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### science | social science:
Political science
* affects a lot of different fields.
* analyzes the various components of the political world and political outcomes.
* focuses on local, state, national, and international levels.
* has major implications on virtually every aspect of modern society
- physics envy
* is about conflict and the use of power
- an ancient discipline
* is both a science and an art
- an ancient discipline and one of the most recent social sciences
- concerned with the knowledge that is needed by citizens and statesmen
- one of the social sciences
- related to all of the social science disciplines
* is the study of collective choices among scarce resources
- government and politics
- governmental institutions and political behavior
- governments and governmental procedures
- governments, political thought, and behavior
- political systems and how they function
- politics, usually focusing on the actions of governments
- power and governance in human associations
- such distributions
* is the study of the political behavior of citizens and professional politicians
* is the systematic study of government, politics and public policy
- the individual's relationship with government
- systematic, objective study of government in all forms
- to try to figure out what makes candidates act that way
* provides a foundation for careers in government and business
- an analytical and substantive background relevant to the study of law
* studies how public and private power is obtained, used, and contested
- the nature, purpose, and principles of governments
* wide-ranging discipline with many fields of concentration. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science | social science:
Sociology
* Sociologies are social science.
* also applies the sociological perspective to itself as a discipline
- ranges across time and serves as a useful complement to history
* approaches the study of social phenomena systematically and methodically.
* asks questions about what it means to be human and what it means to live in society.
* aspires to be an unbiased look at what humans hope, dream and value.
* attempts to connect individual experiences to a conception of a larger social structure
- identify and understand the social functions and processes of human behavior
- understand the individual in terms of social forces and trends
* behavioral and interpretive science.
* broadens the student's perspective of the overall organization and function of society.
* characteristically embraces a wide range of competing paradigms and approaches.
* combines social relevance with the rigor of a scientific discipline
- the rigor of a scientific discipline with a concern for social relevance
* comprehensive behavioral science.
* considers the behaviour and motivation of individuals working in bureaucratic settings
- interdependence between the group and the individual
* contains lots of links to sociology of other institutions.
* core discipline in many programs of study
- skills discipline
* deals with a variety of problems within our society today
- issues relevant to people and social life
* deals with the collective behavior of people in groups
- major issues confronting our world, our nation and our lives
- scientific study of group behavior
* demands empirical evidence that links sociological ideas to lived experience.
* describes the way that groups interact and develop towards violence.
* discipline built on scientific analysis of the social world
- focusing on analysis of the social world
- in the social sciences and part of the liberal arts approach to education
- resting on the premise that knowledge is power
- which encompasses diverse theoretical and methodological approaches
* dominates science.
* encompasses all aspects of human experience
- areas such as gerontology, criminology, gender studies, and much more
- many different perspectives of study
* engages in the study of people and their life in groups.
* examines how groups and institutions are structured and how they act
- function in society
- the interplay between human interactions and social institutions
* explores assumptions about people, their groups, and society
- social life and the social causes and consequences of human behavior
* focuses on recurrent patterns of social interaction and social structure
- the social causes of human behavior such as group membership
- why and how societies are established and change
* formulates social principles and laws that objectively describe the social world.
* general field of study with numerous applications.
* generalising study that combines scientific method with a theoretical approach.
* has a beautiful sister science, namely anthropology
- foundation in universal law, to be sure
- methodology that makes it of little help as an aid to ethics
- special obligation to benefit human beings
- flexible methods of assessment
- specializations that cross into a variety of interests and fields
* helps the professional to tune into rapidly changing fads and trends
- to open the mind to the deceptively familiar world of our social arrangements
* impinges directly on industrial relations.
* includes many sub-fields that examine different aspects of society.
* investigates the structure of groups, organizations, and societies.
* involves the observation and explanation of human behavior in a wide variety of areas.
* involves the study and analysis of the way people behave in different societies
- of human beings in social contexts
* is about prolonged and highly changeable social relations
- the study of social behaviour
- all about understanding one's personal biases
- almost as diverse and divided as society itself
* is also a major of choice for people who want advanced degrees in social work
- the science of the methods people use to interact with one another
* is an academic discipline
- active and dynamic field
- attempt to understand how society works
- essential field of study in any social work or probation officer programs
- exciting and timely field that changes as society changes
- international discipline
- another science directly concerned with hu- man behavior
- basically the study of groups and their processes
- blind to the connections between the human and the so-called natural
- characterized as a discipline by several distinct modes of inquiry
- collective psychology
* is concerned with societal issues
- the reasons for conflict and the reasons for stability in societies
- either history or natural science
- embedded in active participation in social life
- essentially the science and logic of society
- global in orientation, scope, and practice
- introduced by doing
- made up of a variety of orientations that provides a rich fabric for social analysis
- no less divided among areas of study, paradigms, and value commitments
- one branch of the social sciences
* is one of the broadest of the social science disciplines
- youngest academic disciplines
- only one of a family of related social sciences
* is relevant to any occupation that involves working with people rather than things
- wherever human relations are at work
- rich with written material, both theoretically and empirically oriented
* is the disciplined and objective study of human science
- easiest to understand what the lowest entity of sociology is
- formal study of society and social structure
* is the science of human society, social relations, organization and change
- that studies human society and social behavior
* is the scientific study of human action and interaction
- beings as social beings - living and working in groups
- group living and the products human relations
- social behavior and societal organization
- social relationships and structures
- social relationships at the group level
- society and social interaction
* is the scientific study of humans in their groups
- living with one another in a society
* is the scientific study of social behavior, groups and society
- interaction and organization
* is the scientific study of society and human behavior
- the structure and process of social behavior
* is the social science devoted to the study of human society and social relations
- which studies human groups and society
- study and discussion of the role of human relationships in today's society
* is the study of contemporary society
- culture, society, and groups within a society
* is the study of group life, social interactions, and relationships in society
- groups and how they affect human behavior
* is the study of how human beings construct and inhabit social worlds
- people act and react in relationship and response to each other
- society organizes itself
* is the study of human behavior and most importantly, human society
- in social groups
- beings in group settings
* is the study of human group life
- groups, institutions, and societies
- interactions within a group context
* is the study of human social behavior
- life, groups, institutions and societies
- relationships and institutions
- societies and social behavior
- interactions and relations among human beings
- interpersonal and group aspects of human behavior
- life in society
- man in groups
- people and communities
* is the study of people in the context of the society in which they live
- their environments
- situations in which human beings are in relationship with one another
* is the study of social and cultural questions at the centre of contemporary life
- groups and the ways in which they shape human behavior
- groups, institutional structures, and social interaction
- interaction, social groups, institutions, and social structure
* is the study of social life and interaction
- and the social causes and consequences of human behaviour
- and the social causes of consequences made by human behavior
- and the social origins and consequences of human behavior
* is the study of social life, groups and modern societies
- social change, and the social consequences of human behavior
- relationships and social structures
* is the study of society and social behaviour
- as a whole and of human social organization in groups
* is the study of the individual, groups and society
- influence of groups on behavior attitudes, opinions and social events
- interaction between the individual and society
- organization, dynamics and consequences of social life
- sources and consequences of human social interaction
- ways in which human life is socially organized
* is the systematic study of human group behavior
- our social world
* is the systematic study of social behavior and human groups
- organization and social life in society
- the organization and condition of society
- valuable in both public and private spheres
* is, basically, the scientific study of how groups work
- in large part, a study of variables and their relationships
* key discipline, together with some aspects of health studies.
* liberal arts discipline.
* looks at people and sees patterns.
* major that emphasizes the scientific study of social systems and their components.
* multitude of valuable perspectives on history.
* offers a perspective, a view of the world
- emphases in criminology, social psychology, and general sociology
- insights into discovering the world and one's place in it
* participates in a rather long tradition of systematic social thinking.
* perspective on and the study of social life.
* places some explanatory weight on the concept of role-behavior.
* pluralistic enterprise.
* provides an educational background relative to the nature and causes of social problems
- important information useful both to personal life and public policy decisions
* rather broad discipline since all of human behavior is social.
* relates to the specific study of human social behavior.
* represents one of three distinct approaches to the study of human behavior.
* rewarding field to convey to others.
* science which uses scientific methods to develop theories about social interaction
- the scientific method as does any science
* science, a social science.
* seeks to develop one's heart as well as one's brain
- explain social structure, social institutions, and social interaction
- place society in the international setting of today's changing world
* sees humans as fundamentally social.
- concerned with societies and social organization
* social science that strives to understand human behavior
- studies human behavior at the group or societal level
- which is concerned with the systematic study of human society
- science, and, as such, it is neutral and objective
* sterile discipline unless it is applied to everyday life.
* strong major in the liberal arts tradition.
* studies social life and social organization.
* studies the impact that social structure has on individuals and groups
- lives and interactions of groups and individuals
- resulting balance between social reproduction and social transformation
- structure and processes of modern, industrial societies
* subject with important practical implications for our lives.
* suggests objectivity, curiosity, and a continuing search for real truth and true reality.
* systematically studies societal institutions and social behavior.
* talks about what everyone does when together.
* teaches skills of observation, organization, writing and data analysis
- the student to become an active, rather than a passive, member of society
* tends to confuse empirical description with more general analytical processes.
* thus proceeds through various forms of analysis toward advancing human understanding.
* tries to discover the circumstances in which any generalization applies.
* understands and explains human behaviors as a result of social and cultural contexts.
* useful scientific orientation for better understanding and solving social problems.
* utilizes scientific standards to study society.
* very broad discipline with many different areas.
* way of seeing and understanding things beneath the surface of the obvious
- thinking and a way of seeing
+ Identity (philosophy), Description: Social sciences :: Sociology
* Sociology places some explanatory weight on the concept of role-behavior. The notion of 'identity negotiation' may arise from the learning of social roles through personal experience. Identity negotiation is a process in which a person negotiates with society at large regarding the meaning of his or her identity.
* Sociology' is the study of societies and how humans act in groups. Sociology is a social science. People who study sociology are called sociologists.
+ Sociology, What do sociologists do?
* Sociology includes many sub-fields that examine different aspects of society. For example, social stratification studies inequality and class structure in society. The field of demography studies changes in a population size or type. The field of criminology examines criminal behavior and crime. Political sociology studies government and laws. Sociology of race and sociology of gender examine how people think about race and gender. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science | social science | sociology:
Political sociology
* brings to bear the sociological perspective to analyze power.
* is treated as the interrelationship of society and the state.<|endoftext|>### science:
Soft science
* is any of the social sciences , including history , and political science.
+ Hard science: Science
* Hard science' is science that uses mathematics and experiments to get knowledge. Hard science subjects include the natural sciences, which are about the natural world. These include physics, chemistry, biology, geology, astronomy, and botany. Soft science is any of the social sciences, including history, and political science. Psychology and sociology were once considered soft science but are now called hard sciences.
Soil science
* allows a range of possible analyses about old surfaces and preservation.
* focuses on the processes and properties of the soil environment.
* is the foundation of protective medicine, the medicine of tomorrow
- study of the soil as a component of natural and man-made systems
Sound science
* is the cornerstone of environmental progress
- foundation of the forestry profession
* means the use of reliable data produced by studies using validated methods.
* remains the best foundation for food safety and environmental decisions.
Statistical science
* covers a broad range of topics, from accounting to zoology.
* provides a means for managing uncertainty.<|endoftext|>### science:
Structuralism
* are part of anthropology
- sociologies
- theories
* brakes down thought into sensations, feelings, and images.
* emphasises the idea that society structure.
* is about how capitalism pushes states and markets into class warfare
- based on the assumption that it is
- like physiology, and functionalism is like anatomy
* relies on a synchronic approach.
* sets out to determine what forms are used in the work of art.
* studies the meta-constraints on the evolution of essences.
* suggests that meaning is perfectly definable.
* theory that attempted to identify the basic elements of mental processes.
* ties the meaning of the work to the meanings of the culture. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science:
Surgery
* Most surgery affects people
- involves the placement of screws, plates, wires or rods
* Some surgeries require blood transfusions.
* can also be very complicated, like surgery to remove a cancerous tumor.
* Surgeries are a major cause of adhesions and scarring.
* allows exposure of blood to tissue factor.
* alone is the standard treatment for esophageal cancer.
* can also help fluid escape from the eye and thereby reduce the pressure
- reduce discomfort or symptoms, for example by removing an obstruction
- be effective in improving a person's functional ability
- cause bleeding, infection, and allergic reaction to anesthesia
* can cure endometriosis
- most women with stress incontinence
* can help certain kinds of blindness, deafness, and deformities
- in the treatment of amblyopia by allowing the eyes to work together better
- men with inadequate blood supply to the penis
- some people lose weight and keep it off
- include removal of a tiny part of the brain
- play a very important role in the treatment of chronic spasticity
* can remove a tumor but it is the body that heals
- painful or disfiguring tumors
- the endometrial tissue outside of the uterus
- save lives but carries risk
* can sometimes cure epilepsy
- involve reshaping the bone around the tooth or removing a portion of the bone
* carries a risk of bleeding, infection, and even death
- and reactions to the medicines used for anesthesia
- and reactions to the pain medicines used
- infections, allergic reactions to anesthesia , and even death
- incontinence and impotence
- the risks of bleeding, infection and allergic reactions to pain medications
* causes problems.
* common form of treatment for colorectal cancer.
* common treatment for cancer of the bladder
- lip and oral cavity
- prostate
- extrahepatic bile duct cancer
- malignant mesothelioma
- most stages of testicular cancer
- osteosarcoma
- rhabdomyosarcoma
- soft tissue sarcomas
- the early stages of prostate cancer
* common treatment of a majority of urologic cancers including prostate cancer
- all stages of cancer of the stomach
* common treatment of cancer of the bladder
- hypopharynx
- larynx
- oropharynx
- metastatic neck cancer
- renal cell cancer
- way to diagnose and treat anal cancer
* consists of removal of uroliths from the urinary tract.
* does have risks, such as bleeding, infection or impotence.
* form of uprooting when other less invasive interventions have been ineffective.
* has incisions.
* human activity that employs the use of visual and manual investigations.
* improves situations.
* includes all forms of invasive surgical intervention.
* involves cutting a chain of nerves that line the ribs on both sides of body
- excision of the lesion after angiography and embolization
- incisions to enable the removal of excess breast tissue
- opening the eye under sterile conditions in an operating room
- removal of the head of the pancreas, or the total removal of the pancreas
- replacing the abnormal part of the aorta with an artificial graft
* involves the removal of the entire colon, including the rectum
- testicle that is diseased
* involves the removal of the tumor and possibly part of the liver where the tumor is located
- and some of the surrounding normal tissues
- whole of the affected lung and the membranes surrounding it
* is also an option for some animals with arthritis, particularly younger animals
- important in patients with growing tumors
- valuable as a preventive measure in controlling cancer
* is considered ONLY when conservative treatments fail to relieve pain
- particularly when a patient has an artificial heart valve
- the only useful treatment for liver cancer
- curative with minimal mortality
- currently the only possible cure for lung cancer
- generally advisable when physicians can safely remove the cancer from the body
- important in both the diagnosis and the treatment of cancer
- medical science
- of prime importance in the treatment of mycetomas, regardless of the causative agent
- often successful in treating endometriosis
* is often the first and best treatment for cancer
- line of defense in dealing with cancer, even in more advanced disease
- primary way to treat a solitary form of cancer
* is one form of treatment if the ligament is completely torn
- method of staging breast cancer
- treatment for visual pathway glioma
- presently the most common treatment for breast cancer
- some times used to repair dam aged reproductive organs
- sometimes necessary to assist animals through medical difficulties
- the current standard therapy for early stage lung cancer
* is the only cure for an aortic aneurysm
- ulcerative colitis
- currently known curative therapeutic modality
- effective form of treatment for pancreas cancer
- method to physically widen the spinal canal
* is the only treatment for colorectal cancer with potential for cure
* is the only way an ophthalmologist can remove a cataract
- melanoma can be cured
- that some children can ever start to be helped
* is the only way to correct vision loss from cataracts
- cure liver cancer
- remove a cataract and restore clear vision
- repair an inguinal hernia
* is the only way to treat cataracts
- fibroids that are causing problems
- rule for all others who are able to tolerate
* is the treatment for acute subdural hematoma
- most women diagnosed with ovarian cancer
* is the treatment of choice for horses with severe bleeding
- most primary malignant cardiac tumors
- removal of the cyst and reconstruction of the inguinal canal
- tumors that enlarge rapidly and threaten vision
* is the treatment of choice in dogs whose ruptured disc causes paralysis
- the rare cases in which cure possibility
- to remove the pheochromocytoma
- when the tumor is large and the symptoms are significant
- disease or injury in whole or in part by manual operative procedures
- usually curative, but prognosis does depend on cellular morphology
* is usually the first step in treating most brain tumors
- initial treatment for ovarian cancer
- treatment given for ovarian cancer
- yet another method of decompressing the eye socket and realigning eye muscles
* known as uvulopalatopharyngoplasty removes soft tissue on the back of the throat and palate.
* last resort in cases of recurrent sinus infections.
* late stage treatment in rare cases.
* leads to outcomes.
* major insult on the human body regardless of the anesthesia provided.
* multi-million dollar industry per day.
* often cures procidentia
- includes removal of cancer that has spread to the lungs
- involves cutting away disc tissue or removing bone to make room for the nerve
- results in incontinence and impotence
* part of the osteopathic system, just as it is of all systems of medicine.
* places tremendous stress on the body that causes significant immune system depression.
* plays a key role in the management of neuroblastoma
- treatment of breast cancer either alone or with other therapies
- vital role in the diagnosis and treatment of many cancers
* rare measure used in the management of ankylosing spondylitis.
* reduces a person's strength, motion, and endurance
- risk of breast cancer
* refers to the removal of cancerous tissue.
* remains an important step when the uterus has an abnormal shape
- the only curative therapy for stomach cancer
* requires expertise
- removals
- specialize expertise
* saves life.
* sudden shock to the individual follicles.
* takes long time
* tends to drain the body
- lend itself to hospital work and sleep only
* uses invasive procedures
* very important part of the therapy for differentiated thyroid carcinoma
- treatment and is used to remove the tumour in the bone
* well-established approach to treating epilepsy.
* works to help one control obesity, but can cause harm. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science | surgery:
Ambulatory surgery
* allows the patient to return home the same day as the surgery.
* practical alternative for many people having elective surgery.<|endoftext|>### science | surgery:
Arthroscopic surgery
* can provide relief if pain persists.
* involves the use of small instruments and small incisions.
* is endoscopic surgery performed on joints such as the knee or shoulder
- how doctors operate on a patient without having to fully cut open the body
- needed to repair or remove large torn pieces of cartilage
* is performed by an arthroscopic team in an operating room
- orthopedic surgeons
- on an outpatient basis
- used on joint problems
* procedure done in an operating room to look inside the knee.
Breast surgery
* can affect milk supply.
* is one of the most popular types of cosmetic surgery.
Cardiac surgery
* causes desensitization of the beta-adrenergic receptor system of human lymphocytes.
* increases surgical complexity.
* is sometimes necessary to correct heart defects
- very complex and many patients suffer major complications after an operation
Carotid surgery
* has a particular risk of stroke and heart attack.
* is one way surgeons eliminate the blockage.<|endoftext|>### science | surgery:
Cataract surgery
* Most cataract surgery is done under local anesthesia with intravenous sedation
- performed using local anesthesia
* becomes necessary when cataracts adversely affect daily activities.
* can affect the retina in very rare cases
- be sutureless and with topical or retrobulbar anesthesia
- cause a change in the eye's pressure
* common procedure performed regularly.
* day surgery procedure, and doesn t require general anesthesia.
* highly successful medical procedure.
* involves making a small incision in the eye.
* involves removing the cloudy lens and replacing it with an artificial lens
- eye's natural lens, and replacing it with an artificial one
* is almost always an outpatient procedure, done under local anesthesia
- an outpatient procedure performed by an ophthalmologist
- common and nearly always performed on an outpatient basis
- extremely effective at restoring vision in the great majority of people
- eye surgery
* is now a frequently performed operation in most parts of the world
- the most common operation performed in Australia
- often successful in restoring vision in such cases
- one of the most advanced procedures in the world
* is one of the most common and successful medical procedures in the world today
- and successful surgical procedures in modern medicine
- surgical procedures and has a high success rate
- routine and successful surgical procedures
* is one of the most successful surgeries
- surgical procedures in medicine
- safest and most successful surgical procedures
- performed almost exclusively as an outpatient procedure
* is performed on an out-patient basis utilizing eyedrop anesthesia
- outpatient basis, with topical or local anesthesia
- using a microscope
- when the lens of the eye, which focuses light rays, becomes cloudy
* is the most commonly performed operation in elderly people in developed countries
- type of eye surgery
- today the most common surgical intervention world wide
- very successful in restoring vision
* removes an ageing, opaque lens.
* safe, highly successful and common surgical procedure.
Corrective surgery
* can prevent most cataracts from causing blindness.
* is used to reconstruct the external genitalia.
Craniofacial surgery
* consists of operations on the soft tissues and bones in the head and face.
* focuses on the correction of deformities of the bones of the skull and face.
Ear surgery
* is kind of a creative surgery that is mechanical and reconstructive
- micro-surgery
* mechanical way to fix the problem. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science | surgery:
Endoscopic surgery
* continuously evolving discipline that demands educational diligence.
* is curative in most cases.
* requires the addition of channels for dissection tools, suction, and irrigation.
Exploratory surgery
* Exploratory surgeries are nothing more than a diagnostic procedure, just like a blood test or x-ray.
* is one way of obtaining small pieces of stomach and intestine for biopsy
- the other method of looking for metastasis<|endoftext|>### science | surgery:
Eyelid surgery
* Eyelid surgeries Creates a double fold in the Asian upper eye lid.
* Most eyelid surgery is performed in the office or as an outpatient under local anesthesia.
* can remove the excess skin and fat pads, providing a rested, youthful appearance
- result in significant bruising in some patients
- rid the patient of constant tearing
* does evolve over time.
* is done under sedation and local anesthesia
- usually an outpatient procedure with local anesthesia
* removes the bagginess and pouching around the eyes and tightens the loose skin.
Fetal surgery
* has strong detractors as well.
* social and political practice with significant consequences for women s health.
Genital surgery
* Most genital surgery leads to outcomes.
* disrupts the infant's erotic development and interferes with adult sexual function.
Hand surgery
* encompasses all aspects of upper extremity surgery.
* is part of the practice of general surgery, orthopaedic surgery, and plastic surgery.
Implant surgery
* is performed under general anesthesia and lasts from two to three hours.
* produces relatively predictable breast shapes in most women.
Joint surgery
* can relieve pain and restore function.
* is one of the most successful means to treat some specific arthritic conditions.<|endoftext|>### science | surgery:
Laparoscopic surgery
* avoids the incision required for open surgery.
* can make donating a kidney to a loved one easier.
* involves the use of fiber-optic tubes called laparoscopes.
* is an alternative to conventional surgical treatment
- currently the first line technique for treating adnexal abcesses
- less likely to cause adhesions than standard open surgery
- performed via three or four small incisions in the abdomen
- used to treat tubal abnormalities, pelvic adhesions and endometriosis
- very similar in principle
* means surgery performed without opening up the abdominal cavity.
* performs the same hernia repair, but uses much smaller incisions.
* popular approach in urological surgery and genitourinary surgery.
* rapidly developing field.
* refers to procedures in minimally invasive surgery isolated to the abdomen.
* relatively new approach to common surgical problems.
* requires only a few small incisions in the abdomen wall.
* uses smaller incisions than conventional operations. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science | surgery:
Laser surgery
* allows neurosurgeons to easily remove malignant tumors without damaging brain tissue.
* can help lessen wrinkles
- shrink abnormal vessels in the early stages of the disease
- treat some diabetic eye diseases
- often slow the progression of wet macular degeneration
- prevent blindness in some cases
- shrink the abnormal blood vessels and seal the leaking vessels
* focuses a tiny beam of light on a spot in the eye.
* great advancement in animal medicine.
* has the advantage of being able to remove the visibly abnormal areas on the cervix
- cauterizing as it goes, which stops bleeding
* helps fluid drain out of the eye, for people with open-angle glaucoma
* is an effective removal technique for many localized lesions
- done in a doctor's office or in an eye clinic and lasts a short period of time
- frequently helpful with infertility problems
- less helpful when the abnormal blood vessels have already grown under the macula
- much better at stabilizing vision rather than improving it
- now the most common way to shorten the palate
- often helpful in treating diabetic retinopathy
- performed for certain types of glaucoma
* is performed in a doctor's office or eye clinic
- an eye care professional's office or eye clinic
- sometimes combined with standard surgery to treat selected cases
* is the most common treatment for diabetic retinopathy when it becomes advanced
- treatment of choice in pets with primary glaucoma who can still see
- use of a narrow beam of intense light to kill cancerous cells
* is used to treat a broad range of nearsightedness, astigmatism, and farsightedness
- small cancers involving one of the vocal cords
- very effective in preventing vitreous hemorrhage and neovascular glaucoma
* leaves no scar tissue and heals fast.
* modern technique that can only be used on soft tissue.
* relatively new procedure that is being used for myopia in adults.
* removes skin tumours by high energy light.
* stiffens the palate to reduce vibration.
* uses a high-energy beam of light to burn away the dysplasia
- narrow beam of light to remove cancer cells
- an intense beam of light to cut or repair tissue
Neurological surgery
* encompasses disorders of the brain, meninges, skull, and blood supply.
* is performed to treat disability or pain symptoms.
Orthognathic surgery
* is covered under many medical insurance contracts.
* is performed by dental specialists, called oral and maxillofacial surgeons
- in the hospital or outpatient surgical center
* means surgery of the jawbones.
Orthopedic surgery
* is rooted in a long tradition of preventing deformity in children
- still a big deal-people do die from it or fail to regain original mobility
* offers great benefits to people with arthritis.
Palliative surgery
* is another kind of cancer treatment
- done only for the purpose of improving the quality of a person's life
* provides a bridge to prepare the heart for eventual complete repair.
Radical surgery
* dangerous procedure at any time.
* describes the removal of the reproductive organs.
* involves removing the reproductive organs.
* is the only treatment in very little carcinoids to prevent metastases risk.
* is the treatment of choice of operable metastatic neck nodes
- used for salvaging radiation failures
* represents the standard form of therapy having curative intent.<|endoftext|>### science | surgery:
Reconstructive surgery
* branch of plastic surgery.
* can give women a big psychological lift
- involve moving a nerve from one part of the body to the damaged area
- repair trauma to the cornea, iris or lens, and remove foreign objects
* increases the heart s pumping efficiency.
* is an attempt to return the patient to normalcy
- operation
- performed to make a new eyelid or repair the defect
- that which is done to restore form and or function to normalcy
- the correction of abnormal structures of the body | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### science | surgery:
Refractive surgery
* alters the anterior cornea in an attempt to correct vision.
* can partially correct presbyopia through monovision.
* improves vision by permanently changing the shape of the cornea.
* induces optically abrupt changes in shape in the midperiphery of the cornea.
* is an exciting alternative to traditional corrective lenses
- another option for correcting hyperopia
- based on special imaging of the cornea obtained by the computer
- designed to correct distance vision only
- performed predominantly in private centers
- simple, straight forward surgery done on an outpatient basis
* offers an alternative to dependence on glasses and contact lenses
- upon glasses or contacts for many people
- patients an alternative to corrective eyewear
* treats refractive errors of the eye.
Spinal surgery
* Some spinal surgery is caused by accidents.
* is effective at managing and often resolving certain spinal conditions
- major surgery
* risks death, paralysis, permanent posture disfigurement and crippling pain.
Thoracic surgery
* can impair lung function due to direct damage to the lung.
* encompasses the care of patients with conditions within the chest.
Vascular surgery
* has only limited benefit in correcting penile abnormalities.
* includes surgical treatment of blood vessel problems.
Systems science
* focuses on the developmental processes of systems thinking, theory, and application.
* is about reintegrating pieces to reveal important patterns.
Thanatology
* Thanatologies are science.
* is science
- the academic and scientific study of death among human beings
* is the study of dying and bereavement
- or science of the experience of dying and bereavement
* specialty devoted to the study of death as a process.
True science
* True Science involves observing and considering, noting relationships and details.
* consists in understanding through concepts.
* deals with that which can be observed.
* is evolutive, changing as our perceptions change
- limited to observation of the present, real, natural world
- true religion
* makes observational claims of only what can be verified.
Western science
* asserts that reality is to be determined by reason alone.
* is based on a cause-effect model where all things follow a direct causal logic. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Scientific research
* Some scientific research indicates that stevia normalizes blood sugar levels.
* affects every aspect of our lives, from industry to agriculture and health care.
* attempts to identify and describe causal relationships.
* confirms the correlation between hunger and academic performance.
* consists of a vast number of contributions throughout documented history.
* continues to explore the way and why of how whales communicate.
* depends on census data
- effective communication among laboratory workers
* focuses on the pathophysiology and treatment of psychiatric disorders
- role of the brain as the sole location and controller of memory
* has prolonged life with the developments of antibiotics and transplants.
* human endeavor and is usually just a part of a path of discovery.
* includes both basic research and applied research
- imagery, sampling, and analysis
* indicates that antioxidants are essential to our health and longevity
- calcium deficiency major cause of osteoporosis
* involves validating theoretical models and modifying theories.
* is an important component of geothermal development
- part of our lives
- investment in the future
- another field that can benefit from transparency
- based on using mice, monkeys, rats, cats and dogs etc
* is essential to advance knowledge of all aspects of childhood disease
- the solution of technical problems in chiropractic
- heavily biased towards making our lives easier and healthier
- in the area of retinal blood vessel growth
- more than just data collection and analyses
* is the foundation of any technology industry
- seed corn of tomorrow's information and weapons systems
* key to discovering new methods, techniques, and procedures.
* makes it possible for farmers to use fewer herbicides to keep plants bug-free.
* plays a fundamental role in developing the seaweed industry
- profound role throughout our society
* predicts world-wide risks.
* process of building one discovery on top of another, in a search for truth
- continuously emerging data
* progresses by revisiting the discoveries of others.
* provides a technical base of information necessary for decision making.
* requires certain basic beliefs about order and rationality.
* seeks to test hypotheses or answer research questions.
* shows that an active mind can prevent senility
- castration inflicts severe pain on lambs
- chives stimulate the body's digestion of fat
- diet is definitely related to chronic and degenerative diseases
- flavored beverages stimulate more fluid intake than plain water
- goldfish have a better memory in cold water than in warm water
- interacting with dolphins can reduce stress and increase relaxation
- rodents are uniquely sensitive to phthalate esters
- severing both carotids is essential to produce a rapid death
* shows that soy can reduce both the frequency and intensity of hot flashes
- isoflavones increase bone density in post-menopausal women
* systematic way of gathering data and harnessing curiosity.
* uses hypotheses based on ideas or earlier knowledge.
+ Science:
* Research uses the scientific method. Scientific research uses hypotheses based on ideas or earlier knowledge. Then those hypotheses are tested by experiments.
### scientific:
Phylogenetic inference
* is scientific.
* represent hypotheses about evolutionary relationships among organisms.
### scientists:
Research scientist
* Most research scientists have bachelor s degrees in science-related fields.
* Some research scientists are concerned with leukemia or lymphoma.
* are scientists
* know color has a distinct impact on our moods, thoughts, and behavior.
* must have knowledge.
* pay attention
- close attention
* share interest.
* use radar as a measurement tool.
* work to solve problems in horticulture. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Screen font
* are fonts
- models for the letters seen on the screen
* is used for examples of information that is displayed on the screen.
* show a true representation of the type on a computer screen.
### scum:
Slag
* are the debris left over from previous mining operations.
* is scum<|endoftext|>Seafood
* Many seafoods are low in fat and cholesterol.
* Most seafood contains essential minerals
- proteins
- the same amount of cholesterol found in skinless poultry or lean red meat
* Most seafood has little flavor, although it tastes fresh
* Most seafood is also high in protein, low in sodium, and packed with vitamins and minerals
- low in saturated fat
- raises huge concerns about sustainability and overfishing
* Some seafood contains mercury.
* accounts for nearly a quarter of all foodstuffs consumed in Columbia.
* assumes various forms.
* big part of the Malaysian diet, followed by chicken and beef.
* combination to shellfish, sea mammals, whales, halibut, and fish.
* comes from the different waters best known for the quality of the species.
* contains a very small amount of fat
* corporation duly formed and organized under Georgia law.
* has proteins.
* have a positive effect on the prostate because the usually high content of zinc
- almost no saturated fat, the major dietary risk factor for coronary heart disease
* healthy, natural source of protein from the clean waters of the North Pacific.
* includes chilean mussels
- shrimp
* is also lower in saturated fat than most other protein sources.
* is common at restaurants and resorts
- in the coastal region of the state
- easier to digest than red meats and poultry
- high in protein and most varieties are low in fat
- inexpensive and popular on the coast
- lower in saturated fat than meat
- more abundant along the coast
- often the very reason why people go out to eat
- one of nature's healthy fast foods
* is one of the main products of New England
- notable elements of Spanish cuisine
- prevalent and among the finest in the world
- solid food
- unlike beef in that it represents a tremendous variety of species
- usually low in fat and the fat it contains is usually good fat
* major food source in New Zealand and is popular with most of the population.
* natural in many stir-fry recipes.
* particular speciality of Taiwan.
* plays a big part in keeping the foods served healthy and value oriented
- an important role in our heritage
* provides diets
- essential fatty acids known to protect against major chronic diseases
* purchasing on the open market is much like commodity trading.
* speciality at many restaurants.
* staple in the Bahamas.
* very important source of protein for the Philippine population.
+ Halal: Food and drink :: Islam
* All seafood is halal. There is a debate about shellfish, but most think it is not halal. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood:
Bass
* All basses have a body, a neck and strings.
* Most bass are carnivorous and belong to one of three families
- small and slow-growing, but an occasional trophy is caught
- attains weight
* Most bass has eyes
- large mouths
- red eyes
- tails
- lives in shallow water
- move out to deeper, more open, water
- occupies habitats
- basses are bass-baritones, just as most contraltos are mezzos with some extra low notes
* Some bass eats fish
- little fish
- follow baitfish into open water
- has fins
- makes prey
- basses feature pickups that can be set to passive or active mode
* are also conical bore instruments
- kings, wisemen or priests
* becomes sound.
* consumes food.
* has ability
- frequency ranges
- skulls
* is ale
- freshwater fish
* is located in jazz bands
- lakes
- music stores
- quartets
- rivers
- musical instruments
- parts
- perchs
- pitch
- singers
* is used for catchings
- eating
- fun
- nourishment
- playing
* weighs lbs
- pounds
+ Bass (fish): Perciformes
* Many bass live in or near North America. Their name comes from the word for perch
- guitar, Description: Guitars
* The pickups are magnetic devices that sit below the strings. As the strings vibrate, an electrical signal is produced which is routed via an instrument cable to an amplifier. Some basses feature pickups that can be set to passive or active mode. Each pickup may have different tonal qualities that results from its placement relative to the bridge and its components
### seafood | bass:
Big bass
* Most big bass are loners, but there are times during feeding periods when their routes overlap.
* are also a different breed when it comes to fighting ability.
* choose their sanctuary areas for security and food sources.
* live where living conditions and prey availability support their bulk.
Electric bass
* Most electric bass has frequency ranges.
* have a fairly standard spacing when they have four strings.
* is really the bottom four strings of a guitar an octave lower.<|endoftext|>### seafood | bass:
Female bass
* are larger than male bass the same age and females tend to live longer than males.
* live longer than males and are much more likely to reach trophy size.
+ Black bass, Feeding habits: Perciformes
* Age and growth - Growth rates are highly variable with differences attributed mainly to their food supply and length of growing season. Female bass live longer than males and are much more likely to reach trophy size. By age two or three, females grow much faster than male bass. At five years of age females may be twice the weight of males. The oldest bass from Florida whose age has been determined by fisheries' biologists was 16 years of age.
Large bass
* are like whitetail deer.
* grow huge in stages.<|endoftext|>### seafood | bass:
Largemouth bass
* Most largemouth bass has mouths
- is part of largemouths
* Some largemouth bass eats fish.
* Some largemouth bass has fins
- overall capacity
- teeth
* consumes food.
* eat crayfish and frogs, insects and small fishes.
* enter river from lake in late summer.
* grow bigger on the Cape due to the longer warmwater season and better forage.
* is Florida's premier freshwater sportfish
* produce thousands of eggs and the survival of the early stages is extremely low.
* try jerk baits and rattletraps on the rocky points.
* weighs pounds.
Peacock bass
* are tropical fish and require warm waters to flourish.
* originate and thrive in South American waters.
* tend to hold on the deep-water dropoffs of points.
Shoal bass
* are different than redeye bass in that shoal bass tend to grow much larger
- endemic to the Apalachicola basin in Alabama, Georgia and Florida
- habitat specialists
* grow much faster than redeye bass. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | bass:
Spotted bass
* are fun to catch because they bite readily and pull so hard
- shallow around rip rap and striking top water baits
* do well in low, normal, or high water conditions.
* have dark spots on the gill cover and spots or streaks on the lower sides of the body.
* like to eat other fish.
* occur in low gradient streams in southern Ohio.
* rank second in abundance to largemouth, followed by smallmouth.
* tend to be found in areas with more current than largemouth bass.<|endoftext|>### seafood | bass:
Striped bass
* appear in Massachusetts coastal waters in late spring to early summer.
* appear to be light green, olive, steel blue, brown or black
- have followed the herring down the river
* are a favorite of many New York anglers
- active, feeding on schools of shad fingerlings
- also present
- an anadramous ocean fish that travels into fresh water to spawn
* are an anadromous species of fish
- offish
- extremely popular recreational fish
- important resource, worth more alive than dead
- anadromous fish associated with coastal streams when in freshwater
* are anadromous, meaning they live in the ocean but return to freshwater to spawn
- migrating to freshwater from the sea to spawn
- another sleeper species
- believed to spawn only in fresh water in which there is an appreciable current
- hard to find
- important predators in coastal and marine ecosystems
- large aggressive fish that fear nothing
- migratory fish that can tolerate a variety of environmental conditions
- native to the east coast of North America
- notorious for seasonal diets
- omnivorous, eating both plants and animals
- opportunistic feeders
- present seasonally
- roamers
- usually three and one-third times as long as they are deep
* can feed on large gizzard shad, which few other predators can utilize efficiently.
* can live in rivers, estuaries and the ocean, but they migrate upriver for spawning
- salt or fresh water
* has firm and flavorful flesh with a large flake
- white meat with a mild flavor and a medium texture
* have dark brown spots and stripes
- seven to nine unbroken stripes along each side
- two separate patches
* is an open-water species that prefers to feed upon shad
- reduced to a handful of individuals
- sea bass
* is the marquee fish among the sea basses
- top sportfish in the lake, with largemouth bass another top catch
* live in the ocean but spawn in fresh water rivers.
* require moving water to spawn.
* spend the majority of their adult life in coastal estuaries or the ocean.
* tolerate both salt and fresh water.
True bass
* are distinct in appearance.
* release a tremendous number of eggs during spawning.<|endoftext|>### seafood | bass:
White bass
* are fast growing fish that travel in large schools
- hot around creek mouths as well
- locally popular sportfish
- related to striped bass and yellow bass
- relatively short-lived, usually living only about four years
* feed primarily on other fish and insects.
* have one set of teeth on their on ther tonque.
* live in fresh water and also run up river to spawn.
* move to tributary streams or shoals to spawn in the spring.
* provide an excellent fishery, especially during summer and fall.
Young bass
* eat insects and crustaceans.
* mature rapidly too rapidly, in fact, to learn all life skills needed to survive.
* remain in estuarine waters for two years after birth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood:
Bluefin
* All bluefin are highly migratory.
* Most bluefins have features
- physical features
* Most bluefins have remarkable features
* also appear to be timid.
* are part of bluefins
- tuna
* feed on mackerel , herring , mullet , whiting , squid , eels , and crustaceans.
* maintain a constant warm body by continuously swimming.
* saltwater fish
+ Northern bluefin tuna, Appearance, Feeding habits: Bony fish
* Bluefins feed on mackerel, herring, mullet, whiting, squid, eels, and crustaceans. They are very powerful and fast and can swim at speeds up to 50 mph.<|endoftext|>### seafood:
Catfish
* All catfish have long barbels and smooth, scaleless skin.
* Many catfish are carnivores or scavengers but the candiru parasite
- inactive during the day, coming out to feed at night
- become active just before dusk and at night, when fishing success is best
* More catfish is produced in the United States on a yearly basis than all other farmed fish combined.
* Most catfish are ready for harvesting at the end of their first year
- have small eyes and therefore rely on taste, smell, and hearing
* Most catfishes have caudal fins
- poor vision
- tough skin
- live in water
* Most catfishes require oxygenate water
* Some catfish are bream
- can make noises with their bladder - just like a set of bagpipes
- have a poisonous sting, which is good for the symptom of intense thirst
* Some catfishes absorb oxygen
- eat fish
* Some catfishes have jaws
- spines
- produce electricity
- serve with rice
* are fish
- freshwater fish
- generally warmwater fish
- located in water
* can withstand water with low oxygen levels and considerable pollution.
* eat other smaller fish.
- mouths
### seafood | catfish:
Electric catfish
* Some electric catfishes produce electricity.
* appear in freshwater systems in tropical Africa.
Large catfish
* are good food fish, and the madtoms and stonecat are good bass bait
- usually the first to die
* eat fish almost exclusively.
* live in many rivers throughout the world, where they are important scavengers.
Whiptail catfish
* Most whiptail catfish require highly oxygenated water and prefer a hefty current.
* Most whiptail catfishes require oxygenate water
White catfish
* are similar and found statewide, but lack speckling and are smaller.
* feed mostly on the bottom where they eat other fish and aquatic insects.
Cooked seafood
* is moist, flakes readily when tested with a fork and is opaque.
* turns from translucent to opaque in the center when cooked.
Frozen seafood
* can be superior in quality to fresh products.
* is inferior to fresh seafood. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood:
Herring
* are a preeminent forage fish, often marketed as sardines or pilchards.
* are among the more spectacular schooling fish
- most spectacular schooling fish
* are an important food soruce for waterfowl, salmon, sea lions and sharks
- source for many species of fish, whales, and seabirds
- animals
- economically the most important group of fish to North America and western Europe
- food for estuarine and coastal predators, including striped bass
- located in jars
- part of herrings
- pelagic feeders
- saltwater fish
- small fish that figure in a big way in the marine eco-system
* are the bay's most economically-significant fish species
- prey of almost every sea fish, and of almost every sea bird
* can survive and spawn for as many as ten years.
* deposit their eggs on the surface of seagrasses, seaweeds, and rocks.
* has no equal, especially in shallower water.
* have excellent hearing , and their schools react very fast to a predator
- hearing, and their schools react very rapidly to a predator
* is an important food item for porpoises, seals, sea birds and larger fish
- the clean tissue of undecomposed whole herring or herring cuttings, either or both
* key species in several marine areas.
* major food source for herons, kingfishers, salmon, seals, and other marine mammals
- salmon, seabirds, seals, and other marine mammals
* often live in huge shoals, millions strong, especially in the Atlantic and Indian oceans.
* show a more seasonal variation in lipid level.
* spend the summer feeding in nearshore zones.
+ Shoaling and schooling, Schooling: Fish :: Ecology
* Herring are among the more spectacular schooling fish. They aggregate together in huge numbers. The largest schools are often formed during migrations by merging with smaller schools. That's about three billion fish in one school. Israel Program for Scientific Translation, translated by Mill H. Halsted Press, New York. These schools move along coastlines and cross the open oceans.
* The largest schools are often formed during migrations by merging with smaller schools. That's about three billion fish in one school. Israel Program for Scientific Translation, translated by Mill H. Halsted Press, New York. These schools move along coastlines and cross the open oceans. Herring schools have very precise arrangements which allow the school to maintain relatively constant cruising speeds. Herrings have excellent hearing, and their schools react very fast to a predator. The herrings keep a certain distance from a moving scuba diver or cruising predator like a killer whale, forming a vacuole which looks like a doughnut from a spotter plane. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood:
Octopus
* All octopuses are venomous, but only a few species pose a significant threat to humans.
* Many octopuses produce venomous secretions.
* Most octopuses can eject a thick, blackish ink in a large cloud to aid in escaping from predators.
* Most octopuses live in shallow waters, where grabbing prey and holding on to the bottom is useful
- only one or two years
- shorter lives with shorter egg development, etc
- singly in small rocky crevices or other protected places on the ocean bottom
* Octopi catch prey.
* Octopi have glands
- muscles
- poison glands
- suckers
- tentacles
- types
* Some octopus also have a potent venom that can cause death to humans.
* Some octopuses can change their color according to their mood
- use their chromatophores for more than camouflage
* also crawl over reefs, probing with their arms for hidden prey
- feast on tanner crabs
* also have a trick unknown to Nautilus
- an excellent sense of touch
- learn by watching a process without having tried it before
- use water but in a variety of ways that change their environment
* are a source of nutrition for many marine species.
* are active at dawn and dusk, leaving their den to hunt
- night or during the early evening hours and tend to live alone
- also capable of changing their color, depending on mood and environment
- carnivorous, meaning they eat meat
- cephalopods
- characterized by their eight arms , usually bearing suction cups
- efficient hunters, with crabs, lobsters, and shrimps among their favorite dishes
- found in all seas on the Earth
- great at escaping
- highly intelligent , possibly more so than any other order of invertebrates
- intelligent animals and as a result their behaviour is varied and fascinating
* are located in oceans
- molluscs
- mollusks, related to oysters, clams and snails
- part of octopuses
- shy when the sun's up, too
- solitary animals that live alone in dens
- some of the most antisocial, unfriendly animals alive
- strongly territorial and defend a home lair in a rock crevice or hole in a wreck
* are the most intelligent of all the invertebrates
- only invertebrates capable of tool manipulation
- thoroughly antisocial
- well known for squeezing into tight spaces
* begin their lives as eggs, tended by their mother.
* belong to a group of animals called mollusks.
* bite their prey using a small parrotlike beak located in their mouths.
* camouflage themselves in response to a threat.
* can be either batch reared or reared in individual containers
- count and distinguish different colours
- open jars, squeeze through tiny openings, and hop from cage to cage for a snack
* can use the water jet to play, too
- their bodies as a nets to trap fish
* catch their prey in a similar way like other cephalopods, by help of their tentacles.
* come in all sizes and are found throughout the world.
* consume mostly crustaceans and mollusks, most often small crabs and scallops.
* eat bottom-dwelling crustaceans
* even learn to unscrew lids to get at food.
* feed chiefly on crabs, clams, and snails
- on crabs, snails, clams, small fishes and shrimps
* have a mouth underneath their tentacles
- relatively short life span, and some species live for as little as six months
- slit-shaped rectangular pupil
- comparatively short lifespans
- dog-sized brains
- eight arms, which are extended from the mantle
- excellent vision
- got neither, they lack any trace of a shell, internal or external
- highly complex eyes which compare to human visual acuity
- keen eyesight
- no shells but the most advanced mollusc
- one of the stranger and more poignant mating and breeding sagas
- other unique abilities which most mollusks lack
- short lives
- the most complex brain of all the invertebrates
- three hearts
- tremendous gripping power
- two reproductive strategies
- very short lifespans, and some breed once before they die
- well-developed eyes, similar to our own
* is seafood
* lack a shell all together.
* live close to land and in deep water.
* live in dens on the sea floor
- different habitats between the tidal zone and up to seven kilometres depth
- short, lonely lives
* love to destroy lab equipment.
* mate when they are two years old, and the male dies soon afterward.
* move about by crawling or swimming.
* often break out of their aquaria and sometimes into others in search of food.
* pierce the shells of their prey, injecting poison that causes paralysis.
* reach their largest size in the cool temperate waters of the north and south Pacific.
* reproduce sexually.
* spray a cloud of ink at their predators.
* swim with their arms trailing behind.
* tend to be profoundly antagonistic towards each other.
* thrive at the base of the ridge.
* use dens for shelter, and discard remains outside the den in midden piles
- their eight sucker-lined arms to capture their prey and move about on the ocean floor
* vary greatly in size.
+ Octopus, Colors
* Some octopuses can use their chromatophores for more than camouflage. If they are not blending in with their surroundings, they can signal their feelings using color. When they are relaxed, for example, they are a dull, grayish brown or orange-tinged color. When they become angry, they can become red. If they feel scared, they may turn white
- Intelligence: Cephalopods
* In laboratory experiments, octopuses can be readily trained to distinguish between different shapes and patterns. Octopuses often break out of their aquaria and sometimes into others in search of food | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood:
Pickerel
* are a top predator, much like northern pike, walleye, or musky
- in the shallows biting on minnows and crankbaits
- opportunistic carnivores which ambush their prey
- pikes
- sight-oriented predators and are predominately active during the day
* boney fish.
* prefer quiet waters with heavy weed growth.
### seafood | pickerel:
Chain pickerel
* are fish
- pickerels
* fish that fills out the fishing picture.
* grow rapidly in Texas waters.
Roe
* Many roes have a commercial value, the highest being for caviar, the roe of the sturgeon.
* is seafood
### seafood | roe:
Red roe
* comes from female scallops.
* is that of a female, and white, that of a male.
+ Scallop, Life cycle: Bivalves
* Red roe comes from female scallops. White roe comes from males. Scallops release Spermatozoa and ova freely into the water during the mating season. Fertilized ova sink to the bottom. The immature scallop hatches after a few weeks. The larvae drift in the plankton until they go to the bottom again to grow.<|endoftext|>### seafood:
Saltwater fish
* Many saltwater fish are harvested straight from the sea
- succumb to illness early in life due to poor husbandry
* Most saltwater fish have gills
- seawater
* Most saltwater fish live for many years
* Most saltwater fish live in environments
- low salt environments
* Some saltwater fish live along the coasts of continents.
* are especially sensitive to water changes
- large and many species are very capable of emptying a skimpy reel
- marine organisms
- seafood
- some of the most beautiful fish in the aquarium hobby
- usually far safer than Florida's wild freshwater fish
- varied and abundant in the Gulf and ocean off the shores of the entire state
* drink enormous amounts of water to keep from drying out.
* excretes excess salt by active transport through gills.
- oceans and estuaries
* tend to loose water and take in salt.
### seafood | saltwater fish:
Bluefin tuna
* Most bluefin tuna has instinct.
* Most bluefin tuna reaches maturity
- sexual maturity
* Some bluefin tuna has streams.
* are one of the most valuable fish in the ocean today.
* has strong home instinct<|endoftext|>### seafood | saltwater fish:
Flatfish
* All flatfish are rather flat , and have ray-finned fish
- flatfishes have an unusual flattened body form well suited to life on the bottom
* Some flatfish can actively camouflage themselves on the ocean floor
* All flatfish are rather flat, and have ray-finned fish. They swim sideways. Some can hide on the ocean floor, waiting for prey. They have a capacity for dynamic camouflage, which is under nervous control, and can change in 'real time'
* keep a low profile, concealed on the sand till they pounce.
* lay eggs that hatch into larvae resembling typical, symmetrical, fish.
### seafood | saltwater fish | flatfish:
Southern flounder
* Some southern flounder eats shrimp.
* abound around channels, bay months, and adjacent substrate.
* are caught under bridges and docks and in the nearshore ocean
- larger and live longer than Gulf flounders
- well adapted for ambushing quick-moving prey such as fish or shrimp
* consumes prey.
* is one of the best eating fish in the Gulf.
* lives for years.
* takes bait
- live bait
Summer flounder
* are bottom-feeders that eat shrimp, squid, worms, crustaceans and other fish.
* have a very short stage between being a larva and an adult when they are juvenile.
* is an economically important fish in Virginia and in the Bay.
* spend most of their lives close to or on the ocean floor.
Winter flounder
* come into the bay in the fall and stay through the winter until the spring.
* is the most popular finfish species caught by recreational and commercial fishermen.
* produce a natural antifreeze compound.
* tend to return to the same spawning locations in consecutive years. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | saltwater fish:
Mackerel
* contains a kind of amino acid which lowers the cholesterol level in blood.
* have long, tapered bodies and forked tails.
### seafood | saltwater fish | mackerel:
Atlantic mackerel
* Most Atlantic mackerel are sexually mature by the age of three years.
* are fattest in the fall.
* full flavored fish with a higher fat content than most other types of fish.
* have soft, dark flesh and a strong, characteristic flavor.
Porgy
* Most porgies feed on shelled animals, including some that have pretty stout armour.
* Porgies are more resistant to rapid quality deterioration than most other fish
- part of scups
- saltwater fish
- small, averaging about one pound
* Porgies have a deep body, a silvery color, large scales, and long spiny fins
- firm, low-fat flesh with a delicate, mild flavor
- tend to be bony, but they're highly prized for their delicate flavor
### seafood | saltwater fish | porgy:
Scup
* are part of scups
* can grab food with their front teeth and then crush hard-shelled animals with their molars.
* have a deep body which is flattened sidewise.
* is common in the waters almost everywhere.
* produce transparent, buoyant eggs that are spherical.
Salt cod
* are cods.
* is evident in cuisines of the Mediterranean and Caribbean Seas.
Tuna fish
* are located in cans
- containers
- oceans
* gather in shoals and migrate inshore to breed, where they are caught in large numbers.
* great source of vitamin D, and so are eggs.
* has too much mercury to be eaten regularly by pregnant women and young children.
Whiting
* are generaly used whole or headed and gutted.
* are part of silver hakes
- whitings
* is finely ground chalk and was used to make putty, whitewash and paint
- natural chalk that has been refined
* raises chickens just for their feathers.<|endoftext|>### seafood:
Sardine
* Most sardines are wild-caught, and cooked when very fresh.
* Some sardines are for trading.
* also have an important place in Sicilian cooking.
* are a favorite fish specialty of the coastal regions of Morocco
- good bait for raccoons or opossums while tuna fish works on skunks
- saltwater fish
- small schooling fish that inhabit coastal subtropical and temperate waters
- use because of their high oil content
* can be sauteed with herbs and chili.
* constitute the main catch in the western and northeastern parts of the Mediterranean.
* eat plankton in the sea.
* food fish
* have a short life-cycle , living only two or three years.
* naturally grow in tins.
+ Shoaling and schooling, Predator avoidance: Fish :: Ecology
* Sardines have a short life-cycle, living only two or three years. Adult sardines, about two years old, mass on the Agulhas Bank where they spawn during spring and summer, releasing tens of thousands of eggs into the water. The adult sardines then make their way in hundreds of shoals towards the sub-tropical waters of the Indian Ocean. Huge numbers of sharks, dolphins, tuna, sailfish, Cape fur seals and even killer whales congregate and follow the shoals, creating a feeding frenzy along the coastline. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood:
Shellfish
* are a far less dramatic prey but still an important part of the leopard seal's diet
- also risky as they filter contaminants out of the water in which they live
- an excellent source of zinc
- bottom feeders and unclean
- by no means confined to salty habitat, however
- dangerous to collect and eat during the summer months
- fairly resistant to it, but some are susceptible
- filter feeders
- just biological filters, and retain whatever happens to be in the water
- notorious for concentrating viruses in fecally contaminated waters
- one of the few protein sources that can deliver good taste and good health
- prone to contamination because they filter microscopic foods in the water
- susceptible to toxins because they are filter feeders
- very low in fat
* carry inherent sweetness, as well as umami richness
- toxic levels of lead, cadmium, arsenic and other heavy metals
* eat the toxic plankton and accumulate the poison in their gills.
* have little saturated fat
- no head, but they nevertheless lead a complex life
- relatively high cholesterol contents, and eel and fish roe are fatty
* often accumulate contaminants from the environment
- sit in polluted estuaries where rivers and oceans meet
* taken from a red tide area can contain a toxin that causes paralytic shellfish poisoning
- in coastal waters include crabs, shrimp, and abalones | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish:
Cephalopod
* All cephalopods are carnivores that have to digest large prey
- carnivorous and possess a radula and powerful beaks
- much better swimmers than any other species of mollusk
* All cephalopods have flexible tentacles
- internal shells that have chambers connected by siphuncle
* All cephalopods swim by jet propulsion, however squid are the most efficient at it
- rapidly expelling water from their mantle cavity
* Many cephalopods are good mothers and stay with their eggs until they hatch
- short lived and only reproduce once
- only reproduce once and die
- rely on their acute vision to detect predators as well as locate prey
- use venomous secretions to speed up th e death of their prey
* Most cephalopod are semelparous, they die after they lay their eggs.
* Most cephalopods also have a radula which consists of several rows of teeth
- are semelparous, reproducing in one large effort at the end of the life-cycle
- can change their colour to blend with their surroundings
* Most cephalopods have beaks, tentacles and jaws and are active predators
- separate sexes and fertilization is internal
* Some cephalopods can adjust their body shape to move through the water more easily
- move by crawling along the ocean floor or sea bed with their arms
- exhibit extraordinary camouflage.
* There are at least 800 different living species of Cephalopods. Cephalopods are found in all the oceans of the world and at all pelagic levels
* adapt the mollus- can body plan to an active way of life.
* also display a nocturnal feeding activity.
* also have a beak, very similar to that of a parrot, used to help bite into prey
- parrot-like beak which is used in biting into prey
- anatomy very different from our own
- squirt dark ink to hide their escape
- use their tentacles to move and help maintain their velocity
* are a class of marine mollusks
- mollusk that includes squid, nautilus and octopus
- mollusks, a phylum that also includes snails, chitons, clams and slugs
- active necto-benthic carnivores
- agile carnivores
* are all carnivorous
- invertebrates and are closely related to other molluscs like slugs and snails
- animals
- benthic or pelagic, and entirely marine
- carnivores that live only in marine habitats
- dioecious
- especially impressive for their advanced brains and sophisticated eyes
- exclusively marine animals
- throughout the world oceans at all depths
- generally very rare fossils within the chert gravels
- gonochoric which means their sexes are separate
- intelligent and highly visual
* are marine and predaceous
- animals and it can be found in oceans all around the world
- organisms
- predators that use beaklike jaws and a radula to crush or rip prey apart
- predators, feeding on fish, crustaceans, and other molluscs
- muscular animals, able to subdue struggling prey
- of major importance in the diets of many fishes and marine mammals
- predators and use their tentacles to capture and manipulate prey
- so adept at using their tentacles, they can function independently
* are the aliens on Earth
- glitziest of the invertebrates
* are the most active and intelligent of the mollusks
- of all the molluscs and can even rival the fish for swimming speeds
- advanced class of the mulluskes
- highly evolved of all molluscs
- intellectual invertebrates
* are the most intelligent invertebrates and have good senses and large brains
- non-vertebrate animals known to exist
- of all invertebrates
- intelligent, most mobile, and the largest of all molluscs
- only mollusks with a closed circulatory system with three hearts
- onlymollusks that have a closed circulatory system
- unique among mollusks in having a closed circulatory system
- water-breathers, but other mollusks, including snails and slugs, exist on dry land
- worldwide in distribution and are found in all depths of the ocean
* breathe using gills.
* can be cannibalistic especially when they are underfed.
* even have a large brain with ganglia located inside of a cranium.
* have a beak-like structure that they use to feed.
* have a closed circulation while gastropods have an open circulation
- circulatory system, a complex brain, and well-developed sense organs
- more developed nervous system than other mollusks
* have an amazing ability to change color very rapidly
- endoskeleton, if any, and octopuses have no skeleton at all
- long, flexible arms, equipped in most cases with suckers for prey capture
- tentacles attached to the head, and ink sacs, which serve to evade predators
* have the most advanced nervous systems of all invertebrates
- complex brain of any invertebrate
- two kidneys and three hearts, which pump blue blood
- unique abilities which most mollusks lack
- very short lives
* lack feet and their shells are chambered
- larvae, and the young develop from large, yolk-filled eggs
* live in salt water.
* means head-footed.
* move in part by jet propulsion.
* range in size from only a few grams to hundreds of kilograms.
* remains from the stomachs of sperm whales caught in the Tasman Sea.
* show some advances evolutionary adaptations.
* swim by forcing water out of the mantle cavity through the siphon.
* typically guard and clean their egg masses.
* use a strong beak to eat other animals that they catch with their tentacles
- jet propulsion for locomotion
+ Cephalopod, Nervous system and behaviour
* Cephalopods are the most intelligent invertebrates and have good senses and large brains. The nervous system of cephalopods is the most complex of the invertebrates, and their brain to body mass ratio falls between that of warm and cold blooded vertebrates. The brains and lives of cephalopods'. Oxford University Press
- behaviour, Moving around
* Oxygenated water is taken into the mantle cavity to the gills. By contracting the mantle's muscles, the water is pushed out through the siphon, made by a fold in the mantle. Motion of the cephalopods is usually backward as water is forced out forwards, but the siphon can be pointed in different directions. Some cephalopods can adjust their body shape to move through the water more easily | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish | cephalopod:
Colleoid cephalopod
* have complex organs which they use to change colour rapidly.
+ Chromatophore, Cephalopod chromatophores: Ecology :: Physiology
* Colleoid cephalopods have complex organs which they use to change colour rapidly. This is seen in squid, cuttlefish and octopuses. Each chromatophore unit is a single chromatophore cell and muscle, nerve, glial and sheath cells. Inside the chromatophore cell, pigment granules are in an elastic sac. To change colour the animal changes the sac form or size by muscular contraction. This changes its appearance.
Chiton
* are herbivores.
* respire through gills located in two lateral grooves between the foot and the shells.
* tend to be nocturnal creatures, venturing out when the light is dim in search of food.<|endoftext|>### seafood | shellfish:
Cockle
* are a bi-valve mollusc
- popular type of edible shellfish in both Eastern and Western cooking
- street food in Cambodia
- also a very popular target for recreational clam diggers
- an effective bait for a wide variety of sea fishes
- at their best in winter and are usually sold cooked, with or without their shells
- bivalves
- capable of 'jumping' by bending and straightening the foot
- clams with rounded ribs and clear growth rings
- favoured by oystercatchers and sand flounder, and by people
- shellfishs
* burrow using the foot, and feed by filtering plankton from the surrounding water.
* can use their foot to leap from danger.
* comes from the Irish word 'cochall' which in fact means the membrane of the heart.
* have much sand sticking to their shells before storms
- the highest growth rates from subtidal areas with plenty of food
* live in dense bed in many coastal estuaries.
* are capable of 'jumping' by bending and straightening the foot. Cockles burrow using the foot, and feed by filtering plankton from the surrounding water.
+ Bivalve, Movement, Swimming
* Scallops, and file clams can swim to escape a predator, clapping their valves together to create a jet of water. Cockles can use their foot to leap from danger. However these methods quickly exhaust the animal. In the razor shells the siphons can break off only to grow back later.<|endoftext|>### seafood | shellfish | crabmeat:
Blue crab
* Most blue crabs begin life
- compete for resources
- eat diets
* Most blue crabs go into salinity water
* Most blue crabs have hard shells
- legs
* Some blue crabs belong to families
- eat crabs
- feed on bivalves
- have ability
* Some blue crabs live along atlantic coasts
* are a major Virginia seafood product
- commercially fishedin Weeks Bay
- eaten by octopus, fish, gulls, herons, and humans
- good swimmers with the last pair of legs modified into paddles at the end
- highly mobile, but are more active during daylight hours than in the evenings
- host to external and internal barnacles
- invertebrates meaning they lack a spinal column
- part of blue crabs
- sexually dimorphic, meaning sexes occur in distinct forms
- the preferred food in many areas
* belong to the family of swimming crabs that also includes the lady crab.
* eat a wide variety of plants and animals
* feed in three different ways
- on both plants and animals
* have a hard shell or exoskeleton
- place of importance in the ecosystem
- large, flat, paddle-shaped rear legs for swimming
- ten legs with the back two modified into paddle shaped swimming legs
* have three pairs of legs and walk sideways
- walking legs and paddle-shaped rear swimming legs
* is crabmeat
- sold in both hardshell and softshell forms
* live throughout the Bay.
* molt every few weeks when they are young, but only once a year when they are older.
* spend a portion of their lives in brackish-water areas of the Mississippi Sound. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish:
Limpet
* Some limpets also undergo sex reversal.
* eat by grazing on algae found on rock surfaces. They scrape films of algae from the rock with a radula, a ribbon-like tongue with rows of teeth. Limpets move by rippling the muscles of their foot in a wave-like motion.
* always return to the same place when the tide retreats.
* are gastropods
- marine gastropods that live on rocky coasts and in tide pools
- prey for starfish , shore-birds , fish , seals , and humans
- snails which have a cup-shaped shell instead of a coiled one
* can prove too tough even after boiling, and are best used only in an emergency.
* have an oval, laterally compressed shell that tapers to an off-centered blunt point
- separate sexes
* leave their fixed positions only to graze on seaweeds, always returning to the same spot.
* live inside a greyish-white, sometimes ashen, conical shell.
* reproduce by discharging sperm and eggs into the sea, followed by a planktonic larval stage.
* seen under water while diving at high tide are, in fact, usually grazing.
* survive by feeding on algae.
* use suction at high tide, then switch to gluing when the tide goes out.
+ Limpet, Life style, Predators and threats: Gastropods :: Gastropods :: Edible molluscs :: Hawaiian cuisine
* Limpets are prey for starfish, shore-birds, fish, seals, and humans. The defence response can be adjusted to the type of predator, which can often be detected chemically by the limpet.
### seafood | shellfish | limpet:
True limpet
* are small marine gastropod molluscs with flattened , cone-shaped shells.
* lack the hole or cleft and the mantle have developed an overhang.
+ Limpet: Gastropods :: Gastropods :: Edible molluscs :: Hawaiian cuisine
* True limpets are small marine gastropod molluscs with flattened, cone-shaped shells. They live throughout the intertidal zone, attached to rocks or other hard ground. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish:
Mussel
* All mussels possess an organ called the mantle, which soft lining of the mussel's shell.
* Many mussels are tan, brown or black and many shades in between.
* Most mussels accumulate harmful substances
- are able to use only one or a few kinds of fish as host
- avoid predators
* Most mussels have negative effects
- live in water
- take several years to become reproductively mature
* Some mussels add nutrients
- can be fairly active
- cause ecological damage
- contaminate with acid
- go into mouths
- provide nitrogen.
* live in lakes, rivers, and creeks. They sometimes also live in intertidal areas along coastlines worldwide. They are grouped in different subclasses
* also feed by bringing water through the incurrent siphon and passing it over the gills
- prey on barnacle larvae
- tend to rid their tissues of biotoxins faster than other species
* are a bivalve shellfish and a member of the clam family
- delicacy served in fancy restaurants
- good staple diet
- very endangered group
- waterway's natural filters
- accidentally gold, owing to the make-up of their shells
* are also a useful ingredient in seafood stews and kindred dishes
- great in seafood soups or stews, like cioppino or bouillabaisse
- raw material for the pearl industry
- vulnerable to dredging and waterway traffic, which can bury a mussel bed in silt
- an important link in the food chain along the stream
- best steamed in water, wine or cream broth seasoned with herbs and garlic
- bivalve mollusks
- bivalves
- clams
- collected from deep water by means of dredges or rakes
- especially common on stormy, exposed shores
- excellent biological indicators in part because of their key position in energy cycling
* are extremely sensitive to environmental change
- vulnerable because of their dependence on fish as larval hosts
* are filter feeders and they eat the plankton, helping to make the water clearer
- living on a diet of microorganisms gleaned from rich currents
- which means they help clean the water they live in
- feeders, sucking in water and food through specialized structures called siphons
- generally the first animals to be lost when water quality deteriorates
- host-specific
* are important because they keep the aquatic chain of life in balance
- to the health of a river ecosystem
- in a group of invertebrate animals called mollusks
- normally prey for muskrats, otters, raccoons, and minks
- one of the easiest species of shellfish to grow
* are one of the most commonly overlooked seafoods on the Oregon coast
- endangered groups in North America
- imperiled groups of animals
- sedentary bivalves
- sensitive to high turbidity
- shellfishs
- susceptible to pollutants such as heavy metals, nutrients and chlorine
- the dominant competitors for space on many rocky shores
* are the most efficient feeders compared to other shellfish
- severely threatened group of animals
- same delicacy often found next to the lobster and shrimp on a seafood buffet
* attach themselves to rocks using a glue that outperforms all synthetic adhesives
- very tightly
* breathe exclusively with gills.
* can also filter out green-brown algaes, which frequently discolor water.
* can be light tan to deep orange
- more difficult to cook on a flat rock
* cling to rocks in the high-tide zone covered by water only at high tide.
* continuously pump water through their bodies.
* dominate the European market, at least in terms of quantities sold.
* feed on algae, which are partly responsible for the cloudiness of lake water.
* frequently occur in large colonies, forming mussel beds.
* grow very slowly.
* have a short shelf life
- top and a bottom
- gills and eat plankton
- important functions in aquatic environments
* ingest toxin but are unaffected.
* inhabit an area between high tide and low tide called the intertidal zone.
* integrate conditions over weeks and months.
* like to eat mostly fine organic material and plankton.
* live in lakes , rivers , and creeks
* open their valves to feed.
* pick up and store toxic pollutants from the water.
* play an important role in the aquatic ecosystem.
* reproduce in spring and afterwards become depleted of flesh.
* require clean, clear water and silt-free gravel or cobble to survive.
* respond to changes in water quality.
* secrete elastic byssal threads to secure their shells
- glue proteins to attach themselves to rocks
- strong threads that tether to rocks, docks, boats, and the shells of other animals
* seem to have nothing in common with other molluscs.
* serve as indicators of a river s health
- critical trophic and non-trophic roles in the functioning of riverine ecosystems
* shells within the same species closely resemble one anothers.
* shoot eggs into the water to spawn.
* stick to the rocks by extruding filaments stronger than steel.
* tend to wipe out other species in certain intertidal zones.
* tie themselves to rocks with strong byssal threads.
* try to tie up attacking snails with their byssus threads.
* use an amazing variety of strategies to attract host fish to their larvae
- gills like fishes to breathe underwater
* usually form dense colonies in rock pools, on logs, or at the base of boulders
- congregations on rock
* vary considerably with respect to their habitat preferences
- greatly in saltiness | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish | mussel:
Blue mussel
* Some blue mussels contaminate with acid.
* are an important commercial fishery
- filter feeders, straining plankton from the water
- smaller and can be found growing beyond the tidal mark on rocks
* live along the shore in tidal and subtidal areas.
Cultured mussel
* feed on crystal clear water and the meats are consistently plump and clean.
* rely on an adequate supply of natural food, primarily phytoplankton.
Female mussel
* brood their young from the egg to the larval stage in their gills.
* can reach maturity in less than a year.
* release tiny larvae called glochidia.
Freshwater clam
* Most freshwater clams have development.
* are very common in city water systems.
### seafood | shellfish | mussel | freshwater clam:
Zebra mussel
* Most zebra mussels are thumbnail size, but some grow up to two inches long.
* Some zebra mussels cause damage
- ecological damage
* Some zebra mussels have certain environmental requirements
* are freshwater mussels.<|endoftext|>### seafood | shellfish | mussel:
Freshwater mussel
* Most freshwater mussels team up with only one type of fish.
* Some freshwater mussels have modes.
* are also very effective environmental indicators
- ecologically important
* are one of America s most endangered species of wildlife
- North America's main claims to fame in terms of natural history
* are one of the most endangered families of wildlife in America
- of North American animals
- imperiled faunas of animals in the world
- the most endangered group of animals in the world
- valuable indicators of water quality
- very vulnerable
* belong to the world's second largest group of animals, called mollusks.
* have a high ecological value.
* have a unique life cycle
- history, requiring the use of fish in the life cycle
- no head, eyes, or appendages
* live on every continent except Antarctica
- throughout Missouri in a variety of aquatic habitats
* serve many purposes, including indicators of water quality.
Sea mussel
* form dense beds, generally in the intertidal zone of exposed rocky shores.
* spawn throughout the year, with peaks in activity in the spring and fall.
Small mussel
* are important, consumed in their shells after being bashed off the rocks by waves.
* can get into engine cooling systems causing overheating and damage.
Zebra mussel
* cluster in huge colonies, being anchored themselves to any hard surface.
* invade Lake Erie muds.<|endoftext|>### seafood | shellfish:
Octopod
* Some octopods are venomous.
* are active and intelligent predators, with good eyesight and brains
- cephalopods
- highly intelligent, probably more so than any other invertebrate
- the only invertebrate which has been conclusively shown to use tools
* have a variety of defences
- eight tentacles, of equal length, covered with sessile suckers
* inhabit many regions of the ocean, especially coral reefs.
* make up over one-third of the total number of living cephalopods.
+ Octopus, Defences
* Octopods have a variety of defences. They use active camouflage and mimicry, controlled by their nervous system. Most can eject black ink clouds to help escape, and some can shed an arm in extreme danger. It wriggles, and attracts the attacker
* Octopods are active and intelligent predators, with good eyesight and brains. They eat mostly crabs and some fish. Some species of octopuses eat other octopuses
- Intelligence
+ Octopus: Cephalopods
* Octopods inhabit many regions of the ocean, especially coral reefs. For defense against predators, they hide, flee quickly, expel ink, or use colour-changing camouflage. They live rather short lives.
* Octopods make up over one-third of the total number of living cephalopods. The term 'octopus' may be used to refer to those in the genus 'Octopus'. The term 'octopod' is correct for members of the order Octopoda in general. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish:
Pelecypod
* Most pelecypods feed by filtering organisms from the water.
* lack jaws and radula.
Raw shellfish
* Most raw shellfishes contain bacteria.
* can also transmit infectious diseases to humans
- carry bacteria
Scaphopod
* are very common in the oceans today.
* have a well-developed foot located at the large end of the shell.
Sea scallop
* are part of sea scallops
* range in color from milky white to slightly pink.
Univalve
* Have only one part to their shell and include animals like snails and abalone.
* are the shells of gastropods.
* can live in the water or outside the water.
* have one shell, and bivalves have two shells.<|endoftext|>### seafood | shellfish | univalve:
Abalone
* are also vulnerable to various bacterial and parasitic infections.
* can start to give birth at a small size.
* have tentacles that smell and locate seaweed.
* is an univalve
- games
- mollusks
- shellfishs
- snails
* live all over the world.
+ Abalone, Description: Gastropods :: Chinese cuisine :: Edible molluscs :: Gastropods :: Seafood
* Abalones live all over the world. They can be seen along the waters of every continent, except the Atlantic coast of South America, the Caribbean, and the East Coast of the United States. Most abalones are found in cold waters, along the coasts of New Zealand, South Africa and Australia, and Western North America and Japan in the Northern Hemisphere.
Aplacophoran
* are vermiform and spicule-bearing.
* have a radula and a posterior mantle cavity.
* is an univalve
Conch
* Most conchs live in colonies and are found in sand and grassy areas.
* also eat floating organic debris.
* are different colors
- hermaphrodites that reproduce sexually
- located in beachs
* eat grasses, algae, and floating organic debris.
* have spiral round shells and are bigger than periwinkles.<|endoftext|>### seafood | shellfish | univalve:
Nudibranch
* All nudibranchs are carnivores consuming slow-moving or stationery prey.
* Many nudibranches feed on anemones and hydroids.
* Many nudibranchs can use the poisonous chemicals found in their prey in their own body defence
- get their bright colors from their prey
- have gills
* Some nudibranchs actually take in and store some of the coloring substances from the food they eat
- are solar-powered
- create their own food by eating coral with algae
* are oval molluscs usually seen crawling very slowly along the seabed
- very small, averaging less than an inch in length
* can protect themselves from the hydroids and their nematocysts.
+ Nudibranch, Biology, Colours and defence: Gastropods
* Frick K. 2003. Predator suites and Flabellinid Nudibranch nematocyst complements in the Gulf of Maine. Proceedings of the American Academy of Underwater Sciences', 22nd Annual Scientific Diving Symposium. The nematocysts wander through the alimentary canal without harming the nudibranch. Then, the cells are brought to specific places on the creature's hind body. Nudibranches can protect themselves from the hydroids and their nematocysts. It is not yet clear how, but special cells with large vacuoles probably play an important role.
Sea hare
* Most sea hares have life.
* Some sea hares discharge a purple inky secretion when irritated.
* are found in sheltered coastal waters, usually where vegetation is thick.
* have a short life | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shellfish | univalve:
Sea slug
* Many sea slugs are able to consume stinging cells of other animals like coral.
* Most sea slugs feed on plants
- have chemicals
* Most sea slugs have female organs
- sex organs
- nasty chemicals
* Some sea slugs consume cnidarian prey
- develop gills
* Some sea slugs have glands
- salivary glands
- warty or smooth backs and have no visible gill organ
- look like leaves
- produce up to a million eggs, others only a few
* are also hermaphroditic, both male and female at the same time
- hermaphroditic, maintaining both male and female organs in one animal
- notoriously fussy eaters and can have a tough time obtaining food
- weapons
* comes in every imaginable color combination and in an amazing assortment of shapes.
- such poor eyesight they can barely distinguish light and shadow, much less patterns
- translucent bodies that have just about every color on the rainbow
* leave slime trails, just as slugs and snails do on land.<|endoftext|>### seafood:
Shrimp
* Most shrimp are omnivorous , but some are specialised for particular modes of feeding.
* Most shrimp has body shells
- eye sight
- hard shells
- shrimps are scavengers but others are active predators
* Some shrimp can mature directly as females.
* Some shrimp eats dead fish
* Some shrimp has appendages
- cholesterol
- claws
- legs
- noses
- powerful claws
- makes up diets
* Some shrimps also fluoresce, or light up, as a way to signal each other
- are burrowers and use their pleopods to excavate
- turn a brighter color during their summer mating seasons
* appear to be no different now from their fossilized counterparts.
* are common coral reef crustaceans that come in many sizes and colors
- fresh water and marine, crayfish strictly fresh water, and lobsters strictly marine
- often bright red, which in the deep sea has the same effect as being black
- typically scavengers, specialists in feed- ing on bits of detritus on the bottom
* depend on a mix of fresh and salt water for to survive.
* is crustaceans
- located in plates
- shellfishs
* provide high quality protein, vitamins and minerals and are low in calorie and fat content.
* provides benefits.
* remove ectoparasites from fishes in temperate waters.
* reproduce using sexual reproduction
- via eggs
* swim in energetic burst, surging up from the river bed and diving back down just as quick
- small schools<|endoftext|>### seafood | shrimp:
Adult shrimp
* are filter feeding benthic animals that live close to the bottom.
+ Shrimp: Decapods :: Seafood
* Adult shrimp are filter feeding benthic animals that live close to the bottom. They can live in schools and can swim rapidly backwards. Shrimp are an important food source for larger animals from fish to whales. They have a high tolerance to toxins in polluted areas, and may contribute to high toxin levels in their predators. They play important roles in the food chain and are important food sources for larger animals from fish to whales.
Cooked shrimp
* have red color in shells
- shells, firm meat, and a mild odor
* turn a reddish to pink color.
Fresh shrimp
* are firm in texture and have a mild odor.
* is marinated in lime juice, salt and chile.
Frozen shrimp
* are fine, so are frozen blood worms.
* constitute the highest foreign exchange earner amongst marine products.
Ghost shrimp
* are among the prey items of the grey smooth-hound
- particularly elongate, soft bodied and usually very pale in colour
* cause the oysters to sink in the mud and die.
Large shrimp
* Some large shrimp has cholesterol.
* are able to avoid predation by rapid movement but large daphnids are easily caught.
Mantis shrimp
* More mantis shrimp are spearers than are smashers.
* Some mantis shrimp has claws
Northern shrimp
* are protandrous hermaphrodites.
* begin life as males. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seafood | shrimp:
Peppermint shrimp
* All peppermint shrimp start off as males.
* Most peppermint shrimp has body shells
* are easy to take care in a tank, unless it reef tank
- nocturnal in nature
- small saltwater invertebrates
- hard shells
* species of shrimp known by the scientific name Lysmata wurdemanni.
Rock shrimp
* are relatively small in size.
* have a good flavor, but are hard to peel, therefore are usually sold peeled and cooked.
* is far more perishable than either lobster or shrimp.
Shrimp farming
* dates back several centuries.
* is one of the largest and most extractive industries within Belize.
* minor cause of loss.
* rapidly expanding industry, especially in Southeast Asian coastal communities.
Sunfish
* Most sunfishes have molar surfaces
* Some sunfishes are part of largemouths
- smallmouths
* are characterized by deep bodies and three spines in the anal fin.
### seafood | sunfish:
Redbreast sunfish
* appear to be better bioindicators of organochlorine compound contamination.
* have similar spawning habits to other sunfish.
Redear sunfish
* are best suited to large, warm lakes with low turbidity and vegetated shallows.
* have a naturally low reproductive capacity.
Whelk
* are a type of gastropod that live within their own shell
- carnivorous snails living below the tide line and often found in and on lobster pots
- less colortul than abalones
- mollusks
- more colorful than periwinkles
* feed on several bivalve species, including clams.
* have a powerful muscular foot that glides on a film of mucus which they secrete.
* is seafood
* make tasty meals themselves.
### seafood | whelk:
Large whelk
* have a more more calories per gram of meat.
* take less energy to crack, so the net energy gain is higher.<|endoftext|>### seasonal sport:
Outdoor recreation
* All outdoor recreation causes impacts to the ecological systems within which it occurs.
* can also help to prevent diseases that are related to modern lifestyles
- expose the hiker, climber and paddlesport enthusiast to hazards and danger
* contributes to people's overall well-being and good health.
* has a big impact on the economy.
* is an important part of our quality of life and civic identity
- dependent on a healthy and attractive environment
- enjoyed by children of all ages, especially during the hot summer months
* is part of daily living for Hartford area families
- our everyday life
* leads to a better quality of life physically, mentally, and socially.
* seasonal sport.
* vital part of Portland culture.
### seasoning | ail:
Garlic clove
* are alive.
* is ail
* pushes diastolic blood pressure down in patients with mild high blood pressure.
Anise seed
* can potentially help provide relief from a sour stomach.
* have a delicate, sweet licorice flavor similar to fennel.
* is the preservative used to ward off worms and other insects
- used in Southeast Asia
Aniseed
* has estrogenic activity and can be used to help normalize estrus in mares
- expectorant properties and is recommended for horses with chronic coughs
* induces copious perspiration and increases the volume and discharge of urine.
* very beneficial medicine for expelling wind from the stomach.
Caraway seed
* are actually the mericarps of ripe fruit borne in compound umbels
- part of caraways
- small and aromatic, with an anise flavor
* is used in baking, cheeses, and other foods.
Condiment
* Most condiments contain carbohydrates.
* are located in containers
- pantries
- refrigerators
- tables
* enhance food's flavor.
* make foods taste better.
### seasoning | condiment:
Chinese condiment
* cuts blood cholesterol.
* reduces elevated levels of blood cholesterol in the elderly. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seasoning | condiment:
Marinade
* Most marinades are high calorie because of sugar or oil content
- contain an acid such as vinegar, citrus juice or wine, and herbs or spices
- used in Indian barbecue are yogurt or lime based
* add flavor and tenderize tough cuts of meat, such as the skirt steak used for fajitas.
* add flavor, and in some cases, tenderize meat
- but they also help tenderize less tender cuts of meat
- taste and flavor
* also help to tenderize.
* always contain some kind of acid, often wine or vinegar.
* are a wonderful way to add flavor and tenderize low-fat meat or poultry
- also a delicious way to add flavor and tenderness to lean meats
- flavorful liquids that add flavor to the outer surface of the meat
- generally liquidy, but some can be as thick as paste
- good for dry fish, like tuna and wahoo
- popular because they turn less expensive cuts of meat into tasty entrees
* can also cut down on the gaminess in the taste of certain meats
- make any type of meat or poultry more tender and flavorful
* do flavor, however.
* give grilled foods a unique ethnic identity.
* have a multitude of uses.
* help tenderize and flavor venison.
* make grilled foods tastier, more tender, jucier and healther.
* serve different purposes.
* soften or denature tissue with their acid ingredients.
### seasoning | condiment | marinade:
Different marinade
* are used in different cuisines.
+ Marinade: Cooking methods
* The process may last seconds or days. Different marinades are used in different cuisines. For example, in Indian cuisine the marinade is usually prepared with a mixture of spices.
Salsa
* Most salsas are variations of salsa cruda, a fresh blend of tomatoes, onions, cilantro and garlic.
* are classically a combination of diced vegetables or fruits, vinegar, herbs and citrus
- more nutritious and less caloric than dips of flavored sour cream
* is food
- sauces
- spicy food
- used for fun
* rely in part on chiles to provide both flavor and heat.<|endoftext|>### seasoning | condiment:
Soy sauce
* All soy sauces are very low in fat and calories.
* Make a roux with flower and butter.
* Some soy sauces contain wheat.
* adds vitality and improves the taste of various foods.
* are condiments
- located in refrigerators
* brown, salty sauce made from fermenting soy beans with wheat or barley
- salty, liquid used as a condiment or seasoning in many Asian cuisines
* can replace salt.
* combines with Japanese sake and mirin wines, increasingly available in mainstream grocers.
* contains a wheat product called koji.
* dark brown liquid condiment that has been used in China for thousands of years
- made from soybeans that have undergone a fermenting process
* have a salty taste, but are lower in sodium than traditional table salt.
* is also an important flavourings in Indonesian cuisine
- high in protein
- an ancient Chinese seasoning
- extracted from the fermentation of soy beans and flour
- food high in sodium
- found with condiments or in the Asian food aisle
- made either by fermentation or by hydrolysis
* is made from fermented soybeans , salt, water and sometimes roasted grains
- okara via a process involving fungi and salt water
- of beans
- the most important condiment in China
- used as a flavor enhancer
* preserves ingredients naturally.
* primary seasoning in most food preparation, from hearty soups to salads.
* salty, savory sauce made from fermented soybeans, wheat, yeast, and salt.
* very popular condiment and marinade for many dishes in the Hawaiian cuisine.
Coriander seed
* are from the cilantro plant.
* have lots of benefit reducing the level of unwanted cholesterol.
* is used for seasoning and as herbal medicine. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seasoning:
Dill seed
* Most dill seeds are part of dill.
* Most dill seeds come from bloom plants
- flowers
- have flavor
* has antibacterial, sedative, and diuretic effects.
* is more pungent than the leaves and is the primary flavoring in dill pickles
- rich in mineral salts and is used in salt-free diets
* is used as a spice , with a flavor similar to caraway
- primarily to flavor pickles and in bread, potato, and vegetable dishes
* pungent ingredient found in salad dressings, pickles, sauerkraut, and even breads.
+ Dill, Uses: Herbs
Fenugreek
* are herbs
- part of fenugreeks
* contains mucilagins which are known for soothing and relaxing inflamed tissues.
* regulates pituitary gland to control appetite.
* relieves stress on the lymphatic system and helps the detoxification.
Fenugreek seed
* are mixed in an equal proportion with asparagus seeds.
* contain a certain portion of mucilaginous fiber with high viscosity.
* helps soothe the entire respiratory tract and helps rid the lungs of mucous.
* promote heart health and help in lowering blood cholesterol levels.
* show improved blood glucose control and insulin function.<|endoftext|>### seasoning:
Mustard seed
* Most mustard seeds come from plants
- contain enzymes
* Most mustard seeds have antibacterial properties
* Some mustard seeds contain proteins.
* are also essential ingredients in spicy fish dishes like jhaal and paturi
- part of black mustard
- spices
* fits well in a rotation with cereal grains.
- high values
* is one of the most popular spices traded in the world today
- the second most popular spice that is traded around the world
- primarily as a flavoring in the condiment mustard
* make pinheads look large.
Oil of wintergreen
* has aspirin-like properties.
* is distilled from the leaves
- made of the sap and leaves of yellow birch
Paprika
* enhances many dishes like egg mousses, chowders, fish and meat dishes.
* is spices.
* ranges in flavor from mild to hot.
Peppercorn
* is pepper.
* keep well in a tightly sealed container kept in a cool place.
### seasoning | peppercorn:
Green peppercorn
* are also unripe berries with a mild, light flavor
- milder and fruitier than the berries used to ground white pepper
- soft, underripe berries that have a fresh, less sharp flavor
- the unripened fruits which are pickled or preserved in brine
- unripe black peppercorns
* have a special taste all their own.<|endoftext|>### seasoning:
Peppermint oil
* Some peppermint oil has bases
- maintains health
* appears to act directly on the smooth muscle.
* applies to skin.
* can aid in oil secretion in skin, therefore preventing acne
- be very potent when applied in high concentrations
- cause burning and gastrointestinal upset in some people
* contains the essence of peppermint leaves.
* has a wide usage base.
* is also an effective antibacterial and antiseptic agent for combating infections
- available in capsule form in health food stores
- native to a number of countries
- used for sweets
* very good traditional treatment for belching and other digestive complaints. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seasoning:
Poppy seed
* Most poppy seeds contain minerals.
* Some poppy seeds cause neurological damage.
* Some poppy seeds contain acid
- fatty acid
- fiber
- have spices
* add flavour and texture to breads, cookies, muffins, cakes and other foods.
* appear in many foods during Purim.
* are a good source of carbohydrates that provide more energy into the body
- popular addition to salad dressings, cakes and muffins
- potential source of anti-cancer drugs
- effective in treating eczema due to their high content of linolenic acid
- inside a little capsule that has little openings around the top
* are less allergic among seeds and can be used safely even by pregnant women and kids
- nuts
- than a millimeter in length, kidney-shaped, and have a pitted surface
* are one of favorite items in many cultures
- the necessary ingredients in many cooling medicines
- popular ingredients and generally employed as condiment and to press oil
- quite perishable because of their high oil content
- rich in oil, carbohydrates, calcium and protein
- tasteless but when heated, they obtain a nutty, spicy-sweet flavor
- the main source of opiates used for the production of painkillers
- tiny and can clump together when sown
- used around the world in various cuisines
* are used as a food in many cultures
- topping for French breads androlls
- in the preparation of confections and breads
* are used in various German breads and desserts as well as in Polish cuisine
- cultures to impart their rich nutty flavor to the recipes
* can show up as opiates, and hemp-food products can produce positives for marijuana.
- morphine
- small amounts of opiates and can produce a positive test for opium
* have a mild, nutty taste and are especially popular in breads and baked goods.
* make hens and chicks.
* used as topping of breads are safe.
+ Seed dispersal, Mechanical dispersal, Wind dispersal: Plants
* It must be able to float easily on wind or else it will drop straight to the ground. G.A. Fox 2006. 2nd ed, Sinauer Associates, Massachusetts. Some seeds are very small and light, almost like dust. Orchid seeds and poppy seeds are like that. Poppy seeds are inside a little capsule that has little openings around the top. On a windy day, the poppy fruit capsule will sway from side to side, shaking out the tiny seeds out the windows like a salt shaker.
Red pepper
* are a common ingredient
- sweeter and usually more expensive
* has mild smell
* have more Vitamin A than green peppers.
* is an inflammatory and causes a profuse flow of tears and swelling of mucous membranes
- located in pizzas
- the ground version of Cayenne and other red chiles
- vegetables
* pack the most nutrition , because they've been on the vine longest.
Sesame seed
* add a unique, nutty flavor with a crunchy sensation to a variety of foods.
* are a most nutrient rich food
- rich source of calcium, iron, phosphorous, niacin, and protein
- greatly effective against a number of liver parasites
- sesame seeds
* are small and vary in color
- oval-shaped seeds of the sesamum family
- very popular in Chinese cooking
* contain far more calcium than milk. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seasoning:
Turmeric
* also has strong anti bacterial and anti fungal properties
- reduces the craving for sweet and fatty
- supports liver and gall bladder function by stimulating the flow of bile
* can also help improve digestion and balance the flow of bile
- stain fabrics and other materials, so handle carefully
* causes stains very easily.
* has antiseptic properties
- numerous medicinal virtues
* helps to reduce pain and inflammation.
* is also a powerful antioxidant, and helps lowers serum cholesterol
- anti-inflammatory to the mucous membranes
- more widely used as a colourant for textiles and food products
- both an adaptogen as well a bio-protectant
- considered as one of the best gift by nature to mankind
- found in the spice section of supermarkets
- fragrant and has a bitter, somewhat sharp taste similar to ginger
- highly valuable for the influence it exerts on the digestive system and the liver
- marketed in fingers, bulbs, and splits
- quite effective for the treatment of fibromyalgia as well
- reported to have anti-fertility activity as observed with experimental animals
- rich in iron and is valuable in anemia
- smeared on the face as a symbol of prosperity and power over diseases
- splendid against skin diseases and neem leaves are used to guard against small pox
- ubiquitous in Ayurvedic cooking
- very effective in the treatment of skin disease like ringworm and scabies
+ Turmeric, How it is used: Zingiberales
* Turmeric is also more widely used as a colourant for textiles and food products. It is sometimes substituted for saffron as it is much less expensive, but produces the same yellow colour. Turmeric has also been used as an alternative to medicine and can be made into a drink to treat colds and stomach complaints.
Second
* Every second can mean the difference between life and death.
* are agreement
- attendants
- dates
- part of minutes
- rank
- time units
- video games
* can make the difference between life and death
* count in medical emergencies like heart attack and stroke
- when it comes to preventing death or permanent injury
* is the amount of time to display the title image
- unit of time
* turn to minutes, minutes turn to hours, Hours turn to days.
### second major ingredient:
Corn oil
* has fewer monounsaturated fats and more polyunstaturates.
* is added to their feed in order to heighten the sheen of their coats
- oil
* is one component synthesized from corn
- of the most widely used cooking oils
* is the most valuable part of the corn kernel
- preferred cooking oil in Kuwait and the other Gulf countries
- vegetable oil
- very low
* second major ingredient.
* tends to be a little sticky.
* very heavy oil.
Secondary compound
* Many secondary compounds have signalling functions.
* Most secondary compounds play important roles.
* Some secondary compounds are produced by host plants
- deter predators
- find in plants
- inhibit growth
- protect plants
* have a variety of ways of discouraging herbivory.
### secondary open-angle glaucoma:
Pigmentary glaucoma
* is treated using medications, laser surgery and filtering surgery.
* occurs almost exclusively in Caucasians.
* secondary open-angle glaucoma.
Secondary organism
* enter and cause further rot.
* invade the affected tissue and cause the fruit to rot.
### secretings:
Sweating
* causes body odor.
* is secretings.
### secretings | watering:
Sprinkle
* are food
- small firm pieces of sugar and oils that are colored with food coloring
- watering
* has a refilable body with small holes in the belly to sprinkle glitter.
* is watering
Section
* are areas
- constituents
- music
* are part of bands
- citruses
- orchestras
- platoons
- slides
- wholes
- parts
- segments
- slices
- teams
- writing
* is music | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### section:
Cylindric section
* are the intersections of cylinders with planes.
+ Cylinder, Cylindric section: Three-dimensional shapes
* Cylindric sections are the intersections of cylinders with planes. For a right circular cylinder, there are four possibilities. A plane tangent to the cylinder, meets the cylinder in a single straight line. Moved while parallel to itself, the plane either does not intersect the cylinder or intersects it in two parallel lines. All other planes intersect the cylinder in an ellipse or, when they are perpendicular to the axis of the cylinder, in a circle.
Narration
* increases the mind's ability to remember.
* is as much a part of human nature as breath and the circulation of the blood
- reports
* is the crux and the foundation of storytelling
- process of telling back what has been learned or read
- telling of a story, normally a true story
- translation of print to spoken language
Neighbourhood
* affects a plant's risk of herbivory and subsequent success.
* can be any shape, but usually they are rectangular. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sediment
* All sediments originate from the weathering and erosion of older rocks.
* Is the soil, sand, and materials washed from land into waterways.
* Many sediments are anoxic below the sediment-water interface.
* Most sediment is transported from volcanically-disturbed watersheds during periods of heavy rain.
* Most sediments are formed by chemical precipitation
- generated by erosion
- made up of a mixture of different par- ticle sizes
* Most sediments are shelly with less plant fibers
- plant fibres
- collect liquids
* Most sediments consist of fine sand
- minerals
- contain matter
* Most sediments enter rivers
- flow into waterways
- reach coasts
- settle to bottoms
* Some sediment comes from natural erosion.
* Some sediments absorb heat
- solar heat
- sunlight
* Some sediments accelerate bank erosion
- affect humans
- are tiny grains of sand
- become water
- build up in canals
- bury oysters
* Some sediments cause destruction
- diseases
- clog fish gills
* Some sediments contain climatic indicators
- decay plant materials
- spores
* Some sediments enter gills
- streams
- float in water
- flow into oceans
- inhibit growth
- kill fish
- pass through gills
- produce silts
- provide energy
- reflect energy
- saturate with seawater
* accumulate very slowly into the ocean bottom.
* actually release nutrients under certain conditions.
* affect retention.
* also accumulate very slowly relative to snow on an ice sheet
- bind other pollutants that are transported in runoff
* also can carry and store toxic pollutants and nutrients that can poison habitat
- high concentrations of certain toxic materials
- carry nutrients and other pollutants in the eroded soils
- decrease the water quality by blocking light needed for plant photosynthesis
- transports other pollutants, like phosphorus and nitrogen
* analyses such as grain size, mineralogy, calcium carbonate and organic carbon contents.
* are accumulations of silt, sand, or gravel that settle out the atmosphere or out of water.
* are also repositories and natural processing sites for a range of anthropogenic wastes
- rich in nutrients such as phosphorus and nitrogen
- carbonate rich and organic carbon poor
- coarser in shallower water, e.g. on a beach
- deposited over a large area in a continuous sheet
- deposited, pressed and cemented in layers
- earth materials that are deposited in particulate, unconsolidated form
- highly mobile in moderate to high energy exposure areas
- loose particles of former rocks
- massive with local thin bands, planar laminae, flaser laminae, and silt laminae
- naturally high in organic matter
- red and brown because of better oxygenation
- soil particles carried by rainwater into streams, lakes, rivers and bays
- substances
* are the deposits that harden into sedimentary rock
- matrix of the archaeological record
- typically sand and gravel with some clay
* become a mass of material saturated with water and with no strength
- rock when buried, subjected to pressure, and cemented by mineral precipitates
* becomes rock when it is buried and compacted by huge overlying loads of other sediment.
* build up at the bottom of oceans, lakes and rivers.
* can also abrade the corals
- cover the corals directly and kill it
- damage the gills of adult steelhead
- decrease river bottom infiltration, reducing the yield of nearby wells
- harm dams and reservoirs
- increase the likelihood and severity of floods
- result from chemical precipitation or secretion by organisms
- stress aquatic organisms when it is suspended in the water
* can be a food source for corals, as well as a stressor
- different sizes depending upon the location in the floodplain of the river
- very reactive and their activity increases with decreasing particle size
- block sunlight from reaching underwater grasses and suffocate shellfish
- clog or irritate fish gills, so that they are unable to function
- collect at the bottom of water heaters
- come from the erosion of soil or from the decomposition of plants and animals
- contain substantial amounts of total arsenic
* can cover fish eggs and the gravel nests they rest in
- spawning beds, destroying fish populations
- damage fish habitat and degrade water quality in streams, rivers, and lakes
- either improve or degrade the soil upon which it is deposited
- erode stream beds made of soft rock, such as sandstone or limestone
- even preserve plant life
- expand when they freeze, get wet or are heated up in the sun
- harm aquatic organisms including fish
- move around quickly, but it takes a long time to break down bedrock
- reach non-tidal areas through many sources
- refer to particles ranging in size from microscopic to several meters in diameter
- sort by size when they settle out from water
* can suffocate fertilized eggs
- the developing embryos before they hatch
- wash into storm drain causing pollution
* carried by the water fill the voids in the rock.
* carries adsorbed nutrients into water and displaces regular water flow.
* carries the nutrient phosphorus to lakes, causing algae blooms and excessive weed growth
* carry to different places with wind and water.
* cause increased suspended solids in streamwater.
* causes problems to the aquatic habitat by covering up gravel for fish spawning
- various damage to water resources and to water users
* chokes the water, killing fish and disrupting other aquatic life.
* clearly cause nitrogen to undergo a number of changes.
- sand, silt, and clay particles
* consist of sands, silts and clays from shelf
- interlayered by meandering streams
- terrace gravel
* consists largely of silts and clays, with rock cropping out in places.
* consists of particles of all sizes, including fine clay particles, silt, sand, and gravel
- two visually distinct floc layers
* contain elevated levels of heavy metals and polyaromatic hydrocarbons
- heavy metals such as zinc and lead
- high amounts of phosphorus iii
- mostly elemental mercury
* containing the cell walls remains of ancient diatoms frustules.
* deposited in a delta are laid down in layers known as beds.
* dominate the miogeosyncline, whereas volcanic rocks are predominant in the eugeosyncline.
* drifts and contourites on the continental margin of northwest Britain
- on continental margins collect sediment transported to the site by bottom currents
* eventually settle out in a lake or pond, but they start to fill in the lake or pond.
* fall to the bottom of the ocean, too.
* fills streams, rivers, reservoirs, lakes and roadside ditches, reducing their useful life.
* find their way to our surface waters from many sources.
* form in either marine or terrestrial environments.
* generally accumulate in continuous sheets within a given region
- result from erosion of cropland and grazing land
* harden to form sedimentary rock through the application of pressure.
* have to accumulate over the organism in order to preserve it.
* impair quality
* includes clay, silt, and other components of soil.
* increase in thickness toward the center of a basin.
* increases the turbidity, or cloudiness, of water.
* indicate shoreline and near-shore of shallow seas.
* is also a common pollutant washed from pastures and livestock facilities
- any soil or rock material present in the lake transported by wind, water, or glaciers
- by far the most significant pollutant of the Northeast Region's streams
- coarse sand and gravel
- harmful to fish and small aquatic animals
- important to determining the morphology of river systems
- made of rocks, dirt, and earth
* is moved and redeposited to increase the size of continental shelves
- down rills and gullies and deposited on the beach as fan-shaped deposits
* is one of the most damaging pollutants to our drinking water source and life in the river
- significant pollutants resulting from agriculture practices
- rock debris such as clay, silt, sand, gravel, or even larger material
- several feet deep in places
- somewhat like sand dunes, in that it's dynamic
- the greatest pollutant, by volume, in Iowa
* is the largest pollutant by volume of Midwest surface waters
- of surface water in Iowa
- water pollutant by volume in North Carolina and the United States
- most prevalent pollutant impairing water quality in the Virgin Islands
* is the number one pollutant, by volume, of surface water in the state of Indiana
- water pollutant from nonpoint sources in Indiana
- result of an accumulation of minerals in the water mains
- stuff that is transported by wind, water or ice to a site of deposition
- transported by the glacier and deposited where the ice melts
* makes up most of the pollutant carried by runoff.
* occupy areas
- extensive areas
* occur in water bodies both naturally and as a result of various human actions.
* often carries organic matter, animal or industrial wastes, nutrients, and chemicals
- collects in the bottom of a hot water heater
- contains bits of plant leaves and other debris
- settles in intertidal mudflats which are extremely difficult to colonize
* particles themselves have two methods of transport.
* presses down and sand hardens to rock forming a fossil.
* prevent subsidization, drowning and even disappearance of deltas and marshes.
* prime carrier of phosphorus
- factor limiting fish production
* product of erosion.
* reduces light penetration, making photosynthesis more difficult for water plants
- the productivity of aquatic plant and animal communities
* refers to any unconsolidated or loose material.
* remain unconsolidated in the environment of deposition and on the sea floor.
* routing in channels is described by the one-dimensional sediment continuity equation.
* serious threat to spawning and rearing grounds for steelhead, salmon, and other fish.
* settle and accumulate in shallow areas like the edges of the continental shelf and slope
- around the cells and mineralize
- the bottom of surface water
* show evidence.
* smothers the plants and animals that live in the water.
* take various forms.
* tend to collect at low elevations and in depressions in the earth.
* travel to different places that both harm wildlife and the water.
* vary from siliciclastic to interbedded mixtures of biogenic and siliciclastic components
- in texture across the extensive lake bed
* washes back into the water, causing turbidity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sediment:
Alluvial deposit
* are found in wadis, basins, and oases
- objects of paleopotamological studies
- typically very high permeability soils
* can form deltas where the river flows into a lake or ocean.
* including floodplain and channel gravel deposits occur in stream courses.
* occur throughout the Niger River basin.
Alluvial sediment
* can be only a few feet thick or hundreds of feet in thickness.
* is pounded and ground into finer and finer grains each time it moves downstream.
Bottom sediment
* Some bottom sediments contain decay plant materials
* consist of mud, sand, cobble, gravel, and organic debris.
* is in a state of constant agitation due to the flow from the vent.
* range from sand to mud.
Evaporite
* are essentially pure salt
- examples of biochemical sedimentary rocks
- present
- the rocks formed by chemical precipitation during evaporation of sea water
- water-soluble salts that precipitate from solution in arid conditions
* form by precipitation from sea water or brackish fresh water
- through evaporation of water
* tend to dissolve completely.
Excess sediment
* Most excess sediments flow into waterways.
* build up in lakes and rivers.
* can also damage fish gills
- destroy fish spawning habitat and turn beaches into quagmires
Excessive sediment
* Some excessive sediments kill fish.
* can cover up spawning habitats and reduce water quality.
Fine sediment
* accumulates around mangals, making for very turbid water at high tide.
* are found in calm areas such as bays and lagoons
- soil particles that can hurt fish spawning areas
* coagulate as the water becomes saltier.
* is present around shoals protected by islands
- the most abundant product of erosion , which is why mudrocks are so common
+ Mudrock: Sedimentary rocks
Lake sediment
* are expressions of past landscapes.
* covered by a basaltic blanket contain a larger number of well preserved fossils.
* preserve records of past changes in terrestrial and aquatic environments.
Lithogenous sediment
* are from continental masses or volcanic activity in the open ocean.
* is A. derived from rock.
Marine sediment
* Most marine sediments are of two basic types
- consist of materials
* are minerals that settled down through oceans, which are relatively high in boron.
* penetrate into the riverbeds up to a long distance from the coast.
* provide long and continuous records of climate change at a range of timescales.
Organic sediment
* Some organic sediments come from leaves.
* decompose with anaerobic bacterial action and produce fish-toxic hydrogen sulfide.
* is very nutrient rich.
Quaternary sediment
* consist chiefly of till and outwash.
* rest on and infill a karst gypsum bedrock surface.
Salt lick
* are a very important habitat resource.
+ Porcupine: Rodents
* Porcupines like going near roads in areas where rock salt is used to melt ice and snow, and are known to gnaw on vehicle tires or wiring coated in road salt. Salt licks placed nearby can stop porcupine damage.
Sediment loading
* can directly smother corals and inhibit photosynthesis.
* comes from both rural and urban runoff as well as shoreline erosion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sedimentation
* Most sedimentation occurs in areas
- years
* Some sedimentation destroys habitats
- is caused by wildfires
* affects both habitat quality and food availability.
* allows larger particles to settle out before filtration.
* begins where erosion stops.
* can also fill in pools, which are an important part of fish habitat
- have adverse effects on many organisms
- cause loss of flood conveyance capacity resulting in more frequent flooding
- degrade habitat for fish and interfere with river navigation
- result in the growth of rough interfaces
- smother eggs in stream gravel
* causes high levels of turbidity and total suspended solids.
* increases nutrient pollution and degrades water quality.
* inhibits the reproduction of aquatic life.
* is an important factor in evaluating the habitat of a stream.
* is one of the major threats to the coral reefs of the world
- more subtle forms of habitat degradation in wetlands
- sometimes a problem in cider stored at refrigerated temperatures
* is the biggest class of water pollutants
- deposition of sand, silt, and clay particles onto the bottom of a water body
- leading cause of stream impairment in North Carolina
- most important pollutant removal mechanism for the runoff control systems
- mud that enters the ocean from river run-off
- primary cause of water quality degradation in freshwater segments of the basin
* is the process by which sediment is deposited e.g. in waterways
- solids and liquids are separated by gravitational forces
- of removing the flocculate matter
- removal of solids from water by gravity settling
- result of erosion
* kills coral.
* major cause of the decreased quality of fisheries throughout the United States.
* natural phenomenon
- recent years
- the settling zone as the water flow towards to outlet zone
- when soil and other solids wash into the Bay and rivers
- wherever the water slows
* places younger rock layers on top of older ones.
* results anytime flow is reduced by restriction of velocity or a change in aeration.
* shortens the life of a reservoir and decreases water quality.
* significantly accelerates the process of eutrophication.
* slowly fills in lakes and reservoirs, reducing their water holding capacity.
* uses gravity to separate solids from the process liquid.
### sedimentation:
Excessive sedimentation
* can alter food sources of wetland mammal communities.
* problem and stems mostly from landslides.
Lode
* Some lodes continue in an uninterrupted vein.
* is sedimentation
### seeds:
Cotton seed
* All cotton seeds contain gossypol.
* Some cotton seed is used as a high-protein concentrate for food products.
* are seeds.
### seepage:
Exudation
* is seepage
- usually the result of inflammation
* varies along the root and so efflux varies with time.
### segment:
Body segment
* Every body segment contains sympathetic ganglia from which postganglionic axes can spread.
* Most body segments have two pairs of legs.
* Some body segments have one or more pairs of jointed appendages.
* containing swimmerettes appear during the third larval stage, or calyptopis.
* make an animal less flexible.
Internode
* are part of stalks
* are the areas between the points of attachment of the leaves
- regions of differentiated tissue between successive organs
- segments of the stem between nodes
- spaces between the nodes
- usually narrow at the base and enlarged at the top where a natural opening develops
* have less meristematic potential than other parts of the stem.
* shorten, and immature fruit fails to ripen.
Line segment
* are a set of sequentially numbered coordiante pairs
- manifolds
* have length, plane regions have area, and physical objects have mass. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### segment:
Sarcomere
* Most sarcomeres are part of myofibril.
* are composed of thin and thick filaments and titin arranged in repeating units
- present
* are the basic structure of muscle function
- smallest contractile units of muscle fiber
* contain thick and thin filaments.<|endoftext|>### segment:
Somite
* SOMites consider reproduction to mean perfect, cloned duplication of an existing object
- describe Newtonian objects as analytic functions of time
* are blocks of cells that form a segmental pattern in the vertebrate embryo
- chevron shaped clear to the caudal fin
* are chevron-shaped only on the attached part of the trunk
- past the cloaca
- connected by undifferentiated mesoderm, known as lateral plate mesoderm
* arise from the mesoderm.
* begin to take on a chevron shape.
* develop from the paraxial mesoderm and constitute the segmental pattern of the body.
* differentiate into sclerotome and dermomyotome.
* produce cells that become vertebrae, ribs, muscles, and skin.<|endoftext|>Segregation
* can result from economic and cultural differences in addition to discrimination.
* distribution of duties.
* is an issue in prison when talking about elderly
- born and bred of ignorance
- both a reflection of and a contributor to land market inefficiencies
- part of meiosis
- separation
- situations
- smallest when majority and minority populations have the same spatial distribution
- social organizations
- still commonplace in our society
* is the offspring of an illicit intercourse between injustice and immorality
- random sorting of paired chromosomes to produce gametes
- worst form of discrimination facing people with disabilities
- therefore at the core of the dynamics of conflict
- used to manage offenders who have violated prison rules
* leads to discrimination, which in turn leads to prejudice and hate.
* means being separated because of a reason like skin color.
* occurs during meiosis, the formation of the sex cells
- when molten metal solidifies slowly
* process by which one or more groups are isolated from another group.
* represents the freedom to choose one's associates.
* sets the bounds for the independence of all races. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Seizure
* Most seizures are brief and self-limited, but they occasionally do last longer
- brief, lasting seconds to minutes
- minor, short and can be controlled with drugs
* Most seizures happen without warning - learn what to do if a person has a seizure
- warning, last only a short time and stop without any special treatment
- involve episodes
- involve, in addition to the head lift or tilt, twitching of the muscles and eyes
- last only a short time and stop spontaneously
* Most seizures occur in three distinct phases
- randomly, at any time and without any particular cause
- suddenly and without warning
* Some seizures are a metabolic reaction, characterized by convulsions, which are of a short duration
- emergencies
- idiopathic
- associate with injections
- begin as focal ones and then become generalized
* Some seizures cause hallucination
- visual hallucination
- follow ingestion
* Some seizures involve animals
- several thousand animals
* Some seizures occur after birthdays
- first birthdays
- in cats
- only at night
- take the form of antisocial or unnatural conduct
* affect about half of the children diagnosed with the syndrome
- the self-esteem of children, who feel different from others, and embarrassed
* are a common part of severe hypoglycemia
- possible side effect of cycloserine therapy
- rare complication of exposure to high levels of oxygen
- rare, but possible, side effect
- symptom of epilepsy
- very serious side effect that have been reported with the use of tramadol
- abnormal, excessive synchronous discharges in a group of neurons
- abnormalities of brain electrical activity
- also present in all breeds
- an abnormal electrical discharge of the brain
- appropriations
- attacks
- books
* are common during acute infarction and hemorrhage and require anticonvulsant therapy
- the course of the disease, especially in young children
- in children with epileptic disorder
- commonly present in the early stages of the disease
- due to electrical discharges in the brain
- electrical storms on the surface of the brain
- episodes of spontaneous discharge of groups of nerve cells in the brain
- extreme events of the body
- generally difficult to control due to their resistance to anti-epileptic drugs
- illnesses
- most common when estrogen rises and less common when progesterone levels are highest
- myoclonic, generalized tonic-clonic, astatic, or atonic
- of various types and frequencies, and are different for each individual
* are often a feature of the acute illness
- self-limiting as the renegade neurons exhaust themselves and stop firing
* are one of the most frequently seen neurological problems in cats
- seen neurological problems in dogs
- partial when the abnormal electrical activity is limited to one part of the brain
- rare in standard doses
* are sudden attacks that cause a wide range of unusual behaviors and sensations
- storms of electrical activity in the brain
- uncontrolled episodes of electrochemical activity in the brain
- temporary excessive discharges of groups of nerve cells in the brain
* are the events caused by the short disruption of the brain's normal activity
- main symptom of epilepsy, but can be caused by a wide variety of conditions
* are the most common manifestation of supratentorial cavernous malformations
- neurological disorder of childhood
- type of symptom of a tumor in the temporal lobe
- presenting symptom in approximately one-third of patients
- primary symptom of epilepsy
* are the result of an excessive and disorderly discharge of electrical energy in the brain
- nerve cells that fire off abnormal electrical charges
- neurons firing too frequently and irregularly
- traumatic medical events
- uncommon but are thought to be the result of hypoxia
- uncommon, but do occur in some people
* are usually completely controllable with medications
- stereotypic, that is, they tend to follow a specific pattern
* are very damaging to the brain, especially a brain that is immature at birth
- individual in nature
* associated with isoniazid overdose often respond to pyridoxine administration.
* become a problem between ages one and two , and the baby usually dies by about age four.
* can also be totally unrelated to a brain tumor
- lead to dislocations
- occur with food allergies
- take a mixed form, with staring spells and momentary lapses of attention
- alter awareness, physical movements, consciousness or actions
* can be a consequence of heat stroke
- frightening for the person having the seizure or anyone witnessing it
- the result of the disease Epilepsy, or can be a sign of many different problems
- greatly complicate the presence of brain tumors
- happen before, during, or after birth
* can have a significant impact on quality of life
- many characteristics
- injure the person and anyone giving first aid
* can lead to permanent brain damage and possibly death
- physical injury from falling
- look like temper tantrums, staring, or arrhythmia
- occur after high doses due to the metabolite normeperidine
* can occur in any species, but the dog more common victim
- different forms and severity for each individual
- occur, triggered by a toxin released by the germ
- range from momentary attention lapses to convulsions
* can result from a wide variety of causes, such as metabolic abnormalities and head injury
- in falls, or cause oxygen deficiency for the baby
- start early in life or be sudden onset in adult dogs of varying age
* can take many forms, since the brain is responsible for such a wide range of functions
- vary in intensity, duration, and frequency of occurrence
- worsen over time without treatment
* causing a fatal injury are extremely rare.
* come from a sudden burst of electical signal in the brain that no child can control
- many causes
- in a variety of types and are often misdiagnosed
* disorders The occurrence of single or multiple seizures
- surgical treatment of epilepsy has made a comeback in the last few years
* generally disappear by adulthood.
* happen when the body is deprived of sugar for too long a period of time
- brain's cells fire abnormally
- there sudden electrical discharge in the brain
* have an adverse effect upon functional status and cognition.
* is an attack
* occur almost exclusively nocturnally
- as a result of abnormal electrical activity in the brain
- before birth
- due to the liver damage
* occur in a third of alcohol withdrawal patients
- about two percent of patients, most of whom are younger than six months
- four stages
- more frequently than in the general population
* occur when discharges of electrical energy from brain cells become uncontrolled
- excess electrochemical activity interferes with brain function
- there is an imbalance in the electrical activity of the brain
- without any warning sign and can lead to disability or even death
* occurring in photosensitive epilepsy are the most common type of visually induced seizures.
* often begin at puberty for women, adding to an already stressful time
- intercede, both generalized and focal, and coma can last for several days
* originate in the area of the lesion and a narrow margin surrounding it.
* require management.
* result from random firing of nerve cells.
* sometimes do cause brain damage, particularly if they are severe.
* tend to run in families.
* usually develop after the first obvious motor abnormalities
- occur without warning and without the person's awareness of what is happening
* vary in duration and after-effects. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seizure:
Absence seizure
* are particularly common in children and teenagers, especially in girls.
* are rare but can occur in people with learning disabilities
- in adults
- sudden blank spells
- very common in children and teenagers
* begin in childhood and involve a brief loss of awareness.
* can occur several times a day, and tend to come in clusters
- take many forms, depending upon which part of the brain is affected
* take the form of a blank stare lasting only a few seconds.
Clonic seizure
* are repetitive, rhythmic jerks that involve both sides of the body at the same time.
* begin within days of birth and stop in weeks to months.
* cause repeated jerking movements of muscles on both sides of the body.
Expropriation
* are confiscation.
* comes in many forms.
* is the forced transfer of assets with compensation.<|endoftext|>### seizure:
Febrile seizure
* are convulsions brought on by a fever in infants or small children
- essentially impossible to prevent
- limited to the young, probably under three years old
* are the most common form of childhood seizures
- seizure disorder in childhood
- type of seizures observed in the pediatric age group
- usually benign but can cause considerable parental anxiety
* can be frightening, but they are generally harmless, and have no long-term effects
- occur with only a minimally elevated temperature
- result
* is known to aggregate in families.
* make parents and grandparents very anxious.
* seizure brought on by high fever and infection.
* tend to occur in families.
Focal seizure
* are less common and, as the term implies, involve only a part of the body
- more likely from secondary epilepsy than primary
* can also occur.
* remain localized to one body region.
Impoundment
* Many impoundments have irregular shapes that create coves and peninsulas.
* are seizures.
* general term for the body of water, regardless of size, formed by damming a river.
* potential factor affecting habitat quality.
* receiving drainage waters from agricultural land can also function as buffer zones.<|endoftext|>### seizure:
Kidnapping
* are a common practice in Yemen by tribesmen seeking concessions from the government
- attacks
- captures
- criminal acts
* is an aggravated form of false imprisonment
- offence under the common law of England and Wales
- punishable by a maximum term of ninety-nine years of imprisonment
- seen as a way to forcefully achieve the re-distribution of resources
* is the abduction and detention of person, to exact money or for other unlawful end
- act of taking a hostage and asking for a sum of money, called ransom
* requires the willful seizing, confining, or carrying away of a live person.
* second degree felony.
* sign of the ill exercise of law and government and the absence of the modern state.
* single crime, rather than, say, one crime per hour of detention.
+ Crime in Brazil, Overview: Crime by country :: Brazil
* Kidnappings do still happen. Increased police know-how has helped the problem. Prostitution 'per se' is not a crime in Brazil, unlike procuring. The Government of Brazil has increased efforts to combat child prostitution and sex tourism.
+ Hostage
* Kidnapping is the act of taking a hostage and asking for a sum of money, called ransom. If the ransom is paid, the hostage is freed. If the ransom is not paid, the hostage is killed.
### seizure | kidnapping:
Parental kidnapping
* crime in every U.S. state and a felony in most.
* is the abduction of a child by a parent.
Myoclonic seizure
* Most myoclonic seizures are axial, which sometimes results in falls.
* appear by the second or third year and are often photosensitive.
* can occur before, during, or after the atonic seizures.
* cause single or multiple muscle twitches, jerks or spasms.
* consist of sporadic jerks, usually on both sides of the body.
* involve discharges in the motor cortex. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### seizure:
Partial seizure
* Some partial seizures produce periods of automatic behavior and altered consciousness.
* are among the most difficult to bring under control with existing treatments
- limited to one area of the brain, while generalized involves the whole brain
* begin with a discharge of neurons in just one part of the brain.
* can evolve into generalized seizures.
* happen when the disturbance is focused within a limited region of the brain.
* occur in just one part of the brain.
* occur when abnormal electrical activity only involves one area of the brain
- the abnormal electrical discharge in the brain is limited to one area
* result in leg jerks only, while generalized result in all body parts jerking.
* start in one part of the brain.
Uncontrolled seizure
* Some uncontrolled seizures can cause scar tissue which can interfere with cognitive functioning.
* can disrupt careers and personal lives.
Selectivity
* Selectivities are properties.
* depends upon the pH and ionic strength.
* is how well reciever rejects other signals
- mols benzene produced per mol toluene reacted
- the key to the state of music today
* means that people select only bits and pieces of situations
- the pesticide kills certain pests, rather than a wide range of insects
* refers to the number of stocks that a scan returns.<|endoftext|>Selenium compound
* Most selenium compounds are colorless
- quite volatile
* Some selenium compounds are added to anti-dandruff shampoos
- very toxic and harmful to things that live in water
* are very toxic.
* have disparate abilities to impose oxidative stress and induce apoptosis.
+ Selenium, Properties, Chemical properties: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals
* Most selenium compounds are colorless. Selenium compounds are not common
- Safety
* It is toxic in large amounts. Some selenium compounds are very toxic and harmful to things that live in water. Consuming around 5 mg of selenium per day can kill a human being after a certain amount of time
### self- inflicted blindness:
Self deception
* is misconception
- one of the easiest and most dangerous mistakes that a person can make
* self- inflicted blindness.
### self-adjusting flocculent:
Calcium sulfate
* has a low capacity, but it is very complete and rapid.
* is chemical compounds
- known by the trade name drierite
- reasonably inert
- salt
- slightly soluble in water
- very difficult to remove from pottery
* self-adjusting flocculent.
### self-determination:
Home rule
* is equated with democracy
- seen by municipal decision makers as central to their ability to govern
* restricts legislators to passing laws that affect the entire state.
### self-discipline:
Austerity
* also means removing the defects that are inherent in the sense organs.
* is an anti-growth policy
- compulsory, discriminatory, permanent and causes the death of thousands of children
- self discipline
* means renunciation of sensual pleasures, especially the pleasure of sex.<|endoftext|>### self-employed:
Career counselor
* Most career counselors are self-employed
- assist workers
* Most career counselors have degrees
- master degrees
* Some career counselors work in colleges
- firms
* assist people with the process of making career decisions
- masters
* help people make career decisions.
* hold a graduate degree in counseling with a specialization in career counseling.
* work in colleges, businesses, government agencies, and career centers.
* work with clients at various stages of their careers
- students who are uncertain about their career direction
### self-help method:
Verbal protocol
* allows a person to use cognitive processes to solve problems.
* self-help method.
### self-limited benign condition:
Transient synovitis
* has an uncertain etiology and remains a diagnosis of exclusion.
* self-limited benign condition. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### self-limiting disorder:
Aplastic crisis
* Occurs when a child's bone marrow temporarily stops producing red blood cells.
* self-limiting disorder.
### self-reinforcing mechanisms:
Value chain
* are self-reinforcing mechanisms.
* stretch back to the beginnings of civilization, by definition in fact.
### selfishness:
Opportunism
* are selfishness.
* is selfishness
* takes many forms.<|endoftext|>### selling:
Retailing
* are selling.
* course that focuses on the operation and management of retail businesses.
* field experiencing dynamic growth, and requires a growing pool of management talent.
* grows every year, even in recessions.
* has countless career jobs in the United States.
* is Darwinian survival of the fittest
- about delivering goods and services to consumers at a price they are prepared to pay
- also an important contributor to the world economy
- an environment which requires creativity
- indicative of directions in the marketplace
* is one of the fastest growing segments of the economy
- largest sectors in the global economy
- most public industries
* is the LAST stage of economic exchange before goods and services are consumed
- closest marketing activity to consumers
- job of selling to the final consumer
- most visible industry and a big part of the economy
- second largest employment industry in Florida
- selling of goods and services directly to the final consumer
- where the rubber meets the road
* particularly salient industry in which to study the impacts of technology.
### semi-soft ripened cheese:
Brick cheese
* is also a white cheese with mild pungent flavor
* semi-soft ripened cheese.
### semiconductors:
Active component
* Most Active components are semiconductors.
* Some active components protect livers. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sensation
* Every sensation is an expression of pure consciousness.
* Most sensation relates to movement.
* Some sensations trigger responses that occur without any analysis.
* acts as a motivating force on the instinctual level.
* affects the third eye and, by doing so, nurtures self-acceptance.
* are a source of nourishment for the nervous system
- chaotic and, therefore, unrelated
- due to an external movement which generates an internal reaction in our organism
- feelings that originate directly from our perceptions and lead to impulses
- our subjective experience of the objective stimuli that make up our environments
* are the food of the brain
- starting point of knowledge
* are, following tradition, said to be objects of sensory experiences.
* arises and flows according to impulses.
* begin in the womb as the fetal brain senses the movements of the mother's body.
* begins when a receptor fires in response to a stimulus.
* can have a dramatic effect on the nervous system.
* conscious or unconscious awareness of external and internal stimuli.
* creates the thirst of individualized being.
* differ from person to person.
* exist in both lower and higher organisms.
* exist, of one type or another, at every moment on every part, every atom of the body.
* has to be distinguished from feeling on the one hand, and from perception on the other.
* involves the process of data collection by the senses.
* is an interaction between the subject and the object, a physical phenomenon.
* is created by brains
- nervous systems
- stimuluses
- excitement
- intact in all extremities
- latent in every atom of substance
- one that is felt either in an objective or in a subjective symptom
- perceived reality gone wrong, tainted by gunshots and track marks
* is the detection of the presence of stimuli
- function connected to perceptions themselves
- non-resembling means that provokes the figure
- raw information from sensory organs that our nervous system sends to the brain
- recognizance of nerve vibration
- when something goes into the mind, and a perception is what the mind does with it
* kinesthetic feeling, perception thought resulting from that feeling.
* lead to memory, which in turn lead to experience.
* lies at the interaction of mind and matter.
* overlaps the two fields of mind and matter.
* produces feeling, and feeling produces decision, and decision produces action.
* provide matter, and space and time the form.
* refers to immediate and basic experiences generated by isolated, simple stimuli.
* run through the body, dispersing the faculties.
* social game that is created for all ages, but primarly is based for adults.
### sensation:
Corneal sensation
* begins to decrease.
* is present and symmetric.
Loss of sensation
* can progress rapidly as the median nerve is damaged.
* carries a risk of foot ulceration.
* leads to repeated trauma and deformity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sensation:
Smell
* Many smells are heavier than air and can be smelled only at ground level.
* Most smell attracts insects
- predators
- comes from secretion
* Some smell affects situations
- comes from glands
* also play an important part in our emotions.
* are made of fumes of various substances
- sometimes an indication of something that is generally wrong with our lives
- vitally important to most mammals
* attracts cows
- snakes
* can also create emotional responses to food
- serve as landmarks and clues for environmental awareness
- signal danger, fear, or dread
* can create both positive and negative emotional responses to food
- powerful mental associations, therefore they are useful in ritual
- evoke memories in funny ways
- involve showers
- serve as memory aids or as a means of conditioning reactions and performance
* can trigger nausea
- very remote, sometimes forgotten, memories buried in the unconscious
* create special feelings, affect moods, and evoke memories.
* enhance many experiences throughout life.
* evoke mental images that affect and change our life energy fields.
* evokes emotions such as fear, contentment, even sexuality.
* has notes.
* help to identify people, places, objects, other animals, etc.
* is modality.
* play a role in the world of work and business
- very important part in the animal's life
* plays critical roles
* range from strong detergents to urine and body odor.
* reach the olfactory sensory neurons through two pathways.
* stimulate learning and information.
### sensation | smell:
Loss of smell
* Some loss of smell occurs normally with aging.
* can often be the only symptom.
* is known as anosmia.
Malodor
* can signal poor, and sometimes unsafe conditions.
* is smell
Pong
* PonG library for creating configuration dialogs.
* are video games.
* is smell
### sensation | smell | pong:
Ping pong
* game of skill.
* is simple physics, but under stress, the body often works against what physics calls for. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sensation | smell:
Scent
* All scents are safe for use in wax candles.
* Most scent attracts bees
- moths
- predators
* Most scent is caused by oily secretion
- scents contain enough alcohol to harm and kill a child after ingesting only a few swallows
* Some scent attracts animals
- beetles
- insects
- wasps
* Some scent comes from glands
- microscopic glands
- oil glands
* Some scent glands secrete fluid
- musks
* Some scents are slightly stronger sexual attractants than others
- encourage activity and alertness, while others help people relax and unwind
* actually have a function, usually for pollination by insects.
* are detected by the large number of sensory cells on a membrane in the nostrils
- different and some are more focused and concentrated for one type of insect or another
- highly volatile molecules which detach themselves from their source and float in the air
- natural essential oils
- non-toxic and can be mixed over and over
- responsible for love at first sight, instant dislike, and more
- the souls of flowers and are the very essence of the garden
- or repels almost every creature on earth
- pollinators that feed on decaying carcasses
* can be a cure for what ails
- unreliable when the ground is too dry or covered in snow
- cling or be diffused, depending on the wind, weather, terrain, or humidity
- have a very powerful effect on our body, mind, and spirit
- help in creating a preferred state of mind and relaxation
- induce an amazing power as they influence our moods
- originate from several plant parts but is often associated with the flowers
- trigger memories of tastes or sights
* communicate instantaneously.
* determines color.
* fills nostrils.
* give wolves sort of an information superhighway to navigate around their territories.
* glands Huge preorbital glands opening in bull's eye of naked black skin.
* has influence in the bonding process as well.
* help define a person.
* helps headaches.
* hints There are different types of scents that can be used in candle making.
* hounds work with police.
* is also an important component of cat communication
- an ancient signalling system
- another aspect of territorial scratching
- carried by moisture in the air, so the greater the humidity, the stronger the scent
- deposited on the feces as it is eliminated
- important in the bonding process for all animals
- particularly important in food selection for snakes
- processed in the limbic system of the brain, the seat of memory and emotion
- subjective and is described by each person as either good or bad
- the primary mode of communication for giant pandas
* is used as one of their most important forms of communication
- to communicate to other beavers that an area is occupied
- very important to animals in the wild because they use their sense of smell to hunt
- water soluble
* markings outside of burrows seem to signal where an animal is in the dominance hierarchy.
* plays a vital role in cat behavior and their sense of territory.
* plays an important part in courtship, with both animals sniffing each other
- the social hierarchy too
* plays an important role in lupine communications
- our lives and has since ancient times
- the establishment and maintenance of territories and colonies
* powerful motivator for cats.
* provide a link to memory and emotions.
* ranks first because it ranges great distances in water.
* seem to influence sexual attraction in humans.
* serves purposes.
* smell stronger when warm.
* very effective means of communication for wolves
- strong factor in terms of territory in the animal world
### sensation | smell | scent:
Floral scent
* Some floral scents make people feel more romantic.
* begin as oils that are produced by the petals in most plants.
Human scent
* is the biggest problem deer hunters have to contend with.
* remains longer on cool, moist ground.
* rises to the surface of the water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sensation | smell | scent:
Scent marking
* can also communicate sex and reproductive state.
* common feature of otter behavior.
* is an essential component of communication in most nonhuman primates
- important mode of communication
- done to delineate territorial boundaries and communicate sexual state
- imperative for intergroup communication
- important in advertising territory boundaries and willingness to mate
- prevalent, e.g. males seek and urinate on urine deposits made by estrous females
- primarily through dung middens
- used to delineate territories
- very important sustained by rubbing branches with the crotch, forehead and hands
* pass information such as sexual readiness.
* vital role in the communication of the giant pandas to each other.<|endoftext|>### sensation:
Taste
* Identify the taste usually stimulated at each tongue location.
* adds flavor.
* also has an intentional object that communicates knowledge of the world.
* begins with an ion or molecule docking in receptors on the tongue or palate.
* change and develop
- with time
* chemical sense, depending on what substances do when broke down, and affected by saliva
- like smell
* commonly change during pregnancy, and tolerances to smells change.
* conduit for memory.
* cross between malt chocolate and caramel.
* decreases with age and using herbs, spices and lemon juice can increase the flavor of foods.
* detects chemical compounds in the mouth.
* develop in infants over time.
* festive sense.
* function of the ingredients used, as well as the flavorings added.
* helps mammals identify the food that they eat.
* is an important sense in people and most animals
- inlet letting in all manner of sensation which perceptions help define
- another important method of learning about the world
- comprised of five primary senses detected on the palate
- discrimination
- even more specifically related to eating than smell
- experience
- important, but nutrition is the key to healthy pets
- just as important as smell
- key when it comes to choosing foods
- located in mouths
- modality
- much more a social and cultural phenomenon than people tend to recognise
- obviously one of the most common associations with growing plants
- one of the last tests to be conducted, because some minerals are poisonous
- part of helpings
- personal preference
- related to time and place
* is sensed by taste buds located on the papillae lining the mouth and throat of the shark
- on the surface of the tongue
* is the ability to respond to dissolved molecules and ions called tastants
- composition of all the ingredients
- contact point that enables the ball to bounce high
- death of a painter
- final characteristic of what the customer wants
- most important sense used by domestic livestock in diet selection
- number one reason that consumers buy bottled water
- other major reason people prefer bottled water versus tap water
- weakest of the five senses
- used to help avoid harmful foods
- what a human or animal feels on the tongue when food is in the mouth
* major reason many people prefer bottled water.
* masking - Medical substances often have a bitter taste when added to chewing gum.
* mixture of different sensations, including smell.
* occurs when minute particles touch the taste buds
- specific proteins in the food bind to receptors on the taste buds
* plays a crucial role in regulating our ingestion of foods and beverages.
* transmits the meaning of food.
* triggers responses.
* usually determines the choice of metal for jewelry.
* ' is one of the five senses. Taste is what a human or animal feels on the tongue when food is in the mouth.
* varies in intensity.
* varies, too, but in general, taste is less well-developed in birds than it is in humans. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sensation | taste:
Bitter
* Are a group of bitter tasting compounds.
* also help balance blood sugars.
* are a liquor prepared from bitter herbs and roots, traditionally used for stomach ailments
- beers
- dark beers
- pale ale
- part of taste
* is taste
* stimulate the endocrine glands, digestive juices, liver pancreas and peristalsis.
* supply nutrients from bitter leaves that are often lacking in the Western diet.
Bitter taste
* All bitter tastes help detoxify the body.
* arise from atoms that are curved and smooth but very crooked and small in size.
* is also typical for spices containing glycosides.
* varies in intensity.<|endoftext|>### sensation | taste:
Flavor
* Some flavors are product of lipid oxidation.
* are a blend of many ingredients combined in such a way to create specific flavor nuances
- another common food additive
- more pronounced when food is warm
- stronger when culinary herbs grow outdoors in gardens
* blending of taste and odor in the mouth.
* can vary a lot among seed propagated plants.
* combination of smell and taste, with smell often being the most important factor
- smells and sugars
- taste, odor, texture and common chemical sense
* comes from excretion
- muscles that do a lot of work, therefore are less tender, and from the fat
* cross between lettuce and cabbage.
* defines the food that is eaten, and is recognized mainly through the sense of smell.
* depends on odor, texture, and temperature as well as on taste
- upon the balance of acidity, sweetness, bitterness and scent
* does increase while drying, if dried slowly.
* finds in ferment food
* follows alcohol consumption
* follows maternal alcohol consumption
* is influenced by growing conditions, stage of ripeness when harvested and the variety
- kinds
- often dependent upon growing conditions
- perhaps the single most important element in foodservice today
- related to a variety s genetic heritage and can be influenced by growing conditions
- sensory information
* is the overall perception of the coffee
- total impression of aroma, acidity and body
* vary depending upon the plant source from which the nectar is derived.
### sensation | taste | flavor:
Artificial flavor
* are simply chemical mixtures that mimic a natural flavor in some way.
* save companies money because natural flavoring is more costly.<|endoftext|>### sensation | taste | flavor:
Salty flavor
* is relieved by bitter or hot tasty food.
+ Salt, Table Salt: Chemical compounds
* Both of these are needed for all living creatures, including humans, but they are not always eaten in the form of salt, where they are found together in large amounts. Some peoples, like the Yanomami tribe in South America, eat very little salt. Salt is used to control the amount of water in the body. Salty flavor is also one of the basic tastes. Salt cravings may be caused by not having enough minerals, like sodium chloride, in the body.
Flavour
* are a complexity of mints, sparkling with every mouthful
- herb, sesame or garlic
* deteriorate if storage is too warm.
* has aroma
- creamy aroma
- initial aroma
- mild aroma
- strong aroma
- sweet aroma
- wine aroma
* includes notes
- taste notes
Good taste
* is part of style.
* remains a vital factor in consumer acceptance of new healthier foods. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sensation | taste:
Salinity
* Most salinity has bulk salt concentration
- conductivity
* Salinities are higher in the tropics due to high evaporation rates
- highest after dry weather periods and lowest after wet weather or snowmelt periods
- can range from full seawater to fresh in a season
* Some salinity affects crop plants
- development
- fungi
- growth
* Some salinity has effects
- metabolism
- negative effects
- physiological impact
- reproduction
- significant effects
- occurs in conditions
* Some salinity reduces grass growth
* affects agricultural, municipal, and industrial users
- ranges
- the timing of phasic development in spring wheat
- tree and vine performance in two ways
* also affects other constituents such as dissolved oxygen and ammonia concentrations
- the physical processes in the Bay
- determines the distribution of certain benthic predators, parasites and diseases
- disrupts the chain of hydrogen bonds in water
- fluctuates widely in the intertidal
* also varies latitudinally
- with depth in the estuary
* can affect both the survival and appearance of trees
- crop growth through specific-ion toxicities and osmotic effects
* can also fluctuate due to fresh water inputs
- impact the suitability of water for irrigation and livestock watering
- interfere with an organism's use of water
- harm many plants, causing leaves to scorch and turn yellow, and stunting plant growth
* changes with the tides and the amount of fresh water flowing into the estuary.
* continues to be a significant environmental issue in Victoria s irrigated areas.
* contributes to flavor.
* controls the upper depth limit of black corals in Doubtful Sound, New Zealand.
* decreases eastward toward Israel because of runoff
- upwelling
- from the head of the Gulf to the mouth
- in a landward direction both in the surface and the subsurface layers
- just below a layer of sea ice
* depends mainly upon the distribution of runoff.
* directly affects the productivity by making the soil unsuitable for crop growth.
* drastically degrades plant life and diversity.
* effects large areas of irrigated land.
* enhances growth of the flacca tomato mutant.
* falls during periods of heavy rainfall which are associated with ENSO events.
* function of freshwater discharge and tide velocities
- landscape and position in the marsh
* generally has more of an adverse effect on the crop than on the soil being irrigated
- reaches a yearly low in the spring
* good parameter to characterize water at a given spot.
* greatly determines where plants and animals live within the Bay.
* has affects
* increases cadmium uptake by wheat and Swiss chard from soil amended with biosolids.
* increases eastward toward Israel because of evaporation
- gradually downstream
* indicates the amount of soluble salt in soil.
* influences what area of the bay they occur in and where they build their nests.
* is affected by weather, especially at the surface of the water
- almost the opposite of the temperature graph
* is also a very important factor along with tides
- an important factor in determining the amount of oxygen a body of water can hold
- different than total dissolved solids
- important to control
* is an important determinate of what species can live in an area
- part of the ocean s environment
* is an increasingly common problem in the prairies
- important agricultural problem
- indicator of massive droughts in the past
- caused by rising watertables
* is computed from coincident measurements of temperature and conductivity
- the conductivity data with corrections for temperature
- constant throughout the depths of the deep sea
- derived from the temperature and conductivty variables
* is determined by measuring the electrical conductivity of water
- observing where the line intersects with the gradient
* is determined using a hand held refractometer
- hydrometer, which measures the specific gravity of the water
- due to several things - be able to explain how salts accumulate in soils
- greatest near the ocean and smallest near the rivers
- high in marginal seas surrounded by arid land, such as the Mediterranean and Red Sea
- highest at that point and gradually decreases as one moves north
- influenced by the proximity of the slough to the estuary mouth
- low near the mouths of major rivers because of input of fresh water
- lower near the equator because precipitation is higher
- measure in parts per thousand
* is measured as the concentration of dissolved salts of various kinds
- by standard analytical means
- monitored by determining conductivity of collected runoff and of the blended supply
- often an important factor when monitoring many key water quality variables
- represented by color in units of the Practical Salinity Scale
- slightly more than the Pacific Ocean
* is the amount of dissolved solids in seawater
- measure of salts in the water
- most important factor in determining habitat types in the coastal wetlands
* is the total amount of salt dissolved in seawater
- salts dissolved in the water
- solid material that is dissolved in water
- total dissolved salts
- uniform from surface to bottom increasing toward ocean
- vital for animals that live in the ocean
- when soil is high in salts
* key factor influencing the physical make-up of the Bay.
* major environmental threat facing Western Australia
- factor affecting the physical makeup of estuaries
* means the amounts of salts dissolved in a volume of water.
* measure of all salts dissolved in the water
- how much salt is in the water
- the total salt content in water
* plays an important role in shaping coastal marine communities.
* probably reduces germination by reducing water absorption by the achenes.
* prohibits or greatly reduces the growth of many types of bacteria.
* ranges from nonsaline to moderately saline throughout the soil profile
- slightly saline throughout the soil profile
* ranges of late Mississippian invertebrates of the Central Appalachian basin
- some southern African fish species occuring in estuaries
* reduces the growth of wheat plants.
* refers to salts dissolved in water.
* refers to the concentration of dissolved salts in seawater
- salts in water
* remains uniform and similar to the open ocean throughout.
* seems to be an important factor in determining species distributions.
* serious water quality issue facing Southern California.
* shows effects of precipitation events.
* slows the germination of bentgrass, ryegrass, and tall fescue as well as other grasses.
* special measure of dissolved solids based upon concentration of ocean salts.
* tends to be a very stable thing except when associated with other factors.
* varies from freshwater to brackish and finally salt water
- seasonally with recharge and discharge
- throughout the Bay and changes depending on tide, rainfall and time of year | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sensation | taste | salinity:
High salinity
* can be detrimental to irrigation and drinking-water supplies.
* does, however, cause a severe reduction of the reproductive output.
* makes soils unsuitable for growing crops.
* produces a variety of water quality problems.
Higher salinity
* Higher salinities imply higher nutrient concentrations.
* changes the ocean currents, which, in turn, makes water temperatures rise.
* means more dissolved salts.
Increased salinity
* can alter species balance and stratification and seasonal mixing of lakes.
* makes soil unsuitable for many native plant species.
Low salinity
* Low salinities are essential for the survival of many species.
* Some low salinity has effects
- negative effects
* can be a problem for successful reproduction in marine teleosts.
* has multiple effects on the male gametes, which bladderwrack has seem to overcome.<|endoftext|>### sensation | taste | salinity:
Soil salinity
* Some soil salinity affects crop plants
* affects growth and yield of crop plants.
* continues to be a crucial water issue in Australia.
* impacts on onion production.
* is an increasing problem worldwide, restricting plant growth and production
- characterized by extremely high temporal and spatial variability
- controlled by water quality and irrigation practices
- measured by passing an electrical current through a soil paste
* is one effect which leads to the destruction of native trees and vegetation
- of the factors limiting agricultural development of semiarid and arid areas
* proximate determinant of inter-annual variation in primary production.
* significant problem in crop production worldwide.
* term used to characterize the accumulated soluble salts in a soil.
Smack
* are blows
- either sailing vessels or steamers
- kisses
* is taste<|endoftext|>### sensation | taste:
Sweetness
* Some sweetness is contributed by alcohol.
* comes from natural grape sugars and alcohol.
* is one of five recognized tastes
- the primary senses of our taste buds
- related to hawaiian sunshine, adequate potassium in the soil and variety
* lies within the sense of the sweet receptor gene.
* likely is related to sugar content.
* major component of flavor.
* matter of individual taste.
* only occurs in wines that have some residual sugar left over after fermentation.
* variable based on both taste and bitterness of the oranges.
### sensation | taste | sweetness:
Amenity
* Amenities are facilities.
* is sweetness
Thirst sensation
* decreases with age and many times the signs of dehydration go unnoticed.
* diminishes with age.
Visual sensation
* appears, because neurons in the visual cortex are activated.
* is in our heads
### sensitive towards kanamycin:
Untreated cell
* are sensitive towards kanamycin.
* continue their uncontrolled proliferation.
### sensors:
Magnetic sensor
* are sensors.
* can trigger an alarm the moment a protected door or window opens.
* connect to window or door Motion detector senses movement in room.
### separable:
Euclidean space
* are separable.
* is completely symmetrical under translation.
### sequential access medium:
Magnetic tape
* are extremely susceptible to changes in the environment and to contamination.
* can only hold so much signal.
* consists of a base - the carrier for the 'rust'.
* degrades by known chemical processes.
* is memory devices
- tape
- the first erasable storage used for computers
* perishes at a lower temperature.
* sequential access medium
- data storage medium
* storage device
### serious condition:
Acute arthritis
* Most acute arthritis causes severe pain.
* causes pain
* serious condition. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### serious environmental danger:
Ozone depletion
* Most ozone depletion takes places.
* affects many species at every stage of their life cycle.
* allows harmful ultraviolet radiation through the earth's atmosphere
- higher levels of UV radiation to reach the Earth's surface
* allows more ultraviolet light to penetrate the clear waters of the coral reefs
- radiation, which causes skin cancer
* causes global warming.
* follows a seasonal cycle.
* increases the risk of skin cancer, among other dangers.
* is another result of pollution.
* is caused by gases interacting with moisture in the atmosphere
- human-made chlorine and bromine compounds, scientists agree
- just as deadly as the whaler's harpoon
- listed as one of the causes for the declining numbers of amphibian species
- most obvious over Antarctica
- observed to cause an increase in UV-B radiation at the Earth's surface
- predicted across even broader areas of the globe over the next century
- suspected to cause decreases in phytoplankton, a plant within the ocean
- worse over the South Pole than anywhere else
* kills people.
* leads to increasing levels of ultra-violet light at the Earth's surface.
* occur when catalytic chemistry accelerates natural loss processes.
* occurs elsewhere around the globe as well
- if the rate of ozone destruction is increased due to human activities
- over much of the planet
* refers to two types of deterioration of ozone concentration.
* serious environmental danger.
* threatens humanity through the incidence of skin cancer and genetic damage.
* very different atmospheric problem.
### servers:
Name server
* are servers.
* translate domain names into Internet addresses.
Proxy server
* bottleneck of network access.
* function as intermediaries in the path between user and Web site.
* running on a network can also cause strange behaviors when viewing web pages.
### service business:
Home inspection
* are an important part of the home buying process
- for finding out whether systems are working and the house is sound
* is the art of identifying problem areas through observation.
* service business.
Retail banking
* is services provided to small businesses or individuals.
+ Wholesale: Economics
* In banking, wholesale banking means services provided to large companies. Retail banking is services provided to small businesses or individuals.
### service companies:
Cruise line
* Most cruise lines sponsor special activities for children during the day and evening.
* are service companies.
* fit people's personalities like clothes fit their body.
### service organizations:
Television network
* are service organizations.
* depict themselves as watchdogs over politicians.
* have their own broadcast network that reaches viewers in real time.
Service quality
* contributes to value experienced by customers.
* is measured in terms of timeliness, reliability and price.
Sett
* includes sections.
* show variation.
Several compound
* are available for treating chorioptic mange.
* have vitamin A activity and they are referred to as retinoids.
* made from elemental fluorine serve the electronics industry. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Several group
* are predators on other mosquito larvae.
* have a higher risk for reactions to latex.
* secrete venom from specialized glands to kill prey or enemies.
+ Australian Aboriginal astronomy, Constellations, Emu: Astronomy
* At the head of the emu, the Southern Cross is easily spotted in the sky, and there are many different interpretations of this constellation across Australia. Several groups identify it as an eagle, a sky god, or both. To the Ngarrindjeri of South Australia, the Southern Cross is a stingray being chased by two sharks. The sharks, which is a sacred totem to the Ngarrindjeri, are represented by Alpha Centauri and Beta Centauri. In Victoria, the Boorong people identified the Southern Cross as the possum Bunya hiding from an emu spirit whose outline could be seen in the Coalsack nebula. In 1972, the poet Oodgeroo Noonuccal wrote of the Southern Cross as the hands and feet of a wise leader named Mirabooka, who was given eternal life as a spirit in the sky.
Several organism
* can infect honeybees.
* cause tuber rot.
* causing mastitis also are pathogenic to man.
* contain multiple ClC family paralogues.<|endoftext|>Several state
* allow the sale of raw milk or milk products.
* classify periwinkle as an invasive weed.
* have heavy worker's compensation burden based on all measures of burden used
- housing finance agencies to increase homeownership rates for citizens
* have laws covering various aspects of patients' rights
- prohibiting research on human embryos
- restricting or prohibiting online liquor sales
- limited trapping seasons
- mandatory cystic fibrosis screening for newborns
- marketing programs that benefit small farmers
- programs that offer free access to schools and teachers
- special rabies quarantine laws governing ferrets in case of a human bite
- statutes that provide a right to privacy
- systems for maintaining records of drug arrests on a statewide basis
- the eagle on their state flags
- their own rule and rate-making bureaus
* hold annual tournaments for high-school wrestlers
- parents financially responsible for damages caused by their children
* impose restrictions on the use of living wills.
* indicate that they consider themselves as one employer for all purposes.
* limit how abortion drugs can be sold and advertised.
* maintain customs services, taxing the goods of their neighbors.
* own daily or weekly newspapers that also are published in English.
* owned and private sector companies produce copper, lead and zinc.
* pass anti-stalking laws.
* pay retired teachers their pensions plus salaries if they return to the classroom.
* require by law that the electors vote for the candidate for which they are pledged
- continue education
- corporations to elect their boards with cumulative voting
- hospitals to disclose mistakes that result in death or serious injury
- no income tax, although they often have steep sales tax rates
* share Pennsylvania's state fish, the brook trout.
* specify that an execution is suspended while a woman is pregnant.
* use voice recognition for parolees on home detention. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sex
* acts between a man and a woman, as well as between two men.
* creates variation in offspring.
* is an activity
- used by plants and animals, and also by fungi and various single-celled organisms
* means whether someone was born with a male or female 'body'.
* method of reproduction which is widespread among living things.
+ Bisexual pornography: Pornography :: Human sexuality
* As most pornography is marketed to men, most bisexual porn is advertised to straight or bisexual men. Very few customers of bi-porn say they are gay. Sex acts between a man and a woman, as well as between two men. A common way that these are shown in a single scene is with one woman and two men performing together.
+ Nightingale: Luscinia :: National symbols of Iran :: Birds of Turkey :: Birds of Pakistan :: Passeriformes
* The Nightingale is slightly larger than the European Robin, at 15-16.5 cm length. It is plain brown above except for the reddish tail. It is buff to white below. Sexes are similar.
+ Sex determination: Classical genetics :: Developmental biology :: Cell biology :: Biological reproduction
* Sex determination' is a process of development by which the sex of an individual is settled. Sex is a method of reproduction which is widespread among living things. It requires two individuals of the same species.
* Sex' is a type of reproduction common among living things. It always needs two individuals, usually of the same species. Sex is used by plants and animals, and also by fungi and various single-celled organisms. It works by combining genes from more than one source. A dictionary of genetics', 7th ed.
+ Sex, Evolution
* Sex creates variation in offspring. If there are traits that give an advantage to the organism, they spread more easily. Traits that give a disadvantage tend to be removed quickly.
+ Sexual arousal, Animals: Reproductive system :: Human sexuality
* Like humans and some chimpanzees, dolphins use sex for reasons other than procreation. Sex is as frequent as it is casual, a social tool used to strengthen and maintain bonds.
+ The Red Queen, The evolution of sex: Biology books :: Co-evolution
* Sex is an evolutionary puzzle. In most sexual species, males make up half the population, yet they bear no offspring directly and generally contribute little to the survival of offspring. In birds and mammals that idea seems less true. In human paleolithic populations, males were no doubt vital for hunting and protection. Many bird species rear the young jointly. However, most invertebrate species are not raised by parents at all, with larvae developing amongst the plankton.
+ Transgender, Definitions
### sex:
Carnal knowledge
* is sex
* means sex.<|endoftext|>### sex | free love:
Adultery
* can be a healthy way of dealing with stress in a marriage.
* causes pain
- rage
* creates pain and distress and is the wrecker of families.
* destroys marriages.
* devastates whole families as it crushes our mate and cripples our children.
* is free love
* leads to the death of our relationships within our family.
* occurs when a married man or a woman has a relationship with another person.
* refers to marital infidelity.
* turns millions of father's hearts from their children.
Incest
* is sex
- the ultimate form of inbreeding.
* In many societies, it is forbidden by law and religion. Children that result from incest are more likely to have birth defects. Incest is the ultimate form of inbreeding. Any offspring from an incestuous relationship is called an 'inbred', but this word is sometimes considered offensive | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sex | sexual perversion:
Anal sex
* can still pass sexually transmitted diseases from one partner to another.
* is sexual perversion
+ Sexual intercourse, Other kinds of sex, Anal sex: Biological reproduction :: Human sexuality
* Anal sex is when an erect penis or other device made for sexual pleasure is inserted into the sexual partner's anus. Anal sex with a female does not lead to pregnancy by itself, however, semen can leak out of the anus and enter into the vagina, and pregnancy may rarely occur. Anal sex can still pass sexually transmitted diseases from one partner to another. It can also be very unhealthy for the body because the skin around the anus can tear, bleed and get infected with bacteria.
### sexually dysfunctional:
Mutant female
* are sexually dysfunctional.
* lack nerves that normally connect with uterine muscles to stimulate egg-laying.
Shaft
* affect the weight, balance, feel, and playability of a cue.
* are lines.
* are part of arrows
- buildings
- columns
- mines
- tunnels
- passageways
- rods
- uprights
* includes readsides
- sections
* look like tubes.
* means a vertical or inclined shaft, a slope, incline, or winze.
* reflect light.
* vary in stiffness based on the length and style of taper to which they are cut.<|endoftext|>### shaft:
Axle
* Enter number of axles for trucks, tractors, and trailers.
* Some axles are part of bicycles
- bikes
- tricycles
* also house and support the differential, shafts, and wheels that propel the vehicle.
* are an important structural component of a wheeled vehicle
- really tubes that hide hydraulic pumps, servos, and lines
- rods that connect wheels and the whole unit is connected to a vehicle that moves
* connect to wheels.
* have advantage.
* includes sections.
+ Axle, Vehicle axles: Engineering
* Axles are an important structural component of a wheeled vehicle. The axles maintain the position of the wheels relative to each other and to the vehicle body. Since for most vehicles the wheels are the only part touching the ground, the axles must bear the weight of the vehicle plus any cargo.
Camshaft
* are part of engines.
* is belt driven, reducing weight, number of parts, gear wear and noise
- belt-driven, reducing weight, number of parts, gear wear and noise
Hair shaft
* Most hair shafts reflect light.
* become thin and break off as they exit the scalp.
* begin to emerge but remain trapped under a skin layer until close to birth.
* emerge from tiny follicles in the skin.
### shape:
Alpha shape
* describe the shape of a finite set of points.
* formalize the intuitive notion of shape.
* generates a family of shapes according to the selected alpha parameter.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Angle
* Every angle has a bisector
- exactly one bisector
- inscribed in a semicircle right angle
* Identify the terminology associated with points, lines, planes, and angles.
* are always in degrees
- congruent if their measures, in degrees, are equal
- coterminal if they have the same terminal side
- crucial as it represent more than sight or what one sees with the physical eyes
* are in degrees, arcminutes and arcseconds or in decimal degrees
- radians
- measure in radians
- space
* are the key in many forms of magic
- most common type of number used by the celestial navigator
- name of the game on clay
- strongest, lightest, and stiffest, and occupy less transverse space
* are, in general, expressed in radians.
* can be positive and negative to represent directions.
* come in all sizes and shapes, all ages and skin types.
* is how far the bot is turned from the x-axis
* refers to the position of the bag relative to the work surface.
### shape | angle:
Angle of incidence
* equals angle of exit.
* is an angle
- equal to the angle of reflection
Camera angle
* are points of view.
* point of view
Dihedral angle
* can be tricky to visualize.
* refers in general to the angle between two planes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | angle:
Dogleg
* are angles
- holes
* is an angle
### shape | angle | incidence angle:
Angle of attack
* has a large effect on the drag generated by an aircraft
- lift generated by a wing
* is an incidence angle
* is the angle between the relative wind and the chord line
- of the chord line to the apparent wind
* refers to the angle of an airfoil to the oncoming airflow.
Latitude
* All latitudes find some mammals reproducing seasonally, even in the deep tropics.
* are liberty
- lines parallel to the equator
- planetographic
- positive north of the equator
- scope
- the lines that run horizontally on a map and are parallel to the equator
- zenographic
* specify the North-South position of a location on the globe.
### shape | angle | latitude:
Southern latitude
* grow short-day types.
* receive more ultraviolet radiation than northern latitudes.<|endoftext|>### shape | angle:
Longitude
* is always a negative number for the Gulf of Mexico
- comparable to the y-axis on a graph
- defined in terms of meridians, which are half-circles running from pole to pole
- either qualified as East or West, or given as a signed numeric value of degrees East
- expressed in degrees of time
- found from the observed time
* is measured East or West of Greenwich, and can be expressed in different ways
- east and west of the prime meridian passing through Greenwich , England
* is measured from Washington at bottom and Philadelphia at top
- the longitude of the ascending node
- halfway around the world in each direction
- in degrees, minutes and seconds of arc
- positive to the East
- using degrees , the same way an angle is
- measured, positive to the east, and latitude positive to the north from the equator
- money
- offset by time
- one of the main factors that determines where biomes occur in the world
- positive East of the prime meridian
- relative to zero degrees, along which Greenwich, England is located
- tapped location's longitude
* is the angular distance east or west of the prime meridian of a celestial object
- measurement of a place east or west of the prime meridian
- coordinate affected by time errors
- east to west position
- west from Philadelphia
* measures angles in the east-west direction.
* measures how far east or west along the equator something is
- of the prime meridian a place is located.
* is measured using degrees, the same way an angle is. Unlike latitude, which has the equator as a natural starting position, there is no natural starting position for longitude. Other meridians have been used in the past, but most scientists now agree to use the Prime Meridian
* series of imaginary lines radiating from the North and South poles.
* standard for locating a precise position on Earth.
Magnetic declination
* are angles.
* changes over time.
* depends on location wrt magnetic north pole.
* is an angle
* is the angle between magnetic north and true north
- angular difference between true north and magnetic north
* varies with location on the earth and also changes very slowly with time.
Magnetic inclination
* is an angle
* is the angle between the horizontal plane and the total field vector
- magnetic field vector and the horizontal plane
Right angle
* All right angles are congruent to one another
- equal to one another
* are located in corners. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | angle:
Right ascension
* celestial longitude measured in the direction of the Earth's rotation.
* coordinate for measuring the east-west location of astronomical objects.
* corresponds to longitude, but different units are used.
- analogous to longitude for locating positions on the Earth
- expressed in time units
* is measured around the celestial equator towards the east
- continuously in a full circle from that equinox towards the east
- eastward along the celestial equator from the primary direction
* is measured in hours, minutes and seconds
- units of time rather than degrees of arc
- one unit of measure for locating an object in the sky
- similar to longitude on the Earth's surface
* is the celestial equivalent of terrestrial longitude
Solid angle
* Any solid angle is contained by plane angles whose sum is less than four right angles.
* are angles
- important in measuring the amplitude of dipoles
* is an angle
Vertical angle
* are equal on a sphere
- to each other
- non-adjacent angles formed by a pair of intersecting lines
- pairs of angles formed by two intersecting lines
* have equal measures.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Barrel
* Most barrels hold toxic substances.
* allow the wine to breathe and absorb flavor and tannins from the wood.
* are containers
- cylinders
- located in markets
- part of guns
- storage devices
- tubes
- used for holds
- vessels
* dark color without pitting.
* hold substances
* is the standard unit to measure crude oil and most petroleum products
- used for water at a barn without running water
* remains as the unit of volume for oil production.
* volume measurement for oil.
### shape | barrel:
Barrel distortion
* means straight lines in real world bow outward in images.
* occurs when the central parts of an image are magnified more than the outer parts.
Barrel racing
* is the oldest and most competitive girl's college rodeo event
- usualy the only event in which women compete
* woman's event with riders weaving in and out of barrels for the fastest time.
Keg
* are heavy-duty designed for rough handling' commercial applications.
* carry a connotation of excessiveness.
* still contain soda syrups.
Wine barrel
* are the often forgotten link between the grapes and the finished wine.
* come in only a few shapes and sizes and are made exclusively from oak.
Blob
* are excellent for creating lumpy organic shapes
- films
- useful for modelling of smooth, organic shapes
* become squares with area proportional to variance, to convey relative weight.
* can fragment into pieces of at least two people.
Body shape
* affects the risk of other cancers.
* can be especially useful for camouflage.
* changes as the hormone testosterone causes muscle mass to develop and height increases.
* is only partly hereditary
- quite similar across several species of seals
Breast shape
* can also be a function of the skill of the surgeon and the degree of the problem.
* is determined by breast volume and surface area of the skin envelope.
Cavern
* Some caverns have sinkholes in their floors.
* are caves and tunnels that are automatically generated under the ground in various places
- composed mainly of stone, and expose large amounts of ores and igneous stones
- enclosures
Cladogram
* Some cladograms show phylogeny.
* are testable hypotheses of phylogenetic relationships
- trees
* display hypotheses of relationship among organisms.
* take one of two forms, but each shows essentially the same information.
* tree diagram | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Cleft
* Most clefts involve one or both sides of the upper lip.
* affect the soft palate, which is the posterior part of the roof of the mouth.
* also occur as part of a group, or syndrome, of multiple birth defects.
* are books
- gaps
- indentations
- more common in certain ethnic groups
- openings that occur when the developing neural tube doesn t close correctly
* can occur on one or both sides of the upper lip
- sides, and with or without involvement of the palate
* can run in families and be associated with other problems
* form between somites.
* have a complex etiology that involves both genes and gene-environmental influences.
* is an indentation
### shape | cleft:
Orofacial cleft
* are one of the most common congenital anomalies.
* occur during the fourth to tenth week of fetal development.
Compartment
* Some compartments coincide with the realms of maternal effect genes
- contain nuclei
* are connected by doors
- containers
- parts
- reaction areas clearly separated spatially
- rooms
- space
* contain products.
* feature laptops
- pad laptops
* function as an independent units of growth and size control.
* is space
### shape | compartment:
Cab
* Some cabs are part of automobiles.
* are gems that are cut with a flat bottom and a curved or domed top
* includes bases
- ceilings
- doorways
- floors
- room light
- sections
- walls
Cabin
* are an economical way for families to stay while travelling
- buildings
* are built by early settlers
- homes
- houses
- located in planes
* are part of aircrafts
- liners
- spacecrafts
* consist of rooms.
* have bathrooms
- light
* includes bases
- walls
Locker
* Some lockers are part of workplaces.
* are closets
- fasteners
- located in gyms
- made of metal
- storage devices
- doorways
- room light
Stall
* are booths
- farm buildings
* are located in barns
- markets
* are located in public bathrooms
- restrooms
- malfunctions
- obstructions
* are part of stables
- stalls
- seating
* are used for horses
- reads
### shape | compartment | stall:
Newsstand
* are located in train stations
* provide newspapers and magazines from around the world.
Telephone booth
* are located in airports
- cities
- gas stations
- urban areas
- public telephones
- used for calls
* have pay telephones
Convexity
* Describes the rate of change in duration as interest rates change.
* falls as the interest rate rises.
* implies that combinations of products are more desirable than extremes.
* is an important measure of a bond's sensitivity to large changes in rates
- the notion that one option or choice expands into many and then back to one again
Crescent
* are curves.
* different word than new moon.
* is when the moon is slightly illuminated either before first quarter or after last quarter.
* spotting at dusk tends to become easier as one moves westwards.
Crevice
* Most crevices provide habitats.
* create hiding places for squat lobsters and other animals.
* is an imprint<|endoftext|>### shape:
Cube
* Most cubes have density
- edges
* are blocks
- figures
- multi-dimensional representations of business data selected for the purpose of analysis
- numbers
- shapes
- squares
- television shows
- three-dimensional
- used for play
* can be rank-ordered in size by volume or by length of a side.
* differ in their relative colour positions.
* rotate, spheres slide, and polygons and patterns collide around an axis of vivid color.
* symbolize the stability of the four elements. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Disk
* Most disks have only one spindle.
* Some disks contain gases
- have a central cavity, meaning that they are really ring-shaped
* also allow information to be transferred between different computers.
* are a hallmark of young stars and are believed to be regions of planet formation
- and are thought to be regions of planet formation
- analogous to modern diamonds, and represent earth and business
- biodegradable and non-toxic
- cheap to mass produce and also drives
- circular objects
- circulars
- cold , so tides produce narrow ribbon-like features
- cylinders
- flats
- fragile and are carefully packed in rigid shipping materials
- generally more likely to fail either very early or very late in their lifetimes
* are located in cd players
- computer stores
- disk drives
- hard drives
- much slower than memory, but they tend to have a very large storage capacity
- plates
- quite sensitive to dust
- round shapes
- rounds
- sensitive to heat and cold and warping which can occur inside a van
- softer than bone and act as cushions between the vertebrae, giving the back flexibility
- the computer's storage medium
* are used for data storage
- storing information
- throws
- usually the highest level of the storage pyramid that is non-volatile
* avoid the domain between the high and low surface brightness zones.
* can be ruptured, ligaments can sprain, and muscles can be strained
- contain folders, documents or applications
* come in several different sizes, storage capacities and types
- various sizes and densities
* provide long-term, inexpensive method of storing information.
* radiates away energy and cools off.
* spin , so the response depends on the inclination.
* use magnetic media to store programs and documents.
+ RAID, Basics: simple RAID levels, RAID levels in common use, RAID 5 "striping with distributed parity": Storage devices
* This checksum is a special case of a Reed-Solomon code that only uses bitwise addition. Usually, it is calculated using the XOR method. Since this method is symmetric, one lost data block can be rebuilt from the other data block and the checksum. For each block, a different disk will hold the parity block which holds the checksum. This is done to increase redundancy. Any disk can fail. Overall, there will be one disk holding the checksums, so the total usable capacity will be that of all disks except for one. The size of the resulting logical disk will be the size of all disks together, except for one disk which holds parity information.<|endoftext|>### shape | disk:
Dot
* Every dot gets the color of the atom it is situated closest to.
* Many Dots Create pictures and patterns by changing the colors of dots, beads, and triangles
* are color-coded according to earthquake depth
- data samples from the surfaces of humerus, ulna and radius
- intraepithelial microcysts that contain nuclear, cytoplasmic, and lipid debris
- locations of buried radiocarbon-dated soils, peat and forests
- short pulses of electrical current compared to the longer dash pulses
* are small sized and sharply defined, and are fixed as to size and number
- web applets that make finding stuff on the web easy
- the unit used to measure the resolution of the printed image
- visible to the naked eye
* become lines, blurring and overlapping in spatially complex compositions.
* can represent a color.
* depict a spiral of favorable van der Waals contacts made to surrounding atoms.
* game that has simple rules, but like many others, strategy can take some time to learn
- with a grid of dots placed on the board
* indicate presence.
* is spots up close
- the tiny speck among infinity, but is all things within
* mean locations of sensors.
* often represent cities and segments the roads between cities.
* represent derivatives with respect to time.
* stand for a decimal point.
* strategy game. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | disk | dot:
Blue dot
* are actually street reflectors that signify that a hydrant is standing guard nearby
- areas where the plant was found and treated
- blocks
- location of oceanic datapoints
- where deer stands are
* indicate differences that are shared among multiple alleles.
Colored dot
* are a simple way to code the name tags.
* represent different mitochondrial DNA sequences
- the different populations of phytoplankton cells
* show depths, and sizes of dots show magnitude.
Red dot
* are sites of previous attachments
- where images exist
* seen on lips can be inflammation.
White dot
* are the sync pulses.
+ Chicxulub crater: Extinction events :: Impact craters :: Geology
* Gravity anomaly map of the Chicxulub impact structure. The coastline is shown as a white line. A striking series of concentric features reveals the location of the crater. White dots represent water-filled sinkholes in the limestone rocks of the region.
Hockey puck
* are black
- disks
- hard disks of rubber that are used to play ice hockey
* are located in hockeys
- ice rinks
- net
- sports equipment
* are used for kill
- passing
- shooting.
* are hard disks of rubber that are used to play ice hockey. Pucks are often marked with silkscreened team or league logos on one or both faces
Logical disk
* provide a certain amount of space to store data.
* A 'logical disk' concept from computing. Logical disks provide a certain amount of space to store data.<|endoftext|>### shape | disk:
Puck
* are balls
- located in locker rooms
- planets
- resilient because they're made of rubber
- used for hits
* can be similar to ice hockey pucks, but often a ball is used.
* character from English folklore.
* is the biggest of the small closer moons to Uranus.
* moon of Uranus.
+ List of craters on Puck: Astronomy lists
* The following lists all of the craters on Puck. Puck is a moon of Uranus. Craters on Puck are named after spirits from European mythology.
+ Puck (Shakespeare): Folklore :: Characters in Shakespeare's plays
* This play was written by William Shakespeare. In this play, Puck is a servant to the Fairy King, Oberon. Puck has some amazing abilities. For example, he can travel around the world in 40 minutes. In spite of his abilities, Puck makes a few mistakes in the play that create confusion for the other characters. For example, he puts a love potion into the wrong person's eyes. He also plays tricks. He puts a donkey's head on one character.
* He is best known as a character in William Shakespeare's play 'A Midsummer Night's Dream'. In this play, he is married to Titania, the Queen of the Fairies. His servant is Puck. Puck plays tricks
- (moon): Uranus' moons
* Puck is the biggest of the small closer moons to Uranus. It is in the middle in size between Portia and Miranda, the smallest of the five bigger moons. Puck's orbit is also located between these two moons. Little is known about it aside from its orbit, its radius about 81 km, and its geometric albedo approximately 0.11
Zip disk
* ZIP disk is something like a developed form of floppy disc.
* Zip Disks are by far the most common of disk formats around today.
* are much cheaper than memory cards
- slightly larger than conventional floppy disks , and about twice as thick | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Dome
* are companies
- hemispheres
- mountains
- roofs
- stadiums
- substitutes for cones
* avoid flat spots and shed snow more easily.
* can plug vents, trapping gases and cause explosions.
* commonly occur adjacent to or within craters of composite volcanoes.
* normally have the shape of a hemisphere.
* represent hemispherical elevations of the monolayer resulting from vectorial fluid transport.
* use triangular shapes that are connected to transfer the load.
+ Mosque, Parts of Mosques, Domes
* Domes normally have the shape of a hemisphere. The Mughals in India popularized onion-shaped domes in South Asia and Persia. Some mosques have several domes, as well as the main large dome. The other domes are often smaller.
### shape | dome:
Cupola
* are a simple but extremely efficient form of ventilation
- furnaces
- primarily for iron and higher temp non-ferrous metals such as bronze
* occasionally act as the main roof of a tower, spire, or turret.
Geodesic dome
* are a good way to make buildings
- inherently rigid and create a high open ceiling
- strong, light, easy to assemble and require only a few distinct shapes
* are the most energy efficient of all home designs
- upper portion of geodesic spheres
* lend themselves to automated construction.
* make great shade structures.
Plastic dome
* are inadequate protection against sparks.
* keeps plants warm and moist during propagation.
Salt dome
* Many salt domes have a toadstool or umbrella shape, which allows for the accumulation of oil.
* Some salt domes have enough sulfur in the cap rock that it can be economically recovered.
* are a source of salt for many salt mining operations
- very important to the petroleum industry
* begin forming.
* can be very large structures.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Doughnut
* Some doughnuts are rolled in sweet foods such as sugar or shredded coconut.
* are best if eaten the same day they are made
- breakfast food
- located in stores
- sold at doughnut shops , bakeries , or grocery stores
* can cause health problems if they are eaten too often.
+ Doughnut, Health problems
* Doughnuts can cause health problems if they are eaten too often. One of these problems is that doughnuts contain a large amount of fat. Eating too much fat can lead to clogged arteries. When the arteries get clogged, blood does not go through them easily. Also, doughnuts contain a large amount of sugar and white flour, which are turned into fat when they come inside our body. Doughnuts are a health concern in Canada where each person eats more doughnuts per year than any other country
- Serving
* Doughnuts are often eaten in the morning, along with a cup of hot coffee. Doughnuts are sold at doughnut shops, bakeries, or grocery stores. People also eat doughnuts as a dessert, or as a snack
- Types of doughnut: Cakes :: Breakfast foods :: Sweet breads
* The two most common types of doughnut are ring doughnuts, which are shaped like rings, and filled doughnuts, which are round and have jam, jelly, custard, whipped cream, or chocolate inside them. Some doughnuts are rolled in sweet foods such as sugar or shredded coconut | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | ellipse:
Circle
* Any circle drawn around the Earth divides it into two equal halves called hemisphere s
- earth such that the center of the circle is at the center of the earth
* Gives the definitions of terms related to circles.
* Most circles are very close together, almost touching.
* Most circles have diameters
- equal radii
- small radii
- some ritual that shifts the energy
* Some circles represent atoms
- carbon atoms
* are The shape of a pie
- always perfectly circular
- conic sections
- earthquakes used in the inversion
- everywhere
- groups of neurons colour coded by the transmitter they release
- merely ellipses with equal width and height
- ovals
- part of theaters
- polygons
- proportional to diversity according to their area
- round shapes
- rounds
- seating
- simple closed curves
- special cases of ellipses
* are to one another as the squares on the diameters
- squares on their diameters
- unit circles in the Z plane
- when the students sit in a circle
* can be anything, a ball, a tire or even a ring
- big or round -But only spheres can roll on the ground
- bind
- mean the sun or moon
- tell time, And are the shape of dimes
* deform to ellipses.
* includes arcs.
* indicate phases of the moon.
* is an important way to describe a group
- labeled as an ellipse
- symbol of eternity
- used to define a circular area
* living, growing group which is continually created by the people who attend.
* mark the approximate locations of four recently discovered solar systems.
* metaphor of a globe, ellipse - of an orbit.
* reduce motor vehicle speeds and result in a big reduction in the number of accidents.
* refer to the radio antenna.
* represent eternity.
* represents particle.
* retain their color after inversion.
* starting point for travel on the Yukon River.
+ Ananke group
+ Carme group
+ Himalia group: Jupiter's moons
* Eccentricity is indicated by yellow bars illustrating the object's maximum and minimum distances from Jupiter. Circles illustrate an object's size in comparison to the others.
+ Pasiphaë group
### shape | ellipse | circle:
Black circle
* are residues conserved only between the monoamine transporters.
* correspond to inhibitory connections,open circles to excitatory.
* is the center of gravity.
* represent species' mean depth of occurrence
- total richness
- zebra populations from the northern part of their range
Literature circle
* Literature Circles Involve students in cooperative learning study of literature.
* are a format for children to discuss the content of what they have read
- small student-directed discussion groups
Open circle
* refer to samples containing sodium-bearing micas.
* represent conserved loop structures.<|endoftext|>### shape | ellipse | circle:
Red circle
* identify areas which have warmed.
* refer to many fields of berries
- the fruit growing
* refers to cranberry which symbolizes richness of bogs and swamps.
* represent adatoms on the surface
- protons and blue circles represent neutrons
- temperature increases, while blue circles represent temperature decreases
+ Particle: Chemistry :: Nuclear physics :: Matter
* This is an atom, and it is very small. Atoms are made up of particles. Red circles represent protons and blue circles represent neutrons. The atom shown here is a helium atom.
Small circle
* Some small circles represent atoms.
* are circles drawn on a sphere that are smaller than the sphere
- satellites to the large, dark core
Solid circle
* are sites of mutations.
* indicate locations of axial discontinuities
- the inferred position of the object at each observation epoch
* represent individual or local occurrences
- stable fixed points while open circles represent unstable fixed points
- the observed calves per female ratios
Study circle
* are small community groups who work on improving race relations.
* build a community's capacity to fight crime and violence. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | ellipse | circle:
Yellow circle
* are the larger enamel knot inhibitory fields.
* is the starting point of a projectile.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Fissure
* Most fissures are visible externally when patient bears down as if having a bowel movement.
* are common in newborns and children with constipation
- cracks in the rice kernel
- linear cracks which occur in the anal canal
- lines of weakness in the Earth's crust
- painful and bleed when the tissue is stressed during bowel movements
- tears in the skin lining the anal canal
- ulcers or breaks in the skin which just happen to occur in the same area
* becomes cracks.
* body part
* cause pain and bleeding during or shortly after a bowel movement.
* develop and allow entry of microorganisms
- become larger as the limestone is dissolved by the rain water
* evolve at different stages of the rock evolution.
* heal quickly.
* is grooves.
* often develop about the lips and anus
- lips, nares, and anus
- in necrotic cortex tissue
* rupture dermal capillaries, causing clinical bleeding.
* usually cause pain during bowel movements that often is severe.
### shape | fissure:
Acute fissure
* are erythematous and bleed easily.
* can become chronic.
Fringe
* are a modulation with wavelength of the light falling on the detectors
- boundaries
- edging
- parallel lines when no flow is present
- social groups
* is an edge
Gap
* Some gaps are part of lithospheres.
* create places where lots of light can reach the forest floor.
* is disparity
- one of the largest and most profitable clothing companies in the world
* narrow valley or gorge cut by a stream across a ridge or mountain.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap:
Crack
* Most cracks occur as a result of shrinkage of concrete.
* Some cracks are large enough for a person to put their hand through
- can be so small that they are essentially invisible to the naked eye
* affect infiltration of furrow crop irrigation.
* allow germs to enter and cause infection
- the egg
* also open in glaciers as glaciers move slowly downhill.
* are also entry points for insects and rodents
- localized sources of acoustic emission
- attempts
- blemishs
- cocaine
- drugs
- home to crabs and lobsters
- indicators of potential branch or tree failure
- linear openings that form in materials to relieve stress
- major starting points for fractures of branches and trunks
- noise
* can also develop on the hands of children who frequently wash dishes or suck their thumbs
- occur when a cheesecake cools too quickly
- develop in any piece of wood
- form from temperature variations and aging
* can occur at or near the joints where concrete slabs meet or on the slabs themselves
- on tree trunks, usually at the site of an old injury
- with sudden temperature changes, as metal and wood expand differentially
* cause cracks.
* form in the ice shelf for a number of reasons
- surface of the Earth because of the action of tectonic plates
* have several indirect effects on crop performance.
* is an opening
* originate from stress built up during densification of coatings and limit their application.
* propagate in the same manner in void rich as in void free materials.
* provide an entry way for decay-causing pathogens
- easy pathways for moisture to travel into walls
* show the effects of earthquakes.
* tend to start at defects, and a similar thing is true with lightning and sparks.
### shape | gap | crack:
Blank
* always reminds people to keep their abdominal muscles tight and to keep working.
* are cartridges
- characters which glyphs are empty space, either vertically or horizontally
- sheets
* indicate lines which make up the edges of waterbodies. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | crack:
Crevasse
* Most crevasses are steep, and can develop quickly.
* also form when different parts of a glacier move at different speeds
- occur near the edges when one part of the glacier moves faster than other parts
* are a great danger in Antarctica in some areas
- also present on all glaciers in the area
- cracks in the surface of the ice caused by moving glaciers
- deep ice fissures or large cracks within a glacier
- narrow, deep cracks in the glacier
- notorious for swallowing even highly skilled travelers
* are open fissures in glacier ice
- fractures in glacial ice
- well covered with snow
* can be over one hundred feet deep and several feet wide
- create serac s, which are also dangerous to mountaineers
- form in several different ways
* extend only down to the zone of plastic deformation where they close up.
* form due to differences in glacier velocity
- only on steep slopes
- where the speed of the ice is variable, such as in icefalls and at valley bends
* have a bad habit of being lightly snowed over.
* is also a traditional term for a levee breach.
* mark rough spots on the path to the sea.
* often fill with snow, become distorted, etc
- form in glaciers where the ice flows over an irregular surface
* routinely form on the landward side of the shelf.
* typically form when there ridge on the landscape.
* usually form during floods. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | crack:
Fracture
* Can help regain range of motion to injured areas after surgery.
* Learn about and view all types of fractures which can affect children.
* Most fracture filled diamonds contain air bubbles that have been trapped inside the filling.
* Most fractures are produced by impacts or blows and thus involve energy absorption
- heal quickly
* Most fractures occur as a result of a fall onto the shoulder or an outstretched arm
- of an accident
- before puberty
- in the arms and legs
- result from trauma due to a fall
* Some fractures can take six to nine months to heal.
* Some fractures require periodic evaluations until the child s bones have finished growing
- surgery to carry out the bone repair and keep the fragments in place
- undergo routine treatment by means of osteosynthesis with a good prognosis
* also play a significant role in minerals exploitation.
* are a common consequence of osteoporosis
- crack, break, or complete shattering of one or both bones of the lower leg
- frequent type of injury
- result of both trauma and decreased bone strength
* are about twice as common in women as in men
- women than men
- breakage
- breaks in the bone that are often caused by a blow or a fall
- breaks, cracks, or chips in a bone
- broken hones
- caused by a sudden injury that exerts more force on the bone than it can support
- common as women age
- extremely important in the delivery of hydrocarbons in carbonates
- forms of brittle deformation
- injuries
- like cracks in a china plate
* are more prevalent in whites than in blacks and in women than in men
- serious injuries that require immediate medical attention
- near or through growth plates
- often present at birth, they tend to be mostly of short stature
- painful, disabling and costly, both in terms of quality of life and economics
- particularly important to the movement of water
* are the classic symptom of osteoporosis
- first clinical signs of osteoporosis
* are the most common problem associated with osteoporosis
- result of osteoporosis
- dangerous aspect of osteoporosis
- serious health consequence of falls
- traumatic injuries resulting in broken bones or teeth
- uncommon in healthy chicks
- video games
* break in a direction other than along cleavage planes.
* can be small chips or involve the entire bone
- cause total disability or in some cases death
- involve any bone in the arm or leg as well as the spine
* can occur in almost any bone
- horizontal, vertical, or multiple planes
- the spine, hip, wrist or elsewhere when a person has osteoporosis
- utero and during delivery
* can result in loss of height, pain, and deformity
- serious complications including pain, loss of mobility, and death
* cause an enormous burden on the individual and on society worldwide.
* describes an irregular break on the surface of a mineral that has no cleavage.
* develop as the plates are pulled apart
- parallel to earth s surface
* do occur in straight frozen animals, but are smaller.
* have a variety of names
- high permeability and allow water to move quickly from place to place
* heal at different rates depending upon the age of the child and the type of fracture
- rapidly in children
* includes fault lines.
* involving the long bones carry a good prognosis, so long as there is no gross deformity
- malleolus are a much more common type of ankle fracture
* is related to cleavage
- splintery due to the cleavage
- the breakage of a mineral in a way other than along cleavage planes
- when the mineral breaks in an irregular surface
* occur because of an abnormality in bone mass
- from minor trauma and heal slowly with deformity
* occur in later childhood and decrease toward adolescence
- sports where falls or direct impacts are likely
- utero or during delivery resulting in perinatal death
- when there is more force applied to the bone than the bone can absorb
* occurs by the breaking of atomic bonds
- through the zone of hypertrophied cartilage cells
- when a mineral breaks at random lines instead of at consistent cleavage planes
* often heal without surgery.
* often occur after low-velocity trauma, particularly of the spine, hip, and distal radius
- as a result of a fall or a collision
* refers to a broken bone or a rapture of soft tissue.
* represent submaximal accumulation of bone as a young adult or accelerated bone loss.
* result from trauma, such as falls, and from stresses incurred during normal activities
- when more force is exerted on a bone than it can withstand
* typically occur in the hip, spine and wrist
- spine, or wrist, but can appear in other bones
* usually cause pain
- occur first in the wrist, then in the spine, and finally in the hip | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | crack | fracture:
Ankle fracture
* can happen after falls, car accidents or twisting of the ankle.
* occur when the malleoli are broken.
Articular fracture
* involve the articular surface.
* is synonymous with intra-articular fracture and means fracture within a joint.
* respond best to a tension band applied to the caudal aspect of the ulna.
Avulsion fracture
* occur during a violent contraction of the gastrocnemius and soleus.
* tend to displace in the direction of the muscle pull that caused the fracture.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | crack | fracture:
Bone fracture
* Most bone fractures occur when the hens are removed from cages and transported for slaughter.
* are a frequent occurrence in outdoor dogs due to trauma from being hit by cars.
* are a major cause of long-term disability and death in postmenopausal women
- morbidity and mortality associated with osteoporosis
- diseases
- most likely to occur in the wrist or hip
* can also take place as described above but without resulting in spinal cord damage
- result in medullar compression syndrome and radicular pain
* is often the first sign that osteoporosis problem
- one of the most common ways of realizing osteoporosis problem
Clavicle fracture
* Most clavicle fractures heal up quite well on their own.
* tend to become pain-free within a few days.
Foot fracture
* are most common in track and field athletes.
* involve the talus, calcaneus, metatarsal, and phalanges.
Fracture toughness
* critical mechanical property for certain applications.
* is the ability or resistance of the material to crack advancement.
Osteoporotic fracture
* Many osteoporotic fractures are the result of falls.
* Most osteoporotic fractures involve the hip, wrist, and spine.
* account for most of the morbidity, mortality and costs of the disease.
* pose a significant health care problem with exorbitant associated costs.
Pathological fracture
* are most common in breast cancer due to the lytic nature of the lesions
- rare due to the eccentric location of the lesion
* occur when a disease, like cancer or alcoholism, has weakened the bone.
Pelvic fracture
* Some pelvic fractures require surgical repair, and there are often other complicating factors.
* can produce massive bleeding.
* have a high rate of associated injuries.
Skull fracture
* can raise the risk of pneumococcal meningitis.
* occur through the cranial volta and the base of the skull.
* vary in severity and treatment.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | crack | fracture:
Spinal fracture
* Many spinal fractures benefit by chiropractic management while the fracture is healing.
* are the most common and earliest occurring fracture among postmenopausal women
- osteoporosis-related fracture
- site for compression fractures to occur
* can cause excruciating back pain for many years before they are even diagnosed
- stooped posture, collapse of the vertebrae, chronic pain and disability
- occur in traumatic injuries or degenerative changes
* cause stooped posture, loss of height, and chronic back pain.
* distort the skeletal anatomy and collapse truncal height.
* result in such irreversible changes as loss of height and stooped posture.
Spine fracture
* are a frequent cause of neck pain.
* cause stooped posture and backbone deformities.
* have many causes such as falls, car accidents and direct blows.
Vertebral fracture
* are most common but hip fractures are most disabling and life threatening
- often the result of osteoporosis
* are the most common of the osteoporotic fractures
- type of osteoporotic fractures in postmenopausal women
- without a clear definition
* is usually the earliest clinical manifestation of severe osteoporosis.
* lead to curvature of the spine, loss of height, and pain
- the common hunched-over posture of many elderly people
Wrist fracture
* are common
- more common in snowboarding than in skiing
* can occur from trying to break a fall. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | crack:
Frost crack
* appear as shallow to deep longitudinal cracks in the trunks of trees.
* are also most common on thin barked trees such as maple, sycamore, crabapple and ash
- splits in bark and wood of a tree that result from rapid drops in temperature
* can allow rots or canker diseases to get established in the trunk
- also start from a wound inflicted earlier in the tree's development
* form because of high temperature fluctuations from the trunk center to the outside.
* occur on hardwoods and softwoods in the northern latitudes.
* originate at a point where the trunk was physically injured in the past.
Geological fault
* can be the result of compression of tension or of shearing forces.
* exist where two plates come into contact.
Smoking crack
* can also cause respiratory problems and decreased lung function
- produce severe respiratory problems
- seriously harm the lungs and cause chest pains
* produces an intense and rapid euphoria commonly known as a flash high.
* provides eight essential vitamins and minerals.
Stress crack
* are a part of skateboarding
- fine cracks in the endosperm of the kernel, located just below the surface
* increase the breakage susceptibility of corn during storage and handling. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | crack:
Volcano
* Follow the pace and rhtyhm of geologic movement and time.
* Learn about volcanoes from around the world.
* Many volcanoes are still active
- form oceanic islands in the Pacific Ocean or Mediterranean Sea
* Many volcanoes have calderas
- summit lakes through which heat and gases rise to the surface and escape
- sit over magma chambers
* Most volcanoes are composite cones
- explained by the collision or splitting apart of continental plates
* Most volcanoes are formed at plate boundaries
- by the movement of tectonic plates on the surface of the earth
- inactive most of the time, and thus are no warmer than non-volcanic mountains
- stratovolcanoes
- erupt for three to four weeks and then rest
* Most volcanoes have a volcanic crater at the top
- craters
- effects
- negative effects
- occur along the boundaries of the Earth's tectonic plates
* Most volcanoes occur at the plate boundaries
- subduction zones and mid-oceanic ridges
- near the edges of plates
- provide various types of warnings before eruptions begin
- reach a peak relatively early in their activity cycles and then gradually decline
- therefore have both types of activity going on
* Shows the examples of earth's most dramatic agents of geologic change.
* Some volcanoes are active and tremors are frequent
- calderas, which are pits formed by a collapsing lava chamber
- individual mountains
- more dangerous to humans than others because of the magma they erupt
* Some volcanoes can go hundreds, thousands, or even hundreds of thousands of years between eruptions
- tens of thousands of years btween eruptions
- coalsce to form a single island
- destroy land, but others actually make new land
* Some volcanoes erupt all the time
- for only a short time - a few days to weeks and never erupt again
- form very quickly indeed
- occur within a plate and are called intra-plate volcanoes
- only erupt once and never again
- produce fluid mudflows that do travel far down the volcano
- show quite consistent patterns of activity while others are much more erratic
- volcanos are gods and others are ancestors
* add mass to the continents when magma produces lava flows , tephra , and volcanic ash.
* affect humankind in many ways.
* affect the Earth in many ways
- earth's climate in several ways
* also build up new islands and mountains and make the soil a good place for crops to grow.
* also create craters and calderas
- mountains, produce new land, and enrich the soil with life-giving nutrients
- form above hot spots, stationary upwellings of hot mantle rocks
- give out gases such as carbon dioxide and sulphur dioxide
* also have a damaging effect on the weather
- positive effect
- make mineral deposits, like nickle and gold in Australia and Indonesia
- produce huge landslides that can transform into lahars
* also release large amounts of water and carbon dioxide
- particulates and gases into the atmosphere
* alternate active periods which can last for millions of years with long dormant phases.
* appear as bright spots on the smooth plains
- thesmooth plains
* are a beautiful part of the earth, but they can also be very dangerous
- natural way that the Earth and other planets have of cooling off
- source of significant chemical energy, both as heat, and elements
- threat to air safety from the moment that they erupt
* are also another way that hills are formed
- at the center of a new paradigm shift in conceptions of how life began on Earth
- common around the edge of the Pacific Ocean
- hazards to man, animals and crops
- more frequent along the plate boundaries
- on the ocean bottom
- part of the extended carbon cycle
- responsible for some of the world's most fertile soils
- an endogenous process
- awesome manifestations of the fiery power contained deep within the Earth
- both destructive and life-giving
- composite hazards
- considered one of the most destructive natural disasters of Earth
* are different from earthquakes
- sizes and shapes
- made when two tectonic plates come together
- mountains with openings or vents that reach down in the Earth to where magma is found
- nature's method of naturally refining and sorting minerals
- necessary to sustain life but are devastating killers at the same time
* are one major geologic hazard that occurs in our world and Hawaii is one of their homex
- of the most dramatic phenomena in nature
- way Earth gives birth to itself
- openings in the earth's crust that release molten rock
- part of south parks
- physical phenomenons
* are places where magma erupts as lava or ash
- reaches the earth 's surface
- puny builders of the earth's crust compared to their undersea buddies
- still widespread and earthquakes are both frequent and severe
* are the exposure of magma at the Earth's surface, but sometimes magma remains underground
- main way that the Earth releases heat
- primary landforms built by repeated eruptions of lava and ash over time
- unpredictable and highly dangerous
* are very dangerous because they are so powerful and filled with fire and gas
- powerful, extremely destructive, and cause extensive damage
- windows into how the Earth works
* arise from heating by magma at rifts, subduction zones, or hotspots.
* attest to the dynamic nature of the earth.
* begin to form when the rocks of the lower plate get pushed deep into the Earth.
* bring new supplies of minerals to the surface to enrich the land
- up new material for land, erosion wears it down
* bury a village, and terrorism and torture reveal man's inhumanity to man.
* can affect the weather in a number of ways
- also be a source of iridium
* can also form at a hot spot
- hot spots as magma rises out of the sea floor
- by other mechanisms besides subduction
- islands near land or in the middle of lakes
- have long-term effects on the climate, making the world cooler
- make buildings catch fire
- trigger tsunamis, floods, earthquakes, rockfalls, and mudflows
* can be dormant for hundreds of years
- under water or on land
- very dangerous and have killed many people in the last century
- blanket square miles at a whack
* can cause many different problems
- widespread destruction through several ways
* can change or modify weather systems
- destroy an ecosystem by killing the plants, wildlife, and affect the weather
- eject dust to it directly
- erupt at any time, spitting out melted rock called lava
* can erupt for a very brief time or they can erupt many times over millions of years
- long periods
- in any type of season
- explode at any time
- form at a mid-ocean ridge
- make larger changes all at once
* can occur on land or in the water
- the Earth's moon
- solitarily or in belts and chains
- produce large quantities of particles and leave a record in the ice
- put large amounts of dust particles high into the atmosphere
- remain inactive, or dormant, for hundreds or thousands of years before erupting again
* come in a variety of sizes and types
- all shapes and sizes
* commonly occur along colliding plate boundaries
- repeat their past behavior
* constantly produce massive quantities of carbon dioxide.
* continue to happen today, throughout the world.
* contribute to the greenhouse effect.
* create islands for people to live on
- new environments for plants and animals to migrate into
* deform constantly.
* differ widely in size and shape but three main types are recognized.
* do have an historical role well beyond their ancient mythology
- produce chemicals which break down ozone
* dominate the landscape in parts of Central America.
* dot the lowland plain that spreads towards the ocean's blue swells.
* emit gases during eruptions
- hot gases, ash and rock that are powerfully destructive
- huge amounts of steam and hot water
- large quantities of sulfur into the atmosphere
- two sorts of ozone-depleting compounds
- water vapor, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen, chiefly in the form of ammonia
* erupt after the bulk of the volcanic activity is actually over underground
- and create the small area of land that joins North and South America
- in a wide variety of ways
* erupt in different ways because of changes in temperature and gaseous content
- under glaciers, causing apocalyptic floods as the ice melts instantaneously
* erupt, in part, because of pressure from dissolved gas
- the crust quakes, and rivers rage
* expel streams of snow.
* explode and flowers grow tall
- periodically and let out magma, ash, and gases
* fixes nitrogen into plant-available forms.
* form above the areas where the right conditions exist to melt rocks in the mantle
- as magma rises from the melted slab
* form in Rocky Mountains
- nine different stages
- two places on the Earth
- on the plate above the hot spot
* form where it passes over a hot spot carrying magma from deep below
- rising magma breaks through the Earth's surface
* fume under the ice.
* generally occur along plate boundaries and are created when plates collide or move apart.
* generate their own weather which can be severe and different from that only a few km away.
* get progressively older away from permanent hotspot.
* give rise to numerous geologic and hydrologic hazards.
* grow because of repeated eruptions
- by intrusion and extrusion
- from their eruptions
- with steam and ash from the lava about to spew over
* happen, mountains rise, and rocks wear down.
* have a wide range of impacts
- an ecological impact that effects other indicators
- similarity
* here consist mainly of Composite cones that emit volatile magma.
* impact all ecosystems and represent the most intense of nature's forces.
* inject large amounts of sulfur compounds, chlorine and water into the atmosphere.
* kills trees by toxic gasses.
* literally create new real estate, by building land above sea level.
* maintain the atmospheres of the Earth and Venus.
* make islands and add to the continents
- up some of the biggest and most beautiful mountains in the world
* mark places where molten rock is rising to the surface of the Earth.
* occur at plate boundaries and also at hot spots
- weak points in the Earth's crust
- because the Earth's crust is broken into plates that resemble a jigsaw puzzle
- in the mountains and deserts because it is hot and there lot of sand
- most frequently at plate boundaries
- under water as well as on land
- when the mountains get too hot and they erupt
- where the various moving plates which make up the Earth's surface meet
* often erupt at the same time as an earthquake
- over hot spots
- show signs that they are getting ready to erupt days to months in advance
- wake in one of two moods
* play a role by sending up particles that block sunlight and cool the atmosphere.
* pose potential hazards to the surrounding populations.
* pour millions of tons of emanations into the atmosphere.
* produce a wide variety of hazards that can kill people and destroy property
- natural hazards that can kill people and destroy property
- steam, which forms clouds
- volcanic rock
* provide a wealth of natural resources.
* pump massive quantities of gases, dust and ash into the atmosphere.
* release carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide, and other gas molecules.
* renew the surface material and obliterate older surface features including craters.
* represent the magmatic arc.
* rise out of the clouds and the smell of sulfur is heavy in the air.
* rise, orgasm, and fall.
* sometimes erupt on the planet
- occur above a hot spot
* spew noxious plumes of acidic gases.
* start at the edges of huge rocky plates that make up the earth's crust.
* usually destroy life
- erupt through the top
- lie along the subduction zone
+ Endogenous and exogenous: Earth sciences
* Most volcanoes have a volcanic crater at the top. When they are active, materials pour out of it. This includes lava, steam, gaseous compounds of sulphur, ash and broken rock pieces.
+ Hotspot (geology), Discussion, Standard account of volcanic activity: Geology
* Most volcanoes are explained by the collision or splitting apart of continental plates. This explains the long mountain ranges which have many volcanoes, such as the western edge of the Americas. It also explains the huge rift valleys such as the East African Rift Valley. Most Earth scientists accept that the cause of these great features is plate tectonics.
+ Volcanism, Aspects, Volcanoes: Volcanology
* Volcanoes are places where magma reaches the earth's surface. The type of volcano depends on the location of the eruption and the consistency of the magma.
+ Volcano, How volcanoes are formed | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | crack | volcano:
Composite volcano
* Most composite volcanoes have one or more craters
- occur in chains and are separated by several tens of kilometers
* Some composite volcanoes attain two to three thousandmeters in height above their bases
* are the most abundant, and an example is Mount Fuji in Japan
- common type and they can be extremely explosive and destructive
* erupt in different ways at different times.
* hare from more viscous material and are steep sided cones.
* have explosive eruptions.
Explosive volcano
* blast hot solid and molten rock fragments and gases into the air.
* can erupt large quantities of tephra, gases, and aerosols into the atmosphere.
Hawaiian volcano
* Most Hawaiian volcanoes spread sideways under their own great weight.
* are by far the best-studied examples of basalt shields.
* can erupt either at their summits or on their flanks.
* erupt nonexplosively with streams of flowing lava.
* produce large amounts of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide
- two types of the same variety of lava<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | crack | volcano:
Mud volcano
* Many mud volcanoes are by the Black Sea and Caspian Sea
- exist on the shores of the Black Sea and Caspian Sea
+ Mud volcano, Places mud volcanoes are, Europe and Asia: Volcanoes
* There are very few mud volcanoes in Europe, but quite a few are on the Taman Peninsula of Russia and the Kerch Peninsula in the southeastern part of Ukraine. In Italy, many mud volcanoes are near the Apennines and in Sicily. Many mud volcanoes are by the Black Sea and Caspian Sea. Movement from tectonic plates have made areas of mod volcanoes that spit out hydrocarbons and methane. Some of the tallest mud volcanoes are in Azerbaijan. Mud volcanoes are also in Iran and Pakistan in the Makran mountain range.
Old volcano
* come in three basic shapes.
* have a long and complicated history.
Rift volcano
* allow magma to ooze up from the mantle along the rift.
* occur where tectonic plates diverge, often on the ocean floor.
Submarine volcano
* Some submarine volcanoes form where Earth's tectonic plates meet
- host economic deposits of metals
* are also interesting because of the unique habitats they create.
* exist as well.
Underwater volcano
* can form hydrothermal chimneys.
* erupt a lot at diverging boundaries.
* heat the ocean and change the sea floor topography.
Gender gap
* persist in and around the world of work.
* persists both in terms of enrollment and in terms of attainment of schooling. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap:
Hole
* Any holes gnawed through the bark make the trees susceptible to fungus and bacteria.
* Most holes hold water.
* Some holes are functional, elongated passageways, rather than punctuated voids in solids.
* Some holes have gravity
- strong gravity
- such strong gravity
* allow oxygen to enter and lead to problems with silage quality due to aerobic deterioration
- the shoe to remain as light as air
* appear in all the organs
- bones replacing normal bone with scar tissue and extra blood vessels
- flowers and then in leaves
- vessel walls and blood leaks out into the tissues
* are absence
- books
- defects
- essential for leather and vinyl shoes, to prevent water from standing
- important as shelter for many of the large and small animals of Australia
* are located in buttons
- dirt
- donuts
- doughnuts
- golf courses
- green
- ground
- locks
- notebook paper
- old socks
- pockets
- swiss cheese
- negative space
- openings
- part of golf courses
* are used for black
- entries
- hide
- planting
- screws
- vacant states in the valence band that are created when an electron is removed
* can become quite large and flimsy retinal vessels bridge holes.
* come in a variety of geometries and sizes.
* develop in the membrane separating the nostrils.
* have the opposite properties of the medium's components.
* is an opening
* provide shelter for many kinds of animals, from swarms of insects to hibernating mammals.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | hole:
Coronal hole
* appear as large dark regions over the brighter image of the solar corona in X-rays.
* are a source of high-speed solar wind
- another type of structure on the solar surface
- dark regions that reside on both poles of the sun
- easy to spot by looking at the Sun through an x-ray telescope
* are regions in the solar corona of exceptionally low density and temperature
- of reduced emission, reduced density, and increased speed
- where the corona is dark
* are the main source of recurrent solar activity
- sources of high-speed solar wind streams
- visible in several wavelengths but most notably in solar x-rays
* can last for months or years.
* come in all shapes and sizes, and locations.
* have a weaker magnetic field strength and a lower temperature.
Eyelet
* are holes.
* are part of boots
- curtains
- garments
Gopher hole
* are sometimes present with no dirt distributed above ground.
* can seriously injure large ruminants.
Large hole
* are where algae live.
* can continue to allow small amounts of blood from the veins to bypass the lungs.
* develop from earlier feeding as the leaf tissue expands.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | hole:
Leak
* Most leaks occur at joints, at structural connections, or at shrinkage cracks in concrete.
* also create underground ponds, where bacteria flourish around the pipes.
* are damage
- disclosures
- leaks in the pads or the keys
- located in boats
- micturition
- soft rots
- the number one cause of water waste
* can occurs at joints, resulting in leakage of transformer oil to the soil environment
- spread very rapidly in electronic communication
* can waste a lot of water
- hundreds of gallons of water a day
* cause breaks.
* occur when seals inside the faucet become dirty or worn
- the toilet is out of adjustment or when parts are worn
* tend to grow over time and they tend to operate differently under different conditions.
### shape | gap | hole | leak:
Gas leak
* are one of the most dangerous aftermaths of earthquakes.
* can be a danger to people or property
- cause explosions
- produce catastrophic explosions particularly in urban and residential areas
* create bubbles.
Memory leak
* are rare in Python.
* is when the program continues to use ram memory even after the program is closed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | hole | leak:
Venous leak
* can be a result of injury, disease, or damage to the veins in the penis.
* make it difficult for blood to remain in the penis during erection.
Water leak
* are costly and an unnecessary waste of water.
* can occur in such locations as pipes, valves, faucets, and drains.
Macular hole
* Most macular holes occur in the elderly.
* affect the central part of the retina.
Manhole
* are access points to pumping stations, valve vaults, and drainage systems
- collection points for sewage and storm water and are gravity operated
- how workers get from the streets to the systems underground
- located in street corners
- points of access to the sewer system for maintenance reasons
* provide access to sewers for maintenance.
Ozone hole
* Most ozone holes are part of stratosphere.
* Ozone Hole Learn how ozone shields Earth from harmful solar energy.
* are holes
* do exist and have been linked to higher skin cancer rates in Australia.
* occur generally in spring and can be very large.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | hole:
Pothole
* abound in the tops of Navajo Sandstone domes and smaller canyons.
* are also home to tiny desert animals.
* are an act of nature
- important source of water for larger and smaller lifeforms
- cavities
- depressional wetlands found primarily in the upper Midwest
- holes in the roadway that vary in size and shape
- located in streets
- more frequent during Texas winters
* are the direct consequence of vertical erosion and processes of abrasion
- product of unrepaired cracks
* begin after snow or rain seeps into the soil below the road surface.
* can result from the continuous freeze-thaw cycle.
* come from a combination of traffic and water
- in all shapes and sizes, with an equally varied array of lifespans
* exist in many parts of the country which have no gophers.
* fill and reflect the sky.
* left by glaciers fill with groundwater forming ponds and marshes.
* occur when moisture gets under the road material, such as through cracks in the surface
- tires roll over small imperfections in the pavement, like a small ridge
Small hole
* can form nesting sites for birds such as wrens, wheatear and wagtails.
* found in beans indicate that they are infested with bugs.
* lead to underground runways and nesting areas.
* occur in very ripe fruit.
Stoma
* are aperture
- located in leafs
- orifices
- part of colostomies
* have no sensation.
* is aperture
Weep hole
* allow visual inspection of seal condition.
* are teardrop-shaped drainage holes that are drilled into exposed conduit
- usually easy to clean<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | hole:
White hole
* are 'time reversed' black holes in general relativity.
* are the exact opposites of black holes. A black holes sucks in energy and a white hole expels energy. They are polar opposites. Some scientists even believe you can make a wormhole if you connect a white hole and a black hole. Or, if you connected a white hole from the past, and connected it to a black hole today, you could theoretically create a time machine. The possibilities are endless
- bizarre objects that are related to black holes
Wormhole
* are a direct consequence of general relativity
- also a very powerful mathematical metaphor for teaching general relativity
- junctions and are the only natural thing that let ships get between systems or maps
- predicted by the theory of general relativity
* contain two mouths, with a throat connecting the two. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap:
Tear
* ARE the catharsis of the soul.
* Most tears contain salt
- occur in the inner avascular portions
* Some tears require surgical repair, and pneumothoraces require lung reexpansion.
* act as a lubricant and keep the eyes clean and moist
- lubricant, and cleansing as well as antiseptic agents
* also contain a protein that kills certain germs
- enzymes and antibodies which inhibit bacterial growth
* are a freedom of speech issue, and breasts are a source of hidden power.
* are a natural expression of sorrow
- release of tension
- natural, healthy way to release very intense emotions
- normal part of grief
- release of hurt or happiness
- relevant sign only for infants and young children
- salty fluid that continuously bathes the surface of the eye to keep it moist
- sign of weakness
* are an aphrodisiac
- important part of the healing process
- bactericidal, which means they kill the bacteria that can cause infections of the eye
- definitely a form of healing and cleansing
- drops
- emotional stitches
- emotions for which there are no words
* are essential for maintaining a healthy cornea and conjunctiva
- to the normal function and health of the cornea
- found in about thirty per cent of women who have had children
- nature s way of cleansing the eye while keeping it moist
- necessary to lubricate the cornea
* are often a part of singing
- to be found where there is little sorrow, and the deepest sorrow without any tears
- one of the body's natural defense mechanisms
- part of the release of grief
- produced by several glands in and around the eyelids
- safety valves for human beings and show our sadness
- salty to create an osmotic balance with the fluid inside the eye
- separation
- signs of love, But they are only earthly urges
- similar to saliva
- small miracles of life, for tears of joy and tears of pain both heal
- sometimes an inappropriate response to death
- symbolic of inner cleansing
* are the blood of the soul
- healthiest expression of grief
* are the only cure for weeping
- river on which fire can burn
- produce of the eye , and are here elegantly termed the daughter of the eye
- relief valve of the soul as our hearts break with sorrow
- very complex and act essentially to lubricate the eye
- wets
* are, however, strongly hypertonic in regard to potassium.
* bathe and lubricate the eyes.
* can evaporate by heat or medication which causes dryness of the eyes.
* can help cleanse the body and also release a natural pain-relieving substance from the brain
- of substances that form under stress
- make a person feel helpless and out of control
- occur in the disc's annulus and bone spurs can form
* come from our eyes when the eyes are irritated with dust
- out also a reflex action to human emotions
* consist of slightly saline water, having an alkaline reac- tion.
- substances that slow down bacterial growth
* continually bathe the cornea, the outer covering of the eyeball.
* drain from the eye into the nose through the nasolacrimal duct, or tear duct
- out of the eye through a small canal into the nose
- via the lacrimal sac into the nasal cavity
* enter the duct at the puncta, which is the opening on the side of the eye closest to the nose.
* expressing grief are a sign of weakness.
* fall when there is pain.
* flow down over the eye and into the tear channels in the inner corner of the eye lids
- when they set a healed one free or when one dies in captivity
* hasten healing by washing away bacteria and promoting tissue repair.
* have water, salts, glycoproteins, and bactericidal factors, e.g., lysozyme.
* help clean the eye surface and protect it from infection
- our bodies to clean our emotions out
- protect the conjunctiva by diluting bacteria and washing it away
- the body eliminate toxins caused by stress
* help to express shame or sadness, and they help to relieve despair
- lubricate and cleanse the eye
- wash out negative chemicals building up when our body experiences pain or stress
* indefinite quantity.
* keep the eyes moist, help ocular wounds heal and protect against eye infections.
* lubricate the eye so that the lid can move over it smoothly and wash away foreign bodies.
* normally drain into small holes located in the inside corner of the upper and lower eyelids
- function to keep the surface of the eye moist and healthy
* play a critical role in nourishing the cornea and maintaining visual clarity.
* protect, nourish, lubricate and cleanse the ocular surface.
* reach the surface of the eye via small openings from the gland.
* serve to bathe and lubricate the cornea, the sensitive outer covering of the eyeball.
* shed for self are tears of weakness, but tears shed for others are a sign of strength.
* therefore contain a specific agent that attacks just bacteria, destroying their cell walls.
* travel from the gland through tiny ducts to the surface of the eye.
* wash away foreign substances from the eyes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | gap | tear:
Artificial tear
* Some artificial tears have preservatives that can cause side effects in people with dry eye.
* are the most common form of treatment for dry eye
- useful for patients with mild-moderate symptoms
* can help reduce symptoms and wash away allergens and inflammatory mediators
- relieve eye dryness and pain
* dilute the allergens and form a protective barrier over the surface of the eye.
* imitate all of the layers in the tear film.<|endoftext|>### shape | gap | tear:
Laceration
* always cut through tendons, nerves and arteries until proven otherwise.
* are a common skiing and snowmobiling injury
- blunt force injuries in which the tissue is torn
- cuts through the skin
- most common in abdominal surgery, though they can occur in virtually any surgery
* can be minor and superficial or they can be deep and severe.
* cause scars.
* is cuts
- the most common type of acute surfing injury
- wounds
* result from blunt force trauma
- cuts or tears in the skin and are caused by sharp objects
### shape | gap | tear | laceration:
Corneal laceration
* Most corneal lacerations require the placement of corneal sutures by the ophthalmologist.
* are usually evident by loss of the anterior chamber and distortion of the pupil.
Meniscal tear
* Some meniscal tears heal spontaneously after a period of rest, elevation and icing.
* are among the most common knee injuries.
* can develop as the result of an acute injury.
Retinal tear
* are easier to repair than retinal detachments
- usually without symptoms
* can be serious
- occur and as a result a retinal detachment can occur
* increase the chance of developing a retinal detachment.
* require treatment to prevent the retina from detaching.
Geometric shape
* are regular and precise, such as triangles, rectangles and circles
- like triangles, squares and circles
- the simplest objects that can exist in space
* can augment the design of a composition
- be top and tailed to save time and glass
* express minimum contrast and are thus more decorative than naturalistic shapes.
* mystify and multiply. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | globule:
Bubble
* Create a chemical reaction.
* Make some bubbles to blow around during the summer.
* Most bubbles contain gases
- have pressure
* Some bubbles fill with air.
* also pop when they touch dry surfaces.
* appear first at the anode, and much later at the cathode.
* are a direct line to the heart
- bits of air or gas trapped inside of a liquid ball
* are capable of bursts
- double trouble
- covering
- illusion
* are located in swimming pools
- water
- made of soap
- pockets of air or gas that are trapped inside a thin skin of liquid
- round when floating in the air because of air pressure
* burst when people lose money and it is happening.
* can also be a thin, ball-shaped film of liquid that has gas trapped inside
- cause air embolism, necrosis, and permanent loss of sexual function
- develop in products through electrolysis, oxidation, or microbiological action
- then grow by absorbing additional lipids and dividing
- therefore form along the track of a charged particle, and make it visible
* cause bubbles.
* deals with the small spheres that form between individuals.
* explode if three of same color come together.
* flow upwards because they are less dense than the liquid they are in.
* form simultaneously at more than one orifice of the plate
- slowly and collapse below the surface
- the interfaces across which gas dissolves into liquid
* generate much of the high-frequency noise in the ocean.
* have a certain surface free energy that always is minimized
- natural frequency that depends on their size
* reduce bulk modulus of material.
* rise through the viscous liquid, then pop, leaving rings on the surface.
* seen in the foot webs and under the skin indicate good water oxygen levels for frogs
- rising to the surface are due to steam, carbon dioxide and other gasses
* start to form on the egg shell immediately, which increase in number as time goes on.
* thrive in high humidity.
* trajectories influence gas absorption.<|endoftext|>### shape | globule | bubble:
Air bubble
* are also a sign of poor production quality
- extremely dangerous if inside in the system and the flight altitude is high
- located in water
* can distort images under the microscope
- form immediately upon cutting
- interfere with development and produce low-density circles on the film
- mimic uroliths or other filling defects
- stop the free flow of water into the stem
- take the place of a significant amount of a youngster's insulin
* indicate gas leakage.
* percolate up through the column, creating surface froth.
* reduce epoxy's strength in a bond and a coating's effectiveness as a moisture barrier.<|endoftext|>### shape | globule | bubble:
Foam
* All foam combination of foam ingredients and air.
* Many foams are used for cushions or bumpers, however, most have poor energy absorbing capability.
* Most foam product of nature.
* Some foams contain plasticizers which can degrade adhesive bond.
* also burn, producing smoke and poisonous gases such as carbon monoxide.
* are multiple density
- neither solid, liquid, nor gas, but they exhibit properties of all three states
- one class of wildfire control chemicals
- probably the most effective since they spread more evenly to coat the vagina and cervix
* backing absorbs vibrations and absorbs noise.
* create a moist environment and provide thermal insulation to the wound.
* creates cushions.
* exists everywhere - in the quantum froth, the cappuccino, the wave, and the galactic swirls.
* expands and moisture cures to form a semi-rigid closed cell mass.
* forms a chemical barrior over entrance to uterus.
* is colloids.
* is located in fire extinguishers
- waterfalls
- materials
* provide barrier protection.
* reduces combustion by cooling, moistening and excluding oxygen
- the risk of getting some sexually transmitted diseases
* tends to collect on the lee side of waves.
* work well in cats that are frightened by spray bottles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | globule | bubble | foam:
Lather
* apply support frameworks for ceilings, walls, and building partitions.
* are foam
- workmans
* is foam
Rigid foam
* is the insulation of choice where space is very limited but a high R-value is needed.
* represents the high tech end of insulation products.
* used in ring lifebuoys are often polyurethane.
White water
* Some white water has flowers.
* is foam
- the foamy, frothy water in rapids and waterfalls
* refers to the turbulence-triggereed foam.
Whitewater
* exists during flooding.
* is created by a number of natural forces
Gas bubble
* More gas bubbles rise in there water when there lot of decaying vegetation.
* are formed by breaking waves and the impact of hours apart.
* are visible in the core of the eddy
* can form in the blood if the change is too rapid, resulting in pain
- often cause discomfort, leading to crankiness and crying
* forming is chemical.
* indicate that a chemical reaction has occurred.
* provide buoyancy.
Large bubble
* Most large bubbles contain gases.
* can actually tear the walls of blood vessels causing considerable damage.
* collect at pressure minima in standing wave conditions.<|endoftext|>### shape | globule | bubble:
Soap bubble
* Soap Bubbles Create geometric art with soap films.
* Some soap bubbles fill with air.
* are a sort of sandwich of water and soap
- inside-out bilayers
* have very large surface areas with very little mass.
+ Surface tension, Effects in everyday life, Surfactants: Basic physics ideas :: Fluid mechanics
* Soap bubbles have very large surface areas with very little mass. Bubbles in pure water are unstable. Notice that surfactants actually reduce the surface tension of water by a factor of three or more.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Groove
* appear in the cell membrane.
* are body parts
- depressions
- hard to break out of
- tool marks, produced by dragged objects
- used for several purposes in cabinet making and other woodworking fields
* begin to form and a mouth develops at the point from which they radiate.
* generally affect but a very small extent the transverse diameter of the bone.
* is an application that all users install on their machines
- encrypting, memory resident, file infecting virus
- imprint
- basically a rhythmic pattern played in a consistent manner over time
- in the heart
* keep pens and pencils from rolling off.
+ Groove (joinery): Manufacturing
* Grooves are used for several purposes in cabinet making and other woodworking fields. Typically, a groove is used to house the panels in frame and panel construction and the bottoms drawers.
### shape | groove:
Rebate
* are incentives offered by vendors to encourage the purchase of goods from that vendor
- really a form of government spending
* is refunds.<|endoftext|>### shape | groove:
Striation
* appear as scratches of various size on rock surfaces.
* are a key attribute to identify skeletal and cardiac muscle types
- erosional features
- grooves, lines and scratches found naturally in some minerals
- parallel scratches etched into a rock's surface by glacial transport
- present, but the cells have a single, centrally located nucleus
* are the result of metastable precipitation in the alloy
- scratches etched into the rock at the bed of a glacier
- useful indicators of the direction of glacial movement
* type of flow mark, which is caused by some contaminant, such a silicone flowout.
Helix
* Helices can pack with enough energy to drive dimerization
- forming the fingers region also move to widen the DNA binding cleft by several Angstroms
* are curves
- software
- spirals
Hump
* are located in chinas
- part of camels
- really masses of fat that nourish the animals when food is scarce
* can often hold fish.
* reduce speed between intersections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | hump:
Road hump
* consist of raised sections of driving surface installed across the street.
* is the generic name for any vertical deflection for controlling vehicle speed.<|endoftext|>### shape | hump:
Speed hump
* are a kinder, gentler approach to calming traffic on local streets
- asphalt mounds placed on roadways for the purpose of slowing traffic
- one of the most popular devices used to control traffic in residential areas
* are the enemy to emergency vehicles, particularly fire and ambulance
- wider version of speed bumps
* block the flow of drainage water on some streets and can cause flooding problems.
* can have the greatest effect on vehicles with high speeds.
* differ from speed bumps, which are normally found in shopping centers.
* modify driver behavior between intersections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | hump:
Wart
* All warts are benign tumors of the top layer of the skin, caused by distinct viruses.
* Most warts appear as a round, raised lesion on the skin having a rough, dry surface
- are on the shaft of the penis
- only induce symptoms when they become awkward due to size or appearance.
* contain tissue that bleeds easily. A bleeding of this tissue allows the wart to spread to other places. In general, coming in contact with infected tissue spreads the infection
* also occur on the labia, vulva, cervix, anus and male genitalia.
* appear as painless growths around the genitals in men and women.
* are a commonly seen type of lump, particularly on younger dogs
- problem for immunosuppressed people, regardless of how they got immunosuppressed
* are a small, benign growth occasionally found on the skin
- hard, white or pink lump with a cauliflower-like surface
- symbol that the tree is older and is rough and scaly
- very common skin condition
- virus infection in the skin
- an infectious disease of low infectivity caused by a virus
* are benign epidermal growths caused by papillomaviral infection of keratinocytes
- skin tumors caused by a virus
* are benign tumors most often caused by a virus that develops on the outer skin layer
- blemishs
- bulges
- caused by a virus and can be found around the mouths of young dogs
- common in childhood
* are contagious and can be passed on to other people
- spread from person to person
- more easily spread if local trauma occurs to the epidermis
- because they are caused by a virus
- viral infections of the outer layer of the skin
- contagious, however they tend to spread on the infected person rather than others
- diseases
- harmless skin growths caused by a virus
- highly infectious and linked to an increased risk of cervical cancer
- imperfections
- infectious and can spread by touching or scratching
* are located in fingers
- noses
* are more common in areas where the skin was broken
- children than adults, although they can develop at any age
- children, although they can develop at any age
- than scar tissue
- likely to spread to other places on the same individual rather than to someone else
- neither genetic nor masturbatory in nature
* are non-cancerous skin growths caused by a viral infection in the top layer of the skin
- the papillomavirus
- noncancerous skin growths caused by the papillomavirus
- of no danger unless they become infected
* are one of several lesser afflictions of the foot, which nevertheless can be quite painful
- soft tissue conditions of the foot that can be quite painful
- overgrowths of skin tissue caused by viruses
- painless, fleshy swellings
- present in both males and females, but are more prominent in males
- rough skin growths in the outer layer of the skin that are caused by viruses
- rough, hard bumps on the skin, often with a tiny, black center
- skin growths caused by viruses
- skin-colored and feel rough to the touch
* are small benign skin tumors caused by various strains of the human papilloma virus
- fleshy growth on the skin
- skin growths caused by one of several types of viruses
- small, raised bumps on the skin, usually the same color as the skin, but sometimes darker
* are the result of a particular virus infection of the skin
- skin's reaction to chronic virus infection
* are usually skin colored and feel rough to the touch but can be dark, flat and smooth
- rough to the touch, but can be dark, flat or smooth
- rough to the touch, but they can be dark, flat and smooth
- skin-colored and feel rough to the touch, but they can be dark, flat and smooth
* are very common in children
- with most people being infected at some point in time
- viral in origin, and infectious by nature
* can also appear externally on the vaginal lips or around the anus
- on the top surface of the foot
- be present inside the vagina, on the cervix, or in the anus
- grow inside the vagina, anus, or urethra, making detection more difficult
- appear on the vulva, penis, scrotum or anus, in the vagina and on the cervix
* can be asymptomatic but can also cause disabling pain
- cosmetically bothersome and occasionally a source of pain
- small and difficult to detect, even during a medical examination
- become so large that they obstruct rectal canal
- come back since the virus remains in the body
- develop at any age, but they are most common in children and least common in the elderly
* can grow and spread if untreated
- anywhere on the body but usually appear on the hands or feet
- on any part of the body and their appearance depends primarily on their location
* can occur almost anywhere on the body
- on any part of the body but are most common on the hands and feet
* can spread to infant during childbirth
- other areas of the body
* can spread to other parts of the body and to other persons
- the body, particularly if scratching a wart causes it to bleed
* come in tens of thousands of varieties.
* grow in and around the entrance of the anus and the vagina and appear on top of the penis
- size and number
- the mouth, throat, genitalia or anus
- inward, instead of outward, on areas that bear weight, such as the soles of the feet
* have a finite life span of anywhere from six months up to five years
- similar characteristics to head colds which are also caused by viruses
* infect only the topmost layer of the skin.
* look similar to corns but are caused by viral infections and can spread by contact.
* occur in a variety of types and locations, such as the hands, feet, and in the genital area
* often come from walking barefoot on dirty surfaces
- barefooted on dirty surfaces or littered ground
- disappear without treatment over a period of several months to years
- occur on skin that is continually exposed to rubbing, friction, trauma, or abrasion
* present on the cervix can lead to pre-cancerous cells on the cervix and vagina.
* protect their eyes and mouth in fights with other wart hogs.
* result from infection by certain viruses called papillomaviruses.
* signal that the virus is active, placing women at increased risk for cervical cancer.
* sometimes disappear when rubbed with out onions.
* spread by sexual intercourse can sometime affect the lower part of the birth canal.
* tend to get bigger and more uncomfortable during pregnancy.
* thrive in a moist, dark environment.
* use to possess the forehead, nose, hands, and other open places.
* usually appear as small skin-coloured bumps and often occur in clusters of similar bumps
- on moist surfaces about two months after exposure
- are skin colored and feel rough
- occur in the mouth, around the genitals or anus
- take from two to three weeks after infection to develop | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | hump | wart:
Flat wart
* Flat Warts are smaller and smoother than other warts
- warts that are flesh colored and often seen on backs of hands and the face
* appear as skin colored sometimes pink or brown papules with a flat surface.
* are another type of wart that usually are found on the face
- more common within the vagina
* are smaller and smoother than hand and foot warts
- smoother and smaller than the other types of warts
Plane wart
* appear as slightly elevated papules with an irregular contour and smooth surface.
* are small, smooth warts on the face, usually in children.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Margin
* Call A margin call demand for more collateral on a margin account.
* are amounts
- boundaries
- part of pages
- profit margins, operating margins and gross margins
- space
- the principal locus of sediment accumulation on Earth
* defines the amount of space between the border of the element and any other element.
* function of risk.
* is an edge
* is the difference between the market value of a stock and a loan a broker makes
- gap between rest and exhaustion
- percentage of the selling price represented by gross profit
- price that a company can charge in excess of the cost
* often is used to describe voting results.
* refers to earnest money placed in a brokerage account to cover potential losses.
* secured loan, with stocks, bonds, and other securities serving as collateral.
### shape | margin:
Margin of error
* Margins of error occur when a population is incompletely sampled.
* is an index
+ Margin of error: Statistics
* The 'margin of error' is a way to measure the sampling error in the results of a statistical survey. A bigger margin of error means that the results are less certain. Margins of error occur when a population is incompletely sampled.
Molecular shape
* consequence of the distribution of electrons in a molecule.
* determines function.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Node
* act as in-series filters for lymph carried in lymphatic vessels.
* also produce shoots that can produce new plants.
* are abstractions of various real-world objects and concepts
- computers
- connections
- containers of attributes and other nodes
- control points situated at the edges of vector objects
- devices that have network interfaces
- important when propagating plants by stem cuttings
- junction points in the network
- part of computer networks
- places to which people are drawn by shopping, dining, entertainment, etc
* are points in space that have zero probability for locating an electron there
- where an orbit crosses a plane
- simply the places on any vector shape where a change in direction takes place
- spheres, cones or cylinders whose color changes according to their level in the hierarchy
* are the end systems and fabric is the collection of switching elements
- places where new growth happens in a grass plant
- points where leaves join to the stem
- things, the centers of activity
- various endpoints on a network, connected together to form a network
- weakest part of the bamboo
* define the location of the endpoints of every line.
* have a special place in astrology and particularly in spiritual astrology. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | node:
Nodule
* All nodules seen on chest x-ray are cancerous.
* Many nodules are of similar size.
* actively fixing nitrogen for the plant are pink or red inside.
* affect the whole skin, the subcutaneous tissue and sometimes the musculature.
* are a dense mass of fibroblasts and collagen encircled by small vessels
- aggregates of hemocytes that entrap invading microbes
- benign growths on the vocal folds that usually result from vocal abuse or misuse
- deeper and more substantive than papules
- diseases
- firm or hard and cold and painful
- growths that form under the skin
- larger than oolitic forms
- rare
- responsilble for nitrogen fixation
- structures on plants where nitrogen fixation is done by symbiotic bacteria
- the most severe form of acne lesion
- typically bilateral
- very apparent on carefully dug soybeans
* burst and ooze serum, later hardening to form scabs.
* can form in lungs surrounding spherules.
* consist mainly of collagen fibers surrounding one to several adult worms.
* develop on tender tissue of hair roots rather than corky tissue of older roots.
* grow around the root, forming a collar-like structure.
* have to maintain just the right amount of oxygen.
* leave scars.
* occur when the control of cell growth within the nodule is abnormal.
* seem to easily form around objects.
* sometimes do show stress - normally on the very sm all nodules.
* vary from a few millimeters to a few centimeters.
### shape | node | nodule:
Active nodule
* appear pink to the naked eye, indicating active hemoglobin.
* are pink to an almost blood red.
* look pink when broken open.
Cold nodule
* Most cold nodules are benign.
* are more likely to be malignant.
* demonstrate absence of activity.<|endoftext|>### shape | node | nodule:
Geode
* Most geodes are round rocks that are plain on the outside
- typically hollow whereas others are completely filled with massive, banded quartz
* Some geodes are formed out of molten lava rocks.
* are abundant in the area and are most easily found in creek beds
- common in some areas and people pan for gold and gems in area streams
- found in southeast Iowa and are the official state rock
- hollow spheres in limestone
- natural phenomena formed out of millions of years of geological evolution
- partly hollow, globe shaped bodies found in some limestones and locally in other rocks
* are round rocks containing a cavity that is lined with rock crystals
- stones, usually hollow filled with crystals or layers of agate
- unique forms of nature, and like fingerprints, no two are exactly alike
* can also form in gas formed pockets in cooling volcanic ash beds and lavas.
* exhibit a wide range of sizes from inches in diameter to several feet.
* have a hollow interior usually filled with crystals of smoky quartz, quartz and amethyst.
* help to initiate astral travel, and assist in the pursuits of mathematics.
* often start as large bubbles in lava that are frozen in when lava hardens.
* usually form in one of two environments - either volcanic or sedimentary.
Lymphatic nodule
* Many lymphatic nodules are present, distinguish between primary and secondary nodules.
* Most lymphatic nodules are small and solitary.
* are the building units of larger lymphatic organs.
Root nodule
* are perennial and increase in size as the tree continues to grow.
* form when a type of bacterium, rhizobium, infects the plant's roots.
Subcutaneous nodule
* are firm, painless lesions that occur over bony surfaces just under the skin.
* represent cysticerci in the skin.
Sentinel node
* are a limited set of lymph nodes to which cancer is most likely to spread first.
* contains metastatic breast cancer.
Square node
* are a special case of rectangular that require that the length of the vectors be equal.
* have unexplored neighbors in the graph.
Organic shape
* look like things from nature.
* tend to be soft, curvilinear and irregular. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Orthogonality
* Orthogonalities are opposition.
* is fundamental, as it is for analytical methods
- perfect non-association between variables
* mathematical concept.
Oval
* are bands
- figures
- manifolds
- rounds
- shapes
- stadiums
- what they use for race tracks
* come to life through the choreography of motion and sound.
* symbolize software parts.
### shape | oval:
Cassinian oval
* are the intersection of a torus and a plane in certain position.
* is the intersection of a plane parallel to the torus' axis and a distant from it.
Owl egg
* are oval.
* can be round as golf balls.
Tobacco leave
* are oval.
* contain several alkaloids, including the highly toxic alkaloid nicotine.
White oval
* are long-lived storms that form between two adjacent zonal jet streams
- tend to form between two adjacent zonal jet streams
- storms that occur between two adjacent zonal jet streams, and last for decades
* can be either cyclonic or anticyclonic storms.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Pellet
* Most pellets contain amorphous silica
* Some pellets contain bones
- essential nutrients
- food
- hemoglobins
- have pellets
* also contain feathers and fur of the former critter.
* are a good source for minerals
- prepared diet mixed from many different ingredients
- advantageous to feed because they require less storage space and be accurately measured
- also a good source of nutrients
- an ideal blast furnace feed because they are hard and of regular size and shape
* are balls of fur and feathers that contain bones and teeth of owl prey
- that contains bones that the owl eats and spits out
- blue and turn pink when near saturation
- clean and safe to touch
- easier to handle as well as weigh than leaf hops
- found under trees, in barns or around other owl roosting spots
* are high in fat, and can lead to larger animals
- protein and calories
- homogenous, every bite has the same mix of nutrients
- manufactured, little morsels of bird food
- more expensive than firewood
- oval or cylindrical, greyish, and compact with many bones, skulls, and teeth
- particularly good for old horses that have bad, or no, teeth
- prepared from fresh fruits and vegetables and contain vital vitamins and minerals
- quite interesting in their density
- safe to dissect, and contain no formaldehyde
- the smaller pieces and lab blocks are the larger chunks of food
- tiny, dry and loosely formed
* can also cause horses to choke
- be a fraction of the cost of oil and electrial heat
- contain both hay and grain
- ricochet, causing injury or serious damage in background areas
* consist of the hair and bones that owls regurgitate following a meal.
- numerous bones, skulls, and teeth, and are held together by fur and mucus
- vitamins and more protein than seed, so no other supplements are needed
* dissolve slowly into ground.
* do have a place in rabbit nutrition, as they are rich and balanced in nutrients.
* eliminate danger of drift to desirable vegetation.
* exist for larger fish like goldfish and cichlids.
* expand to form pot and soil all in one.
* gradually break down from rainfall and leach into the soil for root uptake.
* have a place as supplements and in commercial production.
* inhibit eating, so prior to the next meal, owls regurgitate pellets from the gizzard.
* last a long time in dry climates and in the protection of barns or other buildings.
* provide birds with excellent nutrition
- important vitamins and amino acids to boost hatch ability and egg production
### shape | pellet:
Fecal pellet
* Some fecal pellets contain food
- have a high phosphate content
* are very solid, and resistant to mechanical breakup. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | pellet:
Ice pellet
* are a form of precipitation
- type of frozen precipitation
- rain drops that have frozen before they hit the ground
- usually smaller than hailstones
* tend to be smaller than hailstones and bounce when they hit the ground.
+ Sleet: Precipitation
* Sleet' is a term for ice pellets that is used in the United States and Canada. Ice pellets are a type of frozen precipitation. They are balls of ice. Ice pellets are usually smaller than hailstones. Sometimes, ice pellets bounce when they hit the ground.
Slug pellet
* are particularly dangerous and so are some weedkillers.
* kill more than just slugs.
Snow pellet
* are beautifully white but are easily crushable between the fingers.
* develop as supercooled droplets freeze on ice crystals.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Physical fitness
* amounts to twenty percent of our well being.
* can gird a person's mental toughness, too.
* combination of proper exercise and proper nutrition.
* consists of individual fitness programs and physical fitness evaluations.
* contributes to our overall physical health and mental well being.
* decreases body fat and improves a diver's tolerance to exertion.
* desired trait for all federal government employees.
* has a direct and positive impact on psychological health.
* helps prevent tachycardia.
* includes having enough strength to carry a load of groceries
- individual fitness programs, step aerobics, strength training and jogging
- overall conditioning and being injury free
* involves the performance of the heart and lungs, and the muscles of the body
- heart, lungs, and muscles
* is affected by several factors, the most important of which are diet and exercise
- associated with a low risk of heart disease
- for a long, high-quality life
- important for general farm workers as knowledge of farm safety practices
- important, as the job entails various amounts of walking
- known to benefit people in all different areas
- linked to spiritual and emotional recovery
- one of the pillars of a strong military force
* is stressed along with attention to nutrition
- daily
* is the basis for all other forms of excellence
- capacity to perform prolonged heavy work
* is the cornerstone of a child's healthy beginning
- healthy lifestyle
- first requisite of happiness
- foundation for all strenuous activities of mountaineering
- result of regular exercise
- vital to a happy life
* key element for a healthy life for children today.
* lifelong process.
* necessity at any age.
* promotes good health and helps relieve physical and mental stress.
* refers to the measurement of maximal oxygen uptake on a treadmill
- medical oxygen uptake on a treadmill
* requires the intake of lots of fluids.
* vital part of overall wellness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Pore
* Some pore shapes trap materials, while others allow free flow in and out of the spheres.
* Some pores exist that are larger than the zeolite pores
- have an umbra but no penumbra
* allow specific communication with the cytoplasm.
* also have thick lignified walls
- reduce the cross-sectional area over which a load is applied
* are also present in the equatorial grove of large wheat, barley, and rye starch granules
- circular to angular in shape
- ducts
- fine, solitary and numerous
- holes
- important in allowing air and water to penetrate the soil
* are large and angular
- visible and the texture is often coarse or thick
- less visible
- often the precursors of sunspots
- part of skin
- spaces in the soil that come in different sizes
* are the scapegoats of the ageing process
- spaces between grains of sediment in sedimentary rock
* are tiny and round
- openings on the surface of the skin
* can also bond the pattern and plastic together which makes demolding nearly impossible
- host gases, solutions, and microbiota
* containing vapor are red, while pores containing fluid are blue.
* grow smaller from spring to summer wood.
* maintain sufficient gas exchange for respiration while limiting water loss.
* occur singularly or in radial multiples of two or three and are barely visible to the eye.
* range from none to few.
* vary in size and shape from species to species.
### shape | pore:
Clogged pore
* are a breeding ground for acne bacteria, and acne bacteria cause pimples.
* have nothing to do with the cause of male pattern baldness.
* require increased water pressure which can damage filters.
Femoral pore
* are also a good way to identify related species
- occasionally present
- present on the males
* found in females are indistinct and flat.
Hydathode
* Many hydathodes have white calcite deposits at leaf tip.
* are common
- small openings on the leaf blades which exude water
Large pore
* are a concern for many women
- function of sexual hormones and their expression
- problem for many women
- best at conducting water through the soil when water content is high
* facilitate lymphocyte travel to tissues.
* permit air to reenter the medium following irrigation
- better exchange of gases between soil and atmosphere
* tend to produce strong contrast in staining.<|endoftext|>### shape | pore:
Lenticel
* are generally showy, tan-colored, irregular, and slightly raised
- large pores with a corky layer and enable the exchange of air
- localized enlargments of plant cells
- macroscopically as well as microscopically important
- pores in the skin that allow gas exchange
* are present at the surface
- in the bark
- prominent and tan colored
- small spots or strips on the bark where the tissue is softer and looser
- spongy regions of the bark that allow gas exchange
- stomas
- very prominent in some stems
* occur as narrow vertical slits.
Numerous pore
* allow material to enter and leave the nucleus.
* penetrate the walls of the skeleton. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Prism
* allow the children to explore what happens when light is bent.
* also considers sample size when weighting.
* are clear plastic with easy to read millimeter lines on both sides
- effective in the treatment of double vision
- for the best quality and erecting lenses for cheaper instruments
- laboratory equipment
- located in windowsills
- optical devices
* are part of spectroscopes
- telescopes
- polyhedrons
- round pieces of glass
- unique in that each color of light is refracted to a different angle
- used in binoculars to bend the light
* bend different colors different amounts.
* can be very effective for patients that require glasses to see
- break up white sunlight
- fit a family of curves at once
* centers around an abstract metacode that simplifies code creation and usage.
* collection of unix machines that operate with common resources.
* defines a curve as a large number of points.
* divert or refract light rays toward the direction of their bases.
* generates the curve as a series of line segments.
* has a lot of red, green, and even blue flecks
- no common sense
- the potential to increase engine life by keeping peak cylinder pressures at bay
* helps scientists efficiently analyze and present experimental data.
* is many things
- used to bring the first dispersion order of the grating back on axis
* links data to transforms, statistical analyses, curve fits and graphs.
* maintains the link between data, results and graphs.
* placed in glasses can usually reduce double vision until the nerve function returns.
* produce a rotation of the visual world.
* run differently in longitudinal and transverse sections.
* separate the colors that make up white light into a spectrum of rainbow colors.
* server product that does HTML content conversion.
* shows all of the radiation beams and their directions at once.
* treats all body types equally
- the two lines as one
* video conferencing server for the internet.
* works by moving the perceived location of what is being seen relative to the other eye.
+ Prism (optics), Uses: Optics
* Prisms are used in binoculars to bend the light. This lets the tubes of the binoculars be short. Sometimes prisms are used to reflect light instead of bending it. Some cameras use a prism to send light to the viewfinder, so the photographer can see what will be photographed.
### shape | prism:
Cuboid
* have six faces, which form a convex polyhedron.
* A 'cuboid' 3D shape. Cuboids have six faces, which form a convex polyhedron. Simply speaking, cuboids are made from 6 rectangles, which are placed at right angles. A cuboid that uses square faces cube, if the faces are rectangles, other than cubes, it looks like a shoe box.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Pyramid
* Any pyramid third part of the prism with the same base and equal height.
* Some pyramids are simple and similar to a chain letter
- have special carvings or artifacts at the top
* also reflect the demographic history of a country.
* are also useful in alleviating stress factors
- energy accumulators and transmitters
- hard to move - so are mountains
* are illegal and are based on taking advantage of people
- because they are inherently fraudulent
- magic and mystery
- manifolds
- monuments
- speculation
- tapered cigars with a small, pointed head and a larger foot
- television shows
- the most recognizable Mayan structures
- where it's at
* become the tomb of choice for pharaohs.
* can represent an image in several different ways.
* cheerleading gym in Concord, California.
* hold better in fast water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | pyramid:
Energy pyramid
* compare energy used by producers and other organisms on trophic levels.
* displays organisms from one food chain inthe food web.
* represent the amount of available energy on each trophic level of the food chain.
* show that energy decreases towards the consumer
- number of organisms increases in the direction towards the producer
- the loss of energy at each level of a food chain
Population pyramid
* are illustrations of what is happening in a community.
* show the general shape of a population's age structure
- relative size of each age and sex category | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Rainbow
* All Rainbows prefer to live in a group with at least six members of their species.
* More rainbows are stocked each year in Minnesota waters than any other trout or salmon.
* Most Rainbows commonly hang in the sky for a good time before they disappear.
* Most rainbows have a pink or red side stripe
- only contain red near the ground
* Some rainbows are part of skies
- worlds
- live in the ocean and migrate to rivers to lay eggs
* also appear in the spray from a waterfall or sprinkler
- are in Maine because they are very popular with the owners of private ponds
- consume decomposing flesh from carcasses of other fish
* always follow the storm and dark clouds never stay long.
* are a common phenomenom
- aggressive fish that can be caught easily with fly and gear angling
* are also a symbol of gay union
- numerous on the White River
- recognizable symbols of gay pride
- an optical phenomena due to the diffraction of light waves
- another method that can be used to observe if rain is falling
- circular because the drops, being spherical, are alike in every position
- concave down ruptures that indicate complete stress drop and characteristic slip
- entirely fresh water fish
- extremely noisy birds and attract attention by their screeching and chattering
- for realizing that from storms, life is revealed and renewed
- formed when light passes through water droplets
- found in streams, rivers, lakes and ponds
* are just light
- things that appear in the sky after a good rain
- less wary than brown trout and more willing to bite
- located in skies
- popular symbols that can mean peace and harmony
- promise
- shallow near shorelines and inlets
- silvery while browns and brookies are darker with large reddish spots
- spectacular rays of color
- symbolic of people coming together, of hope, of promise, and of dreams coming true
* are the easiest of all lorikeets to keep and breed
- predominant species found in southern Alberta's trout streams
- very common occurences after a rain shower, while the sun is still shining
- visions but only illusions
- visions, but only illusions, And rainbows have nothing to hide
- wary, suspicious, and dyspeptic, all common traits among trout
* can create beauty, but humans refuse to look.
* color the world and brighten the sky.
* come after the rain as sun light shines through moister left in the air after a storm.
* dictate acceptance, inclusion and the capacity to love.
* enter streams to spawn in the spring, while the brook trout spawn in the fall.
* feed heavily on scuds throughout much of the year
- mostly on terrestrial and aquatic insects
* form in the misty spiderwebs at daybreak
- when raindrops refract sunlight
* game of buying cards of different color and placing markers on a multi colored board.
* get their name from the pink or red band often present on their sides.
* happen when the sun is shining while it is raining or just after a storm.
* have color because of refraction in a manner similar to a prism
- colors because water refracts different wavelengths of light slightly differently
- difficulty surviving low oxygen levels in winter
- no teeth on the tongue
- six different colors
- teeth on the tip of the tongue, but lack the midline teeth
* inhabit bodies of water such as lakes, rivers and streams.
* is an arc
- explanation of the physics behind the rainbow
* naturally produce in the streams entering and leaving Crescent Lake.
* occur when rain is falling in one part of the sky and the sun is shining in another
- sun light from behind the observer falls on water droplets
* often feed on the surface
- glimmer in the refractions of spray
* only come in the sky after it rains.
* peer support group with trained facilitators.
* play an essential part in weather predictions.
* prefer cool, clear water, either in lakes or streams
- to lie in current breaks near fast water
* program to assist children to integrate the loss into their lives.
* remain active on Power eggs, salmon eggs, and Belgian red worms on low water condition.
* show off their colors
- the entire spectrum of visible light
* spawn in spring.
* support curriculum for children who live in single-parent families or stepfamilies
- group for children who are coping with loss, separation, or tragedy
+ Light
* Light is electromagnetic radiation that is in the form of a wave. Each wave has a wavelength or frequency. The human eye sees each frequency as a different color. Rainbows show the entire spectrum of visible light. The separate colors, moving in from the outer edges, are usually listed as red, orange, yellow, green, blue, and violet.
* A rainbow is actually round. On the ground, the bottom part is hidden, but in the sky, like from the view of a flying airplane, it can be seen as a round shape. Rainbows are popular symbols that can mean peace and harmony. Rainbows are also recognizable symbols of gay pride.
+ Rainbow flag (LGBT movement), Meaning: LGBT :: Flags :: San Francisco, California
* Rainbows are also a symbol of gay union. Tens of thousand of people use the rainbow symbol everyday. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Rectangle
* Every rectangle square.
* Most rectangles have angles
- right angles
* are devices, and elongated ovals are activities
- figures
- frequently the dominant shape in a room
- parallelogram
- quadrangles
- shapes
* are the shape that is seen most
- size and shape of any long side of the large block
* can be a side of a cube or the basement of a pyramid or prism
- wide and tall And circles can be very small
* extrude into boxes, circles extrude into cylinders, etc.
* indicate the size and ideal locations of areas to be used for nerve counts.
* is parallelogram
* play the most important role in architecture.
* represent predicted gene models, with blue and green showing relative gene orientation.
* require moment-resisting connections to be stable.
* specifies a rectangular area by position and size.
* still have all parallel sides.
### shape | rectangle:
Foursquare
* have cubical shapes with pyramidal or hipped roofs.
* regular polygon<|endoftext|>### shape | rectangle:
Square
* Every square contains a letter X and a number n
- corresponds to one pixel in real size
- is referred to as a cell
* are a subclass of both rhombuses and rectangles
- artifacts
- companies
- conservatives
- hand tools
* are located in geometry
- towns
- major towns
- numbers
- quadrilaterals
- regular polygons
- simpletons
- tugs of war between the energies of the planets
- used for measurements
* can be any size, straight or tilted.
* contain roads, cities and castles.
* have one of five colors
* represent the initial positions of material points.
+ Raster graphics: Computer graphics
* When zoomed in, it might look like the bigger smiley face. Every square stands for a pixel. Looking even closer, you can see the three different pixels at the bottom. Their colors made by adding up the amounts of red, green and blue in each one.
### shape | rectangle | square:
Black square
* are large blocks of rock.
* indicate stable nuclei of the familiar elements of which Earth is made.
Large square
* are the size of four sides of a small block.
* break down much more often than small squares.
Least square
* commonly used measure of misfit.
* fitting is based on minimizing the residuals between the data and fitting function.
* means for litter traits
- meat quality and carcass composition
- of boar taint compounds in four breeds of entire male pigs
Open square
* are individuals tested only in winter.
* represent the sites of input of uncorrelated white noise.
White rectangle
* are drown where the difference is negative, and green when difference is positive.
* is the area for gravity modeling.
Rim
* Some rims are formed by impact.
* is an edge
* round shape
Saucer
* are discs
- dishs
- disks
* are located in cabinets
- kitchen cabinets
- kitchens
- tea rooms
- sports equipment
- used for flying
- useful when watering and prevent staining surfaces
* is sports equipment
Scratch
* are blemishs
- handicaps
- least noticeable when they run with the grain of a wood
- motivated by the goal of itch
- programming language
- rivals
* impair vision and can weaken lenses.
### shape | scratch:
Rope burn
* appear around wrists or ankles when children are tied to beds or other structures.
* are abrasion.
* can happen quickly and cut to the bone or worse. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Sheet
* are artifacts
- bed linen
- formed under pressure and heat
- lines used to tension sails
* are located in bedrooms
- drawers
- hotels
- made of cotton
- paper
- part of ships
- smooths
* are used for beds
- sleeping
- white
* can collapse to small streams that cut tiny channels called rills.
* converting is the last stage of papermaking.
* extrudate can be double or triple layers.
* is space
* mulching gardening technique that suppresses weeds and builds fertile soil.
* often have a strip of paper around the edge, called selvage.
* racks Roll-out sheet racks and rack systems for storing sheet metal and flat steel products.
* refers to single sheets of paper.
+ Oriented strand board: Wood
* Oriented strand board', commonly called 'OSB', is a type of particle board which is made of carefully positioned strands of wood. Aspen and other similar woods are cut into long strands parallel to the grain of the wood. It is manufactured into sheets made up of wood strands, wax, and resin adhesives. Sheets are formed under pressure and heat. The finished sheet size varies by country. OSB is very strong making it ideal for building construction. Its most common uses in construction are for covering walls, floors and roofs before the finish products are applied.<|endoftext|>### shape | sheet:
Ice sheet
* act as blankets.
* are larger than ice shelves or alpine glaciers
- sensitive indicators of climate change
- the largest accumulations of ice
* contribute to their own growth.
* expand during an ice age.
* form, advance, retreat, melt, then form again.
* move in response to current and wind and they rise and fall with tidal rhythms.
* play a critical role in the global climate system.
* rest on a foredeepened surface.
* spread outward under their own weight.
* take thousands of years to respond to changes in surface temperature.
* are larger than ice shelves or alpine glaciers. The ice in an ice cap usually comes from a series of glaciers that drain into it.
Worksheet
* Most worksheets consist of tables of numbers, called values in spreadsheet jargon.
* are sheets
- the basis of all spreadsheet functions
Spherical shape
* are common to electrostatic devices for a couple of reasons.
* has the minimum surface area. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Spiral
* Celtic spiral dingbat font.
* are also a symbol of hypnosis
- extremely stable
* are common in plants and in some animals, notably molluscs
- to whorl patterns
- curves
- decoration
- disk-like, with arms of young stars and gas winding out from the nucleus
- flat disks of stars with bright bulges in their centers
- located in japans
- rotation
- symbols for a holistic, balanced view of reality
* are the most common type of large galaxy
- symbol of energy, vitality and cyclic time
* grow laterally away from, rather than along, the axis with each revolution.
* have a central bulge with a flattened disk, generally showing spiral arms
- blue arms of bright blue stars and a red-yellow bulge of older stars
- disks with young stars, spiral arms, gas and dust
- large amounts of gas dust in the arms with the arms revolving as rigid bodies
- most of their bright stars, gas, and obscuring dust in a thin disk
- no ears to interfere
* possess copious amounts of gas and also young stars, in contrast to the ellipticals.
* seem to be associated with the patchy X-ray emission.
* stand for the struggle to maintain balance between out consciousness and outer self.
* start from the inside and work outwards.
* still give birth to new stars.
* tend to have less of a range, with typically one to a hundred billion stars.
+ Spiral, As a symbol: Mathematics
* Spirals are also a symbol of hypnosis. They are also used as a symbol of dizziness, where the eyes of a cartoon character, especially in anime and manga, will turn into spirals to show they are dizzy or dazed. The spiral is also a prominent symbol in the anime 'Gurren Lagann', where it symbolizes the double helix structure of DNA, representing biological evolution, and the spiral structure of a galaxy, representing universal evolution.
### shape | spiral:
Logarithmic spiral
* are common in nature.
+ Logarithm, Uses: Mathematics
* Logarithmic spirals are common in nature. Examples include the shell of a nautilus or the arrangement of seeds on a sunflower.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Spur
* Some spurs extend from ankle bones
* are also painful when they are associated with shoes rubbing on an area of the foot
- bony spear-like projections found on the back of each leg
- calcium growths that develop on bones of the feet
- high ground
- natural things
- part of boots
- short crooked shoots upon which flowers and fruit are borne
- small shoots that produce leaf, flower and fruit
- the sites on which floors of apples, pear and quince are borne
* bearing stunted shoots usually die the following year.
* can also occur without pain
- be painful because they often cause corns
- grow where the muscles of the foot attach to the bone
* is commendation
* normally hold nectar as a reward for the pollinators.
* wound the tree and often carry diseases from trees previously taken down.<|endoftext|>### shape | spur:
Bone spur
* are abnormal bone growth that results from aging or arthritis
- almost always the result of trauma
- in fact smooth structures that form over a prolonged period of time
- medical conditions
- small bony projections that develop along the edge of bones
* can also cause minor setbacks in the recovery process
- develop and interfere with the range of motion
* can be painless or cause severe pain
- very painful
* can form on a vertebrae causing pain and damage to nerves
- bones of the spine causing pain and damage to nerves
- reduce the space available for the bursa and tendons to move under the acromion
Growth spurt
* occur much later in puberty for boys than girls.
* occurs, on average, two years earlier in females than males.
* require increased amounts of iron. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | spur:
Heel spur
* are bony growths from the underside of the front part of the heel bone, the calcaneus.
* are bony growths on the underside, fore part of the heel bone
- forepart of the heel bone
- that result from too much tension in the plantar fascia
- calcium deposits that develop over time into a sharp bony growth under the heel bone
- growth of bone on the bottom of the heel bone
* are growths of bone on the underside of the heel bone
- underside, forepart of the heel bone
- the body's response to injury and inflammation
- usually cureable without surgery, although in some cases it is warrented
* can also result from an abnormally high arch.
* is also the name given to an inflammation of the plantar fascia.
* refer to heel pain due to bone irritation.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Stalactite
* Some stalactites are part of caves
- grottos
* are cone-shaped rock formations that form on cave floors
- cylinders
- formed by a slowly dripping solution of calcium carbonate mixed with other minerals
- iceclelike pendants of dripstones hanging from the cave ceilings
- icicle-like formations on the roof of caverns
- one of the many cave formations
- speleothems which form on the ceiling of a cave
- usually of calcite, and hang from the ceiling of cave passages
* cling tight to the ceiling of caves.
* form by mineral rich water dripping from the cave ceiling
- from the ceiling down
- on the roof of a limestone cave
* grow down from the cave ceiling, while stalagmites grow up from the cave floor.
* grow from the ceiling down
* hang from the ceiling and stalagmites form from the ground up
- water drips in the darkness
- soaring ceiling and stalagmites stand like totem poles
* suspend from cave roof tops as well as stalagmites.
* usually form from slow drips.
Stretch
* are durations
- elasticity
- exercises
- extensions
- part of racetracks
* is space
Tree shape
* depends on the cultivar and varies from erect to spreading.
* maximize sun exposure. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape:
Triangle
* Every triangle contains at least two acute angles
- gets the color of the atom it is situated closest to
- has three vertices
- is isosceles
* Most triangles have angles.
* Most triangles have equal angles
- correspond angles
- sides
* Some triangles are equilateral.
* Some triangles have large mass
* Use the concepts of similarity and congruence to find measures of angles.
* are a simple but important structural construction method
- variation of the traditional log cabin pattern
* are bursts where a break has been found in the optical light curve
- which have a break in their optical light curves
- colobines, circles are cercopithecines
- convergent thinkers
- figures
- geometric shapes
- individual temperature determinations
- instruments
* are located in bands
- drafting
- geometry
- math classes
- orchestras
- percussion instruments
- polygons of three sides
* are similar if their sides are respectively parallel to each other
- respectively perpendicular to each other
- special because they have a compact representation
- stronger than squares because forces applied by a load are equally distributed
- structurally rigid and are often used as supports
* are the inevitable result of a group of single lines crossing and recrossing each other
- most basic units of star-hops
- three-sided polygons
- tools
- triple points, crosses critical points
* are used for geometry
- musical instruments
- very stable shapes
* are, inherently, perfectly planar.
* can take many forms.
* come in different sizes.
* convex polygon with three segments joining three non-collinear points.
* fraternity whose membership is made entirely of male engineering students.
* generally represent the hanmi posture.
- one, two, three sides
* is the minimum polygon
- most basic, simplest of all geometric shapes
- trinity of mind and the cross represents man upright
* list three vertices, squares four, etc.
* national fraternity of engineering, architecture and physical science majors.
* non-profit social research organization operating nationwide.
* provide strength, balance and efficiency of energy space and materials.
* receive the most attention in terms of special properties of shapes.
* represent group sites with two or more megalithic sites close together
- nonpregnant females and crosses pregnant females
- shifts based on adult foveal CSFs and the model of the neonatal fovea
* represent the directions, squares the directions and rectangles the directions
* symbolize several forms of the trinity
* touch the ground.
* withou a right triangle are rightfully called oblique triangles.
+ Triangle (instrument)
* Triangles come in different sizes. Smaller ones will sound higher than larger ones.
### shape | triangle:
Diagonal triangle
* assume a wedge shape pointing in the direction of the larger trend.
* occur as final, exhaustion, movements of trends and corrections of trends.
Isosceles triangle
* are regular polygons
* have at least two congruent sides
- equal base angles
* map to one of three lines running through the origin and a , b , or c.
Right triangle
* are the historic basis from which the field of trigonometry evolved
* can be scalene triangles.
Wedge
* Most wedges are combinations of two inclined planes
- have acute angles
* are brilliant in the sun
- irons
- the most dependable way of controlling the direction a tree falls
- very ancient machines, for fixing axe heads to hafts, and for splitting logs
### shape | triangle | wedge:
Ice wedge
* form in the permafrost tunnel when water seeps into a crack in the frozen ground.
* seem to truncate when they reach the gravels.
Plowshare
* are wedges.
* is jumpers for mother, daughter, and doll.
Whorl
* are the layers of branches that grow from the main trunk.
* round shape
### shape | whorl:
Calyx
* Calyces are green.
* are coils.
* lobes half as long as the tube of the corolla. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shape | whorl | calyx:
Pappus
* are calyxs.
* bristles plumose and deciduous, forming a ring at the base and falling as a unit.
Corolla
* are coils.
* attracts insects for pollination.
* can be tubular or funnel shaped.
* consist of five petals which are also fused.
* is cream in color when fully expanded
- white and purple, very different for a passionflower
* lobes about the same length as the tube, or markedly longer than the tube.<|endoftext|>### shape:
Wrinkle
* Some wrinkles are born of in-temper, of fretfulness, or sorrow.
* Some wrinkles are part of elephants
- necks
- pachyderms
- penises
- skin
* appear as teeth and hair disappear
- the skin becomes thinner
- due to thinning and folding of the skin, most commonly on the face
- upon the forehead when ears are erect, and are fine and profuse
* are a part of the aging process
- clefts
- coarser on the outer layer than within the interior layer
- depressions
- difficulty
- hereditary
- indicative of aging, a natural decay and progression towards death
- lines of expression
- located in fingers
- methods
- part of skin
- the result of much muscle contraction over years time
- unwanted companions of aging
* become more common and the skin ages prematurely, developing a hard leathery feel
- obvious due to diminishing collagen
* begin to appear, joints ache after a highly active day, and body fat accumulates
- form at eight weeks
* can be on the surface of the skin or can be quite deep
- cause skin sores
- have a profound impact on self-esteem
* continue each equinox and solstice.
* equate to more skin, which means more opportunity for oxygen to reach the blood vessels.
* formed from smiling are signs of beauty.
* have no long-term effects.
* increase, especially around the mouth.
* is an imprint
* make the aging process more difficult for women to conceal.
* spread rapidly, skin quickly loses elasticity and smoothness.
* usually make people look old and cause a loss of self-confidence.
### shape | wrinkle:
Dynamic wrinkle
* are the lines that form from years of smiling, squinting and frowning.
* occur in people of all ages, even young children.
Facial wrinkle
* are often a result of aging.
* increase with the amount of cigarettes and number of years a person has smoked.
### shapes | round shape:
Conoid
* are the axisymmetric equivalent of conicoids.
* round shape
Convolution
* arise naturally when differential equations are being replaced with integral ones.
* is an inner product calculation with various shifts
- commutative
* is the basis of non parametric smoothing like loess
- modification of a pixel's value on the basis of the value of neighboring pixels
* is used for digital filtering
- to make a synthetic seismogram
* semigroups on hypergroups.
* symmetric operation, i.e.,.
Funnel
* are cones
- part of ships
- persistent, while scud usually dissipates or changes rapidly
- strips of woods that connect wooded areas to each other
- utensils
* direct the sperm into the sperm ducts which open to the outside on the fifteenth segment.
* help in pouring water from one container to another.
* programming language based on functional nets.
### shapes | round shape | funnel:
Tornado funnel
* are only a few hundreds of feet across.
* develop out of the wall cloud.
Gyre
* are circular movements of water that are driven by the subtropical high pressure cells
- large, slowly rotating oceanic whirlpools, driven by global winds and ocean currents
* cause cold currents off west coasts, warm currents off east coasts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shapes | round shape | spheroid:
Oblate spheroid
* are a rotationally symmetric.
* have rotational symmetry around an axis from pole to pole.
* An 'oblate spheroid' shape like a sphere, but the distance from pole to pole is less than the distance around the equator. It is flatter than a true sphere. Skittles candies are examples of oblate spheroids. Go stones are another example. Oblate spheroids are a rotationally symmetric.<|endoftext|>### shapes | round shape:
Vortex
* Some vortices grow in size at the cost of others.
* Vortices are excitations in the array
- of the array in the form of eddy-current patterns
- fundamental excitations of gases and liquids
- generic features of geophysical flows
- lines of singularity for the velocity field of a fluid
- more likely to form in sprues with round or square cross-sections
- of crucial importance in understanding many of the superfluid properties
- predominantly anticyclonic
- quite common in aerodynamics
- shed at the bell margin resulting in a turbulent wake behind the swimming medusa
- spinning strings
- can be powerful enough to roll business jets and airliners and cause structural damage
- form along the interface and interact before being lost to numerical diffusion
* also trap water from the engines, which explains the ribbons of vapour.
* are roller coasters.
* created by insects rapidly flapping their wings whip the air into a frenzy.
* regimes around a freely vibrating cylinder in oscillatory flow.
Sharpness
* estimates the intrinsic angular size of the measured object outside the atmosphere.
* increases productivity.
* is also a factor of the focus of all three color elements
- intelligence
* physical property.<|endoftext|>Sheath
* Some sheaths absorb water.
* Some sheaths contain chloroplasts
- membranes
* Some sheaths protect claws
- plants
* Some sheaths surround cell membranes
- feathers
- follicles
- lungs
- nerves
* are covering
- protective covering
- the waxy casings that protect feathers as they develop
* cover root tips
* form around their clitellums, which dry and fill with albumin.
* includes sections.
* is protection
* provide protection.
* provides a passageway for genetic material to be passed into the host bacteria.
### sheath:
Leaf sheath
* Some leaf sheaths have margins
- protect plants
* are also susceptible to attack
- open, cylindrical and without auricles
- short and break down into a fibrous interwoven mass as they age
- somewhat compressed and flattened, without hairs
Myelin sheath
* Many myelin sheaths make up a dendrite.
* Some myelin sheaths contain membranes.
* Some myelin sheaths provide electrical insulation
- surround nerves
Sheet metal
* has no specific thickness.
* is A. soft steel sheets that are covered with zinc
- an artifact
- usually electroplate
### sheet metal:
Flashing
* are sheet metal
- the edges around anything that interrupt the field
* is briefly and evenly exposing photographic materials to white light
- the metal stripping that forms a barrier around chimneys, roof vents, or skylights
- their way of advertising that they are available
- where a roof or wall meets a chimney or skylight
* refers to shiny edges on ware, often produced by overfiring.
Tin plate
* is sheet metal
- used primarily in canmaking
* sheet of iron coated with tin to keep it from rusting. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Shield
* Some shields are made of magnetic alloy
- protect eyes
* act as barriers.
* are areas of Precambrian rock that reach the surface
- armor
- protective covering
- television shows
* come in all shapes and sizes and are made of hide stretched over a framework
- many shapes and sizes
* have a decorative and spiritual role just as important as their defensive purposes.
* protect the urethra from heat damage.
* suffer from wear and tear.
+ Arduino, "Shields": Software :: Computer hardware
* Sometimes, people will make other machines that go on top of an arduino, that lets the arduino do more things. They can do different things, like let an arduino machine connect to the internet, or add a touchscreen, or let an arduino use GPS to figure out where it is. Shields can also combine and stack on top of each other.
### shield:
Face shield
* Some face shields protect eyes.
* afford protection to the face and neck.
* protect the entire face as well as the eyes from frontal impacts
- eyes and face from splashes
* provide protection for eye and mucus membranes | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shield:
Helmet
* Every helmet has an inner shell made of strong material.
* Many helmets also have a hard outer shell to protect against collision with a sharp object.
* Most helmets use shock-cord tabs to secure a headlamp.
* Some helmets are made from metal.
* Some helmets are worn by construction workers
* When worn properly, helmets can prevent serious injury and save lives.
* actually do affect a rider's ability to hear.
* are a form of security
- very effective device for protecting motorcyclists against severe head injuries
- an essential component of any snowboarder's protective gear, regardless of ability
- hats
- headdresses
- important in sports other than cycling
- just as important as safety belts and child safety seats
* are mandatory for all motorcycle drivers, driving on public roads
- motorcycles and bicycle riders
- necessary for bicycle safety
- part of body armor
* are the first line of defense against many types of accidents
- most effective safeguards against traumatic head injuries
- only skating equipment approved by a safety organization
- single most important piece of safety equipment in bicycling
- used for protection
* can greatly reduce the risk of head injuries and death
- help reduce the frequency and severity of head injuries
- potentially benefit car occupants as much as cyclists
* can prevent head injuries and skull fractures
- injuries-the main cause of death and disability
- serious head and brain injuries and even save lives
- vary in weight
* come in all kinds of colors and styles
- many sizes and varieties, including many infant sizes
* decrease the risk of death and severe injury.
* do protect the head from direct impact.
* dramatically reduce the risk of head injury in a bicycle accident.
* greatly decrease the chance of serious injury in a crash.
* help reduce injuries while skateboarding, rollerblading or bicycling
- to protect cyclists from head injuries and save lives
* includes sections
- visors
* offer head protection
* often have fabric cushions inside and fabric straps to hold the helmet on a person 's head.
* prevent injuries and death.
* protect heads
- the head, hence battle helmets, bicycle helmets, hard hats and the like
* provide minimal protection
- protection and insulation on particularly cold days
* reduce risk of head injury.
* reduce the potential for injury
- risk of risky behavior
* save lives and prevent injuries
- serious injuries
- protect against serious head injuries
* significantly reduce the risk of sustaining a serious head injury.
* work by absorbing and distributing the impact of a crash before it reaches the brain
- the energy of an impact to minimize or prevent head injuries
+ Tour de France 2010, Race Rules, Rules
* Helmets are obligatory for all stages.
* A 'helmet' is a hard or cushioned hat which is worn to protect a person's head. There are many different types of helmets. Some helmets are made from metal. Other helmets are made from plastic. Helmets often have fabric cushions inside and fabric straps to hold the helmet on a person's head.
### shield | helmet:
Batting helmet
* are relatively new additions to the protection of baseball players.
* is baseball equipment<|endoftext|>### shield | helmet:
Bicycle helmet
* Most bicycle helmets protect heads.
* absorb the energy of a blunt impact to the head.
* are a rarity on Beijing's streets
- expensive
- for in-line or quad skating
- light, cool, and comfortable
* are mandatory in British Columbia No horseback riding
- single-impact helmets
* are the best protection against mishaps that cause death or injury
- only kind of helmets made specifically for bicycling
- unheard of
* offer head protection for sports like in-line skating and roller skating. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shield | helmet:
Bike helmet
* Some bike helmets are self-certified.
* are essential for rollerblading, skateboarding, scooters and cycling
- safety tested for the types of falls that happen when biking
- very important for both children and adults
* can prevent head injuries.
* save lives and save a child's future.
Horseshoe
* Have the children play a game of horseshoes with plastic horseshoes.
* are also great for couples, groups, and even children
- guards
- metal shoes nailed to the bottom of a horse's foot
- plates
- safety devices
* breathe well in low-oxygen muddy water.
* generally creep slowly over the seafloor munching along.
* have two basic configurations, open-heeled shoes and bar shoes.
* includes sections.
Magnetic shield
* Most magnetic shields act as barriers.
* provide a path around sensitive areas to deflect magnetic flux.
Nipple shield
* are artificial nipples worn over the mother's nipple during a feeding
- shields
* can interfere with nipple stimulation resulting in low prolactin and oxytocin levels
- slow the milk flow and encourage infection
Visor
* Most visors are part of helmets.
* are auto parts
- automotive products
- caps
- the latest in handheld computer technology
* comes in many colours.
* offer additional protection
Shift
* also occur on meteorological, seismological and volcanic levels concerning the Earth itself.
* are also evident in the proportion of people who live in urban and rural areas
- gang
- hours
- motion
* are part of work forces
- workdays
- translations
### shift:
Amplitude
* is abundances
- magnitudes
* vary rapidly without concomitant changes in the solar wind.
### shift | amplitude:
Large amplitude
* occur when the driving force is in phase with the natural vibration of the system.
* pulses travel at the same speed as small amplitude pulses.
Noise level
* are amplitude.
* can cause distress and hypertension.
* is amplitude
- that of a manufacturing environment and is usually loud
Antigenic shift
* Some antigenic shifts result in local epidemics or global pandemics.
* comes about because the genes of the influenza virus exist as discrete segments.
* is a. a change in the position of antigens on the virus.
* occurs every few years.
* refers to a more immediate and extensive change in genetic information.
* result in pandemics.
Chemical shift
* can reveal details of oxidation states and ligands of a given element.
* depend upon, What is next to the proton.
* indicate the type of enviroment in which a nucleus is situated.
Night shift
* are books
- shifts
- video games
* happen to cause night sweats too.
Paradigm shift
* are possible only when interrelationship of processes are understood.
* come when technologies are disruptive to the status quo.
* happen, and are important for theology.
* shift in worldview.
Phase shift
* describes the difference in timing between two otherwise identical periodic signals.
* is caused by imperfections in cable media, such as joins and imperfect terminations
- the resetting of the internal clock due to an entraining agent
- where two or more waveforms are out of step with each other
Reality shift
* Reality Shifts Come explore the ways our thoughts and feelings change the physical world.
* relatively new term to describe an ancient phenomenon.
Retrogression
* caused by burning is described for marshes, bogs, and bog forests.
* means returning to a less complex level of development. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shift:
Subluxation
* affect brain health.
* are the physical representations of the cause of dis-ease.
* can also foster the onset of sickness and disease as the body weakens
- cause any symptom, condition, or disease known to man
- occur from a difficult child birth and from childhood falls
- play a major part in changing function and therefore circulation
* cause a lowered resistance to disease.
* condition in which one or more of the vertebrae of the spine are out of alignment.
* interfere with nervous system functions
- the nerves, impeding the intelligence of the body to express itself
* irritate the nerves and compromise the Nervous System.
* is an incomplete or partial dislocation
- described in terms of alterations in specific intervertebral motion segments
- epidemic in our society
* means improper spinal alignment and improper nerve function.
* minor dislocation.
* occur as a normal part of living in any culture.
* result in the organ tissue, muscles, etc., losing their normal function.
Shiner
* are a group of minnows that usually have metallic silver or gold sides
- bruise
- extremely fragile and have a very low tolerance to heat and low oxygen
- good for attracting pike type fish as well as some of the bigger holdover browns
- objects
- satanists that run a store-front of charities and telethons
* have a much narrower tolerance range for oxygen than topminnows do.
* is an object
### shiner:
Common shiner
* are generally three to four inches long, but can grow as large as six inches
- shiners
* grow remarkably quickly in aquaria, even with normal feedings.
* spawn in spring.
Golden shiner
* are fish
- silvery with a hint of gold and often lose scales when handled
* feed on planktonic crustaceans, aquatic insects, and algae.
* grow rapidly and reach maturity at age two.
* produce the larger fish.
Red shiner
* are native to Wyoming.
* can survive in turbid and moderately polluted waters. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Shingle
* affects only the area of the body served by the nerve that held the dormant virus
- the dermatomes supplied by specific nerves
* are building materials
- construction materials
- diseases
- extremely durable and hardy roofing materials
- gravel
- located in roofs
* are painful blisters that are usually only on a small area of the body
- lesions that are caused the chicken pox virus
* attacks the nerves and skin and is very painful.
* can affect adults at any age but the likelihood of an outbreak increases with age.
* can be a very painful complication later in life after an earlier chickenpox infection
- painful for adults
- sawn or cleft, that is split along the grain
- very painful and itchy
- become serious and cause complications
* can occur in the eye
- just about anywhere on the body
- only occur after someone has had chickenpox
* causes a limited but very painful rash.
* causes a painful skin rash and sometimes chronic pain
- painful skin lesions that occur along nerve tracts, often on the truck of the body
* comes from the same virus that causes chicken pox and leads to a rash on the body.
* common problem that increases in severity with age and lowered immunity.
* disease caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox
- of the skin produced by the same virus that causes chickenpox
- that occurs when the virus that causes chicken pox is reactivated in the body
* includes sections.
* is almost never present on both sides of the body
- an infection caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox
* is an inflammation of nerves in the arms, legs, chest or elsewhere in the body
- extremely painful along the nerve it effects
- most common in older adults and the risk of developing it increases with age
* is often a very painful condition
- an early sign of immune deficiency
* is the manifestation of a latent infection
- result of reactivation of varicella-zoster virus from keratinocytes
- treated with prescription medications
* look like chicken pox except that they are usually concentrated in one area of the body.
* major health problem in older adults
- threat to anyone in the family with poor immune status
* never crosses the midline of the body.
* occur most often in a broad stripe on the chest, back or face.
* occurs in people who have already had chickenpox and is very infectious
- had chickenpox and reactivation of the dormant virus
- only in persons who have previously had chickenpox
* often appears on one side of the chest or abdomen
- occurs many years after the initial chicken pox infection
* only occurs in people who have had chicken pox.
* reactivation of the same virus that causes chicken pox, varicella zoster.
* refers to a reactivation of the chicken pox virus along the distribution of a nerve.
* reoccurrence of chicken pox.
* risk to anyone who has ever had chickenpox.
* rot when the mat at the core of the shingle absorbs moisture.
* second outbreak of the virus that causes chickenpox.
* skin rash that develops on half of the body, in a belt-like pattern.
* sudden reactivation of the virus.
* typically starts out without the rash.
* usually affects the elderly or people with compromised immune systems.
* usually develops in elderly people but occasionally occurs in children
- persons with reduced immune function
- occurs in adults who previously have had chicken pox
+ Herpes zoster, Prognosis: Diseases caused by viruses
* Shingles can be very painful and itchy. It is not very dangerous to healthy people, and it usually ends without major problems. The rash and pain last 3 to 5 weeks.
### shingle:
Asphalt shingle
* are another material that is becoming more easily recyclable
- especially prone to damage by heavy foot-wear, and by shovelling or sweeping
- subject to fire started by falling embers
* break easily in cold weather. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shingle:
Solar shingle
* are a new type of solar panel that look like ordinary asphalt roof shingles
- more expensive and less durable than normal solar panels
+ Solar panel, Solar shingles: Solar energy :: Heat :: Electricity
* Solar shingles are a new type of solar panel that look like ordinary asphalt roof shingles. They are used where the appearance of traditional solar panels might be undesirable, such as on residential rooftops. Solar shingles are more expensive and less durable than normal solar panels.
### ships:
Small ship
* Some small ships have sails.
* are ships.
### shitting:
Dump
* are areas of smoothed or uneven accumulations or piles of waste rock and general refuse
- copies
- sites
* can be a breeding ground for rats and mosquitoes.
* is shitting
### shock therapy:
Electroshock
* always causes memory loss.
* can cause brain damage, including permanent memory loss and learning disabilities.
* causes death.
* crime against humanity.
* is shock therapy
- used to bring unconsciousness
* treatment for severe and persistent emotional disorders. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Shoe
* Most shoes are made of materials
- natural materials
- feature a sole that is beveled back underfoot, resulting in more stable edging
* Most shoes have a rubber or sometimes leather sole
- brake pad materials
* Most shoes have flexible rubber soles
* Most shoes make from materials
- other materials
- provide protection
- sit in rooms
* Some shoes are very asymmetrical, meaning there pronounced displacement toward the big toe
- can run a half size short, like most gym shoes
* Some shoes conduct electricity
- static electricity
- do come in varying widths
- encourage a horse to perform in a desired manner
- generate electricity
* Some shoes have heels
- pad heels
- help athletes
- prevent infection
- run large, others can run small
- use a soft rubber sole.
* A 'shoe' type of footwear. Shoes come in pairs, with one shoe for each foot. A shoe is also an item of clothing
* Wear flat shoes at all times.
* affect balance and balance good predictor of falls.
* also are a sacred thing
- keep children's feet from contact with animal wastes and the infections that can result
* are a major source of foot pain
- status symbol and are polished often
- type of footwear that protects the foot and the soles of the feet
* are also a problem for most people
- sign of education in some countries
* are an important part of shopping
- integral part of orthotic therapy
- capable of trips
- cases
- generally best to wear while exercising
- important armor
* are located in beds
- boxs
- closets
- desks
- floors
- foots
- homes
- houses
- rugs
- stores
- suitcases
- tables
- weddings
- near foots
* are made of leathers
- many different types of materials , such as leather , fabric , and plastic
- part of clothing
- personal taste and sometimes looks are more important to some people than others
- software
* are the base upon which a person stands
- product of shoemaking, money is the product of commercial business
- tools our oppressors use to keep our feet in bondage
* are used for fashion
- sales
- walking
- wearing
- worns
- white
* can dramatically affect foot mechanics
- have a high heel, or a low heel
- provide certain kinds of protection
- sometimes actually be the culprit in running injuries
* cause blisters
- more pressure on the toes and cause painful corns
* designed for cycling have rigid or semi-rigid soles
- specifically for weightlifting are surprisingly important to balance and stability
* have a thickness to the steel that physically lifts the hoof from the ground
- high heels
- velcro
* identify function and walk of life.
* includes half soles
- heel counters
- sections
- shoe collars
- shoelaces
- toe boxes
* increase performance.
* is shoes.
* made of leather can reduce the possibility of skin irritations.
* offer options.
* play only a partial but significant role in creating deformed and painful feet.
* protect feet from getting hurt
- rough or sharp surfaces
- the hooves and help maintain a healthy shape and balance
* provide for protection from injury, cold, or burns
* sit in live rooms
* typically lose their cushioning after three to six months of regular use.
+ Footwear, Types of Footwear
* Shoes are a type of footwear that protects the foot and the soles of the feet. Shoes are made of many different types of materials, such as leather, fabric, and plastic.
### shoe:
Athletic shoe
* are a billion-dollar business
- shoes like running, cross trainers or basketball type
* protect the feet from the stresses of a given sport
- of the sport for which they are designed
Bike shoe
* allow a rider to pull during the whole pedal stroke.
* are good because they have rigid soles and spread the pedal pressure evenly.
Climbing shoe
* are one of the essential pieces of equipment for rock climbing.
* enhance climbing ability much like running shoes enhance running ability. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shoe:
Gillie
* are attendants
- low cut shoes with decorative lacing
+ Elizabeth Gillies, Life: 1993 births :: Living people :: Actors from New Jersey :: Singers from New Jersey :: American dancers
* Gillies is also a vegan.
Loose shoe
* can cause serious injuries.
* increase the risk of injury.
Mocassin
* Some mocassins are known as cottonmouths.
* includes half soles
- heel counters
- heels
- sections
- shoe collars
- shoelaces
- toe boxes
Moccasin
* Some moccasins have dark stripes
* are a kind of foot ware
- boots
- very popular for footwear
* can bite underwater.
* come in a variety of styles, and can be made with various types of material.
- heel counters
- shoelaces
Neutral shoe
* are for neutral runners and udnerpronators.
* have a uniform color and uniform density throughout the midsole.
Running shoe
* Most running shoes have too much heel elevation for walking.
* Some running shoes have lace holes directly in the upper of the shoe
- work well for walking
* are bad because they have such a wide foot platform for stability
Safety shoe
* come in a variety of fits and styles.
* provide protection against objects falling on the foot, and impact.<|endoftext|>### shoe:
Sandal
* are also worn indoors in some places , such as in saunas
- highly discouraged because of sharp edged shells
- inappropriate footwear in any laboratory setting
- indispensable when the sand gets roasting hot
* are the best warm weather footwear
- most common footwear
- versatile footwear that can be worn in the water and around camp
- worn in warm countries , such as the Philippines and Cuba
* can always use people to take care of our children.
* feature side buckles and sewn-in pads at heel.
- sections
- toe boxes
* is the epitome of island hospitality.
* starts with one knot at toe.
+ Footwear, Types of Footwear
* Sandals are a type of footwear that consists of a covering for the sole of the feet and straps or ties which hold the sandal onto the foot. Sandals are worn in warm countries, such as the Philippines and Cuba. Sandals are also worn indoors in some places, such as in saunas.
Sneaker
* Some sneakers have flat soles
- reflect light for night jogging
* Wear socks.
* are adult males disguised as immature males
- athletic shoes
- located in gyms
- small males which spawn with females in a terminal male's territory
- some of the very few flat and comfortable shoes that are fashionable to wear
- sports shoes
* can dilute male s sperm, but the effect is usually minor.
* is an alcohol-free dance club.
Soccer shoe
* can contribute to heel pain in adolescents.
* have a flat plastic sole with soft leather upper.
Sport shoe
* are for mostly face climbing, limited crack climbing, and some climbing gym activity.
* can contribute to injuries due to improper design or poor manufacturing techniques.
Tap shoe
* are equipped with metal taps on the bottom of the shoe to make a sound.
+ Tap dance: Dance types
* In tap dancing dancers use their shoes to tap the floor like drummers. Tap shoes are equipped with metal taps on the bottom of the shoe to make a sound. The sound you get from the tap shoe depends on how hard you hit the floor, and what part of your foot you use.
Tennis shoe
* Most tennis shoes sit in live rooms
* are court shoes
- good for crossing rivers
- slippery on rocks
- stiffer to provide more stability and traction
* have the advantages of comfort, ventilation, and excellent traction.
Tight shoe
* can squeeze foot bones together.
* cause blisters.
* cramp the toes, which can be painful and can lead to ingrown toenails.
* rub against the bones of the foot, causing swellings of the skin known as blisters.
Walking shoe
* are better than hiking boots because of the hard surface
- flexible, like running shoes, but a bit heavier
* differ from other sports shoes.
Wedgie
* are a kind of shoe
- unhealthy for children and other living things
* have a wedge-shaped heel. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### shoes:
Comfortable shoe
* are shoes.
* can relieve back pain.
### short duration activity:
Muscle building
* is an exercise
- anaerobic
* short duration activity.
### short range force:
Color force
* is fundamental interaction
* short range force.
### shorter act | acting:
Regular insulin
* is shorter acting.
* is the drug of choice for diabetic pregnant patients and during breast- feeding
- only type that can be administered intravenously
- used in an insulin pump
Shot
* blasting units are machines that look like commercial lawn mowers.
* can involve screams.
* is an actuation
- attempts
- blows
- charge
- experts
- injections
- located in dentists
- projectiles
- remarks
- sports equipment
- treatments
* peening cold working metal treatment process.
* put, hammer and discus rings are concrete.
### shot:
Flu shot
* Most flu shots are boosters that include several strains of flu viruses.
* are most effective at preventing severe influenza with complications
- particularly important for the elderly
- the first line of defense against influenza
- vitally important in reducing their risk of respiratory infections
* can prevent infection with influenza or reduce symptoms even if infection occurs
- the flu
* cuts death risk for elderly.
* is located in doctors.
Foul shot
* are a key point to the game of basketball.
* is shot
Headshot
* are an actor's calling card
- part of soccer
- pictures
- shooting
- used in the modelling and acting businesses.
* It form of portraiture. The purpose of a headshot is to show the subject's personality, or character. Headshots are used in the modelling and acting businesses. Most actors have a headshot that they will provide to employers
Intramuscular injection
* are inconvenient and also cause peak and trough levels of testosterone
* requires the help of another person to administer the injection.
Intravenous injection
* Most intravenous injections produce reaction.
* Some intravenous injections result in seizures.
* can damage lungs by lipid embolism.
* is shot
Masse
* All masses have thermal noise due to the vibrations of the atoms.
* Most masses have the same density as the liver parenchyma.
* are part of pools
- strokes
### shot | masse:
Air masse
* are distinct in their temperature and moisture content due to their place of birth
- enormous bodies of air that form over areas where temperatures are fairly constant
- often several thousands of kilometres across
* take on the temperature of the area.
* warmed by the sun in the tropics affect the whole earth.
Steel shot
* has very different properties than lead shot.
* is harder and lighter than lead
- propelled at the surface at high speeds
Swipe
* are progressions of two or more chords sung on a single word or syllable.
* contain no harsh solvents and have a fresh citrus smell.
* is shot
### shown below:
Hominid
* branches A few of the early hominids are shown below.
* refers to human lineages only.
### shrine:
Stupa
* Most stupas are sealed monuments.
* are Buddhist monuments that often contain relics
- large-scale memorials built in particularly holy places
- monuments representing awakened mind
- representations of enlightened mind
- shrines
* can be of any size and can be made of any suitable material.
### sides:
Right side
* are sides.
* become surfaces. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sidewalk
* allow pedestrians to move freely through the neighborhood.
* are cement.
* are dangerous because of falling facades and glass
- for bicyclists
* are located in ground
- people
- often very dangerous places to ride a bike
- part of streets
- public properties
- smooths
- social spaces which create neighborhood characters and distinctive personalities
* are used for pedestrian traffic
- public use
- roller skates
- rollerblades
- walkways intended predominantly for use by pedestrians
* become sticky, and bees, wasps and flies are attracted to the sweet liquid.
* have cracks
- pedestrian rules, public roads have vehicular rules
* includes readsides
- sections
* often designate an area for bicyclists.
* predate concrete and are made of wood.
### sights:
Telescopic sight
* are best at long ranges in bright light.
* is sights | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sign
* Eating disorders affect victims both physically and mentally.
* Every sign rules a part of the body, Virgo the intestines.
* Many signs point to birds as the primary carrier of the disease
- use symbols
* Some signs have a symbolic value, e.g. a scepter to denote power
- as many as nine different coats of color
* are a lingustic concept, showing the immersion of painting in language
- an indication of disease from direct observation of a pathogen, insect, or their parts
- animes
- clues
- communication
- evidence
- gestures
- habits about habits
* are images that have a relationship to what they are representing
- point to something else
- important in every culture for giving directions, advertising or ordering food
* are located in books
- bus stops
- buses
- cities
- demonstrations
- freeways
- roadblock
- state parks
- street corners
- towns
- mathematical notation
- natural representations of something beyond themselves
- observable structures of the pathogen
* are part of diseases
- sign language
- representations humans develop which convey meaning
- responsible for establishing ambience and frame of mind
- the language of the deaf
- things embodying concepts
- ubiquitous in our culture, both visible and invisible, subtle and clear
* are used for advertising
- displays
- identification
- orientations
- telling
- what patients feel or notice and report to their doctors
* carry their own meaning and convey reality directly to the perceiver.
* communicate in a shared environment.
* depend on the site of the brain that is involved.
* describe the way the planets express meaning.
* differ from constellations, bearing only a loose reference to one another.
* do have a habit of disappearing.
* generate meaning through a process of denotation and connotation.
* is the revised and augmented version of Dictionary of Symbols
- tracks, scrapes, dung, dens, nests, feed beds, etc that animals use or leave behind
* only have meaning as a part of a system of signs.
* play a key role in defining the visual image of a city.
* represent the static forces which color and modify the influence of the planets.
* snap together to form sentences in a similar way as atoms gather to form molecules.
* tend to cluster with level of consciousness
- work very well as a common denominator among the various learned spoken languages
* term used by astrologers to define a a sector of the sky.
* use different symbols, colors and shapes for easy identification.
* usually appear during the first few days of life.
+ Sign language, Grammar of sign languages: Disability :: Language-related lists
* These pieces are used in different combinations to make the signs in the language. Some signs are made with only one hand, and others are made with both hands. Other body movements are also important in the grammar.
+ Sign, Road signs: Human communication :: Semiotics
* A road sign or traffic sign is something that gives information by means of a symbol, or in only 1 or 2 words. It helps people in their vehicles on the road. Signs are very useful. Without signs and traffic lights there would be many accidents and arguments on the road.
+ Traffic sign
* A road sign is something that gives information by means of a symbol, or in only 1 or 2 words. It helps people in their vehicles on the road. Signs are very useful. Without signs and traffic lights there would be many accidents and arguments on the road.
### sign:
Air sign
* are mental people, great communicators
- rational, social, and love communication and relationships with other people
- the zodiac's information processors
* communicate and express ideas with mental agility.
Alphabetic sign
* correspond to a letter or sound produced by that sign.
* represent a single sound.
Astrological sign
* have no relation to planet activity in the named constellations.
* play a part in how Sims interact with each other. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sign:
Billboard
* are cash machines are radio stations
- commercial advertisements
- huge landmarks on the road that people notice, remember, and TALK about
- large display advertisements which pop up as an overlay on the screen
- large, elevated signs that dot many highways
* are located in cities
- countrysides
- streets
- magazines
- open air
* are used for advertisements
* can be the most cost-effective way to win hearts and minds.
* cause visual pollution.
* have more in common with broadcast media than print.<|endoftext|>### sign:
Clinical sign
* Clinical Signs Presenting clinical signs vary with the individual bird.
* Some clinical signs are present from early infancy, and probably in the prenatal period.
* are absent in immunocompetent animals
- dependent upon the organs affected
- irregular heartbeat and tingling in the hands and feet
- largely due to blood loss
- more profound in unvaccinated animals
- referable to hemorrhages that result from faulty blood coagulation
- related to how many nerves are affected
- skin diseases and digestive system disorders
* begin after the infective stage of larval hookworm penetrating through skin.
* can really vary based on the severity of each dog's problem.
* depend on the time, course, and location of tissue damage.
* develop depending on the degree of the amyloid deposits and on the organs involved.
* leading to a suspicion of rabies occur only after substantial virus replication.
* result from the host's inflammatory response to the organism.
* vary depending on the agent, dose, and individual sensitivity
- virulence, and the site of infection
- from depression, rigidity, and fever, to seizures
- in severity depending upon host factors and mite species
Exit sign
* are essential components of evacuation systems.
* are located in freeways
- theatres
Gastrointestinal sign
* are also common among cats with secondary toxoplasmosis
- common in hyperthyroidism
* occur first, with salivation, vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhea.
Hoarding
* happens in third-world countries, too.
* is associated with the cold form of withdrawing family, and with destructiveness
- one of the popular techniques for managing data in mobile environments
* related behavior.
* seems to affect equal amounts of men and women.
### sign | hoarding:
Scatter hoarding
* appears to represent a specialization in memory capacity for spatial locations.
* common means of temporary storage for seeds and bulbs.
Iconic sign
* are images, or likenesses, of their objects.
* have a visual relationship or similarity to what they are signifying.
Interpretative sign
* explain geologic history.
* identify the different types of plants.
Interpretive sign
* explain how proper maintenance keeps plants healthy and more drought-tolerant
- the ecology of the hammock plant community
* help viewers know what it is they are seeing.
* identify certain species and their habitat
- several species, such as the pond apple that alligators and turtles eat
* raise some issues about 'wilderness' and what it means to different people.
Linguistic sign
* bear no necessary relationship to extralinguistic objects.
* depend on consistency of conventional use, i.e., on the grammar of a language.
Magnetic sign
* Magnetic Signs are great temporary signs for metal surfaces.
* are larger and more easily seen by passing motorists and law enforcement.
Mental sign
* begin with irritability, forgetfulness, or depression.
* can include visions that range from ecstatically blissful to terrifyingly frightful.
Neon sign
* Most neon signs contain neon, argon, or argon and mercury.
* are basically bent tubes filled with glowing gas
- tubes containing a plasma made of neon gas
* operate at a high voltage, but with very low current.
* utilize glow discharge. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### sign:
Neurologic sign
* including weakness and ataxia, suggesting distemper, are also common.
* suggest stroke, a demyelinating disorder, or a structural lesion.
Physical sign
* are abnormalities which can be seen on a physical examination
- redness, swelling, heat, pain, and changes in capillary permeability
- the footprints of disease
* range from weakness and floppiness of muscles to spasticity and rigidity.
Placard
* allow vehicles to park in designated areas and free of charge at parking meters.
* are color coded to facilitate clarity
- signs put on the outside of a vehicle which identify the hazard class of the cargo
* increase the public perception of the risks associated with driving while impaired.
Positive sign
* are a pokey feeling in the abdomen or an itchy or crawly sensation on the skin.
* characterize systems that have the tendency to take up electrons.
* is indicative of gall bladder disease.
Prodigy
* Prodigies are exemplar
- geniuses
- phenomenons
- very rare
* allows parents to restrict access to chat rooms, e-mail, and the Net.
Respiratory sign
* are most common, including coughing and respiratory distress.
* vary with the stage of heart disease.
Road sign
* Most road signs are bi-lingual
- use international symbols
* Road Signs Pay attention to road signs that warn against travel by vehicles towing trailers.
* are a study in black humor
- guideposts
- located in street corners
- open air
* can often prove challenging to children.
* comply with European standards.
* give distances in either miles or kilometers.
* work on a backtracking system.
Street sign
* allow vehicles and pedestrians to travel safely and efficiently.
* are located in street corners
* can serve as a simple and revealing example of how signs are used.
Vital sign
* are age-related, and early detection requires familiarity with normal values
- depressed and cardiac dysrhythmias occur
- indicators of one's overall health
- measurements of the body's most basic functions
* are measures by which one assesses a church's health
- of various physiological statistics
- unstable or out of normal limits
- useful in detecting or monitoring medical problems
Warning sign
* Warning Signs Recognize the warning signs of a heart attack or stroke.
* are located in roadblock.
Water sign
* Water Signs are emotional, empathetic, receptive and feel things deeply.
* are emotional people and tend to get carried away in the heat of a situation.
* filter everything through their emotions and feelings.
* specialize in private relationships, but their focus differs from sign to sign.
### signal:
Animal communication
* Much animal communication is intraspecific, that is, it occurs between members of the same species.
* is an essential component of interactions between individuals
- like computer instructions
* provides evidence that some animals are aware of their own mental states.
### signal | animal communication:
Birdcall
* are animal communication.
* is animal communication
Birdsong
* are everywhere, but the birds themselves are hard to spot.
* is animal communication
- songs
Beacon
* are towers
- usually large stone structures or towers, often painted for better visibility
- visual signals
* leading packaging manufacturer for the medical device industry. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
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