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### signal: Curfew * also help teens plan and organize their life. * are a disgrace to basic human rights - necessary evil for teenagers - bells - deadlines - mandates - non-existent, and everyone, young and old, can stay out all night if they want to - rules - signals * can help parents and children develop a trusting relationship - reduce juvenile crime and keep teenagers out of harm's way * compromise fundamental rights of the child and are discriminatory on the basis of age. * give both parents and teens a sense of security. * have more to do with symbolic politics than rational policy. * help parents teach valuable lessons to their teens. * interfere with parental rights of child rearing. Differential signal * are immune to common-mode noise, the primary source of system noise. * use two conductors to carry signals that complement one another. Digital signal * are discrete in both time and amplitude - discrete-one or zero - much different than analog - the language of modern day computers * can tolerate large amounts of noise, interference, and distortion. * cause even more interference with electronic equipment. * function in which both time and amplitude are quantized. * have peak power points much like the peak power point of a television signal. * tend to reflect off tall buildings, producing multiple images on TV screens. Drumbeat * are advocacy * pulsate in the tropical heat. Electrical signal * cause the film to emit relatively low-frequency, pulsed sound waves. * have many measurable qualities, including intensity and spectral characteristics. * initiate mechanical contraction and control the strength of that contraction. * seem to be involved, just as they are with nerve cells. * travel down the brain cell, where they are changed into chemical signals. * turn on individual pixels in a matrix of cells. Electronic signal * tell the beam when to light up certain areas of the screen. * travel approximately one foot per nsec. Fire alarm * are for fires. * consist of individual smoke detectors in each room, common areas and laundry room. * have flashing light and sound. * is alarm - located in buildings Hand signal * are difficult to see at night - essential for quiet and effective communication - the method of communicating on an airship crew - very effective ways of communicating with a deaf dog * can communicate without the use of any speech - prevent accidents and save time Interrupt * are signals. + Game port, Hardware: Video game consoles :: Computer hardware :: Electrical connectors * Digital joysticks are easy for programmers to access. Interrupts use the main CPU of the system. Light signal * coming through the eyes reset the circadian cycles each day. * play a crucial role in determining the architecture of individual plants and canopies. * suffer much less attenuation over distances than electronic signals do. Nerve signal * are conducted by an axon with a myelin sheath wrapped around it. * go crazy and the cord tissue starts to die. Olfactory signal * are odors, aromas, or stinks - something that is intended to be smelled. * play an importan role in communication.<|endoftext|>### signal: Phone number * Most phone numbers are eight digits with the exception of mobile numbers, which are ten digits. * Phone Numbers Find phone numbers and addresses of U.K. residents - can change rapidly * Some phone numbers have inherent value that can change over time. * are a hierarchical structure - word - as dialed from the United States - in the phone book under United States government - like potato chips in social settings - located in phone books - office numbers * can include parents, friends, pagers, work numbers, etc. * is the Internet dialup number when service is available. * lack area codes.
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### signal: Recording * are memory devices * fundamental part of science. * refers to making a copy using any computer, video or audio device - midi files, wave files, and other audio files + Studio, Recording studio: Art :: Buildings and structures * A recording studio is used for recording music, speech, or other kinds of sound. Many recordings become works of art in themselves. ### signal | recording: Binaural recording * is common in virtual-reality games. * sound best when listened to through headphones. Compact disc * are compact discs - flats - rounds - sound recordings * is one type of optical media. Electronic recording * can take many forms. * is used in other states.<|endoftext|>### signal | recording: Interval recording * shortcut procedure for estimating the duration of a behavior. + Applied behavior analysis, Analyzing Behavior, Data collection * Interval recording breaks the observation time into smaller pieces. The total time is divided into smaller intervals. If the behavior happens at any time during one of the smaller intervals it is recorded. But only one behavior per interval is recorded. So the total number of behaviors is not recorded. Behavior analysts can get an idea of how often the behavior occurs with interval recording. Signal conditioning * helps shield signals from electrical noise. * is an important consideration in many data acquisition applications.<|endoftext|>### signal: Siren * appear as a symbol of life's temptations. * are a special type of salamander found only in North America - alarm - found only in the southeastern United States and northern Mexico - salamanders that have lungs and gills at the same time - skilled musicians both vocally and instrumentally * have lungs as well as gills and spend most of their time in water. * remain active during the summer as long as there is open water available. * squirm violently when captured and are very difficult to hold. + Sirenidae: Salamanders * Sirenidae' or 'sirens' is a family of aquatic salamanders. They have very small front legs and do not have back legs. They have gills for breathing. Sirens are found only in the southeastern United States and northern Mexico. ### signal | siren: Greater siren * are only active at night. * have lungs as well as gills, and gulp air from the water's surface.
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### signal: Symbol * Greek font which contains symbols useful for mathematical and scientific documents. * Identify the common symbols used in industrial wiring - symbols associated with basic electronic components and devices * Most symbols live in a namespace, of which there are several. * Some symbols are abbreviations for ancient names - can have different meanings to different groups * Some symbols have inherent meaning - multiple meanings - universal meaning, like leaves for growth, hands and faces for humanity. * are used in Aboriginal art, to show the presence of different things. For example, a 'U' shape is the symbol for a man. Aboriginal art language in itself, communicating through beautiful patterns. This started around 30,000 to 40,000 years ago * also appear in combined form to make compound meanings - have different meanings to different people * are a feature of most organisations, societies and states around the world - form of shorthand - key factor in dream interpretation - necessary part of the human experience - shorthand way of writing the names of unuts - specialized, limited type of sign - universal language which speak directly to the unconscious - very important way in which our soul can grasp truth - akin to metaphor * are also a common tool used to convey information to employees - secret sign for the faithful during times of persecution - an important part of building a strong institutional identity - an important element of any culture - as real as the sun - figures of speech which have a value in themselves, but also an additional meaning - fonts and can also be colored and sized * are important in a country where one in three people are illiterate - vehicles to impart socio-political or spiritual information in any society - when defining the limits of one's property - important, as can be seen around the world - key battlefields where the Culture War is being fought - largely arbitrary that people, through their cultures, assign meanings - metaphorical in function - more than signs in that they participate in the reality to which they point or refer - much more powerful when they can be touched, felt, occasionally spoken to - names that software developers assign to various pieces of code - neutral descriptions of phenomena - numbers, or equations, geometric shapes, formulas or icons - objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or concepts - often objects that stand for some ideas or some other object * are part of communication just like words and sounds - our everyday lives * are powerful and they are everywhere - icons that convey complex messages with lasting impact - powerful, that's why companies spend millions designing their logos and graphics - silent emblems having meaning only when interpreted - simply things that stand for, or indicate, something else - strings of characters, mathematical expressions are concatenations of symbols - stuff of human life, all aspects of our lives * are the basis of language - keys to human ideas and the tools for exchanging creative thought * are the language of the unconscious - that modems use - only link that the common person has to the world - powers that resist change or open the way to creative change when it is needed - units of analysis - very source and support of life - visual counterpart to words in written natural languages - things that stand for something else - tiny flash movies that can be played simultaneously * are used in Aboriginal art , to show the presence of different things - to remind people of their religious beliefs - very important in religion, especially in primal religion - visual, verbal and aural * are, in fact, metaphoric events that arise through the poetic powers of the human species. * become entities within themselves. * can also evoke emotions - evoke all kinds of associations - express ethnic identity, religion, association, or the good taste of the time * can have different meanings for different people - many meanings, whereas allegories mean only one thing - more than one meaning for the same person - very different meanings to different cultures - include hair and clothing styles, jewelry, or any number of gestures - represent either an ideology, religion or culture, and some represent all three - unite towns, armies, even nations * change over time and have different meaning from one group to another. * comes from the part of life that reflects itself, by our own thinking. * consist of types, functions, and variables * construct experience and enable communication, transaction, and conception. * contain highly condensed patterns of information. * convey meaning only when understood. * do more than simply represent something else - tend to take on a life of their own * figure prominently in the African society. * get their meaning via correspondences to entities and categories in the world - power by being a visual representation of a meaning * govern the world. * greatly simplify the task of communication. * have a lot to do with the way young people relate to the church - totally arbitrary relationship to what they represent - many uses - no power in and of themselves for either good or evil - power and can affect the confidence of others * help convey meaning in stories and poems - replace painful images and memories * is an image that represents or stands for something else - like the shadow of something, whether it holds water or the idea of truth - one or more symbols seperated by commas - value of gender * logo designed for the purpose of identifying a product, procedure or service. * play a large part in celebrating important events. * play an enormous role in a wide array of social institutions and processes - important part of our understanding and learning about human history many years ago * refer to variables, labels, and procedures in a program. * represent reality - things, such as parks, libraries, capitals, mountains and more * small application, which displays the entire character set. * span the ages and are international as well, contributing to humankind's self knowledge. * specific idea or object to represent ideas, values, or ways of life. * take up very much less space than words. * tend to accumulate their meanings slowly, over hundreds of years. * turn into facts, and tend to be seen with the eyes instead of with the mind. + Metric system, Description: Units of measurement * Symbols are a shorthand way of writing the names of unuts. All the countries in the world use the same symbol for a unit, even though they might have different ways of writing out the unit name in full. + Religion, Traditions, Symbols: * Symbols are used to remind people of their religious beliefs. They are also used or worn as a sign to other people that the person belongs to a particular religion. A symbol might be something that is drawn or written, it might be a piece of clothing or jewellery, it might be a sign that a person makes with their body, or it might be a building or monument or artwork. Picture symbols for different religions are shown in the box in the introduction to this article.
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### signal | symbol: Beta * are colorful fish and have long graceful fins - letters - only a hazard if the radioactive atom is inside the body - programming language * biological honor society. * can have either a negative charge or a positive charge. * come from Southeast Asia. * compares the magnitude of an investment's price swings with the market's overall fluctuations. * constant that increases as root distributions become deeper. * fairly pure measure of market risk. * function of both correlation with the market and standard deviation. * is associated with concentration, arousal, alertness, and cognition - hormones - one of the tools of modern portfolio theory * is the antidote to seriousness and pomposity - constellation's brightest star - measure of a stock's movement relative to the movement of the market - measurement of a stock s volatility relative to the market - only cubic form of SiC, but is only available as a polycrystal - probability of accepting or retaining a false null hypothesis - second letter in the Greek alphabet * is the slope of the security market line - which represents a stock's movement influenced by the market - standardized regression coefficient - state of normal, wakeful consciousness - term used for current gain of a transistor - used in the bifmay bifurcations and is the power to which the denominator is raised * measure of a stock's volatility - how a particular stock's price moves relative to the market as a whole - the volatility of the individual stock in relation to the market as a whole - volatility of one security against another * measurement of risk based on historical data. * originate from the slow moving, slightly stagnant waterways and rice fields of Southeast Asia. * reflects the statistical movement of a stock price compared to the market. * service organization that provides volunteer services. * single-factor variable. * statistical measure of a security's volatility relative to the broader market - specific stock's systematic risk in relation to the market risk - a. unsystematic risk b. total risk c * supplier of industrial-size volumes to food manufacturers. * thrive in a diverse number of fields. * volatility measurement of stock price volatility compared to market index volatility. + Betta, Betas Male and Female * Male betas can not be in the same tank or bowls because they will fight. Betas are known as the fighting fish. Males and females are easy to tell apart because males are more colorful than female betas - Where they come from: Perciformes * Betas come from Southeast Asia. Many of them, can be purchased in a local petstore<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol: Chemical symbol * Some chemical symbols are the short forms of their English names. * are used all over the world. + Chemical element, Chemical symbols: Nuclear physics * Chemical elements are also given a unique 'chemical symbol'. Chemical symbols are used all over the world. This means that, no matter which language is spoken, there is no confusion about what the symbol means. Chemical symbols of elements come from their English or Latin names. For example, carbon has the chemical symbol 'C', and sodium has chemical symbol 'Na', after the Latin 'natrium'. Au' is the symbol for gold and it comes from the Latin word for gold, 'aurum'. Another symbol which comes from Latin is 'Ag'. Citation * are awards - legal documents - notes * are part of patents - the reward system of science - speech acts * currency that allows free, x-posted messages to keep a value and find readers. * database of books, journals and notes. * is honor * refer to books, journals, films, and videos. * refers to an intention to highlight a phrase or word. Cosmological symbol * provide a microcosmic imagery of the world. * sort out the content of the world - human place in the world
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### signal | symbol: Graphic symbol * are symbols which are slaved to the main timeline. * belong to the tradition of that medium. ### signal | symbol | graphic symbol: Asterisk * are characters - present under the canonical cysteine and histidine residues of the zinc finger motif - software - wildcards when used at the end of a word * graphic symbol * indicate a single nucleotide polymorphism - conserved amino acids among the three species * indicate identical amino acid residues among the five melibiose transporters * mark food in the gut. * refer to the most frequently re-observed stars.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol | graphic symbol: Capital letter * account for only five percent of all letters in written English. * are different from lowercase letters - small letters * are the electronic version of shouting - equivalent of shouting at someone - on-line equivalent of shouting * are usually easier for young children to learn first - the same height and width - variables, small letters are functions * graphic symbol * have different functions than small letters, often completely unrelated. * indicate the amino acids are aligned and a hyphen gap. * is used for a dominant allele. * represent dominant traits, and lowercase letters represent recessive traits - matrices and lower case letters represent real numbers Ideogram * are pictograms that represent ideas linked to a particular object. * can contain a part to indicate pronunciation.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol | graphic symbol: Ligature * Most ligatures are made from metal or plastic. * are also very important for non-Latin scripts - bands - combinations of letters that are treated as a unit - phrases - special characters that consist of two letters - thread - when two or more symbols are connected together to form a single shape + Mouthpiece (woodwind), Single-reed instruments: Woodwind instruments :: Musical instrument construction * The ligature is what holds the reed onto the mouthpiece. Anything that can hold the reed onto the mouthpiece can be called a ligature. Most ligatures are made from metal or plastic. Some people like to use ordinary string to hold the reed onto the mouthpiece.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol | graphic symbol: Rune * affect different weapons in different ways. * are a magical alphabet - method of divination derived from the Teutonic peoples of Northern Europe - system of creative energies - tool for personal growth, transformation, and personal in-depth study - also entities in and of themselves * are an ancient Germanic alphabet, used for writing, divination and magick - divination used by medieval soothsayers - form of nordic divination - early form of writing and their magic is the magic of literacy - oracle from which one seeks advice - ancient Germanic symbols representing various concepts or forces in the universe - both an ancient alphabet and magical pictographs representing the forces of nature - closest to the chaotic state - from the Western Celtic oracular tradition - invisible most of the time - kind of like land mines - lasting enchantments placed on objects or people - life affirmative, light affirmative, and a practical application of the tools of creation - magical tools for both divination and spell casting - sort of a combination between phonetic alphabet and hieroglyphs - symbols that are believe to hold magical power - the tools of the workshop of creation - tools from the workshop of creation - video games * can lead to hurtfullness. * eventually open the channels between the conscious and the unconscious. * lend themselves readily to numerology. * represent energies from the realms of creation. * take much longer to cast than other spells, measured in hours, days and even years.
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### signal | symbol: Identifier * always refer to variables from the lexical environment. * are a specialized type of label, created according to rules, but names nevertheless - an enormously powerful tool for communication within and between communities - nonterminal symbols, string constants are terminals - sequences of letters and digits * begin with a letter, followed by any number of letters or digits. * serve as headings to organize information under - the primary indices into directories ### signal | symbol | identifier: Object identifier * are, basically, strings of numbers. * figure in kernel software, which takes several years to write, test, and refine.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol: Logo * are a proposed industry standard to be printed on all produce boxes - an integral part of an association's image - emblems - logic - one of the most important tools for company recognition - programming language - sacred, untouchable icons in corporate culture - to graphic design as poems are to literature * are trademarks of their respective companies - owners * can be symbols or lettering or combinations of both - include graphic elements, type or both - mean word, verb, law, fundamental principle, energy, and so forth - simply be text presented to convey a company's image * comes vertically to the realm of creation. * graphically symbolize an organization, company, publication, product, or service. * have their varying uses, whether to mark territory, advertise a clan, or just to show off. * provide ways for people to understand brands, and they evoke deep brand meanings. + Logo (programming language): Programming languages * There are 170 versions of Logo. Many of them are open source and free. There are three Logo textbooks that can be downloaded free. Logo is usually an interpreted language. * Most logos are very simple drawings with only a small number of colors. Some logos are only black and white. Mantle * Identify the construction of different mantle styles. * are albums - epidermises - layers - part of lithospheres - shelfs * plumes and episodic crustal growth - control magnetic reversal frequency<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol: Medal * are the reward that a winery gets when they have done their job well. * can denote honorable deeds as well as ones that are questionable or disreputable. * generally signify service in an operational area or for an organization. * glisten on the shoulders of women and men. * is awards - jewelry - tokens + Ireland at the Olympics, Medal tables: Nations at the Olympics * The following tables include medals won by athletes on Irish teams together with one poet. All medals are from the Summer Games. Ireland's best result at the Winter Games was fourth, by Clifton Wrottesley in the Men's Skeleton in 2002 at Salt Lake City. Monogram * are symbols. * come in a variety of styles in one, two or three letters. Numeral * All numerals are Arabic. * Quickly convert between Roman and Arabic numerals. * are 'small cap numerals', lining but lower than cap height - an invention of man - in Sanskrit - notation - on the basis of twenty, the number of fingers on a person's hands and feet - parts of speech - valid to use in passwords * follow the nouns they modify. * precede letters. * serve as shorthand for amateur radio jocks.
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### signal | symbol: Pointer * are dogs selected to freeze and point when they see game birds hidden in the bushes - indicators - mainly useful for stitching together various data objects to form a data structure - men who point the cattle in the right way - the children that don t speak a whole lot but point to what they want * are variables following all the normal naming convention of non - pointer variables - that contain the address, the location in memory of other data - whose values are addresses which themselves contain values - words, phrases, or ideas that appear in a sentence, and are repeated in the next * devices other than optical thumb trackballs or mice Many laptops have a flat touch panel. * help hunters spot their prey. * is an indicator + Hunting dog, Types of hunting dogs, Pointers: Dogs * Pointers find birds then stand still and point at where the bird is. They often are farther away from the hunter than a spaniel would be. By pointing instead of flushing the bird out, they give the hunter time to get close enough to shoot the bird. ### signal | symbol | pointer: Laser pointer * are located in demonstrations. * causes retinal injury with loss of vision. Light pen * are input devices - pointers - synchronous devices * resemble ordinary pens and are used to indicate locations on a computer screen. Smart pointer * are classes whose constructors note the exact location of the pointers in memory. * are objects that look and act like built-in pointers, but do more - feel like pointers, but are smarter Religious symbol * are a protected form of free speech - visible signs of our profound experiences of the holy * embody transcendent reality. * have power. Roman * also states that sin brings with it the wages of death. * are addicted to cell phones - bands - proportional fonts * never bend knee to man or god. * only have half armor. * prefer to sprinkle salt on the crust. * refers to the fact that the pope has lived in Rome for over five hundred years. * use the gladius a two-foot long stabbing sword - waterpower to mill grain. * stop an uprising of Thracian tribesmen Runic symbol * are so ancient that it is next to impossible to establish their exact date of origin. * begin appearing on everyone's bodies. Solid symbol * indicate activation in the same area during imagery and perception. * represent measurements taken with the assumption of field-saturated conditions.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol: Symbolism * are practice - symbols * brings to mind facts, feelings, emotions, and events. * can be a person, place or thing, used to portray something beyond itself - anything, a person, place or thing, used to portray something beyond itself * creates quality aspects that make literature like poetry and novels more meaningful. * denotes social standing, moral messages, and also told historical and legendary stories. * gives a different and mystical meaning to a word. * is actually a part of philosophy because it can stand for something - also important in the use of arms as gods instrument to people - developed for the analysis and evaluation of arguments - found everywhere - present in the colors eave decoration, roofing material, and roof top decorations - the language of the universe * lies deep in the dungeons of the human psyche. * looks to the art form itself for a guide to beauty. * often dwells on strong themes such as death, sin, religion, mythology and eroticism. * powerful tool in the hands of evolutionary process. * primitive but effective way of communicating ideas. * tool writers use so that one thing represents someone or something else. * usually revolve around the life forces of birth, sex, death, war, hate, greed and love. * Random House, Inc. 01 Jan. 2012.. A symbol is an object, action, or idea that stands for something other than itself, often of a more abstract nature. Symbolism creates quality aspects that make literature like poetry and novels more meaningful.
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### signal | symbol | symbolism: Color symbolism * is steeped in history. * varies from culture to culture and from time to time. Religious symbolism * has an effect when it affects both the intellect and the emotions. + Christian symbolism * Christian symbolism' gives objects or actions a meaning that shows Christian ideas. Religious symbolism has an effect when it affects both the intellect and the emotions. The choice of actions and objects for symbolism is very small. This makes it hard to chose a symbol that other religions and traditions do not use.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol: Tag * Some tags affect the look of a Web page, others affect how it functions. * are ugly, irrelevant, distracting, and give the project a bad reputation. * Give readers a little credit. Anything important that is missing is going to jump out at them immediately. Or is not important enough to list. For example you were tagging articles as having no interwikis at one point. Which ridiculous tag to add onto articles. Tags degrade the quality of an article further. Thus meaning people no longer read it once they see a warning. We want to encourage reading not discourage. We build the wiki for the readers not the editors. * allow organisms to send signals and recognize signals sent by others. * appear as dark regions in the images that move with an object as it moves. * are attributes assigned to a piece of information - basically markers that enclose text, images, links, etc - blood, flesh, feces, or greese - fields for information within a class - instuctions set into the text of the page that the browser responds to - literally out pouches of skin that grow slowly over time - text structures that mark the beginning and end of elements within the XML document * are the things that mark the start and end of elements - tools used to create an HTML document and to format text for an internet browser - user-friendly phrases used to indicate the data elements contained within the tags * can also identify parts of documents, such as the head or body of a document - have attributes, which modify the tag, similar to how adjectives modify nouns * children s game based on symmetrical pursuit and evasion. * come in many shapes and sizes. * consist of antennas, electronic circuitry, and energy sources. * grow in the region of the neck, armpit and groin. * magazine for people who want to make their mark. * regular expression. * serve as the vocabulary of a programming language. * usually occur in pairs and are often nested, one pair inside another. + HTML, Tags: Markup languages :: Internet :: Web design * Some tags only work in certain browsers. For example, the tag, which is used to make a bit of writing slide across the page, only works in the Internet Explorer and Mozilla Firefox browsers. Other browsers simply ignore this tag and display the writing normally. + Wireless Markup Language * This means that syntax is very important. Every tag needs to be properly nested and closed.<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol | tag: Ear tag * Some ear tags contain insecticide for repelling face flies in the summer. * are a popular method of identifying cattle - basically small bits of skin attached the the ear, and are usually removed by surgery - commercially available in numerous sizes, different colours or with numbers - for cattle, sheeps and pigs * are the least common form of permanent identification found in llamas - most common way to identify cows - to be placed in the right ear only and as much as possible in the center of the ear * contain insecticides from two major chemical classes - pyrethroids and organophosphates.
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### signal | symbol | tag: Meta tag * are a part of a Web page's HTML coding and help search engines find sites more easily. * are an important factor on a majority of spiders - part of a site's internet presence and visibility - either a storage bin for data or a way of passing information to the server - hidden tags placed in the header section of a.html document - html tags that appear in the section of an html document * are instructions designed specifically for browsers and search engines - for search engine spiders - invisible keywords describing the contents of an internet site - tags that go in the head portion of a web-page * are the hidden lines of source code in the header of most webpages - tags in the head of an html document * provide search engines with information about the content and purpose of a Web site. Price tag * are price guides - singles * reflect the individual differences and needs of employees. Skin tag * appear most often in women, especially with weight gain, and in elderly people. * are usually very small, skin-colored growths commonly found on the neck, arms, and trunk - very much like new-born lamb's testicles<|endoftext|>### signal | symbol: Token * are a cost-effective way of paying for transportation - actually strings of anything separated by something - bands - capable of symbols - coins issued by an entity other than a national government - discrete literals or classes of characters which comprise an input stream - disks - elementary categories consisting of single characters or simple sequences of characters - icons * are located in arcades - ashtrays - pockets - slot machines - subways - sequences of characters which are treated as separate symbols - signs - small portable devices that extend the capability of laptops and desktop PCs * are the basic elements of the language, like words and numbers and chemical elements - keywords which constitute the skeleton of any yabasic program - markers used to represent the players on the game board * are used for bus rides - payments - play games - representations - various composition metal coins used for slot play and some table games ### signal | symbol | token: Postage stamp * account for one third of government revenue. * are a part of our everyday life. * are located in mail - post offices - much more personalised than franking or any other postal mark - official documents - postages - stickers - traditionally for universally acclaimed heroes and celebrities * featuring cartoonists are popular especially in Europe. White feather * Most white feathers have dark spots - pigment * are also schemochromic - no spots under the skin when plucked Target * are actions or steps that are taken to meet our goals - albums - films - objects - reference points - shields - sports equipment * includes bull's eyes. * is an attribute of a link that specifies a particular window for the new page to open in. * refers to the system where the program being debugged executes. ### signal | target: Clay pigeon * are targets. * burst in the air over a field of spring flowers. * vary in size and hunting presentation. Target marketing * involves selling goods and services directly to consumers by mail or telephone. * is the process of focusing on a select and specific group of people. Valid target + Fencing, Weapons, Foil: Summer Olympic sports :: Fencing * A foil fencer. Valid target is in red - Sabre * A sabre fencer. Valid target is in red - Épée Telephone number * All telephone numbers have six digits, and there are no city or area codes. * Telephone Numbers Use dashes to separate area code and exchange. * are direct-dial numbers - located in telephone books * can be for regular, cellular phones or pagers. * count as one word - two words
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### signal: Ultrasonic signal * are merely rapid changes in air pressure. * tend to reflect off hard surfaces, such as concrete or dry wall. ### signal | visual signal: Brake light * Some brake light is part of automobiles - cars - motorbikes - taxis * visual signal<|endoftext|>### signal | visual signal: Flare * Many flares occur within complexes of magnetic fields called active regions. * Most flares develop in a matter of minutes and subside over an hour or two. * appear as brightening in strong magnetic field regions. * are a pyrotechnic device and are dangerous and deadly in the wrong, or very young hands - bright filaments of hot gas emerging from sunspot regions - brighter than the whole Sun in X-rays and in ultraviolet light - even more violent rupturing the surface of the sun in just minutes - explosive eruptions of energy on the surface of the sun - giant releases of energy that can evolve in a few minutes or over several hours - in fact difficult to see against the bright emission from the photosphere - powerful explosions on the surfaces of many stars - short lived explosive brightening of plages * are very active sunspot sites - violent and rapid explosions on the sun - violent explosions of hot material occurring in regions around sunspots * burn at uneven rates and therefore fluctuate in brightness. * can occasionally cause wildfires - therefore provide a significant amount of energy to heat the coronae of active stars * cause chicken fat to melt. * emit high-energy atomic particles and all forms of electromagnetic radiation into space. * happen on flare stars in a similar way to solar flares. * heat the solar gas to tens of millions of degrees. * is attacks - automotive products - devices - effusion - flies - reflection - shapes * occur above sunspots when the energy contained in the magnetic field is suddenly released - during periods of solar activity, which typically last a few days - much more commonly during the maximum of the solar sunspot cycle - near sunspots groups and are caused by tangled magnetic field * often disturb the atmosphere electrically, thus interfering with radio transmissions. * produce a high and rapid increase of the density and temperature. + Flare star: Types of stars * Flares happen on flare stars in a similar way to solar flares. They are magnetic disturbances in the atmosphere of stars. The brightness increases across the spectrum, from X rays to radio waves. Skyrocket * are fireworks. * contain a wooden stick for guidance and stability and rise into the air upon ignition. Warning light * help stop accidents. * visual signal + Visibility: Weather * Visibility less than is often called zero. When it is this low, roads may be closed, or lights and signs are turned on to warn drivers. These are put in areas that often have very low visibility. Warning lights help stop accidents. Automobile crashes with many cars happen often in places like this if the warning lights and signs are not put up. Signature * are icons - important on documents for many reasons - names - part of books - sheets - short text files which automatically attach to the end of any email message sent - the text that people place at the end of messages - tunes * way of linking cases. ### signature: Autograph * also occur on books, baseballs, and other items. * are a large collectibles market and a big part of the music memorabilia market - very significant part of the sports memorabilia market - our connections to the stars - signatures - writing * come in different forms with different values. Digital signature * are implemented using cryptography. * is an alternative for a handwritten signature - authentication of an electronic record by a person using electronic means - one of the great innovations in the history of cryptography
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### signature: Electronic signature * are essential if contracts are to be concluded over the internet - now the legal equivalent of signatures affixed by hand * can save money by eliminating duplicate data entry. * come in many different forms. * have the potential to streamline online purchases and services. * have the same legal meaning and significance as a hand written signature - standing as written signatures Significant event * are a part of life's dynamics - times of remembering * occur in development. * take places.<|endoftext|>### signing: Fingerspelling * is one of the hardest parts of Signing - the use of the manual alphabet to form words * part of some sign languages. * way to show any letter of the English alphabet using one hand. + American Sign Language: Sign languages * ASL includes fingerspelling. Fingerspelling is a way to show any letter of the English alphabet using one hand. Fingerspelling is also used to express numbers. Names of people and names of places can be fingerspelled. + Sign language, Fingerspelling: Disability :: Language-related lists * Besides normal signs, many sign languages use fingerspelling. In fingerspelling, each letter in the alphabet of a spoken language has its own sign. Fingerspelling is a tool. People use it to spell names, acronyms and other words from spoken languages. Sometimes people use a fingerspelled word even when there is a normal sign for the same meaning. For example, when talking about a person, a signer might spell their name using fingerspelling. * Fingerspelling is a part of some sign languages. The picture shows the fingerspelling in American Sign Language. Fingerspelling is not the same everywhere. Different countries have different ways of fingerspelling. Some alphabets use one hand, some use two hands.
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Silver * Most silver is obtained as byproducts, in particularly from lead ore. * Most silver is produced as a byproduct of copper , gold, lead , and zinc refining - today as a by-product of lead, copper, and zinc mining * SILver web application that is accessed on a subscription basis through a standard web browser. * Use silver to purge and clean the aura. * acts as a catalyst, effectively disabling the enzyme - more like a general antiseptic than an antibiotic, which have single targets * adds light and sparkle to dull, green areas. * also comes in several forms in jewelry - has the highest thermal conductivity of any element and the highest light reflectance - helps sanitize catheters - is the official state mineral - occurs as a free metal, but much less often than gold or copper - symbolizes chastity, purity, and eloquence * are easy to catch on hook and line close to shore and are a popular food fish during winter - high-flying acrobats and are perhaps the most sought after of all salmon * bears the same relation to blue as yellow does to red. * better conductor than copper. * brilliant white metal. * can also neutralize sodium fluoride poisoning - gradually tarnish or oxidize to grey or black particularly in the presence of sulfides - replace white * catalyst for hydrogen peroxide. * comes encased in other rock. * component of electrical wire, alloys and foil, as is copper. * conducts electricity better than any other substance. * continues to play an increasingly important role in our daily lives. * dance standard with a high degree of styling. * eat herrings, sandlance, squid and other fish. * fairly rare element in the Earth's crust. * fine, silver-white metal often used in jewelry. * forms a soluble complex ion with aqueous ammonia. * halides change from white to black metallic silver when exposed to light. * has a bright coldness and in astrology it is associated with the moon - host of uses from lubricants for jet engines to healing bone fractures - long history in medicine - massive base that can support a move to much higher prices - reputation for going dead for long periods of time - unique affinity for oxygen - very high aquatic toxicity and accumulates in the tissue of aquatic organisms - germicidal effects - it can kill lower organisms quite effectively - high reflectance over the entire spectral range - low toxicity to vertebrate animals and is eliminated rapidly when ingested orally - many special properties that make it a very useful and precious metal - more in common with palladium than it does with gold - no biological role * has the highest electrical and thermal conductivity of all metals * has the highest thermal and electrical conductivity of all metals - conductivity of any metal or alloy - two other unique properties * heavy metal, but the amounts being distributed are very small - metallic element with a brilliant white luster * heavy, soft, ductile, and malleable metal. * highly conductive metal with excellent corrosion resistance. * iodate' chemical compound. * iodide has a crystalline structure that looks like ice, so it can help freeze water. * iodide is harmless to animal and vegetable life - released into the cloud tops if updrafts are favorable - sprinkled in clouds to make rain * iodide is used in cloud seeding to produce rain - photographic film and cloud seeding - seeding clouds to produce rain - major ingredient to traditional photographic film - yellow solid * is absolutely non-toxic - actually the most desirable of all metals for electrical equipment * is also a common second or third color - powerful oxidative catalyst for the chemical process industry - able to reflect light very well - in chemical compounds - the most thermally conductive element , and the most light reflecting element - widely used in dentistry and medicine * is an indispensable metal and of critical importance in today's society - industrial metal too - another color which can be easily formulated in a heat resistant paint - as sharp as the quills of a porcupine - believed by Miao people to be the symbol of light which can dispel evil spirits - chemical elements - colour - conductors * is considered a psychic metal, enhancing and empowering the psychic abilities of the bearer - one of the noble metals - to be one of the most universal antibiotic substances known - consumed in endless ways, from medical eye drops at birth to lubricants for jet engines - crafted into belts, headdresses and other jewelry - ductile and malleable - extracted from the earth in several ways - extremely ductile, and can be drawn into a monoatomic wire * is found in many parts of Canada - most tissues, but has no known physiologic function - harder than gold yet softer than copper - heavier than water - highly resistant to corrosion by atmospheric oxygen - kesef, which means to long for or desire * is known to be bactericidal and has been used in water purification systems for years - inactivated by protein-like matter - less expensive than gold, and has equal or better optical properties - like adding water to a fire, because it slows the energy flow - likened to the color blue and copper is likened to the color red - linked to priesthood and sacrifices * is located in dentists - houses - mines - old coin - mentioned in the Book of Genesis - metallic in nature and has reflective properties * is mined only as a by product of lead and zinc mining in Canada - with lead, copper, and zinc - more like the grains such as corn or wheat - most toxic to microscopic organisms or larval forms of aquatic animals - much less expensive than gold and platinum - natures very best heat conductor as well as being the very best electrical conductor - obtained from the ores argentite, cerarygrite, pyrargyrite, stephanite, and proustite - of utmost importance in photography - often a common by product from smelting galena - one of the more noble metals * is one of the most toxic of the heavy metals to freshwater micro-organisms - valued gifts that one can receive - transition elements of the periodic table - only toxic at high levels - our spirit that shines through and through * is precious because it has a thousand different uses - present in the human body but has no known role - quite different than crude oil * is recovered as a by product in the refining of gold bullion produced in Queensland - during electrolytic refining of copper - when crude lead is refined to high purity - referred to as a transition metal in chemical literature, along with copper and gold * is said to be a mirror to the soul - another way of killing vampires - salvaged from photographic and platemaking process for recycling - silver without the mint's impress - slightly harder than gold - so malleable that it can be hammered into sheets thinner than a sheet of paper - somewhat harder than gold and is second only to gold in malleability and ductility - stable in water - still a very good conductor even when oxidized - taken and precipitated into a liquid medium and held in electrical suspension - ten times more abundant than gold - the best antimicrobial agent available today * is the best conductor of electricity - heat and electricity - known conductor of heat and electricity - natural conductor of electricity, followed by copper, gold, and aluminum * is the best reflector of visible light known until air causes it to tarnish - light known, and is used in mirror production - coating of choice on catheters because silver basically inhibits all bacteria * is the color of astronaut suits and shuttles blasting off into space - experience * is the color of purity and faith - mentality - happiness that weddings bring, When the silver bells chime and couples exchange rings - material cause - metal most often used for handmade jewellery * is the most common of the precious metals - prevalant material prescribed in Ayurveda to clean the tongue - reflective and affordable of the precious metals - unique asset on earth today - prettiest color - reflective coating of choice for concentrated solar power reflectors - second most malleable and ductile of all metals - sound that a flute plays - symbol of purity and hope - type of performer who brings a smile to the listener's face from the word go - world's most broad spectrum and safest antibiotic - their preferred symbol of wealth - thought to be a toxic pollutant only because it is an effective antiseptic - too expensive and mercury is toxic - unavoidably prone to certain chemical reactions, especially tarnish and corrosion * is used as a catalyst - coinage in many countries - ornaments to adorn the body - the reflective layer * is used for a number of things - candlesticks * is used in Silverware - dental alloys, solder and brazing alloys, electrical contacts and batteries - the manufacture of crystalline solar photovoltaic panels - water purifiers to prevent bacteria and algae from growing in the filters - on the bottom of the tap shoes * is used to coat smooth glass surfaces for mirrors - enhance healing and fight infection - inhibit bacterial growth - kill bacteria in water purification systems - make A. jewelry - usually a byproduct of copper and lead mining and gold recovery * is very expensive and is recycled whenever possible - important in photography - low viscosity and so flows easily into tight joints - toxic to lower organisms - video games * less reactive metal than copper is. * medium of exchange. * micro nutrient found in trace amounts in many fruits and other foods. * mildly toxic element. * minimizes the growth of plaque in the mouth. * neutral color which complements practically every color. * non-renewable resource. * occurs both as chlorides and as hydrosulfides - in the metallic state, commonly associated with gold, copper, lead, and zinc - with virtually no multi-element signature * often occurs near copper lodes. * possesses the lowest contact resistance of all metals. * powerful, natural antibiotic, used for hundreds of years , with no known side effects - natural, universal prophylactic and antibiotic * prevents bacteria growth within the filter candles. * rare, lustrous white metal that has captured people's imagination for centuries. * rather unreactive metal. * readily forms alloys with copper and gold, as well as zinc. * refers to light and mentality - the limestone * reflects when surrounded by light. * relatively soft metal which can be readily electrodeposited. * remains the substance of choice for the majority of fillings in permanent teeth. * removes bacteria better than other materials. * royal treasure. * seems to have an effect on central nervous system function. * soft, white metal with a shiny surface. * stains the intercellular cement dark between adjacent cells. * strong filling agent lasting longer than comparable composite fillings. * superconductor that bridges the electrical gap and restores healthy current flow. * symbolizes purity and honesty - staunchness - serenity and nobility - spiritual traditions * symbolizes the hope and purity - pureness and hope * tartrate explosive mixtures. * tends to react with sulphur, which is found in fixing solutions. * tungsten A porous tungsten material which is infiltrated with silver. * unique medium in the arts. * very cheap metal - inactive metal - powerful natural antibiotic * war material. + Coinage metal, Applications: Periodic table :: Chemical elements :: Currency * These metals, especially silver, have unusual properties that make them essential for industrial applications outside of their monetary or decorative value. They are all excellent conductors of electricity. The most conductive of all metals are silver, copper and gold in that order. Silver is also the most thermally conductive element, and the most light reflecting element. Silver also has the unusual property that the tarnish that forms on silver is still highly electrically conductive. + Iodine, Uses: Halogens :: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals * Some metals are purified using their iodides. Silver iodide is used in photographic film and cloud seeding. Erythrosine is a food coloring that has iodine in it. Iodine can be used to make illegal drugs so it is restricted in some areas. Iodine can be used as a test for reducing agents. Iodine turns colorless when mixed with a reducing agent. Iodine also turns black when mixed with starch. + Silver iodide, Properties: Silver compounds * Silver iodide is a yellow solid. It does not dissolve in water. It turns dark when light is shined on it. The darkening is caused by a chemical reaction. The silver iodide turns into silver and iodine - Safety * Silver iodide is toxic. It can stain skin. It is not as toxic as other silver compounds that dissolve in water. The iodide also is toxic. * Silver iodate' is a chemical compound. Its chemical formula is AgIO3. It has silver and iodate ions in it * Silver iodide is sprinkled in clouds to make rain. It can also be used in photographic film + Silver, Occurrence * Silver can be found as a metal. Silver can be found with copper, lead, or gold in rocks. The rocks are found mostly in Canada, Mexico, Peru, and the United States. Peru produces the most silver. Silver is also in chemical compounds. Acanthite is a silver ore that is a silver compound - Preparation * Silver is extracted from the earth in several ways. It is normally extracted using electrolysis - Properties, Physical properties: Metals :: Chemical elements * Silver is a soft metal. It is also a precious metal. When it is used in money or in jewellery, it is often mixed with gold or some other metal to make it harder. It is bluish-white. It reflects light very well. It is a very good conductor of electricity - Uses, As an element * Silver has been used for many thousands of years by people all over the world, for jewellery, as money, and many other things. It is called a white metal even though it looks grey. The word 'silver' is also used to talk about this colour or shade of grey. Silver is also used for utensils. It may be used to fill teeth in dentistry as an amalgam. Silver is used as a catalyst
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### silver-gray liquid: Mercury metal * has many uses. * silver-gray liquid. Similar phenomenon * Similar phenomena are observed in many other herbs whose flowers or fruit are destroyed by frost. * Some similar phenomena occur in plants - proteins ### similar reaction: Overprotection * is protection * similar reaction. Biological virus * are similar. * fragment of DNA inside protective jacket.<|endoftext|>Similarity * Many similarities exist between medication error reduction and infection control. * Similarities are the basis for classifying different kinds of organisms - do exist between pigmented cosmetic dermatitis and pigmented contact dermatitis * central component of many cognitive processes. * continuous measure of imperfect symmetry. * is based on visual characteristics such as dominant colors, shapes and textures - central to the concept of scaling - simply a distance measure based on the relative number of mismatching features * plays an indispensable foundational role in theories of cognition. ### similarity: Analog * are software. * come in a variety of shapes, sizes and applications. * is similarity * usually take the form of white powder. ### similarity | analog: Meat analog * Some meat analogs are high in salt. * are a convenient way to add additional sources of plant protein to the vegetarian diet - lower in fat and saturated fat than meat Nucleoside analog * All nucleoside analogs are pro-drugs. * are effective, as are protease inhibitors - prodrugs that are converted into active agents by phosphorylation Analogue * Some analogues have no amino group at all, such as benzocaine. * are similarity - substances that act in a similar way to hormones * is similarity Distributional similarity * is computed from a standard natural language corpus. * useful notion in estimating the probabilities of rare joint events.<|endoftext|>### similarity: Homology * Homologies are characters that are similar because of common ancestry - essential clues to relatedness - more reliable for phylogenetic inference than are analogies - parallel evolutionary patterns that come from common ancestry * clear indication of shared structure and frequently related function. * includes a unique group of shared structures referred to as vestigial structures. * indicates a similarity established through common descent. * is always complicated by the potential fusion of remote individual domains - likeness due to shared ancestry * is similarity by descend - in different species due to evolution from a common ancestor - structures having arisen from a common ancestor * is the presence of a similar feature because of convergence - relationship between structures or DNA derived from the most recent common ancestor - similarity due to common ancestor - study of similar structures in different animals * refers to evolutionary related sequences stemming from a common ancestor. * structural similarity regardless of present day function. * word that comes from comparative anatomy and embryology. Parallel * is when the planets are within one degree of orb in declination. * laminae represent the bar surface. ### similarity | parallel: Tropic * are latitudes. * experience a radiation surplus. * gain more energy then they lose, while polar regions loss more than they gain. ### simple asphyxiant: Gaseous nitrogen * contains covalent molecules. * is gases - nitrogen - used in the chemical and petroleum industries for storage tank blanketing - useless to plants * makes up three-quarters of the atmosphere. * simple asphyxiant. ### simple economic activity: Mercantilism * is economy * simple economic activity. Simple organism * Some simple organisms contain chlorophyll - live in habitats * are models for gene function in complex organisms - unicellular, but more complex organisms consist of many co-operating cells
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### simple: Arsenic mineral * Some arsenic minerals have a metal and sulfur along with arsenic. + Arsenic, Occurrence: Semimetals :: Chemical elements * Arsenic is found sometimes as an element in the ground, but is normally found in minerals. Some arsenic minerals have a metal and sulfur along with arsenic. Arsenopyrite is iron arsenic sulfide. It is the same as pyrite with arsenic added. Other arsenic minerals have a metal and arsenic. Erythrite, a cobalt arsenide mineral, is an example. Other arsenic minerals are simple. ### sincerity: Singleness * are sincerity. * is sincerity * often causes depression. Single organism * Most single organisms have ability. * Some single organisms use mitosis. - certain characteristics ### single parents: Young parent * Some young parents are single parents. * can also die or deteriorate. ### sinking: Submergence * causes an irregular shoreline that reflects past elevations and depressions. * is also a viable strategy for weed control, especially in water-seeded rice. ### sites: Construction site * are sites. * have structures. Sitter * are films * is an organism Situated cognition * is behaviorism for liberals. * stands in sharp contrast to both schema theories and behaviorist theories.<|endoftext|>Situation * Many situations are hazardous for elderly people because of their reduced physical ability. * Most situations affect animals. * Some situations can create stress and affect self-esteem - lend themselves to cooperation by animals * affect agriculture * are conditions - contexts in which attributes assume particular values - described by narrators - difficulty - graves - parts of the reality that can enter into relations with other parts - states * can have consequences. * change over years. * deserve consideration. * evolve over time. * have certain similarity - results * involve conflict - forces - interaction * is usually the cosmological framework or state of being. * occur during cold winter months - military operations * require actions - advice - animal removal services - awareness - breaths - effort - exit strategies - ideas - immediate treatments - initial treatments - mechanical treatments - professional services - skills * result in lower muscle tension * take places. * trigger reaction. + Static electricity, Charge: Electricity * Many situations can cause static electricity. ### situation | acknowledgement: Apology * Apologies also play an important role in maintaining and repairing relationships. * Apologies are acknowledgment - an invitation for forgiveness, and forgiveness positive aspect of anyone's life - defense - examples * is acknowledgement Ciao * are websites. * is acknowledgement Handshake * also differ by region. * are acknowledgment - appropriate only between men or between women - generally only for males who are friends - the accepted form of greeting - usually the most appropriate and common form of greeting at business occasions<|endoftext|>### situation: Conflict of interest * seems to be a contagious and virulent disease. * From Berlin's 'Karl Marx', 4th edition, p. 75. This description covers several aspects of what it might be to stand 'too close' to a subject. Any situation where strong relationships can develop may trigger a conflict of interest. Conflict of interest can be personal, religious, political, academic, financial, and legal. It is not determined by area, but is created by relationships that involve a high level of personal commitment to, involvement with, or dependence upon, a person, subject, idea, tradition, or organization. * type of conflict interest. Context * are discourse - environments - information - software. * More context is needed here for anyone to answer 'yes' or 'no' * is discourse ### situation | context: Social context * affects how rhesus monkeys explore their environment. * is at the center of participatory education.
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### situation: Deadlock * global problem, a problem in the interaction of subsystems. * is one of the most serious problems in concurrent programming - the permanent blocking of a set of tasks * major problem for systems that allocate resources in real-time. Domain * column of relation. * is the set of all values for the variable x.<|endoftext|>### situation | domain: Discipline * Many disciplines are interested in methods for gridding the curved surface of the Earth - have journals which publish undergraduate papers - overlap with the broad field of Psychology * Some disciplines have rules about breathing. * are just groups of people seeking to understand the same small part of the world - subcultures designed to reproduce themeselves and resist external influences * is punishment - training * purifies the church, and the offspring of spiritual purity is church unity. ### situation | domain | discipline: Academic discipline * Most academic disciplines have a network, but political science had none. * are important to society only when they solve problems that affect humans. * develop and change over time. * thrive and grow through critical analysis of conventions and theories. Artistic discipline * Many artistic disciplines converge in puppetry. * is meant broadly to include visual, performing and literary arts. * tend to mingle and mix into interdisciplinary forms. Church discipline * helps save the souls of transgressors by assisting members to repent. * includes separation from other believers. * is biblical, necessary, and one way of showing love - love in action * ministry analogous to evangelism and mission. Corrective discipline * involves attempts by employers to correct unsatisfactory performance. * is the strategy used to eliminate an undesired behavior. Effective discipline * helps children understand the effects of their behavior on others. * involves knowing when a child is capable of more independence. * teaches children how to avoid repeating misbehaviors and what to do instead. Market discipline * critical element of a competitive financial market. * is built on financial disclosure - information disclosure - the first line of defense in maintaining the integrity of our financial system Parental discipline * is an evolved set of behavioral rules for their kids. * leads to self-discipline. Positive discipline * is hard work - a labour of parental love - important to the development of a positive sense of self-worth * means helping children learn self-control and problem solving. Spiritual discipline * All spiritual disciplines stress some kind of meditation or prayer. * helps people form the center of their lives. * lever for changing things in life. * teach ideals. Domain parking * is the service of providing a free webpage for a non-hosted domain. * special form of domain hosting. Mitotic domain * are groups of cells that divide in a stereotypic pattern. * reveal early commitment of cells in Drosophila embryos. Realm * Some Realms have hundreds of warriors. * are groups of web pages requiring authentication. * has power. * is an area
{ "source": "generics_kb" }
### situation | domain: Scientific knowledge * Some scientific knowledge uses mathematical skills * comprises our best objective understanding of the universe. * expands rapidly as new discoveries are made. * grows in a cumulative process. * is based mainly on experiment - on experimentation or observation - compared with that acquired in other disciplines - considered through detailed discussion of cases in empirical science - especially contested in such complex domains as human health - founded in sensory observation - gained slowly and incrementally over time - generated by, and used for, asking questions concerning the natural world - higher than practical or productive knowledge - incomplete or absent in many areas - interpreted in the context of philosophical thought and vice versa - limited to the data received through the sense organs - obtained incrementally over time from many small discoveries - one way of knowing, and religious knowledge is another - strengthened by people questioning what is or has been accepted - structured in certain well-defined ways - subject to change - systematized knowledge in which the personal equation has been eliminated - used to create new technology such as computers driven machines * parallel distributed system. * product of humankind. * shared body of knowledge. Time domain * is the world of the packaging engineer. * measures the decay time of an electromagnetic pulse induced by a transmitter.
{ "source": "generics_kb" }
### situation: Ecology * Ecologies are an important area of study. * Is the study of organisms and their habitats. * Most ecology includes depletion. * Provides the latest research in scientific ecology. * Ranges from tropical through subtropical and warm temperate, and from arid to semiarid. * Requires a rich soil for best growth - long, warm, wet growing seasons, doing best under full sun * Some ecology involves reaction. * Some ecology is caused by disasters - natural disasters. * ' is the science which studies the biota and the environment, and their interactions. Ecology is the study of ecosystems. Ecosystems describe the web or network of relations among organisms at different scales of organization. Since ecology refers to any form of biodiversity, ecologists research everything from tiny bacteria in nutrient recycling to the effects of tropical rain forests on the Earth's atmosphere. Scientists who study these interactions are called 'ecologists' * Studying the interrelationships along the way is the study of ecology. * also is charged with protecting the rights of senior water-right holders. * assumes some natural order of things. * attempts to understand where, how and, if possible, why organisms live where they do. * branch of science that involves the study of living organisms and their surroundings. * broad discipline comprised of many sub-disciplines - encompassing both terrestrial and aquatic environments - field that can accommodate many interests * comes from the Greek word oikos meaning house or place to live. * concentrates on the interrelationship of living things and their environment. * concerns the interrelationship of organisms and their environment. * consists of media. * covers basic ecological concepts. * deals with the relationships between living things and their environment. * depends on a basic understanding of chemistry and biology - upon a basic understanding of chemistry and biology * discipline of relationships and partnership. * encourages public involvement whenever it considers changes to air quality rules or plans. * essentially focuses on how living organisms interact with their environment. * examines relationships between species and their environment. * explores connections between living things and their surroundings. * field of science. * focuses on the interrelationships between living organisms and their environments - relationships living things have to one another and to their environment * forms the basis of all our actions. * fundamentally important discipline in our environmentally conscious age. * gives the capacity to predict - if sufficient facts are available. * growth experience. * has a long history of being a descriptive science but is young as an experimental science - aims - many specializations - no authority to charge people for their water use - principles * human science as well. * impacts the distribution of fauna. - physiological, population, community, ecosystem and global studies in ecology - the study of individuals, populations, communities, and ecosystems * is about the interactions of organisms with each other and their abiotic environment - relationship between people and vegetable, people and animals * is an attempt to unlock the physical mysteries of life - important part of the Swedish culture and hence there are many national parks - information-rich discipline covering vast temporal and spatial scales - as much a biological science as it human science - characterized by the numerous landscapes and environments on Earth - described as a bottom-up discipline, which lacks theories and predictive power - how living and non-living things affect each other in their environment - itself the study of contexts - known as the science of community * is more than a scientific discipline - the study of how certain species interact with each other and with themselves - much more than the study of homes - often a matter of simple questions and complex answers - on most people's minds - really a science of place - relevant to virtually everything - something done by a community of people * is the experimental study of the distribution and abundance of organisms - field of biology that looks at our environment and what goes on in our surroundings - interdisciplinary field that includes biology and the earth sciences - knowledge of the balances of life in relation to the environment - natural traditional and proper context of economy - nature of nature considered as an entire system - pattern of relationships between living things and their environment - primary scientific discipline of the wildlife profession - principal entity directing state efforts in litter control - relationship between living things and their environment - science of relationships, yet people have disconnected themselves from the earth * is the science of the relationship among organisms and their environment * is the science that investigates the interactions of organisms and their environments - is showing the possible alternatives - studies how life-forms interact with each other and their environment * is the scientific study of factors that govern the distribution and abundance of organisms - how living things interact with each other and their environment - interactions between organisms and their environments - organisms and the interactions they have in their habitats - the interrelationships of plants, animals, and the environment - shadow side of our global culture - study how organisms interact with each other and their physical environment * is the study of all of the organisms in an environment - connections in nature - generalizable patterns in the way organisms interact with their environment - how living things interact with one another * is the study of how organisms interact with their environment, both biotic and abiotic - interact with their natural environments * is the study of how plants and animals interact with one another and their environment - and animals relate to their biological and physical environments - human interaction with the environment - interactions between organisms and environment * is the study of living beings in relation to each other and to their total environment - organisms in relation to their environment * is the study of organisms in relation to their environment - within their ecosystems - our larger home, the Earth - populations or communities - relationships within an environment * is the study of the environment and how living things house themselves in it * is the study of the interaction of living organizations and the natural environment - of organisms with their environment * is the study of the interactions among organisms - among plants and animals and the physical environment - between and among organisms and their environment - that determine the distribution and abundance of organisms - interconnectedness of living things - interrelation ships between organisms and their environment * is the study of the interrelationships between organisms and their environment - of all things * is the study of the relationship between organisms and their environment - between plants and animals and their environment - of organisms to their environment * is the study of the relationships among organisms and their biotic and abiotic environments - among plants and animals and environment - of organisms among themselves and with their environments - of organisms to their environment and to other organisms - structure and function of nature - way all the parts of a biological system fit together - what lies within the natural environment * is used as a connection between disciplines and emphasizes the common themes and cycles - for environmentalists - very concerned about the long-term exposure to arsenic and lead, especially for children * is, after all, a slice of evolutionary theory, or vice versa. * limited science which makes use of scientific methods. * looks at energy transformations and biogeochemical cycling within ecosystems - the intersection of the social and physical environment * makes it possible to understand why weeds invade certain areas and to make predictions. * means saving our Earth. * multi-disciplinary science. * points to humanity's dependence upon the Earth. * quantitative science. * refers to interrelated activities of many different species co-existing in ecosystems. * relates to the study of ecosystems. * replaces bureaucracy. * requires knowledge. * science concerned with relationships, and it uses a lot of energy measure. * sets water quality standards to ensure that beneficial uses of the waters are met. * studies the factors affecting ecosystems - nature, function, and development of whole ecosystems - relationships among organisms and their environment * study of relationships between plants, animals and their environments. * subject of little awareness in society. * suggests an inclusive perspective, one in which the observer participant. * teaches that everything is connected to everything else. * transcends any one science or discipline. * very diverse field. * wants to draw attention to the greatest risks. * works in partnership with local air pollution control authorities to protect air quality. + Human body, Fields of study: Anatomy * Ecology is a field of science. It studies how the human body senses its environment. It also studies how humans affect the environment. These actions include using natural resources. These actions include making waste.
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### situation | ecology: Behavioral ecology * emerges from behavioral modification. * is the study of the adaptive significance of behavior - value of behavior - ecological and evolutionary basis for animal behavior * stresses species interactions. Community ecology * branch of science that studies the patterns of community members. * deals with the distribution and abundance of individuals among species. * is the study of how they interact. * looks at all of the populations within a given area and how they interact. * studies the structure and dynamics of animal and plant communities. Cultural ecology * analyzes the interrelationship of environment, subsistence, and society. * is the study of human adaptations to social and physical environments. Deep ecology * arises from a belief in the essential value and interdependence of all forms of life. * is about transforming our way of life. * is an all encompassing philosophical paradigm shift - anti-rationalist philosophy, and therefore difficult to define * is the hunger and the satisfaction of being an integral part of a whole - philosophy of environmental ethics, the spirituality of Gaia * means different things to different people. Evolutionary ecology * is one of the major topics in population biology. * looks at how the living and non-living world has shaped the ecology of species. Forest ecology * provides the biological basis for forest management. * serves as a model for stewardship behavior. Human ecology * emphasizes the place of humans within dynamic flows of energy and matter. * expands functionalism from ecology to the human mind. * is the dynamic interrelationship of humans and the environment - subdiscipline of ecology that focuses on humans - treated by geography, sociology, economics, and environmental law * representation of our position within a reality.<|endoftext|>### situation | ecology: Industrial ecology * applies the idea of a natural ecosystem to an industrial setting. * context for designing and operating industrial systems. * focuses on the interaction of industrial systems and the ecological systems. * is the interaction of industry and society with natural systems - study of industrial systems from the perspective of natural ecosystems * new and innovative strategy for a sustainable industry. * provides a framework for thinking systematically about environmental problems. * young field that has grown exponentially. Landscape ecology * emphasizes the importance of spatial patterns at broad scales. * is also a relatively new area in ecology - different from traditional ecology in several ways * is the study of how spatial pattern affects ecological process - spatial variation in landscapes at a variety of scales * studies the influence of natural spatial patterns on ecological phenomena. * way of thinking about the evolution and dynamics of heterogeneous landscapes. Media ecology * is the study of media as environments. * is, in short, a preparadigmatic science. Microbial ecology * is an essential overtone to the lives of more complex plants and animals - one of the frontiers of science, with much yet to be discovered - the study of microorganisms in the environment * large field that includes many topics. * rapidly developing scientific discipline. * relatively new area of both microbiology and ecology. Physiological ecology * arises with an understanding of the influence of temperatures. * involves adaptation to a varying physical environment. * major subfield in ecology. Population ecology * considers both deterministic and stochastic models. * consists of the dynamics and interactions occurring within a population. * involves studying factors that affect population growth and survival. * is the branch of ecology that studies the structure and dynamics of populations - most formalized area in biology * subdiscipline of ecology dealing with the growth and decline of populations.
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### situation | ecology: Restoration ecology * discipline which overlaps with economic botany. * is organized at the community level, looking at specific ecosystems. * is the effort to bring native species and local biodiversity back to cities - scientific study of ecological restoration * prescription for ecology. * works with living materials and is best taught with living materials. Equilibrium * Most equilibrium leads to states. * corresponds to zero slope, or a change in free energy equal to zero. * is proprioception - stasis * occurs only in a closed system. * occurs when E vanishes inside the conductor so no bulk currents are generated - the two rates, condensation and evaporation are the same * relates primarily to the physical body.<|endoftext|>### situation | equilibrium: Chemical equilibrium * dynamic process at the molecular level. * exhibits no change on the macroscopic level. * exists when the two opposite reactions occur simultaneously at the same rate. * is an idea which describes the behavior of chemical reactions over time + Equilibrium: Physics :: Chemistry * Chemical equilibrium is an idea which describes the behavior of chemical reactions over time. In reactions that have finished reacting and have attained equlibrium, the concentrations of the reactant and product chemicals do not change. For some reactions, the equilibrium constant is very large, in which case nearly all of the reactant chemical is turned into products, such as when paper is burned. For other reactions, it is very small, which results in very little product being formed. If the equilibrium constant is close to 1, a mixture of both products and reactants is expected at equilibrium. When chemists talk about equilibrium constants, they call reactions with large K values favorable and reactions with small K values unfavorable. Dynamic equilibrium * can exist as long as there is no fluctuation in the velocity of a moving body. * occurs when there climax community - two opposing actions occur at the same rate Genetic equilibrium * is always true if five specific conditions are met. * signifies a stop in the evolutionary process, or stasis.
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### situation | equilibrium: Homeostasis * Some homeostasis depends on interaction. * allows many organisms, such as humans, to survive in extreme environmental conditions. * can occur at both the level of the cell and the level of the organism. * central principle to the study of human physiology. * characteristic of life because it process that occurs in all living things. * comes into play as soon as the process of exsanguination begins. * depends on the control and regulation of the organs and organ systems. * dynamic state. * enables species to occupy challenging environments. * encompasses many body processes. * group of system-stabilizing relations characterized by negative feedback. * involve the influencing of the external environment. * involves negative feedback mechanisms. * is an important concept in physiology - the regulatory approach to motivation - one of the key concepts of biology - primarily renal, although control mechanisms are uncertain * is the ability of the organism to maintain a relatively stable internal environment - body regulating the metabolism optimally - body's internal balance or equilibrium - central theme of physiology - chemical equilibrium of the body - fundamental concept in Physiology - maintaining of equilibrium varying about a mean - maintenance of a constant internal environment * is the maintenance of a relatively constant internal environment - stable internal environmental - tolerable internal environment - viable internal environment - constant extracellular conditions within the body - relatively constant internal conditions - static conditions in the internal environment - the internal environment within specific limits - process of correcting imbalances - response to changing conditions that keeps the body in a stable state - system within our body that uses feed back to create a thermal balance - two people of the same sex living together - vital for survival * is, therefore, a fitting framework for the introductory study of physiology. * literally means same state, the desired state for a healthy plant. * major aspect with regard to such interactions within plants as well as animals. * natural event. * principle of the universe. * refers to maintenance of stable conditions in the internal fluid environment - metabolic balance maintained by several processes * refers to the a. b. c. d. organization of cellular structures - dynamic constancy of the internal environment - maintenance of consistent internal body conditions * regulates change. * requires adjustment - constant adjustment * state of stability and balance in the body's internal environment. * very important process of the body of a mammal.<|endoftext|>### situation | equilibrium: Market equilibrium * Think of there being only one bank that supplies and demands foreign exchange. * is achieved when customer transaction expectations are fulfilled - at the intersection of the supply and demand curves - efficient because it generates the highest possible total market value * occurs at the intersection of supply and demand. * occurs at the intersection of the aggregate demand and supply curves - when the quantity demanded equals the quantity supplied - where quantity demanded equals quantity supplied * reflects the way markets allocate scarce resources. Static equilibrium * exists when the line of gravity is within the base of support. * occurs when there is no action taking place. Thermal equilibrium * assures that the implosion pressure is very uniformly distributed. * exists if no heat flows between two objects which have a diathermic boundary. * is an important concept in thermodynamics * is the state of maximum entropy - subject of the Zeroth Law of Thermodynamics - when two systems reach same temperature * occurs when two bodies have the same temperature.
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### situation: Exclusion * are abuse and damage caused by accidents. * exists everywhere and creates great suffering in individuals and groups. * function of the American political culture. * is an important rodent control technique - way of limiting the exposure of other commodities to infestation - important in reducing numbers that get indoors - related to social class, gender and age - removal of a student from the classroom or school activities * is the precondition for misery, loneliness and trouble - rejection of admission of an immigrant trying to enter the country * layered phenomenon. * occurs when an immigrant tries to enter the country but is rejected at the border. * often leads to diminished productivity and losses in human potential. * results in success. * starts from the moment a group establishes itself and adopts an identity.<|endoftext|>### situation | exclusion: Social exclusion * can adopt different forms - impact on the unemployed or the homeless, the disabled or the elderly * has obvious effects on welfare spending and tax revenues. * is about institutions and actors. * is still another feature of poverty - the lived experience of large numbers of people * leads to despair and alienation. * refers to the continued, ongoing, ever-present loneliness and isolation. * term that refers to a range of complex social problems. Financial situation * change over years. * force many people into commuting. ### situation | hot potato: Soft coal * burns with a smoky flame. * hot potato. * is coal - dirty, but it makes heat - found in many states<|endoftext|>### situation: Imbalance * Any imbalance results in a change in the average temperature of the earth. * Most imbalances affect bodily functions - are caused by candidas - cause mental symptoms - result in physical weakness * Some imbalances affect growth - hair growth - steady growth * Some imbalances are caused by diseases - nutrition - poor nutrition - radiation - respiratory diseases - waste * Some imbalances cause depressions - electricity - illnesses - mental illnesses - static electricity - contribute to kidney functions - disrupt cellular functions - impact genetic predisposition * Some imbalances induce bacterial infection * Some imbalances lead to cellular injuries - osteoporosises - relate to ages - lack - situations * arises as the effect of negative causes. * can bias one toward the past, the future, or the present - cause disease - put excessive pressure on the heart and kidneys, especially in older people - problems * causes ear, nose and throat complaints, speech difficulties, and heart problems - frustration, and frustration causes fear * commonly accompanies dizziness, but can also be independant. * create problems - serious problems * departure from the optimum state in any body system, and the precursor to illness. * have causes - undesirable effects * is also cause through physical trauma - destructive to life - our world's sickness - unhealthy for the biosphere and the individual as well * lead to disasters - fatigue - illness and even to death * lend themselves to injury, and pain is often the result. * may have effects. * occurs on the network when something new gets advertised. * result in a condition known as methemoglobinemia ### situation | imbalance: Chemical imbalance * Most chemical imbalances cause mental symptoms * Some chemical imbalances cause illnesses * are a leading cause of sickness in fish - also a common culprit for any panic disorder * can trigger depressive episodes.
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### situation | imbalance: Hormonal imbalance * are an important cause for hair loss - common, including poor growth and short stature - often the cause of infertility * can also cause hypertension in some cases - lead to breast cancer - result in infertility - upset the oil balance and increase sebaceous gland activity - be the cause of noticeable thinning in teenagers - cause significant fatigue - contribute to diseases like endometriosis and breast or prostate cancer - shatter lives * causes different things in the different sexes. * contributing to impotence can also occur as a result of kidney or liver disease. * is also frequently responsible for the condition - assumed to be the cause * produce abnormal health, deterioration, and old age. * require proper diagnosis and can be treated medically.<|endoftext|>### situation | imbalance: Hormone imbalance * Some hormone imbalances are caused by nutrition - poor nutrition - can also contribute to cardiomyopathy * are also causes of skin allergies - more likely the closer a woman is to menopause * can also be a factor in unwanted inches around the middle - be life threatening, as with insulin and diabetes * can cause a lack of desire for sex and dryness in the vaginal area - diabetes, heart disease, tumor growth, infertility and birth defects * depend on it as well as prostrate trouble, skin problems and yeast infections. * influences the entire body, physically, emotionally, and mentally. * is arguably the most common cause of hair loss in females - one of the most important health issues for women today * play a direct role in the decline of cognitive functioning with aging. Metabolic imbalance * can occur as a result of fasting, vomiting or diarrhea. * is the major cause of overweight people. Muscle imbalance * can lead to muscle strains. * occurs when some muscles are spastic, while others are flaccid. Nutrient imbalance * can make nematode problems worse. * caused by low potassium and high nitrogen increases losses from stalk rot.
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### situation: Inclusion * Promotes the inclusion of everyone with a disability into society and the workforce. * Some inclusions are minute diamond crystals inside the larger crystal. * also means having the child with a disability included in the family and the community. * are accumulations of sulfatides. * are crystals in the cytoplasm and crystals in the nucleus - pinwheels - unusual in shape * are crystals in the cytoplasm, or unusual in shape - pinwheels, and unusual in shape * are crystals in the nucleus and amorphous X-bodies - viroplasma - differnt from blemishs, which are imperfections at the surface of the gemstone - generally other minerals, but they can also be water, gas, or petroleum based - involvement - membranous bodies, or viroplasma, or unusual in shape - other minerals found inside quartz crystals - situations - small fragments of foreign matter found in gemstones * belief in including and accepting all people. * bodies ultrastructural markers of hantavirus infected cells. * can also be liquid or gaseous - be solid, liquid, or gaseous - benefit children with and without disabilities * compounds with a sexipedal host. * creates an environment in which people want to stay. * flaw within a diamond, such as a crystal or fractures. * goal families reach from different paths. * happens when friends and family are involved - people make friends and care about each other * helps teach children to be more accepting of others who have disabilities. * induced by a specific virus have the same characteristic appearance across a host range. * is about belonging and participating in a diverse society - ensuring choices, having support, connections and being valued - learning to live WITH one another - membership and belonging to a community - actually an educational term that has different meanings to many people - how people deal with diversity, with difference, with their own frailty and mortality - one approach that provides all children with equal educational opportunities - part of the larger social movement towards diversity - people with and without disabilities participating together in all life activities - simply the process of acknowledging people with disabilities as people first * is the basis for unique friendships and relationships that benefit ALL children involved - dynamic that tends towards completeness - precondition for learning, happiness - for healthy living * means a sense of belonging - being connected with the mainstream of social life - integrating children who have special needs with their typical peers * refers to the behaviour of establishing and maintaining a degree of contact with people. * require consideration. ### situation | inclusion: Inclusion conjunctivitis * less severe disease than trachoma and usually clears up spontaneously. * milder form that occurs in both children and adults. Social inclusion * is the priority area for public expenditure and policy-making. * prerequisite for economic success. * promotes the values of interdependence and community. Purgatory * Purgatories are situations. * doctrine of divine mercy. * has a reputation for fresh powder and lots of sun. * is an invention of men - experienced through all our suffering whether it is physical, mental, or spiritual - paper and procedures - similar to jail - where the soul is tested * man made doctrine designed to keep men under the power and fear of other men * place of joy. * temporary state. * term used in the Catholic faith. * time of cleansing. Stressful situation * can trigger suicidal feelings. * cause some people to overeat. * occur during military operations * require exit strategies ### skates: Roller blade * are skates. * have a rigid plastic boot, similar to the boot used in snow skiing.
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### skating rink: Ice rink * Most ice rinks offer daily or weekly public skating sessions. * Some ice rinks have inadequate ventilation systems, or none at all, to clear the air. * are a good example where desiccant systems help reduce condensation on the ice sheet - places for people to play ice hockey and to go ice skating * have ice on the floor if they are inside , and on the ground if they are outside. * skating rink + Ice sledge hockey, Ice sledge hockey and ice hockey differences: Sports for the disabled :: Ice hockey :: Winter sports * Ice rink is same too. + Rink: Sports buildings :: Skating * Ice rinks have ice on the floor if they are inside, and on the ground if they are outside. Ice rinks are places for people to play ice hockey and to go ice skating. Roller skating * are skating. * is another way of exploring and enjoying the outdoors - fun for all ages - very much like riding a bicycle Speed skating * is also excellent cross training for runners, cyclists, and cross country skiiers - like a combination of flying and dancing * sport that's been around for centuries. * very exciting and intense sport. Sketch * are descriptions - drawing - summaries * includes sections.<|endoftext|>Skill * affect tasks. * are abilities that can be developed through life experiences, hobbies, or previous jobs - to perform a given activity and are usually improved with practice - ability - areas of expertise developed through education, training, and practice - capabilities that can be transferred from person to person - general skills which can be applied in a wide variety of work settings - practical behaviors that can be taught, practiced and improved - synonymous with competencies - talents, traits and practical knowledge * are the critical elements that consistently predict job success - knowledge and abilities that a person gains throughout life - means by which knowledge is acquired - practical ability to undertake a specific task in a defined environment - used for safety - ways of thinking, working, communicating, and investigating * bring joys. * evolve over time. * have effects - levels - maximum skill levels - similar effects - values * help animals. * include handle skills * is power * need for jobs - roles - survival * refer to developed capacities that facilitate learning or performance. * represent experience - more specific areas of knowledge or ability and increase with experience * systematic approach to information problem solving. * use in construction - residential construction * vary according to age and ability of children. ### skill: Basic skill * are a foundation for creativity, critical thinking and reasoning skills - abilities taught to function in a learning environment and gain further knowledge - cognitive processes - fundamental skills which are necessary for success in college-level courses * refer to competencies related to accessing, decoding, encoding, and locating. Cognitive skill * advance as a result of problem solving with play materials. * are the bedrock upon which language and social skills are built. * develop better with music and motor skills. * training generally targets offenders at high risk of recidivism.
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### skill: Communication skill * are also important, as is the ability to work independently - basic tools required for healthy living * are essential for effective interaction in both work and social settings - in any sphere of human interaction * are essential to success in any profession - the practice of almost all aspects of medicine * are important for communicating new knowledge and ideas - computer scientists - in the work of a respiratory therapist - to learning - integral to the education and effective function of physicians - key to every professional's career growth - the building blocks of good interpersonal relationships - vital to a person's success in the workplace - what make a person a good lover * can increase productivity and efficiency. * increase their value in daily life. * involve our ability to listen. * is the means through which human cultures find their expression. * refer to reading, writing, and speaking abilities as used in the workplace.<|endoftext|>### skill: Computer skill * are a vital part of the present day workplace - also critical in the engineering profession - an important part of anyone' s college career - essential for digital, and increasingly other forms of, photography - good only for working with computers - important for doing well in school and in the workplace - in demand in workplaces of all kinds - manual labor * enable employees to perform more efficiently and adapt to change with confidence. * make it easier for women to find a job. * vary in the art of engineering and music production. Conceptual skill * are the ability to formulate ideas. * involves the formulation of ideas. * is the ability to think in abstract terms. Expressive skill * focus on the development of speed, clarity, and fluency. * refer to the production of speech and language. Functional skill * are skills that are transferable from one job to another - the skills that employers like to hear about - things that people do everyday * reflect the ability to work with people, data and information or objects. Horsemanship * helps build the self-esteem necessary for recovery. * is an inherently dangerous practice and horses are inherently unpredictable animals - important to our country s history and lore - the one art for which it seems one needs only practice - with a learning process that anyone can learn ### skill | horsemanship: Natural horsemanship * holistic approach to working with horses. * is about respect and love for horses. Human skill * are extremely important to managers at top, middle, and lower or supervisory levels. * involve an understanding of human behavior and communicaiton processes - the ability to work well with other people, both individually and in a group * involves the ability to interact effectively with people.<|endoftext|>### skill: Interpersonal skill * Interpersonal Skills Treats others with respect, trust, and dignity. * are critical to both working with peers and leading others - essential in the work force * are essential to effective job performance - teamwork, as are negotiation and compromise - skills learnt from childhood and constantly refined - very important in the workplace - vital to entrepreneurial success * can energize or inhibit natural personality tendencies. * count in today's workplace. * go beyond the ability to communicate effectively. * involve cooperation, social skills, and communication skills. * is an area of concentration. Leadership skill * are life skills. * become the vehicle by which the leader achieves given objectives. * can create relationships between individuals that go beyond the enterprise - help mobilize people and resources * develop through experience and over time - when the barriers to effectively communicate are lowered * is as important as communication skill.
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### skill: Life skill * are abilities like listening, speaking, writing, negotiating, and meditating - that help an individual live a productive and satisfying life - personal an expression of the self - the long-range benefits youth gain from participation * cover a wide range of skills and abilities. * help deepen a mother's knowledge and awareness of living a healthy, productive life - our children shape their values and build their own personal fulfillment - youth become competent, capable and contributing individuals * relate to occupational, self, social, aesthetic, consumer, and scientific awareness. Listening skill * are a component of both language arts and music - important in high context cultures * help people understand what others think and feel.
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### skill: Literacy * Knowing how to read is essential for an individual to function in our society. * Literacies are skills - tell of different cultures with different ways with words * affects all social levels including the affluent, middle income and very poor children - every aspect of a person's life - many different aspects of society - people's access to decent jobs and thus to adequate incomes * also gives women a voice - includes knowledge of technology and problem solving skills * are the building blocks of life. * assumes the power of texts and encourages exposure to competing ideas and beliefs. * basic human right of every child - skill needed for full citizenship in our society * becomes a hierarchy of societies. * begins with our children and in our homes and schools. * builds communication and an individual's ability to read and write - self-confidence and cultural and societal awareness * can bring people together - change lives - have a direct impact on reducing welfare dependency, unemployment, and crime * characteristic of a culture. * complex matter involving the accessing, understanding, and use of information - phenomenon * component of every lesson or activity presented during the school day. * comprises both reading and writing tasks. * concept, a process, a set of skills, and a mode of behaviour. * consists of reading, writing, speaking, and listening effectively - writing as well as reading ability * constructive process, an attempt to create meaning as part of social action. * continues to be a major focus of libraries. * critical educational issue across the nation. * depends on a person s way of life - student's ability to read * developmental process. * develops from real life settings where literacy is used to accomplish real world tasks. * does form communities. * encompasses every form of written word - reading, writing, speaking and listening, viewing and representing * encourages people to seek medical help and adopt sound hygiene and nutrition. * enhances advancement of a community as a whole - respect, motivation and self-esteem * family legacy handed down from generation to generation. * fundamental building block of a lifetime of productivity, learning and fun - component of communication - issue for the medical profession - skill which affects life-long learning skills for individuals - that effects our entire community * gauge of one's language ability. * gives knowledge and illiteracy depicts ignorance. * good measure of educational achievement in developing regions. * has a different meaning when applied to different groups and in different situations - special role in guaranteeing the basic citizen competence to everybody * has a wide range of genres and functions, which are important to teachers and learners - and functions, which are important toteachers and learners - different meanings and functions for different cultural and linguistic groups - far reaching effects on society * has many definitions for many different people * impacts health knowledge, health status, and access to health services - income level, occupation, education, housing and access to medical care * includes reading, writing, speaking and listening. * involves language, and science relies upon it for communication - placing numbers into meaningful context in daily living - reading skills of a higher order - the ability to acquire information and communicate with others * involves the ability to gain access to written information - meaning from print and pictures - develop ment of communicative competence in written and oral discourse - development of communicative competence in written and oral discourse - expression of ideas and the freeing of the spirit - interrelatedness of reading and writing - use of a language in a variety of contexts - using both words and art to communicate messages * is about communication, and so is understanding - recognition, interpretation and communication, relative to the era - retaining dignity and self-respect in a lettered world - also integral to memory being one of the earliest information storage systems - among the oldest means of integrating different cultures * is an active phenomenon, deeply linked to personal and cultural identity - element in the framing of policies related to youth and seniors - essential tool for community development and wellness - extension of both reading and language - important part of all our lives - and has been very important to middle-class families in India * is another form of communication than orality - way to assist others and change their lives forever - approached as a form of cultural politics rather than a technical skill - at least as complex as carpentry - based on the number of students completing sixth grade - both the cause and effect of development - communication of intent and sentiment - completely different for someone who is blind or deaf * is considered a condition for political, economic and social reform - disease in the future - critical to individual education, employment and personal growth - crucial to all aspects of life, public and private - essential for success in school and in life * is essential to function effectively in a democratic society - fundamental to success in our knowledge-based society - incorporated into all areas of learning - integrated into the arts, science, math, social studies and technology - key to helping people become self-sufficient and realize their potential - mainly a social phenomenon, meant to bind society * is more than just reading and writing - learning to read and write words - reading a book and understanding it - reciting the alphabet * is much more than just reading and writing - the ability to read and write * is of central importance to development - vital importance to children - one thing that only improves with time and experience * is part of a language, so writing and reading develop alongside speaking and listening - language development in literate countries - real life concerns and issues in people's lives - particularly important for women - pivotal to human progress * is related to age independently of education as well - many policy issues - said to be the prerequisite of civilization - situated, meaningful, text-based interaction with others * is the ability to communicate effectively both orally and in writing - interpret, analyze, summarize, relate, and combine ideas - read, to write, and to comprehend what is read * is the ability to read, write, calculate, speak and understand - speak English, and compute in everyday life - understand, appreciate and use language - ability, in language , to make sense and to detect nonsense * is the basis for all learning - of personal power * is the cornerstone of society - the education every child needs and deserves - first step on the road to change and development * is the foundation of academic achievement - everything personal, social, economic and political - that supports our democracy, economy, culture and communities - gateway to education - key that unlocks a world of opportunity * is the key to all learning - being able to live and work successfully in today's society - increasing the participation of African-American men and boys - prosperity, on an individual, family and community basis - the success of deaf and hard of hearing students - norm among the younger generation - path to success and ultimately power - they basis for communication in the majority of our society - tied to economic success in most cases * is universal and almost all homes have electricity, telephones, and running water - for both women and men - used to look at how educated people are, for example how many adults can read and write - vital to success in the technology-saturated workplace * is, for example, a factor in crime prevention and the administration of justice. * key element in Bible translation. * learning occurs as young children participate in purposeful and meaningful activities. * lifelong process of learning how to make meaning from text. * major issue related to poverty - variable influencing health in a variety of ways * means greater productivity at the family, local and national level - knowing how to learn - more than being able to read books * means more than just knowing how to read and write - the ability to conceive images * necessary skill in itself and the foundation of other life skills. * now means more than the basic ability to read and write. * occurs in social, economic, political, cultural, family, and religious contexts. * range of tools that help people help themselves - and their children. * reflection of the total education experience. * responsibility of the public sector. * social, psychological, and linguistic process. * strongly influences individual and social well-being. * visual function. * vital building block in lifelong learning. + Human Development Index * Literacy is used to look at how educated people are, for example how many adults can read and write. One third of this is the 'gross enrollment ratio', which measures how many of children of schooling age attend school.
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### skill | literacy: Basic literacy * includes numeracy and information literacy. * is important at the elementary level - vital to the individual and to our way of life * refers to literacy experiences which occur during the school years. Braille literacy * involves reading, writing and the manipulation of text. * is just as important for the blind as print literacy is for the sighted. Cultural literacy * comprises the major texts and documents of Western civilization. * means consideration for the context of art. * requires detailed knowledge about the oppression of racial minorities. Early literacy * affects every part of a child's life. * is critical to later success in school - the foundation of a good education Economic literacy * contributes to a second class of knowledge. * feeds economic development and prosperity. * is akin to having a working knowledge of a foreign language - crucial in every facet of everyday decision making - essential to people making sound financial decisions - intrinsic to an understanding of the global economy and emerging markets - part of everyday living * vital skill, just as vital as reading literacy.<|endoftext|>### skill | literacy: Family literacy * builds on the strengths and addresses the needs of parents and their children. * encompasses ways parents and children use literacy at home and in their community. * involves a one- way transfer of skills from parents to children. * involves, and works with, children and families of all ages, genders and races. * is about improving skills of both children and their parents - rethinking the values and relevance of what is learned in school - whole-ness and connections and relationships and integration * powerful and innovative approach to education. * reduces dependency on public assistance and significantly increases employment. * strengthens the ability of families to participate fully in society. Health literacy * includes an overall understanding of how to use the health care system. * is about the entire process of exchanging healthcare information - the ability to read, understand, and act on health care information * problem without a defined constituency.
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### skill | literacy: Information literacy * competency needed by all. * concept that has emerged to describe the task ahead. * critical component in the education of students. * encompasses computer literacy. * forms the basis for life long learning - lifelong learning * includes the skills needed to find, evaluate, and communicate information. * includes, but goes beyond, information technology skills. * involves critical thinking - the ability to find, evaluate, and critically review material * is an essential skill for the office of citizen - important skill for students to acquire - increasingly important skill for everyone - another dimension of the digital divide - central to lifelong learning - critical in today's society - crucial in all three types of learning situations - essential to knowing how to learn - important to a liberal education - knowing how to find, analyze, and use information - more than computer literacy - part of the reasoning process - recognized as a critical life skill * is seen as building up a personal knowledge base in a new area of interest - controlling information - using information wisely for the benefit of others * is synonymous with knowing how to leam - the ability to access, interpret and respond to information * is the ability to find and use appropriate information for a specific purpose - use information effectively - information, evaluate it, and use it effectively - find, evaluate and use information - identify, locate and analyze information in any format - retrieve, manage, evaluate, and distribute information - glue that binds many contents areas together - keystone of lifelong learning - new keyword in higher education - skill of finding, evaluating and using information efficiently - term being applied to the skills of information problem-solving - to learning as yeast is to bread * key component of, and contributor to, lifelong learning. * living literacy, needed for even basic operation in a wired society. * pervades all learning. * process applicable to all content areas. * requires that students become judicious users of information - the critical evaluation of information Legal literacy * critical strategy in helping women recognize and advocate for their rights. * extends beyond awareness of laws. * is about making the law understandable and more accessible to ordinary people - low among both rural and urban-based women regardless of status and class Low literacy * has high cost consequences for society. * is closely related to unemployment, poverty and crime - the socio-economic factor prison inmates have most in common * limits life chances, regardless of how it is defined or measured - opportunities, resources, and the control which people have over their lives * weakens communities and undermines the nation.<|endoftext|>### skill | literacy: Media literacy * basic competency in today's world. * can increase our enjoyment of media - make a passive relationship active * concept that encourages inquiry about media. * gives children the tools needed to interact successfully with media. * is about being smarter than the advertisers - an essential part of exposing the consumerist goals underlying media content - associated with critical media initiatives - concerned with the process of understanding and using the mass media - education for social empowerment - known by a variety of names - necessary for responsible citizenship in a democratic society * is the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and create media messages - find, understand, and create media messages - successfully understand and utilize different forms of media - understand and evaluate all the symbol systems of a society - teaching of both the 'reading' and 'writing' of the mainstream media * promotes more active citizenship - the practice of comparing the structure and motivation of different media
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### skill | literacy: Quantitative literacy * concerns a student's familiarity with numbers and numerical manipulations. * deals with the most basic numerical needs of everyday life. * involves understanding the role of numbers in the world - using numbers and arithmetic operations to complete a task * is part of all subjects and the responsibility of all teachers - the ability to perform numerical operations in everyday life * means knowing how to reason and how to think. Scientific literacy * is essential to being a successful participant in the modern world - important to gain an advantage in the technologically advance society - more important today than ever before * is of increasing importance in the workplace - much importance in the workplace - the major concern in the developed world * means being able to use scientific knowledge and ways of thinking in daily life. * provides far more than knowledge and a way to view the world. Statistical literacy * is critical thinking about statistics as evidence for inferences. * part of numeracy. Technological literacy * helps our children succeed in school and succeed in the world of work. * is connected to both information and workplace literacy. * is much more than just knowledge about computers and their application - knowledge of computers and their application - the ability of a person to use, manage, assess, and understand technology * refers to a sophistication about and skill with certain materials and tools. Visual literacy * critical life skill. * declines as the lexicon of images narrows. * forms a basis for shared vision and communication. * is an important component of the practice of engineering - something learned, just as reading and writing are learned - the viewpoint which advocates the use of realistic visuals in instruction * key component to living a free existence. * uses visual data. Managerial skill * are essential to the operation of networks, information systems and databases. * can have payoffs in the performing arts.<|endoftext|>### skill: Motor skill * acquisition a function of maturation and experience. * are any physical activities that require complex movement of the body - motions carried out when the brain, nervous system, and muscles work together * are often an area of significant strength for individuals with Autistic Disorder - harder to increase once competency is attained - things like walking and riding a bike * begin with the learning of the sequence of muscular movements that underlies the skill. * come in two kinds. * improves as strength and voluntary muscle control increase. * is when babies start to learn how to control movement of part of the body - students work on their hand-eye coordination Organizational skill * are a critical skill for the contract professional - also important because clerical staff sometimes work for multiple people - essential for human resources managers * help leaders plan, prepare, conduct, and evaluate outdoor experiences. Parenting skill * are distinct from sexual orientation or gender identity. * can help parents meet children's needs to respect limits as well as to feel loved. * develop slowly, over time, through trial and error. * help build children's social capital. Salesmanship * are skills. * comprises every phase of human activity. Showmanship * is an art form of selling - important in exhibiting animals - the couples overall dancing ability * is the one area of livestock showing over which the exhibitor has the most control - showing where the exhibitor has control - overall presentation by the handler and canine when performing * requires training the animals to be in a ring with people and other animals. * team effort between the exhibitor and the animal.
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### skill: Social skill * Most social skills evolve over time. * are a collection of isolated and discrete learned behaviors - foundation for students' academic success and success in life - natural part of square dancing * are an important part of children's development - emotional intelligence - critical to success in school - extremely important for children * are important for resilience - in any job - likely to play a role in how two people meet - so important for any person to have to succeed in life - vital to self-concept and positive interactions with others - what a lot of kids with disabilities are lacking * encompass a broad range of human activity. * grow as the child plays. * involve a huge range of human behavior. * need for survival. Soft skill * are skills relating to people issues. * involve behavior, attitudes, and communication styles. Swordsmanship * helps develop well aligned and clearly focused movement, with power and subtlety. * is the art of killing people Teamwork skill * are important in the workplace and in the family. * refers to the ability to work with others on the job to achieve best results. Transferable skill * Transferable Skills are skills that are useful in many job situations. * are skills appropriate to the performance of other jobs in different industries - that can be 'transferred' or used in various settings Virtuosity * involves taking a common skill and working hard to perform the task better. * is films. ### skillfulness: Expertise * is ability - the skill of using knowledge to create something unique * leads to selections.<|endoftext|>### skillfulness: Mastery * board game of skill and strategy for two players. * has a long history in various forms of education. * is also an important skill to have at work - domination - perhaps the most commonly recognized form of thinking - simply an art of manipulating men and materials to achieve one's goals * is the ability of distinction - opposite of memorization * leads to freedom from the fear of death, which in turn is the freedom to live. * means the ability to complete a set of problems accurately within a specified time frame - respond with correct answers rapidly ### skillfulness | mastery: Personal mastery * function of the quality of our seeing. * is one of the five building blocks of learning organizations. ### skills: Good horsemanship * is critical to success in any horse-related sport. * philosophy and a way of life. ### skin soothers: Organic herb * are skin soothers. * help to soothe, heal, and regenerate healthy skin. * soothe and rejuvenate.
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### skin-dive: Scuba diving * are capable of dangerous activities - hard work - hobbies - human activities * can be an intoxicating experience - physically and mentally challenging and requires good health - cause decompression sickness in the fetus * dangerous sport. * favorit hobby. * great sport for seeing the undersea nature - sport, but it can be very hazardous to an inexperienced or careless diver * has a culture - particular hazards related to depressurization * hobby for the whole family. * involves going on boats to get to dive sites. * is all boat diving around the Solitary Islands - also physi- cally demanding * is also very popular, and is growing every summer - always an adventure whether drifting over a reef or chasing after lobsters - among the fastest growing recreational activities in the United States * is an adventure sport, and as such, it has inherent risks - easy, exciting, and accessible sport - inherently dangerous activity that can result in serious injury or death - easy to learn - more than a sport - one of the most exciting recreational sports in the world * is popular as well - because of the many different kinds of life living in the water - the perfect way to witness the underwater world up close * is very popular in Lake George - certain areas providing excellent visibility and safe conditions * is very popular in the Arabian Gulf and the Red Sea - Keys * lifestyle and can be very rewarding. * major activity throughout marine protected areas in the Caribbean. * means leaving the world behind for a short time. * particular risk for people with asthma. * popular activity in the resort places of East, West and Borneo resorts - on board, including, introductory and certified dives * requires a certification which takes about four days to complete - heavy exertion - proper certification and training * safe and fun activity, when enjoyed by properly trained individuals. * worldwide sport. + Fiji, Tourism: Fiji :: Commonwealth member states * Retrieved April 2010. Fiji has many soft coral reefs. Scuba diving is a common tourist activity. More budget resorts are being opened in remote areas, which provides more tourism opportunities. + Komodo National Park, People living in the park and tourism: World Heritage Sites in Asia :: National parks :: Lesser Sunda Islands :: Indonesia :: Biosphere reserves * About 4,000 people live within the park. Scuba diving is popular because of the many different kinds of life living in the water.<|endoftext|>### skin-dive: Snorkeling * can be too shallow, but scuba diving can be intimidating. * frequent activity on Galapagos tours. * fun sport, but only when one is comfortable. * great family sport enjoyed by all age groups - way to view the underwater world and all the wonders that it holds * is also extremely popular in the Cayman Islands - to introduce scuba diving to the whole family * is an activity that is best perfected through feeling and repetition - educational and exciting activity that the whole family can enjoy together - ideal activity for people of all ages and interests to share with each other - inherently dangerous activity that can result in serious injury or death - unobtrusive way to view what lives in our oceans and waterways - great right from the shore, Gazing at fish and coral on the ocean floor - like being in an aquarium - one of the most popular activities in Hawaii - for good reason - part of a tour of the islands, or between dives on diving trips - participation in the aquatic wilderness - perhaps the easiest methods of immersing oneself in a true wilderness environment - the best way to become familiar with the flora and fauna * is the easiest and most common way of visiting a coral reef - introduction to the oceans and seas - least expensive way to participate in exploring the underwater world * safe, easy activity that virtually anyone can master quickly and enjoy enormously.
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Skirt * Some skirts are part of coats - diapers - garments - leggings - nightdresses - sweatshirts - underwears * are dresses * are located in closets - shops - suitcases - one of the earliest clothes in human history - part of garments * come in contact. * feature zippers. * have length - materials - patterns * includes lap covering - sections ### skirt: Mini * are automobiles. * tend to grow slower and mature faster. Short skirt * can work as well, especially when paired with knee-high boots. * have a tendency to make men polite. ### slavery: Serfdom * are bondage. * is the forced labour of serfs, on the fields of the land owners. Serfs got protection and the right to work on the leased fields. * is abolished in Austria - Russia - slavery * varies from slavery in many ways. Servitude * degrades people to such a point that they come to like it. * is slavery
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Sleep * accounts for about one third of our life and it is necessary to our well being. * actually becomes worse, with long-term use of sleeping pills. * affects almost every physiological and psychological process - and in turn is affected by almost every physiological and psychological process * allows the body, especially it's organs, to rest and rebuild - brain to go to work, filing and storing the day's events * also affects some kinds of epilepsy in complex ways - allows the joints to rest - builds up the immune system * also has a significant impact on an individual's psychological state - an important role in physical healing * also helps renew mental and emotional balance - the body, as does healthy eating and exercise - means ignorance - plays an important role in the regulation of stress - reduces fatigue and stress * apnoea condition in which breathing stops briefly and repeatedly during sleep. * apnoea is the commonest form of daytime sleepiness and poor night time sleep - medical term for when a person ceases breathing during sleep - temporary cessation of breathing while sleeping - occurs with excessive obesity * appears to be important for human learning as well - play a role in the way that memories are formed * basic function of the brain, whose function still remains unknown - necessity of life * becomes lighter with age, and accordingly is more easily disturbed by noise, light, and pain - more troublesome as people get older * can involve breathing - deep relaxation - dreaming - roll overs - sweat * commodity when a newborn arrives. * complex phenomenon consisting of several phases during which breathing control varies - process involving virtually all organs and systems of the body * complex, active process that is just now being understood. - in which the mind is completely at rest and is shut off from the outside world - of unconsciousness * cures many ills. * cyclical process. * disturbances Some perpetrators sexually abuse their victims in the victims own bed. * does change with age. * dynamic process, during which the brain is very active. * dynmaic bodily function. * embarrasses the respiratory system in obese or cardiopulmonary patients. * ends with awakens. * falls into the category of health. * form of spiritual renewal. * gives a rest to the frontal lobes, the most active part of the brain while awake - our brains a chance to rest and recharge - the brain a chance to organize and archive memories * good recharger of the body both physically and mentally. * greatly affects our health. * helps brain work - in the recovery from the periods of paralysis but the paralysis can recur upon waking - restore energy in their rapidly growing bodies - the body fight infection * helps to harmonise body and mind and maintain a healthy balance - restore both physical functioning as well as mental functioning * highly organized sequence of events that follows a regular, cyclic program each night - regulated , necessary body process * improves muscle tone and skin appearance. * influences our physical, psychological and social well being. * involves great changes in brain activity. * is about resting the conscious mind and letting the subconscious take full flight. * is also a means of relating to the blink - time for restoring mental energy - vital factor in mental ability and concentration - fundamental to fitness success - important because of dreams * is an acquired habit - active state with many different components in a neurological sense - active, highly organized sequence of events and physiological conditions * is an activity that human beings engage in for about one-third of their lives - which consumes approximately one-third of the human life - antidote for stress - aspect of life which has been strangely neglected by the psychologist - emerging area of research and intervention for occupational therapists * is an essential component of our physiology - element of healthy living - part of overall good health - physiological state - extremely important part of total fitness - imperfect fulfillment of death, nature's prophecy of the future death - important factor in all our lives * is an important part of everyone's life - feeling better and living better - integral part of one's working day - interruption, a result of caffeine deprivation * is as important as breathing or eating - food for good health and a good mood - for our health as diet and exercise - to health as exercise or good nutrition * is as necessary to health as food and water, and rest is no substitute for sleep - life as food and water - sustain life as food and exercise * is crucial for normal thermoregulation and energy conservation - to good health - death without the responsibility - difficult when stores are open, other people are awake, and the sun is shining - disturbed radically in space - effective in aborting many migraines * is essential for repair and rejuvenation of the physical and mental self - the maintenance of good health, both physically and mentally * is essential to good health as it refreshes the body and the mind - life and the quality and quantity of sleep is essential to good health - performing well and feeling healthy - physical, emotional, and mental health - fundamental to a healthy life - important for keeping stress away - located in motels * is motivated by the goal of dreams - entertainment - exhausteds - recreation - rests - tireds * is necessary for normal functioning of the brain - the body to perform many cognitive and physical tasks at an optimal level - to human physical and emotional well-being * is of primary importance at all stages of human development - the brain and for the brain - often difficult, and appetite and sexual desire often drop off dramatically - one of the events that modify the timing of secretion for certain hormones * is one of the most basic factors in effective stress management - commonly overlooked activities in most people's everyday lives - complex biological processes, and it likely has multiple primary functions - important components of emotional equilibrium - necessities of human life-as important as food or water - our creator's gift to rejuvenate our bodies - part of life - period of retraction of cytoskeleton - regulated homeostatically - sound and prolonged * is the best antidote for fatigue, even if it is in two to three hour increments - way to recover from mental and physical fatigue after a day of hard work or study - bodies way of recharging itself * is the body's natural way of recovering from the stressors of life - reset button - brother of death - food of the poor - forgotten component of fitness - foundation of our health and well being - guardian of health - key to existence - lesser death, and death is the greater sleep - likeness of death - modification engendered by the abeyance and absence of mental contents - only thing that can overcome fatigue - single most important factor in good health - standard or general word - taste of death * is the time for our unconscious to be most active - the body can undergo repair and detoxification - when the body repairs the damage done to our cells that day - time periods - ubiquitous among animals and is essential for life - vital for a newborn puppy's development - when our minds and bodies are rejuvenated * lowers blood pressure, while nervousness, stress, anxiety, activity, and excitement raises it. * means different things to different forms of animal life. * natural and essential part of our existence * necessary and vital biological function - component of a healthy lifestyle * needs throughout lives vary from person to person. * normally occurs during the time of reduced physiological functioning. * occupies one third of our existence. * offers the body the chance to rest and restore itself. * particular state of nature, an image of death, inactivity of the senses. * period during which a person rests body and mind - of inactivity with raised thresholds to arousal by external stimuli * physical necessity, required to build up the growing organism. * plays an important part in building muscle, that's when all the growth takes place. * poor substitute for caffeine - coffee * privileged time that guarantees an optimum period for memory consolidation. * provides an opportunity for the body to repair and rejuvenate itself - power to energize the body and the mind - relaxation and rest * reason to live. * reduces the metabolic rate and body temperature in endothermic animals. * refers to spiritual sleep. * refreshes the body and mind. * remedy for every disease. * restful state of the body when there is little or no conscious thought - time when our bodies replentish themselves and prepare for the next day * restores energy to the body, particularly to the brain and nervous system. * seizures Some people only experience seizures during their sleep. * serves to prevent damage to the heart from excess stress, and to restore our depleted energy. * sign of weakness. * significant value for producing better physical function and mental states. * strengthens the body's ability to fight infections. * talking is more common than sleep walking, but the two often occur together - normal phenomenon and is of no medical or psychological importance * tends to become fragmented as people age. * type of unconsciousness and state of being unaware of the world. * usually returns to normal once the source of the stress is relieved - suppresses frequency of contractions * valued commodity, somewhat short of supply. * very important factor in their growth and development. * vital part of day to day life. * walking - most commonly affects children - occurs in the first two to three hours after falling asleep * well-studied means of escape from stress, confusion, and conflict for many people.
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### sleep: Adequate sleep * boosts the immune system. * helps as well, since sleep helps regulate hormone levels. * is also very important for a right mental attitude and a healthy personality - central to physical and emotional health - essential to rest the eyes - just as important as nutrition and exercise - part of a healthy lifestyle and promotes feelings of wellness - so important to the immune system as well<|endoftext|>### sleep: Deep sleep * begins to be replaced by longer periods of lighter sleep after age thirty. * is comparable to quiescence - followed by REM sleep - necessary for growth and healing * is the gateway to hibernation - part of sleep that our body and brain needs to recover from the day - thought to be the more restful stage of sleep, and important for growth * special condition of it, in which the activity of all functions of awareness cease. + Sleep, Different categories of sleep: VOA Special English words * There are three or four stages of NREM-sleep. Stage I is just barely sleeping, or dozing. Stage II is also light sleep. Normally, in adult humans, about half of the time spent asleep is spent in light sleep. Stages III and IV are called deep sleep. Deep sleep is necessary for growth and healing. It can be quite difficult to awaken someone who is in stage III or stage IV sleep. Enough sleep * can help prevent fatigue. * is crucial in preventing fatigue. Good sleep * adds to the quality of life. * is essential for good health - the vocal cords - what recharges people batteries Inadequate sleep * can result in poor attention, irritability, and fatigue - short tempers, lower motivation, slower reflexes and more mistakes * is an important contributor to poor school performance. * leads to poor concentration, inability to remember, crankiness, and sluggishness - short-term memory recall * makes people tired. Insufficient sleep * can also be extremely dangerous, leading to serious or even fatal accidents - lead to serious or even fatal accidents - result in mental and physical health and even premature aging * causes automobile accidents - headaches * is associated with decreased immune system functioning.
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### sleep: Lack of sleep * adds to decrease in motivation and slowing of memory. * affects our ability to concentrate, can alter moods and compromise health - judge accurately * can also affect their mood and behaviour - be a silent killer, especially when teens get behind the wheel - contribute to acne formation - make interpersonal relationships more discordant - cause all kinds of problems - even cause skin problems, such as acne - exacerbate stress - have a significant impact on daily functioning and productivity - interfere with alertness and mood - kill humans a lot more quickly * can lead to fatigue and a decreased sense of well-being - problems in school and on the job, sickness, and possible even death - tired lifeless skin and circles under the eyes - magnify test anxiety * can make children irritable and hyperactive, and can result in behavior problems - it difficult for a person to perform normal activities - occur a number of ways - result in symptoms other than snoring - trigger mania - worsen the symptoms of the illness in the impaired person * causes a desire to sleep - health problems like fatigue, stress, and increased susceptibility to disease * common contributor to tension headaches. * increases the risk of having an episode of mania in someone with bipolar disorder. * interferes with the body's natural restorative and rejuvenative process. * is also a problem for teen- agers - teen-agers - associated with irritability, impatience, anxiety, and depression * is often a result of another physical or emotional problem - an important factor in fibromyalgia - one of the major causes of stress - one of the most common symptoms of fibromyalgia - the most common trigger of mania - twice as common among working people than among the unemployed and pensioners * leads to accidents * serious problem resulting in diminished mental functioning. * tends to magnify the negative effects of stress. Normal sleep * consists of two types. * goes through different stages. * helps to restore mental and physical energy. * is as many hours as a person needs to be bright and alert the following day - comprised of various periods of different types of sleep - essential to a healthy and productive life - punctuated by many periods of arousal * occurs in a series of cycles. * takes up a large amount of time in a fast-paced world. * varies considerably from person to person. Poor sleep * affects more women than men and is reported by one in three adults. * can be a side effect of some medications. * caused by sleep apnea major public health problem. * is often related to behaviors and habits that contribute to insomnia problems. + Sleep, Sleeping problems: VOA Special English words * There are many diseases that cause poor sleep. Fever can lead to bad dreams. Poor sleep can be a side effect of some medications. Restful sleep * is also an important part of our overall health - as important as exercise or a healthy diet in maintaining overall health - important to well-being * restores energy and allows the body to renew itself. Sound sleep * improves learning, memory and performance. * is also a cause to invalidate ablution. * provides the opportunity for the brain to release toxins and recover from stress. * sign of health. Sleepiness * can be dangerous - part of it, although sleepiness can also be caused by many other things * increases the likelihood of such lapses. * slows a person s reaction time, decreases awareness and impairs judgment - reaction time, decreases awareness, and impairs judgment
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### sleepiness: Daytime sleepiness * can be the symptom of a serious medical disorder called narcolepsy. * is associated with both inability to fall asleep and stay asleep at night - due to disturbed sleep - only one consequence of sleep apnea * is the most common sleep-related disorder of adolescence - primary symptom for sleep apnea * normal but temporary side effect. * predicts mortality and cardiovascular disease in older adults. Excessive sleepiness * has a negative effect on students. * is usually the first symptom of narcolepsy. Sleeplessness * impairs the ability to make good judgments on the job. * is also common during pregnancy, especially in the later weeks - both a symptom and an immediate cause of cerebral disorder * problem that everyone has experienced. * sometimes signals a serious illness. Sleeve * Some sleeve is part of garments. * covers tattoos. * includes cuffs - sections * is cases. - shirts * protects wrists. ### sleeve: Long sleeve * are essential for climbing without sunburn - more likely to ignite if they touch a heat source * can actually reject more solar heat than they keep in body heat. * is sleeve.<|endoftext|>Slide * are descents - foil * are located in laboratories - parks - made in grass, dirt, sand, or snow - motion - part of playgrounds - photos - plate glass - the most frequent cause of injury for children under the age of six * are the narrow trails muskrats make where they enter and leave the water - nutria make where they enter and leave the water - paths beavers make where they enter and leave the water - tunnels to the center of the earth * includes sections. * is an artifact * move as large bodies by slipping along one or more failure surfaces. * program that can display a bunch of images of various formats in a slide show fashion. + Evacuation slide: Aviation safety * Some slides are designed to act also as life rafts if the plane lands in the water. + Microsoft PowerPoint, Operation: Microsoft Office :: Presentation software * Slides can also form the basis of webcasts. + Playground slide: Playground equipment * Slides are made of metal or wood. They must have a smooth surface so that the child does not hurt himself. ### slide: Rock slide * Most rock slides occur because the hillslope and rock layers dip in the same direction. * are a hazard to walruses on terrestrial haulouts and occasionally result in mortality. ### sliding scale: Human value * are the contemporary currency of commerce - hallmark of human evolution and the basis of a peaceful and prosperous world - universal - what people measure, rather than the value of things * derive directly from reality and human nature. * have a fourth values, the emotive. * is always higher than any market value. * provide moral centers for historical narratives. * sliding scale.<|endoftext|>Slime * All slimes can potentially harm surfaces, especially wood. * Most slime contains chemicals - covers skin - has odor - slimes are tangles of long, chainlike polymer molecules * Some slime absorbs moisture - affects skin - contains nitrogen - deters predators - is secreted by hagfishes - prevents dehydration - protects hagfishes * can form that clog heat exchangers. * gooey substance that kids love to play with. * has components * helps to trap sediment and nutrients. * is made by reacting just two compounds or ingredients - mostly proteins - produced by bacteria that infect wounds and diseased tissues in humans * is the agony of water - exudate generated from wetwood and is toxic to growing areas of the tree - thus fundamental to the success of many bacteria, for many different reasons * is useful in mating too - to bacteria for several reasons * mould cells proliferate as unicellular amoebae, which feed on bacteria in the soil. * serves purposes.
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Slipper * also keep out sound and wetness. * are a kind of indoor shoe - footwear * are located in bedrooms - beds - homes - necessary at many temples, shrines and castles - shoes * includes half soles * usually match the color of the pollera. + Shoe: Footwear * One type of shoe is trainers. Their main purpose is to make running, walking, or jogging easier by making the weight of the shoe lighter and the sole of the shoe softer. Leather shoes are formal shoes. There are worn in business and ceremonial functions. There are also worn for fushion. Slippers are a kind of indoor shoe. They are often worn when it is cold. Rubber boots are used in rainy day. The shoes with a high heel which women wear are called pumps. ### slipper: Bootie * Some booties have snaps or ties at ankle. * can prevent frost bite and protect paws from sharp ice and salty sidewalks.<|endoftext|>### slipper: Snowboarder * Some snowboarders like to ride over jumps and do tricks - use snowboard sizing calculators * also glide just as fast as skiers, due to the large surface area of their boards. * can carve turns and prefer aggressive speed and terrain - turn with a slight carve and prefer a variety of speed and terrain * compete in the half pipe and big air jump. * generally expend larger amounts of energy than do Alpine skiers. * have a style all their own - access to all alpine terrain * love to carve the waves and glades. * suck because they tear up the good snow and shave it into drywall sheeting. * take challenges and do things differently. * tend to injure their wrists and ankles more often than skiers. + Snowboarding: Winter Olympic sports :: Winter sports :: Board sports Slit * Some slits are covered by membranes - improve respiration * are bands - cracks - noise control devices - openings * includes sections. * is an opening * provide spatial information along their axis. ### slit: Pharyngeal slit * Some pharyngeal slits improve respiration. * are present in the embryos of organisms as diverse as fish, chickens, and humans. Slot * are positions - receptacles - slot machines - status - trails * game that anyone can play. * refers to the slot grid. ### sloughing: Ecdysis * involves many behaviors that are unique to ecdysis. * is the last moulting for the chrysalis upon which emerges the adult butterfly. * vulnerable period for trap-door spiders period. Molt * occur about once a year, usually during the summer. * usually begin on the belly and spread to the sides and back, finishing with the tail. ### slow death: Crucifixion * are capital punishment - executions - torturing * is an execution * is the process where a person is nailed or bound to a cross or a stake - torture and execution of a person by fixation to a cross * means the giving up of the whole personality. * slow death. * slow, tortuous death.<|endoftext|>### slow process: Hair growth * Most hair growth depends on concentration - dietary concentration - factors - genetics - occurs on tops - takes time * Some hair growth lasts for years. * begins inside the hair follicle - under the skin in structures called follicles * depends on a lot of factors * follows a cycle. * is controlled by several factors, including nutrition, hormones, and time of year - fastest from the age of sixteen to the late twenties - one of the topics that a lot of people are interested in - patchier in females due to presence of second X chromosome - slower and remains thinner, especially around the crown and hairline - stimulated and lost hair starts to grow back - under hormonal control - over the next decade * slow process. * starts at the roots, but hair damage is concentrated near the tips. * tends to peak at one year and there slow decline for regrowth after one year. Social evolution * is as dynamic as biological evolution. * needs to be examined in relation to the distinct environments of each society.
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### slow-ticking time bomb: Arsenic poisoning * can cause all sorts of health problems - neurological problems, numbness and paralysis - such woes as kidney and liver failure as well as respiratory problems - lead to cancer of the lung and skin * is the cause. * slow-ticking time bomb. ### small business development: Market development * is small business development. * translates into economic development. ### small family farms: Organic farm * Most organic farms are small family farms. * Some organic farms use organic pesticide * minimize that risk by eliminating the use of harmful chemicals. * tend to be more diversified than conventional farms - smaller and more labour-intensive<|endoftext|>Small group * allow global friendships to develop and continue for a lifetime. * are also the setting where real life-change often takes place - instrumental in personal growth - ministry based groups that support each others' needs and share common interests - scriptural places * are the essential human group - hearth of Living Water - where faith is experienced and developed regardless of the purpose of the group * become the environment where community can develop. * can reach people and change their lives - serve as an opportunity to meet other people and develop meaningful relationships * change individual lives. * engage in activities designed to help children understand and express their feelings. * have been know to herd and prey on schools of fish. * promote trust and a sense of belonging.<|endoftext|>Small object * are a choking hazard. * can choke a puppy. * have a large surface area compared to the volume. * present a choking hazard to young children. + Surface area to volume ratio: Mathematics * The 'surface area to volume ratio' of an object is the relationship between two measurements. It is the ratio of Surface area to volume. It shows the comparison between the size of the outside of an object and the amount it can hold inside it. Small objects have a large surface area compared to the volume. This gives them a large ratio of surface to volume. Larger objects have small surface area compared to the volume so they have a small surface area to volume ratio. ### small scales: Good sport * are small scales - television shows * is about being 'good sports'. Small state * Some small states have biennial budgets because their legislatures meet every two years. * are more likely to have a culturally homogenous population. ### small surgical procedure: Oophorectomy * is ablation - the surgical removal of the ovaries * small surgical procedure.<|endoftext|>### small: Small one + Electrical generator: Electricity :: motors * Different things can be used to make the generator head spin. Some small ones are cranked by some's arms or legs. Bigger ones are connected to an engine. The biggest ones use a steam turbine or hydroelectric water power. Some use wind power. Whatever makes it turn, the generator converts this energy into electrical energy. + Submarine: Warships * Most large submarines are war vessels. Some small ones are used for scientific or business purposes. Some rich people buy their own to explore under the sea and look at fish. A submarine is always called a boat, not a ship. Smaller object * Any smaller object traveling around a larger object is called a satellite. * cool off more slowly than larger objects. * create simple, bowl-shaped craters. * have a greater surface area relative to their volume, and hence mass. * lose heat faster, as a consequence. ### smalls: Airline seat * are smalls. * have designations.
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### smogs: Photochemical smog * are smogs. * can cause eye irritation and poor visibility. * involves the action of sunlight on hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides in the air. * is already a health hazard in many of the world's largest cities - brown smog, the gray-brown haze that fills the air in many cities - caused by the release of nitrogen oxides, mainly from motor vehicles - more likely to build up and hang like a blanket in the air on still days * requires large quantities of sunlight, which are absent in bars and restaurants - neither smoke nor fog ### smooth skinned: Papaya fruit * Most papaya fruit contains carbohydrates - is produced by trees * Some papaya fruit contains cholesterol. * are smooth skinned. * fly larvae and adults have been found in Florida in every month of the year. ### smut fungus: Loose smut * affects plants and yield by converting the grain and parts of the head to smut spores. * causes the head to turn black and appear to have been burned. * is one of the most common and easily recognized diseases of small grains - within the germ of the kernel * smut fungus Snowdrift * includes sections. * take the shape of waves, frozen in action. Snowman * Snowmen are now on the endangered species list. * Some snowmen have carrot noses, others have coal noses. * are figures. * is made from Warm and Bright fleece.<|endoftext|>Sobriety * has little to do with character. * is abstinence - an axiom which has attracted the attention of theoretical computer scientists - associated with foreignness, and a lack of social engagement - having consumed no alcoholic beverage for the preceding eight hours - something that college students often neglect - sometimes a hard road - temperance * is the moderation of our affections in the pursuit and use of earthly things - number one priority in a recovering person s life - release from all compulsive and destructive sexual behaviors * is, rather, the process of living a completely new and non-compulsive kind of life. * means abstaining from alcohol at all times - sobriety, period - no drinking and no drugging * replaces drunkenness. * way of life based on spiritual principles. ### social alchemy: True alchemy * means the return to the true self. * takes place in our minds. Social ancestry * Ancestry can be a proxy for race - determines the amount of power a god or goddess wields - family tree * Ancestry is as significant as personality in describing individuals - inheritances - social group ### social ancestry: Common ancestry * explains similarities in basic body functions. * is worked out from the number of synapomorphies among taxa. Family line * Many family lines travel at least ten generations, and some for more than sixty generations. * Some family lines are just more prone to the whacky ovulation cycles that cause double yolks. * is ancestry * list only the names of known descendants with birth and death dates. Phratry * Phratries are larger and more inclusive kinship groups than unilineages and clans. * is ancestry ### social ancestry | sept: Fibrous septa * exist between the spiraling layers. * extend from the mediastinum into the body of the testis. Social assemblage * An assemblage social group * Assemblages dominated by porcelaneous species characterize shallow tropical environments.<|endoftext|>Social audience * An audience is gathering * Audience social group. * Audiences are gathering - groups of people * Audiences are located in arenas - auditoriums - churchs - concert halls - movie theaters - movies - presentation - schools - shows - sporting events - stadiums - studios - theatres - multitudes - the oxygen on which the arts and artists thrive * Audiences consist of members - have awareness - identify actors * Audiences include biotechnology companies - women
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### social audience: Gallery * Galleries are audiences - balconies - buildings - corridors * Galleries are located in art museums - large cities - rooms * Galleries are used for art - exhibitions - display art * Galleries have appearances - sandpaper appearances * Galleries includes bases - ceilings - doorways - floors - room light - walls - show images * forests Forests along rivers. * is an audience * pre-emergent herbicide that can be used before germination early next spring. Readership * are audiences. * is affected by gender, particularly by age, by levels of education and income - the people who are reading the paper and seeing the ads<|endoftext|>Social clan * A clan social group * All clans have places to which their spirits return when they die. * Clans are defined by the acoustic behavior of pods - family groups - games * Clans are groups of people who play together often and have a set team structure - players that unite - madeof families who have common from common ancestor - matriarchal, named after plants and animals - people grouped together around a common theme * Clans are teams specialised in playing certain games against other clans - that simply love to play the game and challenge other teams - usually exogamous * Clans consist of a single breeding pair, young birds, and sons of the breeding male - people related by blood and marriage who claim descent from a common ancestor - often consist of a dominant male, a dominant female, and their subordinate offspring * Clans usually defend a territory, which contains the foraging and denning areas - hold property and have ceremonial and social control functions * Most clans are exogamous and matrilineal * Some clans have several different origins located in different parts of Scotland - take their names from nature and wildlife ### social clan: Family tree * Most family trees provide seeds. * Some family trees have beautiful leaves, but some just have a bunch of nuts. * are history * show the genealogy of the earliest patriarchs. ### social clan | family tree: Bloodline * Some bloodlines are prone to ear, eye and respiratory problems - have a higher prevalence of cysts than others * are again the arbiters of identity. * rise and fall for many reasons. Totem * are a particularly relevant example for the cultural study of dinosaurs - animals which represent groups of humans - emblems - images with authority - kin - sacred to Native cultures - tools with which to tell stories and keep a society's history * perform many functions.
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Social colony * A colony body * Colonies achieve dimensions - adapt to different elevations, or degrees of drought, or soil types * Colonies also contain adult worker ants that feed and care for the queens and developing brood - form in tree cavities and under loose tree bark * Colonies are an adaptation to limited nesting and feeding areas - animal groups * Colonies are areas that are controlled by an outside country - where several stork families live together - beneficial because they provide collective defense against predators - bodies - colonies - generally more complex and are composed of more individual cells - important, but they're rare because they're expensive to build and slow to grow - large and can contain many queens - large, often containing hundreds of queens - multiple organisms living together, which can be multi- or unicellular - become workers * Colonies can be brittle and hard to distinguish from one another - characterized based on their color, shape, consistency, and type of edge they have - polygynous, which means they have more than one queen - begin producing new queens within six months of founding - consist of several hundreds of birds living in one big tree - form different shapes, and can even form different cell types - occupy and use a wide area of land to support themselves - reach considerable size, consisting of a large number of individual polyps - sometimes contain thousands of individuals - take up more complex forms because of an extra ingredient - life * Colonies compose of individuals - many individuals - numerous individuals * Colonies consist of adults * Colonies consist of many individuals - small individuals * Colonies contain ants - hosts - members - differ in shape, size, color, texture, type of margin, and other characteristics - displaying wild type phenotypes have mutant genes in different complementation groups - even thrive in the stumps of dead trees * Colonies experience problems - significant problems - find homes - form on new growth and persist on the backs of leaves as shoots harden off - grow best in an anaerobic or microaerophilic environment using blood agar * Colonies have ants - churches - crabs - establish churches - multiple queens, which also contributes to their survival - organizations - social organizations - soldier ants - structures - include individuals - living on a gastropod shell are either female or male * Colonies may have poor survival * Colonies need food - protection - special protection - supplemental food * Colonies nest in soil and in voids like hollow doors and walls - voids likehollow doors and walls * Colonies occupy areas - occur in regions * Colonies often contain other species of birds - number in the hundreds and even thousands * Colonies perform different roles - possess queens - produce offspring - provide habitats - reach ages - require protection - send off large numbers of winged reproductive termites, or swarmers - show three different growth form 'phases' - start with a single king and queen and develop slowly over the years * Colonies suffer damage - little damage * Colonies survive for long time - many years * Colonies to provide pollination services - usually contain a single queen who is responsible for producing the eggs - vary enormously in strength and pollination effectiveness * Colony social group. * Many colonies gain independence but are still financially dependent on capitalist countries - practice religious freedom and seperation of church and state - take on a green colour because they contain algae * Most colonies compose of individuals - consist of individuals * Most colonies consist of many individuals * Most colonies contain ants * Most colonies have a basic flight pattern as they leave and return to the hive - only one queen - live in caves, mines and attics - start to disperse soon after the young are weaned * Most colonies survive for long time * Some colonies become genetic diversity - maintain genetic diversity * Some colonies can consist of hundreds or even thousands of individuals * Some colonies consist of animals - bees - female workers - millions of ants * Some colonies contain animals * Some colonies form global societies * Some colonies have cell types - conductivity - fertile queens - immature stages - kings - pairs - pheromone - population size - queen wasps - single polyp * Some colonies have small population size - tunics - wingless queens - wings - lead to oxygen depletion - possess ants * Some colonies produce honey - myceliums - sugar - yellow myceliums * Some colonies survive months - take animals
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### social colony: Ant colony * Ant colonies are apparently very long lived once they became established. * Ant colonies are composed mostly of females - of queens, males, a I. workers - everywhere, and their scouts are always out looking for food sources * Ant colonies are very common - organized groups * Ant colonies can be long-lived - re-establish if the same conditions remain * Ant colonies consist mostly of infertile workers - of males, females and workers - depend on the female of the species for their creation and their continued existence - embody all of the most important aspects of biological organisation * Ant colonies have a weird reproductive method - live on one or more trees and feed on the nectar existing in the leaves of acacia * Most ant colonies contain ants. * Most ant colonies have ants * Some ant colonies consist of ants * Some ant colonies contain millions of workers, while others have only hundreds or dozens - have queens + Ant, Development and reproduction, Mating, The nuptial flight: * Ant colonies can be long-lived. Males, however, are more transitory, and survive only a few weeks. Ant queens are estimated to live 100 times longer than solitary insects of a similar size. Australian colony * Australian colonies can have two million termites. * Some australian colonies contain termites. Bacterial colony * Bacterial colonies appear as fine granular bluish material within the inflamed area - shortly after the litter has been colonized by fungi - growing on a nutrient agar plate containing ampicillin are blue in color * Most bacterial colonies appear white or a creamy yellow in colour, and are fairly circular in shape. * Some bacterial colonies derive energy from soil sulfur compounds - enter growth Bee colony * Bee colonies have individuals. * Most bee colonies have individuals. Cockroach colony * Cockroach colonies contain hosts. * Most cockroach colonies contain hosts. Coral colony * Coral colonies grow as the polyps divide and multiply in a process known as budding - in many shapes and come in many colors - have crabs - require clear, nutrient-free, sunlit water to thrive - show swollen tissues, excessive production of mucus, and areas without tissue * Most coral colonies have crabs. Dense colony * Dense colonies are present on apple in the spring and the autumn but never in the summer - arise vegetatively by spread of the rhizomes - develop in fine sand in quiet places on the reef, often under ledges - displace desirable vegetation and wildlife and can exclude livestock * Dense colonies occur at the base of flower heads and on the leaves - on the underside of leaves, ants protecting colonies against natural enemies Large colony * Large colonies can only survive in healthy mangrove forests - develop from long, creeping rhizomes - occupy territory * Most large colonies occupy territory. * Some large colonies consist of treehoppers - have pairs - produce honey Maternity colony * Maternity colonies are similarly vulnerable as the young can be dropped - small, comprised of fewer than a dozen individuals - begin to disband in late summer and early fall - can consist of hundreds of females, although smaller colonies are more common * Maternity colonies choose caves that have warm, stable temperatures to rear their pups - sites that have warm, stable temperatures for pup rearing - occur in horizontal rock crevices Seabird colony * Seabird colonies are highly variable. * Some seabird colonies have stories. Single colony * Single colonies have members - originate presumably from single cells * Some single colonies have fertile queens
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### social colony: Termite colony * Most termite colonies have structures. * Some termite colonies have kings. * Termite colonies are divided into different classes, and most termites only come out in the dark - founded by a pair of primary reproductives - in the soil so only workers are found in the wood - living systems - maintained at a high humidity * Termite colonies can grow very large - number up to three million inhabitants * Termite colonies have a queen, a king, soldiers, and workers - an organized social structure in which different members have different roles - thousands of immature termites - nest underground, foraging for wood to satisfy their appetite for cellulose * Termite colonies survive for long time Vole colony * Most vole colonies occupy areas. * Some vole colonies consist of animals.
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Social community * A community is gathering * All communities have a culture - individuals and neighborhood groups working to rebuild their communities * Communities HAVE populations - Think about other species that like to live in communities * Communities adapt to environments - harsh environments - regions * Communities are a true level of organization, just like the cell, organism and population - agreement - all about people - also divided into populations * Communities are as individual as people are - old as humanity - poor or as great as the individuals who live their lives there * Communities are assemblages of different populations that live together in a defined area - many species living in a common environment - associations of all the populations of different species that live together - bonds made of people who share common interests, common goals, and common passions * Communities are capable of brokens - school children - central to the concept and practice of crime prevention - complex and varying in nature * Communities are composed of populations of organisms that interact in complex ways - only of biotic factors, aka living organisms - fundamental units of social organization - geographic places that have distinct identities * Communities are groups of organisms that live in a specified area - people that share some common characteristics - in and of life - the whole of life * Communities are like people, they have personalities - plants - located in churchs * Communities are made of different plants and animals that all play an important role - political ideology - up of species adapted to the conditions of that community - microcosms of cities - more than just a mixture of different species - ownership - part of human experience - primarily a function of their immediate, micro-scale habitats * Communities are rich in local resources - resources versed in history, culture, and talents - social entities which amount to more than the sum of their individual parts - supports for families * Communities are the backbone of every state - ground-level generators and preservers of values and ethical systems - arise from shared experiences - assume responsibility - build homes * Communities can achieve greatness if willing people communicate, work hard, and have a vision - act to ensure their own survival and prosperity - be a source of wisdom, inspiration and unity - grow and thrive - have different sizes and boundaries * Communities cause infection - skin infection - celebrate pasts * Communities change because new species arrive and old species are lost - over time - with time as the soil becomes established and continues to accept other plants - collection of online services which include message boards and chat rooms - connect people to people and bind the world together - consider pigs * Communities consist of adult offspring - lineage - mangroves - single people - contain individuals - continue to be an important part of the fabric of social life - contribute to success - covers the intangible and tangible meanings of communities * Communities create efficient infrastructures - decline, decrease, and eventually die * Communities develop cultural heritage - patterns - cultures, and culture is the root of style - leaders and rules to govern behavior - own cultural patterns * Communities do fantastic jobs - enhance learning productivity because they coordinate efforts of different people - everywhere depend on flows of national currency to support their internal economy - evolve through exposure, assimilation and circumstances - face emergencies * Communities find growth - in habitats * Communities focus on animal care * Communities focus on proper animal care * Communities form out of relationships, shared history and shared purpose - the biotic parts of ecosystems - when human beings have frequent, mutually-beneficial interaction - forum for open discussion and sharing of information - get energy - give people a sense of belonging - go through stages * Communities have a variety of dynamics, which can include unity, purpose, connection and focus - an important role in urban education - arthropods - authority - capacity - celebration - colorful heritage - different populations, spatial distribution, and amounts of open space - districts - few or no dogs and cats because they've been eaten - functions - herbs - knowledge - laws - materials - mosquito control districts - organizations - physical capital in their buildings and natural resources - places where people live and work - problems - surface water - traditions, values, and a moral voice - yard waste materials * Communities help peace - students - historically have very different levels of social capital - hold parties * Communities include cities - producers - trophic roles - increase survival - issue license - largely shape how human beings behave, feel, and perceive the world in which they live * Communities live in climate zones - located in moist climates have higher resiliency - lose leaders - mourn death - normally have heterogeneous undergrowth * Communities occupy definite territory - dimensions - unique environments * Communities occur in disturb habitats * Communities offer complementary resources - perspective - shelter - often flourish when their businesses prosper and their citizens have jobs - organize and strengthen when forces of oppression exert themselves * Communities play a key role in promoting health and wellness, and preventing disease - promoting health, wellness, and preventing disease - produce waste - promote development * Communities provide contact - critical habitats - excellent habitats - important habitats - touch - range in size from as many as forty households to as few as three or four * Communities receive attention * Communities rely on natural products * Communities require annual rainfall * Communities respond to events - variation * Communities seek assistance - protection - serve to connect individuals through space, between locations * Communities share some common social, cultural, economic and political systems - support ideas * Communities take approaches - comprehensive approaches * Communities thrive on diversity - through the sharing of information and interests - when individuals get involved * Communities to provide services - take actions - too have a stake in child care as it relates to the overall quality of life - undertake tasks * Communities use biomass - emerge technology - fruit - stories as carriers of cultural values, norms, and expectations - usually group themselves according to their ethnicity - vary in species diversity and species richness * Communities will have life - options * Community Describes the sense of finally belonging or identifying with a group of gays - also refers to the body of knowledge created by an individual entering an area of inquiry - amounts to a network of friendships - based care allows people to make more choices in their living situation - belief in the collective * Community can be a collection of individuals that share a common interest or purpose - mean a single neighborhood, town, state, region, nation and world - centres Most cities and towns have community centres - changes along environmental gradients and vegetation ecology - concept that is difficult to define and harder yet to maintain - depends on involvement in institutions that bring lives together - economics seeks to re-establish the local community as the focus of the local economy - fact, whether family or religion, social class or caste - function of the body - group of populations living and interacting in an area * Community happens one person and one relationship at a time - when people of faith mingle to work, play and pray together - implies persons with differences coming together for a common life * Community involves a group with shared interests, goals - institutions, symbols, culture, and ritual that unite and define that group * Community is about relationships among women of faith * Community is all about falling in love with a group of people through their actions - people interacting * Community is an assemblage of living organisms that forms an identifiable group - ever expanding phenomenon of concentric circles - as ubiquitous to humans as water is to fish - essential to being fully human by allowing people to help one another - found in the relationships between believers - just one of the ways people can organize to achieve common ends * Community is more than a location, such as a town or city - place where people live, work, and raise their children - often a goal of a community network * Community is people and people are community - the environment - caring about each other - discovering their mutual interests engaged in joint action - establishing a series of relationships - helping each other - possible only when love exceeds entropy - real people communicating with real people - self-defining, based on a sense of shared purpose and common goals - something that people feel they are part of * Community is the center around which all the other values for living revolve - collective name for the small groups that meet at Poinciana - context for learning - essence of life for all of the various ethnic groups of Namibia - goal to which human social evolution is moving - place where our relationships across differences are put to the test - strength of or country - top level of orca social structure - where love is experienced * Community is, by definition, a relationship between individuals - in a sense, a set of repetitive activities - living expectations balance the rights of the individual with the rights of the community * Community means a city, town, or village, and contiguous and adjacent cities, towns, or villages - community of interest as well as a geographic area - having life and goods in common - the greater sharing of wealth - meta entity outside the direct control of any organization - needs change as the population ages - participatory sport - place where people live, work, and play together - policing views the community as a coproducer of safety * Community refers to the gathering of the Faithful - worldwide Internet community - sense of common purpose with other individuals - social group - term that is so familiar to people in the West and yet so hard to achieve - use being water used for meals, coffee, and hot chocolate - values youth - young person perceives that adults in the community value youth - vital part of any religion - voluntary, mutually created phenomenon - wider term referring to the assembled individuals of different species in a location - word which can justify a multitude of sins - working together of individuals to improve the environment for the benefit of all - works when people are engaged in things, rather than just being together * Every community has a culture - set of relationships, rituals, and rhythms - different measures of sustainability - individuals and groups who make a difference - people who live in poverty and go hungry - their own individual identity based on their history * Many communities add fluoride to their drinking water to promote dental health. * Many communities are built in ways that make it difficult or unsafe to be physically active - concerned about groundwater pollution, which can seep from a landfill site - home to public or government agency libraries - rightly concerned about their natural and man-made environments - collect leaves, grass, and other yard trimmings for composting - depend entirely on glacial meltwater - derive direct benefit through reciprocal access to the genetic resources of others - encourage small vehicles to control auto congestion and pollution * Many communities have businesses that specialize in computer training - day nurseries or day-care centers - fitness centers and spas - groups that meet to try out stories or organize performances - only limited access to medical doctors - parks, forests, or nature areas in which to walk - plots of land once used for industrial or commercial purposes - programs that help prevent gang violence * Many communities have programs to assist victims of domestic violence through the court process - collect and recycle trees as mulch - regulations that prohibit the parking of cars on the streets overnight - resources and agencies that serve people who are visually impaired or blind - separate organizations that represent retail activity - shelters for abused persons and their children - sirens or whistles to warn the public of tornadoes - sister relationships - special programs to assist victims of domestic violence - stoplights timed to turn green for vehicles moving at the speed limit - strict prohibitions on building rental apartments onto single family homes - strong and robust economies, while others languish - their roots in transportation or commerce - make vows of poverty, celibacy and obedience - now have collection facilities for household hazardous wastes - obtain their drinking water from underground sources called aquifers * Many communities offer counseling services and shelters for victims of abuse - shelters for battered spouses and their children - provide shelters for victims of abuse * Many communities rely on bases for income and jobs - the tobacco industry for their livelihood - community policing efforts attempt to involve citizens in solving neighborhood problems * Most communities adapt to environments - also recognize that sustainability is an evolutionary process - are small hamlets along the shore or in inland valleys * Most communities cause infection * Most communities consist of adult offspring - only a few species * Most communities contain individuals - threats to the health and safety of the natural environment - find in habitats - get their water from rivers and lakes * Most communities have an emergency cardiac care system that can quickly respond to an emergency - facilities that treat people who are financially unable to pay for services - food cooperatives that carry organic products - home-health agencies * Most communities have ordinances in place that regulate dangerous animals - that require property owners to keep their walks clear - places where people can recycle certain kinds of trash - now have shelters and support for victims of domestic abuse - occupy environments * Most communities occur in disturb habitats - provide important habitats - recycle cardboard and paper - undergo some natural changes once the stresses are removed - using surface water sources extract water from streams - utilize fire hydrants as the primary means of accessing water * Some communities are in, or on the outskirts of, towns or cities - naturally rare because of their association with an uncommon habitat - residential schools for pupils from three to eighteen years of age - ban only roosters, allowing the quieter hens - build memorials to remember lost brethren, others to remember themselves - collect paint for recycling * Some communities consist of plants - prey - deal with wildfires - decide to spray when there threat of mosquito-transmitted disease - depend on the fish that live in or travel along rivers - even have pet cemeteries - experience malaria * Some communities have a high concentration of one group while others tend to be more multicultural - advocates who help tenants get organised - birds - daycare programs for the elderly, and many provide transportation - dry seasons - homicide rates twenty times higher than the national average - mental health agencies that can supply psychiatric services at a reduced cost - no fluoride in their water - ordinances that ban feeding of coyotes or other wildlife - petting zoos or farms open to visitation - predator prey - small groups of older adults who are interested in literature * Some communities have special childcare centers for sick children - vans that transport residents in wheelchairs - strict regulations on landscaping - wolves * Some communities keep goats - or use a 'holy' fire for religious purposes - live as they have for centuries, their lives untouched by the outside world * Some communities live in environments - fragile environments - make discarded holiday trees into mulch for use in community parks - occur in interiors - offer support groups for children whose parents are under treatment - plan ecumenical services where people can express a united front against hate * Some communities possess amphibians - snakes - protect livestock - provide support for homeless women and their children - reduce soil erosion - reflect a practice of having multiple names for family members - require household pets to be on a leash - resort to locking up the mentally ill in jail - restore wetlands rather than build dams to control floods - sponsor household hazardous waste disposal days once or twice each year - sustain ethnic diversity by design * Some communities use large polyethylene fish totes without drains to store used lead-acid batteries - settling ponds to provide primary treatment of stormwater + Car, Disadvantages: Automobiles * Traffic congestion and accidents can be dangerous to other road users, for example people riding bicycles or walking, especially in an old town built when cars were few. Some 20th century towns are designed for cars as the main transport, but this can cause other problems. These include even more pollution and traffic, as everyone has to drive. Communities are divided up and separated with roads. People walking are in danger by expressways with too few foot bridges, small road bridges or other crossings. Designers now understand these problems and try to build more balanced systems. * As I think most of the people here have misinterpreted the new policy of creating crats. All that has to happen is that EJJ posts I think I need the tools for x reason. Then the crats look at the user if they think the user should have them they say yes. Community voting no longer happens. + Ecosystem: Ecosystems * All the different organisms that live together in an ecosystem is called a community. Each ecosystem has its own community. A terrarium community, for example, can have small animals. A desert community may have cacti, small snakes, and scorpions. A pond community can have frogs, insects, snakes, and plants, and a forest community may have rabbits, foxes and pine trees. Communities are also divided into populations. A population is composed of only one type of species. + Pitjantjatjara * More communities are located a short distance over the border in Western Australia. The land they live in is special to them. It forms a large part of their culture and beliefs. This area is where the Pitjantjatjara language is strongest. In the Northern Territory, their country is on the south side of Lake Amadeus.
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### social community: Aboriginal community * Aboriginal communities can demonstrate remarkable resilience, strength and creativity - have an intimate knowledge of natural resources * Many Aboriginal communities live at great distances from hospitals and from specialist services. Biological community * Biological communities are to be found everywhere - contribute to success * Most biological communities contribute to success. * Some biological communities live in regions. Biotic community * Biotic communities live in climate zones * Most biotic communities live in climate zones * undergo a life cycle. Black community * Black communities appear to have an almost endemic mistrust of their leaders - are hugely over-represented in poverty figures * Many black communities share in a tradition of printed funeral programs. Coastal community * Coastal communities are generally several degrees warmer in winter and slightly cooler in summer. * Some coastal communities use trees at nearby beaches to reduce sand and soil erosion. Diatom community * Diatom communities are a popular tool for monitoring environmental conditions , past and present - for monitoring environmental conditions, past and present. * Diatoms have some practical uses. Diatom communities are a popular tool for monitoring environmental conditions, past and present. They are commonly used in studies of water quality. They are also of interest to nanotechnology Different community * Different communities can have different names for the same disease. * Different communities have different assemblages of organisms - customs - ways of grieving Diverse community * Diverse communities adapt to environments - harsh environments - are healthy communities * Diverse communities occupy environments - unique environments - offer shelter - provide resources * Most diverse communities adapt to environments * Some diverse communities reduce soil erosion. Entire community * Entire communities do fantastic jobs * Entire communities focus on animal care * Entire communities focus on proper animal care - share territory * Most entire communities focus on animal care. Fungal community * Fungal communities use emerge technology * Most fungal communities use technology.<|endoftext|>### social community: Healthy community * Healthy communities allow teachers to teach and students to focus on learning - their citizens to grow and to be healthy * Healthy communities are free of racism, sexism, and parochialism - necessary to survive - the foundation of a healthy economy * Healthy communities depend on healthy bioregions, and vice versa , for the sake of everykind - informed, active citizens - volunteers * Healthy communities have organizations dedicated to arts and education - that support religious and social missions * Healthy communities help assure healthy babies are born - people be healthy by providing a safe environment - mean healthy businesses * Healthy communities provide mechanisms for affiliation, shared problem-solving and mutual growth - the foundation for healthy families and individuals - result from healthy choices and environments that support shared responsibility Human community * Human communities affect the quality of the natural and built environments - appear in different degrees in various parts of the Earth * Human communities are integral parts of the larger bioregional and planetary life communities - only as healthy as our conceptions of human nature - part of natural ecosystems - plan and act in concert with the natural systems in which they are located Intentional community * Intentional communities are circles - have a broad range of goals and values * Most intentional communities function as educational or spiritual centers. * very large field, and no group can be all things to all people.
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### social community: Local community * Local communities are a mass of different communities. * Local communities have responsibility - their fire departments and town councils - use fruit * is the area between Norfolk and Richmond - basic unit of human habitation Mangrove community * Mangrove communities consist of mangroves. * Mangrove communities require annual rainfall Microbial community * Microbial communities are excellent models for understanding biological interactions and evolution - sensitive to changes in soil structure, microclimate, and chemical inputs - consist of various guilds of metabolically related organisms - contain a large scope of organisms that perform a variety of functions - promote development * Most microbial communities promote development. * responses to environmentally toxic cadmium stress. Native community * Many Native communities have suicide rates equal to or lower than the general population. * Most native communities occur in disturb habitats - provide habitats * Native communities are extremely closely knit communities. - seek protection * Some native communities reduce soil erosion. Natural community * Many natural communities are present, including upland forest, savanna, and hill prairie. * Most natural communities are susceptible to invasion by one or both of the species - invasion by one or more of the species - have several food chains that interconnect * Natural communities are certainly as complex as human communities - recycle all available nutrients so that they are used over and over Parish * Most parishes have just one church, called the parish church. * are a subdivision of dioceses. * are communities of faith , of action , and of hope - faith, of action, of hope - jurisdiction - like counties in other states - local organizations - part of dioceses - religious groups<|endoftext|>### social community | parish: Civil parish * are the lowest tier of local government, below districts and counties. + Civil parishes in England * In England, a 'civil parish' is a unit of local government. Civil parishes are the lowest tier of local government, below districts and counties - England, Governance * Every civil parish has a parish meeting, consisting of all the electors of the parish. Generally a meeting is held once a year. A civil parish may have a parish council which exercises various local responsibilities given by statute. Alternatively several small parishes can be grouped together and share a common parish council, or even a common parish meeting. Since 1997 around 100 new civil parishes have been created, in some cases splitting existing civil parishes, but mostly by creating new ones from unparished areas ### social community | planned community: Retirement community * Retirement communities are homes where still-healthy senior citizens reside - planned communities * planned community
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### social community: Plant community * Many plant communities benefit from the seasonal presence of pilgrim pollinators. * Most plant communities adapt to regions - contain individuals * Most plant communities occur in disturb habitats - offer shelter * Plant communities are associations of vegetation that reoccur across the landscape - basic to that environment - fragile in the highcountry - natural integrators of the landscape - solar power stations that produce food energy for everything else - the basis for virtually all terrestrial animal life - varied and complex - change across the landscape in response to resource availability - flourish or perish depending on their environmental conditions * Plant communities occur in distinct zones * Plant communities provide a habitat for animals and significantly modify the local environment * Plant communities range from dry upland prairie to wet prairie and wet woodland - fes cue grassland to alpine tundra - shift in close, intricate patterns reflecting the maze of drainage and soils * Some plant communities ignite and carry fire more readily than others. * Some plant communities play roles - vital roles * Some plant communities reduce erosion<|endoftext|>### social community: Religious community * Many religious communities have an ethnic aspect to their congregation's makeup. * Many religious communities make vows of poverty, celibacy, and obedience - poverty, chastity and obedience - reach out to both adults and children * Most religious communities have one or more members assigned to vocations. * Religious Communities Apply to religious order for admittance. * Religious communities are juridical persons - can have all of the same foibles as can individuals * Religious communities have a calling to care, support and prevent stigmatisation and suffering - prophetic role to play in taking on critical issues of our times - great potential to enhance civic life - legal authority in matters such as marriage and divorce - unique sets of beliefs, rituals, and experiences - live alongside each other in harmony * Religious communities play a negative role in the educating and raising of children - primary role in transmitting and communicating religious inspiration - tend to be conservative about changes in their canons<|endoftext|>### social community: Rural community * Many rural communities are reliant on tourism to sustain their economies - strong and growing and are proud of their quality of life - depend on resource industries for their livelihood - have evidence of pesticide drifting over their crops or homes * Most rural communities have public water supplies - rely on natural resources for their livelihoods * Rural communities are a key element for economic and social development - complex and have a diversity of interests - less and less populated by residents depending solely on agriculture - older, poorer, and have less access to health care - the base and source of the food and fiber products that are used today - depend on the land for subsistence - flourish when their residents recognize community needs and respond - have a different relationship to water than do urban dwellers * Rural communities have the greatest number of entering physicians - nation's fastest growing rate of cocaine and heroin use - live in the shadow of big city wealth - see prisons as a means of enlarging their tax base - share the same health problems as do urban ones * Rural communities tend to be small scale and close knit - have larger proportions of elderly Scientific community * Scientific communities undertake tasks. * Some scientific communities make discoveries - new discoveries
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### social community: Small community * Many small communities depend on the success of agriculture for their sustainability. * Most small communities have people. * Small communities are concerned with infrastructure + PL Kyodan: New religious movements :: Japanese culture :: Organisations based in Japan * Nowadays the group claims having more than 3 million followers worldwide. Most of the parishes are in Japan, however, due to the active missionary work in the 1960s PL was established in South-America and USA as well. Today they are present also in Canada, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Peru. Oceaninan headquarters was founded in the 1990s in Brisbane, Australia. Small communities exist in Europe as well, especially in France, Portugal and Hungary. Smaller community * Smaller communities are the nurseries of larger ones - have health stations that operate only part-time * Some smaller communities have health stations that operate only part-time. Sustainable community * Some sustainable communities promote protection. * Sustainable communities are livable places - have a strong sense of place - live within their natural environments - recognize that all people have ideas, energy, skills and talents - work to live within physical and biological limits True community * True communities are ultimately a collection of people where the welfare of people prevails - have a memory or a set of shared stories that help to shape identity and character * is when family and friends share lives and make a difference for each other. Vegetation community * Some vegetation communities consist of big huckleberries * Vegetation communities are subject to periodic flooding from local rivers.
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### social community: Village * Every village has a Buddhist temple, typically called a wat - long hall, called an aleui, where ceremonial dances and feasts are held - is centered around a temple and every household has a shrine * Many villages also have a mosque where the men meet daily for prayer. * Many villages have a church and usually a nearby monastery - school house and at least one teacher - shallow wells that are polluted with bacteria, nitrate, and other pollutants * Most villages are small and situated near rivers or on plains - have a temple whose monks depend upon offerings for their daily bread * Most villages have an annual fiesta in honor of their patron saint - obeah woman as the dispenser of medicines, enchantments, and advice - civic centers and libraries - health centres - local temples for worship - markets where woven silk, cotton, and other fabrics are traded - pharmacies that carry both human and animal medicines - public health posts and schools - run private generators that provide sufficient electricity for lighting only * Some villages are accessible only by water - feed chickens * Some villages have a power house which supply electricity at certain times of the day and night * Some villages have no electricity at night - telephone lines at all - their own cheese factories where farmers can sell or trade their milk - raise cattle - still practice the ancient art of fishing in dug-out canoes. * are never non-notable. It's not like we don't have room * also contain religious shrines, water sources, and agricultural fields. * are cities * are located in big cities - countrysides - rural areas - worlds - mayors - settlements - small ecosystems which belong to larger ones - the most advanced form of human organization in western Asia - towns * are used for playing - sleeping * can also spawn in the heathland. * consist of kin - walled compounds containing dwellings, vegetable gardens, and fruit trees * embrace many ethnic groups and cultures. * generally have sparse populations and single social traditions. * get electricity. * have an abundance of human and animal wastes - a source of pollution and disease - homes - rights - the same broad general police powers as cities * sometimes communicate with one another by the beat of drums made of hollowed logs. * take care. * vary greatly in the numbers who migrate and in their degree of skill. * work together in building houses and clearing fields, and celebrate together at feasts. + Village, United States, Incorporated villages, New York state * In New York state, a village is a place which is usually in a town. Some villages are in two counties. ### social community | village: Indian village * Many Indian villages have their own special product or crop. * Most Indian villages have their local tales and legends. Pueblo * All pueblos have public pilas , which consist of many sinks and a constant supply of water. * Every pueblo observes the annual cycle of ceremonials and gathering known as feast days. * are games - sienna-colored, but the sun changes that * come in two forms, either parallel street forms, or plaza forms. Small village * Most small villages have homes. * cluster around oases and thin seasonal waterways. - massive churches Virtual community * Virtual communities are a major trend in marketing on the Internet today - mecca for finding people on the Web - about aggregating people - interactive spaces that have a distinctive focus - social aggregations that emerge from public discussions * Virtual communities are, after all, a large part of the Internet - in effect, powerful databases filled with people - use computer technology to bring together users with similar interests * is community at zero cost.
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Social congregation * A congregation social group * Congregation is the large group interaction where mass teaching or information transfer takes place. * Congregations are assemblies - bands - collections - communities in which people support one another in their Christian journeys - groups of people - located in synagogues - made of people - places where lives are transformed and disciples are nurtured - social groups - vital small communities within the context of larger communities and societies - wards and branches within stakes, and branches within districts Social contingent * A contingent is gathering * Contingent social group. * Contingents are gathering - military units<|endoftext|>Social court * A court is an assembly * Court court of record. * Court is seen as a place where one person is judged to be fit, and the other unfit - the last resort of people to resolve conflicts and to seek for justice * Courts address issues. * Courts appoint administrators - personal representatives * Courts are a source of power - adjudicators - also public authorities - areas - concerned about privacy issues related to court data on the internet - deference - focused on increasing public access to the judiciary - government agencies - institutions whose special competence lies in the discernment and application of rights * Courts are located in buildings - cities - courthouses - lawyers - palaces - parks - public buildings - towns * Courts are part of buildings - playing fields - political institutions and judges of the two parties are clearly distinguishable - residences - rooms - the workshops of crimes, the lair of tyrants - theaters where some men play * Courts are used for justice - play games - trials - attempt to mark where individual rights end and societal rights begin - can also use shame as a form of punishment - conduct decisions - consider circumstances * Courts consist of chief judges - contribute to social stability by resolving disputes in a civilized fashion * Courts determine tests - encourage people to settle their own cases * Courts find circumstances - cost - evidence - key witnesses - policy - sufficient evidence - focus on issues - force fathers to pay college tuition for adult children - generally require noncustodial parents to pay support based on a percentage of their income * Courts get answers - wrong answers - give consideration * Courts have administrative authority * Courts have local administrative authority * Courts hear citizens - interpret statutes to ascertain and effectuate legislative intent - large department store chain selling furniture, appliances, electronics and furnishings - maintain offices * Courts make concessions - observations - up the judicial branch - manage conflicts among people over property and other matters - mean the wider spaces of a house - offer protection - provide information * Courts publish documents - entire documents - reach decisions - recognize types - rely on methodologies * Courts require people * Courts take actions - notice - tend to give temporary custody to the parent who physically has the children - use cases - will have guidelines * Most courts insist that parents attend a program on the effects of divorce on children. * Some courts deal primarily in divorce - do recognize fathers' rights when both parents are reasonable - use electronic imaging, converting paper files to electronic ones. * are higher and can change a decision made by a lower court. This is called court hierarchy. You can start from a simple magistrates court and go up to a supreme state or national court. The higher the court the more experienced a judge will be ### social court: Bankruptcy court * are units of the district court. * specialized federal court hearing cases in Arizona and other states.
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### social court: Basketball court * are courts. * are located in cities - gyms - schools * are used for basketball - bouncing - dunkings - exercises - play games - playing sports * have net. Chancery court * are countywide courts with jurisdiction over property title disputes. * hear civil cases, and circuit courts try both civil and criminal cases. County court * are courts of record * have administrative authority * have local administrative authority Court reporting * Court Reporting profession and service business that few outside the field know much about. * business, a profession, a trade, an art.<|endoftext|>### social court: District court * are A. courts that have state-level jurisdictions. * are courts of appeal reviewing judgements of the courts of first instance - first instance in most criminal cases and minor civil cases - federal courts - staffed and administered by the district and islands local authorities * are the federal trial-level courts - first level where a federal case is heard - trial level of the federal court system - trial courts of general subject-matter jurisdiction * function as trial courts. Divorce court - full of people who thought they really knew each other but got married too soon * cause divorces. * mixed alternate-shot tournament in which husbands and wives are paired. * multi-million dollar industry that feeds off the misery of our broken families. Drug court * focus the community on dealing with drug abuse and crime. * offer offenders treatment as an alternative to trial and a criminal record. * provide an alternative to prison for criminal drug offenders. Federal court * are courts of limited jurisdiction * hear citizens. Juvenile court - specialized courts which deal exclusively with matters involving children * exercise jurisdiction over children and, in some instances, minors and adults. * serve as the gatekeepers to the state s foster care system - overseers of the foster care system * supervise children in foster care for the entire time that children are in care. * work with law enforcement prosecution and defense attorneys. State court * are the product of the individual state's constitution and legislation. * determine issues of state law and also determine issues of federal law. * handle cases involving state constitutions and laws. Tennis court - flats - for tennis only * are located in college campuses - country clubs - health clubs - parks - towns - prevalent in our islands * have flat surfaces Trial court * are courts of original jurisdiction * conduct decisions. * consider circumstances. * find circumstances. * take notice. Tribal court * Some tribal courts tend to look and act much like non-Indian courts. * become involved when people are driving or attempting to drive on Indian land. Social crime syndicate * A crime syndicate social group * Crime syndicates operate with impunity. Social crowd * A crowd is gathering * Crowd social group. * Crowds are gathering - groups of people * Crowds are located in demonstrations - sporting events - made of people - the largest groups and least personal of adolescent groups - create scenes - happen naturally when more than a few people stand together - have a natural tendency to grow as something different and out of the ordinary is happening - hear men - take delight
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### social crowd: Large crowd * are located in concerts - race tracks + The Nose (opera), The story of the opera: 20th century operas :: Compositions by Dmitri Shostakovich * As the coach leaves the nose runs in, tries to stop the coach, frightens thehorses, the driver tries to shoot the nose, and everyone starts to fight the nose, beating and hitting it until it is back to its normal size. The policeman wraps it in a piece of paper. He returns it to the Major and asks for payment. The nose escapes into the crowd. The Major thinks that Madame Podtochina, who tried to make him marry her daughter, has used witchcraft on him. Large crowds appear on the street to try to see the nose. ### social environments: Work environment * Some work environments enable people with the syndrome to flourish. * are social environments. * can play a large part in how people feel about their jobs. * depend on factors. * plays an important role in job satisfaction - staff job satisfaction * refers to the type of organization and culture in which the work takes place - where the work takes place * requires the individual to work outdoors and in various types of weather. Social event * are events - physical events * is an event Social faculty * Faculty has expertise. * Faculty is ability - films - groups of people - power - offers ranges * Faculty provides deep expertise - guidance - materials - plant materials - scientific expertise - social group Social family tie * Family ties are strong, often with relations on both sides of the border. * Family ties are very important in Northern Ireland - to the Tatars * Family ties can also be important - reduce crime and save tax dollars - give unity and strength - help a person have greater love for others - involve life-long attachment, emotional closeness and economic dependency - play an important role in Viper's motivation and actions ### social game: Pong * is one of the oldest classic video games - where video games started * social game. Social gathering * Gathering is often a symptom of being unable to start or maintain relationships - means collecting plants that grow wild for food * Gatherings are highly social events where group members play, breed, and groom. ### social gathering: Cast * are bandages - copies - gathering - part of crap - solids - throws * is gathering - the measurement of how the centerline of the stock fits to the centerline of the receiver * skins from larval development often accumulates around the food source. ### social gathering | cast: Hyaline cast * can have inclusions of various kinds. * dissolve quite readily in alkaline urine. Covey * are flocks * explains that communication uses the language of logic and the language of emotion. Data gathering * involves investigative research conducted at user departments. * is important for the collection and organization of past research and information.<|endoftext|>Social group * All social groups have hierarchy. * Every social group has a type of politics, and every society has a political system. * Many social groups are uncomfortable with the open discussion of sex and sexual health. * Most social groups have a standard of acceptability - operate informally by consensus or democratic processes of electing officers * Some social groups have many more members and higher recruitment than others. * are arranged with a hierarchy of power - friends on a temporary basis - sedentary in a single territory, where they remain all year - stable, with little overlap between adjacent groups * collaborate to make sense from experiences. * consist of one male and several females. * exist in the form of females and their fawns. * form in many different ways for many different reasons. * have a larger behavioral repertoire than less social populations - ex- tensive overlap in home ranges - overlapping but still varying value systems
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Social hive * A hive receptacle * ALL hives are at least partly related to storage of stress-effect in the hypothalamus. * Hive social group. * Hives also occur as a feature of anaphylactic reactions - appear when the skin is warmed after exposure to cold * Hives are a common symptom of an allergic reaction - rash * Hives are an allergic reaction to food or medication - outward sign of a whole-body hypersensitivity reaction - another kind of skin response - bands - bumps on the skin that are usually itchy and swollen - harmless except when they cause throat swelling or breathing problems - homes - multitudes - often inside hollow logs * Hives are red, itchy welts on the skin that come and go over the course of minutes or hours - raised, swollen areas on the skin that are very itchy * Hives are red, very itchy, swollen areas of the skin, often appearing in clusters - skin diseases - small, red, itchy swellings on the skin - the result of an allergic reaction in the skin - usually the result of an allergic reaction - very common and usually go away within a few days to few weeks - white itchy bumps which look and feel like insect bites - can also result from physical agents such as vibration, sunlight, cold pressure, and exercise * Hives can appear all over the body or limited to one part of the body - due to certain types of food, plants, drugs or insect bites - on any part of the body, but are most common on the arms, legs and trunk * Hives can be a natural reaction to the presence of a foreign substance in the body - one time experience or a life threatening allergic reaction - cause severe itching * Hives can change shape or vanish and reappear rapidly, in a matter of minutes - shape, fade, then rapidly reappear - develop hours to a day later - have irregular shapes and can be as small as a pencil eraser or as big as a dinner plate - last from a few hours to several days * Hives can occur almost anywhere on the body - anywhere on the body, but are especially common about the elbows and knees - vary in size from a half and inch to several inches in size - come from what bees do - do appear at any time of life - form from firmly stroking or scratching the skin * Hives have nasty defenses which are very powerful, and long range - queens - involve swelling, redness and itching * Hives is an allergic reaction in the skin with a lot of itching and swellings - leave no trace on a mummy - occur when fluid leaks through the cells surrounding tiny blood vessels and enters the skin * Hives occur when the body's capillaries and tiny veins get leaky - skin is stroked with a firm object - often occur in response to a drug, food or infection - possess bees - raise and feed drones as insurance against the loss of a queen * Hives usually disappear within a few days to a few weeks - go away within a few days to a few weeks * Most hives have queens * Some hives take possessions. ### social hive: Bee hive * are easiest to move during winter when they are lighter and populations are low. * have hexagonal cells.<|endoftext|>Social interest group * An interest group social group * Interest Groups are organized hubs where customers, partners, and employees gather to connect - groups ARE organizations that represent people who hold similar views * Interest groups are a loosely formed group that comes together for a common interest - the ones that educate the American public about political issues - attempt to influence policy by supplying public officials with things they want - represent people in political process - seek to shape public policy in ways which, taken as a whole, serve disparate ends * Interest groups work to gain advantages for themselves at the expense of the larger population - motivate public opinion into supporting certain candidates or issues
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Social legislative body * A legislative body is an assembly * Legislative bodies write laws to control emissions.<|endoftext|>Social legislature * A legislature is an assembly * Legislature is used for personal motives and character assasination. * Legislatures are assemblies - complicated human institutions - fiercely political places - houses of debate - party chambers - thoroughly political bodies - formulate laws - have the power to make laws * Many legislatures also have a counting board on one wall of the chamber. * Most legislatures have a seating chart of the floor - two chambers or houses, a 'lower house' and an 'upper house' + Law, Legislature * In democracies, the people in a country usually choose people called politicians to represent them in a legislature. Most legislatures have two chambers or houses, a 'lower house' and an 'upper house'. To pass legislation, a majority of Members of Parliament must vote for a bill in each house. The legislature is the branch of government that writes laws, and votes on whether they will be approved.<|endoftext|>### social legislature: State legislature * Many state legislatures vote electronically. * Most state legislatures are empowered by similar language from their state constitution. * Some state legislatures are part time, and they usually meet in the first half of the year. * are often out of session when major federal legislation is enacted - where malpractice tort reform is accomplished * can convene and go about the business of the states. * enact numerous statutes to protect people against members of their own family. * review how state agencies carry out air pollution control laws. * wield significant power by passing laws that affect our lives at every level.<|endoftext|>Social lineage * Lineage family tree - has origins - includes phyla * Lineage is all-important in the Japanese myths, Shinto religion, and Japanese imperial rule - genealogy - video games - leads to ancestors - measure that describes the documented history of a route - social group - solves problems - survives for years * Lineages are often limited to particular regions of the world - parts of the tree of life - change in frequency over time - survive, but dominant life forms become extinct * Most lineage leads to ancestors. * Some lineage leads to mammals. + Lineage (evolution): Evolutionary biology * When talking in terms of evolution, a 'lineage' describes how a species developed from the species before it. The species adapted to its environment. Lineages are parts of the tree of life. Very often, genetic information is used to determine the lineage of a species.<|endoftext|>Social meeting * Meeting social group. * Meetings are a means of sharing information and ideas - events in which real work takes place * Meetings are led by instructors - train instructors * Meetings is assemblies - convergence - gathering - social gathering. * A 'meeting' group of people who come together at one place to discuss something, make something, or play games together. Meetings can be also on formal times, where businessmen come together to discuss. For instance, politicians meet from time to time to deliberate on issues, map up strategies and trash out issues. Likewise, religious leaders congregate to discuss developing issues, problems and successes chalked ### social meeting: Concourse * are multi-level buildings consisting of contiguous open spaces between floors. * is meeting Conference * are administrative entities responsible for local congregations - associations between shipping companies to provide joint services on trade routes - convention - discussion - major events, frequently hosted by public agencies or academic institutions - meetings - organizations of airlines, shiplines, or rail lines * focus on development. * provide input.
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### social meeting | conference: Colloquium * Colloquia are one-two day comprehensive overviews of a particular area of research - primarily lectures given by scientists describing their current research * are addresses - conferences Consultation * cooperative approach to solving safety and health problems in the workplace. * is the act or process of giving expert or professional advice - providing of legal advice * plays an integral role in all health care settings. * voluntary, nonsupervisory relationship between professionals. ### social meeting | conference | consultation: Sidebar * are consultation - news articles * explain radioactive decay, isotopes, half-life, and how accelerators work. * is consultation Huddle * are conferences - crowds * come in different shapes and sizes. Powwow * are a time to renew old friendships and create new ones - very important part of Native American cultures - councils - dynamic, energetic celebrations showcasing dancing, visual arts, music and food - peaceful celebrations involving the earth and the people involved - special occasions for many Native American families * contain singing, dancing, eating and trading, and usually last for days. Congress * are legislatures - meetings - part of legislatures * is meeting<|endoftext|>### social meeting: Convention * are a rule that people of a given language community agrees to follow - factors that lead to ease of communication - instruments which on ratification create legal obligations * is assemblies - events - meetings - practice - stations - the dictionary of a language - treaties * refer to punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and variation in sentence structure. * rule that people of a given community agree to follow. + Anime convention, Guests: Animation * Most conventions bring famous people to the convention who are called guests. The people who are at the convention can talk to these guests, get autographs, and sometimes take pictures. ### social meeting | convention: International convention * Some international convention bans child labor. * are of great importance in the Finnish legal system. * attempt to curb the trade in stolen cultural property. Naming convention * apply to variables and attributes. * are important to mathematical communities. Trade show * allow small companies to look bigger and give the appearance of doing more business. * are convention - industry specific fairs - sales events and vendors are never the best judge of their own products - sometimes a company s biggest advertising investment of the year * offer a mass of information compressed in time and space. Forum * allow groups of people to communicate via e-mail. * are facilities - venues - work areas that contain a specific types of information ### social meeting | forum: Internet forum * Many Internet forums have rules against things such as spamming and trolling - things such as spamming and trolling. * things such as spamming and trolling. If people do those kind of things, they will be warned, and if they continue, they will be banned Public forum * Some public forums involve opinionated citizens making speeches, one after the other. * is where everyone can participate without registration. Visit * are going - social activities - the total number of sessions on a site over a given period of time * is meeting
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Social minority * A minority social group * Many minorities are unemployed and live below the poverty level. * Minorities also play an increasingly important economic role as business owners. * Minorities are a significant presence in many of the nation's largest metropolitan areas - ages - aware of experiencing relative deprivation and oppression * Minorities are disproportionately low wage workers - underrepresented in the public work force - without health care * Minorities are dramatically under-represented in science professions - underrepresented in academic cardiology - egregiously underrepresented in the human factors and cognitive science communities - individual or groups of individuals especially qualified - legal status - like animals * Minorities are no less fearful of becoming a crime victim than are whites - likely than whites to suffer from illnesses that cause great pain - numbers - poor - social groups - underrepresented in medical education and in the health care delivery system - can speak to issues of the economy, education, the environment, gender and politics - comprise only five percent of the population - encourage other people to resist comformity and practice more individuation - gradually follow patterns, norms, and values of American culture * Minorities have a higher incidence of diabetes-related complications - obesity and late onset diabetes * Minorities make up a large portion of rural and other underserved populations - an increasing share of the population - much of the population - occupy a disadvantaged position as a result of prejudice and discrimination - represent more than a quarter of the nation's population - suffer because our society believes some lives are expendable * Minorities tend to be concentrated in larger markets - underrepresented in political and economic elites - concentrate and disrupt the continuity of otherwise homogenous states * Minority relatively new term that encompasses both race and ethnicity. * Some minorities own communities - raise pigs ### social minority: Racial minority * Racial minorities are at-risk - seriously underrepresented in the legal profession - get less play in historical accounts than majority races - have double the rate of cervical cancer that whites do * Some racial minorities greet birth control with cries of genocide. Religious minority * Religious minorities face many prejudices. * Some religious minorities follow own tradition Social more * are critically important in shaping human behavior. * vary in the world community.
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Social organization * All organizations have personalities and attitudes, just like people. * An organization social group * Any organization collection of individuals - number of groups working to achieve their goals * Every organization has diverse cultures that constantly influence decision-making. * Many organizations assist individuals who are coping with specific medical conditions - conduct regular litter cleanups - deal only with a specific disability or illness - do all their business on computers - effectively take over people's lives - focus on providing clothing to schoolchildren from low-income families * Many organizations have hundreds of databases into which duplicate employee information is entered - multiple messaging systems, usually at the departmental level * Many organizations have names similar to well-known charities and organizations - that are very similar to well-known charities - policies that prohibit employees from accessing other's e-mail accounts - websites that can be accessed through the Internet - working groups that call themselves teams - increase awareness of international conflicts and their causes - keep a directory of their employees online - offer classes for toddlers and their parents - own Internet domain names that describe the primary services that they offer - pay thousands of dollars to their presidents or leaders - regularly report on the situation of children - reward competitive behavior among employees - see science as a way of reducing litigation - send greeting cards and address labels * Many organizations sponsor fishing tournaments in the off-season - nationwide programs about mental health and mental illness - survey their employees, usually once a year - think that if they have an accounting system, they have a budgeting system - treat leadership as something that is inherent in the individual * Many organizations use firewalls that block streaming media - multiple systems to manage worker health and safety - schools, radio and TV to educate teenagers about safe sex and abstinence - view test automation as means of saving time on manual testing * Many organizations work to pass legislation that has an impact on children and families - save the elephant from extinction * Most organizations act as if all they can do is observe the future as it happens - are aware of sexual harassment - create workplaces - divide their networks into subnets, or networks within networks - have a large number of processes and outputs * Most organizations have at least one person who natural leader - two levels of security management - code of ethics - machines - organization structures - record archives - some form of both centralized and decentralized authority - their computing equipment connected to the Internet - women - hire their employees straight from school - monitor extraterrestrial interaction - operate in environments - regularly communicate with consumers in the marketplace - rely on leaders - require athletes to be drug free for at least one year - show evolutionary variation * Most organizations use computers for operations, control and planning, and for office automation - information technology to achieve competitive advantages in the marketplace * Organization duty laid upon the church in every locality. * Organization group of investors who meet to discuss the markets and invest as a group - that exists and operates to achieve common objectives - implies a relationship over time and space * Organization is Power - according to type of structure - action given to events before they becomes a crisis - also a concept used for retaining information in working memory * Organization is by months of the year, which juxtaposes various kinds of bears in various habitats - type of content * Organization is derived from creating systems for every aspect of one s business - for every aspect of one's business - key in science - one dimension of family health - perceived as an open system that requires constant interaction with environment - that of an arbitrary graph * Organization is the coordination of individuals in the furtherance of a common goal - natural state, and disorganization is pathological - operational concept behind library classification systems - process of clearing clutter * Organization is the way content is grouped into coherent units - pages are arranged on a particular site - used mainly for businesses - key factor in the success of a business - occurs when enformy conforms elements of a gestalt to enformation - partitioning process - skill that can be learned * Organizations There are four organizations in the United States that govern dog agility. * Organizations adopt methodologies - project management methodologies - protocols * Organizations are a series of complex, interrelated systems and processes - about people - activities - administration - artifacts of a larger society - big systems made up of little systems * Organizations are complex adaptive systems, they have to react to environment and change - networks of people and systems * Organizations are complex, living, breathing entities - people are complex, and change is complex - creations of member states - dependent on using computers and technology effectively and efficiently - disposals * Organizations are dynamic and complex social systems formed to accomplish goals - their people, software, and networks all constantly change - entities both of human drive and of human intellect - essential to the way our society operates and permeate and shapes our lives - extracurricular activities - good things * Organizations are groups of people who work together to accomplish common goals - people, with ideas and resources, working toward common goals - immortal and can continue forever, whereas, humans are mortal - in a constant process of change and adaptation - interfaces to bring knowledge and resources to achieve goals - like living organisms - living systems - made of people - means of control, power, and enforced discipline - more productive when people do their jobs effectively - mutually disjoint with people - only people coming together for some purpose - organic systems - part of the created world * Organizations are social groups - structures that act in many ways like organisms - systems, which consist on interacting with another - systems within systems - systems, and they are subject to the principles of systems - the structures which people create to solve the problems - treatments - webs of participation - benefit by the alignment of leadership and team behaviors with organizational goals * Organizations can acquire information rapidly, enabling individuals to make better decisions - also provide an environment for trust and learning - control the age of information and the proximity of that information to consumers - have high levels of teamwork and no teams - improve productivity by looking at both people and production variables - rise or fall on the quality of the people they employ - change, and technology changes peoples' tasks - collection of beer and brewing groups - come in all sizes and shapes * Organizations comprise of individual members * Organizations create values - deal with issues * Organizations dedicate to development * Organizations develop infrastructures - pictures - recommendations - differ greatly in size, function, and makeup * Organizations enter decline phases - estimate cost - evolve and adapt to their environment, or cease to be * Organizations exist in different forms and are known by the nature of the services they provide - to help children living in orphanages around the world - within organizations * Organizations focus on address environmental issues - growth * Organizations function better when different people do different tasks - effectively when people work together for common goals - within a certain societal framework - go through different life-cycles just like people do * Organizations have an important role in flattening the knowledge level across the world - certain dimensions and concepts in common - departments - different cultures - flexibility - informal structures as well as formal ones - life cycles - lives which, like people, go through phrases of development - maximum flexibility - practical impact - representatives - staff - strategies - the lowest life expectancy compared to potential of any species on the planet - tools - very different personalities and metabolic rates - web sites - help companies * Organizations hold conferences - global conferences * Organizations include common features * Organizations include follow common features - performers - is here groups of people, possibly large and distributed, sharing a common goal - learn and change more slowly than individuals - live or die based on the quality and the diversity of their people * Organizations look for innovative ways - powerful ways - lose members * Organizations maintain administrators - roles * Organizations make decisions - differences - final selections * Organizations monitor extraterrestrial interaction * Organizations need guidance - teachers - now dominate the delivery of healthcare * Organizations offer benefits - considerable opportunity - contract opportunity - custom designs - educational opportunity - often generate and collect large volumes of data in their daily operations - open offices - operate centers * Organizations operate in environments - regions - promote ideas * Organizations provide additional information - assistance - case management - competitive positions - counsel services - social services - taxonomic information - pursue goals - related to philately are philatelic * Organizations rely on knowledge - traditional leaders - represent employees - require attention * Organizations serve communities - customers * Organizations show evolutionary variation * Organizations support development teams - effort - hunger relief effort - local hunger relief effort - supervision - take responsibility - tend to follow a fairly predictable pattern of growth * Organizations use information - pay grades to group individual jobs having approximately the same job worth - various means of regulating strong and unwanted emotions, including normalizing - vary widely in their ability to demonstrate pluralism and diversity * Organizations work for years - with universities * Some organizations allow businesses that have met their standards to display their logos - are irrationally paranoid when it comes to the Internet - arrange special holidays for people with dementia and their caregivers - claim that diesel exhaust carcinogen - comprise nations - conduct public education - connect their intranets through private networks, at great cost - consider child abuse to be solely a societal phenomenon beyond their control - consist of individuals * Some organizations create parks - teams of professionals and managerial employees * Some organizations deal with death - infant death * Some organizations dedicate to bird conservation - nutrition - define animal welfare as guaranteeing the health and well-being of animals - encourage healthy adults - focus more on right wing political groups than on right wing religious groups * Some organizations focus on conservation efforts, habitat protection, and the study of birds * Some organizations give out favors or rank for money - to several different charities instead of just one * Some organizations have a spectacular mortality rate, particularly on management levels - breeds - humor rooms, places where employees can go to laugh together - more cats than they have foster homes - policies and procedures regarding the creation and use of records - traditions relating to specific activities such as camping or sports - unattractive workplaces or offer low wages * Some organizations help animals - elephants * Some organizations involve in conservation - rhino conservation - look for people all year round - operate virtual trade shows, an attempt to replicate trade shows on the Internet - pay women - promote health care * Some organizations protect big cats - provide medical and health information to the public - represent organizations * Some organizations sell cookies and candy bars to raise money - or donate old computers to their employees - share beliefs - spend tens of thousands of dollars a year to feed hundreds of deer each winter * Some organizations support chefs - personal chefs * Some organizations use an intranet to store and distribute software and data - bar code labels, which can save money in data-entry labor - legitimate legal and political practices to sway public opinion - work directly with parents to build their skills and leadership * Some organizations work to change the social conditions of minority groups * Some organizations work with athletes - gorillas + Colonization of Mars: Mars :: Space colonization * Many organizations support the colonization of Mars. They have also given different reasons and ways humans can live on Mars. One of the oldest organizations is the Mars Society. They promote a NASA program that supports human colonies on Mars. The Mars Society have set up Mars analog research stations in Canada and the United States. All other organizations include MarsDrive, who wants to help fund settlements on Mars, and Mars to Stay.
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### social organization: Agency * Agencies adopt policy - also help pregnant women or others who are considering placing their children for adoption * Agencies are actions - administrative units - businesses - independent companies who work with theatres to sell tickets on their behalf - national and local health, social and recreational organizations - organisations that provide information on demonstration projects etc * Agencies begin effort - investigations * Agencies coordinate activities - dedicate to awareness * Agencies develop guidelines - regulations * Agencies employ representatives - encourage employees * Agencies have age requirements - different requirements - expertise - interest - overall responsibility - permit authority - probable causes - proper authority - public interest - radio communication equipment - rules - services - special expertise * Agencies include departments - methods - involved in sustainable livelihoods creation also have different levels of power - launch investigations * Agencies make arrangements - determination - faith effort - good faith effort - reasonable effort - recommendations * Agencies offer information - schedules - operate facilities - play a central role in trafficking women * Agencies provide assistance - details - educators - specific details - technical assistance * Agencies rely on officials - state health officials * Agencies represent government - mountain villages * Agencies require college education - seek information - specialize in types * Agencies support common rules - take legal actions * Agencies to take actions - appropriate actions * Many agencies have computers that people can take home - light duty programs which allow injured employees to return to duty - waiting lists for couples wishing to adopt infants - provide hot meals for people who are without means to purchase food - regulate the use, storage and disposal of solvents * Most agencies require couples to be married a minimum of one to three years. * Some agencies go so far as to chemically treat their pet areas with disinfectants - have animals - limit birth parents' services to facilitating the adoption of their children - operate offices or facilities that are in a remote location * begins when one person is given the authority to act for or in place of, another person. * downsizing disproportionately affects older, white males. * is an unit ### social organization | agency: Ad agency * Ad agencies are the communication specialists of the communication age. * Some ad agencies are very active in online advertising. * is an agency Adoption agency * Adoption agencies try to match parents to children as much as possible. * Most adoption agencies allow couples to choose the race of their child. Employment agency * Employment agencies are agencies - businesses that are paid when they find an employee to fill a position - have a major role to play in the workplace - serve as intermediaries between employers and job seekers * Most employment agencies handle jobs that are clerical or task oriented. * Some employment agencies charge fees only to the employer. Free agency * Free agencies are representations. * formal rather than a material or substantive capacity. - hard work Free agents have to work to get work * reigns in professional sports. * right of every American worker. Governmental agency * Governmental agencies are monopolies - employ chemists in research and testing laboratories - exist to aid the people in the formation and conduct of public policy * Many governmental agencies have their own web sites. * Most governmental agencies are concerned about the public having access. Health agency * Health agencies dedicate to awareness. * Health agencies have interest News agency * News agencies are agencies. * is an agency
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### social organization | agency: News organization * are in the business of grabbing and keeping adult viewers - selling subtle brands * is an agency<|endoftext|>### social organization | agency: Police * are agents of the ruling class, and, as such, soldiers who serve their interests - amongst the most mobile government servants - conservators of the peace - historians, they show up after a crime, say, rape or murder - individuals employed by the government - people - practically the only ones that carry guns, at least visibly - responsible for a number of things in abusive situations * can force youth to move from a public place even though no crime has been committed - in some cases search premises, vehicles or people without a warrant * carry guns to keep order and ensure our safety. * engage in corrupt activities when they abuse their power and authority for personal gain. * exist to preserve law and order. * have their own language, norms, mores, and rituals. * is used as a force to suppress opponents - where society is headed * maintain records of people who have committed felonies and some misdemeanors. * occasionally torture and rape detainees. * often engage in deviant acts as members of both formal and informal associations - use fingerprints to catch criminals * play a key role in small arms control. * profiling for age is still police profiling based on a stereotype. * routinely use torture to extract confessions. * still practice arbitrary detention and torture. * use dogs to catch bad guys and to help search for things or people - track and capture escaped prisoners or to sniff for bombs - force more often against their own racial or ethnic groups * use radar to detect the speed of passing motorists - waves which are reflected from moving cars * work in partnership with neighborhoods to address problems and goals. + 2009 Victorian bushfires, Major fires, East, Dandenong Ranges fires: 2009 :: Fires :: Victoria, Australia * Police think the fire was deliberately lit. + Bullet, Bullet types, Handgun bullet: Firearms :: Ballistics * Hollow point handgun bullets. Handguns are mostly used for sport target shooting or self defense. Police use the pistol because an officer can easily carry it and have it ready to use. + Feud, Other websites: Violence * Police are very edgy. + Metropolitan Transportation Authority Police: Law enforcement in New York :: Transportation in New York :: Transportation in Connecticut :: Law enforcement agencies of the United States * Police are full police officers in New York State and in the state of Connecticut. The force was started in 1998. * Police blame Kurdish rebels. + PQ: Practical Intelligence Quotient, Gameplay: Video games * A game has 10 stages, which have 10 levels each. The light at the end of a level is your destination. Obstacles and traps try to fail you your way to the goal at the same time. Police are one of the most troublemaking ones. Police agency * Police agencies are responsible for the prevention, detection and investigation of crimes - define and count for the purpose of deterring gang crime - take actions - vary on regulations regarding public access to files and photographs * Some police agencies have staff qualified to perform fingerprinting. ### social organization | agency | police: Local police * are responsible for providing basic public safety and law and order. * have people. Posse * are groups, each made up of ten students from diverse cultural and economic backgrounds * is police State police * are laws * provide police protection * respond to scenes.
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### social organization | agency: Private agency * Most private agencies are non-profit organizations - nonprofit organizations * Private agencies cover employees, families and individuals - receive children as a result of voluntary relinquishments by birthparents * Some private agencies have religious affiliations and work primarily with adopters of that religion - hire conservation biologists<|endoftext|>### social organization | agency: Public agency * Public agencies account for one third of all employment. * Public agencies are covered employers without regard to the number of employees employed - usually non-profit organizations which are affiliated with a government agency - encompass all government and quasi-government departments or organizations * Public agencies have interest - public interest - provide expertise - regulate utility rates, operations, and services as a substitute for competition - to take actions * Some public agencies depend on market rates for their electricity. * includes a commission, board, agency or other governmental body. Service agency * Service agencies are agencies. * is an agency<|endoftext|>### social organization | agency: Several agency * Several agencies comprise the executive branch of government, each one a bureaucracy in itself. + Teddy bear, Healing, helping and learning, Teddy Bear Cop: Toys * Law enforcement in America gives children in tramatic experiences teddy bears for comfort. Several agencies provide the bears the children going through crisis. The bears are donated by citizens to help children deal with transition from their homes to foster care or when a parent is arrested for disobeying the law and is taken to jail. Firemen also hand out bears to children victims of fire.<|endoftext|>### social organization | agency: State agency * Some state agencies attempt to manage their lands in a biologically sustainable manner - plan and manage their lands in a biologically sustainable manner * State agencies adopt rules to implement state and federal law. * State agencies are governmental bodies with statewide jurisdiction - public entities - responsible for implementing the laws the legislature passes - where issues such as rates for electricity are handled - employ more wildlife biologists than do federal agencies - have management - include departments - launch investigations - monitor water quality and track the contaminants and pollution * State agencies represent mountain villages Travel agency * Travel agencies are agencies - service companies - specialize in types * sales position, like selling magazines.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Army * Armies are capable of arm men - crowds * Armies are located in barracks - battlefields - forts - war - made of soldiers * Armies are military branchs - forces * Armies are used for defense - protection - conduct demonstrations - face death * Armies have greek soldiers - many soldiers - mechanisms - offer options - reflect the social structure of their societies - require officers - take steps - use napalm, a highly flammable substance, to spread fire * Most armies have many soldiers * Some armies are notorious for promiscuity and rape. * Some armies have formal command and control rules - musicians + Smoke grenade: Toys :: Weapons :: Law enforcement equipment * A 'smoke bomb' or 'smoke grenade' is a bomb that produces a cloud of smoke. It can be used as a toy to make large clouds of colored smoke. It is normally used in the military though. Smoke bombs are used to hide positions and objects from sight behind a thick cloud of smoke. Armies also use smoke grenades to hide soldiers from the enemy. Smoke bombs can be thrown or shot. They normally contain a powdered chemical that is ignited. It produces a large cloud of smoke quickly. Then something else starts burning, keeping the smoke cloud thick.
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### social organization | army: Egyptian army * Egyptian armies have greek soldiers * Most egyptian armies have greek soldiers Bastion * are spade-shaped widenings of the corners. * is an organization<|endoftext|>### social organization: Branch * Many branches become extinct in time, as has happened in human evolution. * Most branches have leaves - strict rules about the naming of organisms or celestial bodies or compounds - produce leaves - reach height * Some branches are stronger than others depending on how close to the trunk they are - go to the joints, muscles, and skin of the back - make senses * are division - divisions that stem from a main trunk * are located in forests - trunks - organizations - points in the web where a route splits into two or more routes - roots in the air - stalks - streams * are the additional operations of the bank that carry out banking operations - cable, roads, pipelines, and routes that connect nodes with one another * break because of weak attachment, decay and poor tree health. * can bear fruit only if they are attached to a vine or a tree. * contain substances. * dedicate to photosynthesis. * define the shape and form of a tree. * die, and entire trees often die prematurely. * die-back is typical in trees deficient in zinc. * fall from gum trees, particularly on stormy days - off, float downstream, and plant themselves miles from their origin * have compositions - customers - fringes - sides - twigs * hold leaves and help make food. * include leaves. * is division - used to name streams in Maryland and Virginia * lying on the ground make perfect homes for snakes, salamanders and shrews. * offer shelter. * provide additional coverage - nutrition * reach equal height - levels * touching a building can allow carpenter ants easy access to it. + Royal Forest and Bird Protection Society of New Zealand: Organizations :: Wellington * Branches are very engaged in conservation projects on a community and regional basis. + Tree: * The trunk is the main body of the tree. The trunk is covered with bark which protects it from damage. Branches grow from the trunk. They spread out so that the leaves can get more sunlight. ### social organization | branch: Axillary branch * are said to be subtended by the related leaf. * grow upwards from the nodes and bear the foliage leaves. Conifer branch * grow at more obtuse angles to the main stem. * refer to big forests, saw-teethes refer to forest industry. Dead branch * are easier to find before the leaves drop - preferred to living ones, presumably for greater prey visibility * can break and fall at any time. * occur on almost all trees, even healthy ones. Dry branch * are more sensitive to heat from lights. * lying on the ground are a fine source of fuel. Large branch * are known as boughs and small branches are known as twigs. * can break off and drop. Lateral branch * emerge from axillary buds , which are apical meristems located at the stem nodes. * produce leaves. Lower branch * droop as trees grow older. * have twigs. Post office * Most post offices have telephones that can use both cards and tokens. * are branchs - centers - facilities - government buildings * are located in buildings - cities - towns * have telephones, and sell phonecards and change currency. * refers to the server machine on which mailboxes are defined.
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### social organization | branch: Tree branch * Some tree branches are part of acacias - apricots - aspen - baobabs - beeches - cedar - chicots - cocos - conifers - elms - gingkoes - grapefruit - guavas - hollies - laurels - mandarins - mangroves - papaya - pine - pinyons - rowans - spruces - titis - willows - contain water * are a device for visualizing the wind - good for making teepees or lean-tos - located in roofs - naked - very good for the feet and also help satisfy the chewing urge * break, often falling on power lines already overburdened with their own ice load. * make good roosts and can be changed easily as they get soiled - great natural perches
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### social organization | branch: Tributary * Most tributaries are small streams or creeks that feed into a major river or reservoir. * Tributaries are bodies of water that flow into a larger river - water, which flow into a larger river - branches of streams that converge to form the trunk of a larger stream, or river - smaller feeder streams of rivers which empty into a larger mainstem river - the smaller rivers and streams that flow into the larger river - flow into other bodies of water + List of rivers of Bolivia, By drainage basin * This list is arranged by the place the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name. Rivers longer than 400 miles are in bold - Cambodia, By drainage basin * This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Colombia * This is a list of rivers in Colombia. They are arranged by where they drain. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Costa Rica * This is a 'list of rivers in Costa Rica'. The list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Cuba: Geography of Cuba * This is a 'list of rivers in Cuba'. It is arranged from west to east, by coast. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - East Timor * This is a list of rivers in East Timor. The list is arranged by where the river drains from west to east. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Ecuador * These are the rivers of Ecuador. This listing is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - El Salvador - Fiji * They are listed by island in clockwise order, starting at the north end of each island. Tributaries are listed under the parent stream - Guatemala - Guyana * This is a 'list of rivers in Guyana'. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Haiti: Geography of Haiti * This is a 'list of rivers of Haiti'. They are arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Honduras * This list is arranged by where the river drains, from east to west. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Indonesia, By Island: Geography of Indonesia * This list is arranged by island from west to east. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Israel: Geography of Israel * This is a 'list of rivers in Israel'. This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Jamaica * This is a 'list of rivers of Jamaica'. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Jordan * This is a 'list of rivers in Jordan'. This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Laos * This is a 'list of rivers in Laos '. This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Myanmar - Nepal: Geography of Nepal * This is a 'list of rivers in Nepal'. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Nicaragua - Panama * This is a 'list of rivers in Panama'. The list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Paraguay * This is a 'list of rivers in Paraguay'. This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Peru, By Drainage Basin * This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name. Rivers longer than 400 miles are in bold - Suriname * This is a 'list of rivers in Suriname'. This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Syria * This is a list of rivers of Syria. Tributaries are listed under the river into which they flow - Tanzania: Geography of Tanzania * This is a list of rivers in Tanzania. They are arranged by where the rivers flows. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Trinidad and Tobago * This is a 'list of rivers of Trinidad and Tobago'. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - Uruguay * This is a 'list of rivers in Uruguay'. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name. All rivers in Uruguay drain to the Atlantic Ocean - Venezuela * This is a 'list of rivers in Venezuela'. This list is arranged by where the river drains. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name - the Dominican Republic * This is a 'list of rivers in the Dominican Republic'. They are arranged in clockwise order around the island starting in the northwest corner. Tributaries are indented under each larger stream's name
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### social organization: Bureau * are located in bedrooms - cities - government - home offices - office buildings - private, self-regulatory agencies that seek the voluntary cooperation of business * are used for clothing - drawers - keepsakes - sachets - storage * die when the structure of the state collapses. * exist because business believes that it is best able to correct abuses in the marketplace. * have authority - experts * is an unit * provide information. * release results. * see growth.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Bureaucracy * Bureaucracies are about information, and that is what registers provide. * Bureaucracies are also about controls - more involved in everyday life than in democracies - central to the lives of most all modern people - conventional because they make policy decisions - infamous for being unresponsive - inherently difficult to operate and manage, increasingly with size - nothing more than information processing hierarchies - organizations characterized by A. employees who are specialized - sophisticated promoters of the interests of bureaucrats - the most common kind of formal organization in American society - thus deontic systems for organizational and social control - very common in today's society - break work down into a series of discrete tasks - can be both inhumane and dehumanizing - cost a lot, often fail to solve problems, and frequently make things worse - develop systems that try and work for the greater good for the most people - exist to perpetuate themselve and to increase in size - flourish on procedures instituted to insure efficiency - have a metabolic urge to maximize their missions - often trade jobs for negligible gains - provide examples of emergent properties in human social systems - rely on paying workers rigid rates to do specific jobs * Bureaucracies tend to be input rather than output oriented - sterile - they have no sense of humor, which is very dangerous - reward conformity and status-quo thinking - thrive by working in tandem with special interests * can enhance efficiency, logic, and rationality in large organizations. * can, in theory, be a saving grace for the world. * concept in sociology and political science. * giant mechanism operated by pygmies. * hallmark of civilized society. * is about categories - an organization - government officials - located in universities - long-term protection from prosperity, like sowing salt after the harvest - part of everyday life - video games * seems so common that people sometimes think it is the only way to organise work. * set of networks of patronage. ### social organization | bureaucracy: Centralized bureaucracy * Centralized bureaucracies change slowly. * makes it difficult for masses to reap the rewards of commerce.
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### social organization: Business * All businesses are important to a vital, growing economy. * Encompasses the business and finance world. * Every business consumer of manufactured products, and many businesses are in manufacturing. * Many businesses adopt domain names that correspond to their trade names or trademarks - also recycle corrugated boxes and packaging * Many businesses are reliant on growing markets, which include increased consumers - subject to severe loss because of natural hazards - believe that consumers are simply sheep - claim to pay attention to employee relations - find that casual dress boosts employee morale and productivity - generate small volumes of certain types of hazardous waste * Many businesses have an employee who has bullied others - employees that work from home a couple of days a week or even full time - scholarships for dependents of their employees - keep items on hand that can be used to manufacture methamphetamine - match gifts made by their employees to approved or qualified charities - measure the success of communication activities by their immediate impact on sales - now rely on the Internet as a primary or even sole carrier of information - offer loans or educational allowances to employees and their families - provide benefits to society as a whole - rely on adding the proper amount of moisture to indoor air - spend enormous amounts of money on advertising, hoping to catch someone's eye - still rely on traditional methods of accounting and inventory - take the name of their owner or founder - target families because the family unit consumes more * Many businesses try to avoid classifying workers as employees for a variety of reasons - keep prices low in order to attract and retain customers * Many businesses use census data for demographic information, which affects consumers - chemicals as sales products, in processing and as cleaning agents - computers to sell lists of their customers to other, similar businesses - intranets for their internal communications - the Internet as an effective means of marketing - voice messaging systems to speed up the flow of information between employees - utilize large amounts of natural gas for heating or manufacturing processes * Most businesses are more concerned about profit margins than human rights - attempt to quantify their costs by using budgets - depend on computers to perform day to day functions - experience cycles of good times and bad times, growth and retraction - fail after the owner dies, gets disabled, or retires - focus on sales growth and reducing costs as the tools that influence profitability - generate wastes as a part of their everyday operations * Most businesses have a direct correlation to the personality of the person who owns it - an automatic system to detect viruses and illegal content - insurance that covers damage to stores and buildings - market research on consumer satisfaction - one or two key individuals who create the environment for success - only temporary facilities for storing hazardous wastes - very strict punishment for employees destroying co-workers' work - hire bodies for particular jobs rather than people to help build a future - keep electronic records - now depend heavily on computers and electronic means of communication and commerce - only register trademarks within the states in which they do most of their business - plan to grow over time - provide their employees with health insurance coverage - rely heavily on information systems to run their business * Most businesses rely on computers to perform crucial tasks - phone systems, which can also be affected by disasters - report earnings using the accrual principle of accounting - start as family-owned, but successful ones often become too big for a family to run - tend to grow quickly or they never get off the ground * Most businesses use a 'firewall' to prevent hackers from accessing their systems - the Internet for business-related functions * Some businesses are corporations - created to get more money for the owner of the business - finance start-up costs through private investors * Some businesses have more zeroes at the end of their bills and their income - problems with employee theft that largely relate to inadequate controls - young people sign a form when they buy spray paint * Some businesses make and sell products which pose potential hazards - use of equipment to transmit and receive data - now say that no one can smoke cigarettes in any of their offices - offer financial incentives to people who attend wellness programs - require their employees to wear a uniform or a suit - show a relationship to weather on specific days in the week or on public holidays * Some businesses use different banks to separate accounts - differentiation as a competitive advantage - dumpsters for recycling collection - lie detectors to assess worker loyalty - the Internet to support their users via the web, e-mail and newsgroups - videotape their employees in the every day performance of their jobs * affects social change and is influenced by it. * also have responsibility for the safety of their products - rely on the Internet as a primary source of communication - save time and money and can keep customers happy - transform resources into money * always look at a person's personality. * are about groups of workers with shared goals - an important group of telecoms consumers - both users and producers - commercial, industrial, or professional dealings - complex entities - customers and suppliers to governments - dependent on the exchange of information through computers - ethical to the extent that they act in their own self-interest - exchange organizations created to make money - in business to make money - just groups of people - organic entities that evolve around the customer rather than a business plan - regulated to prevent pollution and to keep their own carbon emissions low * are responsible for paying for their hazardous waste disposal - what they sell and how they promote their products * are the biggest users of loanable funds - end users of the public education system - intermediary through which they can be taxed - largest consumers of computer services products - source of a community's ability to change, innovate and adapt * brings customers. * broad term that covers many different career paths. * can file and pay taxes electronically - function as individual proprietorships, partnerships, joint ventures, etc * can only provide jobs if they stay in business and make a profit - survive and grow if they are competitive * can reduce costs by having people telecommute - their use of hazardous materials and generation of hazardous waste * carries out repair services * cognitive activity. * comes to towns. * command vast resources and are the dominant engine of growth in the world today. * compete to make money by serving consumers. * comprise people. * count numbers. * covers services. * create jobs and wealth - oppression and governments create prosperity - wealth through the efforts of man * creates experience - new jobs - opportunity * depend on aviation as the fastest way to move both people and goods - upon the movement of freight as much as the movement of people * determines performance. * develops creative designs * directories, where the common name calls up contact information, products or stock quotes. * do have a role in education. * drives almost every economy - our economy and that of the world * earn profits by promoting their goods. * employ and pay people to work - economists to forecast sales and economic conditions * employs workers. * exist to generate goods and services for individuals or other businesses. * exist to make and keep a profit - money and a profit - money, and educational institutions exist to educate people * experiences sales. * finds operations. * fixed reproducible tangible capital includes capital owned by nonprofit institutions. * focuses on approaches - people as shareholders, customers or employees * follows distinct patterns * game of strategy. * generally pay more in taxes than the cost of services they require. * generic term covering a variety of topics and abilities. * gets results. * goes through lifetimes - stages * grows over time. * has a key role in sustainability - for better for worse. * has a role in meeting other societal needs as well - to play in achieving a good society - strong influence on society and community - culture - dependency - girls - growth capital - locations - owners - skills - strategies * have a key role to play in bringing e-commerce to developing countries - surprising amount in common with living organisms - departments and personnel that specialize in particular functions * have difficulty maintaining a workforce without adequate places for workers to live - affordable places for workers to live - management games that simulate parts of the economy - many different types of systems - wives and husbands working more than one job * helps readers. * hires people because it needs the services they perform - veterans * includes backgrounds. * increase their profits and productivity, which can create jobs. * increases advantage - consumption - employment * increasingly rely on the stability and security of their computer networks and systems. * involves in production - more than just creating wealth for some people and providing jobs - politicians * is about business, making money, making profits for the shareholders - products, solutions, and services - the application of knowledge - acting - aims * is an activity to provide goods or services at a profit - open system dependent on the environment for inputs - based on relationships * is business and capitalism is capitalism - competition part of business - the Web is the Web - when it comes to money * is business, and people run their businesses in many ways - politics is politics - whether it's a public or private company - characterized by what economists call ease of entry and exit - commercial organizations * is concerned with the environment outside the workplace - quality of our workforce * is conducted in a global economy, which has led to increased competition - social context that has a human rights dimension - entertainment - essentially an equal trade between a seller and a buyer - for businesses which provide products or services to the dentist or dental industry - in the business of selling a product or service - just people working with people * is located in big cities - skyscrapers - motivated usually by profit * is one of the games of life - ruling forces in the modern world - other people's money - people, and people do business with the people they like and trust - sectors * is the backbone of economy of all advanced countries - contributor to governments * is the economic engine of the world - that drives our economy * is the exchange of goods and services - medium through which most of the necessities of life are provided to everyone - opiate of the American people - quality of relationships - single greatest force in all of the world - strongest, most influential institution on the Planet today - thus one type of relationship between people - used for organisation - viewed as an important segment of the society * is what drives the economy - most people do with most of their lives * know the difference between borrowing to consume and borrowing to invest. * large consumer of climatic information. * like to do business with people they know. * lose millions every year through retail theft, the legal word for shoplifting. * major actor in building bridges between nations and people - source of political monies * make a profit by selling products that satisfy the needs of consumers - money by responding to the desires of their customers - profits by having, total revenues that exceed total costs * makes choices - differences - faith effort - good faith effort - growth strategies * management function. * meets characteristics * move through cycles of producing and selling goods and services. * multifaceted discipline. * needs mathematicians. * network of communication against a background of relationships. * occasionally employ historians to manage their records and archives. * often have trading relationships with their debtors - involves meeting new people - purchase insurance that indemnifies their organization and people * operate with the joint goals of productivity and social responsibility. * owned by women constitute one of the fastest growing sectors of the economy - represent one of the fastest growing sectors of the nation's economy * participates in markets. * pay income taxes on their profits - more when poor children grow up to be less educated, less productive workers - people to administer their various information networks * pays workers. * planning A business plan guide for management decisions. * plays an important role in technology and school reform. * process, and success result of doing that process well. * processes defines how a business operates. * produce more when the price of output increases. * produces materials - quality products * provides opportunity * reaches certain levels - maturity levels * reengineering, changes a business process to improve speed, service and quality. * relies on consultants - food safety consultants * rely on economists to interpret the impact of a changing economy on business decisions - trademarks to differentiate and identify their products or services * requires care - proof * save money because their employees are more productive and committed. * sells products. * shows growth - impressive growth * staple part of the social order. * succeed only when the people within the organization succeed at their individual job. * succession of logical decisions. * takes advantage. * tends to be conducted in suits, worn by both men and women. * thrive as part of the overall social system by serving the needs of the system - in healthy communities * tos create jobs. * tos provide design services * typically mitigate risk by reducing the probability, the consequences or both. * use INK to access information and to file government forms electronically - materials, water, utilities, and create waste - rechargeable batteries in bar code readers, portable printers and cell phones - the Internet to provide access to complex databases, such as financial databases * uses chemicals - computer software - techniques * usually care more about money than animals - invest heavily in the early years of an economic expansion * work with people who have names and job titles. * worldwide keep investing in technology despite economic uncertainty. + Administrator: Internet :: Occupations * Administrators' are people who organize things like businesses. All businesses have administrators. They make decisions, organize the people who work there and make sure that things are working alright and there are no problems. + Competition, Competitive: Everyday life * Businesses often say that they sell things at 'competitive prices'. This means that their prices are lower than those of other businesses which sell similar things. + Keynesian economics: Economic theories * Keynes said capitalism was a good economic system. In a capitalism system, people earn money from their work. Businesses employ and pay people to work. Then people can spend their money on things they want. Other people work and make things to buy. Sometimes the capitalism system has problems. People lose their work. People cannot work and cannot spend money. + Mildred Pierce, Story: 1945 movies :: Film noir :: American crime movies :: Women's movies :: United States National Film Registry movies :: Movies based on books :: English language movies * Her husband leaves her for dead-common Mrs. Beedlehoff. Mildred has two little girls. Mildred must take care of her kids alone by secretly slinging hash. She is a good cook. She opens a restaurant. Business is great. She gets rich. Mildred gives Veda everything she wants. Mildred starts to date a playboy named Monty. He is spoiled, too. He constantly asks Mildred for money. * Some businesses are created to get more money for the owner of the business. Other businesses are created to give a service without getting more money. They just deliver the service and get 'some' money. * Businesses can be big or small. For example, one person can open a small barber-shop. A big business, like Microsoft, employs thousands of people all over the world.
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### social organization | business: Academia * does to writing what formaldehyde does to living tissue. * embraces the artist only after the art has survived time. * has many resources that can enhance the practice of public health. * is about the exchange of ideas on both sides - an agent that searches the Web for information on specific people - based on trust and honesty - increasingly the victim of online plagiarism * is interested in knowledge for knowledge's sake - open discourse and the free exchange of ideas - supposed to deliver intellectual goods for free - well known for being a distinct sub-culture * land where rewards and recognition come few and far between. * likes to think of itself as a collection of true intellectuals. * manipulates traditional ethics to justify human experimentation. * plays a role in laying the groundwork and maintaining the status quo. * religious cult empowerment of self word. * uses grades and promotions to recognize varying levels of achievement. American business * benefit greatly by the existence of foreign trade zones. * have a 'pyramid' structure. * is what drives our economy. * spend billions of dollars to educate and train their employees - millions of dollars on marketing research<|endoftext|>### social organization | business: Big business * Most big businesses are corporations, and many small businesses also choose to incorporate. * big beneficiary of government pay-outs. * can capitalize on their size - pay lower salaries to workers who are seen to have few skills * dominate the traditional business world. * increases their profits by eliminating workers. * is business - characterized by the chase for lucrative super-profits - the driving force of the economy * makes money by providing health care and education. * spend millions to develop leaders. Business finance * is about finding money for a company's activities - when businesses acquire, spend, and manage money + Finance, Business finance * Business finance is about finding money for a company's activities. It studies trying to make more profit than loss, and taking good risks for the chance to make more money. Business insurance * Business Insurance Covers all aspects of the insurance industry for corporate managers. * common type of ownership insurance. Currency exchange * Some currency exchanges offer small plastic trash bags to carry dinars. * are business - financial institutions * earn a profit by charging a fee for most of their services. * is at the prevailing rate at time of purchase - offered mainly at banks and currency exchange outlets - the trading of one currency against another
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### social organization | business: Ecotourism * Most ecotourism is concentarted on birdwatching, whale watching, and examination of flora. * actively contribute to the conservation of natural and cultural heritage. * are tourism - vacationing * benefits communities by stimulating the economy and providing funds for local projects - more than local wildlife populations * can also have negative effects on the environment itself - assist with sustaining traditional cultures in natural settings - be positive and negative - destroy ecotourism - enhance public awareness of the benefits of marine reserves * can involve birding, hiking, biking, canoeing, hunting, and fishing - considerable outdoor activity - thus be a scheme to integrate wildlands protection with rural development * creates employment and is an important earner of foreign currency. * incorporates environmental and cultural education. * influences both the cultural environment and the natural environment. - more than adventure trips, nature study, and cultural excursions * means education, for both tourists and residents of nearby communities. * signifies something quite new and different. * takes root in Argentina's Patagonia. * thrives because of the community's reverence for nature and the natural environment. + Sungai Petani, Tourism: Settlements in Kedah :: Towns in Asia * Sungai Petani offers high potential of growth in tourism industry specifically in Historic Themes, Ecotourism and Aqua sports. The district of Kuala Muda, in which Sungai Petani is, has the 2nd largest mangrove area in the country. Ecotourism is now in continuous development. Electronic business * consists of layers and layers of processes and steps. * is more than web-commerce - supposed to be ushering in an era of efficiency - the most recent step in the evolution of business transactions * means different things to different companies.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business: Factory farm * Many factory farms use groundwater for cleaning, cooling and providing drinking water. * Most factory farms raise animals. * are machines. * consume enormous quantities of fossil fuels, water, land, and other resources. * contain thousands of tightly packed pigs. * damage the environment as well as the animals they hold captive for profit. * displace family farms, destroy the environment, and drain rural economies. * is business * use farm animals as the machines to produce a toxic industry. Financial business * depend upon interest income and have interest expense. * is all about transferring, comparing, matching and reacting to information - also the forerunner to implementing information technology
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### social organization | business: Firm * Many firms use the book value of capital invested as their measure of capital invested. * Most firms use computers for word processing, time and billing, and calendaring - the accrual basis of accounting in recording transactions * Some firms advertise disinfectants and sealants to prevent further fungal growth. * achieve products. * are business - organizations - sellers in the product markets and buyers in resource markets - the producers of capital and final goods and services * create jobs - net new jobs * dedicate to development. * deliver results. * develop methods. * find workers. * focus on cost - geographic markets * focus on global growth markets - low cost - momentum strategies - opportunity * grow over time. * have business - duties - employees - experience * have extensive experience - human experience - ideas - offices - options - policy - ranges - several options * help markets. * hire students. * implement strategies. * invest in cost-reduction and earn negative profit when they are young. * lose customers. * maintain offices. * make discoveries - profits by producing and selling goods - unique products * offer management - similar products * participate in markets. * pay attention. * perform services. * produce results. * provide business - engineer expertise - small business * pursue innovation strategies * says filter enables cilia to expel, unimpeded, particles from frogs' breathing canals. * sell products. * specialize in assessments. * take advantage - approaches - precaution * to provide construction. * work with industries. + Exhibition: Trade :: Events * Some exhibitions show things which can be bought. Firms exhibit the things they have made, hoping to encourage business. These exhibitions are called trade fairs. They are sometimes called 'expositions' or 'expos'. They may be open to the public, but others are just for invited business people. ### social organization | business | firm: Consult firm * offer services. - small business * use methods.
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### social organization | business | firm: Corporation * Exceed Governments in Their Power. * Many corporations are concerned about the Internet's effect on employee productivity - economically larger than countries in which they operate - believe that an ethical corporate culture is related to strategic advantage - conduct business around the world - earn income from business activities in more than one state - encourage employees to stay active in family life * Many corporations generate revenues in excess of the gross domestic products of many countries - of the gross domestic products of several countries - give away a portion of their profits to good causes - handle personal information for means of conducting business * Many corporations have firewalls to protect their computers - investment policies that guide their portfolio decisions - revenues larger than governments - websites which offer an abundance of information, including annual reports - make non-monetary contributions, which are often easier to get than cash * Many corporations match gifts made by their employees to educational causes - of their employees, spouses and retired employees - the gifts their employees make to charities - pay lower tax rates than private individuals - spend millions of dollars annually on business cards and other imprinted items - sponsor their own teams, which play in organized leagues - team up with charitable organizations to raise money * Many corporations use Web sites as key components of their marketing campaigns - firewalls to protect sensitive information from hackers, etc - multiple systems to manage worker health and safety - usually allocate funds to be used for charitable donations * Most corporations allow their employees to keep the bonuses earned on a company expense account - are concerned about how their employees utilize their time - fund where they have operations and employees * Most corporations have more than one mail system - programs that match charitable contributions made by employees - public relations departments - real estate that is managed by a real property asset management specialist * Some corporations are as large and powerful as small nations - larger and more powerful than some governments - richer and more powerful than nations - become so large that they do business in many countries - discard waste without safety measures and contaminate soil and water * Some corporations have dozens of divisions world-wide, and employ hundreds of thousands of people - legal existence - offices dedicated to philanthropic giving - principal offices - issue bonds for less than their par values - raise cattle - seek to maximize their profit by reducing the quality of their products * also benefit by publicly supporting education - develop their communities by enhancing the environment in which they operate - finance privately owned landfills - use maps to show where their stores are for their customer's convenience * are a major source of revenue for federal and provincial governments - more costly and complicated form of business organization than partnerships - particular type of unregistered association - separate legal entity and are subject to corporate tax on taxable income - system of power - an artificial being with the legal rights, liabilities and duties of a person - arguably the most powerful force shaping the future of humankind * are artificial entities and can only act through agents - separate and apart from natural persons - at the opposite end of the spectrum of available forms of business entities - bloodless, a collection of documents and tax forms as much as a legion of people * are business entities chartered by states that are legally separate from their owners - that exist separately from any given individual - businesses - citizens - companies - consumers * are creations of law and are only permitted to do what is authorized under law - the state, with methods of creation dictated by state statute * are creatures of both statute and contract - statute formed by the filing of the articles of incorporation - dictatorships - entities of pure evil with no view of the future - geographically widespread - hierarchical and modeled after the military - in business to make profits for their shareholders - inherently no more and no less capable of integrity than individuals - instrumentalities set up by the sovereign people to perform specific functions - large business * are legal entities chartered by state governments - formed and governed under legislation - given the rights of people * are legal fictions designed for economic profit - that exist solely to maximize the profits of their shareholders - less and less rooted in the community and in the country - made of people and people have long memories - mere pieces of paper, which government can change and alter at their whim - more complicated to organize than the other forms of ownership * are more expensive to form and operate than sole proprietorships and partnerships - than other types of businesses - persons, and have been for over a century - public bodies created by public charter to serve a public interest - separate entities, legally and financially distinct from their owners * are subject to greater governmental control than other forms of doing business - income and other taxes - supporters of social issues - taxable entities that fall under a different scheme from individuals * are the biggest employers of freelance writers - engine of wealth creation - form of business organization most often associated with the term business - kinds of entities that like to keep their communications private * are the main form of business in which owners have limited liability - proponents of the orthodoxy of economic growth - only device society has to effectively create wealth - third major source of debt securities - transnational, merging and splitting like slime molds - well known for their detailed budgets and financial statements * benefit greatly from establishing brand loyalty among children. * bring jobs to communities and help support other businesses. * build carriers. * can be either government-owned or privately owned - combine with each other, into bigger and more powerful entities - do evil things, but so can governments, families and religious sects - have an existence that survives their owners - hide people of color and women in jobs out of the main chain of command - only act through their individual employees and agents - pay dividends out of both profits and surplus * can raise capital by issuing stock,bonds or other securities - simply selling new stock, bonds, or other securities * can, and do, own personal property. * comprise individuals who make up teams, business units, departments and divisions. * control commodification, work, and media and target individual identity - vast quantities of wealth and have impact on many lives * depend upon a body of law in which they can operate without interference. * do experience double-taxation. * dominate media, universities and education - science and medicine, and determine what gets researched and published * evolve from small businesses to larger entities through blood and sweat. * exist as legal entities under the law, quasi-legal people - because of consumers * exist to make a profit for some stockholders * exist to make money for their officers and shareholders * exists solely to produce profits and converse only in the language of accounting. * expand the use of their money to buy, rent, lease or influence politicians. * follow the principle of centralized management. * give money to institutions to help expand markets. * have a lower federal tax rate at all levels of income compared with individuals - relative level of autonomy as well as a level of freedom of action - different forms for taxation purposes - direct impact on the lives of poor people each and every day - ideas - innovative ideas - neither race nor color * have no conscience, but exist solely for whatever profits they can make - constitutions, no bills of rights - heart or soul - laws that control their morality or ethics - perpetual life - social responsibilities as they are an integral part of society - the status of artificial legal persons - tremendous power, even more so than governments today * increase presence. * inform members. * involve individuals, property and a legal structure. * is de jure municipal corporation and political subdivision. * issue ownership shares in the form of common stock. * like to refer to themselves as families. * live or die by whether they can sustain growth. * merge for growth opportunities and as companies grow they typically add employees. * move people to areas experiencing healthier economies - thousands of employees and their families every year * need experts - guidance * now own and manage huge domains of the public sector. * often benefit from more than one round of public subsidies - issue bonds as well as stock as a means of raising capital * only exist through their individual officers, agents, or employees. * operate in regions. * own a very small percentage of business assets - supermarkets * pay a lower rate of income tax than individuals - tax on capital gain at the same rate as tax on ordinary income - taxes on the business income at corporate tax rates * pollute the air inside workplaces as well. * possess, in many respect, greater rights than human beings. * raise and invest billions of dollars of capital annually. * regularly prepare balance sheets to determine their current net worth. * routinely use urine tests to check for drugs. * sell bonds to help finance their ongoing business activities. * share stock and airplanes are considered personal property. * spend big money to make sure people see a repetitive, consistent image. * support restrictions. * tend to be powerful economically and devoid of human connection and meaning - see the light only when they begin to feel the heat * think in terms of volume sales, economies of scale, export to other countries. * use scenarios - statistics to promote and improve their products - the word 'globalization' to describe the transformation in the world economy * usually have a perpetual life as well, distinct from that of the shareholders - set of bylaws which govern how the corporation is run + Buzzword: Rhetoric :: Figures of speech :: Terminology * A 'buzzword' is a word or phrase that is made to either summarize a complex idea or reconstruct another word or phrase to reflect a particular point of view. Corporations make up buzzwords so that they can advertise stuff better. In this way, a buzzword is a lot like a product name or a proper noun. People can remember buzzwords better than non-buzzwords, which is why its good for advertising.
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### social organization | business | firm | corporation: American corporation * Most American corporations believe that an employee's primary duty is to work. * advocate for market reciprocity in world trade. * claim huge losses of revenue as a result of theft of their property. * compete and are involved in technology transfers across national borders. * have the right to earn profits. Big corporation * are bureaucracies that often promote people who are best at covering their asses - evil * have websites. * lose millions of dollars per hour when their datacenters go down. * spend millions of dollars annually to study the marketplace. Conglomerate * coarse rock made up of pebbles and even boulders. * is formed by river movement or ocean wave action. * sedimentary rock of sand and rounded gravel. * solid mass of round pebbles cemented together. ### social organization | business | firm | corporation | conglomerate: Media conglomerate * Most media conglomerates have interests in both print and broadcasting. * are apt to post enormous profits while small outlets struggle to survive. * are, of course, global phenomena. Crown corporation * account for a significant portion of government activity. * are distinct legal entities wholly owned by the government.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business | firm | corporation: Family business * are an extremely vital sector of the U.S. economy - creatures of entrepreneurs - the heart of the American business economy * dominate some of the largest sectors of the Canadian economy. * employ more than half of the national workforce. * generate about half the gross national product and half of the total wages paid. * is also the center of all businesses. * represent a significant proportion of the world economy. * unique environment where blood, money and power are mixed together. Global corporation * Some global corporations are larger economic units and have greater influence than some countries. * are different than monopoly corporations. * command the capital, technology, labor and many governments. * exist first and foremost as profit-making ventures. * have the ability to spread costs over a larger product portfolio. International corporation * Many international corporations have budgets larger than many nation-states. * are experts at tax avoidance and legal for now money laundering. * continue to exploit our riches and the work of our people. Japanese corporation * Some Japanese corporations use aromatherapy to keep workers alert. * give almost no financial information to their stockholders.
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### social organization | business | firm | corporation: Large corporation * All large corporations pay wages to their employees, and most pay dividends to stockholders. * Many large corporations are larger than many countries, with incomes larger than many counties GDPs - connect their corporate email systems to the Internet * Many large corporations have Intranets for their employees - divisions that develop different biometric systems - huge intranets - investors all over the world - own private networks that span the globe * Most large corporations are self-insured - distribute only a portion of their after-tax earnings to shareholders - employ their own legal staffs - have commercial policies that cover employees while they're traveling - use an automated time-keeping system to facilitate payroll processing * Some large corporations are major violators of human rights - hire anthroplogists to study their corporate structure * are a culture of cruelty and exploitation - often major violators of human rights - people who happen to work for large corporations - usually the ones who deliver the weakest customer service * have complex and diverse impacts on society - entire departments dedicated to competitive analysis - in-house accountants, attorneys, and security experts - many operational units that deliver products or services - thousands of personnel computers installed on the desks of their employees * invest considerable resources at all stages in the knowledge chain. * rule the earth and act with impunity toward the individual consumer. * spend millions annually on professionally designed and constructed websites. * spend millions of dollars each year manually installing software - to maintain their good names - on marketing every year - probably as much on public relations as on marketing * support restrictions. + Montreal, Economy * Montreal's economy is the second largest in Canada. Many large corporations have their main offices in Montreal. The city is home to four major Universities, welcoming students from all parts of Canada and from all over the world. Major corporation * Many major corporations conduct business around the world. * Most major corporations have their own marketing departments. * have lines of credit with banks. * spend fortunes on market research to get consumers' opinions about new products - millions of dollars creating brand name awareness Multinational corporation * are companies that operate in more than one country - firms engaged in productive activities in several countries - in partnership with city regions - often wealthier than the countries in which they operate * can purchase or start enterprises easily. * employ citizens from many different countries. * have thousands of employees and far-flung global offices and operations. Private corporation * Some private corporations maintain pools. * are insurance companies. * employ foresters to manage woodlands for pulp and timber operations. * have a smaller number of private individuals who have shares in the company. * need experts. S corporation * are closely-held firms that are exempt from corporate income tax. * have other benefits for entrepreneurs, especially in how they are taxed. Transnational corporation * are already more powerful than many nation states - responsible for all the laws in the jurisdications they do biz in * exist above and beyond civil society. * have the power to do good and bad, at home and abroad. * hold ninety percent of all technology and product patents worldwide. * prefer to deal directly with central governments. Dominant firm * Most dominant firms participate in markets. * pursue innovation strategies * take advantage. Entrepreneurial firm * are the back bone of our nation's economy. * operate in markets of low complexity, but high equivocality.
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### social organization | business | firm: Firm tofu * is best in stir-fry dishes, in soups or on the grill. * is dense and solid and can be cubed and served in soups, stir fried, or grilled - holds up well when fried - higher in protein, fat and calcium than other forms of tofu - probably most popular as a meat substitute in a stir-fry - sold chilled in blocks packaged in water Foreign firm * are found in almost all sectors of the economy. * focus on cost - low cost Large firm * Most large firms employ whole departments to monitor the Strategic Management of their businesses. * hire accountants directly to analyse their financial data. * pursue strategies.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business | firm: Law firm * Many law firms are leaders in the technological revolution. * Many law firms have attorneys who specialize in lobbying - programs which encourage their attorneys to do pro-bono work * Most law firms are a collection of lawyers - practice in a number of different practice areas, and for different industries * Some law firms use titles as a means of recognizing contributions. * are businesses - in business to practice law - partnerships, and are therefore owned and managed by the partners - service companies - specialized business professionals * can vary widely in size. * diversify when they lose business to more diverse firms. * grow out of a conservative profession that has enjoyed a monopoly. * have duties. * play a central role in offshore financial operations. Multinational firm * are an increasingly important part of international economic integration. * attempt to produce and market a product. Private firm * Most private firms focus on global growth markets * offer services. * take approaches. Publisher * Most publishers categorize their books by age group. * Some publishers advertise that their books are printed on acid-free paper. * are firms - in the business of publishing books - owners - people who know when to cut * often hold copyrights on books and other literary works. * site which reviews children's software. ### social organization | business | firm | publisher: Book publisher * Some book publishers are also foreign owned. * are in business to buy and sell a writer's words. * are, slowly, slowly, creating Web sites, and allowing customers to buy online. * have people look at covers and decide which they'd buy. * know that libraries foster book-buying. * spend money promoting their products at conventions and seminars. Music publisher * come in all shapes and sizes. * represent composers to collect royalties when recordings are sold - musical works, composers and lyricists Publishing house * Many publishing houses have websites or catalogs which list the titles they've printed in the past. * are houses - organizations Global business * is big business - increasingly a complex web of alliances and partnerships * tend to be ethically blind. Healthy business * have healthy banking relationships. * help integrate human and natural environments. * make up the spine of the American economy. International business * comprises a large and growing part of the worlds total business. * focus on people. * is business conducted in more than one country - different in nature to that of domestic business - the study of business transactions that cross national boundaries * stresses the application of management functions in an international setting. Internet business * is the core source of the new economy. * rely on each other to grow.
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### social organization | business: Journalism * allows one to touch people's hearts. * calling that tries to discover and expose the truth. * can also be contagious. * critical element in any society. * different form of writing in that it merely reports the facts of a particular event. * field which often requires a year or two of what is known as internship. * focuses on theories and practices of communication through broadcast and print media. * involves writing, editing, managing and producing materials for the mass media. * is about communication - technicalities and misleading statements - telling stories in a manner that people can get it - all about news and information - also about analysing and interpreting events * is an imperfect science - occupation requiring analytical skills and a detailed knowledge of history - biased toward the negative because people tend to talk about what goes wrong - both process and product - concerned properly and inescapably with daily events - considered a profession, like law or medicine - meant to enlighten or expand the mind - one of the areas relevant to the country's development efforts - only one aspect of writing which can involve Earth Science - politics - power - practices differently around the world in many different styles - primarily a way to tell stories - print mediums * is the ability to meet the challenge of filling space - art or school in which most forms of communication are collected * is the collection and periodical publication of news - publication of current news and information - enterprise of news specialists - grease that keeps the gears of democracy running - popular language used in pursuit of truth - practice of reporting the news of the day - process of ferreting out and disseminating information - ultimate expression of democracy and freedom - to basically give news and information - what gets into the papers or media * is, in most respects, the backbone of the media industry. * moral force in a free society. * profession that desperately needs to be on truth support - requires a grounding in ethical decision-making - with no room for the double standard * public service. * simple writing form. * special profession, sometimes hard for other people to understand. ### social organization | business | journalism: Civic journalism * is about helping citizens be citizens - inclusion, about getting the people into the tent - an idea, a different way of thinking about the news - both an attitude and a set of tools - one attempt at giving the public the news it demands from the media - practiced differently in every community it serves * seeks to report issues that reflect the concerns of citizens. Online journalism * has the capabilities of revolutionizing the sports industry. * is an exciting fusion of moving pictures, sound and interactivity - limited to people's imagination
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### social organization | business: Manufacturer * Many manufacturers make shoes especially designed for trail running - in varying styles and colors that can be termed therapeutic - trail shoes which have the characteristics needed for trail running * Many manufacturers use poultry or beef digests to enhance the palatability of their foods - wheat flour to keep spices from clumping - utilize chemists to make things * Most manufacturers also claim that they penetrate the skin and act on the lower layers - put more sugar in their foods to compensate for the lack of fat * Some manufacturers add caffeine to aspirin. * Some manufacturers also add deodorizing agents to block or mask waste odors - make bags from ballistic nylon, the fabric used in bulletproof vests - have mixed LED colors in an effort to approximate broad spectrum light * Some manufacturers make dry gel crystals that can take care of crickets' water needs - refrigerators with sliding shelves - special powder-free surgical gloves out of vinyl or nitrale - now make gloves without latex powders * Some manufacturers produce food on machinery that is also used to make many different products - orally administered iron supplements for newborn animals - restrict or forbid sales of their products via the internet - still distribute animal glues * Some manufacturers use cartilage powders and claim that their products have chondroitin - designations to distinguish their products which they claim as trademarks - highly toxic poisons to kill any mildew that comes into contact with it - wheat that has had the gluten removed to make gluten free foods * achieve compliance. * alter the chemical makeup of progesterone in order to create progestins. * are among the largest and most powerful companies in the world - business - makers * create products - superior products * do tests. * employ workers. * focus on quality. * have ability - advantage - clear advantage - departments - methods - plants - productivity advantage * is business * make products - soaps by combining calcium and fats - versions * offer guidelines - specific guidelines * place restrictions. * produce products - quality products * provide jobs - manuals - permanent jobs - services * recommend pregnancy tests * release new products * rely on electronics - solid state electronics * require types. * sell products. * show problems. * solve problems. * state alternative methods * suggest guidelines. * support production. * take chances - steps * to provide additional instruction * undertake tasks. * use channels - equipment - oil - parallel channels - parties - techniques - third parties * will have guidelines. + Turbocharger, Properties, Reliability: Motors :: Aircraft engines * Turbochargers can be damaged by dirty or poor oil. Most manufacturers recommend more frequent oil changes for turbocharged engines. The turbocharger will heat when running. Many recommend letting the engine idle for several minutes before shutting the engine off. This gives the turbo time to cool down. This will increase the life of the turbo. ### social organization | business | manufacturer: Auto manufacturer * Some auto manufacturers recommend against rustproofing new cars and trucks. * look at fuel as an important component in helping to meet emissions standards.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business | manufacturer: Automaker * Some automakers also offer side airbags - tout diesel fuels as the way to improve efficiency and prevent global warming * already use tube hydroforming technology to make truck chassis. * can produce vehicles that are significantly more fuel efficient. * generally decorate cars with chrome or silver trim. * refer to their stability-control systems by different trademarked names. * use palladium, together with platinum and rhodium, in catalytic converters - smaller roadway systems to test the performance and durability of passenger cars
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### social organization | business | manufacturer: Bottler * Some bottlers substitute a species of white worm that lives in the leaves of the agave plant. * are manufacturers. Car manufacturer * Many car manufacturers use laser welding performed by industrial robots to assemble vehicles. * are companies - manufacturing companies Chinese manufacturer * have the lead in imitation leather footwear. * use trademarks. Chocolate manufacturer * blend the beans and that's what gives chocolate the flavor and color. * worry about the feel of the chocolate melting on the tongue. Drug manufacturer * Most drug manufacturers have a program to provide prescription medication to low income patients. * are well aware of the power of numbers. * maximize profits by charging different parts of the market different prices. * pay researchers to confirm a drug's effectiveness. * weigh the benefits of their drugs against their side effects. Gun manufacturer * are liable for damage their products do to people. * continue to make a product that leads to thousands of deaths each year - produce a product that leads to thousands of deaths a year * kill people. Pharmaceutical manufacturer * claim that high prices reflect research and development costs. * invest heavily in research to develop new products. * play an enormous role in the area of consumer education. Several manufacturer * make rope where the thickness changes mid-length. * offer winterizing fertilizers with various combinations of nutrients. Tire manufacturer * have many claims as to the safety and traction of their tires. * put antiozinants in their tires to prevent fading. Vehicle manufacturer * Some vehicle manufacturers offer vehicles equipped with side airbags - use engines * use rubber because it works very well as a noise and vibration isolator. Online business * Most online businesses store customer data in one form or another on a server. * is literally the rebirth of the Industrial Revolution.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business: Partnership * Most partnerships tend to form between public entities. * allow communities to develop collaborative strategies and share resources. * are a common form of business ownership. * are also a conduit for sharing experiences, technologies, and cultures - way to survive in a climate of cutbacks - important for enhancing services and supports for children and families - arrangements which require utmost good faith between parties - contracts between persons designed for their mutual benefit - essential because no one government can protect species by acting alone - essentially relationships - important in sustainable development because responsibility is widely shared - increasingly important in government as they are in business * are like marriages, and they take six months to a year to really develop - one of the oldest forms of conducting business or investment activities - organizations - people talking to each other, sharing ideas, knowledge, and resources * are the key factor in maintaining a strong economy - spark that makes things happen in education - ventures that try to involve as many partners as possible - yearlong, renewable, collaborative efforts to achieve mutually agreed upon goals * build friendships and ties between communities in different parts of the world. * depend on teamwork, mutual respect and trust. * group of small, medium, and large businesses, and trade associations. * is an act of creation - both a means to creating social capital, and an end, representing social capital - the key to the menace of drugs misuse * way to balance the needs of the individual with the goals of the organization. * work because they bring together people with different areas of expertise. ### social organization | business | partnership: Business partnership * are unincorporated businesses that have two or more owners. * can be similar to marriages.
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### social organization | business | partnership: Domestic partnership * affirm the validity, dignity, and legitimacy of families. * is no substitute for civil marriage. Private business * are in business to make money. * are the backbone of our economy - engine of the market economy * help to increase production and help countries achieve further economic growth. * use the Internet to communicate with customers and business partners.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business: Processor * Most processors divide the crystal by two. * Some processors are part of computers - use a chemical solvent to dissolve oil from the peanuts * are business - capable of only simple arithmetic, and simple logical decisions - computer components - located in computers - mass-produced in sheets or wafers - the ''brains'' of personal computers - workers * can belong either to a parallel machine, a network of computers or both. * contain mercury and chromium - millions of transistors interconnected with aluminum or copper on a single chip - more and more transistors and networks connect more and more computers * do make a difference in the taste of meat. * have their name because they process data and instructions. * includes electron tubes - mother boards - resistors - sections - vacuum tubes * is business * provide credit - information ### social organization | business | processor: Commercial processor * extract inulin from chicory root. * use Michigan apples for pie slices, sauce, juice and baby food. Network processor * control how data is sent over a network. * generic term that encompasses many specialized functions and applications. * is one of the methods to solve the latency or delay problems. Property management * highly specialized, multi-faceted sector of the real estate profession. * is an area in which they have no past or prior experiences with - established, profitable, and well respected profession * profession well suited for home operation.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business: Publishing * are mediums. * company dedicated to documenting the history of the Australian music industry. * form of manufacturing under licence. * is also an online industry. * is an important aspect of science - factor in many academic careers - industry of networking and connections - business, which means work - important for getting promotions or better jobs - technology * is the act of posting information on the intranet site for employee use - manufacture and distribution of a simple product - means traditionally used to document new knowledge at a point in time - web, regardless of what else a media company does * mechanism for maintaining history in n -dim to make an object persist. ### social organization | business | publishing: Book publishing * has a lot more in common with music making. * is the next big media industry to go digital. Desktop publishing * are publications. * is different from word processing in the way that it handles text and graphics - used for newsletter layout * multiple-step process involving various types of software and equipment.
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### social organization | business | publishing: Electronic publishing * allows many different kinds of information providers to serve schools. * can include other forms of communication, like sound or video. * has the potential to transform scientific communication. * is also similar to broadcast media - an interdisciplinary program combining coursework from several disciplines - like printing - mediated by a computer, an agent capable of processing the information - more than just paper-less publishing - non-polluting and conserves our natural resources - one of the key growth areas of the modern economy - perceived as electronic mail, video -games and the Web - problematic in documenting original work - the publishing of materials via the website at no cost * is the wave of the future, for a number of reasons * offers a paperless means of distributing information and entertainment - the ability to add sound, animation, hyperlinks and more to books * provides a means for distributing information at virtually no cost. * unique way to reach the reading public. * very economic way for new authors to start their careers. Software publishing * business, a large, important industry in the United States. * dynamic and constantly changing industry.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business | publishing: Web publishing * allows editors to continually alter, augment and correct their edition of a work. * form of communication like no other. * game that anyone can play. * happens to be one of the fastest-growing sectors in the packaged software industry. * has many advantages over traditional forms of publishing - similarities to that of the traditional print medium * is an opportunity to demonstrate technical and graphic arts skills - another dynamic environment where change is essential for consistent success - the attempt to create a publication for a wide range of readers * new paradigm for journalism.<|endoftext|>### social organization | business: Railroad * Most railroads require all their employees to have a high school education. * also spill chemicals out of tank cars and spray heavily with herbicides - use some frequencies to transmit end of train telemetry * are a major carrier of long-distance freight and a minor carrier of passengers. * are an extremely safe means of transporting freight - important means of transportation between cities in North Korea - another example of a switching network - businesses - one of Peru's main ways of transportation * are private property, and are dangerous places - the environmentally preferred mode of transport * are the most efficient land transportation method - important means of transport in Japan * carry things in freight cars. * continue to play an important role in the Texas transportation system. * function to various degrees in different parts of the country as a means of travel. * handle two-thirds of the nation's commercial passenger traffic. * have operate procedures - special procedures - their own language, both technical terms and slang * is most important means of transportation in the East. * link the larger cities and towns of the country. * means a person providing railroad transportation for compensation. * provide safe, cost-effective, and reliable long distance transportation. * tie removal and replacement is an ongoing annual process for an operating railroad museum. * transport more than half of the total coal shipped each year. * travel largely over their own rights of way, nearly all in the private domain. * use large amounts of sand to improve traction on wet or slippery rails - ties, bridge timbers, and decking ### social organization | business | railroad: Metro * are musicals - railways * investigate incidents. * zoning classifies homeless shelters as multi-family dwellings. Monorail * also take up less space. * are railways. * hold up in earthquakes.
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### social organization | business | railroad: Subway * are companies - located in subways - often crowded, dirty, and the temperature uncomfortable * transport more than three and a half million people a day. Record label * are business - manufacturing companies - sales and marketing engines * count success in dollars. Service business * are an increasingly dominant force in world economics. * provide employment and services for the predominant retirement community
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### social organization | business: Small business * Many small businesses focus on customer retention and loyalty by mailing to established clients - generate hazardous waste, but only a few are managing it correctly - use wordmarks instead of logos to make their company name easily recognizable - utilize personal computers * Most small business start out as sole proprietorships. * Most small businesses are in niches between or among industries - develop as the result of someone's dream - employ a few people, but huge job growth has never come from small business - have their focus on their products and their business - operate as a sole proprietorship - require the talents of an entrepreneur to be successful - start with a network of inexpensive personal computers - use a calendar year just like individuals * Some small businesses use non-profit corporations as a tax shelter. * account for a significant portion of new jobs in the U.S. economy - two out of every three new jobs created in the United States * are a crucial element of the U.S. economy and the Internet - to the growth of the U.S. economy - dynamic force in the American economy - powerful force in today's economy both nationally and globally - source of new ideas and products * are a vital part of our nation s economy - the economy of the state of Florida * are also more dependent on part-time employees - part of a commercial food chain that large businesses depend upon - an important element in the national economy * are an important part of small metropolitan and rural economies - the global economy - big credit card users, and they have an eye for quality - capable of appearing to be big businesses - common in many countries - critical to the economic well-being of the state * are crucial to the American economy - success of the economy - important sources of product and process innovations - key to economic growth and development both home and abroad - major retailers of microcomputers - notorious procrastinators when it comes to buying insurance * are one of the fastest growing segments of the wired economy - most important facets of any stable economy - our economy's most dynamic engine of growth - particularly susceptible to reductions in consumer demand - quite distinct from the global market * are responsible for creating a vast majority of new jobs each year - today s strong national and local economy * are the backbone of our American economy - economy, creating the overwhelming majority of new jobs * are the backbone of our state's economy, employing most of our people * are the backbone of the American economy - basis of America's prosperity and economic growth - bread and butter of small banks - building blocks of sustainable communities * are the driving force behind our nation's economy - in the economy of New York * are the engine that drives economic growth - innovation and fuels our National economy * are the engines driving our economic growth - of growth for our nation's economy - heart and soul of the economy - life-blood of our economy - nation's job trainers as well - real driving force behind the economy - recognized economic engines of the future * are vital to the U.S. economy - growth and competitiveness of their local economies * bring prosperity to the common man and woman. * can also ensure the wellness of their employees. * can profit from tightening their supply chains - just as much from the Internet as larger businesses - protect themselves by knowing their rights - use census numbers to determine the marketability of new products * complain when bigger companies steal their employees. * comprise about one-third of the construction, trade and food service sectors. * comprises the vast majority of the enterprises in Big Island commerce. * contributes significantly to the Australian economy. * create jobs and wealth while empowering their communities. * create more jobs than do big businesses - either medium or large businesses * don t hire people moving off welfare as an act of charity. * drive our economy and create jobs. * employ approximately one-half of the nation's private work force - more than half of the nation's work force * exist in small towns and big cities, in every state province and country. * finds operations. * give a greater proportion of their income to charity than bigger companies - diversity and vitality to the American economy - the economy the flexibility it needs to adapt to rapidly changing conditions * grows over time. * have a very important place in the economy. * helps drive the economic engine of success in the United States. * increases profits by expanding markets, and hiring workers. * is an enterprise employing fewer than twenty people - important component of the Long Island economy - innovative force in the American economy - under-represented section in and outside parliament * is big business in America - clearly the backbone of American economic growth * is one of the most important elements in our society - parts of the economy - responsible for much of the job creation in the Oklahoma economy - the backbone of our economy, which is why it is vital they succeed and grow * is the backbone of the American economy - California economy - Canadian economy - driving force of the Long Island economy * is the engine of economic growth in western Canada - growth, job creation and innovation in our country - our nation's economy and the heart of our local communities - our nation's economy and the heart of our communities - room of growth in the Australian economy * is the fastest growing segment in the technology industry - of the business sector today - fastest-growing segment of the U.S. economy today - first place job seekers turn for employment opportunities - foundation upon which New York's economy is built - truly an environment where everyone often pitches in to get things done - very important to the banking industry * lift communities out of poverty. * make up the largest sector of American business. * organize themselves in many different forms. * play a large role in the economy - leading role in our economy * predominate in rural areas. * puts more people in less office space than traditional, larger companies. * reaches levels. * reflect the values of individuals and the values of a community. * represent the backbone of the economy - fastest growing segment of the U.S. economy * require finance to start, develop, and grew. * requires people to perform numerous functions, many of which are ad hoc. * rise or fall through the quality of their people. * spur economic growth and employ half of our nation's workforce. * strive to achieve greater levels of success through growth. * sustain the families of their owners and the neighborhoods in which they reside. * use a variety of sources to finance themselves. * vary widely in size and capacity for growth.
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### social organization | business: Smaller business * are where most of the innovation and expansion are occurring. * depend on the area in which they physically exist in order to survive. Sole proprietorship * are business. * are the most common and simple form of business organization - form of business structure * exist in a great variety of businesses. * is the simplest business organization. * means that one person has complete ownership of, and control over, the property. Sports franchise * Most sports franchises are independent organizations operating within their league. * is business. Unfinished business * is work * refers to matters carried over from a previous meeting. Charitable organization * Many charitable organizations hold volunteer recruitment fairs in their communities. * Some charitable organizations dispense food to the needy. * depend upon individual donors to a large degree. * evolve through cycles of growth, maturity and, sometimes, decline. * serve the interests of both the individual and the community. * sponsor trips to serve needs in under-developed countries. * use FACs for self evaluation. Chorus * Most choruses sing more in tune when they are singing major keys, rather than in minor ones. * are companies - lines - musical compositions - sound * is sound ### social organization | chorus: Choir * are areas - groups of people - made of singers - performance groups, and give concerts throughout the year - sets - teams * usually sing in several parts , most often in four parts. + Choir (music): Vocal music * Choirs usually sing in several parts, most often in four parts. This means that there are two or more singers who are singing the same notes. The parts are called soprano, alto, tenor and bass.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Circus * CiRCuS periodical covering poetry, prose and commentary. * Most circuses are arenas for the mistreatment of animals. * A 'circus' special kind of entertainment that can be enjoyed by children and adults. Circuses are a group of performers that may include acrobats, clowns, trained animals, trapeze acts, musicians, hoopers, tightrope walkers, jugglers and other artists who perform stunts. Circuses usually travel about to different parts of the country or to different countries. There may be room for hundreds of people in the audience. In the middle is the circular area where the artists perform. Not all circuses travel about. A few circuses perform in their own building. * come with standard games, animals freak shows, and strip clubs. * is arenas - disturbances - magazines - plazas - stadiums - video games * maintain a market for exotic animals and allow their movement between countries. * owns buckets. * play no role in conservation. * portray a distorted view of wildlife. * sets conditions. Civic organization * Many civic organizations have a specific charity they sponsor on a national basis. * sponsor sports activities as well as provide funding for benevolent projects. Civil service * are government officials. * has further helped remove much of the politics from policing. * is an organization Classification system * are arrangements. * attempt to predict behavior on the basis of morphology. * organize living things in a logical, and meaningful way. ### social organization | classification system: File system * Most file systems use a block cache or buffer cache to store recently used disk blocks in memory. * are classification systems. * contain disk blocks, which are made up of disk fragments - files and directories * specify conventions for naming files.
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### social organization: Club * are association - capable of break bones * are located in armories - golf bags - meeting places - made of people - playing cards - privates - social organizations - sticks * are the foundation of organized cycling activity - tools of roustabouts, axes of woodsmen, and hammers of smiths * are used for beating - clubs - dancing - puttings - weapons * baseball team * encourage students. * feet is where the bones in the ankle are in the wrong position, causing the ankle to twist. * fungi live in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial habitats. * have benefits - evolutionary benefits - flat surfaces * hire trainers. * hold business meetings - parties - regular meetings * make decisions. * mosses , ferns , horestails , gymnosperms , and flowering plants are vascular plants - horsetails , gymnosperms , and flowering plants are vascular plants - posses true roots, stems, and leaves... very similar to real * perform movement. * send representatives. + Bear (gay slang): Bear (gay male) * Bear' is a gay slang term. A bear typically projects an image of rugged masculinity. Bears often form clubs modeled on biker clubs. Clubs are formed for bears to hang out with their own kind. These clubs may have bylaws, membership requirements, and charities the clubs support. + Lap dance: Sex industry :: Dance types * Depending on the local jurisdiction and community standards, lap dances can involve touching of the dancer by the patron, touching the patron by the dancer, neither, or both. In some clubs, any touching by the patron is forbidden. On the other hand, if a club does not enforce its rules, levels of contact may be negotiable between the participants. Clubs vary widely with regard to whether they enforce their rules or ignore any violations. + Logo: Symbols * Logos are not used only by companies. Many schools have logos. Some cities have logos. Clubs can have logos. Even people can have their own logos if they want, the heraldic badge is probably the oldest form of logo in the world. + Queen Elizabeth School: Schools in China * Queen Elizabeth School is also an EMI school, which means that all subjects are taught in English except Chinese language and Chinese history. Clubs are available for all students. ### social organization | club: Billy * Billies are goats - good students - nuts - fight head to tail, sometimes inflicting serious wounds to hindquarters and flanks * Billies have an unpleasant odor during the breeding season - serious problems Chess club * are clubs. * offer places to play casual chess. Country club * are clubs. * have swimming pools, tennis courts and golf courses. Fitness club * are often places of high humidity and a harsh environment for computer equipment. * strive to increase individuals' physical well-being. Frat * are a very heterosexual environment. * have secret membership rituals, secret handshakes, passwords, and stuff like that.
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### social organization | club: Fraternity * Fraternities are associations of students with long and interesting history - primarily for men, but less often, a fraternity can be for both men and women - the antithesis of inclusiveness - attempt to instill leadership and confidence in their members - can mean many things to many people - come in all different shapes and sizes - have personalities - increase chances of graduating - raise more money for charity than honor societies - use alcohol to socialize new members into their organization * Most fraternities count the building of men and of leaders among their goals. * Some fraternities even perform acts of hazing that are both dangerous and illegal - thrive while others hang near extinction - use branding in initiation ceremonies * means the brotherhood of man. + Fraternities and sororities * Fraternities and sororities' are social groups for college students, though sometimes high schools have them too. They exist mostly in the United States and Europe. They also denote whether the group is for men or women. Sororities are only for women. Fraternities are primarily for men, but less often, a fraternity can be for both men and women. Service club * Many service clubs are chapters of national or international organizations. * are centers<|endoftext|>### social organization | club: Sorority * Sororities are Greek organizations for female students - a tight-knit group of women, a family away from home - about laughter, tears, friendship, sisterhood, honor, loyalty and love - encourage young women to learn and grow in the spirit of sisterhood and friendship - exist to support women in education and society - have socials with fraternities, other sororities, and other social groups - play a crucial role in creating a better social environment - serve meals only a few days of the week * offers women the chance to grow and become better people. * Fraternities and sororities' are social groups for college students, though sometimes high schools have them too. They exist mostly in the United States and Europe. They also denote whether the group is for men or women. Sororities are only for women. Fraternities are primarily for men, but less often, a fraternity can be for both men and women.<|endoftext|>### social organization | club: Strip club * Most strip clubs are also bars which serve alcohol. * Some strip clubs are crowded, noisy, and tough to get personal attention. * A 'strip club' type of club that has performers who dance while removing their clothes. Most strip clubs are also bars which serve alcohol. * can be a source of debates in a community. Some people are against strip clubs. They claim strip clubs exploit women. The rise in availability of lap dancing has also created debates. Some critics say that lap dancing pushes women into providing sexual services, because the women often provide the lap dances in private, dimly-lit booths. * are open night and day - pagan temples, pagan shrines Coalition * are complex organizational structures - very powerful groups in organizations * can also play an important role in community planning. * change over time, as a result of death, migration, and changes in social status. * is an organization - unions Commission * are authorization - certificates - commands - fees - operations - pacts * estimate cost. * have officers - wildlife officers * is an unit - charged in currency of trade * is the brokerage fee for entering and liquidating a futures or options contract - yardstick that salespeople use to measure themselves against others * issue license. * provide services. * recommend development. * require utilities. * to provide guidance.
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### social organization | commission: Conservancy * Conservancies are a way to sustain open space - committees - conservation - promote conservation through sustainable utilisation - use various means to restrict land from development * denotes preservation, protection, and safekeeping.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Committee * are administrative units. * are located in business - churchs - city halls - government - meetings - office buildings - nongovernmental organizations - sub-units of municipal governing bodies - used for plans * assist researchers. * comprise of representatives. * consist of community members * deal with policy. * encourage employees. * find facts. * have guidelines - ideas - publications - responsibility * include members. * is an unit * make choices - first choices - recommendations * prepare checklists. * recommend policy. * release ads. * support members. * take actions. * to respond to outcomes. Community organization * Many community organizations offer programs and services which help keep kids healthy. * Most community organizations are non-profit and depend on fund raises for income. * are responsible for the actions of their employees and their volunteers - the ones who often have recreational therapists Consortium * Consortia now exist in every part of the globe. * are association. * is association Cooperative organization * help people adapt to capitalism. + Cooperation: Sociology * Co-operatives are democratic organizations owned by the people who use them. Cooperative organizations help people adapt to capitalism. It reports that there are 800 million cooperative members in the world. Coordinate system * All coordinate systems are equal, but some are more equal than others. * are arrangements * is an organization Council * Many councils have a ceremonial mayor who normally chairs council meetings. - assemblies - groups of chapters within an area - located in city halls * are used for judgement - talking * consist of members. * have an important economic and social role in the development of responsible pet ownership - obligation - power ### social organization | council: Regional council * general term that refers to both. * have obligation. Soviet * are councils - soviets - states * invade Czechoslovakia - Poland from East * occupy Lithuania. * represent extremely flexible, highly democratic bodies which both pass and enforce laws.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Crew * are located in space shuttles - teams * build roads. * conduct investigations - tests * consist of crew members * do jobs. * find water. * focus on tasks. * have adventures - experience - hands - tendencies * help employees. * identify areas. * inform pilots. * is an outdoor sport * is the oldest intercollegiate sport in the United States - only sport that is totally team, no individual - sport of rowing * make fire. * respond to incidents. * sport in the country that is just coming of age - that requires strength, rhythm and teamwork * to provide services - specialize services. * The usual place where crews can be found are ships and airplanes. On such ships and aircraft, some functions some people perform are very special. It is therefore common that crews are organised in a hierarchy. Every person, except the captain, at the top, has a person above them. They will report to that person. Crews also work backstage in theaters and on movie sets and in television studios * year-round competitive sport + Terry Crews: 1968 births :: Living people :: American movie actors :: American television actors :: American voice actors :: Comedians from Michigan :: San Diego Chargers players :: Washington Redskins players :: Actors from Michigan :: Sportspeople from Michigan :: People from Flint, Michigan * He is a retired NFL player. Crews is from Flint, Michigan.
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### social organization: Data structure * Most data structures are collections of fixed-size descriptors. * In Computer Science, a 'data structure' way of organizing information, so that it is easier to use. Data structures determine the way in which information can be used. Data structures are often optimised for certain operations. Finding the best data structure when solving a problem is an important part of programming. Programs that use the right data structure are easier to make, and perform better. * are a fundamental aspect of learning about programming - an important part of many computer programs - arrangements - mechanisms that organize information - tables and multidimensional arrays stored in FITS files * represent relations among data items. * specifies the arrangement and relationship of logical and physical data. ### social organization | data structure: Hierarchical structure * are data structures - one of the key foundations of the sciences and our knowledge systems * is imposed on space to allow efficient spatial reasoning. Defence * is led by counsel - protection + Defence against predators, Costs of defence: Co-evolution :: Ecology * Everything costs something. All defences incur costs. For survival, an animals needs food, and needs to stay alive to reproduce. Energy and time spent on defence can be considerable, but justified if it makes reproduction more likely. ### social organization | defence: Blockhouse * are like bunkers , but are built above ground. * is defence + Bunker: Fortification * A 'bunker' is a military building for defense. They are usually built below ground. Blockhouses are like bunkers, but are built above ground. Bunkers were built during the Cold War for important political people and for the general public because of the scare of a nuclear war. Fortress * are video games. * is defence Delegation * critical skill in the effective management of organizations. * form of training. * is an art form - distribution of authority * is the distribution of specific work, responsibilities and authority - downward transfer of formal authority from superior to subordinate - when supervisors give responsibility and authority to subordinates to complete a task * principle of leadership. * refers to the delegating of responsibility and can be applied to inheritance. * skill to learn.
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### social organization: Denomination * All denominations have Eucharist and baptism. * Many denominations change their creeds every few years - consider homosexuality to be a special type of sin - forbid the ordination of homosexuals as well as pastoral roles for women - house their records in central repositories * Most denominations allow women to become at least junior pastors - have a system for guiding local church treasurers, and systems vary * Some denominations have long standing prejudices against other religions, sexual minorities etc. * also wear human names glorifying some person, place, event, or philosophy. * are also social entities with a membership that can be seen and numbered. * come from confessions, or statements of faith - into existence when churches lose their religious monopoly in a society * is an organization - classes - nongovernmental organizations * often belong to synods, conferences or some other humanly devised federation. * show distinctive patterns that reflect their religious and social heritage. * struggle with issues of diversity and identity. + Christian symbolism, Symbols of Christian Churches, Sacraments * Some of the oldest symbols in the Christian church are the sacraments. The number of sacraments is different in each denominations. All denominations have Eucharist and baptism. Others which may or may not be used are ordination, unction, confirmation, penance and marriage. The rites are seen as a symbol of the spiritual change or event that takes place. In the Eucharist, the bread and wine are symbolic of the body and blood of Jesus. In Roman Catholicism, they become the 'actual' Body of Christ and Blood of Christ through Transubstantiation. This represent salvation brought by the death of Jesus. ### social organization | denomination: Different denomination * teach a wide range of beliefs - different methods of baptism + Reformed churches, Form of doctrine: Christian denominations * Different denominations use different confessions, usually based on historical reasons.
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### social organization: Department * address issues. * appoint officers. * are division - government-defined administrative regions which often cut across cultural borders - part of institutions - sectors - states * assume responsibility. * begin provide services * conduct examinations - tests * confirm leaders. * consider problems. * coordinate activities. * cover services. * determine security. * employ officers. * establish boundaries. * focus on tasks. * give notice. * have employees - expertise - interest - legal responsibility - maps - opportunity - policy - suggestions * include chemistry * is division * issue statements. * make assessments. * offer benefits - death benefits - options - ship options * perform examinations. * prepare statements. * receive calls - information * recognize necessity. * recommend approval. * report results. * require degrees - education - operations * respond to incidents. * take several steps * teach assistants. * use science. + Colombia, Politics, Departments: Spanish-speaking countries * Colombia is divided into 32 departments and one capital district. The capital district is treated as a department. Departments are divided into municipalities. Municipalities are divided into 'corregimientos'. Each department has a local government with a governor and assembly directly elected to four-year terms. Each municipality is headed by a mayor and council. Each 'corregimiento' by an elected 'corregidor', or local leader. + University of Cambridge, Libraries and Museums: Cambridge :: Colleges and universities in England :: 1231 establishments * The University has 114 libraries. The main one is called 'Cambridge University Library'. It is a legal deposit, which means every book that is printed in the United Kingdom goes in this library. Many departments have their own library as well. They usually have special books for their subjects only. All colleges have a library. This is mainly for the undergraduates, so that they can read basic books about their subjects. Some colleges also have very precious books and manuscripts. ### social organization | department: Government department * Some government departments publish and distribute their own documents. * are a source of technical expertise - governmental organizations * have a city mentality ### social organization | department | government department | federal department: Executive department * conduct the administration of the national government. * federal department<|endoftext|>### social organization | department | government department | local department: Fire department * Many fire departments have several different types of fire trucks. * Most fire departments have a fire prevention division which is usually headed by a fire marshall - prevention division, usually headed by a fire marshal * Some fire departments have states. * are local departments - often social centers for small town get-togethers - usually the first first-aid people to arrive at the site of injuries * have procedures similar to police departments * include members. * recommend that people have portable fire extinguishers in their homes. * require degrees.<|endoftext|>### social organization | department | government department | local department: Police department * Many police departments do in fact let their officers carry weapons off duty - have their own guidelines to minimize risks to the public - issue pepper spray for use by their officers - require a minimum number of collars per officer per month * Most police departments are responsible for the administration and control of their own budgets - report crime statistics to state and federal criminal justice agencies * Some police departments track the false alarm rates of alarm companies - use unmarked or partially marked police vehicles for traffic enforcement
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### social organization | department: Health department * Many health departments work with local veterinarians to safely and humanely euthanize bats. * are collections of fiefdoms.<|endoftext|>### social organization | department: Police department * are able legally to secure firearms through seizure or forfeiture - public agencies, funded through public money * get more money when there is more crime. * have procedures for lodging complaints against officers - squads dedicated to tracking gang activity * keep lists of employees who speak second languages. * provide officers trained in assisting victims of sexual assault. * train and use snipers. * use similar tracking devices known as tethers for certain criminal offenders. * work for city governments, and for the citizens at large. + Sniper, Police snipers: Military :: Firearms * Police departments train and use snipers. These snipers mainly serve on the SWAT team for their department. Often they are called upon to provide security at special events, or to make sure that other snipers do not murder someone. This job is called counter-sniping. Most police snipers are trained by the military. Different organization * Many different organizations offer after-school programs for children of all ages. * have different philosophies.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Enemy * Enemies are adversaries - located in war - military units - people - the victims of sin, because they react against it * Enemies have choices - heads - include humans - lead to interaction - occupy territory - use armies * Enemies will have impact - little impact * Some enemies attack when grasshoppers are still in the soil awaiting spring. + Final Fantasy, Gameplay: Fantasy movies * In 'Final Fantasy', players control a group of characters. They go through the game's story by exploring the game world and defeating enemies. Enemies are found randomly. The player gives combat orders. The orders are given to individual characters through a menu. This menu appears when in battles.<|endoftext|>### social organization | enemy: Natural enemy * Most natural enemies attack only specific insects instead of a whole spectrum like insecticides - do better with a diversity of hosts or plants * Natural enemies are generally more adversely affected by chemical insecticides than the target pest - insects that kill mites without further damaging the desired tree - large predators, such as, bears, lions, and at one time in California, wolves - organisms that kill individuals of another species - the fox, cat, dog, dingo and other large carnivorous creatures - can benefit from a source of nectar * Natural enemies help keep mites at low levels when conditions are unfavorable for the mites - to eliminate many of our sawfly larvae - occur in all production systems, from the backyard garden to the commercial field - play a very important part in controlling aphid populations * Natural enemies play an important part in controlling aphids - in the control of the whitefly population - role during periods when gypsy moth populations are sparse - pose the greatest hazard to birds using man-made houses - serve an effective role in controlling populations of different whitefly species * Natural enemies will have impact * Some natural enemies kill coyotes. * Some natural enemies reduce human growth - population growth Environmental organization * Most environmental organizations have volunteer programs. * Some environmental organizations believe that trade can actually be good for the environment - publish their own media
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### social organization: Family * All families have traditions and mythologies of their own - symbolize loving and caring for each other * Every family has a heritage, a model of beliefs and behavior passed from generation to generation - ministry of justice - mother, father, and two children, one of each sex - system of filing valuable financial documents and papers * Every family has different eating, shopping and health habits - values, customs, income levels and attitudes towards money - expectations of behavior that are determined by principles and standards - gardens and orchards to grow food for themselves and their domestic animals - rules about dating, sex, drugs, smoking, drinking, and curfews - their own heritage, pride, and traditions - needs parents who put their children first - suffers from hunger and disease - war between two people arriving with different family cultures * Families Together support group for parents of children with special needs - Valued Gays and lesbians often face barriers when they want to become parents * Families adapt to aquatic environments - affect and are affected by the global society in which they live - allow children * Families also raise goats, sheep, chickens, and bees for their milk, wool, meat, and honey - remember the deaths of loved ones who have passed * Families always care for older people - take care of the elderly until death * Families are a complex network of interactions - critical influence in the lives of adults with mental retardation - group that include boys and girls - primary source of strength and support for a sick child - about togetherness, and sharing common problems - all that most men have - always a subset of the society of which they are a part * Families are an important influence on whether their teenagers become pregnant or cause pregnancy - site for the spread of influenza viruses - interconnected system of relationships - association - at the center of social life in India, with the nurturing of children at the core - both private and public institutions - care-giving institutions - carriage - central to a child's development - cohesive groups of females and their young - critical in the physical, emotional, spiritual, and social development of children - determined by anatomical features and breeding peculiarities * Families are different all around the world - in the United States - family units * Families are fundamental to the lifeblood and strength of our country and world - and strength of our world - groupings of species with similar features * Families are groups of interdependent persons - light fixtures that match in style and finish - people who love each other - that are brought together by common bonds and look out for each other * Families are head by biological parents - human groups of extreme complexity * Families are important because they are children's first teachers - educators of their children - sources of support and guidance for children - important, and a vital part of society - key in shaping values and behaviors of our future leaders - large, young people attending school away from home, live with their distant relatives - lineage * Families are located in funerals - parks - supermarkets - weddings - made of relatives - more mobile and more likely to be affected by family separations or divorce - obviously important sources of social capital everywhere - of primary importance in children's development * Families are often concerned about memory changes in older adults - divided over how best to care for elderly and incompetent relatives - the site where cultural practices are passed down in living form - part of order * Families are partners in policy, planning, and treatment - the education of their children - resources to their own members, to other families, to programs, and to communities * Families are responsible for getting their children to school - the creation, nurturing and building up of the next generation - small socialist societies - small, intimate, persisting groups of adults and children - strong when they have the abilities and confidence to nurture their children - stronger when fathers are actively and consistently in their children's lives - subject to domination at work, where workers are considered expendable - swords * Families are systems in which each member affects, and is affected by, every other member - that exist in and are affected by larger systems in society * Families are the backbone of our society and the foundation of community life - basic unit of society - bedrock of all societies * Families are the building blocks of society - the larger community in which they live * Families are the center of children's lives - faith formation - constants in the child's life and are pivotal in making any system work - core of any health system - cornerstone of a healthy society - cornerstones of all societies - essence of a civilized society * Families are the first and usually the best providers for their children's health and welfare - caregivers for children * Families are the foundation of a nation - every society - greatest natural resource available to an individual - main caregivers for their child with asthma - major producers and consumers of goods and services * Families are the major providers of long term care in the United States - support, care, and love - most effective and economical system for rearing children and nurturing adults * Families are the most important influence on the education of their children - unit in society - ones who suffer the most * Families are the primary caregivers for children with brain injuries - influence in the lives of their children * Families are the primary providers of care for adults with developmental disabilities - care for their own members - source of love, joy, warmth and togetherness in our lives - teachers of their children - stage on which such skills are practiced - ultimate consumers of child care - tight and complex social structures - traditionally patriarchal, patrilineal, and patrilocal - two or more persons, living in a household, related by blood, marriage or adoption - where social reproduction takes place - begin because of a love relationship between man and woman - build places - buy dogs - can adopt more than one child at a time * Families can be different, even when they share the same cultural background - married couples with or without children or single parents with children - rich or poor in many ways other than money - become homeless and disabled over night - come together or fall apart - explore the physical and emotional changes that come about during puberty - go for months, even years, without knowing where their symptoms are coming from - have many children or none at all - ingest lead dust that settles on windowsills, floors, and furniture - love each other in the true sense of love * Families can suffer under domestic violence and child abuse - while parents struggle with low-paying jobs - carry out a variety of functions critically important to society - cause a desire to lives * Families celebrate birthdays - holidays * Families change due to many factors, such as birth, death, marriage, and divorce - in composition and function to respond to social and economic pressures * Families come in all shapes and sizes, but they share one thing in common - sizes, nuclear and extended, past and present - sizes, with multiple and differing needs * Families come in all shapes, sizes and colors - and configurations - sizes, with varying needs and desires for their children's care - sorts and shapes - many forms - comprise households * Families consist of mothers - parents and children as well as singles, young and old - people living together who are related by marriage or birth * Families constitute the basic social unit of humankind - consume salt * Families contain members - types - continue to be a source of education, training, motivation and support as children develop - cycle together - deal with death - demonstrate diversity - develop skills * Families differ as much as individuals differ in their habits, temperaments, cares and prejudices - in size, composition, resources, history, and cohesiveness * Families do care - play a pivotal role in helping young people grow up healthy - spend special holidays together, such as religious celebrations and birthdays * Families eat bread - dinner - less when they eat together because they talk - meals - vegetarian meals - employ workers - evolve over time based on their structure and trajectory - expect women to marry early and concentrate on raising children * Families experience death - growth - personal growth - stress whenever they undergo change - face crises * Families find comfort - doctors - evidence - inspiration - news - peace - fleeing domestic violence are afraid to send their kids to public school * Families follow courtship patterns - interpretations - specific patterns - form the foundations on which society is built - fortunate enough to have their own homes often live together in extended families - get photos * Families go through difficult time - stages - grow by going through many times of happiness and also times of despair * Families have a greater variety of income sources - ability - adult children - an important role in providing the primary care for and shaping the lives of children - backs - bellies - bills - business - careers - carnivorous diets * Families have children because they believe in the future - who go to school - cultural values - descendants - differences * Families have different ideas * Families have eat food - healthy food - faces - facilities - facts - feet - flowers - genus - habitats - houses - huge pasta dinner - information - interest - issues * Families have legal responsibility - rights * Families have major problems - social problems - meetings - more children than they can feed adequately - mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, husbands and wives, brothers and sisters - offspring - opportunity - other places - outcomes - own cultural values - pets - real needs, and systems have real money - repetitive interaction patterns that regulate members' behavior - same outcomes - similarity * Families have special bonds - tasty food - tendencies * Families have the first responsibility for the physical and emotional well-being of children - most influence in their children's development and language acquisition - unique ability - headed by married couples also have much higher incomes and greater financial assets * Families headed by women are nearly five times more likely to be poor than other families - now comprise one-quarter of all households in the world - hold anniversaries * Families include boys - carnivores - different genus - fly squirrels - grandchildren - grind squirrels - infants - land mammals - old boys - pregnant wives * Families include several different genus - influence children's social, emotional, intellectual, and physical development - instill discipline in children and discipline leads to good schooling and good jobs - involve women * Families is where our nation finds hope, where wings take dream - shape, where wings take dream - takes hope, where wings take dream - keep livestock * Families know as families - learning and reading together is important to improving literacy rates * Families like chickens - turkeys * Families live in extreme poverty - shady habitats - states - towns - side by side, in life and death - living in poverty have every interest in saving money on heating fuel and electricity - lose friends * Families love animals - cats - parrots - rabbits - maintain relatives * Families make arrangements - controversial decisions - effort - tough choices * Families make up society - the basis of every society - mourn death * Families occupy areas - distinct territory * Families occur in temperate zones * Families offer attention - treatments * Families often change school districts over the course of their children's school careers - endure greater financial obligations when caring for a loved one who is disabled - fall apart under the stress of caring for their adult child - function better if decision making is democratic - keep the body alive for days or even weeks refusing to accept the person has died - look for ways to keep the memory of a loved one alive after death - set unrealistic expectations, especially for people with multiple illnesses - suffer more from addiction than the addicts do * Families own homes - particularly influence the development of social and emotional competence - pay people * Families perform many vital functions for society - tasks * Families play a big role in encouraging the socialisation of girls into sport - far more important role in the development of a child's gifts than do schools - fundamental role in the development of children - very important role in our individual lives and in society * Families play a vital role in educating children - the formation of a child's early attitudes, behaviors and habits - the growth of a healthy community - vital, active, and responsible role in the education of children * Families play an essential role in society, whose permanence they guarantee - important role in decreasing isolation and increasing hope for the patient - possess pets - potentially contribute towards social capital at a family, community and national level - protect children * Families provide a person's first education about sexuality - financial capital - stable environments * Families raise cats - cattle - raising children with disabilities deserve access to health care for their children - reach decisions - reduce the number of children they choose to have - reinforce relationships through symbolic mechanisms of rituals - remain the most important buffer between individuals and the stresses of life - see opportunity * Families seek answers - assistance - financial assistance - send their children into armies and bonded labor, or sell their daughters as sex workers * Families serve as the matrix of our identity - diners - shape individuals' emotional templates, good and bad * Families share characteristics - common histories and traditions, and they share the language - life styles and genetics and provide support for each other - their values about sexuality - universal characteristics * Families show concern - cooperation * Families sometimes are places of great pain and struggle - plan to use pets to teach children about reproduction - still conduct ancestral rites and visit the graves of their forebears - struggle following the losses of sons, fathers, husbands and brothers in combat - support decisions * Families take actions - drastic actions - road trips * Families tend to be large, with four or more children - more happy and successful when they have shared values and goals - relate things from oldest to the youngest * Families thrive when they are part of a community in which they participate and contribute - women and men share the responsibilities and joys of family life - traditionally live in multigenerational households * Families use diets - methods - sprinklers * Families usually group together into communities for mutual support and protection - keep lots of records and objects from the past - view divorce as the end of the family and some view death in the same manner - vary enormously in structure and size * Families vary in their level of tolerance for the family member's physical condition - levels of comfort with nudity, in general - will have peace * Families work for months - on trust, communication, understanding other cultures and personal interaction - when they are healthy and stable * Many families also believe in home-birth - face heavy child care responsibilities and parental abuse as a child - keep cats, birds and hamsters * Many families are double income families, meaning both husband and wife work - ineligible for elderly housing because they disallow children - interested in both fostering and adopting - multi-ethnic, with two and even three cultures influencing the way of life - one parent, working more than one job - two income families - bear a red lion - believe there are enough scholarships to completely pay for their child's education - benefit since grandparents often provide daycare while parents are at work - bring to marriage children from a previous marriage - caring for older persons develop a pattern over time - celebrate menarche as the time when a girl becomes a woman - choose to adopt a child born in another country - compete with parents and children riding together - continue to be very protective of women and girls with disabilities - encourage siblings to sleep together - expose babies to water at a young age * Many families feel a commitment to care for their aging loved ones - isolated and alone when someone close has a mental illness - form bilingual play groups for their children * Many families have Buddhist altars where they honor their ancestors - a history of both wife and husband employed outside the home - an individual who pulls everyone together * Many families have children spend a week or so with grandparents during summer vacation - week or so with their grandparents during summer vacation - fathers, step-fathers, adopted fathers and grandfathers - guest rooms for people to sleep and store their belongings - more than one generation that races - pets, a dog or a cat or both - special childcare arrangements for their children after school - unsaved parents, spouses, or children - young children, the oldest being in their early teens - involve their children in recreation programs and youth groups * Many families keep dogs to help with the tending of the animals and to help catch small game - food storage in the basement or in the back of their food pantries - live with daily fear for their safety - make food the center of their family gatherings - name their children after a relative who died in the shootings * Many families now use sheets of metal or plastic to roof their houses - the computer to pay bills and maintain all their financial records - often share stories remembering their dead relatives - possess a tradition of remembering and telling family stories - prefer to sleep in a family bed - provide transportation for aging parents and relatives who no longer drive * Many families rely on life insurance to pay for funeral expenses - nursing homes to help care for loved ones - remember their deceased loved ones, by placing flowers on their graves - report losing control of their children to gangs * Many families spend a large portion of their annual income on health care - down to poverty paying for care for an older relative - subsist on salmon, moose and waterfowl they harvest themselves - traditionally write the genealogy of their ancestors into the family bible * Many families use car pools to transport children to and from school or activities - eating as a way to entertain themselves and feel good - melatonin to promote sleep in a condition which often affects sleep patterns - wine or other alcoholic beverages as a part of traditions or rituals - wish to maintain their privacy and the security of their child - family keep cats and dogs as a family members * Most families adapt to aquatic environments * Most families are groups of varied lizards tied together by anatomical similarities - terrestrial, but some are partially aquatic or semiaquatic - together during the period of highest probability of severe weather * Most families consist of a husband, a wife, and their children - depend to some extent on subsistence activities to supplement their livelihoods - don t have enough insurance to cover the costs of losing a loved one * Most families eat food - endure traffic accidents in silence and isolation - experience personal growth * Most families have a symbol that is somehow related - albums full of the first-born and very few of the baby - at least one automobile as a principal means of transportation - between five and eight children - certain traditions and rituals - eat healthy food - relatives of some degree or another who actually experienced the Holocaust - rules regarding their children's drug and alcohol use * Most families have two working parents or only one parent who working mother - that can t make it to children s events during the day - parents, which leaves children home alone - invest their earnings in the education of their children - like to believe there are connections to famous people somewhere in their family tree * Most families live in extreme poverty - houses that consist of a sleeping room and a large living room - on incomes that are barely half of a six-figure salary * Most families love animals - now consist of the mother and children or the father and children - occupy habitats - only focus on saving for retirement after their children are out of college * Most families own livestock such as cattle, donkeys, horses, pigs, chickens, and turkeys * Most families raise cats - large number of children to supplement meagre family income - report cancer in the parents or grandparents, the most common being colon cancer - require female au pairs - take care of their elderly members without resorting to abuse or neglect - try to live within their income, making it from paycheck to paycheck * Most families use savings, income or loans in order to meet their contribution to college costs - loans to meet their contribution to college costs * Some families abandon children they can no longer afford to feed - adopt children while their biological children are still in the home * Some families adopt or foster large sibling groups - several children, one at a time - students while they are away from home * Some families allow all decisions to be made by one person - the child to sleep with the parents or the mother until the age of six * Some families allow their children to check out one book for every year in their age - watch TV only on weekends - teens to practice safe sex while others insist on abstinence * Some families also ask relatives or friends to stand up as Godparents for their children at baptism - eat the tegu meat and use the fat for medicinal purposes - order butterflies for release at a cemetery during funerals * Some families are able to start saving when their children are small - big eaters and habits regarding overeating can begin early in life - hard to reach because both parents work - healthy families - keepers of old calendars, notebooks, clippings, and other items in their attics - less likely to play than others - more flexible about the ethnicity of the child they adopt - prone to have conflicts around who has the right to discipline - very large and contain many genera - arrange multiple beds in one room or even sleeping bags on the floor - bring a baby sitter to play quietly with children while parents attend workshops - clearly have a string of cardiovascular disease - compose of twins * Some families consider green turtles * Some families consist of carnivores * Some families contain animals - banana plantains - beneficial insects - small animals - walruses - develop prenuptial or antenuptial agreements - do have specialized eyes called the aesthetes - drive animals * Some families eat diets - fish on the Jewish New Year as a sign of fertility and prosperity * Some families even have birthday parties with a cake and a present for the child from the newborn - use microhydro generators to supply electricity to light their homes * Some families experience convergent evolution - hallucination - mental illness of a loved one in a particular way - feed hummingbirds - feel that they have too much income to be eligible for financial aid * Some families find it difficult to talk about cancer or share their feelings - talk about serious illness or share their feelings - function via consensus and have family meetings, processes common with associations * Some families have a history of inherited diseases or birth defects - mom and a dad and one or more children who all live together in one house - predisposition toward heart disease - significantly higher risk of developing certain cancers than other families - strict bedtime which is never changed for any reason whatsoever - time limit on how long they can get food stamps - tradition of saying grace, a prayer, or holding hands before a meal - an inherited tendency towards high blood cholesterol * Some families have autosomal inheritances - recessive inheritances - beetles - certain traditions for particular holidays - children at home and children in school - death certificates - flower buds - funeral and burial traditions - gills - high risk of cancer because of inherited cancer risk genes - hoofs - horns - information that have been handed down from generation to generation - more asthma than others - nest sites * Some families have no children living in the house, just a couple of adults - electricity or running water in their homes - pests - pet cats - petals - to walk for hours every day to tend their fields * Some families have two daddies or two mommies - moms or two dads, or live with an aunt, uncle, or grandparent - parents, some have only one - young people train under uncles, aunts, and outside managers - however are likely to abuse their children again - incorporate herbal therapy into their daily routines - increase the proportion of eggs and onions to liver - just have a sleeping bag on the floor for lonely or frightened children * Some families keep a diary or a record of daily blood counts and medications given - amphibians - cremated remains in an urn or other appropriate container - doves - pigeons - kill prey - let children decide which toys others can play with * Some families like to start their kids early in athletics - use the middle name for naming the child after the mother or father * Some families lose babies - multiple children before the underlying disorder is identified - manage by sharing responsibilities with siblings or hiring help - nurture children's social skills before they begin kindergarten * Some families own animals - pass objects and ideas down from generation to generation * Some families possess animals - gerbils - herbivores - pups - tortoises - vertebrates * Some families raise animals - geese - read to their children - really rely on their child to work during the summer - seek medical advice because they recognise that their child has a problem - sell pets - share homes to save money - show an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern * Some families still hope to find their loved ones alive - kill their daughters - live in homes that are half buried in mud - suffer through a death of a child - teach children that home is safe and the world outside is dangerous * Some families tend to develop thyroid and other cancers - have moles that become cancerous - trace their roots back hundreds of years - understand the many parts and obligations of parenting * Some families use a chair in a corner, some put their child in a bed - an automobile battery to power a radio - mealtime as the time to talk - religion as a unifying force, as do some communities * advocates regularly breach privacy by telling their children's stories. * also influences consumer behavior through the family life cycle - is another word for tyranny * basic cell of human society. * childcare workers work in their own homes. * get togethers usually included uncles and aunts who played various instruments and sang. * group of people related by birth, marriage, or adoption who reside together. * has to do with a sense of connectedness. * influences on coping processes in children and adolescents with sickle cell disease - girls' sexual experience and pregnancy risk * is an unit - any group of people with biological, emotional or legal ties - at the core of child development and lifetime relationships - basis of social order * is defined by function rather than bloodlines - marriage, baptism, and religiously enforced concepts of kinship - different things to different people - essential to an individual's well-being - everyone brought together as one - family, and sometimes, difficulty can help bring people back together - husband and wife, married at least one year, with or without children - identified as immediate unmarried children living with parents - immediate family members residing in the household - lifelong connectedness and accountability * is one of the main tools for the structure of personality - most basic social institutions - organic life flow, common life, kinship, common order, and purpose - parents and dependent children, or married couples - persons living as a family at the same address - referred to genetics - relationships that twist and bend - source of human creation * is the basic building block of society in general - unit of civilization * is the basis for any worthiness of life that keeps people together - of Islamic society - binding fiber of human experience - central concept of social behavior in India - context of a child s life - core of society - corner stone of our societies and culture, and the source of our strength - cradle of class, gender oppression - first school of manners and morals - foundation for everything else in life * is the foundation of a child's learning - fundamental unit of society - main engine of education - most basic group a person belongs to * is the most important aspect in the world - thing in human life - one institution in which teens continue to express great confidence * is the primary influence in the development of the individual - on a child's development - thread that weaves all of our other life goals together - unity in diversity - very important at Genesis * is where the heart is and family is where is counts - sacred lives in the ordinary * is, for many people, what holidays are all about. * laboratory of learning. * leave benefits work for families and businesses in the rest of the world - is for workers who have jobs but choose to take time off for personal medical reasons * means children, the guardians of our future - one or more persons occupying a single dwelling unit - that a human group develops or has developed a set of intimate * owned businesses are the backbone of the U.S. economy. * perennial that comes up year after year, enduring the droughts of absence and neglect. * refers to up to two adults and four children. * surnames with earliest recorded person,date and location in parenthesis. * very important part of Moroccan social life. + Beating heart cadaver, Social Issues: Medicine :: Death * A beating heart cadaver is often disturbing and confusing. Because the heart is beating and it is warm, people may have difficulty believing it is dead. Families often like to see the body once it has been removed from the machines and put to rest. + Christmas, Christmas Traditions, Family celebrations, Christmas dinner * The tradition came from the Middle Ages when the pudding was used to preserve some of the fruit from the Autumn until the mid-winter. A traditional pudding is baked six weeks before Christmas and is left tied up in a cloth, in a cool place. Stirring the pudding is sometimes a family tradition, with everyone making a wish as they stir. Traditionally a silver coin would be stirred into the pudding, to bring luck to the person who found it. Nowadays most coins cannot be used because they taste horrible and may be poisonous. Some families use old coins or silver charms. On Christmas Day the pudding must be boiled in a pot for several hours. When it is served, the cloth is cut off, brandy is poured onto the pudding, and is set on fire before it is carried to the table - Family get-togethers * Family traditions are very different. Some families might all go off to church together, to a Carol Service, a Midnight Mass, or a Christmas Morning service. Some families are pulled out of bed very early by children who want to open their presents. In other families, presents are given on St. Nicholas Day, on Christmas Eve or not until after church on Christmas morning. The Christmas feast might start on Christmas Eve, with a special breakfast on Christmas morning, or at midday on Christmas Day + Judaism, Mitzvot (Commandments), Shabbat * It is a special day. They clean their houses and prepare special food for Shabbat. They dress in their nicest clothes. They sing beautiful songs and say extra prayers in the synagogue. They have dinner and lunch with their families. Many families also invite guests for dinner and for lunch. They eat special delicious food, and sing together traditional Shabbat songs. On Shabbat afternoon people study Judaism together or just visit friends. + Legacy: History * Some families pass objects and ideas down from generation to generation. These heirlooms and ideas can also be called legacies. It may have to do with a person or many people. Individuals can leave a historical legacy. + Lilo & Stitch, Plot: 2002 movies :: American children's movies :: Disney animated movies :: English language movies :: American family movies :: American musical movies * Stitch becomes Lilo's best friend. Lilo tries to teach Stitch how to be good. She uses music by Elvis Presley in her lessons. Family means nobody gets left behind or forgotten. Alien officials find Stitch on Earth and take him and Lilo away. In the end they decide to let Stitch stay with Lilo in Hawaii.
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### social organization | family: Adoptive family * Adoptive families ARE different - are just like biological families - come from all walks of life - have little control over their international adoption - share a strong desire to provide love and care for a child * Many adoptive families try to search for the roots of their children.<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: American family * American families believe that Mexican women make great nannies - consist of mothers * American families have a diversity of competing, even conflicting, values - responsibility to keep their handguns out of the hands of children - pay more in taxes than on food, clothing, housing, and transportation combined - spend more money on taxes than they spend on housing, food, and clothing combined * Many American families have children and pets - live in single family homes * Most American families live to the full extent of their incomes - spend more on driving than on health care, education or food - american families consist of mothers Amish family * Amish families are large and stable with age bestowing social status. * Most Amish families eat three meals a day together. Black family * Black families experience isolation and the loss of civil and social rights in other forms. * Most black families stay together because of the strength of a black woman in the household. Broken home * are a common factor among boys who have vented their rage in schoolyard shootings * breed broken hearts, and broken hearts have a diminished capacity to love others. * mean broken people. Catholic family * Catholic families are responsible for providing the next generation of priests and sisters - come in all shapes and sizes - tend to be larger than Protestant families * Most catholic families have a copy of the bible in their house.<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: Cucurbit * All cucurbits are susceptible to root knot nematodes. * Remove and destroy unproductive plants. * are free from fruit fly infestation - important crops - of great economic importance and have a long tradition of cultivation in Turkey - thought to have originated in southern Mexico and Central America - totally dependent on insect pollination since most are monoecious in flower habit * differ from most garden vegetables in their requirements for pollination. * have a flowering habit which is quite unique among the vegetable crops. Different family * Different families have different attitudes about the purpose of money. * Different families have different cultures about food - and even different religions - needs, such as for infants or the elderly - ways of celebrating holidays - use nutrients differently and, therefore, make different demands upon the soil Ethiopian family * Ethiopian families live in towns. * Most ethiopian families live in towns. Extended family * Extended families are common and provide family members with social support and financial security - famous for breaking up marriages - become particularly important for single parent families - claim ownership to land, and inheritance is matrilineal - work together in agriculture, especially herding * Some extended families have their own synagogues.
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### social organization | family: Family life * can differ in Honduras as well - produce anxiety, tension and disagreement * has enormous power in people's lives. * is about creating memories together - an intermingling of blessings and burdens - as important to a child's education as is school life - based on love, respect, trust, support, and on spending time together - important in Liberia - patrilocal, which means that newlyweds live with the groom's parents - strong and is based on kinship groups within village clans * is the beginning of life in society - first experience a person has in under standing the meaning of commitment - very important in Egypt * mirrors the outside world for children. * natural fusion of religion, myth, law and culture. * plays a major role in both types of societies. * varies greatly and many factors influence the outcome for children.<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: Foster family * Foster families are families - attempt to determine if dog gets along with other dogs, cats and children - nurture foster children during difficult times - open their homes to a new foster dog, helping it to adjust to a life of retirement * Foster families provide a loving home environment for our cats, kittens, puppies and adult dogs - an environment of healing and stability for hurting children and families - respect the bonds between children and their parents and siblings - socialize and train dogs * Foster families work closely with the child's biological family - to determine temperament, training, etc * Many foster families experience a drop in income as a result of adoption. * Most foster families specialize in the type of child they serve. * Some foster families specialize in working with short-term cases - wish to provide foster care only<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: Foster home * Many foster homes have only one or two foster children. * Some foster homes specialize in doing emergency care. * are costly to taxpayers and can be harmful to children - important to the animals waiting for their forever homes - one of the only places available for children whose families are in turmoil - orphanages - responsible for caring for a rescue pet before it is placed for adoption - sometimes far more abusive than the child's original environment - used for foster kids * provide a loving home for as long as it takes to find a permanent home - food, lodging, supervision, and household services - temporary respite for cockers awaiting adoption Gene family * Gene families are genes that descended by duplication and variation from some ancestral gene - have lineage * Most gene families have lineage. Haitian family * Haitian families spend their leisure time within their own family and friendship groups. * Some Haitian families try to dream the very best for their children in terms of profession. Hawaiian family * Hawaiian families know what their family s amakua is - treasure their quilts as possessions of great significance * Many Hawaiian families believe the 'io to be their guardian spirit, or 'aumakua. Healthy family * Healthy families are good for the environment - ones that spend time together - the foundation for a healthy start in education * Healthy families are the foundation of a healthy society - healthy communities - primary building blocks for healthy communities - have healthy lawns - produce healthy people - serve as a nest for our human growth and development - share family meals - understand that conflict normal part of being in relationship Hispanic family * Hispanic families are more likely to be poor than non-Hispanic families. * Some Hispanic families live with their relatives all their life.
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### social organization | family: Homeless family * Homeless families are also more likely to have missing or incomplete immunization records - experience episodes of violence at higher levels than the general population * Many homeless families are without the minimal household items that most people take for granted.<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: Immediate family * includes a spouse, child, parent, sibling, or grandparent - grandparents, parents, or brothers and sisters of the bride or groom * is children, spouse or other dependents - father, mother, husband, wife, son, daughter, or brother and sister - mother, father, brother, sister, or grandparent - parents, children, grandchildren - related persons living in the same household * is spouse and children living at home * is spouse, children, parents, brothers, sisters, and spouse's parents - parent, sibling, child or grandparent - spouses and dependent children - spouses, children and stepchildren * is the eligible employee s parents, spouse or children - intern's spouse and minor dependent children - wife, husband, child, father, and mother * means a spouse residing in the person's household and any dependent child - any person related to a member through blood, adoption or marriage - spouse, parents and children only - spouses, children, grandchildren, siblings or parents * spouse, child, sibling, parent, grandparent, or grandchild. Japanese family * Japanese families keep teapots full of hot water on hand to use against intruders. * Many Japanese families have pets, just like families in other countries. * Some Japanese families are strongly Buddhist. Legume family * Legume families have ability - flowers * Most legume families have flowers. * Some legume families consist of plants.<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: Married couple * Many married couples are unhappy because they have a false understanding of love - experience struggles from time to time - use condoms for the life of their marriage * Most married couples can usually remember their first date - cheat at least once - have children - own property in joint tenancy or as tenants by the entirety * Some married couples enter nursing homes together and share a room - have a favorite restaurant where they go for important nights out - join their last names with a hyphen * accumulate property, called marital property. * are by far the happiest with their sexual lives - more likely to be home owners and invest for their future * can have prenuptial agreements which separate their funds and ownership - volunteer to mentor the life of a child - work with children of either gender * conduct programs and retreats for other married couples. * find that swinging increases their ability to communicate with each other. * have a higher maximum social security benefit than single wage earners. * have fewer accidents than single people do - children when their lives improve economically - financial and personal duties during marriage and after separation or divorce - more than twice the assets of other households * minister to engaged couples. * report more satisfying sex lives than single adults. * say the biggest stress on their unions is the time they spend at work. * share most of their properties and are exclusively united by their marriage vow - the most intimate of relationships - their experiences with engaged couples both in large and small groups * take turns bearing children. * tend to fight about money more than about any other single thing. Mexican family * Mexican families are large and they get together at every opportunity. * Most Mexican families live in shacks, without electric or water. Migrant family * Many migrant families travel out of state to work during summer months. * Migrant families are intact families.
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### social organization | family: Nuclear family * Nuclear families are families. * includes a father, a mother, and their children, living apart from other kin. * mother and father together with their offspring. Plant family * All plant families are defined by the details of their flower parts. * Many plant families are dicots - have members that evolved succulence<|endoftext|>### social organization | family: Poor family * Many poor families have incomes well below the poverty line - struggle with bills, or have their utilities turned off * Most poor families eat bread - have none, one or two children * Poor families are less likely to have nutritionally adequate diets than non poor families - have nutritionally adequate diets than nonpoor families - most vulnerable to the lack of social safety nets - fight to feed the children, get clean clothes and find a job * Poor families have more children and have more young children in particular, than non-poor families - to spend a quarter of their income on child care - participate less in activities that reduce injuries and poisonings - run the risk of rearing a generation of sickly children Rural family * Rural families are under economic, personal and family stress from changes in the farm economy - count on their children helping with the farm when they finish primary school - depend more on child care given by relatives and friends - experience child care differently from urban ones on a number of counts - travel greater distances to obtain child care than urban families * Some rural families depend on village or cottage industries such as weaving. Urban family * Many urban families grow their own vegetables - send their children to private schools * Some urban families have different values than some suburban families. * Urban families have one or two children. Whole family * Whole families can die in their sleep - eat dinner. * take part in staging the ballet Federation * Some federations wrestle on a tarp. * are constitutions - organizations * are professional bodies on world level * can have several peoples. * is an alliance of free and equal partners - the place that builds community Fire brigade * are equal opportunities employers - fire departments * is an organization Formal organization * are abstract fictions co-evolved by people with some common purpose - large, secondary groups that are organized to achieve goals efficiently * have a monopoly over education. * is more complex in three-dimensional art than in the graphic arts.
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### social organization: Gang * Many gangs have territories in multiple states. * Most gangs use hand signs to identify their gang and as a form of communication. * affect society in terms of heightened fear, crime, and economic costs. * also use graffiti to communicate with other gangs - weapons to protect their turf and their drug operations from one another * are a fact of life in American society - logical response to society's failure to make teenagers feel belonging - popular source for many violent crimes due to poor family life - problem in most cities, even in small cities - really big problem because they influence kids and kill people - also about money and power and organized criminal activity - frequently violent, criminal, and dangerous - groups of people who collectively engage in bully behavior - highly mobile and can move in and out of any neighborhood - just a group of people that think they have a higher power onver someone else - often violent and intimidating - one of the results of poverty, discrimination and urban deterioration - organized groups whose distinctive languages and dress identify their members - still very gender-stratified and are mostly led by males - terrorist cells * are the epitome of fatherless life - only form of recreation and companionship available to some young people - typical example of deviant behavior - threat groups that threaten the social fabric of our society - usually a product of the area in which they are active * are, almost by definition, criminal organizations. * attempt to instill fear, and use intimidation tactics against rival gangs and the community. * can also vary tremendously in numbers and age ranges of members - meet needs that go unfulfilled in other aspects of a child's life * control their turf where they traffic drugs with violence. * create problems for ALL of society- economically, emotionally, and morally. * depend on both individual and group participation. * do destructive acts to others - traditionally come from ghettos * draw young people away from school and home and into a life of violence. * establish their reputation by the types and severity of the crimes they commit. * exercise control over their neighborhoods by fear. * exist in areas that provide a hospitable environment - many settings and among all racial groups - virtually every community * fight for respect and over turf, sometimes blowing away innocent kids. * have chapters in every state and run like loosely managed, multinational corporations. * involve all races and socio-economic levels, and their activity often affects innocent people. * is association - rivers - tools - units * know no gender. * make people feel afraid to participate in neighborhood activities. * operate by tempting and seducing children into self-destructive behavior. * operates in cities - metro cities * performs activities - such activities * promise power to youth who feel powerless over their lives. * pull teens away from school and home into a life of violence. * recruit children in and around schools. * relate to violence, and so on. * tend to be composed of young people, mainly male, with similar ethnic and racial backgrounds - local, transitory and fluid in nature - operate with impunity in many school environments * thrive on intimidation and notoriety - the power and control they enjoy within their communities * use firearms and violence to protect their territories and supplies - graffiti as a way to mark territory, or serve as a warning or challenge to a rival gang * use graffiti to gain recognition or to express the identity of the gang - identify themselves and their territory and to communicate messages - mark territory and identify themselves - symbols to identify their membership, territory, and loyalty * usually have a group name or designation - leader or some one that takes control * vary in size by type of gang.
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### social organization | gang: Black gang * are usually heavily involved in making money , or as they refer to it, Clocking Dollars. * tend to identify themselves by adopting certain colors. Street gang * Many street gangs confine their drug trafficking activities to their own neighborhoods. * dominate the local distribution and sale of illicit drugs. * have identifiable turf and graffiti. * play an important role in cocaine distribution in Northern California. * use a variety of acts of initiation to induct an individual into full membership. Youth gang * are prevalent in the cities, and domestic violence and child abuse are rampant - responsible for thefts, rapes, assault, drug sales, murder and more * is gang. Genetic map * Some genetic maps show evolution. * are arrangements - like world maps showing landmarks without specific countries * can show evolutionary relationships. * help scientists navigate through the collection of genes found in corn. * is an organization * shows relative position of genes.
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### social organization: Government * All governments are dictatorships of one form or another - major energy users - responsible for the health and safety of their citizens - consider themselves and their countries models of democracy * All governments have a responsibility to protect and promote human rights - economic policies - receive their power from the people and sometimes from spiritual sources * All governments regulate flows of money, products, and services across their borders - the private sector in one way or another - survive on theft and extortion, called taxation * Every government has policies regarding gambling by their citizens - sovereign government and has the ability to make any law in favour of life * Many Governments also help refugees settle in their countries by providing financial assistance. * Many governments already have laws to protect private information - are concerned about the proliferation of encryption products - ban the transmission of popular culture in their countries * Many governments claim that there is no gender discrimination in the public service - to be democratic, but few actually are - control public transport fares, ostensibly to protect poor public transport users - give medal and decorations during war and peace times * Many governments have a vested interest in increasing drinking rates - both male and female representatives * Many governments have laws regulating oil spills - relating to sex - security forces specifically for the purpose of monitoring people of faith - oppress their people and abuse human rights - rule through force rather than by consent - run lotteries as a way to raise revenues for specific projects - sign contracts for police to guard private businesses - spend billions subsidizing car travel by building elaborate road networks * Many governments still own their nations' telephone service - use the death penalty to terrorize their opponents - support condom promotion - use resin to coat paper money * Most Governments maintain a mechanism to record developments in criminal activity. * Most government has cities - metro cities - is led by leaders * Most governments are the repositories of vast quantities of potentially valuable information - currently operate on administrative systems developed in the nineteenth century - finance early childhood interventions out of their general revenues - have wide powers to levy and collect taxes - impose a variety of payroll taxes on firms doing business in their district * Most governments still like their currencies to be free of the gold standard - put seals on important documents - see hunger as a problem of production shortfall * Regulate Natural monopolies- telephone, cable TV, power, water, sewers, airports, etc. * Some government owns countries - recognizes traditional marriages * Some governments also collect taxes from the owners of such property as stocks and bonds - pay low-income mothers a benefit to care for their children at home - watch the Web for political reasons - like hoping to censor dissidents - argue that the death penalty is necessary in societies scarred by violent crime - consider birth control morally decadent - determine how accessible the Internet is and who can access it - even restrict people's choice to change religion - exclude mental health from health priorities and planning - forbid the capture of rare species of turtles - have laws precluded sharing information received as part of a regulatory process - levy a per-unit severance tax on mineral resources * Some governments limit individual freedoms with time, place, and manner restrictions - or restrict the use of cryptography - require signatories to sign and print their names - use sonar for radar to find submarines and military equipment * acts through universal prescriptions, laws that apply to everyone. * adopts goals. * affects people's lives in lot of ways - the pace and direction of science and technology * also carries an enormous load of social responsibility - control people and decide things about what morality to accept or punish - create opportunities and barriers for entrepreneurship - employs chemists in medical, agricultural, and other research - have policies - includes the people who form the supreme administrative body of a country as well - manifest a set of values regarding the rights of their citizens - profit because they are realizing a windfall in new sales taxes * also publish bibliographies on a broad range of subjects - hearings, laws, and regulations - use taxes to fund welfare and public services * always regulates what it finances. * appoints child care workers * are also responsible for the efficient use of resources at their disposal - always coalitions of multiple parties - among the most trusted and authoritative sources of statistical information - bad because they try to save money - bureaucracies that are typically slow to make decisions - corrupt, and even children are no longer respectful to their parents - important, but sometimes social problems require changes in hearts and minds - in the process of change and transformation - interested in people as citizens - involved to some extent in every aspect of land tenure and use - monopolies because there is only one per country - monopoly issuers of fiat currency - much like large corporations, funding research that serves their interests * are much more concerned with interests than they are with principles or ethics - hierarchically organized - only factors in the moral order - political entities, and respond to consumers and businesses - primary holders of important information sources, ie - reflective of the societies they serve * are responsible for ensuring the promotion and protection of human rights - regulating the economy - respecting, protecting and promoting human rights - to citizens - servants to achieve earthly justice - sovereign nations that can do what they want * are the greatest polluters in the world - on the planet - largest human rights violators across the globe - ones created by man that lend themselves to corruption - owner and the operator of many information systems * assumes a structure through which governing occurs. * bans activities. * begin with crime and conquest. * benefit directly by the economic activity resulting from electronic commerce. * blame doctors for spiralling health care costs as they slash spending. * build roads, sewer and water systems, and other infrastructure. * builds airports. * business, a business of people helping people. * can act as role models and market catalysts in developing the information economy - market catalysts in developing the on-line economy - also provide funding to help make things happen - assist the private sector by promoting competition and liberalisation of markets * can be apathetic about the people, as well as people being apathetic about Governments - big, bureaucratic, and equipped with barriers to block people from access * can become militarist, tribal or racist, communist or fascist - more smart and transparent by using information technology - build roads, bridges, airports, and baseball stadiums - encourage collaboration and nurture the sharing of knowledge * can have a profound effect on the growth of commerce on the Internet - the growth of electronic commerce - role in helping to preserve families, and prepare individuals for family life - elections and constitutions * can help build consensus and provide funding to help make things happen - families raise children and care for their elderly parents - influence interest rates by increasing or decreasing the money supply - insure habitat protection by designating land and funding for national parks - make laws and, in some cases, provide funding - never work alone to tackle major social issues such as racism and intolerance * can only act if they are supported by public opinion - facilitate fair and just treatment of people by enforcing laws - place tariffs or quotas on imports to restrict imports * can play a role facilitating or prodding the private sector - an important role to ensure that workers earn a fair wage - reduce the barriers to the free flow of goods, services and capital - rise or fall on their tax policies - shape the market to encourage productive investment, and tax away what is parasitic * can sometimes improve economic outcomes - market outcomes - work with the private sector and establish codes, standards and labels * change regularly through an electoral process - when nations become independent and new leaders replace old leaders * claim also to be the authors of civil order and social stability. * collect taxes on alcohol products. * collective body of individuals within a civilized society. * collects taxes based on where and when income is being earned. * come and go every four years - go, technologies change, and economies evolve in that amount of time * conducts investigations. * confiscates a large percentage of the national wealth. * considers high potential * consume wealth, while free people and free markets create it. * continue to try to restrict access, usage, and privacy. * contract among the governed. * contrivance of human wisdom to provide for human wants. * control power, and attempt to control the economy - water use because it is critical to human and animal survival * controls people through budgets - the supply of money * create an environment in which entrepreneurship and producers can flourish. * creates facilities - stances * critical determinant of the relative health of the economy. * derive their just powers from the consent of the governed. * determines policy. * develop public policy to solve problems or to prevent potential problems. * develops areas - residential areas * devote more of their resources to health and education. * differ in their openness to partnering with external donors. * does have a role in protecting consumers - an important role to play in the lives of the American people - authority to uphold law and order, otherwise society has social anarchy - tests * dominates education, communications, transportation, banking, and manufacturing. * dynamic, sometimes fast-moving process. * effects the supply of healthcare providers by regulating the market. * employ approximately one-fifth of the total work force in the United States - psychologists in hospitals, clinics, correctional facilities, and other settings * employs almost every type of worker and is the country's largest employer. * encompasses the formal mechanisms by which people in a given territory are ruled. * encourages economic growth * enforce rules and regulations to promote social stability and mediate social conflicts. * engages in taxation to generate the revenues it needs to function. * establish laws and regulations to keep names, records and information organized. * establishes areas - laws and rules and individuals decide what, how and for whom to produce - manatee protection zones - protect areas * estimates cost. * exercises a great deal of power in modern society. * exist for the protection of the natural rights of every citizen. * exist to protect our lives, liberty and property from criminals and foreign invaders - their citizenry - provide basic needs to their citizens - serve the common good * exists in order to protect our rights and defend our liberties - only for the protection of individual rights - to protect good citizens from evil by punishing lawbreakers * expresses concern - particular concern * favouring the nuclear option represent most of the world s population and wealth. * finds recommendations. * fixes policies to control the quantity of people. * focuses on infrastructures. * force mothers to go out to work, While millions of men are unemployed. * form the buffer between the rich and the poor. * frequently attempt to steer the economy by using fiscal and monetary policy. * generate statistics. * generator of social capital and an instrument of collective choice. * get their power from the individuals they govern. * grows larger as people become more dependent. * growth industry. * has a central role in the development of distributed data storage - right to intervene in order to protect human life, liberty, and property - role in educating people about stewardship of natural resources - significant role to play in protecting cyberspace - agencies - capacity - critical infrastructures - debts - evidence - functions - influence on both public morals and public education - intentions - jobs - legal responsibility - roles - surplus - two roles in the economy * have a crucial role in macro-economic management - huge volume of information - key role to play in alleviating poverty - long history of imposing price controls on a wide range of goods and services - number of instruments which can be used to affect private markets - police force to make sure people follow the laws - responsibility to manage water for the national welfare - right to take private property for public use * have a role in monitoring claims and educating broadly - to play in allocating responsibility for what happens in the market - significant role to play in environmental challenges - tendency to become degraded and corrupt - unique role to play in our lives, as do the other institutions * have an important role in creating more sustainable patterns of consumption - the new economy - to play in poverty reduction - inherent tendency to squander resources - international bonds - legitimate roles as representatives of interests of citizens * have no independent source of income - money other than taxpayers' money - source of revenue other than the tax payers - political power - their own mandate on self determination * hold international reserves mostly in dollars. * human construction, and therefore is subject to human cultural influences. * impacts our lives in many ways, and has become the dominant force shaping our society. * implements policy * implies the power of making laws. * impose income distributions by taking from some people and giving to others. * imposes sin taxes on cigarettes and alcohol. * improve policing and introduce interventions to reduce criminal behaviour. * improves economic equity in society by redistributing the nation's income. * includes federal, state and local government agencies in the United State - hierarchies - power structures - the structure of our political system and compares it to other nations * inevitably face great social and political pressures when economies slow down. * influences behavior by shaping the cognitions of people in ambiguous situations - the economy in both a macro and a micro sense * interfere with and control the economy in many ways, and they are also a part of it. * intervene in the free flow of trade for cultural, political, and economic reasons. * invest in sport because it returns both tangible and intangible benefits to the nation. * is about using power and law for the public good. * is an abstract entity - ever present aspect of modern life - important economic sector * is an institution of force , plain and simple - with a monopoly of legitimized force in a given geographical region - integral part of the business world - organism that breeds corruption on all levels - based on the principle of equality * is capable of arm citizens - school children - committed to good governance as a cornerstone of development - democratic if part or all of citizens take part in and hold office - divided into two basic functions - found to be negatively related to each measure of human rights - generally responsible for the broad goal of serving the public at large - held responsible for social problems, and for pollution and sick environments - historically the worst violator of individuals privacy - how people organize themselves to be directed by politics - in the business of health, welfare and safety * is instituted by people to protect their rights - to protect individual rights - intended for the protection of the good people as well as the management of the bad - just one of the four fundamental institutions that support society - largely a justice system * is located in cities - civilization - trouble * is made of political ideology - up of living institutions - management rather than national sovereignty - never a source of goods * is one of the actors in governance - key social organizations - largest insurers of all, followed by employers - seven major departments of planetary work - part of society - polity * is responsible for ensuring the quality and availability of key public services - the formulation of laws and policies in all sectors - social control - society's largest employer * is supposed to be the servant of free citizens - of the people * is the act of governing, of exercising control and authority - administrative apparatus of sovereignty - agency that holds a monopoly on the legal use of physical force - agent of depravity - agreements by which people live together - antithesis of the Internet - art of managing the affairs of a community * is the biggest patriarchal institution in our culture - threat to privacy - democratic foundation for public participation - employer of last resort - facilitator of linking information - formal institutions that have legitimate decision making authority - fount of all that is good in our lives - framework through which people work - institution that helps balance the needs, opportunities and responsibilities - largest single creator and collector of information in the country - main patriarchal institution in our culture * is the major employer in the cash economy - source of forced exchanges, the most prominent of which is taxation - means by which society seeks to identify, achieve, and protect the common good - only structure that can adequately address global problems - power of the purse backed by that of the sword * is the principal economic activity, as measured by employee earnings - sector, as measured by employee earnings - provider of services for customers - public's business - reflection of collective consciousness * is the servant of the people - sovereigns and the masters - single largest client of the construction industry - sole entity authorized to wield coercive power against private citizens - source of education - sum total of rights transferred-and exists to protect the rights retained - ultimate repository of force in a society - use of force - thus an exercise of sovereignty, or else a power delegated by sovereignty - ultimate authority * is used for management - oppression - what keeps things running in the community, more or less - wider than politics * is, in part, the study of how people and groups compete for power and influence. * issues statements. * keep a lot of secrets from their people - all kinds of records about people * kill more people than wars. * large and important sector of the economy. * launches campaigns * levy taxes, for the most part, to cover the costs of their expenditures. * listing of government agencies. * mainstay of the wage economy. * maintain bureaus to investigate and to remedy elder abuse and exploitation. * make decisions about the world's climate and atmosphere - laws that help people live safely and fairly - laws, rules, and regulations, collect taxes and print money * makes adjustment - concessions - effort - significant effort * means a State or local government or a federally recognized Indian tribal government - of securing freedom and maintaining a system of justice - the government of the United States of America * natural and collective human responsibility. * needs to regulations. * normally provide disaster relief and social services, but then so do private agencies. * nowadays issue, or sell , bonds when they want to raise money. * offers jobs. * often enact laws that force businesses to function ethically - encourage the citizenry to save energy - pass laws on the total number of school days for public schools - promote tourism to promote understanding - stake their political credibility on the outcome of transactions or restructuring - try to achieve tax equity by making their taxes progressive * only come from societies whom allow to be governed. * owns refineries. * parently figure. * part of our everyday life. * pay interest on their borrowings, and the interest rate is set by the financial market. * places quantitative restrictions * play a key role in the provision of public goods - different roles in different countries - leadership roles in disease eradication - numerous roles in nuclear energy and radioactive waste management * plays a critical role in the capitalist system - major role in business * plays a major role in the professional life of Tennessee's dentists - professional well being of Alabama's dentists - key roles - role in Internet commerce * produces maps. * protect human rights and assure the freedom to enjoy the fruits of their labor. * provide public goods when they use tax dollars to buy items for people - structure to the dealings between people * provide the legal and social framework for markets to operate effectively - policy and fiscal framework which motivates private investment * provides alternative food sources - components - importance - important components - opportunity * publishes bills - new disability bills * pursues family plan policy * raise revenues from production in the form of taxes. * receives intelligence - proposals * recognizes problems - the important role that nutrition plays as a cornerstone of good health * records on gun owners supposedly protect society. * reflection of the people who created it. * regulates elections today by regulating campaign finance. * rejects attempts. * reliable, continuous source of business. * rely on computers for their national defense, collection of taxes, and demographics. * remains the dominant institution in society and is highly centralized. * represent people s efforts to collectively provide self-defense. * requires contributions - significant contributions * respects and protects individual freedoms. * run hotels too, called states. * sets goals. * sign documents to work together to protect the environment. * small part of the institutions of civil society. * social contract between the governed and the governing. * sometimes develop their own voluntary codes, like the National Building Code of Canada - make exaggerated claims for their human rights achievements - operate units that specialize in measurement of the Earth's magnetic field - pay legal fees for their officials or employees in criminal cases - see judicial independence as a limitation upon their capacity to govern * spend trillions on everything from paperclips to cleaning services. * spending on, say, early childhood education is also an act of saving and investment. * spring up as an attempt to centralize the beliefs of a group of people. * still have enormous powers to change society through regulation and taxation structures - own a substantial proportion of the steel industry, especially in Central Europe - store massive stocks of gold * suffer revenue losses and increased expenditures because of unemployment. * supervise and regulate securities markets. * system based on threat and domination. * takes actions - active roles - few steps - first steps * takes important first steps * tend to go through boom and bust cycles - react to public opinion - use over-simplified statistics to make decisions, and ignore other facts * tos respond to emergencies. * transcends all sectors in a society. * treat health care as an entitlement. * typically encourage aquaculture because it is viewed as economic development - identify and regulate dioxin emission by point sources, such as incinerators * units Political boundaries, such as city and county borders. * use general obligation bonds to finance services and projects for the citizenry - laws primarily to control people so it can impose the maximum taxes possible - police and military forces to enforce their desires - tremendous amounts of paper to publish laws, regulations and decisions * uses assessments - death penalty methods - fiscal and monetary policy to control the economy - wealth where private industry creates wealth * usually play a significant role in the financial system. * work to draw power into themselves, just as corporations do. * works to redistribute income through taxes, subsidies, and transfer payments - with industries + Government, The history and the theory of government: * Governments also control people and decide things about what morality to accept or punish. In very many countries, there are strict rules about sexual intercourse and drugs that are part of law and offenders are punished for disobeying them. + Hamilton, Ontario, Government * Government is how people organize themselves to be directed by politics. Hamilton was part of Wentworth County until 1974. + Institution: Social sciences * Government is an institution in the broad sense. Westminster Parliament is an institution in the specific sense. + Internet, Services on the Internet * Some governments think the Internet is a bad thing, and block all or part of it. For example, the Chinese government thinks that Wikipedia is bad. Many times no one in China can read it or add to it. Some parents block parts of the Internet they think are bad for children to see. Well-known examples of the whole Internet being blocked are in North Korea and Myanmar. + Mail: Postal service * A postal service can be private or public. Governments often make rules about private postal delivery systems. Since the early 19th century, national postal systems have mostly been controlled entirely by governments. The governments make people pay a fee to send something. This fee is usually in the form of stamps. + Rainforest, Rainforests in danger * Settlers can get into the rain forests because modern machines have opened roads deep into the jungle. The roads are usuaslly built by businesses who want to cut down trees or dig up minerals in the forest. Governments build other roads for trade and to allow settlers into the forest. Poor people come into the forest by the thousands on the roads and take land to raise food. They burn off the trees and plants to make a field. Then they plant crops for food and to sell. All around them other farmers do the same, so there is no forest left to grow back. + School holiday: Holidays :: Education * School holidays' are the periods when schools close for a break. The dates and length of school holidays are very different throughout the world. Governments often pass laws on the total number of school days for public schools. Private schools usually decide their own holidays. + Seal (device), Impression: Authentication methods :: Writing * A seal could be put on the letter itself, or on the envelope where it is stuck down. This meant that no one would be able to open the letter and then close it again, because the seal will break when the letter is opened. Most governments still put seals on important documents. Letters do not normally have seals any more, even important letters. + Sexual intercourse: Biological reproduction :: Human sexuality * Many governments have laws relating to sex. Forcing someone to have sex who does not want to, called rape, is a serious crime in many countries. There are other forms of sex that may also be against the law, such as incest, sex with minors, sex outside of a marriage, prostitution, homosexual sex, sex with animals, as well as others. + Stephen Krashen, Educational Activism: 1941 births :: Living people :: Bilingualism and second language acquisition researchers * Krashen lives and works in California. Government plans for education there turned against bilingual education. Krashen said that this was a bad idea and responded with research that showed problems with he new policies. He also spoke publicly and wrote many letters to newspaper editors. In 1998, Krashen campaigned very hard against Proposition 227. Though he tried hard, the proposition passed and got rid of most bilingual education in California. Even though he lost, Krashen continues to work hard in support of bilingual education as other states try to get rid of it.
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### social organization: Government organization * Many government organizations are chartered to collect statistics - employ private sector tools and techniques - provide information and materials about smoking and health * Most government organizations are behind the public sector's application of technology. * are accountable for the information they create and disseminate. * have a higher risk mitigation capacity than private industry. * open offices. ### social organization | government: African government * are always the first to sign international conventions. * remain the biggest obstacle to growth in information technology. Angolan government * focuses on infrastructures. * makes effort. Australian government * can also impose conditions on new, direct foreign investment. * takes actions. Authoritarian regime * are government. * is government * suppress demands for democracy in the name of stability. * tend to be brittle. Central government * comprises a bicameral parliament and cabinet of ministers. * includes all budgetary institutions and governmental non-budgetary funds. * is politically committed to decentralisation. City government * are home to some of the most dramatic changes and efforts to change in government. * is different from other levels of government - local organizations - regional government - the government closest to the people * provide essential services for households and businesses. Civil government * involves inspirational leadership as well as institutionalized force. * is confined to external and temporal affairs - divinely-mandated to prevent social dissolution and secure justice<|endoftext|>### social organization | government: County government * are responsible for allocating their funds - to citizens that directly depend upon natural resources * can often be something akin to anarchy. * illustrates the variation that exists in local governmental structures. * is local organizations * keep records and organize elections and laws. * play a pivotal role in determining the nation's land-use patterns. * keep records and organize elections and laws. They are a kind of local government. * subsidiary of state government under the Texas Constitution. Democratic government * All democratic governments recognize some form of freedom of assembly. * Many democratic governments support political dictatorships, including the worst. * honor human rights. * is most successful where there high degree of trust. * recognize military dictatorships for short run political interests. Federal government * creature of local government. * does tests. * has programs where schools can get their unused computers * plays roles. * regulates banking. * sets goals. * works with industries. Foreign government * Many foreign governments allow parents to adopt more than one child at once. * Most foreign governments require a basic fee for adopting a child from their country. * spend billions more. Good government * critical component to building healthy communities. * means the happiness, prosperity, success and welfare of the people. Government censorship * is unnecessary, expensive, and restricts the free speech of adults. * takes many forms. Government corruption * is another problem which interferes with drug distribution. * result of corporate power over government. Japanese government * has no right to steal private properties. * recognizes problems. Limited government * concept many people have difficulty grasping. * deterrent to politicians motivate by power. * is based upon unalienable rights that emanate from a divine source - the norm for natural order, unlimited government the norm for disorder
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### social organization | government: Local government * Many local governments implement tax policies to promote the use of renewables. * Most local governments tend to be small in size, when compared to other states. * Some local governments fear losing tax revenue as more people shop online instead of in stores. * Some local governments have a total ban on backyard burning of waste - additional laws and regulations for bicycles - different watering days or hours in effect - honor kids who have taken particularly good care of their teeth - issue credit cards in both the government employee's and agency's name * adopt and enforce health, safety and building codes. * are accountable for actions that cause harm to individuals - central to development of our society * are closest to the people they serve and best know the needs of their communities - serve and they know the needs of their communities - heavily involved in the utility sector - legally subordinate to the states - it unitary relationship - more than a database and a communications system * are responsible for dissemination of information - enforcing local ordinances - nursing homes and home care services - preparing large scale maps for their urban planning areas - regulating land use - the construction and maintenance of jails - semi-autonomous, and contain executive and legislative bodies of their own - similar to the executive branch in structure and function * are the largest employers of water and wastewater treatment plant operators - most efficient, most effective form of government - where things are happening * assess and collect property taxes. * assist in the provision of sport and recreation in the local community. * belongs to the citizens it has pledged to protect and serve. * can and does contribute to social and economic development in many ways - implement energy efficiency programs to save substantial amounts of money - reduce the greenhouse gas emissions they produce from their own activities * compile statistical reports using annual financial statements. * consist of counties, cities, and special districts. * enforce federal and state land use regulations. * establishes manatee protection zones * get most of their revenue from property taxes. * govern cities, towns, shires, municipalities and district councils. * handle welfare, education, health, roads, and law enforcement programs. * has a vital role to play in aiding the development of strong communities - agencies - an important role in cutting Australia's emissions levels - authority - the primary responsibility for protecting the public * have a key role in education, health, housing, and water supply - authority for regulating land use - primary responsibility for wastewater treatment - responsibility for maintaining property records * have the primary responsibility for land use planning - land-use planning - two major sources of revenueproperty taxes and state aid - zoning laws that specify legally acceptable uses of land in different areas * is administered by nine district councils and five town councils - through a council-manager form of government - an entirely different form of public institution - based on four administrative districts - by a system of organized boroughs, much like counties in other states - defined to include a county - different from other public sector bodies - executed through a system of territorial and administrative divisions - one of the most important tiers of government - provided at obstini level by municipality councils each led by an elected mayor - run by people with their own community - set up by local citizens to provide general services to the people - the foundation of a democratic political order * is the government of the locally powerful - that works - most important level of government because it's closest to the people - one tier of government closest to the people - where the tire meets the road for democracy * key stakeholder in regional planning. * levy taxes on real and tangible personal property. * operate in a complex legal and administrative environment. * pass laws to regulate how land is zoned and subdivided, among other things. * pay for public schools with the help of state aid to education. * play a central role in managing the urban environment - both direct and indirect roles in employment creation * provide some medical care for individuals lacking medical insurance. * reflects the plurality of Fiji's social structure. * regulate discharges to the sanitary sewer systems - social and industry services * service organization. * share motor fuel tax collections with the state government. * work with their own communities to determine needs and wants - within the state tax collection system
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### social organization | government: Municipal government * is either city or town government - the first order of government and the cornerstone of Canadian democracy * make laws at a local level. * makes effort. * provide fire protection, police, sanitation and other such services. Oppressive government * causes some people to commit violent acts. + Oppression: Sociology * It can also describe the feeling of people who are oppressed. Oppressive governments can lead to a rebellion. Representative government * is party government - self-government * step away from pure, or direct, democracy. Republican government * is founded on popular sovereignty - generally superior to other forms of government * replace royal and proprietary rule. Small government * is limited to defending our lives, our liberty, and our property. * night watchman, a tiny institution that does only the bare essentials.<|endoftext|>### social organization | government: State government * Every state government regulates insurance. * Most state governments have a special office that investigates consumer problems and complaints - regulate charitable organizations * Some state governments levy both inheritance and estate taxes - regulate diesel smoke emissions * State Governments have a direct interest in their role as the dominant employers of nurses. * are also divided into executive, legislative and judicial branches * are large employers who can benefit by participating in state and local BLNs - information technology consumers * can be just as bureaucratic and burdensome as the federal government - help industries learn how to prevent pollution * depend on both income and sales taxes. * determine the amount of bonds they plan to issue independently. * has roles. * have Web sites - lending and guarantee systems, and they also use industrial revenue bonds - offices that focus on trade and export promotion - the right to collect tax revenues - their own securities laws and regulations * identify the names and boundaries of state reservations. * is government - regional government - the leading base of the economy * operate numerous types of self-insurance funds. * oversee the licensing of nursing homes. * play a similar role within their own boundaries. * plays key roles * provides alternative food sources * use licensure and certification laws to regulate the assisted living community. + United States, Government: English-speaking countries :: G8 nations * The United States is a federal republic. The federal government is set up by the Constitution. There are three branches of government. They are the 'executive branch', the 'legislative branch', and the 'judicial branch'. State governments work very much like the federal government. Student government * are state agencies, in that they operate similarly to the state government. * class that helps someone become a better leader and a better person. Totalitarian state * are anti-market. * attempt to efface memory and force the adoption of mythologies. * survive by keeping their subjects ignorant and servile.<|endoftext|>### social organization | government: Tribal government * are able to provide their citizens with improved health care and education - as varied as the tribes, native villages and reservations they represent - inherently closer to their people than are the state and federal governments * is autonomous, with status similar to a municipality. * make decisions about civil disputes which take place on reservation land. * promote personal responsibility and work opportunity for their members. * use their revenues to provide basic governmental services to Indian communities. * wear two hats, acting as both governing body and business enterprise.
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### social organization | government: World government * Most world governments ban robot use on Earth other than scientific research. * are most concerned about three major areas of organized crime activity. * is the most ambitious method for creating world order. * theme that plays a large role in many eschatological scenarios. Grassroots organization * Most grassroots organizations work on many issues at once. * are non-profit groups that fight or support a cause at the community level. * can make a big difference when they have the membership and the money. * is an essential part of promoting or opposing legislation.<|endoftext|>### social organization: Greek organization * are families with their own community that runs on a democracy - groups who believe in and strive for a common set of goals and ideas - prevalent in American government as well - valid organizations * do hold social events, but also have activities without alcohol. * encourage involvement in campus activities and organizations. * exemplify democracy in action. * have parties once a week. * offer many people a family away from home. * provide the chance to make new friends and have fun. Health organization * Many health organizations discourage the use of artificial coloring and encourage their avoidance. * make recommendations. * support supervision. Healthy organization * have a different view of people. * have a different view of the leader - potential of people - way of looking at how people work together - healthy relationships - mechanisms for the negotiation of differences
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