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Quality of life
* approaches in the health field usually focus on illness and disability.
* can improve by quitting, even if lung function has already declined.
* consequence of harmony or balance among the three.
* demands that our aged be given appropriate care in their final years.
* depends on quality relationships.
* equals quantity of money.
* has both a physical and a spiritual component
- many dimensions
* is about much more than just creating more jobs and making more money
- addressed by technology
- affected by changes in technology
- also related with taking people into account
- an important issue for cancer patients
* is dependent on safe neighborhoods
- the quality of our environment
- determined by the values of a community
- enriched by having a variety of associations with others
- gratification
- harder to measure than costs
* is important for animals and people alike
- pets and people alike
- to individuals
* is measured by the same standards as for healthy rabbits
- in terms of family, employment, community and spiritual function
- more important for our well-being than quantity of life
- much more important than length of life
- multidimensional and encompasses physical, mental and social well-being
- reduced in obese dogs but improves after successful weight loss
- satisfaction
- something that has been passed down through the generations
* is the centerpiece of human existence
- end result of balancing many factors
- issue of primary concern as individuals move to their new homes
- very dependent on a person's quality of health
* is what attracts people to live in Mississippi Mills
- makes people come here and want to stay
- where cohousing begins
* means clean air and clean water for new workers and their families
- different things to different people
- many things to many people
* measures the impact in human terms.
* multi-dimensional, complex and very subjective concept.
* nation's obligation to their men and women in uniform.
* quantifiable clinical concept.
* refers to both objective and subjective components.
* relative term.
* requires investments by both the public sector and private sector.
* starts with the requirement that ALL laws are strictly adhered.
* suffers when stressed-out meets home life
- with indiscriminate growth
### quantitative science:
Modern biology
* is based on a fundamental understanding of molecular processes.
* quantitative science.
* rigorous and quantitative science.
* supports the view of immediate hominization.
### quantities:
Numeric value
* are quantities.
* can be in decimal or hexadecimal.<|endoftext|>### quantum chemistry:
Theoretical chemistry
* has large overlap with condensed matter physics and molecular physics.
* predicts what happens when atoms combine to form molecules.
* uses physics to explain or predict chemical observations
* It uses mathematics and computers. Theoretical chemistry predicts what happens when atoms combine to form molecules. An important part of theoretical chemistry is quantum chemistry. Other important parts include molecular dynamics, statistical thermodynamics and theories of electrolyte solutions, reaction networks, polymerization and catalysis
+ Theoretical chemistry, Overview: Chemistry
* Theoretical chemistry uses physics to explain or predict chemical observations. The main parts of theoretical chemistry are electronic structure, dynamics, and statistical mechanics.
### quarks | strange:
Strange thing
* can happen if the bond radius is made larger than the atom radii.
* grow beneath Jupiter such as plants that produce cells required for survival.
* happen to colors and patterns, too
- people when they look in a mirror
* occur in dreams.
* occurs when it winds around large submerged rocks.
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### quarters:
Harem
* appearently begin to form in groups of immigrating subadults during the year before breeding.
* are common among wrasses, angelfishes, parrotfishes, damselfishes, basses and gobies
- in many mammalian species, including humans
- groups of females that come together and are controlled and mated by one male
- local organizations
* break up when the rut ends.
Queso fresco
* Mexican fresh cheese with a texture similiar to farmer's cheese.
* fresh, soft, high-moisture white cheese that has a mild, slightly salty flavor.
* is very much a part of Mexican culture.
* traditional food in the Hispanic culture.<|endoftext|>Question
* are capable of surprise
- queries
- questioning
- sentences
- singles
- subjects
* cause a desire to thinks.
* desire answers.
+ Learning English, Online learning: Learning :: English language
* Questions are answered quickly even with help from volunteer teachers from all over the whole world.
* Some questions have no answers. The community confirms it here. In other words, the flexibility of fuzzy logic is best in this context.
+ Testing English as a foreign language, Types of exam, null, TOEIC
* The exam has 200 questions. Every question is a multiple choice question.
+ The Million Second Quiz, Format, Non-televised bouts
* Bouts that are not shown on television last for 500 seconds. Every question is worth one point. Contestants cannot double in these bouts. The fourth bout is followed by an 11-minute break. During this time, a contestant may eat, drink, or use the bathroom
* Questions start at one point each. Every 100 seconds, the value of the questions increase by one point
- Format: 2010s American television series :: Television game shows :: NBC network shows
* Each bout lasts for a set amount of seconds. All questions are multiple choice with four possible answers. Contestants use keypads to lock in their answers. The players cannot see each other's answers. They have five seconds to do so when the question is asked
### question:
Moral question
* are among the greatest questions facing the individual and the human race.
* resonate differently among different nations, religions, and peoples.
### questioning:
Query
* Queries have their own syntax and semantics.
* is the direct way for experienced users to query a set of data from database server.
* web browser based program.
Quinone
* Most quinones are toxic.
* are compounds
- organic compounds
- produced by epidermal cells for tanning the cuticle
- the usual intermediates in allomelanin synthesis
* can react with reactive groups of proteins to form a dark pigment, melanin.
* constitute a class of compounds with important biological and industrial applications.<|endoftext|>### quite heavy:
Barium compound
* Most barium compounds are colorless.
* Some barium compounds dissolve easily in water and are found in lakes, rivers, and streams.
* are quite heavy
- used by the oil and gas industries to make drilling mud
* have an enormous variety of uses.
+ Barium, Properties, Chemical compounds: Alkaline earth metals
* Barium is too reactive as a metal, so it is not found in the earth as a metal. It is found in chemical compounds. Most barium compounds are colorless. The ones that dissolve in water or stomach acid are very toxic. Barium sulfate is well known because it does not dissolve in water or acids. Barium compounds are quite heavy. Barium compounds put out a greenish flame when heated red-hot.
### quite high:
Catalytic activity
* Any catalytic activity depends on the microenvironment and availability of reactants.
* is quite high.
### quite poisonous:
Photographic chemical
* Many photographic chemicals are quite poisonous.
* Some photographic chemicals are toxic
- contain hazardous components
### quite safe:
Gastrointestinal endoscopy
* allows the source of the occult bleeding to be identified.
* is quite safe.
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### quotation marks:
Double quote
* are quotation marks.
* have no special meaning for symbols composed of ordinary letters.
R group
* Some R groups are hydrophilic, some are lipophilic.
* are radical groups, representative groups or reactive groups
- straight chain hydrocarbons
* can be polar, non polar, acidic or basic.
Race relation
* are a touchy subject as well are gender relations and varying sexual orientation.
* complex issue for many countries.
* is as complex as all of human nature.
* major issue in the world.
### racial profiling:
Immigration policy
* involves law enforcement, economic regulation, and foreign policy.
* is racial profiling.<|endoftext|>### racing:
Auto racing
* are motor racing
- sports
* dangerous sport, as is anything in life
* has a family of cultures.
* high-risk sport.
* is also popular at the grassroots level
- an inherently dangerous sport
- hard on marriages and families, and so many couples end up getting a divorce
- like horseracing
- no different from pro football or any other sport
- one of the oldest forms of sports marketing
- said to be the fastest-growing spectator sport in the nation
* is the fastest growing sport in America today
- world's most popular spectator sport
* sport whose time has come and gone.
* takes skill and concentration.
* world full of big dreams, big disappointments and big accomplishments.
+ São Paulo (state), Sports
* Auto racing is a staple of the paulista's way of life. The state has produced several racing drivers that have attained international fame.
Car racing
* are racing.
* is also popular in France
- one of the newest and most frequently witnessed forms of squirrel hazing
* is, perhaps, the first cybernetic sport.<|endoftext|>### racing:
Horse racing
* Saratoga Springs annual tradition.
* are racing
* has a large tourism impact
- one foot in the grave, and another on a banana peel
* highly regulated industry, as are other forms of legalized gambling.
* historic and beloved past-time in the American culture.
* is also popular in the rural areas
- among the nation's largest spectator sports
- based on the pari-mutual system of betting
* is one of the few 'mixed' sports where men and women compete head to head
- most dangerous sports
- sport in which owners, trainers and jockeys always look for the positive
* is the only sport where the athletes pay their fans
- second most widely attended U.S. spectator sport, after baseball
- third-largest industry in the state of New Mexico
* major enterprise, indeed a complete industry in non-Muslim countries.
* national passion.
* popular spectator sport in Britain
* requires raising, training, feeding and breeding horses.
* small percentage of Internet gambling.
* traditional part of many holiday celebrations.
### radio broadcasting:
Ham radio
* are radio broadcasting.
* hobby dating back to the early part of the century.
* is for anyone who likes to communicate with others via wireless technology
- still the only means of communication with the outside world
* myriad of people with varied interests.
### radio transmitters:
Cordless phone
* All cordless phones are radio transmitters.
* Some cordless phones allow multiple handsets and charging cradles
- run on the same frequency as the laptops
* allow users to roam a short distance from the phone's base.
* can also pick up other people's conversation
- cause slow modem speeds by introducing interference on the phone
* cause disconnects.
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Radio volume potentiometer
* A potentiometer is an instrument
* Potentiometer radio volume control.
* Potentiometers are resistors where the resistance can be changed using a knob or a slider
- can be carbon film, conductive plastic, cermet, or wire wound
- generally have composition elements. *' are variable resistors. Potentiometers are resistors where the resistance can be changed using a knob or a slider. Potentiometers are used to control many things, including how bright or dim the lights in your house are and the volume controls on your television
Radioactive compound
* Most radioactive compounds have a limited shelf life due to radiolytic decomposition.
* are expensive, difficult to use and create toxic wastes.
* decay, and lose radioactivity.
* work by emitting an ionising radiation.<|endoftext|>### radioactive element:
Lawrencium
* are chemical elements
- radioactive substances.
* It is also named 'eka-lutetium' by some people. It has the symbol 'Lr'. It has the atomic number 103. It radioactive element that does not exist in nature. It has to be made. Lawrencium is made from californium
* has no biological role
- naturally occurring isotopes
* is an element
- created by nuclear bombardment, and has only been produced in miniscule amounts
- radioactive and therefore considered toxic
* trivalent ion in aqueous solution.
Uranium isotope
* All uranium isotopes are radioactive.
* have differenta.<|endoftext|>### radiology:
Fluoroscopy
* allows identification of any disease in the coronary arteries.
* also is used to assist in guiding catheter placement.
* can help patients regain lost functions
- improve the safety of other procedures
- show obstructive emphysema, decreased diaphragmatic movements and mediastinal shift
* has two magnification modes and image capture.
* involves using x-rays to examine tissues and guide the biopsy
- deep within the body and guide the biopsy
* is also useful in studying the esophagus
- done in an office or the radiology section of a hospital
- invaluable to identify interspace location and helps confirm depth
- mandatory during injection to prevent over distention of the duct systems
- necessary to confirm visceral position in women with pelvic organ prolapse
* is used to guide the needle and prevent complications from the needle
- visualize boundaries of the stomach
* makes a moving X-ray picture of internal organs.
* produces a moving x-ray image of internal organs.
* provides guidance for the catheter to pass through the artery to the heart.
* shows whether it moves properly.
* uses continuous x-rays to create a moving image
- either continuous or pulsed X-ray beam
- x-rays to show movement
* video x-ray that images the esophagus, stomach, and intestines at work.<|endoftext|>Raft
* Some rafts have baffle cones within the tube that expands if there loss of air
- rest on surfaces
* also have the advantage of being able to be transported deflated.
* are a configuration of tube chambers and a floor
- floats
- great for lying around on the nude beach or nude pool
* become water-logged when left in the water and sink in a horrible manner when many get on.
* consist of two or more resting otters.
* includes sections.
* move left and right across the water.
* tend to fold around rocks, dumping the occupants into the river.
* typically consist of two or more resting otters.
### railroading:
Magnetic levitation
* counteracts the gravitational force and decreases the weight of the sample.
* occurs when the vehicle reaches transition speed.
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Raisin
* Some raisins attract ladybirds
- contain sugar
* also make great eyes, spots, collars, or buttons.
* are a type of dried grape and are produced mainly in California and the Middle East.
* are also a healthy snack
- an excellent source of fiber
- an important part of the valley's agriculture
- bad for the spleen, but good for a cough or for the kidneys
- demulcent, nutritive and slightly laxative
- dried food
- excellent for raising blood glucose when necessary
- fine in small amounts, if pre-soaked and chewed well
- fruit
- grapes
- nature's candy
- part of south parks
- produced from grapes using a drying process
- very high in L-Arginine, an amino acid which stimulates growth hormone secretion
* contain potassium and magnesium, which help lower blood pressure and reduce stroke risk.
* freeze well for long periods of time.
* have some iron.
* includes peels
* is dried fruit
* sink since they are more dense than water.
### rampant:
Addictive behavior
* Any addictive behavior is characterized by severe mood swings.
* Some addictive behaviors lead directly to that feeling of being in control.
* are rampant
- very hard to change
* can be difficult to identify.
### rapidly growing industry:
Cellular service
* is the telecommunications industry's fastest growing segment.
* rapidly growing industry.
### rapidly growing market:
Unified messaging
* allows users to access email, voicemail and faxes across platforms.
* is another area where voice applications are making themselves heard
- touted as a lifesaver for end users swimming in messages
* rapidly growing market.
### rapidly maturing technology:
Speech recognition
* is based on grammars
- essentially a software technology
- one of the biggest impediments to communication between humans and machines
- the process of automatically recognizing what is being said
- used in offices, labs, and banks
* rapidly maturing technology.
* technology that is constantly evolving.
* works best in quiet, controlled environments.
### rapidly-growing industry:
Ostrich farming
* is the fastest growing agricultural business in the world today.
* rapidly-growing industry.
### rare complication:
Mild anemia
* are often assymptomatic.
* has no symptoms.
* rare complication.
### rare disease:
Aplastic anemia
* can cause an abnormally low lymphocyte count.
* causes neutropenia as well as deficiencies in other types of blood cells.
* has multiple causes.
* is anemia
- diseases
- extremely rare
* means that they all have stopped working.
* rare disease.
* results when the bone marrow fails to produce enough essential blood elements.
* risk factor for developing acute nonlymphocytic leukemia.<|endoftext|>### rare earth metal:
Promethium
* Most promethium is used for research purpose.
* are chemical elements
- metallic elements
- radioactive substances
* belongs to the lanthanide series.
* has no biological role
- naturally occurring isotopes
* is metal
* is one of the lanthanides , which have similar chemical properties
- most fascinating of all chemical elements
- rare , because it is radioactive , and decays
- the only rare earth radioactive metal
- used as a power source in spacecraft
- useful as a beta source for thickness gauges
- very rare
* rare earth metal.
* rare-earth metal that emits beta radius.
+ Rare earth element: Chemical elements
* Although they are called rare, rare earth elements are not extremely rare on Earth. Promethium is rare, because it is radioactive, and decays.
### rare entity:
Congenital lymphedema
* is much more common in women than men.
* rare entity.
### rare trait:
True humility
* is the best quality of a spiritual person.
* means that one's eyes are turned away from self and focused on other's needs.
* rare trait.
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### rare:
Allergic response
* are rare
- varied and unique to each child
* can range from mild skin irritation to life-threatening anaphylactic shock.
* require allergen-specific IgE to be already present, bound to mast cells.
Anaphylactic reaction
* are rare
- severe and require immediate medical attention
- usually quite sudden and severe
- very unusual
* can follow rupture of an echinococcus cyst
- manifest themselves in several different ways
- occur in rare instances
* caused by food allergies can be potentially life-threatening.
* tend to be faster and more severe with each exposure to the allergen.
Decubitus ulcer
* All decubitus ulcers have a course of injury similar to a burn wound.
* is ulcer
* term doctors use to describe any such sore.
Human toxicity
* is rare.
* is, however, hard to avoid with pesticides targeting mammals, such as rodenticides.
* varies greatly from compound to compound.
Lymphatic metastasis
* Lymphatic metastases are likely to appear in the pararectal, internal iliac , or sacral lymph nodes.
* can also be present in the supraclavicular nodes.
Physiological disorder
* Some physiological disorder occurs in winter.
* result from major and trace element imbalances.
Retinal hemorrhage
* are always significant, reflecting vascular disease that usually is systemic
- extremely uncommon in severe accidental brain injury
* can also occur, and sometimes shaken-baby syndrome is erroneously diagnosed
- be disastrous
Spicy food
* Most spicy food has odor
- strong odor
* Some spicy food helps metabolism.
* are rare.
* can induce urticaria
- irritate the cracks and cause extreme pain
* cause ulcers.
* has effects
* increase the consumption of fluids.
* is too strong for cats.
* prevail in the western mountain regions of Szechuan and Hunan.
* work just like a natural decongestant but without side effects.
Vertebrate fossil
* Most vertebrate fossils are rare.
* Some vertebrate fossils are very large
- small
* bear valuable information about the past.
Wheat allergy
* Some wheat allergies allow the use of rye bread as a substitute.
* Wheat allergies are usually a reaction to the gluten found in the wheat berry.
### rate:
Birth rate
* are lower in all socioeconomic groups
- rates
* continue to decline in all regions of the world
- fall, and far fewer people are coming into the labour market
* depend on both the fertility rate as well as the age distribution of a population.
* differ considerably by educational attainment.
* is linked to poor health and child mortality.
* show a continued decline, even in states with persistent high fertility.
Bit rate
* describes a file's transmission speed.
* is one means used to define the amount of compression used on a video signal.
* refers to the speed at which the processor can read and process data from the disc.
Cancer rate
* are also lower for the married population
- up , particularly for cancers that affect the young
* differ from country to country.
* run high in poor communities because of living conditions and lifestyles.
* soar as a result of radiation in the atmosphere.
* vary enormously by age
- with age, acculturation and location
Crime rate
* are among the lowest in the world while the standard of living is among the highest
- world, and continue to decline
- crude indicators of the amount of law-breaking in society
- low in foreign countries
- rates
* drop when prostitution is brought to a setting where it is monitored
- the economy is doing well
* increase as one moves east to west.
* reflect the risk of becoming the victim of a crime.
* vary by urbanization.
Crude rate
* are simply the ratio of mortality to population for any given year
- total deaths to total population for any given year
* is number of cases over population at risk.
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### rate:
Data rate
* are rates.
+ Bluetooth: Computer protocols :: Computer networking
* There are different standards. Data rates vary. Currently, they are at 1-3 MBit per second. Typical Bluetooth applications are to connect a headset to a mobile phone, or to connect a computer mouse, keyboard or printer.
### rate | data rate:
Channel capacity
* data rate
* is the maximum number of channels that a cable system can carry simultaneously.
Death rate
* are higher among persons with less education
- for blacks than for whites, especially among men
- in males and increase as people age
- highest in older adults, men and blacks
- very high in the days and months after feeding tubes are placed
* is the probability of dying per one organism.
* rises as population density rises.
* varies with age.
* vary according to age
- in different countries
Dose rate
* is energy absorbed per unit mass per unit time
- the dose of radiation per unit time
* rise gradually as soil dries out.
Employment rate
* refer to women of working age.
* vary greatly between types of disability.
Error rate
* is the percentage of words the product misinterprets.
* measure the errors participants make when performing tasks in a given amount of time
- percent of claims processed which contain payment errors
+ Genetics, Tools of Genetics, Mutations: History of science
* Error rates are a thousandfold higher in many viruses. Because they rely on DNA and RNA polymerases which lack proofreading ability, they get higher mutation rates.<|endoftext|>### rate:
Exchange rate
* Exchange Rates Find the exchange rates of currency around the globe.
* are located in newspapers
- market rates
- median daily values based on monitored interbank market exchange rates
- one of the main factors considered by companies contemplating inward investment
* can be major determinants of fair or unfair trade.
* deal with the value of one currency in terms of another.
* do have some impact on trade performance.
* is calculated at time of transfer.
* is expressed as foreign currency per one U.S. dollar
- local currency per foreign currency
* represent mid-market interbank dealing rates.
* subject of agreement between buyers and sellers.
* vary according to international monetary conditions
- daily, depending on the supply of and demand for various currencies<|endoftext|>### rate | fatality rate:
Infant mortality
* Most infant mortality resulting from infections occurs in the first year of life.
* fatality rate
* is also high
- higher and many babies are born prematurely having low weight
- one of the highest in East Africa
- at an all-time low
- comparable to the United States
- frighteningly common
- generally higher than in other breeds
* is high and life expectancy is among the lowest in the Pacific
- even though the young are carefully tended
* is higher for blacks because so many black adolescents are giving birth
- in the capital than the rest of the country
- likely to rise as the rate of innoculation against disease
- most meaningful when looked at over decades
- one of the highest in the world
* is one of the most important public-health and demographic indicators
- solemn events a family can experience
- perhaps the highest in the world
- recognized as a telltale of broader health status
- the highest in the hemisphere
* is the lowest ever
- in the history of Chicago
- of all the regions
- thought to be low
- twice as high for blacks as it is for whites
- very low among domestic alpacas
* measures the number of deaths to children under the age of one.
* refers to the death of a live born baby within the first year of life
- live born infant within the first year of life
* reflects the overall well-being of people.
* sensitive indicator of socioeconomic development.
* tells how many children die in infancy.
* tends to be low.
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### rate:
Fertility rate
* are higher, but so are mortality rates - more than twice the total population
- inversely proportional to women's status
* begin to drop, especially in China, India and Bangladesh.
* change over time for many different reasons and causes.
* comes down when women s education and economic levels go up.
* decrease with advancing age.
* goes down as women starts aging.
* is the total number of children born to the average woman.
* vary widely from country to country and are dependent on a large number of factors.
Fill rate
* refer to the number of positions that a site is actually able to fill.
* refers to the percentage of borrowing or lending requests successfully filled.
Flow rate
* are greatest in the center of the ice mass, least at rock contacts
* is calculated for various types of flow meters.
* is measured by manometer readings taken across the orifice meter
- with calibrated orifice flow meters
- the primary factor that determines the variability of pollutant load
Flux
* All fluxes are acids which allows the metals to bind.
* Most fluxes contain zinc chloride that is harmful to the skin and eyes, and toxic if ingested.
* are large due to internal cycling.
* is chemicals
- pathology
- states
* reduce the firing temperature of the body.
### rate | flux:
Energy flux
* is energy radiated per unit area second
- the rate at which energy flows
* quantity that measures the rate of transfer of energy per unit area.
Heat flux
* can be positive or negative, depending on the direction of heat transfer.
* is the amount of heat energy that crosses the surface of the ocean of a given area.
* represents the intensity of the outside fire source.
Luminous flux
* is flux
- measured in lumens
* is the corresponding quantity restricted to light
- intensity of a light source, measured in lumens
* is the time rate of flow of light
- of luminous energy
- useful for describing the total light output of light sources
* measure of the power of visible light.
Frame rate
* floating point number of frames per second.
* increase when stars, caostics, glare are turned off.
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### rate:
Frequency
* Frequencies Describes a single frequency for a single site typed on a single population.
* Frequencies are nonnegative integers for the outcomes in the choice set
- numbers of waves per second
- rates
- ratios
- the measurement of the waves of air
* Some frequency sound waves cause damage
- internal damage
* affects the pitch of a sound.
* based methods model the frequency distributions of various events.
* can be a sensitive method to detect vegetation changes at a site
- refer to the number of times a piano or guitar string vibratesto produce a sound
* defines how frequently or how often the waveform occurs in one second of time.
* describes the number of waves that pass a fixed place in a given amount of time.
* determines color, but when it comes to light, wavelength is the easier thing to measure
- the wavelength that drives the depth of investigation of the measurement
* film that has three levels of interplay.
* function of how much the signal is changing over time.
* has to do with wave speed and wavelength measurement of a wave's span.
* is all things.
* is an acoustical property of sound and can be measured by laboratory instruments
- indication of inflammation of the bladder or urethra
- associated with the physical object it affects
- basically how close together the vibrations are
- connected to loudness for all amplitudes
- denoted as the number of times a regularly recurring phenomenon occurs in one second
* is dependent on the length of each wave
- spatial distribution of the species and plant size
* is determined by counting the number of cycles over the period of a second
- the number of vibrations per second
- expressed as a percentage of sample plots in which a species occurs
- how fast an object vibrates and sound vibrates in waves
* is how many waves pass a given point per second
- there are per second
* is how often a behavior happens
- the wave occurs at any point
- just a measure of how rapidly a wave crest passes a reference point in space
- measured by the number of times in a second that the wave repeats itself
* is measured in Hertz
- Hz, which are cycles per second
- cycles per second or hertz
- hertz in the same way that temperature is measured in degrees centigrade
* is measured in hertz, or cycles per second
- which means cycles per second
- the number of cycles of change per second, or hertz
* is number of advertising insertions in a contract period
- complete waves passing per unit time
- waves produced in one second
- of time and is finitely terminated
- one element that makes up the satisfaction of sexual relations
- perceived as pitch
- proportional to pitch
* is related to pitch or the perception of data acquisition frequencies
- wavelength via the speed of the wave
- sound, aroma, shape, heat, color, light, etc
- synonymous with pitch
* is the art of frequenting the specific buying target many, many times
- carrier of information
- equivalent of pitch
* is the frequency in Hz at which the power measurement is determined
- on which the control signal of the current system was received last time
- impulse per second
- inverse of period which is the time taken for one complete oscillation
* is the measurable rate of electrical energy flow between two points
- energy flow that is constant between any two points
- that vibration
- most fundamental quantitative unit of sound
* is the number of complete cycles of vibration made by the wave per second
- that a wave completes in a given amount of time
- waves, or wavelengths, that pass a given point each second
* is the number of cycles a resonant system completes in a certain amount of time
* is the number of cycles of a repeating process per unit time
- a wave to pass some point in a second
- vibration per second
- per period
- hours per day, multiplied by the number of days per week
- occurrences of a repeating event per unit time
* is the number of oscillations of a vibrating body every second
- per second, measured in Hz
- pressure waves occurring per second
- sound samples per second
- times a particular species is recorded in a sample area or transect
* is the number of times that a wave vibrates in a second
- an object, or sound wave it produces, vibrates in one second
- thay are exposed to the message
- vibrations per second the sound makes
- wavecrests passing a point per time
- wavelengths that fit into one unit of time
* is the number of waves that pass a given point each second
- pass by at a point each second
- pass by each second
- observing rest frequency in GHz
- percentage of quadrats in which a species is recorded
- physical characteristic that gives a sound the quality of pitch
* is the rate at which electrical charges move through the brain cells
- something vibrates or makes waves
- of waveform repitition
- scientific term for what musicians refer to as pitch
- second dimension of hearing
- speed at which air particles vibrate, measured in centimeters per second
- volume, intensity, or loudness of a signal
- transduced into pitch
- used to drive some motor driven clocks connected on the power system
* major factor in how search engines determine relevancy.
* masking occurs when two tones which are close in frequency are played at the same time.
* means the probability of finding a species within a particular area.
* measurable rate of electrical energy that is constant between two points.
* measure of how many sound waves pass a given point in a second
- times audience members are exposed to a media vehicle
- often the ground moves back and forth in one second
* measureable rate of electrical energy.
* physical attribute of sound whereas pitch psychological attribute of sound
- characteristic of sound, exactly number of oscillations per second
* plays a large part in how much information can be sent and received at one time.
* refers to the number of cycles of a wave passing a fixed point per unit of time.
* relates to pitch.
* represents how often a sound wave goes through a full cycle
- the number of times a sound wave repeats every second
* seems to decrease when someone moves away from a sound source.
* term for the number of vibrations per second.
* way of noting or measuring the different parts of the broadcast spectrum.
+ Applied behavior analysis, Analyzing Behavior, Data collection
* Frequency is how often a behavior happens. So frequency recording just counts the number of times a behavior happens. Every time a behavior happens it is recorded by the observer. Frequency data is easy to collect so it is used a lot. Behavior analysts use frequency data to determine rate of response. Rate of response is the number of responses for a specific time period.
+ Sound, Sound, Pitch and Intensity:
* Pitch' is the highness or lowness of sound. Pitch is how humans hear different frequencies. Frequency is determined by the number of vibrations per second. The highest key on a piano, for instance, vibrates 4,000 times per second. Lower keys have lower frequencies. A note an octave higher than another note has twice the frequency of that note
- The Doppler Effect
* When a sound source is moving towards someone, the frequency seems to increase. The same thing happens when someone moves toward the sound source. Frequency seems to decrease when someone moves away from a sound source. It also seems to decrease when the sound source moves away from someone. This is the Doppler effect
|
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### rate | frequency:
Allele frequency
* is also avaiable for horses as well
- calculated from genotype frequencies
- the fundamental measurement used to define population structure
* refers to how often an allele occurs in a population.
Beat frequency
* has to be understood in order to tune a musical instrument.
* is the number of beats heard per second.
Gene frequency
* Gene frequencies can change when a small group of individuals separates from a larger population
- change across the generation and the species evolves
- describe the genetic variation in the entire gene pool
* is the frequency of an allele at a given locus in a population
- relative ferquency of a particular allele
* represents how often an allele occurs in a population.
High frequency
* High frequencies are radio frequencies.
* High frequencies correspond to high tones, and low frequencies are low tones
- and low frequencies to low tones
- tend to use only the outer parts of the conductor
* Some high frequency sound waves cause internal damage.
* lighting with low energy tubes reduces electricity consumption.<|endoftext|>### rate | frequency:
Higher frequency
* Higher frequencies are also the first to recover after a storm.
* Higher frequencies correspond to features of smaller angular extent
- harmonics of the fundamental frequencies
* Higher frequencies have shorter wavelengths, and lower frequencies have longer wavelengths
- translate to shorter wavelengths
+ Mobile phone, Technology: Telephone :: Messaging
* The radio waves that the mobile phone networks use are split into different frequencies. The frequency is measured in Hz. Low frequencies can send the signal farther. Higher frequencies provide better connections and the voice communications are generally clearer.<|endoftext|>### rate | frequency:
Incidence
* Being overweight common problem in the United States.
* Refers to who bears the burden of a tax.
* are frequencies
* denotes the rate of occurrence of new cases of infection per unit of time.
* direct correlation with the number of drugs prescribed.
* is expressed as the number of new cases of a given type of cancer diagnosed per year
- increased in monozygotic twins
- the number in a population per unit of time
* is the number of new cases added in a defined period, usually a year
- of a disease within a period of time
- newly diagnosed cases in a given location during a given time period
- rate in a population which gets sick on a specific disease
- used as one measure of risk
* measures the number of new cases of disease in a given time period.
* occurs most frequently in areas of poverty and overcrowded living conditions.
* refers to new events in a population in a defined amount of time.
* refers to the number of new cases occurring in the population during a given period
- cases per some period of time
* specifies the angle of incidence in the y-z plane, measured from the z axis.
### rate | frequency | incidence:
Cancer incidence
* increases with age.
* is monitored by population-based tumor registries around the world
- the estimated number of new cases of cancer diagnosed each year
Economic incidence
* attempts to measure the true burden of taxation.
* involves who ultimately bears the cost of the tax.
Radio frequency
* Radio frequencies are electromagnetic signals which range from microwave to radio in length
- can pass through solid objects such as walls
- resonate in it at wavelengths that correspond to the line spacings
* drying keeps food crisp without baking it until it's brittle.
* heating current.
### rate | frequency | radio frequency:
Low frequency
* Low frequencies are radio frequencies
- cause the whole membrane to vibrate
- have long waves with lots of energy
- tend to travel better through and around objects
* radio frequency
### rate | gait:
Stagger
* are animal diseases.
* occurs when an animal's blood magnesium and calcium levels fall below normal.
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### rate:
Germination rate
* are way down on tomatoes, squash, and beans.
* increase after passage through a black bear's digestive tract.<|endoftext|>### rate:
Growth rate
* All growth rates reflect income before adjustment for inflation.
* are dependent on season, age, water and ambient air temperatures, and flow rates
- determined by water temperature and the amount of available food
- faster for populations of underdeveloped nations
- highly variable in children
- measured in terms of how much a child grows within a specified period of time
* are, in general, negatively affected by turbulence.
* bears an inverse relationship to number of rings per inch.
* can also be dependent on the general conditions in which it is grown.
* decelerates in the second year of life, as do caloric requirements.
* declines rapidly with increasing age and is similar in males and females.
* depends on temperature
- upon factors such as moisture, light, nutrients, space, and insect infestation
* is affected by soil productivity and fertility levels
- controlled mainly by the amount of rainfall, plant size, and soil type
- dependent on temperatures and food supply available
- greatest during the first two years of life and during adolescence
- higher in developing countries
- measured as growth occurring in the first five summers of life
- partly a reflection of environmental conditions, and partly genetics
* is the change in cell number or mass per unit time
- consensus long-term earnings growth rate
* reduce with age.
* represents the benefits accrued by the fish from living in one or another habitat.
* seems to be dependent on the amount of food available for ingestion.
* slow down as alligators become older.
* varies with factors in the environment
- location, and is dependent upon temperature and food supply
* vary over time, with least growth occurring in winter as air and sea temperatures fall
- with age, season and nutrition<|endoftext|>### rate:
Heart rate
* are generally lower in the morning.
* can be a reliable indicator as to the overall health and fitness of the body
- useful tool in individualizing and optimizing exercise regimens
- increase or decrease
* continues to rise slowly thereafter.
* is affected by even the most minor emotional distress
- an excellent indicator of work performed by the body
- determined by how hard the skeletal muscles contract
- increased, as are blood volume and blood pressure
- less at any given work rate
* is measured in beats per minute
- through a sensor on a clip attached to the rider's earlobe
- nothing more than the number of times the heart contracts per minute
- only a loose relative guide to recovery at altitude
- reduced, vasodilation occurs, and blood pressure falls
- unchanged by halothane
* modulates the slow enhancement of contraction due to sudden left ventricular dilation.
* quantitative measure of heart's work.
* remains relatively constant without significant bradycardia.
* slow, sometimes becoming irregular.
* The average bpm for a man or women who does not exercise is 70 bpm. Heart rate varies between people because of fitness, age and genetics.
* term used to describe the frequency of the cardiac cycle.
* trained athletes know that if the resting heart rate is elevated something is wrong.
* varies between people because of fitness , age and genetics
* vital sign
### rate | heart rate:
Radial pulse
* heart rate
* is felt with the first three fingers, the index, middle and ring fingers.
Hertz
* are rates.
* claims to be the world's largest car rental company.
* produces radio waves.
* refers to the pitch of the sound.
Illiteracy rate
* remain very high in many Arab countries.
* vary from region to region.
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### rate:
Incidence rate
* allow comparison of disease patterns across different populations.
* are counts of victimization, and therefore more accurately reflect amount of crime.
* is the usual measure of risk and is calculated per week, per year, and so on.
Infection rate
* are highest in areas where sanitation is poor
- developing countries and in children
* increase as one gets older
- with age, density, and purity of stands
+ Hepatitis C, Epidemiology: Diseases caused by viruses :: Sexually transmitted diseases :: Liver disease
* Infection rates are higher in some countries in Africa and Asia.
Inflation rate
* are rates.
* is the percentage rate of change of the price level in the economy.
* testify to the worldwide popularity of wishful thinking.<|endoftext|>### rate:
Interest rate
* affect borrowing power
- economic activity via a number of mechanisms
* are a key determinant of land values, the base of wealth in agriculture
- essentially the cost of acquiring or borrowing money
- exs
- high during periods of inflation
- insensitive to the money supply, and investment is insensitive to interest rates
- just one aspect of the economy that can affect stock prices
- nothing more than a symptom of inflation
- often volatile over time
- such that more and more people are able to afford housing
* are the charge for borrowing money lenders use to make a profit
- manifestation of the demand versus the supply of savings
* are the most basic variable in discussing rates of return on financial investment
- important factor in the pricing of bonds
- national weighted average of adjustable and fixed-rate loans
* are the single most important aspect of bank profitability
- powerful factor affecting the stock market
- standard against which all investments are measured
* are, by definition, rates of return.
* can and do go up and down every day, just like stock market prices
- change because of market conditions
* change all the time, though, as the economy changes.
* determine mortgage rates, which have a significant impact on the cost of a home.
* determine the amount of money a bank can earn
- value of money
* dictate how much home a borrower can buy in many cases.
* function to keep credit and savings in balance.
* have a more fundamental part in the allocation of resources to economic projects
- powerful effect on measured affordability
- profound effect on measured affordability
- substantial impact on housing sale on home buying
- an impact on unemployment, which in turn influences revenues
* impact heavily the profits of publicly-held corporations.
* increases with the tenure of deposit.
* is interest expressed as a percentage
- supposed to influence the level of economic activity in the economy
- the average short-term borrowing rate available to the company
* move with the economic cycle.
* remain linked to the rate of inflation.
* represent the price for borrowing money.
* rise in a growing economy and fall during a depression.
* vary from currency to currency, and they change on a daily basis.
### rate | interest rate:
Base rate
* are interest rates.
* is an interest rate
Literacy rate
* continue to rise and fewer people leave school without qualifications.
* run in the high nineties.
Megahertz
* are a myth.
* denotes a million waves per second.
* is the number of cycles per second.
* million cycles per second.
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### rate:
Metabolic rate
* are rates.
* can be several hundred times lower with huge energy savings.
* declines proportionately with the decline in total protein tissue.
* determines the number of calories a person requires per day.
* has to be lower in larger species if they are to avoid burning up.
* increase in warm water and even more oxygen is needed.
* is an important and often overlooked variable in energy imbalances
- oxygen uptake over a fixed period of time, adjusted for body weight
- temperature dependent in woodlice
- temperature-dependent in woodlice
- the pace at which energy is used by an organism
* is the rate at which food is burned for energy
- heat is produced as the body breaks down ingested foods
- speed with which the body burns up food
* remains high, so calorie deficit pays off in proportional weight loss.
* rise and internal vapor pressure increases.
* vary considerably with activity and type of organism.
Morbidity rate
* are very low, especially rectal morbidity.
* tend to increase with age, then fall off for the oldest age group.<|endoftext|>### rate:
Mortality rate
* appear to be within the ranges observed for the Pacific congeners.
* are difficult to relate to nutritional status.
* are high in many areas, such as the Gulf of Maine
- the first year, particularly if food is scarce or rains come too soon
- higher in patients with complete spinal cord transections
- rates
- slightly higher in blacks than whites for both men and women
- two to three times higher for men than women
- unusually high for flu, especially among young, otherwise healthy adults
- variable with the conditions the shrimp are subjected to
* can vary with virus strain pathogenicity and partial protection by vaccination.
* differ significantly by ethnicity.
* increase in relation to the daily number of cigarettes smoked
- sharply with smaller fish
* is constant with respect to age unlike other animals
- equivalent to the proportion who die within a particular age interval
* jump between early and late adolescence.
* provide indicators of important social arrangements.
* tend to be higher in the black population than in other ethnic groups
- lowest during summer and highest during winter
* vary continuously and precisely with people's socio-economic status
- greatly-impacting the very young and the very old primarily
- shockingly between nations and even States
Murder rate
* are lower in states that have abolished the death penalty
- without the death penalty
* vary greatly among countries and societies around the world.
Mutation rate
* Mutation Rate is the probability of mutation occurring.
* are too low to explain evolutionary rates.
* is low, but after decades of accumulated mutations, cells can become malignant.
* vary from organism to organism.
Natality
* adds to the number in a population by reproduction.
* refers to number of young individuals born or hatched per unit of time.
Pace
* VERY common Maltese surname.
* are part of walks
- steps
* critical element in the process of spinning pewter.
* depends on derivitization, which is the conversion of a chemical compound into a derivative.
* fast gait, and used mainly in races.
* improves mental skills and makes learning faster, easier, and more efficient.
* is the key factor in conditioning that controls physical improvement
- speed and rhythm of the system
Poverty rate
* are broadly related to economic trends which also influence population gain or loss
- much higher in the United States than in many other industrialized countries
- something most people understand
* remain high for certain groups of children and families
- higher than in most other industrialized countries
- inexcusably high, especially for children
* vary greatly among subgroups.
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### rate:
Pregnancy rate
* are more variable on mature cows with calves
- notoriously high with condoms
* has a major impact on the profitability of a cow-calf operation.
* is determined by the conception rate and the service rate.
* remain highest for women in their twenties.
Reaction rate
* increase in the presence of a catalyst because collision rates are increased.
* is simply the change in the amount of product or reactant over time
- the slope of the line tangent to any point on the curve
Refresh rate
* is determined by the total number of rows that have to be refreshed in a memory chip
- measured in Hz, or times refreshed per second
* is the number of rows that have to be refreshed
- vertical frequency, or the rate at which each pixel on a screen is re-drawn
* refer to how many times the screen is repainted in a second.
* techno-term for how fast the screen image is updated.
Reproductive rate
* has a major economic impact on herd profitability.
* is the lowest recorded among North American land mammals
- number of live lambs born per ewe exposed for breeding
Respiration rate
* increase as temperature increases.
* is higher in chickens than in larger animals.
* predict differences in growth of coast redwood.
* slows gradually during growth and after harvest.
Respiratory rate
* are in the two hundreds per minute
- vital signs
* decreases with the administration of xylazine.
* is the number of breaths per minute.
Sample rate
* is the number or frequency of images taken, usually measured in images per second.
* refers to how often the voltage of the analog signal is measured.
Smoking rate
* are alarmingly high for teenage girls
- twice as high amongst gay and bisexual men than the general population
* vary considerably by region and by social grouping.
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### rate:
Speed
* All speeds are relative , except for the speed of light, which is absolute.
* ' is the distance that an object moves in a certain amount of time. Speed measure of how fast something is moving. The 'average speed' of an object in a certain time is the distance the object traveled divided by the time. Speed scalar.
* affects dopamine primarily, a neurotransmitter linked to pleasure and reward.
* also affects the ability to stop
- contributes to tire wear
- plays a part in a number of serious injury crashes
- translates into efficiency of operations
* can vary greatly depending on wind speed and direction.
* comes from power, which comes from range of motion.
* contributing factor in about one-third of all traffic deaths on the nation's roadways
- almost all fatal snowmobile accidents
- nearly all fatal snowmobiling accidents
* controls the line that a ball rolls on.
* critical factor in the telecommunications real estate marketplace
- that drives Web usage
- feature of the fashion and advertising industries
* defines our products, our environments, our way of life, and our imaginations.
* describes how fast an object is moving.
* directly affects the distance required to stop a vehicle.
* divides communities where people are unable to cross the road.
* does kill when drivers are taught only how to get a licence.
* dominates today's engine systems.
* drives productivity, and productivity drives business results.
* factor in a high percentage of automobile accidents
- nearly one-third of all fatal crashes
- of movement
* function of architecture, technology, software, and algorithms
- shape
* generates friction which generates heat which causes melting.
* governs the internet
- throughput from disk to screen and from disk to the central processor
* has a major effect on how the front wheel rises
- tremendous impact on safety
* has the dimensions of distance divided by time
- units of distance per time interval
* helps to keep the boat upright by bringing the apparent wind forward.
* increases the distance needed to stop a vehicle.
* is also a factor in tyre noise generation
- leading factor in motorcycle crashes
- vital component to their survival
- an advantage for horses used in battle
- important when passing a ball
- the biggest determinant of the extent of injury
- an aphrodisiac
- another function of time
- calculated by dividing the distance traveled by the time of the motion
- dependent upon body length, beat frequency, and the aspect ratio of the caudal fin
- distance traveled per unit of time
- equivalent to the wavelength times the frequency
- essential in escaping from a fire
- for color printing and measured in pages per minute
* is how fast a film can capture an image when exposed to a minimal amount of light
- or slowly something is moving
* is how fast something is going
- travels
* is how fast the club swings
- object is going, while velocity is speed plus direction
- much time it takes a page to be viewed by the visitor
- important because planets gravitationally affect their stars' motion
* is important in decisions and actions
- product development as well as in the order cycle
- increase after the flow of motion is established by pulling the hind leg into the body
- influenced by the athlete's mobility, special strength, strength endurance and technique
- irrespective, more or less, as the same mass is moved the same distance
- just the rate of change in position
- made up of reaction time and movement time
- major contributor in most traffic accidents
* is measured as the length of time it takes to complete specific products or work units
- by the distance covered divided by the elapsed time
* is measured in characters per second
- kilobits per second
- knots
- revolutions per minute by a tachometer
- two ways
- with an anemometer , a device with cups that turn during a wind
- more directly related to efficiency than energy expenditure
- multiple of the angular speed of the deferent
- needed in the ocean to catch prey
* is often the difference between a quick or a costly solution
- very important in calculations for navigation
* is one of the elements of progress in the grinding wheel industry
- main usability criteria for web design
- most important factors in the information age
- things that has affected television
- paces
- proportional to motive force, and inversely proportional to resistance
* is rate of stride multiplied by length of stride
- x length of stride
- recorded in miles or kilometers per hour
- relative to social settings
* is relative to the maneuver that the car has to be doing
- rotation of the earth
- said to be a scalar quantity
- second only to alcohol in causes for fatal car crashes on America's roads
- something that is becoming increasingly more important in our society
- sometimes just an antidote for sorrow and grief, sadness and loneliness
- still a major catchword in college football today
- subjective and cultural experience
* is the ability to rapidly propel the body or a part of the body from one point to another
- accuracy and speed with which the graph is drawn
- acid test of the genetics of gait
- bottom line of horse racing and racehorse breeding
- buzzword of the information economy
- defining metric
- difference between surviving and thriving in an ever-changing competitive market
- direct result of acceleration and control
- essence of everything
- leading cause of death of young men in Oregon
- lifeblood of today's digital economy
* is the magnitude of the vector quantity velocity
* is the main factor that separates one type of Internet connection from another
- problem with driving on ice
- mantra of the Internet economy
* is the measure of efficiency
* is the most essential factor of force or power
- important element in producing lift
* is the name of the game in the outfield as the starters posses the ability
- in visual communication
- number of squares moved during the momentum move
- only way they are supposed to travel
- opening or aperture of the lens
- precious commodity of gene exchange
- primary protection for an adult white-tailed deer
* is the rate at which something is moving
- moves, while velocity is the speed in a particular direction
- travels a distance or length
- of stride times the length of stride
- scalar quantity that is the magnitude of the velocity vector
- shrinkage of time through near-instantaneous communication and computation
- single biggest factor affecting the severity of a highway crash
- thought to be a factor in about a third of all casualty accidents
- very important to users of the Internet
* is what has characterised the emergence of the information economy
- lies at the heart of Internet technology
* kills when drivers are taught only how to get a licence
- governments are quick to blame speeding as the sole cause of road trauma
- road safety experts treat drivers as idiots and intellectually challenged children
- roads are built to the lowest price rather than the highest standards
* limitation common to computer architectures.
* lowers the body's natural defenses against disease.
* major cause of accidents
- teen crashes
* major factor in many pedestrian accidents and is something that can be controlled
- road accidents
* measure of a chip's processing power.
* measurement of that change in position over time.
* multiplied by value equals the velocity of profitable cash flow.
* particular risk to pedestrians, bicyclists and in-line skaters.
* physical measurement.
* plays a major role in the extent of traffic accident injury
- incidence of injury as well as strength and muscle development
- part in nearly every fatal snowmobile crash
* quality that allows a guy to do a lot of things.
* rate, a ratio between two different quantities.
* real differentiation in the labor market.
* reduces the stability of tractors.
* refers to the magnitude of the velocity.
* relative thing when referring to the Internet.
* requires that muscles produce energy as quickly as possible.
* result of stepping down to the ground with greater force.
* scalar and velocity vector.
* scalar quantity and has only magnitude, or size, associated with it
- velocity vector quantity
- that indicates rate of motion distance per time
* scalar, velocity vector.
* simply tells the magnitude of the time rate of change of position.
* speeds the flow of business blood.
* still plays a major role in accidents.
* usually is associated with an increase in pace, rather than lengthening of the stride.
* very important factor in sorting and in computer science in general.
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### rate | speed:
Angular velocity
* Angular velocities are speed.
* combination of angular speed and the direction of the rotation.
* is basically how fast an object spins around a pivotal point
- important to the microgravity people
- measured in units of cycles per second
* varies inside the Sun in a complicated fashion.<|endoftext|>### rate | speed:
Average speed
* declines with increasing atomic mass.
* describes the speed over some time period.
* equals distance traveled divided by elapsed time.
* is described as a measure of distance divided by time
- distance over time
* is the magnitude of A. acceleration
- rate of change of distance with time
* is the total distance traveled divided by the total time elapsed
- travelled divided by the total time taken for the trip
- what cycle computers calculate based on the total time the bike is moving
* refers to speed while riding and is independent of the length of the ride.
Clock speed
* is an unreliable benchmark of computer performance
- measured in megahertz
* is one key factor in microprocessor performance
- of the main factors that determine the computing power of a computer
- the maximum rate that the chip can be clocked
- to a computer as horse power is to the engine of car
- very important in terms of bandwidth, and latencies and bandwidth go hand in hand
Digital speed
* is all about information.
* shrinks the distance between the information and the decision.
Download speed
* is the most important aspect of web design.
* major factor in end user satisfaction with a given web site.
Excessive speed
* can contribute to a rollover and increase the severity of a rollover crash
- lead to accidents
* creates heat buildup in a tire, leading to possible tire failure.
* factor in many accidents.
* is the major cause of damage to ships by ice
- number one cause of fatal crashes involving teen drivers
Film speed
* determines how much light is required for correct exposure of the photographic emulsion.
* indicates sensitivity to light.
* is the level of sensitivity that the film has to light
- sensitivity of a film to light
* measure of how quickly light imprints on the image.
* measurement that indicates a film's sensitivity to light.
* number that indicates the film's sensitivity to light.
* refers to how light sensitive it is
- the sensitivity to light for a certain film
Ground speed
* is the speed which the craft is actually moving ouer the ground
- what determines separation across the ground
* means nothing without air speed.
* result of airspeed and wind speed.<|endoftext|>### rate | speed:
High speed
* create more heat for tires and the engine.
* dives enable Peregrines catch everything from songbirds to herons and ducks.
* driving with under inflated tires can lead to tread separation.
* generate high frequency vibrations.
* imaging technology allows one to capture fast motion.
* increase both tire force and bouncing
- the risk of fatal crashes, especially for pedestrians
* is one of the major causes of fatal tractor accidents occurring on public roads
- the leading cause of accidents
- used during manual trim, and low speed during automatic trim
* reduce total traffic capacity due to the increased distance required between vehicles.
Higher speed
* lead to increasing turbulence and much stronger increase of air resistance with speed.
* reduce the ability of vehicles and restraint systems to protect occupants.
Idle speed
* is the slowest speed at which a vessel can maintain steerage
- needed to maintain steerage or maneuverability
* means the lowest speed at which a vessel can operate and maintain steering control.
Instantaneous speed
* describes the speed at any instant.
* is the first derivative of distance with respect to time
- velocity magnitude at a particular time
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### rate | speed:
Radial velocity
* Radial velocities are relatively easy to measure
* is how fast the target is coming towards , or going away from , the radar
- the speed of an object toward or away from the radar antenna
+ Doppler radar: Technology
* Radial velocity is how fast the target is coming towards, or going away from, the radar. The Doppler effect will shift the received frequency up or down, based on the radial velocity of a target in the beam. This gives a direct and highly accurate measurement of target velocity, but only the radial velocity.<|endoftext|>### rate | speed:
Scud
* All scuds provide fish with important food.
* Most scuds avoid light and during the daytime are found among vegetation or under rocks or debris.
* also rank high, especially when looking at high mountain lakes.
* are an important food for fish, frogs and birds
- source for many fishes
- basically scavengers
- known for their voracious appetites
- missiles
- often tan, pink or orange
- very nimble as they dart and climb among the aquatic plants and other structure
- weapons
* have a very interesting way of producing young.
* is speed
* make up the other staple of trout in slow water and lakes.
* require a relatively large amount calcium to support their molts.
* tend to have a color that is similar to their surrounding environment.
Shutter speed
* Explain how to set shutter speed on a large format camera.
* controls the amount of light that reaches the film during exposure.
* determines how long the shutter stays open to allow light in.
* is simply an amount of time
- the duration of time that the shutter stays open
* is the amount of time that the aperture is open
- the shutter is open, allowing light to fall on the film
- speed with which the camera's shutter opens when the picture is taken
Slow speed
* are essential to avoid road hazards
* show greater change with age than fast speeds.<|endoftext|>### rate | speed:
Terminal velocity
* Terminal velocities are speed
- video games
* is achieved when all forces are balanced
- attained when one's weight equals the drag imposed by the atmosphere
- reached when the force of air resistance equals the weight of the object
- the point at which the drag force equals the force of gravity
- when the force of gravity equals the drag force, also known as air resistence
* occurs when the acceleration of a freely falling object is equal to zero
- net force on a falling object goes to zero
- weight of an object is balanced by the drag
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### rate | speed:
Wind speed
* affects the rate of mixing
- potential evaporation and snowmelt
- weather condition
* are a critical factor in determining the potential for wind power.
* are generally light in the continental arctic interior throughout the year
- lower in urban areas compared to more exposed rural locations
- highest across exposed ridges
* are in knots
- metres per second
- proportional to the strength of the height gradient
- stronger near the ground than aloft
- typically highest in winter and lowest in summer
- very difficult to measure in tornadoes
* blow east to west in a belt, and west to east in a zone.
* can exceed double the value of normal trade winds
- vary, making it hard to keep turbines operating at a consistent level
* decreases as the complex structures in forests absorb wind energy
- close to ground due to surface friction
* determines the depth of the bow.
* die off at higher altitudes.
* exhibits a diurnal cycle, generally peaking at noon and weakest at night
- strong seasonal cycle, lowest in the winter and higher in the summer
* fact of aircraft performance.
* has only a magnitude.
* increases strongly with altitude, while temperature decreases
- the height of ocean waves
* is also very dependant uponelevation above ground level
- calculated from the location of the maximum of the quadratic polynomial function
- caused by air moving from high pressure to low pressure
* is determined by counting pulses over a sample period
- using a hand-held anemometer or from a portable meteorological station
- in the traditional way from mean rotor speed
- for standard sea-level conditions
- gauged with an anemometer
* is given in miles per hour and storm surge is measured in wave feet
- high when the lines are close together and low when the lines are far apart
- highly variable from one location to another and during the day
- important for wind energy
* is in kilometres per hour
- tens of degrees and speed is in miles per hour
- indicated by the darkness of the streamline
* is measured by an anemometer, of which there are many kinds
- anemometers, most commonly using rotating cups or propellers
- the rate at which the cups turn
- in meters per second
* is measured using a cup anemometer
- an anemometer, pictured below
- either of two instruments
* is measured with a cup anemometer
- small thermister as a hot wire anemometer
* is measured with an anemometer
- instrument called an anemometer
- our dependent variable, so it goes on the vertical axis
- reported in meters per second
* is the speed at which the wind is moving in relation to the ground
- vector difference between the airspeed and the ground speed
- velocity attained by a mass of air traveling horizontally through the atmosphere
* reflection of the air pressure gradients.
* varies with the seasons, time of day, and region.
* vary with the terrain, season, and time of the day.
+ Tristan da Cunha, Geography, Climate: Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha
* On Gough it is a few degrees colder. 1700 mm annually at the Tristan Settlement, and 3300 mm at Gough. Strong winds are common. Wind speed increases strongly with altitude, while temperature decreases. Thus, while the lowlands experience quite pleasant weather, the uplands may be covered in snow or battered by very strong winds.
Success rate
* are a function of tumor location.
* is the number of awarded grants divided by the number of awards requested.
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### rate:
Suicide rate
* are among the highest in the world
- comparatively lower in Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan
- high, especially among senior citizens
- higher for people of low income
* are highest among the divorced, separated, and widowed and lowest among the married
- for people with mood disorders
- the highest among the divorced and widowed, and lowest among the married
- twice the national rate, as are deaths from influenza and pneumonia
* can vary considerably from year to year.
* fluctuate independently of gun control laws and gun ownership
* increase for men as they age.
* increase with age
- famous victims as do car and plane crashes
* vary from one culture to another.
Survival rate
* are affected by disease, malnutrition and predation.
* decline for women diagnosed with later stages of disease.
* is predicted using a logistic regression model to predict probability of survival.
* jump dramatically when cancers are detected at an early, localized stage.
* vary according to the type of cancer and how early the disease is detected
- widely by cell type and stage of disease
Tax rate
* affect prices for working, saving, and investment.
* are mathematical tables that determine the amount of tax that an individual owes
- rates
- usually a consideration when people buy a new home
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### rate:
Velocity
* Velocities are apparent velocities, computed along a straight array
- heliocentric
- relative to the Pacific plate
- very similar in saturated, unconsolidated sediments
- can vary laterally along a given layer, and layers can pinch out
- increase with average crustal age along ray paths
* affects the amount of economic activity generated by a given money supply.
* also increases with increasing salinity and temperature.
* combination of energy and drive, combining the physical and the mental.
* depends on compressibility, shear strength and density of material
- primarily on temperature, less on pressure, and very little on salinity
* describes both the speed and direction of an object.
* differs from speed in that it has both a magnitude and a direction.
* equals mass times acceleration.
* exists only in computers and in the mind of mankind.
* gives distance, time, and the direction of travel.
* has the dimensions of length divided by time
- same magnitude as speed, but is associated with a direction
* includes speed and direction of motion.
* increases with an increase in porosity.
* indicates the speed of an object in a direction of motion.
* is actually a vector with both direction and magnitude
- speed with direction
* is also a part of momentum
- vector quantity
- dependent on the electrical conductivity and dielectric constant
- displacement over time, where displacement is interchageable with distance
- distance divided with time
- equal to the distance travelled divided by the time take to travel it
- expressed as horizontal and vertical elements
- how fast something is moving in a given direction
- in speed per unit
- known as a vector quantity because it has both speed and direction
- linear because it is increasing at the same amount each time interval, acceleration
* is measured by geophones generating the error signals that control the activators
- using a current meter
- with measuring sticks and stop-watches
- motion, divided by the number of ticks on a clock that it takes for the motion to occur
- similar to speed but it has direction
- sort of the slope of the rotated coordinates
* is speed in a certain direction
- specific direction
- with a direction and is important in understanding bumper car collisions
- such a quantity as is acceleration and force
- the antiderivative of acceleration, which calculus determination
* is the change in distance divided by the change in time
- position
- of distance over change in time
- direction and rate of change in position
* is the distance an object travels divided by time
- objecttravels divided by time
- first derivative of position
* is the measurement of the rate and direction of change in the position of an object
- speed of the ground motion
- primary factor affecting the ability of a stream to erode
- rate at which the position changes
* is the rate of change of displacement of an object, with respect to time
- location
- position, and acceleration is the rate of change of velocity
- motion in a specific direction
- ratio of distance traveled to time
- recessional velocity of a particular galaxy away from the observer
- slope of a position-time graph
* is the speed of an object in a certain direction
- in one direction
- time it takes a floating object to travel a given distance
- time-derivative of displacement
- therefore also a vector quantity
- to acceleration as appetite is to hunger
* measure of distance per unit time
- the rate of change of position of an object
* measurement including both the speed of and the change in direction of an object
- of speed using distance and time as the variables
* quantity that designates how fast and in what direction a point is moving.
* regulates the distance between each drip.
* specifies a direction to go along with that magnitude.
* speed with an associated direction.
* varies with location and time in a river.
* vector and is distinguished from speed in that it has a direction associated with it
- measurement because it has an amount and a direction
* vector quantity and has both magnitude and direction
- that indicates distance per time and direction
- quantity, which consists of both a direction and a magnitude
- which tells the system how fast and in what direction the particle is moving
* vector, because it speed in a certain direction
- which means it has both a magnitude and direction
+ Vector, More examples of vectors: Linear algebra :: Basic physics ideas
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### rate | velocity:
Conduction velocity
* depends on resistivity of the axoplasm and on the membrane capacitance.
* is slowest in the AV and sinoatrial nodes
- the speed at which the compound nerve action potential traverses a nerve
Instantaneous velocity
* is the first derivative of displacement with respect to time
- instantaneous speed plus the direction the object is headed
* refers to the velocity of an object at a specific point in time.
Orbital velocity
* depends only on the radius of an object's orbit.
* is the speed needed to stay in orbit.
River velocity
* determines quantity and size of rock fragments and sediment carried by the river.
* is generally greater on the outside of a bend, where the current often accelerates.
Seismic velocity
* Seismic velocities vary greatly with the type of rock or medium.
* can be a good proxy for the types of rocks at depth.
Vertical velocity
* Vertical velocities reach their maxima when the still water crossings occur.
* is the speed at which the air is rising or sinking
- well correlated with temperature, resulting in a vertical heat flux<|endoftext|>### rate | velocity:
Wind velocity
* Wind velocities increase as winter approaches
- with altitude above the water
* accelerates body heat loss under conditions of both coldness and wetness.
* can have major effects on early plant growth and development.
* is considered a vector, as it represents both the wind's magnitude and direction
- different at ground level than at higher altitudes, and can change quickly
- highest at the shoreline, as is the frequency of flooding and the wave energy
- illustrated as vector arrows, colored by speed
- measured by means of an anemometer or radar
- stronger during the winter months and weakest during late summer
- the dominant environmental condition affecting spray drift
Wage rate
* Wage Rate measures the initial wage rate at placement and wage gains at designated followup periods.
* are an amount of income stipulated for a given unit of work or time
- the result of labor demand and supply in labor markets
* determine total remuneration and measure women's contribution to total production.
### rates:
Event rate
* Event Rate is the proportion of patients in a group in whom an the event is observed.
* are rates.<|endoftext|>Ratio
* are fractions that compare one part to another part
- measures of individual performance and are calculated on a within-herd basis
- ratios
- real numbers
- the quotients of the future and baseline periods
* describe the various relationships among accounts in the balance sheet and income statement.
* inherently give the relative relation of one variable to another.
* is computed by dividing dry ingredients by liquid.
* is the proportion between the times a banner is shown and the times users clicked on it
- of wounded in action to combat deaths
- security price divided by earnings per share
* just means the relation between two numbers.
* measure performance through comparisons of results.
* refers to how much the fuel-air mixture in the cylinder needs to compressed before ignition.
* word of broad meaning.
### ratio scales:
Physical measurement
* Most physical measurements are ratio scales.
* have to do with objective masses, forces, and energies.<|endoftext|>### ratio:
Aspect ratio
* are ratios.
* comparison between the length and width of a wing.
* describes the ratio of the width to the height of the screen.
* has to do with the ration of the blade's legnth to the blade's width.
* is the ratio of the image width to the height
- larger dimension of a rectangle to the smaller dimension
- width to height
- relationship between the width and height of a television picture
* is, for more complex shapes the wing span squared divided by the wing area.
* measure of how long and slender a wing is from tip to tip.
* plays an important role in phase change heat transfer mechanism.
* refers to the ratio of width to height of a television set.
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### ratio:
Efficiency
* Efficiencies depend heavily on the activity of the target gene.
* Indicates how well a speaker system converts power into sound.
* also decreases the energy costs of pumping and providing water for irrigation
- extends the life of non-renewable resources like coal, oil and naural gas
* compares the cooling and heating output as it relates to the amount of electricity used.
* crucial element in transportation.
* deals with the complexity of a learning machine in both space and time
- use of the fewest inputs possible to achieve desired output
* describes the rate at which improvement occurs relative to the termination point.
* generic term that refers to the productivity of the AV program.
* highly developed form of laziness.
* is affected by buildup of settled solids, sludge, or oils.
* is also independent of age and years of reading
- related to crystal size
- an important objective of health care
* is based on how much of the sunlight that hits the panel is converted into electricity
- the cost of inputs required to produce a given output
- capable of increase production
- expressed in terms of costs, participation rates, and free riders
* is important to anyone who is using electric motors
- where competition for water makes it desirable to increase water supplies
* is measured by comparing outputs with inputs
- minimizing administrative costs in the delivery of the services
* is measured by the average number of queries necessary to locate the image
- expediency with which cases are closed
* is measured in terms of the average number of times each task is performed on the job
- time and energy
- obtained through the increase of productivity and decrease of cost
- often the result of the continuous improvement of processes
* is one key to the success of any business or organization
- of the core elements of sustainability
- productive because people can make judgments quickly and keep things simple
* is the ability to do work
- get a lot done in the time available
- absence of waste
- amount of effort required to accomplish a goal
- capacity to bring proficiency into expression
- comparison of output to input
- condition of being adequate in performance with a minimum of waste or effort
- degree to which utilization of resources is minimized to achieve an objective
- extent to which the process achieves the objective in reality
- final principle of taxation
- goal of technology
* is the key to all the changes brought about by globalization
- survival, which places new demands on people and technology
* is the power needed to saturate a channel of the spectrometer
- to produce effects
- process of maximizing the productivity of inputs
- proportion of the water applied that is stored in the root zone
* is the ratio of deposits to administrative expenses
- output over input
- the share of quotas to the share of seats won
- soul of any public service agency
- word of the day
* is usually a code word for sidestepping environmental rules
- an argument for private enterprise and against government intervention
- work output per fuel burn
* is, in a nutshell, the power to produce effects.
* means cutting waste, learning to do more with less.
* measure of the amount of sunlight a solar device converts to electricity
- degree to which certain goals or criteria are met
* measures the ratio of output to input.
* minimum condition for survival after success has been achieved.
* plays an important role in some tasks.
* process which needs a object or goal.
* purpose of the standards selection process.
- of the electric power output to the light power input
* refers to economic incentives, fiscal, administrative, and political costs
- operating a program or project, or performing work tasks economically
- the resources expended in order to achieve a particular goal
- ultimately to valuations
* relates to doing a job right in as little time and with as little effort as possible
- things right
* skill that can be learned.
* typically is output divided by input.
* value highly considered, particularly in our contemporary technological society
- of the system
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### ratio:
Efficiency ratio
* identify the extent to which the firms operations are being run efficiently.
* measure the degree of effectiveness in the use of land, labor and capital.
* refer to how well zinc is absorbed by the plant.
### ratio | efficiency:
Allocative efficiency
* describes how best to distribute resources across competing programs.
* is the theoretical justification for the usage of money.
* matches public spending with consumer preferences.
* measure of the allocation of productive inputs to their best use.
* occurs when marginal social benefits are equal to marginal social costs
- total social cost equals total social benefit
Dynamic efficiency
* is enormously important for the long-run standard of living of a society.
* is, by definition, the rate of increase in productive efficiency.
Economic efficiency
* can mean high unemployment or diminished services.
* has to do with how much wealth a given resource base can generate.
* is actually marginal benefits divided by marginal costs.
* means obtaining the most benefit from our scarce resources
- that production is at maximum, while cost is at minimum
* refers to the relative valuations the users attach to their network service.
* secondary, but still important, aspect of free software.
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### ratio | efficiency:
Energy efficiency
* affects the service energy intensity.
* benefits the environment through a lower consumption of electricity.
* can do much to reduce energy demand
- have an effect on overall community sustainability
- include both energy saving and active and passive solar technologies
- mean fewer emissions which contribute to global warming
- reduce greenhouse gas emissions and create direct and indirect jobs
* critical issue for affordable housing.
* cuts the emissions contributing to global warming.
* has hard consequences, it defines life and death
- the added benefit of lowering household utility bills
* helps cut our dependence on foreign energy sources and preserve our economy
- residents and businesses lower their electricity bill
* increases the initial cost of a home.
* is also an immature technology.
* is an idea that everyone can love
- important strategy to deal with energy demand
- interesting and useful concept for analyzing energy use
- determined by the highest ratio of energy consumption to product output
- energy profit
- often an inexpensive, quick and simple way to save money
* is one of the key strategies to make our economy more cost competitive
- lowest cost strategies for reducing greenhouse gases
- particularly difficult to measure in the transportation sector
* is the basis of good form
- cleanest, safest, most economical way to begin to curb global warming
- icing on the cake
- smartest approach to hold down costs while still remaining comfortable
* key area where economic and environmental interests coincide.
* means fewer emissions which lead to global warming
- significant savings on utility bills
* means using less energy to accomplish the same task
- while achieving the same amount of comfort or service
* measure of economic competitiveness.
* offers the single most effective means to reduce carbon dioxide emissions.
* prevents the destruction of our Earth.
* profit maker.
* reduces emissions contributing to global warming
- pollution to air, water, and land
- the pollution created by running power plants
* refers to the energy input per unit of useful energy output.
* relative term, grounded in the mineral and water regime of the habitat.
* represents the second largest source of energy in the United States.
* requires boiler control systems to closely match steam supply with steam demand.
* saves money and the environment by reducing power plant pollution.
* saves money, benefits the economy, creates new jobs, and enhances human health
- reduces pollution, and conserves resources
* subject of much interest in many countries, including Singapore.
* way of achieving the same services with less energy.
* winner for both the economy and the environment.
* works when our customers understand our programs.
Feed efficiency
* critically important topic in pork production.
* major determinant of feedlot profitability.
Fiscal efficiency
* deals with the ways in which LGUs are financed.
* is separate from economic efficiency.
Fuel efficiency
* decreases the emissions causing global warming.
* is one measure that is going south
- the smart way to go for both the environment and the economy
* varies according to season, load, route and other factors.
High efficiency
* is one of the main advantages of the solid oxide fuel cell
- particularly relevant in systems that can operate from batteries
- the most common trait among farmers that choose nontraditional lenders
* translates to operating cost about one-third that of electric units.
Market efficiency
* critical concept in economics and finance.
* description of how prices in competitive markets respond to new information.
Mechanical efficiency
* evaluates energy conversion and energy converters.
* is expressed as a percentage and accounts for all mechanical friction losses.
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### ratio | efficiency:
Reproductive efficiency
* is always a challenge in high producing herds
- where hair sheep truly excel
* relies on using all resources available.
Resource efficiency
* is an essential foundation of sustainability.
* way to achieve a level of sustainability in our resource consumption.
Thermal efficiency
* is also a prime consideration in the development of new generation systems
- used to evaluate wood-conserving stoves and numerous other devices
* keeps the outdoors where it belongs.
* measure of the performance of a heat engine.
Employee turnover
* are ratios.
* is expensive in terms of time and capital
- widespread in nursing homes
* represents a loss of assets - an uncovered loss.
Gear ratio
* are infinitely variable from full speed reverse to full speed forward
- ratios
* can also determine how much fuel the car uses.
* is the number of times the spool rotates for each handle turn.
* provide proper balance between weight-moving ability and speed of movement.<|endoftext|>### ratio:
Gross margin
* are the excess of revenues above the cost of goods sold.
* compare pricing power to the manufacturing cost of doing business.
* is calculated by dividing gross profit dollars by sales dollars
- subtracting direct costs form gross income
- how much a company keeps from revenue before paying overhead
* is the difference between net sales and the cost of goods sold on the income statement
- the farm's sales and the variable operating expenses
* measure of the basic profitability and costs of a company's core business.
Load factor
- the amount of freight or passengers carried compared to capacity
* is the ratio of the average to peak loads
- what percentage of seats are filled
* measures the portion of an airline's seats that are filled with paying passengers.
Odds ratio
* are a way of examining the likelihood of an event or behavior
- invariant when the orientation of the rows and columns reversed
* refers to the chance of an event versus the chance of a non-event.
Profit margin
* are also an expression of the amount of competition inherent in the business
- often razor sharp in a global economy
- the money left over after paying all of the costs of running the business
* change slowly over time, particularly in an extended business cycle.
* is determined by dividing net income by revenue
- by total revenues for that period
* measure of how efficiently the business is operating.<|endoftext|>### ratio:
Proportion
* also plays a large role in the human perception of beauty.
* are a special type of ratio in which the denominator always includes the numerator
- also useful measures of morbidity and mortality
- equations containing ratios of equal value
- fractions
* brings in other concepts such fractions, ratios, and equivalence.
* determine the optical qualities of the diamond.
* is an outcome of the division of one variable by another
- magnitudes
- one of the principles of art and design
- placements
- the relation of one object to another in size, amount, number or degree
* is the relationship between a facade's height and width
- the various parts
- of parts to the whole in terms of size
* means the ratio between the width and height of the image.
* plays an important role in development.
* refers to the angles and relative measurements of a polished diamond
- relationship of the parts to each other
- size of the upper body or trunk relative to the lower body or legs
### ratio | proportion:
Direct proportion
* is an important concept in both mathematics and science classes
- the essence out of which linear functions grow
* lead to the study of lines or linearity.
Percent
* Covers the basics of converting fractions into percents.
* are decimal fractions.
* cover A densitometer is used to measure percent cover.
* is proportion
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### ratio | proportion | percent:
Percent change
* is based on difference in relative humidity.
* is the percent change from the previous quarter at annual rate of growth
- previous year
- same quarter one year ago
* refers to simple percent changes.<|endoftext|>### ratio | proportion | percent:
Unemployment rate
* Unemployment Rate Represents the proportion of the civilian labor force that is unemployed.
* Unemployment Rate is expressed as a percentage
- the number of unemployed as a percentage of the labor force
* are at historically low levels
- disproportionately high in the Aboriginal community
- higher for younger than older members of the labor force
* are highest among youth and are higher for females than for males
- in small rural communities
- particularly high among nonmetro minorities and teenagers
- percentages
- the highest in the world
* can fluctuate significantly from month to month.
* is the number unemployed expressed as a percentage of the labour force
- ratio of unemployed people to the labour force
* remain very low, and labor markets show continuing symptoms of tightness.
* represents the percent of the civilian labor force who are unemployed.
* show substantial decreases in all sectors.
* vary in minority communities
- within and across regions<|endoftext|>### ratio | proportion:
Percentage
* Divide the number of sensitive organisms by the total number of organisms collected.
* Use numerals to express percentages.
* is far below consensus. Please try again later.
* are proportion
- the number of students that are at state standards
* is proportion
* is the percentage of the total entries made
- hours spent
* living ground cover values represent the percentage area per plot covered by ryegrass.
* refer to percents of school totals
- proportion of Indigenous population in Australia as a whole
- total number of stocks by category
* refers to cumulative percentage.
* refers to the number of people who responded the same way to each question
- percentage of respondents to whom the particular information applies
* represent proportions between samples and harvests.
* represent the degree of homology among amino acid sequences
- portion of the total parasitic energy consumed
Quotient
* also come up in certain tests, like the IQ test, which stands for intelligence quotient.
* also come up in certain tests, like the IQ test, which stands for intelligence quotient. In this case, your quotient is basically your score. In recent decades, as people begin to emphasize full personal development, other similar quotients appeared.
Refractive index
* Some refractive indexes have distinct values
* are ratios.
* function of wavelength, so blue light brought to focus nearer than red light.
* measure of the degree to which a medium bends light.
* numerical value indicating the light bending power of a medium such as glass.
* varies with position for inhomogeneous materials.
Safety factor
* are one of the largest variables in estimating fatigue life
* function of design stress and yield strength.
Stoichiometry
* All stoichiometry essentially is based on the evaluation of the number of moles of substance.
* deals with the mass and volume relationships of chemical changes.
* define the mole as related to Avogadro s hypothesis.
* is the calculation of quantities in a chemical equation.
* only depends on the reaction chemistry and inert gases or liquids present.
* word from chemistry class.
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### ratio:
Turnover
* Refers to the level of discretionary trading activity in a portfolio.
* are dishs.
* can also vary with product cycles.
* human capital risk.
* is caused by cooler water sinking into the warmer water below it
- retirements, promotions, moves, and so forth
* is the attrition of employees through voluntary or involuntary terminations
- largest source of increased taxes for investors
- measure of the amount of active trading in a portfolio
- relationship between the float and the average monthly volume
- sales, or gross revenue, of the company during the financial period
- used in contradistinction to volume of shares
- usually a sign that something is wrong
* measures how long a fund is holding onto the stocks it buys.
* occurs as the lagoon is heating up in the spring or cooling down in the fall
- when someone changes jobs
* refers to how many maintenance tasks can be completed within a fixed amount of time
- the rate at which new users tend to replace old ones, as accounts get deleted
* represents the amounts received and receivable for sale of goods to third parties
- invoiced value of goods sold, net of returns and allowances
- value of goods and services supplied and is stated net of value added tax
* slippery figure that measures the amount of trading a manager does.
* symptom of other problems, especially dissatisfaction with work or working conditions.
* term being used to measure the size of the farm business.
* upsets routines that comfort animals and affect their health and safety.
### ratio | turnover:
High turnover
* is also a key sign of an instability in communities.
* problem at most preschools and day cares.
Inventory turnover
* Inventory Turnover Indicates liquidity of inventory.
* equals the cost of goods sold divided by average inventory.
* is the cost of goods sold divided by the average inventory.
* measure of a management's ability to use resources efficiently.
* measurement of inventory use.
Involuntary turnover
* is the result of termination and layoffs.
* occurs when an employee is discharged or terminated, often for just cause.
Samosa
* are flaky pastries filled with spicy potatoes and peas
- food
- pastry
- savory pockets of dough filled with vegetables or meat
- spicy little pasties stuffed with a vegetable or meat filling
- turnovers
* can be vegetarian or non-vegetarian.
### rational animal:
Human person
* Every human person is brought into the world through the loving arms of a family
- carried in a woman's womb and brought forth through a woman's pain and labor
* are moral agents for whom freedom is an essential condition of responsible action
- more than their bodies
- self-moving substances, capable of being first causes of motion in a causal chain
* rational animal.<|endoftext|>Rationality
* Rationalities are sanity.
* can play a key role in the decision making process.
* constitutes the essence of humanity.
* governs our choice of basic social principles.
* has no other formal definition in economics.
* implies intellectual cognition and rational appetition
- the application of formal rules to some domain of experience
* is an act in accordance with a culturally validated referential system
- exogenous component of selective incentives
- concerned with reason, logical consistency, empirical proof, etc
- confined to a bounded rationality within a possible world
- identified with self-interest
- one of humanity s greatest assets
- quality
- synonymous with the subsequent development of logic and science
* is the driving force behind decision-making
- epistemic basis for our analysis of values
* key value in the management of health systems.
* matter of following rules of rationality.
* means equilibrium of mind.
* relates to making the right decisions and producing successful behaviour.
* synthesis of perspectives.
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### ratios:
Financial ratio
* are ratios.
* can be the impartial indicators at the financial trends at the business.
* provide ways to quantify a company's operating success and financial well-being.
Reactant
* Most reactants have energy.
* Most reactants yield more products
* are always in the denominator
- chemicals
- in the denominator raised to their stoichiometric coefficient
- on the left and products are on the right
- shown on the left side of an equation and products are shown on the right side
- stronger bonds
### reactive business:
Risk arbitrage
* is an arbitrage
* reactive business.
### real disease:
Internet addiction
* can have a devastating impact on peoples' lives.
* increases the likelihood of virtual adultery, as the table below shows.
* is especially risky in the work environment.
* real disease.<|endoftext|>Real estate
* brings people together from all walks of life.
* can be in the form of a limited partnership or individual properties.
* competitive market.
* complex form of investment.
* cyclical industry characterized by recurring periods of boom and bust.
* dealer's stock in trade.
* family business.
* fast paced industry.
* field where it pays to use the services of a professional
- with varied career opportunities
* fragmented market with no centralized database.
* geographic industry.
* gets more expensive every year, and technology gets cheaper every year.
* has the same benefits as securities.
* holds a special place in American law.
* includes owners, lessors, lessees, agents, and developers of real estate.
* includes rental property and land
- property, land, and second or summer homes
- the buildings and land of our homes and businesses
* is about people
- acquired by exchange, by payment, by a bill of sale, or by taking possession
- also a great way to keep a hedge against inflation
* is an ever-changing market with new issues that affect the marketplace on a daily basis
- industry used to cozy inside deals between friends and partners
- inherently localized commodity
* is an investment and with it comes risk
- that benefits from inflation
- big business in the United States
- collateral for mortgages and a large amoung of financial assets
- controlled by the laws of the state where the real property is located
- for most people their largest single investment
- information arbitrage
* is land and any permanent improvements to that land
- plus permanent man-made additions
- managed by property managers
- more than just selling houses
- one area where the largest chunk of black money is created
* is one of the largest investments people make, both financially and emotionally
- most talked about commodities in the world
* is the fourth investment category, and one in which many people have built wealth
- key cost of physical retailers
* local, personal-service industry.
* major component of household wealth
- piece of a company s assets
* means lots, residence, and income producing property.
* people business.
* personal business
- service business
* team sport.
* tracks the cost of living better than any other form of investment.
* traditional hedge against inflation.
### real forms:
Sculptural form
* appear in all other art disciplines.
* are real forms.
### real life-savers:
Platelet transfusion
* are real life-savers.
* is contraindicated since it is associated with rapid deterioration.
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Real object
* All real objects occupy three-dimensional space.
* Every real object has a colour and a size.
* reflect some of the energy impinging on their surfaces.
+ Stress (mechanics), Stress in one-dimensional bodies: Materials science :: Elasticity (physics) :: Mechanics :: Engineering
* All real objects occupy three-dimensional space. However, if two dimensions are very large or very small compared to the others, the object may be modelled as one-dimensional. This simplifies the mathematical modelling of the object. One-dimensional objects include a piece of wire loaded at the ends and viewed from the side, and a metal sheet loaded on the face and viewed up close and through the cross section.
### real people:
Real witch
* Real Witches are real people.
* are the most dangerous of all living creatures on earth.
* call upon spirits to help bring health and peace to the world.<|endoftext|>Real property
* Real properties are properties.
* consists of land and anything that has been permanently attached to it
- certain kinds of interests in land
- items that are permanently attached to the land
- land, buildings, and natural resources such as water, oil, or minerals
* constitutes sites and buildings connected with the ground by firm foundations.
* encompasses rights with respect to land.
* includes all gifts of real estate
- assets of a fixed nature such as buildings and land
* is all tangible real estate that is fixed, immovable property
- anything that is attached to the home
- coextensive with lands, tenements and hereditaments
- essentially land and all the things that are attached to it
- generally land and all things attached to it
- land and any permanent structures attached to it
* is land and anything attached to the land
- that is attached to it
- generally anything built on land, growing on land, or attached to land
- the attachments to the land, such as buildings
- whatever is erected, growing on, or affixed to the land
- any any permanent structures attached to it
- or real estate
- together with whatever is erected on it or affixed to it
- property which is attached such as land and buildings
* is real estate only
- that the government no longer needs
- estate, and personal property is everything else
- simply real estate a home, farm, or other land
* means property that is fixed or immobile such as land and buildings.
* term used in the law in distinction to personal property.
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Reality
* Every reality has an infinity of aspects or properties.
* Realities are able to dissolve into nonexistence and thus are able to evolve from nonexistence
- constructions that negotiate between the potential and the functional
* Some reality relies on perceptions.
* also exists separately from human beings.
* appears as a process in which evil is being progressively overcome.
* belief system.
* combination of perception and definition.
* confusing, complex dynamic of events, processes, personalities.
* consists of plurality and change, rather than duration and unity.
* construct of our conscious imaginations.
* dense three-dimensional fabric, a kind of spider s web.
* depends only on itself and so is independent of all other things.
* does influence imagination, and vice versa.
* encompasses more than the intellect and rationality.
* equals death, because everything which is real has a beginning and an end.
* exists in more than four dimensions and there are many, many different sexes
- the human mind, and nowhere else
- outside the thoughts of people
- within the force that created reality
* exists, and consciousness exists.
* figment of one's imagination, caught up in the nightmare of the dream of time.
* function of matter.
* hierarchy of accidents ruled by pure chance.
* increases with consciousness.
* is Reality and it impacts individuals and groups
- actuality
- all that is , including a person's subjective view of it
- also a process of mutual transformation
- always the moment of vision before the intellectualization takes place
- an illusion brought through lack of alcohol
* is an illusion caused by an imaginary deficiency
- caffeine deficiency
* is an illusion created by a lack of alcohol
- alcoholic deficiency
- that occurs due to the lack of alcohol
- based on concrete elements and inanimate principles of organization
- both material and spiritual
- comprised of matter and energy evolved to different levels
- concrete and is made up of factual things
- confined to what the five senses can perceive
- constructed with symbols
* is created by individuals as they use symbols
- modern science
- observation
- in the moment, and there are multiple realities
- defined by constants
- diversity in oneness
* is everything that can be perceived
- happens outside of Washington
- experience
- experiential truth, or truth that is realized in our experience
- for people who lack imagination
- immanent, within all form
- in the mind of the perceiver
- intended to be worn by women during sex
* is made by society and is observable
- of objects
- materiality
- more than what can be perceived with the five senses
- objective being or existence
- often just the opposite of what feels safe and comfortable
- perceived as a machine rather than a living organism
- rational process
- seen as an indivisible stream of energy or experience
* is that which is abiding, eternal, and unchangeable
- real and enduring
* is the ability to accept the negatives of the real world
- bond which conjoins hearts
- cause of illumination of mankind
- degree of agreement reached by people
- intersection of creation, redemption, and revelation
- knowledge of verities
- leading cause of stress
- movement of energy itself
- oneness or solidarity of mankind
- outcome of a pre-determined epoch, science, or technique
- polar opposite of vision
- result of how our minds are trained to perceive the world
- spoken or written words and actions of outsiders
* is the sum of all facts but is known one fact at a time
- ideas related to expe- rience that is shared by others
- the laws that govern nature and of the causes from which they flow
- total of what exists
- totality of real things and events
- unity of mankind, conferring everlasting life
- way things actually are
- wind, the sky, mountains, rivers and man made objects
- used for losers
- viewed solely in terms of a human's immediate needs
- what one perceives to be true
* makes senses.
* means what exists, what truely is.
* merges with fiction that was inspired by reality.
* multi-causal, circular phenomenon.
* often follows perception
- takes a backseat to perception
* realm that most abide by.
* requires decisions.
* shows that over half of marriages end in divorce.
* social construction.
* state of mind.
* subjective experience and can be explained
* three-dimensional pachinko game played in randomly varying gravity.
* transcends the three states of waking, dream and deep sleep.
* ultimately is the same for all perception because it created perception in the first place.
* unified and consistant set of misconceptions.
+ Human migration: Migration
* Reality is very different. Though as many new arrivals to the city are unlikely to have much money, they will be unable to buy or rent a house, even if one was available. They will probably have to make a temporary shelter using cheap or wasted materials.
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### reality based:
Color photography
* All color photography is the blending of three basic colors, yellow, magenta and cyan.
* captures gradations of color and tone that are smooth and natural to the eye.
* is reality based.
Augmented reality
* Augmented Reality is where virtual data is superimposed upon a real image.
* enhances the real world with additional displays, images, and pictures.
* is the continuum from reality to virtual reality.
Objective reality
* Objective Reality creates the origins of moral truth.
* has objective, true properties.
* is everything that just simply exists
- extremely important in creating a medium for life
* is the medium and substance of life
- which sorts out problems and creates life
- reality, which is ouside and independant of any individual consciousness
Physical reality
* is as spiritual as our nature
- inseparable from space-time
- the only reality
* projection-a version of consciousness in material form.
Political reality
* derives from economic reality.
* encompasses sin, death, and suffering.
Social reality
* constructs peoples view of the world.
* evolves constantly.
* exists only in connection with the events that create and maintain it.
Virtualized reality
* different beast than virtual reality.
* has significant advantages over virtual reality.
* starts with a real world, rather than creating an artificial model of it.
Realization
* is composing
- musical compositions
- sales
- understanding
* seeks truth.
### really physicists:
Professional astronomer
* Most professional astronomers hold doctorates in astronomy or astrophysics.
* Some professional astronomers have positions.
* appreciate functions.
* are really physicists.
* find aspects.
### really small:
Bumblebee bat
* are really small.
* have a wingspan of five and a half inches.
Rearrangement
* Many rearrangements are detectable by changes in linkage or effects on meiotic products.
* is transcription
### rearrangement:
Chromosomal rearrangement
* can establish postzygote isolation in a single step.
* contribute to speciation in two main ways.
* disrupt meiotic pairing, which can delete or duplicate genes.
* maintain a polymorphic supergene controlling butterfly mimicry.
Genomic rearrangement
* create karyotype diversity.
* define a large region which is non-essential under laboratory conditions.
### reception room:
Parlor
* allow individuals working in private or small groups to convene in an enclosed space.
* are located in buildings
- cities
- houses
- victorian houses
* are used for meetings
- play games
- visitings
* reception room
### recessions:
Economic downturn
* are recessions.
* can have destructive effects on global political stability and military security.
### recessive trait:
Red hair
* can go more on fire or be watered down with copper tones.
* is made by genes.
* recessive trait.
+ Redhead: Hair
* Red hair is made by genes. The gene for red hair is recessive, meaning to be weaker than other genes, like the brown hair gene, for example.
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Recognition
* allows for the presence of kin-specific interactions, like kin altruism.
* begins in utero with an inventory of the tissues of the developing human.
* comes from matching the visual symbol with a memory, or experience, stored in our brain.
* formal declaration by one nation that another exists.
* fuels self-esteem, which fosters strong individuals.
* is acceptance
- an energizing activity that creates a flow of positive energy between people
- appointments
- approval
- diplomacies
- one of the highest forms of motivation causing employees to put out effort
* is the capability of a system to recognize attacks or the probing that precedes attacks
- cultural acceptance of value of a work
- positive assessment that the detected object is human, animal, or something else
* means being able to identify as well as detect a particular pattern of stimulation.
* powerful tool that influences behavior, attitude and culture.
* process where certain studied information is identified within a group of items.
* refers to the legitimacy granted by the participants to the other's claims and status.
* sequences for many enzymes are the same on both strands.
+ Bird, Behaviour, Communication, Songbirds:
* Songbirds are passerines, many of which have beautiful melodic songs. Songs have different functions. Danger cries are different from territorial songs, and mating calls are a third type. Fledgling may also have different calls from adults. Recognition calls for partners are quite common.
### recorded orally:
Aboriginal history
* Aboriginal histories predate Canadian history by thousands of years.
* is recorded orally.
### recovery:
Recapture
* are recovery
- seizures
* is recovery
Rescue
* are bands
- tv shows
* is an all volunteer, nonprofit rescue and placement organization
- undertaking that can only succeed with everyone's participation
* means responsibility for the animal's maintenance and welfare.
* program that takes in dogs that have lost their home for any number of reasons.
* role playing game system.
* volunteer activity and rescue people commit countless hours helping homeless dogs.
### recovery | rescue:
Mountain rescue
* is one of the most visible types of voluntary support from the public
- something that requires talent that is acquired over years
* small part of the life of rangers and deputies.
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### recovery | rescue:
Redemption
* also means deliverance from the power of sin.
* always means the payment of a price to secure release.
* are events
- exchanges
- located in confessions
- purchases
- rescues
* basically means to save or deliver by payment of a price.
* can be as quick as the blink of an eye.
* collectable trading card game based on the Bible
- of Biblical adventures for two or more players
* has a past, a present, and a future
- an eschatological aspect also which transcends time
* includes the gradual removal of the effects of sin on our minds.
* involves the payment of a price.
* is about being redeemed
- an outgrowth rather than a reversal of suffering
- deliverance by the payment of a price
- difficult to the self purposed soul
- for all creation
- from the pit of sin
- made possible only by the blood of the sacrifice
- salvation, deliverance, and rescue
- still through suffering
* is the basis of justification
- freeing of a man from misery by the intervention of a ransom, as appeareth
- message of the shofar permeating completely
- promise for all people
* is to restore and recover what was previously determined by creation
- return to that Eden-like state of nature before man's corruption of Earth
- serve and to sacrifice one s own interests for the benefit of others
* leads to revelation, both of which lead to worship.
* lies through faith and obedience.
* marks the new beginning of life.
* means the paying of the price
- restoration of true selfhood and the dignity of true self-possession
- there future
* means to buy back from under the penalty of law
- out of slavery
* mix between role playing, action, narrative and puzzle solving.
* refers to the act of buying something or someone back from what they've been sold into.
* speaks of the salvation of mankind.
* very important and prominent theme in the Scriptures.
### recursive process:
Educational reform
* is key to reducing income inequality in the long term
- slower when women are left behind
* recursive process.
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Recycling
* More recycling means less waste, which saves money, time, and earth resources.
* Try to reduce the amount of material thrown out by recycling.
* also allows some communities to reduce waste disposal costs
- benefits schools
- can provide a source of raw materials that have a monetary value
- conserves and protects other natural resources
* also conserves natural resources and energy
- resources and reduces waste
- creates jobs and whole industries
- decreases the use of natural resources and energy
- diverts waste from landfills
- encourgages individual awareness and responsibility for the refuse product
- has aesthetic value, reducing the amount of litter in communities
* also helps to conserve our natural resources
- reduce water and air pollution
- includes the recovery of energy from hazardous wastes
* also produces cleaner leachate, which is cheaper to treat and dispose of
- income from the sale of recycled materials
* also reduces energy consumption and air pollution
- manufacturing pollutants and saves energy
- pollution risks by keeping materials out of disposal facilities
* also reduces the amount of natural resources that are mined to produce glass
- reliance upon landfill sites and the burying of rubbish in the ground
- results in energy savings and reductions in air emissions
* also saves energy and reduces pollution
- costs and water usage
- on natural resources
- trees
- takes place outside the bodies of reef organisms
* are good things
- human activities
- processes
* avoids the cost of disposing of materials in landfills.
* burden on families.
* can also be a source of new jobs and economic development
- earn cash for individuals and organizations who collect recyclables
- help protect the biosphere and sustain humanity by reducing atmospheric carbon
- reduce air pollution
- be a cost-effective way to wastewater
* can be an effective way to reduce costs associated with solid waste disposal
- important means of ensuring ecological sustainability
* can create jobs, cut pollution, save natural resources and save energy
- only have a positive environmental impact if there market for recycled goods
- provide better overall energy savings than incineration
* can reduce the amount of material going into landfills
- risk of future financial liability associated with land disposal
* can save money and create jobs
- for manufacturers and their customers
* causes pollution.
* choice for everyone.
* conserves natural resources such as timer, water, and minerals
* conserves valuable natural resources, like trees and minerals
* creates at least ten times more jobs than landfills
- jobs and promotes economic development
- less pollution than does production from raw materials
* cuts down on waste produced by processing raw materials into usable forms.
* decreases emissions of greenhouse gases that contribute to global climate change.
* distinctive program where the entire community works together for a common cause.
* does help to save the homes of all the plants, creatures and humans.
* great way to keep the Earth clean and learn what trash is all about.
* growing industry.
* happens much like manufacturing.
* harnesses the nutrients and organic matter present in biosolids.
* has environmental, economic and social advantages
- great potential for reducing pollution
- many environmental benefits
* helps conserve our limited natural resources utilized in manufacturing products
- curb global warming
* helps keep America clean
- antifreeze from being improperly dumped into waterways or on land
- reusable materials out of our landfills
- waste disposal costs low
* helps preserve our environment
- raw materials such as wood and metal, and helps to reduce pollution
- protect the environment
- sustain the environment for future generations
* helps the environment by reducing waste going to landfill and incineration
- in a number of ways
* helps to avoid disposal costs
- conserve natural resources, reduce litter and save landfill space
- generate new industries and in turn help stimulate the economy
* involves creating new products out of old ones, treating waste as a resource
- producing new commodities out of discarded materials
* is also a source, mostly from scrapped catalytic converters
- important in reducing waste
- responsible business citizenship
* is an age-old process
- ancient practice in the Arctic
* is an effective way to manage waste materials once they have been generated
- reduce waste, raise funds and clean the environment
- environmental issue
- every day way to save the environment for our children
- extremely effective means of lowering the waste problems in the world
* is an important part of keeping our environment clean
- strategy in minimizing waste
- tool in preserving our natural resources for future generations
- waste management tool for a number of reasons
- increasingly important part of the business world
* is another area in which a wide variety of industries can save energy
- popular strategy for reducing packaging waste
- beneficial when natural resources are truly saved
- by no means the only source of environmental jobs
- discussed in detail as an effective method to handle solid waste
- essential for the environment and all the little creatures that live in it
- every individual's responsibility
- everyone's promise for the future of our planet
- garbage
- good for the environment because it reuses our natural resources
* is important because fewer raw materials are used and natural resources are saved
- many materials take hundreds of years to degrade
- just one component of sustainability
- more than the separation and collection of materials and products
- often a fiscally responsible decision for businesses
- old news in the pulp and paper industry
* is one important way to conserve precious natural resources
- method of reducing our solid waste going to landfill
- of many strategies for changing how businesses create value from resources
* is one of the answers, the cures to water pollution
- best ways to cut down on the amount of waste that goes unused in our world
- most basic ways to have a positive impact on the waste stream
- ways to solve the waste problem
- way that people can help conserve, or save, our natural resources
* is one way to divert waste from disposal
* is one way to reduce municipal waste
- trash, but an even better way is to use less stuff
- only one of several ways to manage solid waste effectively
- popular for the Sydney Olympics
- re-processing used materials to create new items
- responsible resource management
- simply the process of reusing the items from which utility can still be derived
- something that everyone can do in one way or another
- sometimes a synonym for reusing, especially reusing things in new ways
- still nascent in the world, as are environment-friendly products
* is the best way to dispose of an empty household aerosol container
- collection and reprocessing of materials into new, usable products
- environmental area where most airlines start
- law in Philadelphia
- most common form of paper preservation
* is the process by which a material is retrieved from a product that is no longer used
- particles are returned to a plasma
- in which waste is returned to raw material and made into new products
* is the process of making new products out of used materials
- repeatedly putting materials through the consumption process
- which reduces the waste on our planet
- processing of an existing item into a raw material for use in a new product
- recovery of the toxic chemical such that it is made available for further use
- reuse of material
* is the second level of waste management
- priority of mercury pollution prevention
- solution to the problems caused by throw-away products
- use of recovered materials in the manufacturing of a product
- way of the future
- truly a cause in which every individual makes a great difference
* keeps our environment clean, protects our natural resources, and saves tax dollars
- trash out of incinerators and reduces emissions associated with burning solid waste
- waste out of landfills and saves natural resources, energy and water
* law, a law of nature.
* lowers the use of toxic chemicals.
* major part of efforts to protect the environment by reducing waste disposal.
* means cleaning the potential waste so that the product is usable again
- giving a new cycle of life to a product
- to use, reuse, or reclaim a material
- turning used products into new
* multifaceted issue of reducing, pre-cycling, reusing, recycling and rebuying.
* nearly effortless way to make an impact on Earth s health.
* occurs on trash pickup day.
* often saves energy and natural resources.
* preserves the environment, reduces energy consumption, and protects our natural resources
- valuable resources, protects the environment, and reduces costs
* prevents pollution and helps conserve precious natural resources
- the depletion of valuable natural resources
* promotes the use of materials for some other beneficial purpose.
* protects the environment while creating jobs and competitive manufacturing industries
- wildlife habitat and biodiversity
* provides a raw material they can use to start their own industry.
* reduces air and water pollution because the recycling process requires less energy
- greenhouse gases that cause global warming
- our demand on natural resources
* reduces pollution and conserves a nonrenewable resource
- by decreasing the amount of trash that is burned or buried
- solid waste and saves resources
* reduces the amount of garbage produced
- consumption of virgin materials, and saves energy and landfill space
- cost of disposal and saves on landfill space
- risks of air and water pollution from manufacturing processes
* refers to the process by which waste is remanufactured into a new product.
* removes a substance from a waste and returns it to productive use.
* requires much less energy and therefore helps to preserve natural resources.
* resembles also the course of life.
* saves Recycling saves money and resources.
* saves clean air and clean water
- energy and cuts down on the amount of methane emitted from landfills
* saves energy and natural resources by reusing materials
- resources, creates jobs and saves landfill space
- raw materials, and reduces pollution
- reducing our dependence on fossil fuels such as coal and oil
* saves energy, conserves natural resources and helps protect the environment
- materials and landfill space
- natural resources and landfill space
- reduces air and water pollution and limits mining and manufacturing waste
- resources, and landfill space
- therefore reducing acid rain, air pollution, and global warming
- thus reducing acid rain, global warming and air pollution
- landfill space, conserves resource, saves energy and saves water
- large amounts of energy
* saves money and creates jobs
- money, and it protects our environment
* saves money, energy, raw materials and land space, while also reducing pollution
- trees and landfill space
- landfill space and helps conserve our natural resources
- trees, water and energy
* saves natural and non-renewable resources
- resources and euts the energy needed to make new products
* saves resources and energy
- resources, energy and landfill space and reduces air and water pollution
- valuable raw materials, and cuts down waste collection and disposal costs
* solution for the situation, or the refusal of burying products that are dangerous.
* sometimes requires chemicals to clean and reprocess materials for use.
* stems the flow of water pollution.
* substantially reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
* system necessary for environmental sustainability
- of collecting, processing, and remanufacturing materials into new products
* takes energy, materials, money and time
- trash and processes it in some way to make a useful product
* township service at a cost to each household.
* typically addresses disposable, nondurable products.
* used motor oil decreases our dependency on natural resources and conserves energy.
* used oil extends the life of a non-renewable natural resource
- is good for the environment and the economy
* uses less energy.
* usually uses less energy than manufacturing from virgin material.
* valid waste management strategy for high-volume disposable goods.
* vital component in ensuring environment health for generations to come.
* way of keeping the energy in the network.
* way of life and a state of mind
- that everyone can share in preserving the environment
- to save the Earth's natural resources
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{
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### recycling:
Battery recycling
* eliminates risks of chemical releases and liability.
* is also an important source of lead exposures.
Paper recycling
* is the kind of business that snowballs with visibility and wordofmouth advertising.
* reduces air and water pollution.
Water recycling
* allows water managers to match water quality to specific reuse applications.
* can decrease diversion of freshwater from sensitive ecosystems
- reduce and prevent pollution
* critical element for managing our water resources.
* decreases discharge to sensitive water bodies.
* is the recycling of most concern.
* key strategy for managing our water resources efficiently and sustainably.
* provides urban water with a second useful life.
### red liquid:
Sulfur dichloride
* red liquid.
+ Sulfur dichloride, Properties: Sulfur compounds :: Chlorine compounds
* Sulfur dichloride is a red liquid. It has a strong odor. It is a common sulfur chloride. It reacts with water to make hydrochloric acid and sulfur dioxide. When it is old, it might have some chlorine in it. It reacts with fluorides to make sulfur tetrafluoride.
Redistribution
* happens as they share their skills and empower others to take charge of their lives.
* is an important goal in Sweden s pension policy
- distribution
- for everyone who needs land
- one of the central tenets of the welfare state, and of socialism
- pursuant to group rights expressed in something called entitlement
### reduced:
Neurotransmitter release
* involves the process of endocytosis.
* is reduced
- the most basic mechanism underlying neural function
### refinings:
Petroleum refining
* are refinings.
* is the largest industrial user of energy
- unique among manufacturing industries from an energy stand-point
Reflexivity
* formal property of some genetic sequences.
* is something directed toward oneself.
* is the ethnographer of the text
- turning back of an action onto the actor
* means that self-awareness is part of the environment.
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{
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Refraction
* More refraction means the more spreading out of light and so they appear larger.
* Most refraction causes beams
- depends on thickness
- involves light.
* Examples of waves include sound waves and light waves. Refraction is seen most often when a wave passes from one medium to a different medium. Different types of medium include air and water. When a wave passes from one medium to another medium, the wave will change its speed and its direction. For example, when a light wave travels through air and then passes through water, the wave's speed will slow down and it will change direction
* also causes illusions
- some areas to be more prone to bigger waves than others
* appears to bend the float where it is visible beneath the water.
- some light waves to bend and pass through the side walls
* change in direction of a wave because of a change in propagation speed
- wave direction when waves pass from one medium into another
* changes the direction of the ray.
* depends on layers to increase in velocity with depth
* function of the observed pressure and temperature.
* is also the operative process controlling profiled rear projection surfaces
- caused by sound entering the new medium at an angle
* is caused by the change in speed experienced by a wave when it changes medium
- difference in the speed of the radiation in the two media
- two effects
- dependent on the speed at which light travels
- due to the scattering of the light by the atoms that make up the material
- nothing but bending of the light rays
- performed on almost all complete eye exams
* is the bending of a light ray as it passes from one medium to another
- ray of light
* is the bending of light as it moves from one material to another
- it moves through different media
- it passes from one medium to another of different density
- it passes through an object
- it passes through two materials of different density
- cause by a speed change when it passes through different media
- rays upon passing from one transparent medium to another
- when it passes from one medium to another
- sound waves from their original path
- which is caused by changing speed
- change of direction that occurs when the medium changes
- effect on a wave when there are changes in a medium
- process by which the eye bends light to form an image on the retina
- when light passes through the object but is bent in the process
* link to a web page discussing refraction.
* occurs as light passes through small lenses seated at distant intervals
- at surfaces or interfaces just as reflection does
- because waves travel at different velocities in different media
- four times, as the light intersects the vessel s inner and outer surfaces
- when a light ray changes mediums
* occurs when light enters the eye through the cornea and lens
- waves are bent by shallow water
* often continue to change through the teenage years into the early twenties.
* physical phenomenon
* refers to how a lens, such as a cornea, bends light rays.
* refers to the ability of the eye to focus light
- bending or deflection of the light rays
- deflection of a ray of light as it enters the eye
- way the cornea and lens bend light rays to focus properly on the retina<|endoftext|>### refraction:
Atmospheric refraction
* bends light rays passing along the earth's surface toward the earth
- the rays so that they can pass over the horizon
* can change signal timing, causing position errors.
* causes the Sun to appear to rise earlier that it actually does
- sun to become slightly flattened in shape
* depends on the zenithal angle and occurs for all instruments.
* is caused by the varying density of air with height
- especially notable on cold clear nights
* makes everything seem slightly higher in the sky than it actually is
- the elevation angles of distant peaks slightly larger
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### refractors:
Camera lense
* Most camera lenses are like a four by six picture frame
- have an auxiliary infrared focusing mark
* are refractors.
* have coatings to reduce reflections.
* have the iris diaphragm built into the objective lens
- vertical and horizontal angles of view in the same proportions
### refugees:
Asylum seeker
* Many asylum seekers pass from one European country to another before applying for asylum.
* Most asylum seekers come from war-torn countries or are victims of political or ethnic persecution.
* Some asylum seekers are refugees.
### regional anaesthesia:
Caudal anesthesia
* consists of one or more injections near the tailbone.
* is regional anaesthesia
Caudal block
* are popular in some urologic procedures as well as hernia repairs.
* is regional anaesthesia<|endoftext|>### regional anaesthesia:
Epidural
* Causes longer labors with slower progress.
* affect people differently.
* also deprive women of a sense of mastery over labor.
* are also useful in managing the pain but the symptoms usually return
- currently the most frequently administered form of pain relief
- more complicated than intravenous medication
- one of the most popular forms of pain relief
- very safe when performed and managed properly
* can increase the length of labour, especially the pushing stage.
* have side effects that do cause problems for many moms and babys.
* increase the cesarean rate for poor progress even when doctors practice active managment.
* provide effective pain relief for labour with minimal effects on the fetus
- pain relief from the belly down
* seem to prolong labor.
Pudendal block
* are one of the safest forms of pain medication
- regional anesthesia
* numb the lower vagina and perineum.
Spinal
* differ from epidurals in that no catheter is used, so the medication can be given only once.
* is regional anaesthesia
### regional anaesthesia | spinal:
Spinal meninge
* Provide protection to the spinal cord.
* are tough tubes of tissue which protect the chord.<|endoftext|>### regional government:
National government
* All national governments have sovereignty over their biological resources.
* are still the most powerful forces in the global trade
- the most powerful political institutions
* decide on their own policies and positions.
* do have laws to protect endangered orangutans and conserve wildlife parks.
* is regional government.
* play a critical role in curing the crippling effect of organizational inertia.
* seek to regulate smut, levy taxes, proscribe content.
* takes active roles<|endoftext|>### registered nurses:
Nurse midwife
* Many nurse midwives deliver in hospitals and practice along side an obstetrician.
* Most nurse midwifes treat pregnant women
- work in centers
* Nurse midwives are RNs with advanced education in prenatal, labor and delivery, and postpartum care
- believe that birth normal, physiologic event that affects the whole family
- combine nursing with midwifery
- do co-manage multiple gestation pregnancies
* Some nurse midwifes have extensive medical trains
* are registered nurses.
* provide care.
### regular glass, tempered:
Bulletproof glass
* Most bulletproof glass is regular glass, tempered.
* varies in thickness from three-quarters of an inch to three inches.
+ Bullet-proof glass: Glass :: Armour
* It is usually made from two or more types of material, one hard and one soft. There must be a clear view through the glass. Bulletproof glass varies in thickness from three-quarters of an inch to three inches.
### regularity:
Evenness
* is regularity
* refers to the share of area among different classes in a reference unit.
Orderliness
* implies freedom from disorder or confusion.
* is regularity
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### rehabilitation:
Physical rehabilitation
* focuses on recovery from the physical effects of surgery or chemotherapy
- trauma of surgery or chemotherapy
* goes some way to supporting young amputees psychologically.
* includes improving strength, range of motion, and endurance.
* is rehabilitation.
Urban renewal
* are reclamation.
* condemns private property for private use.
Relate compound
* Most relate compounds derive from plants.
* Some relate compounds cause diseases
- deter herbivores
Related compound
* are carcinogenic and mutagenic.
* cause severe lung injury if aspirated and mucous membrane injury.
### related malady:
Connoisseurship
* comes from the evaluation and judgment of works of art.
* is taste
* related malady.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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Relationship
* Any relationship involving men and women has some kind of sexual undertone.
* Discuss the drama, ups and downs of human relationships.
* Every relationship is between two people and only two people.
* Leading is all about relationships.
* Most relationships contain a combination of healthy and unhealthy characteristics
- do survive breast cancer
- tend to be binary, but they can be n-ary as well
* Selling focuses on the core seller-buyer relationship.
* Some relationships apply only to feeding and sleeping orders
- are the slow, dark dance of death
- can affect body image in a negative way
- involve co-operation between the partners for the benefit of both
- rely heavily on inheritance
* Talk about love, sex, friends and single life
- the state of inter-personal relationships
* appear in birth and marriage records and sometimes in probate calendars.
* are a kind of property defined between two mutable object types
- mix of reality and perception
- part of the adult world, but relationships are all the world to a child
- straitjacket that keep others bound
* are about commitment
- giving and taking
- alchemical vessels of transformation
- all about sharing
- also a recurring theme on Luxuria
- associations between the instances of one or more of the entities
- at the heart of human experience
* are between antonyms or words that are nearly opposite in meaning
- synonyms or words that are nearly the same meaning
- central to mathematical understanding
* are central to our lives
- well-being in more ways than one
- commonly a source of fear and pain for many adoptees
- critical to a child's development
- fluid, and variable relationships have replaced rigid long-term ones
- for relating, be they romantic or otherwise
- foundational to human life and living
- important, because they can make or mar our lives
- in the form of synonyms, homonyms, is-a relationships and aggregate relationships
- inherent in all spheres of life
- like mathematics
* are more complex than simply sexual attraction
- important than money or possessions
- like chemistry than physics
- most important in today's world
- often rich and filled with empathy and understanding
- our immune systems
- oxygen for the soul and highly complex
* are part of all aspects of our lives
- and interact with other relationships
- plastic, fluid, and in the process of change
- private matters
- pure gold
- schools for enlightenment
- seen as the purifiers of the consciousness, for no man can be an island
- states
- stronger when individuals take the time to know one another
* are the basis of everything in business
- bridge over which solutions can travel
- building blocks of society
- connections people have with other people
- cornerstone of life
* are the essence of our lives
- processes
- foundation of all learning
- fundamental building blocks of life
- high seas for which no compass has been invented
- links between people and groups
- main event in today's economy
- most important things in life
- primary building blocks of peace
- reality of our faith
- revenue of life and love is the currency of relationships
- treasures of life
- underpinnings that hold the separate elements of civil society together
- usually verbs, gerunds, based on action rather than identity
* are very hard to keep together because people do change over time
- important parts of society
- what businesses are built on, worldwide
- where the heart and soul of a school lie
* based on accurate communication are major components of self-mastery
- unconditional love are true friendships
* begin and develop over time.
* begin, continue and end, and children are born into the world.
* bring happiness and fun most of the time, but they can also bring sad times.
* build after connection, conversation, and control occurs
* built on love involve commitment and trust.
* can also be a specific addiction
- grow into life-long lasting friendships
- animate , breathe life into situations
* can be opportunities to work through any number of patterns
- the source of great joy or great pain
- break up friendships
- make or break a person in recovery
- offset feelings of being alone
- often lead to marriage
- strengthen, weaken, or cause a population to remain the same
* cause a desire to lives.
* change between groups, just as they do in human families
* create special bonds of respect and friendship.
* deal with age, gender, wealth, power, and wisdom.
* deepen when people share time and discoveries with one another.
* define our lives.
* depend on trust, honesty, and ethical behavior.
* describe how clinical findings and diseases are related to one another.
* develop as trust grows
* die because of empathy and distance.
* exist between organisms that feed on more than one species
- stories and life experiences
- on a continuum
- when suppliers and buyers define and meet mutual expectations
* extends to and through people, place and things.
* filled with love and compassion are more likely to last for years.
* flourish when needs are met.
* form the primary avenues through which human sexuality is expressed.
* formed in joy and sorrow remain long after the immediate joy or sorrow has passed.
* go in cycles
- through many more phases than the moon, even within a single month
* happen over a lifetime, and everyone is unique.
* have beginnings and ends
* heal when individuals heal.
* influence a person's identity and their sense of place in the rural community.
* involve creating, maintaining, and ending connections with others in a healthy manner
- emotion
* is central to parenting
- no foreign word in today's world
- said to exist when things are separate
* is the essence of caring and personal growth
- space between each partner
* make up the fabric of society.
* occur over time.
* often become more deeply valued than material things
- suffer as adverse stress levels result in troublesome behavior
* path to growth and healing.
* reflect sense of self.
* significantly influence subjective time sense in young adulthood.
* suffer when partners ignore their own pleasure.
* take time, work, commitment, and even patience.
* thrive on communication, and wither without it.
* usually have nothing to do with love.
* vary in how any two people function.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### relationship:
Abusive relationship
* Most abusive relationships get worse, rather than better, over time.
* are as old as mankind
- progressive - Abusive relationships get worse over time
* destroy lives everyday.
Bad relationship
* are often fertile breeding grounds for loneliness, rage, and despair.
* happen because of bad habits.
Binary relationship
* involve two entities.
* relate the position of one tree node or text unit element to another.
Causal relationship
* Most causal relationships involving humankind and the environment are extremely complex.
* exist when one event produces another
- variable directly or indirectly influences another
Close relationship
* allows the continual cleansing of sin.
* can be our anchors in the sea of change
- become extension of self
* tend to be directed outside the home, rather than within the family.
Dependent relationship
* can form in opposite and same sex friendships.
* put people in boxes.
Ecological relationship
* are the ways that things in an environment interact with each other.
* help better to describe how they are connected.
* is the relationship between organisms in an ecosystem.
Godly relationship
* are the foundation of a successful family.
* help to build and develop strength in ministry.<|endoftext|>### relationship:
Good relationship
* are the result of creating and reinforcing good habits.
* extend far beyond relationships with people.
* form when the partners share common values, interests, and goals in life.
+ Need: Philosophy :: Psychology
* They are mostly needs for the mind. It is often said that a person needs love, family, and friends. These needs are for personal relationships. They may also be wants. It is true that a life may be better with these things, but some friends can be bad, or bad sometimes. Good relationships can make life very happy. Thinking about a need that is not possible can make a person very unhappy.<|endoftext|>### relationship:
Healthy relationship
* allow talent to thrive.
* are based on trust, respect, communication, honesty, and independence
- between winners who seek answers to problems together
- critical to faith growth
- essential for our psychological health
* can only produce healthy environments.
* enhance the life of both partners.
* involve respect for each other's differences.
* promote healthy behavior, which leads to a healthy and positive self-esteem.
* recognize each person's right to explain themselves.<|endoftext|>### relationship:
Interpersonal relationship
* are an important part of our lives
- at the heart of almost every business, profession, and occupation
- difficult, perhaps fear-inducing
- key in ministering to the needs of men
- major themes in incidents recalled by library users
- of major importance in the overall scheme of things
- the foundation of any organization
* can make or break a leader.
* change, particularly with the opposite sex.
* deteriorate rapidly when others respond with real hostility.
* have a history
- life cycles
Intimate relationship
* are a major commitment of time and energy.
* magnify the desire for erotic spiritual bonding.
* require closeness and moments spent together.
Love relationship
* Every love relationship depends on people spending quality time together.
* equates to pleasure, responsibility.
* go through four stages infatuation, post rapture, discovery and connection.
Monogamous relationship
* Most monogamous relationships end in divorce or break-up due to cheating or jealousy.
* come with specific expectations concerning outside relationships.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### relationship:
Personal relationship
* are a factor in government contracts
- an essential part of any system to discover and act on abuse and neglect
- essential for a fulfilling life
- important for business transactions
- secondary to product performance
* are the blueprint for all other aspects of society
- milestones for doing business in Azerbaijan
* are, like speaking more generally, culturally situated processes.
* follow business relationships.
* helps integration of resources.
* increase the long-term value of each customer.
* play a crucial role in Russian business.
Phylogenetic relationship
* are difficult to analyze.
* help explain why species evolved certain adaptations.
* reveal recombination among isolates of cauliflower mosaic virus.
Positive relationship
* begin with communication, trust and respect.
* lead to positive self image and self worth.<|endoftext|>### relationship:
Relationship marketing
* aims at building a relationship, with the same purpose.
* allows buyers and sellers to work together.
* enables marketers to be in front of their prospects more and more often
- of their prospects more often
* is an investment that goes beyond sale
- identifying food with farmers faces
- key to women-owned businesses
- something that women do successfully every day
- the key to achieving commitment and loyalty from target audiences
* requires knowledge of single consumers.<|endoftext|>### relationship:
Repression
* are control
- defense mechanisms
* divides our beings into conscious and unconscious compartments of awareness.
* is still much a part of everyday life, and so is scarcity of food and medicines.
* is the blocking of unacceptable impulses from consciousness
- vector of revolution
- way of life or actively on the rise throughout Central Asia
- thought to be a major reason for psychological problems
* leads to neuroses, psychoses, psychosomatic disorders, and delinquency.
* often equals self destruction, insanity or death.
* psychologically adaptive response needed to manage our fears.
* pushing into the unconscious of a disturbing feeling.
* refers to unconscious, but motivated, blocking of memories.
### relationship | repression:
Translational repression
* determines a neuronal potential in Drosophila asymmetric cell division.
* regulatory circuit found in the operons encoding ribosomal proteins.
Romantic relationship
* Most romantic relationships fall apart over cheating
- take shape on a level of sexual interest first
* affect everyone.
* are usually better when both partners are equal.
* start with intimacy, small romantic encounters leading to larger ones.
Social relationship
* are an integral part of conversations between communication partners
- diverse in both nature and structure
- extremely important on the individual level
- important in providing the environment for that child to succeed
- long-term and monitored for balance
- one such area of psychic cost
- voluntary
* can be difficult for people with disabilities
- remain intact, based on shared religious practice
Special relationship
* are all about how love is supposed to be.
* develop with the people that swim with dolphins.
Strong relationship
* can only occur when two people deliberately work at it.
* rely on being able to share feelings, knowledge and understanding.
Successful relationship
* are ones in which the two people mesh in the liplock department
- the result of meeting customer's needs
* thrive on love.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
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### relationship:
Symbiotic relationship
* are also characteristic of sea anemones
- classified according to the benefits the symbionts receive
* are common among animals and plants
- organisms living on coral reefs
- and add to the complexity of species interactions
* call into question the notion of individuality.
* demand that one person has power over another.
* evolve over time either individually, or together- it depends on the case.
* pervade all levels of biological systems.
True relationship
* demand individuals devoting themselves to the welfare of other individuals.
* is the key to the meaning of life.
### relative symptom:
Dry hair
* is brittle and breaks easily
- difficult to control after shampoo, looks limp and has ends that are dry and split
- for squids
- fragile hair
* needs the application of oil daily.
* relative symptom.
### relative term:
Lethality
* is associated with inappropriate empirical antibiotic treatment
- morbidity
* refers to the likelihood of death resulting from the act in the immediate or near future.
* reflects the relative ease with which an agent causes death in a susceptible population.
* relative term.
Low power
* eyepieces widen field of view.
* is almost no power
- only effective in the stimulation of ear points and surface points
### relatively inactive metabolically:
Fat tissue
* contains virtually now water.
* has a limited capacity to absorb alcohol.
* is relatively inactive metabolically.
* s purpose is to store calories.
### relatively inexpensive:
Fetal pig
* are relatively inexpensive.
* come from sows who are slaughtered for their meat.
### relatively nontoxic:
Skin cleanser
* Some skin cleansers get their moisturizing power from gentle things like olive oil.
* are relatively nontoxic.
### relatively rapid:
Gastrointestinal absorption
* Some gastrointestinal absorption increases availability.
* is relatively rapid.
### relatively rare condition:
Uveal melanoma
* Most uveal melanomas occur in the choroid.
* contain antigenically specific and non-specific infiltrating lymphocytes.
* has a high mortality rate and responds poorly to existing chemotherapy.
* is the second most common melanoma observed in humans.
* relatively rare condition.
* represent the most common primary intraocular tumor.
Giant centipede
* Some giant centipedes feed on animals
- live in deserts
* are relatively rare.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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Religious group
* All religious groups are cults.
* Many religious groups are also against human genetic manipulation.
* Many religious groups believe in refraining from recreational drugs such as alcohol and tobacco
- that cloning is giving mankind too much power
- endorse abstinence among unmarried people
- exercise unbiblical control over their people
- follow vegetarian diets
- meet weekly for worship, prayer, or study
* Most religious groups accept periodic abstinence.
* Most religious groups have long-standing positions advocating universal health care
- their creeds, confessions of faith, catechisms and church manuals
- teach some truth
* Some religious groups appear to have had considerable success in reducing substance abuse.
* Some religious groups believe gays can be cured through prayer and counseling
- that they face societal pressures within their regions
- count actual members
- deny children the benefits of routine preventive care
- prohibit autopsies
- require self-privation and torture themselves as they do penance
* are by nature conserving communities
- exempt from many civil rights laws
- facilities
- free from taxation
- sect
* can also play an important role in rebuilding society.
* claim that cloning defies the rule or their belief that humans have souls.
* fret about conforming to secular federal rules.
* have a long history of helping the downtrodden
- charity organizations as well
- differing views on the legitimacy of polygyny
* make up the most common type of voluntary association in America.
* operate private radio stations.
* tend to avoid any involvement in internal political affairs.
### religious groups:
Christian organization
* are religious groups.
* have a long history of caring for the poor and needy.
Muslim organization
* can even contribute to legal defense funds.
* have business links with Islamic countries of the Middle East.
### religious holidays:
Jewish holiday
* are religious holidays.
* begin at sundown of the previous day.
* occur on different dates every year.
* tend to include strict fasting followed by feasting.
### religious schools:
Christian school
* are religious schools.
* build partnerships between parents, churches and the school.
* do discriminate on the basis of religious belief.
* strive to educate the whole person in body, mind and spirit.
### religious systems:
Christian denomination
* Many Christian denominations have their own societies
- teach that they alone are the true church
* are religious systems.
### remarkably diverse:
Mitochondrial genome
* Most mitochondrial genomes are circular, although exceptions have been reported.
* are remarkably diverse.
* reflects geographic differences.
### remarks:
Gambit
* are remarks.
* can charge objects with energy to explode on impact.
### remnant:
Supernova remnant
* are among the most spectacular objects in the galaxy
- extremely important for our understanding of our Galaxy
- of interest to many areas of astrophysics
- often visible as diffuse gaseous nebulae usually with a shell-like structure
- the remains of a supernova explosion that exploded a long time ago
* exhibit that mass and energy as it interacts with the surrounding material.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
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### repairings:
Medical treatment
* All medical treatments have some degree of acute and chronic side effects.
* Many medical treatments are effective in the early stages of a disease
- on the market today to help heal acne and even reduce the scarring
* Most medical treatments involve corticosteroids
- dose corticosteroids
- high dose corticosteroids
- reduce mortality
* Some medical treatments involve nerves
- save life
- use therapy
* aims at palliating symptoms and improving the patient's quality of life.
* amounts to keeping up fluid levels.
* are repairings
- unrelated to, or inconsistent with diagnosis
* can prevent progression and cause regrowth
- reduce migraine frequency and severity, or stop the pain once it strikes
* can restore other kinds of hearing loss back to normal
- some kinds of hearing loss back to normal
* come in many shapes and sizes.
* concentrates on drying the infection within the ear.
* consists mostly of anti-anxiety medication and being told to watch stress.
* consists of a number of different drugs used in combination
- agents that decrease the rate of aqueous humor formation
- nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications
* defines the limits of a parent's power to consent.
* depends on the amount of carbon monoxide in the bloodstream
- type of infection and the presence of invasion
* does decrease the time that the disease is contagious.
* focus on helping the individual to battle the disease.
* focuses on the use of braces, splints, hot packs, and exercise.
* includes anti-depressants to correct the chemical imbalance
- prolonged treatment of urinary tract infections
- surgical excision and in some cases radiation therapy
- the taking of thyroxine from animals, or synthroid
* increase cost.
* involves the use of a number of things
- trial and error with a variety of medicines
* is regarded as faithless act in their eyes
- related to the industrial injury
- supportive care, such as mechanical ventilation
- the only way to cure syphilis
- viewed as one means to help achieve good health
* replaces the water and salts lost in the diarrhoea.<|endoftext|>Repellent
* Many repellents perform well against chewing insects.
* Most repellents are also effective against mosquitos and other insects
- consist of a powder that is sprinkled over the desired area
- contain the same active ingredient, only the percentages vary
- function better as taste repellents than to touch or odor repellents
- work for two to three hours under normal conditions
* Some repellents are successful against rabbits
- contain a mixture of tobacco dust and dried blood meal
- work by scent, some by taste
* are applied during either the winter dormant season or summer growing season
- available in both chemical and non-chemical formulas
- compounds which actively repel pests and, thus, deter attack
- easily available and widely used in India
- generally more effective on less preferred plants
- power
- substances that make a mosquito avoid biting people
- the first line of defense against mosquito bites
- very useful in protecting against mosquito bites
- worthless against biting flies
* can be water, oil, or alcohol based.
* containing the bittering agent thiram also work.
* make protected plants distasteful to jackrabbits.
* offer considerable protection if applied to clothing and exposed skin.
* provide effective deer control when they are regularly applied to vegetation
- some protection against biting flies
* signalling from slit requires the Leucine Rich Region.
* simply smell bad.
* ward off animals based on taste and smell.
* work as long as the home being treated is surrounded by the chemical barrier.
* work best if applied before the deer develop a routine feeding pattern
- when they move in the wind
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### repellent:
Mosquito repellent
* are of limited use on horses, but are recommended for human use
- very effective
* is used to flush weevils out from between the florets for more accurate scouting.<|endoftext|>Repetition
* also can contribute to movement and rhythm in a work of art.
* are the number of times a weight is lifted in each set.
* binding process even with oneself.
* fundamental principle of learning.
* is an important and integral part of drumming
- element of minimalism
- occurrence
- another way of inducing an altered or trance state
- continuance
- fundamental to all learning
- how children learn a language
* is important as a child learns to read, and it boosts the child's memory skills
- to stimulate memory and help retention
- one of the ways they learn
- part of oral tradition
- stresses for all ages of tree climbers
* is the basis of programmed learning
- best way for the brain to retain information
- means of passing through
* is the mother of all learning
- name of the game for learning and play
- nearest form of death, for only in death are all things repeating
- only form of permanence that nature can achieve
- parent of learning
- physical basis for idealism, causation, logic, and mathematics
- purposeful re-use of a word, phrase, image or sound, and is fundamental to poetry
- soul of redundancy
- used extensively at multiple levels in pop music
- very important in learning dance and other movements
- what helps young minds grow and learn
* key factor in young children.
* life line of computational mathematics.
* plays an important role in any theory of language learning.
* regularly channels the mind in a specific direction, thus ingraining habits of thought.
* way of learning basic elements of anything, including worship.<|endoftext|>### repetition:
Iteration
* are processes
- repetition
* general-purpose mechanism for traversing the items in a list.
* graphical iteration of a quadratic paramerized curve.
* is important in many areas of mathematics.
* is one of the most common methods to study chaos
- type of loop , which very important structure in computer science
* is the process of taking the output of a function and plugging it back into the input
- repeated application of a transformation
- technical term for a repetition , either of data objects or of actions
* means moving a unit of measure repeatedly while marking the beginning and ending points
- to repeat a process over and over again
* synonym for looping.<|endoftext|>### repetition:
Recurrence
* are common after patients discontinue drug treatment
- and can be triggered by stress, sun exposure, illness, and menstruation
- due to the difficulty of complete surgical excision
- repeats
- sometimes related to emotional, physical or health stresses
* can and do happen, even for people who have normal immune systems
- lead to neurologically devastating outcomes
* develop mainly in the case of immature teratomas.
* following surgery major problem and often is the ultimate cause of death.
* is common because the fungi can survive indefinitely on the skin
- with all forms of treatment
- common, but at puberty, the papillomas usually disappear on their own
- part of the symptomology
- repetition
- the sounding of memory in air
* occur when the virus inside the nerve cell is re-activated.
* refers to a cancer coming back after it has been treated.
### repetition | recurrence:
Local recurrence
* are more common in rectal cancers than in colon cancers
- the growth of cancerous cells in the original site
* is observed more frequently for metastases than for hepatocellular carcinoma
- thought to be related to incomplete resection of the tumor
* major problem after surgery for rectal cancer.
Regional recurrence
* is in the lymph nodes near the site.
* occurs in the lymph nodes near the site of origin.
|
{
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}
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### repetition:
Reiteration
* is repetition
* seems to always precede the generation of complex images by the brain.<|endoftext|>Representation
* are activities
- bodies
- content
- cooperation
- creations
- rights
- statements
* central issue in cognitive science.
* colonize the mind and the imagination.
* is central to the study of mathematics
- inherited by our cartesian, and abstract traditions in philosophy
- like language to children
- pervasive in algebra
* is representation of similarities or relational qualities
* is the conceptual core of an information system
- essence of language
- what makes human behavior uniquely flexible in the animal kingdom
- when a painting looks somewhat like an object or a scene
* refers to the consistent visual language that supports that architecture.
### representation:
Audiogram
* are one of the tools health care providers use to identify a hearing loss.
* test each ear to determine an employee's hearing threshold at specific frequencies.
Data representation
* affects problem-solving strategies.
* is based on multi-dimensional arrays
- presented through the different number systems and character codes
Effigy
* Effigies are common elements in art of the dead.
+ Effigy: Death customs :: Sculpture :: Monuments and memorials
* An 'effigy' is a representation of a specific person, especially in the form of sculpture or some other three-dimensional medium. Effigies are common elements in art of the dead. They are usually made of stone or metal and placed on a tomb.
|
{
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### representation:
Ghost
* Most ghosts appear at dusk, or after dark
- are spirits with unfinished business on earth
- seem to fade away over time
* PC disk cloning and copying utility.
* Some ghosts are children
- said to be friendly and help people who have problems
- women, neither abstract nor pale, their breasts as limp as killed fish.
* Many people believe they have seen ghosts. Others believe they have felt ghosts near them. Often the ghost is said to appear as a feeling of cold and a light or a misty cloud, but sometimes people say they have seen ghosts that look more like people. Sometimes ghosts are said to come in human form. Some ghosts might cause fear in the person who sees them, by being seen suddenly. Some ghosts are said to be friendly and help people who have problems.
* are said to form right after they die, or even centuries later. Many people make up stories or urban legends. Many try to prove the existence of these paranormal creatures with special technology such as heat sensors. They also make TV shows dedicated to proving the existence of ghosts. They often investigate cases where a person has seen one or visit a place of sighting
* also arise when seismograms are recorded in a shallow borehole.
* appear in cold damp environments traditionally.
* are almost everywhere in one form or another
- angels without halos
- apparition
- believed to wander around almost exclusively during night-time
- created by death
- delusion
- everywhere and they are people without physical bodies
- lamps which find external sources of power
* are located in attics
- cellars
- cemeteries
- never average citizens who died peacefully
* are people without bodies, complete with their attitudes, personalities and emotions
- shadowy silent figures and no one has ever been able to prove that they exist
- simply the product of self hypnosis
- singles
- souls
- stereotypical villains for people in European derived cultures
- still present in Hawaii today
* are the products of over-active imaginations
- spiritual remains of living people
* are, by most commonly accepted definitions, unsettled beings.
* begin walking at night.
* can be eccentric, manifesting for some people and snubbing others
- pass through solid objects
* count off as both a human and a vampire.
* crabs deeper than the width of a man's hand also are safe from tires.
* fish often with moons.
* generally have more iridescence than normal.
* have the ability to drain fully charged instruments.
* is psychically sensitive, and can tell that something is about to happen
- used to backup and restore computers
* live in kids' bedrooms.
* often haunt a location or someone living, and they sometimes appear as a warning
- show themselves to humans in a form that the human remembers
* only come out when it's dark.
* present themselves in many forms.
* represent the fear and fascination of death and what comes after.<|endoftext|>### representation | ghost:
Poltergeist
* are ghosts
- often the effect of a female teenager who is enduring stress
- one type of spirit who are believed to throw things around rooms or make noises
- people who died without getting laid
- random energy psychokinetically generated by a living person
- roller coasters
* are said to be invisible
- bother only one person at a time
* can haunt locations or individuals.
* make loud noises and move objects.
* move furniture, bang on walls and doors, and break things to make their presence known.
* slowly dismantle a towering spiral staircase as a person tries to climb it.
* usually begin and end abruptly
- fade as puberty ends
- make noises or move things around
|
{
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}
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### representation:
Idol
* Some idols have feet of silver or gold.
* are deity
- false gods
- giant statues found in mosswart temples
- lifeless and they delude people
- more than gods of wood and stone
- silver, silver and gold, works of man
- social constructions
- stars
* come in various forms, and they can control our lives.
* consist of models, pop stars, television actresses, news anchors and talk-show hosts.
* create the illusion of happiness that is misery and fullness that is emptiness.
* determine our purpose for living.
* exist in abundance today in our own cultural environment.
* have feet of clay.<|endoftext|>### representation:
Interpretation
* are answers to questions people have
- that people have, it is what one wants to see in an image
- explanations of the observed data that form the basis for a hypothesis
- mappings that can be used to translate between different representations
- one way that social groups communicate and impose their world view on others
* base on observations.
* is an art, utilizing many art forms
- which combines many arts
- explanation of the meaning of something
* is revelation based on information
- upon information
* is the attempt to give the meaning of something
- creation of meaning
- meaning of a Biblical passage
- oral restating in one language of what has been said in another language
- process of applying the rules of interpretation to a passage of Scripture
* make senses.
* refers to transferring a message from one language to another verbally.
* require knowledge.
* skill learned through much personal experience and self-discipline
- that improves with training and practice
* type of storytelling.
* yield high values
- negative values
+ Cambrian explosion, Key issues: Evolutionary biology :: Fossils :: Cambrian
* Interpretation is difficult due to a limited supply of evidence. The evidence is an incomplete fossil record, and chemical signatures left in Cambrian rocks.
### representation | interpretation:
Abstract interpretation
* language-independent theory for static analysis of programs.
* technique for safely approximating the behaviour of computer programs
- the static analysis of dynamic properties of programs
Eisegesis
* is an interpretation
* refers to the error of reading one's personal bias into the text.
Exegesis
* are interpretations.
* encourages moral excellence by upholding Christian ethics.
* is an interpretation
- to bring out the meaning of something that is difficult to understand
### representation | interpretation | exposition:
Philosophizing
* are exposition.
* creates philosophy.
* critical examination of Weltanschauungs.
* is consummate negativity<|endoftext|>### representation | interpretation:
Statutory interpretation
* matter of law that is fully reviewable on appeal
* question of law and subject to unlimited review
- calling for de novo review
* question of law for the courts to decide
- reviewed de novo
* question of law subject to de novo review on appeal
* question of law subject to review de novo on appeal
* question of law that is also reviewed de novo on appeal
* question of law that is reviewed de novo for error on appeal
- the panel reviews de novo
* question of law which is considered de novo on appeal
- law, which is reviewed de novo on appeal
Knowledge representation
* affects the speed of learning.
* major component of knowledge acquisition.
|
{
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### representation:
Memory
* All memories are reconstructions, whether human or machine.
* Memories also have storage capacities.
* Memories are an important part of one's personality
- different for every single person
- likely to have changed over time
- one of the best legacies that exist after someone loved dies
- repositories of solutions related to the problem being solved
- smells and patterns
- stored diffusely in the brain
- the bubbles of experience that build our souls, as they compact with one another
* Memories can also help cure the depression and loneliness that comes with illness
- be an important influence on children
- exist in the form of mental as well as physical pictures
- fade with time
- fade, but photographs are able to preserve a moment in time forever
- grow with time
- show up as dreams or nightmares
- change with time, particularly horrible memories
- constantly transform themselves into physical reactions
- leave a trace in the brain that gradually fades with time
- often relate only to images of the past
- rise and fall in our consciousness through association
- vary greatly in strength, availability, and association patterns
* More memory is most often the reason why people have purchased new machines
- often the solution to a lot of different things
* Pertaining to the immune system, memory is an active state of immunity to a specific antigen.
* acts as the register of consciousness.
* affects almost every daily activity
- the ability to learn, which neocortical function
- worker performance and stress levels
* aids to promote learning.
* an array of integer values.
* basic component of every personal computer.
* begins at a very young age.
* belongs to the personality of time and sense.
* brings comfort.
* can also paralyze an individual, a church, or any human institution
- play an important role in the judgment process
- practicalize theory and speculation
* cells home to the type of tissue in which they first encountered antigen.
* changes in healthy young and older adults
- normal aging
* cognitive behavior.
* comes in all sorts of shapes, sizes, configurations, speeds and capacities
- some number of megabytes
* complex process that involves much more than the number of things a person can remember
- system of electrochemical processes in the brain
* computer's primary workspace.
* counter game where the aim is to find pairs.
* creative process.
* critical resource in embedded systems.
* dance of chemicals and electricity in the brain.
* defines our reason and our feelings
- the capacity of storing, retrieving, and acting on that knowledge
* delineates the connections that exist between everything that comes to pass in the world.
* depends on all of the senses
- the survival and healthy functioning of the neurons
- upon encoding the data of experience
* divorces Death from the physical world.
* dumps How to generate, decipher, and use memory dump files.
* dynamic property of the brain as a whole rather than of any one specific region.
* exists in the nostrils and the hands as well as in other body parts
- outside of time
* gains as a function of goal-setting and aging.
* game that involves matching pictures
* has stages and is continually changing.
* high-speed internal storage device.
* interleaving doubles the data path through which data flows.
* is ability to store and recall information accurately.
* is an array of integers indexed by the integers
- essential part of our social existence
* is an important cognitive process that helps the observer code and retrieve information
- commodity in the lives of the Biblical people
- component in a notebook's overall performance
- mental skill that can be improved
- part of our lives as human beings
- integral factor in the learning of new tasks and acquisition of new skills
- as deadly as mercury, as poisonous as snakes, fire, smoke, nuclear fission
- basic to thought
- but one application of spectral-spatial holography
- capable of retaining digital information under certain conditions
* is central to human life
- oral history
- chemical and electrical waves that can travel
- cognitive psychologies
- composed of storage cells called bytes
- considered to be dependent upon properly formed brain cell membranes
- critical, both in individuals and in nations
- crucial to the normal functioning of the mind and to the phenomenon of consciousness
- distributed throughout the brain
- divided into spaces
- embodied in tradition
* is enhanced by emotions
- in animals including humans who eat after learning
- faculty
- hardware
- identity
- impossible without consciousness
* is in the body, in the sinews of the flesh
- muscles
- intangibles
- involved in every aspect of our lives
- just the refiring of established patterns of neurons
* is located in computers
- pantries
* is measured in bits
- terms of megabytes or Mb
- words or Mb
- memory devices
- most often measured in megabytes, a megabyte is one million bytes
- no more than a reaction to a repeated stimulus
- obviously crucial in language learning
* is one of the most important components in a computer
- remarkable and powerful features of human beings
- part of computers
- perhaps the most important single component of consciousness, yet the most evasive
- recollection
- something that needs to be fostered
- stimulated by movement and by smell
- storage of information
- stored in auditory, visual and spatial modalities
* is the ability to consciously recollect past knowledge or experience
- remember information, experiences and people
* is the basis for knowing
- of our identity and the possibility of our future
- big thing with computers
- capacity to glue the world together
- computers work place, the place where all activity happens
- core of history, and shared memories constitute the core of a common national past
- end point of the process and refers to the actual storage of the information
- enduring sensation that remains after swallowing
- field-notes in the realm of thought
- gift that allows every good old day to live forever
- holding on to that which has been known
- localized storage of information
- long term storage in the brain of external or internal experiences
- most expensive component of a handheld computer
- perception that one has perceived
* is the place where all of the information that the CPU works with directly is stored
- programs are stored and and where they live as they are running
- power to gather roses in the winter
- process of reproducing what has been learned
- reproduction of the same vibrations, whether in- duced in the usual or some other way
* is the retention or storage of information and the ability to recall it when needed
- soul of reality
- source of identity
- support of intelligence
- temporary workspace that the processor uses to store and manipulate information
- traction that allows our minds to hold the road
* is the treasure and guardian of all things
- very essence of being human
- thought, or a state of awareness, which exists at the present
* is used for functions
- storing both instructions to be executed and data
* is used to store both program files and data files while processing information
- the data that represents the input waveform
- when there are no other external memory aids present
- very different in the world of dementia
- what is stored in the mind
- where past and future meet
* key component of intelligence.
* kind of burial
- oxygen
- prayer
- script
* language matching game.
* lives in the cellular structure and the imprint of that memory lives in the energy filed.
* means identity, memory as in own, unedited memory
- of salvation
* occurs in the entire brain.
* often blurs time
- survives massive brain damage, even the removal of an entire cerebral hemisphere
* plays a subsidiary but important role in perception
- an important part with imagination
* powerful capacity.
* process that depends crucially on forgetting.
* processes in media effects.
* refers to retention of certain items of information
- the computers capacity for storing information while that information is processed
* resides simultaneously everywhere and nowhere in the brain.
* reverse movement of consciousness.
* seems to reside in strengthening the connections among certain brain cells.
* selection of images others printed indellibly on the brain
* sometimes offers up the past as a living, dimensional, sensory presence.
* sustains both the knowing of what can be understood and the understanding of what is known.
* thrives on stimulation.
* vital ingredient to contentment in the Christian life
- link, since dreams happen late at night during deep phases of sleep
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### representation | memory:
Auditory memory
* is the ability to remember sounds, symbols and words.
* refers to the learner's ability to store and recall what has been heard.
Cellular memory
* holds patterns for disease and wellness.
* lives within polarity and consists of fear based programs.<|endoftext|>### representation | memory:
Computer memory
* All computer memory forgets everything it holds when power to it is shut off.
* Some computer memory is part of computers
- laptops
* consists of a sequence of storage cells.
* gets bigger every year.
* grows by adding computer chips.
* is computer hardware
* is divided into locations called bytes
- many cells
- two parts, the operand memory and instruction memory
- information
- just like our memory
- lists
- made up of many locations, each holding one 'bit' of data
- measured in bytes
- used as an intermediate store
* sequence of bytes.
* storage device
* uses electricity to store the data , hard disks use magnetism.
+ Cache, The difference between buffer and cache: Computer science
* The reason why they are used is different, though. A buffer is a location in memory that is traditionally used because CPU instructions cannot directly address data stored in peripheral devices. Computer memory is used as an intermediate store.
+ RAID, Introduction, Reading and writing data: Storage devices
* In the computer, data is organised in the form of bits and bytes. Computer memory uses electricity to store the data, hard disks use magnetism. Therefore when data is 'written' on a disk, the electric signal is converted into a magnetic one.
Corporate memory
* goes beyond a single person and lifetime.
* includes all the information, data, and know-how that a company possesses.
* is lost or forgotten.
Declarative memory
* involves facts, while procedural memory involves perceptual-motor processes
- the hippocampus, while procedural memory involves the cerebellum more
* is available to consciousness
- long-term memory in which facts and numbers are stored
* is memory THAT something is the case
- for facts
* is the ability to remember names, faces, telephone numbers, or important events
- memory of facts
Episodic memory
* includes episodes that happen in a person's life, similar to a daily diary.
* involves research about how people remember.
- where children are, in fact, remembering events
* is the ability to remember the details of specific events
- area most likely to worsen with age
* means remembering one's own experiences and semantic memory stores facts.
* represents our memory of events and experiences in a serial form.
* retains personal experiences.
Explicit memory
* appears to encompass different elements of memory.
* applies conscious effort to the storing and recalling of information.
* involves the recall of facts, episodes and ideas.
* is associated with the hippocampus and temporal lobes
- part of declarative memory and is centered on structures in the limbic system
External memory
* is for the long term storage of information.
* refers to permanent storage.
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### representation | memory:
Flash memory
* Flash memories are non-volatile in nature.
* is all solid state so there are no moving parts.
- based on an erasable and programmable memory technology
- non-volatile meaning that no battery is required to retain data
- nonvolatile storage that can be electrically erased and reprogrammed
- often the single most costly component in a digital audio player
- simply non-volatile storage memory
- stored on a computer chip, and can be erased and updated with new information
- the fastest-growing segment of the semiconductor industry
- used in cameras, pagers, cellphones and other devices of that ilk
* is used in cell phones and other gear to store information
- phones, telecommunications and other products
- primarily in wireless and handheld devices
* is used to allow easy upgrades of the firmware to install updated or new protocols
- ensure data retention even when the batteries run out
* nonvolatile memory that can be programmed and erased electrically.
* provides reprogrammable memory for computers, mobile phones, and many other products.
* When power is turned off, RAM loses all its data. Flash can keep its data intact, with no power at all. Flash memory is much slower than RAM or hard drives. But it is great for small electronics because it is small and it has no moving parts.
* type of computer chip.
+ USB flash drive: Storage devices
* Flash memory is a type of computer chip. The first flash drives had 8 megabytes of storage. Each year larger flash drives become available.<|endoftext|>### representation | memory:
Human memory
* Human memories are by nature limited and subjective
- in a constant state of dynamic modification
- very fallible and tend to fade with time
* arises from complementary brain systems that are modified by experience.
* can be, in many circumstances, very accurate.
* is based in scripts and the generalization of scripts
- one of nature's most fascinating phenomena
- prone to elaboration and distortion over the years
- selective and imperfect
* seems to store idea in networks, where many items are linked.
* serves as the repository of human experience.
* works by forming links or associations, between and among schemas.
Immunologic memory
* accounts for immunity, the ability to resist infection by certain pathogens.
* is the basis for immunity to specific antigens and can last for many years.
Immunological memory
* central feature of adaptive immunity and is the basis of vaccination.
* induced by a good vaccine can persist for many years.
* lasts forever.
* means it can quickly ward off attacks from intruders it has defeated before.
* underpins all vaccine strategies.
Main memory
* determines the size of a problem that can be solved on a given machine.
* is the primary bin for holding the instructions and data the processor is using.
Motor memory
* is memory
* separate, very enduring brain system.
Physical memory
* cache for virtual memory.
* is computer memory
- essentially one big list of words
- to reminiscence what the elements of a mixture are to a compound
* refers to storage provided by real devices.
Poor memory
* can mean that medication is missed and appointments forgotten.
* is often the result of poor concentration or trying to do too many things at one time.
Procedural memory
* includes motor skills, associations, puzzle solving skills, and so on.
* involves retention of nondeclarative skills and conditioned responses.
* is memory for HOW to do something.
* profound strength that most all persons with brain injury have retained.
Recall memory
* can also let people down when it comes to the initiation of activity.
* much deeper level of memory.
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### representation | memory:
Shared memory
* Shared memories enable the computers to communicate various informations.
* is the fastest inter-process communication mechanism
- used by shared libraries
* is used for buffering
- chunks of data to be read and written
- reading and writing data buffers
* is used to allow the two to communicate with each other
- store incoming and outgoing packets
* portion of memory that multiple processes can access.
* region of memory that can be accessed by multiple processes.
Texture memory
* controls the total amount of imagery that can be used at one time.
* is used to store textures.
Video memory
* affect how many colors it can show at higher resolutions.
* enhances the ability to view text, photographs, illustrations or even movies.
* is used to store image data for processing by the video adapter.<|endoftext|>### representation | memory:
Virtual memory
* Explain the concept of virtual memory.
* allows programs to use hard disc space to supplement the memory available.
* creature of Windows.
* is even a form of caching
* is the first link in the bridge between disk and processor speeds
- idea that the application 'sees' a 'block of memory' of a given size
- usually much larger than physical memory
* makes it possible to use more memory than is physically in the computer.
* mechanism for getting extra memory.
* provides a means to protect the address space in various ways.
* trick used to expand the total amount of memory available.
+ Virtualization: Computing
* Virtual memory makes it possible to use more memory than is physically in the computer. The computer figures out a way to write contents of certain memory blocks to disk.
* Virtual memory is the idea that the application 'sees' a 'block of memory' of a given size. The application can use this memory as it sees fit. This block of memory is 'virtual' in the sense that it comes from different parts. Some of it may be in the main memory of the computer, but some may also be on disk. The CPU has a special part, called Arithmetic Logic Unit which does some of the translations between application memory and system resources. Modern operating systems also do a part of this work.
Visual memory
* Visual Memory Helps to develop visual concentration and sequential memory skills.
* helps users remember what they learned.
* involves the right side of the brain and verbal the left side.
* is another part of visual perception
- required for spelling and for remembering how to form letters
* requires input of information through visuo-perceptual channels.
Mental image
* are primarily symbolic representations.
* can be quite detailed but they tend to be less detailed than actual perception.
* contain the nonverbal aspects of understanding.
* have hierarchies.
Overlap
* is concurrences
- representations
* occur in the diagnoses of mental illnesses.
Pageant
* are a training ground for the entertainment industry
- ceremony
- recital
* have a way of changing girls' lives.
### representation | pageant:
Beauty pageant
* are big business
- one of the fastest growing industries in the United States
- pageants
* hold a mirror up to average women into which few feel comfortable looking.
Percept
* have hue, brightness and saturation, correspondingly.
* involve sensations and memories whereas concepts involve only memories.
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### representation:
Perception
* All perception is an extroverted operation of consciousness.
* Most perceptions depend on states.
* affects our behaviour and activity.
* are a learned trait
- cognition
- combinations of sensational and ideational elements
- conceptualization
- dynamisms that are always waiting to occur
- everything in the workplace
* are important since people act based on what they believe
- to the individual's, the total species' mental state
- interpretations of sensation
- realities
- sensory inputs
- what people believe and translate their beliefs into behaviors, attitudes and bias
* can define political reality
- determine climate
- often be more important than reality
* change over time.
* clingable phenomenon.
* combination of seeing with memory and imagination.
* controls genes.
* defines reality.
- the context of stimuli
* depends upon consciousness.
* determine actions.
* differs even among living beings
- qualitatively from the physical properties of the stimulus
* enables environmental and social interaction via learning and memory.
* exist at an energy level.
* falls within knowledge by acquaintance.
* function of the body, and therefore represents a limit on awareness.
* generate action.
* has a way of clouding reality
- three levels of complexity
* illustrate experience.
* implies understanding as well as awareness.
* includes patterns.
* interprets the report of sensation, and translates it into a thought, or idea.
* involves all the ways of becoming aware of things, people, happenings, or ideas.
* involves an animal's initial awareness of current
- animal'sinitial awareness of current
- awareness of objects, hence, consciousness
- taking in data from the environment
* is achieved through the human brain.
* is also a main concept, especially how it changes above and blow the water s surface
- important for visual language
- always incomplete because it is limited by our senses and our point of view
* is an active, selective process, influenced by a person's attitude and prior experience
- area of psychology where the links to neuroscience are among the strongest
- awareness of the body position in space
- exemplar of direct contact with something
- as much a function of the perceiver as it is of the thing perceived
* is based on invariants that specify the environment
- the context, or environment, in which a text is read
- borne out of substance and spin
* is everything in life and in the martial arts
- gained only through the eyes
* is how markets work
- one sees with their eyes, based on their own internal make-up
- that information is interpreted, organized, and sometimes misperceived
- important, to individuals
- influenced by set
- made up of either illusion or reality
- modeling
- nascent thought
- of either things or facts
- pattern recognition
- power
* is reality and reality is perception
- in the mind of the beholder
- to markets
- reality, and everyone's perceptions are different
* is reality, reality is perception has long been an advertising maxim
- perception, one in the same
- relative to the observer, but the existence of an objective world is absolute
- restricted mainly to the visual sense
- that interpretation of the experience
* is the ability to take in information via the senses , and process it in some way
- ascertainment of specific objects
- conscious awareness and interpretation of sensations
- creative process
- elaboration, interpretation, and assignment of meaning to sensory experience
- experiences caused by stimulation of thesenses
- faculty of conscious exercise of the senses
- first aspect of behavior
- incoming arc of the organism experiencing feedback loop
- interpretation of sensory input by the brain
- key to everything
- most important part of thinking
- overriding determinant of human behavior
* is the process by which sensory information is interpreted and made meaningful
- of imposing order on the information our sense organs take in
- realization or rememberance of some thing
- result of mindset, learning, and decision
- selection and organization of environmental stimuli
- selection, organization and interpretation of sensory input
- third component of perceptual abilities
- truth
- what is given in experience
- yet another aspect of behaviorism and learning
* key motivator of why people move to a particular community.
* kind of pattern-matching process.
* normally deals with feelings and is based on a point of view.
* occurs the insight into the world of realities and meanings divested of physical matter.
* plays a primary role in the development of cognitive processes.
* probably play a more crucial role in our understanding of the world than intellect.
* processes structure and mechanisms.
* provides sensation and perception with an emphasis on the visual system.
* puts the difference between animals and vegetables.
* question of perspective.
* receiver's understanding of the information the emitter has offered.
* refers to awareness resulting from the normal functioning of the sensory faculties.
* sees through the body's eyes and hears through the body's ears.
* subjective issue and is shaped by many forces.
* then ties into thinking and reasoning.
* trigger reaction
- violent reaction
* wrong way of looking at things.
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### representation | perception:
Auditory perception
* is the ability to interpret and understand what is heard.
* resists the direct pathway.<|endoftext|>### representation | perception:
Background
* Inhaled and systemic glucocorticoids are effective in the treatment of asthma.
* affect life.
* are accompaniments
- fields of primary colors
- graphics that are tiled, or repeated, across the page
- information
- inheritances
- noise
- screens
- the settings in which the cartoon characters are placed
- views
* improve functions
- kidney functions
* includes patterns.
* is heritage
* modeling constructs a reference image representing the background.
* often refers to naturally occurring or uncontaminated levels.
* provide ecological expertise
### representation | perception | background:
Background noise
* are also a major factor of stress.
* can cause problems for the traveling deaf or hearing impaired
- make it harder for people of all ages to remember things
* fact of life for people with normal hearing or hearing difficulty.
* key element in noise pollution.
* particularly big issue in cars and public places where people use cell phones.
Background radiation
* comes from a variety of radioactive sources
- three sources
- primarily from the sun and naturally ocurring radioactive elements
* does exist.
* exists everywhere on earth.
* is that which is naturally and inevitably present in our environment.
Cultural background
* helps to determine one's attitudes toward death.
* is one of the primary sources of identity.
* major influence in how one perceives and reacts to pain.
Distorted perception
* explain impaired judgment.
* occur readily in the media.
Human perception
* All human perception is subject to the lived experience of everyday life.
* operates as an orderly system of progressively abstract bindings.
* remains at a level of a tenth of a second.
Light perception
* is the ability to merely distinguish between light and darkness.
* remains in the right eye.
Negative perception
* affect student performance.
* is woven into the fabric of our society.
Perception of risk
* Perceptions of risk are central to the future of food choice.
* can also change over time and with market conditions.
Public perception
* are a key barometer of governance.
* is important to consumer acceptance of pork products
- often more powerful than reality
* make a big difference in how technology is accepted.
* play an important role in engineering ethics.
Right perception
* consists in seeing the true nature of every substances of the universe.
* is therefore essential for each mind, functioning correctly.
Risk perception
* is largely a product of familiarity, knowledge and sense of personal control.
* matter in predicting behavioral intentions.
* varies between boys and girls.
Sense perception
* becomes the source of knowledge and sense pleasure the goal of life.
* is the ultimate authority in empiricism.
* occurs by way of corpuscles passing from the object to the sense.
Time perception
* is integral to consciousness
- the experience or awareness of the passage of time
* vary from culture to culture and individual to individual.
Visual perception
* are perceptions.
* is an active process
- important role in geometry and upper division mathematics
- essentially an ambiguity-solving process
- posed as statistical inference
- the product of complex interactions between multiple subdivisions of the brain
* plays an important role in the selection of an adequate verbal greeting.
* proceeds more slowly.
Pic
* are important in the event of a serious livestock disease outbreak
- one of the primary ways for individuals to get job training services
* retains a DNA bank of individual animals born in our genetic nucleus herds.
Proportional representation
* are representations.
* makes every vote count, regardless of where one lives.
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### representation:
Propositional representation
* are very important in many domains of cognitive psychology.
* lead to problems that are, in general, computationally intractable.
Puppetry
* Puppetries are art
- dramatization
* can also help the teacher to understand any of the child's behavior problems
- be a very skilled art, and it can play a part in many types of theatre
* combines the different art forms of drama, singing, dancing,music,painting and sculpture.
### representation | puppetry:
Water puppetry
* Vietnamese art dating back to about the twelfth century.
* is an art unique to Vietnam
- performed in a chest-deep pool of water, with the water's surface as a stage
Stereonegative stereotype
* Negative stereotypes can endure and die hard.
* Negative stereotypes cause discrimination
- stigmas
- continue to be part of the reality that indigenous people face
- contribute to people feeling threatened
Stereoracial stereotype
* Many racial stereotypes focus on our sexuality through the use of racist myths.
* Racial stereotypes are still prevalent and in use
- develop in a variety of ways
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### representation:
Stereotype
* Some stereotypes suggest a change in sexuality occurs with aging.
* abound in the Middle East, especially negative stereotypes about Arab people
- when there distance
* also change gradually over time
- come between people and build walls
* also exist for persons from minority groups in the larger society
- specific to the computer world
- work, to some extent, like self-fulfilling prophecy
* appear in other forms.
* are a common form of media representation
- kind of lie and they hurt people's feelings
- negative way to group others
- assumptions made about people based on little actual information
- barriers to good communication and good service
- beliefs that associate groups of people with certain traits
- both dehumanizing, and misleading
- discriminatory in that they take away a person's individuality
- inaccurate generalizations about groups
- labels perhaps, and they create barriers
* are often negative
- rigid little bundles of belief
- one way in which people define the world in a more simplified manner
- overgeneralizations and oversimplifications
- particular types of schemata
- representations
- resistant to change in spite of logic and personal experiences
- sets of beliefs about characteristics attributed to members of a certain group
- stigmatic and discriminatory labels that are placed on people
- the mind's shorthand for dealing with complexities
- unwanted, even if they are intended to be positive
- very damaging to ethnic groups
* attribute to people a set of behaviors and psychological traits.
* can also offer some individuals security and safety.
* can be dangerous when interacting with a specific person from a different culture
- negative or positive
* can lead people to make unfair judgments about individuals and groups
- to low morale and negative feelings
* create boundaries between races.
* easily turn into prejudice and racism.
* exaggerate group characteristics.
* exist because some things are universal
- for every group of people imaginable
* have a controlling function.
* help create boundaries between races.
* influence our attention, recall, and judgments of other people.
* lead to prejudice and unnecessary conflict in people's dealings with others.
* limit children from developing their full potential
- people in how they see themselves and others
* maintain prejudice.
* normally reflect differences between one's own and a different culture.
* occur in every culture, in every nation.
* often go through stages of development
- reflect the differences in socioeconomic status, religion, or dialect
- substitute for knowledge and cross-cultural understanding
* persist with regard to the social roles of women and men.
* promote stigma, and stigma prevents people from seeking treatment.
* rob people of their individuality and lead to narrow-mindedness.
* seem to go along with difference, especially racial differences.
* serve a communicative function
- function, often subconscious
- variety of purposes
* tend to portray men and women in very simplistic ways.
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### representation:
Template
* allow a programmer to create objects like linked lists which are type-safe.
* are a generalization of HTML documents.
* are forms of sorts that guide users through the process of providing information
- used to enter data
- groups of services, designed to work together for common tasks
- models for documents that are used repetitively
- patterns that provide structure
- the building blocks of documents
- ubiquitous in nature and essential in many biological processes
* base on facts
- scientific facts
* have kinds.
* include methods.
* is an example
* provide detail instruction
* save significant development time
* Many templates are based upon it, like.
* are used within pages to provide the same message over and over again. Changes to the look, wording, or style of the message can be done quickly, because templates are made again for the reader when the article loads.
* Some templates automatically place the page where it is used into a category. These categories are not appropriate for pages such as lists, so some templates support a feature to suppress the automatic category
### representative government:
American government
* exists primarily to provide for our national security.
* is representative government.<|endoftext|>### reptiles:
Bearded dragon
* Bearded Dragons have appealing physical features
- tend to be mellow and docile, even in the wild
* are another group of lizards that often tolerate some handling
- from south, central Australia
- mainly insect eaters
- omnivorous lizards, so they require a varied diet of prey and plant foods
- oviparous, which means they produce amniotic eggs
- quite docile animals and make great pets
- rather social animals
* are very hardy reptiles, and they make it fairly clear when they are becoming ill
- susceptible to vitamin A toxicity
* can be long-lived pets if maintained properly.
* come in many colours , like brown , grey , reddish-brown , and even orange.
* have a habit of basking in the sun.
* is reptiles.
* live in the arid, rocky, semi-desert regions and arid open woodlands.
* make excellent pets for reptile enthusiasts
- reptile pets
* reach reproductive age at one to two years of age.
* tend to be very healthy reptiles.
* vary in their personality.
+ Bearded dragon, Description: Reptiles of Australia
* Central bearded dragons can grow to be about 2 feet long. Half of the length of a Bearded Dragon's body is its tail. Females are usually smaller than males. Bearded dragons come in many colours, like brown, grey, reddish-brown, and even orange. They sometimes change colour a little bit when it gets hot or cold. They have special scales that look like spikes on the sides of their body, throats, necks, and heads. These spikes look a little like a beard, and that is where a bearded dragon gets its name. If a bearded dragon is scared, it will flatten its body against the ground, puff out its spiky throat, and open its jaws to make itself look larger. Bearded dragons sometimes open their mouths wide to allow hot air to warm them better when they are lying in the sun.
Savannah monitor
* are reptiles.
* come from a hot, fairly dry climate
- the semi-arid regions of Africa
* have sharp claws, and become very strong.
* undergo a considerable dietary shift when they become adults.
### reptilian paradigm:
Mind control
* comes in many powdery forms.
* involves lies.
* is stronger than family ties
- to intellectual autonomy as cancer is to human health
* leads to physical and verbal control.
* practiced by destructive cults social process involvng large groups of people.
* reptilian paradigm.
Rescue group
* Some rescue groups work with pounds to move dogs to rescues.
* keep adoptable animals until they can be placed in loving, permanent homes.
* rescue their animals from local animal shelters and also take owner-surrendered pets.
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Research
* Most research conducted on reproductive contraceptives is for women
- reports that violence against women escalates during pregnancy
* Most research shows that parents are the number one influence in their child's life
- there decrease of memory with age
* Much research relies on epidemiology, the study of disease in actual human populations
- shows high-fiber foods keep blood pressure down
* Some research addresses the more acute effects that smoking has on performance.
* Some research also indicates that papain helps prevent ulcers
- suggests that it puts women at risk for cervical cancer
- appears to show exposure to dioxins can cause lowering sperm counts
* Some research demonstrates that a compound in saw palmetto has aphrodisiac effects
- soy helps prevent breast cancer but mainly in premenopausal women
- even suggests that calcium plays a role in decreasing weed populations
- examines animals as they relate with one another, as well
- indicates it strengthens the immune system
* Some research indicates that children develop more complex and prolonged play in mixed-age groups
- children's skin is even more sensitive to sun damage that adults
- fathers interact more with their children through play
- insomnia can have a genetic component
- oil can remain in sediments for hundreds of years
- overweight girls have a tendency to reach puberty earlier
- wound dressings actually promote decay in certain situations
- to raise metabolic rates, calorie burning and speeds up fat oxidation
- links physical and chemical changes in the brain to violence
- reports potential dangers to the throat and lungs from smoking cannabis
* Some research shows contact with nature can help reduce stress
- higher calcium intake protects against atherosclerosis in humans and in animals
* Some research shows that boron improves libido
- gooseberries can help lower cholesterol as well
- it does cause hyperactivity and aggressiveness in children
- lower income and lower education levels increase the risk for stroke
- pampered children have a higher chance of becoming alcoholics
- women who take soy supplements have an increased growth of breast cells
* Some research suggests a link between high caffeine levels and birth defects and miscarriages
- meningiomas and the hormone progesterone
- rain gush occurs immediately after a lightning discharge
- bile possesses antimicrobial benefits as well
- can be a risk factor in virtually all human cancers except skin
- pyruvate can also aid in fat loss
* Some research suggests that a Native Mexican diet can reduce the risk of breast cancer
- high-protein diet can enhance dopamine production
- antioxidants can improve performance while others show no benefits
- because disposable diapers are more absorbent they keep babies drier
- beta-sitosterol can help reduce blood cholesterol levels
- emotional support is linked to strengthening the immune system
- ginkgo biloba can help protect the body against altitude sickness
- ginseng can also regulate blood pressure and lower cholesterol levels
- isoflavones are responsible for soy's health properties
- language began with song
- liquids leave the stomach more quickly than solids
- manatees periodically require fresh water
- many men are misdiagnosed under the prostatitis umbrella
- marijuana use is likely to come before use of other drugs
- mirrors frighten woodpeckers
- older persons are more sensitive to temperature extremes
- ozone can also destroy molds and pesticide residue
- people with early onset dementia decline at a faster rate
- phytoestrogens work in complex ways
- regular physical activity can lower the risk of colon cancer
- selenium fights certain types of cancer
- there are two general types of suicidal youth
- zinc can slow the progression of macular degeneration
* Some research supports acupuncture as an effective means of relieving migraine
- predation as a regulating mechanism
* Some researches say morning sickness can be a sign of a healthy pregnancy
- think that REM has a different affect on infants then it does on adults
* also shows that biosolids last longer in the soil than inorganic sources of nitrogen.
* based learning is an important aspect of computer instruction.
* confirms that infants begin learning language during the first six months of life.
* creative process that generates new principles and spawns new technologies.
* field demanding long hours of work.
* focuses on how antibodies kill viruses and the structure of various viral components.
* has also show that anxiety is negatively related to how much individuals enjoy an activity.
* has shown that exercise, a healthy diet and stress management can reduce symptoms
- ozone mixed with acids can be more harmful than ozone alone
- women seek affairs in order to be loved, have a friend, and feel needed
- vaccine use reduces the amount of the virus and the length of viral shedding
* human activity which is mostly presented in a de-humanised way as scholarly papers.
* indicates that dietary fiber plays a major role in health risk reduction
- eating a lot of protein increases the amount of calcium lost in the urine
- genetics are involved in the development of atherosclerosis
- health, endurance, and nutrition all depend upon circulatory fitness
- high levels of blood cholesterol can lead to heart disease
- nutrition can play a significant role in healing and recovery
- smoking contributes to coronary heart disease and some cancers
- the transport of odors is also associated with dust particles or aerosols
* indicates that women lose the most amount of bone in the first seven years after menopause
- with diabetes run a higher risk than men of developing heart disease
* is an area of activity that has a very low level of reported participation
- emphasis in graduate study
- which continues to grow in veterinary medicine
- art, much like painting or photography
- essential part of academic life, especially in the sciences
* is an important aspect of nursing care and health care
- component of the science of psychology
- element of practice of all health professionals
- function in natural resource management
- part of an academic medical practice
- intellectual activity unique to humanity
* is an investigation
- or an inquiry to find something out
- investment in information
- any activity which gathers information on individuals participating in any activity
- basic and applied research
- driven by inquiry, the desire to understand something
- essential to advancements in the treatment of cancer
- hard work which is often carried out in an isolated environment
* is important in all areas of psychology
- to gerontology
- important, especially in the sciences
- itself part of the process of epistemology
- located in universities
- of considerable importance in certain fields, such as science and history
- seen as the subsystem that provides inputs to decisions
* is the act of generating knowledge
- art of seeing what everyone else has seen and doing what no one else has done
- behind the scenes work of medicine
- close study of an area or field to answer questions or prove a hypothesis
- creation, discovery, evaluation, dissemination, and application of new knowledge
- discovery of fundamental new knowledge
- engine that drives the marketplace, especially in high tech areas
* is the foundation of both medical education and clinical care
- the money management industry
- generation of new knowledge through use of the scientific method
- key to solving the mysteries of liver disease
- lifeblood of medicine
- means by which the world's knowledge of agriculture is increased and improved
* is the process of collecting information about a certain subject
- creating a body of information unique to a task
- discovering new knowledge
- gathering facts and evidence about a subject
- going up alleys to see if they are blind
- our civilization uses to build further on our storehouse of knowledge
- whereby the frontiers of knowledge are extended
- term used for the process of knowledge discovery
- unclear on whether testosterone levels increase in women after menopause
- understood as the discovery and exchange of new information and interpretations
- vital to the discipline of psychology
* learning process, a search for truth, an endeavor unique to the human species.
* links the consumption of dairy products to a host of diseases and chronic conditions
- science and practice of nursing
* major activity for many social scientists.
* means any gathering of information from or about human subjects
- through which such knowledge is generated
* plays an important role in improving the care of men with prostate conditions
- society, and journals play an important role in research
* process of discovery anyone enjoys
- exploration and discovery
- inquiry that leads to new knowledge and understanding of the world
- measuring the match between readers and products
- or activity in which knowledge is tested or developed
* provides part of the process by which medicine evaluates and improves itself.
* refers to the process of generating new knowledge.
* related to experiences of child care focuses on cognitive and behavioural outcomes.
* science, and the characteristics of science are systematic, replicable, and public.
* shows behavior is an expression of how children feel about themselves
- diet can have a big impact on men's health
- goats have a genetic tendency to favor certain plants
- owls nest in older trees with branches that provide cover from prey
- people who suffer from depression have hearts that beat faster, even when sleeping
- some increase in blood glucose levels often occurs with age
* shows that a diet high in trans fats is associated with an increased risk of heart disease
- acupuncture causes the body to produce steroids, which decrease inflammation
- approximately one third of people are genetically susceptible to infection
- bacteria plays a central role in the formation of pigment gall stones
- brains can be kept healthy and strong well into old age
- breastfeeding has health benefits for both mother and child
- cats and stoats eat about twice as many birds as they do rabbits or rats
- chocolate contains antioxidants known as flavonoid phenolics
- colds are caused by viruses
- color and light affect humans at conscious and unconscious levels
- colorectal cancer develops gradually from benign polyps
- cortisol, the stress hormone, is elevated in major depression
- donating blood helps rid the body of extra iron
- fatigue during exercise is related to low levels of stored carbohydrate
- few non-pregnant women report taking a vitamin containing folic acid daily
- finances affect the amount of contact between generations
* shows that folic acid reduces homocysteine levels in the blood
- acid, a form of vitamin B, prevents neural tube defects
- glycerol is converted to glucose and is stores as an auxiliary fuel source
- laughter stimulates the movement of blood to the heart and lungs
- levels of glutamine are closely associated with muscle protein synthesis
- lycopenes are the most powerful antioxidant in the carotenoid family
- milk and dairy products have high estrogen levels
- mold can cause allergic reactions similar to hay fever
* shows that most eating disorders started with a diet
- people continue to produce growth hormone well into advanced age
- oxidative stress plays a major role in many health conditions
- oxygen deficiency can be the single greatest cause of disease
* shows that people deprived of sleep have raised glucose levels
- who kill and abuse animals go on to kill or abuse people
- with diabetes mellitus often have higher levels of triglycerides
- persons who control their diabetes have lower chances of having a stroke
- phytonutrients help to maintain a healthy body
- poverty and underdevelopment are major factors in maternal mortality
- proper nutrition can increase the average life span of a dog up to two years
- protein and carbohydrate meals can influence serotonin levels in the body
- sexual orientation exists in everyone at an early age, perhaps even at birth
- smoked marijuana damages the brain, heart, lungs and immune system
- smoking and drinking alcohol both can distort sperm's form
- soy proteins are present in soybean oil and soy lecithin
- sperm counts are reduced in men and imbalances in hormones occur in females
- sugar causes diabetes in animals
* shows that the inner ear is the only sense organ to fully form before birth
- risk of child abuse increases when parents are under extreme stress
- there are gender differences in the ways that men and women communicate
- women are much more likely to be victims of family violence than men
- the major cause of gum disease is plaque
- vitamin E to be a powerful antioxidant, crucial to the maintenance of healthy cells
* social enterprise that makes use of linguistic and cultural tools.
* systematic attempt to provide answers to questions.
* systematic investigation designed to develop or contribute to generalizable knowledge
- which aims to increase the sum of knowledge
* traditionally involves the generation of hypotheses or the empirical testing of hypotheses.
* using medical records is very important to medical science and medical care.
* vehicle for impacting society and culture through advances in knowledge.
* vital component of the scientific nature of social psychology.
* way of addressing ideas and questions that arise in the course of daily practice.
+ Appalachian English: Dialects of English :: Languages of the Americas
* Appalachian English' is a dialect of the English language. It is spoken in the Appalachian Mountains region. Research suggests it is one of the most unique dialects in the United States. Since the 1930s, a lot of research has been done to figure out where the dialect came from. Recent research suggests that Appalachian English developed as a uniquely American dialect as early settlers re-adapted the English language to their unfamiliar frontier environment. This is supported by many similarities between the Appalachian dialect and Colonial American English.
+ Dido and Aeneas, Musical numbers: 17th century operas
* The original manuscript does not exist. Research depends upon the earliest printed copies. Some pieces are believed missing. Sometimes music Purcell composed in the middle 1680s is put into the score to balance the loss. Sometimes the missing music is composed completely afresh in Purcell's style.
+ Ecological genetics: Classical genetics :: Ecology
* Research usually involve a mixture of field and laboratory studies. Samples of natural populations may be taken back to the laboratory for their genetic variation to be analysed. Changes in the populations at different times and places will be noted, and the pattern of mortality in these populations will be studied. Research is often done on insects and other organisms that have short generation times. Taking genetics into the countryside'.
+ Meditation, Buddhist meditation: Buddhism :: Christianity :: Lifestyles
* Buddhist meditation is not just used for spiritual reasons. Research shows that Buddhist meditation lowers stress, anxiety and depression.
+ Nystagmus, Treatments and research: Diseases and disorders of the eye
* There are currently no cures for nystagmus, but UK Nystagmus Network supports and encourages medical and other research into this complex condition. Research is ongoing with a number of universities leading the way.
+ Organometallic chemistry, Uses
* Research is currently underway using organometallic catalysis. The energy crisis has initiated increased interest in more efficient ways of working with the remaining fossil fuels we have left. While many agree that lowering oil dependence is safer for the environment as well as politically wise. Many examples of organometallic research can be found in the petrochemical and pharmaceutical industries. Some current methods of chemical production are wasteful and produce toxic waste, while many organometallic catalysts show promise to change that.
+ Schizophrenia, Outlook: Mental illnesses :: Psychosis
* Research continues on Schizophrenia. This could help with schizophrenia and autism neurological research.
* I agree with Auntof6, some terms cannot have an article in an encyclopedia. Yottie, thanks for your advices, I've already thought to the problem you mentioned, but I considered it practically insignificant, because I'm studying the overall structure of the encyclopedia. Research is very competitive. Anyway, you know surely better than me the rules for writing a good article.
+ Science:
* Research uses the scientific method. Scientific research uses hypotheses based on ideas or earlier knowledge. Then those hypotheses are tested by experiments.
+ Signing Time!: American television series
* Research shows that sign language can help children's learning ability to grow. School-aged children enjoy the benefits of learning a second language.
+ Tickling, Tickling Yourself: Everyday life
* It is believed by many that tickling yourself is very hard and by some that it is nearly impossible. Research shows that the brain notices and senses our movements and actions. This lets the brain prepare itself when we try to tickle ourselves. The unexpected senses are then cancelled by our brain so we don't feel the reaction we would have if someone else tickled us when we least expected it.
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### research:
Nature study
* Nature studies are inquiries.
* is one of the best things in the world for people whose mobility is limited
Opinion poll
* is research
* report that public confidence in the armed forces is at the highest level in years.
* show people are ready for change.
Poll
* Some polls do influence political decision making.
* are an attempt to find out what people think
- counts
- issues to be decided by vote
- parrots
* are part of cows
- horses
- positions
- tops
- used for collect information
* influence policy decisions in government.
* invariably show that women believe that breast cancer is their biggest killer.
### research | research project:
Big science
* are scientific research.
* is the human-genome project.
* research project<|endoftext|>Reserve
* accounting for bad debts for tax purposes is an issue affecting only smaller institutions.
* also allow fish to reach their breeding age
- protect habitat, evolutionary processes and ecological support systems
- serve as reference areas to identify how an unexploited ecosystem functions
* are accumulation
- already-identified mineral deposits from which minerals can be extracted profitably
- always a crucial indicator of any country's economic condition
- citizens who wish to give something back to their community through service
- coal deposits that can be mined using today's mining methods and technology
* are the amount of oil that are identified
- inventory source that is to be depleted from in-ground reservoirs
* can function as an indicator of how well a bank has been managed.
* is propriety
* provide a refuge in which easily caught fishes can grow large enough to reproduce.<|endoftext|>### reserve:
Biosphere reserve
* act as catalysts for both conservation and development.
* are of great importance as elements in the network of ecological monitoring
- representations of undisturbed natural habitats which adjoin populated areas
+ Biosphere Reserve: UNESCO :: Ecology
* It has started a World Network of Biosphere Reserves. The MAB programme built up the World Network of Biosphere Reserves since 1971. Biosphere reserves exchange knowledge and experiences on new ideas for sustainable development. Biosphere reserves are areas that are used to develop new ways of doing things, test these ways and share the results. The aim is to get a balanced relationship between mankind and nature.
Gold reserve
* are important in giving a country economic and monetary independence.
* connote security, independence, confidence and value.<|endoftext|>### reserve:
Marine reserve
* are areas in the sea in which fishing is banned
- of sea and foreshore where all marine life is totally protected
- which have been closed to fishing
- few in number and small in scale
- key to protecting reef fish
- one effective way to conserve marine life
* demonstrate top-down control of community structure on temperate reefs
- trophic interactions across habitats
* displace fishermen.
* improve natural population structures within their borders.
* play an important role in restocking over-fished areas.
* provide an ecological, multispecies approach to fishery management
- insurance against scientific uncertainty
Natural reserve
* are frequent, especially along the coastline, protecting birds and seals.
* offer the greatest level of protection.
Ovarian reserve
* decreases with age.
* is crucial for the prognosis of infertility therapy.
### reserves:
Nature reserve
* are reserves.
* have an important role in our forest.
Residential property
* home on a lot or small acreage.
* is property USED for residential purposes
- rented out for nontransient living purposes
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Residue
* Most residues affect taste
- form bonds
- lead to accumulation
* Most residues pass into intestines
- large intestines
- promote interaction
* Most residues remain in environments
- tissue
- undergo oxidation
* Some residue can be water-soluble and therefore easily lost to the environment.
* Some residues affect receptors
- cause cancer
- contain nitrogen
- kill pollinators
- protect surfaces
- reflect sunlight
- the physical and chemical environment of the soil
* also act as organic amendments to intensify microbial activity
- affect soil water evaporation
- provide the feedstocks for base oils used in the manufacture of lubricants
* are either a valid amino acid or nucleotide or unknown
- present in human body tissues
- substances
- wastes that contain higher levels of plutonium than other categories of waste
* build-up provides pests, such as rodents, with cover and protection from predators.
* containing peroxides are shock sensitive and thus are potentially an ether-bomb.
* decompose with time as a function of moisture and temperature.
* improves soil tilth and adds organic matter to the soil as it decomposes.
* increases the soil surface roughness, which helps dissipate the energy from flowing water.
* interacting strongly with the ligand are responsible for the loss of vibrational entropy.
* is matter
* mutate more easily to residues encoded by similar codons.
* protects soil from the forces of wind and water that cause soil erosion.
* provide large potential resources
* reduces soil erosion caused by both wind and water.
* usually attract dirt and make it stick.
* vary with compound.
### residue:
Ash
* Most ash goes to the same landfills as solid waste.
* causes irritation.
* mixes with water.
* rises into air.
### residue | ash:
Bottom ash
* is typically grey to black in color, angular, and has a porous surface texture
- used as a gravel replacement, road de-icer and as a bed base for building roads
- usually a small portion of the total ash produced by the boiler
* offers good physical chemical characteristics to replace conventional materials.
Fine ash
* can deposit over large areas.
+ Plinian eruption: Volcanology
* Short eruptions can end in less than a day. Longer ones can take several days to months. These eruptions begin with clouds of volcanic ash and occasionally pyroclastic flows. Sometimes the amount of magma erupted is so large that the top of the volcano collapses. This leaves a caldera behind. Fine ash can deposit over large areas. Plinian eruptions often happen with loud noises, such as those created by Krakatoa.<|endoftext|>### residue | ash:
Green ash
* appears to be more tolerant of ash yellows.
* are more adaptable, cold tolerant and have golden fall color
- tolerant of the disease whereas white ash are killed
* is also less competitive with adjacent crops than poplar
- one of our most adaptable native trees
- rated as intolerant to moderately tolerant of shade
- tall, long lived and hardy
- the most widely distributed ash in the United States
- used as a source of wood for paddles, oars and baseball bats
* native, deciduous tree with a large, straight trunk and high branches.
* widely planted shade tree throughout Minnesota.
Hot ash
* can shoulder for hours before igniting, for example on an armchair.
* flows Hot ash flows are also known as pyroclastic flows.
Pearl ash
* is potassium carbonate
* less impure form of potassium carbonate.
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### residue | ash:
Volcanic ash
* Most volcanic ash consists of fine, dusty particles
- falls to the surface and becomes welded together as rock called volcanic tuff
* can affect people hundreds of miles away from the cone of a volcano
- away from the volcano
* can also affect aircraft operations
- stops the sunlight from going in and out from the earth
* can be a serious hazard to aviation even thousands of miles from an eruption
- aviation even thousands of miles from and eruption
- hazardous over great distances
- cause great damage to breathing passages and the respiratory system
- contaminate water supplies, cause electrical storms, and collapse roofs
- damage aircraft flying surfaces and electronics, and cause engine failure
- travel hundreds to thousands of miles downwind from a volcano
* is an aviation hazard, as it can cause serious damage to aircraft engines
- derived from a thick bed that crops out at the upper limit of dirt-covered ice
- hot near the volcano, but it is cool when it falls at greater distances
- often the source of the silica
- present as both discrete ash layers and disseminated throughout the clay sequences
* is rock that has been exploded and shattered by steam inside the volcano
- pulverized into dust or sand by volcanic activity
- thought to be capable of providing a significant source of iron for phytoplankton
- very durable and very ligth weight
* makes the island's soil rich and fertile.
* poses health problems
- serious hazards to jet aircraft
* provides much needed nutrients for plants.
* serious hazard to aviation even thousand of miles from an eruption.
* serves as a fertilizer, returning important nutrients and minerals to the soil.
* severe threat to jet aircraft that fly over the North Pacific Ocean.
+ Global dimming, Causes and effects: Climate change :: Environmental issues
* Volcanic ash can also stops the sunlight from going in and out from the earth. Decreases in the earth's temperatures are observed after large volcanic eruptions. Even for large eruptions, the ash clouds do not stay for a long time.
Conserved residue
* are functionally distinct within transketolases from different species
- likely to be essential to protein function
* make similar contacts in two repressor-operator complexes.<|endoftext|>### residue:
Crop residue
* Many crop residues are deficient in protein and minerals.
* Some crop residues provide food.
* can also help reduce wind erosion and can enhance snow entrapment
- have allelopathic effects as they decay
* carries most corn diseases and insects to the next crop.
* cushions the impact of falling raindrops, which reduces soil detachment.
* decay faster when tilled into the soil than if left standing undisturbed.
* decompose in the soil to form soil organic matter.
* direct function of cropping intensity, fertilization, tillage, and sanitation.
* feed the animals and the animals' manure fertilizes the soil.
* has very low levels of vitamins and gestating ewes can become deficient.
* helps control and conserve water in ridge- tilled fields
- erosion and conserve water in ridge-tilled fields
* is also vital to maintaining organic matter levels in soils.
* kill weeds.
* provide food and keep the soil surface cool and moist
- shelter for small game and many species of songbirds
- the raw materials for building soil organic matter
* reduce runoff from farm fields to improve water quality.
* reflects sunlight and insulates the soil from the air.
* works in a number of different ways to reduce runoff and erosion.
Drug residue
* Contain no Salmonella , etc.
* remain permanently entrapped in the hair.
Gunshot residue
* can indicate someone fired a gun.
* is normally a combination of gunpowder residues and lead residues.
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### residue:
Pesticide residue
* Some pesticide residues can contaminate freshwater ecosystems for generations
- do occur in foods consumed
- kill pollinators
* can be dangerous to sensitive crops
- get on work clothes
- transfer from contaminated clothes to other clothing during washing
* concern to some consumers.
* have harmful effects.
* remain in the environment for many years
- only on the surface of produce
White residue
* Some white residues reflect sunlight.
* is all over objects in the home.<|endoftext|>Resin
* All resins are insoluble in water , as distinguished from the water-soluble gums.
* More resin is produced in tropical than in temperate climates.
* Most resins are hydrocarbon-like and burn
- polymers
- provide very good resistance to chemicals and corrosion
* Some resin absorbs potassium.
* Some resin acts as electric insulators
- contains acid
* Some resin is produced by trees
- synthesized from petroleum
* Some resins are difficult to clean
- more susceptible to impact fusion
- soluble in both alcohol and turpentine
- contain essential oils and are used in incense and aromatherapy
* act as a preservative and make it harder for insects and fungi to break down the tree.
* are also soluble in alcohol , ether , and other organic solvent s
- highly malleable but become rigid when cooled
- ingredients that add depth, gloss and hardness to the film of a nail polish
- liquids which turn into solids through a chemical reaction
- often the weak link in an organic coating system
- soluble in alcohol, ether, and many hydrocarbons but are insoluble in water
* are the basic building blocks of architectural coatings
- source of many traditional perfumes, including frankincense and myrrh
- used in the manufacturing of paints, oinments and varnishes
* can replace bismuth alloys in holding jigs for machining
- slow the progression of atherosclerotic lesions
* cause cholesterol to be taken out of the blood and converted to bile.
* come either dry or preswollen
- to the surface of the pads and form a coating that affects braking ability
* cure to a high-gloss finish and are easy to sand.
* exudes from the cones, and after some years the scales fall away from the axis.
* fills cracks.
* flows from sources.
* has natural sheen
* is an organic compound
* is located in ink
- wood
- organic matter
* often flow over and capture small insects.
* penetrates into the demineralized dentin to form a mechanical bond.
* present a different problem, because they are soluble in alkyd paints.
* reduces transpiration.
* remove bile acids in the intestine before they get back into the blood stream.
* retains sheen.
* tends to be a more expensive printing medium
- gum up blades and cutting tools
* undergoes chemical reaction
* work by increasing the clearance of cholesterol-rich lipoproteins from the plasma.
+ Varnish, Resin: Materials<|endoftext|>### resin:
Epoxy resin
* Some epoxy resins produce an asthma-like condition.
* allows for rigidity and strength.
* are one of the most frequent causes of occupational allergic contact dermatitis
- sensitive to a heat, despite heat treatment
- very effective moisture barriers
* cause allergic sensitivity reactions on the skin.
* is almost totally transparent when cured
- synthetic resin
- used for both sealing the wood and laminating the fiberglass cloth
* leaches fewer chemicals, but is four times more expensive than polyester.
* make excellent adhesives, consolidants, and gap-fillers.
* makes great glue, is used in composite structures, and can be used as a varnish.
* polymerize through a chemical reaction after being mixed in the correct proportions.
* possess exceptional chemical resistance and adhesion.
* produce very firm products and so are used for thin, transparent body or organ slices.
* used in two-part adhesives are thermoset plastics.
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### resin:
Plastic resin
* have a variety of chemical make-ups.
* require far less energy to produce than most alternative materials.
Polyester resin
* are also available for use as coatings for curing by ultraviolet radiation
- only compatible with fiberglass fibers
- the most commonly used matrix in the marine and composite industry
* is also suitable for producing polyester zipper, polyester paint and thermosol etc.
* tends to have yellowish tint, and is suitable for most backyard projects.
Polystyrene
* Some polystyrene has excellent insulation properties
* are one of seven categories of plastics.
* is synthetic resin
### resin | polystyrene:
Extruded polystyrene
* is the most suitable insulation material for earth contact.
* looks somewhat like expanded polystyrene.
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Resistance
* Some resistance causes electrical energy
- develops, especially to ascarids, when horses reach two or three years of age
- has physical dimensions
- leads to diseases
* accounts for the major share of total impedance at high frequency.
* also depends on temperature, usually increasing as the temperature increases.
* alters motion.
* always interferes with freedom of thought and action.
* appears related to tree phenology, leaf shape and size, and biochemical composition.
* applies to the ability of a micro-organism to survive the effects of an antibiotic.
* arises from the fact that the membrane impedes the movement of charges across it.
* becomes a problem when bacteria causing a disease withstand antibiotic therapy
- health problems
- serious problems
* becomes serious public health problems
* can also occur when patients are treated with too few drugs or the wrong ones
- cause heat and light Electrical resistance is essentially friction within the wire
* can develop against all anti-HIV drugs and drugs to treat opportunistic infections
- when pesticides are applied in sublethal doses
* causes damage
- electric current to lose energy in the form of heat
- electricity to generate heat as it flows through a conductor
* civilized means to oppose an unacceptable stance, conduct or doctrine.
* denotes the restrictions that try to slow down or stop the flow.
* depends on length
- shapes
- the material through which the electricity is passing
* develops because individual varroa mites differ in their tolerance to a given miticide
- more quickly where a large population of parasites are exposed to drug pressure
* directly affects the time required to charge a capacitor.
* dissipates energy.
* exercises contribute to the increase in metabolism by increasing muscle mass
- such as weight lifting can help build up muscle tissue
- use muscular strength to improve muscle mass and strengthen bone
* exercises, such as weight lifting, increase muscle size and strength.
* factor that opposes the flow of electricity.
* force that works against the muscle making it work harder.
* function of length
- time of exposure to drugs in the face of ongoing replication
- wire size and wire length
* generally increases with increasing temperature.
* generates heat and occasionally light, and is measured in Ohms.
* has an enormous impact worldwide on control of crop pests and vectors of human disease.
* has dominant inheritance patterns
- little effects
- serious effects
* impedes the flow of current.
* increases as elements age
* involves movement.
* is also a function of the type of material of which the conductor is made
- common in many other crops, including cotton and apples
- altered by subjecting the recipient animal to non-lethal, low doses of radiation
* is an action
- emotional process
- important part of the electrical equation
- overhead source of supply of stock to sell triggered by an area of prior purchases
- analogous to extricating oneself from an abusive relationship
* is any force that slows or stops movement
- tends to oppose or retard motion
* is anything that causes an opposition to the flow of electricity in a circuit
- slow or stops movement or keeps movement from happening
- tries to stop or slow down the electricity
- associated with past pesticide use patterns
* is basically a manifestation of a fear related to uncovering unconscious material
- measure of how much resistance opposes an electric current
- capability
* is caused by eating too much carbohydrate and by a lack of essential nutrients
- electrons bumping into ions
- misuse of products
- the scattering of valence electrons due to impurities in the metal
- determined by resistivity and geometrical factors
- directly proportional to resistivity
- equal to voltage divided by amperes
- given in units of ohms
- group actions
- how difficult it is for electricity to flow through something
- impacted by viscosity, airway length and diameter of airways
- independent of frequency and is the cause of damping in free vibration
- inherited as a single dominant gene
* is inversely proportional to lung volume
- total body water through which the current travels
- material's opposition to the conduction of electric flow
- measured by injecting a current and measuring the voltage
* is measured in ohms
- units called ohms
- military actions
- one factor that contributes to signal attenuation
- progressive, evolving from low levels through intermediate to high levels
- similar in many respects to mechanical friction
- that which 'resists' the flow of electrons
* is the ability to fight with whatever one has, in whatever way possible
- stop or slow the flow of electrical current
* is the capability of a system to deter attacks
- to repel attacks
- hindrance to the flow of charge
- impedance to flow
- main reaction to change
* is the measure of energy gain to electrons from collisions with the lattice
- how easy it is for current to flow through a circuit
- name of the game when it comes to disease
- opposition that a substance offers to the flow of electric current
* is the opposition to electric current by a material or device
- property of a solution to oppose transmission of heat or electricity
- ratio of voltage to current
- reciprocal of conductance
* is the restriction of current
- to current's flow
- retarding force in a material that impedes the flow of current
- source of energy for systems change
- stopping a substace gives to the flow of an electric current
- tendency of an element to prevent the passage of current through the element
- unconscious process that opposes psychic change
- wire's opposition to having a current flow through it
* is thought to result mainly from a genetic mutation
- usually from a genetic mutation
* is usually a function of continued exposure of the virus to a drug
- due to changes in viral genes, called mutations
- what prevents change from occurring
* limits infection and retards fungus growth and spore formation.
* means how well something can resist an electrical current, and is reported in ohms.
* measure of a material's ability to oppose the flow of electricity.
* natural part of change
- phenomenon perhaps as old as bacterium themselves
- result of the ability of bacterial cells to adapt
* occurs as the electrons move and they strike each other and the atoms, losing energy.
* occurs because change is perceived as a threat to our core belief system
- the virus makes mistakes when it reproduces
- in weed populations by naturally-occurring mutations
- particularly when insecticides are used repeatedly and at high concentrations
* occurs when a pesticide manages to kill all but the resistant strains of an insect
- target adapts to circumvent a particular control strategy
* occurs when certain changes in the virus make it less sensitive to a drug
- mutations in the virus make it less sensitive to a drug
- the virus is no longer sensitive to the treatment
* perfectly normal reaction in humans.
* produces heat
- poisonous toxins in the glands which undermune the health
* property of all practical circuits to some degree
* provides protection
- the energy needed for the process of transformation
* rare, recessive trait that carries significant genetic fitness costs.
* refers the amount of weight used.
* seems to be a combination of both local resistances and transversal struggles.
* signal to change strategies.
* special kind of impedance.
* stretching involves forcefully working muscles in a stretch position.
* then results from collisions of electrons with other electrons and with atoms.
* usually depends on decreased levels of pyrazinamidase activity.
+ Resistor: Electronic components
* A 'resistor' is a limiter of the electrical current that flows through a circuit. Resistance is the restriction of current. Often in a resistor the electrons that pass through the resistor are changed to various kinds of energy. The most common forms of energy that electrons are converted to are heat and light. For example, in a light bulb there is a resistor made of tungsten which converts the electrons into light.
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### resistance:
Abrasion resistance
* is also a good measure of the strength and durability of a fabric
- resistance afforded by a material to wear by friction
- the rope's ability to resist fraying
* matter of toughness, rather than hardness.
Active resistance
* involves using physical force to repel the attacker.
* is the opposite of passive resistance, and is more violent.<|endoftext|>### resistance:
Air resistance
* Most air resistance depends on shapes
- dissipates energy
- has motion
* Some air resistance causes energy
- kinetic energy
- opposes upward motion
* affects terminal velocity within Earth's atmosphere
- the motion of a real fly line considerably
* alters motion.
* can vaporize meteors.
* caused by friction is also a friend to falling cats.
* decreases the velocity of a moving object.
- primarily on the size and speed of a falling object
* force caused by a gas rubbing against the surface of a material.
- no effect on the gravitational attraction between objects
* increases exponentially with speed
- with increasing speed
* involves movement.
* is another form of friction, but it has some interesting properties
- due to the colliding of an object with molecules of air
- simply a force, and force is simply change of momentum
* is the bane of a cyclist's life
- result of collisions of the object's leading surface with air molecules
- very important for the flight of a golf ball on earth, in contrast to on the moon
- zero at zero velocity
* keeps a piece of paper, for example, from falling at the same rate.
* prevents the sheet of paper from falling at the same rate.
* slows small things a lot more than big things
- the speed of a bullet and reduces the distance by which it travels
* tends to be proportional to speed.<|endoftext|>### resistance:
Antibiotic resistance
* All antibiotic resistance has a genetic basis.
* becomes problems.
* can be the result of different things
- either be inherent or acquired
- move from plant diseases to human ones
* classic demonstration of natural selection.
* continues to be a major public health concern.
* demands replacements for old antibacterials.
* falls in Finland A Finnish effort to limit bacterial resistance bears fruit
* genetic phenomenon.
* growing problem for patients around the world
- in hospitals
- public health problem
* is also a concern
- an example of change brought about by human interference
- both a problem of animal agriculture and human health
- due to another gene in the plasmid
- evidence of evolution because the organisms changed over time
- generally low amongst feline staphylococci
- linked to a genetic marker that can be transferred to other bacteria
- now a major public health issue
- of concern to human and animal practitioners
- particularly dangerous for children, but it can occur in adults, as well
- progressive, evolving from low levels through intermediate to high levels
- spread by the bacteria themselves
* major European and global health problem.
* poses a dire threat in hospitals and communities.
* results from the natural selection of stronger bacteria over weaker ones.
* serious health care problem related to the widespread use of antibiotics
- threat to human health, and new antibiotics are urgently needed
* spreads fast but efforts are being made to slow it
- quickly
* worrying component of the mechanisms of emerging infectious diseases.
Bacterial resistance
* can sometimes occur by chance.
* is less likely with benzoyl peroxide than with topical antibiotics.
* makes an infection much harder to treat.
Chemical resistance
* ensures durability
- their extremely long lifecycle
* is excellent against most acids and bases
- solvents and fuels
- good, except to strong acids and alkalies
* protects the resin from breakdown due to exposure to environmental chemicals.
* varies between different coatings.
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### resistance:
Corrosion resistance
* allows use where methanol-based fuels corrode steel.
* function of thickness.
* increases as Phosphorous level increases.
* is better in de-aerated acid
- dispositions
- similar to that of commercially pure wrought nickel
* strong selling point for construction materials.<|endoftext|>### resistance:
Drug resistance
* becomes health problems
- serious problems
* becomes serious public health problems
* can limit someone's treatment options for the future
- operate by a number of mechanisms, none of which is fully understood
* climbs when antibiotics are overprescribed.
* growing concern for many horse owners.
* is frequent with tetracycline, erythromycin and trimethoprim
- important for two reasons
- rampant in many countries
- related to lack of adherence to medication regimens
- the principal reason for the failure of chemotherapy
- ubiquitous
- uncommon except among people with very damaged immune systems
- where tumour cells become resistant to chemotherapy
* major problem in the treatment of infectious diseases
- with chemotherapy agents
* occurs when a few parasites in their human hosts manage to survive therapy.
* potential threat to tuberculosis control programmes throughout the world.
* problem with current antivirals.
* remains a major obstacle to the effective treatment of patients with cancer.
Environmental resistance
* has a very serious effect on population size.
* provides protection against radioactivity.
Fire resistance
* applies against sunfire.
* is where a player takes less damage than normal from fire.
* varies with age.
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### resistance:
Friction
* All friction source for lost energy.
* Most friction causes charge
- forces
- heat
* Most friction creates electricity
- generates heat
- produces heat
- releases energy
* Most friction removes energy
- mechanical energy
* Related to the normal force is the frictional force.
* Some friction acts on tires
- applies to materials
- generates electricity
* Some friction is caused by air
- attraction
- water
- generated by atmospheres
- occurs in liquids
- refers to forces
* acts everywhere, and friction produces heat
- in the opposite way to the direction of travel
* actually helps skis move over the snow.
* also acts in stationary objects
- causes drag that makes the streams spiral inward toward the central object
* always acts in the direction opposite to movement
- opposite to air motion and, hence, reduces wind speed
* always acts to oppose any relative motion between surfaces
- prevent sliding motion between the surfaces at which it acts
- creates heat
* always opposes motion and makes doing work harder
- the motion or attempted motion of one surface across another surface
- reduces the mechanical energy
- slows down the wind, and therefore also reduces the Coriolis force
* applies mechanical forces to the skin, resulting in increased susceptibility to ulceration.
* becomes factors.
* can also create heat
- produce motion, as in the case of walking
* can cause grease fires
- ignition if water content of the material is low
- come in many forms, but it always resists motion
- exert an influence on wind only after the air is in motion
- help keep a slab of snow from sliding downslope
- rub off the top layer of skin and damage blood vessels under the skin
- slow or stop moving objects
* causes a skateboard to stop rolling
- an object to expend additinal energy to attain a certain position
* causes heat which excites the molecular particles of the material
- in turn excites the molecular particles
* causes the ball to move at a rate proportional to the movement of the mouse
- decline of speed
* changes the useful work of a machine into mechanical energy.
* comes from hundreds of moving metal parts rubbing against each other.
* common element in daily life
- form of acceleration
- topic introduced and investigated during the early age of classical mechanics
* contact force that opposes the relative motion of two surfaces.
* converts energy
- kinetic energy
- heat, the enemy of engines far and wide
* decreases productivity in all areas.
* exerts a centripetal force on the car, directed towards the center of the circular track.
* exists everywhere surfaces meet
- in most of physical manipulators and mechanical control systems
* force between objects that opposes the relative motion of the objects
- produced by rubbing, that resists motion
- relating to molecular structure of two surfaces touching each other
* force that acts to slow or stop the motion of objects
- when two surfaces rub together
* force that can slow an object
- down moving objects
- dissipates energy
- happens when objects rub against one another
* force that holds back the movement of a sliding object
- one object back against another
- is created whenever two surfaces move or try to move across each other
* force that occurs between surfaces that are in contact with each other
- two surfaces where there is motion
- when one object rubs against another
* force that opposes motion
- the direction of motion between two materials
* force that opposes the motion of an object or the attempt to move an object
* force that resists movement between two surfaces
- the sliding or rolling of one solid object over another
* force that slows down moving objects
- or stops motion between two surfaces that are touching
* generator of sound in solids as well as in gasses.
* happens due to the electro-magnetic forces between two objects
- when things rub against each other, and it slows down things in motion
* has effects
- significant effects
* increases energy transfer to the surrounding environment by heating the affected materials
- the amount of force needed to move an object
- within seconds after loss of fluid
* involves deep, circular movements of thumbs or fingertips.
* is also responsible for the wear and tear on bike gears and other mechanical parts
- an important force because it force that affects motion
- another common cause of skin problems
* is caused by collisions between bumps of varying sizes on two surfaces in contact
- irregularities in the surface of objects that are touching
* is caused by the irregularities on the two surfaces in contact
- roughening of the cartilage
- when two opposing surfaces make contact with each other
- conflict
- dependant on the texture of both surfaces
- dependent on the materials that are in contact with one another
- divided into two categories, static and kinetic
- effort
- given to a healing muscle belly after contusion or in minor muscular tears
- harmful when it slows our movement by increasing the force needed to move an object
- higher on rough surfaces than it is on smooth surfaces
- largest in the atmospheric boundary layer, the air layer nearest the ground
- less when the surface is smooth
* is one force causes a ball to roll downhill
- that only exists if air is in motion
* is one of the fundamental forces of nature
- limiting factors in the design of MEMs devices
- parts of force that opposes motion
- opposite of that motion, which is in the direction of the push
* is produced when a match is dragged across a hard surface
- two materials rub against each other
- work is done
- proportional to force per unit area
- responsible for rolling as opposed to sliding
- simply the resistant force between two objects moving while in contact with one another
- sometimes beneficial as when preventing slipping of the feet when walking
* is the cause of most black nails
- deepest of Swedish massage strokes
- enemy of speed
* is the force between an object in motion and the surface on which it moves
- one object rubbing against another object
- to surfaces rubbing together
* is the force between two objects in contact with one another
- things that opposes their motion
- created whenever two surfaces move or try to move over each other
- exerted by the surface of an object when another object moves against it
- that allows the car to make it around a turn
* is the force that causes objects rubbing together to slow down
- to stop moving once they are in motion
- occurs when two surfaces are in contact with each other
* is the force that opposes motion of one object over another
- the motion of two objects in contact
* is the force that resists motion between the surfaces of two touching objects
- the movement of one material over another material
- results when two objects rub together
- slows down or stops moving objects
- stops the bike
* is the main cause of energy loss
- culprit of wear and tear
- force acting against the car
* is the major cause of breakdowns in cars and machinery
- foot ailments like blisters, calluses andhot spots
- factor in determining how much a ball hooks
- only thing holding the radius
- pull and push between an object and the surface across which it is moving
- reason why the soccer ball always slows down
- resistance that one surface offers to movement over a second surface
* is the resistance to lateral movement caused by the contact between two surfaces
- motion of one object moving relative to another
- relative motion between two bodies in contact
- sliding of a solid when a contacting body produces the resistance
* is the resisting force of motion between two surfaces when they are in contact
- to motion
- retarding force acting against the sliding between two contacting surfaces
- retrieve force acting between bodies that tends to oppose and damp out motion
- rubbing of the surface of one object against the surface of another
- therefore the main cause of energy loss
* is what holds the can in place
- keeps one foot planted on the ground as the other one steps forward
- slows down a car or bicycle
- stops things sliding past each other
- when an object resists to move over another object
* keeps objects from moving.
* leads to chafing of the skin that, in turn, can result in skin irritation and damage.
* makes everything less efficient, from refrigerators to car engines.
* makes the ice at the bottom of the glacier move more slowly than ice at the top
- of the glacier move more slowly than the upper portion
- of the glacier move slower than the upper portion
* measure of the force pressing the two objects together.
* nonconservative force, and there are others
* occurs in almost all situations involving physical objects.
* occurs when one conflicts with the other
- the bumps and holes of two objects catch and rub together
* occurs when two bodies rub against each other
- substances rub together
* offers resistance.
* often presents itself as drag, when an object is moving through a fluid medium.
- the motion of an object and acts to slow it down
* plays a fundamental role in everyday's life
- an important part in many everyday processes
* produces drag on the wheels to slow or stop the vehicle.
* produces heat and heat involves the microscopic motion of molecules
- that in some cases can be sufficient to start a fire
- heat, an essential element of fire
* product of rock texture and force.
* reduces the Coriolis force because it slows down the wind.
* slows down a moving object because it force against motion
- wind speed and reduces loads
* special kind of force produced by two bodies that are in contact.
* stimulates the genitals and causes the male to ejaculate
- oils of the skin as it loosens dirt and dead hair
* stress which resists motion and acts in all natural systems.
* surely does, and internal energy losses dominate the repeated collisions between grains.
* surface force that opposes relative motion.
* takes places.
* tends to transfer denser sea water into the overlying fresh water layer.
* then measure of the force pressing the two objects together.
* uses up a portion of the energy as the fluid flows through the lines and components.
* works in a direction opposite to the direction of motion.
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### resistance | friction:
Air friction
* gets rapidly larger as speed increases.
* is affected by the surface roughness of the object.
* makes a leaf travel along in the wind.
Dynamic friction
* is almost always dependent on the relative sliding velocity
- the friction between two objects that are moving relative to each other
* occurs between objects that slide across each other.
Fluid friction
* Some fluid friction involves fluid.
* is observed in the flow of liquids and gases.
* occurs when an object moves across or through a fluid.
* offers resistance.
Kinetic friction
* Some kinetic friction acts on trucks
- refers to forces
* converts energy
- kinetic energy<|endoftext|>### resistance | friction:
Static friction
* acts between surfaces at rest with respect to each other
- in the direction needed to prevent slipping
* applies to friction between surfaces when the object is at rest.
* force that resists motion.
* is greater than kinetic friction
- normally larger than moving friction
* is the force required to make an object at rest begin to move
- that acts to oppose sliding motion when objects are at rest
- friction produced when the object is at rest
- maximum force acting against any start of sliding
- value of the limiting friction just before slipping occurs
- what keeps a box on an incline from sliding to the bottom
- when the friction is strong enough to stop movement between two objects
+ Friction: Force
* The energy lost to friction is turned into sound and heat. Two kinds of friction are static and kinetic. Static friction is when the friction is strong enough to stop movement between two objects. Kinetic friction is when the frictional force is not strong enough to stop all motion.<|endoftext|>### resistance | friction:
Traction
* Headaches Occur if painful sensitive parts of the head are moved, stretched, or displaced.
* alleviates pressure on the nerves as they leave the spinal cord.
* can reduce cervical dislocations, decreasing pressure on the cord.
* involves putting the bone under tension with the use of weights and pulleys.
* is also important for outdoor enjoyment and recreation
- effected by the tire's inflation and plays a vital role in safety
- friction between the tires and the road
* is important in caving boots for grip in deep mud or slippery cave passages
- to movement and braking
* is the application of a force to stretch certain parts of the body in a specific direction
- movement of particles by rolling, sliding, and shuffling along the eroded surface
- resistance or friction happening between each tire and the ground surface
- used to regain alignment of a fracture by applying force to the body part
* method of treatment that holds bones in position by using weights and pulleys.
* vectorial force constituted by intensity, direction and orientation.
* works in a gradual and natural way to increase the size of the penis.
### resistance | friction | traction:
Traction control
* prevent a vehicle's wheels from spinning by limiting power to the spinning tire.
* uses electronic monitors and controls to cut down on wheelspin.
Heat resistance
* is normally an inherent property of the fiber used in the manufacturing ropes.
* protects the resin from exposure to excessive temperatures.
Herbicide resistance
* increases chemical use in agriculture.
* is mobile since it spreads by both pollen and seed
- now a major problem for cropping systems throughout Australia
* poses a threat to crop production in many countries.
Insect resistance
* is also a priority in the development of new germplasm.
* win-win both in small and large scale farming in the developing world.
Insulin resistance
* Some insulin resistance occurs at same time
* Some insulin resistance produces acid urine
Internal resistance
* has effects.
* increases with age and also as the battery's energy is used up.
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### resistance:
Natural resistance
* follows infection.
* is based in different genetic traits.
* seems to be controlled by a genetic determinism.
Pest resistance
* are important variety selection criteria.
* is often a multigenic trait with consequently complex inheritance patterns
- very important as growers try to cut pesticide usage<|endoftext|>### resistance:
Resistance training
* can also improve performance for a variety of sports
- contribute to both sarcoplasmic and myofibrillar fiber hypertrophy
- have a significant impact on the maintenance of independence in old age
- help increase lean muscle mass
- improve muscle mass, flexibility, enhance balance and improve joint health
- increase muscle bulk and strength
* causes a spike in testosterone level.
* component of boxing supplemental exercise.
* helps to combat the loss of muscle
- strengthen skeletal muscle which in turns helps with everyday chores
* improves the performance of children in resistance exercises.
* increases the amount of the body's lean muscle tissue.
* is an important factor to total fitness
- essential to losing fat and gaining muscle
- exercise that develops the strength and endurance of large muscle groups
* leads to trauma or injury of the cellular proteins in muscle.
* reduces the acute exercise-induced increase in muscle protein turnover.
Shock resistance
* is about four times that of sheet acrylic plastic, but less than for polycarbonate.
* tells how well a given species withstands momentary blows or changes in pressure.
Thermal resistance
* is resistance to heat flow provided by a given thickness of material.
* is the ability of a material to resist the flow of heat
- reciprocal of thermal conductance
* varies greatly among the different types of joints.
Water resistance
* develops muscle tone, strength, flexibility and cardiovascular fitness.
* flowing through a hose is the same as resistance through a wire.
* increases exponentially with speed.
* is measured and rated by depth in meters
- the property of an adhesive or caulk to resist water penetration
- utilized to stretch, strengthen and increase stamina
* strengthens muscles and reduces impact stress to bones and joints.
Wind resistance
* causes vehicles to use more fuel at higher speeds.
* is the cyclists biggest barrier to speed.
* transfers the kinetic energy to the air.
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Resonance
* adds energy to a frequency because of reinforcing wave forms.
* are basic to the theory of the timewave.
* basic principle that affects everyone and everything, all the time.
* can occur in atoms and molecules, mechanical systems, and electrical circuits
- inside a food for specific combinations of size, shape, and food property
- when the natural frequencies of two objects are the same
- strongly affect the motion of asteroids
* common cause of sound production in musical instruments
- feature of many molecules and ions of interest in organic chemistry
* have a noticeable effect on the timbre of musical sounds.
* involves an exchange between systems, a kind of mutual 'sensing'.
* is an important feature of many organic molecules
- physical phenomenon
- analogous to a filter
- basically a vibration
- motion that repeats in a regular manner
- oscillations
- seen in many scientific devices
* is the amplification and enrichment of a fundamental tone emanation from the larynx
- basis of musical instruments and has many applications
- degree of emphasis that occurs
- expectation of magic
- most influential structural factor that influences nucleophilicity
- phenomenom by which the fetus is phase locked to specific cycles
* is the phenomenon at play when an opera singer causes a glass to shatter at distance
- that allows a guitar string to make a note when plucked
- vibration set up by contact with an object sympathetic to the frequency
- used to identify molecules and atoms by noting the frequencies at which it occurs
- useful in electric tuning circuits, in microwave ovens
- vital to musical instruments
* kind of 'mechanical amplifier' and is used in many musical instruments.
* occurs in systems.
* occurs when sound reaches out like ripples on a lake to set off responding vibrations
- the amplitude of a driven and damped oscillatory system is at a maximum
- two objects have frequencies of oscillations that are close to each other
* phenomena common in our everyday life as in radio or television.
* phenomenon which requires a.
* pure force.
* refers to the tendency of systems to oscillate periodically at a single frequency.
* very common phenomenon which occurs in many types of physical systems.
* well known phenomenon in physics.
* works with breathing to produce a loud or complex full bodied tone.
### resonance:
Magnetic resonance
* can detect volume regression of the hippocampus.
* continues to have a major impact on the field of diagnostic imaging.
* has two major components.
* imaging study of caudal infrasylvian region reveals novel findings in dyslexia.
* is an imaging modality that is very sensitive to soft tissue pathology
- resonance
* phenomenon exhibited by the nuclear or electronic magnetic moments.
* relies on a very powerful magnetic field.
Respeaker identification
* Speaker identification helps identify persons or objects by their voice fingerprints.
* Speaker identification is recognition
- used to tell who's talking without their having to identify themselves
### respect:
Homage
* is respect
* promise by one person to let another be in charge.
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### respiratory diseases:
Lung disease
* Many lung diseases are more prevalent among men than women.
* Most lung diseases cause difficulty
- kill animals
- require treatments
* Some lung diseases affect infants
- premature infants
- are caused by smoke
- cause pain
- kill women
* are respiratory diseases.
* can affect any or all factors needed for oxygen transport
- have major effects on breathing
- sometimes cause the body to produce too many red blood cells
* causes a quarter of all Chinese deaths.
* common cause of pain and death in older people.
* include emphysema.
* is America's number three killer, responsible for one in seven deaths
- characterized by bacterial colonization and chronic airway infection
- currently the third leading cause of death in the United States
- now the leading cause of death for scleroderma patients
- one of the nation's fastest growing health problems
* is the most serious complication seen with cystic fibrosis
- number one disabler of American workers
* is the third leading cause of death in America
- third-leading cause of death in Arizona
- usual cause of death in most patients
* kills more women than breast cancer.
* major problem worldwide.
### respiratory sensitiser:
Grain dust
* can be extremely dangerous.
* is an extremely volatile substance that can explode without warning.
* respiratory sensitiser.<|endoftext|>Responsibility
* also kind of currency
- means accepting blame and even punishment for one's unwise or illegal actions
* begins with leaders who behave responsibly
- the willingness to be cause in the matter of one's life
* comes in many forms.
* comes with age
- rational and moral apprehension
* connotes a system of ethics.
* fundamental tenet in aviation.
* gift from one person or people to another.
* good trait in an individual.
* human characteristic.
* implies a theory that consequences arise because of flaws in behavior.
* includes operate performance
* involves choices.
* is about action, and it includes much of what people think of as good citizenship
- accountability for procedures, solutions, programs, services, and decisions
- also a mentality
- an obligation to perform assigned activities
- first in all systems and organizations
- fixed on individuals
- measured by executive stability
- one the greatest challenges any man or woman can face
- part of characters
- primarily a function of work activity
- seen as a direct link to self-esteem
- social control
- something other people have
- subjectivity before freedom
* is the ability to respond instead of react on a sterile script
- set goals and priorities in work an personal life
- acceptance of personal accountability
- all-essential partner to the exercise of one's individual rights
- antithesis of blame or fault
- degree of accountability required in performing the job
- duty to do a job or perform a task
- essential criterion of freedom
- foundation of being a human being
- obligation to do assigned tasks
- opposite of blame
* is the price of admission for using the Internet
- relation , i.e., a triadic relation
- second love principle
* learned trait.
* life skill that is consistently asked of each student.
* means being accountable to other societies as well
* necessary ingredient of health and happiness.
* philosophical tenet predicated upon some standard.
* plays an intricate role in the modern definition of citizenship.
* refers to the contractor's ability to perform the contract.
* replaces violence, respect replaces apathy, and caring replaces underachievement.
* requires the ability to act independently.
* sense of duty to fulfill tasks accepted or asssigned.
* separate issue from guilt and blame.
* shared professional and public responsibility.
* works best on fossilised mental matter, and on things belonging to time past.
### responsibility:
Civic duty
* Civic duties are duties.
* is responsibility
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### responsibility:
Civic responsibility
* is inseparable from a democracy
* requires activism and action.
Environmental responsibility
* contributes to the wellness of the planet.
* is an ethic that everyone in the company believes in and adheres to.
* matter of facts, and real performance.
* step beyond awareness, developed only through experience.
Fiscal responsibility
* depends on agencies being accountable for the management of funds.
* is in the long term interests of liberals as well as conservatives.
* key ingredient of good decision making.
* natural response to limited resources.
Individual responsibility
* bedrock principle of common law.
* is fundamental to learning.
* means an attitude of self-criticism.
Moral responsibility
* is different from legal responsibility.
* relates to how well a captive lives up to the tenets of the code.
Nutritional responsibility
* begins with learning to exercise judgment in matters of diet.
* calls for maturity and self-sufficiency.<|endoftext|>### responsibility:
Personal responsibility
* focuses on individual feelings, motives, wants, goals.
* is Karma
- essential to define individuality
* is the cornerstone of a moral nation
- focus of current legislation and law at all levels
- highest virtue parents can hope to instill in their children
- key to fire safety
- price of riding a public school bus
* lies at the core of all our social conditions - good and bad.
* major theme of the prophets.
* means keeping commitments and expecting others to do the same.
* necessity in the health care world.<|endoftext|>### responsibility:
Social responsibility
* arises through love.
* extends beyond investing.
* foundation for improvement efforts.
* high point in African civilization.
* highlights the social and economic effects of management decisions.
* influences how marketers build and strengthen relationships with stakeholders.
* is molded by the entire community
- no longer something a company chooses to do or be
- taught along with academics
- the missionary part of intercultural work
- usually in conflict with the objective of shareholder wealth maximization
* means different things to different people
- many things to many people
* refers to business' pursuit of long-term goals that are good for society.
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Rest
* relax muscles.
* are bridges
- death
- inactivity
* are motivated by the goal of sleep
- tireds
- musical notation
- support
* can be a time for physical and emotional repair
- help recharge batteries when people feel drained of energy
- include sleep as well as sitting and resting
* comes when one's feet are raised UP on a bed or easy chair.
* end with dies.
* helps Most people find that rest and a good night's sleep relieves their symptoms initially.
* helps to reduce active joint inflammation and pain, and to fight fatigue
- swelling and pain around the joint and reduces fatigue
* is absolutely crucial for muscle growth, repair and healthy functioning
- also important for the joints affected by arthritis
- an act of hope, anticipating the future rest assured by the resurrection of Jesus
* is an important component in managing fatigue
- factor in recovering from a cold
- spiritual discipline
- as important as diet and exercise in the treatment of fibromyalgia
- both a good night's sleep and taking the time to relax during the day
- especially important in the early stages of the disease, or later if the liver is involved
- essential to tissue healing
- important for the body to function properly
* is important in helping the body cope with the infection process
- that healthy, happy equation that results in patience, alertness and optimism
- to both physical and emotional strength
- when the joint becomes very painful
- simply the changing from the use of one set of nerves and muscles to another
* is the best known treatment for aching muscles
- most important component to healing the body
- opposite of stress
- very important for the tear down of the muscles, for the fibers to recuperate
- vital when traveling, especially as one ages
- when the muscle grows
* state of suspended growth due to internal physiological blocks.
* stems in lukewarm water in a dark, cool place, so they can absorb water.
+ Weight training, Reps, sets, tempo and rest: Fitness
* Rest has no different meaning for weight training, but it is very important. During rest no motion is necessary. Different kinds of weight training use different rest times between sets. Some use as little as 30 seconds and others can use as much as 8 minutes.
### rest:
Bed rest
* can cause depression and anxiety, lower self-esteem and less satisfaction with body.
* helps in reducing the incidence of early delivery
- muscle aches and pains and paracetamol helps lower fever
* is unnecessary for older children with mild disease.
Excessive rest
* is harmful to the joints, muscles, bones and overall fitness.
* leads to deconditioning and feelings of weakness and faintness on standing.
Laziness
* causes inventions.
* comes from gravity.
* decreases both health and wealth.
Leftover
* Any leftovers are stored in body fat to fuel the body between meals.
* are food.
* are located in containers
- freezers
- fridges
- refrigerators
- remainders
* can cause health and environmental hazards.
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Result
* allow insight.
* are endings
- produced by forces
* come from products.
* confirm experience
- expression
- importance
- predictions
- suitabilities
* demonstrate ability
- alteration
- behavior
- characteristics
- impact
- ingestion
- patterns
- photosynthetic characteristics
- possibility
- potential
- problems
- severe alteration
- values
- variation
* depend on states.
* drive growth
- solid growth
* encourage effects.
* explain variability.
* follow behavior
- certain behavior
- trends
* have importance
- particular importance
* help doctors.
* highlight significance.
* include information
- tests
* increase productivity.
* indicate accumulation
- activities
- adaptive responses
- antibody responses
- apparent benefits
- applications
- boundary conditions
- compel evidence
- components
- differences
- factors
- financial success
- human presence
- inclusions
- little human presence
- methods
* indicate neutralize antibody responses
- performance
- roles
* indicate significant differences
- sources
- specifications
- stability
* induce effects.
* influence decisions
- management
* is animals carry seeds elsewhere, dispersing the plant.
* lead to development
- modification
* may have consequences
- important consequences
* occur in habitats
- particular habitats
* present issues
- theories
* produce reliable results
* provide additional insight
- feedback
- further information
- hypotheses
* provide important insight
- new insight
- input
- interpretations
- promise results
- reproduction
* provide valuable information
* raise doubt.
* reflect digit growth
- satisfactory responses
* relate to measurements.
* represent possibility.
* require careful interpretations
* reveal presence.
* shed light.
* show accumulation
- biodiversity
- cancer growth
- conservation status
- considerable variability
- consumption
- contributions
- dependence
- distribution
- effective strategies
- energy
- environmental factors
- environments
- events
- generalization
* show important environmental factors
- life history strategies
- oocyte growth
- other factors
- phases
- tumor growth
* suggest activities
- advantage
- capacity
- disturbance effects
- functions
- gene expression
- health improvement capacity
- important mechanisms
- independent mechanisms
- protocols
- reciprocal effects
- solutions
* support ability
- assessments
- conclusions
- existence
- frameworks
- ideas
- interspecific competition hypotheses
- mortality hypotheses
- proposals
- recommendations
- research hypotheses
- scenarios
- statements
* vary among individuals.
* are available here. If there is no objections, please notify in meta.
* are in.
### result:
Experimental result
* show differences
* support hypotheses
Preliminary result
* indicate conditions
* show biodiversity.
* suggest consumption
- roles
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### retail stores:
Pet store
* Many pet stores buy puppies from puppy mills, where puppies are abused and exploited.
* Many pet stores carry giant mealworms
- live mealworms and house crickets as food for lizards and other vertebrates
* Many pet stores sell cedar and pine shavings for small animal bedding
- dogs from puppy mills
- ground oyster shells as a digestive supplement for birds
- small toys that are made of acrylic lambs wool type material
* Most pet stores carry brands of food formulated specifically for ferrets
- brine shrimp exclusively for food
- kits for growing kitty grass
- nail clippers designed for cats
- have a wide variety of cages and aquariums to choose from
* Most pet stores sell a variety of medicine, some for single diseases and some for multiple diseases
- neutered and descented kits
- plastic leaves that can be hung from the top of aquariums to simulate trees
- reptile trees, logs, and other accessories designed for snakes
- safe heating supplies
- siphons that vacuum out waste and leftover food from the aquarium bottom
- turtle pellets that are safe for terrapins
* Some pet stores offer cats from animal shelters and function as adoption agencies
- litter in bulk to hold down cost
- use the same water circulated between all their tanks
* are retail stores
### retreats:
Sanctum
* are retreats.
* is primarily a game of strategy and luck.
### revenge:
Reprisal
* are retaliation.
* is revenge
### revising:
Paraphrase
* are often easy to read, because they use simple words and modern idioms.
* attempt to make scripture easier to read and comprehend.
Revocation
* are states.
* local decision that sends offenders to state institutions.
### rewarding field:
Career counseling
* can benefit people who already have a job.
* is guidance.
* rewarding field.
### rhetoric:
Rant
* is rhetoric
+ Monologue, Rant: Literature :: Drama :: Comedy :: Figures of speech :: Movie terminology :: Poetry
* Rants are used often in situations requiring monologue. Comedians, such as Lewis Black, Adam Carolla, and Rick Mercer, use rants as a way to get their message or punch-line across to the listening audience.
### rhythm:
Biological rhythm
* Most biological rhythms have a period of ca.
* are of two general types
- quite an issue and have been widely studied in all kinds of organisms
- ubiquitous in nature and occur on several temporal scales
Heart rhythm
* are medical conditions
- normal
* is controlled by factors both intrinsic and extrinsic to the heart itself.
Regular rhythm
* can occur at many speeds, from very fast to very slow.
* is called meter.
Ribbon
* are capable of color
- decoration
- flat in appearance, soft and very flexible
* are located in baths
- boxs
- floral arrangements
- hair
- parties
- typewriters
- notions
- objects
- part of typewriters
- strips
- thins
* are used for adornment
- beauty
- fashion
- finish lines
- tying
* is an object
* program for creating ribbon diagrams.
* signify the tying together of two lives.
* symbolize everlasting life, and water.
### rice planting season:
Monsoon season
* can actually fail, bringing intense drought and famines to many parts of the world.
* is rice planting season.
* produces severe rain that lasts for short periods of time.<|endoftext|>### right-winger:
Fascist
* Some fascists are active today in anti-blood sport groups.
* aim to smash to atoms the organised workers' movement.
* are a cancer in the body politic
- adults
- films
- people
- realist socialists
- the worst form of pollution and waste
* believe their race is biologically superior to other races.
* comes from the word fascio meaning a bundled group.
* dress up in black and tell people what to do.
* historically desire cultural uniformity.
* movie about making movies.
* seek an organic, neomythological unity of nature, the community, and the self.
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### righteousness:
Impeccability
* Impeccabilities are righteousness.
* is righteousness
* means that a person is incapable of sinning.
Piety
* is the first qualification for ministering in holy things
- root of charity
- worship, prayer, meditation, devotional reading of the Bible and other texts
* takes the form of ritual observance rather than credal correctness.
### righteousness | piety:
Filial piety
* is essentially a rule of behavior directing offspring to repay parental love and care
- thus an important virtue that has been stressed throughout the ages
* major element in accomplishing world peace.
Pietism
* are religious movement.
* emphasizes martyrdom and suffering, rather than conquest and victory.
* is piety
* preaches the saving power of the gospel instead of dogmatic principles.
* stresses warm-hearted religious experience.
Religiosity
* comes again to replace humanistic self-assertion and secular individualism.
* equals frequency of church attendance and praying.
* has a strong effect on the political engagement of both youth and their parents.
* is based on a particularistic approach to religion
* protects against recurrences of depressive disorder.
* seems to have positive relationship with age.
Sublimity
* certain distinction and excellence in expression.
* is produced by aggregation, and littleness by dispersion
- righteousness<|endoftext|>Rigidity
* Is a result of damage to motor cortex and basal ganglia.
* Rigidities are an increasing constraint to growth.
* can also cause the patient's face to look emotionless.
* is an increased tone or stiffness in the muscles
- caused by a patient's muscles being continuously contracted
- less prominent and pronounced in the arms and legs
- quality
- the property that g is finite dimensional
- what killed a lot of empires
* measure of stiffness, which can make for a neat, uniform appearance.
* occurs due to an increase in tonic stretch reflexes.
* relaxes at the ecliptic belt.
* type of mental block characterized by fault-finding negativism.
* varies greatly within the spruces.
### rigidity:
Mental rigidity
* arises out of a deficit of the executive functions.
* is the antithesis of new product thinking.
Muscle rigidity
* contributes to the inability to ambulate to the toilet and to self-toilet.
* makes it difficult to decelerate the ball and absorb extra energy in the ball.
* results in resistance to passive muscle stretching.
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Ring
* All rings are a collection small particles orbiting the planet in complex ways.
* Some rings affect survival.
* Some rings have faces
- fur
- substitution
* Some rings surround eyes
- fingers
* are an ancient symbol of love
- symbol, blessed and simple
- better for ears and other body parts
- blue
- circular and without end to symbolize eternal love
- corrosion resistant aluminum
- dynamic and probably short-lived in geologic terms
- jewelry
* are located in boxs
- gyms
- jewelry stores
- malls
- parks
- pockets
- wedding ceremony
- windowsills
- narrow, and contain concentrations of particles called ring arcs
* are part of algebra
- south parks
- platforms
- round like the sun, round like the course of the stars
- similar structures to that of integers
- sound
- transverse wrinkles that appear from the shrinking of the root
* are used for decoration
- symbolisms
- wearing
* arise from singular events like the destruction of a ringmoon or comet.
* can cut deeply into fingers and bracelets can get caught in reins or lead lines
- fuse with other rings on an edge to give polycyclic compounds
- react with chemicals or puncture laboratory gloves
* cause sound.
* concept of abstract algebra generalizing integers and real numbers.
* differ from webs primarily by being thicker and involving more of the wall of the esophagus.
* get bigger every year as fungus grows.
* have features
- magic properties
* is sound
* manufacturer and seller of interconnect systems.
* nematodes also commonly occur in sandy regions of South Carolina
- cause general aboveground lack of vigor and reduced vine growth and yields
* rot -Circular rot in a log.
* stick if deposits of carbon and varnish form on the rings or ring grooves.
+ Local area network: Computer networking
* A ring topology means that each device talks to two other devices in the network and the devices all talk in a circle. If a computer sends data out one of its interfaces, it could get an answer back on the other one. Some rings send traffic in only one direction, other ring networks send traffic in both directions. Token Ring and FDDI are examples of ring topologies.
+ Ring theory
* In algebra a ring is a structure where multiplication and addition are defined. Rings are similar structures to that of integers.
+ Wedding, Wedding customs in western societies, Ceremony: Marriage :: Ceremonies
* A traditional wedding ceremony in the western world usually consists of the couple exchanging vows before a government official such as a justice of the peace or a clergyperson such as a priest, minister, or pastor. Nuns are not permitted to perform marriages. Rings are exchanged between the married couple, following which they kiss.
+ −1 (number), Algebraic properties, Square of −1
* The above arguments hold in any ring. Ring is a concept of abstract algebra generalizing integers and real numbers.
### ring:
Annular ring
* allow each wafer size to be centered.
* threads hold boards securely to posts or frame.
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### ring:
Fairy ring
* Most fairy rings are only present for one to four or five years and eventually die.
* appear as circular green or dead areas that continue to enlarge for several years
- in any lawn, golf course or other turf areas during spring and summer months
* are actually a result of mushroom growth
- most severe on light-textured, infertile, droughty soils
- of little concern in lawns
- usually most severe in light-textured, low fertility soils low in moisture
* can grow to impressive dimensions
- occur on any type of lawn
* common disease of Kentucky bluegrass and most other turfgrass species.
* develop over a wide range of fertility levels and soil and climatic conditions.
* develops most frequently in soil high in organic matter such as undecomposed thatch.
* is caused by a number of mushroom fungi that live in the soil and thatch layer
- the only cause of extra greening at the leading edge of areas
* survive as spores or as dormant mycelium.
Inner ring
* are a part of everyone's lives
- compositionally similar to arms but have a different origin
- part of everyday life
* depict the sun, moon, and stars.
Nerve ring
* is located near center of the isthmus.
* surrounds esophagus just behind excretory pore.
Piston ring
* Most piston rings are part of pistons.
* Some piston rings have pressure.<|endoftext|>### ring:
Tree ring
* appear as alternating light bands of early wood and dark bands of late wood.
* are an important method of dating in archeology and serve as a record of past climates.
* are another easy example to see how they are also influenced by magnetic flux
- source of information about the recent and ancient past
- more visible in places where the seasons change between hot and cold
- the basis of dendrochronology , which dates wooden objects and associated artifacts
- used to make radiocarbon dating more accurate
- wide in a good and narrow in a poor growth year
- wider during wet years and more narrow during dry years
* can show where a wooden object was made.
* dating is an accurate technique for determining the dates of archaeological sites.
* differ in pattern, width, and density depending on the cllimate conditions of the time.
* grow under the bark, and the bark is pushed out while the tree is growing.
* have many uses.
* indicate tree growth.
* record both the negative and positive effects of volcanic eruptions
* reveal when fires occurred during the tree's life.
* show the years of growth for that particular tree.
* tick out of time with automata driven by tiny cogs and springs.
* vary in width from year to year, depending on temperature and the amount of rainfall
+ Growth ring: Trees
* Tree rings grow under the bark, and the bark is pushed out while the tree is growing. The inner part of a growth ring is formed early in the growing season, when growth is fast and is known as early wood. The outer portion is the late wood, and is denser than early wood. Many trees in places with hot summers and cold winters make one growth ring a year.
* Rings happen because of the change in growth speed through winter, spring, summer and fall, so one ring usually marks the passage of one year in the life of the tree. Tree rings are more visible in places where the seasons change between hot and cold. Enough moisture and a long growing season result in a wide ring. A dry year may result in a very narrow ring. Trees from the same area will tend to grow the same pattern of rings. Cut all the way though a tree horizontally, like a stump, to find the growth rings.
* Tree growth rings can tell us about the ancient climate and growth rings can be used to tell the age of a tree. Growth rings can also be used to date the wood in old buildings, ships and frames for paintings. Tree rings are used to make radiocarbon dating more accurate.
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### ring:
Web ring
* Web Rings are a series of different websites sharing a common theme inter-linked with one another
- collections of associated web pages with the same or similar interests
- groups of web sites with a common theme which are linked together in a circle
- one of the fastest and easiest ways to navigate the Web
- sites that are linked to each other, with a common theme
* are a group of related sites that connect through the ring link
- collections of web sites organized around a similar theme
- cool ways to interconnect the fibers of the world wide web together
- loops of linked sites with a common theme
- organized groups of websites with similar interests or information
- sites of a common interest linked together
* create actively maintained virtual communities of pages on the web.
* link websites with a common theme together.
* represent a sort of organic community of Web sites.
### riparian species:
Blue oak
* contribute to high species diversity underneath their canopies.
* grow on hillslopes with shallow soils and have striated bark.
* is endemic to California.
* riparian species.
### risk factor:
Poor sanitation
* affects health, as does poor or inappropriate housing.
* can spread pathogens to uncontaminated seafood.
* habits cause cholera to spread.
* is one of the main causes of disease in sheep.
* risk factor.
Glibness
* are superficiality.
* is depth
Health hazard
* Smoke pollution from burning vegetation sometimes causes death and illness.
* Some health hazards can be acute, others chronic.
* are hazards.
* can be physical, ergonomic, chemical, biological or psychological in nature
- range from minor to life threatening
- result in chemically induced immediate or delayed health effects
* is risk
* range from infections to irritant and toxic type allergic reactions.
* resulting from the use of animals in research are commonplace.<|endoftext|>### risk | health hazard:
Passive smoking
* can also cause pregnant women to have underweight babies
- exacerbate the symptoms of asthma and allergies and decrease pulmonary function
- have a serious impact on the health of nonsmokers
* causes heart disease and lung cancer.
* causes lung cancer and ischaemic heart disease
- in non-smokers
* constitutes a serious public health risk to both children and adults.
* does carry risks but they are small compared to the risks of active smoking
- cause cancer
* increases the chance of a nonsmoker getting lung cancer by twenty-six percent
- frequency and severity of infections
* is also a recognised factor in lowering the birth weight of babies
- dangerous outside the home
- capable of causing cancer
* is especially harmful to children who have asthma or other lung disease
- hazardous to children who have asthma
- linked with lung cancer, heart disease and sudden infant death syndrome
- most significant in enclosed spaces
* is the process that causes non-smokers to inhale smoke involuntarily
- third leading preventable cause of death
- very dangerous for someone with asthma, other lung conditions, or heart disease
* major cause of respiratory illness among children.
* means to breathe in environmental tobacco smoke.
* poses serious threats to nonsmokers within residential settings.
* refers to the smoke inhaled by non-smokers in the presence of smokers.
* universal phenomenon where smoking is common.
* worsens asthmatic children.
Moral hazard
* exists whenever insurance is provided against any kind of risk
- with medical insurance as well
* is risk
- the tendency of the insured to be indifferent to risks against which it is insured
* plagues global capital markets today.
* risk factor that affects the underwriting decision.
Occupational hazard
* affect many in the work force.
* can have health consequences on all workers.
* cause miscarriage.
* fall into several categories.
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### risky business:
Futures trading
* Futures Trading risky business.
* includes numerous financial tools that can be used to manage price volatility.
* involves high risks with the potential for substantial losses
- leverage and margins which make it a very risky business
- the risk of loss
* is risky business
- speculative and involves risk of loss
- the name of the game and it involves trillions of dollars every year
* zero-sum game.
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Road
* Many roads are under water at levels which are potentially dangerous
- have narrow lanes and carry high volumes of high-speed traffic
* More roads means more cars and more cars means more accidents, more noise, and air pollution.
* Most roads absorb heat.
* Most roads are closed to vehicles during the wet season
- joint-use roads shared by snowmobiles and motor vehicles
- narrow and without sidewalks, creating a hazard for both drivers and pedestrians
- connect cities
- contribute to productivity
* Some roads are also unsafe due to rural crime, including car hijacking
- can cause a vehicle to tilt
- create barriers
- have tolls, where people pay to use the road
- improve safety
* also act as barriers to the movement of wildlife
- have consequences upon hydrology and aquatic habitats
- increase hunting and poaching
- pose other risks to wildlife
* are a major cause of direct cassowary mortality due to vehicle strikes
- source of sediment in most forests
- necessary means of transport for goods such as timber, cattle and minerals
- useful proxy indicator of habitat fragmentation and degradation
- visual representation of how government is able to perform
- also a leading cause of forest fragmentation, one of the deadliest threats to wildlife
- an integral part of leisure and amenity access for people
- anchorages
- believed to be a major contributing factor to the ongoing spread of exotic plants
- capital, and they are generally cited as an important proximate cause of deforestation
- for transportation as they have been for thousands of years
- gravel and can become rough and muddy after rains
- hard surfaces which increases the likelihood of stress problems
- highly influential forces affecting ecological systems
- less slippery when it's cold
* are located in bridges
- maps
- roadblock
- towns
- valleys
- material goods that cost real resources to construct, operate, and maintain
* are one of the most prominent threats to turtles
- significant causes of increased erosion
- part of an overall transport system
- paved surfaces
- privates
- rivers of erosion
- roads, but there are hundreds of different plants
- space dedicated above all to movement
- the arteries of life
* are the greatest current threat to the continued existence of life on Earth
- source of environmental degradation on the national forest system
- most important mode of domestic freight and passenger transport
- number one water quality concern in forests
- oldest, most important infrastructure services provided by governments
- only place bicycle riding can happen
- transport system which allows materials to be carried throughout the city
- to forests as borer is to wood
* are used for crosses
- travelers
- vital to keeps workers and goods flowing to areas where they are needed
- vulnerable to things like ice storms
* block migration routes, cut off wildlife from food sources and otherwise fragment habitat.
* bring bears into conflict with people
- people, and people bring non-native species of predators
* can also be a conduit for pollutants into the environment.
* can also cause floods, environmentalists charge
- rapid mass movements and result in very large increases in sediment loads
- have a direct impact on salmon
- impede important animal migration
* can be dangerous places to work
- nasty when it rains or snows
- very destructive to arroyo toads and their habitat both in streams and in upland areas
* can become impassable in wet weather and conditions can change quickly
- quite slick upon the first onset of rain
- cause landslides, erosion, and siltation of streams
- change the direction of natural water flow, affecting the way wetlands function
- change, or introduce human uses that change, forest biodiversity
* cause direct mortality of many species and modify animal behavior
* constantly change camber as well as going up and down.
* define a city or region.
* deteriorate much faster when water has penetrated their surface.
* determine the basic form of any city.
* displace and fragment or isolate wildlife habitat.
* disrupt wildlife territories, movement, and migration patterns.
* disturb animal movement and migration patterns
* do immense damage to ecosystems, causing severe erosion and siltation of streams.
* encourage development.
* facilitate the invasion of weeds, which can force out native species of plants.
* free database, search and indexing system designed initially for Web cataloguing.
* frequently generate overland flow from relatively impermeable running surfaces and cutslopes.
* have capability
- important economic and military functions
- limits
- markers
- mileage markers
- severe impact
- speed limits
* includes readsides.
* includes safety islands
- isles
- zones
* includes traffic circles
* increase human use.
* is an artifact
- the well traveled road that crosses the Continental Divide at Logans Pass
* lighting in cities is inadequate at best and nonexistent outside of cities.
* make interior forests accessible, exposing wildlife to increased mortality risks
- it possible for the animals to move easily between feeding areas in winters of deep snow
* mean visibility, and visibility means death.
* open forest areas to development, erosion and pollution.
* prevent water from seeping into the ground.
* provide access for people to study, enjoy, or contemplate natural ecosystems
- dependable pathways for moving people and goods from one place to another
* quickly become lakes, and the sides of mountains suddenly drop in avalanches of mud.
* resurfacing involves overlaying the road with a layer of asphalt.
* running participant oriented rather then spectator sport.
* serve as barriers, confining many species of wildlife within restricted areas.
* take up valuable land, reduce wildlife habitat and deprive the human community of open space.
* usually wind their way up or down in serpentines.
+ Bangui, Transportation: Capital cities in Africa :: Central African Republic
* Bangui is a river port. It is served by Bangui M'Poko International Airport. The port handles the most of the country's trade with other countries. River ferries sail to Brazzaville and Zongo. Roads connect the city to Cameroon, Chad, and Sudan.
+ Bastide, Structural elements, Central square: History of France
* All roads run in one direction and are parallel. Here and there there are alleys cut between the roads. The square is placed between two roads. These squares are usually to on each side.
+ Cassowary, Saving the cassowary: Birds of Australia :: Ratites :: Endangered species :: Flightless birds :: Struthioniformes
* Road sign to protect cassowaries.
+ Controlled-access highway
* These kinds of highways have four lanes or more. They carry many vehicles. They have no traffic-lights or ground level intersections. All roads crossing the highway go over a bridge or a tunnel. Ramps connect the highways to smaller roads and other highways. The place where highways meet these roads are called interchanges. Places where cars can leave or enter the motorway are called exits. Many freeways do not allow slower traffic, such as bicycles and pedestrians, to enter them.
+ Gettysburg, Pennsylvania: County seats in Pennsylvania
* Many roads come from Gettysburg. Gettysburg Regional Airport, a small general aviation airport, is west of Gettysburg. Gettysburg has weather that changes from around in the winter months to almost in the summer.
+ Greater Noida, History: Towns in India :: Uttar Pradesh
* The government of Uttar Pradesh decided to incorporate the city of Greater Noida. This would be an extension to Noida. The planning of Greater Noida would be improved from what was learned in Noida. Greater Noida is a planned township. Roads are wide with service lanes for every major road. All cabling and utilities are run underground.
* Road building and care is usually paid for by taxes. Some roads have tolls, where people pay to use the road.
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### road | byway:
Scenic byway
* are roads that provide relaxation and are enjoyable for travelers.
* can also be highways that communities feel are important components of their identity
- steer motorists to state and local parks or other public lands
Causeway
* are bridges
- roads
- the earthen and rock roadbeds that lead vehicles up toward the main bridge structure
* includes readsides.
* includes safety islands
- isles
- zones
* includes traffic circles
County road
* are narrow, well maintained, lightly traveled.
* tend to be winding, with steep slopes, and often unpaved.
Cutoff
* also occur to rationalize destructive behavior during times of anger at adults or peers.
* are channels
- devices
- limits
- natural things
* refer to the lowest number of points possible for a given letter grade.
Dirt road
* Some dirt roads become impassable during the rainy season.
* allow off-road vehicle travel.
* are suitable for passenger cars when dry but can be slippery when wet.
* become impassable after rains
- muddy and sometimes impassable during and after storms
* can become impassable after a rain
- during and after rain
* take hours to navigate and become impassable in the rain.
Driveway
* are located in cars
- cities
- neighborhoods
- subdivisions
- suburbs
- yards
* are used for cars
- garage sales
- motor vehicles
- parking
- pickups
- trucks
Forest road
* Forest Roads are closed in winter.
* are an essential part of the transportation system in many rural parts of the country
- essential to many facets of forest management
* can have adverse impacts on watersheds, especially if poorly maintained.
* provide the backbone of many rural transportation systems.
* represent a high risk for increased sediment delivery to streams.
Gravel road
* can be muddy after heavy rain.
* generate dust.<|endoftext|>### road:
Highway
* also influence economic development.
* are common properties built and maintained by taxpayers' money
- community lifelines for people and businesses
* are located in atlases
- cities
- countrysides
- deserts
- developed lands
- repairs
- states
- made of asphalt
- one of the most important links in the transportation system
- paved roads
- public properties
- still the Number One killer, and automobiles are a main source of pollution
* are the arteries and veins of commerce and crucial to Iowa's economic growth
- most heavily used mode of transportation for both personal and commercial travel
* are used for cars
- commuting
- driving
- movings
- speeding
- traveling
- wide roads
* can adversely impact large carnivores such as black bears, cougars, and wolverines.
* come in all sorts of sizes, from country roads to interstate turnpikes.
* cuts through bedrock commonly expose beds containing fossils.
* enable cars and trucks to move people and products easily and cheaply.
* form a key part of the nation's excellent transportation system.
* have two important impacts on the economy.
- lanes
* lead to major cities in every direction.
* means any highway, road, street, or other public way, regardless of classification
- public street, public alley, or public road
* often are obstacle courses, filled with broken glass and other debris
- parallel power lines and other sources of heavy radiation
* plays an effective role in short and long distance transportation.
* shrines commemorate victims of motor-vehicle crashes.
+ Regions of Brazil, North Region
* Highways are scarce and present mainly in the east. Airplanes are commonly used in small remote communities and sometimes in the larger cities.
* Highways come in many different designs. Highways can also be as simple as a two-lane road.
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### road | highway | bypass:
Cardiopulmonary bypass
* impairs small intestinal transport and increases gut permeability.
* involves surgically sewing vein or artery grafts on a stopped heart.
* is deleterious by triggering an important inflammatory reaction.
* provokes a complex neuroendocrine response in most patients.<|endoftext|>### road | highway | bypass:
Gastric bypass
* is major abdominal surgery and carries all the pain and risks of any operation
- the most common weight loss surgery
* permits normal absorption of food, medicines and vitamins.
* surgical operation that results in marked reduction in the size of the stomach.
+ Obesity, Treatment: Health problems :: Physiques
* Surgery can be used to treat obesity. Gastric bypass is the most common weight loss surgery. It makes a person's stomach smaller so that they feel full after eating less food and causes their body to absorb less calories. People who have surgery are usually very obese.
Expressway
* Some expressways have exits without numbers.
* are a design type of principal arterials
- highways
* are located in american cities
- countries
- large cities
- maps
- main roads
* are used for driving
- travel<|endoftext|>### road | highway:
Freeway
* Most freeways have a name and a number
- name, as well as a number
* Some freeways have special lanes and on-ramps for carpools.
* also carry freight
- connect Brussels to major cities in neighboring nations
- highways
* are located in cities
- countrysides
- notorious for breaking up communities
* are used for cars
- road trips
- speeding
- transportation
- travel
* carry a large volume of heavy truck traffic.
* dominate many urban landscapes.
* enable motorists to move quickly from one end of the metropolitan area to the other.
* includes readsides.
* includes safety islands
- isles
- zones
* includes traffic circles
* increase automobile trips and increases the average automobile trip length.
* operate most efficiently when traffic is flowing smoothly.
* probably facilitate the importation of illegal drugs.
### road | highway | freeway:
Toll road
* are located in new jerseys
- used for driving
* crowd non-tolled freeways with drivers avoiding the tollways.
* have toll booths.
* save governments time and money, and they come with fewer restrictions.
Interstate
* are always north-south routes
- the main routes between cities, and are divided multilane highways
- two-thirds less congested than the national average
* bring crime.
* carry the most traffic like transmission lines carry the most electricity.
* limit opportunities to get on and off the road.
+ Interstate Highway System, Numbering
* Interstates have a special way to figure out their numbers. The main Interstates have numbers with 1 or 2 digits.
Interstate highway
* Most interstate highways have coverage near major population centers.
* Some interstate highways have tolls.
* are highways
- like a tunnel that runs through the country
* are located in developed countries
- tourings
- travelling
* crisscross the nation.
* encircle the central business district, known as the downtown loop.
Motorway
* Many motorways have tolls.
* are an eyesore in the countryside and disturb wildlife habitats
- driveways
- race tracks
- the equivalent of driving in a tunnel
- transport
* bear the prefix 'A' and national roads 'N'.
* includes safety islands
- isles
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### road | highway:
Pike
* adore spinnerbaits and bucktails, chiefly ones yielding white and orange coloration.
* also use the increased turbidity of storm-tossed shallows to ambush their prey.
* are active all winter, but key periods are first and last ice
- carnivores
- everywhere
- fish
- freshwater fish
* are located in lakes
- rivers
- part of pikes
- points
- the weapon of choice for Ten out of Nine modern medieval military units
- torpedo-shaped fish with jaws filled with wicked teeth
* are used for eating
- place names
- pokes
- pulling
- weapons
* come in many sizes.
* feed aggressively just before spawning in the spring and again in the autumn.
* like to live in shallow, weedy, large, small and deep lakes and rivers.
* live in the ford where the river crosses the North Path.
* ' are a genus of fish. Pikes are carnivores. They live in freshwater lakes and rivers. Pikes can be found on the northern hemisphere. Pikes can live up to 30 years of age. The biggest recorded pikes were long, and up to in weight. All pike over in body weight are females.
* occur in most area lakes connected to the river system.
* prefer clear, shallow, vegetated areas of lakes and larger rivers
- quiet waters
* reach maturity at two to three years for males, three to four years for females.
### road | highway | pike:
Big pike
* are tough to find in summer and even more difficult to catch.
* feed actively in cold water.
* regulate the number of small pike.<|endoftext|>### road | highway | pike:
Northern pike
* appear to be more tolerant of cold water temperatures and seem to prefer lakes.
* are active all summer long, as is small-mouth bass
- in most parts of the lake
- also common along with lesser numbers of large and smallmouth bass and musky
- an easy catch along the weedlines on most area lakes
- good eating fish, too
- one of the first species to spawn in northern Indiana
- predators, feeding primarily on other fish
- typically green with light-colored small oval shaped markings
- very adaptable and occur in a wide range of habitats
* grow even more slowly.
* have dark colored bodies with light markings
- light bars on an olive-green back
- to re-orient their prey before they can swallow it
* is areal carnivorous creature
- created for speed, but only for short distances
* live in a wide variety of habitats
- shallow water in the summer and deep water in the winter
* prefers clear and warm waters of the rivers and lakes with gravelled bottoms.
* remain aggressive, located in weed beds, moving throughout weeds looking for panfish.
* use aquatic plants, too, by spawning in marshy and flooded areas in early spring.
Superhighway
* includes readsides.
* includes safety islands
- isles
- zones
* includes traffic circles
- lanes
Major road
* Most major roads have bike lanes.
* are drivable during daylight hours.
Mountain road
* are narrow and occasionally littered with fallen rock, especially after a rainfall.
* wind through tropical forests.
Parkway
* are highways.
* are located in garages
- maps
- new jerseys
- roads
- toll roads
* are used for access
- driving<|endoftext|>### road:
Portage
* are carry
- cost
- software
- tracks
* home teaching scheme for pre-school children with special needs and their families
- visiting service for pre-school children with special educational needs
+ Columbia County, Wisconsin: 1854 establishments
* Columbia County' is a county in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. Portage is the county seat and largest city in the county.
+ Portage, Wisconsin: Cities in Wisconsin :: Columbia County, Wisconsin :: County seats in Wisconsin
* Portage is the largest city outside of Dane County in the Madison Metropolitan Area.
Rail line
* Many rail lines have low levels of service, perhaps just one or two trains per day.
* link the rural and urban areas.
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### road:
Road racing
* is different from mountain biking because the riders work more as a team
- more like candy, or the icing on the top of the cake
- one of the most popular sports in the world
- the peoples sport
- thought to be a sport of precision, of carefully crafted driving
* struggles to attract young riders.
Road travel
* can be particularly dangerous during the winter when snow is on the ground
- sometimes take a long time in Indonesia, particularly during the rainy season
* is dangerous throughout Colombia, particularly in the rural areas.
* seems to be Pakistan's natural form of population control.<|endoftext|>### road:
Roadway
* affect movement only between hexagons so connected.
* are extremely hazardous with blowing and drifting snow
- for vehicles, and are inherently life-threatening places for a dog
- hazardous because of blowing and drifting snow
* are hazardous with blowing and drifting snow and ice
- large generators of storm water flow and cleaning that water is important
* are located in cities
- countrysides
- maps
- neighborhoods
- subdivisions
- one of our most widespread forms of public space
- part of transportation systems
- roads
* are used for cars
- cyclists
- motorbikes
- traveling
* can significantly affect forest habitats.
* contribute petroleum pollutants leaked from vehicles and metals from exhaust fumes.
* have storm drains which are meant to capture storm runoff.
* includes readsides.
* includes safety islands
- isles
- zones
* includes traffic circles
* increase runoff and act as a source of vehicle emissions.
* separate habitats.
* tend to bisect watersheds.
Rural road
* are less likely to be illuminated at night.
* can be narrow, winding, and in poor condition.
* promote economic development but also facilitate deforestation.<|endoftext|>### road | thoroughfare:
Street
* Most streets are created by men.
* Some streets are associated with the beautification of a town or city.
* are bands
- community spaces
- environments
* are located in maps
- street corners
- opportunity
- part of neighbourhoods
- public spaces that once supported all sorts of uses
- roadways
* are the circulation system of the body civic
- largest parcels of open space in any city, and they belong to the people
- urban areas
* are used for automobiles
- walking
* begin to age immediately after they are constructed.
* can become swift moving rivers, while basements can fill with water.
* define the character of our neighborhoods.
* have names
- patterns
* literally turn into rivers and ponds after downpours because of clogged drains.
* provide the thread that attaches a neighborhood to the fabric of the overall community.
* sweeping normally occurs the day after refuse collection.
+ Ho Chi Minh City, History: Cities in Vietnam
* It was invaded by the French in 1859. Saigon it was the capital of French Indochina and became an important city in French colonial trade. The tradition of naming places in Vietnam after great people is very common. Many streets bear the names of epic heroes. Hai Ba Trung street is named after heroic sisters.
* Many streets are the centre of local culture and people make groups there.
### road | thoroughfare | street:
Alley
* are located in big cities
- towns
* are used for bowling
- cats
- deliveries
- garages
- trash containers
- walks
* includes readsides.
Boulevard
* are an important element of the transportation system
- located in large cities
* are used for cities
- traverse cities
City street
* Most city streets are created by men.
* Some city streets have special bicycle paths.
- subject to severe gridlock, and even country roads can be highly congested
* can become rivers in seconds.
* have less soil with the proper drainage and structure for support of tree roots.
* pose other dangers for nesting raptors.
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### road | thoroughfare | street:
Local road
* are roadways
* are the core of the state's roadway network
- responsibility of each local municipality
- smaller roads that carry neighborhood traffic, or give direct property access
### road | thoroughfare | street | rue:
African rue
* competes strongly with other useful pasture species.
* contains numerous alkaloids and all plant parts are toxic.
Street cleaning
* is an effective way of removing excess sand and debris from the road.
* occurs throughout the non-snow season.
Street lighting
* can increase the risk of detection and can make people feel safe.
* enhances the city environment and provides an effective tool in crime prevention.
* gauge of security, a sign that the city has eyes.
* is also solar-powered
- provided to facilitate night-time travel and to promote personal safety<|endoftext|>### road:
Trail
* Some trails are meant as 'nature trails', and are used by people learning about the natural world.
* A 'trail' pedestrian path or road mainly used for walking, but often also for cycling, cross-country skiing or other activities. Some trails are off-limits to everyone other than hikers, and few trails allow motorized vehicles.
* are a chance to be social or experience solitude, to have some fun or to self-discover
- mix of packed snow, patches of ice and rock
- lines of domes, leaves, or curls linked together in a line or chain
- packed snow and ice with drifts in some places
- paths
- proteins
- smooths
- snow covered with patches of ice
- tracks
* become passage.
* can have soft surfaces, such as soil, woodchips, or water.
* follow routes.
* have locations.
* help deer move efficiently.
* includes readsides.
* includes safety islands
- isles
- zones
* includes traffic circles
* lead visitors.
* mark paths.
* usually connect where the deer eats and where it rests.
+ Trail, Trail types and use, Walking trails: Roads
* Trail use has become very popular for a wide variety of users. Some trails are meant as 'nature trails', and are used by people learning about the natural world. Many trails are 'day trails', what means that they are generally used by people out for a short hike, less than a day. Some trails are 'backpacking trails', or long-distance trails, and are used by both day hikers and by backpackers. Some trails are specifically used by other outdoor enthusiasts to gain access to another feature, such as good climbing sites. Many runners also favor running on trails rather than pavement, as giving a more vigorous work-out and better developing agility skills, as well as providing a more pleasant exercise environment. See trail running.
### road | trail:
Hiking trail
* Most hiking trails contain a healthy supply of rocks and boulders.
* Some hiking trails cover rough or rocky terrain that can easily twist an ankle or stub a toe.
* are located in forests
- state parks
* serve as cross-country ski trails in winter.
Water trail
* are like hiking trails.
* connect people with places and simultaneously enrich and protect both.
* promote environmentally-responsibly recreation on rivers and in coastal areas.
Unpaved road
* are a major source of airborne particulate matter
- frequently impassable during the rainy season
* have the lowest rate of speed of any road.
* vary in quality.
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Rock
* All rock contains some radium, usually in small amounts.
* All rocks are made up of minerals
- break down on the Earth s surface
- conduct electricity to varying degrees
* All rocks contain some trace uranium concentrations
- uranium, although most contain just a small amount
- disintegrate slowly as a result of weathering
- fall into one of three classifications, igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic
- fluoresce a medium orange color
- have a certain amount of elasticity
- originally come from igneous rock
* Any rock can become a metamorphic rock if a lot of heat and pressure is applied to it
- contains the entire periodic table, every element in the universe is in every rock
* Many rocks are named based on what kinds of minerals they have
- contain tiny magnetic particles
* Most rocks already contain planes of weakness or planes along which fracturing has occurred.
* Most rocks are a mixture of various minerals
- aggregates composed of two or more minerals
- composed of minerals
- crystalline
- millions to billions of years old
* Most rocks are mixtures of many different compounds
- elements and compounds
* Most rocks contain several different minerals mixed together
- some water, but sedimentary rocks hold the most
* Some rock doves cause property damage.
* Some rocks are broken down by chemical action, in a process called chemical weathering
- formed deep below the surface of the earth and others are formed above the surface
- hard, some are soft, some are shiny, some are dull, and some are rough
* Some rocks are more durable to weathering and erosion
- magnetic than others
- carry current better than others
- consist of minerals which contain uranium and potassium
* Some rocks contain large amounts of minerals
- sufficient hematite to exhibit red streaking
- sulfates
- deform by bending whereas others responded by breaking
* Some rocks dissolve more easily than others
- very easily in water and are called soluble
- evolve when there weight reaches a certain threshold like Granite, for example
- form at the Earth's surface while others form at great depths
- give hints for ancient magnetic fields although no planetary field exists today
* Some rocks have a magnetic quality
- well developed tectonic foliation, but others are essentially undeformed
- compositions intermediate between felsic and mafic
- only form from glacial material
* absorb and store heat for long periods, reradiating heat to plants
- heat and attract dust particles, dissipating nuclear energy over aeons of time
- radiant heat and provide frogs, lizards and butterflies with basking areas
- the sun's rays and give off heat like a radiator
* act like giant radiators.
* allows sewage to move quickly into groundwater without proper treatment.
* also attract fish, try rocky shorelines
- emit mercury
- give shade, and again, the bigger the better
- help keep the soil in place
- provide a site where butterflies can bask to store body heat from the sun
* appear to be in layers with a lot of void space.
* are a mixture of minerals, where crystals and amorphous materials have a single ingredient
- natural substrate for lichens, as well as moss and ferns
- naturally occurring solid material consisting of one or more minerals
- solid matter made up of minerals
- actually solid mineral deposits
* are aggregates of many grains of one or more minerals
- minerals and mineraloids
- alive as our bones are alive
* are an abiotic factor
- excellent mulch material to use around plants native to hot, dry environments
- as hard and sharp as spears
- black and often well-hidden by the dark water
- categorised by the way that they form
- classified by their minerals and chemical make-up
- cohesive, multicrystalline aggregates of one or more minerals
- combinations of minerals in varying proportions
* are composed of Earth materials
- compounds of minerals
- condensed layers of sediments such as sand or mud
- deficient in sodium and potassium but rich in titanium
- disintegrated by frost and rain
- dries
- everywhere, in the ground, forming mountains, and at the bottom of the ocean
- formed on Earth as igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic rocks
- furniture
- genres of music
* are good insulators so the heat has been slow to dissipate
- to hide under or to stay out of the sunlight
- heavies
- heavy and seem to enjoy pinching fingers, breaking toes and tweaking backs
- important to our ecomonics because oil and coal are found in rocks
* are in Stones
- the process of changing
- inanimate objects
* are located in bridges
- caves
- chairs
- countrysides
- drawers
- moons
- mountain ranges
- museums
- riverbeds
- rock gardens
- waterfalls
- made up of one or more minerals
- masses of mineral matter and can be all different sizes
* are mixtures of different minerals
- more complicated with various degrees of cementation, etc
- natural aggregates or combinations of one or more minerals
* are natural combinations of one or more minerals and are formed under a variety of conditions
- substances
- naturally-formed aggregates of one or more minerals
- of two kinds, igneous and sedimentary
- part of the earth's composition
- pieces of the earth
- poor conductors of heat, so interior heated and iron melted and sunk to the core
- produced in a variety of ways and have been cycled in some area many times
- sedimentary which houses lobsters regularly
- sedimentary, igneous or metamorphic in origin
- slippery when wet
- smoothed down, and the wind sorts sand into uniform deposits
- solid objects
- solids made up of a collection of minerals
- somewhat elastic, they can be bent without breaking
* are the building blocks of the Earth's crust
- product of the interactions between minerals
- ultimate source of most nutrients in food chains
- typically brittle at low temperatures and pressures
- used at times as projectiles in hunting bush pigs and other small game
* are used for decoration
- gravel
- hitting
- kicking
- mining
- throwings
- useful as building materials and for mashing stuff
* are usually aggregates of minerals which can be physically separated from one another
- portions of large masses of material that make up the earth's crust
* are very slippery when wet
- specific objects from the point of view of magnetism
* bears evidence of the minerals, temperatures, and forces that created it.
* belong to the earth element.
* break down over time due to the effect of wind, water, and temperature.
* breakdown by weathering.
* can also be composed of solid organic matter, coal is an example
- contain mineraloids, glass or organic particles of various sorts
- be treacherous when wet
- become dilatant just before failure because microcracks increase the volume of the rock
* can break even steel plows
- into pieces but stay the same chemically
- cause broken teeth and serious intestinal obstruction if swallowed
- experience enormous ductile strains if subjected to high stresses for long times
- fall from the heights
- harden very quickly under the right conditions
- preserve records of faults that have been inactive for many millions of years
- resist tidal disruption
- reveal much about the geologic past
- undergo physical and chemical changes
* cause a desire to climbs
- soil compaction, and plastic sheeting suffocates root systems
* change by being broken down into smaller rocks through pressure, weather, water, and heat.
* changes as it ages.
* climbs on rock and it only makes a seashore.
* collide with each other and break up into smaller pieces.
* come in different colors, textures, sizes and shapes
- many shapes, textures and colours
- seven standard colors and some others as well
* contain different amounts of minerals-natural substances formed from nonliving matter
- many clues about the processes of their formation
* containing larger amounts of magnetic minerals register a higher response on the magnetometer
- more silica, such as granite and rhyolite, are generally lighter in color
- volcanic clasts in a muddy, volcanic matrix are remnants of lahars
* correspond to truth.
* deform when applied stress exceeds rock strength.
* differ in their fertility.
* dissolve slowly, such as over thousands, millions and billions of years.
* do so when superheated in the center of the Earth.
* exhibit a variety of properties including shape, size, color, and texture
- properties, including shape, size,texture, and color
* expand when heated and contract when cooled.
* fall in certain ways
- more frequently on some days than on others, according to the recent weather
- out of the sky all the time
- when there's no ground underneath
* flow under stress by breaking and reforming atomic bonds within crystals.
* form the control for delineation of other surface materials.
* give kelp a place to attach their holdfasts.
* go through a rock cycle just like the life cycle or the process of metamorphosis.
* have a different kind of grain or cross section
- higher percentage of oxygen per unit volume than the atmosphere
- reputation for being solid, hard, and indestructible
- variety of properties that can be studied in the classroom
* have different appearances
- lower n than unconsolidated materials
* hiding just below the surface can bounce a boat around like a pinball.
* hold heat and can be detrimental to plant health.
* includes sections.
* lasts longer than wood.
* make excellent habitat for crabs, mussels, and snails.
- majority of the Earth's crust
* mediates thrombin's endothelial barrier dysfunction.
* melt at depths of a few hundred kilometers or less
- where the mantle in the asthenosphere is modified by fluids leaving the subducted plate
* natural object
* normally decrease in porosity with age and depth of burial.
* often fall and there can be landslides.
* outcrops in the stream bottom pose a hazard to canoes in shallow areas.
* piles on farm landscapes attest to the variation of materials carried by glaciers.
* prevent much plant growth due to unavailability of nutrients and soil.
* provide a basking site for butterflies to raise their body temperature.
* range in composition from basalt to rhyolite
- through the entire spectrum of compositions
* reflect light.
* reveal world's oldest mollusc.
* rise to the surface.
* showing repeat patterns of strata are called rhythmites.
* shrink and crack when they cool, spalling off the sides of the tube.
* sometime expand when exhumed.
* stabilize the ground matter.
* stars that like to sit around and discuss their emotions.
* start as magma
- to grow in minutes and grow up to four inches in height
* summer experience designed specifically for youth with disabilities.
* support burrows and serve as sunning and observation posts.
* taken from wet locations can be full of moisture.
* tend to make sounds that are harsh to the ear.
* tends to separate, or break, readily along bedding planes.
* usually have a deeper color once they are polished.
* vary in size, shape, color, and texture.
* weather at different rates in different climates
* weathering Most of the inorganic substances in tapwater come from rock weather ing
- at Earth's surface releases the chemical building blocks for life
- rates vary widely depending on mineral content, texture, rock type, and climate
+ Central Cross-Island Highway, Closing the damaged highway: Roads :: Transport in Taiwan
* The highway goes through mountains. Rocks often fall and there can be landslides. Earthquakes also damage the highway.
+ Geology, Types of rock
* Rocks can be found in all sorts of shapes and colours. Some are very hard and some are soft. Some rocks are very common, while others are rare. However, all the different rocks belong to three categories or types, igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic.
+ Kings Canyon (Australia): Protected areas of the Northern Territory :: National parks in Australia :: Canyons
* Kings Canyon and the area around it is Aboriginal land. It is part of the Luritja people's traditional country, and title over the land was granted to them in July 2012. Before the arrival of Europeans in the region, the damp climate at the bottom of the gorge was an important refuge during droughts. Rock engravings at the base of the canyon date are many hundreds of years old. Many of them are sacred sites for Luritja and are closed to visitors.
+ Mineralogy: Geology
* Studying minerals can be useful for figuring out certain things about a rock. Sometimes the shape or size of the mineral can tell something about the rock as well. The type of mineral in a rock can also tell what kind of a rock it is, or what has happened to the rock since it formed. Many rocks are named based on what kinds of minerals they have.
+ Mohs scale of mineral hardness: Friedrich Mohs :: Minerals
* Mohs scale of mineral hardness' is named after the scientist, Friedrich Mohs, who invented a scale of hardness based on the ability of one mineral to scratch another. Rocks are made up of one or more minerals. The hardness of a mineral is mainly controlled by the strength of the bonding between the atoms and partly by the size of the atoms. It is a measure of the resistance of the mineral to scratching.
+ Rock (geology), Rock classification
* Rocks are classified by their minerals and chemical make-up. The processes that formed them are also noted. Rocks may be igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic. Rock types may change in a so-called 'rock cycle'.
+ Strata, Cycles: Geology :: Earth sciences
* Rocks showing repeat patterns of strata are called rhythmites. Sometimes the patterns are caused by annual climate changes. Geologists call those varves.
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### rock bands:
Punk band
* Some punk bands play the same music on and on with just different lyrics.
* are rock bands
- twerps
### rock music:
Hard rock
* are rock music
- rocks
* blues-based music played louder and more aggressive on stage.
* is highly toxic.
Progressive rock
* are progressive music
* has a long and impressive history
- been know to incorporate elements from several different music styles
* is rock music
Punk rock
* are rocks.
* is about being alive
- people
- the headlining bands checking out the openers, and singing their songs
- writing letters, and constantly criticizing people for the shit they do and say
- for misfits
- rock music
* means a lot of things.
* state of mind.
* style of music.
+ Punk rock, About punk rock: Rock music
* Punk rock is a style of music. Many punk bands make their own music recordings and distribute them without using a major record company.
Basaltic rock
* are the most productive aquifers in volcanic rocks.
* contain too little silica to be reactive.
* form most of the volcanic-rock aquifers mapped.
* reacting with geothermally heated water can form chemicals that can support life.
Basement rock
* consist of highly altered basaltic pillow lavas.
* is that which forms the lower part of the crust.
Beach rock
* frozen into the surface of a lava flow can outline a former coastline.
* is the host material of most beach fossils.<|endoftext|>### rock:
Bedrock
* Some bedrocks are acidic, such as granites, and others are basic dolomites and limestones.
* can also become broken and fractured, creating spaces that can fill with water
- cause a perched water table
* consists of a sequence of cherty limestones and shales of the Permian age
- interbedded limestones, siltstones, and shales
- sandstone and shale
- primarily of basalt, andesite or basaltic tuffs
* crops out in small scattered occurrences, or in roadcuts and building foundations and mines.
* includes igneous, sedimentary and metamorphic rock types
- sections
* is all granite
- cherty limestone or limestone
* is exposed and the drop of a stream is broken by ribbons of harder rock that form cataracts
- in river and stream valleys
- hard limestone, calcareous siltstone or shale
- in perpetual motion
- interbedded, fractured siltstone or fine-grained sandstone and soft, red clay shale
- less likely to be affected by ground shaking than is unconsolidated material
* is located in Cobblestone County
- within a few meters of the surface
- made up of different components in different areas
- overlain by clay and sandy clay layers
- parent material
- slate and greenstone with smaller amounts of serpentine
* is slightly weathered schist, gneiss, phyllite, granite, or anorthisite
- or granite
- somewhat impervious, so water is held in joints, fractures, and faults
* is the layer from which all of the soil is formed
- of soil under the subsoil
- more stable, solid layer of rock underneath
- ultimate source of the inorganic component in soils
* lies close to the surface in much of the county.
* mix of sedimentary rock, sandstone, and shale rich in copper.
* refers to the foundational layer beneath soil or rock fragments.
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### rock:
Boulder
* Some boulders exceed six feet in diameter
- have bolts on top for toproping
* are much less weathered than gravel
* can change the temperature gradient in a snowpack and weaken the base.
* explode into cobble sized pieces when they impact the ground.
* has a dry climate.
* includes sections.
* is in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains
- one of the snowiest cities in the United States
- the incest capital of the world
* opal describes opal found within ironstone concretions of varying shape and size
- is produced in several areas in western Queensland
* protruding from the waters surface create two pockets of slower water.
* rise up from the deep blue of the sea.
* state of mind where physical activity is revered.
+ Boulder, Colorado, Geography, Climate
* Boulder has a dry climate. It has many sunny or mostly sunny days every year. Winters are cool, but sometimes can get very cold
- Colorado: County seats in Colorado
* Boulder' is a city in the state of Colorado, in the United States. It is the county seat of Boulder County. Boulder is in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. The city's height is. It is northwest of Denver. In 2011, there were 98,889 people living the City of Boulder. The Boulder Metropolitan Statistical Area has 294,567 people living in it
### rock | boulder:
Large boulder
* Some large boulders appear to be made up of many smaller rocks cemented together.
* appear to be partly buried in the surface material.
Cambrian rock
* contain the first abundant record of shelly fossils.
* underlie Ohio but are nowhere exposed at the surface.<|endoftext|>### rock:
Carbonate rock
* are different in different places and at different times
- found throughout the world but by no means evenly distributed
- sedimentary rocks
- the reservoirs for much of the oil and natural gas production in Kansas
* can also be pink or other colors, depending on the impurities present.
* comprise known or potential aquifers in some parts of Alaska.
+ Portland limestone, Formation, Later events: Carbonate rocks :: Building materials
* Carbonate rocks are different in different places and at different times. This is because varied organisms lived there and produced the carbonate. Also various events happened, like underwater landslides and earthquakes, which disrupted the beds. Sometimes the deposition of carbonate was interrupted, and different organisms produced silica, which we see as beds of chert.
Common rock
* Most common rocks are about half oxygen by weight.
* formed are carbonates, rock salt, and gypsum.
Cretaceous rock
* cover most of the state between the Red River Valley and Missouri River.
* dip gently away from the central uplift and form the outer rim of the structure.
Devonian rock
* are normally unfossiliferous shales, cherts, and sandstones.
* outcrop at less than three percent of the surface of the United States.<|endoftext|>### rock:
Extrusive rock
* are concordant with the sedimentary strata upon which they are deposited.
* cool above ground and cool in a shorter time than Intrusive rocks below ground
- quickly on or very near the surface of the earth
- rapidly because they solidify at Earth's surface
* form from magma that reaches the Earth's surface and then cools rapidly
- when magma flows onto the surface of the earth or ocean floor
* have crystals that are too small to see without magnification.
* is fine grained
- formed when the solidification process occurs at or near the ground surface
* make it to the surface to form either pyroclastic material or lava flows.
Funk rock
* fusion of funk and rock.
+ Funk rock, Characteristics: Fusion music genres
* Funk rock is a fusion of funk and rock. Many instruments may be incorporated into the music, but the overall sound is defined by a definitive bass or drum beat and electric guitars.
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### rock:
Glacial ice
* absorbs all colors of the visible light spectrum except blue, which it transmits.
* has great competency.
* is full of sediment
- the largest reservoir of fresh water on Earth
Granitic rock
* have uranium concentrations that are high relative to most rocks.
* represent the roots of ancient continental-margin volcanic systems.
Hot rock
* are never suitable for any pet as they provide a localized source of heat that is too hot
- only effective when buried under the substrate an used as a secondary heat source
* provide a localized heat source that is often too hot.<|endoftext|>### rock:
Intrusive rock
* come from magma.
* cool slowly because they solidify inside the Earth
- very slowly
* form when magma solidifies beneath the earth's surface.
* have a characteristically coarse grain size
- coarse grained texture
- large crystals that can be seen with the naked eye
* help to built the volcanoes from the inside.
* occurs in a variety of forms.
* result when magma solidifies beneath the earth's surface.
* show a granodiorite trend, locally with a slight shift towards monzonite.
Jurassic rock
* are present in the subsurface of the western part of the state.
* have no outcrops in the area but they are identified by bore holes.
Kid rock
* Kid Rock supporter of people in the United States Military.
+ Kid Rock, Live performances: American rock musicians :: Musicians from Michigan :: 1971 births :: Living people
* Kid Rock is a supporter of people in the United States Military. He has performed several concerts for soldiers, and gave soldiers free copies of his album 'Born Free'.
Larger rock
* broken off by sediment are called scree or talus.
* work best when they are flat and smooth.
Mafic rock
* are darker in color and denser than felsic
- denser, with ultramafic rocks being the most dense
- generally dark-colored
- less dense than felsic rocks
- lighter in color than felsic rocks
- usually black and have abundant iron and magnesium
* contain more iron and magnesium than felsic rocks
- silica than felsic rocks
- roughly equal amounts of ferro-magnesian minerals and calcic feldspar
Mesozoic rock
* are dominantly carbonates with shales.
* contain more mobile types, such as crabs, snails and fish.
Molten rock
* can flow quietly out onto the surface as lava
- rise up from the mantle into the crust and cool slowly forming big crystals
* has a very low resistivity, the cold dry hostrock a high resistivity.
* is said to have cooled and formed granite.
* surges upward along numerous vertical fractures.
* tends to stay molten much longer than it does here on earth.
Moon rock
* All moon rocks are basalts, anorthosites or breccias.
* are completely different from rocks native to Earth
- located in moons
- typically three billion years old or older
Oceanic rock
* are normally quite young deposits.
* is returned to the Earth's mantle when oceanic crust is subducted.
Pebble
* are all shapes, colors, and sizes
- information appliances
* are located in aquariums
- beachs
- creeks
- gravel
- ground
- lakes
- meadows
- playgrounds
- ponds
- riverbeds
- shoes
- streets
* are small rocks
- stones
- smooth because they are constantly being moved by tides and waves
- the smallest type of gravel
* are used for looking
- paving paths
- throwings
* contain the same apatite variety.
* includes sections.
Precambrian rock
* are the first bedrock encountered in most of central Minnesota
- undivided and consist of sedimentary, metamorphic, and igneous types
* can be complexly deformed.
* outcrop extensively in shield areas such as northern Canada and the Baltic Sea.
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### rock:
Scholars rock
* can be any color
- weigh hundreds of pounds or less than one pound
+ Chinese scholar's rocks: Chinese culture
* Scholars rocks can be any color. There are a wide variety of sizes. Scholars rocks can weigh hundreds of pounds or less than one pound. The term also means stones which are placed in traditional Chinese gardens.
Siliceous rock
* break predictably because they have few impurities.
* is relatively easy to flake and was used for making most of the stone tools.
Soft rock
* are good for some colors
* is an oxymoron
- the kind of muic they play
Unconsolidated rock
* are analogous to a bathtub filled with sand into which water is poured.
* is rock such as gravel.
Wet rock
* can cause broken bones.
* covered with seaweed can be treacherous.
* is much weaker than dry rock.
### rocky shoreline:
Fast growth
* allows for earlier maturation and shorter total growing time per crop.
* diminishes the intensity of their flavors.
* has causes environmental degradation to accelerate in many poor nations
- serious effects on their health and welfare
* rocky shoreline.
### rodents:
Spiny rat
* Most spiny rats die when exposed to heat and dryness.
* are rodents.
* have short, spiny bristles for hair, which discourages predators.
* inhabit forests or clearings, often near water.<|endoftext|>Roller
* All rollers appear to be monogamous and highly territorial.
* Some rollers can fly, but they somersault continually
- use devices
* also swell if they become overheated.
* are able to rotate in steady mutual contact without sliding
- birds
- cylinders
- far more successful in the tropics than they are in temperate areas
- part of roller skates
- single hills which racers speed jump
- useful for testing or displaying locomotives and the lighting systems inside cars
- waves
- wheels
* crush stems and flatten vines to increase the rate of dying.
* do vary in size and speed, which forms a thin web of fibers.
* get their name from their acrobatic flight, often rolling over and somersaulting in midair.
* independently rotate.
* is grounder
* skates with protective gear.
* spin freely on a cushion of air.
* swoop down from a high perch to surprise their prey.
* use pressure applied with the fingers, knuckles, and elbows to release fascial adhesion.
* wear from use and they also age from ozone and heat.
### roller coasters:
Storm chaser
* are roller coasters.
* ski during the winter.
### roman catholic:
Papist
* Roman Catholic
* place crosses upon their churches, upon their altars, and upon their garments.
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Roof
* Many roofs have plastic covers to keep out the rain.
* Most roofs have slopes.
* Some roofs absorb daytime heat
* Some roofs are part of architecture
- buildings
- castles
- cathedrals
- hospitals
- monasteries
- mosques
- skyscrapers
- temples
- sloped , or pitched , so the rain and snow fall off easily
- collect particles
- have snow.
* A 'roof' is the top part of the building. It keeps out rain and snow and protects people from the sun. Some roofs are sloped, or pitched, so the rain and snow fall off easily. Some roofs are flat, but even flat roofs have a little bit of pitch so the water can flow away towards a drain
* are covering
- flats
* are located in airplanes
- garages
- mouths
- towns
- open air
* are part of buildings
- buses
- caves
- houses
- trucks
- protective covering
- singles
- subject to collapse, even from just the weight of ash and debris
- top surfaces
- used for covering
* can also support active systems, such as solar water heaters
- collapse under the weight of snow
- shed large quantities of water
* collect oils from asphalt, chimneys, and cars plus lots of dirt and dust.
* cover materials.
* crush as a result of an energy assault or over compression of the roof supports.
* feature walls.
* have a powerful role in determining the style of a house
- ability
- benefits
- characteristics
- limited life spans
- radiant barriers to minimize heat in the summer, and to help retain heat in the winter
- shingles
- significant benefits
- unique characteristics
* includes bases
- roof peaks
- sections
* is protection
* provide clamp pressure
* tend to be made of shingles and sometimes leak.
* undergo significant expansion and contraction as they heat and cool throughout the day.
* usually have the largest surface areas and are exposed to airborne sparks
- that are exposed to airborne sparks
### roof:
Gable roof
* are roofs.
* can enclose a large volume of space.
Green roof
* are quite common in European countries, where they have had problems with flooding.
* symbolize bamboo shafts which in turn represent youth and longevity.
Metal roof
* are especially susceptible to snow slides
- fire retardant, providing a unfriendly home to fire-blown embers
- low maintenance and long lasting, resisting decay, discoloration and mildew
- normally of treated steel or less commonly of aluminium
* have ability.
Pitched roof
* Some pitched roofs have parts that stick out for windows.
+ Roof: Construction
* It can be dangerous to walk on a pitched roof. Some pitched roofs have parts that stick out for windows. These are called dormers. The edges of pitched roofs are called eaves. Often there are gutters and leaders at the eaves, which take away water from the roof.
Vegetative roof
* can absorb a portion of the sound that otherwise bounces off hard roofing surfaces.
* have important acoustical benefits, especially for higher frequency sounds.
White roof
* keep houses cooler in summer.
* work because of the physics of sunlight.
### roofs:
Flat roof
* Some flat roofs collect particles.
* are roofs.
### rooms:
Cardroom
* Most cardrooms typically have two blinds, the small blind and the big blind.
* are rooms.
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Rope
* Most ropes have mass.
* Some ropes tie around waists
- transmit forces
* are capable of ties
- lines
* are located in backpacks
- boats
- swimming pools
* are used for climbing
- secure packages
* bread disease caused by the bacteria, Bacillus mesentericus.
* breaks down from strands to yarns to fibers.
* burns on ankles, wrists, or torso
- the arms, legs, neck, or torso
* combination of the drug and marijuana.
* includes sections.
* is subject to damage by chemicals
- deterioration when exposed to direct sunlight
* made of yak hair is durable and withstands rain, wind and sun.
* piece of equipment that rhythmic gymnasts use.
* skipping is also very popular in Asia.
* swings present children with a free hanging rope that poses a strangulation hazard.
* variation where the main goals are learning commitment, and being fearless on stage.
+ Rhythmic gymnastics, Rope: Gymnastics
* Rope is a piece of equipment that rhythmic gymnasts use. The length of the rope depends on how tall the gymnast using it is. They swing the rope, throw and catch the rope, make figure-eights, and more. They also leap and jump through the rope while they are holding it.
### rope:
Bungee cord
* Most bungee cords have a rubber cap on the ends of the hooks.
* are good for attaching things to backpacks.
* come in a variety of lengths.
* consist of hundreds of continuous length rubber strands encased in a nylon sheath.
* is spring.
* serve as bookshelves and tree branches act as curtain rods and clothing lines.
Dynamic rope
* have a very thin sheath and abrade quickly.
* refer to the amount of force transmitted to a climber during a fall.<|endoftext|>### rope:
Strong rope
* are made from the bark fibres of the long surface roots.
* make climbing possible and special tools attach ropes to cave walls.
+ Caving, Spelunkers and their equipment: Hobbies :: Caves
* Wise spelunkers explore in groups, to prevent being lost or stranded in a cave. Spelunkers need reliable equipment, because the descent into a cave is like mountain climbing in the opposite direction. Basic spelunking equipment is similar to what mountain climbers use. Strong ropes make climbing possible and special tools attach ropes to cave walls. Special footwear makes it easier to explore hard to reach places, and hard hats protect spelunkers from falling rocks above. One torch attaches to a spelunker's helmet so it is with him or her at all times. Caves are also very cold, so most spelunkers wear heavy clothing for warmth.<|endoftext|>### rope:
Wire rope
* are a common type of cable.
+ Cable: Hardware (mechanical)
* A 'cable' is made of many wires or optical fibers twisted together to make a larger wire. Each of these wires may be covered. Some cables contain both electrical wires and optical fibers. There are many kinds of cables, including coaxial cables which block out radio or magnetic interference from other wires or cables, by having one wire inside an insulated tube surrounded by a second wire, acting as a metal tube along the same axis. Wire ropes are a common type of cable.
### roses:
Hybrid tea
* Most hybrid teas have an upright growth habit
- some fragrance
* are the ones florists use to get that bouquet of single, long-stemmed roses.
* bear long, narrow buds on single, straight stems.
* have large flowers with a high-pointed bud
- very little scent while species roses sometimes have an overwhelming scent
* is roses.
### rosewoods:
Brazilian rosewood
* are rosewoods.
* is considered superior to all
- very rare and very expensive
### rote learning:
Discrimination learning
* is rote learning.
* plays a dominant role in teaching all skills.
Roundness
* also reflects the amount of time the sediment traveled, indicating the distance as well.
* is description of the relative sharpness of the particle corners
- just pure roundness, without any other properties mixed in
- numbers
- shapes
* measures the amount a circle varies from being a circle.
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### roundness:
Concentricity
* Concentricities are circularity.
* helps the spindle spin longer without wasting energy on wobble.
* is an important attribute of bored holes
- zero for a 'perfect' tube
Sphericity
* Sphericities are roundness.
* exceeds cubicity for almost all complete bipartite graphs.
* is calculated using three different formulas
* quantity that measures how well a set of spheres is approximated by a single sphere.<|endoftext|>Rug
* Most rugs contain either natural or synthetic dyes.
* Some rugs make from cotton
- recycle cotton
* are Oriental
- easier to remove and clean, and the floor underneath also can be cleaned
- either all cotton or all wool
- non-conductors
* can also add texture and coziness to a room.
* cover the floor for warmth.
* hide frayed wires and can ignite from the heat, as can many walls.
* includes sections.
* is rugs.
* making is one of the ancient crafts of Oman.
* tearing and eating bedding are also symptoms of boredom.
### rug:
Oriental rug
* are either flat-woven or hand knotted
- the bullies of the woven set
* differ from all other rugs in one important part, their pile.
* woven with depressed warps have a large subsurface area for soil to collect unseen.
Turkish rug
* appear frequently in the paintings of well known artists.
* are still rich in symbolism, with many recurring motifs.
### running:
Sprint
* global communications company and one of the largest carriers of Internet traffic.
* large carrier of internet traffic and a leader in broadband communications.
### rust fungus:
Apple rust
* mites overwinter as an adult females under the bud scales of apple trees.
* rust fungus<|endoftext|>### sacred writing:
Mantra
* Some mantras have meanings
- In Hinduism and Hindu mythology, 'Mantra' means a group of words. There are many such groups of words. Some mantras have meanings. However, there are many mantras which are just syllables, with or without any words. Such mantras do not carry meanings. From the ancient times, Hindus, as well as in many cases, texts of Buddhism and Jainism contain many mantras
* are and can be used in spiritual journey to get to a point from where the jump can happen
- different in that they have different meanings and create different vibrations
- energy-based sounds and are tools of power
- essential parts of all samskaras
- meaningless sounds
- mottos
- of all different varieties
* are sounds or groupings of sounds with a pre-determined vibratory effect
- which take our awareness to quieter, more subtle levels
- very powerful healing aids
* contain powers and deep philosophical meaning.
* express simple phrases of prayer in repetitive patterns.
* sacred writing
* take three forms.
* work in meditation.
### sacred writing | mantra:
Mantra meditation
* is very similar to the American Indian dance meditation.
* method that can help athletes who have high levels of mental anxiety.
* very easy to learn and effective relaxation technique.<|endoftext|>### sacred writing:
Psalm
* Some psalms deal with holiness, and others with sinfulness.
* are for busy people who have less time to pray
- laments and praises cried and sung by the faithful throughout history
- poems
- rich in the variety of human emotions
- songs for the lyre, and therefore lyric poems in the strictest sense
* collection from various sources, some of which are named.
* covers the entire range of human feelings and emotions.
* describes the qualities of wise rule.
* have a way with making the words the song.
* is the Bible's hymnbook
- book of the heart
Sacred scripture
* All sacred scriptures point to a moment of contact that transforms a life.
* lies at the very heart of religion.
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### sacred writing:
Wisdom literature
* is about how to live, how to be an authentic human being
- sayings of wisdom that teach about divinity and wisdom
- that which gives simple, common-sense advise on how to live in a chaotic world.
* ' genre of literature that was common in the ancient Near East. Wisdom literature is about sayings of wisdom that teach about divinity and wisdom. The story-telling used is the same than in other forms of literature. Wisdom literature tells the reader has about how nature is made, and what reality is
### sacrificial:
Biblical worship
* endorses such elements as praise and thanksgiving and, at times, exuberant joy.
* is sacrificial.
* teaches mercy.
### safe abortions:
Legal abortion
* are safe abortions.
* is one of the safest of all medical procedures.
* protect women's health.
### safe, noninvasive technique:
Renal ultrasound
* can detect tumors of the kidney and findings of obstruction.
* is done shortly after birth on all infants to evaluate the kidneys
- normal
* safe, noninvasive technique.
### sailing ships:
Tall ship
* are sailing ships.
* come in different sizes and shapes.
Sainthood
* are groups
- positions
* is acceptable only in saints
- more than ethical perfection or works of Christian virtues
### salad greens | curly endive:
Radicchio
* All radicchios have tender but firm leaves with a slightly bitter flavor.
* is curly endive
### salespersons:
Car salesman
* Car salesmen are the scum of the earth.
* are salespersons.
Salient object bilateral symmetry
* Bilateral symmetry dominates only when the axis is vertical
- exists where there is only one way to split the animal into equal halves
* Bilateral symmetry is associated with cephalization, differentiation of a head
- movement in which one end of the animal constantly leads
* Bilateral symmetry is the most common animal body plan
- symmetrical arrangement of an organism
- two -sided
- salient object property
### saline type laxative:
Milk of magnesia
* is an old standby for treating occasional constipation
- another name for magnesium hydroxide
- medicine
- the best-known saline laxative
* saline type laxative.
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Salt
* All salt can cause damage to things
- comes from the sea in some way
- has the potential of containing minute amounts of organisms
* All salts are good conductors when in solution
- ionic compounds
- come from a sea, but are processed in different ways
- dissociate completely in aqueous solution
* Enhances the flavor of food, especially meat.
* Many salts are quite stable in the crystalline state
- sparingly soluble in water
* More salt blown up from the sea increases the conductivity of ice laid down in that layer.
* Most salt attracts animals
- contains sodium
- finds in seawater
* Most salt has iodine in it, in the form of iodide or iodate
- properties
* Most salt helps dehydration
- fatal dehydration
* Most salt is lost through urine and perspiration
- used to remove ice from roadways and to make many chemicals
- salts appear white because they reflect and scatter light
* Most salts are ionic
- read- ily soluble in water
- the result of a reaction between a metal and one or more nonmetals
- containing the alkali metal ions and the ammonium ion are soluble
* Pocked -Rock salt is pressed into the surface after finishing.
* Some salt adds to food.
* Some salt causes blood pressure
- imbalances
- micronutrient imbalances
* Some salt comes from evaporation ponds
* Some salt conducts electricity
- negative charge
* Some salt contains elements
- minerals
- nutrients
- trace minerals
- decreases absorption
- derives from chlorophyll
- encourages water consumption
* Some salt has effects
- hydrogen
- important functions
- powder
- truffle powder
- helps carbohydrates
* Some salt increases blood pressure
- excretion
* Some salt is added to mayonnaise as a flavor enhancer
- excreted by kidneys
- formed by acid
- synthesized in livers
- kills bacteria
- lowers blood pressure
* Some salt neutralizes acid
- excess acid
* Some salt passes through cell layers
- provides natural resources
- raises blood pressure
- retains moisture
- uses in dentistry
* Some salts are colored, some are white
- insoluble
- toxic to the plant when they are in excess amounts
- can be toxic to root tissue
- contain insoluble additives such as calcium carbonate to enhance the flow of the salt
- pass through the gut without being absorbed
- when added to water make the solution acidic or basic
* absorbs liquids and can cause a heavy feeling
- moisture, so the paper side with the water turns back to black
- water and increases water retention
* accelerates the development of rancidity and thus decreases freezer life.
* accumulate in the plant root zone as soil water is depleted by evapotranspiration
- soil when they are added faster than they can be removed
* accumulating in the root zone make it harder for a plant to absorb the water it needs.
* activates the first enzyme in the mouth, salivary amylase.
* acts as a binder in sausages to form a binding gel made up of meat, fat, and moisture
- preservative and adds flavour and crispness
- purifier and a preservative
* actually acts as a substitute for the cuttlefish's brain which has been long removed
- bonds to the surface and forms a film
- has several negative effects on anything it comes in contact with
* adds density to the water so objects float
- flavor and also inhibits bacterial growth
- taste to life
* adversely affects plants in two ways.
* affect plants both directly and indirectly.
* affects kidneys
- mineral nutrition
- soil quality
* aids the body in fluid and temperature regulation.
* alone has very little effect on snow.
* also accumulates in basins or playas through rainfall runoff
- acts as a flavor enhancer and as a tenderizer
- aids digestion, and helps to retain water
- brings out the flavor of food
- contributes to the crust colour and adds flavour
- corrodes ALL metals eventually
- creates thirst
- has implications for exobiology
- helps to retain flavor
- increases the palatability of some foods
- interfere with water uptake in the plants
- invades plant cells, forcing out water
* also is mined from rock salt, the huge deposits beneath the ground
- toxic to slugs and direct applications of table salt to a slug can kill it
- makes the sediment edges bulge
- place a strain on the kidneys
- plays a role in the ability to produce large quantities of nanoparticles
- provokes thirst
* also stings greatly when it enters a wound
- when it touches bare flesh
- stings, and it burns and it irritates
- strengthens the structure of the dough and adds the necessary flavor to a baked product
- tends to inhibit bacteria and parasites
* also works on blood stains on cotton clothes
- to weather rock
* appears to contribute significantly to cancer.
* are a form taken by many minerals.
* are among the most important chemical compounds
- colourless, tasteless and easily dissolved in water
- combinations of ions
- common solutes and water is by far the most common solvent
* are compounds formed when an acid and a base react
- that result when the hydrogen of an acid is replaced by a metallic element
- comprised of positive ions and negative ions
- important maintaining fluid balance
- ionic compounds that often dissolve readily in water
- known in the three oxidation states
- lost from the body in perspiration, feces, and urine
- made up of particles with opposite electrical charges
- nutrients and evidence of liquid water
- precipitated within the soil
- product of chemical weathering in adjacent highlands
* are stable compounds held together by ionic bonds
- that, when dissolved in water, can be absorbed by plants
- the result of combing an acid with a base
* are usually crystalline solids that consist of positive metal ions and negative nonmetal ions
- ionic solids
* balances the action of yeast and in sweet mixtures it helps to develop flavor.
* becomes apart of everything that it touches.
* break down into ions when they go into solution.
* breaks the chemical bonds holding the clumps together and the pore spaces close.
* brings a very distinctive flavor to food.
* build up usually in soils in dry areas that have been irrigated excessively.
* burns foliage, turning it brown.
* can accumulate and cause kidney disease in old age
- adversely affect plants in several ways
* can also accumulate around the rims of both clay and plastic containers
- be brittle
- corrode metal feeders
- deter ants from coming inside
- go from sea to land
- intensify the effects of drought, and vice versa
- precipitate out of soil water onto soil particles
* can be a problem in some manures
- an irritant, and light can blind
- become tasteless because of a process of contamination or infiltration
- build up in the soil which makes it harder for plant growth
* can cause even greater dehydration to occur
- higher water retention, requiring extra water to dilute it
- come from two sources
- contribute to the painful retention of fluids
- damage, even kill, plants
- delay death
- hurt an animal's paw, so when trying to melt ice, use sand instead
- improve the flavor, but phosphate can contribute a soapy flavor
- inhibit plant growth and depress yields
- injure and or kill grass, flowers and other vegetation along campus walkways
- leave stains on the wood
- mask off flavors in salted butter
- persist at the surface in cold and arid climates
- preserve and heal, but it cauterises when strewn in an open wound
- worsen the symptoms of cardiomyopathy by increasing retention of excess fluid
* causes a person to retain fluid which drives up the blood pressure
- corrosion of the sealing materials
- excretion of larger amounts of calcium and thus increases calcium in the urine
* causes fluid retention which can increase nervous tension and high blood pressure levels
- retention, varying throughout the day with fluctuating intake
- hypertension
- moistness
* causes the body to retain fluid, which increases the heart's workload
- fluids, resulting in swelling
- or hold on to water
- outright death of plants, and the consequent erosion of topsoil
* causes water retention and increases that marshmallow woman feeling
- in the body, and, in turn, higher pressure
- to move out of the plants in a process called exosmosis
* collects on stems, buds and roots, or washes into the soil and destroys root systems.
* combination of sodium and chloride.
* comes from our groundwater
- through the gel column with the starch
* common commodity today and it is relatively in expensive.
* commonly occuring mineral, the technical name of which is sodium chloride.
- that is made of the elements sodium and chlorine
* concentrates through evaporation and evapotranspiration.
* conducts electricity when placed in water.
* consists of sodium and chlorine
* containing the sulfite ion are called sulfites.
* contains an anti-caking agent
* continues to be produced in the traditional way, i.e. through an evaporation process.
* controls the yeast's activity.
* decreases the growth of some bacteria and molds.
* desiccant - it helps remove water from things, including human bodies.
* dissolve into positively charged ions and negatively charged ions, which conduct electricity
- releasing an aroma
* dissolved in water increases the density of water.
* dissolves in ocean water
- salt water
* does kill slugs and snails but repeated use can make the soil toxic to plants
- more than bring out the flavor of foods
* does, indeed, rise because it is less viscous than surrounding rock.
* domes contain anhydrite , gypsum , and native sulfur , in addition to halite and sylvite.
* draws moisture from herbs and at the same time absorbs some of their essential oils
- off nutritious, natural juices
* draws out moisture and inhibits browning
- water out of bacteria and molds , which prevents their growth
* easily removes stains from skin.
* enhances the natural flavors in most dishes, even pies and cakes.
* enters the roots and accumulates throughout the tree.
* even arrives on earth from outer space.
* flavor crystal.
* flavors food.
* flows into the ocean from the land.
* forms crystals that are almost perfect cubes
- protective layers
* frequently cakes around the nostrils.
* furnish raw material for food synthesis.
* general magical protectant in almost every culture around the world.
* gets into the sea from rivers and groundwater.
* gives taste to food.
* glow An exfoliating treatment using a mixture of oil and coarse salt rubbed into dampened skin.
* hardens the arteries and if taken in excess can cause hypertension, which leads to strokes.
* has a dispersing effect on clumps of bacteria
- retarding effect on yeast and a toughening effect on gluten
- tendency to dry the meat out and remove moisture
- at least three unique qualities
- healing properties
- many regulatory functions in the body
- natural qualities to absorb negativity
- no intrinsic nutritional value
- the power of life like the immortal and eternal truth
* have also an influence on the products formed in a reaction
- relatively little effect in practical food applications
* helps conduct electricity better through water
- destroy moths and drives away ants
- restore faded colors, and to remove dirt and grime
- slow bacterial growth
- strengthen the gluten in the flour
- the body hold on to water
* helps to aid digestion
- keep nerves and muscles functioning properly
* hydrophilic substance because it dissolves easily in water.
* improves the taste of cooking apples.
* increases marinade pick-up by increasing the space between the thick and thin filaments.
* increases the buoyancy of the ice cube
- flow of saliva also
- rate at which rancidity develops in meat
- solubility of muscle proteins in water
* influence ionic activities, and therefore, reduce pH values.
* inhibits the ability of liver cells to change hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen
- softening of the seed coat of beans
- yeast fermentation, improves texture, has a slight toughening effect, and adds flavor
* interferes with absorption.
* is about thirty kilometers northwest of Amman
- absolutely vital to making the structure of bones firm
- abundant on and deep within the earth
* is added during the manufacture of all cheeses as a preservative and flavouring
- processing and manufacturing of food products in the form of sodium
- for flavor and to inhibit the growth of undesirable microbes
* is added to butter for some flavor but mostly as a preservative
- many foods as a meat preservative
- processed foods to aid preservation and to improve taste
- the depleted brine leaving the electrolytic cell and the brine is recirculated
- water by rivers dissolving rocks and carrying it to the ocean
* is also a cause of osteoporosis and a minor cause of some cancers
- very important element in animals' diets
- widely used preservative
* is also an important export
- ingredient in many manufactured foodstuffs
- effective in treating injuries or infections to the slime coat of our pond fish
- important in their diet
- injurious to many plants growing along roadsides and driveways
- of vital nutritional importance
- prepared and used as an export commodity
* is an abiotic factor found in some environments
- antiseptic and disinfectant
* is an element that is difficult to remove
- difficult, at the very least, to remove
- excellent cleaning agent, by itself or in combination with other substances
- important curing ingredient
- indispensable necessity of life
- inexpensive, bulk commodity
- insulator
- integral part of our diet
* is another common household product that produces texture
- essential ingredient in quality bread production.It has several functions
* is both a seasoning and a preservative
- sharp tasting spice and a vital ingredient for life
- brought over the land from the fine aerosol spray thrown up from the oceans
- categorized as four types, based on the method of production
- composed of two poisonous elements
- considered to be a hallowing substance that purifies, repels evil, and attracts wealth
- corrosive to metal type creep feeders
* is crucial for both taste and texture
- to survival in outdoor conditions in Antarctica
- dangerous for people with hypertension
- different from that which it salts
* is dissolved into a brine solution
- with water to form a concentrated brine solution
- dried along the coasts, as the Black Sea salt water body
- effective in treating skin disease and is used in some soaps
- especially effective against fungal infections and some parasitic problems such as ich
* is essential for life in general , and saltiness is one of the basic human tastes
- life, and salt is used to purify and to preserve
- many body functions
- normal body maintenance
- the prevention of muscle cramps
- in relationship to the desired life of the bread
* is essential to the health of both people and animals
- human body
- essential, both for bringing out the flavors of foods and for bringing flavors into balance
- excreted through special glands, but Spartina has another defense from salt damage
- expensive to separate from drinking water
- extremely important in food processing and cooking
* is for cleansing
- shiokagen, the act of seasoning food to bring out the flavor
* is found in considerable quantities in the deep underground
- underground deposits and seawater more commonly called saltwater
- free of charge
- heavier than water, so it sinks to the bottom
- high in ions and conducts electricity
- highly antiseptic and draws out toxins while exfoliating
- important in many ways
- in the makeup of almost all foods, with incredibly high percentages in processed foods
- inorganic, a mineral, and also crystalizes
* is iodized by adding the chemical potassium iodate to it
- using potassium or sodium iodide
- known as the universal and most widely used food supplement and condiment
* is less dense than rock and tends to mushroom upward forming salt domes
- effective for de-icing when temperatures plunge below minus five degrees
* is located in cabinets
- cupboards
- homes
- mines
- sea water
- shakers
- shelfs
- streets
- tables
* is made of crystal
* is made of sodium and chloride, and it's mostly the sodium that affects blood pressure
- two different atoms
* is made up of many sodium and chlorine ions stacked together in a lattice
- the elements sodium and chloride
* is made up of two chemicals, sodium and chloride
- different kinds of atoms-sodium atoms and chloride atoms
- mentioned many times in the Bible as a seasoning and staple ingredient
- mined around Lake Chad, where most people live
* is mined in Gulf Coast mines of Louisiana by drilling and blasting
- differnet ways depending on where it is found or even made
- mixed with sand to prevent freezing and clumping
- more viscous than ice by about three orders of magnitude
- natural, but some healthy people avoid salt like the plague
* is necessary for people and animals to have in their diets
- the biological processes of many aquatic organisms
- non-toxic and harmless to skin and clothing
- one of several factors determining the kind and abundance of plant life
* is one of the bugaboos of our eating habits, too
- most commonly used drugs in aquaculture
- world s most widely used inorganic chemicals
- only affective to prevent rotting if it is applied to that which it is to preserve
- part of a healthy diet
- perhaps the single most important chemical for reducing transport stress in fish
- plastic-like, flexing in all three dimensions under enough pressure
* is present in processed foods and is added in cooking and at the table
- vast quantities in seawater , where it is the main mineral constituent
* is produced by the evaporation of sea water
- from nearby salines
- in most of the countries on the earth
- pure
- really most Effective, when the concentration of salt changes
- removed from the ice as it forms, increasing the density of the underlying water
- required to regulate body fluid levels
- retained, which causes the body to hold fluid
- salt, or it is less than dung fit only to be thrown out
- seasons
- separated out by water washing
* is so abundant that it is used for building blocks and for road pavement
- dense that one can float without sinking
- hostile to most life forms that people have used it for centuries as a preservative
- something that developed taste
- spices
- spread when accumulations are under two inches
- still a prevalent ingredient in our diets
- suitable for vegetarian and other special diets as well
- tasted with the tongue, and can overwhelm the tastebuds that perceive sourness, or acidity
- that which keeps society from becoming rotten
* is the best disinfectant known, and the least harmful of all known to mankind
- body or container of form, which holds the other principles together
- decisive factor together with lactose
- grand purifier and preserver
- important necessary to live for human being
- key in the diet
- leading cause of dehydration for most marathoners
- main source of sodium in foods
* is the most common seasoning and curing agent found in home sausage making
- source of sodium in the diet
- familiar source of sodium
- obvious difference between the water that comes out of our tap at home and the sea
- only commercially exploitable mineral
* is the only rock directly consumed by man
- humans can eat
- type of rock that has a permeability so low that it can hold the tiny helium atoms
- primary source of dietary sodium
- product of an alliance between fire from the sun and ocean water
- signification that it is made barren
- world's oldest known food additive
- to prevent massive loss of feathers
- totally different from meat and bones
- transparent to infrared light
- universally and regularly consumed
* is used as a deicer because it lowers the freezing point of water
- natural preservative in soy cheeses
- seasoning and a preservative, plus it functions to bind a product together
- the connection between the worlds of the living and the dead
* is used both as a seasoning and as a preservative
- in dry cure as well as brining
* is used for food
- resin regeneration in the water softening unit of the dishwasher
- in a manufacture of a large number of chemicals
* is used in canning and in frozen foods to enhance taste, color, and as a preservative
- only for flavor or color protection
- making covenants - friendship
- the winter time to melt ice
- washing cloth as a stain remover
* is used on many foods and can add up quickly
- the snow route system to rapidly provide wet roads
- primarily for stock feeds, recharging water softeners, and road de-icing
* is used to banish evil
- control the amount of water in the body
- denote permanence, preservation from corruption
* is used to keep snow and ice from bonding to the pavement and to allow snowplows to remove
- wintry roads free of ice
- limit consumption of supplemental phosphorus
- lower the temperature and increase the rate of ice melting
- manufacture chlorine and caustic soda
* is used to melt ice on road surfaces
- the snow or ice
* is used to prevent meat from spoiling
- the snow or freezing rain from freezing directly to the pavement
- purify water
- recharge the resin beads once they are saturated with magnesium and calcium
* is used to relieve stress associated with maintaining a water balance in the fish
- during handling and transport
- season foods and is the primary source of sodium in our diet
- the ancient rites to exorcise the devil
- treat bacterial gill infections and relieve stress during handling and transport
- useful in treating parasites
- very important for the camel
* is vital for absorption of food particles through the intestinal tract
- clearing up catarrh and congestion of the sinuses
- maintaining sexuality and libido
- preventing varicose veins and spider veins on the legs and thighs
- sleep regulation
* is vital for the generation of hydroelectric energy in cells in the body
- prevention of gout and gouty arthritis
- white coloreds
* is, today, the largest mineral feedstock consumed by the world chemical industry.
* key ingredient in many yeasted breads, as it performs several important functions.
* kills germs and helps wounds heal
- leeches
- mold, too
- plants, and they are growing plants here
- weeds
* lessens the Number of Pathogens in the water.
* lowers the freezing point more d.
* lowers the freezing point of ice, causing the ice to melt
- temperature of water by a few degrees
- water potential
* major factor in our lives
- problem with Hawaii soils
* makes blood vessels leaky and causes water retention
- ice melt, and the string can sink into the ice cube a little
- the white colors
- water denser, so the less-dense fresh water flows on top of the denser sea water
* marshes evolve over time from young marshes to old marshes
- exhibit characteristics of both terrestrial and marine ecosystems
- fringe or grow around the edge of much of the pond
* mays have additional benefits
* means any inorganic compound dissolved in water.
* melts an ice balloon and the resulting water carves meandering channels.
* mineral that is found in soil and rocks, too
- naturally in the earth
* mineral, so it can be stored indefinitely without going stale.
* minor element in food, but it flavours all of it.
* mixes with water.
* modify the properties of water by reducing an ion's activity in solution.
* natural exfoliant which eliminates impurities in the skin, leaving it clean and radiant
- the skin, leaving it glowing and clean
- water softener and is helpful in drawing impurities out of the skin
* necessary and accepted part of the winter environment
- part of life
- seasoning that makes life on earth possible
* needs moisture to provide melting action.
* occur in natural well water and spring water as well as saliva.
* occur naturally as rock weathers and forms soil
- in the soil and are carried by water
* occurs in beds and in dome-like deposits.
* plays an important role in the formation of the cheeses rind or outer coating.
* preservative and imparts taste to food
- that slows down the decay process of food and other natural materials
* preserves food from putrefaction and was a symbol of permanence
- things, like meat
* preserving substance.
* prevent roots from absorbing water and thus increase the wilting point.
* produce positive ions and negative ions when dissolved in water.
* produces a cubic crystal
- and promotes the development of color in meats and baked goods
* promotes the development of color in ham, bacon, hotdogs and sauerkraut.
* purifying agent.
* raises blood pressure increasing the risk of arterial spasms.
* readily absorbs moisture, tying it up in the soil and extracting it from plant roots
- dissolves in water
* regulates the exchange of water between our cells and their surrounding fluids
- water in our cells, it aids muscle contraction, nerve impulses, and heartbeats
* removes moisture and helps cure the alligator skin.
* replaces salt loss through sweating.
* represents stability between opposing forces as in fire and water.
* restricts bacterial growth.
* seems to be an irritant which increases the fish's slime response.
* sets the flavor in food.
* solid at room temperature, and water liquid.
* stable chemical compound.
* sterilizes the ground so that nothing grows.
* strengthens gluten by slowing down the enzymes which catalyze the breakdown of proteins
- in bread dough, providing uniform grain, texture and dough strength
* strong natural antihistamine.
* substitutes Potassium chloride salt substitutes are one way that sodium intake can be reduced.
* symbol of lifelessness
- that which preserves from decay
* takes three days to start to develop, and can keep growing for about a week
- up space so less oxygen
* tend to attract water both from the concrete and through the coating
- leave the water in the aquarium and accumulate on the cover glass
* tends to retain body fluids and adds to any weight problem.
* thus represents immutability.
* universal cleanser that absorbs impurities.
* used in cooking is limited
- snow road maintenance can result in spalling and cracking
* uses for preparation.
* vital nutrient
- substance for the survival of all living creatures, particularly humans
* vitally needed element in the treatment of diabetics.
* water loving chemical.
* works as a prooxidant for heme pigment oxidation and thereby also influences the color.
+ Iodine, Occurrence: Halogens :: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals
* It has iodate in it. Iodide is found in seawater. Kelp has quite large amounts of iodine in it. Iodine is one of the heaviest elements needed by living things. If we do not get enough of it, we get a disease known as goitre. Most salt has iodine in it, in the form of iodide or iodate. We can also take iodine pills to make sure we get enough.
+ Salt, Table Salt: Chemical compounds
* Both of these are needed for all living creatures, including humans, but they are not always eaten in the form of salt, where they are found together in large amounts. Some peoples, like the Yanomami tribe in South America, eat very little salt. Salt is used to control the amount of water in the body. Salty flavor is also one of the basic tastes. Salt cravings may be caused by not having enough minerals, like sodium chloride, in the body.
+ Sulfite: Chemistry
* Sulfite' is an ion. Salts containing the sulfite ion are called sulfites. Sodium sulfite is an example. They are used to preserve dried food. Some people have allergies to sulfite in food, and it makes them sick.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### salt:
Arsenate
* Most arsenates are heavy, and none are hard.
* are chemical compounds
- salts of arsenic acid
* is salt
+ Arsenic, Properties, Chemical compounds: Semimetals :: Chemical elements
* Arsenate' is an ion. Arsenates are salts of arsenic acid. They are oxidizing agents. Sometimes, not all of the protons are taken away from the arsenic acid and then hydrogen arsenate salts are formed. Arsenate can replace phosphate in the cells but it does not work like phosphate does. The cell dies, and that is why arsenates are toxic. Some bacteria can use arsenate instead of phosphate, though.
Bicarbonate
* Most bicarbonate neutralizes acid.
* Some bicarbonate is secreted by pancreases
- lowers urinary excretion
- promotes excretion
* Some bicarbonate reduces calcium excretion
* cause chlorosis, margin burning of leaves, and poor growth.
* dissolves in water.
* is carbonate
### salt | bicarbonate:
Potassium bicarbonate
* Some potassium bicarbonate reduces excretion
- nitrogen excretion
* Some potassium bicarbonate reduces urinary excretion
* is an additive in fire extinguishers
- used in the production of soft drinks
* reduces urinary nitrogen excretion in postmenopausal women.<|endoftext|>### salt:
Bile salt
* Some bile salt helps carbohydrates
- is synthesized in livers
* aid in emulsifying and absorbing fats in the intestine.
* are amphipatic and have a detergent action on fat
- cholesterol derivatives, principally cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid
- in turn absorbed in the ileum and are recycled by the liver and gall bladder
- the major component
* break up fat, and bilirubin gives bile and stool a brownish color.
* cause fat globules to break up.
* convert carotene.
* enhance the absorption properties of the fatty acids and certain fat-soluble vitamins.
* form micelles, with the polar groups facing outward.
* help to emulsify fats which aids the pancreas with digestion
- keep cholesterol in solution in the bile
* induce or blunt cell proliferation in barrett's esophagus in an acid-dependent fashion.
* inhibit many kinds of bacteria, especially gram positives
- non-enteric bacteria
* stimulate the secretion of water by the large intestine to help move the contents along.
* surround fats to form micelles that can pass into the epithelial cells.
Bismuth salt
* All bismuth salts form insoluble compounds when put into water.
* have broad spectrum anti-biotic properties.<|endoftext|>### salt:
Borate
* are a environment sensitive product that has an unlimited residual
- derivatives of the mineral boron
- environmentally safe, odorless and used in homes with children and pets
* are highly effective as a pesticide
- toxic to wood boring insects and fungi
- used as environmentally benign wood preservatives
* have a long history of stopping insects and preventing decay.
* kill immature fleas by contaminating their food supply.
* protect wood against wood decay fungi and have long been used in wood preservation.
* treated wood is unchanged in color also protects from wood eating insects and most fungi.
* use a unique approach for the control of wood boring beetles.
Borosilicate
* are a diverse and widely used class of glasses
- silicates
* lead free glass for bulbs.
Calcium salt
* Most calcium salt interferes with absorption
- salts are colorless
* Some calcium salts are readily absorbable and are used in the body.
* are always bad news in water
- important in the building of bones and the coagulation of blood
- used to produce orange in fireworks
* denser product than sodium salt, because of sodium's hydrophilic nature.
* form the bulk of the inorganic material in bone.
* seed onto the outer shell membrane fibres.
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{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### salt:
Carbamate
* Most carbamates are only moderately toxic to mammals.
* Some carbamates are herbicides.
* also pose a relatively high risk for human poisoning.
* are a fourth group of pesticides
- derivatives of carbamic acid
- generally harsh on natural enemies of mite pests
- more toxic and last longer
- much more effective if slugs can get to water after treatment
- synthetic compounds of salts or esters of carbamic acid
- very water soluble
* tend to be quite soluble in water and some are systemic in plants.
### salt | carbamate:
Ammonium carbamate
* are carbamates
- chemical compounds
* is obtained by direct reaction of ammonia with carbon dioxide.
Chlorate
* Many chlorates produce oxygen when they are heated.
* ' is an ion. It strong oxidizing agent. It exists in chemical compounds such as potassium chlorate. Many chlorates produce oxygen when they are heated. Chlorates are salts of chloric acid.
* are also toxic to the kidneys
* is salt
* require special handling.
Chloride salt
* Most chloride salts are soluble.
* are the first category of dust suppressant.<|endoftext|>### salt:
Chromate
* are a worker hazard as suspected carcinogens
- chemical conversion coatings
- common primer pigments
* are generally bright yellow, while dichromates are generally orange or red
- nonradioactive but can kill fish and harm humans if ingested
- usually insoluble
* can cause cancer.
* derive their intense hues from charge transfers between chromium and oxygen.
* inhibit corrosion in a similar fashion.
+ Chemistry, Safety
* Many chemicals are harmless, but there are some chemicals that are dangerous. Chromates can cause cancer. Hydrochloric acid can cause bad burns. Some chemicals like hydrogen can explode or catch fire. To stay safe, chemists experiment with chemicals in a chemical lab. They use special equipment and clothing to do reactions and keep the chemicals contained. The chemicals used in drugs and in things like bleach have been tested to make sure they are safe if used correctly.
+ Chromium, Compounds, Hexavalent chromium: Chemical elements :: Metals
* Chromate and dichromate are strongly oxidizing in acidic conditions, but weakly oxidizing in basic conditions. Chromates are generally bright yellow, while dichromates are generally orange or red. They can be destroyed by reaction with reducing agents.
### salt | chromate:
Strontium chromate
* is an essential component in the primer paint to provide corrosion control.
* occurs as monoclinic yellow crystals.
Dichromate
* All dichromates are poisonous.
* are red or orange.
* is salt
+ Chromium, Compounds, Hexavalent chromium: Chemical elements :: Metals
Dietary salt
* Some dietary salt comes from food.
* increases first-pass elimination of oral quinidine.
* presents a problem only for a minority of people who are salt-sensitive.
Different salt
* give off different colors when they burn.
* grow at different speeds because of different solubilities.<|endoftext|>### salt:
Epsom salt
* are tiny little crystals that dissolve into water
- used to enhance magnesium and sulphur levels in solution
* good remedy for a strained ligament or a muscle pull.
* have a high magnesium content and promote the release of lactic acid from muscle.
* hydrate of magnesium sulfate.
* is an inexpensive and safe way to supplement magnesium
- another name for magnesium sulfate
- available in drug and grocery stores
- basically magnesium and that is one element which hardens the water
- dissolved in boiling water and cooled
- good for crystal slides, as is aspirin
* relaxes the muscles of the liver and is also a laxative.
Eutectic salt
* can use existing chillers but usually operate at the warmest temperatures.
* fall somewhere in between.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### salt:
Excess salt
* Some excess salt increases blood pressure.
* accumulate in the soil and travel to leaf edges where tissue is killed off.
* can also interfere with the effectiveness of blood pressure lowering medications
- be particularly troublesome for desert animals for it can exacerbate dehydration
- cause a negative calcium balance
* is harmful to plants.
Excessive salt
* can adversly alter the permeability of soils
- cause stomach distress, fatigue, and other problems
- damage roots and lead to root rot diseases
- make high blood pressure worse
* causes the body to retain water and adds extra work for the heart.
Ferrocyanide
* are very persistent but are of low toxicity.
* is salt
Grain of salt
* Grains of salt explain cystic fibrosis.
* Some grains of salt are large, some small, and they come in all different shapes.
Halide
* are reactive elements that include iodine and bromine.
* tend to have rather simply ordered structures and therefore a high degree of symmetry.<|endoftext|>### salt | halide:
Fluoride
* Some fluoride is deposited in the teeth while they are calcifying.
* accumulate in the brain over time to reach neurologically harmful levels
* accumulates throughout the body, overan individual's lifetime.
* are compounds that combine fluoride with some positively charged counterpart
- present in some electrodes and in flux
- released into the air in wind-blown soil
- violent poisons to all living tissue because of their precipitation of calcium
* cause premature aging of the human body.
* collects in the aorta, skin, skeleton, and cataracts.
* depresses thyroid activity
- function
* destroys muscle structure, muscle function and depletes muscle energy.
* diminish the intelligence capability of the human brain.
* dissolve easily and can be absorbed easily from the stomach and intestines.
* do occur naturally in water.
* have a disruptive effect on various tissues in the body
- little or no effect on decay prevention in humans
* is chemical compounds
- located in dentists
* stimulates cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator cl- channel activity.
* strengthens enamel and helps prevent tooth decay.
* strengthens tooth enamel and decreases mouth bacteria
- supporting bone and helps repair minor decay damage
* works best on the smooth surfaces of teeth.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
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### salt | halide:
Iodide
* All iodides are toxic if taken in excess.
* Most iodides are colorless or reddish-yellow and are weak reducing agents.
* are chemical compounds
- more reactive than bromides which are more reactive than chlorides
- only toxic in large amounts
* become colored when mixed with oxidizing agents.
* react with acidified manganese dioxide or chlorine to make iodine.
+ Iodine, Properties, Chemical compounds: Halogens :: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals
* This is typical of the halogens except for fluorine. Most organic iodine compounds are in the -1 oxidation state. Most iodides are colorless or reddish-yellow and are weak reducing agents. They are both oxidizing agents.
* Potassium iodide is one of the most common iodides. Iodides are normally colorless but turn yellow after being in air because the iodide is oxidized to iodine. Iodides react with acidified manganese dioxide or chlorine to make iodine. Iodine monochloride is a red or brown liquid. Iodine trichloride, as well as iodine trifluoride, are yellow solids. Iodates like potassium iodate are colorless solids similar to chlorates. Iodic acid is the only stable oxidizing halogen acid. Chloric acid, by comparison, is very unstable and dangerous
- Safety
* Iodine can irritate skin. Its vapors are irritating to the lungs. It is less toxic than the other halogens, though. 2-3 grams of iodine can kill. Iodides are only toxic in large amounts
- Uses
* Erythrosine is a food coloring that has iodine in it. Iodine can be used to make illegal drugs so it is restricted in some areas. Iodine can be used as a test for reducing agents. Iodine turns colorless when mixed with a reducing agent. Iodine also turns black when mixed with starch. Iodides become colored when mixed with oxidizing agents
Silver halide
* are sensitive to light
- the basic image-forming elements of photographic materials
* compound of silver and halogens.
* is the material that records what is to be seen in the photograph.<|endoftext|>### salt:
Hypochlorite
* are chemical compounds
- most reactive, while perchlorates are the least reactive
- solid or liquid chemicals used to whiten textile products and other materials
* is salt
* react with acids to produce chlorine.
* yield an aqueous solution of hypochlorous acid that is the true disinfectant.
+ Chlorine, Properties, Chlorine compounds: Chemical elements :: Halogens
* The -1 state is most often in chloride. Chlorides are not reactive. Only one is common. Hypochlorites are most reactive, while perchlorates are the least reactive.
* Hypochlorite' is an ion. It can be found in household bleach, sodium hypochlorite. It is unstable, meaning that it breaks down easily. Hypochlorites react with acids to produce chlorine. It is a strong oxidizing agent. They are the salts of hypochlorous acid.<|endoftext|>### salt | hypochlorite:
Sodium hypochlorite
- disinfectants
- hypochlorites
- inorganic compounds
* becomes less toxic with age.
* can cause blistering of the skin and severe deep burns to the eyes.
* is added for disinfection
- to drinking water at the secondary disinfection stations
- an antimicrobial
- inherently an unstable compound
* is manufactured by dissolving chlorine in sodium hydroxide solution
- mixing chlorine with sodium hydroxide and water
* is the chemical name for the common name bleach
- most common method for controlling the bio-fouling of cooling systems
* substitutes for in vitro plant propagation.
|
{
"source": "generics_kb"
}
|
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