risk population
- adept at manipulating and exploiting others
- also part of the human condition
- arrogant people who believe they are superior human beings
- considered to have a severe form of antisocial personality disorder
- devoid of the normal human emotions of compassion, guilt and remorse
- known to mimic emotions and feelings as a manipulation technique
- people who appear to have no moral conscious
- skilled liars who experience no remorse for their antisocial behavior
- truly devoid of love and the ability to feel guilt
- unable to empathize with the pain of their victims
- unemotional
* certainly have problems with attachment.
* frequently switch careers, change relationships, or relocate.
* have a large range of behaviors
- significant negative impact on individuals and on society
- no remorse, and lack human empathy
* kill for no reason
- people for no reason
* often make successful businessmen or world leaders
- show other antisocial behaviour as well, including sadism, violence and deception
* view people as little more than objects to be used for their own gratification.
+ Psychopathy: Personality disorders
* Psychopathy' is a mental illness. It is generally seen as a type of antisocial personality disorder. Psychopaths are unemotional. They do not care about the emotions or rights of others. They show almost no empathy, and do not try to conform to social norms. They lack a conscience and do not feel guilt. Many psychopaths are charming and often manage to have superficial ties with other people, which they use to manipulate people for their own benefit. Psychopaths often show other antisocial behaviour as well, including sadism, violence and deception.
* Psychopaths are unemotional. They do not care about the emotions or rights of others. They show almost no empathy, and do not try to conform to social norms. They lack a conscience and do not feel guilt. Many psychopaths are charming and often manage to have superficial ties with other people, which they use to manipulate people for their own benefit. Psychopaths often show other antisocial behaviour as well, including sadism, violence and deception. They are very selfish and discard people whom they have no further use for. They tend to have many children by many partners.
Psychotic
* are frequently glib and loquacious and liable to say anything.
* have frequent delusions, which affect any decision-making.
* search for unwilling partners.
* usually have a past history of sexual crimes such as rape or incest
- require treatment in a mental hospital<|endoftext|>### person | sufferer:
Sociopath
* approach interpersonal relationships as an opportunity to exploit and manipulate.
* are expert at dumping goods on unsuspecting buyers at high prices
- fearless, guiltless and ruthless
- incapable of experiencing guilt or shame for their actions
- manipulative
- neurotics
- professional liars
* can ask themselves if they are one
- be criminals
* exhibit abnormally spontaneous and daring behavior
- poor impulse control
* have a hard time dealing with criticism
- low tolerance for boredom
- almost no friends, but many acquaintances
Suicidal individual
* All suicidal individuals are mentally ill, and suicide always is the act of a psychotic person.
* are afraid to get help for fear of adding to their pain.
* feel that they have lost control.
* have a right to acknowledgement of their pain
- severe psychological pain
- the right to be seen as wanting to be helped
* manifest various chemical imbalances.
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### person:
Sultan
* Some sultans become men
- hold hands
- mention wives
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles<|endoftext|>### person:
Supplier
* are businesspersons
- relationships
- the people who provide the goods and services
* express interest.
* have markets
- material specifications
- products
* help business.
- body substances
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- legs
- personality
* list of suppliers of micro RC equipment.
* pay attention.
* produce products.
* provide products
- recommendations
- values
* specialize in plant care products
* submit samples.
* to provide solutions.
* use techniques.
+ Pricing, Type of market, Polypoly: Microeconomics
* Many suppliers are compared to many consumers. You also call this market form competitive market.
### person | supplier | distributor:
Middleman
* Middlemen exist to promote the value of trade and hence increase the amount of value created.
* are people.
Retail chain
* Some retail chains are large enough to underwrite sponsorships of women's sports.
* is chain.
Retailer
* Some retailers make more that half of their income during the holiday season.
* are distributors
- important to the health of the economy
- merchants
- vendors of products to consumers
* play an important role in getting products from producers to consumers.
* specialize in the selling of products.
Suppressor
* Some suppressors also have circuit breakers or fuses to protect circuits from normal overload
- have both visual and audible alarms
* are electrical devices
- genes
* vary greatly in size and efficiency.
* work by absorbing some of the electrical surge and diverting the rest to ground.
### person | suppressor:
Tumor suppressor
* check cell-cycle progression.
* meets oncogene.
Survivalist
* are a minority in a world that has accepted majority rule
- the very foundation of all societies, past, present and future
* attempt to reinforce the chain of society by strengthening their own links.
* recognize man's violent nature.<|endoftext|>### person:
Survivor
* are animals
- books
- former victims who seek support to recover from their experiences of abuse
* are people who are remarkable for their inner strength
- move purposefully towards either resolution or acceptance
* benefit from diets
- healthy diets
* develop mental problems
* eat diets
- food
- soy food
* face difficulty
- extreme difficulty
* find food.
* follow recommendations.
* go through distinct phases
- cell membranes
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
* live for years.
* migrate to cities
- medieval cities
* reach maturity.
* recover from disasters.
* report emotional reaction
* seek comfort.
* show emotion
- growth
- memory
- poor growth
* sustain injuries.
* understand benefits.
* use cell phones
* website for men and women who are survivors.
### person | survivor:
Cancer survivor
* Many cancer survivors develop lymphedema- a disorder of the lymphatic system.
* Some cancer survivors have radiation therapy
- limit alcohol intake
* are productive workers and have no higher rate of absenteeism
- victims of cancer
* can still experience fatigue long after they've completed their treatments.
Rape survivor
* can be any age
- feel re-victimized when new sexual assaults occur
* speak eloquently about emotional hurts lasting long after physical hurts heal.
Suicide survivor
* are at increased risk for suicide.
* constitute a special subgroup of surviving twins.
### person | sweetheart:
Valentine
* Have the children cut out hearts and decorate with paint, glue, glitter.
* are greeting cards
- sweethearts
Symptomatic individual
* have a mucopurulent discharge from the urethra or cervix.
* spend usually at least one month off work.
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### person:
Taxpayer
* All taxpayers are responsible for keeping tax records
- pay taxes in order to finance schools, health care, social services and pensions
* Most taxpayers are law-abiding citizens who timely file and pay their taxes
- associate tax refunds with income tax
- use the cash method of accounting for their personal life
* also pay special federal sin taxes on alcohol, tobacco and gambling
- save money with lowered costs for care of uninsured injured persons
* are concerned with the costs of extended days and years
- general contractors engaged in the business of building single-family homes
- nonresidents of California
- subject to taxation without representation
* are the beneficiaries of the liquor wholesaling system in Michigan
- employers who hire school personnel to serve the needs of parents and children
* benefit when previously unemployed people with disabilities pay income taxes.
* can also choose to work through their financial institutions
- invest in their family's future or favorite charity
- make credit card payments through tax software, by phone, or via the Internet
* control budget, expenditures, and overhead.
* deduct credits after computing their tax liability.
* foreign corporation with a U.S. trade or business.
* have a direct interest in how the government helps foster children
- lot in common with turtles
* lie on taxes to escape the pain of paying extra money to the government.
* lose hundreds of millions of dollars every year
- money because the government is paying out of both pockets
* often evade paying taxes in collusion with tax officials.
* pay income tax on all taxable sources of income, including capital gains
- the price of low wages in subsidized health care, housing and food stamps
- to collect the money they use for political campaigns
* sometimes show their displeasure by paying in pennies.
* transfer assets or income to a trust claiming to be a charitable organization.
* use care in timing the realization of items of income and expense.
* work hard for the money they earn.<|endoftext|>### person:
Technologist
* Many technologists work in product development.
* Most technologists work in hospitals, clinics, or medical imaging centers.
* also anesthetize that area of the patient's body
- assess the behavior of the radioactive material inside the patient
- wear badges that measure radiation levels
* are as driven by the desire to take on new projects and skills as they are by dollars
- incurable optimists
- usually detail oriented
* can play a different role during surgery.
* check medical charts and monitor patients' vital signs.
* count the sponges, needles, and other instruments as they are used.
* exploit the fear of cyberspace.
* have to understand business economics
- tunnel vision driven by a sense of technological determinism
* like to use acronyms.
* microscopically examine blood, tissue, and other body substances.
* often tend to hate institutions
- think of technology change in technological terms
* perform examinations at the request or direction of a physician.
* produce the images on a computer screen or on film for a physician to interpret.
* propose the computer and the computer age as the key to happiness.
* protect themselves by using special gloves and protective devices.
* provide images of tissues, organs, bones and vessels inside the human body.
* transform engineer's design concepts into actual prototypes or products.
* use radio waves, powerful magnets, and computers to create images of body parts.
* usually argue that technology is neutral
- work alone when operating equipment and conducting laboratory tests
* work from doctors' orders, written for specific procedures.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | technologist:
Engineering technologist
* Engineering Technologists organize people, material, and equipment to solve technical problems.
* are graduates of bachelor-level programs in engineering technology.
* handle the technical side of making a product.
* work in the part of the spectrum between the engineer and the technician.<|endoftext|>### person | technologist:
Medical technologist
* Many medical technologists put their skills to work in hospital laboratories
- work as generalists in all areas of the laboratory
* Most medical technologists work in hospital laboratories and have little patient contact
* Some medical technologists continue as generalists working in all areas of the laboratory.
* are essential members of the health care team in the clinical laboratory
- important members of a clinical laboratory
- problem-solvers who like challenge and who work well under pressure
- trained laboratory leaders
* assume responsibility for, and are held accountable for, accurate results.
* can be teachers, supervisors or researchers.
* make a vital contribution to health care.
* perform laboratory tests necessary for diagnosis and treatment of disease.
* play an important role in patient care.
* work in many areas of the profession, with a variety of responsibilities
- quickly and accurately
Surgical technologist
* Most surgical technologists work in hospitals, mainly in operating and delivery rooms.
* are responsible for maintaining a sterile field for surgical procedures
- the surgical team's experts in aseptic technique
* assist in operations under the supervision of surgeons or surgical nurses.
* have a responsibility of maintaining the sterile field.
* work in clean, brightly lit, relatively quiet, cool environments
- well-lighted, cool environments
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person:
Teen
* All teens experience some form of acne during puberty.
* Many teens become victims of sexual assault while they are in chat rooms on the internet.
* Many teens begin smoking to look older and more mature
- relieve stress
- describe puberty as being on a roller coaster of emotions
- die every year from drinking and driving
- have trouble waking up, staying awake in school, or falling asleep at night
- live in homes where a parent or other family member drinks too much
- living on the streets are homeless because they ran away from home
- report that they have the same problems as adults in trying to quit cigarettes
- start drinking because their families drink
- tend to wake up early in the morning with pounding headaches
- use alcohol and other drugs to cover up their feelings
* More teens become sexually active as they get older.
* Most teens are sexually active before they graduate high school
- encounter the issue of suicide during their teen years
- expect to get married and raise children
- recognize that a lifetime of smoking is detrimental to their health
- respond positively to the biological changes of puberty
- say using contraception each and every time they have sex is important
- spend months counting down the days until they can drive
- struggle as their bodies change during puberty
- try drugs, alcohol or smoking for fun because of peer pressure
- use contraceptives the first time they have sex
* Some teens actually manifest symptoms of a parent's illness or treatment
- consider some forms of sex and foreplay as being abstinent
- control their asthma with medication
- eliminate entire categories of food from their diets such as dairy products or meats
- go through different stages of emotions when they are sick for a long time
- have what is known as exercise-induced asthma
- pack more into one day than adults do in a month
- reportedly use it as a way to simply stay alert, or wake up in the morning
* Some teens start dieting because they think all the problems in their lives are because of weight
- think all the problems in their lives are weight-related
- struggle with their self-esteem when they begin puberty
- suffer facial disfigurement after an accident or illness
- try drugs because the media portray drugs as fun and exciting
- turn to self-mutilation in response to emotional turmoil
- use chemicals to cope with other difficulties, such as depression or family problems
* also live in family groups, but in single-gender homes.
* are a high risk group for delivering premature or low birth weight babies
- at high risk for a pregnancy with complications
- bands
* are capable of homework
- smoke
- volunteers
- generally dependent on others for most aspects of their livelihood
- located in malls
* are more likely than adults to be victims of crime
- people of other ages to commit suicide
* are more likely to have sex if they and their partner have been drinking
- use tobacco and alcohol, for example, if their parents do
- often concerned with privacy and body image
- one of the fastest growing vegetarian populations
- part of adulthood
- prone to hormonal change
- the biggest Web surfing population and also make up one of the largest consumer markets
- toddlers with hormones
- twice as likely to commit suicide as anyone else is
- very vulnerable to depression when a mother is depressed but untreated
* can become alcohol dependent in as few as six months
- easily become addicted to smoking before they're even smoking a cigarette a day
* experience a variety of risk factors that can lead to pregnancy.
* generally are a segment of society underserved with medical treatment.
* get acne because of all the hormones that come with puberty.
* have a tendency to want to spend less time with their families and more time with friends
- one foot in childhood, and the other in adulthood
* lose identity, dependence, and the security of childhood.
* sometimes see sexual activity as a way of being liked or accepted.
* tend to have lower self-esteem and are more influenced by personal relationships
- sleep irregular hours, staying up late and sleeping in until noon
- stay up later and wake up later than either children or adults
* try to be independent from parents, and older parents seek independence from younger people.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | teen:
Hispanic teen
* are the centerpiece of American youth culture.
* continue to have the highest rate of teen births.
Older teen
* are also more likely to report buying alcohol from licensed alcohol outlets.
* see themselves as more similar to their parents.
* tend to express fear about changes in their bodies, isolation, sex and world events.
Overweight teen
* consume a larger proportion of their calories from soft drinks than do other teens.
* get a larger percentage of their calories from soft drinks than do other teens.
Pregnant teen
* Most pregnant teens do turn to their parents when faced with an unwanted pregnancy.
* are least likely of all maternal age groups to get early and regular prenatal care.
* run a risk of anemia, high blood pressure, and premature labour.
Teen girl
* Many teen girls have painful menstrual periods.
* Some teen girls become depressed when they go through puberty
- find that birth control pills help to clear up their acne
* are also more recognized as consumers with money to spend
- twice as likely as boys to report that they suffer from depression
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person:
Teenager
* Every teenager knows smoking is bad and smoking causes cancer.
* Living with teenagers can sometimes be like living in another world.
* Many teenagers are concerned about losing or gaining weight
- with losing or gaining weight
- sexually active
- uncomfortable discussing contraception with parents, partners, and peers
- begin smoking to feel grow-up
- choose to have babies for men who are twice their age
- die as passengers in motor vehicles
- smoke because they feel more adult
* More teenagers die from car crashes than die from diseases, or homicides, or suicides.
* Most teenagers are interested in girls, driving, and other healthy hobbies
- carry pictures of friends, or their car, or family members in their wallets
- construct a lasting sense of self through both engagement and separation
- eat food
- grow up in different environments in the world
* Some teenagers avoid school out of fear of their peers
- believe that experimenting with drugs part of growing up
- carry their own cell phones
- drink cocktails which mix two or three or more nips of different spirits together
- engage in anti-social behavior in order to attract attention to themselves
- even shoplift in gangs to see who can steal the most
- have more problems during adolescence than others
- lose weight
- make their bedrooms into shrines to rock stars
- only drink or get drunk at social and sports events
- smoke cigarettes
- worry too much about their weight and starve their bodies
* also have a sense of invulnerability
- say that smoking way to relieve stress, stay thin, and a way to fill time
* are also disproportionately victims of violent crimes
- less likely than younger children to have a usual source of medical care
- more likely to drink and drive
- at a higher risk for pregnancy complications
- capable of smoke cigarettes
- citizens of the United States
- human beings, capable of making informed decisions about their own bodies
* are located in high schools
- malls
- nightclubs
- roofs
- more likely than adults to suffer medical complications attributable to childbirth
* are more likely to commit suicide if a gun is available
- participate in many types of sporting activities than other age groups
- much less likely to smoke than adults
- one of the fastest growing groups of users on the internet
- people who express a burning desire to be different by dressing exactly alike
- still less likely to commit suicide than any older age group
* are the economic engine that fuels the world
- hottest consumer demographic in the United States
- largest source of transplant organs in the United States
* are the only age group in which smoking levels continue to increase
- known mammals that wake up asleep
- well known for experimenting with all sorts of risky behaviors
* can be particularly sensitive about their weight and appearance
- the cruelest people in the world
- have difficulty falling asleep until late at night and awakening early in the morning
* commonly think that there's is the first generation to reach puberty.
* comprise a significant proportion of victims of unsafe abortion.
* consume sugar.
* develop colds about as often as adults do-two to four times a year.
* die in motor vehicle crashes at twice the rate of the rest of the population.
* drive excessively at night and have a significantly higher nighttime crash fatality rate.
* eat fast food
- junk food
* feel presence.
* generally suffer acne mainly due to a zinc deficiency.
* get acne because of all the hormones that come with puberty
- into trouble
* have grow pain
- senses
* have the highest alcohol-involved fatal accident rate of any age group
- death rate of any age group in motor vehicle crashes
- suicide rate of any age group
- to be told that sleeping is as important as eating and breathing
* hear causes.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- legs
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* kill or attack other children, teachers at school, their own parents, or homeless people.
* learn about evolution.
* like food.
* need calories
- extra calories
- more calories
* often collect and wear objects that have symbolic and metaphoric meaning
- fail to recognize the symptoms of depression in themselves or in other people
- hold onto things, including anger, for a long time
- travel in packs
- use drugs to cope with the challenges of adolescence
* reach ages.
* seek attention.
* seem to be biologically programmed to stay awake later than adults.
* sleep at different times from adults.
* sometimes like to feel and to behave like adults.
* start jobs.
* struggle with issues of identity, independence, competency and social role
- violence, crime, drug abuse, and immorality
* to gain weight.
* use alcohol, tobacco and analgesics more than other drugs.
+ Fashion, Clothing fashions
* Fashion is a way to express one's self. Many teenagers show their ideas and opinions by the way they look. They may want to look unique and individual, often to be a member of a group which looks unique. It helps people to make their first opinion of you and can influence the opinions and ideas of other people.
+ The Sims 2, Changes: The Sims :: 2004 video games
* An additional young adult stage is added when you get the University expansion pack. Sims can now grow up and eventually die. In the first game, Sims would stay children forever and adults would stay adults forever. Teenagers can hold jobs as well as go to school.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | teenager:
American teenager
* are one of the many nutritionally confused groups in our society.
* eat many different types of food.
* get into trouble.
Few teenager
* are prepared to use birth control prior to first intercourse.
* can abstain from masturbation, because sexual craving is so intense at that age.
Hmong teenager
* Most Hmong teenagers help their parents with cooking, washing dishes and cleaning the house.
* are friendly to all people.
Mod
* always have the best hair.
* are files, just as word-processing documents are files
- well-suited to electronic music in which one can precisely control the sounds<|endoftext|>### person:
Teller
* Most tellers work in bank branches.
* Some tellers specialize in handling foreign currencies or commercial or business accounts.
* are bankers.
* are located in banks
- train stations
- officials
* assist customers.
* deal with customers.
* explain products.
* help with bank transactions, such as making deposits or withdrawals.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* possess good math skills
* work at bank branches
- positions<|endoftext|>### person:
Thinker
* Many thinkers are at the same time religious believers and scientists.
* Most thinkers engage in roles.
* Most thinkers monitor own thoughts
* Some thinkers expect computation to match brain capacity in the near future.
* Some thinkers live in climates
- warm climates
* address ethic.
* advance theories.
* are famous people, great people
- intellectuals
- more likely to embrace logic and reason when making a decision
- task-oriented people who like controlled environments
* argue success
- uneven success
* bring perspective.
* can have amaze talent
* contemplate machines' effect on soul.
* develop awareness.
* gain insight.
* give consideration
- serious consideration
* have problems
* includes arms
- heads
- material bodies
- nuclei
* is an intellectual
* take time for reflection and can separate emotion from fact.
* tend to be more interested in ideas, reason, concepts, and reasons or purposes
- make decisions based on logic and objective analysis of data
* understand roles.
### person | thinker:
Arranger
* adapt musical compositions to a particular style or group.
* are musicians.
* work with existing pieces of music to create new harmonies and alter or improve rhythms.
Classifier
* are handshapes that represent nouns and incorporate aspects of adverbs and verbs
- morphemes
- words
* have anaphoric and discourse-pragmatic functions.
* provide cross-categorization of nouns and help the language to structure concepts.
Critical thinker
* are initiators of community change because they are innovators.
* have a passion for truth and for accepting the strongest reasoning.
* rely on the power of classification during the analysis of complex information.
* use critical skills and insights to reveal and reject beliefs that are irrational
- logical inference processes
Problem solver
* are thinkers.
* try to solve problems when they come up.
Sophist
* are philosophers.
* is the noun derived from the adjective sopho.
Third person
* Third people are people.
* accounts analyze phenomena by enframing being and by viewing all being as things.
* is the traditional way that stories are told.
Trailer
* are a vital part of the American economy
- the workhorse of transportation
* includes arms
- nuclei
- plasma membranes
- sections
* is an idler
* make deliveries.
* offer advantage
- significant advantage
Transgendered person
* Most transgendered persons identify themselves as heterosexual.
* are for one reason or another uncomfortable with their present gender.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person:
Translator
* are language professionals
- linguists
* are professional writers who convert one written language into a second language
- happen to work in more than one language
- professionals in their fields of expertise
- programs
- skilled workers
- software programs, that are rather simple to build and adapt to the needs at hand
* transfer ideas and concepts expressed in writing from one language to another.
* work with written material and interpreters render spoken communication
- text, interpreters with the spoken word
Transmitter
* Some transmitters cause diseases.
* are electronic components
- machines
- sets
* have ranges.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is the size of a beeper.
* require power.
* send information.
* to provide information.<|endoftext|>### person | transmitter:
Spammer
* Many spammers have software that can extract e-mail addresses out of messages.
* SPAMmers often get addresses from e-mail lists that are posted on the Internet.
* Some spammers use robots to trawl the web for addresses, looking for pages with ' mailto ' tags.
* add people to their junk mail lists without consent.
* also use techniques of using other internet services' email equipment to send their mail.
* are a blight on the Internet
- dishonest people employing dishonest tactics
- energy creatures
- notorious for using fake email addresses
- people who flood user mailboxes with irrelevant or inappropriate messages
- scum who steal from their victims who have to pay for their time online and bandwidth
- senders
- stoopid
- subhuman primitives who think that being assholes legitimate business plan
- the scum of the earth
- thieves, cheats, and liars and are the bane of the Internet
* change accounts as fast as they change underwear.
* do serious harm to the web by falsely indexing their sites in irrelevant categories.
* get email addresses in a number of ways.
* have a variety of tools for gathering email addresses to build their mailing lists
- programs which spider through web pages, looking for e-mail addresses
* make money by sending out millions of email messages on a daily basis.
* often forge the delivery headers of email to disguise where they are sending it from
- use bogus message identifiers to hide their identity
* often use software spiders to grab email addresses from chat rooms and message boards
- that combs newsgroups for email addresses
* shoot themselves in the foot from the onset and never recover completely.
* use a variety of methods to get email address
- automated programs to search the Internet for email addresses that they can use
- programs that automatically search Web pages for addresses
- relays to increase the number of messages they can spew
- robots to scarf up email addresses from newsgroups
* use software to hunt through newsgroup postings and personal Web pages to gather addresses
- scan large swaths of the Internet for open relays
- spambot spiders to pick off e-mail addresses from web pages
- special software to 'harvest' random e-mail addresses from the Internet
- spiders to cultivate email addresses from the internet
- the electronic serfs to troll the Internet for e-mail addresses
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
|
### person:
Transvestite
* Many transvestites are, in fact, heterosexual.
* Most transvestites are also, typically, heterosexual
- heterosexual men
- married and have children
- begin to experiment with cross-dressing when they are children or adolescents
- have their first cross-dressing experience around puberty or in adolescence
* Some transvestites also say that they envy women's bodies
- say that they dress when they are feeling extreme pressure in their male lives
* act like women even when wearing men's clothes.
* always slap on a yellow wig to look like the dye-job movie star they're mimicking.
* are a secretive lot
- an accepted part of Brazil's culture
- just guys who dress up as women
- merely men that enjoy wearing women's clothes
* are people who cross-dress, but have normal gender identity
- like to dress like members of the opposite sex
* become excited by wearing articles of clothing usually worn by the opposite sex.
* fairly modern term for which it is hard to track down a solid definition.
* have no desire for a sex change, and value their male organs.
* love women's clothes and make-up.
* spread transvestite slut waifs.
* suffer from a sexual dysfunction.<|endoftext|>### person:
Traveler
* Many travelers also experience motion sickness when traveling, especially in planes or automobiles.
* Some travelers believe pets have every right to fly with their owners
- die in accidents
- use a blindfold to eliminate light and allow healthful rest
* are books
- located in airports
- people
* carry documentation.
* drink fresh water
- plenty
* have communities
- tibetan communities
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* observe differences.
* obtain passports.
* provide answers.
* receive advice
- health advice
* respond to questionnaires.
* share passions.
* take care.
* use passports
- trips
* visit friends.
* wear coats
- dark coats
### person | traveler | absentee:
Expat
* are a very visible minority with their own culture, including a number of churches.
* is an absentee
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler | absentee | expat:
Refugee
* Many refugees come from parts of the world where torture is still prevalent
- consider souls to be attached to different parts of the body
- live in refugee camps
* Most refugees are in the developing world because that is where most conflicts are taking place
- women, children and elderly people who require special attention
* are a commodity to be traded for political ends
- problem in many areas of the world especially in Africa
- symptom of a deeper malaise in the polities from which they have fled
* are also under pressure to leave their host countries or areas
- vulnerable to abuse in the community such as organized crime, including extortion
* are among the most vulnerable groups in our world
- members of society
- as diverse a group as any other people
- autochthonous populations expelled from their land
- by definition people who have had to leave their homes
- civilians
* are different from immigrants
- economic migrants who come here to get a better life
- everywhere, without possessions or a place to go
- exiles
- human beings who deserve to enjoy their human rights without discrimination
- of every race and religion and can be found in every part of the world
- part of the human family
* are people who have been forced by persecution and violence to leave their homes
- to run away from their country
- the living casualties of continued war and persecution in the world
- victims of persecution and forcible displacement
- without sanitation, food, water, and shelter
* are, by definition, angry, frustrated and bitter people.
* contribute positively to economic growth of countries of asylum.
* describe their lives in terms of abnormality.
* happen when ecumenicism fails, as when multi-ethnic Bosnia was fractured.
* have fewer rights than many persons charged with criminal acts.
* is an expat
* often come from a home environment different from that in which they seek sanctuary.
+ Human migration: Migration
* These people are refugees, they move to other countries hoping to find help and asylum. Most refugees are illegal immigrants and more than half are children and women. They live in extreme poverty, lacking food, shelter, clothing, education and medical care.
### person | traveler | absentee | expat | refugee:
Afghan refugee
* are the largest and most forgotten groups of refugees in the world today.
* have a variety of reasons for wishing to remain in exile.
* live in squalor in Pakistani camps, dying daily of dehydration and heat stroke.
Palestinian refugee
* are the largest group of refugees worldwide.
* represent the largest refugee population in the world at present
- oldest and largest refugee population in the world
Tibetan refugee
* Most Tibetan refugees live in India.
* follow strict guidelines on use of color, composition and symbols.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler | absentee:
Expatriate
* Many expatriates living in Riyadh are from Muslim countries.
* are citizens of one country that work in another
- often interesting people who have lived colourful and adventurous lives
- subject to taxes in the countries where they reside, however
* generally find food and semidurables to be relatively inexpensive.
* have freedom from foreign anti-trust laws.
* is an absentee
* person employed and living in another country other than their home country.
* routinely move in when they fear trouble.
* spend most of their free time on the weekends diving or fishing.
* work in a nation other than their home country
- mainly in the oil and mining industries and associated service companies
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler:
Astronaut
* All astronauts have some special skills, either as pilots or scientists
- lose some calcium and bone mass
* Eat in orbit.
* Many astronauts are mission specialist astronauts
- describe feelings of wonder upon viewing the earth from space
- experience motion sickness, at least for a while
- find it difficult to stand without fainting immediately after their return to Earth
* Many astronauts have advanced degrees
- doctoral degrees
- multiple degrees in different fields and many are pilots
- trouble adjusting to zero gravity
- spend weeks or even months in space at a time
* Most astronauts consume calories.
* Most astronauts eat food
- meals
- moist food
- experience weightlessness
* Most astronauts feel body weight
- find it hard to stand during their first days back on Earth
* Most astronauts have acceleration
- homes
- lose life
- report having difficulty sleeping in microgravity
- return to earth
- see earth
- sleep for just six hours
- train for two to ten years before their first space mission
* Most astronauts use devices
- flush toilets
- machines
- tools
- workout machines
* Some astronauts are doctors
- pilot astronauts
- become ill while traveling in space, their ailment being similar to car sickness
- experience vision problems
- find it difficult to float in sleeping bags
* Some astronauts have degrees in physics
- learn to drive the space shuttle because they practiced and practiced
- lose weight
- rely on inertia
- say that adaptation to space gets easier with each mission they fly
- stay in space, six months or more, testing equipment and solitude
- use a meal tray to hold the food containers
- walk in space, while others stay inside
* adopt a workaday attitude toward life in outer space.
* also experience bone loss, muscle atrophy and other physiological alterations
- the discomfort of a swollen head
- report sleeping difficulties in space
- wear fine-fabric gloves inside the outer glove units for comfort
* are a little taller in space than on Earth
- select group of employees with unique occupational risks
- all experts in their fields
- books
- government workers
- humans
* are located in moons
- orbits
* are located in space shuttles
- stations
- spaceships
- one type of person that goes into space
- pilots or mission specialists
- scientists who work beyond the earth's atmosphere in the frontier of outer space
- skilled workers
- taller in space because on earth they're bones are pushed closer together by gravity
- trained in use
- travelers
- used for weightlessness
* are, by definition, superachievers.
* become a little taller in space
- very thirsty while working in space
* brush their teeth just like they do on Earth
- teeth, take sponge baths, and go to the bathroom in space
* can also be strapped onto cycling and rowing machines
- be pilots or have military flight training
- grow an inch in a few days
- lose bone density while in zero-gravity conditions for extended periods
- see meteors burn up in the atmosphere
- sleep standing up, upside-down, or even in the air
- thus sleep in any sort of position regardless of where they are
- use a treadmill as a form of resistance exercise
* carry a limited water supply.
* claim that after travelling into space their view of Earth has changed.
- energy
- enough energy
- sufficient calories
* deal with the challenges of working in a spacesuit
- harsh realities of survival in space
* depend on special gases to detect leaks in their space equipment.
* do experiments
- special exercises while they are in space to keep from losing bone mass
* don their flight suits.
* eat food from plastic bags by squeezing it out
- freeze-dried foods and drink though straws when they are in space
- slowly though, just like on Earth, as work schedules permit
* even experience space-sickness.
* exercise their arms by pushing upward on the bar while walking.
* experiencing high g forces on liftoff weigh more than their normal weight.
- weightless when they are in outer
* float around weightless, sleep standing up and take sponge baths instead of showers.
* fly to various destinations to conduct research and experiments.
* generally are specialists in at least one field of study and knowledgeable in several.
* go out into space
- to school to learn what to do in space and how to act in emergencies
* have a lot of trouble scratching their noses and ears during a space walk
- reduced red blood cell mass after exposure to space
- college degrees in science or engineering
- cumulative legal limits of radiation that they can be exposed to
- some changes in their bones when they're up in space
- to exercise at least two hours every day in space
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* join crews.
* keep daily journals of their time in space.
* lose a lot of bone density in space due to the absence of gravity
* make appearances
- big wobbly drops of water float around in a space-craft
* now have all different backgrounds.
* often choose strong-tasting food to combat the loss of taste
- experience weakening of their hearts and blood vessels in space
* perform maintenance
- routine maintenance
* practice underwater to learn how to work in the weightlessness of space.
* receive psychological and physical training for space flight.
* regularly talk to their families and school children while in orbit.
* say it's what they do in their spare time onboard.
* sleep in bags that are attached to one of the sides of the ship
- only six hours each night, on average
* spend long spans of time in space, and they have to eat
- more time in simulators than in space
* take actions
- medicine to alleviate the pain or discomfort caused by the body's adaption to space
* tend to sleep poorly.
* to eat food
- orbit earth
* train for years in order to explore space.
* travel into space aboard space shuttles
- and they use the Earth's gravity to orbit around it
* use a device that resembles a toilet seat
- bright lights to signal day and red goggles to signal night to their bodies
- hand holds to pull themselves along
- knife, fork, and spoon
- only straws to eat
* use special instruments to observe the earth, the stars, and the sun
- kinds of soap and shampoo
- the treadmill or exercise bike and bungee cord themselves in place
- two-hand controllers to manage the movement of the robotic arm
* wear business attire under their spacesuits
- spacesuits when they fly in the space shuttle , rockets , or space stations
- special helmets for space travel
- suits in outer space because humans can only exist in a certain atmosphere
- underwear lined with water tubes to keep cool
- various types of clothing for all aspects of a mission to space
* work for the federal government.
+ Space suit: Protective clothing :: Spaceflight
* A 'spacesuit' is an article of protective clothing worn by astronauts when they travel into outer space or into the upper atmosphere. Spacesuits are completely sealed, so that an astronaut can survive in the harsh, cold, and airless environment of space. Spacesuits have their own heating and cooling systems and a radio communication system. Spacesuits also provide a supply of fresh air for the astronauts to breathe and create a normal atmospheric pressure. Spacesuits cover the entire body, and they have gloves for the hands and a helmet for the head, including a clear visor for the face. Astronauts wear spacesuits when they fly in the space shuttle, rockets, or space stations.
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### person | traveler:
Bather
* Some bathers appear to be immune.
* are people.
* can get upset stomachs and eye infections.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Carrier
* Most carriers lead completely normal, healthy lives
- remain infectious for life
* Some carriers are minimally infectious and can lead normal lives
- cause diarrhea
- have a natural immunity to the disease
- transmit diseases
* are among the oldest fancy breeds
- an active ingredient in a toner
- at risk of liver problems later in life, like liver cancer or cirrhosis
- business
- chemicals
- especially important for cats
- extremely common and are a source of infection for other birds
- heterozygous individuals for recessive diseases
- humans who have infectious pathogens colonizing their bodies
- last names
- lipoproteins, recombinant chylomicrons and liposomes
- many times more likely to get liver cancer than are non-carriers
- organisms
- racks
- things that share the same properties of qualities as in the example of fire and heat
- travelers
* are unaffected because they have only one copy of the disease gene
- one copy of the gene
- vectors
* belong to the group of wattle pigeons that originated in England.
* can also infect other people
- pass abnormal genes to their children
- suddenly become sick as a result of stress or anesthesia
* contain one normal gene copy of hexoseaminidase A and one defective gene.
* harbor the organism in their mucus membranes, such as the lining of their mouth and nose.
* have guidelines
- limits
- normal visual fields, normal ERGs, and normal acuity
- one normal gene and one mutated gene
- only one copy of the abnormal gene
- procedures
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* make lists.
* military vehicle
* provide coverage.
* shed virus in their saliva.
* sign contracts.
* spend most of their time outdoors and work in many different kinds of weather.
* to provide services.
* translocate a wide range of simple solutes, including ions, sugars, and amino acids.
* usually have the bacteria in their stool.
### person | traveler | carrier:
Asymptomatic carrier
* are presumably the major source of transmission of pathogenic strains.
* can introduce the organism into new populations
- still, however, infect other people with the virus
* pass cysts in the faeces.
* play a role in transmission, particularly during outbreaks.
Chronic carrier
* are at risk for cirrhosis of the liver, liver cancer, and death
- highly infectious
- the ones most at risk of serious liver complications later in life
* can develop chronic liver disease, cirrhosis of the liver, or primary liver cancer.
* have the potential to spread the disease to others, including their partners.
Electron carrier
* Some electron carriers accept and release protons along with electrons.
* Some electron carriers can only transport electrons in the company of hydrogen ions
- electrons in the company of protons
Human carrier
* are also important
- the only reservior of infection
* excrete organisms for weeks after illness.
* exist and are often asymptomatic.
Insurance carrier
* Many insurance carriers cover naturopathic medicine and acupuncture
- have fraud hotlines that allow callers to furnish information anonymously
- treat workers' compensation solely as a financial transaction
* can play a key role in facilitating the growth of independent agents.
Roof rack
* are luggage racks.
* attach to the top of a vehicle.
Cosmonaut
* are another type of person
- from Russia
* claim that it is forbidden to have sex in space.
* generally sign only their last name, or sometimes first initial and last name.
* have to engage in long periods of exercise to recover their fitness.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler:
Courier
* are typeface.
- body substances
- cell membranes
- heads
- legs
- necks
* is used to indicate commands and command options.
* mono-spaced font good when a lot of formatting is needed in the document.
* monospaced font, which means that every character is exactly as wide as every other.
* ride bikes
- mountain bikes
* transport documents and merchandise abroad.
* type style used by typewriters and computer printers.
* typeface derived from typewriter styles.
### person | traveler | courier:
Conveyor
* Most conveyors use electric motors
* are durable and reliable components used in automated distribution and warehousing.
* includes arms
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Foreigner
* Many foreigners study martial arts.
* Most foreigners live in the Canton in which they work when they first arrive.
* Some foreigners do sometimes have problems finding clothing to fit their body size or shape.
* are also the first to lose their jobs when the unemployment rate rises
- as rare as snowflakes
- free to practice their own religion
- much more pervasive in society
- people
- strangers
- travelers
* can also be 'naturalized' as citizens
- be big users of funds, depending upon interest rates in other countries
* can legally drive on almost all of Russia's highways and can even ride motorcycles
- of Russia's roads and highways
* depend on the hospitality of the citizens in the country in which they are living.
* do pay property taxes.
* lend based upon relative rates of return in the many different countries.
* residing in Pyongyang report that street crime is rare.
* tend to be concentrated in the larger cities
- dominate the illegal drug trafficking market
+ Citizenship, Common law definitions: Politics :: Nationality
* Foreigners can also be 'naturalized' as citizens. Naturalization makes them citizens of their new country. Usually they give up their citizenship of their old country.
+ Singapore, People, Languages: ASEAN Members
* Most foreigners come from Asia. Thus, Chinese is the main language of many workers such as hawkers, retail assistants, hairdressers, etc.
### person | traveler | foreigner:
Exile
* are absentees
- video games
* causes a person to feel rootless and destabilized.
* is the space of the excluded third and the home for the nomad, the homeless.
* means being out of one's place, one's homeland.
* refers to federal time.
* tend to live in the past.
Gringo
* are foreigners.
* can buy and sell property.
* think they are the most important people in the world.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Hiker
* Many hikers carry a firearm for protection from bears, but attacks are uncommon.
* Most hikers also carry a lightweight pair of shoes to wear in camp and while in towns.
* Some hikers carry flip-flops or shower shoes
- have problems with blisters until their feet and boots are broken in
- use bells for noise
- wear gaiters to prevent seeds and other things from getting entwined in their socks
* are hobbyists
- located in forests
- pedestrians
* can also keep their pack animals from going to the bathroom too close to water sources.
* drink water.
* frequently see javelina, gray fox, and sometimes even black bears.
* includes arms
- cells
- cytoplasm
- material bodies
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* make day trips
* often see ground squirrels, rabbits,coyotes, and mule deer.
* pass through alpine areas
* pass through fragile alpine areas
* reach destinations.
* require a gallon or more per day as they sweat and respire water and water vapor.
* select paths.
* take breaks.
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{
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### person | traveler:
Immigrant
* Many immigrants are converts of missionary work in other countries
- create job opportunities by starting companies and investing capital
- work in low level service jobs, where advancement is difficult
* Most immigrants arrive in the United States in the prime of their working years
- leave their countries in the hope of one day to return to their countries
- live on welfare
- move when they are young adults
* Some immigrants are undocumented, and are afraid of being jailed or deported.
* also bring a wealth of cultural diversity to our society
- have their share of accidents and criminal problems
* are a foundation of the American workforce
- among the fastest growing population of children in American schools
* are disproportionately part of the uninsured population
- the targets of crime
- entrepreneurs
- hard workers, almost by definition
* are individuals who have moved from one country to another
- intend to remain permanently in the United States
- only immigrants on their side of the border
* are people who have left their homes in one country to live in another
* are people who intend to or end up staying in South Africa permanently
- stay or end up staying in South Africa permanently
- leave their homeland to live in another country
- want the best out of life
- people, mostly poor, with families and needs
- persons admitted as permanent residents of the United States
* can adversely affect the wage distribution by raising the number of low-wage workers
- also be victims of racism
* contribute to society, and there is no question that they contribute to California
- the American economy
* create jobs by being consumers.
* fuel our economy by investing in businesses and in neighborhoods.
* generally create job opportunities for others.
* increase the demand for goods and services, which leads to job creation
- total size of the economy
- unemployment and reduce wages
* make an economic contribution to the U.S. economy.
* represent an important and growing segment of the American workforce.
* tend to be young adults who come seeking economic opportunity
- move when they are young and near the start of their work lives
* typically arrive when they are young and healthy
- migrate to the United States to escape unbearable poverty
* work for less money, reducing the wages of other workers.
+ Central Valley, Population and economy, Economy and agriculture
* Except for the city of Sacramento, where the focus is on the government, the rest is mostly agricultural. Immigrants provide a large amount of the work done in farms in the Central Valley.
+ Immigration, Difficulty of immigration
* Travelling can also be very expensive. Many immigrants have to use all their money to pay fees or plane tickets.
* Once immigrants arrive in the new countries, they can face many difficulties. They may be have get a job, find a house, and learn a new language. Immigrants can also be victims of racism.
+ Norway, Ethnicity: Nordic countries :: Current monarchies
* They mostly live in and around Oslo, and in the other big cities. Many immigrants come from nearby countries, like Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Poland and Russia. There are also many from countries far away, such as Pakistan, Somalia, Iraq and Vietnam.
### person | traveler | immigrant:
Asian immigrant
* are also potential first-rate homebuyers.
* have lower institutionalization rates than white non-Hispanic immigrants.
* tend to enter the United States through either California or New York.
Indian immigrant
* represent America's most successful immigrant group.
* tend to be highly educated.
Korean immigrant
* continue to arrive in the United States.
* form one of the fastest-growing Asian subpopulations in the country.
|
{
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### person | traveler | immigrant:
Legal immigrant
* Many legal immigrants are no longer eligible for food stamps until they become citizens.
* are also eligible to be drafted in wartime
- three times more numerous as the illegal ones
* have no constitutional rights whatsoever.
* pay taxes and contribute to our economy.
* share the same responsibilities as citizens.
* work hard, pay their taxes, and serve America.
Recent immigrant
* focus on the survival issues of money, food and work.
* tend to speak a language other than English in the home.
Russian immigrant
* express their culture in America through religion, music, dance and food.
* make up a significant percentage of the white population.
Undocumented immigrant
* are aliens residing illegally in the United States.
* pay far more in taxes than they use in government services.
* remain a small minority.
* steer clear of government programs for fear of being deported.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler | journeyer:
Pilgrim
* are bearers of love, which they carry to special places of the Earth
- believers
- people
- wayfarers
+ Tannhäuser, Story of the opera: Compositions by Richard Wagner :: Operas
* Wolfram sings to the evening star. The Pope has not forgiven him because of his time with Venus. Wolfram whispers the name of Elisabeth. The vision disappears. A procession appears bearing the dead Elisabeth. Pilgrims appear announcing a miracle. The Pope's wooden staff has burst into bloom.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Messenger
* Some messengers contain proteins
- work magic
* are artificial satellites
- books
- mysterious people who live outside the norms of society
- travelers
- usually also prophets and often come with books of revelation
* come in many forms.
* complete missions.
* follow paths.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is figurative, in the sense of agent.
* provide delivery services
* topical application of harpin protein that produces the same effect in plants.
### person | traveler | messenger:
Chemical messenger
* carry signals from one nerve branch to another.
* transmit information from nerve cell to nerve cell in the body and the brain.
Herald
* are insects
- newspapers
* can be people, objects or acts of nature.
Human messenger
* tend to be called prophets.
+ Revelation: Theology
* Most of the time, the term is used to speak about religious revelations. That means that the revelation is done by communication with the divine. Revelation can be through a deity who may send a messenger. Human messengers tend to be called prophets.
Instant messenger
* allow people to communicate in real time using text.
* great way to communicate with friends over the internet.
Second messenger
* activate other intracellular chemicals to produce the target cell response.
* can induce new protein synthesis by regulating gene expression.
* pathways in cells that control blood pressure
- involving the central nervous system
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### person | traveler:
Migrant
* also tend to have higher birthrates than the native populations.
* are more likely to undertake risky behaviour - as they are separated from their families
- often, moreover, victims of exploitation and causes of dispute
- people who move from one place to another perhaps due to the availability of work
- workers who take seasonal jobs and return to their families in Mexico
* arrive at locations
- in areas
* begin journeys
- southward journeys
* can be actors of co-operation.
* come into countries.
* drink salt water
* have attributes
* includes arms
- material bodies
- necks
- personality
* nowadays come from a variety of countries of origin.
* produce offspring.
* risk life.
* seek employment.
* take journeys.
+ Bullfinch: Finches
* Probably most populations are partially migratory. Most migrants move short or medium distances. North European birds move within a wider compass than central European birds.
### person | traveler | migrant:
Neotropical migrant
* Many neotropical migrants have a fairly regular migration from year to year.
* are birds that breed in North America and winter south of the U.S. border
- songbirds like warblers, vireos, thrushes and some predatory birds<|endoftext|>### person | traveler | migrant:
Settler
* are clerks
- migrants
- negotiators
* build structures.
* come to establishments.
* establish cattle ranches
* experience earthquakes.
* find food.
* follow customs
- own customs
- paths
* go through stages.
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- nuclei
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* introduce animals.
* invade territory.
* leave scenes.
* move into territory.
* raise horses.
* survive years.
* use resources.
* make a land run for prime land in the Cherokee Strip in Oklahoma.
### person | traveler | migrant | settler:
European settler
* experience earthquakes.
* invade territory.
Squatter
* Most squatters are subsistence farmers who grow cashew nuts, citrus fruits and coconuts.
* Some squatters live in larger shacks.
* are intruders
- people who settle on a piece of land without owning or renting it
- settlers<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Motorcyclist
* Most motorcyclists believe they can have a few drinks without affecting their riding skill.
* Some motorcyclists have to push their personal limits
- smoke
- take advantage of their small size and maneuverability
* are a breed apart
- group with heart
- travelers
- very vulnerable to head injury
* attempt to circumvent traffic blockage by weaving through vehicles and pedestrians.
* can accelerate faster than other motor vehicles
- increase their safety by practicing correct riding techniques
* collect contributions from their families, friends and other motorcycle enthusiasts.
* come from all ages and walks of life.
* enjoy being outside
- special views of nature
* generally exhibit a high rate of voluntary compliance with use of helmets.
* often use hand signals to make themselves more visible.
* require a driving licence.
* risk hearing loss.
* see the world differently.
* usually wave when they pass each other on the road.
Musher
* Some mushers believe that dogs are more comfortable when doubled up in larger boxes.
* also use liniment to keep foot pads from cracking in the intense cold.
* are travelers.
* operate small, upright carts equipped with a steering wheel, a brake and survival gear.
* raise and train dogs all year long.
* use the fuel to fire up the stoves used to boil water and heat dog food.
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### person | traveler:
Passenger
* are killed by animals.
* are located in airports
- bus stops
- cars
- train stations
* ask attendants
- flight attendants
* board planes.
* display behavior
- disruptive behavior
* have concern.
* includes arms
- cytoplasm
- heads
- sections
* remain in seats.
* travel to destinations.
* wear shirts.
* Palestinian terrorists blow up three hijacked airliners in Jordan. Passengers are held at secret locations in the capital city, Amman.
+ Airport terminal, Airport terminal designs, Satellite terminals: Airports :: Aviation infrastructure
* A satellite terminal is a building that is not joined to other airport buildings. The aircraft can park around the entire building. The first airport to use a satellite terminal was London Gatwick Airport. Passengers use an underground tunnel to walk to the satellite from the main terminal. This was also the first setup at Los Angeles International Airport, but it has since been changed to a pier layout. The first airport to use an automatic people mover to join the main terminal with a satellite was Tampa International Airport.
+ MTR, Station facilities, amenities and services, Telecommunications network coverage: Rapid transit systems :: Hong Kong
* Passengers can stay connected underground.
+ Virgin Atlantic Airways, Inside the Aeroplanes, Economy: Airlines of the United Kingdom :: Virgin Group
* Economy class is the standard class on Virgin Atlantic aircraft. It is the cheapest part of the aeroplane to travel in. Passengers usually get a free meal, some drinks and a bag with gifts in like a toothbrush. The seats in this class have a maximum pitch of 31 in, but this depends on what aeroplane you go in.
### person | traveler | passenger | commuter:
Bicycle commuter
* Most bicycle commuters can t wear their bicycle clothing at work.
* tend to enjoy healthier lifestyles, get sick less often and feel less stress.
Hitchhiker
* Some hitchhikers feed on nettles
- sea nettles
* are passengers.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
Stowaway
* are part of the normal life of seafarers.
* have desire.
- cells
- material bodies
- vacuoles
* often try to hide identification papers in cabins etc.
* survive flight.
* usually board ships illicitly when they are in a foreign port.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Pedestrian
* Look out for pedestrians, especially in residential areas and town centres.
* account for a disproportionately high percentage of car crash fatalities in cities
- one of every six traffic-related deaths
* also have greater difficulty in judging the speed of approaching vehicles.
* are as much a part of traffic as motorists, motorcyclists and bicyclists
- commonly present in residential neighborhoods
- humans
* are located in street corners
- streets
- more at risk at specific times during the day
- much more vulnerable than car occupants when a crash occurs
- people
- the second largest category of motor vehicle deaths, after occupants
- travelers
* can move freely only at small pedestrian densities.
* make communities better places to live by walking.
* means a person who is either walking, jogging or running on the multiuse path.
* move in safety along skyways set above roads for vehicular traffic.
* sport cellular phones.
* suffer accidents to legs, ankles and feet despite initiatives to remove the dangers.
* walk facing traffic because they can step sideways out of the way.
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### person | traveler:
Rider
* Some riders kill in accidents.
* are articles
- capable of trainers
* are located in cars
- subways
- part of bills
* experience problems.
* have have horses
- cell membranes
- plasma membranes
* look for alternative routes
* maintain diets
- healthy diets
* make trips.
* own horses
- ponies
* possess horses.
* raise horses.
* ride horses.
* use wheels.
* utilize strategies.
* wear helmets
- safety helmets
+ Equestrianism, Show jumping: Horse riding
* Show jumping' is where a rider rides a horse over a set course of horse jumps while being timed. The horse and rider must also try not to knock down any of the jumps. Riders win by having the fastest time without knocking any jumps down.
+ Legion of Net. Heroes, Fictional History, Stories
* These stories are adventures. Riders stop bad things before they happen.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler | rider:
Bicycle rider
* are located in streets.
* have the same rights and responsibilities as motorists.
* wear plastic and foam helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident.
+ Helmet, Types of helmets: Protective clothing
* Soldiers wear steel helmets to protect their heads from explosions and bullets. Construction workers wear plastic helmets to protect their heads from falling objects. Welders wear special helmets with a lens that lets less light through. This protects their eyes from the bright light of welding. Bicycle riders wear plastic and foam helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. Motorcycle riders wear helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. People who ride horses often wear helmets, to protect them if they fall off the horse. People who rock climb wear helmets in case they fall. Cavers wear helmets to protect their heads from bumping into rocks in a cave.<|endoftext|>### person | traveler | rider:
Bicyclist
* Many bicyclists also use a red flashing light on the rear of their bicycles.
* Some bicyclists use rear-view mirrors.
* absorb it through the palms of their hands.
* also have the responsibility of driving on the far right hand side of the road
- pay for roads in the form of sales taxes
* are also at risk for traffic related injuries
- at greater risk of brain injury than motorcyclists
- equivalent to motorists under Boston driving rules
- invisible to most motorists
- more likely to fall or hit fixed objects such as a mailbox or a parked car
- often hard to see in traffic
- responsible for the safe operation of their bicycle at all times
* are subject to the same laws and regulations as motor vehicles
- rules of the road as automobiles
* aren t the only ones at risk.
* break laws.
* communicate by using hand signals.
* enjoy the same rights as motorists.
* face dangers motorists never dream of.
* fare best when they act and are treated as drivers of vehicles.
* get more respect on the road than do motorcyclists.
* have a responsibility to obey traffic laws and to ride safely
- wide range of abilities and experiences
* have the same privileges and responsibilities of motorists when using public roads
- right to use the road as motorists
- rights and responsibilities as a motorist
* love the choices in terrain.
* now use aerodynamically designed bicycles and clothing to minimize air drag.
* share a complex traffic environment with other larger forms of transportation.
* travel on most primary and secondary roads, and on some freeways and expressways
- with traffic
* use the same rules as vehicles.
* yield trail to foot travelers, both animal and human.
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### person | traveler | rider:
Cyclist
* Many cyclists are strongly against wearing helmets.
* Most cyclists generate electrical energy
- live in areas
- now wear helmets , both for safety reasons and improved aerodynamics
- pedal in a flat footed technique where the foot remains in a fixed position
- range in ages
* Most cyclists use chemical energy
- plastic bags inside their panniers
* Some cyclists actually do strength training only in the winter, while others do it year round
- are hypersensitive to having their feet overheat while riding
- report that time just stood still, or that time was accelerated during a race
- wear wool or a wool-blend sock
* also eat more often than motorists.
* are athletes
- computer users
- often tense and nervous when approached by an automobile
- responsible for avoiding collisions
* are responsible for loading and securing their own bikes
- unloading their bicycles
- obeying all traffic laws
- the ones who have the most to lose when running a stop sign or light
* can also protect themselves by wearing a helmet
- help their own causes by filing police reports when they are victims of road rage
- regulate temperature by level of effort
- see and hear motor vehicles
* commonly suffer from tendonitis, bursitis, or irritation of the joint.
* consume drinks.
* eat and drink while cycling.
* enjoy basically the same rights and privileges as motorists.
- as a vehicle when they are cycling on the road
* have all the rights and the duties that apply to drivers of vehicles
- one of the highest aerobic capacities of any athlete
- options
- schedules
- several options
- the same rights and responsibilities as drivers of motor vehicles
* help to keep our air and water clean.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- sections
- vacuoles
* often like to buy tight shoes for maximum power and control.
* participate in a sport that tends to be on the endurance side of the track.
* pay taxes, and have the same rights to the road as drivers.
* perform exercise tests
* reach high speeds, so one fall and one hit to the pavement can crack the skull.
* share the roads with motor vehicles
- tips
* spend money to fuel their bodies and to buy cycling related equipment and gear.
* to follow rules.
* use Spinning bikes as part of their training regimen
Equestrian
* All equestrians know that the hoof of a horse is the most important body part.
* are special people
- sports
* are, by and large, animal lovers who want to do what's best for all their pets.
* is for horse's lovers and for riders of every equestrian sport.
Horse rider
* Most horse riders maintain diets
- healthy diets
* Some horse riders die after attacks
- heart attacks
* Some horse riders kill in accidents
- separate accidents
Horseman
* Horsemen are quick to perceive human traits in animal behavior
- call their animals after their natural colour
- can also use cold water as therapy
- have a habit of taking care of their own
* Horsemen includes arms
- cell membranes
- heads
- necks
- plasma membranes
- vacuoles
- own horses
- possess horses
- ride horses
* Many Horsemen believe garlic to be a natural deterrent to insects and flies.
* Most horsemen own horses
* are riders.
### person | traveler | rider | horseman:
Jockey
* Most jockeys have diets
* Some jockeys die from injuries.
- capable of play games
- forms
- horsemans
- operators
- the most underrated and underappreciated athletes in sports
- workers
* enjoy food.
- cell membranes
- cells
- plasma membranes
* often cease their riding careers to take up other employment in racing, usually as trainers.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler | rider:
Motorcycle rider
* wear helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident.
+ Helmet, Types of helmets: Protective clothing
* Soldiers wear steel helmets to protect their heads from explosions and bullets. Construction workers wear plastic helmets to protect their heads from falling objects. Welders wear special helmets with a lens that lets less light through. This protects their eyes from the bright light of welding. Bicycle riders wear plastic and foam helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. Motorcycle riders wear helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. People who ride horses often wear helmets, to protect them if they fall off the horse. People who rock climb wear helmets in case they fall. Cavers wear helmets to protect their heads from bumping into rocks in a cave.
Spaceman
* Spacemen float around at near zero g when they get up there in orbit.
* Spacemen includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles<|endoftext|>### person | traveler:
Surfer
* Many surfers regularly chance drowning.
* Many surfers use ear plugs to keep cold water out of their ear canals
- rips to get outside the breaking waves
* Most surfers prefer to go barefoot, because that's how they surf.
* Some surfers appear in the water off the coast.
* Some surfers die after infection
- from injuries
- like to take advantage of the anomaly of high waves
- pride themselves on never having bought a bar of wax
* also wear wetsuits in colder regions.
* always follow the swells just as wind surfers follow the wind.
* are humans
- magazines
- notorious for scanning rather than reading
- swimmers
* can simulate surf paddling.
* come in all shapes and sizes, from all walks of life and with a range of abilites.
* define themselves by involvement with what is never the same.
* describe both the parts of the waves and the waves themselves.
* frequently populate the Australian coasts.
* have a common bond that transcends any differences.
- body substances
- corpi
- legs
* know how to do special moves or tricks.
* love to surf.
* measure the wave height between the bottom of the trough and the top of the wave.
* often take to the waves with a board or kayak, sharing the surf with seals and seabirds.
* organize to save the ocean and the coastline.
* prefer sandy beaches.
* represent a diverse culture based on riding the waves.
* see riding as an expression of life and the nature around u s.
* suffer viral diseases.
* tell of riding the waves, only to look up and see a penguin swimming alongside.
* telnet-based chat forum for people to talk to others live around the globe.
* use 'em to shield their skin from board wax
- the Internet for recreation
* usually wear a leash around their ankle that is connected to the surf board.
* write about abuse.
Time traveler
* Most time travelers wear coats.
* Some time travelers kill fathers.
- dark coats
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
|
### person | traveler:
Tourist
* are a class of consumers.
* are located in beachs
- state parks
- waterfalls
- zoos
- travellers
* begin trips.
* centres Punjab is dotted with places of historical and cultural interest.
* discover areas.
* have impact.
- cell membranes
* leave areas.
* means someone who learns about other places.
* share photos.
* spend billions when they travel to countries.
* take actions
- meaningful actions
* visit areas
- cities
- historic sites
* watch in anticipation.
+ Baltimore, Culture
* People of one ethnic group mainly live in each one of these areas. Some of the most important today are downtown. These are the Inner Harbor, Fells Point, and Little Italy. The Inner Harbor has lots of hotels, shops, and museums. Many tourists visit the Inner Harbor. Fells Point used to be a place where sailors went for entertainment. Today it has been rebuilt and cleaned up. This is the neighborhood in the movie 'Sleepless in Seattle'. Little Italy is where the Italian-American people live and work. Nancy Pelosi grew up in this neighborhood.
+ Belize: Current monarchies :: Caribbean Community :: Spanish-speaking countries :: English-speaking countries :: Commonwealth realms
* On the mainland bananas and sugar cane are grown. Many tourists come to Belize each year. They like to snorkel or dive, to visit pyramids built by the Mayans, or simply to relax on a beach.
+ Blacks and Whites' Carnival: Festivals :: Colombia :: Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity
* The carnival happens each year, from January 2 to January 7. Many tourists visit it.
+ Cambodia, Culture, Flag: ASEAN Members :: Current monarchies
* The Cambodian flag includes a three-towered temple called Angkor Wat. It is the famous monument in the country. Many tourists visit the temple.
+ Canterbury Cathedral, History: Anglican Cathedrals :: Canterbury :: World Heritage Sites in Great Britain :: Cathedrals in England
* Because of this, fund-raising is one of the Dean's main jobs. The cathedral is a working church. On weekdays there are three services. These are free of any entry charge. Tourists visiting pay a fee to see the cathedral when there is no service.
+ Colombia, Cities: Spanish-speaking countries
* Cartagena de Indias is the most important tourist center in Colombia on the Caribbean Sea. It is also a very beautiful city. Many tourist come to visit the city.
+ Dead Sea: Lakes in Asia :: Seas :: Geography of Israel :: Geography of Jordan :: Geography of Palestine :: National parks in Israel
* Because the water is so salty, it weighs more than fresh water, and a person is able to easily float in the Dead Sea without any effort. Tourists come from around the world to float in the water.
+ Formentera, Economy: Balearic Islands
* The island lives mainly on tourism. Most tourist are from Germany, the United Kingdom and Italy and France.
+ Hollywood: Movie industry :: Neighborhoods of Los Angeles
* Hollywood' is a district in Los Angeles, California. It is famous around the world as a place where movies and television series are made. It has many different attractions such as the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Universal Studios and the famous Hollywood Sign. The word Hollywood can also mean the movie industry that is in Hollywood. Many tourists come to the area.
+ Ichikawa, Chiba, Local attractions: Cities in Japan :: Settlements in Chiba Prefecture
* There are lots of flowers in this park. Many tourists visit here every year. And this park is near Konodai station. Akedo kofun is an historic tomb in the park.
+ Israel, Economy, Tourism
* Tourists support many of Israel's service industries, especially trade, restaurants, and hotels. Over 2.7 million foreign tourists visited Israel in 2009.
+ Italy, Geography: European Union member states :: Italian-speaking countries :: G8 nations
* Northern Italy has some of the biggest lakes in the country, such as Lake Garda, Lake Como, Lake Maggiore and Lake Iseo. Because it is surrounded by the sea, Italy has many kilometers of coast, which brings tourists from all over the world. Tourists also come to see Italy's many historical places.
+ Jeonju: Korea :: Cities in Asia
* Known as a city with 1000-year history, Jeonju is also promoted as a gateway to traditional Korean culture and gastronomy. The Hanok Village in Jeonju is one of the most famous tourist attractions that many Koreans and foreigners visit every year. The Hanok Village, where traditional Korean houses from the Joseon Period are preserved, offers traditional Korean cuisine, hanji, or traditional Korean paper, and oriental medicine. Tourists can get a hands-on experience at various tourist facilities and historic sites in the city.
+ Juneau, Alaska, Transportation: United States capital cities :: Cities in Alaska :: Alaska boroughs
* Local government operates a bus service under the name Capital Transit. There are also several taxicab companies, and tour buses used mainly for cruise ship visitors. Many tourists arrive on cruise ships that sail from Vancouver or Seattle.
+ Kashmir, Economy, Tourism: British India
* Tourism has been important in Kashmir for many years. Many people call the region 'Paradise on Earth'. Tourists visit Kashmir from all over the world irrespective of nationality and religion. In spite of a drop in footfalls due to terrorism in the last decade, Kashmir still remains one of the most sought after tourist destinations.
+ Lake George: Geography of New York
* Lake George' is a glacier lake in the Adirondack Mountains in New York. Isaac Jogues found the lake in 1646. Many tourists visit Lake George.
+ Lanai, Tourism: Islands of Hawaii
* Tourism on Lana'i started not long ago. That was when the growing of pineapple was slowly coming to an end in the Islands. On Lana'i, you can be with nature and feel the mood of the Hawaiian countryside. It has no traffic or shopping centers. Tourists come mainly to relax.
+ Lanzarote, Economy: Canary Islands :: Biosphere reserves
* Most tourist come for sunbathing, swimming, windsurfing or snorkeling.
+ Lefkada, Sights - Tourism: Greek Islands
* Every year many tourists visit lefkada. Tourists come from western European countries, mainly from Italy. The most touristic village on the island is Nidri which is in the east of the island. Opposite Nidri there are many small green islets. Among them is the islet Scorpios which belonged to millionaire Aristotelis Onassis.
+ Port Arthur, Tasmania, History, Convicts to Tourists: History of Australia :: Towns in Tasmania :: Prisons :: World Heritage Sites in Australia :: Australian Convict Sites :: Museums in Australia :: Open air museums
* Tourists can either walk around the area themselves, or go on a guided tours. There is a museum, with written records, tools, clothing and other interesting things from convict times.
+ Prague, Cultural sights
* Since the fall of the Iron Curtain in 1990 Prague has become one of Europe's most popular tourist places. It has buildings dating from the 13th century to the present day. The castle looks very important on the hillside. Charles Bridge is now closed to traffic so that pedestrians can walk across the bridge and buy souvenirs from the stalls. There are many museums, palaces and theatres. Tourists often go to the Old Town Square in the centre of Prague. There are lots of buildings there from different periods of history. The statue of Jan Hus stands high above the square. There is a famous Astronomical Clock on the wall of the Old Town Hall. It was built in the 1780s and Mozart conducted the first performance of his opera 'Don Giovanni' there.
+ Rhyl: Towns in Wales
* Rhyl' is a town on the North Welsh coast in Denbighshire. It has around 25,000 people. Many tourists visit during the summer months.
+ Space Needle: Buildings and structures in Washington
* Visitors can reach the top of the Space Needle by using elevators. These elevators travel at. The trip to the top takes 41 seconds. Some tourists wait in hour-long lines so that they can go to the top of the tower. On windy days, the elevators are slowed down to a.
+ Venice, Los Angeles: Neighborhoods of Los Angeles
* In summer, the boardwalk is busy. Many tourists visit. It was home to early Beat poets and artists in Los Angeles. Its area codes are 310 and a 424 overlay. Its ZIP Code is 90291.
+ Willis Tower, The Skydeck: Skyscrapers in Chicago :: History of Chicago
* The Sears Tower observation deck, called the Skydeck, opened on June 22, 1974. It is located on the 103rd floor of the tower. Tourists can experience how the building sways on a windy day. They can see far over the plains of Illinois and across Lake Michigan to Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin on a clear day. Elevators take tourists to the top in about 60 seconds. This allows tourists to feel the pressure change as they rise up.
+ Yellowstone National Park: Fauna of North America :: Wyoming :: Montana :: Idaho :: Volcanoes :: National parks in the United States :: World Heritage Sites in the United States :: Biosphere reserves :: Western United States :: Calderas
* Yellowstone National Park is famous for its geysers and hot springs. The park contains about half the world's geysers. The world's most famous geyser, the Old Faithful Geyser, is in Yellowstone National Park. It also is a home to grizzly bears, wolves, bison and elk. Many tourists visit the park each year to see the geysers and animals there.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler:
Trekker
* Some trekkers experience problems with their knees after a period of downhill trekking.
* always wonder about how to tell if a headache is due to altitude.
* are travelers.
* depend on wood for heating and cooking which has led to serious deforestation.
* occasionally suffer from coughs, colds, and stomach upsets in the hills.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler:
Visitor
* access information
- reliable information
* are located in front doors
- people
- travelers
* arrive in towns.
* come from areas
- wide areas
- through doors
* come to museums
- sites
* discover heritage sites
* discuss aspects
- scientific aspects
* encounter animals
- habitats
- learn experience
* enjoy ecosystem services
* enter environments.
* face limitations.
* find favourite food
* have impact
- knowledge
- little knowledge
- visitors
* hire guides
- local guides
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* leave parks.
* may have destinations.
* pass through areas.
* person who has been admitted to Canada as a tourist or a student.
* provide information.
* report sighting.
* take photos.
* to follow guidelines.
* use eyes
- keen eyes
- roads
* visit sites.
* wear shirts.
+ Assisi: Towns in Italy :: World Heritage Sites in Italy :: Umbria
* After St Francis, and St Clare died, churches were built in their honour. Many visitors go to Assisi on pilgrimage. Many people also go there to see the artworks. Assisi is a World Heritage Site.
+ Costa Rica, Geography, Flora and fauna: Spanish-speaking countries
* The Corcovado National Park is internationally known by ecologists for its biodiversity. Visitors can see many different types of animals. Corcovado is the only park in Costa Rica where all four Costa Rican monkeys can be found. These include the white-headed capuchin, the mantled howler,the endangered Geoffroy's spider monkey and the Central American squirrel monkey. The squirrel monkey is found only on the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and a small part of Panama.
+ Hlinsko, Culture, Betlém: Cities in the Czech Republic
* Many of buildings was renewed. Visitors can look over here how people lived and what traditions they had. There take place periodical exhibitions, too.
+ Korkeasaari: Islands in Europe :: Geography of Finland :: Helsinki
* Two or three times a year they have a theme called 'cats walk'. Visitors can see the big cats in the night.
+ Miyagi Prefecture, Sight-seeing
* Miyagi Prefecture has one of Japan's Three Great Views. Matsushima Bay is full of small islands with old pine trees on them. Many visitors come here every year and many artists have painted the islands.
+ Mont-Saint-Michel, Geography, Tidal island: Churches in France :: Communes in Manche :: World Heritage Sites in France
* The construction of the dam began in 2009. It was completed in 2013. The project was to also remove the causeway and its visitor car-park. The new car-park is on the mainland. A bridge that allows the waters to flow freely around the island will improve the efficiency of the dam in operation. Visitors can walk or use small shuttle buses to cross the causeway. The future bridge will also be open to pedestrians and vehicles without a motor.
+ Queen Mary's Peak, Climbing the peak: Volcanoes :: Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha
* He could not get to the top. However, he collected hundreds of plants. Today, Queen Mary's Peak makes a wonderful but steep climbing route. Climbing it can take 5 to 10 hours, depending on the ability of the walker. Visitors are required to use a local guide if they want to go to 'The Peak'.
+ Space Needle: Buildings and structures in Washington
* Visitors can reach the top of the Space Needle by using elevators. These elevators travel at. The trip to the top takes 41 seconds. Some tourists wait in hour-long lines so that they can go to the top of the tower. On windy days, the elevators are slowed down to a.
* Corcovado National Park' is a national park in Costa Rica. It was established on 24 October 1975. The park very popular with tropical ecologists. Visitor can see a lot of wildlife.
+ Tipu's Tiger, Today: Woodwind instruments
* It is in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. Visitors can no longer operate the mechanism.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | traveler | visitor:
Guest
* are customers.
* are located in fraternity houses
- hotels
- motels
* benefit from properties.
* drink beers.
* enjoy food
- meals
- wonderful food
* enter areas
- homes
* have options.
- legs
- vacuoles
* make effort.
* participate in conferences
- international conferences
* share stories.
* sit at tables.
* walk down roads.
* will have experience.
+ Disney California Adventure, Areas, Golden State, Golden Vine Winery: Disney theme parks :: Anaheim, California :: 2001 establishments
* This sub-land is themed after Northern California's Napa Valley and the winemaking industry. Wine Country Trattoria, a casual restaurant that serves wines and Italian foods. The former main attraction in this area, Seasons of the Vine, a film showcasing Napa Valley and the changes throughout the seasons, was housed in a wine cellar-like theatre. The new attraction displays the upcoming changes to the park. The exhibits will be rotated every few months until 2012, when the major park improvement project is scheduled to be finished. Guests also have the opportunity to taste several wines for an additional price.
+ Disney's Animal Kingdom, Themed areas, Oasis: Disney - Orlando :: 1998 establishments
* The Oasis is the park's main entrance. It has the guest services center and some animal habitats. Guests can see muntjacs, spoonbills, ducks, wallabies and giant anteaters, among others. The main paths lead into the park, and onto Discovery Island.
+ Disneyland, The lands of Disneyland Park, Main Street, U.S.A.: Disney theme parks :: Anaheim, California :: 1955 establishments
* Main Street, U.S.A. is the first land people see when they come into Disneyland. It was built to look like a small American town, much like the one Mr. Disney grew up in. A station for the Disneyland Railroad can be found here. It is located at the entrance to Disneyland. Mr. Disney and some of his workers loved trains and wanted a railroad in their new park. Guests can ride steam-powered trains for a ride around the edge of Disneyland. They can also ride a streetcar pulled by a horse, a double-deck bus and even a small fire engine.
Voyager
* are people who venture into the realms of their own expanded states of awareness
- software
- travelers
* use their senses to explore how their bodies work.
### person | traveler | wanderer | nomad:
Mongolian nomad
* live in the steppes of the country, and are very horse-centric.
* rely on their livestock exclusively for food, transport and trade.
Wayfarer
* are pedestrians
- travellers
+ Mast-Allah: Spirituality :: Islam
* Wayfarer means wanderer, and the book's title implied that masts are on a spiritual journey. Meher Baba wrote the introduction of the book. So Meher Baba says they are like people who are drunk, only the masts are not drunk on alcohol but on God and are very close to God.<|endoftext|>### person:
Traveller
* are consumers.
* are located in airports
- bus stops
- buses
- cars
- rest areas
- subways
- train stations
* have meals.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
* science fiction game set in the far future.
* seek advice
- health advice
* tend to marry young, and the average family size is eight children.
### person | treasurer:
State treasurer
* are the trustees of the public purse.
* serve as the chief financial officers of the states.
Untreated individual
* Some untreated individuals have spontaneous disease regression.
* can transmit the bacteria for several weeks.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
|
### person:
User
* access applications
* acknowledge limitations.
* are assigned to roles
* benefit from technology.
* buy products.
* change jobs
- minds
- setting
* choose locations
- multiple locations
* close tabs.
* complete tasks.
* contact representatives
- technical representatives
* develop problems.
* enjoy benefits
- services
* enter life.
* estimate optimal values
* excrete substances.
* exercise independent judgment
* exercise own independent professional judgment
* experience desire
- intense sensation
- interaction
- more positive social interaction
- positive interaction
* feel differences
- effects
- negative effects
- side effects
* find helpful answers
- manuals
- routine
- tests
* get life.
* have ability
- computers
- contracts
- games
- passive smokers
* hold tissue
- toilet tissue
* identify as users
- cell membranes
- heads
- necks
* learn applications.
* make contributions
- decisions
* manage applications.
* meet requirements.
* move heads.
* need light.
* obtain services.
* open books
- guest books
* perform actions.
* point out goals
- similarity
- term weight loss goals
* press buttons.
* provide follow information
- genome sequence information
- interest
* reach goals
* receive cost
- electrical power
- ship cost
* report excellent business results
* respond to tasks.
* return to sites.
* see applications
- medical advice
* select areas.
* share common interest
* suffer symptoms.
* take full responsibility
* to discuss development
- future development
- explore concepts
- find answers
- share ideas
* to take appropriate steps
* use applications
- fruit
- marijuana
* will have ability.
* write notes.
+ Active Worlds: Software
* Users assign themselves a user name, log into the Active Worlds virtual world universe, and explore 3D virtual worlds and environments that other users have created. Users can chat with one another or build structures and areas from a selection of objects. AW allows users to own worlds and universes, and develop 3D content.
* Some users like to use flag icons instead of country names. However, this should be avoided, as flags are less recognizable than country names.
* I would also like to know what Clementina's views are in relationship to sexually explicit images on Wikipedia. I want to expect admins to be able to view things without a POV pushing its way in. Most users can block, delete, and protect correctly. Its the decision-making job that's the one that really matters.
+ Australian Plant Name Index: Databases :: Plants of Australia
* It covers all names, whether current names, synonyms or invalid names. It includes bibliographic and typification details, links to other resources, and data from the Census of Australian Vascular Plants divided by state. Users can also make notes and comments on other details.
+ Closure (computer science), Uses of closures
* Users can easily define their own control structures as well.
+ Cloud computing: Computer science :: Internet :: Computer networking :: Metaphors
* In Computer science, 'cloud computing' describes a type of outsourcing of computer services, similar to the way in which the supply of electricity is outsourced. Users can simply use it. They do not need to worry where the electricity is from, how it is made, or transported. Every month, they pay for what they consumed.
* Users often post minority views to articles. This fits within Wikipedia's mission so long as the contributions are verifiable and do not give undue weight. The burden of evidence rests with the user who initially provides the information or wishes the information to remain.
+ Curitiba, Tourism: Cities in Paraná State :: Capitals of Brazilian states
* Every year, tourism grows in Curitiba. It is a special city tour that visits the principal tourist attractions in Curitiba, featuring comfortable white buses with big windows and a shape similar to that of streetcars. It is possible to visit the parks, squares and the rest of the city's tourist attractions. To go on the tour you must buy a ticket with five tickets that give you the right to get on and off bus four times. Users can therefore choose the touristic point where they want to stay longer. Then, they can embark again to complete the remaining part of the itinerary.
+ Find a Grave, Content and features: Websites :: Cemeteries
* Members can place on-line memorials for family and friends for no cost. Users can edit the memorials. Members may also request photos of graves which Find A Grave volunteers can add.
+ Flickr
* Users can upload any photo to their website. The user will then be asked to release the photo under many licenses available. Some licenses allow other people to reuse it, which makes it possible for Wikimedia Commons to transfer free files from Flickr to their website.
* Users can also discuss things on wikis. Discussion can help people understand things better, or gives people a chance to tell their views. In Wikipedia the talk pages are for that, but in some wikis, the article and the discussion are in the same page.
+ Google, Things google has made: 1998 establishments :: Google :: Mountain View, California
* Users can send money using their credit cards or bank accounts to other users.
* It is called 'Google Mail' in the United Kingdom and Germany. Users get free space to store e-mail.
+ Help:Logging in, Your user page and user talk page
* Most users write a little bit about themselves and their interests on their user page.
+ Help:Moving a page, Undo a move
* Any user can remove the redirect and propose that the page be deleted.
+ Help:Random page, Namespace selection
* Users can also opt to view a random page in a namespace of their choice.
+ Help:Signatures
* Users can easily 'sign' their posts at the end of a comment. This comes from the computer network Usenet, where two hyphens mark a signature block. This helps other users to follow the timing order of discussions, and to find the author of a particular comment. Signing is normally done on talk pages only, not on written articles.
+ Help:Talk page, User Talk pages
* This can function as a kind of messaging system. Users receive a prominent notification when new messages have been left on their talk page. If you don't get a response to your user talk page message, try looking for other contact details which they may have supplied on their user page.
+ Internet forum: Internet communication
* One type of a 'forum' is an online discussion site on the Internet. Users can type messages for others to see, and reply to other user's messages.
+ Kaioo: Web 2.0 :: Non-profit organizations :: Social networking
* Users can also create their own networks that are within the kaioo-network.
+ Ketchup, History, Later innovations: Condiments
* In fast food chains, ketchup is often put in small packets that hold ketchup inside. Users tear the side or top of the packet. They then squeeze the ketchup out of the ketchup packets. In 2010, Heinz is offering an alternate squeeze and dip cup. This is meant to offer a cleaner method of dispensing the product.
+ Memrise: Education :: Software :: Websites
* Memrise' is a free online learning website. It uses flashcards with mnemonics to teach. Users are tested by multiple choice and type-in tests. Memrise was founded by Ed Cooke and Greg Detre.
+ Methamphetamine, Effects of methamphetamine: Drugs
* Many users claim to have an uncontrollable urge to get more of the drug, after using it. This effect of the drug is part of the reason methamphetamine can be so addictive.
* Users have to have edits 'before' the vote starts for it to count. I have therefore struck the vote.
* Some users are more lenient, some less so, some in the middle. That's why I feel we need rules. We need someone to, for want of a better phrase, take charge on this issue ie a steward or some other impartial observer.
+ Multitasking (iOS), Features, Fast app switching: Apple software
* Fast app switching lets apps to pause and resume themselves quickly and easily change to other apps. Users can use fast app switching by opening the multitasking bar. The multitasking bar can be displayed by double-tapping the home button.
* User talk pages are for talking with other members. Every user has their own. You do not have to sign up to Wikipedia and get a user name to have a talk page. However, other editors who also edit Wikipedia from the same IP address will also have the same talk page. You may therefore find messages on the talk page that are not meant for you. You will then not be able to edit Wikipedia from that IP address until the block expires. That is why it is a good idea to get your own user name by signing up to Wikipedia.
+ Norton Internet Security, Macintosh edition, Version 1.0 through 3.0: Antivirus software
* Norton Internet Security version 1.0 for Mac was released November 1, 2000. It can identify and remove both Windows and Mac viruses. Other features include a firewall, advertisement blocking in the browser, parental controls, and the ability to prevent confidential information from being transmitted outside the computer. Users are prompted before such information is able to be transmitted. The incorporation of Aladdin Systems' iClean allows users to purge the browser cache, cookies, and browsing history within Norton's interface. Operating system requirements call for Mac OS 8.1.
* Users can inform network administrators of the attacking computers for corrective actions.
* All users are invited to ask the candidates, if there are questions.
* FYI, I was here at this wiki far longer than you have. I also had some respect in this wiki before I left this project temporarily and the people who respected me also left soon after. The reason why I decided to leave for months was because I was fed up with all the drama, especially in this wikipedia. I hoped clearing my head would make things better, but it seems to have gotten worse. Face it, this wikipedia no longer has a point. Users play games over here and vandals get another chance to be obnoxious. Until another school year starts again for me, I'm just waste time here.
* That's why we have admins. Most users here are already admins and there's usually at least one around at any time.
+ Paint.net: Graphics software
* It was a simple replacement for Microsoft Paint. There have been many versions of the program and it has become more powerful. Users can create logos. They can also edit photographs, making them bigger or smaller, changing colors. Users can also change the file format of an image.
+ Pinterest
* Users can visit other pinboards, 're-pin' images to their own pinboards, or 'like' photos. The site was created by Ben Silbermann, Paul Sciarra, and Evan Sharp.
+ RollerCoaster Tycoon, Games in the series, RollerCoaster Tycoon: 1999 video games :: 2002 video games :: 2004 video games :: Simulator video games
* Users can also download famous theme parks from the internet. A large amount of rides and shops are included with the game.
+ TV.com: Entertainment websites
* Users get a user page and can keep track of television shows. They can also add things like episode details and cast members.
* Any user can nom articles for deletion as long as the nom is in good faith. I see no evidence that this nom was in bad faith.
* Any user can 'comment' on any discussion. The person being elected cannot vote in their election, but can comment. In such elections, unnamed editors cannot vote, but they can comment. The crats closing such discussions will decide what votes are taken into account. It might well be that a comment of an unnamed editor decides the outcome of such an election. Also note that blocking an editor is not punishment, it is simply a way of protecting the wiki.
* It is a part of our responsibility to make the Simple English Wikipedia safe for our users. We already do a lot of things to make sure it is a safe place. Users also have to take some responsibility to keep themselves safe.
+ Text editor
* Sometimes users make mistakes, or need to do the same thing over and over without getting bored. This is what the undo and redo features do. Users can reverse their mistakes, or quickly repeat their actions.
* Many users like to add userboxes to their user pages. These are similar to the Babel templates but are usually more about what users do on Wikipedia, what their interests are, their political and religious beliefs, etc. Note that some userboxes also exist in user space, and a directory of them can be found here.
+ Tuenti
* Tuenti' is an online social network which was accessible only by invitation, to 14 November 2011. The site is mainly focused on Spanish speakers. It allows users to create their own profile, add other users as friends and exchange messages. Users can join common interest pages, event management, and upload photos and videos.
+ Tumblr: 2007 establishments :: New York City :: Websites
* Tumblr' is a blogging site that began in New York City in 2007 by founder David Karp and Marco Arment. The site allows people to post text, images, videos, links, quotes and audio to their tumblelog, a short-form blog. Users can follow other users, or choose to make their tumblelog private. The service emphasizes ease of use.
* Any user is free to move it into article space.
+ Twitter: 2006 establishments :: San Francisco, California :: Social networking
* All users can send and receive tweets using the Twitter website. They can also use other applications that work with Twitter on smartphones. Using Twitter is free, but sending or getting tweets by SMS may cost money. The website is based in San Francisco, California. Twitter also has servers and offices in San Antonio, Texas and Boston, Massachusetts, and soon in Salt Lake City, Utah.
* In the pervious closing proposals, the wikimeta community was tolerant to the inactivity and decided to live and let live the struggling simple projects. Unfortunately there has been little progress and many other projects, especially the English wikipedia have shunned the simple projects. Many projects in other languages have been closed for similiar reasons why some users want to close simple. However there was always a group of resistance, claiming to keep it for non-native speakers or for the children. It is time to step back and realize that keeping the simple projects won't bring a sudden burst of activity here. Users come and go and wiki projects evolve over time. I think that the consensus should also change and adapt to the current circumstances here. Even if the current proposals fail again, in the next year another complaint will arise up and the discussion will repeat itself again as it has done before. The majority of the opinion will progressively push for closure of simple language projects.
|
{
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### person | user:
Internet user
* Many Internet users are concerned with maintaining their privacy as they surf the web
- consider spam an invasion of their privacy
- devote one or more hours every day to Internet use
- have address books which can contain hundreds of names
* Most Internet users have credit cards
- view spamming as an unprofessional form of marketing
* Some Internet users are concerned about the security of information transmitted over the Internet
- see cookies as a threat to their privacy
* account for only five per cent of the world s population.
* are almost evenly divided between men and women.
* are among the highest earners with a high disposable income
- most affluent and educated members of our society
- at risk for eyestrain from hours spent staring at the computer screen
- busy people who receive dozens or even hundreds of email messages a day
- computer literate
* are concerned about censorship, privacy, and navigation
- intrusion into their personal lives
- generally people who are employed, intelligent and have disposable income
- highly educated, intelligent, informed consumers
- increasingly representative of the general American population
- information hunters
- more affluent and educated than non-Internet users
- upper middle-class people
- way above average in intelligence, education and earning power
- well educated and are more affluent than the general population
- young, well educated and have above average incomes
* believe that they own the internet system and that they have great freedom.
* cite privacy as a number one concern when shopping online.
* conduct online financial transactions.
* have a substantially greater monthly income than non-users
- different roles as a result of their type of connection
- higher incomes and are educated to a higher level than the average population
- nearly the same number of friends as non-users
* like most people, are interested in convenience.
* manage a plethora of passwords to protect email, files, and website registrations.
* spend less time watching television or reading newspapers and magazines
- the majority of their time reading, writing, and managing their email
* tend to be middle-income, white males who know how to use their computers
- more educated, wealthier and white than the population as a whole
- surfers with short attention spans
- well-educated, motivated, and have above average incomes
- younger and buy more expensive homes than other homebuyers
- younger, wealthier and better educated than the general population
- consist of upscale, well-educated families
* tend to have a higher education, and by assumption, a broader interest in the world
- large amount of disposable income
- relatively high household incomes
* understand better than most people that information is power.
Other user
* enjoy services.
* find manuals.
Vagrant
* are basically a product of unemployment and their numbers swell during depressions
- capable of smoke cigarettes
* are located in bridges
- subways
- wanderers
* enter territory.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* make a practice of watching people punch in calling card numbers.
Vermin
* are creatures such as rats, stoats, or weasels
- especially common in hot, humid climates
- insects and arachnids
- vermin, wings or no
* can be a major headache.
|
{
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### person | vermin:
Dead vermin
* can also cause unusual smells often associated with hauntings.
+ Haunted house, Other causes: Occult
* Dead vermin can also cause unusual smells often associated with hauntings. Doors closing by themselves can be caused by wind. Moving shadow figures can be caused by the headlights of passing cars shining through a window. Many times normal sounds that come from outside can be mistaken for a sound inside the house.<|endoftext|>### person:
Victim
* Most victims die of suffocation because their lungs cease to function.
* Some victims lack some organs and glands, which are extracted through the small puncture
- use drugs or alcohol as a coping mechanism to relieve their anxiety and fear
* are being.
* are located in basements
- crime scenes
- people who let others know they have been treated unfairly
- souls that have been wounded in their journey in life
- the people who died
* deal with damage.
* desire closures.
* eat lunch.
* enter areas
- enclose areas
* experience death
- difficulty
- pain
* feel consequences
- immediate consequences
- senses
* find justice.
* get attention
- medical attention
* get prompt attention
* give statements.
* have circulatory problems
- determination
- immediate treatments
- pulses
- skin
- strong determination
- throats
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* lead police.
* make sound.
* may have damage
- nerve damage
* means a natural person who incurs loss or harm as a result of a crime
- person against whom a crime has been committed by either an adult or a juvenile
* need intensive treatments
* perform activities
- routine activities
- sacrificed by an uncontrollable force or person
* possess characteristics
- typical characteristics
* range in ages.
* receive wounds.
* seek attention
- care
- emergency care
* seek immediate care
- medical care
* seek medical attention
* share stories.
* suffer death
- emotional scars
* suffer from allergies
- peanut allergies
- grave injuries
- painful death
* to receive assistance.
* to report incidents
- such incidents
* to seek medical treatments
* turning into oppressors is the history of humanity.
* will have emotional problems
+ Drowning: Water
* In many countries, drowning is one of the biggest causes of death for children under 14 years old. Children have drowned in wading pools and even bath tubs. Many people drown in countries where there is a lot of water, especially if they swim in dangerous waters. In some places, drowning is the second most likely cause of injury and death for children. Victims are more likely to be male, young or teenage.
### person | victim:
Casualty
* Casualties are decrease
- injuries or deaths that occurred in conjunction with any fire incident or response
- located in hospitals
- survivors
- victims
* Casualties includes arms
- legs
- nuclei
- sections
- vacuoles
- occur in areas
- refer to the total number of fatalities and persons injured as a result of road accident
* is an accident
- human death
### person | victim | casualty:
Casualty insurance
* includes a variety of different insurance coverages.
* pays for injuries to persons or liability for such injuries.
Collateral damage
* Collateral Damage concerns the way that a war can reach across half a century to blight the present.
* is fatal accidents.
Hypothermia victim
* Most hypothermia victims are elderly persons who are unable to keep sufficiently warm in winter.
* develop muscular rigidity and erratic heartbeats.
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{
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### person | victim:
Martyr
* are favorite subjects of church windows, and have their own iconography
- holocausts offered to the divine love and glory
- people who died for their faith, for goodness, for principles, for values
* often believe it is their obligation to remain in their position in life
- give their life willingly for their cause<|endoftext|>### person | victim:
Quarry
* Quarries means an open excavation used for obtaining building stone, slate, or limestone.
* Some quarries fill with water to make small lakes when they are no longer being used for mining.
+ Quarry: Mining
* A 'quarry' is a type of open pit mine that is used to get rocks and minerals from the ground. Quarries are often used to cut stone from the ground in large pieces or blocks. These are called dimension stones. They are used for building things. Some quarries fill with water to make small lakes when they are no longer being used for mining.
Rape victim
* Many rape victims feel ashamed and alone
- suffer depression and memory loss
* Most rape victims are women, but men can also be raped
- experience strong feelings of guilt
- suffer visible physical injuries during an attack
* Some rape victims are males.
* are especially at risk of infection
- nine times more likely than victims of other crimes to attempt suicide
Scapegoat
* act upon their feelings of anger, hurt and rejection.
* are victims.
* tend to be unaware of feelings other than anger.
Villain
* are by definition evil people
- characters
- dependants
- lawbreakers
* get fate.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* meet fate
- similar fate
* play active roles
### person | villain:
Rogue
* are villains.
* stars colliding and holes that eat up galaxies are common galactic occurrences.
Virgin
* are animals
- innocents
- uniquely able to give their total selves to love in a marriage
* includes arms
- body substances
- cytoplasm
- heads
* represent purity, and a unicorn is very pure
Vixen
* Many vixen fail to reproduce at all.
* are bitchs
- foxs
- monestrous and have only one litter per year
Ward
* are blocks
- geographic areas into which a municipality is divided for purposes of the election
* are part of hospitals
- municipalities
* have guardians.
- vacuoles
### person | ward:
Death row
* Death Row can be a lonely experience and a struggle for mental survival
- unique prison population
* corridor between towering walls under an open sky.
* is the prerogative of the poor.<|endoftext|>### person:
Warrior
* Most warriors die in battles.
* Some warriors use leather shields
- wield blades
* are people who choose to walk a separate path from others
- the masters of weaponry
* do jobs
- superb jobs
* engage in combat.
* enjoy opponents
- worthy opponents
* find weapons.
* have honor
- places
* hunt prey
- suitable prey
- human bodies
- legs
* love life.
* need nourishment
- regular nourishment
* return homes.
* to seek care.
* utilize skills.
* wear armor.
* works by killing the adults, therefore reducing the number of eggs and larvae.
Wealthy individual
* can have a huge impact on conservation.
* get rich because of their families' hard work.
* tend to be intelligent individuals that are more likely to be a card counter.
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### person:
Wife
* Most wives can have children
- die of diseases
- engage in sexual activities
- get husbands
* Most wives have husbands
- sons
- lose weight
* Some wives adopt sons.
* Some wives are diagnosed with breast cancer
- collect animals
- die in hospitals
* Some wives die of cancer
- tuberculosis
- do abuse their husbands
- have colon cancer
- lose husbands
- possess pets
- raise animals
- shave heads
- sleep in beds
- suffer from osteoporosises
* Wives acquire husbands
- answer doors
* Wives are slaves to their husbands or masters
- spouses
* Wives are the most frequent victims of spouse abuse
- property of their husbands
- women
- young men's mistresses, companions for middle age, and old men's nurses
- become parents
* Wives can charge husbands with rape
- do hikes
- eat food
* Wives engage in activities
- follow paths
- give birth and some nurse children
* Wives go to beds
- doctors
* Wives have authority
- best friends
- busy life
- considerable authority
- conversations
- education
- freedom
- ideas
- legal rights
- problems
- hold hands
* Wives includes arms
- cell membranes
- nuclei
- personality
- sections
- woman's bodies
- interact with husbands
* Wives issue brief statements
- leave towns
- lie to children
* Wives lose lbs
* Wives love cats
- indian food
* Wives make decisions
- suggestions
- may have trouble
- open eyes
- raise kids
* Wives release follow statements
* Wives remain in countries
- native countries
- ride bicycles
* Wives see doctors
- faces
- pictures
* Wives share primary residences
- support families
- survive for years
* Wives take care
- comfort
* Wives to perform household tasks
- most household tasks
- use goods
- want life
- will have children
* cheating use surveillance software to monitor computor activity.
### person | wife:
First wife
* First wives have children.
* Most first wives have children.
Homemaker
* Most homemakers make pasta at least once a week to save money.
* are makers.
* assist with cooking, light housekeeping, laundry, shopping and other household chores.
* markets home decorative products and ways to organize and strengthen the home and family.
* perform household tasks and activities that support clients in their homes.
* take care of household tasks.
Housewife
* Housewives are relatively more at risk for both undernutrition and obesity
- discipline their intoxicated husbands
- go online to shop for goods
- manage their chores with a minimum of water
* Most housewives bake injera twice a week.
* are homemakers
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### person:
Winner
* are books
- companies
- contestants
- gamblers
- located in sporting events
- subsidiaries
* demonstrate excellence.
* get opportunity.
* have contrast patterns
* includes arms
- body substances
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- plasma membranes
- vacuoles
* win games.
+ 1st Academy Awards, Nominees and winners
* Winners are listed first.
+ 34th Annie Awards: Annie Awards :: Glendale, California
* Winners are marked in 'bold' text.
+ 59th Primetime Emmy Awards, Nominations and winners, Primetime Telecast Winners
* Winners are listed first, in 'bold'. Other nominees are in alphabetical order.
+ 65th British Academy Film Awards, Winners and nominees: BAFTA Awards :: 2011 in entertainment
* Winners are listed first and highlighted in 'bold'.
+ 84th Academy Awards, Nominees and winners: Academy Awards :: 2012 in entertainment
+ Academy Award for Best Actor, Winners and nominees
* Winners are listed first in 'bold', followed by the other nominees
- Actress, Winners: Academy Awards
* Winners are listed first in colored row, followed by the other nominees
+ Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor, Winners and nominees
- Actress, Winners and nominees
+ Elephant seal, Behaviour, On land
* Mating is preceded by fights between males, who throw their huge bulk against each other. Winners get to mate with females.
+ Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards: Movie awards :: Movie festivals :: Taipei :: Festivals in Asia
* Winners are selected by a jury of judges during the week before the ceremony is held. Winners are awarded with a golden horse statuette.
+ MTV Movie Awards: Movie awards
* It also contains movie parodies that used official movie footage with hosts and other celebrities and music performances. The nominees are decided by a special panel at Tenth Planet Productions, the production company headed by Joel Gallen, who also created the MTV Movie Awards. Winners are decided by the general public. Presently voting is done through MTV's official website through a special Movie Awards link.
+ Mud bogging: Motor sports
* It is popular in Canada and the United States. The goal of mud bogging is to drive a vehicle through a pit of mud. Winners are decided by the distance they get through the pit. However, if several vehicles are able to travel the entire length, the time taken to go through the pit will decide the winner. Usually, vehicles competing in mud bogs are four-wheel drives.
+ Pritzker Architecture Prize: 1979 establishments
* It is for talented and significant architect who has created great projects throughout his or her life. Jay A. Pritzker and his wife Cindy began the award in 1979. The Pritzker family pays for the prize. It is the top prize in architecture, and it is often called the Nobel Prize of architecture. The country, race, religion or political ideas of the architect are not important. Winners receive a medal. The idea comes from the Roman architect Vitruvius. Before 1987, a limited edition Henry Moore sculpture came with the prize money.
+ Star Search: Television game shows :: First run syndicated television programs
* Star Search' is a talent competition, where performers compete for prizes, including contract offers from different companies. Musical performers, dancers, models, comedians, and other kinds of talented people appear. Winners are chosen by celebrity judges, and also audience votes.
+ William M. Jennings Trophy: National Hockey League trophies and awards
* Winners are selected based on regular-season play. Up until 1981, the Vezina Trophy had been awarded under that definition, but it was later changed and replaced by the Jennings Trophy. Since it began in 1982, it has been awarded at the end of 25 seasons to 27 different players.
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### person:
Witch
* All Witches are creative, artistic, intuitive and spiritual people.
* Many Witches also love animals and keep pets, especially the traditional cats
- do choose to wear black clothing or ritual robes
- feel that wearing black attracts and holds more natural energy
- witches also practise tantric sex magic
* Most witches have a spell table or altar which is used only for ritual and magickal work
- teach themselves to work magick
- use spells
* Some witches band together in covens.
* Some witches believe that one has to be born with the talent to become a witch
- that the most powerful time to cast a spell is during orgasm
* Some witches have doors
* Some witches practice alone, while some seek out a coven to practice with others
- in a coven, while others do it individually
* Some witches wear heavy makeup
- jewelry
* TEND to focus more heavily upon certain mythic images than on others.
* also have a responsibility in how they present themselves to others
- like to say that they are pagans
* are always female, and sorcerers always male, and both reproduce with humans
- animists, believing that the spark of divinity exists in all creation
- both males and female
- diverse, and practice a variety of traditions
- elderly people
- essentially healers, whether they heal broken bones or broken spirits
- everywhere, and can be dangerous
- female, warlocks are male Witches are both male and female
- fish
- generally eclectic and draw on many aspects of paganism including shamanic practices
- individualists
- located in covens
- made of wood
- normal, everyday, people
- now rare and weak, compared to ancient times
- often intimates, relatives, friends
- powerful people, but they do have their limits
- sensitive, intuitive people who work with the cycles of the moon
- ugly, have warts and wear pointed hats
- used for burning
* believe in responsibility.
* believe in the sanctity of all life
- triple goddess and are protectors of mother earth
- they have existed throughout known history in many parts of the world
* burn up in the earth's atmosphere.
* can also breath under water.
* can be blonde, blue-eyed and beautiful
- either men or women
- good and evil
- change themselves into cats
- never do evil
- summon glowing hula hoops to teleport people across vast distances
* celebrate eight major festivals or sabbats each year.
* certainly can hold their beliefs and practices in private.
* claim that they have a constitutional right to hold ceremonies.
* come from all racial, socio-economic and religious backgrounds
- walks of life
- every socio-economic background
- in all sexual orientations and genders
* do have magic wands
- magic and spells
* don t sacrifice animals, worship the devil or cast evil spells, they say.
* find joy, knowledge and enrichment in things that many people take for granted.
* fly fast, because they can only fly at night.
* follow the old Celtic agricultural calendar and the sabbats are seasonal celebrations.
* gather together during the different moon phases, and always when the moon is full.
* get attacks.
* give honor to the elements.
* have familiars, often in the form of a cat
- features
- follow features
- group and same sex, sex during rituals
- power that grows with wisdom
- tolerance
* hold a deep reverence for nature and animals.
- cell membranes
- corpi
- heads
- material bodies
- nuclei
- personality
- sections
* is an occultist
* live in attunement with the world's soul.
* loaded word in the world of religion.
* never die before their time, except in the real world.
* non gender-specific term and refers to both male and female practitioners.
* normally meet monthly during the full moon in local covens of thirteen people.
* often cause illnesses or spirit possession
- curse and sometimes kill their victims
* only work with the powers of light and creation.
* perform spells, such as the one described above.
* practise rituals on indigenous women's sites.
* recognize the phases of the moon and the changing of the seasons.
* seek to control forces within themselves in order to live peaceful lives.
* sink in water.
* strive to respect the magickal arts, as well as the lives of others.
* tend to be dedicated environmentalists
- highly individualistic
* treat patients and pray for rain or sun.
* try to hurt people.
* use a lot of symbolic magics for spells
- ingredients such as herbs and chemicals to cas their spells
- ritual to attune to natural rhythms and give thanks for the bounty of the Earth
* venerate the life forces in nature and seek to be in tune with natural cycles.
* walk in the night.
* wear clothing and robes of every color.
* work at aligning themselves with the free flow of the universe
- with the natural flow of energy in the world
* worship false gods and goddesses.
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### person | witch:
Modern witch
* Many modern Witches have animal familiars, usually cats, which are their magical helpers.
* Some modern witches inscribe their magical tools and personal jewelry with runic characters.
Warlock
* are also part of the fairy world
- bands
- books
- witchs
* cast shadow and fire magic spells.
* conjure bolts of lightning.
* have hollow weenies.
* wear cloth armor and are vulnerable to melee damage.
+ World of Warcraft, Gameplay, Classes: 2004 video games :: Blizzard video games :: Massively multiplayer online role-playing games :: Windows games
* Warlocks cast shadow and fire magic spells. Warlocks wear cloth armor and are vulnerable to melee damage.<|endoftext|>### person:
Wizard
* Some wizards look at doors
- specialize in services
- wield swords
* are also symbols of balanced male and female energy or yin-yang
- ingenious help programs that automate much of a complicated process
- magazines
- mere masters of deception through illusion when left to their own devices
- powerful casters whose mastery is in dishing damage
- pure magic users, eschewing the training of the body in favor of training the mind
- software, with all the associated up-front development costs
- system administrators
* are the masters of thunder and lightning
- most numerous of the magic-using professions
- thinking-person's battlers
- undisputed masters of magical damage
* can only wear troll leather, regular leather, and cloth.
* have magical spells plus they can combine spells to form magic traps
- the power to summon a vast range of creatures and cast amazing spells
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is an expert
* like to research new spells.
* manipulate the very essence of magic itself to mysterious and powerful effect.
* wake when they dream and dream when awake.
|
{
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### person:
Worker
* Most worker termites feed on substances
- wood
* Most workers earning low-wages are young, single and live with their parents
- eat proteins
* Most workers have glands
- wax glands
- live in Price, where their children can attend school
- work with communities
* Some Workers collect nectar, some collect pollen and some do both.
* Some workers are known to lay unfertilized eggs that are fed to the larvae and queen
- believe that there is periodicity to asteroidal and meteoric impacts
- capture insects
- carry larvae
* Some workers collect insect larvae
- describe a workforce divided on the basis of employment status
- eat spores
- further reduce their life expectancy by abusing drugs
- have ovaries
* Some workers isolate carbohydrates
- structural carbohydrates
- kill in accidents
- migrate to nest sites
- monitor animals
- occur in workplaces
- place certain species in different families
- protect offspring
- wear gloves made of heavy rubber to protect their hands from chemicals
- work with children
* absorb captan through their skin into their bloodstream.
* access information
- support services
* acquire skills.
* actively vibrate their antennae when ambulatory.
* alone have mouths for collecting nectar and the honey-carrying crop.
* also force feed animals enormous quantities of products until half of all the animals die
- help determine the adult role of larvae
* ants forage for food for the colony, care for the queen and young, and defend the colony.
* are a key factor in nuclear safety
- sector of modern society who live from selling their labour in the factories
- capable of bottle water
- carnivorous, and the larvae, with rare exceptions, spin cocoons prior to pupation
- concerned with continuity of employment, benefits, pay and representation
- individuals, with individual needs, methods and preferences
- local people who are concerned and proud of their work
* are located in desks
- roofs
- shops
- more productive when they lose less time to illness, disability and premature death
- small, white insects which are blind and are very sensitive to heat, cold and dry air
- sometimes confused with honey bees , especially when flying in and out of their nests
* are sterile females produced by the queen that develop from fertilized, diploid eggs
- who care for the young, collect food, build and defend the nest
* are the masters of the process of work and the products of their labour
- smallest bees in the colony
- stars of capitalism
- trained on jobs
- workers the world over
* assume roles
- tasks
* attack queens at night on foraging trails, the same way they attack prey.
* avoid areas
- conflict
* begin careers.
* belonging to different subfamilies have the same mother but different fathers.
* benefit from style.
* bring water.
* can swallow chemicals in different ways.
* carry food.
* carry out duties
- many other duties
* claim experience.
* clean and protect the hive, care for eggs and larvae, and gather food.
* collect seeds.
* come to homes.
* communicate by a series of semiochemicals and pheromones.
* comp applies to injuries at home caused by work, e.g. carpal tunnel syndrome.
* control operates in production.
* create decorative finish
* develop skills.
* do different tasks
- labor
- many different tasks
* eat cream
- ice cream
- rich food
- sugar
* employ in operations
- techniques
* engage in duties
* enter areas
- fields
- occupations
* examine growth.
* exhibit a wider range of behaviors than either queens or drones
- similarity
* experience normal reaction
- stress reaction
- unemployment
* expose to benzene.
* face events
- issues
* find activities
- sources
* follow experience
- precaution
- procedures
- space entry procedures
* gain experience
* gender the workplace by creating a gendered workplace culture.
* get experience
- proper protection
- work experience
* give off pheromones signaling when the hive is under attack and when to gather together.
* have a mostly sugar based diet, while larvae and queens feed mostly on protein
- considerable experience
* have considerable relate experience
- desire
- dollars
- exposure
- knowledge
* have no offspring, and their fitness is an increasing function of chosen mortality
- wings and also have several evolution stages
- options
- pulses
- the rights to freedom of speech and assembly
- three fundamental rights in health and safety
- two sets of chromosomes
* help citizens
- effects
- senior citizens
* identify complex computer problems
* include people.
- cells
- human bodies
- nuclei
* increase productivity.
* invest in education when young, which raises their productivity once employed.
* involve in industries.
* keep in touch.
* know effort
- extra effort
* learn occupations
* leave descendants
- forces
* leave labor forces
- markets
- professions
* look for food.
* lose jobs
- weight
* maintain temperature.
* make attempts
- contributions
- decisions
* means man in regard to the employment of the factor of production human labor.
* meet requirements.
* migrate to where wages are higher and where they receive respect.
* move to locations.
* must have experience
- power plant experience
* need calories
- sunlight
* often form subgroups, which compete with other subgroups and individuals
- groom each other, keeping their body, mandibles, and antennae clean
- trade wages for job security, status, and other job attributes
* pass drug tests
* perform at levels
- colony maintenance
- essential duties
- general labor
- routine maintenance
- such duties
* play a critical role in occupational safety and health
- significant role in wealth creation
* policing limits the number of reproductives in a ponerine ant.
* prey on insects and feed on honeydew produced by sucking types of insects such as aphids.
* produce all the wealth in society.
* provide education.
* raise families.
* receive benefits
- disability benefits
- hepatitis b vaccines
- permanent disability benefits
* recognize development.
* record results.
* rely on knowledge.
* report life
- prolong life
* require skills.
* reveal presence.
* see summaries.
* seek care
* serve customers
- different roles
* show symptoms.
* suggest patterns.
* survive winter.
* take actions
- charge
* take over duties
- same precaution
* tend to retire at much younger ages than previous generations.
* termites constantly forage far and wide, looking for wood to feed the colony
- looking for wood to feed their colony
- construct mud tubes and usher swarmer termites out for their annual mating season
- gather food, maintain the nest, and feed and care for other members of the colony
- out foraging in the leaf litter are also a useful food source for insectivores
- tunnel into structural timbers and other sources of cellulose on which they feed
* termites, the ones that damage wood by eating the softwood layers, are white and soft-bodied.
* to buy goods
- complete tasks
- obtain information
* to perform anticipate job duties
- certain tasks
- return to workplaces
- support families
* transmit the organism to the queen through food exchange.
* treat emotional issues
* undertake tasks.
* use equipment
- handle precaution
- mass transits
- safe handle precaution
* visit sites.
* wear gear
- protective gear
- shirts
- sleeve shirts
* work for years
- full time
* work in agencies
- coal industries
- facilities
- government agencies
- offices
- weekends
- local communities
+ Common Ground, Street To Home: Charities
* In these counts, there is a way of writing down who is most vulnerable, who is most in danger from being homeless. This is called a vulnerability index. Workers complete the vulnerability index by asking about medical problems. Then they try to persuade those who spend the most time on the streets to seek permanent housing. They do this even if the people still have drug, alcohol or medical problems. Some of those involved in the issue of homelessness consider Common Ground a pioneer - someone who thinks up new ways to deal with old problems.
+ Ethics, What is ethics used for?
* In work, thinking about ethics can help with hard questions. Work can be like both economics and politics. Workers have to make money and follow laws. But the best way to do both is not always easy to know.
+ Glove, Gloves worn for protection: Accessories :: Protective clothing
* People wear thick gloves, usually made of wool or fabric, to keep their hands warm in cold weather. People also wear thin gloves made of rubber or plastic to keep things they touch clean. Some workers wear gloves made of heavy rubber to protect their hands from chemicals. A mitten is a glove which has a separate place for the thumb, but the other four fingers are together. There are also mittens, which are very similar to gloves. Gloves and mittens are usually used to protect people from cold, and chemicals. People use latex gloves during Earth day to clean up.
+ Mount Athos: Mountains in Greece
* There is a limit on the number of visitors. People visiting need to get a special permit. Only men are allowed to enter. A large number of Albanian Muslims work in the Holy Mountain. Police and Coast Guard presence is very discreet. Most workers live at the place where they work. The 2001 Greek national census recorded a population of 2,262 inhabitants.
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### person | worker:
Accumulator
* also dampen surges within the hydraulic system.
* are available in steel or aluminum, and in a number of different sizes
- registers
* serve two important functions.
### person | worker | accumulator:
Automobile battery
* Automobile batteries contain a stronger form of some of the same acid that is in acid rain.
* Some automobile batteries are part of ambulances
- automobiles
- cars
- dumpers
- go-karts
- motorbikes
- pickups
- taxis
- trucks
- consist of plates
* is an accumulator<|endoftext|>### person | worker | accumulator:
Car battery
* All car batteries have liquid inside.
* Car batteries are an example of re-chargeable batteries
- auto parts
- automotive products
- most likely to explode when a short-circuit generates very large currents
- part of electrical systems
- can maintain an electrical charge even if flooded
* Car batteries contain acid, which is corrosive
- lead and sulfuric acid
- sulfuric acid and produce hydrogen and oxygen gases
* Car batteries have a liquid electrolyte
- three main jobs
- lose power in the cold
* Car batteries use acid
* Most car batteries use acid.
* Some car batteries are part of ambulances
- cars
- motorbikes
* is an accumulator
+ Rechargeable battery: Batteries
* Rechargeable batteries can be used for many mobile machines, like MP3 players, mobile phones, flashlights, etc. Car batteries are rechargeable.
+ Wet cell
* A 'wet cell' is a cell that contains a liquid electrolyte. Most batteries have a paste electrolyte. Car batteries have a liquid electrolyte. They are inconvenient because the electrolyte can be spilled. Some early batteries had liquid electrolytes.
Nicad
* NiCads also lose their power quickly over several days of non-use
- are notoriously undependable
- contain cadmium, a metal that is toxic to humans when inhaled or ingested
* are storage batteries.
* can explode if short circuited or connected with the wrong polarity.
Agricultural worker
* Some agricultural workers live in areas.
* are at higher risk of death or disabling injury than most other workers
- often the poorest of the poor
* can absorb pesticides through their skin, through inhalation, and by ingestion
- have more than one employer the same time
* do labor.
* have a high risk of contracting malaria
- the potential for prolonged extensive contact with pesticide residues
American worker
* are the most productive in the world
- productive, highest-paid workers in the world
* attain the highest rates of productivity in the world.
* lead the world in degenerative diseases.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Animator
* are elements that update rendering primitive characteristics
- technicians
* bring to life cartoons and three-dimensional imagery.
* can work in many areas including movies, television, video games, and the internet.
* draw a series of pictures that are put onto film to make animated cartoons
- or move models or puppets which are then photographed in sequence to produce a film
* make up a fairly small population of the people that create an animated film.
* small animation making tool.
* use lasers to scan real people or things into digital form in their computers.
* usually work with other people to form a team.
* can work in many areas including movies, television, video games, and the internet. There are many ways of making animations. Animators usually work with other people to form a team.
* work in the motion picture and television industries.
Ant worker
* are dark red or black and move about in the open.
* take meticulous care of their young.
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### person | worker:
Assistant
* Some assistants use medical instruments.
* are capable of hand tools
- doctors who tend to work regularly for a practice full or part time
- trained on jobs
* can do duties
- routine duties
* do tasks.
* explain complex issues
- medical issues
* follow instruction
- rules
- specific rules
* gather information.
* have ability
- flexibility
- strong ability
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* interview people.
* learn duties
- occupations
* leave teams.
* make contributions.
* need masters.
* perform necessary tasks
- services
* play roles
- significant roles
* provide patients.
* pursue education.
* specialize in services.
* take measurements.
* to join teams.
* to perform duties
- such duties
* treat animals.
* use technology.
* work in homes
- nurse homes
- operate rooms
- on teams
- under supervision
* work with faculty members
### person | worker | assistant:
Attendant
* are assigned to rooms
- participants
* can do jobs.
* create opportunity.
* greet passengers.
* have jobs.
- body substances
- cells
- corpi
- heads
* interact with passengers.
* is an assistant
* lose jobs.
* open doors.
* provide instruction
- safety instruction
* serve customers.
- extra duties
### person | worker | assistant | attendant:
Batman
* are albums
- attendants
- films
- located in comic books
- video games
* is an attendant
Caddie
* allow golfers who are physically able the opportunity to walk.
* are attendants.
* can be relatives, friends, etc.
### person | worker | assistant | attendant | checker:
Virus checker
* monitor computers and look for malicious code.
* work by searching for signatures, much like virus fingerprints.
Courtier
- cells
- material bodies
- nuclei
- personality
* sometimes travel great distances to their friends' Coronations.
* win approval.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant | attendant:
Flight attendant
* Most flight attendants have jobs
- work full time, but they usually have variable schedules
* Some flight attendants attend flight attendant academies
- belong to unions
- have schedules
- respond to emergencies
- work in cabins
* are aboard planes primarily to ensure the safety of passengers
- emergency responders as well
- highly trained professionals who know all about the aircraft that they fly
* are located in airports
- responsible for passenger safety
- susceptible to injuries because of the job demands in a moving aircraft
* can do jobs
- jeopardize their careers by striking or engaging in illegal self-help
* create opportunity.
- safety instruction
* strive to make air travel as comfortable and enjoyable as possible.
* suffer a significant increased incidence of bone cancer.
* to perform duties
* work in the confined spaces of aircraft aisles and galleys.
### person | worker | assistant | attendant | flight attendant:
Stewardess
* are flight attendants
- stewards
* have the lowest divorce rate among working women.
* is the longest word that is typed with only the left hand
- typed using only the left hand
Groomsman
* are attendants.
* is an attendant
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{
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### person | worker | assistant | attendant:
Guide
* Is a tube in which the stem moves.
* Some guides are professionals in camping safaris.
* advise tourists.
* are leaders
- located in museums
- plateau country natives who love to share their knowledge and stories
- structures
* contain basic information
- pages
- recommendations
- suggestions
* cover topics.
* describe sites.
* emphasize importance.
* enjoy scenery
- surround scenery
* explore ranges.
* have advice
- approaches
- different approaches
- feedback
- permission
- photos
- recipes
- subjects
* help centers.
* include definition
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- sections
* incorporate alternatives
- concepts
* is an example
* look at pictures.
* offer details.
* point out features.
* provide assistance
- general information
- introductions
- nutrition
- sources
- tips
- users
* teach readers.
### person | worker | assistant | attendant | guide:
Field guide
* Most field guides have maps showing where to see a particular kind of bird.
* are books with pictures and descriptions of the birds
- guidebooks
Tour guide
* are guides
- professional film makers who personally narrate their films
- volunteers donating their time
- workers
* explain the interaction between insects and plants in an ecosystem.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant | attendant:
Lifeguard
* Most lifeguards ensure safety
- have moms
* also communicate with their co-workers.
* are attendants
* are located in beachs
- swimming pools
* are on duty during all public swim hours
- swimming hours in the summer months
- the summer months to make sure the young ones are safe
- for the safety of all swimmers and to enforce pool rules
- only to enforce rules and to respond in case of an emergency
- professional rescuers, just like firefighters and paramedics
- supposed to have some equipment to aid rescues
- trained in a variety of different lifesaving skills
* begin effort.
* do workouts.
* enforce guidelines
- safety guidelines
* enter water.
* have assistance
* help ensure that all aquatic facilities and programs are safe and enjoyable.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- vacuoles
* is an attendant
* monitor activities.
* perform public safety work at state park swimming areas throughout the state.
* play a key role in ensuring a safe environment for swimmers at pools and public beaches.
* watch pools.
Lifesaver
* are safety devices.
* develop stroke efficiency and endurance in a timed swim.
* take responsibility for others as well as for themselves.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant | attendant:
Rocker
* are adolescents
- ice skates
- intelligent agents
- located in porchs
- musicians
* are part of cradles
- hobbies
- people
- punks
- support
- the best selling comfort walking shoes in Ireland
- troughs
* denotes the curve of the hull from fore to aft.
* includes arms
- heads
- vacuoles
* is how much the bow and stern of the canoe curves upward.
* is the amount the hull curves from bow to stern
- curve of the bar from front to back
* refers to how curved the bow is along the keel line.
Squire
* Some squires also wear silver chains in imitation of the chain of fealty.
* are attendants
- landowners
* is an attendant
Auxiliary
* Auxiliaries can have clitic status.
* is an assistant
Confederate
* are accessories
- supporters
* invade New Mexico from Texas.
* break naval blockade of Vicksburg, Mississippi.
* is an assistant
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{
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### person | worker | assistant:
Dental assistant
* Most dental assistants are women of child bearing age
- work in dental offices
* Some dental assistants make impressions of teeth
- wear safety glass
- work with dentists
* apply clinical skills and promote oral health in a variety of settings.
* are assistants
- located in dentists
* follow rules
- specific rules
* help dentists prepare, examine and treat patients.
* learn duties.
* make up a medium-sized occupational group.
* perform tasks.
* wear gloves and masks to protect themselves from infectious diseases.
* work at dental offices
- in dentists' offices, helping to treat and examine patients
- under supervision<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant:
Doula
* Many doulas are also childbirth educators who offer private or group classes.
* Some doulas are also midwives and experienced labor companions.
* always live outside of the family's home.
* are individuals who provide emotional care and physical comfort for women during childbirth
- professional postpartum care providers
- special, patient, nurturing women
- well known for the positive outlook they have on the birthing process
* are women trained to offer emotional support to mothers during childbirth
- who support the laboring patient
* assist labouring mothers on an emotional level providing support and physical comfort.
* attend births at home, at the hospital, and at birth centers.
* can provide pregnancy, labor and postpartum support.
* help women and their partners prepare a written birth plan.
* improve the overall experience of women during labor and delivery.
* is an assistant
* only attend home births.
* provide continuous support to the expecting couple during labor, delivery, and postpartum
- emotional and physical support during pregnancy, labor, birth and postpartum
- praise, reassurance, comfort, and companionship to women in labor
* serve as labor coaches and advocates for the woman giving birth.
* sometimes carry their favorite oils for labor purposes.
* speak their language.
Facilitator
- located in meetings
- successful people who love to see others succeed
- workers
* assist children to express their feelings through play therapy and activities
- parents in preparation for their child's baptism
* help people communicate.
* work like oil between steel gears.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant:
Fashion model
* are models
- professional models
- used to sell clothing or cosmetics
* display clothing before an audience.
* is an assistant
* work in manufacturers showrooms and clothing stores.
+ Model (person), Commercial models: Clothing :: Art
* Fashion models are used to sell clothing or cosmetics. People who make clothing will often use fashion models to wear the clothing they make at fashion shows. The models will walk up and down a raised section of floor called the catwalk or 'runway' to show the clothing to other people. Some exclusive 'fashion houses' also use models to show off their dresses to clients. This idea was invented by Charles Worth.
Graduate teach assistant
* have flexibility.
* work with faculty members
Library assistant
* Some library assistants specialize in helping customers who have vision problems, such as blindness.
* are responsible for the routine work in a library.
* employed in school libraries generally work only during the school year.
* work in customer service or technical services.
Nursing assistant
* are front-line patient care providers in many settings.
* care for patients in hospitals and residential care facilities.
* help patients with activities of daily living like eating and bathing.
* work in hospitals, nursing homes, and home health agencies.
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### person | worker | assistant:
Paraprofessional
* also help educators integrate mediation into their classrooms.
* are among some of the lowest paid workers in the State
- responsible for recruiting families
* can develop a sense of community and a stronger feeling of responsibility
- proactively reduce negative classroom behaviors, and improve overall learning
* often can bridge the divide between home and school
- function under the supervision of someone with an advanced degree
* usually live in the communities where they work.
### person | worker | assistant | paraprofessional:
Legal assistant
* Many legal assistants use computers to do legal research, create documents, and keep records.
* are more likely to be employed by large firms than small firms.
* use technology.
* work in law firms, corporations, or government agencies
- under the supervision of licensed attorneys<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant | paraprofessional:
Paralegal
* are individuals who assist in the delivery of legal services
- legal professionals
- paraprofessionals
- professionals skilled in the delivery of legal services
* assist attorneys with representation of abused or neglected children.
* help attorneys prepare, file and track different business immigration matters.
* typically work in law firms, governmental agencies, and corporations.
* work as assistants to attorneys
- lawyers
* work for lawyers and perform many of the same tasks as lawyers
- in law firms, business corporations, and government agencies
* work under the direct supervision of lawyers
- supervision of lawyers to provide legal services
+ Paralegal, Education: Law occupations
* Most paralegals go to school for two to four years. They learn about different kinds of law, such as business law, criminal law, and civil law. They also learn how to work with lawyers, how to create contracts and other official agreements, and how to do research well.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant | paraprofessional:
Paramedic
* also work in immediate and long range organizational planning.
* are EMTs with the highest level of training
- a unique medical entity
- able to work life- support equipment and administer drugs
- emergency workers
- medics
- on the front line of medical care for patients who are ill or injured
- one of the highest trained health care providers in the field setting
* provide immediate care for patients in acute clinical emergencies.
* respond to all medical emergencies.
* routinely bring people back from the dead by jump-starting a stalled heart beat.
* say children who fall out of windows most commonly receive very serious head injuries.
* sometimes risk their own lives to save others.
* work indoors and outdoors, in all kinds of weather.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant:
Pawn
* are borrowing
- chess pieces
- chessmans
* are located in chess sets
- schemes
- part of chess
- pledges
- used for sacrifices
* have no representation in chess notation.
* is an assistant
+ Chess piece, Summary
* If an enemy piece is straight in front of a pawn, the pawn cannot capture that piece. Pawns have a special way to capture. A pawn can capture an enemy piece which is on the diagonal square to the left or right of the square in front of it. This is the only time a pawn can move to a square that is not straight in front of it.
+ Pawn (chess), Moving: Chess pieces
* Pawns move differently than other pieces. Unlike all the other pieces, pawns can not move backwards. Most of the time, a pawn moves by going up a single square, but the first time each pawn is moved from its starting place, it can go forward two squares. Pawns may not use the first two-square move to jump over a square with another piece on it or to capture. Any piece in front of a pawn, white or black, stops its moving. In the picture at right, the pawn on c4 may move to c5, while the pawn on e2 may move to either e3 or e4.
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"source": "generics_kb"
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### person | worker | assistant:
Physician assistant
* Most physician assistants work full time.
* Most physician assistants work in operate rooms
- physicians' offices and clinics
- on teams
* Some physician assistants collaborate with physicians
- examine children
- make house calls or visit nursing homes to treat patients
* Some physician assistants treat injuries
- minor injuries
* Some physician assistants work in areas
- primary care
- surgery
* are different from medical assistants
- people-oriented and good professional communicators
- the health care providers when physicians are absent
* can do duties
- routine duties
- relieve physicians of routine duties and procedures
* do a great majority of the health care normally provided by physicians.
* emphasize patient education which strengthens patient care.
* explain complex issues
- medical issues
* have ability
- strong ability
* need masters.
* perform a range of medical duties
* practice in ambulatory, emergency, inpatient, and long-term care settings.
* provide direct medical care to patients
- high quality health care services to patients and to the community
- services that deliver health care in two types of scenarios
* pursue education.
* work in a variety of settings and in a number of different specialties
- the same places as physicians
* work on teams with physicians or surgeons and other healthcare workers
- under the supervision of a physician
- with the supervision of a physician<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant:
Secretary
* Most secretaries are responsible for the legal work of two attorneys.
* Secretaries are assistants.
* Secretaries are capable of forward messages
- pages
- desks
- generally responsible for the communications and organization of business offices
- heads
- often the key to office efficiency and flexible, responsive managers
- the linchpins of the government machinery
* Secretaries are used for correspondence
- help
- conduct personal services, so their jobs are considered inherently governmental
- do many types of jobs to help run an office
- gain experience
- get bursitis in their elbows, plumbers get it in their knees
* Secretaries have bosses
- roles
* Secretaries includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
- learn jobs
- make adjustment
* Secretaries need experience
- work experience
- often organize and maintain files, fill out forms, and take dictation
* Secretaries perform knowledge
- work knowledge
- receive information
* Secretaries release follow statements
- remain essential to running efficient offices
- send copies
- shall have rights
- sometimes work in groups to share the work
- support managers
* Secretaries to handle administrative tasks
- use computers, fax machines, and copiers
- work at centers
- write letters<|endoftext|>### person | worker | assistant | secretary:
Legal secretary
* Legal secretaries belong to one of the most employable groups in the world
* Legal secretaries perform work knowledge
- requiring knowledge of legal terminology and procedures
* Legal secretaries prepare legal documents and communicate with the courts
- correspondence and assist with research
- papers and correspondence and assist legal research
* Legal secretaries work with lawyers
- one or more attorneys or paralegals
* Most legal secretaries perform work knowledge
- work in law firms, corporate legal departments, and governmental agencies
* Some legal secretaries read legal journals and assist with legal research.
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### person | worker | assistant | secretary:
Medical secretary
* Medical secretaries are located in dentists
- responsible for front office duties
- help doctors keep track of patients
* Medical secretaries to handle administrative tasks
* Most medical secretaries work at centers.
* Some medical secretaries train in specific areas of medicine.
Receptionist
- desks
- some of the most powerful people in the music business
* face situations
- stressful situations
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* perform other office tasks
* should have communication skills
* to provide services.
* work in industries
- service industries
Stenographer
* Some Stenographers are self-employed, working out of their homes on a contract basis
- specialize in particular fields such as medicine, engineering, or law
* are responsible for correct format, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling
* sometimes work under the pressure of deadlines and frequent interruptions.
* usually work in clean, well-lighted offices.
Subordinate
* are assistants
- colleagues
* is an assistant
### person | worker | assistant | subordinate:
Cog
* S is the largest single expense in a retail organisation
- single largest expense in a retail organisation
* eat chocolate covered coconuts, candy corn, crisp cabbage, carrots, and cats.
* have memory, and memories have cogs.
* organizes clusters of protein sequences from completely sequenced genomes of different species.
Veterinary assistant
* are primarily responsible for helping a veterinary technician or veterinarian.
* feed, water, bathe, groom, and exercise animals.
* move animals and prepare equipment before procedures.
* provide basic care for sick animals.
Australian worker
* are part of an international class.
* report life
- prolong life
Beater
* There are dozens of varieties of beater, differing in length, weight, shape, and balance.
* are implements
- workers
* carry sticks of some sort ranging from broom handles to ski poles.
Boatman
* Boatmen eat vegetables.
* Boatmen includes arms
- cell membranes
- nuclei
- personality
* Some boatmen share habitats.
* are workers.
### person | worker | boatman:
Gondolier
* Some gondoliers show teeth.
* are boatmans.
- body substances
- cell membranes
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- vacuoles
Bricklayer
* are at risk because of tools and work practices
- capable of smoke
- craftsmans
* build walls, floors, partitions, fireplaces, chimneys, and other structures.
* can lose work time because of bad weather or downturns in construction activity.
* have occupations.
- cell membranes
- heads
- sections
* is an artisan
* need diets.
* work on sidewalks, streets, homes, walls, and more.
Canadian worker
* are the most productive in the world.
* rank third in gross wages.
* view job stress as more prevalent than work-related injury or illness.
* wear rainwear suitable for a cold and wet climate.
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### person | worker:
Carpenter
* Help carpenters by performing duties of lesser skill.
* Many carpenters learn their skills in school
- work outdoors
* Most carpenters build tunnels.
* Most carpenters use basic math skills
* Most carpenters work in construction industries
* Some carpenters belong to a union.
* Some carpenters change employers each time they finish a construction job
- they finish a job
- jobs when they finish their tasks
- erect shoring and scaffolding for buildings
- repair cabinets and furniture such as desks
* also do small projects such as hanging shelves, doors, and pictures
- perform skilled work in cutting and fitting glass
* are bands
- field personnel skilled in all aspects of construction
- much more focused on production, and focus on a variety of specialties
- skilled construction workers
- tradesmans
- woodworkers
* beesexcavate tunnels in wood where they rear their young.
* bend wood.
* build houses
* generally use a claw hammer to drive nails.
* get jobs in most parts of the country.
* have a higher rate of injuries and illnesses than the national average
- experience
- one of the highest rates of injuries and illnesses of all occupations
- opportunity
- cytoplasm
- heads
- plasma membranes
* is the subject , the agent that performs the action of the verb.
* know grains and shingles, and straight lines.
* make up the largest single group of skilled workers in the country
- trade group in the construction industry
- wood into furniture
* manufacture, install, maintain and repair woodwork and related products.
* perform a variety of jobs.
* shape the wood.
* stabilize structures by bracing it with triangles.
* still use hammers.
* then use nails, screws, staples, or glues to join the materials together.
* use basic math skills every day to calculate volume and measure materials to be cut
- different hand and power tools, such as chisels, saws, and drills
- tools and materials that are heavy
* wear aprons made of heavy leather that have many pockets to hold tools.
- residential, commercial, or industrial construction
- indoors and out, and often in tight places in a wide range of conditions
- quickly, accurately, and efficiently to maximize use of time and materials
- under a wide variety of conditions, indoors and out, in all types of weather
- with many different types of tools
+ Apron: Clothing
* There are many different types of aprons depending on what the apron is used for. Aprons can be made from many materials and fabrics. Rubber aprons are used by people who work with dangerous chemicals. Carpenters wear aprons made of heavy leather that have many pockets to hold tools. Many servants and domestic workers are required to wear an apron as a part of their work uniform.
Carter
* are workers.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- sections
- vacuoles<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Caster
* Some casters cause death.
* are measured by their wheel diameter
- rollers
- shakers
- similar to steel pourers in that they pour metal into molds
- workers
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- plasma membranes
* is the backward or forward tilt at the top of the spindle support arm
- other name for the front tire
* refers to the angle of the vertical axis of the wheel in relation to the steering connection
- position of the wheels in relationship to the frame of the car
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker:
Chef
* Many chefs incorporate exercise into their weekly routines
- work passionately to turn food into works of art
* Most chefs work in business
- kitchens
- restaurants
* Some chefs cook on instinct, others on methods
- even substitute tomatoes for chili peppers for their similar reddish color
- help diets
* Some chefs work in homes
- with schools
* are TV celebrities
- a special breed of people
- also celebrities who influence the consuming public
- capable of add ingredients
* are capable of cook dishs
- eggs
- cooks
* are capable of prepare food
- meals
- fictional characters
- hands-on chefs that are responsible for the entire kitchen operation
- located in kitchens
- part of south parks
- respected business people and sought after entrepreneurs
- software
- temperamental people
* are the most highly skilled and trained of all kitchen workers
- skilled, trained, and experienced of all kitchen workers
* create delicious variation
- versions
* dream about food and running restaurants.
* explore possibility.
* have duties
- recipes
* help ideas.
* hold spoons
- wooden spoons
- nuclei
* learn cook techniques.
* learn new cook techniques
* tend to be males who work full-time.
* use chlorophyll to color a variety of foods and beverages green, such as pasta and absinthe
- science
- the flesh to make cakes, ice cream, and other desserts
- vegetables
- weeks
### person | worker | chef:
Gourmet chef
* Many gourmet chefs use shallots for sauces, stews, gravies, and roasts.
* use souybean oil in cooking recipes as well as a salad dressing ingredient
- the liquor in fine cooking
Great chef
* know how different meats, vegetables, sauces, and spices blend.
* use herbs and spices to create culinary delights.
Japanese chef
* prefer single sided knives.
* prepare food for taste AND visual appeal.
* take justifiable pride in the quality of their food.
Personal chef
* Most personal chefs work in business.
* Some personal chefs work in homes.
Private chef
* Some private chefs help diets.
* create versions.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Domestic abuse
* affects employee health, well-being and productivity.
* can affect anyone
- also include psychological intimidation
* can be difficult to identify and insidious in nature
- physical and emotional
- physical, emotional, or sexual and often leads to permanent injury or death
* comes in many forms.
* crisis that many women have to deal with.
* crosses all economic, class, racial, and ethnic lines
- racial, social, and class lines
* exists in all cultures.
* has a long and dishonourable tradition in recorded history.
* huge problem in society.
* is about more than physical violence
- always about power and control
- child abuse
- confined to the poor, disadvantaged, uneducated, particular age or ethnic groups
- harmeds
- illegal
- just a momentary loss of temper
- often the subject of special educational events
- so painful, that victims and their families isolate themselves by silence
- suffered by women of all ages, all classes, all races, all religions
* is the leading cause of injury to women in the United States
- shadow epidemic of our society
* is the use of power and control
- violence or threats to control another person's behavior
- without boundaries, effecting women, children, senior citizens and sometimes men
* multi disciplinary community problem.
* occurs among all ages, races, and socioeconomic classes.
* serious assault to our society and mores
- issue in our world today
* spreads to workplace The holidays have come and gone.
* state issue.
* tactic of power and control.
* takes many forms and escalates in severity
- multiple forms
|
{
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}
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### person | worker:
Domestic terrorism
* crime against the order and tranquillity of our nation.
* has nothing to do with the Middle East, Bosnia or Latin America.
* is one of the most fundamental threats to the liveability of our community
- probably a more widespread phenomenon than international terrorism
* tends to deal only within the United States.
* terrorist act
Domestic travel
* includes travel within and between the United States and Canada
- United States, Mexico and Canada
* is considered to be travel within the United States and Canada
Domestic worker
* Many domestic workers are foreign nationals who are frequently ill-treated by their employers
- live-in domestics
- live in their employers ' homes
* Some domestic workers look after children or elderly people and feed pets.
* is another large sector of the community who fall into abusive work situations.
* struggle for life.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker:
Editor
* Sulfate is an abundant and ubiquitous component of Earth's lithosphere and hydrosphere.
* allow players.
* are people who are flooded with paper
- powerful tools that allow web builders to design, build, and administrate web sites
- programs that are used to create and modify text files
- skilled workers
* check copies.
* compile lists.
* discuss stories.
* do math.
* document discoveries.
* face pressure.
* find information.
* have choices.
* hold management positions
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* make decisions
- effort
* oversee assistant editors
* program which enables the user to inspect and alter their program or data.
* share advice.
* take steps.
* work for magazines.
* work on books
- medical textbooks
* work with authors
- experts.
* are asked to remain civil and assume good faith.
* Of what I have seen there seems to be willingness to improve, so rather than banning, we should try to help him get an accepted editor of this wikipedia. I know this is neither youtube nor facebook. This is about making an encyclopedia that is easy to understand. Editors being sociable and generally nice to talk to side-effect. So in my opinion, we should first try with 'socialisation measures', so some kind of 'mentoring' would probably be a good thing. These are just my thoughts, anyone is free to disagree.
* are encouraged to review it for accuracy. I suggest that this is upgraded from a guideline to a policy due to the legal nature.
* Some editors declare an interest in a particular topic area. They do this in various ways. Many Wikipedians show their allegiances and affiliations on their user pages. You may choose to reveal something about yourself in a talk page discussion.
* As such, I think it's probably time that the community discuss whether or not we wish to continue to permit editing by anonymous editors or whether we want to disable it. Some smaller WMF projects do prohibit anonymous editing and the MediaWiki interface allows this to be implemented with ease. I'd like to invite all editors to hold a rational, and polite, discussion about this topic. All editors are invited, named and anon alike.
* This user is very helpful, and his contributions are guarantee that nothing will go wrong. There's no limit to the number of bureaucrats here. There's not much point bringing up the generic 'they should have been more active' when you can have good redundancy, rather than waiting to replace one. Any editor is able to be a bureaucrat but it is up to the community's decision.
* All editors are reminded to be civil. Please do not bite the returned editor.
* Some editors simply paste in a URL and call it a source citation. It is left to other editors to properly format the citation to include very basic information such as title. It also makes cleanup of bare-URL citations easier for other editors. Simply load the URL in question and copy-paste a proper citation over it in a matter of a seconds.
* On enwiki and other, much larger, projects where changes affect many many times the number of pages than on ours, these templates are free for autoconfirmed editors to improve. I'm not expecting you to do any of that, I'm simply pointing out that our editors should be able to improve these templates when and where they see fit. Some editors improve articles, some improve templates.
* In addition to total edits, edit frequency is important. Being part of any community means being there. 100 edits every Saturday seem less meaningful to me than 5-10 edits each of 4 to 7 days a week. Editors have to check in often. Also, total edit counts miss out on the quality. Good, simple writing is important. Correcting errors is important. Getting started sooner rather than later is most important.
* can therefore use any of the patterns from the football kit template.
* A book is basically a list of articles. Editors are free to create books based on whatever criteria they like. Just note that articles included in a book could change, so you might need to look at them periodically to see if you think they're still appropriate for your book
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker | editor:
Copy editor
* are editors.
* is an editor
Human editor
* compile directories, organizing Web resources by subject area.
* place Web sites into categories and subcategories.
Manage editor
* discuss stories.
* work for magazines.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | editor:
Text editor
* Some text editors have HTML extensions designed to make it easier to develop web pages.
* Some text editors can edit 'rich text'. Rich text allows the person that is editing text to have 'bold text', 'italic text', and other things.
* Text Editors Write a text editor.
* allow users to create and edit text files.
* are different from word processors in a number of ways
- local programs
- programs that modify text files
* are programs used to create and modify plain text files
- the most durable and venerable programs for entering text into a computer<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Electrician
* Many electricians also install and maintain electrical machines in factories.
* Most electricians work in companies
- with engineers
* are licensed by municipalities or counties.
* are responsible for supplying electricity to the population
- the safe installation and maintenance of electrical wiring
- skilled workers
- tradesmans
* bring electricity into homes, businesses, and factories.
* change light bulbs.
* determine causes.
* frequently work from high ladders and scaffolds and in cramped positions and quarters.
* have a machine that checks for resistance
- many opportunity
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* install, alter, maintain and repair electrical wiring, apparatus, and equipment
- maintain and repair electrical systems, equipment and fixtures
* learn on jobs.
* often wear rubber gloves to protect themselves from getting a shock
- work in confined areas
* perform tasks.
* risk injury from electrical shock, falls, and cuts from sharp objects
* take safety.
* test circuits to ensure compatibility and safety of components.
* to handle jobs.
* use a range of hand and power tools and instruments
- wide variety of hand tools to perform various tasks
- ammeters to determine whether current is flowing through wires
- hand tools such as screwdrivers, pliers, knives, and hacksaws
* use handtools such as screwdrivers, pliers, knives, and hacksaws
* usually start their work by reading blueprints.
* wear a variety of safety equipment to reduce their risk of injury.
* work full time.
- cramped spaces and spend a lot of time standing or kneeling
* work indoors and out, at construction sites, in homes, and in businesses or factories
- outdoors, at homes, businesses, factories, and construction sites
* work with engineers
- people on a regular basis
- the wires that carry electricity
### person | worker | electrician:
Industrial electrician
* are essential employees in all kinds of industries.
* maintain and repair many different types of electrical equipment.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker:
Employee
* act as managers.
* apply skills.
* are affiliates
- colleagues
* are located in companies
- corporations
- meetings
- offices
- workplaces
- part of companies
- people, and people want to be cared for
* are trained on customer services
* arrive at places
* classifieds Allow employees to publish personal classified ads.
* complain of circumstances
- suspicious circumstances
* contact experts
- fingerprint experts
* create career development goals
- conditions
- more realistic goals
- unsafe conditions
* deal with problems.
* desire raises.
* do good jobs
* experience events.
* follow performance.
* form trade unions
* gain experience.
* get feedback
- input
* have administrators
- appendices
- cell phones
- exposure
- issues
* have realistic goals
- job goals
- rights
- roles
- vital roles
* improve current job performance
* include information.
- cells
- vacuoles
* interact with suppliers.
* keep jobs.
* learn rules.
* leave companies
- departments
- organizations
* make decisions
- effort
- faith effort
- good faith effort
- right decisions
* may have experience
- options
* means a person who works for wages or salary in the service of an employer
- any person employed by an employer
* meet duties
- general requirements
- qualification requirements
- tests
* need assistance
- emergency assistance
* often consider pay as a measure of individual achievement and social status.
* perform activities.
* perform at high levels
* provide opportunity
* pursue activities.
* raise concern
- safety concern
* read books.
* receive assistance
- benefits
- employment services
- great benefits
* request duties.
* see opportunity.
* should have opportunity.
* take applications
- appropriate steps
- journeys
- notes
- pride
* to perform jobs.
* understand importance.
* use appropriate hazard information
* wear aprons
- shoes
* work at offices
- in environments
* work with communities
- oil industries
+ Gainsharing, Gainsharing implementation: Economics
* Employees often are involved with the design process.
* All employees are eligible for plan payments.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee:
Bartender
* Some bartenders acquire their skills by attending a bartending or vocational and technical school.
* are capable of mix drinks
- located in bars
* derive their earnings from a combination of hourly wages and tips.
* have higher rates of lung cancer than firefighters, miners and dry cleaners.
* is an employee
* perform repetitive tasks, and sometimes they lift heavy kegs of beer and cases of liquor.
* understand the link between alcohol intoxication and unsafe sexual practices.
Clerk
* Some clerks are college graduates who have a degree in business, finance, or the liberal arts
- with degrees in business, finance, or the liberal arts
- work as receptionists or desk clerks giving out information on routine matters
* are employees
- films
- humans
* are located in airports
- bookstores
- hotels
- post offices
- shops
- professions
- responsible for granting marriage licenses and also can perform marriage ceremonies
### person | worker | employee | clerk:
Court clerk
* keep records and papers that are used in court.
* work for the government, so they receive government benefits.
File clerk
* Most file clerks work with the organizations other clerical workers.
* are clerks.
* return files to storage after they are returned by borrower.
Mapper
* presentation tool for easy and fast data visualization on high quality thematic maps.
* toolset to expediate building Enhydra applications.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker | employee:
Copywriter
* are copy cats, and they have swipe files filled with headlines they turn to and adapt
- responsible for gathering information, writing, and editing
* bear the sole responsibility for writing in the advertising field.
* help find the concepts behind the written words and visual images of advertisements.
* often have specialties
- work for advertising agencies, marketing firms, and public relations firms
* prepare advertisements to promote the sale of a good or service.
Employee compensation
* consists of two parts - direct wages and benefits.
* is broken out into wages and benefits to show the changing distribution.
* significant determinant when people decide where they are going to work.
Employee empowerment
* chance for the employee to have power to initiate change.
* is one example of how people are our competitive advantage.
Employee satisfaction
* drives customer satisfaction, which creates profits
* rises as people are empowered to choose when and where to work.
* translates into loyalty and employee retention.
Federal employee
* are responsible for making and keeping records of their work
- the people who ensure that our government runs efficiently
- volunteers in schools, churches, hospitals, and hospices
* earn retirement benefits.
Healthy employee
* ensure the economic health of companies.
* mean a healthier and safer workplace.
Hire
* are acts
- authorization
- employees
- films
- helpings
* is an employee
Mailman
* Mailmen are the healthiest city workers.
* are letter carriers.
* are located in front doors
- post offices
- mail carriers
Milkman
* bring milk
- raw milk
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* make journeys.
Postman
* are books
- located in post offices
* do jobs.
* have hands.
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- nuclei
- plasma membranes
* is an employee
- email software that supports multiple account sending, receiving, and composing
* sexist word, because it automatically assumes that the person Man.
* understand information.
Public employee
* are the largest group of union members in the state
- stewards of the public trust
* constitute forty-three percent of the unionized workforce
- well over half of all nonfarm employment
Public servant
* are employees
- located in desks
- part of the democratic process
* dedicate life.
* have a standard retirement and pension plan.
* survive by their network.
* work in the public interest.
### person | worker | employee | public servant:
Caseworker
* public servant
* term used in a sociological context.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker | employee | public servant:
Social worker
* Many social workers use a systems approach to counseling
- work for social change as well
* Most social workers engage in a combination of direct and macro practice in their jobs
- perform tasks
* Most social workers specialize in a field
- particular type of client or population
* Most social workers work for the government
- full time
* Most social workers work in agencies
- government agencies
* Provide advice and support for parents of a child with a visual problem.
* Some social workers act as planners and developers of services
- have jobs in group homes for abused or troubled children and teenagers
- report children
- specialize in gerontological services
* Some social workers treat disorder
- emotional disorder
- work in local voluntary organisations and hospitals
* Some social workers work with children
- teachers.
* A 'social worker' government employee that gives adequate welfare and helps people who cannot help themselves including physically disabled people, person with other disabilities, people addicted to alcohol, and people with addictions to drugs like cocaine and marijuana. If a child is being abused then a social worker could help by either taking the child away to live in a home or to be fostered. Social workers are provided by the government
* appreciate interaction with people from a variety of backgrounds.
* are able to work singly or in partnership with others
- advocates for individuals, families, groups, communities, etc
- always advocates for children or adults who are victims of abuse
- citizens, professionals, and employees
* are committed to the principles of social justice
- pursuit of non-violence
- counselors
- especially sensitive to, and capable of, people-centered leadership
- explorers, inventors and caregivers
- human beings too
- often interested in psychological or mental health issues
- overlooked heroes who help bring out the best in a community
* are people who are professionally trained in counseling and practical assistance
- with a degree called the master's in social work
- public servants
- sometimes the only mental health care providers in the community
- the nation's largest provider of mental health and therapy services
- therapists, educators, researchers, managers, supervisors and administrators
- traditionally devoted and overworked
- versatile people
* assess and address the needs of every family.
* assist families with lodging arrangements
- in lodging arrangements for families
- many people who are unemployed or who are incapable of holding jobs
- patients who have a variety of neurological illnesses
* believe in the worth, dignity, and uniqueness of each individual.
* can also help families find needed resources
- provide support to foster parents on specific individual child needs
- build on their professional backgrounds and study and practice law
* can help patients cope with a wide range of problems from financial to emotional
- deal with the anxieties and fears related to their illness
- play a key role in detecting and addressing domestic violence
- respect individuals when they choose, or the interests of 'society'
* conduct interviews in the home environment to evaluate the needs of the individual.
* contribute to making social institutions more humane and responsive to human needs.
* counsel families and individuals to help cope with an illness.
* deliver more mental health services than any other profession
- than half of the nation's mental health services
* develop behavioral approaches to encourage food intake.
* emphasize helping people help themselves.
* engage people as partners in the helping process.
* have a commitment to principles of social justice
- history of protest
- responsibility to society as well as to their individual clients
* help citizens
- effects
- members and their families learn to live with loss of sight
- others to embrace change
* help patients and their families make emotional adjustments
- in coping with the stresses of the diagnosis and treatment of cancer
* help people cope with challenges in their lives
- function the best they can in their environment
- increase their capacities for problem solving and coping
* help people solve and cope with problems in their everyday lives
- resolve a variety of problems that can come up when someone needs care at home
- senior citizens
- shape the cultural and social standards of society
* help to bring about individual and social change
- maximize and maintain individual, family, group, and community functioning
* interact with individuals and families offering information and emotional support.
* intervene with individuals, groups and communities, representing all populations.
* know first-hand how important parental involvement is in children's lives
- where social work jobs are
* link people with supportive services.
* look for parents who can provide a safe, nurturing home.
* make decisions every day.
* move in and out of patients' lives depending on their medical and psychosocial needs.
* note that gang members often recruit their siblings, cousins and their own children.
* offer services in nursing homes and other long-term health facilities
- support to patients and their families
* practice in all settings with all populations.
* prefer to use the term children without parental care.
* promote social justice and social change with and on behalf of clients.
* provide counseling and services to clients and work to improve social conditions
- direct services to individuals, families, groups, and communities
- most forms of psychotherapy
- over half of the mental health services in the United States
- psychosocial evaluation, individual, couple, family and group psychotherapy
- the bulk of mental health services in the United States
* recognize the central importance of human relationships.
* respect the inherent dignity and worth of the person.
* run online chat sites, keep up bulletin boards, and run newsgroups.
* say an increasing number are addicted to glue sniffing.
* seek to enhance the capacity of people to address their own needs.
* serve individuals, families, and communities
- groups, organizations and communities
* strive to assist individuals to function more effectively within society.
* tend to be people whose own religious orientations are relatively irresolute
- help the poor and the disadvantaged
* train specifically in the tradition of social work.
* understand themselves as providing remedies in the guise of therapeutic treatment.
* work closely with families to offer psychosocial support and family counseling
- schools, hospitals, group homes, government offices, and private agencies
- to evaluate needs of the families, work with community agencies to meet needs
* work with all age groups
- patients and families to plan for life outside the hospital
- students and families to facilitate success in school, home and community
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker | employee:
Sales rep
* are salespersons
- the legs, voice, eyes, and ears of a company
* is an employee
### person | worker | employee | sales rep:
Salesman
* are located in front doors
- shops
- toy stores
- sellers
- vendors
* have good manners.
* sales rep
Salesperson
* Salespeople are in the business of sales
- information processors
- the only people who keeps themselves from being successful
* are business people.
* are capable of closing deals
- double prices
- employees
* are located in bookstores
* is an employee
* work with the direct selling of goods and services to the public or another company.
Scribe
* are journalists
- software
* write in an ancient writing called hieroglyphics.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee:
Server
* access information.
* are also computers where Web pages are stored and from which they are distributed
- big computers that run millions of Web sites and thousands of corporations
- central computers that are linked to individual client machines
- computers providing a service
* are computers that connect PCs to the Internet
- dish out information to other computers
- handle lots of calls simultaneously
- store lots of information for other computers to download and view
- which hold information and data and provide services
- computers, whose function is to provide services to users on the network
- entities that provide multi-media content and services
- equipment that support network services and software applications
- generally very powerful computers containing lots of memory and storage space
- high-end computers that hold data and application programs shared by all network users
- high-speed machines that hold programs and data shared by network users
- large computers which store information or run special programs
- part of computer networks
- players
- powerful computers or processes dedicated to managing large amount of data and users
- powerful, dedicated computers that are capable of storing huge amounts of data
* are programs running on computers that are accessible via the Internet
- that transport the messages from one user client to another
- providers of services and resources
- supercomputers that handle an office's connection with the Internet
* are the computers that manage Internet sites and corporate networks
- store and transmit the Web pages that browsers request
- high-powered computers that run networks
- utensils
* based client management key tenet of e-business.
* bring meals.
* close containers.
* complete services.
* create contain information
* denotes the number of servers at the queueing center.
* have bias.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* often have storage devices where files and applications can be stored.
* perform operations.
* provide facilities
* refers to computers that provide resources or information to other computers.
* require energy
- enormous energy
* send information.
* use databases.
* utilize components.
* will have technology.
### person | worker | employee | server:
Food server
* is the broad term that describes anyone who works at a place that serves food.
* tend to be women who are unskilled or uneducated.
Internet server
* Many Internet servers limit the number of messages or the storage space used for e-mail.
* run various operating systems, which handle email in various ways.
List server
* are a means of distributing information to a controlled circulation list.
* maintain a list of email addresses to be used for mass emailing.
News server
* are computers that collect information from around the world from other news servers
* provide the infrastructure that makes newsgroups work.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker | employee | server:
Waitress
* are female animals
- located in bars
- waiters
* bring cold food
- plates
* have the highest death rate of any female occupation.
- body substances
- cells
- necks
- personality
* quit jobs.
* serve friends.
* wear tops.
* work at bar grills<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee | server:
Web server
* Most Web servers use cookies to store preferences for a site, or the contents of shopping carts.
* Some Web servers are capable of displaying Web pages in one of several different languages.
* allow individuals and corporations to set up sites for private and public access.
* are a specific type of network application.
* are computers that are maintained by a system administrator
- store Web pages and respond to requests from different browsers
- which are attached to the Internet, and do basically two things
- crucial Internet components, powering the web filling it with content
- simply computers configured to send information out across the Internet
- small computers whose primary function is to serve up Web pages
- the most exposed servers on the Internet
* come in various shapes and sizes.
* provide content to Web browsers as documents.
Spotter
* are employees
- people who are sent out to different areas when conditions are right for tornadoes
* help falling climbers land on their feet, using a pad to cushion the impact.
* is an employee
### person | worker | employee | spotter:
Storm spotter
* are volunteers that have been trained in the basics of severe thunderstorms.
* come from all walks of life.
Sweeper
- low-hanging branches which touch the water in a current
* clean streets.
* drape around red sandstone cliffs, their surface allowing speeds up to and beyond the ton.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is an implement
Typist
* are employees.
* do it with their fingers.
Waiter
* are capable of serve food
- films
- located in cafes
- male animals
* bring coffee.
* carry trays.
* define menu terms as they describe dishes.
* grab plates.
* includes arms
- human bodies
- material bodies
- sections
- vacuoles
* learn skills.
* provide more formal services
* remove dinner plates
* understand motion.
### person | worker | employee | waiter:
Lurcher
* also take other prey.
* are dogs.
* have the strong hunting instincts of the sighthounds.
Lurker
* Most lurkers are great sorcerers who have lived for millennia.
* are waiters.
* tend to hide in human society, using their powers of disguise to appear as humans.
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### person | worker | employee | workman:
Cowboy
* Most cowboys ride horses
- use the initials of their name, business or their ranch
* Some cowboys raise horses
- rest on horses
* also employ sirens to scare the birds.
* are a major part of American folklore
- adventurers
- advocates of the land
- capable of smoke tobacco
- cowboys wherever they go, despite the fact that some are now world-renowned superstars
- football teams
- located in horses
- performers
* call all cattle cows, even bulls and calves.
* catch horses.
* compete in bull riding, bareback riding, saddle bronc, steer wrestling, and calf roping.
* dance every dance as long as their bladders and feet hold out
- with wolves
* don t like fences.
* drive cattle.
* earn their living on cattle drives.
* eat pork and beans.
- corpi
- plasma membranes
* increase in western states as former soldiers, seeking work, move west.
* like cattle
- to eat with their hats on
* often work with horses to herd cattle and sheep.
* pride themselves on their individuality.
* ranch hand
* seem only to know how to play when they're in pain.
* spend a lot of time out where the skies are dark, and so do astronomers.
* start young.
* still drive cattle high up into the mountains to feed on lush summer grasses.
* use signals to direct their horses.
* wear hats, accountants wear suits and bikers wear tattoos.
+ Calgary, Activities
* Calgary has a famous event called a rodeo every year. This rodeo is called the Calgary Stampede. The Calgary Stampede is the largest rodeo in the world. At the Stampede, cowboys can win a lot of money. Cowboys also race with chuckwagons at the Stampede. Chuckwagons are carts with four wheels pulled by horses. In 1988, the Winter Olympics were held in Calgary.
### person | worker | employee | workman | cowboy:
Cowgirl
* are cowboys
- special when they follow their dreams
* like to ride bareback.
* often wear different colored socks on each foot, for luck.
Gaucho
* is for use by commercial seed treaters only.
* systemic seed treatment, which means it works within the plant.
Cowman
* Cowmen includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- sections
- vacuoles
* ranch hand
Digger
* Most diggers dig burrows.
* are laborers.
* find death scenes
- body substances
- legs
* look for round or slightly oval holes in the mud, about an inch or so across.
* travel below ground in search of refractors, the earth's only source of energy.
Factory worker
* are capable of machine screws.
* suffer from illnesses related to bagasse dust and the handling of chemicals.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee | workman:
Harvester
* Some harvesters add chemicals to containers to kill the hagfish quickly.
* Some harvesters have mandibles
- massive mandibles
- powerful mandibles
- use plastic
* are artwork
- programs looking around in the web in quest of e-mail addresses
- video games
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- material bodies
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
* shoot a plume like a cone into the air, straight and thin.
* software robot that gathers selected information from designated Web sites.
* use arms.
* wear cotton gloves
Laborer
* Some laborers have job titles that indicate the work they do.
* are the lowest paid of all construction workers
- workmans
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### person | worker | employee | workman | laborer | agricultural labourer:
Sharecropper
* are almost always poor , and are often in debt to landowners or other people.
* is an agricultural labourer
+ Sharecropping: History of the United States :: Labor :: Agriculture :: Property
* Sharecropping' is a term for when one person farms another person's land, and then the two share what is produced. Sharecroppers are almost always poor, and are often in debt to landowners or other people. Sharecropping was very common in the Southern United States after the Civil War and the end of slavery. At that time, many African-Americans sharecropped on the land that they had once farmed as slaves.
### person | worker | employee | workman | laborer | gipsy:
Tinker
* are experimenters.
* is the place for hamburgers.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee | workman | laborer:
Gypsy
* Gypsies are a despised and neglected minority in all of eastern Europe
- people of different ethnic groups without a formalized religion
- about workmanship and song
- first targeted population to be forbidden to attend school
- the sort of people who can to anything
- workers
- are, on the whole, against organ donation
- believe that one year after a person dies, the soul retraces it steps
- live throughout Hungary, although their distribution by area varies
- share common folk beliefs about the afterlife and tend to be opposed to donation
- usually stay near to towns and cities
* Most Gypsies are poor, and they are the underclass of Eastern Europe
- speak the language of the people among whom they live
* Some Gypsies prefer to maintain their isolated way of life.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee | workman | laborer:
Logger
* ARE environmentalists.
* Most loggers work in small crews for self-employed contractors.
* also are a cause of fire
- operate heavy machinery to transport logs from cutting to loading sites
- replace trees as they go, in an attempt to forestall a shortage of wood
* are sellers of a product, wood
- skilled workers
* contend that allowing such giant trees to die, rot, and fall over waste of resources.
* generally work in crews of four to eight workers.
* have to endure poisonous plants, brambles, insects, and snakes.
* often attempt to swing trees into openings by cutting the hinge off on one side.
Longshoreman
* Longshoremen are dock workers who load and unload ships.
* are dockers.
Lumberjack
* are jackets.
* stick close to camp for fear of falling trees and branches.
Porter
* are ale
- employees
- laborers
- located in hotels
- unskilled workers
* is the largest manufacturer canoe parts and accessories in the United States.
* suffer from hunger, malnutrition, disease, and exhaustion.
Skinner
* are skilled workers.
* defines psychology as a study of consciousness.
* is the fourth largest auction house in the United States.
Stevedore
* are laborers.
* bear burdens on their backs and mothers bear children.
* have to work long hours with inadequate rest and reduced manning.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee | workman:
Miner
* Most miners work in coal industries
* Some miners die in accidents
- eat leaves
* are far from food sources and have been hunting gorillas
* hold license.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* live in houses.
* palomino with a blanket, both hind ankles and a blaze.
* worldwide have a reputation for alcohol consumption.
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### person | worker | employee | workman | miner:
Coal miner
* Some coal miners die in accidents.
* are exposed to toxic dust and face the dangers of cave-ins and explosions at work
- teachers who stay on the job until the coal has turned to diamonds
* remove the soil above the coal.
* work a strip pit using horse-drawn wagons.
+ Coal mining, Extraction
* Surface mining is done when the coal is near the surface. Coal miners remove the soil above the coal. The coal can then be removed without the coal miners having to go deep underground.
Gold miner
* Some gold miners have pyrites.
* are highly susceptible because of toxic damage to the ciliary tree
Prospector
* are miners.
* routinely use a compass when doing fieldwork.
Mover
* are companies
- the people who change groups every hour to learn about the issue from a different place
- travelers
- unskilled workers
- workmans
* call all types and kinds of trucks used for moving vans.
* ensure safety.
* have opportunity.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
Packer
* Some packers die at homes.
* are downhole equipment used to separate portions of a borehole from each other
* have durability.
- corpi
- necks
- vacuoles
* produce pork products from pigs of diverse genotypic backgrounds and different sexes.
* save time.
### person | worker | employee | workman | paster:
Bookplate
* are the trAdditional and proper way to identify one's books.
* is paster
* usually have a water soluble paste rather than glue.
Sawyer
* are laborers.
* includes arms
- cytoplasm
- material bodies
- personality
* run saws that cut logs into planks, boards, and timbers of various thicknesses.
* use skills.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | employee | workman:
Shepherd
* Most shepherds keep sheep.
* Most shepherds thrive on diets
- food
* Some shepherds have coats
- only a few sets of twins, while others claim to have a majority of twin births
- lose weight
* act as companions, guide dogs and police dogs.
* are animals
- breeds of dog
- clergymans
- herdsmans
- highly active animals
- mammals
- men who care for sheep
- people who care for sheep
* are, obviously, keepers of sheep.
* care for their sheep but also expect to make a living.
* create farms
- model farms
* didn t watch their flocks at night in the dead of winter.
* exist for the well being of the sheep.
* gather their flocks by night.
* have reputations.
- cells
- human bodies
* keep goats
- watch over their flocks night and day
* protect their flocks with the help of guard dogs, donkeys and llamas.
* require proteins, carbohydrates, minerals, vitamins and fatty acids.
* say they are responsible for the deaths of hundreds of sheep every year.
* suffer from problems.
* tend sheep from which wool is obtained.
* use it to keep their sheep together
- rods for counting, guiding, protecting and rescueing their sheep
* wash arms.
+ Amahl and the Night Visitors, Story: 20th century operas :: Compositions by Gian Carlo Menotti
* There is a knock at the door. Three kings ask for a place to rest. They are on their way to Bethlehem to find a newborn child. Amahl pesters them with many questions. Shepherds arrive to dance for the kings. The kings grow sleepy and the shepherds go home.
Stamper
* are located in cabinets
- pedestrians
* use large drawers to hold paper, small drawers for stamps and ink.
Female worker
* develop from the fertilized egg and male drones develop from the unfertilized egg.
* need calories.
* perform duties
- essential duties
- such duties
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### person | worker:
Fisher
* Many fishers use the thermocline to help locate fish during the summer months.
* Most fishers eat fish.
* Most fishers have feet
- large ranges
* Most fishers reach maturity
- sexual maturity
* Some fishers harvest marine vegetation rather than fish
- have bushy tails
* Some fishers have long bushy tails
- metabolism
- predators
- kill martens
- lead solitary lifestyle
- prefer to catch wild fish
- work in deep water on large fishing boats that are equipped for long stays at sea
* also cache their prey, coming back to eat it later
- kill porcupines with repeated bites to the face and head
* are a type of weasel and are about the size of a large house cat
- agile and speedy tree climbers, but they usually move on the ground
- at highly increased risk for drownings and work-related traumatic injuries
- creatures
- forest animals, and seem to be most common in mixed coniferous and deciduous woodlands
- important predators in their ecosystems
- large carnivores in the weasel family
- largely carnivorous
- located in boats
- mammals
* are mostly brown, with a long bushy tail
- nocturnal
- one of the few specialized predators on porcupines
- predators that can eat porcupines
- predators, and most of their prey are plant-eating mammals
- small carnivores and a member of the weasel family
* are solitary, except during mating and when rearing their young
- opportunistic predators
- swift and elegant tree-climbing furbearers
- weasels and they are about the same size as a big house cat
* can live up to ten years in the wild.
* claim that seals steal fish from nets, destroy fishing gear and take bait from lobster pots.
* contribute to the overall health of prey species when their densities are light or moderate.
- snowshoe hares, along with a variety of other small mammals, birds and even martens
* have an interest in protecting their livelihood
- dark brown fur shading to black and frosted with white-tipped hairs
- five toes on their feet, and their claws can be drawn up into the paws, like a cat's
* have large home ranges
- strong, moderately large feet with hairy soles
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
* live in similar habitat and have similar tracks
- habitat, have similar tracks and are darker in color than pine martens
* move to harbours.
* often kill marten whenever they come in contact with each other.
* place for safely raising children and intergenerational living.
* prefer coniferous forests, but they are also found in mixed and deciduous forests.
* pull a heavily weighted net to drag the bottom of the ocean.
* return homes.
* use lighted boats to catch squid at night
- nets to catch fish
### person | worker | fisher:
Recreational fisher
* buy commercially-sold live worms and other aquatic organisms.
* fish for pleasure or sport, while commercial fishers fish for profit.
* use a variety of methods to capture eels.
Trawler
* are fishermans
* catch all sizes of fish
- foodfish incidental to shrimping and industrial fishing
* drag enormous nets through the water, forcing all fish in their path into the closed end.
* have hulls.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* routinely operate very close to the shore, often at night.
### person | worker | fisher | trawler:
Modern trawler
* are usually decked vessels designed for robustness.
* store the fish they catch in some form of chilled condition.
Stern trawler
* are designed to operate in most weather conditions.
* have trawls which are deployed and retrieved from the stern.
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### person | worker:
Fisherman
* Fishermen also use sonar to find schools of fish
- are active throughout the year as there are no closed seasons on any species of fish
- bring fish
- buy worms
* Fishermen catch fish
- salmon
- chase fish
- collect fish
- depend on fish
- die every year in accidents at sea
- employ techniques
- enjoy life
- find tuna
- harvest sea turtles for their meat and their shells
- hate hag fish because they crawl into nets and eat fish from the inside out
- have opportunity
- hunt animals
* Fishermen includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- human bodies
- personality
- sections
- vacuoles
- kill animals
- live on seashores
* Fishermen love crabs
- to tell stories
- pick up fish
- provide meals
- receive fish
* Fishermen sell lobsters
* Fishermen take fish
- shelter
- to report sighting
* Fishermen use boats
- refine techniques
- rod, reel, or line to cast, hook, and retrieve fish
- traditional techniques
* Fishermen utilize fish techniques
- visit coasts
* Fishermen work in groups
- on boats
* Many fishermen keep, cook, and eat the fish they catch
- use waypoints to record the location of traps or nets
* Most fishermen are men involved in offshore and deep-sea fisheries
- believe that the shape and size of a fly are more important than the color
- drill their holes by hand using an auger
- think that bass strike because they're hungry
- work on boats
* Some fishermen also breed cormorants
- carry shrimp in live bait buckets, the same type as used for fresh water fishing
- catch live coelacanths
* Some fishermen kill crocodiles
- dolphins
- sharks
- starfishs
- say that if there is fish, there is bound to be seals
* Some fishermen use a shelter for protection from the elements
- dynamite and poisonous chemicals to get fish
- feathers
* are capable of fish lakes
- row boats
- smoke fish
- people
- skilled workers
+ Anchovy, As a food source: Anchovies :: Edible fish :: Fish of the Atlantic :: Fish of the Pacific :: Fish of the Indian ocean :: Clupeiformes :: Teleosts
* In Roman times, they were the base for the fermented fish sauce called 'garum' that was a staple of cuisine and an item of long-distance commerce produced in industrial quantities. Today they are a key ingredient in Caesar salad and Spaghetti alla Puttanesca, and are often used as a pizza topping. Both are quite salty. The flat fillets are usually more salty than the rolled anchovies. They are also marketed in jars and tubes as a paste, mostly for use in making sauces, such as anchovy essence. Fishermen also use anchovies as bait for larger fish such as tuna and sea bass.
+ Komodo National Park, People living in the park and tourism: World Heritage Sites in Asia :: National parks :: Lesser Sunda Islands :: Indonesia :: Biosphere reserves
* However, several fishermen died since the 1980s. People disagree about what happened to them. Park patrol and military said they needed to protect themselves. Fishermen living in the area say the park management killed the fishermen on purpose. Down to Earth 2003.
### person | worker | fisherman:
Bass fisherman
* Many bass fishermen consider weeds to be the ultimate cover for bass.
* Some bass fishermen die after crashes.
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### person | worker | fisherman:
Commercial fisherman
* Commercial fishermen are interested in pinpointing the whereabouts of a particular species of fish
- capture tuna and swordfish at sea, far from any source of industrial pollution
* Commercial fishermen catch lake trout winter and summer using gillnets
- the yellow perch with gillnets, poundnets, and trapnets
- pay taxes, provide jobs, supply stores with salmon
- target mature females because they grow to larger sizes than males
- use gillnets
* means any person, firm or corporation engaged in commercial fishing.
+ Spiny dogfish shark, Conservation: Sharks
* Due to their long gestation period and the low number of pups they give birth to at a time, the Spiny dogfish must be managed carefully. This species is extremely vulnerable to overfishing and is currently on the brink of collapse. Commercial fishermen target mature females because they grow to larger sizes than males. This was in response to heavy fishing that devastated Spiny dogfish populations during the 1990s. In late 2000, a fishery management plan for the Spiny dogfish began to develop, followed by its approval in November 2002. Federal and state recovery plans are currently in place but are continually challenged. The National Marine Fisheries Service, with new data predicting the collapse of the Spiny dogfish populations, closed federal waters to Spiny dogfish fishing in July 2003.
Japanese fisherman
* Japanese fishermen fly kites to check winds before they set out to sea.
* Some japanese fishermen find bottlenose dolphins
Local fisherman
* Local fishermen make their living by harnessing sea and sail
- to report sighting
* Local fishermen use techniques
- traditional techniques
Foreign worker
* Many foreign workers do menial, low-paying work in advanced capitalist countries.
* are one of the key factors causing unemployment.
* comprise one third of the active labour force.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Hairdresser
* Most hairdressers use chemical products
- dye
- hair dye
* Most hairdressers use permanent dye
* are craftsmans.
* are located in malls
- salons
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is an artisan
* often wash and color hair.
* provide hair styling and beauty services.
* receive products.
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### person | worker | hairdresser:
Barber
* Many Barbers also curl, color, or straighten hair, using special chemical solutions and equipment.
* Most barbers have senses.
* A 'barber' is someone who cuts hair and shaves beards. Usually, it is men who go to a barber. Women usually go to hairdressers instead. Barbers sometimes have a pole outside, which is red and white in most countries. Barbering most ancient and honorable profession, with a very interesting history. Barbering is the practice of cutting or trimming hair and includes shaving or trimming facial hair. Besides cutting hair, barbers also shampoo and style hair, mostly for male clients. Other duties include scalp treatment, skin care and fitting or grooming hairpieces. In some states, barbers color, highlight or bleach hair.
* also give shaves, shape and trim beards and mustaches and give facial or scalp massages
- shave or trim mustaches and beards
* apply procedures.
* are hairdressers.
* first learn to shave by shaving fools.
* have careers
- passions
- skills
- body substances
- cytoplasm
- heads
- legs
- personality
- vacuoles
* renders trees in cities and trees in towns, but much less often in villages.
* retain benefits.
* sometimes have a pole outside , which is red and white in most countries.
+ Barber, Job Description: Personal service occupations
* The main job of a barber is to cut a client's hair. The goal is to improve the appearance of the hair and to adapt styles to the customer's wishes. Barbers also shape and trim beards and mustaches. Instruments such as scissors and combs must be kept sterile and in good condition, and the barber is also responsible for keeping the shop clean by sweeping up hair. Owners of barbershops also order supplies, pay bills and may hire and supervise staff. Good interpersonal skills and a positive attitude are important qualities to have when working as a barber. Examples of famous barbers are Alex Kelly and Cameron Kelly formally known as the Kelly Cutters. Many barbers use these men as examples and aim to also deliver a very high quality service.
Hanger
* are located in closets
- support
- workers
* includes arms
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- human bodies
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
* use clothe pins
Health care worker
* find activities.
* receive hepatitis b vaccines
* use handle precaution
- safe handle precaution<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Health worker
* All health workers relate to people of different cultural, religious and ethnic backgrounds.
* Some health workers are trained on child health services
- operate pharmacies or work as village midwives
- use curricula
* administer radiation in several different ways.
* encourage women to breast feed their infants.
* fear dysentery, diarrhea and other diseases.
* say many male secondary-school teachers sleep with their female students.
* tell stories of malnutrition and dehydration.
Healthcare worker
* Many healthcare workers work different shifts, with alternating days off.
* are the largest population at risk for developing a latex hypersensitivity.
* do use the Internet.
* face the risk of acquiring infections from patients.
* tend to look more into bruises that are found on women than bruises found on men.
* use latex gloves during many medical procedures.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Helper
* are capable of hand tools
- parents who come in
- people who can help solve disputes
- talented networkers, making connections between other people
* contribute to nest success
* improve conditions.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cells
- necks
- plasma membranes
* know solutions.
* make differences.
* provide assistance.
* are people who can help solve disputes. Anyone can be a helper, but having a little bit of experience in solving disputes works well. Just remember not to take sides in the dispute.
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### person | worker | helper:
Donor
* Many donors give their sperm for financial reasons, others simply out of philanthropy.
* Most donors find giving blood a rewarding and satisfying opportunity for saving someone's life.
* Most donors have some bone pain and aches for several days or a few weeks
- unusually high sperm counts and donate anonymously
- return to normal life and work two to four weeks after surgery
* Some donors are antigens
- believe that a healthy mind is best supported by a healthy body
- employ trusts to either pay the income or a remainder interest to a charity
* are benefactors.
* are people in good health who have died suddenly and have been declared brain dead
- who share a real concern for a cause
- the means by which our doors stay open to serve animals and people
- tissue typed after their organs have been harvested
* can also give a kidney or part of their liver while they are still alive.
* can be individuals, families, groups, or organizations
- partnerships, or corporations
- live with just one kidney without any problems
* leukocyte infusions in acute lymphocytic leukemia
- myelogenous leukemia
* quail neural crest are adjacent to the dorsal quail neural tube.
### person | worker | helper | donor:
Blood donor
* are donors
- volunteers
* can give blood every eight weeks, or six times a year.
* come from all walks of life.
* play a vital role in the treatment of sickle cell disease
- an important role in sickle cell disease care
* save lives.
### person | worker | helper | donor | blood donor:
Universal donor
* blood donor
* can give blood to any blood type.
Organ donor
* Most organ donors are victims of accidents that cause fatal head injuries
- die of traumatic injuries to the head, such as accidents or strokes
* are donors.
Messiah
* are mammals
* die young.
* tend to be highly charismatic individuals prone to megalomania and violence.
### person | worker | helper | sponsor:
Guarantor
* are patrons.
* refers to a person who has financial responsibility for the payment of a patient account.
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### person | worker:
Hunter
* Many hunters also hunt from duck boats or other camouflaged craft
- assume that all slugs shoot about the same
- believe deer kills are up because of the weather
* Many hunters believe that a piece of iron is enough to protect any carcass from the wolves
- the wolves are a threat to elk and deer populations
- claim to enjoy hunting because they love the outdoors
- consider the wild turkey more difficult to take than big game animals like deer
- forget the face and hands when choosing their camouflage pattern and clothing
- insist air-drying hunting clothes outdoors is the best way to eliminate scent
- like to display squirrel tails on the antennas of their cars or in their yards
- move around at midday, and their activity moves deer
* Many hunters prefer to draw small game in the field
- owl call early in the morning and use crow callers after the sun is up
- take only the antlers of the deer they kill
* Many hunters use muzzleloaders, but they generally hunt during a regular firearm season
- similar devices to keep from getting lost
- waste time wandering around habitats that hold few or no moose, biologists say
* More hunters fall from tree stands when climbing or descending than when sitting in the stand.
* Most hunters believe they are defending livestock against the depredations of a fearsome carnivore
- whitetails react differently than mule deer
- capture prey
- carry devices
- cause death
- concentrate on wind direction, but they often neglect wind speed
- consider a mountain lion hunt a hunt of a lifetime
- consume other animals
- depend on animals
* Most hunters eat animals
- fish
- food
- mammals
- meat
- prey animals
- rabbits
- what they kill or give it away to others who do
* Most hunters feed on large prey
- find animals
* Most hunters follow deer tracks
* Most hunters have acute vision
- diets
- omnivorous diets
* Most hunters kill animals
- lead nomadic lifestyle
- lease land from farmers and ranchers
* Most hunters live in areas
- intertidal areas
- move camps
* Most hunters prefer live prey
* Most hunters rely on knowledge
- sound, knowledge of the terrain, knowledge of their hounds, and gut instinct
- search for prey
* Most hunters seek animals
- hares
* Most hunters shoot animals
- birds
- bucks
- elephants
- first when they see movement
- foxes
- geese
- pheasants
- squirrels
- target prey
- think of elk language as bugles and barks
- trim it off their meat before cooking, or even freezing
- try to cover their scent with cover scents
* Most hunters use archery equipment
- arms
- bullets
- illegal weapons
- small motorboats launched from Anchorage, and hunt near the river mouths
* Most hunters wear coats
- garments
- hats
- outer garments
- wield guns
* Some hunters also shoot wildebeest for sport
- are licensed to hunt in more than one category
- believe Brittanys become better hunting dogs when they are trained to be house pets
* Some hunters belong to fang tribes
- build houses
- capture gorillas
- carry claws
* Some hunters claim falcons interfere with their hunting because raptors prey on game birds
- otherwise, but killing big part of hunting, especially for big game
* Some hunters consider boars
- large carnivores as unwanted competition for elk or deer
- construct their entire blind from natural materials
- consume coatis
- contend that sows do make moaning sounds when they're in heat
* Some hunters describe animals
- zebra animals
- do try to honor the animal by taking a moment to praise it for sacrificing it's life
- eat rattlesnakes
- employ metal detectors
- enjoy scavengers
- examine hartebeests
* Some hunters feed on insects
- rodents
* Some hunters follow antelopes
- bears
- go all six days without bagging one white tail
- handle coyotes
* Some hunters kill antelopes
- apes
- bison
- buffalo
- caribou
- crocodiles
- ducks
- lions
- mallards
- monkeys
- rhinos
- turkeys
- ungulates
- victims
- whales
- learn about bears
* Some hunters live in huts
- small huts
- love snakes
- own horses
* Some hunters possess alligators
* Some hunters prefer to cut the pelvic bone and breast bone when opening the animal
- remove the scent glands on the inside of the hind legs
- stalk boar by moving quietly through feeding areas attractive to boar
- protect livestock
- rely on plants
* Some hunters report surface whales
- resist blaze orange as a greater chance of being seen by deer
- ride horses
- say that coyotes run only fast enough to stay ahead of the hounds
- schedule their vacation time around hunting season
- see monkeys
- seize squirrels
* Some hunters shoot antelopes
- chickens
- elands
- kangaroos
- panthers
- pigs
- pythons
- rats
- sheep
- zebras
- stalk the moose with bow and arrow
- stick the carcass by severing the large blood vessel leading to the heart
- swallow prey
- target gorillas
* Some hunters think antlers are defense weapons against predators
- that using a decoy, which is usually a carved wooden duck, form of cheating
- thrive on diets
* Some hunters use antelope leather for ladies' or dress gloves, however
- brutally inhumane weapons such as the bow and arrow
- falcons to harass a gazelle so that it can be readily overtaken by dogs
- food scent as cover scent
- pesticides to kill the salamander
- poodles
* Some hunters watch deer
* Some hunters work as teams
- with dogs
* acquire chances.
* also kill animals for special items
- pacas for their tasty flesh, which is eaten
- shoot dove, quail, squirrel, fox and an occasional bobcat
* appear to be killing an average number of deer that are average in antler development.
* are Ogres who prefer solitude over company
- also masters of stealth, quieter than an owl in flight
- an endangered species
- campers
- ecological opportunists who gladly take from the land and give nothing in return
- located in forests
- masters of stalking their prey
- people who are focused in their search
* are responsible for everything that occurs on a hunt - whether on public or private land
- most of the dwindling numbers of rare animals
* are responsible for their own alcoholic beverages and soft drinks
- beverages and softdrinks
- seekers
- skilled workers
- watchs
- well-informed, trained, licensed gun owners
* arrive on scenes.
* attack prey.
* become cold very quickly when calling for a long period of time from a stationary position.
* believe that wild animals are merely moving objects waiting to die anyway.
* can also pursue white-tailed deer, ruffed grouse and gray squirrels
- have partners
* can hunt one particular animal or in combination
- wild geese, ducks, or pheasants during the regular season
- talk, meet new people, or spend time with their families
- tame many kinds of pets including spiders, bears, worms, wasps, and many more
* catch animals
* chase animals
* choose methods.
* come in contact.
* consider meat.
* consume animals
- hunting animals or gathering edible plants, fruits and nuts
* do think about the future, even though their thoughts are often different.
- venison and elk
* encounter deer.
* enjoy societies.
* enter areas
- hunt areas
- walrus meat
* fire dart guns
- trails
* frequently hunt in groups.
* generally use snares, spears or dogs to kill anoas.
* get chances.
* harvest deer.
* have a strong interest in the more effective management of the resource they utilize
- ability
* have eyes in the front of their heads
- on the front of their heads to increase depth perception
- vary diets
* hear low noise
- pop noise
* help control the black bear population in many regions of America and their flesh is edible.
* hold the power of life and death in their hands.
* hunt animals
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* keep most of their body fat in their belly and chest while their legs and butt stay thin.
* kill bears during hunting season to get their furs to sell
- ducks and geese
- polar bears for their fur to make coats and rugs
* know habits
- that water fowl such as ducks and geese always land in water flying into the wind
* lead lifestyle
* learn to pull the string and activate decoy wings when needed, as when birds fly overhead.
* leave wood.
* like to hunt in different conditions.
* make use of constantly improving equipment and techniques to make their hunt easier.
* mistakenly shoot protected animals, violent storms destroy trees and the nests they shelter.
* often assert that their practices benefit their victims
- claim that hunting is necessary to control deer populations
- look for tracks and other signs of animals as they walk through an area
- remove the tarantulas' fangs after they're caught to prevent bites
- supplement winter food by planting sorghum, corn or some other grain
* play an invaluable role in maintaining the delicate balance of nature.
* pursue white-tailed deer and many small game species including squirrel, rabbit, and grouse.
* range in age from the teens to the eighties.
* reach places.
* report numbers.
* return homes.
* revel in elk, deer, cougar, bear, and wild turkey seasons.
* save wildlife from a painful death by starvation.
* see deer.
* slaughter animals.
* supervise hunters.
* take deer and turkey during season.
* take deer, duck, dove, and quail in season
- turkey, javelina, and many types of birds in season
* take deer, wild turkey, and dove in season
- quail, dove, and javelina when in season
- delicious meat
* tend to have a much larger 'blind area' behind the head than hunted animals do
- rely on vision if they feed during the daytime, or on touch if they feed at night
* to kill animals
* to wear garments
* trailing tracks move bears, and once bears start moving, they're much more vulnerable.
* use a duck blind to kill ducks
- ammunition
- artificial calls to appeal to the bird's social instinct
- center fire ammunition
- decoys
- laser sight
- lead bullets
- locator calls that sound like a crow or owl, or even a silent dog whistle
- muzzle load
- precaution
- simple precaution
* using dogs generally ride horses or mules in order to keep up with the dogs.
* usually kill captive exotic animals in order to collect a trophy.
* wait for ducks.
* want animals
* watch mallards.
- orange hats
+ Afghanistan, Plants and Animals: South-central Asia
* Endangered snow leopards live in the cold Hindu Kush, but they have thick fur to stay warm. Hunters sell the soft leopard skins in the markets in the capital Kabul.
+ World of Warcraft, Gameplay, Classes: 2004 video games :: Blizzard video games :: Massively multiplayer online role-playing games :: Windows games
* Hunters attack with a bow, crossbow or guns from range while their pets attack and keep an enemy's hate in melee range. Hunters can tame many kinds of pets including spiders, bears, worms, wasps, and many more.
|
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### person | worker | hunter:
African hunter
* are said to have boiled the seeds to extract arrow poison.
* have a clever way of trapping monkeys.
Archery hunter
* enter areas
- hunt areas
* wear hats
- orange hats
Deer hunter
* Many deer hunters participate in more than one season.
* are careful with fire when properly approached
- films
- people with a community of interest, regardless of where they reside
* can carry only buckshot, sabot rounds, or rifled slug while hunting.
* come in their season.
* look forward to next year's season all year long.
* manage deer populations by taking antlerless deer.
* provide all their own hunting equipment and pack out their own deer.
Duck hunter
* Most duck hunters rely on knowledge.
* are hunters.
Elk hunter
* have chances.
* hear low noise
- pop noise<|endoftext|>### person | worker | hunter:
Falconer
* Many falconers are licensed to trap and remove raptors
- have concerns about feeding starlings
- like to feed the quail gastrointestinal tract for the flora that it contains
* Most falconers do feed food that is stored frozen
- eventually release their kestrels back into the wild once they are of breeding age
* Some falconers feed a small amount every day, others feed a small amount once a week
- raise pigeons, chickens, quail, or rabbits for the food
- try to completely strip the fat out of the bird's diet
- use both methods for their game hawks
* can also hunt during any open season, such as the one for rabbits.
* design their mews for the bird's best physical and mental condition.
* have permits to keep raptors, and have training in handling and working with the birds.
Forager
* Most foragers collect nectar and pollen, but nectar is collected in greater quantities than pollen.
* carry leaves and stems to the nest.
* return to their nest with food, which they feed to adult and larval wasps.
* take less time when food is more abundant.
Fossil hunter
* can locate trilobites in Morgan County.
* divide Kansas into two roughly equal parts.
Fowler
* can t prescribe medications.
* thinks that dromaeosaurids and troodontids both evolved from fast-running ancestors.
Nocturnal hunter
* Most nocturnal hunters eat prey.
* Most nocturnal hunters feed on large prey
- have diets
- search for prey
- vary diets
Opportunistic hunter
* Most opportunistic hunters kill prey.
* Some opportunistic hunters feed on insects.
* capture prey.
Tracker
* are hunters
- wood devices that connect the keys to the pipes
* first observe tracks and trails as naturalists and classify what they see.
### person | worker | hunter | tracker:
Magnetic tracker
* detect the position and orientation of the user's head and joystick.
* use sets of coils that are pulsed to produce magnetic fields.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | hunter:
Trapper
* Many trappers consider the nutria fur, or pelts, as their form of income
- use commercial wire stretchers which insure uniformly stretched pelts
* Most trappers use simple tools
* Some trappers build shelters on stilts.
* Some trappers kill alligators
- cats
- coyotes
- possums
- refer to vines
- remove coyotes
- seek mammals
* Some trappers shoot dogs
- wild dogs
* Some trappers use boxes
- wooden boxes
* also catch raccoons, nutria and other pests in urban areas.
* are hunters
- the ones who make or break the success of a Convention
* concentrate on taking beaver, fox, wolf, marten, lynx, wolverine, otter, muskrat and mink.
* have two genders and reproduce sexually.
* hunt animals
- marmots
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* kill animals by stomping, bludgeoning, and strangulation.
* make more money on muskrat pelts than any other types of fur.
* observe tracks.
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### person | worker | hunter:
Treasure hunter
* try to find leprechauns by listening for the tapping of their hammers.
* use metal detectors to search for gold and Civil War relics.
Turkey hunter
* Most turkey hunters are deer hunters, and vice versa
- judge birds by weight and beard length
* are a special breed.
* spend a great deal of time preparing for the turkey season.
* use decoys.
Young hunter
* Many young hunters learn to hunt rabbit before moving up to other game.
* Some young hunters examine hartebeests.
Huntsman
* Huntsmen are big spiders
- very large Australian spiders
* Huntsmen includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
- threaten life
- use calls and the whip to ensure the dogs do what they are meant to do
* Some huntsmen eat frogs.
* skilled worker
Japanese worker
* shun small companies because of poor working conditions and low pay.
* take pride in their products and quality.
Male worker
* Some male workers create tension when they are asked to work along with or take orders from women.
* Some male workers die of hydrogen sulfide poison
* die at the end of the lifecycle.
Many worker
* leave jobs.
* to obtain information.
* wear gear
- protective gear
* work full time<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Mason
* are concerned with developing their minds and enlarging their scope of knowledge
- craftsmans
- faggots
- in the business of leading souls to hell
- members of a traditional, respected construction trade
* are men of charity and good works
- good character who strive to improve themselves and make the world a better place
- tradesmans
* become painters.
* build walls.
* come from all walks of life and levels of income.
* create curbs and gutters, steps, sidewalks, and even roads.
* donate millions of dollars to charity every day.
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- vacuoles
* is an artisan
- international law firm
* often lift heavy materials and stand, kneel, and bend for long periods.
* provide homes for the elderly and for orphans.
* start careers.
* take up permanent residences
* use a special hammer and chisel to cut stone
- bricks, concrete blocks, or concrete to build walls, walkways, and fences
* will have memory.
* work at building their lives and character, just as a carpenter works at building a house.
+ Brick: Tools
* Masons build brick walls. They join bricks together using mortar.
### person | worker | mason:
Cement mason
* are responsible for all preparation and repairing of concrete.
* can lose work time because of bad weather or downturns in construction activity.
* use knowledge.
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### person | worker:
Mechanic
* Some mechanics are members of labor unions and have benefits
- discover minds
- use wrenches made of something besides cast iron
- work in industries
* also constitutes a central part of technology
- use test instruments such as voltmeters, thermometers, and manometers
* are capable of machine tools.
* are located in garages
- race tracks
- repair shops
- part of a rational centered society, that squares and boxes according to discipline
- physics
* belong to unions affiliated with particular industries.
* conduct tests.
* deals with the behavior of objects and systems in response to various forces
- movements of bodies, especially under the action of external forces
* diagnose problems when systems break down
* encompasses the topics of kinematics and dynamics.
* examines the forces acting on machines and their tendency to cause failure.
* field of study which permeates all major engineering disciplines.
* forms the basic background for the understanding of physics.
- cell membranes
- cells
- sections
* involve interaction
- negative interaction
- introductory calculus-based course in mechanics
- mechanics is mechanics
* is the best place to start, because it is the basis of motion
- branch of physics that enables to make some sense of what's going on
- science of the ac- tion of force upon matter
- soul of physics
* is the study of how objects move
- motion and forces
- moving objects
- the motion of bodies
* often have grease on their hands
- lift heavy parts and tools
* operate precision equipment, such as torque wrenches and micrometers.
* play major roles
- minor roles
* provide explanations.
* use a variety of tools in their work
- concepts
- same concepts
* work on many different systems
- mechanical and electronic components of automobiles
- with heavy equipment, often at dangerous heights or in confined spaces
+ Mechanics, Significance
### person | worker | mechanic:
Celestial mechanic
* is the branch of astronomy that deals with the motions of celestial objects.
* uses more general rules applicable to a wider variety of situations.
Continuum mechanic
* is concerned with motion of such objects.
* underpins all theoretical work in both solid and fluid mechanics.
Diesel mechanic
* Most diesel mechanics work on heavy trucks used in industries.
* work on diesel-powered trucks, buses and heavy equipment.
Engineering mechanic
* are experts on how solids and fluids react under forces.
* is the study of the effects that forces produce on bodies.
Molecular mechanic
* can model very large compounds quickly.
* tends to be one of the standard methods of structural chemistry.
Newtonian mechanic
* are part of physics.
* deterministic, mechanical view of the universe.
* is the base science of physics and engineering
- used to move each atom in the direction of the resultant force<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Migrant worker
* Many migrant workers suffer at the hands of their employers, on whom they are completely dependent.
* Most migrant workers are in some way or the other linked to business activities.
* are an important component of the agricultural economy of the region and the state
- temps
* face issues.
* have problems in getting both primary health care and ongoing care of illness.
* hunt wildlife because it cheap source of food.
* play a key role in Guangdong's economy.
* underpin economies of developed countries.
Miller
* are craftsmans
- shapers
* describe methods.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- vacuoles
* need growth.
Mine worker
* meet requirements.
* work in coal industries
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### person | worker:
Official
* are adjudicators
- an integral part of the sport of hockey
- assigned to services
- employees of the civil service and are legally responsible to the minister
- skilled workers
- symbols of fair play, integrity and sportsmanship
* begin breaks
- experiments
- spring breaks
* carry out duties.
* change minds.
* coordinate health services
* determine methods
- operations
* discuss results.
* dismiss ideas.
* do jobs.
* document incidents.
* estimate numbers.
* express confidence.
* follow environmental laws
* have educational requirements
- interest
- rights
* have specific educational requirements
* hold conferences
- news conferences
* identify people.
* includes arms
- necks
- sections
* investigate suicide.
* involve in effort.
* kill swans.
* make decisions
- initial decisions
- poor decisions
* monitor activities.
* offer resources.
* receive calls
- criticism
* release statements.
* rely on judgment.
* report cases.
* request assistance
- technical assistance
* require information.
* say in statements.
* search for solutions.
* see doctors.
* show concern
- great interest
* to attend annual train workshops
- association meetings
* to attend monthly association meetings
- perform duties
* understand patterns.
* visit countries.
### person | worker | official:
Apparatchik
* always have their own myths that have little to do with the whole of things.
* is an official
### person | worker | official | assessor:
Lister
* are rivers.
* is an assessor
Bailiff
* are also responsible for security in the courtroom and in the courthouses
- circuit courts
- district courts
- officials
- professionals
- responsible for attachment of furniture
* generally work in courtrooms.
* guard offenders and maintain order in courtrooms during proceedings.
* is an official<|endoftext|>### person | worker | official:
Bureaucrat
* Every bureaucrat has some finite mass.
* A 'bureaucrat' can do a few more things than an administrator, but they should only use these while acting on consensus. Bureaucrats can also help users who want to change their username.
* are members of the community as well. They can vote too. The fact they press the button at the end is meaningless - they're just doing their job.
* perform vital tasks. They need to be professional. They need to make hard decisions which could ultimately infuriate many other users. Well many people actually. There are only two options I can see to remedy this situation.
* can grant and revoke the bot flag to and from non-admins when needed
- administrators
- primarily concerned with job security
- the meat loaf of humanity
- used for bureaucracy
* have power over the common man
- various incentives such as job security, power, or prestige
* like to exercise power
- feel in control of other people
* often use the passive voice to avoid responsibility for bad decisions.
* retain the individual freedom of capitalism while working for the community.
* shape political decisions, therefore the politicisation of bureaucracy.
* think the way they do because they are trained to make and follow rules and regulations.
* work within a system of rules, and they make their decisions in writing.
+ Law, Other parts of the legal system
* Bureaucrats' are the government workers and government organizations that do work for the government. Bureaucrats work within a system of rules, and they make their decisions in writing.
Censor
* are an institution or some third party entity
* are, of course, propelled by their own neuroses.
* intervene in the brain's flow of data to intercept painful or anxious cultural events.
* try to suppress the production, distribution and consumption of pornography.
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### person | worker | official | church officer:
Deacon
* Most deacons are married and they are Catholic clergy.
* Some deacons serve the church in a full-time capacity such as archdeacon or educational specialist.
* also have responsibility for ushering at church services
- prepare communion and prepare the sanctuary for worship
- witness weddings, and lead benediction and prayer services
* are a vital resource in the present struggle against the Culture of Death
- administrative assistants to the bishops
- both servants and messengers
- chief slaves, waiters, stewards
- clergy who can be married
- clergymans
- leader servants for the effective performance of service
- leaders who serve under the elders
- leaders, designated servants, leaders in ministry
- members of the clergy
- men who function as helpers to the pastor
- officers of the church
- part of the rank within many of the churches today
- people who have hearts for helping and serving
- priests
- probationary members or associate members who have been ordained
- routinely in contact with the persons for whom they care
- servant leaders
- servants of the church
* are the eyes, ears, hands, arms and feet of the bishop
- hands of compassion and service in our church
- weapons
* assist in worship, preach, and minister to people wherever they happen to be
- the priest in the administration of the liturgy
* can also act as administrators of parishes
- perform all the sacramental roles of a priest except the consecration of bread and wine
* church officer
* comes from the Greek word, diakonos , meaning servant.
* deal with the more temporal matters of the church.
* encourage others to become involved.
* function in ministries of liturgy, word, and charity.
* have no authority over the church or pastor, but are servants to the church
- special responsibilities as assistants in the liturgy and in charitable work
* make no vows.
* often have special clerical duties.
* perform the task of ministering to others including the sick and needy.
* play a key role in moving their churches into missions of justice, mercy, and compassion.
* receive and administer benevolences, as well as care for the sick and needy.
* serve as a bridge between church and community
- in the ministry of liturgy, of the word, and of charity
* wear the stole over one shoulder, priests and bishops over both shoulders.
### person | worker | official | church officer | deacon:
Deaconess
* are deacons
- servants whose primary function is the care of the laity
* often do volunteer work with churches as well.
* perform services such as health care, teaching and social ministries.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | official:
Civil servant
* are also owed months of back pay as are soldiers, who have mutinied in the past
- civilians
- government workers
- indirectly organs of the state
- officials
- often in positions of great power
* can quit their jobs and go home at night.
* comprise a majority of the wage-earning middle class.
* do election work in various democracies in the world.
* have a different attitude towards job security, which can be bad for business
- separate entitlements and can retire at full pay
* is an official
* live in a 'static' environment.
* tend to be more concerned about their own welfare than the benefit of their country.
Coast guard official
* hold conferences
- news conferences
* see doctors.
Diplomat
* Many diplomats have law degrees.
* are a different breed
- bands
- mediators
- representatives from one nation who conduct relations with another
* go and visit places all the time.
* is an official
* sometimes talk about a different sort of balance of payments.
* tell lies to journalists and then believe what they read.
* usually possess an uncanny mastery over speech.
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### person | worker | official | diplomat:
Ambassador
* are books
- spokespersons
- students who want to make a commitment to their university
- the personal representatives of kings, potentates, and other heads of state
* fulfill the duties of a secretary of state or negotiator.
Consul
* are diplomats
- impersonal when administering laws
- the main diplomatic relations vehicle for the United States
* denotes an officer in the foreign service of a country.
Dispatcher
* are employees
- workers
* is an official
### person | worker | official | federal agent:
Federal official
* are agents.
* federal agent
Lame duck
* are a special kind of a canard.
* is an official
* move very slowly.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | official:
Mace
* Some maces have intense flavor.
* are clubs
- large weapons
- powder
- spices
- staff
* brand name of pepper spray similar to other pepper sprays.
* comes from the seed covering of a plant.
* has more vitamin-C content than nutmeg.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is another spice derived from nutmeg
- lighter and more mild than nutmeg and is used in cakes, pies, preserves and cookies
- made from the outer husk of the nutmeg, and has a very similar flavor
* is the crimson, vinelike substance that covers the nutmeg seed
- dried, fleshy net- work which surrounds the nutmeg seed or kernel
- lacy growth or aril that surrounds the seed
- spice obtained from the membrane of the seeds
* is used in low stages of fever, consumptive complaints, humoral asthma
- similar ways to nutmeg, although it does have a milder flavor
- spice mixtures and sauces for meat
- to flavor all manner of foods, sweet to savory
* membrane that surrounds the whole nutmeg.
* trademarked brand.
Official currency
* can and does circulate far and wide.
* is the Fijian dollar
- colon
Registrar
* are academic administrators.
* are custodians of students' education records
- officials
State official
* coordinate health services
* determine methods
- operations
* offer resources.
Tax collector
* are bureaucrats.
* desire money.
Umpire
* Some umpires are people who keep baseballs in a sack.
* officiate the game.
* are a vital part of baseball
- located in sporting events
- the nomads of major league baseball
### person | worker | official | umpire:
Third party
* Many third parties are large conglomerates with multiple operations.
* Third parties are an essential part of American democracy
- political parties
- can be victims of sexual harassment
- have along history of being the engine of ideas in the United States
- provide services
- tend to be more parties of ideology and issues than the two major parties
* is an umpire
Usher
* are escorts.
* are located in concerts
- movies
- operas
- shows
- theaters
- weddings
- unskilled workers
Zoo official
* begin experiments.
* receive criticism.
Older worker
* are one of the fastest growing groups in the American workforce.
* can use reduced hours as a means of gradual transition to retirement.
* represent the fastest growing age group in the American workforce.
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### person | worker:
Optician
* Most opticians conduct routine eye tests
- work in offices
* Some opticians also fit contact lenses
- use machines or computers in eye tests
* also adjust and repair glasses and frames
- make corrective lenses
- work for optometrists or ophthalmologists
* are often responsible for the business aspects of running an optical store
- professionals
- skilled workers
* are technicians who fill prescriptions written by ophthalmologists and optometrists
- use a doctor's prescription to make corrective lenses
- the professionals who create precision lenses for a variety of uses
- truly health care professionals
* do eye tests
- it with their eyes
* enter occupations.
* fill prescriptions for eye wear written by ophthalmologists and optometrists
- written by eye doctors
* frequently use special tools to make final adjustments and repairs to eyeglasses.
* grind and dispense eyeglasses and in some states dispense contact lenses.
- body substances
- nuclei
- personality
* make observations.
* manufacture and dispense corrective lenses.
* specialize in the manufacture and fitting of eyeglasses and contacts.
* spend a lot of time on their feet.
* use license.
* work closely with and in most cases directly for doctors.
* work in a variety of settings and working conditions
- hospitals and eye clinics<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Pilot
* Most pilots love to talk about flying and the time they too learned how to fly.
* Some pilots think about flying airplanes almost every day.
* are aviators.
* are capable of flies
- lands
- sail ships
* are located in airplanes
- cockpits
- ground
- showers
- space shuttles
- mariners
- part of friends
- professions
* assess conditions
- weather conditions
* attend flight schools
* begin careers.
* consider light.
* desire flies.
* drive aircraft.
* experience fatigue.
* fly aircraft.
* get certify flight instructors
- routes
* greet passengers.
* have events
- flight training
- irregular schedules
- kids
- primary responsibility
* help lateral movement
* includes arms
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* inform passengers.
* involve in operations
- rescue operations
* learn from instructors.
* maintain experience.
* make decisions.
* receive license.
* report incidents
- smoke
* return to bases.
* start careers.
* use instruments.
* very simple programming language which has been mainly used in instructional settings.
+ Air navigation, VFR navigation: Navigation :: Aviation
* Under Visual Flight Rules, pilots use a map and compass, and look on the ground. When preparing for a flight they choose big visible points on the map, for example large cities, lakes, hills, rivers, roads or forests. When in the air, they seek the chosen points to make sure of going the right way way. The weather must be good enough to let them see the ground. They cannot fly into clouds, because they can get lost. Pilots also have to look for other aircraft. It is their responsibility to make sure they do not get too close to other aircraft.
+ Glider: Aircraft
* In some places a vertical draft makes the air go up faster than the glider is going down. The pilot of a glider can make it climb by flying to these places. This is called soaring. Good pilots can travel long distances by always finding rising air. Some pilots race each other over hundreds of kilometres each day. Other pilots just fly for fun.
### person | worker | pilot:
Commercial pilot
* Most commercial pilots fly aircraft.
* have irregular schedules
Glider pilot
* are experts at dead-stick landings.
* come from all walks of life and almost every nation.
Plasterer
* also work with a plaster material that can be finished in a single coat.
* are skilled workers.
* includes arms
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### person | worker:
Plier
* are helpful for removing and attaching wires to screws
* can chew the comers off a nut.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Plumber
* Most plumbers work for plumbing contractors.
* are capable of rush jobs
- craftsmans
- the people who install and repair the system of pipes that supply and carry off water
- tradesmans
* assemble, install and repair piping systems which carry gas, steam, oil, and water.
* can lose work time because of downturns in construction activity.
* check pipes
- sewer pipes
* compete in geographic markets
- narrow geographic markets
* frequently use a torch to thaw frozen pipes.
* have special safety procedures and tools to minimize the risk of explosion or fire.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* install and repair water, drainage, and gas pipes in homes, businesses, and factories.
* install, repair and maintain plumbing, heating and steam operated equipment and systems.
* is an artisan
* learn on jobs.
* make much more than child-care workers.
* mediate between the pure and the abject.
* offer commercial plumb services
* often have gas detectors that can help locate gas sources
- install plumbing in buildings as they are being constructed
- use bars of solder, much thicker than the wire used for electrical applications
- work in cramped areas and in awkward positions
* perform roles.
* provide maintenance.
* supply their own work clothing and small hand tools.
* use a variety of specialized tools
- copper pipe on an everyday basis to connect water main lines to household pipes
- two-part epoxy
* work with the water and gas in buildings and other places.
+ Plumbing: Water infrastructure :: Waste :: Engineering
* A 'plumber' is someone who fixes or puts in piping systems, plumbing fixtures and equipment such as water heaters. Many plumbers are construction workers.
Postal worker
* are a loyal and dedicated workforce who are paid very poorly
- located in post offices
- skilled workers
* suffer from dog bites and homicidal tendencies.
Potter
* Most potters use natural paints rendered from local vegetation, and paint with yucca brushes
- work in one clay body
* Some potters add acid directly to an aging clay in the form of vinegar or citric acid.
* are craftsmans.
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- personality
- vacuoles
- evil with no goal or reason for being that way
* make one hundred different shapes.
* often make their own glazes
* still use spinning wheels.
### person | worker | potter:
Bare pottery
* objects without a glaze are called 'bisque'.
+ Pottery
* Bare pottery objects without a glaze are called 'bisque'. The finest pottery objects, called 'porcelain' are made using a special clay called kaolin.
Quarrier
* are a leading, long-established Scottish social care charity.
* work within the natural resources of the land to process stone for construction.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | quarrier:
Cutter
* Many cutters report that when they harm themselves, they feel relief rather than physical pain.
* Most cutters have a straight edge cutting blade that dulls quickly.
* Some cutters use carbide blades.
* also dismantle large objects, such as ships, railroad cars, automobiles, or aircraft.
* are diners
- films
- people crying for help
- sailing vessels
- thin to moderate in flesh
* blades in most fly cutters come with a quite sharp pointed end.
* can sometimes reach three feet in height and have large, many-petaled heads.
* come in sizes to fit pipes and tubing of different diameters.
* dismantle large objects, such as ships, railroad cars, automobiles or aircraft.
* make sharp, clean cuts for a professional finish to buttonholes.
* specialize in patterning and cutting the pieces of fabric needed to assemble a costume.
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### person | worker | quarrier | cutter:
Diamond cutter
* cut and polish diamond rough by hand into objects of beauty.
* take advantage of cleavage to fashion diamonds efficiently.
Rescue worker
* follow experience.
* use infrared sensors to find people in emergency situations.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Sailor
* Most sailors eat diets.
* Some sailors hunt dodo birds
- like to race and compete against others or the clock
* are a special breed
- capable of row boats
* are capable of sail boats
- ships
* are located in oceans
- people
- skilled workers
* bring seeds.
* desire wind.
* fold their arms across their chests with hands touching the upper chest or shoulders.
* have bases.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* return homes.
* stand on decks.
* visit coasts.
### person | worker | sailor:
Mariner
* are especially concerned about wind and waves
- located in sea
* have a language all their own.
* spend extended periods at sea.
Seafarer
* diver and lives for the sea.
* focuses on people who go to sea, particularly sailors and fishermen.
Seaman
* Seamen are mysterious creatures that basically start off looking like fish with human faces.
* are capable of sail ships.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Scab
* are a fungal disease that cause fruits, leaves, and roots to obtain hardened tissue
- more likely to be caused by too much protein in the diet, allergy, or skin infection
- necrotic tissue
- part of skin
* are the body's way of bandaging itself
- result of unemployment
- unsightly, but are only skin deep
- usually crusty and dark red or brown
* continually form over the ulcer and then come off, but the ulcer never really heals.
* remain infectious for long periods, and each new lot of lambs can be infected.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | scab:
Apple scab
* Look for gray or brown corky spots, uneven or deformed fruit, and cracked skin and flesh.
* affects susceptible apples and ornamental crabapples.
* appears as olive green to black spots or lesions on leaves.
* can also infect hawthorn and firethorn.
* causes black spots on the leaves
- heavy leaf drop on susceptible crabapple varieties
* fungal disease that causes black splotches on leaves and fruit
- problem that causes brown lesions on apple skins
* fungus disease that overwinters in dead, infected, fallen leaves.
* is caused by a fungus that thrives during wet weather
- of major economic importance in the mid-Atlantic region
* is one of the most serious diseases of apple trees and occurs wherever apples are grown
- severe diseases of apple trees and some flowering crabapple varieties
- present in a number of orchards around the state
* serious disease caused by a fungus that overwinters on infected fallen leaves
- problem on susceptible crabapple varieties
Eschar
* are scabs.
* hard, black, leathery tissue.
* is necrotic tissue composed of denatured collagen and elastin and protein.
* wet, purulent wound.
Peach scab
* causes minor losses in mid-Atlantic orchards but can build up if no fungicides are used.
* occurs on leaves, twigs and fruit causing small, circular to oval-shaped spots.
Pecan scab
* fungal disease that affects developing shoots, leaves and nuts.
* occurs on immature leaves, shucks of developing nuts and current season twigs
- leaves, twigs and nut shucks
Seasonal worker
* are workers.
* face annual periods of unemployment when their resources are scarce.
* tend to be men with a considerably below-average level of education.
Sedentary worker
* have the second highest incidence of back pain.
* suffer from backache due to long periods of being tied to a desk.
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### person | worker:
Servant
* Most servants work in households.
* Some servants refer to people.
* are attendants
* close gates.
* dedicate life.
* do duties.
* have masters
- responsibility
- several different responsibility
* includes arms
- legs
- necks
- sections
- vacuoles
* is the same word translated deacon in other places.
* make up the lower class of society.
* receive additional opportunity
* serve leaders.
### person | worker | servant:
Butler
* Most butlers answer doors.
* Some butlers feel heartbeats.
* are people
- servants
- skilled workers
* buy cars.
* carry trays.
* have conversations
- rooms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- material bodies
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- vacuoles
* show skills.
Domestic
* are servants.
* outnumber wild poplulations.
Housekeeper
* are domestics
- unskilled workers
* typically conduct sight tests when cleaning rooms at most hotels.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | servant:
Maid
* Most maids work for families
- in homes.
* A 'housemaid' or, formerly, 'maidservant', or in current use 'maid' female employed in domestic worker. Maids perform typical domestic chores such as cooking, ironing, washing, cleaning the house, grocery shopping, caring for pets, and taking care of children like a nanny. In many places in some poor countries, maids often take on the role of a nurse in taking care of the elderly and people with disabilities. Many maids are required by their employers to wear a uniform
* are an important part of childcare in Peru, and most maids are of Indian descent
- capable of cleaning windows
- girls
- housekeepers
* are located in hotels
- motels
- themselves women
- cells
- cytoplasm
- necks
- nuclei
* often leave hotel room doors ajar while they're cleaning.
* usually do sight tests when they clean rooms.
Service worker
* Some service workers deal with animals.
* are most vulnerable to job loss.
* learn occupations.
Serviceman
* Servicemen includes arms
- heads
- human bodies
- material bodies
- plasma membranes
* Some servicemen have children.
* are skilled workers.
### person | worker | serviceman:
Marine insurance
* covers sea, road, rail and air transportation.
* is the oldest type of insurance
- type of insurance needed during the actual ocean transit time<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman:
Marine life
* All marine life is part of an inter-connected web.
* abounds in open areas, especially the more southerly waters.
* depends on nutrients to grow.
* explodes in color and schools of fish thrive in unequaled numbers.
* flourishes, with lots of fish and soft corals.
* includes blue-spotted rays and moorish idols
- dugongs, rare starfish, turtles and whale sharks
- turtles, sharks, barracuda and reef fish
* is abundant and pristine.
* is abundant, as the aboriginals found
- including cod, pollack, lobster, ling, sea bass, and flounder
- also varied
- diverse
- equally diverse and abundant, from tiny plankton to blue whales
- especially sensitive to the debris
- in abundance
- less threatened by a relaxed snorkeler
* is located in oceans
- plentiful with a wide array of tropical fish
- protected and abundant
- very rich here, and provides a wide variety of prey for polar bears
* maintains balanced ecological relationships by competing for habitat and food.
* ranges from microscopic plankton to the endangered blue whale.
* refers to the plants , animals and other organisms that live in the ocean
- species of animals, plants, and other organisms that live in the ocean
* renews itself much faster.
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### person | worker | serviceman:
Officer
* achieve power.
* act as detectives.
* advance to positions.
* announce death.
* are assigned to administrative duties
- capable of voice commands
- human beings, complete with life experiences, when they join a police force
- located in fraternity houses
- mariners
- officers
- the leaders of an army, skilled in strategy and directing troops
* arrest men.
* arrive at scenes.
* come to conclusions.
* conduct criminal investigations
- inspections
- vessels
* contact women.
* describe scenes.
* determine activities
- limits
* establish purposes
- scientific purposes
* exercise judgment
- poor judgment
* fill positions.
* find doors.
* follow procedures.
* gain experience.
* go to homes.
* have assignments
- authority
- causes
- difficult jobs
- direct evidence
- eyes
- general duties
- probable causes
- uniforms
* hold positions.
* include city police
- body substances
- cell membranes
* interact with members.
* interview witnesses.
* investigate death.
* involve in decisions.
* issue tickets.
* knock on doors.
* lead activities
- management activities
- such activities
- teams
* leave houses.
* maintain safety.
* move into positions.
* must have strength.
* need skills.
* observe individuals.
* perform duties.
* point guns.
* possess expert knowledge
* provide inspections.
* read newspapers.
* receive hands.
* report movement.
* respond to calls
- incidents
- sides
* take charge
- notes
- pride
- roles
* talk with men.
* to assess conditions
- medical conditions
- investigate crime
* understand authority
- lawful authority
* use computers
- weapons
* work desks.
* work for county sheriffs
- holidays
* work in agencies
- neighborhoods
- states
- nights
- weekends
* write letters
### person | worker | serviceman | officer:
Admiral
* Most admirals have bloodstreams.
* includes arms
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is equivalent to the rank of general in the other uniformed services.
Aide
* are assistants.
* is an officer
### person | worker | serviceman | officer | aide:
Psychiatric aide
* provide basic care for patients who have psychological disorders.
* work in hospitals and institutions.
Army officer
* are members of both a unique profession and a complex organization
- military officers
- people
- well-trained professionals
* is an officer
### person | worker | serviceman | officer | army officer:
Quartermaster
* are the individuals involved in supplying the military.
* is an army officer<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman | officer:
Captain
* are leaders.
* are located in airplanes
- basketball teams
- battleships
- charge
- militaries
- officers in an army
- part of teams
- pilots
- police officers
- policemans
- sailors
- the subordinates of Generals
* are used for commanding ships
- leadership
- sailing boats
* commissioned officer
* includes arms
- cell membranes
* inform attendants.
* make attempts.
* take ships.
* are officers in an army. In a navy, captains command an entire ship. Another type of captain commander of a ship who is not in the military. There are also captains in other uniformed organisations, including the police. A leader of a sports team is also called a captain, as well as the pilot of an airliner.
Commander
* are leaders
- people
* rank used in many navies and some air forces.
+ Commander, Commander as a naval rank: Military ranks :: Royal Navy
* Commander is a rank used in many navies and some air forces. It is rarely used as a rank in armies, except in special forces for a team leader.
### person | worker | serviceman | officer | commissioned officer:
Commodore
* are bands.
* commissioned officer
* fly a red swallowtail burgee, with a similar shield.
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### person | worker | serviceman | officer | commissioned officer | general:
General revelation
* means truth found outside the Bible.
* serves to explain the worldwide phenomenon of religion.
Lieutenant
* are military officers.
* commissioned officer
Major
* are discipline
- students
* live in the dry interior of Australia, and also in the west.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman | officer | commissioned officer | major:
Driftwood
* also works, but avoid all types of treated lumber.
* are located in beachs
- oceans
- sea
- wood.
* In some waterfront areas, driftwood major. However, the driftwood provides shelter and food for birds, fish and other aquatic species as it floats in the ocean. Gribbles, shipworms and bacteria decompose the wood and gradually turn it into nutrients that are reintroduced to the food web. Sometimes, the partially decomposed wood washes ashore, where it also shelters birds, plants, and other species. Driftwood can become the foundation for sand dunes
* hints that land lies to windward, while seaweed indicates an up-current reef.
* is beneficial for soft water fish like bettas
- essential to provide roughage in their diet
- much in evidence, identifiable often by the marine worm-bores
- pieces of wood that are carried to shore by waves
* logs, if they are heavy enough, or partially buried in sand and gravel, also work well.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman | officer | commissioned officer | major:
E major
* is hard for wind instruments to play.
+ D major: Musical keys :: Major scales
* For some beginning wind instrument students, however, D major is not a very good key, because it transposes to E major for B flat instruments. E major has four sharps, which is harder for new learners to play.
* E major is hard for wind instruments to play. It is quite good for violin, because two of the open strings are A and E, the tonic and subdominant. Other orchestral string instruments can play well in it, and it is also good for the guitar. When writing in E major, clarinets in A should be used instead of clarinets in B-flat to make it easier to play. This is because clarinets are transposing instruments.
Consular officer
* are highly trained professionals who know what they are doing.
* protect U.S. citizens abroad and their property.
+ Consulate: Government buildings
* Consular officers have diplomatic immunity.
Correctional officer
* are role models for inmates, families of inmates, and their peers.
* have no law enforcement responsibilities outside their place of work.
* use equipment to control and defuse situations.
Executive officer
* are military officers.
* is an officer
Medical officer
* have direct evidence
* take notes.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman | officer:
Navigator
* also maintain safety by watching for telephone and power lines.
* are capable of sail ships
- explorers
- organisation
* browser for finding and visiting websites.
* focus on building disciples, one at a time, in everwidening circles.
- the name of the browser
* know well the signals of each particular light.
* recognize up to eight different swells, one from each octant of the compass.
* tool that maps information about New York State's environment.
* valves control the output temperature for variations in input temperature and pressure.
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### person | worker | serviceman | officer | noncom | corporal:
Corporal punishment
* appears to be used most at the middle-school level.
* can and does expose children to excessive physical force
- cause serious physical damage
- have very severe consequences to the physical health of a child
* cruel and obsolete weapon.
* degrading and humiliating treatment.
* gray area.
* grey zone.
* has deep social, cultural and emotional roots here and around the world
- far-reaching consequences for both children and adults
* hurts all kids, victims and witnesses alike.
* implies that violence is acceptable.
* is an aversive technique that produces physical discomfort
- common in Haitian schools
- counter-productive as a form of discipline
- forbidden, as is humiliation and verbal abuse
- illegal in schools in some states
- legal in most places in thirty-nine states
- only a symptom of a bad attitude on the part of adults
* is physical force or contact applied to the body as punishment
- physical contact applied to the body as punishment
- quite a controversial subject
- reminiscent of Dickensian times
- termed, with suspension, as optional discipline
* is the most effective method in preventing crime
- only way to teach some kids
- perfect model of violence before thinking
- use of pain, discomfort or physical force for the purpose of punishment
- used only on the worst kids
* makes the child blindly accept and obey the teacher's standards.
* powerful reinforcer of bigotry, class discrimination and collective hatred.
* prevents unruliness.
* reality of life in certain societies.
* remains a lawful sentence after conviction for some crimes.
* technique that can easily be abused leading to physical injuries.
* terrible way to maintain discipline.
* uses the barbaric tactics of intimidation through physical domination.
Patrol officer
* provide police services in elementary school neighborhoods.
+ Police, Parts of police departments: Law :: Emergency services
* Patrol officers travel through their area to see what is happening. Patrol officers also enforce traffic regulations and run the local jail.
Probation officer
* are officeholders
- probation
* is an officer
Sergeant
* begin careers.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* lead squads.
* may have difficulty.
* receive calls
- phone calls
* shake heads.
* understand necessity.
### person | worker | serviceman | officer | sergeant:
Sergeant major
* are associated with shallow reefs.
* is both a rank and a military billet.
* senior non-commissioned rank or appointment in many militaries around the world.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman | officer:
Skipper
* are a separate group of butterflies, with many distinctive features
- considered an intermediate form between moths and butterflies
- insects
- students
* dart actively around drinking nectar from a wide variety of blossoming plants.
* form an intermediate group between butterflies and moths.
* have long tongues, as much as one and a half times their wingspan
- their antennae clubs hooked backward like a crochet
* often hold their front pair of wings at an angle to the horizontally held back pair.
+ Skipper (butterfly)
* They are a bit different from other butterflies, which are classified in the superfamily Papilionoidea. Skippers have their antennae clubs hooked backward like a crochet. The other butterflies have club-like tips to their antennae. Hesperioidea' is very likely the sister group of Papilionoidea. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, New York.
Uniform officer
* have duties
- general duties
* include city police
* respond to calls.
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### person | worker | serviceman | officer:
Wildlife officer
* come to conclusions.
* enforce wildlife laws and protect native Ohio wildlife.
* have assignments.
* relocate a bear the first time it crosses people's paths.
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### person | worker | serviceman:
Soldier
* Most soldiers have glands.
* Some soldier termites live for years
- soldiers literally die of fear in combat
* also have mandibles and a fontanelle or frontal gland pore.
* are about twice the size of workers, with enlarged heads and jaws
- also people
* are located in battlefields
- platoons
- tents
- trenchs
- war zones
- white houses
- part of armies
- people who work for there nations army
- primarily citizens who are enlisted or commissioned by their government
- protectors, representatives of laws and government
- residents in the posts at which they are stationed
- responsible for care of their family members
* are used for combat
- fighting
- guards
- killing
- protection
- warriors
* carry guns
- machine guns
* desire fights.
* develop from nymphs, pseudergates, or workers.
* excrete substances
- toxic substances
* experience effects.
* fire rifles.
* fly females lay eggs on the surface of nitrogen-rich material that is exposed.
* fly larvae as feed in commercial fish production
- in America north of Mexico
* form ideas.
* have an oval head with massive jaws that cross at the tips
- large rectangular, red-brown heads with massive jaws
- large, elongate, brown heads that are equipped with two large jaws
- powerful mandibles
- thin veins
- uniforms
* hold flags
- swords
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* kill in battles.
* know soldiers.
* make camps.
* mature within a year and live an average of five years.
* often perform heroic acts that shorten their own lives.
* participate in african campaigns
- north african campaigns
* perform services.
* popular brand of roach spray in Egypt.
* provide duties.
* receive actions
- decoration
- rations
* report camps.
* serve nations.
* sustain wounds.
* take ammunition
- live ammunition
- prisoners
* to kill men
- take steps
* wear steel helmets to protect their heads from explosions and bullets.
* win games.
+ Army, Gear
* A soldier is supplied with weapons, such as guns, knives, and other simple gear for surviving in the battlefield, such as food, water, clothes, and tents. They must keep good care of the items. Some soldiers train to be a doctor for the army, or other civilian duties.
+ Army:
* They are used to defend their country, or attack another country's army. It is difficult, and a soldier must be in good shape, both physically and mentally. They almost always move together, and that way the team can do more things, in a safer way. They may be assigned to certain places to guard, or they may be told to search a place, or even attack it. That is up to their commander. Every soldier answers to someone else, so that way, everything is organized.
+ Helmet, Types of helmets: Protective clothing
* Soldiers wear steel helmets to protect their heads from explosions and bullets. Construction workers wear plastic helmets to protect their heads from falling objects. Welders wear special helmets with a lens that lets less light through. This protects their eyes from the bright light of welding. Bicycle riders wear plastic and foam helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. Motorcycle riders wear helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident.
+ Plautus, Biography, Plautus and the Gods of Roman Society: 254 BC births :: 184 BC deaths :: Playwrights :: Ancient Roman writers
* Usually the only characters that scorn a god are those of low standing, like a pimp. Plautus perhaps does this to further demoralize the characters. Soldiers often bring ridicule among the gods. Young men, meant to represent the upper social class, often make fun of the gods in their remarks. Parasites, pimps, and courtesans often praise the gods with little ceremony. Tolliver argues that drama both reflects and foreshadows social change. Plautus did not make up or encourage irreverence to the gods, but used the ideas of his time.
+ Team Fortress 2, Classes, Offense, Soldier: 2007 video games :: Shooter video games
* The Soldier' is a middle-aged man from the American midwest. His main weapon is a rocket launcher which he can use to blow up enemies, or, if fired at his own feet, can be used to make him jump very high. Rocket jumping will hurt the Soldier, though, and if he is low on health, it could kill him. Soldier also uses shotguns and shovels to attack. The Soldier is a good offensive class but he cannot move very fast and is easy to hit. The Soldier has a large amount of health, the second highest of all the classes.
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### person | worker | serviceman | soldier:
Fresh fish
* Most fresh fish have clear eyes.
* are a nutritious and healthy food
- good food
* contains essential fatty acids.
* has a mild, fresh odor.
* inhabit rivers.
* provide an important food source at sea.
### person | worker | serviceman | soldier | infantryman:
Musketeer
* are films
- infantrymans
* can fire only if their guns are loaded that turn.
* is an infantryman
* usually fire as units, and are brigaded next to spearmen.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman | soldier:
Marine
* are a product of society and have poor body awareness
- located in oceans
- military services
- soldiers who serve on warships , but go to land to fight when necessary
* claim to do more in the morning than most people do all day.
* learn how to screen individuals for possible recruitment.
* live it every day of their lives.
* often refer to each other as brother and sister.
* pride themselves on creating discipline, leadership and motivation.
* stay in shape.
* try to survive and kill.
* usually have strong links with the country's navy.
+ Marine (military)
* A 'marine' is a member of a military force. Marines specialize in military actions in other countries, such as an attack by sea and occupation. Marines usually have strong links with the country's navy. The commander in the field is usually the commander of the fleet. Support for the marines such as medical, legal, and supplies come from the navy. The anchor is often used as a symbol for the marines. Marine forces are usually part of the navy, but they can be part of the army or act on their own
- (military), Roles
* The main task for marine troops is military actions near the coast. Based on ships they are trained to land on and secure key points to around 50 miles inland. Marines leave the warships using helicopters, landing craft, hovercraft and amphibious vehicles
+ Marine, Military
* Marines are soldiers who serve on warships, but go to land to fight when necessary. Marines often serve under the navy, but they are not sailors.
Orderly
* Orderlies are attendants
- help transport patients in hospitals or residents in nursing homes
* is an attendant
Paratrooper
* are often purveyors of fads and fashion
- tough
* make a considerable amount of noise when they jump.
Peacekeeper
* are a militant arm of a church, worshiping a deity of peace and serenity
- defenders
- pistols
- tenacious fighters with massive ships and overwhelming weaponry
* can enable refugees and internally displaced persons to go home
- offer citizens a chance to live without the fear of being caught in a crossfire
Reservist
* are hard-working civilians that serve our nation part time
* perform important missions at home and abroad in times of peace and crisis
- two weeks of active duty per year for six years
* represent a pool of trained law enforcement personnel for use in emergency situations.
* serve as officers or enlisted personnel, depending on their qualifications and interests.
Trooper
* are policemans.
* enforce rules.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* respond to accident scenes
* wear distinctive uniforms
* work weeks.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | serviceman:
Veteran
* Most veterans identify a spouse or person with whom they co-habit as their primary relative.
* account for a higher proportion of all self-employed workers than any other age group.
* are experts
- people who have already served, but are no longer in the armed forces of our country
- servicemans
* find jobs
- pay jobs
* have more health problems and physical disabilities than the general population
- services
- body substances
- heads
- personality
- vacuoles
* receive ceremony
- military ceremony
* return homes.
* seek care
- mental health treatments
* survive severe wounds
|
{
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### person | worker:
Sharpie
* are companies
- sailboats
- the size of a hen pheasant
* often migrate in large numbers.
* pound in a head sea, and they have steering problems in some conditions.
Shift worker
* Some shift workers use sleeping pills to try to alleviate shift lag.
* eat food
- rich food
Skilled worker
* are workers.
* have different personalities, work ethics and life goals.
### person | worker | skilled worker:
Artificer
* are mad scientists.
* skilled worker<|endoftext|>### person | worker | skilled worker:
Artisan
* Some artisans still make native crafts to be sold at pow-wows or festivals.
* also produce beautiful baskets, pottery, glass painting, wood carving and fabrics.
* create, inventing new ways of seeing, doing, and feeling.
* depend on crafts as their primary source of income generation.
* have exceptionally keen senses, and love working with their hands.
* make objects of wood, ivory, and metal
- porcelain, toys, and jewelry but specialize in religious objects
* sleep at night because they're worn out from doing the work.
### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Beautician
* Some beauticians also work at client's homes - particularly during weddings.
* are craftsmans.
* is an artisan
Bookbinder
* assemble books and magazines from large, flat, printed sheets of paper
* can also make inexpensive slipcases and protective clamshell boxes.
* perforate and process into books, sheets, or coils.
Ceramicist
* are artists who work with clay.
* work outside the crafts tradition.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Construction worker
* More construction workers die on the job than employees in any other field
- job than workers in any other field
* Some construction workers use feet.
* Some construction workers wear hard hats
- located in roadblock
* have one of the highest rates of drug use among jobs.
* is an artisan
* maintain buildings, utilities, vehicles, roads and runways.
* need sunlight.
* wear plastic helmets to protect their heads from falling objects.
+ Helmet, Types of helmets: Protective clothing
* Soldiers wear steel helmets to protect their heads from explosions and bullets. Construction workers wear plastic helmets to protect their heads from falling objects. Welders wear special helmets with a lens that lets less light through. This protects their eyes from the bright light of welding. Bicycle riders wear plastic and foam helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. Motorcycle riders wear helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. People who ride horses often wear helmets, to protect them if they fall off the horse.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Cooper
- orthopedic surgeon who cuts as a last resort
* presents ways to do so through exercise, diet, and supplements.
* tri-color long coat male.
+ Chris Cooper: 1951 births :: Living people :: American movie actors :: American television actors :: American stage actors :: American voice actors :: Actors from Kansas City, Missouri :: Actors from Houston, Texas :: Academy Award winning actors :: Golden Globe Award winning actors
* He was married to Marianne Leone since 1983. Cooper now lives in Kingston, Massachusetts.
Diemaker
* are machinists with additional skills in designing and constructing metal stamping dies.
* is an artisan
Hairstylist
* are workers.
* keep their work area clean by sweeping up hair and soaking their combs.
Hard hat
* are compulsory in the cross-country and jumping events
- effective only if worn properly
* shine in the sun.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
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### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Luthier
* are craftsmans
- master artisans of handmade string instruments
+ Electric violin: String instruments :: Electronic music
* An 'electric violin' is a string instrument which is played with a bow, like a normal violin. The strings are usually tuned to the notes G, D, A, and E, but it could have its pitches changed as it is electric. Different notes are made by fingering with the left hand while bowing with the right. It has no frets or other markers. Players have to learn the exact place to put the fingers of the left hand and memorise them. Luthiers tend to fix electric violins as well.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Machinist
* Most machinists work in small machining shops or manufacturing firms.
* are capable of machine tools
- films
- metalsmiths who produce high-precision parts and tools
* create precision equipment by using a variety of metal working tools.
* frequently use lathes to make round or circular parts.
* is an artisan
* make furniture and other forest products
- plastic and metal parts for equipment, products and machinery
* operate a variety of machine tools.
* produce parts from metal castings, forgings, stampings or from solid metal stock.
* use lathes, drill presses, and milling machines when creating precision metal parts
- precision measuring instruments to insure parts are correct to very close tolerances
- specialized skills in operating many types of machines
+ Smith (metalwork), Machinists: Occupations
* Machinists are metalsmiths who produce high-precision parts and tools. The most advanced of these tools, CNC machines, are computer controlled and largely automated.
Manicurist
* are beauticians.
* is an artisan
* routinely handle solvents, chemicals, solutions, and glues.
Paperhanger
* apply wall coverings for the same reason.
- forgers
* cover interior walls and ceilings of rooms with decorative wallpaper or fabric.
* generally earn higher wages than painters.
* is an artisan
Roofer
* are craftsmans
- located in roofs
- tradesmans
* measure and cut felt and shingles to fit around vents, chimneys, and corners.
* often work in very hot and cold weather.
* use it to bind knee pads to their jeans.
* usually cover flat roofs with several layers of materials.
* work outdoors in all types of weather, particularly when making repairs
Stonemason
* Build stone structures, such as piers, walls, and abutments.
* Some stonemasons specialize in setting marble, which is similar to setting large pieces of stone.
* build similar surfaces or structures out of stone
- stone walls as well as stone exteriors and floors
* do work that is similar to that of bricklayers.
* still practice in part of the Middle East today.
* usually work on structures such as houses of worship, hotels, and office buildings.
Taxidermist
* Some taxidermists work in teams.
* can use a mold to make a fiberglass replica of an angler's fish.
Upholsterer
* Make, repair, or replace upholstery for household furniture or transportation vehicles.
* Most upholsterers work inside a shop or factory.
- workers
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{
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### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Welder
* Many welders choose to work outdoors and travel for service or construction contractors.
* Some welders operate automated welding machines.
- in demand for construction, manufacturing and repair
* assist maintenance personnel where welding is required for the repair of pipes or equipment.
* can deposit more metal with fewer passes because weld flows more readily and pools evenly.
* connect cables from welding units to obtain amperage, voltage, slope and pulse.
* create things with their metal working skills.
* do either manual or automatic welding.
* follow and apply safety practices and procedures as they relate to industrial situations.
* have hotter rods.
* repair broken metal parts on all types of machinery, equipment and structures.
* use all types of welding equipment in a variety of positions
- scientific principles all day long
- their knowledge of metals and welding when planning their work
* wear special helmets with a lens that lets less light through.
* work by hand or by machine when welding.
+ Helmet, Types of helmets: Protective clothing
* Soldiers wear steel helmets to protect their heads from explosions and bullets. Construction workers wear plastic helmets to protect their heads from falling objects. Welders wear special helmets with a lens that lets less light through. This protects their eyes from the bright light of welding. Bicycle riders wear plastic and foam helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. Motorcycle riders wear helmets to protect their heads in case they have an accident. People who ride horses often wear helmets, to protect them if they fall off the horse. People who rock climb wear helmets in case they fall.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan:
Woodworker
* Many woodworkers have a number of theories about how and when to remove glue squeeze out.
* Most woodworkers operate a specific woodworking machine, but some operate a variety of machines.
* are craftsmans.
* follow strict safety precautions to reduce the risk of injury.
* have different needs when it comes to sharpening stones.
* is an artisan
* know the hazards of woodshop dust.
* share techniques for attaching work to concrete block walls.
* use it to make golf club heads, billiard cues, and shuttles that are used in weaving
- power saws, planers, sanders, lathes, joiners, and routers
- wood or rubber mallets when striking wood to keep from denting it<|endoftext|>### person | worker | skilled worker | artisan | wright:
Millwright
* Many millwrights belong to labor unions.
* Some millwrights use metalworking equipment such as lathes or grinders to custom fit parts.
* also use hand and power tools, cutting torches, welding machines, and soldering guns.
* are wrights.
* generally work eight hour days.
* install conveyor systems, escalators, giant electrical turbines and generators
* often decide what to use for moving machinery.
* sometimes work to specifications requiring tolerances to a thousandth of an inch.
* specialize in machinist or metal work.
* use welding equipment and torches.
Aviator
* Most aviators serve seven years after they complete their initial flight training.
* are professional drivers
- skilled workers
- special people
* kill time by studying flash identification cards of American battleships.
* participate in field exercises, transporting fuel, ammunition and personnel.
Balloonist
* are ordinary people
* prefer winds to be twelve miles per hour or less.
Crew member
* play roles.
* HMS 'Erebus' and HMS 'Terror' with 134 men under John Franklin sail from the River Thames in England, beginning a disastrous expedition to find the Northwest Passage. All crew members die on the expedition.
### person | worker | skilled worker | crew member:
Privateer
* are crewmans
- officers
- warships
* crew member
* is an officer
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### person | worker | skilled worker:
Dental hygienist
* Dental Hygienists are important partners in the delivery of dental health care
- specialists in all aspects of preventive dentistry
- strong advocates of the preventative approach to disease
- can make a difference in the nation's oral health
- clean and polish teeth using scaling instruments and a rotating polisher
- provide preventive and therapeutic services, and perform dental health counseling
- work in a variety of clinical and public health settings
* Many dental hygienists help detect serious problems early by focusing on extensive oral exams.
* Most Dental Hygienists work part time - eight hours a day, usually two or three days a week
- dental hygienists work as part of a dental team in private dental practices
* Some dental hygienists work in industry.
* are primary providers of preventive dental care
- skilled workers
- very active participants with community events
* evaluate the dental health of patients.
* function as oral health educators in both private practice and community settings.
* have professional associations at the state, national and international level.
* help people keep their teeth clean.
* perform many patient care roles in the dental office.
* practice in accordance with requirements of individual state dental practice acts.
* provide preventive dental care to patients under the supervision of a dentist.
* use a variety of instruments in the course of their work.
* work in a clinical environment under the supervision of a registered dentist
- clean, well-lighted offices
- with clients and the public to achieve and maintain oral health
+ Dentistry
* Dentistry' is a specialty in medicine, which is practiced by a dentist. Dentists find out what's wrong, fix, and help prevent problems with teeth. A dentist has other people that help him with their job. Dental hygienists help people keep their teeth clean. A dental assistant helps the dentist when they are treating a patient. Dental surgeons will perform surgery to fix large or dangerous problems with people's teeth. There are also dentists called orthodontists, who can move people's teeth using braces. Dental surgeons and orthodontists are called specialists.
Dyer
* Most dyers use enamel pots.
* are skilled workers
- women, but embroideres men
* change the color of fabrics.
Engraver
* are printmakers
* skilled worker
Esthetician
* administer facial and other skin treatments.
* are philosophers
* still use violet ray lamps today to eliminate acne.
Flier
* are in the narthex
- travelers
* feed on small fish, insects and other invertebrates.
* tend to be more dominant as the pH of the habitat decreases.
Funeral director
* Most funeral directors have a chapel of rest in which the deceased can be held pending the funeral.
* Some funeral directors are also embalmers.
* are also responsible for the success and the profitability of their businesses
- caregivers and administrators
- the calmest people in the world
* conduct funerals and manage funeral homes.
* desire dead people.
* spend less time embalming dead people.
Laminator
* can apply adhesive or laminate at the same time without heat or electricity.
* textile laminating company located in Northeast Connecticut.
* use mechanisms called heat shoes to melt the laminate.
Lobsterman
* Lobstermen can haul up hundreds of pounds of lobsters in a day
- keep all the lobsters they catch
- often find herring eggs attached to their lobster traps
- report seeing lobsters spontaneously drop a claw for no apparent reason
* Lobstermen use herring as bait in their traps
- individual colors and numbers to mark their buoys
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### person | worker | skilled worker:
Phlebotomist
* are individuals with extensive training on proper blood drawing technique
- vital members of the health care team
* draw and test blood.
* draw blood from patients for testing purposes
- or donors for diagnostic testing or other medical purposes
- needed for testing purposes and deliver the samples to a laboratory
* have the option of working in a small facility or a large workplace.
* save lives.
* work as independent contractors on a temporary basis.
* work in a sterile environment throughout the blood donation
- hospitals and clinical settings and draw patient's blood for medical purposes
- hospitals, clinics, nursing homes, and smaller health care settings
Piano tuner
* adjust piano strings to the proper pitch.
* increase and decrease the tension of piano strings to tune pianos to the proper pitch.
Refiner
* Some refiners make brown sugar by adding syrup to refined white sugar.
* are skilled workers.
* blend natural gasoline with other gasoline.
* produce gasolines with a range of octane ratings.
Repairer
* Many repairers are high school graduates who are trained on the job.
* have numerous job titles, which often refer to the kind of equipment they work with
- refer to the kind of equipment with which they work
* work in every industry in which a great deal of machinery is used.
Riveter
* skilled worker
* work on steel framework.
Turner
* are cooking utensils
- people
- tumblers
* syndrome patients lack tight junctions between uterine epithelial cells.
### person | worker | skilled worker | undertaker:
Embalmer
* Wash hands.
* are responsible for maintaining the workrooms and equipment in a sanitary condition.
* can protect themselves by always wearing gloves and a mask when working with cadavers.
* is an undertaker
* prepare bodies for burial in conformity with legal requirements
- the body for viewing and burial
* protect the public health by properly caring for the deceased.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Smith
* Most smiths die in accidents
- car accidents
- gauge the temperature by the color of the hot steel
* Some smiths even become tool smiths.
* Some smiths have power
- wives
* Some smiths make decisions
- products
- work magic
* are bands
- skilled workers
- the village doctors and surgeons
* consume ingots far more quickly than they can be produced.
* devise market strategies
* have an important function and their own rites.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* make tools, nails, hinges and so forth, put metal tyres on cartwheels and shoe horses.
* still work long hard hours.
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### person | worker | smith:
Blacksmith
* Many blacksmiths also incorporate materials such as bronze, copper, or brass in artistic products
- wear plastic safety glasses to keep their eyes safe
* Most blacksmiths create weapons
- make knives
* Some blacksmiths build cages
- eat meat
* Some blacksmiths make barrels
- gun barrels.
* A 'blacksmith' person who works with iron and steel. The blacksmith hammers hot iron on an anvil to change its shape. Blacksmiths make iron and steel tools
* are smiths.
* can cover the hot metal with sand, so that it takes hours to become cold.
* frequently make their own hammers to suit their personal taste.
* give blows
- few more blows
* have procedures.
* hold a special position in society.
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- nuclei
* inherit large concentrations of nyama from their ancestors.
- tools from iron
* sell blackware wrought of black iron.
* understand properties.
+ Blacksmith, Hard Iron and Steel: Occupations
* To 'anneal' iron or steel, a blacksmith heats the metal until it no longer pulls a magnet, and then makes the metal become cold very slowly. Blacksmiths can cover the hot metal with sand, so that it takes hours to become cold. This makes iron or steel very soft.
* A blacksmith must be careful when hammering hardened steel or work-hardened iron, because small pieces can break off and fly, and these can hurt his or her eyes. Many blacksmiths wear plastic safety glasses to keep their eyes safe.
### person | worker | smith | blacksmith:
Farrier
* Many farriers consider the shoulder angle when determining the toe angle for the fore hooves.
* Some farriers use stocks to restrain the animal for trimming and shoeing.
* are blacksmiths
- the people who give hooves the monthly beauty treatment
* usually pack the space between the pad and the hoof to prevent debris from entering.<|endoftext|>### person | worker | smith:
Locksmith
* Many locksmiths sell personal security devices, such as alarms, mace and other repellent sprays.
- workers
* fix broken locks , make keys , and install security systems like alarms.
* fixing and repairing locks installing locks rekeying locks lock out.
* frequently go into business for themselves as a means of advancement
- work on-call evenings and weekends to respond to emergency service calls
* go everywhere, efficiently solving other people's problems with picks and pliers.
* often specialize in one aspect of their trade.
* work independently in the performance of assigned tasks.
+ Locksmithing: Occupations
* Locksmithing' is the profession of working with locks and keys. A person who does this is called a 'locksmith'. Locksmiths fix broken locks, make keys, and install security systems like alarms.
Support worker
* All support workers are female community health or welfare workers.
* identify complex computer problems
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### person | worker:
Technician
* are experts.
* are located in chemistry labs
- concerts
- masters of making things
- professionals
- skilled workers
- the people who keep the hardware working and the networks up and running
- trained on jobs
* assist patients.
* conduct experiments.
* create comprehensive resources
* diagnose brake system problems
* engage in activities
- research activities
* enter occupations.
* estimate size.
* explain methods.
* find problems
- structural problems
* form an important link between animals and the veterinarian.
* get jobs.
* have areas
- certificates
- duties
- hand knowledge
- hands
- own preference
* help designs
- pharmacists
- surveyors
* improve skills.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* learn duties
- field research techniques
- job duties
* make recommendations.
* measure amounts.
* meet requirements.
* must have experience
- work experience
* need education
- formal education
- good organizational skills
- technology
* pay attention
- close attention
* perform procedures
- tests
* play major roles in scientific and medical discoveries.
* possess associate degrees
* provide assistance
- customer services
- samples
- urine samples
* receive supervision.
* recommend use.
* sell services.
* to perform basic maintenance
- provide services
- use equipment
* understand behavior
- fire behavior
* use computers
- laboratory equipment
- sophisticate equipment
* utilize techniques.
* work for agencies
- companies
- firms
- government agencies
* work for large companies
- software companies
* work for other agencies
* work in industries
- positions
- public schools
- uncomfortable positions
- on automobiles
- regular schedules
- under supervision
* work with environmental scientists
- technicians
### person | worker | technician:
Automotive technician
* repair and service automobiles, light trucks, and vans with gasoline engines.
* use a scanner extensively when diagnosing modern computerised cars.
Biological technician
* Most biological technicians work in laboratories.
* work together on teams under the direction of biologists or other scientists.
* work with biologists, studying living organisms
Chemical technician
* Some chemical technicians monitor pollution by collecting and analyzing samples of air and water.
* conduct experiments.
* work with chemists and chemical engineers.
Dental technician
* are located in dentists
* design, fabricate, and repair dental appliances and prosthetic restorations.
* use a number of different waxes for various purposes.
* work with a variety of materials in replacing damaged or missing tooth structure.
Denturist
* Most denturists work in private practice.
* Some denturists continue to work beyond the normal retirement age.
* also repair, reline or rebase dentures.
* are independent practitioners.
* form a very small occupational group.
Library technician
* Some library technicians work for businesses that use specialized knowledge, such as law firms
- in libraries
* are the middle level of library staffing.
* have certificates.
* meet requirements.
- close attention
* provide customer services
* work in public schools
- with librarians in the provision of library and information services
Marine technician
* collect and analyze information using instruments and computers.
* tend to spend more time at hands-on tasks than marine scientists.
Meteorological technician
* make weather observations in the field and operate equipment.
* observe, record and interpret weather and atmospheric conditions.
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### person | worker | technician:
Petroleum technician
* Most petroleum technicians work with scientists.
* measure and record conditions in oil or gas wells.
* need technology.
* perform a variety of tasks related to oil and natural gas production.
* use computers
* work with environmental scientists
Pharmacy technician
* are allied health specialists employed in pharmacies
* deliver medications, order supplies, and maintain inventory systems.
* help maintain inventory and keep patients' medication records.
Senior technician
* engage in activities
- research activities
* find problems
- structural problems
Service technician
* perform tasks.
* to use equipment.
Survey technician
* help surveyors.
* learn duties
- job duties
Techie
* Most techies see a straight line as the shortest distance between two points.
* are technicians.
Veterinary technician
* Most veterinary technicians work in veterinary hospitals and clinics.
* are professionals dedicated to animal health care.
* help veterinarians in the same way nurses help doctors.
* perform duties similar to nurses in human medicine.
* provide health care to animals.
* work in a wide variety of animal-health related fields.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Temp
* Defines a directory name for temporary files.
* are the single fastest-growing sector of the labour market
- workers
- younger, less educated, less experienced and have less stable work histories
* drop with altitude even in Hawaii.
* euphemism for day laborer.
* fall sharply at night.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is the temperature for that time.
* text file found in the text folder.
* vary with any changes in the elevation and seasons.
Termite worker
* are creamy-white, wingless, eyeless insects and the most numerous in the colony
- white and soft bodied
- whitish, wingless, soft-bodied insects
* look for food.
Topper
* are coats
* control dog, whose skills are obedience and protection.
Trade unionist
* are workers.
* see works councils as a competing system of representation.
Unauthorized worker
* are especially vulnerable to abuse and exploitation.
* is illegal worker who have no right to work in the United State.
Washer
* are disks
- located in jars
- seals
- tools
* have many shapes and sizes.
- body substances
- legs
* use water.
### person | worker | washer:
Clothes washer
* are located in garages.
* have a significant impact on sewer costs.
* use energy to both clean clothes and heat water.
Pressure washer
* are alot like vacuum washers.
* clean vehicle parts with hot water and detergent at high pressures.
Waterman
* Most watermen live in small waterfront communities.
* Some watermen also catch eels and harvest clams.
* Watermen are the salt of the earth
- still harvest oysters in the cooler months, blue crabs and fish in the summer
### person | worker | waterman:
Canoeist
* are boatmans.
* kneel as they paddle, while kayakers sit in their boats with their legs extended forward.
* tend to stay in tents and eat camping food.
* use certain strategies when running rapids.
Paddler
* are capable of row boats.
* can glide by egrets, bighorn sheep, beaver, and other canyon wildlife
- spot beaver, nutria, night herons and other waterbirds in the evenings
* sometimes drown despite the use of a life vest.
* use single ended paddles similar to Canadian canoe paddles.
+ Canoe: Boats
* Paddlers face in the direction of travel, either seated or kneeling. In this way paddling a canoe can be contrasted with rowing, where the rowers face away from the direction of travel.
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{
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### person | worker | waterman:
Rower
* Most rowers learn to row in college as members of sweep oared crews and never learn sculling.
* Some rowers use the year after an Olympics to recuperate.
- of all ages and physical conditions
* learn time management, allowing balance between academic, athletic, and social interests.
* row when they are sick.
### person | worker | waterman | rower:
Sculler
* are mavericks, governed only by their own souls and wants.
* have two oars each, but rowers use only one oar each.
* use two oars, sweep oarsmen pull just one.<|endoftext|>### person | worker:
Weaver
* Most weavers are sedentary, noisy, gregarious, and polygynous, with elaborate courtship rituals.
* Most weavers have eyes
- legs
- spiny legs
* Most weavers live in Africa though there are a few Asian species
- Africa, south of the Sahara Desert
- use a natural warp thread such as linen or cotton
* Some weavers appear in movies.
* Some weavers have cones
- life
* Some weavers kill male partners
- like to wet their hand when weaving fiber rush
- live for years
- smoke cigarettes
- talk and sing to their textiles as they weave
* Some weavers use jaws
- the natural wool colors of black, white, brown and gray
- vary in color
* are all gregarious and often live together in trees
- bands
- birds
- craftsmans
- strands that go over and under the spokes to complete the basket
* can use their fly shuttle bobbins or tapestry bobbins as working bobbins.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* know which plants to select for use in making each different item.
* make cloth for their household and their family's clothing.
* still use old-styled vertical looms to produce carpets in traditional processes.
* traditionally work as independent family units.
* weave, and horseshoers shoe.
* work wooden looms near shelves full of spools of colorful yarn and wool.
+ Tapestry: Weaving
* Tapestry' is art made with threads. It is woven by hand on a vertical loom. It is weft-faced weaving. In normal cloth weaving both the warp and the weft threads can be seen. In this way, a colourful pattern or image is made. Most weavers use a natural warp thread such as linen or cotton. The weft threads, which will be seen, are usually wool or cotton. They can also be made of silk, gold, silver, or other things.
### person | worker | weaver:
Orb weaver
* Many orb weavers are brightly colored, and have hairy or spiny legs.
* Most orb weavers are nocturnal
- have spiny legs
* Some orb weavers have cones
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | worker:
Worker bee
* All worker bees are female and are produced from fertilized eggs.
* Many worker bees give their lives to save a bee hive from an attack by bears or other animals.
* Most worker bees drink nectar
- get energy
* Most worker bees have hives
- workers
- perform tasks
- take care
* Some worker bees feed larvae.
* Some worker bees have life
* Some worker bees produce jelly
- royal jelly
* are all female, and perform all the tasks in the hive except two
- female bees that hatch from a fertilized egg
- non-reproductive females
- raised in the multi-purpose, horizontally arranged cells of the comb
* can make wax from the bottom of their abdomens.
* collect nectar and pollen for the queen and new larvae to eat, and keep the burrow tidy.
* control the fate of the female larvae.
* do all the different tasks needed to maintain and operate the hive
- different things depending on how old they are
- the nectar and store it in a pouch-like structure called the crop
* eat eggs laid by other workers but leave eggs laid by the queen.
* fan the hive, cooling it with evaporated water brought by water carriers.
* feed the larva a mixture called royal jelly and bee milk for the next two days
- larvae, drones, and queen
* gather nectar from flowers and convert it into enough honey to keep the colony alive.
* guard the entrance of the hive.
* have a stinger to defend the hive, but they are unlikely to use it unless provoked
- four pairs of wax glands on the underside of their abdomens
- stingers that are bent at the tip
- stomachs
* live about one month.
* make royal jelly, which is fed to the queen bee.
* perform all the other roles in the colony
* remove the liquid from the nectar.
* survive the winter, feeding on the honey and pollen they store.
Workers compensation
* covers injury and disease arising out of and in the course of one s employment.
* is the original tort reform of the American legal system
- responsibility of an employer
* medical case in which an injury is sustained while on the job.
* pays benefits to a worker who incurs a job-related injury or illness.
Younger worker
* are the most vulnerable to being poor.
* represent an increasing proportion of people in the workforce.
Worrier
* are spoilsports.
* build life on wealth just as much as the wealthy.
* have a low tolerance for ambiguity and uncertainty.
* includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- heads
- human bodies
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* often have excess energy.
Wrangler
* are debaters.
* is the name given to a network of small discussion groups of local religious leaders.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person:
Writer
* Many writers describe all the activities of animals as their habits
- have a pen name they use for writing
* Most writers are artists, and appreciate that art is born of suffering
- shy people who experience life very internally
* Some writers become famous from their efforts at writing
- describe Pictish as a Celtic language with an admixture of some non-Celtic substrate
* Some writers die of causes
- natural causes
- interpret the birth from the sea itself as being representative of human sexuality
- refer to gemination as 'schizodontism'
- use the term festivals to refer to the annual Sabbaths
- work from an oral tradition
* acknowledge characters.
* acquire knowledge.
* are a pen aimed at the self
- special group of people
- authors
- both men and women who represent various cultural perspectives
- communicators
- eloquences
- entertainers
- experts on writing
- just people who happen to write
* are located in advertising companies
- houses
- offices
- schools
- universities
- lone wolves who mate for life with the act of writing
* are often people who know a little bit about a lot of things
- solitary creatures who write because they're uncomfortable socially
- ordinary people who like to write
* are people who love words, so language is often carefully chosen and extremely revealing
- simply people who write
- workers
* assume characters
- rights
* based writing is used to enhance the writers knowledge.
* begin careers.
* come from all walks of life
- in all shapes and sizes
- into rooms
* complete articles.
* continue tradition.
* contribute to advancement.
* cramp is when the muscles of the hand spasm.
* create paper.
* develop subjects.
* emphasize effects.
* encourage readers.
* express complex ideas
- single complex ideas
* feel difficulty.
* focus on principles.
* frequently use writing as a means of self-revelation.
* gain prominence.
* have ability
- crazy ideas
- enormous influence on culture and the way people think about themselves
- faces
- successful careers
- text
* include details.
- cytoplasm
- material bodies
* inherit ideas.
* introduce concepts
* is an abstract class from which all character-oriented output streams are derived
- word prediction software that is used with a word processor
* know for books.
* learn to write by writing.
* live in areas.
* make applications.
* post news.
* prepare instruction manuals
* present examples.
* provide descriptions.
* receive air.
* record answers.
* relate to the act of writing in many ways, from hobby to way of life.
* see color
- fly color
- shades
- situations
* sometimes divide their time between countries.
* specialize in subjects.
* suggest examples
- tests
* to develop concepts.
* understand values.
* use passage
- prose, poetry, and letters as part of courtship rituals
* want facts
* word prediction program that allows people to write with whole words
- helps streamline the process of writing
* work in offices
- is the manipulation of language
* work with experts
- technology experts
* write aspects
- chapters
- from memory
- novels
- stories, or they write about things that really happened
+ Science fiction, Different styles of science fiction, Other sub-genres
* New Wave is science fiction writing with a lot of experimentation. Writers try new ways of writing and new story ideas. It may feel more intellectual.
+ Windows Live Writer: Microsoft Windows software
* Windows Live Writer' is a web logging application. It was made by Microsoft and is part of the Windows Live Essentials group of applications. Writer lets users add images and maps to their posts as well as other things. The application works with Windows Live Spaces, SharePoint blogs, Blogger, LiveJournal, TypePad, WordPress and other services.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### person | writer:
Crime writer
* Some crime writers find wives.
* are fringe dwellers in Australia, hanging out on the edges of literary fiction.
Diarist
* Many diarists admit that they write only when they are confused, unhappy, or full of self-pity.
* Some diarists celebrate themselves by recording moments of action or passion
- hide their identity online
* are albums
Nature writer
* Some nature writers believe wilderness areas are vital for the human spirit and creativity.
* lament the loss of natural beauty through human destructiveness.
+ Wilderness: Ecosystems :: Conservation :: Geography
* Wilderness is deeply valued for cultural, spiritual, moral, and aesthetic reasons. Some nature writers believe wilderness areas are vital for the human spirit and creativity.
Science writer
* inherit ideas.
* write for the public, they write in magazines, and books for children.<|endoftext|>### person | writer:
Women writer
* talk about having sons and raising men.
* This is the first time I have participated in a deletion discussion on Simple, so I hope I am doing it correctly. If categorising by gender is inappropriate, then I do not understand why such categories have existed on English Wikipedia continuously for years. Women writers is certainly a topic of significant relevance. I do not see that these cats are too complex for Simple - the large majority of our readers are familiar with the words American, British, women and writers and if they are not, links can be easily provided on the category descriptions, should they be kept. I believe the American and British subcats are justified because the parent cat is populated enough to make it worthwhile.
Young person
* Every young person deserves to live, love, and be loved.
* Young people are juveniles
- get license
* Young people live in challenge environments
* Young people see best friends
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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