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### location | region:
Boundary
* Boundaries abound in organizations, and they are focal points of change and turbulent behavior
- also separate one person's needs, wants, desires, thoughts and feelings from others'
- appear in nature and in human systems
* Boundaries are about other people's actions
- also the dividing lines between people, the limits that define selfhood and identity
- extremities
* Boundaries are important in every relationship
- understanding the nature of Hermes
* Boundaries are limits that are always present, spoken or unspoken, honored or overstepped
- delineate time, place and person
- lines that separate objects
* Boundaries are located in basketball
- countries
- maps
- societies
- sporting events
- manifestations of national identity
- markers which separate one thing from another
- the defining attribute of a geographical state
* Boundaries are the limits and blocks people encounter in life
- that allow for safe connections between individuals
- rules that define the right and wrong uses of clerical power
* Boundaries are used for limiting
- separate areas
* Boundaries are where biological, physical and social processes are at work
- one person ends off and another person begins
- things change
- define what is inside from what is outside
* Boundaries exist across a continuum, ranging from chaotic to rigid
- within every healthy family
* Boundaries extend from corners
- southeast corners
* Boundaries have areas
- surface areas
- often represent protection and comfort
- refer to areas that receive protection under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act
* Boundaries separate air
- moist air
- strengthen relationships by delineating roles and responsibilities
* is an extremity<|endoftext|>### location | region | boundary:
Border
* are artifacts of history and are subject to change over time
- edges
- imaginary lines
- just artificial barriers that belong to a past and present that is best left behind
* are located in countries
- houses
- maps
- menus
- pictures
- quilts
- man-made barriers between people and things
- parts
- sites
* are used for accents
- marking boundaries
- political maps
* is specified as a number, representing the width of the border in pixels.
* is the edge of a photographic print - either left white, or printed black
- second largest book retailer in the United States
- thickness of the border around the table
* keep people's eyes focused on a specific area.
* appear only on the top and bottom of any given bar. Unfortunately, this cannot be changed - to have a border at the top or bottom only of a bar, you should create a separate bar to overlay the end.
* pixel value of the border width between frames.
* specifies the border width in pixels.
* weaving in basketry comes in different styles.
### location | region | boundary | border:
National border
* are more like bridges than barriers.
* can constrain trade in goods and currency, but they are useless against disease.
Borderline
* are people in pain.
* live in the black and white.
Bottom
* are cargo ships
- located in water
- quarks
- regions
- sides
- turns
* have barriers
- protective barriers<|endoftext|>### location | region | boundary | bottom:
Heel
* Some heels are part of boots
- mocassins
- moccasins
- sandals
- shoes
* are body parts
- bottoms
- foots
- solid objects
* close together raise the body on the toes as high as possible.
* flies deposit eggs on the hair of cattle early in the spring.
* includes sections.
* marks Try using a pencil eraser to remove heel marks.
* means the angle of inclination of the floatation device from horizontal, across the breadth.
* provide stability.
* spurs , or calcaneal spurs, can develop if the fascia is continuously under tension
- form gradually over many months | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | boundary | bottom | heel:
High heel
* High Heels Keep high heels in good repair.
* alter the balanced position of a person's body.
* are especially a problem for people with high arches
- less stable than flat heeled shoes, and tiptoes are less stable than flat feet
- more likely to get caught in the carpet and in holes
- the most fetishized type of shoe
* can and do cause considerable postural problems.
* force the foot down, bending the toes against the shoe.
* hinder proper posture.
* mean sex, and sex is power.
* tend to shorten the muscles and tendons at the back of the leg.
Insole
* are part of boots
* can help reduce the friction that causes blisters.
### location | region | boundary | bottom | insole:
Biomagnetic insole
* are also the safest magnetic product available.
* provide massage to the soles of the feet.
Sandy bottom
* are home to crocodilefish and bluespotted stingrays.
* cause painful abrasions.
* enhance the growth and variety of aquatic vegetation.
Soft bottom
* are important to species like catfish, and insect eaters such as crappies and sunfish.
* consists of unconsolidated sediment and unvegetated areas.
* occur where sediments accumulate.<|endoftext|>### location | region | boundary:
Coastline
* Most coastlines have continental shelves
- harbors
- shallow shelves
- offer habitats
* Some coastlines are occupied by mangroves
- very dramatic, with tall, vertical cliffs whilst others are low-lying or marshy
- attract birds
- lead to regions
* are an obstacle to the free flow of water
- littered with the evidence of erosion and the power of the sea
- natural things
- outlines
- shorelines
- thin solid lines , and international borders are dashed lines
* become properties.
* have shallow continental shelves
* is an outline
* provide opportunity.
* turn into rugged boulders, then into sand, and then finally into sub-atomic particles.
### location | region | boundary | coastline:
Louisiana coastline
* Most louisiana coastlines have continental shelves
- shallow shelves
* have shallow continental shelves
### location | region | boundary | demarcation:
City limit
* are part of towns.
* is demarcation<|endoftext|>### location | region | boundary:
Edge
* Most edges have receptors.
* Usually refers to the three outside edges of the pages of a book.
* are boundaries
- capable of hurt
- limits
- magazines
- places where the image brightness changes rapidly and consistently
- polylines with an arbitrary number of segments
- sides
- slips
- straight line segments joining pairs of vertices
- superiority
- the paths or links connecting two nodes
- urgency
* basic fundamental of the visual language that helps representational images hold together.
* can be structural, i.e. have knobs, braids, tentacles, fringe, and teeth.
* correspond to edges.
* have backs
- fringes
- margins
* is an extremely thin blade cutting edge, and is mostly used to slice ham and beef meats
- identified by the labels on associated vertices
- important to a number of wildlife species
- simply areas where two habitat or vegetative types come together
* is the border between two habitats
- space where two different ecosystems meet
* library of mathmatical functions used for graphics programming.
* line segment connecting two data points at the intersection of two face planes.
* may have values.
* refer to the outer periphery of the petals and occasionally the sepals.
* scanning polygon draw routines use a method of tracing down each edge of a polygon.
* video game featuring interactive extreme sports.
* waters all hold some fish, and often a good number.
### location | region | boundary | edge:
Bezel
* are edges.
* attach through screw holes in lenses.
* is an edge | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | boundary | edge:
Periphery
* Peripheries are boundaries.
* has underdeveloped or narrowly specialized economies with low levels of productivity.
* means the external boundary of something, or the external surface of a body.
Selvage
* is an edge
- borders
* is the finished lengthwise edge of a woven fabric
- heavy woven sides of the canvas yardage
* refers to the finished lengthwise edges of the fabric.
Sharp edge
* can cause dangerous cuts or other abrasions.
* create mechanical stress with soft tissue.
Grain boundary
* Grain boundaries are defects
- important in semiconductors, due to their mechanical and electrical properties
- the surfaces between individual grains in a metal
- have also for a along time been known to affect the properties of materials
* Some grain boundaries contain particles.<|endoftext|>### location | region | boundary:
Hem
* Some hems are part of cardigans
- cloth
- coats
- diapers
- dominoes
- elastic
- fabric
- garments
- gowns
- handkerchiefs
- jerseys
- rags
- sailboats
- sweaters
- underwears
+ Provincial city (Vietnam)
* Hems are little hamlets inside the city
- (Vietnam), Investment and ownership
* Foreigners don't normally invest in the cultural homes directly. And, little or no re-gentrification has been occurring after progress. Hems are different. Some hems have a full circuit of interior roadways that allow for better communities
Lee
* are a naturally occurring material from grape solids and tartrates suspended in the wine
- the grape skins and other grapes solids that remain after crushing
* is the sediment remaining in a barrel or tank during and after fermentation.
* refers to the sediment of wine.
### location | region | boundary | outline:
Silhouette
* are drawing
- outlines
- shadows
- symbols or visual vehicles through which meaning is conveyed
- the traced and painted shadows of human profiles
- to scale, illustrating the relative magnitude of body size differences
* is an outline<|endoftext|>### location | region | boundary:
Shoreline
* Some shorelines are part of coasts
- seashores
- attract ducks
- provide habitats
- color-coded to show their sensitivity to oiling
- dynamic ecosystems
* are generally low, rocky, sandy or overgrown with aquatic vegetation
- stable due to years of wind, wave, and ice action
- natural things
* are near ancient burial sites
- part of shores
- the meeting place of water, land, and air
* can switch between erosional and constructional processes rapidly in both time and space.
* mark regions.
* points that extend far out into the lake and drop off sharply often concentrate bluegill.
### location | region | boundary | shoreline:
Rocky shoreline
* are common habitats for sea urchins
- the nest area to see spawning activity, followed by offshore reefs and bars
* offer anchorage for sessile organisms.
Shoreline change
* can be due to natural causes or they can be human-induced.
* is most extreme during high energy storms periods.
Underside
* have areas.
* have bare patches
- surfaces
- dark spots
- large white spots
Bright region
* are locations with high clouds in the upper troposphere shielding the methane below
- more dewet than dark regions
* have higher density of coronal gas than dark regions.
* reflect topographically high areas corresponding to the terminal bromine atoms.
* represent clouds, darker regions represent land and oceans.
Brighter region
* are regions where the electron is more likely to be found.
* have lower temperatures than darker ones.
Central region
* Most central regions contain tissue
- xylem tissue
* Some central regions contain arcs.
Climatic region
* Contrasts between the interior and the coasts produce six main climatic regions.
* are varied and often extreme. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region:
Coastal region
* Most coastal regions experience frequent fog.
* are densely populated and are subject to human exploitation for food
- especially sensitive to changes in sea level
* can receive a lot of rain because they pull up moisture from surrounding waters.
* experience fog
* have hurricanes.
* receive rain.<|endoftext|>### location | region:
County
* Counties are Completely Within states
- administrative arms of the state
- also important in protecting the environment
- counties
- especially important in electing people to government positions
- general purpose governments, charged with providing a wide variety of services
- large areas of land, and the loci of outbreaks bear no relation to their boundaries
- local government areas, with there own elected representatives
- located in states
- part of states
- political subdivisions of the state
- regional subdivisions of States to carry out local administrative functions
* Counties are responsible for financing their own voting systems
- the maintenance of jails, parks, and certain roads
- voting machines and poll workers
- specific areas
- subdivisions of the state itself
* Counties are the governmental unit principally responsible for assessments
- largest territorial division for local government within the state
- major providers of addiction services for the indigent
* Counties are the primary legal divisions of most states
- political divisions of most states
- weakest units in state government
- units of local government, but state laws define their form and powers
- continue only as geographical subdivisions
- contribute to migration
- drive growth
- experience properties
* Counties have a variety of different structures and styles of operation
- forces
- labor forces
- land areas
- many elected officers, each with some executive authority
- problems
- rainfall
- significant responsibilities in health care and in enforcing health ordinances
- three levels of courts
- includes county seats
- keep the money they save by getting people off welfare
* Counties offer attraction
- many attraction
- often perform services for other levels of government
- possess birds
- trace their roots to the English shire of a thousand years ago
* Counties vary greatly in size and composition
- population
- widely by population
* Every county has a north county.
* Many counties also have atlases and plat books that identify ownership of land
- have county parks
* Most counties have many districts.
* Some counties also have county and municipal court systems
- shelters for people who have been abused
* Some counties have a much larger proportion of older people than others
- birth, death, marriage records, wills, census lists, etc
- boundaries coextensive with cities
- health codes enforced by the county health department
- small parks with walking tracks
- routinely identify and count the male mosquitoes
* atlases often list the majority of cemeteries that existed when published.
* is the county where the headquarters of the institution listed on line one is located.
+ List of counties in New Jersey
* There are 21 counties in the U.S. state of New Jersey. In New Jersey, a county is a local level of government between the state and municipalities. All of these jobs are elected officials. Counties are responsible for the maintenance of jails, parks, and certain roads. The site of a county's administration and courts is called the county seat.
### location | region | county:
Butte county
* Butte County is in the Sacramento Valley Region
- located in the Sacramento Valley in northern California
* Butte County is situated on the east side of Northern California's Sacramento Valley
- east side of Northern California's rich Sacramento Valley
- the second highest in the number of seasonal and migrant farm workers | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | county:
Crook county
* Crook County county located in the northeastern section of the U.S. state of Wyoming.
* Crook County is located in the geographic center of Oregon in an area of outstanding natural beauty
- situated in the geographic center of Oregon
Dale county
* Dale County is in the southeastern corner of the State of Alabama.
* Dale County is located in the southeast corner of Alabama
- southeastern part of the state, wholly within the coastal plain
+ Dale County, Alabama, Geography: Alabama counties :: 1824 establishments
* Dale County is in the southeastern corner of the State of Alabama. According to the 2000 census, the county has a total area of.<|endoftext|>### location | region | county:
Dare county
* Dare County is located in northeastern North Carolina along the Atlantic
- the largest county in North Carolina
+ Dare County, North Carolina: North Carolina counties
* Its county seat is Manteo, North Carolina. It is named after Virginia Dare. Virginia Dare was the first English child born in the Americas. She was born in the Roanoke Colony, in what is now Dare County. Buffalo City, in Dare County, was once the biggest community in the country. Dare County is the largest county in North Carolina.
Franklin county
* Franklin County borders the southern shore of Smith Mountain Lake
- contains Columbus, the capital of the state of Ohio
* Franklin County is located in north central Iowa
- central Massachusetts
- one of the leading dairy and soybean producing counties in Kansas
- situated in south central Tennessee on the Alabama-Tennessee border
- the largest dairy county in the state and one of the largest in the nation
Henry county
* Henry County is in northeast Tennessee
- located in southeast Iowa
* Henry County is located in the Outer Bluegrass Region of Kentucky
- northwestern portion of Illinois
- one of the fastest growing counties in the United States
- transitional between the mesic and thermic temperature regimes
Imperial county
* Imperial County has the state's lowest median family income.
* Imperial County is in the southeast corner of California along the U.S. border with Mexico
- one of California's top-ranking agricultural counties and a producer of cotton
Kern county
* Kern County has the highest first-year infant mortality rate in the state.
* Kern County is first in the state in death among newborn babies during the first month of life
- one of the most rapidly growing areas in the United States
- the third largest county in California
- ranks seventh in the state in the proportion of births to adolescents<|endoftext|>### location | region | county:
King county
* King County has a rich history of restoring and preserving fish habitat
- fifteen school districts
- the third highest child immunization rate among urban areas in the United States
- includes one of the largest deepwater seaports on the west coast
* King County is also the fifth-largest warehouse and distribution center in the United States
- the regional provider for wastewater treatment and disposal
- lakes come in many different sizes, shapes, depths, and of course, water quality
Lake county
* Lake County has nine cities, nine villages and five townships
- several lakes and rivers for boating including Lake Michigan
* Lake County is in the North Coast Region
- located on the high desert in south-central Oregon
- one of the five most impoverished counties in the state of California
- situated in south central Oregon
- rural county in the Northern California Coast Ranges
- single-county waste district | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | county:
Lee county
* Lee County has a good population of rattlesnakes.
* Lee County is South Carolina's largest cotton producing county
- also the largest cotton producing county in the state
- home to one of the largest commercial shrimping fleets in the United States
* Lee County is located in Northwest Illinois
- southeast Iowa on the Mississippi River and the Missouri border
- the state's fourth fastest-growing county
- low tax county in a low tax state
Shire county
* Shire counties are divided into non-metropolitan districts.
+ Local government in England, District level, Non-metropolitan district
* Shire counties are divided into non-metropolitan districts. Power is shared with the county council, but shared differently to the metropolitan counties when first created.
Union county
* Union County borders Cimarron County, Oklahoma on the west.
* Union County is also the smallest county in Florida
- cattle country
- located in southwest Iowa
+ Union County, Florida: Florida counties :: 1921 establishments
* Union County' is a county in northern Florida. Union County is also the smallest county in Florida. The county was founded in 1921 after being cut off from Bradford County. Since Union County is the smallest county, it covers only 250 square miles.
Wake county
* Wake County is where the population is.
+ Wake County, North Carolina, Education, Colleges and Universities: 1771 establishments
* Wake County has seven colleges and universities.<|endoftext|>### location | region:
Crust
* Most crust contains oxygen
- forms physical barriers
* Some crust causes erosion
- consists of magnetites
- contains fractures
* Some crust is part of lithospheres
- worlds
- crusts increase surface topography by forming pinnacles or pedicles
* are a sign of pyogenic infection
- least susceptible to trampling damage when soils are frozen or snow covered
* can be the dominant source of fixed nitrogen in some semiarid ecosystems.
* color the earth black, apple-green, blue, and tones of red.
* floats on a shallow upper mantle.
* form and fall
- in the nose
- on the wings of the nose
* forms barriers
* includes asthenospheres.
* is covering.
- pizzas
* sometimes form the bed surface for avalanches.
* stretches, warps, and cracks.
### location | region | crust:
Biological crust
* Most biological crust forms physical barriers.
* are different than chemical or physical crusts.<|endoftext|>### location | region | crust:
Continental crust
* behaves like a body 'floating' on the denser underlying layers.
* is composed mainly of granite
- different than crust that underlies the oceans
- incorporated into each plate and so moves along with the plate
* is less dense and thicker than the surface of the deep ocean
- than oceanic crust
- mostly of granitic composition
- much older, thicker and less dense than oceanic crust
- older and thicker than oceanic crust
* is the geologic stuff of landmasses
- layer that forms the continents
- thick and high, but it's light
* is thicker than oceanic crust and tends to be less yielding
- crust, but is less dense
- thinkest beneath mountain ranges and extends into the mantle
- too light to subduct and accumulates on the surface
- typically much older than oceanic crust
* resists subduction.
* varies in p wave velocities both laterally and vertically.
Crustal plate
* is crust
* separate at divergent plate boundaries.
Cryptobiotic crust
* fragile layer of life covering undisturbed soil.
* is also extremely vulnerable to mountain bicycle and horse travel
- the foundation of life in the high desert
Fusion crust
* Some fusion crust consists of magnetites.
* is what forms as a meteor passes through the atmosphere.
Microbiotic crust
* are important components of many aridland soils
- intimate tangles of lichens, mosses, and cyanobacteria
* provide the major share of fixed nitrogen in desert ecosystems. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | crust:
New crust
* is created at the mid-ocean ridge.
* is formed as molten rock is forced upward into the gap
- or destroyed at the boundaries between plates
Ocean crust
* is basaltic with uniform p wave velocities
- denser than continental crust
- recycled back into the asthenosphere at the subduction zones
- returned to the mantle through subduction
* sinks into the mantle at deep-sea trenches.<|endoftext|>### location | region | crust:
Oceanic crust
* All oceanic crust is produced at spreading centers by a very specialized process.
* carries sediments that have been deposited on the oceanic floor.
* consists mainly of basaltic rock with an thin veneer of sediment.
* has insignificant amounts of radiogenic elements.
* is also much thinner than continental crust
* is composed of basalt, the result of partial melting of the mantle
- primarily of basalt and gabbro
- created at divergent plate boundaries
* is destroyed at convergent plate boundaries
- made primarily of a rock called basalt
* is more active than continental, but it is thinner
- subducted back into the mantle
* is the layer below the deep ocean basins
- rock type
* is thicker than continental crust and is made of basalt
- thin and low, but it's dense
* is, in general, thin and dense.
Soil crust
* Most soil crust forms physical barriers.
* consist of cyanobacteria, mosses, and lichens.
* forms barriers
* is important to preventing wind erosion and conserving water
- vegetation in the desert because it prevents runoff and conserves water
* prevent erosion.
Destination
* are goals.
* have adults
- few visitors
- opportunity
- popularity
* is an end
- the physical name of an external file or aggregate file location, or of a device
Different region
* have advantage
- comparative advantage
* have different air pressures, even at the same altitude
- climate dynamics and different distributions of daily rainfall
- names for the same organism
- distinctive seasonal patterns
- their own traditions and ways to utilise their forest resources
Equatorial region
* Some equatorial regions receive radiation
- solar radiation
* are humid and have heavy rainfall throughout the year.
* have few species than temperate regions
- fewer species than temperate regions
* rotate faster than polar regions.
Geographic area
* Most geographic areas have heat accumulation.
* have accumulation
### location | region | geographical area:
Climatic zone
* approximate to distinct latitude belts around the Earth.
* geographical area
* shift with long-range weather patterns.<|endoftext|>### location | region | geographical area | climatic zone:
Polar region
* Most polar regions get sunlight.
* Some polar regions get energy
- have microscopes
* are bright, possibly due to a haze of small particles that lie above the main clouds.
* climatic zone
* experience a radiation deficit
- climates
- little chemical weathering
- temperate climates
* have myofilaments and are contacted by efferent nerve fibers.
* play an essential role in the processes affecting the world's climate.
* receive less solar energy per unit area, and so less heat, than tropical regions do
- more water as precipitation and river runoff than they lose via evaporation
* reflect the greatest changes in ozone concentrations, especially the South Pole.
* respond quickly to changes in climate conditions.
### location | region | geographical area | drainage area:
Detention basin
* control storm drainage by intercepting runoff and detaining it.
* drainage area
Drainage basin
* are crucial for resource management, ecosystems analysis, and global-change studies
- important in ecology
- separated by topographic highs called divides
* are the area of land that drain into rivers, streams, ponds, and estuaries
- principal hydrologic unit considered in fluvial geomorphology | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | geographical area:
Hot spot
* Hot Spots Fall colors come in according to elevation
- are interactive areas on the screen and access an image, sound or other medium
- can change dramatically in size in a very brief period of time
* appear white, as do low-level clouds.
* are areas of intense heat in the middle of tectonic plates
- skin infection that occur as a result of allergic irritated skin
- the screen that are activated by moving the cursor over it
- on the picture that act as a hyper-link when clicked with a mouse
- which have a high concentration of endangered species
- features that are fixed in the asthenosphere
- films
- isolated areas with volcanic activity in the earth
- localized regions of high temperature
- most recognizable when they occur beneath plates that move with higher velocities
- often a result of flea bite allergies
- parts of the string that, when mutated, do increase the growth factor
- places within the mantle where rocks melt to generate magma
- points
- spots
- the places where large oceanic and crystal plates collide and slide apart
- where people live, too
* bring heat up from the earth's crust.
* can also occur under continents - Yellowstone nearby example
- appear after serious bug bits such as with flies or bee stings
* can be extremely painful to animals
- much smaller than a grain diameter
- flare up without warning
- occur in microwaved bottles and cause burns in the baby's mouth
* cause uneven growth, but can be remedied by using light movers.
* form volcanoes in both oceanic plates and continental plates.
* have nothing to do with the temperature outside.
* refer to the area of the screen users first focus on.
* tend to be fixed in position, with the plates moving over the top.
Populated area
* are most vulnerable to damage and loss through natural disasters.
* geographical area
River basin
* are simply the areas that drain into a river.
* encompass several watersheds.<|endoftext|>### location | region | geographical area:
Rural area
* Many rural areas are important for their natural heritage
- depend on salmon fishing and salmon fishers for their income
* Many rural areas have an increasingly diverse population
- shortages of mental health practitioners
* Some rural areas have problems with untreated sewage.
* are among the poorest in Mexico
- as technologically linked to urban centers as are other cities
* attract methamphetamine producers for a number of reasons.
* benefit from a clean environment.
* can also contribute to water-quality problems.
* depend on rain water, shallow wells, streams and river water.
* ensure food for people worldwide.
* have a low popuation density, and therefore are more abundant in resources.
* have higher motor vehicle crash death rates than urban areas
- incidence rates and death rates than urban areas
- professionals involved in health education government service, or the police
* lag behind urban areas when it comes to access to the Internet and technology.
* lie close to cities, and the temperature varies from ices to torrid.
* tend to be highly dependent on resources, with only minimal diversity
- have community colleges rather than universities
- lag behind urban areas in terms of development
* thrive on warm personal relationships and close-knit communities. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region | geographical area:
Time zone
* Most time zones have boundaries
- irregular boundaries.
* For events where the precise time, day or month is not known, the user may omit these details. Time zones are assumed to be local to the event. If time zone information is specified, the otherwise optional timezone parameter must be set
* Time Zones Find out what time it is anywhere around the world
- Learn about the development of time zones around the world
* are a barrier to unity
- product of the Industrial Revolution
- important in our daily lives
- video games
* can also change from year to year.
* objects represent geopolitical regions.<|endoftext|>### location | region | geographical area:
Urban area
* Many urban areas derive their water from adjacent rivers or lakes
- have thousands of abandoned and potentially contaminated properties
- lack space for recreation, learning, social interaction and cultural expression
- offer a high quality of life
- tend to have high ozone levels
* Most urban areas have trees
- reflect a mixture of all religious denominations
* Some urban areas provide habitats.
* An 'urban area' is an area where many people live and work close together. The population density is higher than in the surrounding area. It is where buildings are close together. Urban is the opposite of rural, where farm lands and nature are. Urban areas are usually cities and towns. Most of the work available in urban areas is factory and office work.
* account for the major share of income growth in most countries and of fiscal revenues.
* are also susceptible to climate variability
- always warmer than the countryside
- concentrations of population, property investment, and infrastructure
- existing communities where a broad range of public services exist
- major noise pollution centres
- places where large populations exist
- the product of industrial development
- warmer than rural areas both during the day and at night
* are, therefore, where environmental problems are most severe.
* can experience dangerous flash flooding when storm sewers back up from intense rainfall.
* consume large amounts of resources and generate considerable amounts of waste.
* have a huge impact on avian species richness, composition, and abundance
- strong impact on local land use and land cover
- adequate medical staffing in hospitals and clinics
- many activities occurring that can potentially contaminate an aquifer
- the effect of warming the environment and making the surface rougher
* reflect a lower proportion of incoming solar radiation.
* serve as the hubs of manufacturing, commerce, government, communications and culture.
* suffer from elevated temperatures due to the darkness of paved streets and roofs.
* support development.
* tend to appear grey.
* tend to have less extreme low temperatures than the surrounding countryside
- warmer nights than rural ones
### location | region | geographical area | urban area:
Conurbation
* Most conurbations arise on the coast.
* is an urban area<|endoftext|>### location | region | geographical area | urban area:
Urban sprawl
* can lead to high public costs and environmental degradation.
* competes with preservation of farm land in rural areas.
* direct result of crime in the central city.
* has also a negative effect on city dwellers.
* increases road congestion, while pushing traffic deeper into the countryside.
- another reason homeowners associations are growing
- one of the most devastating environmental problems
* is the antithesis of traditional development patterns
- result of many social and technological factors
- term for automobile-oriented cities
- today's contrived crisis
* problem that communities all across America are confronting.
* reduces farmland at the rate of one acre for each five births.
* significant environmental issue.
* statewide concern as much as environmental protection. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region:
Hell
* is trouble.
* really exist for people who have done evil and created bad kamma due to a lack of morality.
Hydrosphere
* Most hydrospheres are part of worlds.
* includes bays
- gulfs
- oceans
- sea
Inferno
* are software.
* is quadruple distilled and cold charcoal filtered.
* revolves around the concept of services managed by a file system.
Interior
* are films
- insides
- shapes in space
* emphasize architecture, and as a result, provide a sense of geometric order.
* feature large walls
- structural walls
* have compartments
- hide compartments
- temperature
* influence the way people feel about a company.
### location | region | interior:
Midland
* has a different gas from Chicago.
* is in the Permian Basin in Texas with a contiguous city named Odessa.
* natural location for sporting events.
* specializes in mass spectrometry of oligonucleotides.
Interplanetary space
* contains many small bodies of different sizes.
* is littered with rocks tens of meters in diameter or less
- part of outer space
- vast and empty
* lies between the sun and the planets of the solar system.
Interstellar space
* contains a plasma.
* is albums
- filled with a dilute, relatively cold plasma
- permeated by clouds of gas and dust
* is the term given to the space between stars in the galaxy
- vast environment between the stars
* lies between the stars of a galaxy.
Karst region
* Many karst regions display distinctive surface features, with sinkholes being the most common.
+ Karst: Sedimentary rocks :: Landforms
* Many karst regions display distinctive surface features, with sinkholes being the most common. Some karst regions include thousands of caves, and the water is generally underground.
Lithosphere
* All lithosphere is composed of two layers of differing composition.
* Most lithospheres affect biospheres
* are layers.
* are part of earth
* includes asthenospheres
- crust
- gaps
- waters
* is destroyed at trenches, which are another important type of boundary between plates
- the brittle uppermost shell of the earth, broken into a number of tectonic plates
* term that has been used in a variety of ways by different authors.<|endoftext|>### location | region:
Mansion
* Many mansions have a metal door knocker in the shape of a woman's hand.
* Most mansions are surrounded by lawns.
* are houses
- used for governors
* often have beautiful gardens.
+ House, Types of houses, Mansion: Accommodations
* A mansion is a big grand house, usually with two storeys and sometimes more. A mansion often has beautiful architecture, and shows that the person for whom it was designed and built was rich. Mansions often have beautiful gardens. Sometimes a mansion does not belong to a private family, but to a town council, to a big business company, to a church or college and is a place for a person with an important job to live and to entertain guests. A mansion often has rooms which are not found in ordinary houses, such as a drawing room, a ballroom, a library and a music room. Mansions often need servants to help keep them in order and there are often special rooms where the servants do particular jobs such as cleaning the silver tableware. Well-known mansions are the White House in Washington, D.C. where the President of the United States lives and Mansion House in London where the Lord Mayor of London lives.
Mediterranean region
* Most mediterranean regions receive abundant rainfall
- winter rainfall
* plays an important role in Turkey's tourism industry.
Mountain region
* are also rich in mineral and forest resources and in biodiversity
- colder with heavy winter snowfalls
- nearly always cool
- the home of diverse minority nationalities and repositories of culture
* feature wildlife preserves, trail riding and camping under the stars.
* see decline in skiing and increase in other activities like hiking
- in other activities such as hiking | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region:
Mountainous region
* Some mountainous regions are famous for their blue haze.
* are subject to snowfall in winter.
Northland
* is located near the southern shore of Lake Superior in northern Wisconsin.
* is the area upon which modern New Zealand was founded
- only Publicly-owned, regularly traded cranberry company in the United States<|endoftext|>### location | region:
Side
* Every side represents an orbital and every orbital can hold up to two electrons.
* affects range from acne to liver cancer.
* are albums
- areas
- aspects
- cuts
- lineage
- opinion
- part of torsos
- regions
- surfaces
- units
* become surfaces.
* come into contact.
* effects Chemotherapy tablets for myeloma often cause very few unwanted side effects.
* experience growth
- healthy growth
* have cell walls
- equal length
- sides
- southern sides
* lighting from both a very low angle and a high angle is used to light dance and musicals.
* provide shades
- summer shades
* receive direct sunlight
* show interest.
### location | region | side:
Upper surface
* are sides.
* have texture.
Spectral region
* Most spectral regions contain water.
* span the ultraviolet through the visible and infrared.
Stratosphere
* Most stratosphere has height.
* Some stratosphere extends from surfaces.
* Some stratosphere is part of skies
- worlds
* includes ozone holes
- layers
* is the second major layer of the atmosphere.
* massive wall of air, driven by a noisy bassdrum.
Stratum
* Most strata have sea levels.
* Strata contain evidence.
* Strata have levels
* are layers.<|endoftext|>### location | region | stratum:
Cuticle
* Most cuticles consist of different layers
- several layers
- vary in thickness
* Some cuticles are part of elephants
- necks
- pachyderms
- penises
- skin
- contain chitin
* Some cuticles have bees
- hold water
- protect leaves
- reduce evaporation
- support animals.
* In biology, a 'cuticle' is something that covers the outside of living things called organisms. Cuticles are usually tough but also bendable. In plants, cuticles in the leaves help it from losing too much water by evaporation
* are a plant's idea of skin
- common in a range of animals including nematodes, annelids and arthropods
* are part of fingernails
* complex mixture of fatty acids, partly free and partly combined with alcohols.
* cover epidermises.
* have hardness.
* includes cell membranes
- corneums
- cytoplasm
- nuclei
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
* is on all the aboveground green parts of plants
- thin on guard cells and stomata are parallel to veins
- thin, transparent and keeps body from drying out
* keep bacteria from getting under the nail bed.
* minimize water loss and effectively reduce pathogen entry due to their waxy secretion.
* offer protection.
* restricts growth.
Dermis
* is composed of elastic fibers and collagen.
* plays a role in preventing wound contraction and scarring.
### location | region | stratum | epidermis:
Upper epidermis
* Most upper epidermises have numerous stomata
* Some upper epidermises have cuticles.
Subtropical region
* Most subtropical regions experience frequent fog.
* Most subtropical regions grow citrus plants
* experience fog
Temperate region
* Most temperate regions have climates
- mild climates
* Some temperate regions have leaves.
* have a seasonal thermocline and polar regions have none
- abundant rainfall, hot summers and cold winters | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | region:
Tip
* are integral membrane proteins in the tonoplast.
* burn in cabbage heads can lead to subsequent breakdown by soft rot bacteria.
* is an end
- from cell's element
- the wire that goes to the tip, Ring is the wire that goes to the ring
* lead officers
- to discoveries
- wildlife officers
+ Nail art, Artificial nails: Body art :: Cosmetics
* Tips are made of lightweight plastic plates that are nail-shaped. They are glued on the end of the natural nail and liquid acrylic is then applied over the entire nail.
### location | region | tip:
Fingertip
* Most fingertips have patterns of ridges separated by valleys.
* Some fingertips are part of fingers
- fists
- hands
- thumbs
* are body parts
- solid objects
* contain acids that can damage the surface of a coin
- nerves
Root tip
* grow below ground and extend the roots into a large root ball.
* is the area of cell division.
Top
* are brittle and break up easily in storms
- more prone to infection as plants mature
* define themselves as places Where nothing higher's to be looked to.
* have bowl shapes
- tables
### location | region | top:
Bodice
* Most bodices lace up, but they can also be fastened with buttons or hooks and eyes.
* are part of dresses
- tops
Mountain peak
* Some mountain peaks are part of alps
- mountains
* are always snow capped be it Spring or Summer
- part of mountains
- red because they are volcanic
* exist at many different levels, some obviously lower than others.
* go down into valleys and gradually rise up again to another peak.
Mountain top
* are also above some weather and air pollution.
* have frequent freeze and thaw cycles, where as the valleys have fewer.
* indicate regions of lowest gene-flow.
Short top
* mean short roots, and short roots mean less future leaf production for grazing.
* tend to have sparse root systems with diminished food reserves.
Treetop
* Some treetops are part of acacias
- apricots
- aspen
- baobabs
- beeches
- cedar
- cocos
- conifers
- elms
- gingkoes
- guavas
- laurels
- mandarins
- mangroves
- papaya
- pine
- pinyons
- rowans
- spruces
- titis
- trees
- willows
* create canopy.
* is part of the history of Kenya.
* sound with the calls of parrots and macaws of every color.
* whip around and two trees never move in the same direction.
Tropical region
* Some tropical regions have abundances.
* are annually subject to tropical cyclones.
* contain more than two-thirds of all the world's species.
* have very intense exposure, while high-latitude regions have rather weak exposures.
* make a good habitat with abundant food.
Troposphere
* Most tropospheres contain gases
- methane
- vapour
- have characteristics
* Some tropospheres are part of skies
- worlds
- extend from surfaces
Various region
* exhibit an enormous range of densities and temperatures.
+ Liquor store: Alcoholic drink :: Shops
* Liquor stores' are retail shops which sell prepackaged alcoholic beverage, particularly in bottles. They are also called 'bottle stores'. Various regions carry different laws and regulations on liquor stores.
Zodiac
* allow a close exploration of coral atolls, shallow lagoons, and tropical island shores.
* are chains of memes which prefer to be called by glamorous names.
Relative location
* answers the question about the exact position of an individual object in space.
* deals with the interaction that occurs between and among places.
* describe a feature's position such as near, far, or North.
* is concerned with a feature as it relates to other features.
Route
* are located in atlases
- maps
- post offices
- the paths network traffic takes to contact a remote machine
* are used by migrants
- for planning
+ List of bus routes in London, List of routes: Public transportation :: Transport in London :: London-related lists :: Transportation lists
* All routes operate in both directions unless detailed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | route:
Beat
* are oscillations
- paces
- sailing
- sound
- strokes
* can help measure tempos and are performed in grooves and rhythmic music.
* happen when two tones are played together that are just slightly different in frequency.
+ Beat (music): Musical terminology
* A 'beat' is the basic unit of music. Beats can help measure tempos and are performed in grooves and rhythmic music. They measure the pulse and rhythm of a musical piece. Stressed beats are the 'strong' beats and unstressed are the 'weak' beats. Time signatures and tempos are created by moving the beats into particular orders.
+ Donkey Kong Jungle Beat: Donkey Kong :: Nintendo GameCube games :: Platform games :: 2004 video games
* Players use the left drum to move left, the right drum to move right, and both drums to jump. Clapping or hitting the sides of the drums causes Donkey Kong to clap. Clapping produces a small small red ring and a bigger green one. Enemies that are in the red ring are usually defeated, and those that are in the green ring are usually stunned. Stunned enemies can be killed by jumping on them and hitting the drums repeatedly. Beats are gotten by grabbing bananas, and lost by being hit or falling. More beats can be gotten by doing combos while grabbing bananas.
### location | route | beat:
Binaural beat
* originate in the brainstem's superior olivary nucleus.
* result when pure tones at slightly different pitches are heard by the two ears.
Premature beat
* are very common in normal children and teenagers.
* can occur in the atria or the ventricles.<|endoftext|>### location | route:
Bus route
* are paths.
+ Queens, Transportation: County seats in New York
* Queens has a very large bus system that goes to all parts of the borough. Some bus routes go to Brooklyn, Manhattan, or the Bronx.
+ Staten Island Mall: Buildings and structures in New York City :: Malls
* The mall has 200 stores with around 3,000 people working in those stores. Stores include JCPenney, Sears, and Macy's. Many bus routes go to the mall area. This makes it the second-largest area in the borough for public transportation after the St. George ferry terminal.<|endoftext|>### location | route:
Orbit
* Every orbit described in space is elliptical.
* Most orbits are elliptical
- hyperbolic, but the hyperbolicity is non-uniform
- correspond to orbits
* Most orbits have angular momentum
- different shapes
- pass through centers
* Some orbits are highly eccentric, and cross Earth's orbit
- nearly circular, but the orbits of most planets are ellipses - shaped like ovals
- have dimensions
* are body parts
- conic sections with the force center at the focus
- elliptical , with the heavier body at one focus of the ellipse
- in reality more like clouds
- paths that describe dynamic phenomena
- solid objects
* can be close to circular but normally orbits are actually elliptical.
* change over time.
* changes on Earth can cause ice ages.
* have advantage
* last for years.
* lie close to the plane of the ecliptic.
* uses time-dependent orbital elements for the calculation of planetary positions.
### location | route | orbit:
Circular orbit
* are merely a special case of an ellipse where the foci are coincident.
* mean more uniform receipt of energy from season to season and from year to year.
Comet orbit
* are long ovals.
* suggest a huge reservoir of objects far away.
Geosynchronous orbit
* allows the uplink and downlink of satellite signals over great distances.
* are orbits.
* is an orbit
- when a satellite stays in the same spot
* lies in the outer portion of the radiation belts.
### location | route | orbit | geosynchronous orbit:
Geostationary orbit
* are circular orbits that are oriented in the plane of the Earth's equator
- ideal for weather satellites and communications satellites
* geosynchronous orbit | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | route | orbit:
Low orbit
* work well for satellites that take pictures of the Earth.
+ Satellite (artificial), Orbits
* To stay in orbit, the satellite's sideways speed must balance the force of gravity. Closer to the Earth, in LEO, the satellites must move faster to stay in orbit. Low orbits work well for satellites that take pictures of the Earth. It is easier to put a satellite in low Earth orbit, but the satellite appears to move when viewed from Earth. But constantly changing positions does not work for satellite TV and other types of satellites that send and receive a lot of information. Those need to be in geostationary orbit.
Planetary orbit
* All planetary orbits are ellipses, with the sun at one focus of the ellipse
- lie in almost the same plane
* Most planetary orbits lie nearly in the same plane.
* are all nearly circular
- ellipses with the sun at one focus
* are nearly circular
* have a distinct elliptical shape.<|endoftext|>### location | route:
Trend
* Describe the trends in data communications.
* affect development
- ecological stability
- economic development
- markets
- resources
* are a measure of how the system has been changing over time, either improving or worsening
- way to describe a change over time
- academic journals
- magazines
- new cultural movements that follow their own course of birth, life, and death
* are patterns in the values of a ratio
- or shifts according to time
* are the products of media, the result of the culture that media helps to create
- result of the interaction of institutions, people and circumstances
- things that change most frequently, paradigm shifts change the least frequently
* begin with the people who create something new, something different.
* contribute to success.
* correspond to contamination levels
* define the context in which the organisation functions.
* develop as animals interact with the terrain and with each other.
* emerge and disappear, shapes and colours change
- from data when they are summarized in a graph
* exist in all time frames and all markets.
* increase likelihood.
* influence growth
- market growth
* is the direction down the plunge of the line.
* long term movement in a time series.
* receive attention.
* refer to consistent price movements over a period of years.
* reflect growth
* seen in the fashion industry also play a role in fabric availability.
* term used to describe the persistence of price movement in one direction over time.
* watching is the treadmill of thinking aerobics.
### location | route | trend:
Demographic trend
* imply that such problems are likely to affect growing numbers of older people.
* indicate dramatic changes as the population of the United States ages
- people are busy and value their free time
* mean no new supply of young people to pay pensions for older workers.
* show that the number of elderly people is on the increase.
Economic trend
* are important to understand when making many of our decisions.
* tend to develop in unison in the same sector, country, or region.
Fashion trend
* Most fashion trends revolve around showing lots of skin, or at least some skin.
* can affect the demand for dry cleaning.
* seem to trace their way from one end of the western seaboard to the other.
Global trend
* affect everyday lives.
* enhance the urgency of economic matters.
Market trend
* are the least expensive aspect of the marketplace to study
- upward or downward movement of a market, during a period of time
* is as important as pricing.
* show a growing market for socially responsible businesses and products.
Population trend
* Population Trends Take a look at population growth over time.
* are an integral part of our common future.
* parallel the recent history of Mediterranean cities.
Russia
* includes Caspian.
* is part of Eurasia. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location:
Saddleback
* All saddlebacks are extinct on the mainland, and live either in captivity or on islands.
* Some saddlebacks have color.
* are birds
- passes
- territorial and sing loud rhythmical songs
- very vocal birds
* vary their calls so that even individuals from different areas can be identified.<|endoftext|>### location:
Sanctuary
* Many sanctuaries have observation towers
- sponsor programs aimed at teaching children respect and compassion for animals
* Most sanctuaries attract ducks.
* Most sanctuaries have animals
- numerous wild animals
* Sanctuaries accept adoptable and nonadoptable pets in which none are destroyed.
* Sanctuaries are a private, nonprofit organization funded by donations and grants
- located in churchs
- nonprofit organizations with limited space and resources
- places where manatees can rest and feed undisturbed
- currently exist for sea grass, blue crab and black sea bass
* Sanctuaries harbor a dazzling array of algae, plants, and animals
- fascinating array of plants and animals, from the great whales to tiny krill
- nourish the soul with a sense of play
- preserve scenery that ranges from the interesting to the spectacular
- provide a lifetime home for horses
* Some sanctuaries have cats
- possess koalas
- surround towns
* is an area
### location | sanctuary:
Wildlife sanctuary
* Most wildlife sanctuaries have animals
- numerous wild animals
* Wildlife sanctuaries are all remote former hunting grounds of local rulers
- also a home to a variety of feathered species both domestic and migratory
Scene
* are areas
- capable of locations
- drama
- graphic art
- incidents
* are located in movies
- play
* are part of acts
- pictures
* are used for movies
- paint
* contribute to development.
* have senses.
* show different places
- take places
### location | scene:
Locale
* Many locales have laws that limit or prohibit same-sex sexual activity.
* are virtual places for group work situated in the computer network.
* is the locale in which custom is running.
* lend their identity to the names of certain foods, too.
Locus
* Loci have factors.
* are magazines
- sets
- sites
### location | scene | locus:
Locus of control
* becomes more internal with age.
* integrates personality, expectancy, and reinforcement theories.
* refers to what drives or motivates a learner.<|endoftext|>### location:
Seat
* Is the ground area of the cylinder head which matches the shape of the face.
* are centers
- chairs
- companies
- devices
- furniture
- legal rights
* are located in airplanes
- auditoriums
- bikes
- bus stops
- jeeps
- operas
- porchs
- rest areas
- shows
- space shuttles
- theaters
- trains
- locations
* are part of seats
- skirts
- parts
- support
* are used by children
- young children
* are used for comfort
- hits
- kick
- waitings
* is space
* support weight.
### location | seat:
Car seat
* Some car seats are part of ambulances
- automobiles
- cars
- taxis
* are a child s best protection against injury in a motor vehicle accident
- one time use product, if it was involved in a crash, the seat needs to be replaced
- auto parts
- automotive products
- frequently incompatible with the seat belt systems in cars
- located in cars
- part of cars
* help children behave appropriately, making interactions with their parents more positive.
Couch
* are beds
- essential in offering body and beauty treatments
* are located in apartments
- dens
- doctors
- houses
- lofts
- parties
- rooms
- furnishings
- sleeping
* can be very dangerous to ferrets.
* come in many kinds of colors such as red.
* large rock on the horizon.
* sleeper sofa.
### location | seat | couch:
Sofa bed
* are located in basements
- guest rooms
- hotels
- living rooms
- motels
- studio apartments
* can sleep two adults, but are better for children. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | seat:
Toilet seat
* are located in hardware stores
- washrooms
- part of toilets
- seats
* covers provide a place, besides the floor, to sit in the bathtoom.<|endoftext|>### location:
Source
* Identify sources of electrical and electronic components.
* Many sources estimate that one in every four girls has been sexually abused
- recommend chewing parsley after eating garlic or onions, to freshen the breath
* Most sources contain carbohydrates
- recommend that carnivorous plant bogs be watered with rain or distilled water
- say pinworms are usually harmless
* Some sources also record red lionfish as occurring in bays, estuaries, and even harbors.
* Some sources claim that defensive excretions protect healthy animals from fungal diseases
- there are more like five million vertebrate animals in zoos
* Some sources contribute to microwave radiation
- sodium intake
- create heat
- define scripta as 'writing', and in that sense it becomes equivalent to 'words'
* Some sources emit only at a few specific wavelengths, others at all wavelengths
- extend the perinatal period until the fourth week after birth
- place opium consumption in Teheran at five tons a day
- produce electricity
* Some sources provide electrical power
- nutrients
- report marigolds deter aphids
- say elephant shrews are noctural, active at night, others diurnal, active by day
* Some sources say that a dog's nose million times more sensitive than that of a human
- small children have sexual feelings
- the larvae hatch out and bore their way into aquatic insects like mayfly nymphs
- sustain human life.
* Every source is right after what it talks about
* are color coded by their infrared colors
- documents
- facilities
- inspiration
- natural processes
- places where sugars are being produced
- processes that release greenhouse gases into the atmosphere
- software
- where air pollution comes from
* can be magnetic, acoustic, electrical, or electromagnetic in origin.
- misinformation
* contribute to adverse impact
* drying related concept to herd protection.
* emit sound.
* exhibit characteristics
- growth characteristics
* hashing is similar to hashing in a database.
* have drawbacks
- extent
- important impact
- levels
* include chemical plants
- favorites
- power plants
- seeds
* increase antler growth
* make contributions
- minor contributions
- significant contributions
* provide information
- overviews
* receive heat.
* use for construction
- fuel
* vary when it comes to the density of the Earth.
+ Crazy Frog, History: Animated characters
* Before becoming a ringtone to download onto mobile phones, The Crazy Frog started as a TruboForce 3D animated creature. All original videos and images also show small male humanoid genital in a relaxed state that move realistically. Some sources pixel out or remove the genitals.
* You need to stop trying to change everything and start working on articles. Reference is simple enough. Source has many meanings.
+ Herero and Namaqua Genocide: Genocide :: Namibia :: Rebellions in Africa :: 20th century rebellions
* In total, from 24,000 up to 100,000 Herero and 10,000 Nama died. Some sources also claim that the German colonial army systematically poisoned desert wells.
### location | source:
Energy source
* All energy sources have an impact on the environment
- some impact on our environment
* Some energy sources affect environments
- cost less than others and some cause less pollution than others
* have impact.
* is chemicals taken from the environment.
Fink
* are bands
- informers
* leader in the understanding of the forces that mold the genome.
* package repository that offer mostly precompiled binaries. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | source:
Food source
* Many food sources exist for squirrels in their natural surroundings.
* Most food sources have little iodine, but iodized salt dietary source.
* Most food sources increase antler growth
* Some food sources are whole and skim milk, bananas, prunes, and raisins.
* Some food sources contribute to intake
- sodium intake
- vitamin d intake
* Some food sources have different values
* Some food sources provide food
- necessary nutrients
* are better than supplements because they are generally better absorbed
- fish, grains and nuts
- large and diverse
- limited because of the harsh climate and difficult storage conditions
- plentiful from land and sea
* are present in the form of human waste, food waste and other simple organic material
- wastewater in the form of human waste, ground garbage, oils grease, etc
- starches, grains, fruits and vegetables
- the best way to get calcium
* can be anything from dry wall and insulation to carpeting or mattresses.
* contain all eight compounds
- other nutrients such as calcium, protein and some essential fatty acids
* have a significant effect on calcium absorption
- different nutritional values
* include seeds
* range from sweets to protein-based foods.
* varies depending on which region the peccary inhabits.
* vary by season, location and availability.
* vary, but typically any small insects they catch in their webs.
Headwater
* are beginnings.
* is critical habitat for many species, several of which are threatened or endangered
- the largest unprotected ancient redwood forest remaining in the world
Heat source
* Most heat sources receive heat.
* Some heat sources create heat
- provide freeze protection
* are located in bedrooms
- cars
- fire
- homes
- houses
- solar energy
* are used for cooking food
- greenhouses
- relaxing muscles
- thawings
- warmth
* help spark the wildfire and bring fuel to temperatures hot enough to ignite.
* is interior of earth.
Historical source
* are the clues to fitting a story together.
* indicate that demand for rhino horn was significant in the medieval period.
Natural source
* Most natural sources have super-Gaussian density.
* Some natural sources contribute to microwave radiation
- provide habitats
* are from plant
- yeast and fish liver oil
* can also play a significant role in pollutant production
- be from plants such as marigold, chili, or corn
* complex mixture of organic and inorganic compounds.
Noise source
* can also come from exterior sources such as aircraft and highway traffic.
* represent unwanted environmental sounds.
* vary in digital cameras.<|endoftext|>### location | source:
Point source
* Many point sources dispose of their wastewater via pipe discharges to a nearby water body.
- fixed pollution sources such as electric power plants and refineries
- large stationary sources of emissions
- pipes, culverts or similar single points from which phosphorus is released
- places with a point of discharge, such as a pipe, directly into water bodies
- sources that have a specific location
- typically industrial discharges of waste gases and aerosols to the atmosphere
* emit sound.
* have extent.
Power source
* Most power sources use fuel.
* Some power sources provide electrical power<|endoftext|>### location | source:
Primary source
* are documents or artifacts from a person, place or event in history
- documents, objects, or traces of the past which come from the era being studied
- materials written, printed or recorded during the period of time being studied
- original documents written or created that are useful in historical analysis.
* It is used as an original source of information about the topic. In library and information sciences, primary sources are generally regarded as those sources closest to the origin of the information or idea under study. Primary sources are distinguished from secondary sources, which often build upon primary sources | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | source:
Radiation source
* are useful tools in clinical applications, as well as biomedical investigations.
* can be dangerous if mishandled.
* occur naturally throughout the galaxy.
Radioactive source
* Some radioactive sources emit x-rays at accurately known wavelengths.
* lose their energy over time.
Renewable source
* Most renewable sources are renewed by the sun, just as plants are.
* Some renewable sources produce electricity.
* account for only about one tenth of U.S. energy.
* are geothermal, wood, waste, wind, and solar.
* can contribute energy with little or no carbon emissions.
* make contributions
- significant contributions<|endoftext|>### location | source:
Secondary source
* Some secondary sources create heat.
* They may need to be interpreted by an expert in the field. Secondary sources are surveys and interpretations by experts in the particular field. They are not suitable for references in scientific topics because their reliability is open to question.
* are books and articles written after the fact by scholars
- findings of someone who has investigated the primary sources
- historical materials written by historians or biographers after the fact
- interpretations of primary sources
* are materials prepared later by people who studied the primary sources
- produced by people in a later period
- ones that interpret primary sources or are otherwise a step removed
- reports, findings, or summaries of other researchers on a topic
- the accounts written by historians
- things such as legal encyclopedias or treatises on various topics
- works produced from the study and evaluation of primary sources
* are works that are based on primary sources
- interpret or analyze an historical event or phenomenon
- written by historians based on their study of primary sources
* provide information.
Several source
* believe that most world religions have some foundation in sound current teachings.
* contribute to emissions of VOCs.
* provide overviews.
* report that opossums are great predators of roof rats.
Stationary source
* Some stationary sources have to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions.
* is concerned with the emissions from facilities or industrial sources.
Voltage source
* Most voltage sources have power.
* occurs where the electricity is produced and made.
* provide power.
Water source
* All water sources contain salts such as calcium, magnesium and others.
* are rivers, streams and farm storage dams
- strong attractants and good locations to see wildlife and signs of wildlife
- the key to making good use of pastures
* belong to castas, but normally each water hole is occupied by only one lineage.
* can be either on the surface or below ground.
* differ on the amount of peat, granite and heather they contain.
Whistleblower
* are conscientious and courageous workers who are of great benefit to any society
- employees on trains who warn people to get off the tracks
- films
* can identify corporate or government abuse while reducing their risk of detection.
* tend to be hardworking and conscientious employees who believe that the system works.<|endoftext|>### location:
Territory
* Most territory is occupied by mammals
- placental mammals
* Some territory is occupied by wolves.
* Territories are inherited by females
- of two kinds, breeding and nonbreeding
- belong to nationalities who have managerial rights
- exist only when and where females are present
* consists of plants.
* contains resources
* covers areas.
* covers large areas
- enough areas
* enhances an animal's prestige and improves chances for survival.
* has best resources
- features
- topographic features
* is areas.
* life and death matter among females, however.
* offers protection.
* plays a big role in survival and species fight in order to gain more territorial space
- an important role in tribal views of spiritual warfare
* provides food. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | territory:
Larger territory
* Larger territories increase breeding opportunities for males.
* is correlated with bigger animals and sparseness of prey.<|endoftext|>### location | territory:
Union territory
* Most union territories are ruled by administrators sent by the central government.
+ India, Indian states: Gondwana :: Asian countries
* For administration purposes, India has been divided into smaller pieces. Most of these pieces are called states, some are called union territories. States and union territories are different in the way they are represented. Most union territories are ruled by administrators sent by the central government. All the states, and the territories of Dehli, and Puducherry elect their local government themselves. In total, there are twenty-eight states, and seven union territories.<|endoftext|>### location:
Track
* Most tracks are made by animals.
* Some track bears with specially trained dogs.
* are a record of who has passed through an area - coyote or rabbit, mouse or wolf
- also an important factor in distinguishing coyote from dog predation
- artifacts
- bars
- belts
- capable of circles
- concentric circles of data on a given surface
- grooves
- imprints on a sediment surface by an animal with legs
- individual imprints left by the passage of an organism over the sediment surface
- large for animal's size because the Raccoon is flat-footed, like bears and men
* are located in arenas
- schools
- snow
- stadiums
- stations
- subways
- train stations
- one key indicator of bears
- part of railroad tracks
- paths
- roads
* are used for races
- running
- trains
- useful indicators of dinosaur behaviour
* competes in athletic events such as sprints, distance running, jumpiing, and weight events.
* have distinctive shapes
- types
* is track, disabilities or no disabilities.
* show similarity.
+ Race track, Design: Sports buildings
* Most race tracks are a closed loop. The start and finish line is at the same place. Some tracks are 'open'. They start at one point and end at a different location.
### location | track:
Animal track
* Animal Tracks Look for animal tracks in mud, sand or snow.
* are trails when the snow is deep and powdery.<|endoftext|>### location | track:
Race track
* Some race track are in the general form of a circle or oval
- tracks are called road courses
+ Race track, Design, Oval
* Some race track are in the general form of a circle or oval. Michigan International Speedway is an example of an oval track. The racers always turn in the same direction. In the United States, they normally turn left
* Some race tracks are called road courses. The racers turn both left and right. Donington Park in England is an example of a road course. Formula One runs most of its races on road courses. These types of tracks are often called 'circuits', especially in Europe
- Design: Sports buildings
Railroad track
* are also dangerous, conducting electricity for long distances
- located in train stations
- part of lines
* can stick up several inches.
* run parallel to each other.
* turns are wide track turns with more equal wieght distribution foot to foot.
* wear out faster on one side than the other.
Train track
* are located in countrysides
- ghettos
* are used for train travel
- transportation<|endoftext|>### location:
Tract
* Some tracts cause infection
- pain
- tract infection
* Some tracts cause urinary infection
* Some tracts contain bacteria
- symbiotic bacteria
- extend from mouths
* are books
- by far the most economical form of literature evangelism
- chains of neurons that form pathways
- small, statistical county subdivisions
- systems
- treatises
* conducting down are motor or descending projection tracts
- from hemisphere to hemisphere are commisural tracts
* cross over so that left side of brain controls right side of body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | breeding ground:
Rookery
* Rookeries can have a size range of skeletal remains.
* breeding ground
Census tract
* are comparable to neighborhoods
- small geographic areas
* are small, relatively homogeneous statistical subdivisions of a county
- permanent statistical subdivisions of a county
- the smallest geographical area for which sample data is available<|endoftext|>### location | tract:
Center field
* are positions
- tracts
* is the place where the general resides.
* sets a point through the axis of rotation goes.
+ Baseball, How baseball is played, Fielding team
* The three outfielders are called the 'left fielder', the 'center fielder', and the 'right fielder', because they stand in left field, center field and right field. Left field and right field are on the left and right sides, if you look out from home plate. Center field is straight ahead from home plate. Center field is very big, so the center fielder is usually the fastest.
Clearing
* allergens out of the home can help reduce asthma attacks.
* are events
- films
- improvement
- liberations
- removings
- tracts
* multi-faceted phenomenon.
* refers to the exchange of financial information.
### location | tract | clearing:
Forest clearing
* continues to reduce the amount of food available to the species.
* occurs with varying intensities and for several purposes.
Land clearing
* affects the wombat and also has affected many of our other native animals.
* is also responsible for the degradation of rivers in rural Queensland.
* is the biggest threat that bats face
- main threat to their survival
* leads to fast runoff during rain events, snow thaw and spring freshets.
* major driver of dry land salinity.
* occurs frequently in order to enhance grazing operations.
Purgation
* involves a releasing of the details of one's life, shedding thoughts and emotions.
* is the best therapy for healing.
Vindication
* has a way of loosening the tongue.
* is an expression of innocence
- considered the first declaration of women's rights
- that type of emotion
* means to support or maintain as a right or claim.
Common
* are pasture
- resources
* has media related to Animal camouflage
- Aquatic plants
- Plant stem
* have bluish tongues, and have narrower, triangular heads.
* is similar.
* has the tool too.
### location | tract | common:
Common myna
* are believed to have both positive and negative impacts on biodiversity
- pair for life
- found in flocks throughout the year
* plays an important role in maintaining our ecological balance.
* select a wide range of nest site than any other species.
* show flexibility in their roosting behaviour.
Common poorwill
* are the only species of bird that go into true hibernation.
* hibernate when the temperatures get really cold, really hot or when food is scare.
Common tansy
* grows best in full sun to light shade.
* has a strong odor when crushed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract:
Field
* Every field has an algebraic closure
- is also a ring
* Many fields have areas where corn plants are short, delayed in maturity, and chlorotic
- ear tip damage from corn earworms and fall armyworms
* Most fields absorb energy
- are outdoors, with the vegetation and terrain as varied as the natural countryside
- consist of trees
* Most fields contain abundant seeds
- create heat
* Most fields drive growth
- job growth
- employ people educated in philosophy
* Most fields have constant values
- crops
- intensity
* Most fields produce discharge
- electromagnetic discharge
- support perennial vegetation
- undergo phase transitions
* Some fields affect solar wind
- apply scientific methods
* Some fields are created by electrical current
- high electrical current
- attract bees
- can have energy
- cause infertility
* Some fields create electrical current
- magnetic forces
- microwaves
- voltage
- determine weather patterns
- exert transverse forces
- focus on energy
- grow trees
* Some fields have biologists
- magnetic poles
* Some fields increase energy
- kinetic energy
* Some fields possess birds
- caterpillars
* Some fields produce electric current
- surround clouds
* Some fields undergo magnetic reversals
- polarity reversals.
* All fields are optional. See talk page for examples and standards.
* All fields are 'mandatory'.
* The infobox may be added by pasting the template as shown below into an article. All fields are optional and unused parameter names can be left blank or omitted
* apply principles.
* are categories of information
- commercial enterprises
- components that make up records
- countrysides
- dominated by grass
- general matrix structures used represent complex data
- indexeds
- infinite, in continuous motion, and always changing
* are located in countrysides
- meadows
- rural areas
- objects that can be programmed to respond to user-initiated events
- occupied by farms
- on earth
- open areas
- part of algebra
- physical phenomenons
- regions
- reverberations in the medium by the structural motion of particles
- smallest, single pieces of information in a database
- storage areas for particular kinds of data
- systems of interacting wave particles and can be considered as special forms of matter
* are the attributes that the various nodes have
- basic units of information in a database
- smallest unit of data addressable in Access
* are used for ploughing
- walking
- variable in nutrients and pests
* based work refers to course assignments which involve school age children
- which involve school-age children
* burning is fast, economical and removes disease organisms, but is now tightly regulated
- often occurs in the summer, when the slugs are quite deep and insulated in the soil
* can naturally salt up over time.
* change both in time and space
- colors during the growing season
* consist of fields
- longitudinal fields
- grain seeds
- wheat
* crops producers in other countries compete directly with U.S. producers through world trade.
* exist in regions.
* experiencing growth are gerontology, addiction, and developmental disabilities.
* feeding by white-fronted geese occurs primarily in corn and winter wheat fields.
* focus on issues.
* growing is the way to go when seed and space is available.
* have amounts
- applications
- different crops
- many different crops
- origins
- weeds
* include radiation
- thermal radiation
* insecticides lower populations.
* is an n-dimensional array of numbers, records, or object handles
- the concept that unites humans and their environment
* n is the number of samples.
* offer care.
* often vary in slope, color, drainage, or texture.
- effects
- measurable effects
- torque
* provide a lure for animals, but so do the fruit trees that they feed on in the forest
- benefits
- education
- food and shelter for migrating warblers, thrushes, sparrows and larks in autumn
- habitats
- resources
- suitable habitats
- sustainable resources
- wildlife habitats
* receive results.
* refers to how experiences are processed.
* require knowledge
- manipulation
* sandbur warm-season annual grass found throughout the United States.
* searches A field search search that looks for certain elements within a document.
* searching common way to refine a search.
* set closed under arithmetic operations.
* shapers a current-carrying conductors that are coupled to the forming coil.
* slow the velocity of light and the equilibration of fields.
* sparrows prefer old fields and forest edges.
- wildflowers
* surround timber.
* take places.
* undergo analogous transitions
* weakening allows an electric machine to operate beyond the designed frequency of excitation.
+ Sally Field, Personal life: 1946 births :: Living people :: American movie actors :: American television actors :: Academy Award winning actors :: Emmy Award winning actors :: Golden Globe Award winning actors :: Actors from California :: People from Pasadena, California
* Field has osteoporosis. She has become a vocal advocate for women's health issues, encouraging early diagnosis of such conditions through technology, such as bone density scans.
* To use the template, copy the following into an article and fill in the appropriate sections. There is no need to delete unwanted sections. All fields are optional.
* Copy a blank version to use. All parameters 'must' be lower case. Some parameter use a space while others use an underscore as shown. All fields are optional except the location of the company's headquarters. To specify the location specify either and or.
* The infobox may be added by pasting the template as shown below into an article. All fields are optional. Any unused parameter names can be left blank or omitted.
* Copy a blank version to use. All fields are lower case and optional. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field:
Applied science
* can be like biological science and physical science
- enhancae productivity and therefore has been viewed as important by society
* is the application of scientific knowledge transferred into a physical environment.
### location | tract | field | applied science:
Fisheries science
* concerns the rational and sustainable use of aquatic resources.
* is an applied science.
Food science
* broad and complex field.
* integrates knowledge of the chemical composition of food materials.
* uses scientific methods in laboratory experiments to help understand food. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science:
Psychology
* All psychology comes down to a clean bloodstream.
* Many psychologies deny the reality of the unconscious, and dismiss the importance of dreams.
* Psychologies are science.
* aims to sift opinions and evaluate ideas with careful observation and rigorous analysis.
* also has a critical function
- applications in emerging areas such as computer science
- plays a huge role in the wireless future
- studies how an individual's environment affects performance
* analyzes the process of learning and then communicates that knowledge.
* appears in mainstream culture in every medium.
* attempts to explain how and why human beings think, feel, and behave as they do
- why organisms act the way they do
- understand man and promote psychological health
* basic and applied science, health profession, and undergraduate liberal arts major.
* blend of paradigms or ways of understanding.
* bridges the gap between the biological and social sciences.
* broad and diverse field
- behavioral science with many applications
- discipline covering much of the area between biology and sociology
* broad field having applications in virtually every line of work
- that often overlaps with many other disciplines
* can also be a stepping stone for law, medicine and business
- influence valuations, which at times in the past have been driven to extremes
- enrich life in profound ways
- expand toward a fuller and richer accounting of the full range of human experience
- play a big role in covering the distance
- provide insight and help when life seems overwhelming
* claims that children have two different personalities in and out of their homes.
* class where scholars learn how people think and react to different stimuli.
* common area of study on the university level.
* concerns itself with the study of human and animal behavior.
* constitutes sexuality in terms of the individual's psychic structure.
* constructs the female, or the fantasy life of the male psychologist.
* contributes to knowledge of methods of teaching in three ways.
* currently ranks among the most popular majors in North American universities.
* deals mainly with humans but also sometimes with animals.
* deals with the behavior and mental processes of humans and animals
- mind
- overt behaviour of humans and animals and the study of the brain
- theories and hypotheses about man
- very specific questions, while philosophy deals with more general questions
* deceptive vanity.
* definitely has many different approaches or paradigms.
* degree that encompasses many other areas of study.
* describes how the mind functions.
* destructive way to face problems and life.
* difficult discipline to categorize.
* discipline that can be applied to many areas of human endeavor
- is commenced at university, so there are no pre-requisites
- lends itself to a variety of career paths
- supports many contrasting theoretical viewpoints
* discipline with a bright future
- many different branches and areas of application
* diverse and exciting field
- field with room for students with many different interests and abilities
* diversified and flexible discipline that can accommodate a wide range of interests
- scientific approach to the understanding of human and animal behavior
* draws on a variety of other disciplines in both the life and social sciences.
* dynamic and evolving science
- growing discipline
* encompasses a very wide variety of areas of human activity
- wide range of concerns
- many different and unique fields of study
* evolves in a sociohistorical context.
* examines the complex nature of human behavior.
* faces the challenge of providing understanding both in personal and social arrangements.
* field of medicine
- that includes many vibrant areas of intellectual interest
* focuses on the behavior and mental processes of the individual
- of individual people
- nature of individuals and their roles within groups
- scientific study of behavior
- study and explanation of patterns of individual behavior
* fundamental component of a liberal arts education.
* growing field with increasing influence in many parts of our society.
* has a much larger proportion of women than the other sciences
- an identity problem
- applications in many other professions as well, including nursing, medicine and law
* has both academic and applied branches
- an applied side and a basic science side
- links to the natural sciences, the social sciences and the arts
* has many different branches, each focusing on different issues
- outlets of study
- relatives, too
- no means to deal with inherited behavioral disorders like addictions
- three faces
- two specific aspects - scientific and professional
* has, since World War II, become a science largely about healing.
* helps explain reasons for human behavior
- to measure the probability that an aim is attainable
* huge part of racing.
* humanistic fraud that has been entered the Christian church.
* impacts every area and aspect of our lives.
* includes one third of a year in statistics
- studying phenomena that are mental or cognitive
* investigates the nature of mind and behavior.
* involves conducting research with human participants
- investigation of mental processes and behavior
- scientic research
- the scientific investigation of human behavior and experience
* involves the study of behavior
- human behavior and mental processes
- thinking, feeling, and behavior
* is about helping, helping people develop in a more complete and fulfilling way
- measurement of human and animal behavior
- people and animals
* is about the biological, cognitive and emotional basis of human conduct
- understanding of individuals, groups, organisations, society and cultures
- understanding the mind with the mind
- actually biology
- also a profession that seeks to change behavior for the betterment of humankind
* is also a profession which applies scientific principles to special problems
- is committed to helping people
- art and a profession as well as a science
* is an empirical science
- way to study the mind
- even more pure form of secular humanism than sociology
- evolving and changing field
- extraordinarily diverse field with hundreds of career paths
- independent discipline, which is taught in universities and colleges
- introduction to the scientific study of human behavior
- based in both the social and natural sciences
* is both a domain of scientific inquiry and a field of applied practice
- natural and a social science in which people study human and animal behavior
- research science and a clinical area
* is both a science and a profes- sion
- way of being
- an applied and academic field that studies the human mind and behavior
- called a social science but our methods of investigation are rigorous
- clearly relevant to everyone's life every day
- compared to and contrasted with other sciences, noting commonalities and differences
* is composed of many sub-areas
- several areas of specialization
* is concerned with general human capacities, such as attention and memory
- how people perceive, learn, feel, think, and interact with others
* is concerned with the consistency and variability of behaviour
- intricate study of the human mind and behavior
* is considered a non-science
- by some to be a science, while others consider it to be an art
- to be both a natural science and a social science
- deterministic
- divided up into different areas that psychologists often call perspectives
- essentially an observational and experimental science
- founded on eight false premises that are all humanistic from the core
- however, different from other sciences
- largely an empirical subject
- less a set of sciences than monastic orders
- much larger than a corner of the health care system
- mythology in that it pays attention to the stories of the soul
- one branch of the social sciences
* is one of the basic majors in liberal arts and sciences
- broadest fields of academic study and practical application
- fastest growing areas for employment in America
- fastest-growing majors in college
- few disciplines which straddles both the natural and social sciences
* is one of the most exciting and socially relevant of the human sciences
- popular university degree programs
- rewarding fields a person can enter
- physics applied to the mind
* is primarily an experimental and laboratory science
- concerned with the study of mental activity
- related to many fields because human behavior has an impact on almost every field
* is the branch of medicine that deals with the study and treatment of behavior
- driving force for today's education programs
- empirical and theoretical study of behavior and mental life
- fascinating study of behavior and mental processes
- intercultural field's other antecedent discipline
- investigation of behavior that occurs regularly
- kind of field bound by countless rules
- latest instrument to keep people oppressed
- most deceiving of all ideas to be integrated into church life
* is the science of behavior and experience
- that investigates why humans think, feel, and act as they do
- how people think and feel
- our era
* is the science of the behavior of living organisms, especially human beings
- intellects, characters and behavior of animals including man
- thought and behavior
* is the science that investigates mental states directly
- studies how individual people and animals behave
* is the science that studies the behavior of organisms
- mental processes and the behavior of humans and animals
- why human beings and animals behave as they do
* is the scientific inquiry into many aspects of the human mind and experience
* is the scientific study of behavior and cognitive processes
- and the mental processes that determine behavior
- and the mind
- in both humans and animals
- behavior, especially human behavior
* is the scientific study of behaviour and experience
- covert and overt behavior in humans and animals
* is the scientific study of human and animal behavior and mental processes
- and animal behavior, and it's a diverse field
- behavior and thought
* is the scientific study of mental processes and behavior
* is the scientific study of the human body, mind, and character
- mental processes and behavior of organisms
- thinking, emotion, and behavior
- thought, emotion and behaviour
* is the second most popular major in the United States
- undergraduate degree in the United States
* is the study of a. the human mind
- animal and human behavior and of cognitive processes and thought
* is the study of behavior and experience
- the science with the most to say about compatibility
- how people think and behave
* is the study of how the human mind works
* is the study of human and animal behavior and mental processes
* is the study of human behavior and cognitive processes
- and how it affects the individual
- and mental activity
- and the working of the mind
- individual human beings
- mental processes, affective states, and behaviors of individuals
- people and the ways in which they think, act, react, and interact
* is the study of the human mind, and human and animal behavior
- interplay and interchange of the levels of psychic material
* is the study of the mind and behavior
- and of human behaviour
- and the ways of thought
- mind, behavior and thinking
- psyche or soul
- what and how of behavior
* is the systematic and scientific study of behavior and experience
- application of science to helping people who are mentally disturbed
* is the systematic study of human experience, development and behaviour
- thought, behaviour and their underlying mechanisms
- systematic, scientific study of human behavior
- the scientific study of behavior and thought
- theoretically diverse
- thus both a science and an ai t or a profession
- to be treated as a natural science
- very important in investing, and people get mesmerized by moves like that
* is, at once, both a science and a practice.
* is, essentially, the scientific study of behavior and can be approached numerous ways
* lacks an overarching perspective which brings the brain, mind and behavior together.
* large, diverse field.
* linking discipline.
* literally means the study of psyche.
* means the study of the soul.
* now has an objective measurement tool with which to examine the workings of the mind.
* offers a scientific framework for understanding the how and why of human behavior
- an in-depth exploration of human behavior patterns
* operates in the same way as logic - pure freedom tends to subvert liberty.
* philosophy and a religion.
* plays a huge role in the market
- key role in society
- major role in America s courtrooms
- role in how a player performs
- significant role in questions of preservation and access
- an important part in understanding and changing unsafe behaviours on the road
* popular undergraduate specialization.
* practical science.
* provides a general picture of how persons are put together
- for assessment of intellectual and adaptive functions
- training in a variety of very important skills
* pseudo-science with no defined provable criteria on which to base their beliefs.
* rapidly growing and developing profession based on the scientific discipline.
* rigorous empirical disciplne.
* scholarly discipline, a scientific field, and a professional activity.
* science AND a profession
- and psychologists are scientists
* science based on empirical results
- experimentation or statistical surveys
- concerned with the study of behavior
* science of great fertility, exploration, and dynamic change
- that rests on a foundation of research
* science which searches for answers to a myriad of questions about behavior
- myriad questions about behavior and thinking
- with a specific focus on behavior
* science, a data-based scientific study of behavior and mental processes
- an academic discipline, and a time-honored profession
- concerned with the intricacies of human character and human behavior
- hence it is important for students to understand the scientific method
* scientific endeavor and can therefore discover truth through natural revelation.
* seeks to explain the mind.
* sees itself as part of the natural sciences.
* shares other things with natural sciences, as well.
* similar pseudo-scientific profession staffed by psychiatry wannabees.
* soft science.
* stands as a bridge between many worlds.
* strives to describe, predict, understand, and control behaviour and mental processes
- understand why people behave as they do
* studies our experience of the world as individuals and our experience of each other
- the behavior of both humans and animals
* takes the individual as the unit.
* therefore is the systematic study of behaviour and experience.
* tremendously varied field.
* tries to explain why people act, think, and feel as they do.
* vast discipline.
* versatile, inherently interdisciplinary, and multi-methodological enterprise.
* very broad field, encompassing the scientific study of all aspects of behavior
- diverse field with endless applications in both public and private life
- graphic discipline
- popular subject concerning the study of human behaviour
* widely diverse field with many different career paths to take.
* young and a dynamic science and profession.
* young science covering an extremely diverse and fractionated subject matter
- that often touches on issues in our lives that stir up controversy
+ Carl Jung: 1875 births :: 1961 deaths :: Disease-related deaths in Switzerland :: Psychiatrists :: Psychoanalysts :: Psychologists :: Swiss people
* He created many theories and ideas that are still used in psychology today. Psychology is the science of how people think and feel. His kind of psychology was called analytical psychology or 'Jungian Analysis'.
+ Human body, Fields of study: Anatomy
* Psychology is a field of medicine. It looks at how people think and feel. The brain is part of the body. How we think and feel comes from the brain. So psychologists study the body. They study how the brain lets us be who we are.
+ Human, Psychology: Hominins
* Psychology is the study of how the human mind works. The human brain controls everything the body does. Everything from moving and breathing to thinking is done by the brain. Neurology is the study of how the brain works, psychology is the study of how and why people think and feel.
* Psychology deals mainly with humans but also sometimes with animals. Because psychology is difficult to study as a whole, psychologists often only look at small parts of it at a time. Psychology has much in common with many other fields, and overlaps with many of them. Some of these fields are medicine, ethology, computer science, and linguistics.
+ Psychology, Methods, Scientific approaches
* Psychology shares other things with natural sciences, as well. For example, a good psychological theory may be possible to prove wrong. This is called falsifiability. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Adlerian psychology
* addresses the complete range of human experience, from optimal to pathological.
* is very much a values-oriented psychology.
Child psychology
* is the systematic investigation of the psychological processes of childhood.
* specialized field modeled after ideal parenting.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Cognitive psychology
* Cognitive psychologies are part of cognitive science
* examines how individuals deviate from rationality in making decisions.
* is committed to an empirical, scientific approach to studying human cognition
- concerned with all of the human information processing faculties
- one of the most important and influential areas of modern psychology
- the science which studies cognition
* is the scientific field devoted to studying our special mental capacities
- study of how people acquire and use information
- study of how people perceive, act, communicate, and reason
* is the study of human thinking and memory processes
- thought processes and cognitions
- mental processes
- the fundamental capacities of the human mind
* is, in some ways, the prototypical psychological science.
* laboratory science.
* makes a further distinction, between automatic and attentional behaviour.
* pertains to thinking and information processing.
* portrays learners as active processors of information.
* proposes yet another way to study the causal mechanisms of animal behaviour.
* stresses the contextual nature of knowledge, strategies, and expertise.
* studies the higher mental processes of humans.
+ Cognition: Psychology
* This process is the way we think. Cognitive psychology is the science which studies cognition.
Community psychology
* analyzes the situational problems in living.
* does target systemic sources of suffering.
* is both a content area in psychology and a means for promoting social change
- ultimately about empowering others
* vital part of the present day system of public and community health.
Comparative psychology
* is an extension of work done in human psychology
- the branch of psychology concerned with the study of animal behavior
* studies the behavior and mental life of animals other than humans.
Consumer psychology
* affects spending habits.
* relatively young field with a very exciting future.
Contemporary psychology
* looks at gender as a continuum of psychological difference.
* thriving science and profession.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Developmental psychology
* Developmental Psychology See Psychology
- psychologies are psychologies
* concentrates on how the human grows and develops.
* examines the changes that occur over the lifetime of the individual.
* is also an active research area
- an area that looks at human growth and development over the lifespan
- concerned with both stability and change across the lifespan
- interested in how people develop and change through their lives
- one of the main research areas
- the study of human psychological development
* subfield of psychology.
* traces human growth from birth to old age.
+ Development, Social science and politics, Psychology
+ Psychology, Branches
Educational psychology
* addresses the topic of learning by studying three aspects of learning.
* attempts to foster such a point of view.
* field of study.
* is nothing but the psychology of learning
- the study of psychology in education
* supplies the constructivist theories of learning. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Evolutionary psychology
* avoids some of the cruder reductionism of the older sociobiology.
* explains why humans are attracted to verbally skilled partners.
* is actually a branch of a radically new understanding of evolution itself
- also related to cognitive psychology and the cognitive sciences
- founded upon recent advances in psychology and anthropology
* likes to talk about the 'psychic unity of humankind'.
* offers a theory of how the human mind came to be constructed.
* understands the mind in the context of it s biological origins.
* uses a biological approach to study human behavior.
Experimental psychology
* Experimental Psychology stands thus midway between the sciences of mind and of nature
- psychologies are psychologies
* has much to offer in the current debate about memories for childhood abuse.
* knows how to design experiments and evaluate the results.
* requires sophistication in mathematics.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Forensic psychology
* Forensic Psychology brings together psychological principles and issues of law.
* can involve giving expert testimony in court and counselling offenders.
* has some major roles in a court that bring psychology into a legal arena
- to be the field of psychology most rigidly focused on standardized testing
* is another relatively new field of psychology.
* is the study of the mind of an individual, using forensic methods
- term given to the applied and clinical facets of psychology and law
* large field and ever expanding.
+ Forensic psychology, Major roles: Branches of psychology :: Forensics
* Forensic psychology has some major roles in a court that bring psychology into a legal arena. Another job of a forensic psychologist is to investigate the state of mind of the defendant at the time he or she committed the crime. Another is to see whether or not the defendant is able to be charged with the crimes due to his or her mental condition. Another job is to evaluate the defendant to see if he or she are able to be rehabilitated, or if they might commit the crime again
- science, Subdivisions
* Forensic psychology is the study of the mind of an individual, using forensic methods. Usually it determines the circumstances behind a criminal's behavior
General psychology
* covers a wide range of human behavior.
* studies how an individual behaves.
Health psychology
* focuses on the study of somatic health as it relates to psychological phenomena.
* involves the application of psychological principles to physical health.
* is also concerned with health after an individual acquired a disease.
* is concerned with helping people stay healthy
- the interaction between behavior and health and illness
* represents a major departure in perspectives on health at work.
Humanistic psychology
* aims to be faithful to the full range of human experience.
* emphasizes personal growth and the achievement of human potential.
* focuses on human potential for mature, healthy growth.
* is an approach which stresses the uniqueness of the individual
- directly opposed to the Bible
Idiographic psychology
* emphasizes the importance of the individual as a unique person.
* is an attempt to understand the unique aspects of a particular individual.
Liberation psychology
* defines liberation as the freedom to choose intimacy.
* is dependent on yielding. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Neuropsychology
* can localize an area of function loss in the brain.
* field that trains doctors to evaluate cognitive and other changes and symptoms.
* highly specialized discipline within the field of psychology.
* investigates the inter-relationships of biological and psychological processes.
* involves therapeutic retraining of people with brain injury.
* is an area of specialization within the field of clinical psychology.
* is the study of how the brain and nervous system affect thinking and behavior
- the relationship between brain and behavior
* looks at the brain and how it works to make people the way they are.
* provides a significant benefit to patients with head injury
- patients with consultation and cognitive retraining
* quarterly, peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles.
* seeks to be the vehicle for the best research and ideas in the field.
+ Psychology, Branches
Occupational psychology
* includes work and organizational psychology.
* studies people in their working environment.
Personality psychology
* focuses on the study of the individual.
* is the scientific investigation of the individual human personality
- study of the person<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Physical abuse
* All physical abuse starts with emotional abuse.
* attacks a child's body while emotional abuse attacks the child's spirit.
* can be as emotionally traumatizing as it is physically traumatizing
- both physically and emotionally debilitating
- confinement, burns, beatings, sexual abuse and cuts
- one or two isolated incidents or can occur over a prolonged period of time
* can cause brain injury
- bruising, broken bones, burns, internal injuries or can lead to death
- permanent physical damage
* can include pushing, shoving, slapping, as well as other assaultive behavior
- slapping, kicking and punching
- slapping, punching, strangling, using weapons, scalding, burning
- lead to bruises, fractures and, tragically, in some cases death
- leave a child with obvious physical limitations
- occur and leave no visible injuries
* crime and the abusive person can be arrested.
* escalates in frequency and severity.
* harms the body.
* has many forms.
* includes hitting, kicking, punching, slapping, and other forms of violent conflict
- non-accidental injuries such as burns, bruises, cuts or broken bones
- scalding, beating or severe physical punishment
* is always dangerous to children and can lead to serious physical injury
- anger gone berserk and is never justified and always unrighteous
- another concern for elderly patients in nursing homes
* is any act which results in a non-accidental trauma or physical injury
- use of size, strength, or presence to hurt or control someone else
- anything someone does to cause pain, injury, or disease
- considered domestic violence when both the perpetrator and victim are adults
- easier to define than emotional abuse because there are bruises to prove it
- illegal
* is intentional bodily injury
- injury to a child by a parent or caregiver
- often an inability to express the emotion of anger
* is only one kind of abuse
- part of a system of abusive behaviors
- pain or injury inflicted intentionally by a caregiver
* is physical force or violence that results in bodily injury, pain, or impairment
* is the leading cause of serious brain injury among infants
- head injury in infants
- most common reason children are removed in foster care in Oregon
- willful infliction of physical pain, injury or unreasonable confinement
- violence that results in bodily harm or mental distress
- wrong, and usually against the law
* occurs in approximately one out of every four dating relationships
- most among infants
+ Physical abuse, Types of physical abuse: Psychology | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Physiological psychology
* Physiological psychologies are psychologies.
* adds nothing to mental philosophy.
* assumes monism and reductionism.
* behavioral science.
* is an area that is of great interest to students.
* is the science of mental processes as related to the nervous system
- study of how the brain and nervous system relate to behavior
Popular psychology
* looks at the many aspects of human behaviour that relate to the self.
* says to put the self first, but when the self is first, peace is last.
Psychometry
* Psychometries are clairvoyance
* can be deep.
* is an aspect as a result of meditation
- divination by handling an object
* is the ability to discern information from the vibration of an object
- art of tuning in
- main technique used in psychic criminology
* means 'mind-measure'.
* theory that all objects record sensory data in their molecular structure.
Psychophysiology
* involves the relationship between mental and bodily processes.
* is the study of the relationship between behavior and physiology.
* new term that means mind and body together interconnected and interrelating.
* refers to the study of psychological theories using physiological measures.
* tracks the physiology of psychologically induced pain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Reflexology
* Homeopathic way of helping the body to heal itself.
* Reflexologies are massages
- medical treatments
* affects more than just the feet.
* aids the improvement of circulation and releases stress with in the body.
* aims to improve nerves and blood supply in a natural way.
* also reduces stress by bringing the body into a deep state of relaxation.
* big stress and tension reliever.
* can act as a type of preventative maintenance
- negate the effects of stress while it helps the body relax
- restore and maintain the body's natural balance and encourage healing
* complement to traditional medical treatments.
* completely safe, natural aid to restoring the body s healthy balance.
* dates back to ancient times.
* deep compression massage done with the thumbs on feet and hands
- of pressure points on the feet
* distinct native healing tradition.
* elicits painful or tender areas with actual or potential disorder.
* focused pressure technique, usually directed at the feet or hands.
* focuses on the pressure points on the feet
- the massage on the feet and hands
* gentle compression technique used on the hands and feet.
* gently non-intrusive touch therapy applied to the feet.
* great way to promote health and well- being.
* growing modality in the field of natural health.
* has ancient foundations and has evolved into the modern world.
* helps break up congestion, which can develop, dissolving blocked energy.
* helps the body to normalize by improving the blood and nerve supply to all the organs
- circulation in general
- with relaxation and feelings of well being
* improves nerve and blood supply to help bring about homeostasis
- supply, and helps nature to normalize
* induces a deeper relaxation, reduces stress, aids sleep and increases energy levels.
* is an American refinement of Oriental wisdom
- Eastern massage therapy that manipulates hands and feet
- Oriental massage therapy that manipulates hands and feet
- age-old health practice
- alternative therapy based on massage of the feet
* is an ancient holistic therapy that helps to relieve stress, tension and aching feet
- method of activating the healing powers of the body
* is an ideal mix of both old and new skills to activate the healing powers of the body
- way of treating children
* is based on the premise that all nerve endings run to the feet
- theories that nerve pathways exist throughout the body
- basically a massage performed on the feet - which can relax the entire physical body
- believed to stimulate and revitalise the energy flow
- claimed to be particularly effective in the reduction of stress and tension
- great for the elderly and also for children
- known as an archetypal form of therapy
- like exercise
- mentioned as one of the ten therapies being studied
- more than a foot massage
* is one of the fastest growing holistic therapies now gaining worldwide acceptance
- massage techniques a person can learn to self-administer
* is one of the most accessible forms of alternative therapy
- popular forms of complimentary therapies
- powerful preventative health care
- practiced in many Amish families
- primarily a relaxation technique
- recommended for chronic conditions such as asthma, headaches and migraines
- relaxing and reduces stress
* is the application of specific pressures to reflex points in the hands and feet
- manual stimulation of the hands and feet
* is the massaging of feet to diagnose and cure disease
- specific points on the foot that correspond to organs of the body
- skilled massage of very specific zones in the feet
- study of the reflexes of the feet corresponding to every part of the body
- use of pressure on the feet and hands by a trained individual
* is used around the world, in early Indian, Chinese and Egyptian cultures
- primarily for relaxing tension
- well-known for reducing levels of mental and physical stress
* master body of knowledge onto itself.
* method for activating the healing powers of the body
- of gaining access to the body s energy system
* natural healing art.
* natural,relaxing holistic therapy beneficial for everyone.
* non-nude service.
* novel form of acupressure employing foot or hand massage.
* often helps restoring the balance.
* promotes relaxation and healing
- improves circulation
* reduces stress in all parts of the body by generating deep, calm relaxation.
* relaxing, non-invasive healing art that has been around for centuries.
* releases tension, stress, blockages and poisons from the body.
* relieves many conditions and is especially effective for stress and tension.
* relieves stress and releases energy flow throughout the body
- stimulates circulation
* safe treatment promoting homeostasis.
* safe, easy and beneficial method of treatment
- natural aid to restoring the body's own healing potential
* serious advance in the health field.
* serves as a unique tool to maintain or establish a link between adult and child.
* simple, natural and harmless way to health.
* skilled treatment of massage and pressure points on the feet.
* sometimes causes the pain to be worse later in the day or evening.
* specific pressure technique which works on precise reflex points On the feet.
* stimulates the blood circulation which helps to unblock nerve impulses.
* technique of applying controlled pressure to specific spots to relax muscles
- that people can learn and self-administer
* therapeutic form of foot massage whose benefits affect the entire body.
* therapeutically reduces stress and tension throughout the whole body.
* unique modality in the health field
- practice, separate from massage
* uses foot massage at specific points to stimulate healing in other parts of the body.
* utilizes the map on the soles of the feet.
* works on points below the skin by gentle compression
- the nerve endings in the hands, feet, and ears
* works to clear the body of accumulated toxins
- relax the entire body and restore it's functions to normal
- with the nervous system
- without a diagnosis if administered correctly | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology | reflexology:
Foot reflexology
* holistic approach to good health and well being.
* pressure therapy.
School psychology
* is grounded in both psychology and education
- one of the oldest areas of applied psychology
* small cog in the wheel of education.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Social psychology
* Social psychologies are psychologies.
* branch of psychology that studies individuals in the social context.
* concentrates on understanding the social causes of individual behaviour.
* explains both society and the individual.
* focuses on human social relationships.
* includes a broad range of topics concerning how people act in social situations.
* is an active and vibrant discipline
- empirically-oriented field with a strong theoretical foundation
- important application of sociology today
- concerned with the effects of social situations on human behavior
- much more than just symbolic interactionism
- studied in both psychology and sociology
* is the scientific study of the psychology of interpersonal relationships
- study of how an individual's behavior is affected by other people
* is the study of human behaviour in a social context
- individuals within social situations
- social influence processes
- systematic application of basic psychological principles to human behavior
* looks into how groups of people work together and how societies build and work.
* relies more on experimental methods.
* very broad area of scholarship in both sociology and psychology.
+ Psychology, Branches
Sport psychology
* can unite the two in harmony.
* helps players develop mental skills as they learn the mechanics of the game.
* involves preparing the mind of an athlete, just as one prepares the body.
* is all about pursuing dreams
- an emerging field in the worlds of psychology and athletics
- the science of the mental game in athletics
* valid, scientific way for athletes to do just that.
Sports psychology
* critical part of bringing any athlete back from an injury.
* is part of the larger field of sport and exercise science.
* suffers from the intellectual baggage of it's clinical psychological roots.
Traffic psychology
* Traffic Psychology can serve to educate all drivers
- teach pedestrians to be more self-responsible
* employs cognitive therapies for changing our thoughts, feelings and behaviors.
* is the study of the social-psychological forces that act upon drivers in traffic.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field | applied science | psychology:
Transpersonal psychology
* has benefits for both psychology and the spiritual disciplines.
* is about dualism, trans meaning beyond, beyond the personal
- an approach to the whole person
- depth psychology
- strongly multicultural
- the future norm in psychology, as yet unrecognized by the mainstream
* psychology of human development
- that goes through the personal to the transpersonal
* recognizes and studies the different states and stations of consciousness.
* stands at the interface of psychology and spiritual experience
- and spirituality
Baseball field
* are green
- located in countries
- playing fields
* are used for excitement
* have diamonds.
Campus
* are fields
- ground
* can have libraries, lecture halls, and parks.
* A 'campus' is land where a college or university buildings are placed. Campuses can have libraries, lecture halls, and parks.
Corn field
* provide both food and cover for wildlife.
* show potential for high yields.
Cornfield
* Many cornfields have large infestations of corn flea beetles.
* are farmland.
* contain very few milkweed plants.
* have very little milkweed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field:
Electric field
* Most electric fields create heat.
* Some electric fields create voltage
- exert forces
- provide forces
- surround clouds
* are a lot like magnetism
- easy to reduce
- important in theortical modelling
* are present even when equipment is turned off, as long as it is plugged in
- whenever there is power on a conductor
- strongest close the device and diminish with distance
- used in numerous ways by animals
- vector fields
- widespread around charges and extend out into the spaces around the charges
* arise from electric charges.
* become even more interesting when they penetrate materials, such as metal wires.
* can also induce a dipole moment.
* come from charges.
- voltages in the circuits they strike
* decay with distance similarly to magnetic fields.
* draw the ants.
* emanate from unshielded power lines, wires, equipment, and appliances.
* exert force on electric charges.
* exist around any object having an imbalance of electric charge
- in the vicinity of charged objects
* go away from positive charges and toward negative charges.
* have a positive and a negative.
* is denser at uneven areas- cylinder ends, closures around cathode surface
- force per unit charge
* occur whenever a voltage difference occurs.
* pulses induce reversible shape transformation of human erythrocytes.
* speed up the particles which strike a target.
* vector quantity.
* vector, i.e. it has both magnitude and direction.
Electrical field
* Some electrical fields cause surface damage.
* are basically regions containing forces which repel or attract charges.
* help kill biofilms.
* result from electrical devices and televisions.
Electromagnetic field
* Most electromagnetic fields have intensity.
* Some electromagnetic fields cause infertility
- create microwaves
* are invisible and can penetrate living tissue
- vectors which vary in complicated ways through space and time
* describe electric and magnetic fields.
* do have an effect on living matter.
* is generated by a pair of wires, which also serves as a measurement probe
- produced by a machine attached to the solinoid
Energy field
* are the fundamental units of living system.
* interact when people stay close to each other.
* move by the laws of harmony and resonance.
Field research
* Some field research is experimental because it involves randomly assigning people to groups.
* guides the evolution of our systems.
* is the collection of primary data in market research
- vital to the making of discoveries<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field:
Flat
* are boxs
- containers that hold cell packs
- footwear
- houses
- large slow moving sections of the stream
* are located in apartment buildings
- cars
- cities
- towns
- musical notation
- plains
- sand or coral bottomed, good for wading
- scenery
* are the major food producing regions of most lakes
- food-producing regions of most lakes
- used for music
- what some people call apartments
* can also cause heel spurs by placing more pressure on the heel
- connect depressional systems to each other during high water periods by overland flow
* term applied to most magazines and non-letter size mail.
### location | tract | field | flat:
Alluvial plain
* exist throughout the rest of the Nadiad region.
* form at the base of mountains. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | flat:
Salt flat
* are too harsh for most plants and animals to survive, yet are quite fragile.
+ Death Valley, Geography: Deserts :: Geography of California :: Valleys in the United States :: Wilderness Areas of the United States
* Some of these features include sand dunes, salt flats, colorful rocks, and tall mountains. Large parts of Death Valley are below sea level. One feature, named Badwater Basin, is the lowest place in North America. It is below sea level. The salt flats are another famous feature in Death Valley. Salt flats are very unusual. They are large, flattened areas where the surface of the ground is covered by salt instead of dirt. The salt that makes up a salt flat can be many inches or centimeters deep. The salt flats were created because thousands of years ago, Death Valley was underwater. Lake Manly used to be very large, but changes in the weather caused the rivers that brought water into the lake to dry up. After a long time, the water in Lake Manly began to dry up too.
Tidal flat
* are areas of low relief, cut by meandering tidal channels.
* are broad, low-tide zones, usually containing rich plant, animal, and bird communities
- relatively level areas that are alternately flooded and exposed by the tide
- highly dynamic systems, in constant motion
* form in areas of low wave energy and medium to high tidal range
- quiet inner bays at the mouths of rich deltas
* provide habitat for shellfish, and migratory waterfowl are plentiful.
Flood plain
* are areas near streams or rivers that flood during periods of heavy rain
- made by a meander eroding sideways as it travels downstream
- nature's way of channeling excess water
- often rich in nutrients and create fertile farmland
* can be hazardous environments but are extremely fertile lands.
* retain excess water, acting as a buffer to lessen the impact of floods elsewhere.
Gravitational field
* Most gravitational fields have origins.
* Some gravitational fields create conditions
- exert forces
- produce tide
* accelerate masses, and electric fields accelerate charges.
* affects time.
* are fields
- vector fields
* can act as their own source.
* have an effect on collective human psychology
- no polarity at all | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field:
Lawn
* Avoid walking on frozen lawns.
* Fertilize the lawn with a slow release fertilizer
- lawn, trees, and perennials
* Many lawns show drought symptoms because of inadequate water despire irrigation systems.
* Most lawns are combinations of Kentucky bluegrass, creeping red fescue, and perennial ryegrass
- can get by with very little fertilization, often less than once a year
- have trees
- maintain shades
- only require nitrogen to green up
- receive twice as much water as they require for a healthy appearance
- require a minimum of one inch of water per week
* Some lawns are thin in places.
* Some lawns create conditions
- moist conditions
- enhance growth
- lead to erosion
- require insects
* add insult to injury because grass lacks deep roots that help prevent erosion.
* also keep precious top-soil from eroding away
- prevent soil erosion, reduce runoff and filters contaminants from rainwater
- provide a monochromatic blanket of green
* appear to be sensitive to pool water.
* are a cultural entity
- significant source of yard waste during the growing season
* are an additional source of nutrients and pesticides in the urban environment
- ecological waste
- dry when footprints remain in the grass long after being made
- easier to establish during wet periods, when the temperature is moderately cool
- gardens
- home to many, many insects
* are located in backyards
- front yards
- golf courses
- suburbs
- moist fertile areas where the conditions usually support a plentiful supply of live food
* are more harmful to lakes than are toxic substances and waste derived from septic systems
- toxic substances or waste from individual sewage systems
- of little use to wildlife and they require extra water, fertilizer and pesticides
- susceptible to several different diseases
- the biggest water users in home landscapes
* are used for barbeques
- weedings
- useful in areas where people walk and stroll and picnic and play catch
- wildlife deserts
* benefit from a raking to remove winter debris such as old leaves and moss.
* can absorb nutrients from decomposing grass clippings that are left on the lawn after mowing
- do without water for a long time and turn green again when moisture is available
- leach fertilizers, chemicals, and organic debris into the pond
* can survive with little or no fertilizer
- without feeding, but fertilized lawns fight weeds better and look better
* comprise nearly one-quarter of urban and suburban landscapes.
* consist of whatever happens to grow in front of a house.
* do help oxygenate and cleanse our environment, just like trees and shrubs.
* eat nitrogen.
* grow at different rates depending on environmental conditions and management practices.
* grow best in soil with intermediate or loamy soils that have a mix of clay, silt, and sand
- the spring and fall
* have problems
* is prone and vulnerable to the action of insects and pests.
* needing some lime and potassium can also benefit from wood ash.
* often look dull and brown by the end of winter
- run right up to and under trees and shrubs
* provide safe playing surfaces for children and sports activities
- sources
* rakes handle lawn debris such as grass clippings and leaves.
* recover from dollar spot injury when conditions are favorable for vigorous, healthy growth.
* reduce noise and improve air quality by trapping dust and pollutants
- runoff and control erosion
- the habitat available to wildlife
* replace native habitats, and so suburbs are less biodiverse than other areas.
* require about one inch of water once per week
- fertilizer when they begin spring growth and again in the fall
- more water when first planted
- nitrogen, phosphorous and potassium in the greatest quantities
- tremendous amounts of water
* suffer the most damage from dog urine in hot, dry weather where it sits without washing away
- under layers of fallen leaves
* surround areas
- homes
* take enormous amounts of water, fertilizer and energy.
* turn light green or yellow and thin out.
* use much more fertilizer and pesticides per acre than the forests and farmlands they replace.
* usually fill-in as conditions warm in spring
- use the most water in a landscape | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field | lawn:
Dormant lawn
* are in jeopardy of dying if drought conditions persist over an extended period.
* continue to protect water quality by holding soil and potential pollutants.
Healthy lawn
* Some healthy lawns depend on ability.
* cope better with the occasional cranefly infestation.
* go brown during a drought, but quickly turn green when rainfall resumes.
* grow on healthy soil.
* resist weeds, disease, and insect damage, and also require watering less often.
* tolerate injury better than lawns in poor condition. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field:
Magnetic field
* All magnetic fields arise from the motion of charges.
* Magnetic Fields Begins with ancient misunderstandings of magnetism.
* Most magnetic fields are man made.
* Most magnetic fields consist of fields
- longitudinal fields
* Most magnetic fields have constant values
- produce torque
* Some magnetic fields affect solar wind
* Some magnetic fields are created by current
- electrical current
- high electrical current
* Some magnetic fields create current
- forces
* Some magnetic fields exert forces
- transverse forces
- exist in interiors
- generate current
* Some magnetic fields have conductance
- effects
- hall conductance
- magnetic poles
- strength
* Some magnetic fields produce current
- electric current
- provide pressure
* Some magnetic fields surround straight wire
- undergo reversals.
* The strength of a magnet has to do with the spaces between the magnetic flux lines. The closer the flux lines are to each other, the stronger the magnet is. The farther away they are, the weaker. The flux lines can be seen by placing iron filings over a magnet. The iron filings move and arrange into the lines. Magnetic fields give power to other particles that are touching the magnetic field.
* In physics, the magnetic field field that passes through space and which makes a magnetic force move electric charges and magnetic dipoles. Magnetic fields are around electric currents, magnetic dipoles, and changing electric fields
* accelerates the movement of cell ions.
* act a bit like rubber bands
- as tightly strung wires
- on all moving charges
* alter human sleep.
* appear to play an important role.
* are 'polar' fields with a North and South polarity.
* are a direct result of current, or the use of electricity
- little like rubber bands
- areas where an object exhibits a magnetic influence
- around electric currents , magnetic dipoles , and changing electric fields
- commonly a result of magnetic dipoles
- conservative
- different from electric fields
- energetically important throughout most of the interstellar medium
- essential to maintain health
- invisible lines of force that surround all electrical devices and wiring
- measures in units called gauss and are typically reported in milligauss
- proportional to the size of the planet
- strongest close to the device and diminish with distance
- the same as electric fields
- to be studied in the non-thermal polarised continuum
- used to extract metals and mercury from bodies
* are vector fields
- quantities, meaning they have both a magnitude and a direction
* arise from current flows.
* arise from the motion of electric charges, i.e. a current
- only with relative movement between the charge and the observer
* block and redirect some of the energy, creating sunspots.
* can accidentally clear a computer disk
- also affect components such as inductors in the oscillator circuitry
- be a source of electricity, or electric fields
- cause interference with electronic equipment, especially CRT monitors
- deflect the path of a moving charged particle
- diminish drug action
- open new reaction pathways to alter rates and product distributions
- penetrate walls and are difficult to shield against
- reduce the material's superconductivity
* channel some gas along the axes to make the jets.
* clash with one another when a certain closeness creates a particle press.
* come from currents.
* control both the location and power density of the plasma
- the travel of cosmic rays through space
* create current in the circuits they strike.
* exert forces on other moving charge.
* exist and do interact with the constituents of human tissues
- as soon as a device is switched on and current flows
- in a DC machine
- only when the appliance is turned on and the current is flowing
* exposures in agricultural science laboratories.
* extract ions, keeping the beam in a very tight spread.
- many properties that scientists and others have used over the centuries
- no beginning or end
* help support molecular clouds against collapse.
* improve fuel mileage by affecting hydrocarbon bond strength.
* interact with the copper inducing currents and themselves become magnetic.
* is created by endless bar magnet, magnet is homogeneously magnetized
- generated by moving charges
* make transformers and motors function, and have many other uses.
* move through the body as if it was air.
* obey the principle of superposition.
* occur when current flow through a wire.
* originate from everything with an electrical current
* pass through most materials, including concrete, steel, and lead.
* penetrate further and can stimulate more specifically
- into the chromosphere and into the solar corona
- the tissue inducing small local electrical currents that stimulate nerves
* permeate all space and play an important role in shaping the universe on all scales
- the whole organism
* play a key role in space plasma processes.
* provide evidence of metallic conducting cores
- support to the clouds against their self-gravitation
* provides a plausible link between disks and jets.
* reduce the growth inhibitory effect of tamoxifen in human brain tumor cells.
* remain frozen-in the solar plasma throughout the convective zone.
* result from the flow of current through the wires or electrical devices.
* run out from the north pole and enter a magnet's south pole.
* seem to hold sway in some aspects of animal behaviour.
* surround the earth.
* surrounding the black hole accellerate the particles into a narrow jet.
* tend to become concentrated as components are shrunk.
* threading a plasma can guide electric currents along intricate paths.
* vary in strength with the current and are present only when the current is flowing.
* vector quantity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | field:
Magnetic flux
* is excluded from the superconducting region
- magnetization
- measured in webers
- observed to be quantized in a region enclosed by a superconductor
- the dot product of the magnetic field and the area vectors
* measure of the number of fields lines passing through an area.
+ Dot product, Physics: Linear algebra
Military science
* are discipline.
* says that the more troops the greater the strength.
+ Military science, Overview
* Military science has some branches below.
Monogenetic field
* are the result of very low supply rates of magma.
* occur where the supply of magma to the surface is very low.
Open field
* are located in countrysides.
* attract many seed-eating species including sparrows, blackbirds, and finches.
* provide feeding habitats for small mammals and migratory birds.
Rice field
* Some rice fields cover areas
- surface areas
* are artificial wetlands, and they provide important habitat for waterbirds.
* offer benefits to a multitude of migrating waterfowl.
* provide benefits.
Scientific discipline
* Any scientific discipline is about facts, facts, facts.
* Many scientific disciplines depend in some way on extracting structural information from noisy data
- produce and use large, multidimensional databases
* is fields of study.
Vector field
* are an extension of the field concept to vector quantities
- functions
* can be perpendicular to local gradient or along the gradient.
Wheat field
* are favorite nesting sites for wild pheasant hens.
* occupy more of the earth's surface than do fields of any other food crop.
* symbol of creation and peace.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | field:
Yard
* are enclosures
- films
- landscapeds
- lawns
* are located in cities
- houses
- housing development
- neighborhoods
- properties
- subdivisions
* are part of chain
- leas
- perchs
- rods
- sailing vessels
- shafts
- spars
- tracts
- units of measurement
* are used for family gathering
- measuring
- playing games
- storage
* includes fts
* linear measure
* originate from the days when people traveled by coach and horses.
* provide habitats
- nest habitats
### location | tract | field | yard:
Backyard
* Many backyards have abundant quantities of small animals and birds to hunt.
* Most backyards are composed of grass with perhaps a few scattered shrubs and trees.
* Most backyards collect rain water
* Some backyards attract animals.
* are located in countries
- houses
- subdivisions
* are used for barbecues
- gardens
- playing sports
* can become places where migrating birds visit.
* have grass
- large telescopes
Front yard
* are located in grass
- suburbs
* are used for barbeques
- flowers
- gardening
- leisure
- watering
Glade
* also occur in the wild areas.
* are common, especially in the White River drainage
- rocky, dry areas with a very thin layer of topsoil over thick bedrock
- wooded areas that have been thinned and cleared of underbrush
* occur as small openings within the woods
- on almost any type of bedrock, including limestone, sandstone, igneous and dolomite
Industrial park
* Most industrial parks reduce pollution.
* are closed areas where different services - such as banking, security, etc | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract:
Oasis
* Most oases are part of deserts.
* Oases also provide habitat for animals and even humans if the area is big enough.
* Oases are created where the water table is near the surface
- large areas of ice-free land that look more akin to deserts of lower latitudes
- often the only places in deserts that support crops and permanent habitation
- the smallest kinds of towns
- vegetated areas moistened by springs, wells, or by irrigation
* Oases form in the desert, usually from a source high in the mountains
- where the ice has withdrawn and where new snow melts faster than it accumulates
- occur where highlands generate surface streams or springs
- provide a habitat for animals and are used as a source of water for humans
- routinely go a decade or two without any rain at all
* Some oases have thousands of date palm trees.
* In geography, an 'oasis' is an isolated place in the desert where there is vegetation. Most often, this occurs around a source of water. Oases provide a habitat for animals and are used as a source of water for humans.
* release their first album, Definitely Maybe.
* are located in deserts
- natural things
- the most important band in the world
* can also simulate upper-tibial or supracondylar single osteotomies.
* is an Ohio company that makes water coolers
- effective in hot or cold water
- shelter
- the sweetest of the turnips, all white, and, when peeled, it can be eaten like an apple | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract:
Park
* All parks close at dusk.
* Many parks also have cooking places and tent sites
- host natural features that are nationally significant
- offer trails for hiking, mountain biking and horseback riding
- are adjacent to state forests or state wildlife areas, which also allow hunting
- contain critical habitat
- feature picnic shelters
* Many parks have handicapped-accessible visitor centers, restrooms, campsites, and trails
- lakes and groves of stately trees, especially white birch
- marinas that offer boat rentals, boating supplies, fuel and refreshments
- offer swimming pools and palm tree shade
- provide whirlpools, tennis courts, and horseback riding
- vary their hours depending on the day of the week and time of year
- welcome pets, yet often require pets to be on a leash or crated at all times
* Most parks contain natural resources
- significant natural resources
* Most parks feature animals
- extinct animals
* Most parks have access to water through streams, creeks and lakes
- birds
- picnic facilities and playground equipment
- some combination of picnicking, fishing, swimming, boating, and hiking
- tracks for jogging, and many have tennis, squash and badminton courts
- maintain natural resources
- possess pigeons
* Most parks provide habitats
- major habitats
- sanctuaries
- several major habitats
- reduce pollution
- restrict the planting of non-native plants
* Some parks allow dogs off leash in designated training areas.
* Some parks also have special facilities for the disabled
- maintain fishing lagoons
- are neighborhood green spaces, while others offer swimming, boating or hiking
* Some parks attract birds
- ducks
- become habitats
- even have restaurants, phone booths and recreation centers
- exhibit dolphins
* Some parks feature beautiful gardens which add a burst of colour when in bloom
- tot lots, with play equipment geared to small children
* Some parks have bushes
- lilac bushes
- picnic tables and barbeque grills
- sites designated specifically for group camping
- squares
- offer solitude and the enjoyment of nature
* Some parks possess animals
- arthropods
- coyotes
- reptiles
- turtles
- wolves
- provide running water, electricity, picnic shelters and garbage containers
- work with gorillas.
* A 'park' is an open place in a city or town for nature. There are often trees, benches, statues, and ponds in a park. Some parks built in big cities are very large. These can have fountains or picnic areas
* abound with hiking trails, beaches, historic forts and lighthouses.
* are a large part of British life
- metaphor for nature
- popular thing in the United States, unlike some other countries
- way to reconnect people to what is primary
* are an important component of community livability
- part of the lives of people of all incomes
- especially important to an urban city like Singapore
- essential to urban dwellers
- expensive to build, and more expensive when people get hurt
- extraordinary places from which to acquire knowledge and learn about the natural world
- for people as well as wildlife
- generally off-limits to hunters, and in most cases make it easier to control poaching
- in neighborhoods, many times within walking distances
- located in carnivals
- part of urban areas
- popular places for children to play and adults to enjoy exercise
- public properties
- the landscape of the soul
- tracts
* are, potentially , one of the most important areas for the preservation of wildlife habitat.
* attract attention
- national attention
* can also have a variety of ground cover and terrain, with terrain quite extreme in places.
* change over time, whether it be over a season, years, or decades.
* contain critical habitat for rare species, and often serve as key scientific research sites
* contain significant natural resources
* cover areas.
* create important corridors for wildlife and vegetation.
* free and comprehensive guide to parks throughout the world.
* give people a sense of ownership and a sense of belonging.
* have bathroom facilities
- visitors
* help protect the diversity of species that live in different regions of the United States
- to promote air, water, and soil quality
* include locations.
* maintain biodiversity
* offer parks
* often have a high visitation rate, which frequently brings a large amount of litter.
* perform two roles in our society, wildlife sanctuary and a place to relax and enjoy nature.
* provide a source of relaxation and recreation
- excellent habitat for animals
- opportunities for various forms of recreation
- places for children and families to unwind and have fun in a city
* receive rainfall.
* surrounded by low crime areas usually have a lower level of crime.
* will have resources. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | park:
Amusement park
* Some amusement parks have very strict rules about line-cutting
- use robots
* are a part of the American landscape
- also full on weekends, and balloons are sold even in the snowstorm
- tourist attraction
* compete to see who can build the most thrilling roller coaster.
* focus on having the tallest, fastest, most exciting rides.
* have rides.
* use the concept of converting between potential and kinetic energy.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | park:
Car park
* Some car parks are private car parks.
* are a target for thieves and a source of fear for many people.
* are located in cities
- downtowns
- metros
- motels
- parking garages
- used for parking
- wastelands
+ Parking, Places to park, Car parks and parking lots: Traffic
* Some car parks are private car parks. They can only be used by people who are visiting the hotel, store or firm to whom the car park belongs. People who park there illegally may find that their vehicle gets clamped, towed, or booted.
City park
* Some city parks have substantial tracts of semi-wild land.
* appear in many shapes and sizes.
- usually too small or too well kept for collecting many insects
Forest park
* Forest Park is America's largest urban forest.
* Forest Park is one of the largest urban parks in the United States
- largest urban wildlife habitats in the country
- the nation's largest urban wilderness
- town of cemeteries, marking the historical fringe of the metropolitan area<|endoftext|>### location | tract | park:
National park
* Many national parks are in some of the most remote, and sometimes harsh, locations in the country
- primarily famous for their natural features
* Many national parks have active archeological programs
- wetlands
- play a crucial role in recovery efforts for certain endangered species
* Most national parks celebrate natural beauty found aboveground.
* Most national parks have a sewage treatment plant
- hiking trails and some have information centres
- visitors
- provide sanctuaries
* Some national parks have special guided tours and walks for kids
- offer protection
* are a place for environmental stewardship
- about environmental quality as well as visitors
- all over the country
- also unique laboratories for scientific research
- areas where many different animals occur together in large numbers
- one of many types of protected areas
- only one part of Australia's protected area network
- responsible for preserving park resources unimpaired for future generations
- some of the most popular tourist attractions all over the world
* are the crown jewels of Canada's wilderness parks
- foundation of any serious plan to protect nature
- fullest and most effective form of nature preservation
- there to preserve the tiny remnants of what existed before European colonization
* create jobs.
* depend on clean air.
* emphasize strict preservation of pristine areas.
* enjoy a greater degree of protection than wildlife sanctuary.
* form the main stay of Kenya's tourist industry.
* have a goat control program and zoos and sanctuaries have breeding programs going
- cottages, chalets or lodges, which are all fully equipped
- some recreational facilities
- the highest conservation status
* keep plants and animals safe from harm.
* play a key role in caring for our cultural heritage.
* prohibit the collection of firewood, even of deadwood that has fallen to the ground.
* range from lush, green tropical rainforests to dry empty outback.
* serve as laboratories for conducting research on coral reef ecosystems.
* use horses to find lost or stranded visitors.
* will have resources.
Public park
* Some public parks require permits of owners, or they require dogs to be licensed.
* are important contexts in which such socialisation occurs | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | park:
Science park
* are found all over the world , but they mostly exist in developed countries
- world, but they mostly exist in developed countries.
* A 'science park' property designed and used for supporting high tech, science, or research related businesses. Science parks are found all over the world, but they mostly exist in developed countries. Over 140 are found in North America alone<|endoftext|>### location | tract | park:
State park
* Many state parks contain giant stumps in second growth redwood forests.
* Many state parks have hiking trails that are handicap-accessible
- that make excellent terrain for a winter excursion
- one or more small lakes on their property
- places for picnics, trails to hike, camping areas, or lakes to go boating
- programs that encourage bike touring
- special use areas for use by non-profit youth organizations
- swimming pools or designated swimming areas in state park lakes
- remain open for camping during the winter months
* Most state parks are open year-round, but some close in winter
- have camping facilities
- offer recreation
* Some state parks allow winter camping, with rangers' permission
- have self-guided interpretive trails
* are great places to see animals
- public property to be preserved for our posterity as open and natural space
- wilderness parks
- wildlife refuges
* has several programs to help kids learn about their environment.
* have special hunting and trapping regulations.
* protect the places that tell stories about Wisconsin people and landscapes.
* receive just as many visitors each year as do national parks.
Theme park
* are amusement parks
- forms of thinned reality
* are one of the few non-computer interactive media types
- media types to be interactive
- largest summer employers of college and high school students
Zoological park
* allow visitors to see and experience how their animal friends live and function.
* exist on every continent.
Respiratory tract
* Some respiratory tracts contain gases
- provide environments
* infec tions and nosocomial pneumonia.
* is the primary route of exposure.
Short
* are a popular garment to wear during warmer weather
- pants
- smalls
- taboo for men and women at temples and mosques
* are worn either as outer garment or as underwear
* ' are a type of trousers or pants that reach only to the upper part of the legs or more, but do not cover the entire leg. They are worn by both men and women. Shorts are worn either as outer garment or as underwear | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract:
Site
* Many sites contain forms for entering information such as protein or nucleotide sequences
- have structures that divers can swim in and through, including some large caves
- use cookies, which identify a user, to personalize data presented to consumers
* Most sites confirm that adult sponges are largely sessile, living in an attached position.
* Some sites contain digital elevation maps of the earth's surface
- expose to sunlight
- promote suicide as a way to be elevated to a higher state of consciousness
- react with barbiturates, others with convulsants, and others with anesthetic gases
* are dominated by exotic grass
- season grass
- near centers
* are places where humans did things and left their things behind
- people have stored information which can be accessed via the Web
- positions
- sacred to aboriginal groups because the landscape is sacred
- used for laughings
* consist of grass.
* contain ads
- confidential information
- detail information
- general information
- materials
- news
- specific information
- useful information
- vegetation
- water
* correspond to areas.
* develop policy
- privacy policy
* enhance diversity
- functions
- genetic diversity
- vegetative growth
* feature photographs.
* focus on aspects.
* form, and are destroyed, by both natural and cultural processes.
* get rainfall.
* have areas
- average users
- basal areas
- capacity
- chances
- characteristics
- climates
- communities
- cultural values
- daily visitors
- deliveries
- descriptions
- details
- diagrams
- examples
- frost
- grassland
- habitats
* have high moisture
- soil moisture
- late frost
- limits
- lists
- low precipitation
- maximum capacity
* have mild climates
- winter climates
- neighbors
- plants
- plenty
- ranges
- resources
- seedlings
* have significant cultural values
- surfaces
- temperature
- unique users
* include features
- holes
* indicate presence.
* influence absorption.
* is the physical location of a place.
* location or scene of something or, as a verb, to place something in a location.
* offer advantage
- benefits
- minimal resistance
- opportunity
- potential
- products
- protection
* often have the structure of a hierarchical tree.
* present problems.
* provide additional information
- basic information
- enough information
- excellent habitats
- false information
- guidelines
- health information
- humid environments
- important habitats
- information management guidelines
- insight
- more information
- nest habitats
- options
- reproductive health information
- safe environments
- technical information
- tree care information
* receive effective rainfall
- partial sunlight
* refers to the actual physical position and conditions of a place
- way the tract of land is in relation to the environment surrounding it
* represent different habitats
* require effort
- labor
* support few individuals
- scatter individuals
- party cookies
- technology
+ Ephesus: Ancient Rome
* It was one of the twelve cities of the Ionian League. It is also located in the west of turkey. Site still possesses many well preserved ruins side by side with rich history. Apart from the ones above two of Ephesus's outstanding monuments holds an importance not just for their home city also for world's cultural and architectural heritage. The first one is library of Celsuswhich is located at the end of the Curettes Street. Celsus library looks like a two storeyed building seen from the facade but as we know it used to have three stories inside. Facade of the building shows us a rare found craftsmanship. Also the library used to be the third biggest library of the ancient world, having after the libraries of Alexandria and Pergamon.
+ Publius Ovidius Naso, Other websites: 43 BC births :: 10s deaths :: Ancient Roman writers
* Metamorphoses', 'Remedia Amoris', 'Tristia' with enhanced browsing facility, downloadable in HTML, PDF, or MS Word DOC formats. Site also includes wide selection of works by other authors.
+ Website, Structure, Uses
* Websites can be used to advertise or sell things. They can also be used to talk to other people. A blog is a website where the location of the material is less relevant than who writes it, and which is more focused on dialogue. Sites are good for looking up information on the computer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | site:
Active site
* are part of antibodies
- enzymes
- the clefts or crevices to which the substrate binds
- usually pockets or clefts in the surface of the enzyme
* determine how the protein reacts with other molecules.
* major part of the enzyme volume.
Archeological site
* Some archeological sites show the presence of arboriginal people.
* are fragile, nonrenewable resources
- often in inaccessible areas
Burial site
* Most burial sites have cultural values
- significant cultural values
* Some burial sites contain puppies.
* are sacred resting places.
* have significant cultural values
Campground
* Many campgrounds also limit the number of dogs per campsite.
* are campsites
- facilities
- locales
- located in state parks
- picnic areas fill up on holidays and summer weekends, but weekdays are quieter
* usually have campsites with a picnic table, a fire pit, and space for a tent or camper.
Campsite
* Some campsites have food storage lockers or contraptions for hanging food.
* are places
Celtic site
* draw pilgrims from around the world.
* tend to be more in uplands and near the Celtic hillforts on the hilltops.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | site:
Cemetery
* Cemeteries are also places of remembrance
- cities of the dead
- for the dead to rest
- full of corpses
- great places to walk, especially older cemeteries
- homelands for family memorials that are sustaining sources of comfort to the living
* Cemeteries are located in cities
- countries
- fields
- no places for kids
- outdoor museums and sculpture gardens
- sad places for the mourning
- used for dead bodies
- compilation of the location of cemeteries and who the permanent residents are
* Cemeteries exist because every life is worth loving and remembering, always
- in societies
- feature crypts for full-body burial and niches for cremation
- have one day a week on which they remove all the flowers
- located in remote rural areas, as well as in some urban locations, can be dangerous
- now offer ceremonies and services customarily provided by funeral homes
- provide a focal point for people to remember people
- set rules about the size, color, material, and even the wording of a grave marker
* Many cemeteries have a war memorial or a section set aside for veterans.
* Many cemeteries require a grave liner to keep earth from settling after burial
- rigid container designed to prevent the grave from settling
* Most cemeteries have small plots for cremated remains and scattering gardens
- keep simple, but informative, records for plots within the cemetery
- now have records of who is buried and where
* Most cemeteries require an outer burial container to be used for ground interment or inurnment
- leak proof vaults, durable caskets, and expensive grave markers
- some type of outer burial container
- that the casket be placed in an outer burial container
* Most cemeteries require the casket be placed into an outer burial receptacle
- use of a grave liner or vault
* Some cemeteries have burial plots of families for generations.
* Some cemeteries have rules about grave markers or about what can be put on the graves
- prohibiting the use of certain products for cremation
- limit the items that can be placed around graves
* Some cemeteries require an urn vault for burial
- outer receptacles to prevent the sinking or collapse of the grave
- that an outer burial enclosure be placed around the casket in the grave
- sell grave sites with pre-poured foundations
### location | tract | site | cemetery:
National cemetery
* All national cemeteries are important locations for patriotic and commemorative events.
* National cemeteries provide space for both body burial and cremated remains.
Common site
* Most common sites are pelvic organs, such as ovaries, tubes, broad ligaments.
* are the brain, lungs, liver, lymph nodes, bone, skin, and adrenal glands. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract | site:
Epitope
* Some epitopes are immunodominant because they induce a stronger immune response
- provoke a bigger response from the immune system
* are peptides
- sites on proteins that interact with antibodies or other proteins
- the individual molecular sites at which immune molecules interact with antigens
Fairway
* are lawns
- part of golf courses
- paths
- tracts
* consist of lakes, waterfalls, and rock walls.<|endoftext|>### location | tract | site:
Graveyard
* always appear deceptively safe in daylight.
* are a place where people are buried so people can come and gather
- dense and are surrounded by density
- grave sites
- history books in which the headstones are the pages
* are located in cemeteries
- churchs
- cities
- towns
- notorious for harboring ghosts
- the silent cities of the dead
* are used for burial
- dead people
- flowers
- mourners
- old bones
* have graves
- masses of decaying flesh beneath the surface
Historic site
* are resources that document people, events, and processes.
* can also act as magnets for tourism.
Landfill site
* are a possible source of toxic chemicals and produce large quantities of methane gas
- hard to come by in many countries and they can pollute groundwater
* give off methane and gas which can be used as energy for agriculture development.
Nest site
* have areas
- basal areas
* include holes.
* provide habitats
- nest habitats
Receptor site
* are very specific as to the size and shape of the molecule that is recognized.
* exist in tissues.
* have complimentary shapes, like a lock.
Restriction site
* are palindromic DNA sequences which serve as substrates for restriction enzymes
* can reveal polymorphism between genotypes.
Rubbish dump
* create a strong chemical cocktail called leachate.
* play and important role as a food source and encourage overwintering.
Sacred site
* abound around the world, built on or near energy vortexes and crystal portals.
* are an integral part of Aboriginal culture
- the settings of their custodians' most important knowledge and activities
Secure site
* offer protection.
* use encryption to scramble information so that only the intended party can read it
- that only they can read it
Summer camp
* are part of the lives of many middle class young people in the United States.
* give children a chance to learn how other children live and act.
* special place where children and adults come together to form a unique community.
### location | tract | site | summer camp:
Day camp
* are camps.
* can also help a child to nurture friendships.
* summer camp
Tee
* Is a small pin made from wood or plastic on which the ball is put for the first shot.
* contract manufacturer of high fashion tees for private label manufacturers.
### location | tract | site | trash dump:
Midden
* are a combination garbage heap and toilet
- normally dark in color, and include charcoal, ash, animal bones, and artifacts
- similar to backyard compost piles, but are much larger in size
* trash dump
Subdivision
* are division
- words or phrases that narrow the scope of a broad subject word
* geometric transformation that maps polygons into more densely faceted polygons.
* includes any division of land except for agricultural purposes.
* is the act of dividing real property for resale to multiple owners
- process of creating one or more new lots from an existing parcel | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | tract:
Terrain
* Most terrains have ravines
* Some terrains consist of mountains
- slopes
- cover with snow
- range from mountains.
* is used as a general term in physical geography, referring to the lie of the land. This is usually expressed in terms of the elevation, slope, and orientation of terrain features. Terrain affects surface water flow and distribution
* affects how far a unit can move, and so do enemy units
* are tracts.
* enhances terrain awareness when flying in the reduced visibility conditions or at night.
* feature shapes and surfaces change with the weather and use.
* impacts line of sight, movement, and combat.
* include dirt trails
- geographical features
* plays a very significant role in precipitation distribution.
### location | tract | terrain:
Mountainous terrain
* is where destructive processes are most prevalent.
* tends to reduce the size of each animal's home range.
Rocky terrain
* Most rocky terrains have water.
* Some rocky terrains consist of slopes.
Urinary tract
* Some urinary tracts cause extreme pain
- infection
- tract infection
* Some urinary tracts cause urinary infection
Vermont
* includes Rutland.
* is part of America.
Vicinity
* Vicinities are sections.
* can mean a range of distances.
Wilderness
* Some wildernesses surround cities.
* are located in state parks
- profusion
* improves air quality through the filtering actions of their green plants and forest.
* is rejection<|endoftext|>### location:
Workplace
* All workplaces have family-friendly policies and practices
- hazards, some major and some minor
* All workplaces have the potential for violence
- workplace violence
* Any workplace can be at risk of violence by a co-worker.
* Every workplace has a degree of risk for occupational injuries
- set of factors that influence how work gets done
* Many workplaces also extend education in first aid and safety procedures
- are improperly lit for paper work or computer work
- never open after a fire, resulting in job losses
- still use propane forklifts
* Most workplaces employ a majority of females.
* Most workplaces have a microwave for easy reheating
- offices where material goes in and never comes out
- some sort of system for keeping older records
- isolate human primates into rows of desks, cubicles, and offices
- offer benefits
- suppress or discourage complaints
* Some workplaces create a risk of exposure to the rabies virus
- encourage their employees to have fun
- have an agreed procedure for resolving safety and health issues
* Some workplaces have dress codes and some provide uniforms
- with gender-specific expectations
- result in death
- use compassionate leave days or floating days off
* are also where much of our pollution originates
- breeding grounds for the nasty little bugs that cause colds and flu
- communities, too
* can play a crucial role in supporting family commitments.
* change constantly.
* exposures to a wide range of carcinogens.
* includes bases
- ceilings
- floors
- locker rooms
- lockers
- room light
- walls
* is an independent journal that reports on, and advocates for, the academic labor movement.
* journal produced by graduate students about academic labor.
* provide an ideal opportunity to influence individual behavior and community norms. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | workplace:
Farm
* All farms prevent animals from living natural lives.
* Many farms also have computers to help track how much milk a cow makes
- rely on tourism to make money
- use machines, which cut down on the number of people needed to farm the land
- are in valleys that are in hilly land
- employ the use of livestock guardian dogs to protect their animals
- place round bales of hay outside in paddocks for their horses' use throughout the winter
* Many farms use and transport hazardous materials
- bedding materials and mats to assist the piglets find a warm and dry sleeping area
* Most farms also depend on wells for domestic and stock water.
* Most farms are small family affairs with workers often operating alone
- family-run businesses
- contain nitrate
* Most farms have a mix of crops and livestock
- barns
- far fewer problems in winter than in summer
- livestock that graze along the river and use the river for drinking water
- numerous hazards that place adults and children at risk
* Most farms keep animals
- cows
- pigs
- sheep
- possess animals
* Most farms produce crops
- food
* Most farms provide animals
- pollination
* Most farms raise animals
- deer
- rely on animal products from grasslands
- work with cattle
* Some farms also prepare dairy eggnog for the holiday season
- run deer or have arable crops
- collect horses
* Some farms destroy habitats
- natural habitats
- extend the season by using greenhouses and keep growing durable root crops
- feed pigs
* Some farms have gardens where they grow their own food
- no animals, while others specialize in animals
* Some farms keep birds
- cats
- chickens
- geese
- goats
- rabbits
* Some farms kill animals
- other animals
- make pigs
- pasteurize and feed calves milk from the cows in the herd instead of using replacer
- possess dogs
- provide dogs
* Some farms raise alligators
- bison
- butterflies
- turkeys
- satisfy niche markets for small salmon by harvesting all fish prior to grilsing
- specialize in one breed of pigs
* Some farms use organic pesticide
* Some farms work with goats
* also face threats from industrial and agricultural pollution
- rely on water for irrigation and livestock
* are businesses which sell the crops , fruit , and vegetables that are produced
- examples of agriculture
- great places for children to play and work
- human-managed ecosystems designed to convert energy into harvestable products
- located in countrysides
- production centers for crops and livestock, but they are also businesses
- small, soils eroded and Lacking in fertility and rainfall variable
- usually in remote areas and have high transportation costs
* can also cause dust and dirt particles to be released into the air
- be intensive users of pesticides and chemicals
- only appear in low density Industrial land with low land values
- save water by lining their water distribution canals with concrete or other materials
- vary in size
* contribute nutrients, sediment and chemicals.
* create jobs and inject money into the local economy.
* do jobs.
* feed chickens.
* grow crops and livestock.
* have amounts
- beef cows
- care
- characteristics common to many industrial enterprises
- chicks
- color
- effects
- fields
- gates
- machinery
- methods
- neither electricity nor running water
- serious problems
- social, economic and environmental effects outside of their borders
- staff
- suppliers
- vegetable production
* help herd health problems
* include food.
* includes attics
- bathrooms
- bedrooms
- courtyards
- decks
- elevators
- family rooms
- farmhouses
- foundation stones
- foyers
- front rooms
- interior doors
- kitchens
- libraries
- lockers
- roofs
- staircases
- walls
- windows
* is where they are replanted.
- taxes low, as they demand few public services
* offer insight.
* plated vehicles are commercial motor vehicles.
- ducks
- both habitat and corridors for fish and wildlife
- farmers
* require attention
- more attention
* see growth
- significant growth
* support rural communities and help to keep real estate taxes low.
* use fertilizer
- krill meat
- resources
- zeolite to enrich poor soils
* yield sediment, toxic substances and excess nutrients.
+ Córdoba, Andalusia, Economy
* A soft, fine-grained leather called 'cordovan' is made in Cordova. Cordova is the center of an agricultural region. Farms produce grain, grapes, olives, and vegetables.
+ Farming, Overview
* In rich countries, farms are often much larger. The yield on farms has gotten bigger in the last one hundred years because farmers are able to grow better varieties of plants, use more fertilizer, use more water, and more easily control weeds and pests. Many farms also use machines, which cut down on the number of people needed to farm the land. This results in fewer farmers in rich countries, but the farmers are able to eat more. This kind of intensive agriculture comes with its own set of problems. These chemicals can pollute the soil or the water. They can also create bugs and weeds that are more resistant to the chemicals, causing outbreaks of these pests. Having fewer farmers also changes society and can make a country less able to feed itself in bad times.
+ Garden, Gardens compared with farms: Home :: Leisure :: Plants
* Farms are businesses which sell the crops, fruit, and vegetables that are produced. Some gardens are businesses, which charge a fee to enter the garden. However, private gardens in people's backyards are used as a hobby or as a recreation, not as a business.
+ Ho Chi Minh City, Port: Cities in Vietnam
* Delivery of materials for the city can be made by boat. Farm produce distributors can arrive by boat in many districts outside the city.
+ Valley, Types of valleys, Valleys in hilly country
* In country that has hills, but is not very steep, a river or stream runs more slowly. It makes a wider valley that often has some large bends as the river flows around the hills, always following the lowest way. Water running down from the hillsides often carries soil that spreads out across the valley, making flat land that is good for growing food crops and raising cattle and other animals. Many farms are in valleys that are in hilly land. Many towns are built on the sloping sides of valleys. Famous valleys of this type are the Loire Valley and the Lower Rhine Valley in Europe and the Thames Valley in England. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | workplace | farm:
Animal farm
* keep growing in size and dwindling in number.
* use mountains of grain.
Cattle ranch
* Most cattle ranches are near fields.
* Some cattle ranches have barns.
Commercial farm
* have employees.
* provide homes and basic help for thousands of disadvantaged people.<|endoftext|>### location | workplace | farm:
Dairy
* Dairies are California's largest agricultural industry and a significant source of polluted runoff
- farms
- great places to live and raise a family
- potentially a major contributor of nitrate and salts to groundwater
- generally milk again in early afternoon
- have a bad odor
* Dairies includes attics
- bases
- bathrooms
- bedrooms
- ceilings
- courtyards
- decks
- elevators
- family rooms
- farmhouses
- floors
- foundation stones
- foyers
- front rooms
- interior doors
- kitchens
- libraries
- locker rooms
- lockers
- roofs
- room light
- sections
- staircases
- walls
- windows
- provide nutrients
- total up the number of acres of each crop and their coinciding nitrogen requirements
- use water for cooling, cleaning, livestock drinking water and other purposes
* Many dairies have one or two lagoons, while a few have three or four in series
- use a lagoon to store water and waste
* Most dairies provide nutrients
- dairy is suitable for a bland diet, as it is easy on the stomach and digestive tract
* Some dairies also produce buttermilk, chocolate milk, evaporated milk and powdered milk
- contain calcium
- depend on crops
- even pasteurize extra milk from the main herd to feed calves
- use methane
- dairy cows feed diets
* cows form strong bonds, especially among mothers and young and among peers.
* cows live for six generations, calve and produce normal milk on a protein-free diet
- in crowded pens or barns with concrete floors
- use their tails like giant flyswatters
Dairy farm
* Many dairy farms purchase little or no fertilizer.
* Most dairy farms are operated by their owners, with the family providing most of the labour
- do an excellent job of preventing antibiotic residues in milk
- milk their cows once or twice each day
* are close to being self-sustaining units.
* collect manure for use on their crop land.
* intersperse and rotate grass and corn crops.
* use more energy than almost any other agricultural operation
- special cows
Family farm
* Many family farms are partnerships of more than three people.
* Most family farms are subsistence, but also surplus crops for cash.
Large farm
* account for more than half of agricultural land in Hungary, Bulgaria and Estonia.
* are important in terms of providing for the food and fiber needs of society.
* have a higher risk of serious nutrient and bacteria pollution into our rivers and lakes.
* use mechanical harvesters to gather nuts.
Larger farm
* generate more wastes, creating greater potential for large-scale pollution.
* tend to rely on machines and organic or chemical sprays.<|endoftext|>### location | workplace | farm:
Ranch
* Most ranches collect cattle.
* Most ranches keep cattle
- historical production and financial records of some type
- raise cattle
* Some ranches have barns
- chickens
- tennis courts and many have swimming pools
- keep horses
- offer child care and organized children's programs
* Some ranches raise bison
- buffalo
- deer
- sheep
- turkeys
- water buffalo
* are facilities
* are located in countrysides
- prairie
* are used for cattle
- ranching
- summer vacation
* have horses.
- bases
- bedrooms
- elevators
- family rooms
- locker rooms
- room light
* possess cattle.
* provide beef.
* require livestock.
Scale farm
* provide food.
* see growth
- significant growth | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | workplace | farm:
Small farm
* Most small farms survive only because someone in the family has an off-farm job.
* Some small farms are limited resource farms
- retirement and investment farms
- provide enough income for a family to live on
* are a significant part of American agriculture
- more important in terms of land and farm assets
- real farms
* can conform to the economic and ecological niches of markets and of nature.
* do jobs.
* produce environmental benefits in terms of soil, water and wildlife.
* provide less income for families than do large farms.
* tend to weed, plant and harvest by hand.
Tobacco farm
* make up a significant portion of the agricultural economies in many southern states.
* require large quantities of wood in order to dry the tobacco.
Truck farm
* are farms.
* grow produce such as squash, sweet corn, melons, etc.
Vineyard
* Some vineyards grow a rose at the end of each row of grapes
- have their own wells, and some use irrigation canals
* are crop farms
- places
- routinely subject to flooding in the winter
* straddle valley floors and stretch up mountain slopes.
* tend to be planted in river valleys where water for irrigation is plentiful.
* use much less water than other farms and housing developments. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | workplace:
Fishery
* Every fishery complex of interactions among organisms, the environment, and social values.
* Fisheries also have an impact on biodiversity through the degradation of marine habitats
- are a renewable resource
* Fisheries are a vital part of the world's economy
- source of protein for local villagers
* Fisheries are an important economic activity on all islands
- source of recreation, food, and the basis of a traditional way of life
- organizations
- the last major world industry exploiting wild natural resources for food
- very important industries throughout the Caspian countries
- workplaces
- catch fish
* Fisheries depend on plants for several things
- upwelling conditions to provide food for the fish they are collecting
* Fisheries have characteristics
- effects
- important characteristics
- limits
- little effects
* Fisheries includes bases
- ceilings
- locker rooms
- lockers
- room light
- sections
- walls
* Fisheries is an essential sector for developing countries' societies
- recognised as a valuable natural resource
- located in freshwater also are subject to the toxic effects of oil
- make an important contribution to the economy of our rural coastal communities
- occur on both spawning and non-spawning fish
* Fisheries play a major role in nutrition, employment and foreign exchange earning in Bangladesh
- an important role in tourism, which is often overlooked
- possess fish
* Fisheries provide a major source of protein for people in Asia Pacific countries
- food sources
* Fisheries provide important food sources
- raise fish under controlled conditions, avoiding contamination and safety concerns
- represent but one small part of our environment
- selectively harvest the largest individuals of desired species
* Many fisheries operate on a multi-species basis.
* Most fisheries are profitable when harvested at the level of the optimum catch
* Most fisheries provide food sources
- take place in the coastal band and involve a high number of small vessels
* Some fisheries are so overexploited and polluted that they are nearing biological extinction
- continue to reduce fish and shellfish populations and damage bottom habitat
- kill salmon
- make oysters
- possess animals
- provide wealth
- use large nets with small mesh, trapping or fatally wounding many non-target species
* mainly consists of coastal fishery.
+ Azores, Economy: Islands of Macaronesia :: Islands in Europe :: Geography of Portugal
* In the agriculture sector, cattle-raising is very important. Some of the most important crops in the Azores are pineapples, grapes, potatoes, tobacco and tea. Fisheries are an important economic activity on all islands. Fishing methods are highly traditional among Azorean fishermen.
### location | workplace | fishery:
Arctic fishery
* Arctic fisheries are among the most productive in the world
* Arctic fisheries provide important food sources
* Most arctic fisheries provide food sources<|endoftext|>### location | workplace | fishery:
Marine fishery
* Many marine fisheries are open to anyone who wants to fish.
* Marine fisheries are a vital economic, ecological, and food resource
- largely limited to lobster
- can potentially interact with monk seals via direct and indirect relationships
- cause changes at three levels of organization of biodiversity
- provide food sources
* Marine fisheries provide important food sources
- support the dietary needs of many people globally
* Most marine fisheries provide food sources
Recreational fishery
* Recreational fisheries are economically important in Europe and North America
- use hook and line
* Some recreational fisheries provide wealth.
Healthy workplace
* are just as important as healthy outdoor environments.
* provide employees an opportunity for success while enriching their lives. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | workplace:
Lab
* Some labs also analyze drinking water for metals, minerals, pesticides and other organic substances
- occasionally observe the gel swelling out of the top of the plates during electrophoresis
- use minute quantities of chemicals, such as in a laser or photolysis laboratory
* analyze samples
- specimens
- types
- urine specimens
* can carry fleas and ticks.
* contain detail information
* develop methods.
* device-independent color space where the color transformation occurs.
* do tests.
* focus on methods.
* have components
- diagrams
- expertise
- facilities
- friendly brown or hazel eyes and silky-smooth ears that hang close to their cheeks
- have success
- instruments
- technical expertise
- very distinctive ears, heads, webbed feet, otter-like tails, and overall body shape
* include simulation.
- floors
- lab benches
- laboratory benches
- locker rooms
- tabletops
* is the number of computers in labs
- where the action occurs
* love to eat much and without sufficient exercise, they gain weight easily and become lazy.
* make recommendations.
* offer genetic tests
* perform tests.
* protein structure orientated lab.
* provide services.
* require skills.
* require special skills
- technical skills
* test samples.
* use computers to model genetic changes in populations and analyze genetic structure.
* use different measurements
- genetic technology
### location | workplace | lab:
Computer lab
* Most computer labs have mice.
* are located in universities.<|endoftext|>### location | workplace:
Laboratory
* Laboratories analyze samples
- soil samples
* Laboratories apply current molecular techniques
- knowledge
* Laboratories are both a means to advance science and the product of modern technology
- located in universities
- places where people labor night and day and often on weekends
- where science is done
- workplaces where small amounts of chemicals are used in non-routine ways
- conduct tests
- determine characteristics
* Laboratories do function tests
- emphasize the scientific method as a way of knowing
* Laboratories follow establish protocols
- guidelines
* Laboratories have areas
- capability
- effects
- general ventilation
* Laboratories have good general ventilation
* Laboratories includes bases
- ceilings
- laboratory benches
- locker rooms
- lockers
- room light
- sections
- tabletops
- walls
- normally use chromatography to detect traces of explosives
- offer tests
* Laboratories perform analyses
- genetic tests
- possess mice
* Laboratories provide lists
- results
- receive samples
* Laboratories report expect results
- test results
* Laboratories test samples
- single specimens
* Laboratories use appropriate procedures
- assistance
- different measurements
* Laboratories use standardize methods
- test methods
- supplemental tests
- work with mice
* Many laboratories handle blood and other body fluids capable of transmitting bloodborne diseases
- have dust free cabinets for storing their sterile medium and equipment
- routinely analyze water samples for a whole array of ionic constituents
- laboratory strains lose their ability to form biofilms
* Most laboratories measure specific gravity with a refractometer
- use mice to study human diseases
* Some laboratories study mice.
* applies scientific methods to the study of living systems.
* detailed study of mammalian anatomy learned through dissections.
* includes some dissection or prosection of human and nonhuman primates
- the synthesis of compounds found in chemical literature
* involves handling and manipulating living embryos of several species
- observation and recording of animal behavior
- techniques used with microorganisms and development of basic laboratory skills
- the use of molecular biology techniques
* phylogenetic survey of the kingdoms of life. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### location | workplace | laboratory:
Independent laboratory
* Independent laboratories follow establish protocols
- use methods
* Independent laboratories use standardize methods
- test methods
Medical laboratory
* Medical laboratories are laboratories
- assist the medical professions by providing analytic and diagnostic services
- can measure carboxyhemoglobin levels in the blood
- perform thousands of tests every day
* technologists conduct experiments and analyses of medical specimens and samples.
Research laboratory
* Research laboratories contain equipment and chemicals which can be dangerous if used improperly.
* Research laboratories do function tests
* is work<|endoftext|>### location | workplace:
Studio
* are suites
- workplaces
* create sites.
* graphics editor that can manipulate images in various sizes and color formats.
* includes bases
- ceilings
- floors
- locker rooms
- lockers
- room light
- sections
- walls
* offer services.
+ Direct-to-video, Reasons for releasing direct-to-video: Movie terminology
* Studios, limited in the annual number of movies they grant cinematic releases to, may choose to pull the completed movie from the theaters, or never exhibit it in theaters at all. Studios then recoup some of their losses through video sales and rentals.
+ Recording studio: Music industry :: Buildings and structures
* A 'recording studio' is a place prepared for the recording of music, or other sound media. Some studios are independent, but many are part of a larger business, like a record label. Independent studios may only record one band or set of performers, but may also lease time to outsiders. Some studios charge an hourly rate, while others charge by the project.
* Studios are usually soundproofed, to keep outside noises from getting into recordings.
### location | workplace | studio:
Music studio
* Most music studios have a piano and a mirror.
+ Studio, Music studio: Art :: Buildings and structures
* A music studio is a room or group of rooms that are used for practicing music. Most music studios have a piano and a mirror.
Open studio
* Open Studios is the world's largest annual art show.
* enable artists to show art within the environment in which it is created.
Recording studio
* Most recording studios use hard disk recording machines.
* are studios.
Locket
* are cases.
* can hold photos, hair, a charm, or other small, precious object.
* includes sections.
Locomotion
* can be passive or active.
* comes in the form of either the rotating flagellums, or the flexible pellicle membrane.
* is movement
* stimulates group III muscle afferents.
* takes place by flagella, cilia or psendopodia. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Logic
* Most logic involves rules
- makes senses
* Some logic applies to economics.
* allows children to live with the consequences of their choices.
* applies to structures.
* attempts to study mathematics itself.
* branch of philosophy.
* defeats anger, because anger, even when it is justified, can quickly become irrational
- it's justified, can quickly become irrational
* defines knowledge
- objective reality
* demands an object as the cause of knowledge.
* dissipates rapidly in soil.
* entails relations and things.
* exists in the mind, Numbers exist only in the mind
* fall into three groups, free logics, foundation systems, and intermediate systems.
* game with specific rules.
* grows out of the grammar of each language, so there is just simply NO universal human logic.
* has close and deep contacts to all parts of computer science
- low toxicity to other organisms, except for aquatic invertebrates and bees
* helps people decide whether something is true or false.
* imprisoned by the senses is an organic disease.
* includes categorical logic, propositional logic and fuzzy logic.
- the art of examining opinions or ideas through questions and answers
- using concepts to draw conclusions
* is alien to humans, all animals have an ability to communicate with each other
- all there is
* is also a branch of mathematics
- an activity, one that includes the activity of criticizing reasonings
- toxic to fish
* is an ancient subject whose tradition is carried on today mostly in philosophy departments
- examination of the nature of reason and argumentation
- extension of intellect
- interdisciplinary subject
- both an organ of and a preparation for philosophy
- broadly the analysis of the structure of correct reasoning
- capable of help
- common senses
- concerned to provide sound methods for distinguishing good from bad reasoning
* is concerned with the laws of valid reasoning
- structure of an argument
- critical to problem solving and reasoning
- deductive and axiomatic demanding sequential reasoning
- dependent upon proofs
- derived from the principles of language itself
- directed at the meaning of language as the fact based on what is valid or invalid
- embedded in language if and only if logic varies as language varies
- essential to understanding texts in modern analytic philosophy
- everywhere
- external to the human mind
- foundational to the study of every other subject
- how buyers justify doing what they WANT to do
- illogical, when emotions are the playing pieces
- in the eye of the logician
* is just a branch of mathematics which studies discourse and their interpretation
- tool, as mathematics tool to measure
- located in schools
- logic is logic
* is necessary to analyze other people s beliefs
- understand and communicate our own beliefs
- one of the main formal tools used to develop artificial intelligence products
- part of mathematics, but at the same time it is the language of mathematics
- really the core of philosophy
- reason arrogating to itself the right of judging alone, supremely, and without appeal
- studied without the use of formal proof
- surely a function of computers
- that method of thinking which is in accordance with reality
* is the anatomy of thought
- art and principle of noncontradictory identification
* is the art of argumentation, as necessary for mathematics as for making sense of a novel
- going wrong with confidence
- producing and evaluating universals
- showing if something is true, or if it is false
- basic tool that philosophers use to investigate reality
* is the basis of all rhetoric and evolves within a culture
- rationality and a foundation for mathematics, science and technology
- branch of philosophy which studies reasoning
- difference between correct and incorrect reasoning
- fifth part of modern philosophy
- foundation of function
- glue that binds together methods of reasoning, in all domains
- ice upon which conversation skates
- introduction to philosophy in the strictest sense
- matrix into which meaningful facts take their appropriate place
- mechanics of thought and analysis
- method of dialectic
- motive or justification for making a decision
- process of drawing a conclusion from one or more premises
- road that leads to nowhere, or at the very best madness
* is the science of correct reasoning
- reasoning and the study of argument forms
- reasoning, proof, thinking, or inference
* is the science that evaluates arguments
- looks at how to build an argument
- simplest of arithmetic
- story about what follows from what in all situations
* is the study of arguments
- how meanings are related to each other , and how to make good decisions
- patterns and systems of rational thought
- reasoning and argumentation
- the methods and principles used to distinquish good from bad reasoning
* is the study of the principles of right reasoning
- of valid, or correct, reasoning
- the study of propositions and of their use in argumentation
- tool writers use to establish their credibility with readers
- torch of rationality in the darkness of unknown and uncertainty
- to be understood as the ordered relationship of particulars in each subject
- transcendental
- used by computers in what is called an algorithm
* is used for data manipulation and control functions
- in mathematics
- to figure things out, often by trial and error in actual practice
- usually the first fatality in ideological warfare
- very important to philosophy, due to the central role of argumentation in philosophy
* is where math and philosophy converge
- the brain does most of the work
* is, of course, based on binarity.
* kind of science, like mathematics, but different from the empirical sciences.
* large field of discussion and inquiry.
* leads to conclusions
- faulty conclusions
* makes art of science, and science of art
* means consistent relationships.
* mental process.
* plays little or no role in revelation or truth.
* presents a guiding influence on the methodology and design of computing systems.
* product of nature.
* provides foundations for mathematics and is the bedrock of rationality
- specific techniques for understanding and evaluating reasoning
* refers to the order and unity of the mode in which it is embodied and thus regulates.
* requires attribution.
* science of reasoning, including methods for distinguishing good reasoning from bad.
* serves as a tool or medium for inventing and arranging scientific issues or arguments.
* simply is the use of reason to support a thesis.
* solves problems.
* studies the differences between valid and invalid reasoning
- rules of correct inference
* system of consequence
* systematic method for getting the wrong conclusion with confidence.
* systematic method of arriving at the wrong conclusion with confidence
- coming to the wrong conclusion with confidence
- way of coming to the wrong conclusion with confidence
* teaches one how to reason rightly so as to gain knowledge
- standards for how to discern good reasoning from bad reasoning
- the critical function of referent as well as proper ways of thinking
* theory of correct reasoning.
* uses operators to combine combinations of trues' and falses'.
* works best when applied in the early spring after the ants have begun to forage.
* worldwide provider of business management software for the printing industry.
+ Causality, Causality in Logic
* Logic is the science that looks at how to build an argument. In Logic, there are usually two different types of causes. They are called 'necessary cause' and 'sufficient cause'.
+ Logic, Uses
* Logic is used in mathematics. People who study math create proofs that use logic to show that math facts are correct. There is an area of mathematics called mathematical logic that studies logic using mathematics.
+ Trivium (liberal arts), Logic: Middle Ages :: Liberal arts :: Cultural history
* One way of studying the world is to look at the meaning of words. Logic is the mechanics of thought and analysis. Logic is the study of how meanings are related to each other, and how to make good decisions. A fallacy is when someone does not draw a conclusion according to the rules of logic. An old name for logic was dialectics.
* Logic runs behind the dogs, armed with the sword 'syllogismus'. In the bottom left corner, the philosopher Parmenides can be seen in a cave.
* Logic' is the science of reasoning. Logic helps people decide whether something is true or false. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### logic:
Aristotelian logic
* is concerned with actual human thought
- largely the art of deducing valid assertions by means of syllogisms
* uses terms such as major premise, minor premise, and conclusion.<|endoftext|>### logic:
Boolean logic
* allows multiple key words to be used, joined by a logical operator.
* defines logical relationships between terms in a search
* enables a searcher to define sets and search on sets using Boolean operators.
* establishes specific relationships among search terms.
* helps refine searches.
* involves understanding how sets of things overlap.
* is basic to searching Boolean Logic Boolean logic is basic to searching
- derived from a system used to manipulate sets in mathematics
- simply a way of comparing individual bits
- symbolic logic
- the means by which computers combine terms to perform complex operations
- used to increment or decrement the counter
* method for describing a set of objects or ideas.
* programming process for doing multilevel searches.
* refers to the logical relationship among search terms
- relationships terms can have with one another
* represents a fundamental principle in searching information.
* uses a basic syntax made up of search terms and operators
- three basic 'operators' or limiters to manipulate sets
* uses words called operators to determine whether a statement is true or false
* way to a tell a computer how words or data sets relate to each other.
* works in most search engines
- with sets of propositions which are definitely true or definitely false
Business logic
* is represented as service collaboration descriptions stored in an enterprise model
- the 'user' code in the system
* suggests that greater control in fewer hands increases market share and profits.
Categorical logic
* is primarily concernedwith categorical claims
- the study of connections between formal logic and category theory
- useful in a variety of ways
* sub-set of propositional logic.
Deductive logic
* Most deductive logic assumes that a proposition is either true or false.
* deals with rules for drawing valid conclusions from assump- tions.
* examines arguments in which the conclusion necessarily follows from the premises.
* is the process of reasoning from the general to the specific
- stricter type of logic
Deontic logic
* is formal logic
- the logic of obligation, permission and prohibition
* modal logic with operators for permission, obligation and prohibition.
Description logic
* Description Logics are a subset of relational logic.
* are a family of formal languages used for structured knowledge representation
- knowledge representation languages
- logics for modeling complex hierarchical structures
- good candidates for representing complex objects<|endoftext|>### logic:
Formal logic
* deals with the form or structure of an argument.
* is based on the relation of identity and simplicity of concatenation.
* is concerned with nothing but the rules of consistent thought
- the method of deriving one truth from another
- interested in the form or structure of reasoning
- nothing more nor less than the behaviour of sets of things
- system of logic
* is the study and analysis of good reasoning
- of logical form
* means of expressing declarative knowledge.
* presents methods of recognizing and constructing valid arguments.
* proceeds without meaning and without intentionality.
* takes structural constraints as basic in characterizing possible uses.
Human logic
* can find no trustworthy evidence to prove, or disprove, the existence of unseen spirits.
* is limited to an assessment of our experiences
- often in error pertaining to the growth of the jaws | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### logic:
Inductive logic
* analyzes events to identify generalizations.
* goes in the reverse direction.
* is beyond the purview of neural networks
- concerned with techniques for the appraisal of inductive arguments
* is the more lenient form of logic
- study of arguments that aspire to be, at least, cogent
Informal logic
* generalization based on samples, or a hypothesis based on evidence.
* includes decision making and critical thinking.
* is logic
- the reasoning out the Content of the argument
Interval logic
* field of mathematics dealing with reasoning over different time periods.
* translates a four bit value to a note number.
Intuitionistic logic
* admits a semantics given by topological spaces.
* includes classical logic as a special case.
* limit the power of proof by contradiction.
Mathematical logic
* furnishes clear answers to precisely defined questions.
* is system of logic
* is the basis of computer science and machine languages
- use of symbols instead of words to write mathematical statements
* modern branch of mathematics.
* provides a precise framework for mathematical assertions and deductive systems.
Predicate logic
* can break sentences down into their subjects and predicates.
* more general formalism with more expressive power.
* precise logical system developed to formally express mathematical reasoning.
+ Fuzzy logic: Artificial Intelligence
* Predicate logic says calculate the point to be at to catch the ball. Fuzzy logic says because of wind or other things you might not be in the correct place so just keep getting closer until you catch the ball.
Propositional logic
* is formal logic
- symbolic logic
* sub-set of propositional logic.
* uses variables to represent statements.
Symbolic logic
* helps formulate useful queries to search engines.
* is logic
- system of logic
* is the application of formal, mathematical methods to human reasoning
- methods to reasoning
- useful for simplifying complicated electrical circuits
* rigorous introduction to formal logic.
Temporal logic
* are extensions of classical logic, with operators that deal with time.
* is obtained by adding temporal connectives to a logic language.
* provides a simple paradigm for event scheduling.
Traditional logic
* is chiefly concerned with the analysis of the syllogism.
* studies the validity of syllogistic arguments.<|endoftext|>### long-term investment:
Venture capital
* focuses on investing in private, young, fast growing companies.
* is an important source of equity for start-up companies
- industry that continuously reinvents itself
- investment in an unproven business
- capital
- described as risk capital for new ventures
- dominated by men
- medium term equity funding for business
* is money provided by professionals to startup rapidly growing companies
- that is risked
- often a second career begun after a successful career in management or finance
- one of three main sources of funding used to start and grow new companies
- particularly relevant to the development and transfer of new technologies
- patient capital
- the lifeblood of new technology companies
- what creates an industry around a new idea
* long-term investment.
* relationship business.
* speculative investment with high risk and potential high reward.
* spurs growth at the critical early stages of growing companies' development.
* can also include managerial and technical expertise. Most venture capital comes from a group of rich investors, investment banks and other financial institutions that pool such investments or partnerships. This form of raising capital is popular among new companies, or ventures.
* subset of the larger private equity asset class.
* type of equity financing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### long-term management objective:
Deer management
* is increasingly a challenge with the loss of large tracts of open space for hunting.
* long-term management objective.
* part of a much larger and comprehensive effort to manage natural ecosystems.<|endoftext|>### long-term process:
Volcanism
* also occurs in continental areas that are undergoing episodes of extensional deformation
- are undergoing episodes of rifting
* appears to be a consequence of radioactive decay within the interiors
- have occurred throughout the planets' history, possibly until the present
* can also occur at intraplate volcanoes
- occur through all stages of corona formation
* commonly is associated with the first two types of margins.
* connects the lithosphere plate cycle with the biosphere-atmosphere cycle.
* is also part of some very complex features on Venus
- associated with heating of Io by tidal pumping
- distributed asymmetrically with respect to the Red Sea
- one of the most important processes that shape our earth
- part of the process by which a planet cools off
- related to rifting of the continent
* is the dominant process affecting the surface of many planets and takes many forms
- formation of massive accumulations of igneous rock by extrusion of magma
- result of the subduction of the Indian Ocean plate under the Eurasian plate
- typically widespread along plate boundaries
* likewise shifts to the north from more basic to more silicic.
* long-term process.
* natural phenomenon
- process which has operated since the Earth was formed
* provides fertile soils, valuable mineral deposits, and geothermal energy.
* ranges from basic to acid in composition.
* shuts off from south to north as the transform boundary migrates northward.
* tends to more abundant than tectonism, although both seem to increase together.<|endoftext|>### long-term process | volcanism:
Intrusive volcanism
* is when magma is forced into the rocks that make up the Earth 's crust.
+ Volcanism, Aspects, Intrusions: Volcanology
* Intrusive volcanism is when magma is forced into the rocks that make up the Earth's crust. It occurs when there are lines of weakness such as faults, joints, or bedding planes in the crust. Then magma enters these lines of weakness. When it cools and become solid while still underground, different features called plutons are formed. The rock formed is intrusive igneous rock.
### long-term relationship:
Pediatric dentistry
* has spaces for new and returning patients.
* includes all services defined in the 'general practice' category, for children.
* is general dentistry for infants, children, and adolescents.
* long-term relationship.
* provides comprehensive care for infants and children through adolescence.
### long-term resident visas:
Immigrant visa
* are long-term resident visas.
* entitle the recipients to permanent resident status in the United States.
### longer term tests:
Chronic test
* are longer term tests.
* measure the long-term response to test substances.
### longshore tradition:
International solidarity
* is crucial to keep the peace process alive and end the war
- the expression of the highest qualities of human conscience
* longshore tradition.
* very important concept in the struggle for human progress.
Loose object
* become projectiles in a collision.
* can be deadly in hurricane winds.
Lore
* database management system for semi-structured data.
* is content.
### lore | folklore:
Celtic folklore
* abounds with legends that involve stone.
* is rich with stories of the clever overcoming the strong.
European folklore
* contains a number of references to the Romani complexion.
* is filled with stories of dragons.
* regards the bell as both a decree of death and as a means of protection. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### lore | folklore:
Jewish folklore
* is filled with stories of tricksters, rascals and scoundrels who do something good.
+ Basil, Cultural aspects: Medicinal plants :: Lamiaceae :: Herbs
* There are many rituals and beliefs associated with basil. Jewish folklore suggests it adds strength while fasting. It is a symbol of love in present-day Italy, but represented hatred in ancient Greece, and European lore sometimes claims that basil is a symbol of Satan.
Russian folklore
* encompasses a broad and powerful storytelling tradition.
* promotes ginseng as a stimulant and immunity booster.<|endoftext|>Lotion
* Are aqueous solutions or suspensions that cool diffusely inflamed unbroken skin.
* Many lotions contain almond extracts, vitamin E or other minerals.
* Most lotion contains water
- protects skin
* Some lotion contains acid
- insecticide
* are easy to apply and are particularly useful for cooling or drying the skin
- less likely than solutions or gels to cause irritation
* are much thinner but trap less water in the skin than ointments
- similar to creams but contain more water
- toxic and non-toxic in nature
* boost the ability of the skin to stay intact by keeping the skin moist.
* can have moisturizers and are sometimes preferred by people with dry skin.
* concentrate for intensive cleansing of oily skin.
* contain a greater proportion of waters to oils.
* containing malathion, pyrethroid or carbaryl insecticides are effective.
* help dry skin.
* includes sections.
* is indicated in the topical control of acne vulgaris, acne rosacea and seborrheic dermatitis
- treatment of acne vulgaris
* is located in cabinets
- fingers
- remedies
- toiletry
* often provide good barrier protection against disease.
* produce a coolant effect on the skin, as they hydrate the skin.
* work by sealing in moisture that is already present.
### lotion:
Skin lotion
* Many skin lotions are mostly water and offer very little protection against winter s harsh, dry air.
* is used to soften skin texture and improve skin health.<|endoftext|>Lottery
* Lotteries also hide from citizens the true cost of government.
* Lotteries are a form of gambling
- kind of voluntary tax on the poor, who buy a disproportionate share of tickets
- major source of revenue for many states, especially in the Northeast
- perfectly legitimate form of gambling
- special tax on people who are bad at math
- accidents
* Lotteries are an easy way to lose money
- inefficient way for governments to raise money
- big business in the state earning crores worth of revenue
- competition
- drawing
- games of chance
- illegal except when conducted by states and certain exempt charitable organizations
- immoral and degrading, and they are causing people to become addicted to gambling
- perhaps the hardest form of gambling to justify in terms of their costs and benefits
- are, perhaps, the most widespread form of gambling
- exist in dozens of states
* Lotteries prey on the poor and the undereducated
- poor, the less-educated and minorities
- reduces consumer spending on other goods and services
- tend to draw gamblers who dream of winning a large sum of money
* is an accident
- entertainment
- the process by which rooms are selected for the next academic year
### lottery:
Humanitarian aid
* increases dependency in an era of market driven forces.
* political factor of power in all disaster and war situations.
* reflection of core American values.
Loudness
* depends on waves.
* increases drastically with wind speed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Love
* All love is self-love in various connotations of the meaning of self.
* Attracts the love and affections of others.
* Comes From the Heart.
* Every love is perishable, because it is connected with the body of a person.
* IS Love friendship that has caught fire
- inspiration of self-love
- nourishment toward acceptance
- the allowing of growth
* Is a feeling of intense affection, given freely and without restriction.
* Lists the personal home pages of persons with the surname of Love.
* allows children to grow through their mistakes
- humans to try out other ways
* alone can make both good and evil merge into values of One
- things round, harmonious, circular or spherical
* alone is an objective in itself that can yield perfection
- fixed in time
* also calls husbands to care about their family's spiritual welfare
- gives meaning to, and reinforces the behavior of, mothering and parenting in general
* also has a physical side
- spiritual component
- very important part when it comes to raising rabbits
* also involves sacrifice, pain, work, persistence, and commitment
- the affections and motivations of the heart
- is an intrinsic defining aspect of human nature and human life
- means trust
- respects the freedom of the person loved
- sets people up for success
- unites humans and nature
* always considers the welfare of another, never the welfare of oneself
- focuses on the best interest of both the family and the person
- manifests itself in action
* appears to be a form of madness.
* attracts love, and hatred attracts hatred.
* bears all things, believes all things, and endures all things
- hopes in all things, endures all things
- hopes all things, believes all things, endures all things
* beautiful feeling that can be expressed in many ways.
* begins as an energy force before being molded physically
- in the spiritual realm
* begins with a smile, grows with a kiss, and ends with a tear
- smile,grows with a kiss and ends with a tear
- the physical attraction
* believes in the person loved and in the person's worth without question.
* belongs to desire, and desire is always cruel.
* biological and social process.
* bond between person and person.
* bond, a commitment that grows in our hearts.
* brings couples closer to each other and creates a warm environment in which to raise a family.
* broad term, but includes the concepts of balancing benefits and risks.
* builds upon concern for the other and nurtures what is healthy.
* business of the heart that often requires a cool head.
* calls for a commitment to that which is loved.
* can also mean trust, happiness and honesty
- take a person to hell and back
- always create Life and erase the wounds of war
* can be destructive, like a fire
- happy and sometimes sad
- man and woman, mother and daughter, siblings, etc
- personal, or religious
- the crest of an emotion, or it can be the toil of assistance
- beautify and manifest one's life
- believe that another life is as important as the lover's
- bridge the times of healing and the times of recovery
- bring out the worst in people, if they feel like slaves to it
- burn for years and years, A heart can cry without shedding tears
- cast out fear, anger can turn to compassion, and foolishness to wisdom
- change people's heart
- come through living a life for the sake of others
- create a world that is healed and holy
- develop after marriage
- drive humans to do almost animalistic things
- endure and relationships can survive drawing from the experience of others
* can exist without sexual desire, and sexual desire can exist without love
- vice versa
* can grow and prosper only in an atmosphere of harmony, equality and freedom
- stronger if it is cared for
- have different meanings in different relationships
- help bring joy and happiness to a person when needed most
- involve kisses
* can make a cloudy sky light up and also make a bright day look like a dark overcast sky
- man become a beast and love can also make an ugly man beautiful
- move mountains and change lives
- multiply as life goes on
- never express itself by imposing sufferings on others
- occur in small doses, even in a split second between two strangers on a crowded street
* can only exist through emotion
- exists when there is no conflict
- flourish when it is given freely and consensually by self-determining individuals
* can sometimes be about letting go
- magic
* can take a lifetime to grow, and flourish
- any form and various meanings
- many forms, such as caring, understanding, forgiving, patience, or compassion
- turn into attachment
* casts out fear and love covers a multitude of sins.
* causes a desire to gets
- lies
- paint
- death
- marriages
* ceases when love exists.
* changes all vibrations
- darkness into light And makes the heart take wingless flight
- people for the better, just as expressing love heals and expands our own hearts
* chemical reaction.
* choice and commitment to other's true and lasting happiness.
* choice, choose to live in Love.
* circle that n ever ends.
* combination of care, responsibility, respect, commitment and trust.
* combines attitudes and actions, commitment and conduct.
* comes about over time.
* comes from being loved
- sharing and caring for each other
* comes from the capacity to feel deeply, enjoy simply, and risk life to be needed
- fullness of being
- heart, which is the center of the body
- in different ways
* comes in many forms
- shapes and forms
* commitment that also respects the other person
- to another person
* commitment to growth, happiness, and fulfillment of one another
* common every day feeling that most people have.
* complex feeling.
* connectedness, and a communing.
* connotes tender feelings and strong affection usually accompanied by loyalty and devotion.
* consists chiefly in the lover wishing good to the loved one
- in a mutual sharing
* constantly changes because people constantly change.
* conversation that never ends.
* covers the multitude of sins.
* creates an expanded state of being
- intimacy
- miracles and is healing at the end of the day
- order within the family, among neighbors, and extends to the world
- the conditions for faith and hope which are the foundations for trusting relationships
* creation of the human mind and exists only in a metaphor experience.
* cures every ailment and is the healing balm to hatred
- human ailment and limitation
- people, both the ones that give it and the ones that receive it
- people-both the ones who give it and the ones who receive it
- pettiness, hate and grief
* deceives people.
* decreases when it ceases to increase.
* deep compassionate feeling, without thought of rewards.
* deep emotion that involves the heart more than it does the mind
- no man has ever been able to properly define
* demands the giving away of things and self.
* desires lives.
* develops out of sex.
* device to overcome envy.
* diamond of the purest quality, and the rarest find.
* dirty word for others.
* disappears after the honey moan stage, which is when the hormones die down
- honeymoanstage, which is when the hormones die down
* disease, That strikes every teen.
* dissolves confusion and fear and elicits kindness, openness and respect.
* divine attribute
- feeling which is beyond likes and dislikes
- quality in man
* does exist after youth departs and when beauty of form and feature is no more
- have a balance of good and bad
- live on in time and space
- mean letting go when the time comes
* dominates all actions and all relationships.
* drives every human behavior, every human endeavor.
* elevates every soul which absorbs it, and prepares it for the journey to eternity.
* embodies the desire for beauty, for completion, the yearning for immortality.
* enables the person to treat life as an art.
* encompasses all the other commands of how men are to act
- every form of Pure knowledge, experience and thought
* entails suffering and sacrifice.
* even eliminates fear of death and judgment.
* exists independent of sex
- inside and outside of every living thing
- only where a refuge is offered for the fragile things of the universe
* expands in the heat of pressure.
* expresses emotional oneness, grief expresses emotional separation.
* faith,and one faith leads to another.
* fallen condition thus it human condition.
* falls in different categories.
* feast, to which everybody is invited.
* feeling and action
- the expression of that feeling is separate
- maintained by a thought
- of secutity
* feeling that can be given without regrets
- sensed, but it's of course more than just that
- many of people share
- only humans can experience
* feeling, but it also commitment
- in the heart of man
* flower of emptiness, total emptiness.
* flows through as conscious or unconscious acts.
* force in motion, with a shifting shape and some subtlety.
* force that can motivate, create, heal, and transform the lives of anyone it touches
- runs in the mind and body like molten gold in a furnace
- which can assume great extremes of devotion , dedication and destruction
* forgets wrongs so that there is hope for the future.
* forgives all things and endures all things.
* form of conflict between the different natures of consciousness
- craziness and insanity
- work or a form of courage
* fosters health and decreases stress.
* four letter word.
* four-letter word, it has a multitude of meanings, it can cover a multitude of sins
* fruit in season at all times and within the reach of every hand
* fundamental requirement for human existence, the basic ingredient in human life force
- teaching, a moral imperative, of all the great religions
* game in which one always cheats
- that many are destined to lose
- where everyone gain something
* general term.
* generates heat and light.
* gift anyone can give.
* gives birth to love
- meaning so that faith and hope have basis in reality for being attainable
- people courage as well as wisdom, peace and the inner strength to do something
- way to lust, and when lusts are followed, people inevitably get hurt
* giving and a sharing.
* grows and deepens over time
- attachment, often severed in tangable form, but last forever in spirit and heart
* happy alignment of time space through which two bodies travel.
* has a sense of things beyond the senses
- source and love has an object
- vast spectrum in which it is active
- way of knowing things
- an infinite variety of expressions and infinite degrees of intensity
- consequences for health and well-being
- different meanings for different people
- little to do with intelligence, pragmatism, or agendas
* has many different meanings
- ways to be expressed
- facets - caring, sharing, cherishing, understanding
- moral substance that validates every human being's personal rights
- more power than any one thing in the world
* has no color but the colors of joy and sorrow
- color, race, sex
- something to do with giving, caring, kindness
- that affect on people
* has the ability to live with the inconsistencies of others
- greatest power to improve a life
* has the power to renew the soul
- reproduce itself in the heart of another
- transcend our physical limitations
* has to do with giving
- encompass all of the things that a person is
- very little to do with verbal expression
* healer that transcends intellectual knowing and understanding.
* healing agent as is light.
* helps glands perform well, love and security build a stable nervous system.
* hug around the knees.
* includes and embraces the entire Universe
- having respect and being able to realize dreams
* includes the assigning of consequences
- human body, and the body is made a sharer in spiritual love
* increases the power of prayer.
* insists that the one loved ought to be loved.
* inspires devotion and faith
- the culture of life, while selfishness inspires the culture of death
* involves acceptance
- caring about the needs of another person, forgiving easily and adjusting continually
- commitment and care
- deference towards each other
- friendship and affection
- giving oneself to someone, male or female, freely and without reserve
- passion, intimacy and commitment
- reciprocity and mutuality
- recognition of faults and asking for forgiveness
- service to others
- taking turns taking care of each other's needs
- unselfish service to others
- work, effort, pain, and happiness
* is Love, no matter what
- THE Fact of Life Love fact of life
* is about caring for each other and understanding each other
- comfort, familiarity, closeness, trust and really caring that the other person grows
- companionship - and about sharing values and interests
- complete trust, total respect, and unconditional kindness
- faith, friendship, laughing, and adoring
* is about giving good things, and helping one another to discard bad things
- without calculating the costs
- knowing one another through and through
- sacrifice sacrificing our time, space and money, in order to help another
- sharing, and getting to know a person better
- above all virtues, as they consist of love
- abstract concepts
- all things shared, be they large or small
* is also a catalyst that helps restore a person's faith
- feeling, but love makes no universal claims
- fruit of The Holy Spirit
- function of lust
- guiding principle in effective human interaction
- luxury
- survival instinct
- about the enduring friendships, the steady, constant love of a lifetime
- betrayal, sin, selfishness, pain and death
- generosity
- altruism, giving oneself away
- always the light that warms our lives, and it grows stronger every year
* is an act of endless forgiveness, a tender look that becomes habit
- a tender look which becomes a habit
* is an act of faith, and whoever is of little faith is also of little love
- whoever is of no faith is of no love
- act, a force, or an energy, but persons are more than that
* is an action of one toward another
- that opens the gateways to everyday enlightenment
- word and it manifests itself in specific actions in our lives
- active force which transforms
- active, transitive verb
- art that requires attention in order to develop it
- attachment to another self
* is an attempt to change a piece of a dream world into a reality
- piece of a dream-world into reality
- attitude followed by appropriate behavior
* is an attitude of selflessness
- the heart that is expressed in outward action
- awakening, and love sleeping
* is an emotion constituting a certain space in which relations occur - no more, no less
- shared by all
* is an emotion that brings otherwise strong individuals to their knees
- manifests certain physical symptoms
- emotion, but finding love process
- end and a beginning
- energy, the highest and most pure energy
- enormously powerful economic principle that is largely ignored in the money economy
* is an essential part of life and a celebration of the human spirit
- the process of salvation
- eternal bond Between a soul, with another
- experience that transcends philosophy
- ideal that every beating heart seeks to know
- illness
- important force in the lives of people of all colors
- incurable disease
- inner state
- intensely personal, intimate experience
- investment of the heart in what is estimated to be of highest value
- irresistible desire to be irresistibly desired
- ongoing way of life and one that can change attitudes and prejudices
- unconditional feeling of appreciation for a person or a life form
- uncontrollable emotion
- understanding of one another that goes beyond simple knowledge
- unlimited, self-giving compassion flowing freely to all living creatures
- unselfish giving emotion
- unselfish, self-sacrificing desire to meet the needs of the cherished one
- unspoken bond, Between two lovers
- aphrodisiacs
* is as primary a phenomenon as sex
- vital to our well-being as air and water
- associated with softer qualities like compassion and acceptance
* is at the heart of creation
- war with hate, betrayal, selfishness, and all love's enemies
- attitude in action
- attracted to love, no matter the religion, race or creed
- based much more upon our attitudes and decisions than upon our feelings
* is based on confidence and a security
- individuality or distinction
- respect , understanding , and being able to talk with each other
- trust, and trust is broken by deception
- beautiful things
- between two that feel the same
- bigger than sexuality, gender, faith, career, and monogamy
- blind to color
- blinds
* is both an attitude and action to one another
- motivation and goal
- the fulfilment and the negation of law
- built on mutual respect and consent
- by far the most complex of human emotions
- capable of hurt
- caused by joy
- central to morality
- characteristic of a father and fatherhood is expressed in loving concern
* is characterized as being patient, and kind
- by genuine humility
- cold when dreams are old
- commitment to a person's satisfaction, security, and development
- communicated in commitment, attention, spending time
- compassion and concern for another or others
* is composed of a single soul inhabiting two bodies
- all sorts of different things
- connected with heart
- consideration of another, never of oneself
- considered by many to be the most important human emotion
- contentment with whatever is present in the moment
* is different at every stage of a relationship
- for every single person
- from falling in love
- displayed by loving
- dreams and courage
- earth and sky and warmth and light
- elemental to life itself
- embedded in all animate creatures and affection is the exhibition of that love
* is embodied in mutual accountability
- tolerance
- entrusted in human beings
* is essential to human growth and development
* is eternal and never ends
- through the years, ever strong through joys and tears
- eternally existing
- everything, everything that is truthful and that really exists
- exclusively a Person
- expressed by drinking each other's blood
* is expressed in deeds and in giving
- different ways, it can be a smile, and it can be a tear
- most acutely in the institution of a family
- through innocent sexual feelings, self denial, honesty, base cheating, and lust
- faith and hope in action
* is felt and it is experienced When it is shared among all
- as the physical effects of sexual attraction
- first an attitude of sympathy, fellow-feeling, and benevolence toward one another
- for everything in the world that's kind
- forever, for always and for all eternity
- forgiving, it allows the other person to move on
- found in friendship and shared dreams
* is friendship, companionship, and more
- plus sex and minus reason
- genuinely happy when others are honored by their children
* is given to a spouse, to a parent, to a child, to a friend, to a co-worker, to a stranger
- an existing, concrete being
* is greater than any evil, sin or suffering
- faith or hope
- happiness on a dark, cold and rainy day
- heaven, love is rare, love is something that two people can share
- humanity's noblest emotion
- immortal and makes all things immortal
* is in all animals of all shapes and sizes
* is in knowing just what to do and what to say
- do, And what to say
- our lives to feed our souls
- the air, alcohol is in the bloodstream
* is inherent in our very nature
- inspired by affection, kindled by attention, and steeped in respect
- interested in doing what's right for the other person
- itself the fulfillment of all our works
- joy in others
- joy, with the accompanying idea of an external cause
- just another word for sex
- kind and gentle when kindness and gentleness go against the grain
- kindness, understanding, listening, hearing, caring, and tenderness
- kisses, with little hearts
- known only when it is experienced
- learned by being loved
- life, vital and intense
* is light and heat and life itself
- kindness is light, because both are positive
- light, truth, and hope
* is like a living thing, it can bloom and grow and it can also die
- the air, which becomes a breeze after birth
* is located in families
* is love The two couples said they have found love and respect in their relationships
- even from across the Earth
* is love in all cultures
- the truest sense
- to love a person without any conditions, without any expectations
* is love, and love is never to be taken for granted or belittled
- no matter who it's with
* is made by two people, in different kinds of solitude
- up of lovers
- manifest in actions
- manifested in kindness, gentleness, forbearance, and long-suffering
- meant to be acknowledged and expressed
* is meant to be given and received
- freely and multiplied
- shared, and pain is meant to be soothed
- harmonize differences
* is measured by possessions and moments of delight
- the quality of the act
* is more a feeling, Then something that can be seen
- important than a person's ambition or career goals
- particular and has to do with the union of souls as opposed to the union of genitals
- powerful than life, it is the source of life itself
* is more than a concept or physical motivation
- feeling that comes and goes
* is more than just a feeling or a thought
- sex, or caring for one's own family, or going to church
- knowing a lot or accomplishing great acts of faith or doing good deeds
- the some of the interests and attractions and commonalities that two people share
- mostly an accumulation of remember-whens
- much like life, with different meanings and perspectives for everyone
* is much more like the sun, Which shines on one or more the same
- than an emotion or a feeling
- mutuality and reciprocity
- nature's second sun
* is nature's way of ensuring the propagation of the species
- giving a reason to be living
- making people miserable
- neither a religion nor a philosophy nor a hierarchy nor a belief system
- never concerned as to how others return love love only wants to love
- no more than a state of mind or heart
- nothing but pain, sorrow, blackness, heartache and misery
- nourished by the sexual energy a couple generates
- nurtured by truth and knowledge and sustained by experience
- obedience, in faith
- objectivity, among many other things
- objects
- obviously a dominant trait among human beings
- of the heart, thus compassion being an expression of love is also of the heart
* is one continuous round of affection
- essence, and it comes in many different forms, or expressions
- generation, life is one generation, but blood lineage transcends generations
* is one of the Platonic forms of madness which stimulates the soul's ascent to beatitude
- forces that can easily obsess and enslave
- leading causes of life
* is one of the most important things when it comes from morals
- intense emotions experienced by man and hate is another
- powerful emotions that anyone can experience
- pinnacle parts of the Christian faith
- pivotal points of the Christian faith
- strongest bonds that keep any number of humans together
- only love if it is given to all beings
* is only love when it is played out with real money on the table
- liberates
- possible between a man and a woman
* is our attitude toward others
- automatic emotional response when our needs are met
- joy, health, and wealth
- life's beginning and end
- positive soul emotion
- reason to continue life in the absence of color and taste and touch
- spiritual gravitational pull towards wholeness and therefore fulfillment
- pain and pleasure simultaneously
- pain, sorrow, heartache, arguments, and complete joy intertwined between two souls
- part of livings
- perhaps the most powerful of human emotions
- personal freedom and trust
- personified and treated as if it had a life of it s own
- physical and emotional intimacy
- physically different from friendship
- pity in action, mercy in motion, practical kindness
- pleasure, accompanied by the idea of an external cause
- power of producing intercentric relationship
* is powerful and any soul strives to Love as much as possible
- enduring and effectual and eternal and constant
* is present during lonely times
- equally in all human beings as the one effulgent divine quality
- presented as more important than wealth or power
- pretty much the same in all cultures
- recognized when warmth is felt without arbitrary limits, and it has two main forms
- reflected through trust, respect, dignity, acceptance
- related to the performance of the other person
- safety and danger
* is said to be blind
- reside in the heart
- scores
* is seen in mercy and grace
- within the eye
- selfless giving , always selfless and always giving
- sex and many things , that is to say , love needs important invisible things
- sex, love is drunkenness, but it never lasts
- shown by deeds
* is shown in faithfulness and fidelity
- our deeds to one another
- to others as children take turns with toys and supplies
- simple, and simplicity comes from love
- so important to the development of the soul
* is so universal in the world that it even underlies the physical forces of nature
- to all peoples of all cultures and covers all of recorded history
- soccer players
* is something a woman breathes, drowns in, disappears under
- every person yearns for
- like the clouds from which sweetness pours into life
- many people claim
- our society tends to keep as a human characteristic
- so complex that no words can define it
* is something that comes in many forms and shapes
- grows with understanding and the experience of sharing
* is something that is passed from one person to another
- shared between two
- to be cherished
- never changes
- one person has for another person
- speaks more about commitment in our relationship
- the universe makes possible
- that's important in everyone's life
- to share with a wonderful person
- very special in Humans
- which is in the library books and paperbacks that women read
- space and time measured by the heart
- spontaneous, voluntary affection
- still the greatest force in the world
- strong emotion
- supposed to be give and take
* is synonymous with acceptance
- life, and death is synonymous with hate
- television shows
- temporary insanity curable by marriage
* is that connection to aliveness
- cosmic essence which inwardly binds together consciousness and life into a unity
- element of character which is able to identify with others
- strange feeling that overtakes one pers on on account of another person
- unexplained type of feeling That has a way of healing
* is that which gives value to every other mark of the Christian life
- makes all things harmonious
* is the Only socially acceptable means Of escape from the self and life itself
- ability to give
- abundance of the universe
- active ingredient that makes faith and hope come alive
- active, two-way expression of human worthwhileness
* is the answer to all life's difficulties, and all life's questions
* is the antidote to fear and the wellspring of creativity
- antonym of selfishness
- art of merging the distinct and still maintaining the distinction
- attainment of life's greatest inspiration
- attraction of the soul to something, or more likely, some one
- basic prescription for a prayer life that is limping or ill
* is the basis and pivot of spiritual development
- for normal growth and development
* is the basis of all law
- that is good
- child training
- heart power and the driving force of moral and religious education
* is the basis of the hope of all mankind
- values of trueness, goodness and beauty
- beauty of the soul
* is the beginning and the end of the spiritual life
- essence of life
* is the beginning, love is the middle, and love is the end
- the middle, and the end
- being and hope of a bride
- best virtue that can be taught by family because it family
* is the binding force which unites two people
- quality that holds all things together
- bond between men, the way to teach and the center of the world
* is the bond of perfection, first it bond or ligament
- perfectness
- braiding of an infinite moment
- breath of life
* is the bridge between mortality and eternity
- two hearts
- capacity to draw out the good from another
- capstone for the pillars of forgiveness and hope
- carrying out of the potential of giving
- center of the cross and the cross is always at the center of Love
- central source of all enduring force
- cheapest of religions
- chief solvent of the several ills to which the human individual is an heir
* is the child of faith
- illusion and the parent of disillusion
* is the common denominator that binds together every person on the planet
- gene and heritage that is worth passing on from one generation to the next
* is the complete and fulfilling interpretation of our lives in the universe
- total acceptance of what is, it is about allowing
- continuation of hate and fear, the emotions provoked by our parents, by other means
- controlling emotion that helps concentration
- converse of resentment
- cornerstone of life, and without love nothing grows
- creative emotion
- crucible in which individuation takes place
- current that lifts an angel
- delusion that one woman differs from another
- derivative of life that dictates a generosity unbeknownst to most mortals
* is the desire to benefit others at the expense of self
- do good to others
- understand another
- difference between a truly concerned person and a self-righteous person
- difficult realization that something other than oneself is real
- distance between reality and pain
* is the divine power that activates everything
- divinity itself
- doorway to complete fulfillment and expression of our true nature
- drive towards the unity of the separated, and separation presupposes an original unity
* is the driving factor, yet can be the ultimate force of destruction
- force of all life
- elixir of life, the moving force of the universe
- emanation of light from the core essence of creation
- emblem of eternity
- emotion of death and rebirth
* is the emotional experience of profound surrender that is the ecstasy of transcendence
- expression of the heart energy
- end result of a mature union of two compatible personalities
* is the energy of cohesion
- inner distinctions within the ground of the divine nature and identity
- presence which gives beauty to the creation beheld
* is the energy that creates friendship, and it is the driving force that perpetuates it
- fuels our physical and etheric bodies
- which expands, opens up , sends out, stays, reveals, shares, heals
- environment where faith can grow
* is the essence of all things
- essential reality and our purpose on earth
* is the eternal celestial bonding that is forever in bloom
- law whereby the universe was created and is ruled
- etheric glue which binds our hearts and souls
- ethic to guide our choices into being appropriate, compassionate, and just
- evidence that sight has been given to to the blind
- experience of oneness, a union of the mind and heart
* is the expression of compassion and the protection of human dignity
- harmony in life
- extremely difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real
- face of people
- factor in refraining from hostilities and bringing about peace and friendship
- feeling of the utmost high
- fiber that weaves the tapestry of form
- final metaphor of sexuality
- fire which kindles faith and love is the fight which turns hope into certainty
- flow of heart-the outpouring of deepest heart
- force that holds atoms, electrons, quarks, and galaxies together
- fortune of the fortunate
- foundation for truth, goodness, and beauty
* is the foundation of all effective communication
- friendship, and it is the reason friendship exists
- foundation, the building blocks, and the common denominator for all levels of success
- frontier of energy and the true power of energy comes with unconditional love
* is the fruit of all knowledge
- faith, like apples on an apple tree or oranges on an orange tree
- that proceeds all others
* is the fulfilling of the law and love includes everything
- in that the law is fulfilled in love and through love
* is the fulfillment of the law, the glove to fit the hand
- full expression and realization of our attempt to give voice to our feelings
- fury of the storm and the calmness and serenity of a rainbow
- fusion of two souls in one in order to bring about mutual perfection
- general concept of joining together or union of separate parts or the bringing together
* is the gift of oneself to the other
- self for the other
- gift-wrap that holds the good things of life
- giving of one to another
- glue that bonds friend to friend, parent to child
* is the glue that holds families together and time spent together is more important than things
- our world together
- the world together and makes economies productive of real affluence
- together the organizational system of the church
- goal of every person's heart
- golden chain that binds
- goodness that communicates itself from all eternity
* is the gospel for the whole world
- grandeur of service in action
- great mystery of human life
* is the greatest because love endures-even in the midst of crucifixions
- feeling in the world
* is the greatest gift given to anyone
- one person can give another
- happiness in life
- healing power of mind and the body
- motivation to do the hard work of mothering
- of all emotions because of the rarity of it
* is the greatest power available to the believer
- the world has ever known
- thing in the world - the greatest privilege and power known to man
- virtue and contains all the others
- gross exaggeration of the difference between one person and everyone else
- guardian deity of everything
- hallmark of family
- harmony of life
* is the healer of sin, and forgiveness is the act that brings such healing
- healing force that dissolves arrogance and selfishness
* is the heart of acceptance, and hate is the heart of denial
- the matter love sustains and dialog is the wave of the future
- heartbeat of life
* is the highest and most powerful law in the universe
- attainment to which man can ascend
- energy in Truth
- form of human energy
- law and the sacred bond bringing any two or more beings into harmonious oneness
- type of morality
* is the immortal flow of energy that nourishes and preserves
- that nourishes, extends and preserves
- imperfect striving of the imperfect person to achieve the impossible-perfect union
- impetus to perfection
- impetus, the thing which gets it started
- infinite that is beyond knowing
- ingredient, That holds it together
- inner quality that sees good everywhere and in everybody
- intensity that heals
- irresistible desire to be desired irresistibly
- joyful sound of shared laughter
* is the key that opens salvation s message to a child s heart
- unlocks the door to eternal life
* is the key to happiness
- living in harmony with each other and with the rest of nature
- making a difference in someone's life
- salvation and rebirth
- unlocking a curse and transforming the Beast into a man
* is the language of the heart all over the world, but especially in small Southern towns
- subconscious mind and of the heart
- that every heart speaks
* is the law of the Earth plane
- that sets the whole world right
- life force of all existence
- light that guides the feet of man in the wilderness
- light, the majesty of life
- living evidence of new birth and eternal life
- lubricant that keeps the path from chafing
- magic kiss that heals all owies
- main ingredient in all cures and is the foundation of any relationship
- master key that opens the gates of happiness
- maturation of friendship
* is the meaning and motivation for life
- of the cradle in Bethlehem
* is the means and the end
- of obtaining the true knowledge, the highest knowledge
* is the measure of our ability to bear crosses
- spiritual maturity
- measurement of spiritual growth, without the presence of love, there can be no growth
* is the most basic and pervasive energy that exists
- beauteous, the holiest, thing known to human beings
- controlling emotions in the world
- durable power in the world
* is the most important medicine and pets are one of nature's best sources of affection
- thing in life
- potent factor in determining the character of the sexes
- powerful and still most unknown energy in the world
* is the most powerful force in the universe
* is the most powerful force on earth
- the face of the earth
- healing energy in existence
- medicine of all and it involves giving and receiving
- powerful, vital and active force in the universe
- used, overused, misused, abused, misunderstood, word in the English language
- vulnerable of all our emotions
* is the mother and companion of all the other virtues
- motive-power of life
- movement of life
- music that authenticates the lyrics of salvation
- natural state for man and all the other contrary emotions are unnatural
- norm of all Christian moral living
- normal state of every person in existence
- nourishment of soul
- number one reason why a lot of people decide to go into rabbit raising
- ointment that heals all wounds
* is the one key that can unlock all things
- that is stressed all throughout
- thing that all life preparation for
- true and only lasting thing that remains through all eternity
- word summarizing every believer's duty
* is the only emotion that can be really digested
- energy signature that truly involves communication
- flower that grows and blossoms without the aid of the seasons
* is the only force capable of transforming an enemy into a friend
- game in which two can play and both lose
- gift that is complete and that lasts
- guarantee of return on the investment of our words, our goods, and our lives
- key to unlocking a curse and transforming the Beast into a man
- known cure for any disease
- means to achieve anything
- medicine that can heal the wounds of the world
- possible antidote to our core emotion of fear
* is the only power that can cause a permanent change
- has created or that can create
- reason for living
* is the only thing satisfies spiritually
- that can be divided, without being diminished
- true meaning of life
- open door to the fullness of life
* is the opposite of Rejection
- legalism
- original, unified pulse of energy that unfolds into the mystery of our universe
- passion of self-giving
- path to eternity
- peak of affection and the sentiments
- perfect bond of unity
- perfection of the spirit, and charity that of love
- permanent state of creation
- perpetual deferment, always the next step, the other, the other
- physical and mental compatibility of two people
- pleasure one has in focusing on the good qualities in someone else
- polar opposite of non-love
* is the power that allows the extraordinary to break in on the ordinary
- can combine and commingle blood
- holds all things in the universe together
- joins and binds in divine harmony the universe and everything in it
- which produces love
- presence of life
- primary theme of all music ever created
* is the principal entity of uniting tie between the two
- source of other virtues, and of all genuine happiness
- way to a life lived in the Holy Spirit
- product of unity between individuals, a recognition of a commonality and affinity
- progress of eternity
* is the purest emotion, but also the hardest to obtain, say others
- way through life
- purest, the divine flame of our being
- quality that binds the family together
- quest itself and the infilling property of every subatomic particle in existence
- quiet understanding and mature acceptance of imperfection
* is the reason for the Internet
- to have faith and to have hope
- reason, the cause and the foundation of marriage
- recognition and claiming of one's reflection and one's complement
- relation in the relationship
- response of the heart to the good
- result of a chemical reaction in the brain
- reward of love
- road that leads to hope
- root and the life giving fluid circulating in the tree of our morality
* is the root of all joy and sorrow
- other passions
- that holds all the other virtues
- salutation of the angel to the stars
- secret of peace in turmoil and joy in stress
* is the single most potent force in the universe
- powerful aspect of all beings
- single, most powerful force in the universe
- smell of a baby's neck
* is the sole factor in determining long-term happiness
- power to endure
* is the solution that dissolves all of our problems
- to gaining all wisdom, all knowledge, and all power
* is the soul and life of the world
- source and the creator of life
* is the source of all our comfort and contentment
- spirit's rejoicing in what is real
- star that lights our souls throughout our life and beyond
- state in which man sees things most widely different from what they are
* is the state of angels
- desire, of feeling and passion
* is the strongest and most fulfilling emotion possible
- element in human life
- energy to defy the accumulated powers of hatred
- healing power in the world
- motivation in the world
- power in the universe
- power, it is infinitely stronger than hatred and malice
- thing on earth, but it can be bended by the ideas of society
* is the substance of every moment and love makes every moment worth living
- family life, of friendship, and of romance
- the divine life
- sun of life
* is the supreme law of the universe
- meaning of our life
- of living things
* is the thing that makes life possible or, indeed, tolerable
- some people shout
* is the tie that blinds
- holds the world together
* is the total absence of fear
- and complete acceptance of what is
- tranquil glow that is somehow brighter than infatuation without causing all the burns
- triumph of imagination over intelligence
- true ruling principle of the regenerate soul, and faith ministers to it
* is the ultimate refuge, the alchemy of eternal happiness
- relationship from one life to another
* is the ultimate truth and the source of infinite energy
- of the heart of creation
- undercurrent of life
- undying reason for all magic
- unforetold explanation for creation
- unifying force of oneness that can reach all
* is the unity of the soul
- two hearts beating together as one
* is the universal juice that makes things what they are
- language, beyond time, age, culture and sensibility
- topic of writers, poets and singers
- universe flowing through itself
- vehicle that miracles travel in
- very core, the center, the apex, summit, pinnacle of securing life's happiness
* is the very essence and core of our being
- life of the Christian religion
- foundation of righteousness and nonviolence
- foundation, beauty and fulfillment of life
- life breath of a human being
- vibration of communication in the spirit world
- virtue of mercy
- warmth and security of home and heart and hearth
* is the water of life
- that helps the seeds sprout and grow
* is the way of life, when times are joyous and happy or even in strife
- risk, adventure and creation
- white light of emotion
* is the whole life
- willing of the highest good according to the value of the object loved
* is the willingness to relate to another
- word, straight from the heart
- thegreatest gift one can give to another
- their form of currency
* is therefore the fundamental and innate vocation of every human being
- only law of life
- thoroughly and absolutely equated with sex and nothing else
- thus a positive force directed towards their growth towards maturity as persons
- time and space measured by the heart
- to allow oneself and others to be as one is, and to live as one naturally lives
* is to be distinguished from obsession, sexual attraction, infatuation, and ego gratification
- experienced in the depths of peace
- practiced in self-sacrifice
- give of oneself to another
- hold the beloved's heart with an open hand, trusting freedom
- see what is good and beautiful in everything
- truth and forgiveness
* is two minds without a single thought
- things after each other
* is unconditional and shared in a variety of ways with children
- commitment to an imperfect individual
- surrender of one's heart and soul to another
- unconditional, like the love of a mother
- understanding, acceptance, and tenderness
- undivided loyalty to life's higher values
- unity, understanding, harmony
- unselfish, loyal concern for the good of another
- unselfishness
- used for giving
* is what a true family is made of
- allows one to throw in one's lot with the beloved, though outcomes are uncertain
- distinguishes the church from other organizations in society
- draws and holds people
* is what gives rise to despair when that which is loved absolutely, is absolutely inaccessible
- grief when love or the beloved is absent or dead
- indignation when the beloved is wronged
- rage when the beloved is harmed
- governs forgiveness
- has created the entire universe
- holds the world on it axis and allows it to spin
* is what keeps the heart warm
- two people so close, when they are yet so far away
- love does
* is what makes a brain of words our minds
- any gift special
- it possible for vulnerability to entrust itself to the unknown other
* is what makes life livable
- people feel crazy
- the world go around
- one wills to do to make the other person happy and fulfilled
- opens the heart and dissolves fear
- truly feeds our souls
- what's left in a relationship after all the selfishness has been removed
* is when every moment is an event of bliss
- mommy gives daddy the best piece of chicken
- one gives totally to the other, life, things, time, respect, to give all
- someone is there To share a hurt and hug a care
- where creation connects with source to produce manifestation
- willing to bear hardships without complaint, to ease others' pain
- word which means everything, Yet seems to mean nothing in our country
* is, above all, the gift of oneself.
* joy, accompanied by the idea of an external cause.
* joyful feeling.
* judges what people say and do that creates love and healing or hatred and pain.
* key doctrine of the Christian religion.
* knows the ways, outcomes, and thoughts of others.
* language that all understand.
* lasts as long as money endures
- only for months, sometimes only for minutes
* leads man and woman, one through the other, to a higher possession of their being
- to obedience and obedience to love
* legacy handed down from generation to generation.
* link, which means recognition of an otherness.
* lives on even though the physical body dies
- through all things, beyond the grave and into eternity
* loosens the knots of being, love is liberation from the vortex of egotism.
* major cause of dysfunction, that inspires programs of dysfunction.
* makes life and all human relationships in life simply beautiful
- persons want others to be a part of their work
- someone willing to sacrifice oneself for another
- things grow Like sunshine and rain
* manifests itself in all creation through the use of purposeful energy
- love for others
* marriage of two hearts and two souls.
* matter of chemistry, sex matter or physics.
* means acceptance of what is, without prior judgment
- accepting another totally, including all their qualities and flaws
* means being at the mercy of a stranger
- willing to do something for another
- believing in someone, in something
- caring and showing understanding
- comforting someone when they're feeling down
- devastation for both male and female Pigs
- different things to different people
- helping each other get out of bed in the morning
- how to give something
- letting go of our fears, prejudices, egos and conditions
- living as a branch of the vine
- making another person happy, even at the cost of our own happiness
- that there physical attraction
* means the corporal works of mercy
- desire for others to be happy
* means to accept the way things appear and let live
- give our best for the good of others
- wanting what is best for the other person, seeking the greatest good for that person
* means, 'giving to meet the needs of another with no thought of repayment'.
* movement towards unity, towards oneness.
* never dies of a natural death
- starvation, but often of indigestion
* non-possessive delight in the particularity of the other.
* occurs on many levels of energy awareness.
* occurs when the recipient gives back
- two beings are in sync, their brainwaves resonating in a silent, unseen duet
* often brings pain
- causes a great deal of conflict in our minds
- changes to hate
- expresses itself in self-sacrifice, with little thought for self
- includes our emotions
- inspires healing
- involves exploitation
- means different things to different people
* only can grow when it is shared
- flourishes when one or both of the parties overcome something
* ought to be the purpose and nature of every relationship in daily work.
* permeates every particle of matter and is absorbed into every spirit.
* physical sensation.
* positive energy with true substance.
* power that is essential to unity
- overrides all of the desires that are tempted by the darkness
- with unknown strength
* powerful and unpredictable entity
- caring for someone else
* practical decision to act on what is and for what is.
* primary key in opening the doorways to personal and collective human solutions.
* private bond between two people.
* profound affection that has a strong outcome.
* provides the moral basis for personal rights.
* provokes others to love and takes care of the problem of inaction.
* pure energy which inhabits everyone and everything...
* reality When someone else cares.
* reciprocity of soul and has a different end and obeys different laws from marriage.
* recognizes individuality and respects individual freedom.
* reflection of the purity of spirit.
* refrigerator covered with creative works of art.
* reification of capitalist fantasies.
* relationship that needs webs of friendships and supportive neighborhoods
* representational state, and so are fear, guilt and anxiety.
* requires acceptance of someone as they are, with their limitations and faults
- or demands both bonds that tie and the freedom to grow
- vulnerability to thrive, and therefore relies on a high degree of trust
* respect for the freedom of the other.
* response to values.
* resumes from people who have spent a significant amount of time abroad.
* roll of the dice.
* says to take precautions in relating to one's spouse.
* secret gift that pervades our existence without our being conscious of it.
* seed that needs special attention to grow
- once planted, one never knows how high and how far it can grow
* seeks to be with the object of it's love
- overcome evil with good
* seems inaccessible, yet it is the most common of human experiences
- the central fact of human life, and the foundation of spirituality
* sees all persons as having a special worth.
* series of constant heartaches.
* shared mutual feeling between two people that never stays the same but grows.
* sign of genuine faith.
* skill which practice makes perfect.
* sometimes deceives people
- plays a role in other ways too
* sort of excess of friendship, and can be felt toward one person only.
* special form of reciprocity which supersedes the social contract of individualism
- way of life, love is newlyweds, man and wife
* special, secret joke held between two people.
* specific type of energy.
* spells to get a person to commit are rare.
* spontaneous expression of heart.
* spreads quite easily and is the opposite of fear.
* spring that flows freely.
* starts with a smile, grows with a kiss, and ends with a tear
- smile,grows with a kiss,and ends with a tear
- within and expresses itself outwardly
* state of being that grows over time
* still exists in the realm of philosophy.
* strengthens the soul and can cure any illness.
* strong affectionate feeling for someone
- caring for someone else while sexual desire strong physical excitement
- devotion to something or somebody
- force of devotion which nothing can destroy
- human emotion with many varibles involed
* stronger power over souls.
* substitute for chocolate.
* suffers when someone falls or when tragedy strikes.
* symbol of eternity.
* takes the form of connections to little pets, cats and dogs
- time to grow and develop
* teaches freedom and happiness and gives inner peace.
* technical, covenantal term for a relationship of loyalty.
* temptation and can happen anytime, anywhere, and with anyone.
* tenderness and attachment to someone
- passion, open feelings
* term of convenience for most people.
* test for spiritual health.
* then is the illusion for the absence of harmonic rapport between the sexes
- standing for the absence of rapport between the sexes
* thermometer of our spiritual health.
* thing that does everybody good
- is always there
- once possessed makes a life doubly blessed
* too happens in a heart beat and travels straight to the soul.
* transcends all realms of being
- horror, hallucination and ashes and creates beauty
- the physical and finds meaning in the spiritual
* treasure thats's worthless when hidden For love has no value until it is given.
* tries to be a personal part of life.
* trust that breeds more trust.
* ultimately leads to spiritual healing, and spiritual completeness.
* unites in such a way that two lives become one life in perfect harmony.
* universal longing throughout the human race.
* usually makes the heart beat faster
- takes root slowly and grows with time
* value that is actualized through loving actions.
* verb and word of action.
* verb, a word that describes action.
* verb, an action word
* very complex emotion.
* virtue of both individuals
- technically called charity
* warm affection for, or a close attachment to, another person.
* way of being, a way of living, it is the ultimate guide to life
- seeing
* word that can mean many, many different things
- has no opposite
- is so common, yet can also be so complicated
- people take to lightly
* word used only by fools
- without meaning by the clergy
* wreath to be worn always.
+ Australian Music Prize, Past winners and short list nominees: Music in Australia :: Music awards
* Love is Gone'.
+ Courtney Love: Actors from San Francisco, California :: American feminists :: American movie actors :: American rock guitarists :: American rock singers :: American singer-songwriters :: Musicians from San Francisco, California :: Singers from California :: 1964 births :: Living people
* Love is a feminist. She was diagnosed with autism at the age of 9. She is open about having had cosmetic surgery.
+ Love, Forms of love: Healthy lifestyle
- Love and health
+ Opus Dei, What it teaches: Roman Catholicism
* Love is what holiness is all about. And one learns to love by praying throughout the day like a child. Also by sacrificing for God by doing good deeds which are hard to do. You can have great holiness just by doing the little duties of each moment, Escriva said. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### low levels:
Lower level
* are low levels.
* indicate acidity
- increase acidity
* occur during years.
### low-grade tumor microscopically:
Parosteal osteosarcoma
* has a relatively good prognosis compared to conventional osteosarcoma.
* low-grade tumor microscopically.
* strong possibility.
### loyalty:
Fealty
* is loyalty
* promise between two people to be friends and protect each other.
* refers to absolute loyalty, as that of a vassal to a feudal lord.<|endoftext|>Luck
* appears to have played an important role in all of their lives.
* applies only to human actions whereas chance applies to any natural event.
* horse to ride like any other.
* involves the playfulness in gambling, the tension between risk and reward.
* is allergic to all types of plants
- karmas
- phenomenons
- superstitions
* is the derivative of good planning
- equity gained through the roll of the dice
- sense to recognize an opportunity and the ability to take advantage of it
* is the time when preparation and opportunity meet
- opportunitymeet
- used to describe a fortunate happening with no basis
- usually a matter of choosing to do wise things
* is what happens when preparation meets opportunity
- meets, recognizes, and acts on opportunity
- when hard work meets opportunity
* is when opportunity and determination meet
- meets preparedness
- preparation meets determination
* is when preparedness and opportunity get together
- where persistency and opportunity collide
* magical power, a psychic gift, subtle, elusive, but potent.
* major factor in life.
* plays a big part in racing
- part in finding fossils, but research and hard work play a larger role
- an important part in any gene hunt
* state of being and always balances itself.
* still plays a large part in space exploration.
* tag given by the mediocre to account for the accomplishments of genius.
* word devoid of sense. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck:
Disaster
* Most disasters affect environments
* Most disasters are caused by natural phenomena
- can have impact
* Most disasters cause destruction
- erosion
- soil erosion
* Most disasters destroy cities
- entire cities
- habitats
* Most disasters have causes
- health consequences
* Most disasters involve death
- some source of water
- lead to starvation
* Most disasters occur in areas
- countries
- develop countries
- geographical areas
- other countries
* Some disasters affect animals
- individuals
* Some disasters are caused by conditions
- cyclone
- earthquakes
- tropical cyclone
- the cause of human actions, intentional or unintentional
- claim thousands of lives
- evolve over time
- have an effect on only one or two families
- impact survival
- increase scarcity
- lead to situations
- relate to damage
- result in burns.
* A 'disaster' is something very bad that happens to people and almost always changes their lives completely. Disasters can destroy homes and many kinds of work. Disasters can be of different kinds, but most are caused by forces of nature
* affect areas
- everyone
- many people
- specific areas
* also brings out the worst in people
- cause death
- means spiritual comfort and witness
- result in indirect costs such as loss of employment and economic losses
* appear according to people's thoughts.
* are a major cause of impoverishment and can reverse progress towards poverty reduction
- result of poverty rather than a cause of it
- serious issue in the United States
- emergencies
- events postulated with separation and loss
- harmeds
- particularly traumatic for children
- sometimes a part of life
- the source of intense stress for families and individuals
- unpredictable and often devastating
- usually events that happen at the worst time and in the worst place
* bring communities together for a common cause
- out the worst in human behavior
* build over days or weeks, or hit suddenly, without warning.
* can be any emergency that taxes our local resources
- both natural and caused by human conduct
- man-made or natural
- meteorological, topographical, or accidental in origin
- build gradually over days and weeks, or strike suddenly with no time to prepare
- disrupt people's lives in a matter of minutes
- effect every part of the United States and at any time of the year
- exacerbate reproductive health needs
* can have effects
- profound effects
- include weather, rebellion, accidents and foreign intervention
- leave children feeling frightened, confused, and insecure
- occur quickly and without warning
- seriously damage a country s economy
- still happen in relationships
* can strike anywhere, and often without warning
- in the form of hazardous materials spills, train derailments, and house fires
- take many forms
* cause damage
- immense damage
* come in many forms
- sizes and shapes
* constitute stressful and traumatic experiences.
* develop a personality of their own and reflect the people and land where they happen.
* disrupt hundreds of thousands of lives every year
- normal avenues of communication and information
* happen abruptly and frequently without warning.
* happen all over the world, every day
- rich countries have droughts, storms and earthquakes
* happen in every country
- provinces and in cities
- no boundaries and they strike at all races, all creeds, all sizes of people
* invariably cause large numbers of casualties and result in massive socio-economic damage.
* is distinguishable from trouble by the apparent severity of the loss of life or property
- misfortune
* leave misery, deaths and injuries.
* may have effects
- serious effects
* occur every day, whether natural like Honduras or man-made like Sudan.
- every state in the nation
- towns and villages across our vast nations
- primarily when assets that have a high availability requirement are destroyed
* often exhaust and exceed the resource capacity of a given community.
* place incredible stresses on people and irrational behaviour is common.
* represent a disruption in development, a disruption in sustainable human development.
* require decisions
- make decisions
- rapid decisions
- responses
* result from factors.
- on many shapes and sizes
* tend to have a long-term impact on both individuals and communities.
* will have effects. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | disaster:
Ecological disaster
* Most ecological disasters lead to starvation.
* come and go, and the planets, man and other creatures and plants have survived.
Environmental disaster
* Some environmental disasters take places.
* can be overwhelming for children.<|endoftext|>### luck | disaster:
Natural disaster
* All natural disasters cause loss in some way.
* Many natural disasters are in good part the product of social conditions
- responses to human activities
* Most natural disasters affect environments
- life
- are more limited in magnitude than a large impact
* Most natural disasters can have effects
- profound effects
* Most natural disasters cause damage
- destruction
- erosion
- immense damage
- soil erosion
* Most natural disasters destroy cities
- entire cities
- habitats
* Most natural disasters have consequences
- health consequences
* Most natural disasters occur in areas
- countries
- geographical areas
- other countries
- near the tropics where the aircraft has particularly good performance
- result from factors
- tend to have a greater impact upon the poor
- vary in terms of size versus frequency of occurrence
* Natural Disasters are mainly earthquakes, hurricanes, and volcanic eruptions
- can happen at any time
- occur on an ongoing basis
* Some natural disasters affect individuals
- are caused by earthquakes
- increase scarcity
- relate to damage
- result from a combination of natural and human factors
- human lives and can be devastating to local communities and economies
- men and women differently with respect to their responsibility and rights
- the lives of many thousands of people each year
* affects different aspects of our living.
* are a dramatic example of people living in conflict with the environment
- fact of life
- global problem
- tragic interruption to the development process
- albums
- also increasingly costly
- disasters that are out of human control and are usually caused by the weather
- natural hazards
- nondiscriminatory in nature
- often a cause of families falling into poverty
- one of the main causes for the phenomenon of under nutrition
- prime examples of events that occur unexpectedly
* are the consequences or effects of natural hazards
- result of geophysical or meteorological disturbances
* bring out both the best and worst in people.
* can be especially traumatic for children and youth
- disrupt parrot feeding and nesting
- happen at any time or place
- play havoc with power lines and telephone poles
* can strike anywhere and at any time
- at any time, often with little warning
* come in all shapes and sizes.
* cost the United States tens of billions of dollars each year.
* happen all over the world
- for a reason
* have a way of pulling people together
- wide variety of causes
- no political borders or partisan leanings
* including earthquakes cause damage that impacts communities across the country.
* is the consequence when a natural hazard affects humans in an adverse manner.
* kill and inflict human suffering.
* leave deep scars in the environment.
* may have effects
- serious effects
- mercurially all the time and can severely affect business operations
* play a major part in the destruction of species.
* pose distinct challenges to the developing world
- special problems for managers of open space
* remain mysterious and unpredictable.
* require decisions.
* rip apart the fabric of entire communities.
* threaten the lives and property of thousands of people each year. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing:
Health
* All health starts in the stomach with digestion.
* Most health affects certain organs
* Most health is experienced by many women
* Most health promotes cardiovascular health
- social development
- requires food
* Related Can include health insurance, dental insurance, etc.
* Some health contributes to death
- physical health
* Some health is caused by emotional problems
* Some health leads to diseases
- reproduction
- plans fine physicians who write more prescriptions than their contract allows
* Some health relates to health
- meat
* affects ability
- reaction
* balance of diet, mental state, and body movement.
* basic human right.
* begins with a natural diet
- healthy development of the child and a positive family environment
- nutrition
* bridge to peace, an antidote to intolerance, a source of shared security.
* broad concept that includes physical health, mental health, and social welfare.
* can only start spiritually
- refer to wellness and illness as well as disease
* can vary on a continuum from optimal health to ill health
- optimum health to ill health, including death
* changes over time
- with time and varies according to circumstances
* choice, an attitude, a state of mind.
* comes from a combination of things
- memory's recovery
* comes from the integrated processes of the body and the mind
* comprises dynamic and well-preserved blood, liver and other body ecosystems.
* concept that transcends the physical world.
* concerns Heart disease, obesity, stroke, cancer
- the whole body, which includes spirituality
* condition wherein all the functions are performed with a normal amount of force.
* continuum ranging from peak wellness to death.
* corresponds with living and being.
* crucial factor in the present day quality of life of Aboriginal people.
* depends on factors
- many factors
- perfect circulation in the tissues
- seed production
- such factors
- various factors
- to a great extent on food
* dynamic multidimensional state of being
- process that changes daily
* dynamic state influenced by individual, environmental, and hereditary factors
- involving our whole being
- of response to internal and external stimuli
* dynamic state which fluctuates among degrees of wellness and illness
- over a continuum varying from optimal wellness to death
- state, and a process of being, as well as, becoming an integrated whole person
* dynamic, multi-dimensional state of being in which the potential of a human is realized.
* embraces body, mind and spirit
- the triumvirate concepts of body, mind , and spirit
* encompasses more than just being free of disease
- the mental, social, emotional, physical and spiritual human potentials
* exists in a social and environmental context
- any of many conditions and is uniquely experienced by each person
* exists on a continuum which varies from decreased functioning to optimal well-being
- with high level wellness at one end, and death at the other end
* factor because the medical equipment that run on computers.
* fluid, dynamic experience of clients.
* form of freedom.
* fundamental human right
- public good
* guide for people who want to take control of their own well-being
- take more control of their own health
* has characteristics
- information
- similar characteristics
* health and fitness magazine, directed primarily at women.
* human right, linked to social, cultural, economic, civil, and political rights.
* implies both physical, mental, and social well-being, and it resource for living.
* improves as social status and income increases.
* improves, as our emotional state becomes more positive.
* includes more than just physical wellness
- one s physical, emotional, and spiritual functions
* influences the quality of plants as forage for animals.
* involves genetic, nutritional and environmental factors as well as many others.
* involves more than the absence of illness and injury
- physical body
- the whole body, emotions, spiritual outlook, diet, exercise and our relationships
- well-being of body, mind and spirit
* is about a body
- lifestyle
- balance and stability
- becoming aware of and reowning denied parts of our Selves
- the whole person - mind, body, soul, sociability
- actually a continuum moving from very sick all the way to optimal health
* is affected by illness, disability, and dysfunction
- many elements in people's lives
- the combination of foods that make up a diet
- all about nutrition
- also physical and means strength and long-life
- always an issue of concern for people traveling abroad
- among the most popular topics people research on the Internet
* is an enabling resource for a productive and fulfilling life
- essential component of life and happiness
- expression of the whole person, and to heal is therefore to make whole
- extremely complex matter, and involves so much more than the size of one's waistline
- important common factor in all types of families - urban or rural, rich or poor
- inner resilience, a wholeness and a way of life
- ongoing process with a goal of optimum wellness
- optimum level of functioning for individuals, families and communities
- another important component of the standard of living
- approximated by a discrete state variable
- attainable when the environment for it is created
- bad when it is chronically bad
- both a determinant of development and an outcome of development
- complex mix of physical, emotional, spiritual and social factors
- connected with sexuality, and sexual disorders cause health problems
- consistent with observation and adherence to the laws of nature
* is created and lived by people in the settings of their everyday lives
- within the settings of their everyday life
- in communities
- critical to quality of life and social justice for Aboriginal people
- defined broadly to include both physical and mental health
* is defined by clients within the context of their own values and cultures
- persons, families and communities
- in terms of freedom
- dependent upon maintaining appropriate tone in the nervous system
- determined by the interplay of wide-ranging factors
* is difficult to measure because it is subjective
- measure, and is itself influenced by labor supply and productivity
- dynamic, characterized by unity between person and environment
* is essential for enjoyment of all the worldly pleasures in a righteous manner
- to a quality life
- existence that is vigorous, happy, and free of physical or psychological disorder
- in holistic ways including individual and communal dimensions
- far more than the absence of disease
- found in nature
- health, it has nothing to do with marketplaces
- improved in many ways, but especially by decreasing obesity and heart disease
- in a category of rights known as social, economic and cultural rights
* is influenced by a variety of factors that co-exist within society
- factors beyond health and medicine
- health care providers and society
- lifestyle and environment and depends on individual choices
* is influenced by the ability to cope with life processes
- interrelationships among the many systems
- person's heredity, environment, and lifestyle
- through lifestyle choices
- inner peace and healing is letting go of fear
- integral to human well-being, which is the ultimate goal of development
- likely the most valued aspect of quality of life as people grow older
- maintained by adopting a lifestyle that harmonizes with nature's healing agents
- mental, emotional, physical, moral, and spiritual wholeness
* is merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die
- way someone can die
- metabolic efficiency
- more important than weight
* is more than effort to cure disease
- just physical fitness
* is more than just the absence of disease, and health care is more than just medical services
- mere lack of sickness
- simple absence of disease
* is more than the absence of disease
- physical illness
- provision of medical services
- mostly about mental health
- much more than the absence of disease
- normal and sickness is abnormal
- one of each person's most precious resources
* is one of the basic human rights
- greatest concerns of people living in regional Australia
- the most valuable things in life
* is our greatest wealth
- natural state, and ill health is unnatural
- partly physical, but to a degree also depends on how people feel about themselves
- perceived and valued differently
- political and social in nature
- primary concern for everybody next to food
- prosperity
- psychological, emotional, and erotic
* is related to all sectors in life
- cultural risk in two ways
- the totality of an individual's environment
- relative condition, characterized by wellness, illness, disease, or dysfunction
- responsible for mosquito control, cutting and cleaning of various drainage structures
- rooted in the group spirit of the family
* is seen as a continuum ranging from high level wellness to illness and death
- self-development
- self-perceived and relative to each person s or group s beliefs and values
- simply the slowest possible rate at which one can die
- something adolescents tend to take for granted
* is the ability to adjust to or evolve with environmental changes
- resist strain
- treasure personal time in silence alone or with family and friends
- adaptive response to biological and environmental forces
- antithesis of disease, degeneracy, and crime
* is the basic quality of life as the family is the basic unit of society
- requirement to enjoy wealth
- basis of real prosperity
- beginning of effective social and economic development
* is the capacity of the land for self renewal
- for self-renewal
- core of our lives and our livelihood
- elixir of life
- entity, something to be attained
* is the first and most important reason more attention is being paid to a meatless diet
* is the foundation for all of one's activities
- of beauty, and helps winning in any field
- fully-awakened, linitless mind of enlightenment
- gauge of life
* is the goal of nurses working with persons and their environments
- the person's behaviour and the person's ability to be an adaptive organism
- harmonious balance of three important forces acting in the body
* is the harmony between the energy components of body, mind and spirit
- magnetic field and the human cells
- integration of spiritual, social, emotional, and physical well being
- keystone to human development
- major reason people initially turn to organic foods
- most important aspect of life
* is the normal and natural functioning of the body and the goal of ideal treatment
- state of the human body
* is the only discipline that addresses teen concerns every day
- real expression of man's true being and is always intact
- true wealth, and they want everyone to be wealthy
- physical, mental, emotional, spiritual, social and economic well being of a person
- primary duty of life
- principal asset of the working man and the working woman
* is the result of healthful living
- the body's ability to defend itself from disease
- richest possession of man upon earth
* is the right of every individual and health care is the responsibility of society
* is the state about which medicine has nothing to say
- of one s emotional, intellectual, social and physical well-being
- systems of the body working optimally
- vital principle of bliss, And exercise, of health
- wealth of the one Nation
- well-working of the organism as a whole
- threatened by the danger of rabies, animal bites, and attack
* is viewed as a sense of well-being, freedom from discomfort, and a robust appearance
- an absence of symptoms or diagnostic evidence
* is viewed as the dynamic state of wellness and illness in individuals and groups
- maximizing of one s potential along various dimensions
- vital to maintain well being and quality of life in old age
- wealth on every chakra level
- wealth, peace of mind is happiness
* is when all our individual cells are peacefully and joyously functioning in harmony
- different aspects of self can get to know each other and reflect upon each other
* is, as one way of manifesting and identifying the unity of spirit.
* journey that explores the inner as well as the outer dimensions of a human being.
* long-term process and commitment.
* makes wealth.
* manifests itself as an absence of feeling.
* matter of balance.
* means different things to different people
- for functioning well
- physical health, mental health, social health and spiritual health
* mixture of natural forces, personal responsibility and social care for wisdom writers.
* much wider concept than merely the absence of disease.
* multi-factored state of being.
* natural state, because it is harmony and balance
* occurs at the cellular level.
* offers opportunity.
* often overlaps with welfare
- returns with improved nervous system control of the body
* permanent theme of humankind.
* personal commitment, but it is also a social commitment.
* physical, mental and social resource for everyday living.
* pillows aid restful sleep, allowing air to circulate, keeping the head cool.
* positive concept emphasizing social, physical and personal resources.
* prerequisite for human development.
* prevails when the four humors of the body are in balance, disease when there is an imbalance.
* progression toward and an achievement of a satisfactory level of functioning.
* promotes a young person's development and a positive relationship with the environment
* provides benefits.
* provides health and wellness services to people of all ages
* quality present in persons, families and communities.
* question of harmony and balance.
* records Medical records are confidential.
* refers to wholes, the dynamics of whole organisms.
* reflection of beingness
- evolving patterns of human-environment interactions
- ones total well being - mental, emotional, physical and spirtual
- our beliefs
* relative state of mind, body, and spirit, which is unique to each individual.
* requires a balance in life between work, play and relationships
* set of guidelines for the promotion of physical activity.
* significant human rights issue.
* social responsibility.
* sound relation to nature.
* state and a process of being and becoming an integrated and whole person
- of balance and harmony of all the aspects of the medicine wheel
* state of complete mental, physical and social well-being
- physical, mental and social well-being
- mind, body and spirit
- optimum function within a given environment
* state of physical, mental and emotional well-being
- social well being
- spiritual well being
- wellness and inner peace
* subject in which every individual is inter- ested.
* supports global security interest
* sustainable state.
* way of life, and medicine tool through which health can be improved.
* yardstick of our success or failure in human development. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Animal health
* is the nation's wealth.
* is, therefore, improved in disasters when animals are evacuated.
Behavioral health
* concerns an individual's overall well being and ability to cope with daily life.
* is unlike any other branch of medicine.
* operates in a marketplace where determining product value is often equivocal.
Bone health
* can often deteriorate from the decline of bone mass that usually occurs with aging.
* huge issue with soda consumption.
Cardiovascular health
* Most cardiovascular health promotes cardiovascular health.
* leads to mental health by making the body less reactive to stress.
Colon health
* depends on the beneficial bacteria that reside in the digestive tract.
* major concern for people today.
* starts with regular colon cleanses.
Community health
* focuses on the health of populations or groups.
* is about building and maintaining a strong and resilient community
- community competence
- discussed in terms of costs to employers and loss of production
* vital component of primary health care.
Compromised health
* can be a direct result of parasite infestation in our bodies.
* direct result of parastical infestation in our bodies.
Dental health
* depends upon good habits, proper nutrition and regular professional monitoring.
* is an essential component of overall physical wellness
- important component of overall health
- important at any age
- integral to overall health
- more important than most people realize
- the most important reason to have teeth straightened
* plays a critical role in learning.
* serious issue for animals.
Ecological health
* depends on diversity.
* is good, but rising levels of fecal coliform bacteria are worrisome.
Economic health
* depends on environmental safety.
* is also important to family strength.
Emotional health
* component of sexuality just as physical illness can challenge intimacy.
* starts with recognition.
* vital aspect of all of our lives.
Environmental health
* contains a broad spectrum of related issues.
* focuses on the impact of the environment on human health.
* graduate career in most countries.
* is improved because hazardous wastes previously buried are no longer generated
- part of public health
- very much connected to human health and development
* provides the basis of public health.
* represents a critical component of public health.
Forest health
* is also an issue in Europe
- an informal and technically inexact term
- based on biological controls vs. chemical
- measured on a relatively large spatial scale
* measure of the hardiness of the forest as a whole, or an ecosystem. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Good health
* affects individuals and the communities in which they live.
* balance of mind, body and spirit
- water and electrolytes
* basic right for every citizen of the world.
* begins at an early age
- the cellular level
* blend of physical and emotional well-being.
* byproduct of a balance of one's electrolytes and water as well as nutrients.
* can help ease allergy symptoms, and good health starts with nutrition.
* combination of a healthy body, healthy mind, and healthy spirit
- physical, mental and spiritual components
* comes from genes, luck, but especially lifestyle
- good habits and wise choices
- souls living within each person
* depends a lot more on prevention and lifestyle choices than on treatment
- on good nutrition
- very much upon the efficiency of oxygen intake by the body
* does depend on a varied diet.
* entails a high level of physical, mental, and spiritual well being.
* includes physical, social, mental, and spiritual well-being.
* is actually a matter of living a life that is free of illness.
* is an essential determinant of social development and economic growth
- part of social justice
* is an important component of well-being
- ingredient for higher productivity and development
- arguably the most important contributor to an individual's quality of life as well
- as much mental as anything else
- basic to the well being of an individual
- dependent in a large part on good nutrition and regular physical activity
* is dependent upon having a good foundation for health
- the balance of yin and yang being constantly harmonious
* is essential for any child's development
- learning and cognitive ability
- utilising the body for good deeds
- to good living
- everyone's major source of wealth
* is fundamental to all our lives
- people s wellbeing and central to sustainable economic development
- mental, physical and social well-being
- merely the slowest possible rate at which one can die
* is more than a healthy body
- the absence of disease
- that just the absence of illness
- much more than the absence of illness
- necessary for proper growth and development both physical and mental
* is one of the essential ingredients of rural life
- foundations of a happy life
- many benefits of laughter
- possible at any body size
- so natural that most people often pay attention to it only when they are sick
* is the foundation for inner peace, happiness and success
- of every person's quest to reach their full potential
- most important thing in life
* is vital to a child's ability to learn and succeed in life
- good life
* lies in giving up the quest for good health.
* means a perfect balance between the body, mind and soul
- eating well and getting enough exercise
* means keeping all bodily systems in proper balance
- everything in balance, and sickness means an excess of one of the humors
- more than just the absence of disease
- much more than a lack of illness, it means energy, including sexual energy
- the integration of body, mind and spirit
* product of self-discipline and control over ones body, mind and habits.
* promotes development
* represents a different molecular balance.
* requires active participation by individuals
- food
* seems to be an integral part of beauty.
* starts before a baby is born.
* starts with good nutrition - Good nutrition can protect against disease later in life
* supports lifelong learning, living and well being.
* type of prosperity.
* way of life in California. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Health insurance
* Taking out private health insurance is one way of planning for health expenses.
* can pay a persons medical expenses for sickness or accidents
- prevent children from ever needing the child welfare system
* covers a variety of costs
- hospitalization costs
* covers the basic costs of medical care
- costs of medical care due to illness
* critical employment benefit for many Milwaukee families
- safety net for children
* equals access to health care.
* exists to protect individuals from unexpected occurrences.
* familiar vehicle to cover hospital and medical bills.
* helps kids stay healthy
- to defray some of the cost for some persons
* is actually a system for arranging payments for medical services.
* is an absolute necessity to provide medical care in the case of illness or injury
- employee benefit that many young people take for granted
- ever-increasing expense as the baby boomer generation retires
- important fringe benefit for many workers
- ongoing problem for many missionaries and their families
- comparable to non-taxable income
- considered a basic benefit by most workers
* is important in getting needed care
- to cover unexpected, large medical bills
- inadequate for people with all kinds of chronic health problems
- linked to employment, and job security is history
- meant to cover medical care associated with an illness
- more complex than life and retirement insurance
- necessary in the United States because of the high cost of medical care
- nothing more than prepayment of future health services by a group of persons
- now the equivalent of auto insurance that covers fill-ups and oil changes
- often an issue as well when one parent decides to stay at home
* is one of the most confusing issues facing individuals today
- familiar types of insurance out there
- part of the social safety net in every other major democracy
- protection against the high cost of medical care
* is the benefit most used and valued by workers and their families, surveys show
- most common benefit offered by small businesses
- only protection against the cost of an unexpected emergency or illness
- ticket to getting access to health care
- very expensive in the United States
* major concern for the self-employed.
* means of protection from uncertain, future loss.
* mediates some pain associated with cost.
* most in today's expensive health world.
* pays for the majority of medical costs when a person is sick or injured.
* plays a significant role in our nation.
* provides children with a more positive future and a better chance of success
- financial support for medical-related costs
* voluntary benefit for employees
- provided by employers to their employees
Health research
* cornerstone of quality health care system of the future.
* is the foundation of public health and the treatment of disease
- key to preventing disease and disability
Health risk
* appear to be associated with contact with the water when the toxin is present.
* are common among workers who handle fertilizer and pesticides without protection
- higher in the tropics
* differ by a number of social factors, notably gender.
* go up as the proportion of body fat increases.
* related to fad diets take many different forms
- the use of drugs factor regardless of age
* vary depending upon the chemical form of mercury to which one is exposed.
Healthy love
* involves devotion and trust.
* is part of the human fabric.
Healthy newborn
* All healthy newborns belong to and belong with their mothers
- undergo one or two heel lances within the first few days for blood tests
* have lowest priority, regardless of the status of the mother. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Holistic health
* focuses on physical health, peace of mind and clarity of consciousness.
* is an alternative to conventional health care
- certainly popular today
- the view that health complex combination of mind, body and spirit
* relates to healing and wellness of the whole person - body, mind and spirit.
* theory that believes good mental health is essential to good physical health.
Human health
* can also be at risk.
* depends on the proper supply of food, air and water.
* is affected by the health of our physical environment and by our personal behavior
- another angle in assessing water quality
- considered to be part of the living system
- enhanced by safe foods, balanced diets, and proper nutrition
* major concern with imported fire ants.
Individual health
* critical element in an educational or work experience.
* is important and contributes to the health of community.
International health
* means two different , but related , things
- different, but related, things. * different, but related, things. It means care of people who travel from one country to another, and knowledge of diseases foreign to the traveler. It also means people from one country trying to improve health in another
Maternal health
* has a profound influence on infant development.
* is important to child survival. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Mental health
* Assess the client's mental health.
* Increase the proportion of adults with recognized depression who receive treatment.
* can impact the daily life and the future of a young person.
* causes as much suffering as physical conditions.
* completes the triad of well-being.
* congruence of ideal self and real self.
* continuum like physical health.
* critical component of children's learning and general health.
* depends on the thickness of the mind.
* enhances people's ability to participate in community life.
* has a stigma attached to it
- an impact on physical health, as well
- to do with everybody's everyday life
* impacts every area of our lives and relationships.
* includes things like handling stress, relating to other people, and making decisions.
* involves several concepts.
* is VERY different from the mainstream medical health care referrals, etc
- an area still surrounded by stigma and innuendo
* is an essential and indivisible part of health
- ingredient in the quality of life
* is an important concern for many men
- factor in having a healthy lifestyle
* is an integral part of every individual's health
- our overall health
- intergenerational matter
* is as important as physical health for a person's wellbeing
- to an individual s well-being as physical health
- much a part of well being as physical health
- critically important to overall health
- determined by many factors
- essential to the development and realization of every person s full potential
- fundamental to overall health and productivity
- how a person thinks, feels and acts in life
- indispensable to personal well-being and to leading a balanced and productive life
- just as important as physical health
* is key to feeling and looking good
- maintaining physical health and vice versa
- more than simply the 'absence of illness'
- one of the least developed areas in the Palestinian health system
- part of physical health and people being able to care for their needs
- thus as important in suicide prevention as it is in life quality preservation
- undoubtedly the key to happiness
- viewed as occurring along a continuum
- vital to successful aging
* key to understanding stress.
* means being able to communicate clearly with others.
* mental condition
* offers opportunity.
* presupposes that an individual is free to make choices.
* refers to a person's emotional and psychological well-being.
* relates to emotions, thoughts and behaviours.
* represents a microcosm of society as a whole, but in bureaucracy in particular.
* requires constant attention to good health habits.
* serious issue, with constant tension from noise and danger of accidents.
* valued and integral part of the health system.
+ Health, Aspects of health, Mental health:
Natural health
* Some natural health means to help with the pain of arthritis.
* emphasizes whole systems.<|endoftext|>### luck | wellbeing | health:
Optimal health
* balance among physical, emotional, social, sprititual, and intellectual health
- between physical, emotional, social, spiritual, and intellectual health
* calls for an alkaline pH balance in the body.
* depends on the ability of defense cells to recognize a good cell from a bad cell.
* is much more than the absence of sickness
- synonymous with optimal adaptation
- the achievement of health potential
* reduces absenteeism, disability, employee turnover, and direct health care costs.
* result of harmony between the body, mind and spirit. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Oral health
* barometer for general health problems in the elderly.
* can be a matter of life or death for diabetics, hemophiliacs, and others.
* does improve the quality of a person's life.
* is also an important component of healthy lifestyles.
* is an area of health care that has often been overlooked or trivialized
- integral part of general health
- essential to total health and well being throughout life
- important in the development of chewing and speaking skills
- integral to general health
- linked to the fluoride content of tea
- more than clean, white teeth, filled cavities and healthy gums
- necessary for overall health and well being
- the single largest health issue affecting our young people
- truly a subset of general health
* means being free of disease.
* means more than healthy teeth and the absence of disease
- sound teeth
* vital component of a child's overall health.<|endoftext|>### luck | wellbeing | health:
Physical health
* affects the spiritual and spiritual health affects the body.
* can affect people's emotional well-being and vice versa.
* involves a balance of good diet, proper rest, and purposeful work and movement.
* is an important basis of life
- confused with spiritual health
- important to sexual pleasure
- intertwined with spiritual health
- key to looking at life creatively and dynamically
- maintained by separation from disease germs
- necessary to full emotional, mental, and spiritual health
* is only a part of the health needs of our children
- single facet of an individual's well being
- one aspect of nudity
- the child s foundation for totaldevelopment
- thus a welcome by-product of spiritual health
* refers to the body's physiological condition.
* requires development in all areas.
Plant health
* major factor that dictates the amount of energy reflected.
* suffers because the roots are unable to absorb the nutrients they require.<|endoftext|>### luck | wellbeing | health:
Poor health
* Most poor health affects certain organs
* Some poor health is caused by emotional problems
* can affect libido, mating ability, and semen production and quality.
* causes some people to retire early.
* common consequence of poverty and poverty can be a consequence of poor health.
* constitutes one of the fundamental risks to household well being.
* exacerbates poverty and limits social and economic development.
* has complex causes.
* inhibits an individual's ability to work, reduces earning capacity and deepens poverty.
* is both a cause and consequence of employment problems
- the twin sister of poverty
* major cause of poverty in rural areas.
* prevents one from enjoying one's life, despite riches or wealth.
* reflection of the low status of women in many developing countries.
* seems to be a frequent cause of premature retirement. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Public health
* addresses the needs of the population as a whole.
* aims to maintain and improve the health of entire populations or population subgroups.
* approaches to the management of obesity.
* broad discipline with many overlapping interests.
* can do much to supplement primary care
- mean making sure that sewer and water systems reach everyone and function safely
* concerns itself with violence in society too.
* contributes significantly to longer, healthier lives.
* differs from health care in two major ways.
* encompasses a wide range of strategies affecting the health outcomes of a population.
* has roots in antiquity.
* helps to prevent outbreaks of epidemics and the spread of disease.
* includes more than just the absence of illness.
* involves the prevention aspect of health.
* is about ensuring healthy living and working environments
- all about prevention, and almost every act of violence is preventable
- also a concern surrounding raves
* is an applied field concerned with the health-related needs of groups of people
- important aspect of the lives of people everywhere
- broader and more inclusive than epidemiology
* is concerned with disease and early death as they occur in populations
- improving the health of populations
- enhanced by improved light and air
* is everyone's business
- responsibility
- in jeopardy in areas where arsenic poisoning is extensive
- involved in health protection and promotion from a population-based perspective
- most often about preventing or reducing the seriousness of illness and injury
- multidisciplinary
- one of the most rapidly expanding fields in the country today
- protected by allowing shellfish to be harvested only from waters of high quality
* is the application of health science in a community context
- first-line defense in maintaining and improving the public's health status
- focus when mosquitoes are vectors , or transmitters, of infectious disease
- hottest field in healthcare
- system that works to protect and promote the health of citizens
* makes it possible for the public to be healthy.
* means different things to different people
- many things to many people
* promotes early prenatal care for all pregnant women.
* serves as the connection between scientific research and delivery of health care.
* takes a population-based approach to addressing the root causes of health issues.
* way for everyone in a community to work together.
* works behind the scenes by preventing disease and optimizing health.
* works, through dozens of programs, to keep a community safe and healthy.
+ Health, Aspects of health, Public health:
* It is about the health of many people, or everybody, rather than one person. Public health stops instead of encouraging a disease through surveillance of cases. To prevent being sick, it is good to do healthy behaviors such as hand washing, vaccination programs and using condoms. When infectious diseases break out, washing hands may be especially important.
+ Public health, History of public health: Medicine
* Public health has roots in antiquity. From the beginning, human civilization recognized that polluted water and lack of proper waste disposal spread communicable diseases. Early religions attempted to regulate behavior related to health, from types of food eaten, to behaviors, such as drinking alcohol or sexual relations. Governments placed responsibility on leaders to develop public health policies and programs in order to gain some understanding of the causes of disease, ensure social stability prosperity, and maintain order. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | health:
Reproductive health
* Most reproductive health depends on factors
- many factors
- such factors
* Most reproductive health has characteristics
- similar characteristics
* is the health of conjugal pairs who are able to have children.
* means the health of the mother, the child, and the couple.
* touches upon the most basic norms, values, and principles of society.
Social health
* is more than just the absence of social problems.
* means to be happy and make others happy too.
Soil health
* has a significant link with water quality and vegetation health and condition.
* is central to organic farming
- the key to sustainability<|endoftext|>### luck | wellbeing | health:
Spiritual health
* indicates healthy principles of life.
* involves the condition of the spirit.
* is as important for pastors as it is for congregations.
* is central to well being and influences a person's entire being
- well-being and influences a person's entire being
- flexible, changing constantly, and manifests itself in behaviors and attitudes
- fundamental to well-being and affects a person's entire being
- linked to stewardship practice
- maintained by separation from germs of false doctrine
* is the first step towards physical and mental well-being
- most difficult to understand and maintain
* refers to religious training, values and character issues.
Total health
* depends on the delivery of clean, oxygenated blood to the cells.
* requires that all body systems be balanced.
Vibrant health
* is about truly empowering oneself.
* starts from a clean bowel and from a clean human body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing:
Wellness
* addresses all dimensions of life.
* allows pharmacists to unite patient care with good business practice.
* balance of one's physical, physiological and mental well-being.
* begins with facing our sin and grieving over our sins.
* captures the combination of activity and fitness and a healthy lifestyle.
* central component of human growth and development.
* comes through education.
* continuous process of purposeful, enjoyable and healthy living.
* contributes to the prevention of disease and disability.
* covers physical health, mental stability, spiritual understanding, and a healthy diet.
* critical issue in our society.
* decision one makes to move toward optimal health.
* does include achieving and maintaining a healthy weight when combined with exercise.
* dynamic and ongoing process
- process that involves taking responsibility for one's quality of life
* encompasses many aspects of our lives
- such broad categories as fitness, nutrition and stress
* facilitates learning and enhances self-care behavior.
* general condition of feeling fit, well-balanced and complete.
* harmony of mind, body and spirit.
* helps provide the conscious growth in various areas of life.
* holistic concept.
* includes much more than just physical health.
* internally results in wellness externally.
* involves choices about our lives and our priorities that determine our lifestyles
- close attention to the body, mind, and spirit
* is about taking responsibility, being accountable and living consciously
- acceptance of oneself
- achieved by practicing good health habits and eliminating harmful ones
- all about learning, doing, growing and living
* is also a balanced diet - unlike human baby food
- about striving to achieving inner strength, balance, inner peace and happiness
- dependent on the proper movement of body fluids
- determined by the state of our physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual health
- equated with optimal system stability resulting from a normal line of defense
- examined in relation to the individual, lifestyle, society, and the environment
- holistic in nature and emphasizes personal responsibility
- integral to personal and professional life
- more about balance in one's life
* is more than being free of disease
- getting rest, exercise, and nutrition
- just an exercise regimen or a nutrition program
- the absence of illness
- much more than just taking cholesterol and blood pressure measurements
* is much more than simply avoiding diseases
- the absence of sickness
- multi-dimensional and involves a person's entire lifestyle
- multidimensional
- primarily a matter of balance
- prosperity
- subjective and distinctively individual
- very dependent on whole body treatment
* journey toward optimal health of mind, body and spirit.
* life long, life style growth process.
* life-long process.
* living is an art that can be learned.
* mind-body journey.
* mindset characterized by a strong sense of personal responsibility.
* multi-dimensional term that includes many aspects of a person's life.
* multidimensional or holistic approach to living.
* part of life.
* philosophy of living which advocates the development of the total individual.
* positive and enjoyable approach to life that encourages a high level of well-being.
* proactive approach to maintaining and improving one's health.
* promotes healthier employees.
* refers to condition of physical and mental health.
* resources Features an osteopathic approach to harmonious functioning of body systems.
* state of being healthy, characterized by positive emotion, thought, and action
- health more positive than the mere absence of disease
- physical, mental, and spiritual health
* takes years to measure results.
* term that means 'total health'
- used to cover a lot of territory
* way of life designed to enjoy the highest level of health and well-being
- in Sun Valley
- life, a process, an integration of body, mind, and spirit
* win-win situation for employees and the company. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### luck | wellbeing | wellness:
Emotional wellness
* deals with how a person copes with feelings.
* includes the degree to which one feels positive about oneself and life.
* relates to the feeling person.
Intellectual wellness
* incorporates exercise for the mind.
* involves life-long learning.
* is the possession of healthy attitudes and thought processes.
Physical wellness
* includes things such as cardiovascular endurance, and body composition.
* is important for academic performance and overall well-being.
* is, perhaps, what most people think of when they think of wellness.
Social wellness
* involves one s relationships with others, such as family, friends and neighbors
- the students interactions with society as a whole
* is the process of creating and maintaining healthy relationships.
Spiritual wellness
* deals with the manner in which one makes sense of life and it's meaning.
* focuses on personal spiritual beliefs and values.
True wellness
* addresses the body, mind and spirit.
* is created by establishing a state of balance and harmony within.
* starts with an optimally functioning nervous system.
Luggage
* includes handles
- sections
- straps
* is located in airplanes
- bus stops
- closets
- luggage racks
- train stations
- trunks
* is used for carryings
- packing
- travelling
* usually contains a wide variety of object shapes, sizes and composition.
### luggage:
Imperial
* are automobiles
- baggage
- beard
- the smallest value of coin, made of a copper alloy
* is luggage<|endoftext|>Lumber
* Most lumber contains chemicals.
* building material
* comes in a variety of lengths, widths, shapes, and sizes
- sizes and colors
* commodity, therefore prices fluctuate with the market.
* drying is one of the critical steps in making lumber usable for fine furniture.
* fast-growing industry in Alexandria because of the many nearby forests.
* has defects.
* includes sections.
* is construction materials
- produced from logs in sawmills
- superior to other fuels and materials because it can be grown
* is the country's main export
- free existence of things
- major forest product, and some pulpwood is harvested
- timber or logs milled into building materials
* is used for both re-populating areas of low density and also building and repairing ships
- crating, bridge timbers, railroad ties, flooring and rough construction
- various purposes, but the chief use is as an ornamental
- in the construction of ships, buildings and some weapons
- woodwork
* light yellow color.
* quick and easy way for poor countries to make money.
* shrinks after being dried and treated.
### lumber:
Composite lumber
* is low-maintenance, and resists rot, insects and UV rays.
* mix of wood and plastic.
Dimensional lumber
* comes in a wide variety of sizes.
* varies in thickness by a half inch or more throughout a typical floor.
Plank
* Some planks use a tongue and groove design to hide the nails.
* are part of platforms
- policy
* come in several widths, thicknesses, and colors.
* is lumber
Rough lumber
* allows bats to cling more easily.
* is the raw material for furniture making.
+ Lumber: Wood
* Lumber is supplied either rough or finished. Rough lumber is the raw material for furniture making. It is available in many species, usually hardwoods.
Toothpick
* also work well for applying small amounts of glue.
* are good for adding extra features like ears or noses.
* are located in boxs
- grocery stores
- mouths
- made of plastic
- picks
- strips
- used for chewing
* come round and flat, narrow and thick.
* work well for painting on eyes and spots. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### lump:
Breast lump
* All breast lumps are cancerous.
* Most breast lumps are noncancerous tumors such as fibroadenomas or cysts
- are, in fact, benign
* Some breast lumps can be cancerous.
* are a problem for which women commonly consult family physicians
- extremely susceptible to emotional disturbance
- very common in women
* can occur in women of any age, but are more common in middle age.
* occur in both men and women.
Fibrocystic lump
* can assume different degrees of texture
- be tender to the touch and move freely
* tend to disappear after menopause.
Small lump
* are formed over time under the skin at the regions of the joints
- noticed in the skin
* show up on patients with breast cancer.
Lunchtime
* are mealtime
- usually the busiest time of day
* is mealtime
### lungs:
Right lung
* Most right lungs consist of lobes
- have lobes
* are lungs.
* has also a transverse fissure
- three lobes, left lung has two lobes
* is larger than the left lung.<|endoftext|>### lustrous silver-yellow metal:
Neodymium
* also acts as an anticoagulant , especially when given intravenously.
* are chemical elements
- metallic elements
* combines with oxygen to form a yellowish coating.
* comes in many grades.
* goes into mobile phone batteries and superconducting devices.
* is considered to be moderately toxic
* is one of several metals in an alloy commonly used in cigarette lighter flints
- the most abundant of the rare earth elements
- present in the minerals monazite and bastnasite
- reactive to air and moisture
- regarded as moderately hazardous
- so strong that it was possible to make a magnet with twice the strength
- soluble in liquid magnesium
- somewhat reactive
* is used in astronomical spectrometers
- coloring glasses
* is used in making lasers
- purple glass
- the fabrication of artificial ruby for laser applications
- to make specialized goggles for glass blowers
* lustrous silver-yellow metal.
* occurs with other rare earth elements in monazite, bastnasite, and allanite.
* quickly tarnishes in air, forming an oxide that spills off and exposes metal to oxidation.
* shows typical properties of an active metal.
* soft, bright, silvery white metal
- malleable metal
* yellowish metallic metal used in coloring glass, salts and can be used in lasers.
### lustrous silvery metal:
Pure thorium
* is soft, very ductile, and can be cold-rolled, swaged, and drawn
- be swaged, drawn and cold-rolled
- capable of being drawn, swaged, and cold-rolled
- very ductile and, as normal for metals, can be cold-rolled , swaged , and drawn
* lustrous silvery metal.<|endoftext|>### lymphoid tissue:
Adenoid
* also help to fight infections.
* are a mass of lymphoid tissue that sit behind the nose
- almost never a factor in adults
- clumps of cells that fight infections
- like tonsils, sitting behind the nose above the soft palate
* are lymph tissues at the back of the nasal passage above the tonsils
- found at the back of the nasal passage above the tonsils
- similar to the tonsils
- temporary, start with our first year of life , usually end by the eighth
- tonsil-like glands located at the back of the nose
* can become infected and swollen
- physically plug the tube or transmit infection through it
* cause it sometimes, especially in children.
* is lymphoid tissue
* shrink so much that they are almost nonexistent in adulthood.
* tend to shrink during the teenage years, and are usually gone by age eighteen.
* usually fade away by age seven.
### lymphoid tissue | adenoid:
Enlarged adenoid
* can lead to excessive mouth breathing because of obstruction of the nose.
* can, because of their size, interfere with the eustachian tube opening. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### lymphoid tissue | adenoid:
Large adenoid
* can cause nasal obstruction and be associated with glue ear
- contribute to ear infections
- impair nose breathing and require a child to breathe through the mouth
- lead to blockage of sinus drainage and sinus disease
- press on the Eustachian tubes interfering with their proper function
* causes nasal block, snoring and sometimes otitis media witheffusion.
Lien
* are items such as property taxes, mortgage loans, and judgments
- rights in property to secure the payment of a debt
- special encumbrances which make the property security for the debt
* is lymphoid tissue
### lymphoid tissue | lien:
Commercial lien
* are commercial paper and negotiable instruments.
* imply a debt in the absence of any lawful money.
Lymph gland
* Most lymph glands are part of bodies.
* are an important part of the body's defence mechanism against infection
* become swollen and painful.<|endoftext|>### lymphoid tissue:
Lymph node
* All lymph nodes become visible with lymphadenopathy.
* Most lymph node swelling reaction to ongoing infection
- nodes are part of bodies
* are body parts
- lymphatic tissue
- circulatory systems
- solid objects
* help remove fluid that is outside blood vessels.
* lie deep to the superior aspect of the muscle.
* make and store infection fighting cells
- infection-fighting cells
* play a major role in the spread of cancer.
* play an important part in fighting infections
- the body's defense against infections
* produce lymphocytes, monocytes, and plasma cells.
### lymphoid tissue | lymph node:
Bubo
* frog-dog with bulging black eyes and a protruding lower jaw filled with sharp teeth.
* means horned owl.<|endoftext|>Lysine
* Most lysine derives from proteins.
* Most lysine has effects
- little effects
* appears to be nontoxic
- help the body absorb and conserve calcium
* helps maintain proper nitrogen balance in the body.
* improves calcium assimilation.
* inhibits the virus' ability to replicate itself.
* is amino acid.
* is available in capsules and tablets to prevent a recurrence of herpes
- health food stores
- most health food stores
- chemical compounds
- commonly the most limiting amino acid
- essential for energy production in the body
- now available in pill, capsule, topical ointment, and liquid oral supplement form
* lowers high serum triglyceride levels.
* plays an important role in the human body.
* promotes the production of antibodies, hormones and enzymes.
### lysis:
Autolysis
* allows an organism to eliminate worn-out cells.
* are lysis.
* is followed by putrefaction , the breakdown of organic matter by bacteria
* is the most natural method of debridement
- release of cellular enzymes that initiate breakdown of tissues and cells
* takes place when the source of the hydrolytic enzymes is the dying cell's own lysosomes.
* usually starts in the pancreas.
Haemolysis
* can occur as an idiosyncratic thing to just about any drug - but is VERY rare.
* is lysis
* seems to be the only relevant adverse effect of glycerol treatment.<|endoftext|>### lysis:
Hemolysis
* alone causes the abrupt sigmoidal increase of the collimated transmittance with time.
* also occurs due to repeat deformations of the red cell.
* are illnesses
* can adversely effect many laboratory results
- cause interference for certain assays
- falsely elevate total protein
* ceases when the drug is withdrawn.
* does lower the growth hormone result.
* increases the probability of false positive results.
* is caused by traumatizing the thin membraned red cells
- distinct from hemorrhage
- indicated by increased serum bilirubin and high blood reticulocyte numbers
- likely to result in elevated serum bilirubin levels
- prevented, if cell swelling is preceded by eryptosis
* is the destruction of red blood cells | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### lysis:
Osteolysis
* can ultimately result in implant failure and revision surgery.
* develops in the distal and middle phalanges, with a characteristic tapering effect.
- the major cause of implant failure
### machines:
Virtual machine
* are machines.
* date back a long time.
* is used to offer common architecture on any machine.
### mackerels:
Spanish mackerel
* are abundant and range up to five pounds
- in the smaller sizes also
- mackerels
- medium sized pelagic fish
- part of spanish mackerels
* have a fairly light color and a milder flavor.
### mackerels | spanish mackerel:
King mackerel
* are a highly sought after gamefish
* is the seasons offshore catch.
* prefer to consume fish but also have been known to eat shrimp and squid.
### madam:
Madame
* are dames.
* includes arms
- cell membranes
- cells
- cytoplasm
- heads
- legs
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
- woman's bodies | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Magazine
* are a major outlet for professional photographers to sell and show their work
- periodical, as are journals and newspapers
- type of periodical
- books
- commercial serial publications intended for any of a wide variety of readers
- conceptual work
* are general interest periodicals
- or popular periodicals
- glossy publications available at newsstands
* are located in airports
- beds
- bookstores
- dentists
- doctors
- libraries
- mailboxs
- markets
- racks
- shops
- tables
- train stations
- materials that can be recycled using drop-off sites
- monthly publications
- part of cameras
- pornographic when women are pictured as sex objects to be abused
- press
- products
- the single largest component of the North American commercial printing industry
- used for reading
* contain advertisements
- letters
* cover environmental issues
* have articles
- pages
- pictures
* highlight issues.
* include stories.
* includes artwork
- cartoons
- chapters
- feature articles
- items
- magazine articles
- page numbers
- paragraphs
- text
- word order
* magazine for smokers who want to stop smoking.
* offer news.
* often portray women as ultra thin, and men as overly muscular.
* report sales.
* sell copies.
* support causes.
* tell women how to be beautiful, or men how to be successful in business.
* use information in the form of articles to sell advertising.
+ Magazine (firearms)
* Most magazines use a spring and follower inside to push the ammunition into the gun. Magazines may be made out of metal or plastic. Metal magazines are more common, but some plastic magazines can be partly see-through so that the user can see how much ammo is left inside.
+ Sniper, Sniping, Sniper rifles: Military :: Firearms
* A magazine is used on semi automatic rifles and most bolt action rifles. Magazines hold more shots in the gun and make it much faster to ready the next shot. With many rifles, the shooter can carry more full magazines to put into the gun when the magazine that is in the gun is empty.
* A 'magazine' is a type of book people read. Magazines are not like regular books. This is because a new version of the magazine is printed many times each year. Magazines are a type of periodical. They are called periodicals because new versions of them keep being printed. Magazines are printed on paper. People usually need to subscribe to them. An example of a magazine is 'Time'. There are magazines printed about many things.
* A 'magazine' is a type of book people read. Magazines are not like regular books. This is because a new version of the magazine is printed many times each year. Magazines are a type of periodical. They are called periodicals because new versions of them keep being printed. Magazines are printed on paper. People usually need to subscribe to them. An example of a magazine is 'Time'. There are magazines printed about many things. Magazines are similar to newspapers, but usually new versions take longer to make, they cost more money, and they are in color on every page. Also, sometimes magazines come with little gifts to reward the readers who buy it. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magazine:
Comic book
* Many comic books are about superheroes , but many others are about other things
- superheroes, but many others are about other things.
* They have small pictures and words to tell a story. Comics were started in the 1900s. Some famous examples are Spider-Man and Batman. Some comic companies are Marvel Comics and DC Comics. Many comic books are about superheroes, but many others are about other things. Very often, characters in books, video games, movies and television appear in comics, and sometimes comic book characters are used in movies, TV shows or video games.
* There are many kinds of comics. Comic strips are short comics which are often found in newspapers. Comic books are thin comics magazines. Graphic novels are books of comics. In Japan, comics are very popular, and Japanese comics are popular around the world. The Japanese word for comics is manga, and people use this word for Japanese comics in English and other languages
* are a story telling medium.
* are an art form in themselves
- important medium
* are the bastard children of pop culture
- great American counterculture
* move beyond superheroes to the world of literature.
Fashion magazine
* Fashion Magazines Enter the world of fashion and be updated with all the current trends of fashion.
* represent women in a certain way in photographs.
Popular magazine
* are similar to newspapers.
* have short articles that are written to inform or entertain the general public
- to inform the general public
Trade magazine
* are magazines
- publications of general public interest
* exist by selling advertising space.
* report sales.
Magnesium compound
* are less strong than sodium bicarbonate but act quickly.
* lead to diarrhea, and sodium bicarbonate can result in gas and bloating.
Magnetic object
* All magnetic objects have field lines and poles.
* Most magnetic objects are composed of many small fields called domains.
* are made up of iron and some other metals.
* exert a force on other magnetic objects and act in a particular direction.
Magnitude
* Most magnitudes are essentially quantities
- correspond to density
* Some magnitudes correspond to energy
- describe the level of high frequency energy
- reflect light
* are astronomers measures for brightness
- brackets
- importance
- properties
* can be negative for very bright objects.
* change over years.
- flux density
* depend on differences.
### magnitude:
Amount
* Some amounts attract honey bees
- come from carbohydrates
- reflect light
* are magnitudes.
* can have damage effects
- devastate effects
- harmful effects
* change over time.
* determines the intensity of the sharpening that is done to the edges in the image.
* increase in the winter when respiration exceeds photosynthesis.
* is an assets
* reaped is proportionate to amount sown.
### magnitude | amount:
Absolute value
* are norms.
* depend upon the existence of absolute truth.
* is an amount
- symbolized by vertical lines surrounding the value, such as a
* is the distance a number is from zero on a number line
- that point is from the origin
* tells how far from zero a number is.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount:
Abundance
* Most abundances affect survival
- decrease over time
- increase over time
* Most abundances promote growth
- population growth
* Most abundances vary over grow seasons
* Some abundances occur during time.
* are about the same as seen in the sun
- expressed as percentages of dryland pollen
- ratios
- situations
* can be financial, emotional, spiritual, and physical.
* damage tissue.
* enhance ability.
* impact survival.
* is in units of the number of encounters per unit of search time
- unity
* varies in accord with different functions of different cell types and tissues. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | abundance:
Bounty
* Bounties are generosity
- literally subsides from Australian taxpayers to foreign consumers
* Bounties are rewards offered for fugitive information
- pieces of information
- ships
* is an abundance
Excess
* are harmlessly urinated out of the body.
* can contribute to ecosystem degradation, whereas deficiencies can hinder plant growth.
* has effects
- negative effects
* is superabundance
* leads to liver problems
* stored in the liver can cause jaundice and liver damage.
* usually occur when multiple combinations of micronutrients are applied.
### magnitude | amount | abundance | excess:
Androgen excess
* can lead to problems as benign as acne or as serious as endometrial cancer
- produce both hair loss and hirutism
* represents the most common cause of hirsutism.
Excess demand
* is seen as being a major cause of inflation
- the amount demanded minus the amount supplied
* situation in which quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied.
* tends to induce competition among the buyers that forces prices up.
Excess dopamine
* has a suppressing effect on the reproductive hormone, prolactin.
* is known to be a feature of schizophrenia.
* suppresses the production of the reproductive hormone prolactin.
Glutamate excess
* is neurotoxic because it over stimulates specific neuronal metabolic functions.
* occurs when it isn t removed after nerve cells signal to one another.
Profusion
* ProFusion meta-search engine that submits a query to as many as nine search engines.
* has good resistance to most severe pests of crabapple.
### magnitude | amount | abundance | richness:
Overgrowth
* are profusion.
* is richness
### magnitude | amount | abundance | richness | overgrowth:
Candida overgrowth
* can be difficult for a physician to diagnosis
- cause severe constipation
- further contribute to gluten sensitivity
* is stimulated by feeding the yeast or fungus
- the result of damaged intestinal flora, mainly in the colon
* starts in the gut and can quickly run rampant throughout the entire body.
### magnitude | amount | abundance | surplus:
Consumer surplus
* is A the gains from exchange.
* is the area above equilibrium price and below the demand curve
- under the demand curve and above the price
- net gain for consumers from consumption
- used frequently by economists in policy studies
* measures the buyer's gain from a trade
- difference between quantity supplied and quantity demanded
* represents the dollar value gained by buyers due to a market's existence.
Cash advance
* are advances
- an important feature of credit cards
* is an amount
Critical mass
* is an amount
- expression which science applies to nuclear reactions
- mass
* is the amount of radioactive material necessary to sustain a chain reaction
- key issue in the semiconductor equipment industry
* refers most often to the number of people required to plan and implement a project.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount:
Deficit
* always increase when the economy goes into a recession.
* are a tax on our children and a drain on capital
- an aspect of public life that can be good or bad, depending on the circumstances
- caused by gravity
- common in prosperous times
- lack
- liabilities
- promises to pay for current spending with future tax revenues
- scores
- shortages
- when adults tell the government what they want and their kids pay for it
* contribute to poor hoof quality
* limit ability
- plant growth
### magnitude | amount | deficit:
Budget deficit
* are deficits.
* can be harmful to the economy.
* increase demand for loanable funds and hence lead to higher interest rates.
* raise total lifetime consumption by shifting taxes to subsequent generations.
Government deficit
* are an economic fact of life
- bad since they always result in inflation
* stimulate private investment. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | deficit:
Memory deficit
* continue to worsen as the disease progresses.
* point to involvement of the hippocampal formation.
Sensory deficit
* consist of numbness of the medial thigh and the anteromedial calf.
* range from loss of primary sensations to more complex loss of perception.
* refer to the problems caused by blindness, low vision and deafness.
Trade deficit
* are deficits
- the mirror image of capital surpluses
* eliminate jobs.
Water deficit
* induces abscisic acid accumulation in endosperm of maize viviparous mutants.
* limit responses to fertilizers even on the most nutrient-deficient sites.
Dosage
* is an amount
* is concentration integrated over a specific period of exposure
- time period of exposure
- the amount of chemical per unit of body weight
* is, of course, a function of both concentration and time of exposure.
### magnitude | amount | dosage:
Antibiotic dosage
* are for patients with normal renal function.
* vary according to the patients ability to tolerate a particular regimen.
Dosage compensation
* equalizes X chromosome expression in the two sexes.
* is less effective in birds than in mammals.
Economic value
* are values.
* comes from knowledge.
- inherently individualistic
- one of many possible ways to define and measure value
* multi-dimensional concept with several different measures.
* relative concept.
Excessive amount
* can interfere with calcium absorption
- lead to heart attack and stroke
* make water unfit to drink or use in industrial processes.
Free fall
- drops
- motion with no acceleration other than that provided by gravity
* means that no air resistance is present or considered.
* occurs whenever an object is acted upon by gravity alone.
* state that occurs while in orbit around a planet.
* weightless state.
### magnitude | amount | fundamental measure:
Period of time
* Periods of time form the chief divisions in the study of history.
* fundamental measure
### magnitude | amount | gain:
Dot gain
* critical variable in halftone reproduction.
* is the amount that an ink dot spreads out - after it hits the substrate.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | gain | financial gain:
Capital gain
* affect gross income only in the amount of the net gain on each transaction.
* are a part of taxable income
- gains taxed at special lower tax rates
- one of the primary rewards for economic risk-taking
* are profits and anything that punishes profits punishes growth
- from selling property such as stocks, bonds and real estate
- subject to tax in the same manner as any other forms of income
* are the name of the game for most investors
- profits earned from the sale of assets like stocks and real estate
* are the profits from the sale of investments like stocks and bonds
- of stock, land and other capital assets
- made from selling capital
* is calculated on the gain made when the property is sold
- derived from trading in the market and can also be reinvested
- financial gain
* is the difference between the amount paid at purchase and the selling price
- net difference between the sale price and the cost of a property
- profit from selling at a higher price than originally paid for
- usually payable when the property is sold or inherited
* offset capital losses dollar for dollar.
Winning
* are financial gain
- success
* cause guilt. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | gain:
Weight gain
* Most weight gain is due to water retention
- lean body mass
* Some weight gain is normal with increasing age, of course.
* Weight Gain Gaining weight natural consequence of regular binge eating.
* are slow in smaller animals and increase with size.
* can also occur due to water retention
- be a problem for some smokers who are quitting
- cause image problems, lowered self-esteem and feelings of hopelessness
- lead to obesity
- occur for reasons other than an underlying endocrine disorder
- result from a depression
- weaken pelvic muscle tone
* caused by the body's retention of sodium and water is common.
* causes weight loss Artificial ballast fools mice into eating less and slimming down.
* comes from overfeeding and lack of exercise.
* common concern for women using hormonal contraception
- fear of taking birth control pills
- problem that results from eating a high amount of fattening foods
- result of depression
- side effect among breast cancer patients receiving adjuvant chemotherapy
* concern, particularly in women.
* consequence of over eating and inadequate exercise.
* does occur, including swelling due to fluid accumulation.
* following smoking cessation can be due to several factors.
* frequent problem for smokers who are quitting.
* happens during the middle years.
* has a small positive effect except Supplemental Whites
- to be related to energy intake and expenditure
* impacts morbidity and mortality in institutionalized older persons.
* indicates leakage and absorption of moisture.
* is also a common symptom
- significant issue for many children with chromosomal variations
* is an important component in the economic efficiency of a commercial pig operation
- indicator of retained fluid - a danger sign
- another common concern during pregnancy
- associated with initiation of an intensive insulin regimen
- caused by a common problem throughout the holidays, otherwise known as overeating
- coincident with greater caloric intakes
* is common after the medicine is stopped
- as men grow older
- because water retention and bloating are side effects
- due to bloating which is the result of retention of sodium, salt and water
- expressed as percent of initial weight
- less likely with increased activity
- mostly fat
- normal during pregnancy
- often the first sign that insulin levels are rising
* is one common side effect of fighting the body's natural state
- commonly seen with a number of the antidepressants prescribed currently
* is one of the most highly heritable performance traits in beef cattle
- surest indicators of growth
- only a small indication of nutrition
- possible with any oral contraceptive
- primarily in buttocks and thighs
* is related directly to dietary fat consumed
- to survival
* is the biggest issue with all of our children
- most commonly reported creatine side effect
- usually minimal despite the high fat content of the diet
- very important with a multiple pregnancy
* is, of course, another indication of getting enough to eat.
* much greater risk factor, especially if the weight gain occurs after menopause.
* normal and healthy part of pregnancy
- part of growing up
* occurs as fluids are retained and the child becomes weak and lethargic
- very easily because lymphatic types have a very low metabolic rate
* occurs when animals consume more calories than they use
- caloric intake is greater than output, regardless of food type
- with sulfonylureas, insulin, and thiazolidinediones
* precedes growth spurts.
* puts diabetics at risk of health problems and reduces the effectiveness of insulin.
* real problem for most psychiatric patients.
* reported side effect of birth-control pills.
* significant symptom of several endocrine diseases.
* varies from person to person.
Goose egg
* can be particularly difficult to hatch.
* is an amount | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount:
Increase
* abounds in souls and wealth.
* abundance in all areas of life.
* appetite in anorexic animals.
* are amounts
- processes
* butyrate, lactic acid, acetate and propionate acids levels.
* fluids to assist in the excretion of uric acid.
* insulin uptake from blood into target cells.
- in cell number rather than cell size
* libido in both men and women.
* protease enzyme activity in neutrophiles.
* saliva flow and helps to remove blockages in all parts of the body.
* soil fertility by fixing nitrogen
- nutrient content and water retention in both clay and sandy soils
* tissue oxygen, thus reversing the hypoxic environment and restoring tissue oxygenation.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | increase:
Accretion
* also occurs inside galaxies, forming stars.
* causes the beach to become wider.
* continues until the particles get to the size of boulders or small asteroids.
* disks around neutron stars and black holes can be hot enough to radiate X-rays.
* is addition
- an increase
- deduced to be the dominant process, which acts to deplete the condensate to near zero
- growth by external addition
- inheritances
* is the addition of new knowledge to existing memory
- slow addition to land by deposition of water-borne sediment
- sticking together of solid particles to produce a larger particle
- washing of sand, silt or soil so as to form firm ground, called alluvion
* occurs when a black hole bites off more than it can chew.
* often heats gas to X-ray emitting temperatures.
* slowly continues today as asteroids and comets impact the planets of the solar system.
* still occurs today, but at a much, much slower rate than in the distant past.
Accrual
* are accumulative from year to year.
* is an increase
Augmentation
* allows agents to leap great distances and heights undamaged.
* are increases
- statements
* is the increase of native agents for control of native or exotic pests
- recharge of groundwater by the user
* method of increasing the population of a natural enemy.
* process by which humans replenish the groundwater they have used.
* replaces the water extracted by irrigation wells.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | increase | augmentation:
Breast augmentation
* can increase one's bustline by one or more bra cup sizes.
* cosmetic procedure that alters the size and shape of a woman's breasts.
* is another procedure associated with risks
- one of the most popular of all cosmetic procedures
- performed to enlarge the breast size
* is the second most common cosmetic procedure
- popular of all cosmetic surgeries
- usually an outpatient procedure
* permanent enlargement.
* procedure to make the breasts larger, fuller and more youthful looking.
* using implants enlarges the breasts by one or more cup sizes.
Elaboration
- development
* is the ability to make an idea better or clearer by building upon it
- deliberate act of expanding on an idea to process it more thoroughly
- process of converting a current experience into a specific memory
* measure expanding on a single idea to create others.
* refers to the amount of cognitive processing related to the type of route.
Intensification
* chemical method of increasing the density of the photographic image.
* is an increase
* relatively new concept in the struggle to deal with drug-resistant virus.
Natural increase
* is the number of births minus the number of deaths.
* refers to the balance of births over deaths.
* surplus of births over deaths in a given period.
Population increase
* are a major concern for a number of Asian nations.
* is merely the difference between births and deaths.
* is, simply put, a function of the discrepancy between births and deaths.
* major force driving annual retail sales increases.
* provide the basis for slow growth.
* requires an increase in food supply. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount:
Large amount
* can also cause children's teeth to become brown and mottled.
* can cause appetite loss, nausea, and headache
- gastrointestinal upset, vomiting, abdominal pain
- increased blood pressure, nerve damage or cardiovascular disease
- produce goitre and various forms of thyroid disease
* stimulate central nervous system.
Large number
* are bred in captivity, particularly in Australia
- difficult to factor, while they are relatively easy to divide
- found in the blood only in early infections
- inflationary
- the main focus in math
* can cause intestinal blockages, bloody diarrhea and even premature death
- obstruction of the small intestine
* compete for food and cause intestinal discomfort.
* congregate on the undersides of leaves, twigs, and stems.
* is an amount
Larger amount
* Much larger amounts are used, for example, to make metal alloys.
* can be toxic, especially over a prolonged time
- cause above normal heart rythems, nervous system malfunctions, and even death
- increase the risk of kidney stones
- induce vomiting
* produce depressant effects on the brain.
### magnitude | amount | little:
Little one
* grow quickly and often surprise their parents with their mobility.
* love to hear parents sing about how precious and loved they are.
Magnetization
* function of the temperature and neutron density of the pulsar interior.
- measures
- natural processes
- physical properties
* process where the magnetic domains are being aligned.
* transforms simple water into a miraculous liquid.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount:
Metric
* are a statistical indicator of the likelihood of an error occurring in a portion of code
- any method used in measurement
- syllables, monosyllabic words, stresses and length that create a pattern in the verse
* are the measures that indicate if a strategy or action has been completed successfully
- sizes of various elements on the display
* consist of the number of tests successfully run.
* establish objective measures by which true progress can be determined.
* provide a direct link between quality management and business performance
- the means for measuring process improvements
* refer to the comparable companies that are competitors within the same sector.
### magnitude | amount | metric | bandwidth:
Digital bandwidth
* enables signal to be condensed as a five to one ratio.
* is measured in bps
- now the most important economic commodity in the United States
- the hydrogen bomb
High bandwidth
* allows large blocks of data to be transferred efficiently between processors.
* is critical to the development of digital knowledge systems.
Network bandwidth
* is one of the major factors that impacts the cost of a video service.
* major factor impacting the cost of a multimedia service.
* shared resource.
Dal
* Some dals can be unilateral, where they only hear from one ear.
* also like to swim, and make good running partners as well, especially for distance runners.
* are clowns and can be exasperating, especially in puppyhood
- usually good swimmers who love the water
* can also be very vocal.
* love interaction with humans, frequently displaying their affection for one and all.
Operational metric
* deal directly with dynamic properties of business processes.
* measure how the process is performing through time.
Software metric
* is one way of measuring the volume and complexity of an application.
* measure static attributes based on abstractions of programs.
Morsel
* are taste.
* is an amount | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount:
Number
* All numbers corresponding to a fractional part of the whole circle belong to one cycle or another.
* All numbers have a factor of one since one multiplied by any number equals that number
- two digits to the right of the decimal point
- refer to the amount of bits
- represent the percentage of a given element by mass
- seem to be composed of certain other numbers called primes
* Any number divided by itself equals one , except if that number is zero.
* Any number is either a part or parts of any number, the less of the greater
- prime or is measured by some prime number
- multiplied by zero equals zero
* Every number comes before infinity
- has a square and a square root
- is equal to itself
* Learn to count in Hebrew.
* Most numbers are divided by numbers
- depend on environmental conditions
- have a unit
- seem to refer to the number of soldiers a lord or officer commanded
- start out as a binary numbers or a number in base two
* Multiplying complex numbers is the same as multiplying polynomials.
* Some numbers are odd, but all odd things are numbers
- contribute to male mate success
- correspond to energy levels
- reflect different perceptions of the state of things in America
- resonate through the human psyche and have meanings beyond their quantitative value
* Use words to express numbers smaller than ten or at the beginning of a sentence.
* Write numbers from zero to nine as words.
* actually have names well beyond trillions.
* also have a meaning in the structure of the sound material
- significant meanings to gang members
* apply to the absolute, but musical notes change from moment to moment.
* are a tool for modeling
- transcended characteristic of reality
- very important part of our everyday lives
- abstract objects
* are also important when it comes to open heart surgeries
- in the phonetic alphabet
- objects that can be considered in sets
* are always a part of divination
- in hexadecimal
- amounts
- an important part of daily lives
- average numbers of animals on each farm
* are both a universal language and a means of quantifying relationships
- the nails and the rails which hold together the train tracks of karma
- by definition themselves a language, and therefore computers are communicators
- companies
- decimals
- different from character strings in values
- distinct from one another
- equal to their numerical value
- especially interesting in that an integer rational and a real complex
- expressions, whose value or meaning is the number itself
- fundamental to the study of mathematics and science
- fundamentally devoid of self-existent inherent 'Platonic' existence
- important because they lend credence to preconceived notions
* are important in aviculture
- influencing decisions
* are important to any institution
- having a working knowledge of the Bible
- our everyday life
- in kilobytes
- indicators of where people want to be - on local, state and national configurations
- information
- integer or real constants
- intellectual witnesses that belong only to mankind
- items
* are located in calculations
- equations
- offices
- phone books
- statistics
- stores
- telephone books
- merchandise
- merely properties of objects like color, texture, etc
- money
- numeric values
- often hard to come by in the world of religion
- part of scales
- parts of speech
- positive identification
- quantitative symbols and are therefore used to signify magnitudes
- quantities
* are real and tangible things
- variable
- relative to one another
- resident births occurring in North Carolina hospitals
- roughly equivalent throughout the industrialized western world
- scalars
- signs
- sometimes significant in the Scriptures
- symbols of transformations, of cycles within the world of nature and spirit
* are the blueprint that determines the shape of atoms and the structure of molecules
- building blocks of life
- closest thing humans have to a cultural universal
- cornerstone of both art and science
- driving force behind policy decisions
- entire basis of science and mathematics
- first language the computer learned
- fuel of the markets
- highest degree of knowledge
* are the language of business
- public policy
- mean of five or six observations
- means for the kernel to recognize the devices
- one true universal language
- only thing that computers understand
- path to truth
- simplest and the most uni- versal linguistic invariants
- universal language of the infinite
- truly the universal language of our world and beyond
- uniform units, all the same, with ordinal names for a mere few
- used for math
* are used to refer to individual specimens
- study how the world works
- when things are measured
- usually integers
- very important to lots of human beings, especially men
* are, in essence, symbols of other things.
* become the measure of goodness.
* can also be negative.
* can be any non-negative real number
- in decimal or hex
- organic
* can be positive or negative
- zero only
- become more important than people
- create political communities out of people who share some trait that has been counted
- exist as independent values, or they can be used in formulas to calculate other values
- often provide more precision than words and are commonly used in scientific papers
- speak louder than words
- take on symbolic meaning
* constitute the only universal language.
* correspond to numbers on price list.
* count for the environment
- in numerous ways
* count, especially when influencing public policy.
* decimal number used to name the stipple in the stipple fields of style lines.
* decline over decades
- past decades
* define how many lines can be drawn around it.
* depend on conditions.
- factors
- the availability of running water and on water temperature
- various factors
- wetland conditions
* desig- nate the order of differentiation of the particular areas.
* display in scientific notation.
* do exist, in fact they are the only things which exist.
* equal their squares.
* evaluate to themselves and use integer and real math.
* exist only in the mind.
* fall into a sequence, just as life sequence of cycles.
* find continual shelter under stones.
* following decimal points are whole numbers.
* have causes - the algorithms that perform the operations on the sets
- no relationship to nuisances
- significance
- special significance
- the advantage of extending on into infinity
* hook up to create the patterns of the universe.
* identify the most conspicuous stars, in descending order of brightness.
* increase sequentially eastward and letters advance alphabetically northward.
* is an amount
- another profitable type of gambling
- called numbers because they counted the people
- important, especially in widely used constructions
- number of tows processed per category
- power
- pressure in GPa
* is the number of CDs with sample tracks
- ORFs in each size range
- bytes occupied by the instruction
- product of the human mind
- ruler of forms and ideas, and the cause of gods and demons
- year, month, day, orbit, half-hour of day
* juggling is the goal of juggling as many objects as possible.
* lack the power to stir souls.
* laid by any particular species can vary from a few single eggs to many thousands.
* marking on nouns is an inflectional category that languages apparently can do without.
* mean different things to different people.
* means census, counting.
* multiplied by four are always even.
* play an important role because the scale of the energy needed to keep out society is huge.
* positive integer, which was assigned to the leaf.
* possess a dual nature and can represent either a positive or a negative force.
* property of mainly nouns and verbs, and it is expressed by means of different endings.
* provide a code for uniquely identifying objects
- specific information
- specifications
* refer to adults who use the Internet weekly in business and at home
- dollar amounts
- households
- serial numbers of individual instruments
* refer to the number of sites sampled
- order in which vortices appear in the storm
- thickness values
* refers to the singular or plural nature of a word
- whether the noun is singular or plural
* replace intellect.
* represent age in days.
* represent the frequency distribution of taxa for each category
- positions of the amino acids
- pulse of life and are considered sacred
- quantity of empty squares between pieces on a row
* represents any positive integer
- mean of the reaction on three plants
* show up as fractions.
* translate into power.
* used by economists have entirely different meanings from numbers used by nuclear physicists.
* usually refers to the number of individuals present.
* vary according to seasons and general energy.
+ Equality (mathematics): Mathematics :: Geometry
* In geometry, the word congruence is often preferred. Numbers are equal, geometrical objects are congruent. Two shapes are congruent if one can be moved or rotated so that it fits exactly where the other one is. If you have to shrink or enlarge one of the two objects, they are not congruent.
+ NATO phonetic alphabet, Alphabet: Writing systems :: Aviation :: Military :: Flags
* Numbers are also in the phonetic alphabet. The English numbers 0 through 8 are written and spoken the same. The number 9 is written the same, but it is pronounced 'niner'.
* Numbers are also used for other things besides counting. Numbers are used when things are measured. Numbers are used to study how the world works. Mathematics is a way to use numbers to learn about the world and make things. The study of the rules of the natural world is called science. The work that uses numbers to make things is called engineering.
+ Sequence analysis, Score, Rough totals: DNA :: Molecular biology :: Evolutionary biology
* As of December 2012, whole genome analysis has been completed on about 800 to 900 living species and strains of species. Numbers are approximate, and changing. Search for details on specific genomes by organism name and strain.
+ Zero, Arithmetic with zero: Integers
* Any number divided by zero has no answer
- The place of zero as a number | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | number:
Amicable number
* are a pair in which each one is the sum of the proper divisors of the other.
* have a long history in magic and astrology, making love potions and talismans.
Aphid number
* are higher on plants with higher nitrogen levels.
* build until crowding or plant stress stimulates the production of winged forms.
Arabic number
* refer to oxygen isotope stages.
* stand for a group of non-driven axles in the same frame.
Arity
* Arities are numbers.
* is the number of arguments that a relation can take.
Atomic number
* are located in chemistry labs
- positive integers
* describes the number of protons found in an atom.
* has almost no bearing on the strength of intermolecular interactions.
* is the number of protons in an atom
- the nucleus of an atom
* refers to the number of proteins in an element's atom.
### magnitude | amount | number | atomic number:
Magic number
* Displays the ratio of play length to master loop play length.
* are a well known sequence of bytes at a well known offset in the file
- atomic numbers
- constants hard-wired in the code that occur more than once
* is an atomic number<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | number:
Binary number
* are a natural representation for computers because of the two-state memory elements
- at the root of digital computers
- long and difficult for people to deal with
* are numbers that computers use to communicate
- written in base two instead of base ten
- the reason every computer 'knows' what to do
* is the language of computers.
* look strange when they are written out directly.
* seeks a goal, a solution, the summation of a quantity of units.
* take up more space than decimal numbers.
Blue number
* are the prefered phone number to be calling for a given city.
* refer to how high above the ground the rain is found.
Bulk
* comes from vegetables.
* is magnitudes
- mass
* laxatives present a risk if there is undiagnosed obstruction.
### magnitude | amount | number | bulk:
Bulk flow
* is involved in long distance transport of xylem sap
- translocation
- opposed by colloid osmotic pressure
* passive transport process similar to simple diffusion.
* process used by small lipid-insoluble proteins to cross the capillary wall.
Cardinality
* Cardinalities are numbers.
* characteristic of the relationship in the context of the data under consideration.
* deals more with size and lacks the rigid ordering.
* involves the degree and the nature of relationships.
Chromosome number
* Some chromosome numbers have similarity.
* follow the barley convention, with wheat homologs in parentheses.
* is doubled in the gametes
- one way to identify a species
- reduced during the first meiotic division
* varies considerably within the species.
* vary regionally.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | number:
Complex number
* Define complex numbers.
* Describes the rules of complex arithmetic and the complex conjugate.
* Every complex number has a complex conjugate where the sign of the imaginary part is reversed
* are a more general form of numbers
- also very common in electrical circuits problems
- an extension of the ordinary numbers used in everyday math
- extremely important mathematically
- imaginary numbers
- in a sense perfect while there is little doubt that perfect numbers are complex
- quaternions
- useful for signal processing and frequency domain filtering
* contain two parts, a real part, and an imaginary part.
* have a real part and an imaginary part added together
- some very interesting properties when applied to a physical system
- the type designation complex
- two parts, a real part and an imaginary part
- wide practical application in science and engineering
* help solve problems involving real numbers.
+ Number, Types of numbers, Complex numbers:
* Complex numbers are a more general form of numbers. The complex numbers can be drawn on a number plane. This is composed of a real number line, and an imaginary number line. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | number | complex number:
Real
* have an exponential form.
* is also a specific name for a function that returns the real part of a complex number
- coin
- companies
- subsidiaries<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | number | complex number:
Real number
* All real numbers are rational.
* Every real number has exactly one cube root in the real number system
- is either positive, negative, or zero
- limit point of the set of irrational numbers, since they are dense also
* Real Numbers Use math in real life
- are either rational or irrational
* Some real numbers are called positive
- You can think of the real numbers as an infinitely long ruler. There mark for zero and every other number, in order of size. Unlike a ruler, there are numbers below zero. These are called negative real numbers
* are also closed under addition and subtraction
- complex numbers
- generalized to complex numbers
* are numbers on the number line
- that are real, unlike imaginary numbers which are imaginary
- on the x axis, and therefore theta is zero or pi
- the sets of rational and irrational numbers
* can start with a decimal point.
* describe real-world quantities such as amounts, distances, age, temperature, and so on.
### magnitude | amount | number | complex number | real:
Irrational
* have exact values, hence they have exact positions on the number line.
* is real
Irrational number
* Some irrational number are also algebraic
- numbers have continued fractions that consist of a repeating pattern of numbers
* are nonrational numbers represented by points on the number line
- numbers such as which has an infinite number of non-periodic decimals
- simply numbers with no repeating pattern
* have an infinite and non-repeating string of digits after the decimal point.
### magnitude | amount | number | complex number | real | irrational:
Transcendental number
* are also irrational.
* is an irrational
+ Real number, Different types of real numbers: Number theory
Rational
* can be full of energy.
- the domain of all rationals
* is the field domain of all rationals
* pride themselves on being ingenious, independent, and strong willed.
Real greatness
* combination of courage and the good deed - or mitzvah.
* is measured in terms of depth.
Real life
* Real Life is where the real heroes live and where real adventures take hold.
* includes the ability to earn, save, invest, and spend responsibly.
* is what simulations try to replicate.
* life filled with fulfillment, acceptance, and purpose
- real fulfillment, real acceptance, and real purpose
Real love
* Real Love takes the investment of one's self and one's time.
* develops naturally over time, as mutual respect and mutual trust develop.
* is about continuing to be affectionate and supportive even in the face of differences
- sometimes soft and tender
- the capacity to meet the needs and requirements of the moment
- to love someone unconditionally
- unconditional love, and means exactly that - unconditional
* permits people to make their own decisions.
* state of being. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | number:
Coordinate
* Describes how coordinates have to be used.
* Generate coordinate pairs that satisfy a simple linear rule.
* Some coordinates correspond to a value that repeats every other time, or every third time.
* are a method to describe the shape of objects by numbers
- decimal based Ones, tens, hundreds and so on
- expressed in units of parsecs
* are in decimal degrees
- pixel units and are relative to the whole image origin
- x,y order
- integers and fall between physical screen pixels
- integral, in terms of pixels, and coincide with pixel centers
- relative to image origin
- the x,y position of the cursor on an image map in pixels
- x,y pairs counting in pixels from the upper left-hand corner of the image
* can be positive or negative real numbers.
* define the position of the light flashes and strokes on the plot.
* have an implied six decimal places.
* represent locations in relation to other locations
- on the earth's surface relative to other locations
### magnitude | amount | number | coordinate:
Cartesian coordinate
* Cartesian Coordinates can define a point in space, that is, in three dimensions.
* simplify many mathematical calculations.
* tell where something is.
Cylindrical coordinate
* take the same idea that polar coordinates use, but they extend it further.
+ Polar coordinate system, Cylindrical coordinates: Coordinate systems
* Cylindrical coordinates take the same idea that polar coordinates use, but they extend it further. To get a third dimension, each point also has a 'height' above the original coordinate system.
Texture coordinate
* are just like colors in that they can be linearly interpolated over a triangle.
* determine how a texture image is mapped onto a primitive.
Decimal number
* make it easy to work with fractional amounts.
* require a point as a decimal separator.
* take up less space than binary numbers.
Different number
* are used by different stock markets.
* mean different things in cultures throughout the world.
+ Market capitalization, Categorization of companies by capitalization: Business :: Legal terms
* Different numbers are used by different stock markets. There is no official definition of the exact cutoffs. They also may be done by percentiles rather than fixed cutoffs.
Exact number
* have an infinite number of sig.
* have an infinite number of significant digits
- figures
Fractional number
* are the result of shared victories.
* lose precision if truncated.
+ Module:Factorization/doc
* This template displays the factorization of a given number. Fractional numbers are rounded down.
Froude number
* determines the type of bedform that occurs under given flow conditions.
* hydraulic term related to flow depth and velocity.
Hex number
* are numbers given to colors.
* have six digits.
High number
* are also important when it comes to balloon angioplasty.
* equal a lack of top predators.
* flying adults associated with heavily infested host plants can be a nuisance.
* mean the roots are starved for water, leading to wilting and death.
Imaginary number
* All imaginary numbers are complex numbers with zero for the real part.
- numbers that can be written as a real number times i
* do exist.
* result when one takes the square root of a negative number. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | number:
Integer
* Every integer has a finite stopping time
- is divisible by at least one prime number
- rational number
* Some integers are perfect squares.
* are OK to count small numbers of things.
* are a built-in type
- countable subset of the rational numbers and real numbers
- all real whole numbers including positive and negative numbers
* are also rational numbers since they can be represented as fractions
- capable of factoreds
- distinct values from floating-point numbers
- just positive or negative whole numbers
- negative or positive whole numbers
- neither true nor false
- output as strings of digits, with a leading space or a negative sign
* are the finite ordinals
- whole numbers, negative whole numbers, and zero
- whole numbers, including negative numbers
* can also be short, and unsigned.
* consist of all of the numbers that have no decimal expansion.
* have no decimal part, whereas floating point numbers do
- the usual values
* know arithmetic.
* offer a larger range than real numbers.
+ Real number, Different types of real numbers: Number theory
* Integers consist of all of the numbers that have no decimal expansion. In other words, they have only zeros after their decimal, which we normally choose not to write. 0 is also an integer, even though it has no positive nor negative signs. Integers are a countable subset of the rational numbers and real numbers.
### magnitude | amount | number | integer:
Positive integer
* All positive integers are equal.
* Every positive integer has exactly one successor
- is expressible as a product of prime numbers in a unique way
* are an infinite family whose kinship is wonderfully intricate
- positive numbers
- the numbers to the right of zero
* use the same representation as unsigned.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | number | integer:
Serial number
* are consecutive with all sizes and models of instruments running together
- ids
- important in the recovery of stolen property
- in numerical order
* can be as many as a dozen digits long.
* is an integer.
+ Serial number, What are serial numbers used for?: Numbers
* Serial numbers can be very useful for quality control. That way, if there is a problem with a certain batch of products, the serial number of one defective item can tell which items are affected by the problem. Serial numbers can also be used against stealing or imitating products, because it is possible to keep track of which serial numbers have been used. Stolen goods or those with problems can be identified more easily.
Low number
* occur when the sun is low in the sky and during overcast conditions.
* represent acidic substances, high numbers represent alkaline substances.
Majority
* Majorities are ages
- both the blessing and the curse of democratic society
- part of adulthood
* Majorities have characteristics
- deficiencies
- homology
- ideas
- physical characteristics
* Majorities have similar characteristics
- live in regions
* Majorities occur during years
- within weeks
- present theories
- support conclusions
* Most majorities live in regions.
* Some majorities have eyes.
* refers to having more than half.
Mite number
* can also decrease quickly with rainfall or predator activity.
* increase on the plant and they being to move upward to the newest growth.
Multiplier
* are numbers.
* measure the response of the economy to a change in demand or production.
Native number
* are used for numbers one through ten.
+ Waray-Waray, Sounds, Numbers: Austronesian languages
* Native numbers are used for numbers one through ten. Some, specially the old ones, are spoken alongside the Spanish counterparts.
Natural number
* Every natural number is either prime or can be uniquely factored as a product of primes.
* are also whole numbers
- finite cardinal numbers | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | number:
Odd number
* Every odd number is the sum of three primes.
* alternate with even numbers.
* are yang, even numbers are yin.
* don t count.
* increase in a counterclockwise direction.
* refers to setting prices just below even dollars.
Ordinal number
* are adjectives used to organize persons and things into a sequence or order
- numbers
- the simplest set of all and are sometimes called the empty set or the null set
* follow the pattern of cardinal numbers.
* refer to position relative to an ordering, as first, second, third, etc.
* tell the position of something in an ordered set
- or order of objects
Page number
* are artificial conventions
- attributes of book layout that have nothing integral to do with the text
- in numerals
* field code.
* refer to the numbers which appear on each leaf in the collection.
* refer to the page in the text where the data are presented
- upon which the work begins
- pages on which the articles appear in the printed Chronicle
* represent the page numbers in the actual yearbook.
Pagination
* are numbers
- part of pages
* is continuous throughout the year.
* refers to the number of pages in a book.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | number:
Positive number
* All positive numbers represent the number of unit spacings that the pen is held down.
* Every positive number has a logarithm
- two square roots
* are intuitive in that they are merely the base two representation of the number
- more than zero and negative numbers are less than zero
- pressure falls Pressure falls are very important in short term forecasting
* indicate locations east of the prime meridian
- north of the equator
* mean the sun is towards the motor end.
* moves number upwards in vertical direction and to the left in horizontal direction.
* represent hydrophilic regions, whereas negative numbers denote hydrophobic areas.
* signify hydrophobic regions with more hydrophobic regions having higher values.
Random number
* All random numbers are non-negative integers.
* are useful in many contexts in programming.
* fall mainly in the planes.
Scale factor
* are multipliers.
* ratio of actual and principal scales.
Sequence number
* are the unique series of numbers that identify a course.
* counter that is maintained by the system.
* is used to detect inserted or lost cells.
+ Serial number: Numbers
* Sequence numbers are almost always non-negative, and typically start at zero or one.
Shorebird number
* continue to be quite high but diversity was low.
* peak once again during the early fall migrations.
Smaller number
* refer to even smaller books.
+ Kharijite: Islamic denominations
* This movement has no followers today. At first they accepted the rule of Ali, but rejected him to later support the view that Abu Bakr, and his successors were the rightful Caliphs. The only group of Kharijites that still exists are the Ibadi. The Ibadi do not consider themselves to be Kharijite. Most Ibadis live in Oman. Smaller numbers live in Algeria, Tunisia, Libya and Zanzibar.
Triangular number
* Some triangular numbers have close family ties.
* are numbers that can be arranged in a triangle
- of the form where n positive integer<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | number:
Whole number
* Every whole number rational number, because any whole number can be written as a fraction.
* are all positive real numbers starting with zero
- also integers
- the natural numbers , but whole numbers always include zero
+ Natural number
* Natural numbers', also called 'counting numbers', are the numbers used for counting things. The special number zero is sometimes considered a natural number. Examples of natural numbers can be seen in the box on the right. Whole numbers are the natural numbers, but whole numbers always include zero.
+ Real number, Different types of real numbers: Number theory
* These include both positive and negative numbers. Whole numbers are also integers. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount:
Numerical value
* indicate the brightness levels of individual pixels in digital images.
* is an amount
Octane rating
* are a measure of the gasoline's ability to resist engine knock
- measurement of a fuel's performance
* has nothing to do with the energy or power in the gasoline.
* measure gasoline's ability to resist engine knock.
* measures a fuel's resistance to spontaneous sparking.
Plurality
* Pluralities are states.
* characteristic of the globe.
* is Newton's gravity - common, internal, and interacting
- indicated by number or by reduplication of a sign<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount:
Revenue
* are a key indicator of a company's chances of going public
- measure of sales and includes the value of all products sold
- increases in owners' equity resulting from transactions with customers
- one of the most important indicators of a company's financial stability and growth
- price of sugar times quantity of sugar sold
* are the means by which our message is delivered
- sales generated by a company for peddling goods or services
- what the business earns for doing what it is in business to do
* caps pit boards, administrators, children and teachers against one another.
* estimating involves the development of national estimates of economic activity.
* increase as the economy grows.
* is an amount
- equal to price multiplied by weight
- funds that the government receives as income
- monetary values
- money coming in from any and all sources
- sales less cost of goods
- the amount of gross sales generated by the company
* is the amount of money coming in, or how much stuff has been sold
- that someone receives in a transaction
- by-product when the company creates value for consumers
- income that an organization brings in
- total gross amount of money that the corporation brought in for that year
* is what the business earns for doing what it is in business to do
* lost by downtime is often revenue lost forever.
* reflect the impact of foreign currency exchange.
* represent the total amount of dollars generated from business activities.
* represents the income producing ability of a company.
* source of income.
+ European Union budget, Revenue
* The EU obtains most of its revenue indirectly by payments from treasuries of member states. Revenue is divided into three categories.
### magnitude | amount | revenue:
Box office
* are located in ballparks
- cinema
- movie theaters
- offices
- part of theaters
* is revenue
Marginal revenue
* is the additional revenue earned by selling one more unit of a product
- gained by selling one more unit of the product
- change in the total revenue for selling one more unit
* is the change in total revenue associated with selling one more unit of output
- per unit change in quantity
- price of the product
- variable payment made by State health authorities
Net revenue
* is gross revenue less allowable production costs.
* is the players' deposits, less their account balance and any withdrawals
- retail price for the electronic work less returns and discounts
Oil revenue
* account for approximately half of the government's total revenue.
* make Qatar one of the world's richest countries in per capita terms.
* pay for state government in a region where doing anything costs a bundle.
Tax revenue
* are, of course, directly related to economic activity.
* have a positive elasticity with respect to national income.
* is generally the major source of financing for public services and works
- government revenue
Total revenue
* is one of the criteria used in the selection of charitable service organizations.
* is the amount of income earned by selling products
- revenue a firm receives at different quantities
- product of the price and the number of units sold
- sum of net interest income plus other income | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount:
Scarcity
* Most scarcity leads to extinction.
* Scarcities can boost the economic power of small elite groups.
* central fact of the human condition and the starting point for economic analysis.
* concept that covers a wide range.
* derives from modernized poverty.
* exists in all societies.
* fact of life for individuals as well as governments
* is constructed by the demand for the product
- one of the fundamental aspects of our world, both inside and outside of markets
- really what economics is all about
- situations
- the shadow of greed
* means that water for bathing and cleaning comes from irrigation ditches.
* occurs when the prices of goods are set too low
- wants exceed resources
- when, at a zero price, quantity demanded is greater than quantity supplied
* political artifact.
* real and tenacious problem of human existence.
* reality for both individuals and societies.
* then drives migration, conflict, and greater environmental destruction.
* turns into abundance where there living encounter of people.
### magnitude | amount | scarcity:
Real scarcity
* can also exist by over use of non-renewable resources.
+ Scarcity: Microeconomics
* Scarcity exists due to the effects of nature such as drought, floods, storms, pest infestation, fire and other things. Real scarcity can also exist by over use of non-renewable resources.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | scarcity:
Water scarcity
* can be the result of both human and natural causes
- damage economic growth and cause critical environmental problems
* constant constraint for countries with arid and semi-arid climates.
* has negative affects on ecology , biodiversity , agriculture and human health.
* impacts on health, availability of food, and the conditions in which people live.
* is now the single biggest threat to global food production.
* is the emphasis of most popular writing on water issues
- most critical, and pollution growth is as severe as the rest of the world
* leads inevitably to competition between urban and rural residents
- to overexploitation of groundwater and to declining water quality.
* ' lack of drinkable water available in a given area. It mostly affects arid and deserted areas, and places where the water is too polluted to drink. It social, environmental and economic problem in many countries. Water scarcity can be the result of both human and natural causes. Changes in climate and weather patterns can cause the availability of water to drop. Common human causes include over-consumption, bad governance, pollution, and increases in the demand for water.
* has negative affects on ecology, biodiversity, agriculture and human health. It has also led to armed conflicts in several cases
* major problem in much of California.
* worldwide problem.
Shortage
* affect the entire range of medical specialties.
* are caused by lack
- events
* become problems
- serious problems
* cause lack.
* have adverse effects
* means that at a given moment, demand for power exceeds the supply of power.
* pose problems
* relate directly to the poor climate for leadership.
* relative term.
* usually cause rising prices and rising profits. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount | shortage:
Food shortage
* Most food shortages are caused by lack.
* Some food shortages cause starvation.
- widespread and malnutrition is reported to be increasing
* become problems.
* have the greatest negative impact on children and elderly adults.
* is quite common, especially after the planting season and before harvest begins
- still a big problem in the world today
+ Food, Food-related issues:
* Food shortage is still a big problem in the world today. Many people do not have enough money to buy the food that they need. Bad weather or other problems sometimes destroy the growing food in one part of the world. When people do not have enough food, we say that they are hungry. If they do not eat enough food for a long time, they will become sick and die from starvation. In areas where many people do not have enough food, we say that there is famine there.
Labor shortage
* are a critical constraint on increasing agricultural production.
* occur during peak periods.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount | shortage:
Water shortage
* affect fire fighting capabilities through reduced flows and pressures.
* are common, despite abundant rivers and wetlands
- the greatest threat to continued prosperity
* causes symptoms similar to spray poisoning.
* increases social inequity.
* is also due to huge consumption of underground water.
* pose problems
- serious problems
* prevail during the winter, with natural springs and streams drying up.
* threaten at least one-third of the world
- health, econmonic growth and, potentially, national security
* vary widely from region to region.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | amount:
Small amount
* Some small amounts come from carbohydrates.
* act as a tonic to the nervous system.
* are critical for some individual women due to reduced ability to metabolize alcohol
- to some infants due to genetic risk
- present in meat and fish, and in human milk
- vital for proper functioning of the body
* can also leave through the lungs and in feces
- be harmful, even fatal to children
- displace vital oxygen in the bloodstream and cause death
* can have devastate effects
- harmful effects
- make water smell and taste like turpentine
- poison small children
- reduce pig performance and overall health
* depress central nervous system.
* make steel fine grained and improves mechanical, electrical and magnetic properties.
Sufficiency
* Sufficiencies are quality
- wealth
* has an effect on ail features of a paper.
* is an amount
- synonymous with adequacy
- when someone eats what is needed and sufficient for normal nourishment
### magnitude | amount | sufficiency:
Self sufficiency
* is important in effectively utilizing computer resources
- necessary in the areas of water, nutrition, energy, and medicine
- observed for pig and poultry
* term that means many things to many people. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | amount:
Supply
* Supplies are artifacts.
* Supplies are items consumed during the process of providing services
- that are consumable and have an expectant life of less than one year
* Supplies are located in cabinets
- shelfs
- resources
* byproduct of other activities such as animal slaughter and fast food preparation.
* decreases when the price of a substitute in production rises.
* drives demand in health care.
* is the function of long-term costs to society of forgoing social change
- obverse of demand
- sum of all firms' supply curves
* refers to a list of quantities and prices.
+ Amaṯa, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: 1961 establishments :: Pitjantjatjara
* There is a school, a general store and a health clinic. Supplies are delivered once per week and mail is delivered twice per week. Water comes from bores and is stored in tanks. A swimming pool was opened in June 2007.
+ Galena, Alaska: Cities in Alaska
* Galena' is a town in Alaska, United States. There are no roads leading to the town. Supplies come by the river or by airplane.
+ Kaltjiti, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: Pitjantjatjara :: 1934 establishments
* Mail is delivered to Kaltjiti twice a week. Supplies are delivered every two weeks. Water is provided from four bores and placed in storage tanks for pumping to the community. Electricity comes from a diesel generator. Kaltjiti does not have a permanent police presence. State police are based at Marla and run patrols to the area.
+ Nyapaṟi, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: Pitjantjatjara :: 1970s establishments
* Supplies are delivered once every two weeks, and mail is delivered once per week.
+ Umuwa, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: Pitjantjatjara :: 1991 establishments
* Umuwa was established in 1991. Mail arrives in Umuwa once per week by air mail. Supplies arrive by truck every week. Unlike larger settlements on the APY lands, Umuwa does not have a general store. Portolesi, G and Marshall, S. 30 June 2011. Hansard, Estimates Committee B, Parliament of South Australia, p198. As with most APY settlements, Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Special Broadcasting Service television are available.
### magnitude | amount | supply:
Aggregate supply
* Aggregate supplies are economic terms.
* is represented by the country's production possibilities frontier.
* is the supply side of the economy
- total quantity supplied at every price level
Blood supply
* All blood supply travels through the liver to be detoxified.
* deficiencies mainly lie within the large centres such as Toronto and Vancouver.
* features a portal system between hypothalamus and anterior pituitary.
* follows along with the nerve rootlets themselves.
* is therefore impaired to organ tissue and fascia.
Food supply
* Food supplies comprise domestic production, imports less exports and changes in stocks.
* Food supplies fuel in the form of glucose and other nutrients
- of nutrients
* is determined by habitat, climate and veld-condition
- often a limiting factor in pelican distribution and range
Time interval
* are measures.
* have their root in astronomical observations.
* is an amount
Time unit
* are measures.
* can be seconds, weeks, or years.
* is an amount
Apparent magnitude
* describe how bright stars appear to be.
* is how bright a star appears from Earth
- seems when seen from Earth
- simply how bright the object looks from earth
- the brightness of an object as it appears to an observer on Earth
* measure of apparent brightness
- the brightness of a celestial object as seen from Earth
* refers to how bright the star appears from Earth
- the brightness with which a star appears in the sky | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude:
Area
* Defines an area of an image as an image map.
* Many areas are important in terms of biodiversity, as habitats for mammals, carnivores
- locations where children play and domestic animals, such as cats and dogs, live
- naturally prone to electrical storms, brush fires, and even earthquakes
* Many areas have different ages for homosexual sex as well as anal sex and other forms of sodomy
- malaria parasites which are resistant to anti-malaria medicines
- the potential for wet weather with some locally heavy amounts of rain
- water containing impurities from natural or artificial sources
- rely upon water coming from the mountains
- suffer from lack of distribution of fresh water, such as deserts
* Most areas absorb heat
- can expect snow in winter
* Most areas contribute to biodiversity
- forest biodiversity
- expose to sunlight
* Most areas have air temperature
- annual temperature
- arid climates
- climates that are warm or hot in the summer and cool or cold in the winter
- continental climates
* Most areas have dry climates
- seasons
- food sources
- grow plants
- high salinity levels
- hot climates
- subtropical climates
- water sources
- winter temperature
* Most areas receive direct sunlight
- indirect sunlight
- maximum sunlight
- winter snow
* Some areas absorb radiation
- appear to be untouched by humans, such as regions protected in national parks
* Some areas are affected by ringworm
- also susceptible to waterspouts - weak tornadoes that form over warm water
- at risk of flooding from rivers and the sea
- dry all the year and others are wet
- hot all the year , and some are cold
* Some areas are inhabited by deer
- ferrets
- foot ferrets
- horn lizards
- jaguars
- killer whales
- tigers
- wolves
- kept moist by spray from waves or by water that slowly leaks out of tide pools
- populated by sea turtles
* Some areas can be wetlands without appearing wet year round
- even erode, ulcerate, or become gangrenous because of impaired blood supply
- contain significant oxide copper oxides overlying the sulphides
- continue to have sufficiently soft snow for roosting by ruffed grouse
- contribute to germination
- do depend on the pollination of bats more than others
- even have migrating reindeer or caribou
- experience too much water in the form of floods
- go for more than a year without rain
- harbor far greater concentrations of living creatures than others
* Some areas have an eolian influence on the surface layer
- deep springs called oases
- different soil types and microclimates that support fascinating plant communities
- honey production
- little population because of mountains or cold environments
- no soil, or soil is hard to find, as in the snow
- pine forests, or juniper bushes in little mini-forests
- rich nutrients
- possess a richer variety of species than others
* Some areas produce ice
- sea ice
- receive less than one hour of direct light per day
- surround eyes
* absorb energy
* affect distribution
- people
* affected by secondary salination show major declines in vascular plant biodiversity.
* are affected by acid rain
- pollution
- sewage pollution
- wildfires
- body parts
* are covered by habitats
- maps
- trees
- divided by areas
* are dominated by invasive plants
- extent
- frequented by animals
- inhabited by raccoons
* are occupied by animals
- other animals
- queen snakes
- places
- structures
- topics
* are used by cattle
- herbivores
* attract cockroaches
- insects
* change over time.
* consist of habitats
- layers
- similar habitats
* contain habitats.
* contain important habitats
- manatee habitats
- prefer habitats
- suitable habitats
* contribute to global biodiversity
- productivity
* correspond to positions
* cover habitats.
* creates an area map from a set of edges that divide a two-dimensional plane into areas.
* depend on availability
- circumstances
- conditions
* depend on seasonal conditions
- upon circumstances
* depend upon own circumstances
- specific circumstances
* experience drought
- exceptional drought
- fluctuations
* experience major fluctuations
- temperature fluctuations
- mild variation
- problems
- seasonal variation
- strong storms
- sunny weather
* experience temperature fluctuations
- thunderstorms
- wind
* generate heat
- power
* get rain
- summer rain
- tropical rain
* have accumulation
- adequate resources
- appearances
- average temperature
- characteristics
- concrete floors
- cultural diversity
- desirable plants
- details
- effects
- elevation
- evidence
- excess water
* have frequent rain
- fur
* have grow plants
- heat accumulation
- heavy rainfall
* have high levels
- natural levels
- hills
- hollow logs
- immediate food sources
- information
- little rainfall
- low grow plants
- major problems
- necessary resources
- nematode problems
- occurrences
- poach problems
- precipitation
- prolong dry seasons
- protect status
- reputations
- same temperature
- seasonal rainfall
* have serious poach problems
- severe problems
- short grow seasons
- significant effects
- similar characteristics
- snowfall
- soft fur
- stable water levels
- success
- summer rainfall
- surface water
- surfaces
- surplus
- their own area code, and countries have their own country code
- turbidity levels
- uniform appearances
* have water levels
* include areas
- child development
- fields
* include protect areas
- such areas
* increase availability
- winter food availability
* indicate presence.
* influence variation.
* is how many square units are inside the whole shape
- indexed to body surface area
- measure in square units
* is measured in square units such as square inches, square feet or square meters
- units, like a floor area is measured in square meters
* is the amount of space in side the figure
- inside the figure
- square units that a shape contains
- extent of plane surface occupied
- number of square length units it takes to cover a surface
* may have devastate impact
* occupied by clean calcite represent initial porosity in bioclastic sediment
- rats often have a musky smell
* offer shades.
* preferred by ticks include the groin, armpits and scalp.
* provide adjacent water
- comfort
- educational resources
* provide enough sunlight
* ravaged by forest fires also can produce prodigious morel crops.
* receive acid rain
- annual rainfall
- flood rain
- full sunlight
- mm rainfall
- sufficient sunlight
* refers to information within the areas of research interest.
* reflect light.
* require attention
- drainage
- improvement
- intense attention
- protection
- special attention
- treatments
- urgent improvement
* see development.
* show details
- growth
* support animals
* surround cities
- monarch habitats
- suburbs
* take places.
+ Age of consent: Law
* For example, if the older person was a teacher, member of the clergy or the police the age may be higher than for other people, an example of this is Indiana where the age where a person is 16 except if the older partner is a teacher, in which case the age limit is 18. There may also be a minimum age where consent is possible. Some areas do not think it is a crime if the older person believed that the younger person was of legal age while in other areas, this is not allowed. If the two people are married, the age is often much lower. Age of consent can also be affected by the type of sex or the sex of the person. Many areas have different ages for homosexual sex as well as anal sex and other forms of sodomy. There are areas which also have different ages depending on if the person is male or female.
+ Bury St Edmunds, Cathedral: Towns in Suffolk
* Bury St Edmunds Cathedral was created when the Diocese of St Edmundsbury and Ipswich was formed in 1914. The cathedral was extended with an eastern end in the 1960s, commemorated by Benjamin Britten's Fanfare for St Edmundsbury, and a new Gothic revival cathedral tower was built as part of a millennium project running from 2000 to 2005. The opening for the tower took place in July 2005, and included a brass band concert and fireworks. Parts of the cathedral remain uncompleted, including the cloisters. Many areas remain inaccessible to the public due to building work. The tower makes St Edmundsbury the only recently completed Anglican cathedral in the UK, and only a handful of Gothic revival cathedrals are being built worldwide. The tower was constructed using original fabrication techniques by six masons who placed the machine pre-cut stone individually as they arrived.
+ Telephone, Telephone number
* Each telephone has its own number. Today, telephone numbers are about seven to ten digits long. In many contries, part of the telephone number is called the 'area code'. Area codes are used to make sure the numbers are not the same in two different places. Areas have their own area code, and countries have their own country code.
+ Wind power in Texas, Overview: Wind farms :: Texas
* Wind is a highly variable resource, but with proper understanding it can be readily incorporated into an electric utility's generation mix. Many areas contain areas with winds presently suitable for electric power generation. The number of commercially attractive sites will expand as wind turbine technology improves and development costs continue to drop.
+ World history, Influence of climate: History :: Former good articles
* Climate has a very big effect on the way that humans live. Climate is different from one part of the world to another. Some areas are hot all the year, and some are cold. Some areas are dry all the year and others are wet. Most areas have climates that are warm or hot in the summer and cool or cold in the winter. Most parts of the world get rain at some times of the year and not others. Some parts of the world have seaside climates and others have mountain climates. All these things affect the way that humans live in different parts of the world.
+ Yemen, Government
* New elections will be held in 2014. Some areas are controlled by armed militant groups. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | area:
Agricultural area
* Most agricultural areas have, at best, six inches of topsoil.
* Some agricultural areas have high abundances
- insect abundances
* are important for a healthy environment.
* contribute pesticides, nitrogen, and phosphorus to streams and ground water.
* make up a large portion of the state.
Arid area
* Most arid areas have little rainfall
- several types of terrain
* Some arid areas are inhabited by oryxes.
Baggage claim
* are areas.
* is an area
Bright area
* are coronal clouds moving outward
- places with high, thick clouds that shield the methane below
* correspond to active sunspot regions.
* indicate a high concentration of the element, dark areas an absence of the element
- higher amounts of moisture and are often associated with clouds
- regions of high coherence, whereas dark areas represent low coherence regions
Brighter area
* represent regions populated by either numerous or massive young stars.
+ Field (physics): Basic physics ideas
* Brighter areas have a greater magnitude. The direction of the field is not visible.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | area:
Coastal area
* Many coastal areas are protected nature reserves.
* Most coastal areas experience two high tides and two low tides each day
- receive snowfall
* Some coastal areas are nearly frost-free year round
- contain cacti
* Some coastal areas provide habitats
- primary habitats
- waterfowl habitats
* are among the places of highest biodiversity on Earth
- world's most productive and scientifically interesting regions
* are particularly important to society for fisheries and human populations
- vulnerable to the effects of natural hazards
- sites of intense human activity and rapid population growth
* are subject to problem flooding when storms or heavy rain showers occur at high tide
- tropical cyclones
- the breeding and nursery grounds for a variety of organisms
- vitally important as feeding, spawning, and nursery grounds for scup
* begin at sea level and rise quickly as one travels east into the Coastal Range.
* benefit from the moderating influence of the warmer sea.
* encompass a diverse array of resources and ecosystems with intense human activities.
* experience two or three tropical cyclones of varying intensity each year.
* harbor a disproportionate number of rare and endangered species.
* have a direct relation between the amount of precipitation and runoff
- warm Mediterranean climate
- milder climates than inland
- the most pronounced fjords
* provide extensive and excellent habitat for migrating waterfowl and shore birds
- habitat for more endangered and threatened species than inland areas
- marine resources as well as coastal birds and their eggs
- primary habitat for biting midges
+ Maine, Geography, Climate
* Winters are cold and snowy all over the state, and are mostly more severe in the northern parts of Maine. Coastal areas are moderated somewhat by the Atlantic Ocean.
+ North Sea, Animal life: Seas :: Atlantic Ocean
* Terns, Atlantic puffins, razorbills, kittiwakes and other seabirds live on the North Sea coast. Many coastal areas are protected nature reserves.
Cold area
* Many cold areas are underlain by permanently frozen ground called permafrost.
* appear brighter on an infrared image than the earth s surface.
Critical area
* are environmentally sensitive lands that are protected in some way.
* is the probability of failure times the die area. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | area:
Dark area
* Some dark areas are permanent features, such as the huge ring of dunes around the north polar cap.
* are devoid of cells
- green-colored mud, inhabited by halophilic green algae
- ground and ocean surfaces
- locations that are dry, and the brighter areas show where the moisture is located
- lung tissue and light areas image the heart
- regions of current or recent volcanic activity
- relatively dry middle atmosphere regions where air is sinking
* represent warm ground and ocean surfaces.
Enclosure
* Most enclosures differ in size and form
- have a small pool in which the birds can bathe
* are areas
- documents
- insertions
- space
* is an area
* refers to being surrounded or boxed in by the surrounding objects.
### magnitude | area | enclosure:
Dock
* are body parts
- enclosures
- herbs
- landings
- moorings
* are part of seaports
- tails
- platforms
* is an academic docking program capable of processing large databases of compounds
- automatic procedure for docking a molecule into a receptor site
* is an enclosure
- where the defendant stands or sits in a criminal court
Playpen
* are a very useful tool to separate dog and infant
- storage devices
* have rattles and plastic toys.
* usually have food and water dishes.
* work well with some babies, and others cry the minute they're put into one.
Erogenous zone
* Some erogenous zones are common to all human beings, other are particular to each individual.
* contain high concentration of nerve endings and are significant in flirting and sex.
* vary from woman to woman.
Forest area
* Most forest areas contribute to biodiversity
- forest biodiversity
* Most forest areas contribute to global biodiversity
* Most forest areas have climates
- continental climates
- rainfall
- seasonal rainfall
* Some forest areas provide habitats
- shelter
* intermingle with large river valleys and numerous lakes varying greatly in size.
Grassy area
* Some grassy areas reduce soil erosion.
* are the heaviest consumers of water in landscaping
- natural living environments of black wildebeests, too
Gray area
* are acoustically transparent volcanic materials
- landmasses
* vary in transparency.
Green area
* are high reflectivity caused by buildings, streets, etc. and blue areas are water.
* indicate wetlands that have no risk of pollution from surrounding land uses.
* represent rain forest vegetation.
+ Great Artesian Basin: Aquifers :: Drainage basins :: Regions of Australia
* Green areas are the low-lying areas.
Groin
- edges
* are part of bodies
- loins
- solid objects
* are structures built perpendicular to the shore and extending out into the water
- that extend out to sea
* initially interrupt the longshore transport of littoral drift.
Humid area
* More humid areas deflect heat in clouds, water and vegetation, remaining cooler
- have woods of palm trees, specially carnaubeira
* Most humid areas experience strong storms.
* experience storms
* play an important ecological role in nature wherever they are.
Industrial area
* Some industrial areas influence lake effect snowstorms.
* create pollution and erosion.
Intertidal area
* Most intertidal areas are affected by pollution
- sewage pollution
* show a lack of large clams, resulting in a low average size for all four species.
Land area
* are a source of nutrients, and the ocean provides stability.
* country s total area, excluding areas under inland bodies of water.
* excludes area under inland water bodies.
* includes dry land and land temporarily or partially covered by water.
- the total area of the country, excluding area under inland water bodies
* receive more moisture by precipitation than they supply by evaporation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | area:
Large area
* Most large areas absorb energy.
* are rich in minerals copper, coal, gold, lead, molybdenum, silver, and zinc.
* consist of large, pleomorphic cells with vesicular nuclei and marginated chromatin.
* distort due to the earth's curvature.
* take places.
Light area
* are leucosomes, dark areas are mesosome.
* have small dots and darker areas or shadows have larger dots.
Many area
* Some many areas have malaria.
* are inhabited by raccoons.
* contain habitats
- suitable habitats
* require improvement
- urgent improvement
Mountainous area
* are have cold winters, favor needleleaf trees.
* can become fairly cold, especially during the winter.
* receive more rainfall and are therefore cooler.
Muddy area
* Most muddy areas have surface water
* are good places to start, such as along ditches, creeks, or ponds.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | area:
Natural area
* Some natural areas are home to rare plants
- populated by snakes
* are a type of natural resource containing relatively undisturbed native habitats
- critical to the existence of wild animals and native plants
- scenic places to escape crowds, cars, and the noise of machines
* exist which serve the spiritual, social, and economic needs of human communities.
* influence a community's self image and pride.
* provide an important reservoir of our state's genetic or biologic diversity.
Necrotic area
* are generally dark brown in color.
* can develop between the fetal villi and the crypt wall.
Open area
* are used only when thick shrubs or forest are nearby.
* can give way to undesirable plant species as they begin to grow back.
Orchestra pit
* Some orchestra pits are part of theatres.
* are areas.
* are located in auditoriums
- butts
- concert halls
- opera houses
- operas
- part of theaters
- used for musicians
* have musicians.
* is an area
Other area
* are frequented by animals.
* include areas.
* receive precipitation
* require treatments.
* show variation.
Patio
* are located in backyards
- gardens
* are part of gardens
- houses
* are used for cookouts
- patio furniture
* is an area
Preserve
* are either publicly or privately held lands
- unique areas of native flora and fauna where human influence is kept to a minimum
* contain chunks or whole pieces of fruit in a thickened syrup.
- located in jars
- reservations
- spheres
* lose their flavor and bright color during storage.
* moistures and provides nutrients that feed the skin.
Protect area
* have poach problems
* have serious poach problems
* include protect areas
- such areas
* take places.
Red area
* are areas of high radar reflectivity.
* is the surrounding rock, which consists mostly of minerals rich in magnesium and iron.
* represent regions of high heat retention in the atmosphere
- magnetic field strength, blue of low
Research area
* have problems.
* support light.
Resort area
* are areas.
* is an area
Rest area
* are parks.
* have picnic tables. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | area:
Riparian area
* are a transitional area between the edge of the water and adjacent land uses.
* are among the most diverse, dynamic, and complex biological systems on earth
- important vegetative communities for wildlife species
- dynamic and ever-changing environments
- extremely important for water quality protection in North Carolina
- lush green from plentiful moisture
- narrow strips of land that border creeks, rivers or other bodies of water
- one of the most productive and important types of ecosystems
- part of the continuum from water to upland
- rich in biodiversity and form critical links between land and water
- some of the most rare and diverse habitats in Southern Idaho
- the creek and drainage areas in mountainous areas of land topography
* are the green areas adjacent to rivers and streams
- which lie between channels of flowing water and uplands
- richest environments in variety and diversity of species
* are the thin green lines of life in the semiarid West
- water dependent vegetation found along waterways
- zones that border streams, springs, wet meadows, marshes and ponds
- thick with vegetation of all types which decreases the amount of erosion
- unique due to the water and soil conditions
- usually transitional between wetland and upland
- vegetated areas on each side of streams and rivers
* become weed and trash choked wastelands.
* can store water and help prevent downstream flooding.
* help filter sediment and nutrients from runoff and reduce bank erosion.
* occur in areas with high water tables, both in forested and non-forested areas.
* offer excellent habitat for moose, mule deer, and neotropical migratory birds.
* provide critical habitat for deer, moose, elk and pronghorn antelope
- important habitat for fish, birds, and invertebrates
* tend to attract people, wildlife and livestock
- have greater potential for higher numbers of native plants and animals
Sensitive area
* More sensitive areas have smaller receptive fields and a higher density of receptors.
* are sites or living things in environments that are easily injured by a pesticide.
Several area
* experience problems.
* receive rain.
### magnitude | area | storage space:
Cache
* are buffers
- small high-speed memory subsystems between the processor and main memory
- storage space
* is storage space
+ Cache, How caches work: Computer science
* A cache is made up of many entries, called a 'pool'. Caches usually use what is called a 'backing store'. Backing stores are slow or expensive to access, compared to the cache. A disk cache uses a hard disk as a backing store, for example.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | area | storage space | cache:
Web cache
* exist in part to reduce bandwidth demands on the external network.
* reduce the amount of information that needs to be transmitted over the network.
+ Cache, Where caches are used, Web caches: Computer science
* Web browsers and web proxy servers use caches to store previous responses from web servers, such as web pages. Web caches reduce the amount of information that needs to be transmitted over the network. Information previously stored in the cache can often be re-used. This reduces bandwidth and processing requirements of the web server, and helps to improve responsiveness for users of the web.
Study area
* consist of habitats
- similar habitats
* have levels.
Subtropical area
* Most subtropical areas experience strong storms.
* Most subtropical areas have grow seasons
- rainfall
- summer rainfall
* experience storms
Tank farm
* are sites with many storage tanks.
* is an area
Tidal area
* Most tidal areas have high natural levels
- turbidity levels
* have high levels | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | area:
Tropical area
* Many tropical areas have a dry and wet season.
* are poorer than temperate areas in part because of a heavier disease burden.
* have the most different kinds of butterflies and they fly all year long.
* receive more heat from the sun than do polar regions.
* take places.
Uncultivated area
* are in forest and are used for pasture in some places.
* have an A horizon with similar colors and textures.
Visual cortex
* is an area
- enormously complex structure comprising about a third of the cortical surface
* sees more than the conscious mind.
Wet area
* Any wet areas are breeding grounds for fungus and germs.
* are located in gyms.
White area
* are bare coral skeleton from which coral tissue has recently decomposed
- clouds and dense aerosols
- different shades of white ranging from pure white to orangish or a light brown
- high ozone levels, black areas represent low ozone
- iron metal, grays titanium dioxide
* is skeleton recently stripped of coral tissue by the advancing disease.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | area:
Wilderness area
* Some wilderness areas get special legal protection against air pollution.
* are almost universally healthier than areas that are farmed
- multiple-use areas where timber harvesting is generally forbidden
- places for nature where people are only an occasional, and respectful, visitor
- special areas where nature comes fist
- the most protected landscapes in the federal system
- truly wild places
* have pleniful fauna and have retained thier native habitat.
* provide an opportunity for solitude in a rugged, natural setting
- undisturbed habitats for wild plants and animals, promoting biodiversity
* sustain our existence, and even today, many people call wildernesses their home.
Yellow spot
* are plant diseases.
* is an area
- present in most birds between the eye and the beak
* represent genes equally expressed in both offspring.
Coverage
* Describes the spatial and temporal characteristics of objects or resources through time.
* is an amount
- extent
- news
- one of the most important concepts involved with health insurance
- sums
- the area the satellite can see while it can be seen from the ground station
* measure of the ability to service debt.
* provides additional protection
### magnitude | coverage:
Contraceptive coverage
* is about equity.
* matter of equity and fairness.
Medical coverage
* helps provide financial protection against the high cost of medical care.
* is for the people injured in an accident.
News coverage
* commercial enterprise that often plays off the fears of public opinion.
* is news coverage
- television's most important public service | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude:
Depth
* All depths refer to depth from the surface and are in meters.
* affects aquatic organisms indirectly through increased pressure and by the reduction of light
- productivity
- variation
* also determines a canoe's ability to carry a load
- plays a part in slender sole distribution
- varies according to soil consistency
* are positive below a datum of sea level.
* comes about when workers increase their interpretive and responsive skills.
* defines the number of images in the Z dimension of the volume.
* depend on the day and water temperature.
* fluctuates over time.
* hoar occurs because snow insulates the earth's surface.
* is an important factor of soils
- part of our understanding and appreciation of landscape
- attributes
- calculated from height
- constant regardless of wavelength
- created through interaction between density and transparency of color
- crucial to the maneuverability of large ships
- degrees
- encoded in the visual cortex by a specialized receptive field structure
- how many layers of forwarding there are
- implied by the distribution of colour within the canvas
* is important because larger fish in schools are often below the more active fish
- temperatures, moisture, and aeration vary with depth
- indicated by the sizes of the atoms
* is measured from the top of the bulb to the soil surface
- in kilometers
- often a function of the lip's surface area and angle
- only one way of characterizing the ocean floor
* is related to breadth
- water pressure
* is the extension of operations in time, space, resources, and purpose
- height of a gemstone measured from the culet to the table
- mystery of life, the hidden dimension
- number of edges traversed in unique path to root
- second part of angles
- vertical distance between the probe and the surface of the water
* is very important when trolling for large fish
- much related to temperature and light
* means that human beings are capable of playing at many different levels of expertise
- the longest distance from the receiver to the farthest leaf node
* refer to mean low water.
* refers to the internal self or information of an individual that is kept private
- thickness of the item across the spine
- time, distance, and resources available to the commander for the mission
* relates to the number of colors used.
* represents precipitation per unit area.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | depth:
Bit depth
* is defined by the number of bits per pixel which display on a screen
- determined by the number of bits used to define each pixel representing the image
- in binary notation
- simply the number of bits that a single pixel generates
- the number of colors a scanner can capture
* measure of how many different colors the scanner can distinguish.
* measurement of the number of bits of stored information per pixel.
* refers to the quantity of ones and zeros used in each sample.
* represents dynamic range in digital recordings.
* single-byte integer.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | depth:
Color depth
* is another measure of a scanner's image quality
- determined by the amount of memory
- expressed in either bits or total colors
- measured by counting the total number of colors recorded or displayed
* is measured in bits and reflects how many total colors can be displayed
- the number of bits of color that are being displayed
* is the number of colors that are supported by an image format
- range or number of individual colors the scanner can discern and record
* refers to how many bits are assigned to each pixel in an image
- the number of colors that the scanner can electronically capture
* varies with changing light.
Ocean depth
* Most ocean depth is calculated from height.
* are much smaller than their horizontal extent.
Optical depth
* is measured in units of the mean free path.
* simple measure of the amount of aerosol in a column. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | depth:
Snow depth
* appears to be an important factor, as well as the existence of snow cover.
* is reported in level centimetres of snow.<|endoftext|>### magnitude:
Dimension
* Most dimensions use equations.
* Specify the height and width, in pixels, of the image.
* are a manifestation of frequency
- concerned with the units in which quantities are measured
- entities that represent dimensional information about the facts
- fashion
* are in English and metric units
- light-years
- item attributes that seem to order the items in the map along a continuum
- magnitudes
- merely directions of movement which can be measured
- typical of silica optical fiber dimensions
- ways that the data can be sliced or viewed or segmented
* can have multiple hierarchies.
* contribute to improvement.
* equal dimensions.
* is the size in pixels of the display window
- of an image
* refer to the size of the box surrounding the text.
* refers to the type of measurement, such as length.
* represent the size of the gemstone more accurately than carat weight.
+ Coordinate system: Coordinate systems :: Mathematics
* A 'coordinate system' is a system of numbers used to uniquely determine the position of a point. More dimensions call for more numbers.
### magnitude | dimension:
Fractal dimension
* is one of such shape parameters.
* measure of the degree of roughness or fragmentation of an object.
* use folding as a data compression scheme. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | dimension:
Height
* Some height depends on moisture
- is affected by conditions
* affects architecture and other aspects of society as well
- the amount of snow stored and area protected
* are rel- ative to the eye.
* can indirectly be a sign of status.
* causes large areas of the earth to blend into almost distinct patches of color.
* contains the height of the device in pixels.
* decreases with age.
* decreases, primarily caused by shortening of the trunk.
* defines the downwind distance protected when combined with density.
* dramatically affects one s relationships and employment.
* function of time.
* has effects.
* increases most before menstruation begins
- rapidly but stops at an early age
* is also in large part governed by growth hormone - a hormone secreted by the pituitary
- an independent risk factor for neuropathy in diabetic men
* is another consistent trait that often is related to maturity
- example of a trait that is influenced by nature and nurture interaction
- both genetically determined and dependent on nutrition
* is controlled by a number of genes
- at least four genes
- described as a dependent variable and time as an independent variable
* is determined by genetics or perhaps nutrition
- many factors
- encoded in color
- genetically determined but is subject to environmental influence
- given by the cumulative fraction of foliage, Z c
* is how much it goes above the baseline, depth how much it goes below
- tall each unit is and width is how wide each unit is
- just something that people look at, height is big sometimes
- less in older children and adolescents but differences disappear in adulthood
- measured at the withers
* is measured from the floor to the center of the bull's eye
- soil to the tip of the spike
- in inches
- with shoes off, weight is taken in workout apparel
- without shoes, standing on a flat surface
- modeled by storing a Z value at each point
- normal to the plane formed by the length and width
- one of several variables believed to indicate healthy childhood growth and development
- perpendicular because it is the shortest distance from a point to a line
- polygenic and affected by environmental factors, especially nutrition
* is probably a combination of many genes, each acting in different ways
- the single most important factor in determining range
- represented on maps in a number of ways
- safety
- the average length from the soil surface to the top of the main stem of mature plants
* is the average length in inches from the ground to the tip of the main stem at maturity
- of mature plants from the ground to the tip of the main stem
- best way to approximate a child's size
* is the distance from the base of the tree to the topmost twig of the tree
- bottom to the top of something standing upright
- top of the wave to the bottom of the trough between two waves
- hinge pin length
- lowest point along the center line of the tarp
- maximum number of edges between current node and any descendant
- number of lines of text displayed in the field without scrolling
* is the vertical axis, first in inches, then in centimeters
- distance from the ground to the highest leaf-tip
- under the control of more than one gene, perhaps many
- used to add capacity without increasing ground space
- very important for rhombics, as it is for all antennas
* position of dominance.
* primary function of the average temperature of the air below that height surface.
* ranges from centimetres.
* refers to how tall the wall and openings are
- terrain surface or vegetation
* represents the number of times each number showed up.
* result of growth only in apical meristems at the very tips of the twigs.
* special case of contours.
* varies with latitude and season. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | dimension | height:
Human height
* is an example of a trait
- one of the areas of study within anthropometry
* trait with complex genetic causes.
Parental height
* has a strong influence on the eventual height of their children.
* play a significant role in the height of a child.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | dimension:
Length
* Some length is divided by length.
* comes into the body giving muscles space to work and joints freedom to function properly.
* equals meters.
* expresses the length of each link in the graph.
* fundamental measure
* is also a property of time
- distance
- extent
- field length
* is how long it is
- or short something is
- hull length
- important with age
- one dimension and width is another dimension
- phonemic for vowels, and each of the seven phonemes occurs short or long
- physical properties
- proportional to the size of the head
- quantities
- sections
* measures at meters
- the distance between one point and another, or how far apart the two points are
* ranges from cms.
* refers to a cigar's length
- the total length of all trails
* varies depending on animal species
+ Length, Length of Time: Physical quantity
* Length is also a property of time. An amount of time has a length.
+ Ruler: Measuring tools
* A 'ruler'A ruler is also called a 'rule'. is an instrument of measurement. Rulers measure length. Length is how long or short something is. Rulers can also be used as a straight edge to draw lines with.
### magnitude | dimension | length:
Bond length
* decreases from single to double to triple bonds.
* is the distance between the nuclei in a bond.
Day length
* determines flowering, bulb initiation, and maturation in certain crops.
* has an effect on reproduction in the buck and the doe.
* is detected by the pineal gland
- the duration of the light period from sunrise to sunset<|endoftext|>### magnitude | dimension | length:
Diameter
* Most diameters depend on size
- measure at cms
* Some diameters correspond to surfaces.
* are length
- straight lines
* classes -Classification of trees based on diameter outside bark measured at d.b.h.
* includes r
- radii
* is length
* is the distance from one edge of the canopy to the other
- largest chord of the circle
- single most important factor in propeller calculations
- thickness of the string
* is the width as measured in millimeters
- of the contact lens as measured in millimeters
* refers to the width of the container as measured from outer wall to outer wall.
* works similarly to radius dimensioning.
### magnitude | dimension | length | diameter:
Aerodynamic diameter
* applies to the behavioral size of particles of aerosols.
* is used to define particles' size.
Wheel diameter
* is directly proportional to the thickness of the blade.
* plays an important part in stress-calculations for an axle.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | dimension | length:
Elongation
* Most elongation accompanies plant growth.
* accompanies growth
* continues until the ribosome reaches a stop codon.
* decreases as strength and hardness increase.
* is addition
- illnesses
* is the angle between the sun and a planet as seen by an observer on earth
- angular distance between the moon and the sun
- increase in length of a sample at the breaking point
* occurs through water uptake into the vacuoles.
* tells how inefficiently packed the chains are, relative to their optimum packing.
* type of deformation.
Focal length
* determines the size of the projected image.
* have an inverse relationship to both optical power and angle of view.
* is basically the measurement in millimeters from the lens to the sensor
- the distance between the camera sensor and the center of the lens
* is the distance from the focal point to the lens
- where the light is first bent till it meets in focus
- measured from camera lens to film | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### magnitude | dimension | length:
Fork length
* is measured from the tip of the snout to the fork of the tail.
* measurement from the tip of the nose, mouth closed, to the fork of the tail.
Hair length
* can change drastically with the change of seasons and humidity levels.
* is genetically determined and varies from person to person.
* varies geographically.
Leg length
* is the distance from the point where the upper leg bone joins the body to the ground.
* varies among species although most have fairly long legs suited for wading.
Longevity
* Longevities are interestings.
* counts when it comes to after-sale servicing.
* demands that all organs be kept strong.
* embraces both the concept of the length of life and the quality of life.
* favors gender Four out of every five centenarians are women.
* increases the demand for diseases associated with old age.
* is length
* tends to be determined by a combination of genetics and lifestyle.
Radius
* Radii are part of diameters.
* is length
### magnitude | dimension | length | radius:
Atomic radius
* decreases across a row and increases down a period.
* increases from top to bottom in a family or group.
Stem length
* ranges from cms.
* varies from cms.
Tendon length
* is, in practice, the deciding factor regarding actual and potential muscle size.
* varies in all major groups and from person to person.
Word length
* is measured by counting the letters in each word , or by counting syllables
- in terms of the number of syllables
+ Textual difficulty, Readability predictions, Word difficulty, Word length: Written communication :: Linguistics
* Word length is measured by counting the letters in each word, or by counting syllables. Since most syllables have one vowel, some computer programs count vowels per average word.<|endoftext|>### magnitude | dimension:
Thickness
* Most thickness absorbs radiation
- solar radiation
* are for smooth, non-porous substrates.
* indicates the thickness of the lines in pixels.
* is articulation
- consistency
- defined in world units
- determined by the resonant frequency
- measured either in inches or in millimeters
- much harder to measure over the expanse of the Arctic Ocean
- simply the distance between two constant pressure surfaces
* is the thickness of the dry cloth
- width of the line of dashes
* refers to how thick the wall is.
### magnitude | dimension | width:
Line width
* equals the gap between lines.
* is given in units of pixels of the scanned image.
Earthquake magnitude
* is measured based on calculations from ground motion recorded on seismographs
- related to fault length
* logarithmic measure of earthquake size. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
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