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### animal | vertebrate | amphibian | toad:
Wood frog
* Most wood frogs adapt to climates
- cold climates
* Some wood frogs have components
- remain in states
* are an amphibian species of upland forests
- ectotherms , and their body temperature closely tracks the outside air temperature
- one of the first frogs to begin the breeding season
- poikilotherms and rely on the environment for heat
- remarkable creatures
- terrestrial except during the breeding season
* begin their mating calls while there is snow on the ground and ice in the pools.
* breed early in the spring, taking advantage of temporary wetlands
- explosively in spring ponds where resident males jostle with each other
* can live north of the Arctic Circle, surviving for weeks in a frozen limbo state.
* tend to like forested ponds.
Young toad
* eat smaller sizes of the same prey that adults feed on.
* have small dark, orange-tipped spots on the back.
Urodele
* Some urodeles are entirely aquatic, but others live on land as adults or throughout life.
* are without invest- ing girdle bones.
* is an amphibian<|endoftext|>Ability
* Abilities are forms of developing expertise
- in adapting, alternating, observing, changing, and communicating
- often disparate, with striking contrasts between abilities and levels of achievement
* Some ability affects nutrition.
* contributes to development.
* depends on quality.
* determinant of behavior.
* ensures survival.
* explains skills.
* grouping involves creating groups within the same classroom.
* has advantage
- limitations
* has obvious advantage
- survival advantage
* helps predators.
* increases over time.
* influences outcomes
- success
* is cognition
- dispositions
- dynamic, changing as the child grows, matures and develops
- how much income people make, how much they can put down
- skill or proficiency in understanding financial products
* is the make up of an athlete
- only way to succeed in life
- power of accomplishing something
- product of aptitude multiplied by training and resources
- state of being able or competent
* provides additional benefits
* provides important benefits
- potential benefits
* relates to duties
- official duties
* translates into capability.
### ability:
Ability grouping
* divisive issue among parents, teachers, and policymakers.
* is the grouping of students according to their ability, as the name suggests
- used in the academic areas of English, mathematics, science, and social studies<|endoftext|>### ability:
Adaptability
* covers the ability to react to network configuration or application changes.
* is ability
- about new partnerships for new economic, social and technological conditions
- health
- just one attribute associated with mathematicians
* is the key Life process of change
- for a species like the mallard that uses a broad range of habitats
- to survival
- root of evolution and the secret to biological success
- strongest single resource of the brain
* marks the history of American media.
* requires partnership to adapt to new economic, social and technological conditions.
* varies both from person to person and from population to population.
Athletic ability
* Athletic abilities are the underlying parameters of being a skillful athlete.
* increases the longer the child takes lessons.
Capability
* Capabilities are the knowledge, skills, and abilities required to perform roles effectively
- refer to specific skills which are localized in a particular job or role
* drives growth.
* is aptitude
- susceptibility | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### ability | capability:
Capacity
* Capacities are a person s ability or capacity to experience or express something.
* Most capacity relates to thermal conductivity.
* depends on factors.
* familiar concept to the medical profession.
* improves ability.
* includes analyses.
* influences characteristics.
- determined by the amount of instruments and equipment needed
- functions
* is measured in liters
- units called bits, bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes and terabytes
- production
- simply the amount of water that the humidifier or vaporizer holds
* is the amount of data that the drive can store, after formatting
- most important variable when estimating volumes on congested highways
- potential to do something
* is the power of either an organization or individual to perform or to produce
- to receive training or instruction
- prospect's financial ability to give
- size of the tube
- tolerance
* measure of how much data a hard drive, or any other storage medium, can store.
* refers to uncompressed, nominal capacity.
* reflects productivity.
* relates to conductivity
* variable element that is affected by both seasonal demand and business cycles.
### ability | capability | capacity:
Assimilative capacity
* is the ability of a river basin to safely absorb pollutants.
* refers to the degree that a particular environment can reduce contamination.
Battery capacity
* is about half that of an alkaline cell
- expressed in ampere-hours
* is measured in amp hours
- talk time or standby time
Heat capacity
* Heat capacities depend upon the manner in which they are measured.
* Most heat capacity relates to conductivity
* belongs to the properties which are least affected by high pressures.
* is kind of like density.
* is the amount of energy for a substance to change in temperature
- change in heat divided by the change in temperature
- quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of an object by one degree
* measure of how much heat a material can hold.
Human capacity
* begins with basic education and literacy.
* has both personal and social relevance.
* is an often-neglected component of building a digital society.
Lung capacity
* is increased by arm movements.
* tends to decline in old age.
Managerial capacity
* is an important factor that involves education, experience and motivation.
* refers to the system s institutional and administrative capabilities.
Mental capacity
* Mental capacities vary.
* is decision-specific rather than all or nothing
- intelligence
- lost and the ability to recognize the loss
Physiological capacity
* All physiological capacities have a limited level of development.
* Most physiological capacities are dependent upon body and system dimensions.
* Physiological capacities achieve ceiling levels in a relatively short period of time.
Vital capacity
* decreases with age.
* equals total lung capacity.
* is capacity
- diagnostic tests
- directly proportional to the total number of alveoli in a person's lung
- maximum volume of air that can be moved in and out during a single breath
- related to age, height, and gender
* is the largest amount of air that can be exhaled after taking a deep breath
- maximum volume that can be expired after a maximal inspiration
* tends to increase with height.
Cognitive ability
* Cognitive abilities are relatively stable and change very slowly.
* influences outcomes.
Contractility
* is ability
- also a model for biological energy transduction and enzymology in general
* is the ability to shorten and thicken after sufficient stimulus
- inherent ability of the myocardial cell to contract
### ability | contractility:
Astringency
* Astringencies are contractility
- taste
* is contractility
- removed by cooking, and choke cherries make tasty pie-fillings, sauces and wine
* sensation or feeling, a dry, puckery feeling in the mouth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### ability:
Human ability
* Human abilities exist on a continuum
- refer to differences in information processing speed and capacity
* is the cornerstone of golf.
Immunocompetence
* appears to influence the outcome of cytauxzoonosis in bobcats.
* is ability
- essential for good health and longevity<|endoftext|>### ability:
Psychic ability
* Psychic abilities are inherent in consciousness
- scary
- involve the use of all of our senses
* gift from spirit
- uninvited by true psychics
* goes hand in hand with all exceptional ability.
* has to have a confident spirit in which to grow.
* is as common as the ability to walk.
* is like a musical or artistic talent
- sometimes comparable to common sense and experience
* runs in families, and for a simple reason.
* skill of the mind and imagination.
* useful technique, because it hovers on the borders of sci-fi and reality.
* way of perceiving and using energy that is different from the physical world.
Totipotency
* is ability
- known to be present in plant cells
* is the ability of each and every plant cell to regenerate an entirely new plant
- physiological basis for reproducing plants from cuttings
Visual ability
* Visual abilities develop as a child matures
- range from legal blindness to total blindness
* fundamental survival skill among creatures of the reef, especially fish.
### abjection:
Decadence
* is abjection
- sometimes amoral, especially in the modern era
- usually a state in a society which used to be good but has become bad
+ Decadence, Decadence and society: Culture :: Ethics :: Literature :: Painting :: Pop music
* Decadence is usually a state in a society which used to be good but has become bad. Many people have started to behave in a way that others think is shocking and society does not function as well as it did before.
Degeneracy
* Degeneracies are important in physics.
* results because there are more codons than encodable amino acids
- from symmetry in the system
+ Particle in a box, Higher-dimensional boxes: Quantum mechanics :: Physics
* This situation is called 'degeneracy' and for the case where exactly two degenerate wavefunctions have the same energy that energy level is said to be 'doubly degenerate'. Degeneracy results from symmetry in the system.
### abnormal cells:
Large cell
* appear to be dark shades while small cells appear to be lighter shades.
* are abnormal cells
* have a smaller ratio of surface area to volume than do small cells.
* surround dorsal fenestra.
* term used in oncology.
### abnormal growths:
Spinal tumor
* Most spinal tumors are extradural.
* are abnormal growths
- usually meningiomas or neurofibromas
* caused by lung cancer are more aggressive.
* is much less common than primary brain tumor.
Aboriginal group
* claim they have been discriminated against in earthquake relief efforts.
* occupy the upland area around the borders of Cambodia.
* say regulating guns violates aboriginal treaty rights.
### absent:
Calcium oxalate
* is absent
- also a constituent of the root
- associated with benign breast tissue
* is insoluble in alkali and acetic acid, but it dissolves in hydrochloric acid
- water and acetic acid
- more likely to form in males, struvite is more likely to form in females
* is the most common constituent of kidney stones
- other common mineral
Free carbonate
* are absent
- generally in the solum
* are in the organic layers in some pedons
- substratum and in some pedons, are in the lower part of the subsoil
- present
### absolute power:
Universal knowledge
* can develop from experience.
* is absolute power.
Absolutism
* carries a torch and wears a white robe.
* is control
- divine command theory, but without the generous and humble spirit
- doctrines
- dominance
- the pivot of Vedanta philosophy | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### absorbed poorly:
Green light
* are good to use when healing.
* arises in regions where the gas is doubly ionized.
* carries the most energy of any color.
* has a shorter wavelength than orange light
- wavelength of about
- higher frequency than the red light
- properties totally unique in the natural world
* is absorbed poorly
- emitted when oxygen ions acquire electrons from the surrounding gas
- green
- higher energy than purple light
- least effective to plants as most plants reflect green light and absorb very little
- light waves
- permission
- reflected or transmitted, as is far-red light
- right in the middle of the visible light spectrum
- traffic light
- transmitted through while the red and blue light is absorbed
### abstract concept:
Absolute
* are abstraction
- highly concentrated, entirely alcohol-soluble perfume material
* are the beginning of justice
- framework for perceiving truth
- words such as all, none, always, never, and every
* cause an intense emotional reaction, either positive or negative, in most people.
* exist as concepts.
* exist, and what is right, the truth, many times is known.
* is abstraction | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abstract concept:
Braille
* also gives blind people more options in life.
* are strongly language-dependent.
* bears no visual resemblance to the written alphabet.
* certain pattern of bumps that make a letter.
* code of raised dots that allows the blind to read by touch
- small, raised dots that can be read by touch
- which enables blind persons to read and write
* is an abstraction
- alphabet that uses raised dots to represent letters
- example of blind embossing
- important skill for anyone who is blind or vision impaired
- output alternative for people who are blind
- based on different combinations of six dots
- created by small pins that push the dots up from the back of the special heavy paper
* is in English
- an eccentric orbit that passes inside the orbit of Mars
- intended for use by the visually impaired
- intrinsically a straight line notation
- just as important to a blind child as print is to a sighted child
- literacy for the tactual learner
- made up of a series of little bumps that stick up from a surface
- now almost universal for writing for the blind
* is read by lightly moving the fingers from left to right across the line of Braille
- moving the hand or hands from left to right along each line
- from left to right using the index fingers on one or both hands
- the format which blind persons use to read most of their materials
* is the key to literacy and intellectual growth
- most direct contact blind persons have with the written thoughts of others
* is the most widely accepted system of reading and writing for blind people
- used communication method for blind people
- solution to the digital divide
- system for accessing literal information by touching raised dots
- written language of the blind
- to blind people what print is to sighted people
* is used by many blind individuals
- the majority of persons who are visually impaired
- only for alphabetic characters, numbers, and punctuation marks
- with different languages today
- written with a combination of six raised dots on stiff white paper
* is, after all, a tactual, hands-on means of reading and writing.
* only has one set of letters.
* reading and writing system used by visually impaired people.
* representation of text that depends on the language being represented.
* special alphabet for people who are blind.
* system for reading and writing.
* system of raised dots that a blind person can read with their fingertips
- which blind people can read with their fingers
* system of reading and writing by touch used by the blind
- touch reading and writing for blind people
* tactile reading system used to present text to a reader who has a visual impairment.
* unique form of written communication.
* universal form of communication for any language and any culture
- many language and any culture
* useful alphabet for blind people when they use computers.
* uses a series of raised dots to represent letters or groups of letters
- cells of six raised dots, in two columns of three dots
- impressions on paper to create an alphabet, numbering system and punctuation
* vital reading and writing tool for blind people.
+ Braille, The Braille alphabet, The Braille cell
* Braille uses cells of six raised dots, in two columns of three dots. The dot positions on the left are numbered one, to three, the ones on the right four to six, as shown in the picture
- alphabet: Braille :: Tactile alphabets :: Assistive technology :: Encodings :: Blindness :: Latin alphabet representations :: Writing systems :: Encodings
* Braille is used with different languages today. In each language, the letters are 'encoded' differently, depending on the alphabet. The list of codes is known as braille code, or code page. There are also different braille codes in use for special purposes, like writing shorthand, mathematics or music | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abstract concept:
Market share
* depends on how the market is defined.
- important for long term stability of any business
- of interest to everyone in business
- particularly important in the software industry because of increasing returns
- represented by a grid
- that portion of an overall market segment's potential by a specific retailer
* is the percent share in sales one company controls in a particular market
- percentage of each county's total taxable consumer retail sales
* matter of definition.
* measurement of unit sales at any given time.<|endoftext|>### abstract concept:
Measure
* angles in degrees
- radians
- with respect to the pole of the plane
* are abstraction
- activities, programs or services that limit or reduce the emission of greenhouse gases
- containers
- maneuvers
- musical notation
* are the processes used to determine the actual level achieved on the desired criterion
- values that are actually counted in a calculation
* change in gemstone's surface temperature.
* changes in water volume due to evaporation and melting of snow.
* curvature in two dimensions of a patient's cornea.
* distances on maps and globes.
* is the abstract base class for a set of classes dealing with coordinates
- dialectic of quantity and quality which passes into the recognition of something
* means to find out how big or long something is by using a measuring unit.
* microscopic amounts of blood in feces.
* objects weight in grams.
* quantities indirectly using algebra, geometry or trigonometry.
* structure commensurate with the relations by which that structure is constituted.<|endoftext|>### abstract concept | measure:
Indirect measure
* compare one person 's behaviors to other people 's behaviors.
+ Applied behavior analysis, Analyzing Behavior, Data collection
* Indirect measures could also be used but they are not as good. Indirect measures compare one person's behaviors to other people's behaviors. They get information about a person this way. An example would be an intelligence test. One person's score is compared to the scores that other people got. These are not as good because everyone is different. Scores on indirect measures can also change a lot.
Physiological measure
* predict behavioral lifetime of human auditory sensory memory.
* start to increase perhaps several minutes before waking.
Preventative measure
* Some preventative measures can ease the anxiety of parents and of children.
* are important because eye diseases develop over a long period of time.
* can be helpful in controlling insects
- help reduce the risk of being stung
- significantly reduce the incidence and severity of head injury
* save lives, and their costs are significantly less than the cost of passivity.
Preventive measure
* are especially important for arthritis
- essential in minimizing the spread of the hepatitis viruses
- often more effective for keeping groups healthy and active
* consist in keeping from being bitten by infected mosquitoes.
Unit of measure
* Units of measure are the metric ton and the U.S. dollar.
* is the candela per square meter
- dunno
- hectolitre
Unobtrusive measure
* are ways of studying social behavior without affecting that behavior.
* reduce the problem of reactivity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abstract concept:
Perfection
* can come in many different shapes and sizes.
* causes jealousy.
* concept of the Christian Platonic mind-set.
* goal to be reached by a gradual process.
* human abstraction.
* is albums
- also a concept, in the same way that infinity is
* is an abstract concept
- accumulation of near-perfect giving
- illusion that is unattainable
- balance and harmony in life, while desire is an imbalance of thought
- being entirely without flaw and meeting supreme standards of excellence
- born of purity of heart
- either in the past or in the future or in the dream world
- improvement
- seen as the price for success and avoidance of disappointments and problems
* is the clerkly way of doing things
- essence light
- invention of man
- part of the process where a bill is debated and amended
- sense of oneness with all that is,has ever been and can ever be
- then the sense of oneness with all that is,has ever been and can ever be
* lies in the degree of openness to self-transcendence.
* means being able to control our environment
- the perfection of love and the perfection of personality
- to engage in one's original consciousness
* process to achieve and to create, by correct and exemplary living.
* refers to simplicity of intention and purity of affection.
* Wikipedia is not paper and has no need to work towards a deadline. There is no finished version expected soon, and it is perfectly acceptable to let the editing process fashion an article up to our standards eventually. Wikipedia work in progress, and will always remain so. There is no publication date and Wikipedia does not have to be finished today. It merely needs to have improved on yesterday. Perfection is neither desired nor achievable.
* relative term.
* sense of never having arrived, never doing good enough.
* theoretical construct, an unknown ideal.
* vision that is shared by all.
Revery
* Reveries are of two kinds, sinful and religious.
* is abstraction<|endoftext|>### abstract concept:
Right
* All rights are rights to freedom of action.
* are a concept that implies stability over time
- fundamental basis from which all dispossessed people can progress
- protection from society
- responsibility that the individual holds to the community and other holders of rights
- baleen whales similar in size and color to bowheads
- civil and political, economical and social
- commons
- concepts pertaining to the only species capable of forming concepts - human beings
* are ethical principals that can only apply to beings that can reason
- principles applicable only to beings capable of reason and choice
- factions
- freedoms guaranteed by law
- hands
- inherent in the nature of man
- interest
- interests constituted by law and enforceable by governments
- justice
- legal entitlements such as life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness
* are moral principles sanctioning a man's freedom of action in a social context
- that guarantee freedom of action in a moral context
- norms
- part of a social contract that makes no sense without responsibilities
- political parties
- positions
- privileges that are bestowed upon people by their country when they declare alliance
- something that exist simultaneously among people
- the artificial constructs defining how different parties agree to treat each other
- turns
- universal, applying to all people in all places at all times
- what a civilized world revolves around
* are, by their nature, based on a homocentric view of the world.
* can take the form of patents, trademarks, trade names and copyrights.
* exist in a world governed by limited resources.
* involve claims by individuals or classes against the larger society.
* is abstraction
- the word used to mean that things are fair for everyone
* represent entitlement and claims by individuals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abstract concept | right:
Aboriginal right
* are rights for aboriginal people, guaranteed by the Constitution
- the rights of Aboriginal peoples
* influence economic development.
Animal right
* capitalizes on public confusion.
* catchphrase akin to human rights.
* clearly defined ideological concept.
* is based on a concern for individual creatures foremost
- the philosophic attempt to better that humanity
- usually the first step that children take in being involved in the environment
* means an end to all cures for diseases
- animals first
- dramatic social changes for humans and nonhumans alike
* philosophical viewpoint.
Constitutional right
* are legal rights defined in law and protected by an independent judiciary
* protect and create equality for all citizens before the law.
Equal right
* are the recognition that each citizen is equal to each other.
* is about equal access and equal opportunities
- deem sectarian and bigotry is labelled as secular
Group right
* are the negation of individual rights.
* promote differences and stereotypes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abstract concept | right:
Human right
* All human rights are universal, indivisible and interdependent and interrelated.
* abuses only speed up a government's loss of legitimacy and lead to greater instability.
* address a specific arena of the human condition.
* affect the happiness, health and prosperity of a community.
* allow people to have assertive exercise and individual empowerment
- live a life that they choose free from discrimination and harassment
* are African rights, they are American rights
- America's legacy to the world
* are a cardinal aspect of our faith
- concept which grew out of medieval Christian Europe
- general possession of all users
* are a legitimate claim and a solemn responsibility
- concern of the international community
- problem for dissidents and others who run afoul of well-enforced rules
- recognized objective by all
* are about freedom from fear as much as from want
- the ways states treat their own citizens or individuals under their control
* are an essential element in education for modern citizenship
- inextricable part of our lives
- issue for everyone, everywhere
- as much the result of history as they are universal
- at the root of children's rights
- basic protections to which a human being in a given country has a just claim
- dependent upon the acceptance of an idea
- everyone's rights
* are for everyone, everywhere and at all times
- foreign to no culture and native to all nations
- fundamental to making democracy work for all citizens
- highly respected and freedom of expression legally protected by the constitution
- ideals that people try to live up to
- important because they acknowledge the intrinsic value of human beings
- in a sense both the design and the product of people organized through government
- inalienable and inviolable rights
- inherent and inalienable
- inseparable from responsibilities
- intrinsic for every human being
- key to people s lives for four main reasons
* are more basic than derived knowledge
- important than property rights
- inclusive, encompassing all the peoples of the earth
- necessary for a life with human dignity
- now global issues
- of universal significance
- political rights
- properly the birthright of every human being
- rights of entitlement
* are rights that all people have
- any person has as a human being
* are the birthright of every person
- business of everyone
- foundation of human existence and coexistence
- glue which bind societies
- minimum conditions for life in community
- most basic of laws
- natural-born rights for every human being, universally
- possession and entitlement of all
- result of popular engagement and struggle
* are the rights of human beings, both individual and collective
- people have simply because they are human
- that one has because one is human
- simple idea of one being able to enjoy life, and live well with human dignity
* are universal , indivisible , interdependent , and inalienable
- indivisible, interdependent and interrelated
- interrelated and indivisible
- what reason requires and conscience commands
- women's rights and women's rights are human rights
* become meaningful only through national observance and protection.
* begin with children's rights.
* belong to every person by virtue of birth
- everyone, or they are guaranteed to no one
* constitute our response to the demands of justice and the fulfillment of human needs.
* define at the same time, values, objectives and the limits.
* disappear when anyone who speaks out is assassinated by death squads.
* encompasses personal and religious use.
* exist only to the extent that they are struggled for, won and then maintained
- to secure freedom from fear and freedom from want
* form the core of Bulgaria's new democratic Constitution.
* give people the choice to live to their potential and to live a life of dignity.
* has multiple dimensions.
* have a spiritual character
- different meanings when observed from a deep versus a shallow point of view
- no borders
- to include the right to education, health, shelter and food
* imply also that one has obligations as a human
- some moral basis for rights
* involve relationship among individuals, and between individuals and the state.
* is an idea whose time has come.
* is the name given to humankind's most universal and fundamental needs and aspirations
- soul of our foreign policy
* perish at death.
* protect an individual's autonomy against greater institutions
- men, women and children all over the world
* provide for the recognition of the human being as an autonomous being.
* require the preservation of religious liberty and freedom of conscience.
* secure our freedom to live fully and responsibly within life's community.
* seek to prevent and redress inhuman wrongs.
* transcend all borders, cultures and notions of difference.
* try to aim for self-liquidation.
* universal notion, though there is sometimes a difference in application.
* very important issue in today's society. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abstract concept | right:
Individual right
* apply, even to children.
* are actually fundamental to create real jobs
- both legal and moral
- central to the organizing principles of our nation
- fundamental to the values of socialism
- inseparable from individual responsibilities
- the basic foundation of our political system
* begin at birth, with the creation of a new, separate human being.
* presume personal and social responsbilities.
Legal right
* are rights
- usually moral rights that are protected by law
* relate to specific issues, and are written into laws
- written into the law
Natural right
* are inherent in human nature.
* belong to all people, in all times and places
- moral discourse and association
Parental right
* are a private law concept, a bourgeois concept.
* imply parental responsibility.
Privacy right
* allow people to break the law without anyone knowing it.
* are in their infancy on the internet today
- vulnerable in an online environment
* hinge on important notions of human dignity.
Reproductive right
* are a subset of sexual and reproductive health and rights
- vital part of a human rights agenda
- an important part of efforts to protect the environment
- central to our liberty and equality
- legal rights related to reproduction and reproductive health
* embrace existing human rights.
* includes the right to sex education and abortion services.
* is so important in an individual life in and especially to women.
Riparian right
* are property rights arising from owning shoreland
- which run with the land
- rights of owners of land abutting a stream
* relate to the use and ownership of water in A. non-navigable rivers and streams.
Social right
* are universal franchises, and relate entirely to public privileges
- welfare states rights
* cover a wide field, and include both absolute and conferred rights.
* have to do with health and relations to family members.
Water right
* Some water rights authorize users to impound water in a lake or reservoir for later use.
* allow use of ground or surface water.
* are constitutionally inseparable from the right of ownership of property
Worker right
* are controversial because it involves major corporations
- indivisible from human rights
* promote productivity growth.
### abundant:
Epiphytic orchid
* Most epiphytic orchids have aerial roots
- occur in regions
* Most epiphytic orchids produce aerial roots
* Some epiphytic orchids have air
- layers
* are abundant.
* grow on other plants.
- special root layers that absorb and store water for future use
* require a growing media with extremely good aeration and drainage.<|endoftext|>### abundant:
Underground water
* Any underground water is kept liquid by overlying pressure and Mars s internal heat.
* Some underground waters contain big quantity of dissolved metal salts.
* can also erode and deposit material.
* comes close enough to the surface for springs and wells to exist.
* is abundant
- analyzed once a year
- called groundwater, as opposed to surface water in lakes and rivers
- considered fairly clean because soils create a filter that remove large toxins
- often the source of potable water
- scarce and often available only at great depths
- widespread enough to allow the raising of cattle, sheep, goats, and camels | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abundant:
Wild animal
* All wild animals are susceptible to parasites and disease
- belong in the wild
- carry diseases
- have the potential of being dangerous, especially when wounded or cornered
* Every wild animal is born with well-defined instincts.
* Many wild animals can be dangerous to handle
- carry parasites and diseases
- find themselves endangered or threatened by pollution, hunting and more
* Many wild animals live in the forests including tigers, chital, bears, pigs, and deer
- unsettled interior, but some also live near cities
- survive their injuries but are unable to be released due to permanent damage
* Most wild animals are less shy of a riding elephant
- nocturnal, sleeping during the day and active at night
- normally most active at night
- particularly afraid of humans
- under the control of North Carolina Wildlife
* Most wild animals carry cat fleas
- come out at night and are afraid of people
- eat grass
- harbor a few fleas, and some species are typically infested
* Most wild animals have behaviour
- body length
- bones
- characteristics
* Most wild animals inhabit areas
- know enough to make sure that their underground burrows have an emergency exit
* Most wild animals live in areas
- high temperature
- make very poor pets and are best observed in their native habitat
- obtain food
- play roles
- solve the problem of winter survival in Anchorage by avoidance
- stalk prey
- transmit diseases
* Some wild animals adapt, like Oklahoma farm animals that stay outdoors in winter.
* Some wild animals are already extinct while many are on the brink
- also susceptible
- bite people
- can be dangerous to people
- die from starvation
* Some wild animals eat cycads
- leaves
- snails
- grow horns
- harbor bacteria
- have quills
* Some wild animals infect animals
- domestic animals
- inflict serious injuries
- invade territory
- leave owners
- lose fear
- prey on armadillos
- provide valuable products for the development of modern drugs
* adapt and adjust to their own specific niche.
* are WILD and unpredictable
- also part of the farm ecosystem
- always subject to injury by predators
- an important and vital part of our natural ecosystem
* are capable of fending for themselves
- finding plenty of food on their own
- dangerous and can carry disease
- dangerous, especially when they feel threatened
* are difficult to keep alive in captivity
- raise in captivity, even if found at a very young age
- either dangerous or harmless
* are generally active at night and avoid contact with people
- much more active
- safest when they avoid close human contact
- habitual creatures
- happiest when they are wild and free
- indicative of Tibetan abundant natural heritage
- intelligent enough to recognize that people are the source of their handouts
* are located in forests
- meadows
- zoos
- most active around dawn and dusk
- naturally fearful of humans
- plentiful in the forests of Sweden
* are the major source of rabies
- puma and jaguar
- unpredictable and dangerous at all times
- usually capable of finding plenty of food on their own
- very sensitive to odors, loud noises, and bright lights
* ask little of humans beyond some undeveloped places where they can be left alone.
- their natural habitat where their needs are met
* can also attack pets.
* can be a potential danger when camping
- threat to California's fresh water supply
- difficult to detect because of their instinctive behavior to avoid humans
- fiercely protective of their young
- bring the tick from heavily wooded environments into suburban backyards
* can carry diseases that can be transmitted to humans and pets
- rabies, distemper or other illnesses
- cause many problems
- have severe disease or be affected subclinically
- never be happy confined to a small cage with no normal social interaction
- no longer reach the water and they leave
- scratch, bite, or transmit disease and parasites
- spread diseases such as lyme disease, rabies, plague, and histoplasmosis
- diseases and parasites
* carry many diseases that can be very harmful to people
- parasites and diseases that can be harmful to people
* contribute extensively to the welfare of people and economies of developing countries.
* deal with fire remarkably well.
* depend on the shrinking forests for habitat.
* die of disease, despite eating a raw, natural diet.
- lots of moist, green leaves and roots which are very nutritious
- the fallen leaves and fresh leaves are said to be good fodder for domestic animals
- various kinds of food
* feel pain even if they are a nuisance.
* go to their den or cave to escape the hot sun and cold rain.
* harbor parasites which can be lethal, especially to infants and young children.
* have a much larger flight zone than most domestic animals that are used to humans
- an instinctive knowledge of what is poisonous
- no health insurance
- options
- requirements
* have special care, and housing needs
- dietary needs
- specific requirements
- their own inherent value, their own reasons for existing
- to be the best at what they do to survive
* hunt for food.
* including skunks, bats, and racoons can also get rabies and give it to humans.
- regions
* invade crops to fulfill needs such as food and protective cover.
* keep our world alive.
* know how to get their own food.
* learn what to be afraid of and what to tolerate by watching their parents.
* live here, from lizards to black bear.
* live in and visit places where they can find suitable habitat
- off the meagre resources and have special mechanisms to conserve water
* living apart from human interference are commercially non-productive.
* means any animal found living in a natural or feral state in The Bahamas.
* meet their needs in their natural environment.
* need care
* require specialized medical care and diets.
* see no difference between themselves and their niche.
* seem to face difficult challenges for survival.
* stay playful for a very short time after birth.
* tend to be more dangerous when injured by the mines.
* use leaves, twigs and buds of the plant itself for food
- sand to roll in to get rid of parasites
* visit the river at night to feed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abuse:
Racism
* Most racism exists because of a non-willingness for conformity
- nowadays takes indirect forms
* abounds and results in discrimination, dehumanization, and oppression.
* affects everyone
- the everyday reality of people of colour
* also affects everyone
- income distribution
- limits a person's enjoyment of many areas of life
- narrows people's worlds and limits people's freedom
- targets males as likely victims of sexual abuse
* amounts to intolerance based on skin color or racial background.
* attacks the very sense of self for children of color.
* begins with egoism.
* biological fact of life.
* blight on the human conscience.
* can also be discrimination based on race
- play a role
- take place at different levels
* can be brutally overt or invisibly institutional, or both
- personal or institutional
- change and greatly damage lives forever
- start with stereotypes, ignorance, home and friend influences and other sources
* cancer of the worst kind.
* causes damage by isolating and hurting people and dividing communities
- some people to be turned down in housing, education, and employment
* clearly factor in what is happening to malls
- plays a part in residential segregation
* combination of racial prejudice and discrimination.
* comes in all colors.
* continues as a powerful force in the Australian community.
* continues to cause painful division and marginalization
- deform human relations across the face of our common globe
- divide people
* corrupts the mind, infects the heart, and poisons the spirit.
* demon who invades the heart and mind and usually tries to hide.
* denies the historical and ongoing contributions of people of colour.
* destructive and persistent evil that brings only harm.
* disease of the intellect.
* divides and weakens working-class struggles.
* doctrine of the congenital inferiority and worthlessness of a people
- of, by and for brutes
* does exist in our country
- indeed exist in today's society
* exacerbates hate and discontent within society and work environment.
* exists against all members of our society
- and constitutes a controversial social and political issue in contemporary society
- as elements in any society
- both in the North and in the South, but differently
- even though people of color are always visible
* exists in all aspects of society today
- societies around the world in one form or another
- everybody, in every color
- only in rural areas
* feeds by swallowing others and therefore paves the way for aggression
- on depersonalizing others
* form of prejudice
- pride
- scapegoating
* fosters oppression
- the vomiting of inward arrogance to be spewed as outward supremacy
* gets lots of play in the media, as does sexism.
* global disease, infecting human hearts in every country of the world
- phenomenon that occurs world-wide
* goes beyond mere prejudice.
* grand refusal to see individuals as individuals, each responsible for their own actions.
* greater problem among minorities than it is between minorities and whites.
* happens because of a lack of understanding
- in many different ways
* has a depth and intensity which afflicts the mental and spiritual
- history, coming into being with the rise of capitalist nations
- lot to do with absence
- many disguises
* has nothing to do with color, but everything to do with attitude
- football either
* has to be one of the most destructive devices known to humanity
- do with both the question of defining the other as well as the self
* hatred or intolerance of another race.
* huge problem in our country.
* human trait.
* hurts white people, and sexism hurts men
- workers as well as minorities
* implies a hatred and intolerance of different people
- that race matters
* includes both personal and institutional racism.
* informs our images and treatment of women.
* involves power domination by one group over the other.
* is about people from dominant groups exerting their power unjustly over others
- power and the abuse of poser, exploitation, and oppression
- systems, institutions, people in power maintaining that power
- weak people feeling weak, and blaming someone else
- abundant in the world today
- alive and well in the way police treat minorities
* is also a sin in Honduras
- term that needs to be defined
- still alive and well as witnessed by the current rise in violent hate crimes
- among the worst of ingrained prejudices that characterize sinful human beings
* is an abuse
- additional factor faced by women of color
- attitude or activity motivated by beliefs that value one race over another
- early-stage cancer
- enemy of peace
- illness that afflicts many societies
- illogical learned emotional response to people who are different
- important and controversial subject
- institutionalised phenomenon in South Africa
- integral element in the American death penalty
- ism to which everyone in the world today is exposed
- issue that the church needs to stamp out
- undeniable part of American life
- unfortunate part of American culture
- universal problem
* is at the center of the discriminatory conditions within the business
- root of the wars that destroy Indian villages and way of life
* is based on economics
- fiction
- history, genetics, economics and sex
- prejudice toward so-called racial groups
* is based on the belief in one's own ethnic superiority over that of another
- singular idea that some people are inferior to others
- bias
- blatant, with women of color getting fewer and less desirable shifts
- born of ignorance
- both the original sin and the fatal flaw of the republic
- clearly apparent in police brutality and court prejudices
- color prejudice and the misuse of institutional power
- constructed by humans
- created and reproduced out of a complex set of circumstances
- criticised even by churches though in the past they collaborated with the regime
- different from racial prejudice, hatred, or discrimination
- difficult to understand and often traumatic
- endemic to white so like that of the unemployed in the fifties
- everyone's problem
- everywhere even on a campus that dictates multiculturalism and diversity
- felt through out the world, everyday
- founded on the belief in one s racial superiority over another
- given expression through prejudice and discrimination
- hatred, the opposite of love
* is ignorance and fear that come together and form hatred
- manifested through fear, while greed is ignorance manifested through want
- ignorance, no matter what culture it is directed towards
- in Rwanda, Bosnia and the Middle East
* is in fact a kind of social misconception all over the world
- the purest expression of patriotism
- ingrained in our institutions and consciousness
- inherent in sinful man
- injustice of the highest order
- interwoven into the fabric of American culture
- just like warfare in which there is no shelter and nobody is neutral
- located in souths
- man's ego exalting itself
- meaningless against an organized people
- mental and physical lynching with rules, words, money, culture, law, and clubs
- more a societal problem than a library or library association problem
* is more than a couple of mean or nasty white people acting out
- just intolerance
- personal prejudice
- motivated by greed and perpetuated by power and ignorance
- offensive and it breeds hate
* is one form of discrimination
- of many diversity issues to be addressed
* is one of the big issues in the world today
- largest social problems
- most difficult problems facing our society
- worst things in the world
- sort of anti-conceptualism
- specific form of prejudice, focusing on physical variations between people
- ousted by friends in other races
* is part of American history
- the context of tribal-state relations
- perhaps the most extreme expression of a whole gamut of behaviours
- perpetuated by class structure
- persistent, often subtle and is deeply embedded in all levels of our society
- personal, institutional, cultural and internal
- pervasive throughout the existing world-system
- politics parading in a guise of nature and natural law
- power and prejudice, so blacks by definition can t be racist
- prejudice merely from skin color
- primarily a system of social power
- pure ignorance and evil
* is racism is racism
- no matter how it's packaged
* is racism, no matter what color perpetrates it
- who embraces it
- whomever it favours
- real and decisions are made every day to keep people separated
- rooted in ignorance
- simply endemic in capitalism
- so linked to queer oppression
* is something that's systematic, it's ingrained in our culture
- which belongs to the soul and the mind of each and every human being
* is still a favorite argument for genocide
- significant factor in educational mobility for students of color
* is still alive and well, operating in every segment of American society
- today because hatred basic human emotion
- predominant in African countries
- rampant in our society
- the number one divider of people
- very visible today in a lot of areas of our lives
- supposedly an act of power and oppression
- systemic in our society and shapes the way society is structured
- that bondage in which whites are free to beat, rape, or kill blacks
* is the attitude of belief that human abilities are determined by race
- basis for slavery and colonization
- belief that certain races are better than other races
* is the belief that one race is innately superior to all other races
- or group of people are inherently superior to another
- big social problem in the United States
- combination of prejudice and the misuse of power
- conviction that human beings can be cleaved, or separated into races
- elevation of membership in a racial group over individual merit
- idea that one's character is determined by race
- ideology developed to justify the slavery of people of African descent in our country
- initial violence
- intentional or unintentioanl use of power to isolate, separate and exploit others
* is the most challenging issue confronting the world today
- debilitating factor in urban life
- notion that one's race determines one's identity
- oppression of one people by another
- power to perpetuate and intensify prejudice and exclusivism through institutions
- result of ignorance and fear of the unknown
- stereotyping and collectivizing of people of a race
- stupidest thing in the world
- systemic enforcement of radical prejudice
- taboo through which it is being done
- worst form of hatred
* is therefore as much an examination of oneself as of society
- only one of many symptoms of a deeper malaise
- thus only implicit in behavior
- total estrangement
- ugly, fueled by hatred, exclusivism and superiority
- unacceptable behavior
- unfair to black people
* is used as a weapon against all youth and working people
- by the elite upper class to help sustain themselves
- to try to keep down wages
- today to divide black and white people and to dominate both
- usually a misunderstanding between cultures
- very much alive in the world
- well and alive in United States
- widespread in the world and has caused many problems
* largely misunderstood term.
* learned behavior, which is usually taught at home
- trait that can be avoided through education and desegregated socialization
* lives on as a sign of the sin which controls many decisions, personal and corporate.
* lives, in all colors.
* major health determinant
- issue in the legal system
* major problem in and for America's cities and towns
- many materially advanced countries
* makes people so blind that their normal consciences and sensitivities no longer function.
* modern fact, a product of evolutionary thinking.
* moral issue.
* often starts in the mind of young children.
* operates similarly in individuals.
* part of the human condition.
* particular form of domination, exploitation and exclusion.
* people problem.
* pernicious and persistent evil.
* persists, particularly in the field of athletics, in an insidious and multifaceted fashion.
* pits one group against another, causing bitterness and hatred.
* plays a huge role in determining who dies
- who goes to prison
* poison that can succeed in dividing workers.
* power relationship.
* prejudice based on the outward appearance of an individual.
* prevents people of colour from achieving equality of opportunity and outcome.
* primary factor in the continuing failure by governments to call an inquiry.
* problem everywhere
- in churches and society
* problem that has existed as long as our country, and there is no quick fix
- perplexed the human race since it began
* product of capitalism
- social conflict
* product of the bosses' attempt at divide and rule
- interrelations between blacks and whites mainly
* promotes nationalism on the basis of ethnic identity.
* props up capitalism.
* protects the rights of all human societies.
* quiet fire fueled by the fumes of ignorance and fear.
* remains a major problem throughout the United States.
* results in distortions of vision.
* river still running strong and deep through our society and our consciousness.
* salient form of passion.
* separates, confuses, invalidates, and immobilizes everyone.
* serious problem in the United States.
* sick ill that does nothing but hold people back.
* sin that permeates society and the church.
* sin, a theological heresy.
* sneaky evil, and it usually appears in a more subtle form.
* social and spiritual disease
- disease that is manifested through our educational system
* spiritual issue.
* stems from Britain's legacy as an imperial power and a slave-trade economy.
* still exists in Little Rock, in the country, and in the world
- exists, but the African-American civil rights movement changed the world forever
- flourishes in society
* system in which special advantages are set aside for certain racial groups.
* system of advantage based on race
- domination that is economic and political as well as personal
- group dominance
* systemic evil, and so are sexism and world hunger
- issue with individual, institutional and cultural manifestations
* takes many forms.
* terrible evil in our society because it shows a hatred of a group of people.
* then signifies the merger of race and culture.
* tool of big business and of the unelected elites who run our society.
* undergirds our history and our traditions.
* violates creation by treating people as less than human.
* word on almost everyone's mind and tongue.
* works in all directions. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### abuse | racism:
Antisemitism
* comes in various forms.
* generic term which signifies a singular attitude to a particular group of people.
* has a long and unpleasant history in many Arab countries.
* is exactly the same as delousing
- frightening to the world, for the world, and for all peoples
- the oldest form of racism
* natural reaction.
Environmental racism
* has a long, disturbing history in the United States.
* is an idea that's been kicking around greenie circles for a while
- the residual waste of social racism
* refers to racial discrimination in environmental policy and planning.
White racism
* causes black teen pregnancies
- blacks to do poorly academically
- the staggering homicide rate among young black men
* has a negative impact on many people of color.
* leads blacks to abuse drugs.
* leads to blacks having a disproportionate amount of earwax than other ethnic groups
- mass murder<|endoftext|>### abysmal regression:
Subversion
* are guilty of writing, referring to and defending articles abusive to anarchists.
* carries the death penalty in Indonesia.
* crime in China.
* is an abysmal regression.
* works against structures of power, authority, exploitation, servitude, and hierarchy.
* ' means trying to break the established order of a society. Subversion works against structures of power, authority, exploitation, servitude, and hierarchy. A 'subversive' is something or someone that has some possibility of turning against an organization or system.
+ Apache Subversion: Internet :: Free software
* Subversion allows other developers to view the code easily.
+ Subversion, Laws, China: Society
* Subversion is a crime in China. These laws describe behavior that can be a threat to national security. China has prosecuted many dissidents using these laws. Articles 105 and 111 are used the most often to silence political dissent. Article 105 makes it a crime to organize, make a secret plan, work against the national order, or tell rumors to make people fight the national order or overthrow the socialist system. Article 111 prohibits stealing, secretly collecting, purchasing, or illegally providing state secrets or intelligence to an organization, institution, or personnel outside the country. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### academic discipline:
Accounting
* are explanations
- registers
- systems
* back-office function for many organizations.
* block-building process.
* broad field
- term
* changing field with much of the detail work handled by computers
- profession that demands concern for both theory and practice
* common thread throughout all of agriculture.
* communicates economic information by using periodic financial statements.
* continues to be one of the leading professions world wide.
* course that continues to build on the knowledge gained.
* demanding field, one in which change is rapid and the pressure is constant.
* discipline in which concepts build on one another
- that can open doors to many opportunities
* dynamic discipline and a critical area of business
- field that provides many different job opportunities within the profession
* dynamic, challenging profession.
* field that has grown in influence.
* focuses on developing the ability to analyze and solve fiscal problems.
* includes the whole range of business information management.
* involves analysis and professional judgment.
* is an academic discipline
- ever-evolving field with constantly changing objectives
- important tool of business
* is an information system and is often called the language of business
- integral part of the management of business and public organizations
- based on the concept of a financial transaction
- built into most modern operating systems
- essential to both business and government
- examined as a tool for organizing business information
* is for students who wish to learn the basic principle of double entry accounting
- tracking resource consumption
- fundamental to a civilized society
- how they figure out whether they succeeded
- ingrained in our society and vital to our economic system
- introduced as a form of communication
- of major importance to corporations in today's business environment
- one area where corporate funds can be better utilized in more strategic areas
* is one of the fastest growing and most lucrative majors
- occupations in the country
- professions in America
- leading growth professions today on both a national and a worldwide basis
- more respected professions
* is one of the most important components of a sound business decision-making process
- rapidly expanding fields in today's economy
- respected professions in the United States
- primary functional areas of administration
- traditional professions
- oriented to both preparers of financial information and users of that information
- part of measuring, communicating, and interpreting financial activity
- recognized as one of the world's leading professions
- responsible for posting payments and billing schools
- something called the language of business
- studied both as a method of communication and as a decision-making tool
- subdivided into financial accounting and managerial accounting
* is the action of collecting data related to resource usage
- analysis of the accounts
- information system that provides reliable and timely data for financial decisions
- international language of business
- language and scorecard of business
* is the language of business and as such communication process
- decision making
- commerce
- economic measurement
- resouce measurement and management
- spoken in every business field
- one degree that opens doors in organizations coast to coast and around the world
- process of measuring the resources a user has consumed
- story of a business told in the language of numbers
- study of how businesses track their income and assets over time
- tracking of which services are used, by whom, when, and for how long
- universal language of organizations regardless of the size or location
- used in every type of organization existing today
- vital in the conduct of business in modern society
* leading growth profession throughout the world.
* monopolistically competitive industry.
* multi-disciplinary profession.
* precise, logical and communicative skill.
* process of measurement and communication that is required by all economic entities.
* profession in which experience is very valuable
- great emphasis is placed on individual integrity
- steeped in tradition and continues to be the cornerstone of business
- that is as prestigious as becoming a doctor or lawyer
* provides the measures of economic activity for our society and for our individual lives
- skills needed for keeping business records
* refers to tracking changes to the contract.
* requires attention to detail and the ability to work with numbers and financial concepts.
* set of procedures that provides such information.
* subject learned by doing
- that requires practice
* teaches the way companies or people track their revenue and their spending.
* technical subject.
* true international language, reaching across industries, countries, and time.
* usually focuses on costs, and IT generally translates to technology.
* vital tool used to measure and manage the performance of a business.
* wide open profession for women today. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### academic discipline | accounting:
Bookkeeping
* is always one place where people try to save money by doing it themselves
- an accounting
- essentially the starting point of the accounting process
- merely recording expenses and income
- one of the most time consuming aspects of running a business
- only a part of accounting, the record-marking part
* is the preliminary record-keeping state of accounting
- process in which all financial information is gathered and recorded
- recording, posting, and proving of the financial data
Cost accounting
* case in point.
* central element of managerial accounting.
* different way of looking at information.
* is an accounting
- analyzed as a tool of management
- studied as a segment of accounting controls
* subset of both financial and management accounting.
* vital part to industrial and manufacturing engineering.
+ Management accounting, Specific concepts, Cost accounting: Management :: Accounting
Current account
* are accounting
- bank accounts
- current deposits in banking institutions excluding payable drafts
- part of balance of payment.
* has less than fifty edits, and has a habit of retiring and quickly returning
Financial accounting
* Financial Accounting Teaches the basic structure of the accounting system.
* formalized system designed to record the financial history of the firm.
* is concerned with external reporting of accounting data
- the preparation of financial statements
- the art of communicating financial information to interested users
* measures the cost of the equipment.<|endoftext|>### academic discipline | accounting:
Management accounting
* includes preparation of budget and cost data for managerial reporting.
* is an applied discipline used in various industries
- very different from financial accounting
+ Management accounting, Specific concepts, Transfer pricing: Management :: Accounting
* Management accounting is an applied discipline used in various industries. The specific functions and principles followed can vary based on the industry. Management accounting principles in banking are specialized but do have some common fundamental concepts used whether the industry is manufacturing based or service oriented. For example, transfer pricing is a concept used in manufacturing but is also applied in banking. It is a fundamental principle used in assigning value and revenue attribution to the various business units. Essentially, transfer pricing in banking is the method of assigning the interest rate risk of the bank to the various funding sources and uses of the enterprise.
Managerial accounting
* focuses on using accounting information in order to make business decisions.
* is utilized as a tool to understand the financial health of the organization.
* provides financial information is used to make business decisions
- the essential data with which organizations are actually run
Public accounting
* enhances the economic accountability of business enterprises.
* is only one branch of accounting.
Tax accounting
* is based on the concept of the tax year.
* type of accounting that makes sure tax laws are followed.
+ Accountancy, Types of accounting: Accounting
Algebra
* are geometric facts which are proved.
* is academic discipline
- science
### academic discipline | algebra:
Cognitive algebra
* facilitates the identification of antecedent and consequent operational abilities.
* is more akin to a theory of competence than a theory of performance.
Computer algebra
* are able to perform symbolic operations as well as numerical ones.
* is used to achieve optimal formulations.
Differential algebra
* generalization of classical commutative algebra.
* is the study of such fields, suitably axiomatized. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### academic discipline | algebra:
Linear algebra
* has many applications - in engineering, science, and social science.
* is about vector spaces, matrices, and linear transformations
- an important component of undergraduate mathematics
- both theoretical and applied mathematics
- essential to the theory of differential equations
- part of algebra
* is the basis for analyzing situations in which there is more than one unknown
- math of shaped collections of numbers
- study of vectors, matrices and linear transformations
* provides a basis for wide areas of mathematics.
* provides the methods necessary to analyze unwieldy systems
- tools for organizing mathematics in higher dimensions
* runs into difficulties for spaces with infinite dimension.
* shows up in many other engineering disciplines.
* studies the theory of abstract vector spaces and linear transformations.
* talks about functions , which are often called transformations.
* tool in almost every area of advanced mathematics.
* uses a system of notation for describing system behavior, called a matrix
* wide field with many applications.
+ Determinant
* Linear algebra uses matrices. In that context, a 'determinant' is a mathematical function that allows to associate certain matrices with a scalar. Only square matrices have determinants. That is to say that the matrix needs to have the same number of columns as it has rows.
* Linear algebra uses a system of notation for describing system behavior, called a matrix. For the previous example, the coefficients of the equations can be stored in a coefficient matrix.
+ Eigenvalues and eigenvectors: Basic physics ideas :: Linear algebra
* Linear algebra talks about functions, which are often called transformations. The vector may change its length, or become null. The value of the change in length of the vector is known as 'eigenvalue'.
Process algebra
* is used to model concurrent systems, of which music good example.
* new part of computer science.
Vector algebra
* is algebra.
* is used extensively in equilibrium analysis of structures and machines
- in the analysis
- to treat problems in two and three dimensions | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### academic irregularity:
Plagiarism
* also consists of passing off as one s own segments or the total of another person s work
- undocumented use of another's ideas
- constitutes cheating
* also includes misquoting or misrepresenting the work of another
- the use of other persons' unpublished work
* amounts to intellectual theft stealing the ideas or work of others.
* applies to e-mail messages as much as other documents
- just as other documents
* are writing.
* breech of professional ethics and is theft of intellectual property.
* can also mean using someone else's ideas without acknowledging that person as the source
- occur in oral presentations
* can be hard work
- intentional, can be due to carelessness, or can be the result of ignorance
- occur when a student is ignorant of correct citational procedures
- take several forms
* comes from a Latin word meaning kidnapping and ranges from paraphrasing to theft.
* comes in a lot of forms
- two forms
* consists of presenting the words or ideas of another without proper acknowledgment
- the unacknowledged use of the words or ideas of another person
* constitutes academic misconduct according to university policy
- the use of another person's work without proper acknowledgment of that work
- unethical scientific behavior and is never acceptable
* direct violation of intellectual and academic honesty.
* encompasses a range of errors and violations
- many things, and is by far the most common manifestation of academic fraud
* fact of academic life.
* fancy word for stealing and fraud.
* form of academic dishonesty and results in the same penalty
- fraud and is treated very seriously
* form of cheating and has the same consequences
* form of cheating that involves presenting as one s own the ideas or work of another
- as one's own the ideas or work of another
- as one's work the ideas or work of others
* form of intellectual dishonesty
- property violation
- theft and is wrong
* implies copying work produced by someone else.
* includes copying sentences directly from another source
- failing to give a citation for using work from another person or source
- more than directly copying another person's paper
- paraphrasing the thoughts of another writer without acknowledgement
- portraying words or ideas as one's own
* includes the 'borrowing' of ideas from others without appropriate citation
- use of another person's work without attribution
- using computer programs and procedures written by others
* involves fraud and misrepresentation
- presenting the ideas or work of another person as being one's own
- stealing from the other writer and lying to the reader
* involves the failure to cite outside sources from which words and ideas are taken
- presentation of another person's words, ideas, or work, as one's own
- use of the ideas or writings of another without acknowledgment of that use
- using the work of another person and presenting it as one's own
* is academic dishonesty and can mean failure in a course and suspension from college
- fraud and penalties are severe
- against the rules of academic institutions and is dishonest
- alive and well on campuses and in cyberspace
* is also a form of academic misconduct and is unacceptable
- always a concern when people write research papers
* is an academic irregularity
- offense for which there are serious consequences
* is an act of academic dishonesty
- unadulterated, sociopathic evil
- to pass off as one's own the ideas, writings, etc. of another
- act, that violates Section IV-A of the University Code
- affront to the educational and ethical standards of intellectual work
- attempt to obtain undeserved academic advantage
* is an offense for which grades are lowered
- punishable by law
- under the Honor Code
- anathema
- any case where one person tries to take credit for the work of another
- applicable to written, oral and artistic work
- as reproduction and presentation of the work of others without acknowledgement
- attempting to pass off as one's own work the ideas or words of another
- bad, immoral, evil, and anti-democratic
* is considered a form of cheating
- serious academic and legal offense in our culture
* is considered academic dishonesty and is subject to disciplinary action
- as any use of another's work without proper references
* is considered to be a serious offense or academic theft
- defined in terms of proscribed acts
- discussed in relation to note-taking and to writing
- dishonest because it misrepresents the words and ideas of another as one's own
* is dishonest, a form of academic misconduct
- foolish, and dangerous
- unethical and at times illegal
- either an act of ignorance or an act of desperation
- equivalent to intellectual robbery
- essentially theft - the stealing of someone else's intellectual property
- failing to cite the source of an idea or piece of information
* is illegal and discourteous in the extreme
- very disrespectful of someone's hard work
- in fashion
* is intellectual theft and lying
- violates the student honor code
- theft, and is the cardinal sin of the academic world
- involved when one uses, without acknowledgment, the ideas of others
- literally an artistic theft and misrepresentation and is illegal
- literary burglary
- misrepresenting another s ideas, phrases or discourse as one s own
* is misrepresenting another's ideas, phrases or discourse as one's own
- phrases, discourse, or works as one's own
- motivated out of self-interest
- offering another s work as one s own without appropriate acknowledgment
- often a failure to use appropriate citation techniques
* is one form of academic dishonesty
* is one of the most frequently reported types of academic cheating
- seriousinfractions a professional or student can commit
* is one of the worst academic sins
- mistakes anyone can make
- perhaps the most common and misunderstood form of academic dishonesty
* is plagiarism, no matter what the type of book
- whether it occurs electronically or manually
* is presenting another person's words, work or opinions as one's own
- work or ideas as one's own
* is presenting as one s own the writing or work of others
- one's own the writing or work of others
* is presenting the work of someone else as one s own
- else as one's own
* is punishable by decapitation, mutilation or dismissal, at the whim of the professor
- failure, expulsion, or loss of employment
- regarded as a form of theft and is therefore a serious offence
- something to do with attitude
- sometimes the act of carelessness or ignorance
- stealing another person's work and passing it off as one's own
- still plagiarism, whether it be on the Web or on paper
- taking work, writing, etc., from another and passing it off as one's own
* is the academic and literary equivalent of robbery, taking someone else's property
- equivalent of theft
* is the act of literary theft, the stealing of someone's ideas or work
- passing off as one's own the ideas or writings of another
* is the act of presenting the ideas or words of another as one's own
- ideas or works of another as one's own
- submitting another person's ideas as one's own
- taking and using another's work as one's own
- using the words and ideas of others without giving proper credit
- appropriating and subsequent passing off of another person's work as one's own
* is the appropriation of another's work to claim it as one's own
- without attribution of another person s thoughts or words
* is the borrowing of another's words and ideas without proper acknowledgment
- or the theft of another person's writing
- cardinal sin of academic life
* is the copying of another s words without proper citation
- deliberate and unacknowledged theft of another person's intellectual property
- dishonest use of the work of others
- enemy of all writing
- equivalent to intellectual theft
- failure to acknowledge any linguistic or ideational indebtedness
* is the failure to give credit for the material from other sources
- for the use of material from outside sources
- flip side of forgery and a form of stealing and a form of misrepresentation
- gravest of all academic crimes
- highest crime that a scholar can commit because it denies legitimate ownership
* is the improper borrowing of another person's words, ideas, or methods
- use of another's ideas, statements, work, etc
- inclusion of someone else's words, ideas, or data as one's own work
- intellectual equivalent of forgery, and it is never permissible
* is the intentional OR unintentional theft of words or ideas
- representation of words, ideas, or work of another as one's own
* is the intentional use of another's words or argument without proper credit
- someone else's words or ideas without proper acknowledgment
- misrepresentation of another person's writing as one's own
- most common form of academic dishonesty
- offering of the words or ideas of another as one's own
* is the offering of the work of someone else as one s own
- of someone else as one's own
- work of another as one s own
- order of the cyberwaves with no protection such as intellectual property rights
- practice of submitting work or ideas other than one's own as being one's own
- practices of passing off the words and work of others as the work of oneself
- presentation of another person's ideas or product as one's own
* is the presentation of another s work as one s own and form of academic misconduct
* is the presentation of someone else's product, words, ideas, or data as one's own work
* is the presentation of the ideas of others as one s own
- or the writing of someone else as one's own
* is the representation of another person's words and ideas as one's own
- work or ideas without proper referencing
- someone else's words, ideas or data as ones own work
- the ideas or words of another person as one's own
- single most serious offense against academic and intellectual integrity
* is the stealing or passing off as one's own the words or ideas of another
- of the ideas of another as one's own
- submission of the ideas or words of others as one s own, and is cause for failure
- term applied to the unacknowledged borrowing of words or ideas of other authors
* is the theft of another s words or ideas
- ideas without citing the source, and is taken very seriously
- someone else's ideas and work
- ultimate sin in the academic world
* is the unacknowledged appropriation of another s work, words, or ideas
- borrowing of another writer's words or ideas
- reproduction of another's words, ideas or work
* is the unacknowledged use of another person s ideas, words or work
- person s labor, ideas, words, or assistance
- writer s words or ideas
* is the unacknowledged use of another's words, ideas or research
- words, ideas, or information
- secondary sources
- used of somebody else's words or ideas
- unattributed use of someone else's ideas or writings
* is the undocumented use of another person's ideas or words
- another's ideas or words
- someone else's ideas or words
* is the use of another person's ideas or thoughts without referencing
- ideas or writing without proper attribution
- s words or ideas without acknowledgment of their source
- another's ideas or words as one's own without giving the author due credit
* is the use of another's words or ideas without acknowledgment
- without crediting that person
- other people's works without proper citation
- some one else's work, ideas, quotes, etc. without due credit
- someone else s words or ideas without proper credit
* is the use of someone else's ideas or work without appropriate acknowledgment or credit
- the words of others without attribution
- words or ideas from another's work without giving proper credit
- use, without attribution, of someone else's thoughts or words
- verbatim use of four or more words from an unreferenced source
* is theft and is to be avoided at all costs
- results in the immediate failure of the paper or worse
* is theft of another individual's words or ideas
- person's writings or ideas
- others' ideas without acknowledging the source and is totally forbidden
- the real author's work and provides an unfair advantage to the plagiarist
* is theft, piracy, and is generally a criminal activity
- plain and simple
* is to steal or pass off one s words as their own
- take and use ideas, passages, etc
- treated as a form of cheating
- unacceptable academic behavior
- undocumented use of material from texts and other sources
- using the work of others without giving it appropriate credit
- what the word is about
* is, essentially, cheating
- some say, the sincerest form of flattery
* means presenting as one's own, the words or the work of someone else
- work, ideas, or words of someone else
- presenting, as one's own, the words, the work, or the opinions of someone else
- taking credit for someone else's words or ideas
* means to steal and pass off the work of another as one's own
- steal, purchase, or pass off the ideas or works of another as one's own
* means using another student's work or published work without credit
- another's work without giving credit
- the words or ideas of another person without attribution
* moral offense, rather than a legal one
- term, while infringement legal term
* more common form of academic misconduct.
* occurs when a student uses of purchases ghost-written papers.
* occurs when a writer presents the writing and thinking of others as personal expression
- uses someone else's words or ideas without proper acknowledgement
- material is taken from a source without proper citation
- people pass off other people's ideas as their own
- students fail to acknowledge that ideas have been borrowed
* occurs whenever another's words or ideas are used without attribution
- work is submitted as one's own
* rampant problem on college and university campuses today.
* refers to borrowing the work, ideas, or knowledge of others for personal gain
- taking credit for the work of others
- the use of another person's work without giving proper credit to that person
* serious academic crime
- offence and the consequences are severe
- offence, the penalty for which is usually failure in the course
- breach of academic ethics
- concern for scientists and graduate students
- crime, even if unintentional
- disciplinary offence
* serious form of academic fraud
- intellectual crime
* serious offence in journalism courses and in the profession in general
- which can be avoided by always citing sources
- offense and constitutes stealing the ideas of other people
* serious offense and is met with severe penalties
- tantamount to theft
* serious offense in The Netherlands
- an academic environment
- the professional and academic world
- representing intellectual theft
- resulting in a failing grade on that paper
* serious offense that can result in a failing grade in the course
- expulsion from the graduate program
- offense, punishable by suspension or dismissal
- unprofessional practice
* serious violation of academic honesty and carries serious penalties
* takes many forms
* type of cheating and can result in very serious penalties at U.S. universities
- replication
* very serious academic offense that can result in academic probation or expulsion
- carries heavy penalties
- act of misconduct
- offense which can result in severe penalties
- offense, punishable by expulsion
- both the student code of conduct and professional ethics
- ethical practices
- intellectual honesty
* violation of the Academic Honor Code
- university rules
* worse problem for images of works of art than for text. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### academic irregularity | plagiarism:
Intentional plagiarism
* involves deliberate copying or use of another s words or ideas.
* is academically dishonest and unethical
- deliberate copying or use of another's work without credit
* serious form of cheating.
### academic journals:
Clinical chemistry
* employs complex testing procedures for blood and other body fluids.
* is academic journals.
* uses chemical processes to measure levels of chemical components in the blood.
Inorganic chemistry
* is academic journals
- also the study of atomic and molecular structure and bonding
- centers on the remaining elements
- concerned with all other substances
* is the chemistry of elements other than carbon
- the whole periodic table
- study of the elements and all non-carbon compounds
- systematic study of all the other chemical elements
* overlaps the other subdisciplines of chemistry.<|endoftext|>### accepted anesthesia technique:
Regional anesthesia
* can decrease the crying that occurs after circumcision
- dull the sensations in a wider area, such as the lower half of the body
* involves numbing a large area, such as the entire hand or leg.
* is an accepted anesthesia technique
- anaesthesia
- considered safer than general anesthesia
- really the way to go in orthopedic surgery
* is used most commonly today
- to numb part of the body
- useful when surgery is limited
* numbs a broader area, like the epidurals used in childbirth.
* produces a loss of sensation to a specific region of the body.
* takes slightly longer to perform than general anesthesia.
### access:
Back door
* are access
- bands
- doors
* is access
### accessories | fastener:
Dowel
* are fasteners
- wands
* help with fire-starting.
* provide strength and easier alignment and can be made of wood, metal or plastic.
* serve as perches.
Grommet
* can pull away from the cloth in which they are placed.
* loosen with age.<|endoftext|>### accessories | fastener:
Lock
* Most locks serve only to keep honest people honest and to discourage criminals.
* allow boats and barges to travel past barriers such as rapids and dams.
* are a means of passing vessels through the dams
- an essential feature of any canal which needs to gain or lose height
- built in places where the level of the water in the river or canal suddenly changes
* are capable of locks
- opens
- created by locksmiths
- enclosures
- hair
- how people have have protected their property
* are located in cabinets
- car doors
- doorknobs
- entrances
- front doors
- gates
- jails
- locker rooms
- lockers
- made of metal
- mechanical devices
- mechanisms
- only one aspect in the management of the risk of theft
* are part of canals
- drawers
- firearms
- lids
- restraint
- security devices
* are the mechanism that prevent more than one user at a time making changes to the database
- responsibility of individuals
* are used for closes
- privacies
- protection
* refuse to stay locked and doors open and close without wind or human intervention.
+ Lock (water transport): Canals :: Rivers :: Gates
* A 'lock' is a place where boats that are travelling up or down a river or canal can be raised higher or lower. Locks are built in places where the level of the water in the river or canal suddenly changes. This may be because there is a waterfall there, or because a dam or a weir has been built, or because there is some other thing in the way. The lock is like a big chamber with gates at each end. They have lock gears which empty or fill the chamber with water.
### accessories | fastener | lock:
Dreadlock
* are a part of history
- symbol of their dedication and devotion to Rastafari
- more than a hair style, they become a part of life
* are the natural state of hair
- result of the natural locking, or matting, of coarse African hair | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### accessories | fastener | lock:
Electronic lock
* Most electronic locks allow the user to set the combination.
+ Combination lock, Electronic keypad lock: Locks
* When the number is entered, a motor opens the lock. This type of lock is popular on safes and doors, but is almost never seen on padlocks. These locks require batteries or another source of electricity. There is sometimes a key backup in case the batteries die or the electronics fail. Most safe locks do not have a key backup, as a key backup can be picked. Most electronic locks allow the user to set the combination.
Gimbal lock
* is the phenomenon of two rotational axis of an object pointing in the same direction.
* occurs when the first and third axis of a joint line up.
Gun lock
* are optional in a country where every two hours, a gun kills a child.
* can give a false sense of security
- provide a false sense of security
* diminish the defensive value of guns.
Padlock
* are locks
- probably the most common type of lock
* deal with a combination disks and uses the combination lock design.
+ Lock, Types of lock:
* Padlocks are probably the most common type of lock. They are opened either with a key or a combination. The best way to break them is to snap the hoop with a long-handled bolt cutter.
### accessories | fastener | lock | padlock:
Wedlock
* is another term for marriage
- marital status
- the state of being married
* means to be married.
* pill, bitter to swallow, and hard for digestion.
Time lock
* are used in banks.
+ Lock, Types of lock mechanisms:
* Time locks are used in banks. They prevent anyone opening the vault until a preset time. This defeats burglary attempts when the bank is closed.
Trigger lock
* are a way to find common ground
- the crime-policy opiate of the elite
* can prevent gun deaths of our young children.
Vapor lock
* common problem in hot weather.
* is caused when the gasoline boils in the fuel line.<|endoftext|>### accessories | fastener:
Loop
* Some loops pack together to form a hydrophilic umbrella structure over the channel opening.
* are a way of doing the same set of instructions over and over again
- clique
- fingerprints
- intrauterine devices
- programs
- regions of non-repetitive conformation connecting regular secondary structures
- self-closing when the cursor reaches proximity of the origin
- sensitive to magnetic fields if they have a low impedance and a large area
- transcription units
* can also inhibit release of insulin.
* have irregular lengths and shapes and are on the surface of the protein.
* interact with the surrounding aqueous environment and other proteins.
* normally have roughly a similar conformation in similar structures.
### accessories | fastener | loop:
Radial loop
* are just the opposite of ulnar loops it opens in the direction of the thumb.
* have their ridges entering or leaving on the radial side of the hand.
* start on the thumb-side of the finger, the side closer to the radius.<|endoftext|>### accessories | fastener:
Price fixing
* are control.
* goes on every day in our free market economy.
* is among the most serious offences under many antitrust laws
- colusion with another retailer to set a minimum price in an area
- forbidden if businesses engage in explicit agreements to do so
* is illegal at any level of an organization
- under both federal and state antitrust laws
- illegal, whether at the wholesale or retail sales level or even among buyers
- price fixing
* major problem in corporate agriculture.
* way to pick consumers' pockets. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### accidents | car wreck:
Accidental injury
* Accidental injuries account for mortality and morbidity several times the national average.
* Accidental injuries are frequent in modern society
- the fifth leading cause of death in the United States
- do occur from time to time, such as during sport, dance or exercise
- tend to be single wound, occurring on any part of the body
* includes wounds and bruises from falling and colliding with objects.
* is an accident
- the leading killer of children, and a major killer of adults
- when no one means to hurt someone else
+ Injury: Health problems
* Injury can be 'accidental' or 'intentional'. Intentional injury is when someone 'tries' to hurt another person. Accidental injury is when no one means to hurt someone else. An example of accidental injury is a car wreck.
Unintentional tort
* are accidents.
+ Tort, Kinds of torts, Unintentional torts: Legal terms
* Unintentional torts are accidents. They usually happen because someone was not being careful. When someone is not careful, it is called negligence. An example of negligence is driving a car while not paying attention to the road.
### accommodation:
Economy class
* is accommodation
+ Virgin Atlantic Airways, Inside the Aeroplanes, Economy: Airlines of the United Kingdom :: Virgin Group
* Economy class is the standard class on Virgin Atlantic aircraft. It is the cheapest part of the aeroplane to travel in. Passengers usually get a free meal, some drinks and a bag with gifts in like a toothbrush. The seats in this class have a maximum pitch of 31 in, but this depends on what aeroplane you go in.
### accompaniments:
Vamp
* Some vamps know of their energy needs early in life and some later.
* are accompaniments
- long and toes rounded
- part of uppers<|endoftext|>Accordion
* Most accordions have more reeds than a piano has strings, and have several thousand moving parts
- the reed valves vertical when the accordion is vertical
* also have tremolo tuning, and the sound is similar.
* are accordions
- instruments
* are located in bands
- music stores
- musical instruments
* are used for fun
- polka music
* commonly have rectangular valve plate assemblies.
* have keyboards.
* includes action mechanisms
- finger holes
- piano keyboards
- sections
* is wind
* series of grooves regularly increasing and decreasing in width across the sheet.
* squeeze and expand.<|endoftext|>Account
* Some accounts say that during their migration the sky darkened at mid-day.
* They can create an account, and log into that account for reading articles. Accounts have a number of preference settings. These allow to hide all images, or some of them.
* are a way of identifying users to a computer system
- financial arrangements
- how individuals or businesses access the Internet themselves
- importance
- norms
- profit
- relationships
- statements
* have dollars.
* is an interest-bearing checking account.
* six character code that describes the basic accounting classifications.
* unit to record and summarize accounting transactions.
+ Chess, Competition rules, Touch and move law
* There are a few famous cases where players appeared to break this rule without being punished. The most famous example was by the then World Champion Garry Kasparov against Judit Polgar in a top-class tournament. Seeing that 37.Bb7-c6 would be bad for Black, Mr. Kasparov instead put the knight on f8. However, the way Miss Polgar saw it, Mr. Kasparov's hand 'did' leave the piece on c5. Accounts diverge from there. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### account:
Bank account
* are a familiar form of joint accounts
* are financial accounts
- assets
- like toothpaste
* can also have a domestic bank account identifier.
* depend on credit creation and government guarantees.
* is an account
+ International Bank Account Number, Administration: Finance :: ISO standards
* Bank accounts can also have a domestic bank account identifier. The domestic bank account identifier in the United Kingdom is the sort code and bank account number. From February 2014 all banks within the European Union must use an IBAN instead of a domestic bank account identifier for transactions that use the euro.<|endoftext|>### account:
Historical account
* indicate cannibalism was widespread at Jamestown during the winter.
* reveal that social capital facilitated involvement in the collective action.
* tell of the existence of nerds during the Greek and Roman empires.
* tend to merge with myths and legends.
+ Starving Time: Virginia :: Cannibalism :: History of the United States
* Only 10 percent of Jane's remains have been recovered by researchers. Historical accounts indicate cannibalism was widespread at Jamestown during the winter. Modern historians were reluctant to credit these accounts without other evidence.
Variable account
* are professionally managed portfolios much like mutual funds.
* offer the risks and rewards of investing in the stock market. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### accountants figure:
Economic growth
* Some economic growth leads to consumption.
* appears to have become less effective in reducing poverty.
* brings results.
* byproduct of the unleashing of human potential.
* can enhance health status because it increases living standards in general
- occur with or without an overall economic development strategy
- put pressure on the global environment
- reduce poverty by generating employment and incomes
- sometimes distribute economic benefits inequitably
- take Vermonters in many directions
* causes a simple proportional increase in travel growth over the long term.
* changes any geographic area.
* comes from work, saving and investment.
* consists of an increase in the production and consumption of goods and services.
* creates a favorable climate for investment
- opportunity
- profit opportunity
* depends more than ever on knowledge, creativity, and innovation.
* depends on availability of power
- the development, and application of technology
* driven by private sector foreign investment is seen as the key to development.
* gives leeway to buy food.
* has potential.
* involves the expansion of the economy as it now stands.
* is about producing more and more wealth
- actually a resource generating process
- also a major driver of the growth of transnational education
* is an accountants figure
- essential component in any country's strategy for sustainable development
- increase in production in society
- but one aspect of human well-being
- constrained by a number of factors, particularly by the lack of infrastructure
- dependent upon investment, which is tied to savings
- different from economic development
* is driven by the accumulation of knowledge
- predominantly by a higher investment ratio and lower taxation
- enhanced when expenditures with a good economic multiplier are implemented
- found in most other Pacific Rim nations
- fundamental to poverty reduction
* is good in some countries due to consumers borrowing money
- things
- inevitable in an environment of abundant resources
* is key to building a new city that works
- environmental cleanup
- measured in increasing idleness
- no longer dependent on a growing domestic population
- often the glue that holds a society together
- possible without growth in energy demand
- reflected by an overall improvement in the quality of life in a given country
- responsible for changing the standard of living for most people in the world
- stunted by prejudice, illiteracy and the high birth rate
- supported by domestic demand
* is the answer to many ills of society
- best way to deal with problems of poverty and inequality
- driving dynamic of modern societies
- engine that powers the expansion of many job fields
- foundation of our future
- increase in the production of goods and services
- main factor driving growth in energy demand
- result of a nation's cultural and institutional structures
- sine qua non for sustainable human development
- social tide that lifts all boats
- solution, they say, to the problems of poverty and low incomes
- usually a necessary condition for poverty reduction
- visible in all sectors
- vital to prosperity, for it creates new jobs and rising incomes
* is, of course, a driving force for liberalizing markets.
* key element for poverty reduction.
* leads to the development of a large and strong middle class - in any country.
* major determinant of both energy demand and carbon dioxide emissions
- and emissions
* means a nation is able to produce more of everything
- the development of land and resources
* necessary condition for poverty alleviation.
* occurs significantly faster in states with limited taxes
- when output, or real GDP, grows
- where there is an increase in the level of output of a country
* physical process
* plays a central political, economic and psycho-cultural role in western society.
* poor guide to human welfare.
* powerful tool for reducing poverty by generating employment and income.
* pre-requisite for eliminating hunger.
* reduces the burden of debt.
* refers to an increase in the productive capacity of an economy.
* requires efficient transportation
* results from growth
- productivity growth
* rise in a. real GDP per person.
* subsists on creativity and change.
* tends to be driven by fast knowledge
- follow a cyclical pattern
- occur in a cyclical pattern | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### accounts:
Account number
* are accounts.
* represent the type of revenue or expense to be transacted to each center.
Accuracy
* depends on features.
* is dispositions
- virtue
### accuracy:
Fidelity
* expresses constancy in keeping one's given word.
* is accuracy
- quality
* refers to doing one's duty and keeping one's word
- loyalty and to promise-keeping
### accuracy | fidelity:
Constancy
* is fidelity
- perceptions
- the fourth mark of intercessory prayer
* means reproducibility in measuring a constant source over a long period of time.
### accuracy | fidelity | constancy:
Invariance
* is constancy
- orderly repetition of pattern of which a special form is called symmetry
* precedes teleonomy, teleonomy secondary property stemming from invariance.
Metastability
* Metastabilities are constancy.
* common phenomenon.
- the pragmatic manifestation of the paradox of change
* problem with all asynchronous, clocked designs.
Perceptual constancy
* is supposed to depend on stimulus-invariants.
* much wider phenomenon.
Measurement accuracy
* function of image quality and correlation parameter settings.
* is affected by compounds that competitively quench the fluorescence
- important in reverse engineering
Relative accuracy
* concerns the positioning of map features relative to one another.
* refers to the relationship of a single map feature to other features on the map.
### accusations:
Implication
* is accusations
- inference
- involvement
- the relationship that holds between premises and conclusion in a good argument
* thinking is the most complex and most abstract type of thought.
Accusative case
* means that the noun is the object of the sentence.
+ Word order, Subject, Object and Verb: Grammar
* In other languages, sentences like this can be in different orders. Languages that let you choose how to order the words often have a grammatical case system. Accusative case means that the noun is the object of the sentence.
### ace:
Ace of diamonds
* is an ace
* means success with money.<|endoftext|>Acetylene
* can also add to itself or to aldehydes and ketones
- polymerize exothermically, leading to deflagration
* colorless, flammable gas with a distinctive garlic-like odor.
* compressed gas that is used as a fuel and is stored in a liquid state.
* fairly dangerous substance.
* flamable gas.
* flammable gas that burns very hot , hotter than any other gas.
* fuel gas and is combustible.
* gas with extremely high explosion pressures.
* is an organic compound
- another compressed gas which is also widely used in welding
- chemical compounds
- chemically very unstable
- dissolved in the acetone solution and dispersed throughout the porous medium
- gases
- hydrocarbons
- manufactured by the reaction of water with calcium carbide
- produced by combining calcium carbide with water
- relatively nontoxic and has been used as an anesthetic
- shipped and stored dissolved in acetone
- simplest member of unsaturated hydrocarbons called alkynes or acetylenes
- the simplest alkyne
* is used for chemical synthesis and for oxy-acetylene cutting, heating, and welding
- in welding where it reacts with oxygen
- what chemists refer to as a triple bond molecule
* linear molecule, all four atoms lying along a straight line.
* makes up only a very small percentage of hazardous locations.
+ Welding, Energy for welding, Energy for other kinds of welding: Construction :: Technology
* OFW uses a flame from burning fuel gas and oxygen to heat up the metal. This fuel gas is almost always acetylene. Acetylene is a flammable gas that burns very hot, hotter than any other gas. That is why it is used most of the time. Other gases like propane, natural gas, or other industrial gases can be used too. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Acid
* All acids are generally incompatible with bases
- can form salts with metal cations
- have an equal effect on water
* Any acid reacts in with calcium carbonate in the same way.
* Caucasian drug across the board.
* Every acid has a conjugate base formed by removing the acid's proton
- base, and vice versa
* Many acids have a sour taste
- including sulphuric, and nitric have corrosive fumes, yet again avoid inhalation
- occur naturally and some are essential for life
- release only a single hydrogen ion per molecule into solution
* Most acid affects blood lipids
* Most acid breaks down enamel
- food
- tooth enamel
* Most acid causes brain damage
- decay
- deformities
- serious deformities
- combines with alkalies
* Most acid contains acid
- carbon atoms
- sulfur atoms
- derives from proteins
* Most acid destroys layers
- teeth
- deters herbivores
- dissolves bones
- enters vessels
* Most acid has beneficial effects
- chemical properties
* Most acid induces intense pain
- irritates esophagi
- is produced by digestion
* Most acid kills ants
- many microorganisms
- termites
- produces compounds
* Most acid produces during digestion
- protein digestion
- ionic compounds
- acids also contain oxygen as part of an acid radical ion
* Most acids are non-penetrating corrosives
- weak
- dissolve in water to yield the corresponding anions
* Some acid absorbs water.
* Some acid accumulates in blood
- joints
- plant tissue
- shellfishes
- acts as neurotransmitters
* Some acid affects cell growth
- expression
- germination
- aids in metabolism
- appears in urine
- binds to proteins
* Some acid builds up in meat
- muscles
* Some acid catalyzes oxidation reaction
* Some acid causes cavities
- diseases
- health problems
- heartburn
- irritation
- skin irritation
- changes color
* Some acid combines with acid
* Some acid comes from coconut oil
- stomachs
- tissue proteins
* Some acid comes into intestines
- small intestines
- consists of atoms
* Some acid contains air
- cholesterol
- fish oil
- nitrogen
- contributes to health
* Some acid derives from algas
- bacteria
- brown algas
* Some acid derives from certain algas
- coconuts
- destroys bacteria
* Some acid dissolves sea urchin shells
* Some acid enters blood streams
- bloodstreams
- capillaries
- lakes
- tubules
- excretes in urine
* Some acid facilitates absorption
- calcium absorption
- zinc absorption
* Some acid falls as acid rain
- to earth
* Some acid finds in blood
- muscle proteins
- triglyceride
* Some acid has atoms
- health benefits
- many health benefits
- presence
- stability
* Some acid helps birth defects
- certain birth defects
- tube defects
* Some acid increases absorption
- acidity
- induces synthesis
* Some acid inhibits absorption
- mineral absorption
- interferes with absorption
* Some acid involves in acid metabolism
- irritates intestines
* Some acid is deposited in connective tissue
* Some acid is excreted by land snails
* Some acid is formed by oxidation
- rainwater
- generated by metabolism
* Some acid is produced by bacteria
- diatoms
- fermentation
- microbes
- normal bacteria
- plant roots
- starter bacteria
- released by bacteria
* Some acid is secreted by glands
- pineal glands
* Some acid is synthesized from acid
- adenine
* Some acid kills bacteria
- insects
- mammals
- pathogen
- plants
* Some acid lowers absorption
- incubation temperature
* Some acid makes up eukaryotic proteins
- mixes with water
- participates in reaction
* Some acid passes through gut walls
- kidneys
* Some acid prevents birth defects
- coronary diseases
* Some acid produces during metabolism
- liquids
- promotes inflammation
* Some acid protects dogs
- hearts
- mice
- sunflower plants
- reacts with metal
* Some acid reduces absorption
- excretion
- nerve damage
- optic nerve damage
- prostate tumor growth
- urinary excretion
* Some acid releases gases
- hydrogen gases
- requires for larval development
* Some acid stimulates activities
- microbial activities
- osteoblast differentiations
- suppresses responses
- uses for energy
* Some acids are also flammable or oxidizers and can start a fire if in contact with organic matter
- strong and others are weak
- weak like vinegar and some are strong like sulfuric acid
* Some acids can donate more than one proton in aqueous solution
- have a delayed discoloring chemical reaction
- have the capability of providing more than one hydrogen ion from each molecule
- offer a fire and explosion hazard
* accelerates aging.
- the formation of sinter deposits around the geyser
* also conduct electricity
- dissolves marble and limestone statues
* are a group of chemicals, usually in liquid form
- normal by-product of metabolism
- waste product of bacterial metabolism
- also the opposite of bases
- beneficial in removing hard-water deposits, discoloration and rust stains
- caustic, which means they have the ability to injure and destroy human tissue on contact
- chemicals which release hydrogen ions when dissolved in water
* are compounds that add hydrogen ions to a solution, bases lower hydrogen ion concentrations
- contains hydrogen
- give up hydrogens to bases
- tend to produce hydrogen ions in water
* are corrosive and can burn flesh and dissolve metal
- to skin and eyes
- electrolyte
- electron pair acceptors and bases are electron pair donors
* are harmful in two ways
- to tissue
- important
- mixed with a paste and then printed on metals or glass
- present in every painful or inflammatory reaction in the body
- proton donors
- solutions that have a higher concentration of hydrogen ions than hydroxide ions
- sour thus the lactic acid gives unflavoured yoghurt their sour taste
* are substances that are higher up on the pH scale
- can provide a hydrogen ion
- sustances that contain lots of hydrogen ions
- tart like lemons, bases feel slippery and taste bitter
- what they say they are and salt can be one of the most corrosive forces in nature
* attacks the plant fibres in paper and weakens it.
* belong in the first group and alkalies in the second.
* binds irons.
* break down proteins in the dough and produce a flakier crust.
- over time causing paper to become brown and brittle
- electrostatic bonds, causes electrostatic repulsions
- long gluten strands
* builds up over time in cellulosic materials such as cotton, linen, and rayon.
* burns skin.
* can also destroy metal.
* can be either a chemical acid or nano-bot destroyers
- neutral molecules
* can burn or severely irritate the skin
* can cause chest pains that can radiate to other surrounding places
- severe burns to the skin almost immediately
- damage the stomach, so the walls of the stomach have a special lining to protect it
- demineralize the enamel leaving weak spots
- destroy some substances yet help to preserve others
* can dissolve metals to make ions of the metal
- the cement that binds concrete together
- donate protons and bases can receive protons
- etch surfaces and porcelain enamel
* can have a lot of different properties depending on their molecular structure
- different 'strengths', some are more reactive than others
- irritate and injure the skin and eyes
- land on surfaces through deposition by rain, as well as snow, fog, sleet, and particles
- neutralize bases , and strong acids are corrosive
- react with bases
- weaken cellulose in paper, board, and cloth, leading to embrittlement
* catalyzes dehydration
- the reaction shown below
* cause color changes in acid-base indicators.
- feldspars to alter to clay
- items to deteriorate
* causes serious damage
- tooth decay, but in a normal mouth, saliva buffers that acid
* change the color of certain vegetable dyes, such as litmus, from blue to red
- structure of the cabbage so that it reflects more red light waves
* conduct electricity in relation to the degree of their ionization.
* contain many hydrogen atoms.
* corrode active metals
- concrete and cast iron sewers, concrete wet wells and sedimentation tanks
* damages surfaces.
* differ in how readily they donate the proton.
* dissolve gummy buildup, eat away tarnish, and remove dirt from wood surfaces.
* dissolve in base and turn blue litmus red
- water and generate hydrogen ions
- it with red, alkalies, chloroform, benzol and carbon disulphide with green color
- pearls
- the metal, but it is unaffected by alkalis
- calcites
* donate protons in chemical reaction.
* eat away at things by releasing hydrogen ions in water.
* eats away the metal where it is exposed.
* fall to the ground in particulate form.
* finds in salmon.
* forms chemical reaction
* found in batteries are corrosive.
* frequently used are acetic, fumaric, propionic, and their salts.
* gases purification in cyclone reactors.
* has actions
- impact
- positive impact
* have a sour taste and can sting the skin
- little effect on oily or greasy films
* have low pH numbers, while bases are high on the scale
- pH's
- sour taste and turn a vegetable dye called litmus, red
* help stabilze the wine, affect the color and aging rate, and balance the sugar and alcohol.
* helps dissolve collagen.
* hinder the growth of many common fungi and bacteria.
* impairs uptake.
* increases hydronium ion concentration.
* is also a common word in everyday use, but it has a precise definition in chemistry
- believed to damage tooth enamel and cause decay
- blotted on small sheets of paper and is usually placed under the tongue
- drugs
- essential to the production of good cheese
* is formed from glucose by some strains and some can ferment other sugars
- when the bacteria in plaque break down sugars and carbohydrates from the diet
- found naturally in many kinds of paper and wood
* is generated under certain natural conditions even in the absense of mining
- when iron sulfide minerals, such as pyrite, weather
- hostile to other bacteria
* is located in chemistry labs
- low, alcohol is warm
- manufactured by certain cells in the stomach and major factor in ulcer formation
- needed for flavor and for gel formation
- present in the stomach to digest food
* is produced by bacteria in the child's mouth
- from many carbon sources
- released into the intestinal tract
* is the major cause of the internal destruction of paper based records
- male and alkaline is the female counterpart
- substance which makes fruit juice tart or sour
- tartness, the tang, the snap, which one feels in the back of the mouth
- used to eat away at the scratched areas, creating the grooves to hold the ink for printing
- what eats at photos and accelerates their deterioration
* lakes, often forming large colonies in deep water
- sandy or muddy shores, peatlands
* like to oxidize obliging metals.
* lose their acidity when they are combined with alkalies.
* make Litmus turn red.
* makes newspaper decay and fall apart rapidly.
* neutralize bases and change indicators to distinctive colors
* phosphatases from different grass tissues
- grass seeds
* play an important part in cleaning and neutralizing fabrics.
* precipitate it from aqueous solution.
* produced by the bacteria causes the enamel to break down, leading to cavities and gum disease.
* radically decrease.
* rains kills fish in lakes and streams by increasing the acidity of water.
* react only with bases and bases react only with acids.
* react with bases to form salts and water
- hydroxides to form water and a salt
- metal oxides to produce water and a salt
- metals to produce hydrogen
* reducing therapy relieves symptoms of ulcers and promotes faster healing.
* release hydrogen ions in water.
* remove paint, allowing metal parts to rust.
* sets dyes and alkaline releases dye.
* side effect of diet, stress, toxins and poisons.
* slows stomach emptying and digestion.
* soils with a very thick layer of clay accumulation
- good drainage favor ectomycorrhizae
* spits and gurgles when poured into water and can then get into the eyes and on skin.
* substance capable of providing hydrogen ions in solution and turning blue litmus red.
* taste sour, are soluble in water and undergo similar chemical reactions.
* tend to bind with tissue proteins and coagulate the surface epithelium
- bleach some stains
- form in diesel lube systems, caused by the combustion process and type of fuel burned
* triggers production
* turn blue litmus paper red and alkalis turn red litmus paper blue
* typically have a slippery feeling.
* undergoes anaerobic degradations
* usually are derived from acidic igneous rocks, soil organisms, and many organic remains
- damage the very front of the eye
* weaken fibers in paper, causing the paper to become brittle and turn yellow or brown.
* work well for dissolving stains and mineral scale.
* works together with other substances in the stomach called enzymes to break down food.
+ Acid, How acids work:
* Every acid has a conjugate base formed by removing the acid's proton. An acid and its conjugate base are opposite in strength. Since HCl is a strong acid, Cl- is a weak base
- Importance
* Acids are important. Nucleic acids, such as DNA and RNA contain the genetic code. These molecules determine many characteristics of an organism, they are passed from the parents to offspring. DNA contains the plans how to build proteins which are made of amino acids
* Acids can have different 'strengths', some are more reactive than others. More reactive acids are often more dangerous.
* Acids can burn the skin. The burn can be serious or minor depending on the kind of acid and how concentrated it is. Burns like this can be a serious problem. Chemical burns like this need medical attention immediately
+ Chemistry, Concepts of chemistry, Acids and bases
* Acids and bases are common chemicals. Acids can react with bases. A salt is also made when an acid and a base react together. Sodium chloride is a salt.
+ Litmus test, Litmus paper
* Litmus paper is a way to test whether or not a solution is an alkali or an acid. Acids turn blue litmus paper red and alkalis turn red litmus paper blue.
+ Wart, Getting rid of warts: Diseases caused by viruses
* This will slowly kill wart tissue. Dead tissue can then be removed. Getting rid of a wart that way usually takes several weeks. There are different drugs, with different acids. Some prescription drugs may contain stronger acids, such as chloroacetic acid or silver nitrate. All acids are caustic. This means, healthy tissue around the wart needs to be protected, before the substance is applied.
* A chemical can donate a proton if the hydrogen atom is attached to an electronegative atom like oxygen, nitrogen, or chlorine. Some acids are strong and others are weak. The weak acids hold on to some of their protons, while the strong acids let go of all of them. Weak acids generally have a pH value of 4-6 while strong acids have a pH value of 1 to 3. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid gas:
Carbon dioxide
* Arises during the fermentation process.
* More carbon dioxide is produced in the tiny passageways of soil
- than actually ends up in the atmosphere
- taken up by plants
- leads to more atmospheric water vapor, which leads to higher temperatures
* More carbon dioxide means an increased greenhouse effect, which leads to global warming
- more cooling
* Most carbon dioxide absorbs energy
- affects photosynthesis
- becomes air
- builds up in lungs
- comes from waste
* Most carbon dioxide enters air
- atmospheres
- tracheae
* Most carbon dioxide has growth
- origins
- plant growth
- roles
- significant impact
* Most carbon dioxide is produced by burn gasoline
- respiration
* Most carbon dioxide is released by bacteria
- through the skin in all salamanders
- used up by photosynthesis
- passes through membranes
- produces during respiration
* Some carbon dioxide absorbs radiation
- acts as fertilizer
- affects plants
* Some carbon dioxide boosts growth
- builds up in blood
* Some carbon dioxide combines with acid
- carbon compounds
- organic acid
* Some carbon dioxide contributes to effects
- greenhouse effects
- depends on saltiness
* Some carbon dioxide enters aquatic autotrophs
- containers
- tubes
- exists as liquids
* Some carbon dioxide flows into arteries
- pulmonary arteries
- gets photosynthesis
* Some carbon dioxide has high partial pressure
* Some carbon dioxide increases gas pressure
- runoff
* Some carbon dioxide is dissolved into the ocean, where some organisms use it to form their shells
- incorporated into compounds
* Some carbon dioxide is produced by combustion
- released from the interior of the lithosphere by volcanoes
- used by algae and phytoplankton through the process of photosynthesis
- limits photosynthesis
- needs for photosynthesis
- passes through skin
* Some carbon dioxide produces as byproduct
- carbohydrates
- reacts with water
* Some carbon dioxide releases into water
* Some carbon dioxide removes gases
- toxic gases
- uses for photosynthesis.
* greenhouse gas. Greenhouse gases trap heat energy. Greenhouse gases change the climate and weather on our planet, Earth. This is called climate change. Most scientists think that greenhouse gases are causing global warming, the rise of Earth's surface temperature
* absorbs heat and traps it near the Earth's surface
- from sunlight and warms up the Earth
- infrared radiation from the sun and prevents it from returning to space
- sunlight reflecting off the Earth, heating up the air
* accounts for about half of the world's greenhouse gases, which trap solar rays
- three fourths of the predicted increase in the greenhouse effect
- two thirds of the greenhouse gases our economy emits
- two-thirds of the greenhouse gases our economy emits
* acts as the solvent and carries the caffeine away from the beans
- like an acid in water
- the heat balance by acting as a one-way screen
* allows light to reach the Earth's surface
- sunlight to strike the earth, but traps some of the resulting heat
- the sun's short wave radiation to reach the earth
- airborne when fossil fuels, solid waste and wood products are burned
- toxic when it suppresses respiration
* bi-product of biomass burning.
* boils first, then sulfur dioxide.
* builds up in the Earth's atmosphere, causing temperatures to rise
- body as a waste product of metabolism
* by-product of fermentationwhich displaces oxygen
- fossil fuel combustion
- that process
* byproduct of body metabolism and is attached to the red blood cells
- cellular metabolism
- the burning of fossil fuels and industrial activity
* can also remove cholesterol and fat from milk and meat
- dissolve in water, where some of it is later returned back into the atmosphere
- help dissolve proteins
* cans have consequences.
* cause global warming
- the earth's average air temperature to increase
* causes bread to rise and gives effervescent drinks their bubbles
- cerebral vasodilation
- global warming while sulphur dioxide can cause global cooling
- rapid onset of anesthesia with subsequent death due to respiratory arrest
* certain source, but, bacterial sulfate reduction key.
* changes the pH of seawater, making it more acidic.
* colorless gas having a faint odor and a sour taste.
* colorless, almost odorless gas that is formed by the combustion of carbon
- odorless gas that's part of our atmosphere
- odorless, gas that extinguishes a flame
* combines with water to form a. carbonic acid b.
* comes from fossil fuel usage, and losses in soil organic matter
- the breathing of almost all living organisms and from anything that burns
- in, oxygen goes out
* commonly cited greenhouse gas.
* compound , or a combination of two or more elements.
* continues to accumulate in the atmosphere threatening changes in the global climate.
* decreases because it is blown off.
* diffuses out.
* displaces oxygen in the air and causes suffocation.
* dissolved in water can disperse into the atmosphere
- is the major source for aquatic plants
* dissolves out of the blood back to the skin
- readily in the surface oceans
- single-celled and aquatic autotrophs through no specialized structures
* enters the atmosphere through each of the following processes except one
- carbon cycle or is taken up by plants for photosynthesis
- leaf and passes into the chloroplast
* enters the leaf through pores called stroma
- tiny openings called the stomata
- leaves through a
- waters of the ocean by simple diffusion
* equilibriates between the atmosphere and the ocean's surface layers.
* exists in small amounts both in the atmosphere and in protoplasm.
* extinguishes fire by physically attacking all three points of the fire triangle.
* fluxes over a northern, semiarid, mixed-grass prairie.
* follows a reverse path.
* food additive used as a propellant and acidity regulator in the food industry.
* forms compounds
- many acids, called carbonic acids, in the ocean
* furnishes the carbon and oxygen, and water furnishes the hydrogen for carbohydrate,.
* gas at room temperature while silicon dioxide high-melting solid.
* gas that is vitally involved in the process of photosynthesis
- occurs naturally in the atmosphere as a product of living organisms
* gas that scientists say major factor in the earth's rising temperatures
- in the planet's rising temperatures
* gas, and because it is heavier than air it pushes the air out of the bottle
- so it can be compressed and stored under pressure
* gaseous waste product of normal energy metabolism.
* goes through the process called sublimation.
* good indicator for indoor air quality.
* greenhouse emission
* greenhouse gas and a contributor to global warming
- major contributor to global warming
- considered a major factor in global warming
- contributing to possible global warming
* greenhouse gas linked to global climate change
- of major concern in the study of global warming
- produced from burning fossil fuels
* greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming
- the potential for global warming
- is closely associated with global warming
- keeps our planet warm
* greenhouse gas which contributes to global warming
- traps heat rising from Earth s surface
* greenhouse gas, and as such, it is partly responsible for global warming
- produced when electricity is generated or gas is burned
* has a double bond on each side of the carbon atom
- nasty habit of remaining trapped in our atmosphere, sometimes for centuries
- warming effect on the earth's environment
- any number of biological benefits for plants
- carbon in it
- many beneficial effects on the body
- varied commercial uses
* helps fuel photosynthesis, the process through which plants are nourished and grow
- plants grow, but it is also one of the so-called greenhouse gasses
* high pressure, super critical process.
* impacts their pH systems, and the expiration of gases necessitates lots of water.
* improves the growth of hairy roots cultured on solid medium and in nutrient mists.
* increases temperatures, extending the growing season and increasing humidity
- the levels of ozone via heating the atmosphere
* influences the mean global temperature through the greenhouse effect.
* inhibits the growth of most aerobic bacteria and moulds.
* introduced into the greenhouse further boosts production.
* is A. less soluble in sea water than other common atmospheric gases
- absolutely necessary for plants and animals
* is absorbed and oxygen is produced
* is absorbed by growing vegetation and soils
- producers to make carbohydrates in photosynthesis
* is absorbed from the atmosphere and oxygen is released
- through pores in the leaves called stomata
- on one side of platinum electrodes and converts to oxygen
- actually a benefit to the plants
* is added to drinking water during the final phases of the purification process
- lower the water's pH level
* is also a gas
- greenhouse gas, thus it keeps the planet warm
- an excellent absorber
- effective, displacing the oxygen necessary to sustain fire
- the gas formed when natural gas, oil and coal are burned
* is an acid gas
- acid, and is released by soil bacteria during biodegredation of litter
- acidic oxide and reacts with water to give carbonic acid
- acidic, metabolic waste product in the form of a gas
- atmospheric constituent that plays several vital roles in the environment
- efficient greenhouse gas
- essential raw material for photosynthesis by green plants
- important gas in Earth's environment
* is an important greenhouse gas produced by fossil-fuel use
- leavening agent for most baked goods
- part of the atmosphere
- orderless, tasteless gas that is heavier than air
- another ingredient needed for photosynthesis
- applied to the face in light, circular motions
- available to produce new biomass and that's why it renewable resource
- better than pasteurization
- bubbled through a water solution of calcium hydroxide at room temperature
- by far the most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere
- capable of freezes
- carried to the lungs through blood and sent out the lungs
- cheap and abundant
- cheaper to buy than solvents and can be reused
- chemical compounds
- clearly the most important cause of the human-made greenhouse effect
- colorless, odorless and heavier than air
- composed of two atoms of oxygen and one atom of carbon
* is considered a greenhouse gas
- by many as one of the major contributors to global warming
- the most prominent contributor to the global warming issue
- controlled by the carbon cycle
* is converted in photosynthesis and store as wood
- into sugars in a process called carbon fixation
- created by the burning of oil, coal, gas or wood
- denser than air
* is emitted into the atmosphere when fossil fuels are burnt
- through the burning of fossil fuels such as oil and coal
- to the atmosphere through natural sources
* is emitted whenever fossil fuels are burned
- such as coal, oil and natural gas are burned
* is essential for photosynthesis, the process by which plants grow
- to plant growth
- expelled from the lungs with each exhalation
- extremely harmful to the atmosphere
- far more than a waste gas
- faster consumed than supplied due to the mesophyll s photosynthesis
* is fixed by photosynthesis into carbohydrates
- plants, which are then eaten by animals
- formed by burning carbon
- found in nature
- fundamental to maintaining normal physiology
- furnished to a greenhouse for commercial produce
- gathered from the air through the stomata
* is given off as the organic matter decays
- during respiration of biological systems
- harmless
* is heavier than air and can collect in low and poorly ventilated places
- pushes it out of the bin
- puts out a flame
- tends to collect in low and enclosed spaces
- highly soluble in seawater
- influenced by the level of organic matter in the soil
- inorganic compounds
- instead the inevitable byproduct of burning fossil fuel
- introduced to make a space so the pelvic organs can be seen
- liberated from the mineral and bubbles out through the acid, creating the fizz
- linked to air quality problems and contributes to global climate change
* is located in air
- lost with faster breathing and increased when breathing slows
* is made in steel mills
- the reactions between most acids and most metal carbonates
* is made up of carbon and oxygen atoms
- one carbon and two oxygen atoms, hydrogen of two hydrogen atoms
- mixed quickly throughout the atmosphere
* is more soluble and diffuses faster than oxygen
- in water than oxygen
- much better suited for heat-pump applications
- necessary for plant respiration
- obtained through tiny pores in plant leaves called stomata
- one example of a greenhouse gas
* is one of many greenhouse gases, including water, methane and ammonia
- several gases implicated in greenhouse warming
* is one of the first chemical compounds kids learn about
- key greenhouse gases blamed for causing global warming
- more important gases responsible for the greenhouse effect
* is one of the most important greenhouse gases in the atmosphere
- primary greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming
- raw materials of the photosynthetic process
- strongest attractants for mosquitoes
- the gas responsible for global warming
* is only one gas which is exchanged between the atmosphere and forests
- slightly poisonous
- prevented from entering the Earth's atmosphere before exiting the system
- probably the most abundant form of carbon found on earth
* is produced and given off
- released as a by-product
- remains in the bottom because it is more dense than air
* is produced by all animals and by green plants in darkness
- cells as a result of cellular metabolic processes
- plants, and is found in many things, including soft drinks
* is produced by the burning of coal, oil and natural gas
- fossil fuels such as coal, oil and natural gas
- cells and moves in the opposite direction through the same system
- degradation of organic matter
- from heating , driving and consuming products
* is produced in excess amounts
- the reaction between calcium carbonate and hydrochloric acid
* is produced when fuels are burned
- microorganisms oxidize organic matter within the sample
- the methane gas is burned for cooking and heating
- vinegar and baking soda are mixed
- pumped into the body to give the surgeon room to work
- readily soluble in water
- reduced and water is oxidized
* is released back into the atmosphere through bacterial respiration
- from the soil during the freezing process and in the late spring
- in deforestation by burning or cutting
* is released into the air when students exhale
- atmosphere when fossil fuels are burned
- through the same pores
- to the atmosphere by all organisms
* is released when fossil fuels are used
- like coal and oil are burned
- people burn fossil fuels , like oil , coal , and natural gas
* is removed from the atmosphere and oxygen is released during photosynthesis
- by a complex network of natural sinks
- during photosynthesis and by dissolving in the oceans
* is responsible for approximately half of the increase
- only about half of the Earth's greenhouse effect warming
- returned to the atmosphere when the plant parts decay or are burned
- slightly soluble and is absorbed into bodies of water such as the ocean and lakes
- suggested for fires involving delicate instruments and optical systems
- supposedly the most effective greenhouse gas
* is taken from the atmosphere through small pores called as stomata
- into leaves and utilized during photosynthesis
- out from the blood and brought out
- up at night and stored until photosynthesis can occur during the day
* is the air that plant take in used in the process of photosynthesis
- biggest contributor to global warming
- cause, the trigger, that starts the warming
- chief culprit in the increased threat of global warming in recent decades
- fundamental nutrition of every life form on Earth
- gas that all animals exhale when they breathe
- greenhouse gas that contributes most to global warming
- heat trapping greenhouse gas held most to blame for global warming
* is the largest contributing factor to global warming
- single waste product of modern society
* is the leading cause of climate change
* is the least aggressive of the greenhouse gases but is emitted in large quantities
- expensive gas to measure and serves as a good measure of ventilation
- soluble and so is the first to separate
- main byproduct produced when the liver processes erythromycin
* is the main cause of human-induced climate change
- gas caused by human activity that has been linked to global warming
* is the main greenhouse gas that contributes to global climate change
- which contributes to the threat of global warming
- ionized gas which contaminates water
- vector in causing the warming of our atmosphere
* is the major contributor of global warming
- man-made contributor to global climate change
* is the most abundant greenhouse gas in the atmosphere
- gas, meaning that it traps infrared radiation
* is the most common greenhouse gas
- of several gases that contribute to the greenhouse effect
- important gas driving global warming
* is the most important greenhouse gas contributing to global warming
- released by human activities
- of the greenhouse gases produced due to human activities
- single greenhouse agent produced by human activities
* is the most powerful cerebral vasodilator known
- vasodilator for cerebral blood vessels
- prevalent greenhouse gas
- troublesome gas
- preferred agent, as it leaves no residue to be cleaned up
* is the primary gas in Mars' atmosphere
- leading to global warming
* is the primary greenhouse gas contributing to climate change
- principal gas caused by human activity that is implicated in global warming
* is the principal greenhouse gas believed to be behind changes in the global climate
- gas, especially at the household level
- product of combustion of hydrocarbons and carbohydrates
- result of animal respiration
- second most abundant gas produced as organic acids are degraded
- source gas of the carbon emissions
- uninvited guest that shows up whenever coal, oil, or natural gas burn
* is the waste product of cells
- well functioning cells and is also carried back by the blood
- produced during strenuous activity such as mountain climbing
- thought to cause global warming
- transparent to light but rather opaque to heat rays
- transpired through the pores of the shell
* is transported in the blood a. bound to hemoglobin
- on hemoglobin
* is used by plants during photosynthesis to manufacture glucose
- to make food for themselves
- the food industry, the oil industry, and the chemical industry
* is used in a variety of ways by organisms in the oceans
- some fire extinguishers
* is used in the light-independent reactions
- production of carbonic acid, the main intravascular acid
- to produce carbonated soft drinks and soda water
* is very soluble in water, much more so than oxygen
- weakly soluble in water , therefore it separates into a gas
* key contributor to global warming.
* key greenhouse gas and is mostly produced by power plants, factories and cars
- that many scientists feel is warming Earth
* known greenhouse gas that contributes to global warming.
* large contributor to greenhouse gases, which lead directly to global warming.
* leaves that same blood when air is exhaled from the lung out of the body.
* leaves the body through the spiracles
- cell by diffusion into the water and out the osculum
- cell, diffuses through the interstitial fluid and enters a capillary
* likes to do one thing in water.
* linear molecule.
* links the energy crisis with the problem of global warming.
* major component of the emissions
- global warming gas
* major greenhouse gas, which many people believe contributes to global warming
- means it gas that captures and absorbs heat
- metabolite
- player in global warming
* makes up less than one two thousandth of one per cent.
* modulates energy metabolism in a dormant mollusc.
* moves readily from the extravascular space into the blood.
* natural byproduct of respiration
- gas and is an important part of the environment
* naturally occurring gas that is released and absorbed in a natural cycle.
* nonflammable gas that is naturally contained in the exhaled breath of humans.
* normal and harmless atmospheric component
- waste product of cellular metabolism
* nutrient a very important nutrient, perhaps the most important.
* passes from the blood into the alveoli
- through the thin gill tissue into the water
* passes out through the body surface as well as through the contractile vacuoles
- surface as well as being expelled by the contractile vacuoles
- the capillary walls from the cells
* plant nutrient.
* plays an important role in the lives of plants and animals
- warming the earth by trapping the sun's heat
* powerful greenhouse gas.
* prevents infrared photons from radiating energy to space.
* primary factor in global warming.
* primary greenhouse gas that causes global warming
- gas, which contributes to global warming
* principal contributor to the green house effect
* produced by human activity enters the natural carbon cycle.
* produced during respiration is removed by lungs
- the burning of coal enhances global warming
* product of the biochemical reactions that are part of composting.
* provides the carbon atoms that are incorporated into sugars in photosynthesis.
* puts out fires by depriving the flame of oxygen.
* reacts with carbonate to produce bicarbonate
- seawater to make carbonic acid
- water in solution to form the weak acid, carbonic acid
* regulates smooth muscle or the involuntary muscle of the airways, blood vessels etc
- the activity of the autonomic nervous system
* released by cars major contributing factor to the greenhouse effect
- during respiration is used up by the plant for photosynthesis
* remains for a century or more.
* replaces harsher acids for the alkaline neutralization process
- oxygen in a grain bin and can be deadly
* represents that most abundant of the greenhouse gases.
* results primarily from decaying organic matter in water-bearing soils.
* rises as oxygen falls.
* significant greenhouse gas considered to be responsible for global warming.
* small but important constituent of air.
* so called greenhouse gas causing global warming.
* stimulates plant growth.
* strong radiator of infra-red.
* suppresses fires quickly without leaving a residue.
* three-dimensional clean agent.
* tissue building chemical.
* traps heat and warms the atmosphere
- in our lower atmosphere
* waste product exhaled by humans, but they ingest it when they drink cola drinks.
* waste product of aerobic respiration in plant cells
- animal metabolism and is exhaled in breathing
- cellular activity
- respiration and oxygen waste product of photosynthesis
+ Carbon diet: Environment :: Nature :: Green politics
- dioxide, Isolation and production: Organic compounds :: Biochemistry :: Greenhouse gases :: Oxides
* Chemists get carbon dioxide from cooling air. They call this air distillation. But this method is inefficient. Chemists can also use several different chemical reactions to separate carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is made in the reactions between most acids and most metal carbonates
- footprint: Ecology
* Doing something that burns fuel will make carbon dioxide gas in the smoke. Carbon dioxide has carbon in it. Just as walking on the sand leaves a footprint, burning fuel leaves carbon dioxide in the air, which is called a carbon footprint
+ Carbonation, Chemistry: Chemistry :: Geology
+ Lung: Anatomy of the respiratory system
* The alveoli are moist to allow oxygen to move from the lung through the alevoli into blood vessels and red blood cells. Carbon dioxide passes from the blood into the alveoli. The oxygen-filled blood goes back to the heart and the carbon dioxide in the alveoli is pushed out of the lungs and into the air we breathe out.
* However, humans are adding greenhouse gases to the atmosphere. Mainstream science believes that this has caused the planet's average temperature to rise by causing the greenhouse effect. Carbon dioxide is released when people burn fossil fuels, like oil, coal, and natural gas. Carbon dioxide emissions come mostly from transportation, energy and industries. Among these, the largest contributor is from meat production.
+ Photosynthesis, Factors affecting photosynthesis, Carbon dioxide levels: Cell biology :: Cellular respiration :: Metabolism :: Plant physiology | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Acetic acid
* Many acetic acid based solvents are on the market and are less toxic than other solvents.
* acts a flavour agent and natural preservative.
* colorless liquid with a sharp, irritating odor.
* corrosive chemical.
* gives a distinctive vinegar note, while citric acid gives a sharp, clean bite.
* has a smell similar to vinegar
- strong odor, but citric is fairly corrosive
- molecular polarity
- more highly electronegative oxygen atoms than the other molecules
* is also a product in the destructive distillation of wood
- an important ingredient of vinegar
* is an irritant by skin contact or inhalation
- to the eyes and mucous membranes
- oxoacid
- carboxylic acid
- chemical compounds
- considered to be about one third as effective as propionic acid
- formed upon contact with water or humid air
- more acidic than ethanol because the acetate anion is stabilized by resonance
* is one step short of glycine, the simplest amino acid
- the simplest amino acid, glycine
- produced following placement of the fluid
- quite corrosive
* is the constituent that makes vinegar sour
- more significant cause of the deterioration in the European museums studied
- most common cleaner used in home stills
* is used as the reaction solvent
- for coagulation of latex
- usually easier to come by in large quantities than saliva is
* mature product and is manufactured by a limited number of large producers.
* mixes readily with water.
* relatively weak acid.
* smells like vinegar.
* strong acid
- irritant and a corrosive
* vital ingredient for the feedstock for polyester production.
* weak acid, so a base is required to obtain any acid-base reaction
- elecetrolyte
- electrolyte because only some of the molecules dissociate to form ions
* weaker acid than hydrocyanic acid.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Alginic acid
* are commercially important in the production of rubber and textiles.
* controls bleeding.
* creates a foam barrier between the stomach and the esophagus.
* is chemical compounds
- gum
- obtained from brown algae
- one of the main constituents in bladderwrack
- used in ice cream as a smoothener
* linear polysaccharide made from two different monomer subunits.
* reacts with saliva to produce a foamy froth that layers on the liquid in the stomach.
* type of dietary fiber that can be used to help relieve constipation and diarrhea.
Aminolevulinic acid
* causes skin cells to become much more sensitive to certain types of light.
* prepares the skin it is used on for light therapy.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Arachidonic acid
* comes prepackaged in animal meats, chicken, shell fish, and dairy products.
* fatty acid released from cell membranes in response to injury.
* gives rise to potent lipid mediators, known collectively as eicosanoids.
* increases cytosolic calcium and stimulates hormone release in rat lactotrophs
- nitric oxide release from elicited peritoneal macrophages in rats
* is an essential oil found in all human cell walls
- essential for desiccation tolerance
* is found in such food substances as dairy foods, and red meats
- naturally occurring in the diet, mostly through animal products
- only in animal fats
- primarily in animal fats and is often too high in modern diets
- metabolized to prostaglandins, leukotrienes and lipoxins
- particularly important for feline immunity
- released from membrane phospholipids as a response to inflammatory stimuli
- the building block of bad eicosanoids
- vital for the function of the brain and nervous system
* metabolites after excimer laser corneal surgery
- having potent pharmacological effects
- relevant to medicine
* part of phospholipids in the plasma membranes of cells.
* stimulates protein kinase C-epsilon redistribution in heart cells
- tyrosine phosphorylation in vascular cells | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Aristolochic acid
* cause cancer in rats and mutations in bacteria and mammals.
* is also chronically toxic to the digestive tract and is carcinogenic
* potent carcinogen and nephrotoxin found in certain plants and botanicals
Battery acid
* can cause serious burns
- eye injuries
* is acid
- an example of a corrosive
- highly corrosive
- recovered to use in reconditioning chargeable batteries
- the electrolyte in most batteries
Behenic acid
* cholesterol-raising saturated fatty acid in humans.
* is chemical compounds.
* long chain saturate which is rather poorly absorbed.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Benzoic acid
* are more toxic to soybeans than phenoxy's with leaves turned up.
* can also cause allergies.
* common food preservative.
* consists of a carboxyl group attached to a benzene ring.
* is carboxylic acid
- extracted from an organic compound
- highly flammable
- known to stimulate olfactory receptor cells in trichoid sensilla of females
* natural complement to it.
* occurs naturally in cherry bark, raspberries, tea, anise and cassia bark.
* rides On stinking urine tides.
* stronger acid than phenol.
+ Solvent extraction: Chemistry
* Benzoic acid is extracted from an organic compound. All of this is done in a diluted soilution of Sodium bicarbonate. Benzoic acid is converted to Sodium benzoate. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Boric acid
* acts as a stomach poison.
* chemical substance with mild antiseptic properties.
* comes as a white, crystalline powder.
* compound used in certain fixers to prolong shier hardening life.
* fairly nontoxic compound that kills roaches.
* gives rice dumplings a fresher look and a better texture.
* good ingredient for ant baits and used in several commercial products.
* has some toxicity so keep out of reach of children and pets.
- acutely poisonous if ingested, especially in infants and children
* is added to borax for use as welding flux by blacksmiths
- salt in the curing of cattle hides, calfskins , and sheepskins
- the cellulose material during production
* is also an effective way to control ants
- important boron compound with major markets in textile products
- available in gel form
- now available as a granular material
- useful with fleas
- among the best cockroach insecticides
* is an important boron compound used in textile products
- applied in a very dilute solution as an eye wash
- approved for crack and crevice treatment in kitchen and food preparation areas
- available in powder form from a pharmacy without a prescription
- derived from boron, a naturally occurring mineral
- fairly safe to use and handle
- incompatible with acetic anhydride and potassium
- mildly antimicrobial, and a natural boron-containing organic antibiotic is known
- moderately toxic unless the skin is abraided or burned, then it can be highly toxic
- odorless and extremely low in toxicity to people, pets, and other nontarget animals
* is of low toxicity to adults, but it can present a hazard to children
- but it does pose a hazard to children
- one inexpensive insecticide for cockroaches
* is one of the most common and effective ways to dispatch of termites
- standard silverfish killers
- only slightly more toxic than regular table salt when used as directed
* is probably more toxic to humans than many other registered pesticides
- the most commonly used dust labeled for cockroach control
- released in small quantities by borax
- soluble in boiling water
- the least toxic poison available for effective, long-term cockroach control
* is toxic by mouth - keep away from children and pets
- when ingested or inhaled
* is used as a disinfectant
- an insecticide, notably against ants, fleas, and cockroaches
* is used in pre-treating certain textiles before they are dyed
- some nuclear power plants as a neutron poison
- the production of the glass in LCD flat panel displays
- traditionally as insecticide, especially against ants or cockroaches
- to lubricate carrom and novuss boards, allowing for faster play
* kills the insects by damaging their metabolism as well as their exoskeleton.
* lubricous lamellar solid at room temperature.
* makes a triangular crystal
- an important contribution to the absorption of low frequency sound in seawater
* mild antiseptic and is added to powder as a skin-buffering agent.
* mineral-based organic pesticide derived from the element boron.
* reacts with water to release a proton.
* safe pesticide.
* shuts down the termite's nervous system while dehydrating it.
* ' is an acid of Boron. Its salts are called Borates. Boric acid is used as a disinfectant. It can also be used as a preservative, it has the E number 284. Boric acid by-product of the production of certain forms of glass, porcelain and vitreous enamel. It is also used as a Flame retardant. Dissolved in water, it acts as a neutron absorber in nuclear power plants.
* toxic compound, and wool normally contains phosphorus.
* white powder insecticide that is lethal to roaches.
* white, inorganic powder chemically derived from boron and water.
* widely used insecticide.
Cacodylic acid
* desiccant that causes leaf drop and death in certain hardwood species.
* has no registration in Canada.
* is chemical compounds
- judged as essentially non-irritating to both skin and eyes | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Carbonic acid
* Some carbonic acid enters fractures
- increases acidity
- is formed by rainwater
* disassociates into hydrogen ions and bicarbonate ions.
* dissociates into carbonates and hydrogen ions in a reversible reaction.
* dissolves limestone by separating the calcium and carbonate and creating a liquid.
* filters down through the cracks and dissolves the limestone.
* helps dissolve minerals.
* ionizes less than lactic acid and so is weaker than lactic acid.
* is acid
- an effective agent of chemical weathering
- described as a volatile acid since it has a vapor phase
- especially effective at dissolving limestone
- formed in the presence of moisture
- in equilibrium with dissolved carbon dioxide gas
* is the heart of the natural remineralization process
- largest player in the dissolution of bedrock
- used in aerated drinks
* lowers the pH of the solution making it more acidic.
* reacts with calcite to breakdown the mineral into ions.
* relatively weak acid compared to HCl and therefore is less conductive.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Carboxylic acid
* Many carboxylic acids occur naturally.
* are found a lot in food. Many types of fat molecules are actually carboxylic acids. For example, chocolate and coconuts have these acids. They are also used a lot in soaps and detergents
- compounds whose molecules contain the functional group
- therefore much stronger acids than the analogous alcohols
* can readily hydrogen bond and have relatively high boiling points.
* give up their protons at acid pHs.
* have spectra that are even more involved.
* is acid
- organic acid
* react with bases to produce carboxylate salts and water.<|endoftext|>### acid | carboxylic acid:
Fatty acid
* All fatty acids are chains of carbon atoms with hydrogen atoms attached to the carbon atoms
- molecules composed mostly of carbon and hydrogen atoms
* Many fatty acids occur in living things as components of lipids.
* Most fatty acid combines with alkalies
- contains atoms
- enters vessels
- finds in salmon
- has actions
- acids have an even number of carbon atoms and are broken down to acetate
* Some fatty acid affects cell growth
- combines with acid
- consists of atoms
* Some fatty acid contains carbon
- fish oil
* Some fatty acid finds in cods
- proteins
* Some fatty acid has benefits
- health benefits
* Some fatty acid has many benefits
- helps conditions
- interferes with absorption
* Some fatty acid is produced by fermentation
- microbes
* Some fatty acid lowers incubation temperature
- makes up water
* Some fatty acid plays beneficial roles
- important roles
- indirect roles
- key roles
- promotes inflammation
- protects dogs
- provides nourishment
* Some fatty acid reduces growth
- prostate tumor growth
* Some fatty acid requires for development
- larval development
- supports health
- uses for energy
* Some fatty acids are essential in the diet
- have one or more double bonds between their carbon atoms
* are hydrocarbon chains with a carboxyl group at the end
- carboxylic acid group at the end
- potent modulators of lactate utilization in isolated hepatocytes from fed rats
- impact
- positive impact
* is carboxylic acid.
Succinic acid
* lacks the hydroxyl group that is present on the others.
* shows a very weak response.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Chloroacetic acid
* has many uses in syntheses.
- chemical compounds
* is used in industrial chemical processes , for example in the production of dyes
- to make the intermediate for glyphosate.
* Replacing one hydrogen atom of acetic acid with a chlorine one yields 'Chloroacetic acid'. Chloroacetic acid is used in industrial chemical processes, for example in the production of dyes. It was used as poison gas in the First World War, as a so-called Yellow Cross agent. It is still used to treat warts today. Chloroacetic acid very strong acid that causes immediate damage to the skin | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Chlorogenic acid
* health villain suspected of causing intestinal cancers.
* is chemical compounds
- one of the allergens which coffee shares with oranges
Clavulanic acid
* chemical sometimes added to a semisynthetic penicillin preparation.
* is drugs.
* potent inactivator of beta-lactamases.
* reaches levels sufficient to inhibit beta- lactamase.
Elenolic acid
* has a very wide anti-viral spectrum.
* is very virucidal.
Excess acid
* Some excess acid is deposited in connective tissue
* accumulates in the body and can damage organs like the liver or pancreas.
* can eat through the protective lining and damage the stomach.
Ferulic acid
* is also a natural source for the ultraviolet light UV protection.
* strong membrane antioxidant in people. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Folic acid
* B vitamin
- and is found in green leafy vegetables, nuts, beans and citrus fruits
- often found in fortified food products and vitamin supplements
* B-vitamin that can be found in some enriched foods and vitamin pills.
* Some folic acid is produced by the intestinal bacteria
- synthesized by bacteria in the intestines
* appears to be a key compound in human nutrition.
* breaks down homocysteine and allows it to be removed from the blood stream.
* can also play other important roles during pregnancy
- reduce the risk of certain birth defects of the brain and spinal cord
- help form a baby's brain and spine
* can help prevent birth defects of the brain and spinal cord
- diseases of the brain and spine, called neural tube defects
- reduce the risk of birth defects of the brain and spinal cord
- that mechanism stay active
* can prevent a brain and spinal cord birth defect called spina bifida
- spina bifida when taken in the early days of pregnancy
- reduce a group of birth defects called neural tube defects
* carrier of one-carbon fragments which it transfers to various biochemical targets.
* cofactor for the metabolism of formic acid, a toxic methanol metabolite.
* comes in several forms.
* cuts homocysteine levels.
* exerts important effects on hemapoiesis.
* fights heart risk factor.
* fills the nutritional gap that exists for many people.
* forms a vital function in the transport of coenzymes that control amino acid metabolism.
* has a higher absorption rate than natural occurring folate
- many important benefits at high doses
* has no known toxic levels
- side effects
* helps DNA, the genetic building blocks, repair itself
- fight birth defects because it is so important in the development of new cells
- nourish the skin and nervous system
- prevent defects of the baby's spine
- red and white blood cell formulation and the synthesis of hemoglobin
* helps reduce homocysteine levels, which helps protect DNA from damage
- the risk of having a baby with brain and spinal cord defects
* helps the baby's brain and spinal cord develop properly
- body make new red blood cells
- ovum mature
* helps to control their behaviour
- prevent neural tube birth defects such as spina bifida and anencephaly
- with the formation and maturation of red and white blood cells
* improves phenytoin pharmacokinetics.
* induces growth of red blood cells and helps in cell division.
* inhibits homocysteine-induced proliferation of human arterial smooth muscle cells.
* is B group vitamin found in leafy vegetables, fruits and organ meats
- absorbed in the intestinal tract and is stored primarily in the liver
- added to many vitamins and mineral supplements
* is also an important counter to depression
- critical for women of child-bearing age in order to have healthy babies
- essentials
- important in the synthesis of purines and pyrimidines
- present in grapefruit
- useful in the proper functioning of the entire central nervous system
- an essential B-vitamin for swine
* is an essential nutrient found in all enriched grain products
- required by the body in very small doses
- vital to the production of red blood cells
- vitamin found in meat, fresh fruit and vegetables
- another nutrient whose requirement appears to be substantially increased in pregnancy
- at the center of it
* is contained in beetroot which helps in the normal tissue growth
- many foods and in multivitamin supplements
- critical to the development of the nervous system of the fetus
- crucial to prevent neural tube defects in the developing embryo
- depleted through the use of many prescription drugs
- effective in the treatment of certain anemias and sprue
- especially important for women of childbearing age, pregnant or nursing
- essential during pregnancy to prevent neural tubular defects in the developing fetus
* is essential for DNA synthesis and cell division
* is essential to a process that clears a substance called homocysteine from the blood
- help the body grow and is vital for pregnant women and healty foetuses
- neural tube development in the fetus
- extremely important for pregnant women and women in their childbearing years
* is found in a wide variety of foods, including liver and raw vegetables
- citrus fruits, dark, leafy vegetables, beans, and peas
- fortified breakfast cereals and breads
- fresh, leafy green vegetables, beans, citrus fruits, brown rice, and liver
- green leafy plants, citrus fruit, fruit juice and legumes
* is found in leafy green vegetables, beans, tuna and eggs
- greens, nuts, seeds and beans
- vegetables and liver
- liver, green leafy vegetables, peas, beans and some fruits
* is found in orange juice, dark leafy green vegetables and peanuts
- leafy green vegetables, beans, liver, and fortified grains
- peanut butter, leafy green vegetables and oranges
* is found in the germ in whole grains
- wholes wheat toast, pita bread, pasta, orange and spinach
- yeast, liver, green vegetables, whole grain cereals and many other foods
* is found mainly in green leafy vegetables, asparagus and liver
- orange juice, green leafy vegetables, and beans
- naturally in leafy green vegetables, beans, tuna, eggs and other foods
- to be deficient in people with depression
- implicated indirectly in the prevention of cardiovascular disease
* is important for brain function
- neurologic functioning and detoxification
- protein metabolism
- the development of the fetus
- women of all ages because it can help prevent heart disease and stroke
- indicated in chronic hemolytic anemias due to increased requirements
- involved in regulating homocysteine
* is known for preventing birth defects
- to be important in the development of the brain and spinal cord
- lost in foods stored at room temperature and during cooking
- metabolized into different forms in the body
- much more likely to bind to a cancer than to normal tissues or a benign tumor
* is necessary for the synthesis of nucleic acids and the formation of red blood cells
- to prevent spina bifida
- needed both before pregnancy and during early pregnancy
* is needed for DNA synthesis
- cell growth and protein synthesis in the rapidly growing baby
- healthy brain and spinal cord development very early in the pregnancy
- the health of the mucus membranes in the mouth
- in the first weeks of pregnancy for spinal development
- to make purines
- nontoxic in doses exceeding the daily requirement by several hundred-fold
- obtained from fruits, vegetables, beans and fortified grain products
- one chemical that appears to be particularly important
* is one of the B vitamins
- vitamins in the B-complex
* is only one of the many nutrients required for health
* is present in foods such as green vegetables, liver, and yeast
- nearly all natural foods but can be damaged, or weakened, during cooking
- relatively inexpensive and often is included in multivitamin supplements
- required for transferring single carbon units
- safe and also prevents some serious birth defects in pregnant women
- supplemented to help prevent anemia and potential pregnancy problems
- taken in tablet form once a day and has few side effects
- the form used in supplements and to fortify foods
* is the man-made form of an important vitamin called folate
- or synthetic form of the vitamin
- version of a B vitamin called folate
- most prominent human vitamin deficiency
- number-one ingredient in making a healthy baby
- only vitamin that operates directly on genes
* is the supplemental folacin form usually added to feeds
- form of folate
- synthetic B-vitamin form used in vitamin supplements
* is the synthetic form added to vitamins and enriched foods
- of folate or folacin, which is found in food
* is the term for the synthetic form of folate, a water-soluble vitamin
- used when a food is fortified with the vitamin
* is used biochemically for nucleic acid synthesis and for other one-carbon transfers
- to make red blood cells and important proteins like DNA
- useful in the treatment of folic acid anemia
- very important during pregnancy
* is very important in brain development, and in preventing birth defects
- to reduce the chance of birth defects in babies
- well-known for preventing birth defects when taken in proper doses by pregnant women
* key ingredient in preventing serious birth defects
- vitamin in human nutrition
* necessary element needed for correct neural tube development.
* needs for breeding and growth of nonhuman primates.
* occurs naturally in leafy vegetables like spinach and in orange juice and liver
- some foods and can also be taken in tablet form
* offers protection from neural tube damage in unborn babies.
* plays a major role in lowering homocysteine levels
- an important role in the prevention of neural tube birth defects
* precursor for essential co- enzymes.
* preventative measure.
* prevents birth defects
- serious neurological conditions like spina bifida
* produces many health benefits.
* promotes the formation and maintenance of healthy gums and prevents periodontal disease
- synthesis of the oxygen-carrying blood protein hemoglobin
* reduces the chances of certain birth defects
- level of an amino acid called homocysteine that clogs arteries
* reduces the risk of neurological birth defects
- spinal defects
* seems to be the most important single nutrient in providing protection
- play the key role in lowering homocysteine
- protect the brain's central learning and reasoning regions from shrinkage
* special vitamin that can help prevent birth defects.
* supplement found in vegetables such as broccoli.
* type of vitamin, which is essential for the development of the foetus.
* very important vitamin as it controls functions for cell division.
* very safe B-vitamin
* vital B vitamin
- nutrient for cell division
* vitamin essential for human growth and development.
* vitamin that is essential for all new cell formation
- needed in pregnancy
- stimulates the formation of normal red blood cells
* vitamin, found in fruit and vegetables, which everyone needs to help make blood.
* water-soluble vitamin, and any excess consumed is rapidly excreted in the urine
- it can be produced by bacteria in the intestine
* works during cell growth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Fumaric acid
* enhances performance of broiler chickens.
* is acid
Gibberellic acid
* can play an important role in seed germination.
* flower inducer that takes the place of a cold period.
* is chemical compounds
- one of the most important and common gibberellins in plants
- produced in the terminals of shoots and acts to increase cell elongation
- the plant hormone that is responsible for plant tallness
* share one growth response with the auxins.
* simpler way to provide freeze rescue to plants.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Glutamic acid
* 'non-essential' classified amino acid that is very common in plants and animals.
* combines with ammonia to become glutamine.
* is amino acid
- an amino acid that is present in our bodies naturally
- biosynthesized from a number of amino acids including ornithine and arginine
- just one of many amino acids that are the building blocks of proteins
- one of several amino acids which are the main components of proteins
* is one of the amino acids which make up proteins
- major excitatory molecules in the brain
* major biotransformation product of endothall under aerobic conditions.
* nonessential amino acid that the body uses to build proteins.
* serves as fuel for the brain and calms the central nervous system.
* very polar molecule usually found outside of proteins and enzymes.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Humic acid
* are present in all natural water used as sources of drinking water supplies
- vital to normal plant growth including pest resistance
* can have a direct positive effect on plant growth in a number of ways
- then absorb the proteins in the dead algae, trapping the nitrogen
* contribute to better tilth, water and nutrient retention, and soil aeration.
* grow more and better tomatos with better flavor and shelf life and at a very low cost.
* growth stimulant and a chelating agent.
* have properties similar to oxidized lignins.
* humic substance
* increase the protein and mineral contents of most crops.
* is an example of an organic acid in that it is formed from carbon-based compounds
- available in liquid and dry forms from specialty nurseries
- soluble in dilute alkaline solutions, and is precipitated by acidification
- used in a large number of commercially profitable enterprises
* precipitate in acidic solution, but fulvic acids remain soluble.
* reduce bioaccumulation of some polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.
* serve many complex purposes in the soil.
* stimulates seed germination and viability, and root respiration, formation and growth.
* work in the low weight fraction on the cellular level.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Hyaluronic acid
* enhances the zona pellucida-induced acrosome reaction of macaque sperm.
* helps the joints produce good joint fluid.
* is chemical compounds
- expensive but popular
- increased by estrogen
- influenced by nutrition and other environmental factors
- metabolized by hyaluronidase in synovium
- needed to cushion and lubricate joints, eyes, skin and heart valves
* major component of synovial fluid, which aids in the lubrication of the joints.
* natural component of cartilage and joint fluid
- polysaccharide and lubricates and cushions the joint
* naturally occurring glycosaminoglycan
- substance found in the synovial fluid
* newer medication for joint injection, used to treat osteoarthritis of the knee.
* occurs naturally in body tissues and fluids
* provides a steay mousture source to dry skin.
* provides lubrication and helps prevents erosion of the cartilage
- to the synovial membrane surface
Hydrocyanic acid
* inhibits cellular respiration and the animal's ability to use oxygen.
- both inflammable and explosive
- cyanide
- inorganic compounds
- more soluble in water than acetic acid
- pure substances
- toxic substances
* penetrates into the skin, the mucous membranes, and the bodily fluids.
* weaker acid than acetic acid. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Hydroflouric acid
* can cause extreme damage to the exygen sensor, catalyst and exhaust system.
* is highly corrosive and can eat away at lung tissue.
Hydrogen chloride
* Most hydrogen chloride released into the air by natural sources comes from volcanoes.
* is acid
Hydroxycitric acid
* is extracted from the pericarp of Garcinia cambogia.
* slows the deposition of fat from carbohydrates.
Hypoiodous acid
* is unstable to disproportionation
- very unstable
+ Hypoiodous acid, Properties: Acids :: Iodine compounds
* Hypoiodous acid is very unstable. It easily disproportionates to iodine and iodic acid. It is a disinfectant and oxidizing agent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Lactic acid
* Some lactic acid builds up in meat
- muscles
* Some lactic acid enters blood streams
* Some lactic acid is produced by bacteria
- starter bacteria
- prevents growth
* acccumulates when a muscle is overworked.
* accumulates during exercise
- in the muscle tissue as a fish is played
* acts on the protein in the milk to make yoghurt thick and sour.
* build up in muscles inhibits muscle contractions
- leads to the symptoms of trematol poisoning
* builds up as anaerobic respiration switches on, and it can quickly become toxic
- in the muscles, causing that sore and tired feeling
* by product of metabolism that is formed during exercise.
* by-product of anaerobic energy production
- glycolysis
* byproduct of energy metabolism
- glucose metabolism
* can cause sore muscles
- reach toxic levels, causing muscle cramps and fatigue, in stressed muscle groups
* causes cramp
- muscle stiffness and soreness
- muscles to hurt
- rigor mortis
- soreness when it builds up in muscles
- the muscle pain when one runs too fast for too long
* contributes to better digestibility of the bread product and gives it a unique flavour
- fatigue in muscle and oxygen debt, and the liver eventually reconverts
* creates efficient fermentation because it is stronger than the volatile acids.
* cuts down on endurance.
* forms as a by-product of energy production by the muscles
- in milk due to the action of fungi and bacteria acting on the lactose sugar
* has two enantiomers.
* helps produce growth hormone.
* increases in the active muscles.
* interferes with the muscles ability to contract.
* is also very hydrating
- an acidulant that adds tartness and controls acidity
* is an alpha-hydroxy acid with keratolytic properties
- example of a weak acid
- carboxylic acid
- chemical compounds
- converted back to pyruvic acid by liver cells
- especially effective in combating pathogenic bacteria
* is formed in some microbes as well as in the muscle cells
- when carbohydrates break down, usually during exercise
* is one of the most effective AHAs and has the lowest irritation potential
- way of keeping all the cells, brain and muscle, going
- only temporaly
* is present after working a muscle, producing natural growth hormone
- in most foods, and, of course, is present throughout our bodies
* is produced by muscles as they run out of oxygen over prolonged bouts of exercise
- the microbial fermentation of sugars such as glucose or hexose
- during exercise when the demand for oxygen in muscles exceeds the supply
* is produced in animals and is associated with muscle fatigue
- large quantities by heavy, high physical loads
- response to the alkalosis of hyperventilation
* is produced in the muscles during intense activity
- presence of decreased oxygen
- more readily during anaerobic exercise, like sprinting
- when glucose is metabolized through the energy production cycle
- ten-times stronger than proprionic acid
- the alpha hydroxy acid found in milk
* is the main acid in milk and has a much lighter taste
- cause of enamel decalcification
- most stable and most palatable of all common silage-produced acids
- predominant volatile fatty acid in the best-quality silage
- primary cause of muscle soreness
- waste product of exercise that enhances fatigue and muscular soreness
* is toxic in large amounts, and therefore produces fatigue
- to many cells and leads to muscle fatigue
- what causes muscles to burn after strenuous exercise
* metabolite formed in the body during muscular activity.
* milder acid than malic acid.
* natural constituent of the human body and has several proven functionalities.
* naturally occurring organic acid, which is present in sour milk and molasses.
* normal byproduct of muscle metabolism.
* primary component in the skin's natural buffer system.
* producing bateria produce mainly lactate as a metabolite from glucose.
* registered disinfectant.
* represents a small fraction of the chemicals of commerce in the United States.
* seems to be a better compound to rub on twice daily.
* strong acid that has been implicated with fatigue.
* ubiquitous product of energy metabolism.
* waste product or toxin that causes muscle to fatigue and ultimately fail.
+ Enantiomer: Stereochemistry
+ Yoghurt: Dairy products
* Yogurt', or 'yoghurt', is a dairy product made by bacterial fermentation of milk. The lactose in the milk becomes lactic acid when it is fermented. Lactic acid acts on the protein in the milk to make yoghurt thick and sour. Yoghurt made from cow's milk is called dairy yoghurt. It is produced using a culture of 'Lactobacillus delbrueckii' subsp. Soy yoghurt is made from soy milk. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Lansoprazole
* are drugs.
* inhibits gastric acid secretion
- the metabolism of theophylline
* is acid
- stable when exposed to light for up to two months
* works by decreasing the amount of acid produced by the stomach.
Lauric acid
* has the beneficial function of being formed into monolaurin in the body.
* is fatty acid
* medium chain fatty acid, found naturally in mother's milk.
Lipoteichoic acid
* are teichoic acids that are linked to the underlying cell membrane.
* mediates the bacterial attachment.
Lysophosphatidic acid
* decreases glutamate and glucose uptake by astrocytes.
* enhances contractility of isolated airway smooth muscle.
* induces necrosis and apoptosis in hippocampal neurons
- urokinase secretion by ovarian cancer cells
* possesses dual action in cell proliferation.
Muratic acid
* can give a sever burn to skin or eyes.
* is technical grade hydrochloric acid that can be purchased at building supply stores.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Nitric acid
* Most nitric acid is used in fertilizer as ammonium nitrate and in the manufacture of explosives.
* are dangerous and mercury is poisonous.
* can also be a product of incineration for energy production or waste disposal
- be an environmental hazard in water systems and as NOx in air emissions
- cause burns
* contributes to acid rain.
* dissolves it, though, to make silver nitrate.
* has a corrosive impact on marine life
- many uses including industrial uses and fertilizers
* is absorbed quickly and can cause widespread damage to the body and death
- chemical compounds
- inorganic compounds
- ionic compounds
- liquids
- toxic substances
* reddens it, and when the mixture is heated, oxalic acid is formed.
+ Silver, Properties, Chemical properties: Metals :: Chemical elements
* It is not reactive. It does not dissolve in most acids. Nitric acid dissolves it, though, to make silver nitrate. It does react with strong oxidizing agents like potassium dichromate or potassium permanganate. It does not corrode easily. It only corrodes when there is hydrogen sulfide in the air. Then, it forms a black coating known as tarnish.
Nitrous acid
* deaminates a cytosine base to uracil which can base pair with adenine.
- an unstable compound which is prepared just prior to use
- chemical compounds
- formed, but it reacts further with acid to make water and the nitrosyl cation
* reacts in various with all types of amines.
Orotic acid
* accumulates in the blood and is excreted in the urine.
* is an intermediate in pyrimidine metabolism
- the synthesis of the pyrimidines
Oxyacid
* contain polyatomic anions such as nitrite, carbonate, etc.
* have the acidic proton attached to an oxygen atom.
* is acid
Palmitic acid
* is chemical compounds
- the major fatty acid in palm oil
- very common in animal fats
* saturated fatty acid, which has been shown to raise blood cholesterol.
Peracetic acid
* causes more rapid scission and produces more acid groups than peroxide.
* disinfectant produced by reacting hydrogen peroxide with acetic acid.
* is also reportedly sensitive to light
- irritant to the eyes, skin, and mucous membranes
* more potent germicide than is hydrogen peroxide.
* very effective oxidant and disinfecting agent.
Perchloric acid
* can also form explosive mixtures with organic compounds
- be dangerously reactive
- leave explosive residues in a fume hood, duct system, or on a hood fan
* commonly used laboratory reagent.
* hazardous chemical which is covered by the rules of the preceding section.
- an extremely dangerous, powerful oxidizer
- very corrosive to all living tissue
* powerful oxidizing agent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Periodic acid
* is acid
- found as a colorless solution
+ Periodic acid, Properties: Iodine compounds :: Acids
* Periodic acid is found as a colorless solution. It is a strong oxidizing agent, like perchloric acid. It breaks down when heated to iodine pentoxide and oxygen, as well as water. It does not form I2O7. It is found as HIO4 in dilute solution and H5IO6 in concentrated solution. When H5IO6 is heated, it turns into HIO4. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Phenol
* Some phenols are sold as dietary supplements
- have antiseptic properties, while others disrupt endocrine activity
- occur naturally in the environment.
* is produced from petroleum. It is an important molecule because it can be used to make many other products. It is also used in detergents and herbicides
* affects the central nervous system, liver, and kidneys.
* also give a negative test.
* are acidic due to the dissociability of their -OH group
- antiseptic and kill bacteria and viruses and are found in oregano and thyme oil
- caustic, poisonous, acidic compounds
- chemical compounds
- coal-tar derivatives
- found in the natural world, especially in the plant kingdom
- hardest to get rid of, because they are more difficult to decompose
- organic compounds
- simple molecules, made of a few oxygen and hydrogen atoms
- the blue, blue-red and violet colorations seen in berries, grapes and purple eggplant
- very good at killing gram positive bacteria
- weak acids which are widely used for their antiseptic and disinfectant properties
* can also cause severe damage to eyes, including blindness
- reactions including convulsions, coma, and circulatory collapse
- catch on fire
- do electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions very well
- have positive effects when used for medical reasons
- penetrate leather on shoes or clothing
* carbolic acid and reacts highly acidic and works like a strong cell poison.
* causes nerve destruction by inducing protein precipitation
- severe burns when it comes in contact with skin
* chemically interact with many other substances.
* combustible liquid.
* compounds Some phenol compounds are also available.
* constitutes one of the main pollutants to be removed from wastewater.
* denatures proteins.
* extract extensively.
* give a brown color or precipitate as a positive test.
* helps lower the risk by preventing fat-like substances from oxidizing and clogging arteries.
* highly effective disinfectant and anesthetic for the skin.
* is absorbed easily into the body through the skin, lungs, and stomach
* is also a powerful disinfectant and bacteria killer
- recoverable byproduct of coal pyrolysis
- flammable
- harmful
* is an agent that injures the local nerve it has been injected close to
- colorless when solved in water but presents a characteristic sweet tar like odor
- considered to be the parent chain
- corrosive to the skin and mucous membranes
- derived from the distillation of coal tar, creosote from the distillation of wood
- found naturally in decaying dead organic matter like rotting vegetables and in coal
- good sclerosant
* is highly corrosive and can be absorbed through skin
- toxic and highly combustible
- less acidic than the other molecule
- reduced to benzene when it is distilled with zinc dust
- regarded as a substance with good warning properties
- so inexpensive that it attracts many small-scale uses
* is the deepest peel
- prime ingredient in Epoxy
- strongest of the chemical solutions and produces a deep peel
- transported as a solid or in gel form
- very soluble in water and is quite flammable
* monoprotic acid.
* often have chiral centers.
* peels, for example, can alter the color of the skin and permanently make it lighter.
* produced by high temperature fermentation are also to be avoided.
* therefore exists essentially entirely in the enol form.
* turns red on exposure to sunlight and air because of oxidation.
* weak acid material and corosive.
+ Phenol, Properties, Reactions: Organic compounds
* Phenol can do electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions very well. This is because the lone pair on the oxygen atom can give electrons through the benzene ring to an electrophile. Because the lone pair is so high in energy however, sometimes phenol reacts too many times. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid | phenol:
Cresol
* are a widely occurring natural and manufactured group of chemicals.
* smell like medicine.
Resorcinol
* are chemical compounds
- phenols
* can withstand a wide range of useful temperatures when cured.
* contains solvents which evaporate.
* high value additive used in the manufacture of tyres.
* is also strong and has moderate gap-filling properties
- an effective anti-septic also found in ointments to treat infections and rashes
- the primary agent for bonding steel belts to the rubber in steel-belted radial tires
- water-soluble and readily conjugated and eliminated
Tannic acid
* acts as an astringent.
* can help in the formation of blood clots.
* constricts blood vessels.
* forms in the leaf.
* gives the acorns their bitter taste.
* imparts a bitter taste.
* is an astringent that helps proteins solidify
- believed to work well
- one of the main economic products obtained from galls
- used to denature mite allergens in carpeting
* neutralizes the allergens in dust mite and animal dander.
* precipitates it completely from aqueous solution | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid | phenol:
Tannin
* Some tannins are also powerful antioxidants.
* act as a preservative and so are particularly present in wines meant for long aging
- palate cleansers when paired with foods high in proteins or oils
* also help to mature the wine
- taste richer and softer if they're riper in the first place
* appears to lower the digestibility of the protein and starch.
* are a group of unrelated chemicals that give plants an astringent taste
- very complex group of plant anti-nutritional compounds
- also much of the reason that wines mellow or improve with age
* are also present in tea-leaves
- wine stems and seeds and in the barrels used to age wines
- wood, and sometimes find their way into the wine from barrel aging
- analogous to the beams and girders supporting a house
- big and matched in perfect proportion by the fruit
- bitter tasting chemicals that can interfere with digestion
- classified as ergastic substances, i.e., non-protoplasm materials found in cells
- distributed in species throughout the plant kingdom
- especially evident in red wines, and generally help red wines to age
- extracted with an aqueous organic solvent
- fine-grained
* are firm and acids abundant
- on the finish
* are found also in the barks of trees
- in leaf, bud, seed, root, and stem tissues
- highly astringent and are therefore used in many health care products today
- in the smoke when a cigarette is burned
- light and thin
- located mainly in the vacuoles or surface wax of the plants
- natural compounds found in grape skins, seeds and stems, and in oak barrels
- overwhelming when cooked unripe as a mellow-yellow
- phenolic compounds that precipitate proteins
- plant products that inhibit digestion in livestock
- probably responsible for bilberry's effect on diarrhea and wound healing
- quite soft and the style of winemaking favours early drinking
- responsible for the stringent flavor in the vinegar
- ripe and sweet
- smooth and integrated
* are soft and approachable
- rounded
- yet drying, almost bitter
- sufficient to stand up to food and to provide a pleasant grip
- supple and round
- the astringent compounds in grape skins
* are the chemicals in grapes that give wine structure, especially during aging
- flavour compounds that contribute to a red wine's ageability
- most abundant phenolic compound in brown bird-resistant sorghum
- third prominent pigment
- tough and very noticeable
* are very bitter, and are produced when the plant is stressed
- common in the plant world
- soft but show a mild stemmy note that is attractive
- waste products of cell processes found in vacuoles and cell walls, giving brown colors
- water-soluble flavonoid polymers produced by plants and stored in vacuoles
- what allow red wines to improve with age
* are, for example, contained in black tea.
* associated with prisms occurs in tannin sacs in white pine and tamarac bark.
* belong to the phenolics class.
* bind liquids, absorb toxins, and soothe inflamed tissues
- to protein and can make plants with high levels have an astringent dry mouth taste
* binds protein and makes it unavailable for the body.
* can also react with iron present in fasteners or nails
- bind proteins tightly together
- cause nausea and even vomiting in people with sensitive stomachs
- impart a faintly yellowish to brown color to water which never settles out
- protect proteins against degradation by rumen microbes
* cause brown shades in some species.
* cause the brown colors of some leaves
- hues in leaves of some oaks and other trees in the autumn
* contribute to many aspects of our daily lives.
* dominate at the moment, with noticeable acidity.
* exhibit antimicrobial activity towards many types of fungi, bacteria, and yeasts.
* frequently exists in red wines or wood-aged white wines.
* get more noticeable in the glass.
* give a wine a bitter taste and an astringent mouth-feel.
* help bind stools and hold back bowel movements
- to make wines more astringent or mouth puckering
* induce changes in morphology of several species of ruminal bacteria.
* inhibit enzymatic activity, thus possibly affecting protein digestion.
* is essential to the taste and flavor of the grapes as well as the wine
- firm, slightly green
- grudgingly water soluble
- present in the leaves
- sometimes low
* make bird-resistant sorghums undesirable as a feed or forage crop.
* negatively affect an animal's feed intake, feed digestibility, and efficiency of production.
* occur naturally in grapes and sometimes in the wood in which wine is stored.
* occurs naturally in the skins and seeds of grapes.
* often occur in green or immature fruits, the quantity decreasing as the fruit ripens.
* play an important role in cork formation, which explains their presence in bark.
* produce brown colors often seen in tea, chestnut bark, and in oak leaves in the fall.
* produces negative effects on sapling growth.
* react with proteins and contribute to haze formation.
* seem to be created to discourage animals from eating the plants.
* still abound, fruit, wood, alcohol and acidity - all in abundance.
* tend to bind starches while being digested.
* usually bind to both dietary and microbial protein. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Phenolic acid
* are a class of antioxidants, or compounds that quench free radicals
- abundant in foods, especially coffee, whole grains, fruits, and vegetables
* have mild anti-inflammatory properties and are potent antioxidants.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Phosphoric acid
* balances the cola s sweetness to provide the characteristic tart taste.
* can also break down tooth enamel
- combine with certain alkaline elements to form salts called phosphates
* colorless, odorless thick liquid.
* contains three hydrogen ions.
* corrosive chemical and contact can severely burn the eyes and skin.
* dense, colorless liquid which is toxic and strong irritant to tissue.
* forms flammable gases with sulfides, mercaptans, cyanides and aldehydes.
* good P source for plants.
* has a condition of silent peevishness and aversion to conversation
- special relation to the periosteum
* high analysis liquid phosphorus source.
* is acid
- added to the heated crude oil to eliminate the phospholipids
- an acidulant added to cola drinks
* is an ingredient contained in many common products such as carbonated colas
- in soft drinks that support their bubblieness
- intermediate step in almost all phosphate applications
- chemical compounds
- harmless, despite the alarming name
- heated with a sodium halide to make the hydrogen halide and sodium phosphate
- liquids
- one of the least toxic acids
* is produced by either a dry or wet process
- from the metabolism of nucleic acids and phospholipids
- in the reaction between calcium phosphate and sulfuric acid
- responsible for tang
- the result of combining mined phosphate rock with acid
* is used in the production of phosphatic fertilizers
- primarily in manufacturing fertilizers, detergents and pharmaceuticals
- very reactive acid
* strong acid.
* supplies dietary ash buffers which offset the symptoms of alkalosis.
* triprotic acid, but only two inflections appear on the titration curve.
* weaker acid.
* white solid.
* works well and is safe for most surfaces.
+ Phosphoric acid, Properties: Phosphorus compounds
* Phosphoric acid is a white solid. It melts easily to make a viscous liquid. It can be deprotonated three times. It is very strong, although not as much as the other acids like hydrochloric acid. It does not have any odor. It is corrosive when concentrated
- Safety
* Phosphoric acid is one of the least toxic acids. When it is diluted, it just has a sour taste. When it is concentrated, it can corrode metals
- Uses
* It is used to make sodas sour. It is also used when a nonreactive acid is needed. It can be used to make hydrogen halides, such as hydrogen chloride. Phosphoric acid is heated with a sodium halide to make the hydrogen halide and sodium phosphate. It can be used to clean teeth
Phytanic acid
* derives from the corresponding alcohol, phytol, and is oxidized into pristanic acid.
* is found in meat, fish, and dairy products.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Phytic acid
* binds two-thirds or more of the phosphorus from plant sources
- with calcium, magnesium and iron
* chemical that naturally occurs in legumes, cereals, and nuts.
* inhibits zinc absorption.
* is broken down by yeast fermentation
- found in rye bread and other foods made from whole grains
- one substance found in whole grains which can reduce mineral absorption
* is thought to reduce the body's ability to absorb certain nutrients, like iron
- ability to use certain nutrients, like iron
- ability to use iron and certain other nutrients
Picolinic acid
* is most renowned for zinc supplements.
* natural metabolite found in human breast milk.
Polylactic acid
* biodegradable polymer produced from sugar.
* is an example of a plastic that biodegrades quickly.
Polyprotic acid
* Most polyprotic acids have at least one amphiprotic ion.
* can undergo neutralization to produce both normal and acid salts.
* lose their H one at a time. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Propionic acid
* fatty acid that exists naturally in everything from apples to wood pulp.
* is carboxylic acid
- dangerous to skin and eyes and corrosive to farm equipment
* source of nutrition and is among the safest of all food additives.
Protein amino acid
* induces intense pain
* triggers reaction.
Pyruvic acid
* accumulates in the blood after consumption of the adulterated oil.
* is acid
- chemical compounds
- converted into carbon dioxide
- electrolytes
- liquids
- organic acid
- the main natural compound during the human metabolism process
* loses carbon dioxide and is converted to the two- carbon compound acetaldehyde.
Resin acid
* are composed of tricyclic diterpenoid carboxylic acids.
* undergoes anaerobic degradations<|endoftext|>### acid:
Retinoic acid
* affects patterning along the anterior-posterior axis of the ascidian embryo
- vegetal plate formation in sea urchin embryos
* can block differentiation of the myocardium after heart specification.
* causes the promyelocytic cells to be replaced by normal, mature cells.
* establishes ventral retinal characteristics.
* has a hormone-like action.
* induces embryonal carcinoma cells to differentiate into neurons and glial cells
- polarizing activity but is unlikely to be a morphogen in the chick limb bud
* is also necessary for initiation of limb bud outgrowth
- critical for proper development
- involved in normal developmental alveolar growth and septation
* is known to be able to activate certain patterning genes in the limb bud
- inhibit bone formation and to increase bone resorption
- necessary for development of the ventral retina in zebrafish
- such a tumor drug
* is the active form of vitamin A in the body
- form of vitamin A that does all the work in the nucleus
* mimics the natural morphogen.
* popular topical treatment for acne, psoriasis, and other skin disorders.
* produces rod photoreceptor selective apoptosis in the developing mammalian retina.
* promotes photoreceptor differentiation in rat retinal cell cultures.
* regulates oral epithelial differentiation by two mechanisms.
* reverses ethanol induced cardiovascular abnormalities in quail emb ryos.
* seems to cause the cells to redifferentiate and then be able to take up iodine.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Salicylic acid
* Some salicylic acids can upset the balance of the skin enough to cause problems durring waxing.
* can also be mixed with sulfur to treat dandruff
- induce resistance to plant virus movement
* causes the destruction of the corn tissue.
* comes in many different forms and generic drug names.
* exfoliates dead flaky skin, reduces oil production and promotes healing.
* has a half life of about four hours at therapeutic doses
- anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties
* helps unclog pores and prevent abnormal shedding of skin cells.
* induces changes in the physical properties of model and native kidney membranes
- of model and native membranes
- also comedolytic
- chemical compounds
- derived from aspirin
- keratolytic, keratoplastic, antipruritic, and bacteriostatic
- particularly effective on blackheads
- phenols
- synthesized from the amino acid phenylalanine
* is the active ingredient in many acne treatments, and it also reduces inflammation
- most acne products on the market
- used in many top acne products on the market today, and proven acne fighter
* natural substance which is part of the defense mechanism of plants.
* offers keratoplastic, keratolytic, bacteriostatic and mild anti-pruritic functions.
* product used to make aspirin.
* relatively polar, poorly aqueous soluble material.
* works deep into the pores to clean the debris of dead cells. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Selenic acid
* is acid
- made by oxidation of selenium dioxide with hydrogen peroxide
+ Selenic acid, Preparation: Acids :: Selenium compounds
* Selenic acid is made by oxidation of selenium dioxide with hydrogen peroxide. It is hard to evaporate it, but when it is evaporated, it makes colorless crystals. It can be made by oxidation of selenous acid with a strong oxidizing agent, such as potassium permanganate, chlorine, or bromine. The HCl and HBr made as a byproduct can reduce the selenic acic to selenous acid again, though, so it has to be taken out.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Stearic acid
* fatty acid that occurs in virtually all fats.
* has a neutral effect on blood cholesterol.
* is an example of such a saturated fatty acid
- another common fatty acid
- chemical compounds
* is, in fact, known to actually reduce blood cholesterol levels.
* long chain fatty acid.
* makes candles burn more evenly.
* saturated acid, and so glyceryl tristearate saturated fat.
* saturated fatty acid found in beef, some dairy foods, and chocolate
- mainly in animal products and a few plant foods<|endoftext|>### acid:
Stomach acid
* Most stomach acid causes damage
- contains acid
- irritates esophagi
* Most stomach acid kills many microorganisms
* Some stomach acid destroys bacteria.
* activates the cysts and the trophozoites are released.
* are capable of destroying enzymes
- important to digest foods
* breaks down food, but it can also digest the stomach wall itself
- the metal, which causes anemia and sometimes death
* can also make a difference
- damage the esophagus
* cause severe erosion of the teeth resulting in cavities.
- serious damage
* dissolve the lead in the paint, allowing the lead to get into the bloodstream.
* dissolves the enamel on teeth.
* enhances absorption.
* erode the esophageal lining, leading to ulcers and possible rupture of the esophagus.
* increases calcium absorption.
* inhibit bacterial growth in stomach.
* is also important in producing ulcers
- an important factor in absorption of nutrients, including magnesium
- hydrochloric acid produced by the stomach
- important to the absorption of zinc
- produced by an acid pump in the chief cells
- required for adequate breakdown of proteins
- similar in strength to that of a car battery
- thought to play a role in causing peptic ulcer disease
- very dangerous
* kill most food borne bacteria, an important contribution to the immune system.
* kills most bacteria and other microorganisms present in food
- microorganisms ingested in food or drink
* leaking into the esophagus common cause of chronic cough and even asthma.
* stops being secreted.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Strong acid
* All strong acids are strong conductors of electricity.
* Many strong acids have a negative pKa value , which means they are very strong.
* Most strong acid dissolves food.
* Some strong acid destroys bacteria
- helps food
* Some strong acid kills bacteria
- plants
- mixes with water
- acids occur naturally on Earths surface, but they are relatively rare.
* They also have a very low pH, usually between 1 and 3. Many strong acids have a negative pKa value, which means they are very strong
* are corrosive in nature
- incompletely ionized acids
- strong electrolytes
- very concentrated acids
* can damage stainless steel and aluminum.
* cause burn on skin.
* dissociate almost completely in water solution.
* form conjugate bases which have no measurable strength in water.
* ionize completely or almost completely in dilute aqueous solution.
* produce solutions with a higher pH than weak acids.
* react with strong bases to form weaker acids and bases.
Stronger acid
* dissolve silver.
* have weaker conjugate bases. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acid:
Sulfonic acid
* are close relatives of the more familiar sulfuric acid.
* are used as catalysts in esterification, alkylation and condensation reactions
- in many detergents
- acidic due to the hydrogen atom, stronger than a carboxylic acid
- one of the most important organo sulfur compounds in organic synthesis<|endoftext|>### acid:
Sulfuric acid
* can affect the body if it is inhaled or if it comes in contact with the eyes or skin
- burn clothing and the skin and even cause blindness
- cause severe deep skin burns and permanent loss of vision
- form new cloud nuclei, from which new cloud droplets can emerge
- then release metals contained within the rock
* comes from egg yolks.
* is acid
- chemical compounds
- inorganic compounds
- liquids
- part of automobile batteries
- polyprotic acid
- strong acid
- toxic substances
Trichloroacetic acid
* is carboxylic acid
* relatively strong acid that forms deliquescent crystals.<|endoftext|>### acid:
Uric acid
* Most uric acid produced in the body is excreted by the kidneys.
* accumulates from eating too much meat.
* appears to be nearly completely filtered by glomerular membrane.
* can also crystallize in the kidneys and other soft tissues, causing damage
- deposit in other tissue
- cause joint pain and lead to gout if an excess builds up
- crystallize into stones when the urine is persistently acid
* is accumulated by the breakdown of DNA in the diet and normal breakdown of body cells
- an indicator of kidney function
- another waste product removed from the blood by the kidneys
- basically a purine, and is the most expensive nitrogenous waste product to produce
- cleared from the blood by the kidney
- derived from the breakdown of purine bases
- dissolved in the blood and is excreted through the kidneys into the urine
- excreted as a semisolid with feces
- filtered at the glomerulus and is subject to tubular reabsorption
* is formed from ammonia mostly in the liver and to some extent in the kidneys
- the breakdown of substances called purines
- in reactions that degrade nucleic acids
- when the body uses proteins
- insoluble and can safely build up in the allantois
- left to mix with feces, which are then excreted
- one of the most effective water-soluble antioxidants in the blood
- only slightly soluble in water and is insoluble in alcohol and ether
- organic acid
- precipitated out of water a
- pretty much insoluble and forms a white chalky solid
* is produced by the liver and is normally expelled in the urine
- molybdenum activated enzyme xanthine oxidase
- during metabolism, when the body breaks down proteins
- mainly in the liver and is excreted by the kidneys
* is produced when purines are digested and processed in the body
- the body breaks down a chemical called purine
- quantified by ultraviolet spectrophotometry
- quite insoluble and so can be excreted using only a small amount of water
* is released in hypoxic conditions
- into the system in amounts necessary to break proteins down into amino acids
- synthesized by the insect's tissues and released in soluble form into the hemocoel
* is the creamy white portion of the dropping
- culprit
- end of purine metabolism in birds, reptiles, insects and primates
* is the end product of purine metabolism and is mostly produced in the liver
- metabolism in man
- the metabolism of a food component called purine
- end-product of purine catabolism
- relatively water-insoluble end product of purine nucleotide metabolism
- toxic, too
Usnic acid
* has selective antibiotic qualities which can partly deactivate viruses.
* is chemical compounds
- poorly water soluble, so ethyl alcohol is used to produce a tincture
* natural mitochondrial uncoupling agent.
### acidosis:
Diabetic acidosis
* is acidosis
* requires immediate hospitalisation for treatment with fluid and insulin. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acquired habit:
Self discipline
* is an acquired habit
- discipline
- the basis of all self change
* major factor in distant education.
* prerequisite for integrity and essential to the exercise of responsibility.<|endoftext|>### acquired skill:
Time management
* addresses various tasks, habits, and time-wasting perceptions and feelings.
* allows for a person to set aside time for a particular task.
* biggie - getting projects done on time, for example.
* career skill.
* common problem in today's fast-moving business environment.
* critical component of workflow-based process management.
* is actually self management
- also another way of reducing stress
* is an acquired skill
- essential skill for every person in today's hectic world of work
* is an important aspect of the study habits of college students
- element in learning to juggle school, family and work
- leadership skill
- skill for college students to learn
- tool in the world of work
- dealt with as it relates to the role of wife, mother, and Christian worker
- different for men and women
- essential to an individual's success
- largely a product of personal organization
- life management
- more than counting every minute of the day to see that none was wasted
* is one of the biggest challenges people have in their lives
- keys to success in college and throughout life
- most important skills a student needs to be successful in college
- really self-management and it begins with making choices
- self-control
* is the key to life
- successful post-emergent herbicides
- science of how to use the hours in a day more efficiently
- ultimate in self-improvement
* key function of employee productivity.
* personal form of scheduling time effectively.
* plays a key role in a college athlete to achieve success.
* skill of life-long importance.
* skill that is essential for an officer in the military to possess
- many small business owners lack
- takes constant practice
### acquired taste:
Arabic coffee
* has a reputation as the best variety, and used in most specialty coffees.
* is an acquired taste.
### acquisition:
Buyout
* are an important way to reduce the risk of future disasters.
* is an acquisition
- buying<|endoftext|>### acquisition:
Procurement
* are acquisitions
- often the means by which the grantee transfers programmatic work to a third party
* describes a process that encompasses purchasing but also goes far beyond it
- the process of sales or acquisitions between two parties
* has a very significant effect on the environment.
* involves the expenditure of public funds.
* is also about the application of commercial skills throughout a project
- one IT area in which the transit industry lags behind
* is the encouragement of adultery
- least equitably distributed of all types of federal funds
- method by which a contractor's services are obtained
- only area where government agencies can get sued
* palette of services and solutions designed around customers' needs.
* process with many customers.
* refers to governmental purchases and contracts.
### acquisition | procurement:
Government procurement
* accounts for a significant proportion of world trade and economic activity.
* is notoriously susceptible to corruption.
* potentially lucrative sector for small and mid-size companies.
Public procurement
* can also play an important role in strengthening demand for recycled products.
* major part of the European economy.
* represents a major source of demand for goods and services in most countries.
### acquisition | purchase:
Buyback
* are buying.
* benefit stockholders in a number of ways.
* encourage criminals to steal guns.
* increase earnings and the value of shares.
Stock buyback
* are purchases.
* can be accretive to earnings.
* increase an investor's earnings and the value of shares. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### acquisition:
Restoration
* beginning, the point where the ecological decline can be turned around.
* commonly is used to compensate for the permitted destruction of ecosystems.
* consists of the restoration of muscle glycogen levels.
* healing and spiritual art.
- artifacts
- models
- professional work that creates an economic benefit
- repairs
* is the application of ecological theory to ecological restoration
- art of transforming older, worn-out traditional pianos to their former glory
- process of accurately recovering the original form and details of a building
- reinstatement of driving ecological processes
- restoration of indemnity
- word used to explain the establishment of monarchical government
* process of evolution.
* refers to the reconstruction of the aesthetic appearance of an object.
* specialized form of construction.
* word describing the relational process.
### acquisition | restoration:
Ecological restoration
* is also an expression of good land ethics
- outdoor activities
* relatively new and expanding field of scientific study.
Gentrification
* are restoration.
* fact of life.
* is like air pollution
- primarily a relocation of people within the city
- what needs to happen every generation or so to upgrade and maintain housing
* means different things to different people.
* process which can trigger a revitalization cycle.
Habitat restoration
* can benefit ranchers during times of drought.
* is the process of rehabilitating damaged or injured estuaries.
Land restoration
* attempts to re-create original ecosystems that once existed.
* refers to practices that actively restore eroded or degraded land.
Rejuvenation
* is restoration.
* is the first step in the direction of immortality
- most severe type of pruning and is normally done during the dormant season
* occurs when the mind is able to rest, unencumbered by thought.
Riparian restoration
* can benefit many species of wildlife, including fish.
* helps create buffers and protect the stream banks.
### acquisitions:
Accession
* are acquisitions
- agreement
- increases
- property rights
* is agreement
- an important tool in fostering economic transition to market economics
### acres:
Fief
* are estates.
* is an acres
- online game that thousands of players can play interactively
* linguistic variant of feudum.
* view of medieval society from the bottom rungs looking up.
Homestead
* is the threshold between two unique federal parks.
* right to possession, rather than an ownership right.
### acronyms:
Abbreviation
* Define all abbreviations in the body of the text the first time they occur.
* are acronyms
- decrease
- forms
- shortening
- terms created by shortening larger terms
* coding process that maps a word into a shorter, but still understandable word.
* refer to books in which illustrations appear.
Act
* Every act is caused by some brain process.
* Some acts involve actual physical violence, including cutting, burning, or beating.
* are bills that have been passed into law.
* book of Prayer.
* is an instrument
* is the history of the early church
- record of the birth and growth of the church for Jerusalem to the world
### act | acting:
Mime
* are acting
- actors
- pantomimists, performers who act out scenes using no sounds, and with invisible props
* is an acting
* use it to express laughing and crying. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | actuation:
Drive
* are capable of streets
- devices
- journeys
* are located in golf courses
- mechanisms
- medical conditions
- motivated by the goal of cruises
- propulsion
- returns
- roads
- traits
- transportation
* are used for storing information
- use computers
* born of passion in matters of public policy positive attribute of good citizenship.
* is an actuation
* start with walks.
* supply the energy necessary for behavior.
* use electric motors to spin disks and require power directly from the power supply.
+ RAID, Problems with RAID, Linked failures: Storage devices
* In practice, however, the drives were often bought together. Many drives fail because of mechanical problems. The older a drive is, the more worn are its mechanical parts. Mechanical parts that are old are more likely to fail than those that are younger. This means that drive failures are no longer statistically independent. In practice, there is a chance that a second disk will also fail before the first has been recovered. This means that data loss can occur at significant rates, in practice.
### act | actuation | drive:
Blood drive
* Blood Drives register donors, serve refreshments, or label empty containers.
* are a convenient way for people to make a donation during work or school hours
- meetings
* can honor patients who have used large amounts of blood during their treatments.
Direct drive
* Many direct drive rotating motors use hall-sensors for sensing rotating speed.
* means that the propeller is bolted to, and turns at the same speed as, the crankshaft. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | actuation | drive:
Firewall
* Add firewall-style support to an operating system.
* FireWall tracks the number of nodes on all internal interfaces beginning from initial installation.
* Most firewalls are dual-homed, meaning that they have two physical network devices
- distinguish between inbound and outbound traffic
* Some firewalls act as bridges rather than routers
- also offer multiple encryption schemes and enhanced authentication
- automatically detect the type of cable, and some have a switch that needs to be set
- use packet filters which block packets used by traceroute
* act much like the manager of a safe deposit box vault.
* add an extra layer of security
- security to financial, student and corporate records
* allow access to the outer world while shielding the protected areas from attack
- authorized users access to a network or computer system
- users direct access to applications and data through a security door
* also hamper online gaming.
* also provide a central point for logging and auditing Internet traffic
- companies with other types of protection from network intrusion
* are a common and tested Internet security feature
- cornerstone in current network security
- key ingredient to any network that is hooked to the Internet
- means of keeping intruders out of a local network
- necessary form of online security
- relatively new solution to security problems against intruders
- security mechanism that protect the site from intended or unintended damage
* are an integral part of a total security system
- any security architecture
- another method of controlling access
- books
- clever mechanisms typically a combination of hardware and software
- devices that allow network administrators to limit traffic that it deems harmful
- electronic security screens
* are generally a combination of vertical walls between sections of a building
- hard on the outside and non existent on the inside
- important security tools
- like security guards that protect high-risk buildings
* are network barriers designed to keep out crackers
- blocks that restrict access to or from part of the network
- no longer a barrier to communicating over the Internet
- now prevalent throughout the public and private sectors
* are one of the fastest growing technical tools in the field of information security
- present to protect against unauthorized access from the Internet
* are security devices used to protect companies from unauthorized access to their servers
- perimeters for active information infrastructure components
- systems
- software programs to ward off hackers
- systems, which control access policy between two or more networks
* are the network s response to the host security problem
- same technologies that major corporations use to protect their networks
- traffic cops of network security
- very important tools in protecting an environment connected to a network
* block direct or unauthorized access via the Internet and the intranet.
* can also be software applications
- be specialized hardware devices or a combination of hardware and software
- cause problems for online learners who access classes from work
- have an impact on performance
* can help eliminate unauthorized access to a company's network
- restrict traffic to the server
- keep intruders out of corporate networks, if properly used
- potentially block huge amounts of traffic
- provide a secure connection between two networks
* combine hardware and software to block unwanted communications into and out of a network.
* come in all shapes and sizes
- both hardware and software forms
- hardware and software varieties
- several styles and purport to protect the internal network in different ways
- the form of software, hardware, or a combination of both
* consist of one or more routers that accept, reject or edit transmitted information.
* control the flow of traffic between networks.
* create barriers in order to prevent unauthorized access to a network.
* ensure the security of data.
* exist so that no client can obtain access to areas personal to another client.
* filter both incoming and outgoing network traffic
- what comes in and leaves a private server
* focus on entry policy, admissions, and denial of service.
* have a limited ability to examine incoming traffic
- nothing to do with viruses
* help prevent and log network access
- thwart external threats
* is the biggest buzzword in security.
* keep unauthorized users out.
* often allow a wide variety of traffic to go outbound.
* perform security checks by inspecting each passing packet.
* permit desired services coming from the outside, such as Internet email, to pass through.
* prevent network penetration
- savings in one category from being applied toward increased spending in another
* primarily use one of three technologies to filter data.
* protect against administrator errors
- many attacks on the network and system infrastructure
- consumers from hackers and other unwanted activities directed at their PCs
- information in internal computer networks from external access
- internal systems from Internet attacks
- networks from computer hackers
- one part of a network from another
- sensitive internal records from Internet client software snooping
- services from unauthorized access
- system and database information
- the network integrity and only allow legitimate traffic
* provide a centralized location for external security services
- perimeter defense against intrusion from the outside network
- access control and auditing for inter-network traffic
- additional security, either permitting or preventing access outside the firewall
* provides security to the network using userids, passwords, encryption techniques, etc.
* react to security threats when they arise.
* refers to a server's protection against unauthorized access from the Internet.
* relatively generic term for methods of filtering access to a network.
* rely on knowing where traffic is going.
* restrict access at the network layer.
* security barrier set up between a company's internal and outside systems.
* serve as a protective gateway between an organization's internal network and the Internet
- to define the services and access that are permitted to each user
* type of network perimeter defense.
* use hardware and software to protect the business' internal network resources
- one or more mechanisms to enforce policy and provide protection
* usually involve a total block on all outside connections into the network.
* work because only a few machines running a few services are exposed to attack
- by restricting the number and types of communications from one network to another
* work, and have a place in the Internet.
+ Firewall (networking), Other things firewalls are used for, Tunnelling: Software :: Internet security
* Firewalls can provide a secure connection between two networks. This is called 'tunnelling'. The data may be encrypted. It is unencrypted at the other end. Since the firewalls are doing this, the rest of the network is unaware of it. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | actuation | drive | firewall:
Personal firewall
* Most personal firewalls provide an activity log to alert the user to attempted intrusions.
* attempt to protect PCs from various malicious network activities.
* protect ports from being displayed to Internet scanners.<|endoftext|>### act | actuation | drive:
Flash drive
* are used to store any type of data file, or to move data from one computer to another.
* can hold a large amount of information and they are used worldwide.
* use little power , compared to hard drives and have no moving parts.
+ USB flash drive, Good points and bad points, Cons
* Flash drives are small and are easily lost or left behind. This can cause problems of data security
- bad points, Pros
* Flash drives are quite. They are not damaged by scratches and dust. This makes them a good choice to move data from one place to another.
* Some flash drives can keep the data, even if they are put in water. Some data may even survive the washing machine, but this is not a designed feature, and people should not rely on it. Leaving the flash drive out to dry completely before allowing current to run through it has been known to result in a working drive with no future problems.
* Flash drives are available in large sizes. Currently at the start of 2010, the largest size publicly available is 256 gigabytes. This will increase as the technology gets better.
* Flash drives use little power, compared to hard drives and have no moving parts. They are small and easy to carry
- bad points, Security issues
* Flash drives can hold a large amount of information and they are used worldwide. Many users store information on them that is personal, or that should be protected. For this reason, more and more flash drives offer biometrics or encryption to control the access to this data. Users can install passwords on to their flash drives so that when a user tries to open it, the computer prompts the user, to enter a password before they can begin using the device. These programs have proved useful in securing data on flash drives
+ USB flash drive, Uses, As a personal data store/transport: Storage devices
- Backup
* Flash drives are cheaper than many other backup systems
- Brand and product promotion
* Flash drives are very cheap to produce. So, they are sometimes used to promote a product. At most technical trade fairs, many exhibitors will promote their products by giving away free drives
Floppy drive
* Most floppy drives use a slightly smaller power connector than the other drives.
* accept the insertion of a floppy disk into the computer.
* are a simple example of magnetic storage
- disk drives
- much slower than hard drives
- part of a larger category of storage products called removable media drives
* operate very slowly.
* rotate the floppy on a spindle, which is driven by some motor.
Food drive
* are also an important way of helping out the poor.
* can ameliorate hunger. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | actuation | drive:
Hard drive
* Hard Drives are preferred places to store files.
* are also a factor in high case temperature
- located in computers
- mechanical devices that can take several seconds to come up to full speed
- moving parts, they break
- used by computers to store data
* can, however, contain disks.
* die with age.
* have magnetic metal oxides deposited on rigid metal disks for recording data.
* provide the data storage on which all modern computers depend.
* store large amounts of data.
* use magnetic storage media.
* vary greatly in the amount of data they can store.
* wear out over time, they draw lots of power and get very hot.
+ Computer, Computers and waste: Tools
* Very often, they are thrown away within two or three years, because newer programs require a more powerful computer. This makes the problem worse, so computer recycling happens a lot. Many projects try to send working computers to developing nations so they can be re-used and will not become waste as quickly, as most people do not need to run new programs. Some computer parts, such as hard drives, can break easily. When these parts end up in the landfill, they can put poisonous chemicals like lead into the ground water. Hard drives can also contain secret information like credit card numbers. If the hard drive is not erased before being thrown away, an identity thief can get the information off of the hard drive, even if the drive doesn't work, and use it to steal money from the previous owner's bank account.
+ Western Digital: American technology companies :: 1970 establishments
* They make hard drives. Hard drives are used by computers to store data.
Zip drive
* are also useful for transporting large files
- essential for backing up or transporting medium sized amounts of data
- located in desks.
* can transmit data to the computer in various ways. Internal drives have been made with IDE and SCSI interfaces. External drives can use SCSI, parallel port or USB interface
Ejection
* are a part of baseball.
* begins as pressure in the ventricle exceeds that of the aorta and the aortic valve opens.
* is an actuation
Jump
* are descents
- illegal in ice dancing
- increases
- motivated by the goal of scareds
- propulsion
- singles
- the most common cause of spinal injuries among snowboarders
- transitions
* cause jumps.
* come in many shapes and sizes.
* is an actuation
### act | actuation | pull:
Extirpation
* appears to be primarily the result of riparian habitat loss.
* is pull
- the loss of a population, or loss of a species from a particular geographic region
* means the species no longer exists in the wild in Canada, but occurs elsewhere. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | actuation | pull:
Sprain
* Apply ice to the injured area as soon as possible
- moist heat and ice alternately to reduce pain, swelling, and inflammation
* Most sprains heal completely within a few weeks
- occur on the outside part of the ankle, but they can occur on the inside as well
* are a result of torn ligaments, broken blood vessels and inflammation.
* are common in the ankles, knees, wrists and fingers
- injuries that cause ligaments to rip of separate from the bone
- commonly graded according to the extent of the injury
- different from strains
- diseases
- injuries around joints including ligaments and other joint tissue
* are injuries to the ligaments, which connect one bone to another
- is tissue that connects the bones
- most common in the ankles, knees and shoulders and are seen less in wrists and elbows
- ripping
- wrenchs
* can heal correctly with proper care
- vary from just a minor stretch of a ligament to a complete disruption
* describe injury to ligaments, which connect bone to bone, and joint capsule.
* frequently occur at the wrist, typically when people fall and land on an outstretched hand.
* happen to joints.
* involve ligaments and usually include swelling and discoloration.
* occur most often in ankles, knees or fingers, although any joint can be sprained.
* occur when the ligaments are stretched more then normal
- in a joint are damaged
* often affect the ankles, knees, or wrists.
* refer to a stretching of ligaments that connects bone to bone.
* result from suddenly stretching or tearing the ligaments that hold the bones together.
* take longer to heal than strains
- more time to heal and sometimes require that one wear a cast or use crutches
* usually cause swelling and eventual bruising
- occur in the joints of an animal's limbs, causing rapid swelling
* vary from minor tears in a few fibers of ligament to complete tears of entire ligaments.<|endoftext|>### act | actuation | pull | sprain:
Ankle sprain
* Most ankle sprains are temporarily painful but, over time, heal without incident
- undertreated, and people tend to have problems down the road
* are a common musculoskeletal disorder
- occurrence, with the majority involving the lateral ligament complex
- among the most common injuries in sports
* are common and often are treated inadequately
- sports injuries
- common, foot sprains less so
- extremely common
* are less common due to the skate's protective nature
- likely because the foot is directly on the ground, with less chance to twist
* are one of the most common and debilitating injuries for an athlete
- sprains occurring to the dancer
- neglected musculoskeletal injuries
* are the biggest risk factor for future ankle sprains
- most common of all athletic injuries
* are the most common sports injury, and one of the most neglected
- type of sports injury
- very common injuries that result from twisting or rolling the ankle excessively
* can occur from quick starts and stops.
* is probably the most common acute musculoskeletal injury seen in primary care practice.
Toke
* is pull
* take the form of bets placed by the patron for the dealer's benefit.
Transpirational pull
* depends upon the creation of negative pressure.
* takes place at the leaves.
Tug
* are small harbor craft for towing.
* provide direction and even power to combat the forces of the current.
Push
* are forces
- progress
- propulsion
* is an actuation
- the preffered system for staging pressure ulcers | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | actuation:
Shooting
* are homicide
- killing
- shooting
* family oriented sport and families participate in it.
* is also an Olympic sport.
- skill that takes practice, patience and discipline
- probably the most humane approach to controlling porcupine populations
* is the end result of an offensive team play and is the action that produces a goal
- exact opposite of most sports
- most effective way to collect many species
- national sport, and the backbone of the national defense as well
- only individual and team sport where men and women compete together on equal terms
- second most popular international sport behind track and field
- third most popular sport in the Czech Republic
- unlike any other Olympic sport
- used for hunting birds such as grouse or pheasant, rabbits etc
* practical skill.
* provides sport for hunters as well as a source of edible meat.
* Even the firing of artillery, rockets and missiles can be called shooting. A person who is very good at shooting marksman. Shooting can take place in a shooting range or in the field in hunting, in shooting sports or in combat. Shooting is also an Olympic sport.
* very individualistic sport.
+ Shooting, Uses: Summer Olympic sports :: War
+ Sport in the Czech Republic, Individual sports
* Shooting is the third most popular sport in the Czech Republic. Winter sports are also very popular. The country has hosted world championship tournaments for Nordic skiing, ski jumping, and luge. Several Czech competitors have won medals in these kinds of sports internationally, including at the Winter Olympics.
### act | actuation | shooting:
Accidental shooting
* accounts for a miniscule fraction of childhood deaths.
* are all too common and often tragically result in death or permanent injury.
* are, by definition, an unintentional act.
### act | actuation | shooting | gunfire:
Enfilade
* are a class of data structures and their corresponding algorithms
- gunfire
* comes from the French word enfiler , to thread.
* is gunfire
School shooting
* are very rare in Saudi Arabia, a strict Muslim country with a low crime rate.
* are, after all, to teachers and staff workplace violence.
* raise questions about humanity.
Target shooting
* is confined to safe areas
- one of the safest of the outdoor sports
- still a popular indoor and outdoor sport for all ages
* sport at which Canada excels internationally.
Trap shooting
* demanding sport requiring precise accuracy.
* is the fastest way to meet people.
Throw
* are blankets
- movement
- opportunity
- propulsion
- the number of positions to which the poles can be switched
* is an actuation
### act | actuation | throw:
Heave
* are animal diseases
- rises
- spasms
- throws
* is more likely to appear in horses older than nine years
- one of the most common types of allergy observed in horses
- usually a chronic and progressive disease, more common in horses that are kept in stables
* management-related disease, so the treatment is to remove the cause.
* often indicate right ventricular hypertrophy.<|endoftext|>### act | actuation | throw:
Ringer
* are doubles
- throws
+ Noah Ringer, Life and career: American movie actors :: actors from Dallas, Texas :: 1996 births :: Living people
* Ringer is a young taekwondo practitioner who was born and raised in Dallas, Texas. At age 12, he achieved a first-degree black belt rank with the American Taekwondo Association and is proficient with a variety of Eastern weapons. He is part of a taekwondo club, from which he heard about Paramount Pictures' open casting call to play Aang. For his audition, he sent in a homemade video that depicted him showing off his skills in martial arts. After being signed for The Last Airbender movie, he joined the Creative Artists Agency. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | carelessness:
Shortsightedness
* is carelessness
- the malaise of governments and business
* occurs when the eyeball becomes too long or the lens becomes too thick.
### act | carelessness | shortsightedness:
Extravagance
* are excess
- waste
* is both bad manners and bad strategy in business
- shortsightedness
- the mark of rakes
Causation
* Is the physical world causally closed, or are reports of psychokinesis etc.
* exists when changes in one variable make another variable change.
* is an act
- inference of fact to be drawn from other facts and circumstances
- known to operate from chromosome to gonads, and from gonads to hormones
- the order of events<|endoftext|>### act:
Communicating
* Explain the function of flower parts in the reproduction process.
* are physical events
- social events
* are used for conversations
- education
- negotiation
- talking
- understanding
- writing
* assertively style that can work for a variety of messages and situations.
* cause collaboration
- confusion
- progress
- responses
- static
* effectively learning process.
- active process that involves both the speaker and the listener
- something that all animals, including humans, do
* is the exchange of information
- vehicle through which two people connect with each other
* often means leaving notes or labeling things so the blind person knows what they are.
* quickly is what instant messaging is supposed to be all about.
* two-way process, in which both parties benefit.
* wirelessly can take a toll on battery life.
### act | communicating:
Allusion
* are communicating
- mentions
* is used in hopes of triggering an association to portray a meaning.
* reference
- in literature to a familiar person, place or event
Creative act
* occur in the perfection of action in ordinary circumstances also.
* ritual which in itself search of one s own being.
Criminal act
* are actions
- criminal acts, regardless of intent
- dangerous activities
- human activities
- infrequent both in early and later ages
- normally non violent and very few criminals have guns
- the responsibility of the judicial system and are beyond the scope of arbitration
* can rapidly turn violent.
### act | decree:
Ban
* decree
* are made by the community, usually for project disruption. I thought I explained it well enough since most know that the community can not 'block' someone, but here is my revised response. A block technical measure used by admins to stop an account from editing. It is decided by the community.
* are permanent.<|endoftext|>### act | decree:
Pragmatic
* deals with acts of speech, or why people use the language they use it.
* field of linguistics studying comunication.
* investigates a linguistic utterance as a communicative action.
* is the study of linguistic acts and the context in which they are performed
- communication, of actual language use in specific situations
- meaning in context
* is the study of the underlying assumptions that one makes
- ways in which context affects meaning
* refers to actually using language to communicate.
Equalization
* are acts.
* helps turn a vocal sound into something less than human.
* remains a fundamental principle of government finance.
### act | equalization:
Histogram equalization
* has the same effect on pixel values.
* produces an equal number of pixels for each level of brightness in the image.
Escape
* are avoidance
- discharge
- diversion
- plants
* is an act
### act | escape:
Breakout
* are video games.
* is an addvanced form of pong
- escape
* occurs when the price of a stock or level of an index passes the neckline. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | escape:
Exodus
* Greek word meaning way out, or departure.
* are departures
- escapes.
* means 'going out' in Latin. It is about how the Hebrew people were led out of Egypt by God. Moses, their leader, hears God's words and in turn tells to the Israelites. Exodus ends with God's laws and his instructions on how to build a holy container called the Ark of the Covenant
* is an escape
* is the oldest book of the Bible
- time of the night light
- world leader in web server hosting
Forfeit
* are acts
- loss
- penalties
* is an act
* occur when a team fails to field a designated number of players.
### act | forfeiture:
Civil forfeiture
* allows government to seize and sell property suspected of involvement in a crime
- the government to profit from black market assets through criminal windfall
* are thus a substantial source of revenue for both federal and local governments.
Criminal forfeiture
* operates as punishment for a crime.
* punitive action by the government against the offender.
Group action
- events
* refers to a specific industry group.
* takes the form of a fitting together of individuals actions.
### act | group action:
Attendance
* also plays a key role in the incidence of juvenile crime.
* group action
* is an important factor in the discipline of mathematics
- companies
- frequencies
### act | group action | attendance:
Turnout
* are attendance
- electromechanical devices that sometimes fail to operate correctly
- gathering
- part of roads
- parts
- rotation
* is attendance<|endoftext|>### act | group action:
Decolonization
* generally means independence from the European rule.
* is the culmination of national-liberation struggles, of whom some win and some lose
- veritable creation of new men.
* Sometimes, a colony may not get full freedom, but may become part of other country or even the part of the country which colonized it. This is also decolonization. In some, decolonization may result after non-violent discussion. In a relatively small number of cases, decolonization happens only after armed struggle and revolt. Decolonization is different from the break-up of traditional empires like the Mongol Empire or the Ottoman Empire. Decolonization generally means independence from the European rule. Major decolonization occurred in the 20th century. It began with the independence of Pakistan and India in 1947 from the British Empire. Soon thereafter, many countries of Africa became independent from the rule of many countries of Europe<|endoftext|>### act | group action:
Democratization
* also goes far beyond the mere act of voting.
* is fundamental to the process of economic and political reform
- one means to erase social injustices
- part and parcel of a common movement for a really democratic world order
- the work of a generation or more
* long and complex struggle, constantly marked by advances and setbacks.
* long-term process.
* reduces the value of shared resources.
* requires an active, effective civil society
- group leaders to engage in compromise and negotiation<|endoftext|>### act | group action:
Due process
* are group actions
- human rights
* concept of fundamental fairness.
* corrupted process.
* is affected by the gravity of deprivation
- an important part of the American justice system
* is the application of laws to make sure that an individual's rights are being protected
- learning goals a faculty member defines for a course or program
* legal concept for determining what is fair and what violates constitutional rights.
* refers to protection from arbitrary punishment
- violations of the Sixth Amendment, such as the right to a speedy trial
* term that essentially means procedural fairness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | group action | due process | demurrer:
Entrapment
* are defense.
* compresses the nerve, causing pain, burning and tingling on the sole of the foot.
* generally occur at the interface between moving and stationary objects.
* involves pressure on the nerve where it passes through a narrow structure.
* occurs when an individual was induced into the criminal act by a law enforcement officer.
Dispossession
* due process
* persistent theme of African-American life and literature.
* refers primarily to loss of land.
Foreclosure
* are at an all time high in California
- proceeding
- simply homes that have been repossessed by the bank or by a government agency
* happens when a lien holder's rights are violated.
* is the legal process by which a county acquires title to a property
- method by which lenders repossess and dispose of the collateral
* legal process by which a local government takes title to a property.
* occur on other types of property after two years. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | group action | due process:
Hearing
* All hearing is is the ability to feel vibrations.
* are modality
- opportunity
- sessions
* can be both of the ear and the mind
- return after some months in some, but others remain permanently deaf
* comes by the soul.
* critical part of a child's development.
* crucial sense in water, where vision is restricted.
* depends on a series of events that change sound waves in the air into electrical signals.
* has a major impact on learning and speaking.
* helps children learn about the world and communicate
- to read, appreciate music and to receive warnings of approaching harm
- with language, social, and emotional development
* involves a set of intricate brain processes
- the detection of mechanical inputs, the vibrations produced by sound waves
* is acute by three or four weeks and kittens learn to determine what sounds mean
- for noise
- in some owls for prey locating
* is all about the vibrations of sound as they hit our ears
* is also present at birth and responses to loud sounds have been recorded in the womb
- well developed but is used primarily for detecting predators
- an important sense for most animals
- birds' second most important sense and their ears are funnel-shaped to focus sound
- both physical and spiritual
- connected with space
- extraordinarily acute, as is eyesight - even in daylight
- highly developed and important to their survival
- impaired in up to one half of all elderly persons
- important to most birds
* is measured in decibels, which is the degree of loudness required to hear the sound
- units called decibels
- more internal than sight
- naturally complex and stimulation varies when the fetus changes positions in the uterus
- restored in some children who experience hearing problems
* is the act of perceiving audible sounds with the ear and passive act
- area that the devil usually attacks first
- detection of sound
- experience of what presents itself through the ears, of sound
* is the first sense to develop completely in babies
- stage of listening
- step to listening
- mechanical, physiological, non-selective process of receiving sound waves by the ear
- most important sense to many marine mammals
- neural perception of sound energy
- perception of certain vibrations of bodies which give rise to sound waves
- physical process whereas listening is the mental process
- sense of sound that comes into our ears
- thought to be the last of the senses to fade
- usually somewhat compromised during an ear infection
- vital to language development
- vitally important to the development of oral language skills
- well developed and moles twitter and squeal while they feed or fight
* plays an important role in social and emotional development.
* rabbit's most vital sense, hence the large upright ears.
* represents the primary sense organ - hearing happens involuntarily.
* requires neural processing that sorts and integrates the rich fabric of natural stimuli.
* rhymes increases a child's awareness of the sounds that make words similar.
* seems to be the keenest sense in hedgehogs.
* sense that is often taken for granted.
* sounds in words is the best predictor of problems learning early reading skills.
* starts with the outer ear.
* takes place in our brain.
+ Sense, The sensory system of animals:
### act | group action | due process | hearing:
Binaural hearing
* requires less volume, which makes listening more comfortable and less tiring.
* works like a stereo sound system.
Good hearing
* helps create a good sense of balance.
* is especially important when learning to speak.
* is essential for babies to learn to talk
- to the social and intellectual development of infants and young children
- extremely important for the development of speech and language skills
- provided by two large external ear canals at the back of the head | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | group action | due process | hearing:
Impaired hearing
* affects more older adults than any other chronic condition.
* is more prevalent than poor eyesight
- one of the most common causes of language delay
Loss of hearing
* can affect speech development
- lead to problems in communicating and coping in daily life
* denies people sensory experiences that contribute to the quality of their lives.
* gradual thing and mostly irreversible.
* means total and permanent loss in both ears.
Judicial decision
* are case law.
* due process
Lawsuit
* are civil proceedings, as distinguished from criminal proceedings
- court cases
* cause stress.
### act | group action | due process | legal proceeding:
Legal process
* are legal proceeding.
* is all about how law shapes politics and politics shapes law
- an essential part of the democratic process<|endoftext|>### act | group action | due process:
Naturalization
* allows foreign-born residents to become citizens.
* are borrowing
- introductions
- the result of imported plants used as ornamentals
* do exist for unmarried women.
* is about navigating and separating.
* is the conferring, by any means, of citizenship upon a person after birth
- formal acquisition of obtaining United States citizenship
- gradual evolution of the stranger to the nature of the native
* means different things to different people.
* permits individuals to obtain a U.S. passport and to vote in U.S. elections.
* requires total assimilation, the total destruction of our ethnic identity.
* two-step process for becoming a citizen of the United States.
Notification
* allows people to protect themselves from harmful chemicals.
* due process
* is requests
- the process by which a data controller's details are added to the register
- vital in efforts to prevent or control the spread of infection
Internationalisation
* also increases the possibilities that people have.
* can have negative connotations, e.g. aggressive recruiting of foreign students.
* leads to the dismantling of trade barriers and greater competition.<|endoftext|>### act | group action:
Internationalization
* allows software to be adapted to any language and cultural convention.
* also brings direct repercussions to our cultures and lifestyles.
* are group actions.
* big issue when formatting numbers.
* is about nations working together for the same goals.
* is an idea which never worked in history
- important trend in economics
- underlying part of an application's infrastructure and architecture
- in the Swedish genes
- thus part of globalization
+ Globalization, Definition: Politics
* Herman E. Daly has said that there is an important difference between internationalization and globalization. Internationalization is about nations working together for the same goals. These are things like treaties, alliances, and other international agreements. Globalization is about making national borders less important for those who want to buy or sell things around the world.
Legalization
* is about taxation
- an act of neglect and ignorance
- essentially the process of authen-ticating a legal document
- small government
- surrender to immorality
* means that the state imposes regulations under which women can be prostituted.
* refers to some form of state controlled prostitution.
Military action
* is dictated by politics and politicians
- used to accomplish political goals
+ Police action
* Police action' is a term for the use of military forces without declaring war. Many military actions are called police actions. People do not declare war commonly any more.
Rivalry
* Rivalries are important in all sports.
* develops out of sibling conflict as a result of parental intervention.
* does seem to decrease as children get older.
* is also endemic to the nation-state system for psychological reasons | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | group action | social activity:
Economic behavior
* Most economic behavior involves multiple behavioral relationships.
* social activity.<|endoftext|>### act | group action:
Social control
* begins in terms of force and authoritarianism.
* define deviance, just as victims define criminals, according to social attributes.
* express definitions of deviance by sanctioning people deviant.
* includes all of the processes by which people define and discipline deviant behavior.
* is exercised through religion.
* is the flip side of deviant behavior
- reproduction of the culture of dominant groups in a society
- when religion encourages the people to comply to social norms
### act | group action | social demobilisation:
Disarmament
* is demobilisation
* reduces tension and thereby the threat of war.
Social denationalization
* A denationalization is social control
* Denationalization is an economic and speedy way to determine rightful ownership.
Social enculturation
* An enculturation is social control
* Enculturation is the process of learning one's first and original culture.
Socialisation
* is the preparation of individuals for roles in a culture.
* is the process by which culture is transmitted from one generation to another
- of introducing a variety of people and animals<|endoftext|>### act | group action:
Socialization
* Provide a definition of socialization.
* Shows how the agents of socialization influence the self throughout the life cycle.
* also plays a large role in forming habitual academic performance.
* begins in the home
- the day the pup comes home
- with a blank slate and constructs both nationality and citizenship
* continues throughout the life cycle.
* demands that eating, sleeping, and elimination conform to acceptable patterns.
* ensures that individuals internalize norms and values as they grow up.
* has nothing to do with going to new places.
* imprints nationality and state citizenship on both newborn citizens and immigrants.
* includes exercising, playing, brushing, and loving our in-house animals.
* involves introducing the puppy to new people and animals.
* is an imperfect process.
* is an important aspect of police dog training
- raising a kitten
- ongoing process of changes and additions in a puppy's life
- crucial for the young bonobos to be psychologically healthy and well-developed
- examined from infancy through adolescence
- important for any pet but it s especially critical for large, guardian breeds
- meetings
- one of the most important traits to look for when purchasing a pup or older dog
* is the growing relationship between the child and the world
- key to preventing fears
- major source of an individual s values
- means by which people learn how to behave as adults in their society
- primary function of schooling
* is the process of shaping behavior of the child
- teaching a dog how to cope with and behave well in a human world
* is very important for young dogs
- in the workplace
* key factor for adaptation and survival.
* lifelong process.
* means introducing the puppy to new people and to other animals.
* plays a big part in the Indian life.
* process of learning that many humans can be trusted.
* refers to all learning regardless of setting or age of the individual.
* relates to the extent to which one considers the rules binding upon oneself.
* starts at birth, with being handled everyday.
* teaches puppies how to behave and greet other dogs and their owners.
* therefore plays a very important role in the child's life.
* very underated characteristic of teambuilding. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | group action:
Truancy
* adversely affects the entire community.
* gateway to crime.
* has a damaging impact on the educational and life chances of children
- dramatic practical and monetary impact on society
* is absence from school without permission from school officials or parents.
* is an act of skipping all or any part of the student day
- unexcused absence that is by the student's own choice and neglect
- considered a deterrent to academic success
- illegal absence from school for any portion of a school day or more
- linked to delinquency, drug involvement and dropping out of school
* is often a warning sign that a student is having trouble
- an indicator of problems within the home
- one of the factors that contributes to a risk for future delinquency
- the number one predictor among boys of future criminal activities
* often results in delinquent behavior that involves violence.
* results when the student is absent from school or leaves school grounds without permission.
* violation of New York State rules and regulations regarding school attendance.
* warning signal that a child is in trouble, and is often a gateway to crime.
Inaccuracy
* includes compression of distance.
* is inherent when voting gets down to the fifth decimal place
- quality
* leads to confusion and chaos.
* occurs when there is lack of concentration.
### act | lavage:
Ductal lavage
* examines cells from inside the milk ducts, where most breast cancers originate.
* involves using a catheter to draw cells out of milk ducts, where most cancers begin.
* is premised on the fact that most breast cancers originate in the ductal systems.
* minimally invasive method of collecting samples of milk ductal cells.
* new way to obtain samples of cells from the milk ducts of the breast.
Gastric lavage
* collects the respiratory secretions which are swallowed at night.
* is administered through a nasogastric tube.
* is indicated after ingestion of food or water contaminated with mustard gas
Negligence
* amounts to fault for purposes of an offence.
* occurs daily at hospitals and in doctor's offices.
* occurs when somebody fails to take proper care in their actions
- unreasonable risk is created
* refers to the absence of, or failure to exercise, proper or ordinary care.
### act | negligence:
Comparative negligence
* applies to constructive fraud.
* is negligence
Human negligence
* can severely damage freshwater ecosystems.
* is also another key factor in the downfall of the cicada.
### act | obstetrical delivery:
Caesarean delivery
* can lead to post-natal depressive symptoms.
* is an obstetrical delivery
Caesarean section
* are surgical removals.
* is the most effective method of delivering a healthy lamb if dystocia occurs
- standard way lab animals give birth, as it used to be for women
Cesarean section
* are three to four times more likely for pregnant women with diabetes
- very risky for guinea pigs and the survival rate for the mother is poor
* is an obstetrical delivery
- the method of choice for delivery in cases of a major degree of placenta previa<|endoftext|>### act:
Play
* can involve grab
- laughs
* ends with rests
- stops
* helps fawns strengthen their muscles and reflexes that are critical for escaping predators.
* is actions
- diversion
- dramatic work
- fun
- located in theaters
- magazines
* is motivated by the goal of fun
- play
- tos
- shows
- touch
- use
* promotes muscle development and physical coordination.
+ Play (theatre)
* Plays often show conversations between people. A play is usually watched, rather than being read.
* Plays can be very interesting because they can be understood in many different ways. Modern directors can direct plays by Shakespeare, and these old plays seem modern now, too. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | play:
Active play
* builds strong muscles, which are basic to good health and posture.
* can help reduce mild feelings of depression.
* is one of the earliest behaviors predictive of a healthy lifestyle.
Fair play
* involves a set of corresponding rights and obligations.
* is the virtue of human society as well as of all sports.
* teaches that sport is an ethical pursuit, one which builds character and shapes attitudes.
Fantasy play
* is an extremely positive way for a child to develop a healthy emotional life
- important and sometimes private part of children's development
* powerful learning tool that children use to find who they are.
Free play
* encourages young children to communicate, exercise free choice, and gain confidence.
* is important for young children, also.
Outdoor play
* encourages learning for growing children and is critically important to development.
* is also integral to overall child development
- healthy even in winter
- provided for children to ensure they receive physical exercise
Role play
* Most role plays involve two characters interacting.
* are generally short in length.
* is life training in all-important social skills
- used extensively as a learning tool
* popular method in language-learning classrooms for a number of reasons.
* social phenomenon, and requires some thought and insight.
Rough play
* concern in ALL of basketball.
* is commonplace in professional hockey.
Social play
* includes chasing, mock fights, and sexual play.
* powerful tool for teaching communication skills, displaying empathy, and sharing.
Unstructured play
* declines faster for girls than for boys as they age.
* is one of the most important parts of a child's development.
Playing
* can involve cheats
- education
- injuries
- laughings
- running
* causes competitiveness
- enjoyment
- fatigue
- fitnesses
- fun
- relaxation
- satisfaction
- skinned knees
- winnings
- wins
* is actions
- information transfers
- musical performance
- physical events
- recreational activities
* is used for children
- exercises
- leisure time
- pleasure
- squirrels
- teaching
- wasting time
Political action
* are actions.
* focuses on states and is guided by national interests and respect for sovereignty.
* is the foundation for change
- means to improving our daily lives
* starts with personal self-liberation.
Proximate act
* are the things that operators and inspectors do, for example.
* have two characteristics.<|endoftext|>### act:
Rejection
* are a part of everyday life.
* basic principle of life.
* can send a child into a time of loneliness and self-imposed isolation.
* fact of life, just like birth, taxes and death.
* happens in all aspects of life.
* is acts.
* is an act
- excruciating form of pain
- one of the most painful experiences a child goes through
- part of the body s natural reaction to foreign invaders
- situations
- speech acts
* is the absence of acceptance
- body's natural reaction to transplanted organs and tissues
- leading cause of graft loss after pancreas transplantation
- process of the activation and accumulation of T-cells in the organ
- root of many of the personality problems in people
- single greatest pain any human being experiences
- ultimate form of death
- worst thing that can happen to a person
* major hazard of organ or tissue transplantation.
* normal reaction of the body to a foreign object.
* part of the process of finding the right partner.
* term used when the body reacts against the transplanted kidney.
### act | rejection:
Acute rejection
* can often lead to the loss of the transplanted organ.
* happens to almost all patients who receive organ transplants.
* is an inflammation of the transplanted kidney
- cell mediated and results in myocardial dysfunction in more severe cases
* primary cause of death in heart transplant recipients. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | rejection:
Chronic rejection
* is characterized by a narrowing and obliteration of the small bronchioles.
* major factor contributing to organ shortage.
Excommunication
* are rejection.
* involves cutting a person off from membership, fellowship, and communion.
* is for heretics and abortionists
- mandatory for murder and almost always required for incest
- resorted to only in cases of offenses aggravated by persistent impenitence
* penalty specified in canon law for certain grave offenses.
Expatriation
* general topic associated with leaving one's home country.
* is rejection
- the voluntary act of relinquishing one's citizenship
Hyperacute rejection
* is thought to be primarily due to activation of the complement system.
* occurs immediately post-operatively and is secondary to preformed antibodies
- within minutes to hours after renal transplantation
* severe reaction that is seen within minutes of transplantation.
Residency
* is acts
- an act
- positions
- situations
* is the difference between being a medical school graduate and being a doctor
- district wherein the parent or legal guardian resides
* is the time when they develop both professionally and personally
- learn the comprehensive responsibility of the physician
* time of transition between life as a student and life as a professional.
Retrieval
* is an act
- memory
* refer to the actual attempt to obtain the eggs from the ovarian follicles.
Sacrifice
* are concerned with the feelings of devotion and longing
- conducive to material prosperity and spiritual growth
- films
- killing
- loss
* can include food, drink, tobacco, and human beings.
### act | sacrifice:
Animal sacrifice
* Most animal sacrifices require z'rika, sprinkling the blood.
* are commandments in the Torah
- common, and belief in the power of black magic is widespread
- unable to remit sins
* is no more cruel than slaughtering animals for food
- one of the customary ways of pleasing many of the gods of Nepal
- practiced at birth, marriage, and death rites
- rare in Pagan religions
Human sacrifice
* can function, temporarily, as a ley line when power is needed.
* very important part of a ceremony. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act:
Sin
* All sin is an act of poor judgment
- punishable by death
- rooted in unbelief
- leads to death and the Bible says that all have sinned
* All sins are attempts to fill voids
- due to the evil soul
- tend to be addictive, and the terminal point of addiction is damnation
* Every sin disordered act which has an effect on the sinner.
* IS sin IS sin.
* Is a concept that was invented by religious leaders.
* Some sins are sins of weakness
- emerge from delusion, either internal or external
- have a greater affect on society than other sins
* abounds in the world, but sin has always abounded in the world.
* affects both the body and the mind.
* also appears in attitudes and dispositions and feelings
- builds walls between people
- has the capacity to multiply
- involves the omission of duty
- is the cause of the bad things people do to each other
- kills the body soul and spirit
- poisonous worm
* alters the ability to have loving relationships.
* always brings suffering to the sinner
- tension, strife, and conflict
- ends in violence
- has consequences for both the present life as well as the next
- involves some act of disobedience or selfishness
- means suffering
- produces death
* always results in death
- human misery
* applies to every human being.
* are just choices or events
- personal, and they affect each individual in particular
- the specific thoughts, words, and actions that sin produces
- what give a spirit power and freedom to operate
* becomes an unwillingness to become accepting and affirming of any and all behavior.
* begins with a thought, and results in an act
- being selfish in our heart and results in disobedience in our behavior
- evil desire
* begins with the internal acts of lusting and creating sexual fantasies
- thought process and leads to actions later on
* benumbs the hearing and tends to make men deaf.
* blinds the mirror of the soul.
* breakdown of relationship.
* brings about the penalty of pain, suffering, and eternal death
- corruption, disease, destruction and death into our world
- death and death brings vanity to man's existence
- trauma in person's lives
* by-product of faithful worship
- mortality
* can become a spiritual anesthetic that clouds our reasoning and paralyzes our lives
- change peoples' minds and personalities
- give pleasure, but it never produces or leads to happiness
- kill the soul and deliver the sinner into satanic slavery
- lead to other sins, and to vices by the repetition of the same sins
* can only grow when it is hidden in the darkness
- happen if first there is love
* carries an Eternal death penalty
- the death penalty
* cause alienation between the people
- the various types of corruption to occur in the land
* causes a dark blot in our souls that alters our thinking
- all kinds of destruction and division
- men to either abuse their role as leader, or to abandon it
- pain, curse, death and judgment
- sadness in our world
- slavery, degradation, guilt, and fear
- stress in many ways
- suffering and death
* certain defect of action, a lack of proportion, of order, or opportuneness.
* changes our entire lives and perspective of life.
* choice, and if there is no choice then there is no sin.
* comes in many forms.
* complex concept.
* condition before it is an action
- or a state of being
* condition, a predilection.
* constant in the human race, and so certain patterns of behavior are predictable.
* contagion that is logically prior to any specific act.
* controls every part of man
- the members of one s body, the deeds of the body
* corrupting, killing, foreign substance in the soul of the individual and the church.
* creates an insatiable appetite that leaves one continually in a state of unfulfillment.
* crime - a felony.
* dark and slavish reality.
* deliberate and willful act of commission or ommission.
* destroys lives and consigns people to eternal misery.
* determines where one is going to spend eternity.
* disease, a moral disease, a disease of the inner man
- sickness
* divides minds into two halves.
* do differ in their seriousness and are rightly evaluated according to their gravity.
* does terrible things to people.
* dwells in and is manifested in the carnal believer.
* emerges out of a lack of belief in the possibility of positive outcomes.
* entails spiritual disability.
* enters subconscious minds repeatedly creating cycles of regeneration.
* equates to selfishness.
* exacts a penalty and that penalty is death.
* exists apart from law
- because there divine standard
- every time a child goes hungry
* exists every time a child is denied a quality education
- hurt, molested or forgotten
- in every person
- only in individuals
* failure to live with godly character and motives.
* faith word.
* filter in our mind that distorts truth.
* first exists in the mind and our heart's desire from an external or internal stimulus.
* form of insanity.
* fruit that comes only from that root.
* give rise to social situations and institutions that are contrary to the divine goodness.
* goes through every part of our lives.
* great evil because it causes innocent suffering.
* has a death penalty
- an effect upon the total person, every part
* has many faces
- heads, like the mythological Hydra
- no individuality, so that no one can say of it that someone created it
- spiritual, emotional, social and also physical consequences
- the power to make prisoners of everyone
- two effects on every person's life
* hereditary problem and all humans have it.
* horrendous thing that deserves eternal punishment in hell.
* impairs our seeing and hearing
- the sight, and works toward blindness
* includes our alienation from nature.
* involves a choice or decision that one freely makes
- sort of infinite guilt because of the infinite dignity of the One offended
- personal responsibility and has real consequences
* is 'younger' than the goodness of creation
- Sin is Sin is Sin
- a. a pervasive sickness in every person
* is about our deepest feelings and motivations
- accumulated if one gives up truth and tells lies
- actually an ancient term used in archery
- also a defilement of one's conscience
- always a case of failing to put godly wisdom into practice
* is an act of disingenuity and unkindness
- in-fidelity and unfaithfulness to the covenant responsibility
- attitude, sins are actions
- empire wishing to control our lives
* is an evil force
- that is dangerous because it is deceptive
- infatuation, a craze
- infinite thing
- intruder in the earth
- invader in the human experience
- inward inclination
- offence against reason, truth and right conscience
- un-natural intrusion into human nature
* is another name for rebellion, and death consequence of sin
- word for separation, alienation and estrangement
- any unrighteousness
- anything that is thought or done that is unloving
- at the root of all human problems, dilemmas and confusion
- atoned for by the blood of the lamb
- basically an act of un-love
- behavior that prevents a person from living out their potential for human being-ness
* is both personal and communal
- buried in baptism
- but an element or attribute of choice or intention, or it is intention itself
- cancer of the soul
- caused by self-deception
- compared to fire in the Bible
- conceived in flesh before it is born in the light of day
- condemned on the cross whereas the sinner is condemned in hell
- dark, destructive, and demonic
- darkness, and makes dark
- deceitful and all that continue to live in sin are deceiving themselves
- declared to be sin
* is defined first in actions
- from the human point of view as a disordered use of creation
- simply as ignorance, a veil that needs to be lifted in order to uncover the truth
* is described as sin in one s members
- in terms of being spiritually dirty
- more in terms of something that messes our lives up
- developed through psychological conditioning with power as the positive reinforcement
- distinguished into that which is common to all men, and the personal sin of each individual
- dominance, manipulation, control of others, and desires for supremacy
- done in darkness both spiritual and, many times, literal
- egotism and selfcenteredness
- empty calories
- everywhere, in everyone, and causes people to perish forever
- evil in the nature of it
- falling short of the mark
- greed, injustice, intolerance
- immorality
- impossible to cast off by one's self
* is in essence a denial of Godliness
- the world because death is in the world
- inherent in humans
- innate because of our being born in sin and shaped in iniquity
- institutional as well as individual
- involved in every divorce
- lawlessness
- like a disease that was passed down to all men
- love that is misdirected
- lust concieved in the heart
- mankind's ultimate disease
* is moral and spiritual pollution
- cancer, spiritual insanity
* is more than breaking a law, it defection from the one who gives the law
- cheating, lying, immoral behaviour, etc
- lying, stealing, or living an immoral life
- mother and father of death
- much more of a noun than a verb
- often the cause for a believer having mental problems
- overcome by confession, repentance, forgiveness and reconciliation
- part of our inherited nature
- personal, but it is also social
- pictured as sitting upon a throne and reigning over mankind
- powerful and brings death
* is powerful as a desert breath that drinks up all spiritual dews
- poison in the heart
- promoted by the most corrupted persons
- psychological self-abuse
- rebellion against the highest authority
- rebelliousness and disobedience
- rebelliousness, pride and self-interest
- responsible for human misery
- self-centered, imperious, indifferent to the welfare of others
- self-centeredness
- separation from unity
- shame and guilt-inducing
* is sin and a murderer is no more guilty than a liar or cheat
- never brings happiness only unhappiness
- because man person
- just as night is dark
- whenever committed
* is sin, because it hinders and blocks that celebration
- no matter who, what, when, where, why, or how it is committed
- plain and simple
- whatever any mere mortal cares to think about it
- whether it be physical murder, or spiritual murder
- slavery, the loss of our freedom
- social and institutional, as well as personal
* is something external
- like lying, cheating, stealing, fighting, or disobeying parents
- man is born with
- that has passed to all human beings, because all sinned, as the quotation says
- spiritual cancer - it eats away and destroys
- spiritual, as much as holiness is
- still sin and love is still the opposite of sin
- suposed to enter into humanity through the seed of man
- that same kind of constant negative force that spoils our best aim at life
* is that which causes suffering
- destroys life
- divides life from life and prevents community
- is self-destructive
* is the act or state of a sinner, as thought is the act or state of the thinker
- active principle of every division
* is the antithesis of civilization
- virtue
- barrier that gets in the way of love
* is the cause of all evils
- the bad troubles and suffering in our world
- destruction and death in life
- our inhumanity
- trouble in our lives
- central problem of human existence
- condition which produces sins as individual acts
- consort of death, and everywhere there is sin there is death
- death-power
- devil's first-born
- disease of the soul
- downside of the gift of freedom
- excrement of the soul, the superfluity or garbage of naughtiness, the devil s vomit
* is the failure to abide by their rules
- recognize the sacrifice of the cross
- first negative that is mentioned in the Bible
- force that moves in the members of our bodies and fights against what is true and good
- fundamental problem of human life
- gravest of all evils
* is the great destroyer of man's soul and of society
- infection of the soul
* is the greatest enemy of mankind
- tragedy the human family has ever faced
- impossible that happened
* is the most deadly poison ever to invade our world and our lives
- wicked thing in the world
- nature of hell
- one and only thing of which sinful man is the total cause
* is the only force in subconscious minds
- thing that demands expiation by blood
- prison of the spirit
* is the problem in each of our lives
- of the world
- punishment for sin
* is the reason for physical death
- the horror of hell
- why there is pain, misery, and death in our land
* is the refusal of that gift of life and call to growth
- to grow, to love, to be loved
* is the result of human agendas
- ignorance, weakness, and indifference
- man's own choice
- strong temptation
* is the root cause of all suffering
- of all social upheaval
- seed from which a problem pregnancy grows
- sinister motivation everybody has for everything they do, a part of human personality
- stuff that messes with our hearts
- transgression of The Law
* is the transgression of the ceremonial law
- law, or lawlessness
- ugliest thing in the world
- ultimate bondage, worse then any handicap, physical or mental
- willful breaking of the law, or rules of conduct
- work of darkness, and darkness is the wages of sin
* is to be conquered by being made to feel the power of goodness
- found in every part of our existence
* is transgression of the Torah of Yahweh
- law but it is failure rather than rebellion
- transmitted from one generation to another but only by teaching and example
- truly a bondage leading to death
- ultimately selfishness
- unbelief in the revealed Word of God
- universal because of imitation
* is what causes a soul to be lost
- feels good to corrupted persons
- is wrong with the world
- made it necessary for the natural to be sacrificed
- whatever obscures the soul
- willful violation of the laws of morality and religion
* is, for one thing, a preoccupation with self.
* keeps people from praying.
* kind of sickness.
* leads to darkness and eventual death
- death and destruction
- judgement and death
- pain, misery and suffering
* lies at the root of most of society's difficulties today
- only in hurting other people unnecessarily
* life-dominating force which disrupts hopes, dreams, and expectations.
* lot like the calcified cholesterol that clogs the arteries of the heart.
* means to do bad things.
* mental creation.
* occurs inside the heart and mind of people.
* occurs when one yields to temptation
- the conscience is violated
* opens individuals and groups to the bondage of demonic principalities and powers.
* part of our nature
- the internal structure of our lives
* personal act.
* pollutes our souls and destroys our spiritual heart.
* power operating always.
* power, a perversion of good.
* powerful force that leads to death.
* produces a sense of guilt
- spots, stains and wrinkles in the soul
* provides relief for stress, loneliness, failure.
* queer thing.
* refers to our corrupt nature.
* relational problem.
* reproach to any people.
* return to the law of the jungle.
* returns the sine of the angle in radians.
* rules the world, enslaves and controls people.
* self-centered attitude.
* selfish attitude in our heart.
* separates the sinner from the Savior.
* severing of relationships.
* significant part of the human experience.
* sin, whether big or small, it is still a sin.
* spiritual burden
- problem, and therefore, it requires spiritual solutions
* state, a condition.
* stems from a psychologically conditioned force in subconscious minds.
* still remains in man's nature after justification and regeneration.
* stirs up all kinds of deep emotions within a person.
* stubbornly pervasive part of the human condition.
* takes on many forms
- the glory of mankind away and replaces it with death
* tends to total and universal selfishness.
* terminal disease.
* transcends physiological and psychological, because sin originates in the spirit of a person.
* wreaks marriages and destroys lives.
* wrecks nations and homes and individuals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act | sin:
Confession of sin
* can only be sincere if it is preceded by the process of conversion.
* is accompanied by acts appropriate to repentance.
* normal and vitally important part of spiritual life.
* sine qua non in the Christian way of life.
Ira
* allow money to grow without being eroded by taxes.
* are long-term investments
- retirement savings tools with a variety of options
- tax-advantaged accounts that can be set up for retirement or educational purposes
* invest much of their funds in stocks.
* is sin<|endoftext|>### act | sin:
Original sin
* doctrine about human origins and human nature, both now subjects of science.
* has to do with our state, that is, our condition
- vim coactivam , the power of a law which binds the subject to allegiance
* is caused by the semen as instrumental cause
- creed
- religious doctrines
* is the cause of all actual sin
- in- nate depravity and corruption of the nature common to all mankind
- source of personal sin
- transmitted as leprosy is conveyed to the children of lepers
* means that even the best people are driven by a mixture of motives some good, some bad
- the child is born genetically selfish
* property of the young.
* spiritual blindness, a corruption of the human soul and mind.
* thing common to all infants descended from Adam by ordinary generation.
Personal sin
* gives demonic influences legal rights to our lives.
* is the symptom of a disease.
Public sin
* are to be confessed to the public.
* require public confession and repentance.
Venial sin
* allows charity to subsist, even though it offends and wounds it.
* are light offences or daily faults mainly committed against charity.
Speech act
* are acts
- fuzzy concepts which show both diachronic and synchronic variation
- human activities
* is an act
### act | speech act:
Bidding
* are information transfers
- invitation
* game that is played in two parts.
* speech act
### act | speech act | bidding:
Competitive bidding
* can mean a significant increase in funds for education.
* is employed to ensure responsive, reasonable and firm prices
- the foundation for purchasing by agencies of the state of Texas
* takes the form of guessing the maximum price others are willing to pay.
### act | speech act | denunciation:
Damnation
* is denunciation
- judgment upon the sinner
- spiritual death, as a contraposition to the physical death of the body
- states
* is the lot of all people, whether virtuous or evil-doers
- mirror image of sanctification
- opposite of salvation
- video games
Disclosure
* are one of nature's little known laws of communication
- speech acts
* is the dissemination of material information to the marketplace.
* refers to access, release, or transfer of personal information about individuals.
### act | speech act | disclosure:
Public disclosure
* forceful incentive for ensuring the proper monitoring of cleanups.
* is any publication or presentation of the invention
- at the heart of the system of trust that underlie all our financial markets
- intended to save lives, prevent pollution, and protect property
- the only way to keep officials behaving in the interest of the public
Resignation
* is despair
- documents
* is voluntary employment termination initiated by an employee
- termination of employment by an employee
* synonym for defeat.
### act | speech act | resignation:
Abdication
* is resignation
- the act of formally giving up one's monarchical power and status
* is the precursor of all masses
- theologies
- control
- work for surrendering our principles legislatively
Surrender
* are deliveries
* crucial factor in spiritual growth.
* increases the quality of life.
### act | speech act | resignation | surrender:
Defeatism
* are resignation.
* denotes a certain psychic state that has meaning only in reference to action.
* has a tendency to spread like wild fire.
* self-fulfilling prophecy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### act:
Stop
- endings
- ends
- knobs
* are located in busy streets
- cities
- motors
- organs
- telegram
- part of organs
- sounds that are maintained for a very short amount of time
- stays
* are used for stops
- waits
* cause stops.
### act | stop:
Bus stop
* are bus stops
- common tropes in popular culture
* are located in airports
- towns
- urban areas
- part of bus routes
- transit areas where people stand for shorter periods of time
Checkpoint
* also operate in meiotic cells.
* are regulatory mechanisms that control transitions between cell cycle phases
* maintain integrity.
### act | stop | checkpoint:
Police checkpoint
* are along roads outside the capital.
* contribute to unsafe travel on roads leading out of the city.
Symbolic act
* are merely devices or tools which are used to establish a halakhic change.
* can play an important role in bringing negotiations to a close.
Traveling
* can involve accidents
- bargaining
- driving
- flight delayeds
- reading
- scheduling time
- shopping
- sightseeings
- weariness
* causes diarrhea
- disorientation
- fatigue
- fear
- motion sickness
- movement
- movings
- relocation
* is actions.
* is used for business
- diplomatic relations
- education
- enjoyment
- entertainment
- fun
- relaxation
Unsafe act
* are the result of employees actions that fall into the category of human error.
* cause four times as many accidents as unsafe conditions.
* result from people failing to follow established safety rules and work procedures.
Violent act
* can directly affect the well being of our soldiers, civilians and family members.
* is attempted or committed.
* occur on a continuum of escalating severity.
Wrongdoing
* can and does occur at all levels in organizations, and in all functions.
* is activities
- an action which is both positive and evil
- the poison of the soul
Actinide
* are typical metals
- unstable and undergo radioactive decay
* have similar properties to lanthanides. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Action
* All action is the result of the play of the conscious mind
- actions are the actions of entities, of things that exist
* Counts the number of words in string.
* Every action produces a reaction due to the very structure of the cosmos
- taken by humans has some environmental impact
* Most actions involve sensory perceptions.
* Some actions affect animals
- induce insulin resistance
- stimulate secretion.
* Just 'cause I set the house down the street on fire is no reason for me not to have matches here. Actions elsewhere are usually a good indicator of all actions. Grawp and Jtv are just as likely to vandalize a new wiki as they have every other wiki they ever show up on
* affect circumstances
- creatures
- environments
- responsibility
* are a type of meeting held by community organizations
- acts
- bus companies
- doings
- drives
- events
- expression
- group actions
- mechanisms
* are part of guns
- keyboards
- physical manifestation of thoughts and feelings
- plots
- sequences of event
- software
- states
* are taken by manufacturers
- users
- television stations
* are the energies of organs, and the synergies of groups of organs
- high-level entities that people typically use to describe what is happening
- operations performed on objects
- verbs in descriptions of events
* benefit patients.
* can have big impact
- butterfly effects
- consequences
- term consequences
* cause infection
- localize infection
* contribute to education
- improvement
- life
- quality education
* could have impact
- positive impact
* create electrical energy
* depend on internal pressure
* enable success.
- cost
- legal consequences
- lifelong impact
- little effects
- negative effects
- numerical values
- positive effects
- profound effects
* have same numerical values
- significant impact
* include maintenance
- regulations
* involve activities
- behavior
- complicate behavior
- difficulty
* is an act
- another word for gambling
- caused by desire
- composed of two complementary forces, muscular and organic energy
- how to achieve resolution and change
- inhibited by fear
- love that wishes to pass itself on
* is the catalyst that places all choices into motion
- conviction of belief
- crystalization of faith
- difference between a dream and achievement
- dignity of greatness
- element that breaks illusion into concrete terms
- expression of inner experience in the physical world
- key that conquers doubt, and turns dreams into reality
- law of all individual life
- magic word-movement, motion
- province of verbs in human speech
- strong objective that someone has in a beat or scene or act of a play
* lead to results.
* learning builds problem solving and decision making skills
- is something everyone can use in the work place
* may have effects
- significant effects
* means the employment of means for the attainment of ends.
* occur at numbers
- in responses
* occurs when something happens that makes or permits something else to happen.
* pose survival.
* prevent runoff.
* process that needs to be gone through.
* produce energy
* provide comfort.
* refers to the distance between the strings and the fretboard.
* require effort
- performance
* result from participation
- in suspensions
* stem from the world of thought.
* take effects
* varies depending on isotope and chemical form.
* verb describing what is happening.
* will have effects.
* would have effects
- measurable effects
+ Science fiction, Different styles of science fiction, Space opera
* Typical space opera magazine coverSpace opera is adventure science fiction in outer space or on distant planets. Action is more important than the science or characters. There is usually a strong hero and a very big conflict. The action often moves to many different places. Flash Gordon and Star Wars are also popular examples.
* Example of a Space Opera movie poster 'Space Opera' is adventure science fiction in outer space or on distant planets. Action is more important than the science or characters. There is usually a strong hero and a very big conflict. The action often moves to many different places. The best-selling science fiction book of all time is a space opera. It is Dune by Frank Herbert. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Accomplishment
* are positive results that achieve an organization's goals and objectives.
* is an action
### action | accomplishment:
Great accomplishment
* come from people who believe in their own abilities.
* occur when new ideas are explored to increase learning.
Masterpiece
* are accomplishment
- conceptual work
* is work<|endoftext|>### action | accomplishment:
Record
* Many records relating to Indigenous people deal with entire families and communities.
* Most records are of birds on breeding territory, rather than actual migrants
- contain record number, birthdate, name, parents' names, and race
- processing clerks work regular business hours
* Some records are Presidential records, meaning they are public records
- exist of termites damaging seedlings and fungal diseases attacking leaves in India
- show nesting in man-made boxes on grasslands and in nonforested wetlands
* allow a psychologist to document and review the delivery of psychological services.
* also show that the amount of rain falling over large regions of the world is increasing.
- any recorded information on paper, videotape, floppy disk, and photographs
- books
* are collections of information about a person, a place, an item, or an event
- related items
- documents
- evidence
- expression
- facts
- for remembering more than just memories
- important to organizations and to all of society
- just records - documents of material recorded at a certain time
- located in offices
- newspapers
- numbers
- one of the most important parts of reproductive management of the dairy herd
- physical manifestations of past emotions
- records, no matter how far they go back
* are the building blocks of databases
- information by-products of organisational and social activity
- link between accounting and accountability
- means by which information is transmitted from one person to another
- units that make up a database
- tuples whose components are labeled with an identifier
* concerning intramural sports include athletic records, rules, schedules, and statistics.
* describe a file which is written to the output a record at a time.
* have information.
* indicate pork has been a part of the Korean diet back to antiquity, similar to beef.
* is the number of data records contained in the file.
* kept by Presbyterian ministers include birth, baptism, and marriage records.
* labels Links to jazz record labels.
* normally correspond to individual spatial objects or entities.
* play a crucial role in most human endeavors.
* work together to make files.
+ Rockefeller family, The family archives
* Only the expurgated records of deceased family members are publicly available to scholars and researchers. All records pertaining to living members are closed to historians. However, as Nelson Rockefeller's researcher, Cary Reich, discovered, in the case of Nelson's voluminous of papers, only about one-third of these files had been processed and released to researchers up to 1996.
### action | accomplishment | record:
Archival record
* are records that have permanent value
- which have significant historical value
- the products of everyday activity
* require specialized storage conditions to ensure their long-term survival.
Balance sheet
* Explain the purpose of a bank's balance sheet.
* are a complete account of a business on any day
Birth record
* are the single most important document that a genealogist can aquire.
* provide the child's name, names of parents, and birth date.
Checkbook
* are located in desktops
- drawers
- purses
* are used for financial management
- payings
* belong to the world of the flesh.
* have checks.
Death record
* are local or State public records, often referred to as vital records.
* are most useful for pinpointing a date of death and place of burial
- to pinpoint a date of death and place of burial | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | accomplishment | record:
Electronic record
* are more than just data or information
- password protected with access restricted to authorized users
- public records
- records that are stored in a form only a computer can process
* permit the sharing of information by the byte rather than the megabyte.
Financial record
* Use adequate financial records to accomplish personal financial goals.
* are probably the least kept and the least studied of all records.
Fossil record
* indicate that fungi preceded plants on dry land
- sexual reproduction has been occurring for at least one billion years
- trees and their root symbionts share a long evolutionary history
* indicates that horses have gradually increased over geologic time.
* provide evidence that changes have occurred in number and types of species.
* shows many types of plants and animals.
* suggest that the sperm delivery required lysis of the megasporangium wall.
Geological record
* indicate that climate change has taken place repeatedly.
* suggest that the ice ages developed slowly but disappeared relatively quickly.
* supports catastrophism because of discontinuities and existence of fossils.
Judicial record
* are also a rich primary source of economic and social history
- part of the student's educational record
* can also give a lot of information on relationships between people.
Ledger
* are books.
* are located in accounts
- desks
* are used for accounts
- listing items
- record sales
- that keeps accounting transactions by accounts
### action | accomplishment | record | ledger:
General ledger
* are ledgers
- located in offices
* are used for accounting
- business accounting
- record keeping
Marriage record
* are the courthouse records with the most clearly relevant connection to genealogy.
* contain the names of both spouses and date of marriage.
Personal record
* are important to any track and field athlete, win or lose
- located in homes
* contain personal information about identifiable indivduals.
Public record
* are a key source of information about government actions and decisions
- rich source of personal identifying information for businesses and people
* guard the rights of citizens and chronicle local history.
* is, by definition, an account of happenings that affect the public.<|endoftext|>### action | accomplishment | record:
Register
* are a group of cells used for memory addressing, data manipulation and processing
- small set of on-chip locations that can be accessed very quickly by the processor
- high-speed memory locations in the processor itself
- lists of job applicants that have passed an exam or evaluation process
- logical groupings of one or more audio output channels
- memory devices
* are part of furnaces
- regulators
- sets of flip-flops which can hold data
- storage locations internal the the processor
- timbre
- verbs
* originate in laryngeal function.
### action | accomplishment | record | register:
Accounting system
* Many accounting systems use encryption.
* Most accounting systems have a method of measuring usage
- the ability to report on budgets vs. actuals
- provide the ability to compare actuals to budgets
* are one of the big institutions connected directly to task environments
- pervasive throughout any organization
* deal with ledgers, customers, orders, invoices etc.
Studbook
* contain the family trees of every individual animal in the zoo population.
* help zoos keep track of animal populations.
* maintain the records on an entire captive population of a species. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | accomplishment | record:
Registry
* Registries There are public registries for trademarks and patents
- trademarks, designs and patents
* Registries are a means to circumvent the injustices of closed records
- holdings
- can prevent over-vaccination
- facilitate transactions to create, modify, and remove database objects
- flag children with contra-indications for vaccines, such as drug allergies
- maintain databases on patients with all types of kidney disease
* is another means of attaining lawful permanent residence in the United States
- the repository for all hardware, software, and application configuration settings
- where extensions are matched up with applications
Temperature record
* are located in newspapers.
* reveal a history of thermal cycles in the Earth's climate.
Vital record
* are among the permanent records for which an agency is responsible
- birth, marriage and death records
- public records
* are records essential to the continuing operation of an organization
- operation of the university
- the primary source of the most fundamental public health information
* document the span of our lives from birth to death.
### action | accomplishment | stunt:
Split
* are bottles
- cracks
- formations
- frozen dessert
- increases
- separatings
- shares
* maltose into glucose.<|endoftext|>### action:
Achievement
* comes in many forms.
* dominant motivation in American culture.
* equals the sum of ability and motivation.
* is an action
- individual thing
- defined in terms of human contacts and the quality of the living environment
- recognized as a function of individual growth and performance
- related directly to expectations and the level of commitment
* is the fulfillment of goals, purposes and missions
- kind of word that provokes an assortment of potential definitions
- moral ideal because man's life does depend on it
* is the result of academic learning time
- controlling the mind
* means performance in some academic area, such as reading, spelling, or math.
* process of continual learning and improvement.
* reduces cost.
* refer to degrees, awards, professional accreditations, publications, etc.
* The standard for writing an achievement is to display the achievement, followed by the year earned in parentheses. Achievements go in reverse chronological order, from most recent to earliest.
* refers to any recognition the nominee has received for their efforts in coaching
- bringing an effort to the desired end or the end gained
* requires tasks.<|endoftext|>### action | achievement:
Academic achievement
* affects many areas of sorority life.
* declines as the regularity and intensity of alcohol and drug use increases.
* factor most companies consider when hiring students for internships.
* gives young people more choices and better opportunities.
* is also the lowest where the most money is spent on education
- associated with interaction
- measured by individual progress as much as possible
* is one of the predominant factors leading to a child s healthy future
- primary values upon which Greek-letter organizations are founded
- the main criterion with preference given to women
Close call
* are accomplishment.
* is achievement
### action | achievement | feat:
Hit
* are a meaningless unit of traffic measurement.
* are the number of times a server is accessed
- registered users have viewed a message
- the ball has appeared
* represent the number of times a Web page is viewed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | achievement | feat | hit | bunt:
Karnal bunt
* affects common wheat to a lesser degree than durum wheat, triticale and related species.
* disease of wheat, durum wheat, and triticale, a hybrid of wheat and rye.
* fungal disease of wheat that is spread by planting infected seeds
- spread through the planting of infected seed
- wheat, which can affect the amount and quality of grain produced
- wheats, triticales and rye
* has minimal effect on quality and yield of wheat
- several effects on wheat
* is caused by the smut fungus Tilletia indica and is spread by spores.<|endoftext|>### action | achievement:
Liberation
* achieved by individuals at the expense of others is an act of oppression.
* are accomplishment
- attempts
* can be view as a process of liberty, social justice and love.
* comes as the end of a conflict between the principles of good and evil.
* is achievement
- one of the deepest aspirations of contemporary man
* is the 'Release from bondage'
- corollary to enlightenment
- final extinction of all pain and suffering
- goal of all buddhist systems of practice
- nervous system devoid of mental-conceptual redundancy
- physical release of valuable minerals from their waste gangue
- undoing of the effects of internalized oppression
* means freedom and right to rule themselves
- the attainment of pure state of infinite knowledge and infinite bliss
* process of continuous change.
* state of attitude.
+ Bangladesh Liberation War: Wars involving India :: Wars involving Pakistan :: 1971 :: History of Bangladesh :: Wars of independence
* This war lead to the liberation of East Pakistan, which is now called Bangladesh. Liberation means freedom and right to rule themselves. The war started on 26 March 1971 and finished on 16 December, 1971. A category 3 cyclone also appeared during the war.
### action | achievement | liberation:
Liberation theology
* is an area which is challenging both psychoanalytic and Marxist limitations
- outlet for oppressed people to articulate their troubles
- theology
- very critical of capitalist economies
* puts man in complete charge of building a new society and a new man.
* tends to see the gospel liberating people from political or social bondage.<|endoftext|>### action | achievement:
Pass
* are cycles
- flight
- leaves
- license
- locations
- part of ranges
- permission
- situations
- throws
- tickets
* cause passes.
+ Alps, Travel and visitors
* The Alps are popular both in summer and in winter. The Alps as a place for sightseeing and sports. In summer, the Alps are popular with hikers, mountain bikers, paragliders, and mountaineers. There are also alpine lakes which attract swimmers, sailors and surfers. The lower places and bigger towns of the Alps are well served by motorways and main roads, but higher passes and by-roads can be bad even in the summer. Many passes are closed in winter. The Alps normally has more than 100 million visitors a year.
### action | achievement | smooth:
Smooth bromegrass
* coarse texture, low density species.
* is also desirable because it attracts pheasants for nesting and roosting
- one of the few economic grasses resistant to the fungus
- probably the most popular cool season forage grass in Iowa
- very susceptible to brown leafspot
### action | achievement | walk | ambulatory:
Ambulatory monitoring
* is, therefore, a better method to detect white coat hypertension.
* requires patients to wear a small non-invasive device.
Boardwalk
* also help preserve the fragile environment.
* are walkways.
March
* are books
- months
- processions
- progress
- walks
* cause marchs.
Prowl
* are walks.
* is sprayed on the soil surface so it is positioned above level where the corn roots develop
- very immobile in soil
* prevents plant cells from dividing and elongating, thus stopping growth.
Somnambulism
* affects children much more regularly than adults.
* is sleeping | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Acidification
* affects animal and plant populations of lakes.
* also causes the release of potentially harmful metals
- makes many forests vulnerable to drought, disease and harmful insects
* can have adverse affects on stream communities
- hinder the ability of aquatic organisms to reproduce
* exacerbates coral bleaching.
* helps maintain the quality of the unused milk and reduces the incidence of diarrhea.
* impacts on ecosystem services.
* is an action
- natural processes
* primary stressor in some regions.
* requires energy for proton pump.
### action | acidification:
Episodic acidification
* can cause sudden shifts in water chemistry.
* sudden jump in the acidity of the water.<|endoftext|>### action:
Action research
* brand of research originated to solve problems in applied settings.
* is action and research in the same process
- research done by teachers, for themselves
* methodology whose flexibility allows learning and responsiveness.
* systematic examination of a question arising from a teacher's practice.
* tends to be directly linked to achieving results in the classroom setting.
* type of research aimed at changing and improving educational practice.
* way to look at a problem, gather data and make recommendations.<|endoftext|>### action:
Addition
* affects growth.
* cans have beneficial effects
* encourages growth
- new root growth
* has different effects
- significant effects
* increases conductivity
- cost
- effectiveness
- electrical conductivity
- intake
- water intake
* is an increase
- components
- determined by the activity of telomerase
* is one of the cornerstones of math
- functions used when calculating insulation needs in the home
- suburbs
- the sum, or combination, of two or more groups of things
* leads to growth.
* way to find the total or sum of two or more numbers.
+ Addition, Addition as increase: Arithmetics :: Hyperoperations
* Addition can also mean to make bigger.
### action | addition:
Annex
* are addition
- buildings
- part of buildings
* is addition
Fluoridation
* cuts treatment costs and saves money.
* increases cavity-fighting protection for our citizens
- the incidence of dental fluorosis
* is addition
- effective in reducing cavities
* saves billions of dollars for industries with fluoride pollution problems.<|endoftext|>### action | addition | fluoridation:
Water fluoridation
* continues to be the cornerstone of community oral disease prevention.
* contributes greatly to reducing dental caries.
* goes against the notion of consumer choice.
* helps reduce such oral health disparities.
* is an ideal way of improving dental health and controlling health care costs
- cited as the most effective method of reaching large populations
- endorsed by nearly every major health and safety-related organization
- mass medication
- relatively inexpensive in the United States
* is the ideal solution for industry's fluoride waste disposal problem
- least expensive and most effective way to reduce tooth decay
- most effective and inexpensive way to reduce dental decay in a community
- safest and most cost-effective way to prevent tooth decay
* low-cost and safe way to improve dental health for people of all ages.
* plays a key role in optimal dental health.
* safe and cost-effective public health measure in preventing dental caries.
Nucleophilic addition
* is also a good reaction, though a bit more difficult than with ketones
- one rate-limiting process
+ Ester: Functional groups
* Esters can also do many reactions. It is very easy to change the ether part of the molecule with another similar one. It is also possible to reduce the ester to a ketone or an alcohol, which can do many different reactions. Nucleophilic addition is also a good reaction, though a bit more difficult than with ketones. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Adiabatic process
* are important in some types of cloud formation
- very important in the atmosphere
* is an action
* transfer no heat by definition.
Antitrust case
* are legal actions.
* is an action<|endoftext|>### action:
Arousal
* associated with emotion physiological experience.
* causes ejaculation.
* common physiological response evoked by many different emotions.
* enhances the probability of emitting dominant responses.
* equals the emotional, physiological or mental excitability.
* function of context and behavior.
* gates the cortical control of rhythmic vibrissa movement.
* induced by fear, interest, pain, or excitement causes pupillary dilation.
- part of life
- perhaps the number one issue in keeping sex going
* is the attempt to evoke some action or feeling from somebody
- state of interest in the skill
- wakefulness
* level of consciousness involving the cerebral cortex.
* mental and emotional thing.
* physical response that requires no mental involvement.
### action | arousal:
Awakening
* are arousal.
* is arousal
- films
- really the point of all spiritual practices
* is the method by which the brain shuts off the continuing barrage of threatening stimuli
- quantum leap from relative to absolute
- to go beyond both emptiness as well as form
* often brings seasons of conflict and suffering.
* recognition that nothing is missing.
Emotional arousal
* appears to influence how well experiences are remembered.
* is arousal
### action | arousal | incitement:
Subornation of perjury
* is incitement
- when a person induces another to commit perjury
* occurs when someone asks another person to lie while under oath.<|endoftext|>### action | arousal:
Sexual arousal
* depends on hormones.
+ Masturbation, Masturbation frequency, age and sex: Human sexuality
* People may not masturbate on any given day. Some people masturbate every day, sometimes even multiple times a day. How often someone masturbates, or the frequency of masturbation, depends on many things. One of the things that the frequency of masturbation depends on are hormones. Sexual arousal depends on hormones. Other things that the frequency of masturbation depend on are sexual habits. Sexual habits are sexual activities that people do because they are used to doing them.
Arrival
* are accomplishment
- actions
- encounterings
- translations
- travelers
* have effects.
* is achievement
### action | arrival:
Admission
* is acknowledgment
- an entrance
- permittings
* refers to the place of residence of the person admitted.
+ National Museum of the United States Air Force: United States Air Force :: Military aviation :: Dayton, Ohio :: Museums in the United States :: Buildings and structures in Ohio
* Over 400 aircraft and missiles are on display, most of them indoors. Admission is free.<|endoftext|>### action | arrival:
Advent
* Latin word meaning the coming.
* are arrivals
* is an arrival
* is the beginning of the Church Year for most churches in the Western tradition
- church year
- birth and rebirth of hope, love, joy and peace
* is the season of expectancy
- yearning
- time of waiting and of preparation
* period marked by waiting, anticipating something to happen.
* season of hope, hope for the future in the light of present reality
- penance and preparation
- preparation, contemplation, waiting, and silence
* time for dreaming, and it is also a time for journeying
- waiting, a time of darkness
- observed by Christian people to wait for the birth of Jesus
* time of special prayer, fasting and other spiritual disciplines
- vigilance and prayer
- watching, of waiting, and of expectation
* time to become aware of one's sins
- sit and be, as well as to do and become
- spiritually prepare for the birth of Jesus | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | arrival | attainment:
Educational attainment
* appears to have a much larger impact on literacy than does work experience.
* correlates to healthy life style and a low incidence of sexual dysfunction.
* has a direct, positive correlation to income-earning potential
- strong tendency to perpetuate itself within families and societies
* has no impact on the wage gap between males and females
* is also related to mobility
- associated with higher life expectancy
- correlated with labour market success
- highly related to literacy proficiency
- largely a measure of socio-economic status, as is marital status
- the average number of years of school completed among adults
* predicts coronary and aortic calcification in post-menopausal women.
* reliable predictor of labor force participation.
* varies widely, but more than half have less than six years of schooling.
* very critical factor in accounting for lifetime fertility differentials
- lifetime fertility rates
Dockage
* are fees.
* is an arrival
- the unwanted material that is removed during grain cleaning
Early bird
* Most early birds get worms.
* Some early birds have teeth.
* are arrivals
- risers
* catch the worm.<|endoftext|>### action:
Attachment
* All attachments are of the nature of feelings and they reside in Heart.
* Every attachment is an impediment to living at a higher level of consciousness.
* are a can of worms best left closed in a mailing list environment
- human condition
- major source of virus infection of computer systems
* are a way of including any computer file as part of an e-mail message
- sending files via e-mail
- also the number one way that viruses are spread across the Net
* are files or documents that are sent to a recipient via email
- which can be attached as word processing files or in other formats
- how viruses are spread through email
- items , such as computer files or imbedded objects
- one of the more common ways viruses have been spreading lately
* are the area where muscles are bound or connected to the bones
- most common carrier of viruses
- only way that viruses can be spread through an email message
- primary way a virus is spread
- way to share objects
- viruses that attach themselves to a utility or an application program
* arises due to desires and is due to the lower qualities of the mind.
* inhibits swimming but unattached tadpoles swim spontaneously.
* is addition
- affection
- combinations
- configurations
- connections
- support
* live lonely lives.
* occurs to epithelial cells and to mucus.
* refers to a person's shared intrests with others
- an emotional bond that forms between two people
- following characters in time and space
- the consumer s interest in and enjoyment of clothing
* takes places.
+ Love, Chemical basis: Healthy lifestyle
* Since these lust and attraction stages are both described as temporary, a third stage might describe long-term love. Attachment can be used to describe the bonding period that helps keep husband and wife together for many years. Attachment occurs in the longer term.
### action | attachment:
Binary attachment
* are a gross abuse of network resources
- non-text files, such as programs or images, that are posted to news groups
* tend to fill up people's mailboxes or even cause crashes.
Email attachment
* are a major source of virus infections
- prime vehicle for propagating Internet hoaxes and malicious viruses
- files sent along with an email message
* transmit computer viruses.
Emotional attachment
* have a downside, as humans well know.
* take time to solidify.
Healthy attachment
* begin in early infancy.
* lead to greater independence and autonomy as children mature. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | attachment:
Infant attachment
* is found to some degree in all mammals and is greatly expanded in humans
* multipurpose behavioral system essential to social animals. During infancy patterns of behavior are established on which other long-term relationships are built. The establishment of homeostasis of physiological systems, social and emotional development and learning are other functions. Infant attachment is found to some degree in all mammals and is greatly expanded in humans. Attachment behavioral system that is present at birth but that must be activated and developed
Lens hood
* Most lens hoods are part of cameras.
* is attachment
Normal attachment
* develops during the child's first two years of life.
* takes a couple of years of cycling through mutually positive interactions.
Secure attachment
* are crucial for emotional and cognitive development.
* develop as a result of sensitive, warm, responsive, and respectful caregiving.
* involves the child eliciting the most parental investment to ensure survival.
* provides a foundation for healthy development and healthy mental functioning.
Bacterial action
* decomposes part of the solids and grease.
* is more rapid in warm weather than in cold weather.
* plays a major role in nutrition and digestion.
* slows as soil temperatures drop.
* starts immediately, causing a breakdown in the skin.
* works quickly.
Bad action
* are the result of sinful thoughts.
* have painful consequences, even when our children or loved ones are involved.
### action | beautification | beauty treatment:
Facial
* Use a mirror.
* are cranial nerves
- part of faces
- skin care
* beauty treatment
* can also remove blackheads and help prevent acne
- deep cleanse, re hydrate and rejuvenate the skin
- help changing skin conditions and salt glows smooth dry, rough skin
* concentrate on the face, massage on the muscles.
* revitalize and regenerate skin, while deep cleansing removes impurities.
### action | beautification | beauty treatment | facial:
Facial palsy
* can cause problems with facial movements, such as chewing and blinking.
* presenting sign in most of the patients with the complete triad.
Facial paresis
* can also occur after radiation.
* is the most common presenting symptom of a facial nerve schwannoma.
Manicure
* are care.
* is attention
### action | beautification | beauty treatment | manicure:
Regular manicure
* are the best prevention of aging hands.
* can help restore the health of damaged nails and discourage nail biting.
Blockade
* are military actions
- obstructions
* arise during our life, by unprocessed emotions from negative or painful experiences.
* is an action
Brachiation
* is seen in gibbons and chimpanzees
- the movement through the tree tops by swinging hand over hand, and branch to branch
* rare ability for primates.
### action | buildup:
Thatch buildup
* major contributor to lawn diseases.
* natural part of normal, healthy turfgrass growth.
Burst
* are activities
- villages
* lead to surges and changes in flow regimes that tend to release sediments.
+ Gamma-ray burst: Astronomical phenomena
* Bursts can last from milliseconds to several minutes, although a typical burst lasts a few seconds.<|endoftext|>### action:
Centrifugation
* creates a vacuum and volatilizes liquids causing aerosolization.
* involves the use of centrifugal force to separate mixtures.
* is also a milder means of extraction, resulting in a finer quality
- natural processes
- separatings
- the process of separation a suspended solid in a liquid by high speed rotation
* process used to separate or concentrate materials suspended in a liquid medium.
* standard method for concentrating substances in the laboratory.
* way of creating a gravity gradient. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | chemical action:
Acetylation
* Some acetylations involve terpenes like geraniol.
* chemical action
* is involved in the process of histone assembly into nucleosomes
- the primary metabolic pathway for sulfonamides
* prevents gel-formation but increases the stabilising and emulsifying effects of pectin.
### action | chemical action | acetylation:
Histone acetylation
* critical step in clearing the way for the transcription initiation complex.
* plays a key role in the regulation of eukaryotic gene expression.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action:
Calcification
* Most calcifications are benign, or normal findings in the breast.
* also helps to prevent grazing since it makes the plant harder to digest.
* appear as dense basophilic clumps
- white specks on mammograms
* are an entire subject by themselves
- calcium deposits found within the breast tissue
- small calcium deposits in the breast that are found by mammography
* are tiny mineral deposits within the breast tissue or breast arteries
- specks of calcium that are clustered together
* can be benign or malignant
- occur
* contributes to the loss of elasticity of the arterial wall.
* is also an important component of vascular tissue
- an indirect marker of atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries
- chemical processes
- common in the prairie grasslands
- common, is usually linear, thin and peripheral
- demonstrated in a minority of patients with thymoma
- illnesses
- inaction
- medical conditions
- rare
- seen only in a minority of patients
- stained red and cartilage is stained blue
* is the dominant soil-forming process in semiarid regions
- process, if indeed soil forming even occurs
- very common, typically associated with the rupture of the keratinous cysts
* make tissues stiffer, leading to cracking.
* occasionally are visible.
* occurs causing reduced cooling efficiency.
* often extends through the wall of the heart
* sign of placental aging.
* tends to occur in the wrong tissues, with accelerated calcification of arteries.
* then stops, and osteoid material accumulates around the capillaries of the diaphysis.
### action | chemical action | calcification:
Coronary calcification
* can be an indicator of atherosclerosis.
* occurs before there significant blockage of a vessel.
Dystrophic calcification
* can also take place, giving rise to a white chalky appearance.
* common feature.
* fancy way of saying calcium deposit that is benign in origin.
* occurs as a result of tissue injury and necrosis.
* result of tissue necrosis.
Metastatic calcification
* is common.
* occurs in normal tissues with elevated serum calcium levels. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | chemical action:
Chemical reaction
* All chemical reactions are reversible in principle
* All chemical reactions are, in principle, reversible, i.e., they can go in both directions
* All chemical reactions involve a change in substances and a change in energy
- atoms trying to get a full outer shell of electrons
- changes in energy distribution
- making, breaking, and relocating bonds
- occur between electrons in the outer energy level of atoms
* All chemical reactions proceed in the direction of attaining greater binding energy
- until a balance is established between reactants and products
- require an initial input of energy called the energy of activation
* All chemical reactions require energy to begin
- speed up as temperature is raised
- tend toward a state of chemical equilibrium
* Every chemical reaction has it's characteristic proportions
- involves a a. change in the state of the matter in the reactants
- requires energy to occur
* Many chemical reaction are able to release energy to the surroundings.
* Many chemical reactions are also reversible
- elementary
* Many chemical reactions give off energy
- out heat, a byproduct in excess during the molecular rearrangement
- happen a lot faster at higher temps
- have products with less chemical energy than the reactants
- involve an equilibrium process
- keep an organism alive
- produce energy in the form of heat
* Many chemical reactions take place in the cytosol
- uniformly throughout a volume
* More chemical reactions occur in general as a cell increases in volume.
* Most chemical reaction creates compounds
* Most chemical reaction generates energy
- kinetic energy
- gives off heat
* Most chemical reaction has properties
- steps
* Most chemical reaction involves chemical compounds
- different substances
- exchanges
* Most chemical reaction involves in energy
- photosynthesis
- oxygen
- is caused by interaction
- needs energy
- occurs at temperature
* Most chemical reaction occurs in organisms
- reductions
* Most chemical reaction occurs under conditions
- difficult conditions
* Most chemical reaction occurs within normal physiological temperature
* Most chemical reaction produces energy
- heat energy
- provides energy
- relates to activities
* Most chemical reaction requires activation energy
* Most chemical reactions are exothermic
- involve the breaking and formation of chemical bonds
- occur in some form of solution
- take place in solution
* Some chemical reaction absorbs energy
- affects characteristics
- boosts metabolism
- causes explosions
- changes color
- destroys ozones
- has energy
* Some chemical reaction has lower energy
- total energy
* Some chemical reaction involves addition
- air pollution
- breaks
- elements
- energy transformation
- enzymes
- in respiration
- light
- minerals
- proteins
* Some chemical reaction leads to destruction
- ozone destruction
* Some chemical reaction occurs in chloroplasts
- clouds
- organs
* Some chemical reaction produces acid
- carbon dioxide
- carbonic acid
- electricity
- radiation
- shock waves
- waste products
* Some chemical reaction releases chemical energy
- electrical energy
- requires energy input
- triggers physiological reaction
* Some chemical reactions absorb energy and are called endothermic reactions
- cause a voltage to appear between the two substances that are reacting
- give off heat, while others absorb heat and make their container cold
- release energy, others store energy
- require the addition of energy such as heat
* appear as functional applications constructing new functions.
* are a necessary condition to life
- difficult to reverse
- most intense where the climate is wet and hot
- often dependent on some electronic parameters of the given molecules
- pressure-dependent
* are the basis of all chemistry
- life on earth
- heart of chemistry
- where the composition changes
* become increasingly more endergonic.
* can also cause fires in garbage collection trucks
- create substances that are insoluable in a given liquid
- be either endothermic or exothermic
- use up, or produce useful energy
* cause the base layer literally to break down.
* change the taste and style of the tea.
* convert one chemical substance into another
- some minerals contained in the parent materials into clay minerals
* depend upon such collisions.
* digest the minerals of the protolith which yields new minerals.
* find new ways to live.
* goes on, heats up gas, channelled backwards so that rocket goes forward.
* happen very rapidly.
* has consequences
- negative consequences
* influence the heart, nervous system, muscles and other areas of the body
- nervous system, as well as the muscles and other areas of the body
* involve breaking and reforming covalent bonds
- combining different substances
- either the transfer or the sharing of electrons between atoms
- re-organization of the atoms, the way they are bound together
- reorganization of the atoms-changes in the way they are bound together
- sharing or exchanging electrons
* involve the breaking and forming of bonds
- formation or destruction of bonds between atoms
- physical events
* lack the energy density to efficiently fuel a launcher.
* occur at a rate that depends on temperature
- faster with the addition of heat, slower without it
* occur in a series of steps called a metabolic pathway
- nature, and some also can be performed in a laboratory setting
- much faster here than on the surface of the Earth
* occur when atoms are separated, joined, or rearranged
- chemicals combine to form new substances
- new bonds are formed or broken in molecules
- the metals are being mixed
- within are bodies, one example is digestion
* oscillate in chaotic fashion.
* proceed more rapidly at higher temperatures.
* process in which one substance is chemically converted to another.
* producing water are common in space.
* progress in the direction of high to low energy.
* rearrange connections between atoms.
* require collisions - the physical impact of the reacting molecules
- mixing
- some kind of mixing or diffusion process
* run faster at higher temperatures
- slowly when it is cold, but quickly when it is hot
* take place, and mineral grains grow.
* take the oxygen out of the water that river life needs
- starting chemicals and end up with new chemicals
+ Chemical energy: Chemistry
* Many chemical reactions produce energy in the form of heat. This warmth is sometimes called 'chemical energy'. Using Hess's law it is possible to calculate the amount of energy a chemical reaction produces. Chemical energy should not be confused with binding energy. Binding energy is the work that is needed to split a system of many components into its parts.
+ Fume hood: Laboratory equipment
* Fume hoods have a large glass window that is opened when a scientist needs to get inside. The window protects the scientist from splashes of chemicals or explosions that could harm them. Most chemical reactions are done inside a fume hood.
+ Tea, Types of tea
* To make 'black tea' workers take the leaves and spread them out on shelves where they can dry. Next they are rolled and broken into pieces and put into a room where they absorb oxygen. Chemical reactions change the taste and style of the tea. Finally the leaves are dried with hot air until they turn brown or black. Most black tea comes from Sri Lanka, Indonesia and eastern Africa. When black tea leaves are brewed in boiling water, the tea made from them looks deep dark red, so another name used for black tea, especially in China, is 'red tea'.
+ Weathering, Context, What does the weathering?
* Physical weathering is important in very cold or very dry environments. Chemical reactions are most intense where the climate is wet and hot. However, both types of weathering occur together, and each tends to accelerate the other. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | chemical action | chemical reaction:
Chain reaction
* Most chain reaction spreads to water sources.
* Some chain reaction causes explosions
- extinction
- nuclear explosions
- destroys substances
- leads to degradations
- releases heat
* can rapidly grow.
* escalates To economists, excess inventories are a classic cause of recession.
* is chemical reaction
- nuclear reaction
* provides power.
* spreads to sources
Endergonic reaction
* are energy-storing reactions
- important to many cell processes
* require an energy input
- input of energy
* result in products with more energy than the reactants had.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action | chemical reaction:
Endothermic reaction
* All endothermic reactions decrease the entropy of the sorroundings
- occur spontaneously
* Most endothermic reaction gives off energy.
* Some endothermic reactions proceed spontaneously.
* absorb energy
* can be cold enough to cause frost bite.
- endergonic reaction
* needs energy.
* require heat.
* take in heat.
+ Thermochemistry: Physical chemistry
* Endothermic reactions take in heat. Exothermic reactions give out heat. Thermochemistry combines the concepts of thermodynamics with the idea of energy in the form of chemical bonds. It includes calculations of such quantities as heat capacity, heat of combustion, heat of formation, enthalpy, entropy, free energy, and calories.
Exergonic reaction
* are biochemical reactions that liberate only heat
- energy-releasing reactions
* have a negative G and energy is released.
* produce an energy output.
* release energy.
* result in products with less energy than the reactants had.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action | chemical reaction:
Exothermic reaction
* All exothermic reactions are spontaneous
* Some exothermic reaction produces gaseous products
- gases
- hot gases
* are more likely to occur spontaneously
- often spontaneous
* can be violent.
* involving hydrogen occur when heated or in contact with moisture or acids.
- exergonic reaction
* liberate energy.
* produce heat, whereas endothermic reactions take heat in.
* release energy as the reaction proceeds
- into the environment - feel hot
* Endothermic reactions take in heat. Exothermic reactions give out heat. Thermochemistry combines the concepts of thermodynamics with the idea of energy in the form of chemical bonds. It includes calculations of such quantities as heat capacity, heat of combustion, heat of formation, enthalpy, entropy, free energy, and calories.
Oxidation reaction
* Many oxidation reactions occur everyday without releasing fire, however.
* are exergonic and reduction reactions are endergonic.
* involve electron loss and are exergonic
- reduction reactions involve electron gain
- the transfer of electrons
* occur when a chemical substance loses electrons to another substance.
Photochemical reaction
* Some Photochemical reactions leads to the generation of highly reactive species.
* are classified as being either direct or indirect
- common in nature
- limited to the soil surface
Reduction reaction
* Most reduction reaction occurs in reductions.
* Some reduction reaction produces gases
- hydrogen gases
* involve electron gain and are endergonic.
* is chemical reaction
- issuing
* means addition of hydrogen to a reaction.
- on the cathode | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | chemical action:
Chlorination
* also oxidizes iron, manganese and hydrogen sulfide so they can be filtered out
- removes soluble iron, manganese and hydrogen sulfide from water
- treats for organically-related taste, color, and odor problems
* can disinfect and destroy harmful bacteria and other organisms.
* causes the light-absorbing properties of solutions to change.
* common method of disinfecting drinking water.
* destroys all animal and microbial life, leaving no trace of itself afterwards.
* disinfects the water and finally makes it safe for distribution
- water, killing bacteria, viruses and protozoa that transmit disease
* is an alternative to powdering medical gloves, so that they can be donned.
* is an effective measure against microbial activity
- treatment for both types of clogging
- apparently as natural a biological process as blood clotting or salivation
- chemical processes
- currently a standard method of pool and spa disinfection
- effective in killing the parasite, as is boiling water
- imperative to keep public water supplies free of most deadly pathogens
- important to improving several treatment processes
- more effective as water temperature increases
- necessary for two reasons
- particularly effective in preventing recontamination during distribution
- presently the most common treatment for zebra mussels
* is the final step for most wastewater treatment plants
- injection of chlorine gas into the water and assures potability
- most common disinfection method
* is the most common method for treating bacterial slimes
- of disinfecting potable water
- of chemical intermediate reactions in the chemical process industry
* is the most widely used method for disinfecting drinking water
- for purifying municipal water supplies
- recognized and accepted method of treating water supplies throughout the world
- standard by which other disinfection procedures are judged
* is used almost universally in U.S. public water supplies
- extensively by municipal water treatment plants to disinfect water
- to maximize the efficiency of fine filtration processes
* kills any remaining microorganisms
- the microorganisms and keeps the filter going longer
* means the addition of a chlorine compound or chlorine gas to water.
* procedure used to disinfect a water well contaminated with bacteria.
* process that constitutes purification of water.
* produces chlorinated organic materials including a very small amount of dioxins.
* provides disinfection of viruses and residual maintenance for the distribution system.
* uses liquid chlorine bleach to kill microorganisms.
### action | chemical action | chlorination:
Shock chlorination
* introduces very high levels of chlorine into a water system.
* is recommended when coliform bacteria are detected, or after system repairs.
* is the preferred method for eliminating bacterial contamination in wells
- procedure for cleaning and sanitizing a well or spring with chlorine
- used to control bacteria in water wells
* way to protect a private well from coliform, iron, and sulfur bacteria.
Decarboxylation
* occurs during Glycolysis.
* requires electron shift away from the carboxylate.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action:
Desalination
* are chemical processes
- separatings
* is also effective in removing other chemicals like fluoride, arsenic and iron
- an experiment that is neither necessary nor appropriate
- more expensive than most other methods of obtaining fresh water
* is the process of making salt water fit to drink
- removal of salt from seawater
- very energy intensive
* makes a significant contribution to Saudi Arabia's overall power generation.
* process by which salts are removed from seawater.
* scientifically simple process.
* takes place in the channel centre where electroneutrality is present.
* turns salt water from the Gulf of Mexico into drinking water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | chemical action:
Gasification
* begins as the particles rapidly absorb energy from the high enthalpy torch gas.
* turns biomass into a more useful form, gas.
### action | chemical action | gasification:
Coal gasification
* can also take place underground.
* process by which coal is converted into a synthetic fuel, natural gas.
* produces methane from abundant coal.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action:
Hydrogenation
* also increases the time it takes before oils become rancid, so they stay fresh longer.
* changes liquid oils into a more solid form of fat.
* contributes important textural properties to food.
* hardens a liquid vegetable oil so it looks, feels, and acts like butter.
* impairs the hypolipidemic effect of corn oil in humans.
* increases firmness and resistance to rancidity
- product shelf life and decreases refrigeration requirements
* increases the firmness and melting point of oils
- melting point and oxidative stability of fat
- saturation and therefore makes it more harmful to the body
- shelf life and flavor stability of oils and foods
* is chemical process, which creates the widely used hydrogenated oils
- processes
* is the process of adding hydrogen to a liquid oil to produce a semi-solid oil
- that keeps liquid oil solid at room temperature
* is used in making crude oil from coal
- the manufacture of organic chemical products
* lessens the amount of unsaturation and also hardens the oils.
* makes unsaturated fats more saturated.
* occurs when vegetable oil is changed from a liquid to a solid.
* physically alters any EFAs in the oil, which creates artificial fatty acids.
* process that changes the melting behavior of liquid oils and improves stability
- makes an oil more solid at room temperature
- used to harden vegetable oils to produce spreads like margarine
* produces the bulk of dietary trans fats now recognized as unhealthy for the heart.
* solidifies the oil by pushing bubbles of hydrogen through it.
* way of making vegetable oil harden at room temperature.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action:
Polymerization
* begins when reactive components first come in contact.
- reaction in which small molecules combine to form larger molecules
* forms submicronic particles.
* involves model compounds and lignin fragments having a free phenol hydroxyl.
* is chemical processes
- initiated by a metal complex exhibiting unprecedented high activity
* is the process by which many small molecules join together to form large molecules
- small molecules react to form a long chain - a polymer
- of joining monomers
* occurs at atmospheric pressure and at moderate temeperature
- within a matter of seconds
* proceeds more rapidly in larger batches.
### action | chemical action | polymerization:
Actin polymerization
* is necessary for mammalian cellular locomotion.
* pushes the cell membrane forward during cellular locomotion.<|endoftext|>### action | chemical action:
Proteolysis
* also generates active peptide hormones from larger precursor polypeptides.
* are chemical processes.
* can be highly promiscuous such that a wide range of protein substrates are hydrolysed.
* is irreversible, unlike most posttranslational modifications
- suppressed during periods of oxidative stress
* is the most important event in ripening
- process that breaks down proteins
* refers to the cutting up or digestion of proteins.
* vigorous process during sporulation in Bacillus subtilis.
Syneresis
* also occurs secondary to previous intraocular inflammation.
* is the contraction of the curd with the release of the water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Chemical change
* All chemical changes are accompanied by chemical reactions.
* Every chemical change is accompanied by a change in energy, usually in the form of heat.
* Many chemical changes take place within the body as a result of glandular secretions.
* Most chemical changes are irreversible.
* Some chemical changes are extremely small and happen over a series of steps
- permanent, while others can be reversed
- occur naturally in the environment
* are a result of chemical reactions.
* are changes substances undergo when they become new or different substances
- that result in the production of another substance
- more permanent than physical changes
- the basis for chemical reactions
- what happens in the intestines when one eats at taco bell
* are, indeed, important.
* begin to appear in the brain.
* cause alterations in perception.
* consists of a combination, separation, or rearrangement of atoms.
* happen on a molecular level
- much smaller scale
- when atomic bonds are broken or created during chemical reactions
* involve alterations in a substance's chemical makeup
- chemical reactions and the creation of new products
- conversion of a set of materials into other materials
* is an action
- any change that results in the formation of new chemical substances
- when the composition of a substance changes
* occur almost all the time
- during cooking
- when the bonds between atoms in a molecule are created or destroyed
* releases or absorbs much energy.
* take place on the molecular level.
Chemical process
* All chemical processes have an ideal pH at which they are most efficient.
* Many chemical processes require tight temperature control.
* Most chemical processes involve liquids or gases
- the collective behavior of many atoms
* are natural processes
- physical events
* can occur within living organisms or from nonliving sources.
* increase by two or three times as temperature rises.
* is an action
Chewing
* Some chewing also occurs on leaf margins.
* allows enzymes and lubricants released in the mouth to further digest food
- the mouth to further digest, or break down, food
- fun, therapeutic, and it helps keep the teeth clean
* reduces stress and helps control barking
- the size of food particles and the saliva moistens food
* releases mercury from fillings.
### action | chewing:
Destructive chewing
* behavioral problem and needs training to overcome.
* can be a major problem with young Airedales.
* is another behavior problem that can develop in dogs left outside
- the most common avenue for release of trapped energy
Efficient chewing
* means faster digestion, as the material is broken into smaller pieces.
+ Ornithopod
* Their major evolutionary advantage was the progressive development of a chewing apparatus that became the most sophisticated ever developed by a reptile. They had beaks, multiple teeth rows, cheek pouches and true chewing. Efficient chewing means faster digestion, as the material is broken into smaller pieces.<|endoftext|>### action:
Chromatography
* allows the distribution of the size of fragments to be determined.
- much used in biochemistry and analytical chemistry
- unique because of three reasons
* often involves laborious separations.
* ' way to separate single chemical compounds from mixed substances that depends on the speed at which they move through special 'media', or chemical substances. The mobile phase flows through the stationary phase. Chromatography is much used in biochemistry and analytical chemistry.
* permits scientists to separate diverse mixtures of closely related compounds.
* separates molecules by their relative migration rates
- phases dissolved in liquid
- things dissolved in liquid | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | chromatography:
Affinity chromatography
* allows protein purification in a relatively short time with a high yield.
* can be an extremely effective way to purify certain proteins.
* takes advantage of the biological activity of proteins for separation.<|endoftext|>### action | chromatography:
Gas chromatography
* chromatographic technique for separating volatile compounds.
* is the analysis of chemicals and chemical products
- instrumentation used for measurement
* key technique used to separate and detect the trapped air components.
* reveals that the major alkaline component in the fermented sweat is ammonia.
* sensitive technique used by chemists to measure small amounts of compounds.
* technique that separates volatile mixtures into their component compounds
- used to separate substance in a gaseous state
Ion chromatography
* is practiced in two forms.
* is used for anion analysis of the absorber solutions
- to determine ionic species present in air
* widely used technique for the analysis of ions in environmental samples.
Paper chromatography
* is among the simplest of chromatographic techniques
* method of separating mixtures by using a piece of absorbent paper.
* process used for separating mixtures.
* works on the simple principle of capillary action.
Civil action
* are legal actions.
* is also a probability if a third party is injured
- an action
* refers to a civil action in a circuit court. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Climate change
* affect water supply and the availability of other natural resources.
* affects all ecosystems and social structures
- living things on planet Earth
- corals on many levels
- ecosystems today, as it has in the past
- everyone and everything
- many aspects of life on Earth
- physical processes on the Earth
- the entire globe
* big threat to all pikas.
* brings about a global redistribution of the costs and benefits of the weather.
* can also affect coastal regions
- aid in the dispersal of plant and crop disease
- effect biological diversity in several ways
- mean more storms, droughts, and violent weather
- negatively impact temperate penguin species
- alter fitness landscapes in several ways
* can cause abrupt stepwise transitions in cool-coniferous and subarctic ecosystems
- other environmental changes
- happen for many reasons
- have a range of impacts on physical, mental, and community health
- increase food market volatility by affecting both supply and demand
- influence a planet's geological history
- mean warmer weather
* case in point.
* causes extinction by altering the habitats of organisms
- more dry years
* challenge facing both business and policymakers.
* change in the average weather of an area
- that a given region experiences
* collective problem, and it demands collective action.
* comes from burning fossil fuels, as released carbon traps heat in the atmosphere.
* common concern of humanity.
* complex issue for which there are no simple solutions
- with numerous variables
* complicated phenomenon, involving more than temperature changes.
* crisis resulting from many human-induced factors.
* critical global problem requiring global solutions.
* detonates the ideological scaffolding on which contemporary conservatism rests.
* encompasses systematic alterations in a variety of abiotic and biotic factors.
* global issue requiring global solutions
- issue, and as such can only be effectively dealt with globally
* global problem that requires a global solution
- which needs a global agreement
- problem, and requires a global solution
* goes beyond borders and governments.
* gradual shift in the average weather.
* happen slowly over hundreds or even thousands of years.
* has an impact on the susceptibility of forests to infestation, as does deforestation.
* has many parallels with fire suppression
- possible adverse effects on health, the economy and agriculture
- potential impacts for international security as well
- strong geopolitical consequences
- the potential to either aggravate or alleviate an area's water situation
* hits the insurance industry.
* includes both warming and cooling conditions.
* induces demographic resistance to disease in novel coral assemblages.
* is about how humans use energy.
* is also a factor in emerging and re-emerging diseases
- matter of both economic and intergenerational justice
- an issue of intergenerational justice
* is also likely to affect the highly urbanized centers of the Northeast in many ways
- make for warmer winters that produce less snow and more rain
- only one threat to species diversity
- among the most serious threats to rainforests worldwide and to much else besides
* is an action
- air problem, a water problem, and a land problem
- existential challenge to our contemporary worldviews
- increasing concern across the world
- international problem
* is an issue that business takes very seriously
- requires a long-term, global perspective
* is another serious threat to the mountain pygmy possum
- threat affecting populations
- any significant change in the climate lasting for decades or longer
- arguably the greatest threat facing humanity
- attributed to land use for two main reasons
- but one of many signs of environmental stress
* is caused by industrial emissions
- the emission by humans of extra greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere
- due to have severe negative effects on employment in Africa
- feared to have significant direct impacts on human health and on ecosystems
- highly relevant for anyone studying adaptation
- inevitable, and the ocean major factor in that change
- likely to have a devastating effect on biological diversity
* is likely to have a significant impact on the global environment and human society
- negative effects on the psyches of individuals
* is likely to have wide-ranging and mostly adverse effects on human health
- mostly adverse impacts on human health
- impact on seabird populations
- modify rainfall patterns and their interaction with the soil
- linked to the ocean processes
- more than a warming trend
- much more complex than local pollution
* is now a scientifically established fact
- one of the leading threats to wildlife
* is one factor amongst many that affect coastal ecological systems and societies
- that appears to be driving increased outbreaks of bark beetles
- of the biggest challenges facing the world in the next century
* is one of the greatest challenges facing the world today
- threats facing the planet today
- major threats to biodiversity at both the species and ecosystem levels
* is one of the most important environmental issues facing humankind
- global issues facing the world today
- threatening environmental crises facing today's world
- sector that provides obvious opportunities
* is perhaps the gravest calamity our species has ever encountered
- greatest threat to our quality of life on a global basis
- predicted to have many impacts
* is projected to have far-reaching environmental impacts both domestically and abroad
- increase the frequency of extreme precipitation events
- real and is already having an impact on the sustainability of our communities
- regarded as one of the factors resulting inthose declines
* is seen as a political issue among nations
- to be the result of major deforestation in parts of Asia
* is the biggest environmental issue ever
- chief driver of glacio-eustatic change
- current day global issue
- effect on the natural climate caused by human activities
- greatest environmental problem facing mankind
- last, and failing, rationale to comprehensively regulate energy
- latest emerging threat to biodiversity in Africa
- main threat to polar bears today
* is the most challenging global environmental issue of our time
- critical environmental threat facing the world today
- serious environmental issue facing our planet today
- number one environmental threat facing the world
- primary threat to narwhals
- single greatest threat to the Arctic
- variation in global or regional climates over time
- viewed as an overriding, all-pervasive threat
* local issue.
* major environmental policy challenge.
* means much more than higher temperatures.
* modern theory that warns about the danger of too many greenhouse gases.
* natural event that has occurred throughout history
- occurrence
* new and growing threat to wildlife migrations in the East African savannas.
* occur over shorter periods, as well.
* part of nature
- the Earth's history
* plagues the island states of Micronesia.
* poses a threat to the control of pest and disease invasions
- an unprecedented challenge to human society
- another threat to krill populations
- one of the greatest moral challenges humanity has ever faced
- perhaps the greatest long-term threat to snow leopards
- profound global economic, environmental and social challenges
- significant risks to human health, the environment, and the economy
- threats to resources both domestically and internationally
* presents a significant challenge, particularly to developing countries
- real risks for the future of mankind
* problem that transcends borders.
* provides basic facts and figures about our changing climate.
* puts another stress on agricultural systems
- real and huge costs onto everyone
- taigas in danger in different ways
* raises complex environmental and energy issues.
* reduces yields by increasing the frequency of droughts and floods.
* refers to any significant change lasting for an extended period of time
- the impact of human activity on our global climate
* remains of major global importance
- one of the most important environmental issues of our time
* represents a change in long-term weather patterns.
* resulting from greenhouse gas emissions poses the potential for abrupt change.
* seems to be cyclical.
* serious consequence of man's appetite for fossil carbon.
* shifts the curve to the hotter side, moving the average over.
* threat to all people and all of creation
- sustainable development
* threatens human health and well-being in the United States
- life on our planet
- more than mega-storms, floods and droughts
- polar bear food supply When temperatures rise, ice melts
* threatens to redistribute water around the globe
* topical issue in New Zealand and around the world.
* unfolds over centuries.
* violates moral and religious principles of justice. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Coagulation
* change that is studied by many scientists with different theories.
* chemical technique directed toward the destabilization of colloidal particles.
* defects secondary to a dead fetus are rare.
* involves the feeding and rapid mixing on one or more chemicals.
- in essence an electrical burn that destroys the appearance of the tissue
- simply the solidifying of the egg by heating
- usually irreversible
* normal response to a cut and helps to stop the bleeding.
* occurs when chemicals added to the water form one or more precipitates.
* removes dirt and other particles suspended in water.
* requires encounters between particles.
* works because colloidal particles bind with oppositely charged fining agents.
Collective action
* builds the relationships that make coalitions work.
* is the most effective means of achieving happy and healthy workplaces
- source of our strength as workers
Completion
* are maneuvers
- terminations
* is play
### action | completion:
Finalization
* are completions.
* is the counterpart of initialization, and takes place when the application shuts down
- used to ensure that memory allocated from external heaps is returned
Graduation
* are a series of marks for measuring that are equal in distance or value
- completions
- events
- festive, happy occasions with a long tradition
- lines
* concept of the past.
* is an achievement of which students, their families and friends are justifiably proud
- the issuing of diplomas
* marks the ending of a structured period in one's life.
* time of gift giving.<|endoftext|>### action | completion:
Orgasm
* All orgasms come from the clitoris.
* Some orgasms are more powerful than others.
* is emotion.
* relieves tension, recharges the body and revitalizes the mind.
* vary from person to person and for each individual at different times
- time to time and from person to person
- in intensity
+ Erection, Clitoris: Female reproductive system :: Male reproductive system
* A penis has a tubular shape while a clitoris has a hood covering and C curvature shape, and yet still tubelike, and rides along the body. The tip can lift upward more when aroused. The tip can also be referred to as the pearl. Sometimes, it can be uncomfortable to the entire clitoris, from its sensitivity, if treated rashly, mistaking erection for pleasure. This is known mentally by the participant if pleasurable or uncomfortable. Orgasms vary in intensity. The body and mind can be relaxed and passionate afterwards to continue with love making or setting itself. It is apart of our systems function and an occasion of delight to discover as well as the togetherness and mental health and joy with a partner to share together.
### action | completion | orgasm:
Female orgasm
* foreign concept, doubted to exist.
* helps sperm thru plug.<|endoftext|>### action:
Confession
* are admission
- declarations
- documents
- human works, always open to improvement
- penance
- religious doctrines
* condition of salvation and therefore precedes remissions of sins.
* form of witness.
* implies renunciation, the putting off of sin.
* involves admitting sins to a priest and receiving penance
- repentance - a change in attitude and action
* is admission
- an important part of worship
- fundamental to faith
* is the beginning of possession
- healing balm of our soul
- method used to get rid of impurity
- remedy for spiritual sickness
- sacrament of reconciliation
- sacrifice of ego on the altar of love
- toilet of the conscience
- verbal side of repentance
* kind of death.
* means for pursuing purity.
* occurs in many forms.
* public commitment to that belief and determined change of lifestyle.
* renewal of the grace that has come in baptism.
* sacrament and all sacraments give grace.
* way of naming our sin and telling our story.
* weapon in the hands of the enemy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Cooking
* boil rice.
* allows children to explore a variety of things.
* also contributes to vitamin losses, and many water soluble vitamins are destroyed by heat.
* also destroys enzymes, making beans and grain less digestible
- pST's ability to function biologically
- encourages creativity
- includes the use of microwaves
- kills parasites and food poisoning bacteria
- reduces the organic minerals our body needs into an inorganic, unusable form
- releases slightly more calcium, iron and zinc in many vegetables
* are actions
- albums
- preparing food
* are used for chefs
- food preparation
* are used for preparing food
- meals
- relaxation
* breaks down the proteins that provoke the needed immune response
- stiff cell walls and makes the nutrients inside available
* can destroy glutamine, especially in vegetables
- greatly increase a food's fluoride content
- inactivate both the enzyme and the bacteria
- often be the glue that bonds family members together
- reduce the number of potentially pathogenic organisms and the risk of illness
* cause burns
- cooked food
- hot food
- hunger
- pride
- smell
- smoke
- steam
* causes cross-linking which form of oxidation
- protein denaturation and the browning reactions
- the flesh to become lighter in color
* changes the chemical composition of foods and greatly reduces their nutritional content
- protein in the shellfish
* chore when women do it, an art form when men do it.
* collection or group of techniques.
* combination of various tastes, colours and textures.
* creative art that produces new things out of scraps even in a limited time
* denatures some allergens.
* destroys all the nutrients
- the amino acids the dog needs, as they are naturally a carnivore
* destroys the enzymes and changes living matter into dead matter
- nutrition in food
* does destroy some vitamins, but heating foods has several, significant benefits.
* factor in releasing the desirable antioxidants from tomatoes.
* fun way for children to learn to read and problem solve.
* has a relatively small impact on the oxalate content of foods.
* helps develop interest for youth in the areas of careers and family living
- eliminate fat
- to inactivate the goitrogenic compounds
* is all about heat and how heat transforms things.
* is an act of kindness provided it is an act of caring wrapped in pleasure
- alchemical process
* is an art as well as a science
- form that promises a solid economic future
- that comes from the inside
* is an art, much like painting
- the first creative art of all
- educational alternative to television and computer games
- exercise which involves preparing meals
- integral part of our traditional way of life
* is as much about nourishment for the soul as it is the stomach
- natural to children as making mud pies or playing in the sand
- by electricity
- chemistry
- common with different types of oil
- done by sunlight falling on dark surfaces and changing to heat
- essential to make food palatable
- for people who wear pastels
- global and cross-cultural and removes all barriers amongst people
- home economics and math
- in fact essential for some foods
* is the leading cause of all residential fires and fire injuries
- home fires
- only artistic medium that appeals to all five senses
- women's magic, ritual magic, a way to heal
* kills bacteria, but toxins remain in the tissues and can be eaten
- harmful bacteria
* kills the bacteria, which thrive in the warm waters of the Gulf
- necessary digestive enzymes found in raw fruits and veggies
* life skill.
* means that things get hot.
* occurs as the food temperature rises and moisture is driven out
- when the microwave causes food particles to vibrate
* often decreases vitamin C in foods.
* plays an important role in life on board.
* process of food destruction from the moment heat is applied to the foodstuff.
* reduces the water content of food.
* softens the tough cellular walls of carrots which allows beta carotene to escape.
* takes place as the temperature of the food mass rises
- mainly on open fires using charcoal, wood or kerosene as fuel
* typically increases protein digestibility and destroys antinutrients.
* usually results in a further loss of nutrients.
* way to share time together.
+ Control of fire by early humans, Changes to diet: Fire :: Human skills
* The cooking of meat, as can be seen from burned and blackened mammal bones, makes the meats easier to eat. It is also easier to get the nutrition from proteins because the meat itself is easier to digest. Cooking also kills parasites and food poisoning bacteria. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | cooking:
Barbecue cooking
* means to cook very slowly.
* means to cook very slowly. It is not as hot as grilling. Some meats must be cooked slowly to be tender, and easy to chew. Sometimes, meat may be slowly cooked for 8 to 24 hours in a barbecue.<|endoftext|>### action | cooking:
Braising
* are cooking.
* close cousin to stewing.
* includes both dry and moist cooking methods.
* involves long, slow cooking in liquid under low to moderate heat.
* is also an excellent way to cook vegetables
- an ideal way to prepare less-tender cuts of meat, firm fleshed fish and vegetables
- more often for large pieces of meat while stewing is used for smaller pieces of meat
- used mainly with meats that require longer cooking times in order to become tender
* method of cooking with a small amount of liquid in a tightly covered dish.
* moist-heat method similar to the oven cooking bag method.
* refers to cooking food with a small amount of liquid in a tightly covered pan.
Careless cooking
* is the number one cause of house fires.
* remains a leading cause of home fires.
Chinese cooking
* is an art with as many variations as there are provinces in China
- the general name of the cooking branches of every area and every nation in China
- widely available, as is that of India, Pakistan and Iran
* makes good use of ginger in fish, duck, chicken, pork, beef, and seafood dishes.
* varies greatly from region to region, but noodles are eaten everywhere.<|endoftext|>### action | cooking:
Cuisine
* Some cuisines are fond of raw garlic.
* also is an aspect of culture.
* are the result of evolution, an intermingling of forces over centuries or even millennia.
* belongs in a certain place, culturally, historically, and geographically.
* is Vegetarian with emphasis on whole foods
- about cooking, which is about eating and nourishment and health and survival
- an easy to use database designed to catalog recipes and plan meals
- barbeque, smoked meats, cowboy cuisine
- both an art and a science
- definitely a big part of the people's culture
- international, with all foodstuffs other than seafood imported
- only about making foods taste the way they are supposed to taste
- something very traditional in the life of Azeris
- typical bar food, including burgers, salads and appetizers
* varies greatly from one region to another.
### action | cooking | cuisine:
Asian cuisine
* can be a m lange of complicated flavors and textures.
* is considered by many to be the next wave in restaurant and catering concepts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | cooking | cuisine:
Bosnian cuisine
* is balanced between Western and Eastern influences.
* uses many spices, in moderate quantities.
+ Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cuisine
* Bosnian cuisine uses many spices, in moderate quantities. Most dishes are light, as they are cooked in lots of water. The sauces are fully natural, with little more than the natural juices of the vegetables in the dish. Typical ingredients include tomatoes, potatoes, onions, garlic, peppers, cucumbers, carrots, cabbage, mushrooms, spinach, zucchini, dried beans, fresh beans, plums, milk, paprika and cream called Pavlaka. Bosnian cuisine is balanced between Western and Eastern influences. As a result of the Ottoman administration for almost 500 years, Bosnian food is closely related to Turkish, Greek, and other former Ottoman and Mediterranean cuisines.
* Bosnian cuisine uses many spices, in moderate quantities. Most dishes are light, as they are cooked in lots of water. The sauces are fully natural, with little more than the natural juices of the vegetables in the dish. Typical ingredients include tomatoes, potatoes, onions, garlic, peppers, cucumbers, carrots, cabbage, mushrooms, spinach, zucchini, dried beans, fresh beans, plums, milk, paprika and cream called Pavlaka. Bosnian cuisine is balanced between Western and Eastern influences. As a result of the Ottoman administration for almost 500 years, Bosnian food is closely related to Turkish, Greek, and other former Ottoman and Mediterranean cuisines. However, because of years of Austrian rule, there are many influences from Central Europe. Typical meat dishes include mostly beef and lamb. Local wines come from Herzegovina where the climate is suitable for growing grapes. Plum or apple alcohol beverages are made in the north.
Caribbean cuisine
* includes chilies, curry cloves and ginger, as well as goat and pork.
* is based on a wide variety of local fruit, nuts, tubers, meat and vegetables
- some of the tastiest food in the world
Chilean cuisine
* has both Indian and European influences.
* shows the country's topographical variety.
+ Chile, Regions, Cuisine: Spanish-speaking countries
* Chilean cuisine shows the country's topographical variety. There is an assortment of seafood, beef, fruits, and vegetables.<|endoftext|>### action | cooking | cuisine:
Chinese cuisine
* Chinese Cuisine Includes Chinese recipes and restaurant listings.
* favorite one of non-Chinese people in the United States.
* harmonizes the body.
* has a very long history and is renowned all over the world
- zero tolerance for animal rights groups
* is an ancient art and ranks as one of the best in the world.
* is one of the greatest methods of cooking
- most popular types of ethnic food in America
- rated as one of the best among the different cuisine of the world
* uses chestnuts in high-class dishes
- more fresh vegetables and less meat than many other cuisines
- spare amounts of protein and a minimum of oil
Egyptian cuisine
* combination of Mediterranean, Lebanese, Greek and Turkish food.
* is notably conducive to vegetarian diets, as it relies heavily on vegetable dishes.
* mixture of Turkish and Arabic influences.
Finnish cuisine
* leans heavily on whatever fresh domestic ingredients are in season.
* varies with the seasons.
French cuisine
* has a very gentle way of handling fish
- worldwide reputation since the beginning of the last century
* is the goal of every amateur in the kitchen.
Fusion cuisine
* combines ingredients or cooking techniques of two or more cultures.
* is an evolving, ever changing style of cooking.
Indian cuisine
* combination of fragrantly mixed spices.
* encompasses a wide variety of regional and traditional cuisines native to India.
* has many influences.
* incorporates many spices that are said to have medicinal properties.
* is considered to be spicy by many.
* uses an extensive variety of herbs, spices and ingredients.
* varies from region to region. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | cooking | cuisine:
Indonesian cuisine
* is known as one of the best kind of cuisines in the world.
* varies greatly by region and has many different influences.
Japanese cuisine
* includes shrimp, lobster, chicken, steak and sushi.
* is cheap nowhere in the world
- one of simplicity bordering on the austere
* uses a lot of seafood.
Persian cuisine
* relatively new taste to American palates.
* uses chives and garlic chives lavishly in herb salads, meat sauces and soups.
Portuguese cuisine
* hearty fare, originally prepared to satisfy hard working peasants.
* is simple, characterized by a rich variety of regional dishes.
Spanish cuisine
* has a few standard procedures to prepare meats.
* uses the most oil among all Western and Central European cuisines.
Swiss cuisine
* is considered among the finest in the world.
* varies from German cuisine.
Thai cuisine
* is different from Chinese because it's cooked different
- one of the world's most delicious, enhanced by fresh, explosive tastes
- rich and spicy and seafood is considered a national speciality
- structured so that cool flavors temper heat and sweetness cuts acidity
* offer an enormous variety of vegetarian entrees.
* varies in different regions of the country.
Turkish cuisine
* is considered to be among the best in the world.
* is one of the best in the world
- richest in the world
- similar to that of surrounding countries and is rich in vegetables and meat
Vietnamese cuisine
* balance of all the different influences.
* emphasizes the harmony of sweet, sour, bitter and salty.
* has a particular genius when it comes to wrapping foods.
* is much richer and more varied than many cultures.
Culinary art
* is an hands on profession.
* wide field open to many exciting areas of specialization.
### action | cooking | culinary art:
Haute cuisine
* enjoys the reputation of being considered the finest cuisine in the world.
* is culinary art
Ethnic cooking
* is alive and well throughout the United States, even in the country's heartland.
* represents both a source of sustenance and a complex form of communication.
Fijian cooking
* draws heavily on seafood, often cooked in lolo, or coconut cream.
* is usually prepared in a lovo.
Home cooking
* catalyst that helps to bring people together at the table.
* is no longer the primary source of meals for many people.
Indian cooking
* has many health benefits.
* is considered as spicy, hot, complex and elaborate.
* relies on it heavily, especially in bean and lentil dishes.
Interrupted cooking
* can actually increase the possibility of bacteria growth.
* increases the chance of bacterial growth to infectious levels.
Italian cooking
* celebrates the true essence of ingredients.
* has a great influence on the younger generation.
* is about family, love, and abundance.
Mexican cooking
* blends the worlds of Indian and Hispanic.
* classic cuisine that combines numerous cultural traditions.
* mixture of both native and Spanish styles.
* uses ingredients that are easy to find and quick to prepare.
Microwave cooking
* can leave cold spots where bacteria can grow.
* is an great way to retain vitamins and color in vegetables
- as possible with bison as it is with beef or any other red meat
- safe to use for defrosting, reheating, and cooking
* requires very little water so that vegetables retain vitamins and minerals.
* uses much less energy than conventional cooking.
Partial cooking
* allows for bacteria to grow rapidly.
* can promote the growth of spoilage and food poisoning bacteria.
Proper cooking
* can destroy bacteria which are present in retailed meat.
* is one of the main ways to avoid contamination, since heat kills bacteria.
Slow cooking
* is the secret to the texture along with enough oil
- way to achieve a juicy jerk chicken that is browned to perfection
* more feminine way of cooking. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | cooking:
Solar cooking
* can slow down the deforestation.
* uses nothing but the sun's rays and a foil-lined cardboard box to cook food.
Thorough cooking
* is effective in making pork and pork products safe.
* kills most tapeworms, trichinae, and whipworms.
Toasting
* also has a long history, dating back to the Middle Ages
- makes removing the skins off of nuts easier
* brings out their flavors, especially when they are being added to other foods.
* is an off shoot of the tradition of fire bending
- important in China, with the host making the first toast
- something of a formal ritual in Sweden
* removes excess moisture and further develops flavour, texture and colour.
Unattended cooking
* causes the majority of fires in the kitchen.
* is the leading cause of house fires
- kitchen fires
* major cause of fires in residence halls.
Corrective action
* is intended to be a stimulus for positive change.
* written warning or suspension without pay.
Counterclaim
* are legal actions
- statements that oppose or refute claims
* is an action
Courtesy
* is civility
- manners
- politeness
- remarks
* means acting with respect and honoring the other person's values and beliefs.
Dash
* Use dashes to emphasize a part of a sentence and indicate a break.
* are elegance
- punctuation marks
- runs
- three times the length of dots
* can act as semi-colons, connecting independent clauses.
Decimalization
* affects nearly every area of the securities industry.
* allows securities to trade at increments as small as a penny.
* also brings the United States into conformity with international practices.
* is an action
- one example of trend that is limiting the profit potential for professionals
* means smaller price change increments, which means more parties can afford to trade.<|endoftext|>### action:
Defoliation
* Most defoliation occurs late in the summer the second year after infection.
* also cuts off the food supply to late season insects that are entering diapause
- makes the plants weaker and more susceptible to winter injury as well
- predisposes trees to bark beetle attack
* can also affect seed development and germination characteristics
- reduce the abundance of flowers the following spring
- result in sunburn of the fruit and quality loss
- be severe when conditions favor disease development
- reduce yields and lessen winter hardiness
* directly affects trees by decreasing their health and vigor.
- important management practice associated with high yields and high quality cotton
- especially severe when trees under water stress are subject to drying winds
- particularly noticeable during winter months
- possible relative to population levels
- recognized as small, round holes between major leaf veins
* measure of the leaf area destroyed by the storm.
* naturally interferes with growth and development of crop causing yield reduction.
* occurs early in the year
- in badly drained soil
- late in summer, when most growth is completed
- when infection is severe
- with increased infection
* reduces both cover and forage for many wildlife species
- hiding cover and forage for many wildlife species
* sometimes accompanies drought stress.
* starts at the bottom of the plant and works up.
* typically occurs from the bottom of the plant to the top.
* weakens plants and reduces flower production and quality
- the plant and exposes the fruit to sunscald injury
- trees and leads to other stresses
### action | defoliation:
Early defoliation
* leads to small fruit, weak bud formation, and fall blossoming.
* reduces growth and causes loss of crop the following year.
Heavy defoliation
* can be a problem on severely infected plants, especially in the fall
- lead to growth loss and tree mortality
* causes trees to appear grey or greyish-brown and tree crowns to appear thin. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | defoliation:
Premature defoliation
* reduces the quality and quantity of forage.
* weakens the tree and reduces fruit set and yield the following year.
Severe defoliation
* can occur if plants are permitted to dry excessively.
* disrupts the natural cycle of nutrients.
* reduces host plant vigor, which allows for secondary pest infection
- tree vigor, allowing for secondary infection and possible death<|endoftext|>### action:
Degradation
* Most degradations are caused by activities.
* Most degradations are caused by human activities
- disturbances
- increase poverty
- involve oxidation
* Some degradations affect health
- human health
* Some degradations contribute to cell death
* Some degradations occur in cytosol
- distinct organelles
- reduce food production
* also is accelerated by the formation of peroxides.
* appears as swelling, softening, cracking, or other change in appearance.
* can have impact.
* change in physical properties of the glove material.
* comes in several forms, the best known of which is soil erosion.
* depends on soil type, temperature, and moisture
- temperature and the presence of microorganisms
* increases with temperature and exposure to sunlight.
* is an action
- caused mostly by man and is normal in areas of poverty and underdevelopment
- faster in the presence of sediments, and is faster in fresh water than in salt water
- frequently by consortia of microorganisms
- important to protein conc
- the erosion of landforms by water, wind, and gravity
- typical of all sex chromosome systems
* lead to breakdowns
- differences
- reductions
* lowers the elevation of streambeds and flood plains.
* occurs as a result of many forms of pollution, from acid rain to pesticides
- due to sunlight, soil microorganisms, and chemical reactions in the soil
- when a material absorbs the radiation
* pose concern
- serious concern
* reduce chances
- likelihood
* refers to water quality.
* result of two simultaneous processes.
### action | degradation:
Anaerobic degradation
* can proceed by reductive dechlorination.
* occurs under denitrifying, sulfate reducing and methanogenic conditions.<|endoftext|>### action | degradation:
Environmental degradation
* Some environmental degradations create habitats.
* can also lead to human flight.
* concern that all nations share.
* contributes significantly to immigration pressures.
* direct consequence of activities by people.
* exacerbates the problem of time scarcity by adding to women's workload.
* has an economic cost, and economic development has environmental costs.
* is an increasing concern of hikers
- estimated to be increasing due to economic crisis
- less obvious in the sea than on land
- one of the most serious problems facing The Gambia
* major problem in southern Africa.
* occurs, for example in areas where springs have dried up.
* poses a serious threat to survival and gives rise to new conflicts.
* threatens indigenous people in the Pacific.<|endoftext|>### action | degradation:
Habitat degradation
* Diminishing water quality concern for all aquatic species.
* Most habitat degradations are caused by activities
- human disturbances
* can lead to changes in fish distribution
- offset the natural benefits of having a supply of cool water from springs
* includes dams, river dredging, and degraded water quality.
* is also a cause of death in young salmon
- an important factor in the decline of many protected species and fish stocks
* is the greatest threat facing orcas
- major threat to the sand cat
- primary cause for decline
* lead to differences.
* reduce quality. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | degradation:
Land degradation
* Some land degradations affect health
* Some land degradations have economic impact
- severe economic impact
* broad term that can be applied differently across a wide range of scenarios.
* global problem largely related to agricultural use.
* is about people.
* lead to reductions.
* leads to a significant reduction of the productive capacity of land.
* major problem in rich countries as well as in poor ones.
* occurs because of repeated land use decisions under specific conditions.
* reduces land quality and has a major impact on biodiversity.
* takes many forms.
* threatens food security.
Protein degradation
* Most protein degradation involves the proteasome, which carries out selective protein degradation.
* Some protein degradation occurs in lysosomes.
* involves many different proteases, such as calpains and cathepsins.
* is an essential component of normal cellular homeostasis
- important part of cell maintenance
* necessity but also a hazard.
Delivery
* Deliveries are acts
- births
- transportation
- refer to the arrival dates and quantities discharged in recipient countries
- result in performance
* involves the actual birth or expulsion of the fetus from the uterus.
* is the fetus become child
- process by which the baby leaves the mother
* refers to how services are organized and provided.
### action | delivery:
Oxygen delivery
* depends on convective transport by the blood and diffusion within the tissue.
* function of cardiac output and the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood.
* is determined by cardiac output and the oxygen content of arterial blood.
Preterm delivery
* major cause of death and illness in infants.
* places an infant at increased risk for severe complications or early death.<|endoftext|>### action | delivery | relay:
Frame relay
* can be a very efficient means of moving data around a network.
* fast and effective method of transferring data between corporate networks.
* fast, inexpensive way to transmit data.
* high-speed data connection that can replace dedicated leased lines
- transmission technology
* is an interface used for wide-area networking
- based on packet-switching technology
- one of the most important data service technologies used by corporations today
- the most widely deployed data transmission method in the world
- used by most state and local governments primarily to interconnect LANs
* modified form of packet switching service.
* packet-switching technology, which performs our data communications.
* reliable means of connecting remote locations to the headquarters office.
* uses switches where information is shared across a series of leased lines.
Transdermal delivery
* avoids the liver as well as the mouth.
* means absorbing through the skin.
Vaginal delivery
* alters the support in the vagina, especially the anterior wall.
* is almost always safe, even with abnormal tests
- often possible, especially when the babies are in the head-down position
- safer for the baby and for the mother
Demotion
* is an action
- organisation
* occurs when an employee moves to a lower pay grade.
Desorption
* is an action
- natural processes
- the reverse of absorption , adsorption , or both
* measures a greater regain at a given relative humidity.
* simultaneously regenerates surfactants for reuse. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Destruction
* Most destruction contributes to greenhouse effects
- is caused by impact
* Some destruction causes extinction.
* Some destruction is caused by agriculture
- human activities
- hurricanes
* can occur from both natural and human causes.
* causes problems.
* contributes to effects
* creates environments.
* exists only in the physical realm.
* has adverse consequences
- global consequences
- several adverse consequences
* human nature and can never be gotten rid of.
* is always a net loss for the economy.
* is by burning or shredding
- pulping, macerating, or burning
- shredding or burning
* is by shredding, macerating, pulping, or burning
- tearing, or burning
- tearing or burning
- tearing, macerating, pulping, or burning
- tearing into pieces, shredding, pulping, macerating, or burning
- called development and noise is labeled music
* is caused by consequences
- either by the direct impact of the wind or by flying debris
- endings
- located in war zones
- terminations
* is the loss of certain property, it is usually the result of another cause of loss
- physical disposal of records
- use of graffiti as a way to obtain fame and status in the graffiti culture
* leads to depletion
- disappearances
* leads to indirect impact
- negative impact
- victories
* occurs in nature
- the spleen and other specialized tissues
* produces effects
- little effects
* reduces survival.
* requires effort.
* results in reductions.
* threatens existence
* usually involves tissue loss down to the bones and joints.
### action | destruction:
Devastation
* is destruction
- deterioration
- feelings
- ruins
* refers to the reduction in the regenerative capacity of the forest.
Environmental destruction
* affects everyone.
* kind of self-destruction.
Forest destruction
* can remove the mature forest that the lynx needs for denning and rearing young.
* is the primary threat to the survival of collared lemurs as well
- survival of common brown lemurs
* threatens biodiversity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | destruction:
Habitat destruction
* Most habitat destruction is caused by impact.
* Some habitat destruction is caused by agricultural expansion
- conversions
* accounts for many extinctions.
* big problem for many wildlife species, and the bald eagle is no exception.
* can also decrease the range of certain organism populations
- take many forms
* comes in many forms.
* concern for all four gorilla subspecies.
* constitutes the main reason for their decline.
* continues to be the number one threat to flora and fauna in the world.
* destroys both food sources and nesting sites.
* has a devastating effect on the populations of many species
- long term effects
* is also a major threat to their survival.
* is another cause of the decreasing number of tarsiers in the Philippines
- key problem affecting black coral populations
- major threat to biodiversity
- ever on the increase as the human population expands
- identified as the primary cause for their decline
- likely the major factor affecting long-nosed bats
- mostly a consequence of agrarian conversion
* is one of the leading causes for declines for all types of wildlife
- of species decline today
- main causes why tigers have become endangered
* is one of the main threats to lemur longevity and population
- to macaques
- major reasons of their decreasing population
* is one of the most important problems facing wolves today
- serious threats to amphibian populations
- perhaps the worst of all threats to the coastal environment
- primarily due to economic and agricultural development
- probably the major threat to local populations of rubber boas
- sometimes worse than in the developing world
- the biggest threat facing red pandas today
* is the greatest threat of the chimpanzee
- key cause of biodiversity genocide
* is the leading cause of species endangerment and extinction
- pushing endangered species toward extinction
- main reason why species disappear
* is the main threat for black-faced lion tamarins
- to the lemurs but hunting also occurs
- major threat to koalas
- number one cause of species decline in Canada
- primary cause of extinction or threat of extinction for all animals
* leads to impact.
* major threat to most natural habitats and wildlife species
- wildfowl
* poses the most significant threat to the Florida panther's survival.
* primary cause of songbird species decline.
* problem across their central African range.
* significant threat to gopher tortoises.
Holocaust
* are destruction.
* is destruction
* take different forms throughout history, always based on evil.
### action | destruction | hooliganism:
Soccer hooliganism
* is also a problem in the Western world.
* mars the world's most popular game.
Nuclear destruction
* is instant, total and irreversible.
* remains the greatest threat in terms of potential harm. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | destruction:
Vandalism
* Some vandalism is to let people see their talent of art
* There is the problem of vandalism. Some vandalism is easy to see. Other vandalism may be harder to find.
* isn't actually all that bad here compared to english wikipedia. Most vandalism is gone pretty quickly.
* ' is making changes to Wikipedia content so that it becomes incorrect or does not make sense. This also includes removing content for no reason. Vandalism very bad problem. People who vandalize may be blocked so they are no longer able to make changes. Test edits are usually not vandalism. Sometimes, vandals from the English Wikipedia will come here to vandalize. This is called cross-wiki vandalism.
* is any disruptive edit. Spamming is disruptive. I wouldn't have hesitated to use rollback on this edit either. Spam is one of the worst kinds of vandalism because it masquerades as a legit edit. Had I been on, I would have done the same thing.
* The regular English Wikipedia does not allow IPs to create pages. Most vandalism is from anonymous users
* are destruction.
* breeds vandalism.
* can be a problem when fencing and vegetables are stolen.
* comes in many forms and robs citizens of time, money and personal property.
* crime punishable by either incarceration or fine or both
- which eats away at everyone's tax dollars
* crime, even if that charge is being litigated in a juvenile delinquency hearing.
* criminal offence.
* dates back centuries.
* destroys sites for scientific investigation and the enjoyment of others.
* is an example of a crime that is probably under-reported
- iresponsable act
* is any attempt to harm or destroy data of another user or network
- destroy the operating system, application software, or data
* is any malicious attempt to harm or destroy data of another member
- or destroy hardware or software
- common crime on campus
- damage to or destruction of the physical property of others
- disorderly behavior
- good when the victim is bad
- mischief
- only damage to or destruction of the physical property of others
- punishable by fine or imprisonment
- seen as a mechanism for restoring equity in a relationship
* is the deliberate defacement, mutilation, or destruction of private or public property
- destroying of someone else's property
- most common reason for using protective glazing
- number one problem in preserving the historical cemetaries of New Orleans
- willful destruction of property
- usually a crime of opportunity
- vandalism, from spray painting bathroom walls to crashing the campus computer network
- wilful damage
* is, however, punishable by a fine or imprisonment.
* kind of parasitism born from the essence of millennial western civilization.
* low form of antisocial behavior.
* means deliberate damge to someone else's property, including school property.
* often conceals another crime.
* poor form of revenge.
* possibility in outdoor displays.
* problem that gets to everyone in some form or another.
* serious problem in many communities.
* widespread problem facing many churches today.
* willful or malicious act on public or private property.
+ Vandalism, Examples: Types of crime :: Property crimes
* However, not all vandalism is bad. Some vandalism is to let people see their talent of art. The vandals do not have enough money to buy an art gallery and therefore using public property to allow people to admire their talent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | destruction:
Vaporization
* can occur in temperatures as low as zero degrees
- through either evaporation or boiling
* increases the risk of poisoning
- when ambient pressure is decreased
* increases with increase in temperature or with decrease in pressure
- rises in temperature
* is an alternative to smoking
- endothermic process
- annihilation
- obliteration
- phase change
* is the conversion of a liquid to a gas
- most precise surgical tool available for the removal of endometriosis
- physical change of a liquid to a gas
* is the process by which solid and liquid is turned into a gaseous form
- of converting a liquid into a gas
- when a person is murdered by being turned into vapors
* occurs when a liquid changes into the gaseous state
- gins enough energy to become gas
* releases the active ingredient in a smoking material without actually burning it.
+ Unperson: Language
* In the George Orwell book Nineteen Eighty-Four, an 'Unperson' is someone who has been vaporized. Vaporization is when a person is murdered by being turned into vapors. The point of this was that such a person would be gone from all citizens' memories, even friends and family. There is no Newspeak word for what happened to unpeople, therefore it is thoughtcrime to say an unperson's name or think of unpeople.
+ Vaporizer (cannabis): Smoking
* Vaporization is an alternative to smoking. It does that by heating the material so that the active compounds boil into a vapor. Nothing actually burns, so there is no smoke or taste of smoke. Vapor ideally contains almost no particulate matter or tar, and much less noxious gas such as carbon monoxide. The vapor can be collected in a jar or inflatable bag, or inhaled directly. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Diet
* All diets are well balance, low fat and sodium
- containing more energy than a person needs can cause weight gain
* Any diet has the potential to be beneficial or detrimental to health
- promote or harm health depending on the food it comprises
* Every diet contains plant matter
- needs a percentage of Fat
* Many diets cause hypoglycemia and subsequent periods of ravenous hunger
- the body to go into starvation mode, due to radical changes in caloric intake
- claim to be simple
- eliminate food groups
- fail because they are difficult to keep to
- have the same ingredients and preservatives
- listed as hypoallergenic contain other ingredients and caution is order
- promote high inflammation
- recommend reducing dietary intake of saturated fats
* Most diets add food.
* Most diets affect brains
- development
- flavor
- growth
- mental health
- allow food
- alone cause a loss in fat along with water and muscle tissue
- are too high in fat, especially saturated fat
- become vitamins
- boost energy
- can have effects
* Most diets can have health consequences
- many negative side effects
- negative effects
* Most diets can have positive effects
- health effects
- serious health consequences
- cause calcium excretion
* Most diets cause excessive calcium excretion
- combine food
- come from food
- comprise fruit
* Most diets consist of bake meat
- beans
- breakfasts
- camel meat
- carbohydrate proteins
- cheese
- consumption
- dairy products
* Most diets consist of decay matter
- organic matter
- plant materials
* Most diets consist of decompose organic substances
- diverse plants
- dog food
* Most diets consist of dry dog food
- edible plants
- fast food
- fiber
- fibre
- fish meals
- flake food
- foliage
* Most diets consist of fresh food
- vegetables
- gerbil food
- grass hay
- green plants
- healthy meals
- herbs
- large prey
- leafy vegetables
* Most diets consist of lean meat
- live prey
- meat products
- muscle meat
- natural food
- nutrients
- nutritious food
* Most diets consist of organic matter
* Most diets consist of plant food
- prepare food
- pulpy fruit
* Most diets consist of raw fruit
- ripe fruit
- rot food
- salad
- shrub plants
- small prey
- soup
* Most diets consist of such materials
* Most diets consist of tropical fruit
- vegetable matter
- water plants
- whole food
- wild fruit
- woody materials
* Most diets contain adequate calcium
- amounts
* Most diets contain animal protein products
- bread
- calories
- cereal grain
- cholesterol
- components
- corn
- dietary fiber
- enough nutrients
- essential nutrients
- few calories
- fruit vegetables
- grain vegetables
- legume grain
- legumes
- lipids
- low calories
- magnesium
- many calories
* Most diets contain milk products
- modest amounts
- moisture
- percent moisture
- phosphate
- pollen
- rice
- salt
- seafood
- seeds
- soybean meals
- sugar
- total proteins
- vegetable fruit
- whole grain
- yeast
* Most diets contribute to health
- sac secretion
- viscous secretion
- create positive effects
* Most diets depend on availability
- environments
- geographic regions
- habitats
- healthy habitats
- oceanic habitats
* Most diets emphasize carbohydrates
- drink water
- raw meat
* Most diets ensure good health
- intestinal health
- healthy life
- survival
* Most diets fail because humans are still thinking and eating like humans
- in achieving effective weight loss or maintenance
- when individuals go on a dietary regime, because they lose both fat and muscle
* Most diets feature food
- healthy food
* Most diets fill with food
- rich food
* Most diets focus on eat food
- seasonal food
* Most diets have animal proteins
- aspects
- b vitamins
- benefits
- big differences
- commonalities
- conditions
- deficits
- features
- health benefits
- lean proteins
- many benefits
- other benefits
- positive aspects
- potassium
- recipes
* Most diets have several commonalities
- variation
- sodium disproportion with the ratio tending toward sodium extreme excess
- starches
* Most diets help body weight
- brain functions
- cardiovascular diseases
- common problems
- digestion
- excess weight
- fundamental problems
- goal weight
- health problems
- healthy skin
- heart diseases
- lymphocyte functions
- maintain proper health
- metabolism
- nutrition
- performance
- potential health problems
* Most diets help prevent common problems
- ulcer
- symptoms
- women
* Most diets improve bone health
- immature survival
- liver health
- overall health
- physical health
- quality
* Most diets increase chances
- immunity
* Most diets interfere with absorption
- calcium absorption
* Most diets involve calorie deprivation
- eat meat
- fresh meat
* Most diets lack certain nutrients
* Most diets lead to benefits
- deficiency diseases
- intestinal problems
* Most diets lead to liver diseases
- weight gain and a sense of failure
- never work
* Most diets offer food
- little sugar
- many nutrients
- nourishment
- optimum nourishment
- refine sugar
- only work for the short term and in the long term produce the opposite effect
- overlook the emotional components of eating
* Most diets play important roles
- major roles
- protective roles
- significant roles
- vital roles
* Most diets prevent breast cancer
* Most diets produce effects
- harmful effects
- treatment effects
* Most diets promote cardiovascular health
- cell regeneration
- muscle growth
* Most diets promote optimal growth
- reproduction
* Most diets protect against diseases
* Most diets provide additional nutrients
- adequate nutrients
- basic nutrients
- daily intake
* Most diets provide enough calcium
* Most diets provide essential nutrients
- good nutrition
- green vegetables
- inadequate nutrition
- lysine
* Most diets provide many calories
- essential vitamins
- minerals
- much calcium
* Most diets provide necessary daily nutrients
- protein intake
- rich nutrients
- sufficient calories
- zinc
* Most diets raise acid levels
- testosterone levels
* Most diets reduce cholesterol
- impact
- rely on small portion sizes to reduce calories sufficiently
* Most diets require digestion
- food preparation
- women to limit food consumption in caloric amount or to specific food groups
* Most diets result in benefits
- dramatic health benefits
- suggest using fresh foods, cooked from scratch at home
- supply necessary nutrients
* Most diets support complete immature development
- digestive health
- larval development
- treat hunger as the enemy
* Some diets add yogurt.
* Some diets affect babies
- cognition
- dogs
- embryo survival
- expression
- gene expression
- kidney functions
- livers
- occurrences
- outcomes
- patterns
- slaves
* Some diets are consumed by langurs
- deficient in copper
- well balanced and can be followed for long periods of time
- avoid food
* Some diets become disorder
- eat disorder
- mainstreams
* Some diets boost intake
- build and maintain healthy bodies
* Some diets can be very restrictive and expensive
- cause adverse effects in certain individuals
* Some diets can have excretion
* Some diets cause abnormalities
- alkali diseases
- big problems
- bone abnormalities
- calcium deficiencies
- damage
- death
- dental diseases
- diarrhea
- fatal imbalances
- fatty liver diseases
* Some diets cause health disorder
- illnesses
- kidney damage
- long term health damage
- permanent damage
* Some diets cause serious dental diseases
* Some diets cause serious health disorder
- sperm abnormalities
- weight loss through dehydration or through other dangerous means
* Some diets come from acorns
- exoskeletons
- olive oil
* Some diets compose of potato
- white potato
- comprise seeds
* Some diets consist of adult moths
- algas
- animals
- aphids
- aquatic vegetation
- arboreal mammals
- arthropods
- bacteria
- bamboo
- bivalves
- blood
- blossoms
- broths
- buds
- butterfly flowers
- carrot snacks
- caterpillars
- cattle
- coarse vegetation
- conifer needles
- crabs
- dead animals
- debris
- decay vegetation
- deer
- dragonflies
- dwarf shrubs
- earthworms
- fibrous vegetation
- fish larvae
- flower nectar
- freshwater vegetation
- frogs
- fungi
- gelatin
* Some diets consist of grass seeds
- green vegetation
- grubs
- hairy caterpillars
- hares
- insect larvae
- juice
- krill
- liquids
- locusts
- marine mammals
- meadow voles
- mixture
- molluscs
- monkeys
- monocots
- mussels
- native mammals
- nuts
- oysters
- pasture
- phloem
* Some diets consist of plant juice
- plenty
- powder
- prairie dogs
- primate biscuits
- ragweed seeds
- rations
- rats
- rattlesnakes
- rays
- reptiles
- roots
- sea turtles
- seaweed
- seed mixture
- semen
- serpents
- sheep
- shoots
* Some diets consist of small animals
- snails
- snowshoe hares
- soy milk
- squids
- sunflower seeds
- swim crabs
- truffles
- underground fungi
- weevils
* Some diets consist of white rice
- spruce seeds
- wildflowers
- woodlouses
- zebra mussels
- zebras
- zooplankton
* Some diets contain acid
- adequate irons
- amino acid
- barley
- biomass
- calcium hydroxide
- chromium
- coconut oil
- color
- corn oil
- disrupt compounds
- duckweeds
- endocrine disrupt compounds
- excess phosphorus
- fatty acid
- fibre diets
- field peas
- flour
- glucose
- kelp
- mice
- percent carbohydrates
- refine carbohydrates
- spirogyras
- tomatoes
- wheat flour
- whole milk
* Some diets contribute to birth defects
- decrease blood pressure
* Some diets depend on goals
- types
- encourage consumption
- enhance experience
* Some diets ensure bowel conditions
- fill with meat
* Some diets focus on barley
- sandwiches
- follow principles
- formulate for kittens
* Some diets have ability
- abundances
* Some diets have adverse effects
- immediate effects
- little effects
- much energy
- phases
- physiological effects
- powerful effects
- profound effects
- reputations
- significant effects
- similar effects
- similarity
- surgery
- term effects
* Some diets have unpleasant effects
* Some diets help acidity
- acne
- athletes
- autoimmune disorder
* Some diets help blood pressure
- sugar imbalances
- circulate insulin
- emotional issues
- female gymnasts
- health issues
* Some diets help high blood pressure
- kidneys
- kids
- kinds
* Some diets help lower blood pressure
- lung cancer
- many autoimmune disorder
- nausea
* Some diets help prevent diseases
- infection
- shapes
- skills
* Some diets help young female gymnasts
* Some diets improve blood vessel functions
- cardiovascular risk factors
- characteristics
- glucose oxidation
- verbal memory performance
* Some diets increase blood pressure
- cholesterol levels
- fat excretion
* Some diets increase fecal excretion
- kill bacteria
- lack food
* Some diets lack rich food
- protein food
- sufficient vitamins
* Some diets lead to abnormalities
- micronutrient deficiencies
- obesity
- severe deficiencies
- vitamin deficiencies
- limit absorption
* Some diets meet minimum daily requirements
- nutrient requirements
- mix with rice
* Some diets offer diets
- friendships
- natural diets
* Some diets prevent anemia
- diabetes
* Some diets promote high intakes of protein, especially chicken
- osteoporosises
- protect against cancer
* Some diets provide health benefits
- lifelong protection
* Some diets reduce blood levels
- body secretion
- toxins
- variability
* Some diets replace diets
- lunch
* Some diets result in deposition
- lipid deposition
- tout one food with special properties that can cause weight loss
- use mangos
* actually do great damage to a compulsive eater.
* also change seasonally
- limit the number of calories people take in
- vary geographically
* are a leading cause of eating disorders
- multi million pound industry
- about eating the right quantity and type of food at the right time
- adult maintenance diets on a per elephant basis
- cultural activities
- expensive and without value
- fares
- for people who are thick and tired of it
- generally high in fat, carbohydrates, and sodium
- important to help the patient maintain a healthy weight and a healthy blood glucose level
- legislatures
- likely to succeed if, however they achieve it, they get people eating less
- limited in essential nutrients and certain food groups
- negative, restricting, and depriving
- nothing but voluntary starvation
- often useful in food allergy
- one of the causes of obesity
- something, that especially women, start doing around the age of fourteen or so
- the root of all evil
* base on animal food
* based on catabolic foods result in staggering weight losses of pure fat from the body.
* can be very beneficial to some, yet damaging to others
- cause tension between children and parents
- even create other serious health problems
* can have consequences
* can have serious consequences
- include corn and insects, depending on necessity and environmental availability
- involve all types of fruits and vegetables to fresh juices
- temporarily change with habitat in the same species
- turn into eating disorders
- vary depending on the age, size, habitat, and available prey
- compulsive eating
* change every day.
- sources
* compose of certain nutrients
- grasses, leaves, woody material, and roots
- quality grass hay
- two forms of iron, a ferrous form and a ferric form
* containing cottage cheese are higher in sodium.
* create a negative self-image
- feelings of deprivation
* decrease intake.
* differ across societies, among individuals, and over time
- between and within species
- only in how they tune the engine
* follow guidelines.
* go wrong by making it difficult to eat
- to prepare food and to eat
- requiring the dieter to change the type of food eaten
- best results
- downsides
- fringe benefits
- inclusions
- overall results
* help benefits
* help potential health problems
- users
* include abundant fresh vegetables
* include animal food
- beef
* include certain food
- cholesterol food
- citrus fruit
- clear liquids
- complex carbohydrates
- dry food
* include ferment dairy products
- fortify food
* include fresh vegetables
- grain carbohydrates
* include green leafy vegetables
- grind beef
- insoluble fiber
* include invertebrate animals
- vertebrates
* include lean meat
- little red meat
- meat fish vegetables
- much fruit
- organ meat
- other vertebrates
- persian food
* include plant food
- preserve food
* include raw animal food
- restrictions
- seasonal fruit
- significant components
- simple carbohydrates
* include small animals
- soft fruit
- vitamin minerals
- woody plants
* involve eat meat
* limit carbohydrate intake
* lower blood cholesterol levels
- triglyceride levels
* may have adverse effects
* may have serious effects
* need for growth
- rapid growth
* offer benefits
- enormous benefits
* offer many benefits
* only provide temporary weight loss
- work when they're adhered to, whether the subject is human or merely human-owned
* play big roles
- critical roles
- huge roles
- key roles
- support roles
* play vital roles
* produce better results
- consistent treatment effects
- similar results
- deprivation and as a result they provoke eating binges
- excellent results
- immediate results
* recommend meals.
* reinforce body hatred.
* result in dramatic benefits
* take effort
* trigger development
* typically cause children to feel deprived and, as a consequence, to overeat.
* usually leave a person aggravated, discouraged, and the same size.
* vary depending on a skunk's location and the time of year
- geographically and seasonally
* vary greatly among sea turtle species
- throughout the Mediterranean
- seasonally, as different foods are available at different times of year
- throughout the year in response to minute changes in plant chemistry
* work faster when combined with a sensible program of exercise.
+ Diet (nutrition): Food and drink :: Nutrition
* Diets are about eating the right quantity and type of food at the right time. When people talk about a diet, they are usually referring to a special kind of diet. People who study diet and eating habits are called dietitians.
+ Water viper: Vipers
* Water vipers' are a species of venomous snakes found in the southern United States. They are capable of performing a highly painful bite. If they are antagonized they stand their ground by coiling their bodies and then show off their fangs. These snakes are almost always found in or near water. They are also known as water moccasins. Diets are usually fish and frogs.
+ Yo-yo effect, Causes: Health
* The body needs less energy after losing weight on a diet. People have less fatty tissue and often less muscle after dieting. Muscle tissue needs more energy than fatty tissue. Reducing the amount of muscle tissue therefore reduces the need for energy. Diets also limit the number of calories people take in. At some point, a dieter's body will change the way it uses energy if there are less calories to burn. The body does this to make sure it survives when less food is available. These changes in the body cause people to gain weight rapidly when they stop dieting and return to their old eating habits. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | diet:
Alkaline diet
* Some alkaline diets help acidity.
* disturb a felines digestive and urinary balance.
* is hard for certain parts of the country.
American diet
* Many American diets are low in zinc.
* are high in protein from which lysine and methionine are derived
- often quite high in fat content and obesity common health problem
* come up particularly short in the vegetable and fruit groups.
Artificial diet
* Most artificial diets provide basic nutrients
* Some artificial diets consist of milk.
* are almost invariably heat treated and contain chemical additives
- messier than live food and tend to easily decompose<|endoftext|>### action | diet:
Balance diet
* Most balance diets boost energy.
* Most balance diets consist of food
- fresh food
- vitamins
* Most balance diets contain adequate fiber
- amounts
- legumes
- proteins
- contribute to health
- have calories
* Most balance diets offer food
* Most balance diets promote growth
- optimal growth
* Most balance diets provide calcium
- necessary nutrients
- support development
* Some balance diets consist of seeds.
* Some balance diets lead to good health
* include carbohydrates
- fresh water
- fruit
- products
- simple carbohydrates
Balanced diet
* are diets.
* is important for the treatment of several diseases.
* is very important for good health
- keeping healthy body and mind
* plays a vital role in keeping body and mind healthy.
Calorie diet
* Most calorie diets can have effects
- many negative side effects
- negative effects
- contain food
- produce results
* Most calorie diets provide calories
- nutrition
* include proteins.
Candida diet
* Most candida diets allow food.
* Most candida diets contain enough nutrients
Chimpanzee diet
* Most chimpanzee diets consist of fruit.
* include fruit.
Commercial diet
* Most commercial diets like to focus on one or two success stories.
* are usually one size fits all.
* contribute to periodontal disease.
* insure that essential vitamins, minerals and fatty acids are included.
Crash diet
* Some crash diets have reputations.
* are difficult to maintain
- for dummies
* simulate times of famine.
* tend to include large amounts of raw foods, such as fruits and vegetables.
Daily diet
* Most daily diets consist of salad.
* Most daily diets contain calories
- support digestive health
* Some daily diets focus on sandwiches.
- fiber
* include fruit.<|endoftext|>### action | diet:
Dietary supplement
* Many dietary supplements are available in the form of tablets or hard gels.
* Most dietary supplements are safe when consumed as directed, while others are potentially harmful.
* Some dietary supplements can have serious side effects even when taken alone.
* abound and offer a variety of advantages to weightlifters.
* affect the anabolic hormones after weight-training exercise.
* are a controversial medical issue
- multi-billion dollar business
- another source of folate
- big business
- far more processed than food, so the chances are they are safer than food
- hugely popular
- particularly important for older people for three reasons
- unnecessary if one eats a balanced diet
* can assist milk production
- be of enormous value
- foster good health and vigor in all stages of life
- have dangerous side effects
* encompass vitamins and minerals as well as herbals and botanicals.
* have a place
- few regulations about what claims they can make
* range in quality.
### action | diet | dietary supplement:
Vitamin pill
* are dietary supplements
- no substitute for healthy eating
- pills
* don t have fiber.
* reduce cancer risk in China. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | diet | dietary supplement | vitamin pill:
Multivitamin
* Many multivitamins contain that much
- the recommended amount of folic acid
* Most multivitamins contain both nutrients, as do whole grains, oranges, and green vegetables
- small amounts of elemental iron
- that amount
* Most multivitamins contain the recommended amount of folic acid
- dosages of both nutrients
- provide adequate potassium
* Some multivitamins contain iron and other minerals.
* A 'multivitamin' is set of vitamins used often with minerals needed by the human body to function properly. Multivitamins are available as tablets, capsules, pastilles, powders, liquids, and injections.
* are a good way to make up for little to no intake of a certain type of vitamin
- available as tablets , capsules , pastilles , powders , liquids , and injections
- medicine
- the most commonly used product in the dietary supplement category
- useful in reversing neovascularization
- vitamin pills
* contain multiple micronutrients , such as vitamins and dietary minerals.
* have small proportions of each vitamin in the correct amount.
* promise good nutrition in a pill.
* provide many nutrients that are necessary for optimal nervous system function.
Elimination diet
* help problems.
* is used to diagnose food allergies vs intolerances.
Extreme diet
* Most extreme diets can have health consequences
- serious health consequences
* can be unhealthy, hard to sustain and even dangerous.
* can have consequences
* can have serious consequences<|endoftext|>### action | diet:
Fad diet
* Many fad diets call for an imbalanced food intake and can create poor nutritional status.
* Most fad diets provide poor nutrition and cause a number of side effects.
* are abundant
- to be avoided because they are nutritionally unsound
- unsafe and harmful
- unsafe, and some can even be life threatening
* are usually full of crap
- short lived in popularity
* can be dangerous, unproductive, and unhealthy.
* fail to provide ways to keep excess weight off.
* promise rapid weight loss but actually encourage unhealthy dietary habits.
* provide the illusion of a quick fix.
Fast diet
* Most fast diets promote cell regeneration
* lead to benefits.
Fat diet
* Most fat diets consist of fresh fruit
- contain fruit
- help weight
* Most fat diets lead to diseases
- heart diseases
* Most fat diets prevent diseases
* Some fat diets affect expression.
* Some fat diets cause death
* Some fat diets consist of grain
* Some fat diets contain coconut oil
- plenty
* Some fat diets contribute to health problems
- help shapes
- lead to obesity
* Some fat diets reduce blood levels
- testosterone levels
* decrease intake.
Fiber diet
* have benefits
- many benefits
* help healthy skin
- symptoms
* interfere with absorption
- calcium absorption
* prevent hunger.
* support digestive health
Food diet
* consist of food
- meat
- muscle meat
* play roles
- support roles
* play vital roles
* provide nutrients
- rich nutrients
Good diet
* Most good diets contain enough nutrients
- essential nutrients
- proteins
- help energy
* Most good diets improve health
- liver health
- provide vitamins
* Some good diets help blood pressure
- high blood pressure
* allows the body to function properly.
* consist of fruit
- hay
- people
- performance
* include food.
* uses all foods in moderation, even cookies, candies and fries.
Healthful diet
* enable people of all ages to work productively and feel their best.
* help children grow, develop, and do well in school.
* include meat. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | diet:
Healthy diet
* Eat regularly for steady metabolism- avoid feast or famine diets.
* Most healthy diets consist of diverse plants
- meals
- tropical plants
* Most healthy diets contain amounts
* Most healthy diets ensure healthy life
* Most healthy diets help cardiovascular diseases
* Most healthy diets help potential health problems
* Most healthy diets improve health
- quality
- prevent diseases
- promote growth
- protect against diseases
* Most healthy diets provide calories
- enough calories
* Some healthy diets contain chromium
* Some healthy diets enhance dive experience
* Some healthy diets help blood sugar
- lower blood sugar
- increase survival
* Some healthy diets provide lifelong protection
* are essential for reducing heart disease risks.
* has long range impacts on health.
* have benefits.
- weight
* helps in minimizing stretch marks to a large extent.
* include fiber
- fruit vegetables
- insoluble fiber
- vitamin minerals
Herbivorous diet
* Most herbivorous diets help health problems
- require digestion
* Some herbivorous diets help blood pressure.
* Some herbivorous diets help high blood pressure
High fiber diet
* help healthy skin
* interfere with absorption
- calcium absorption
* support digestive health
Homemade diet
* Most homemade diets improve health.
* are an alternative for cats that refuse to eat a commercial diet.
Improper diet
* Most improper diets lead to intestinal problems.
* Some improper diets lead to diarrhea.
* can cause white muscle disease, paralysis, white eyes and death
- contribute to weakness of the spine
- lead to sluggish muscle tone in the colon and can cause food waste to accumulate
- result in the outbreak of a disease
* is another cause for ill-health of the immune system.
Inadequate diet
* Some inadequate diets affect slaves.
* forces the body to use stored-up protein and fat for energy.
Liquid diet
* Some liquid diets consist of juice
- liquids
* are also more expensive to prepare and more difficult to store than dry feeds
- safe only if they are used according to directions
* consists entirely of liquids, of which milk is the most valuable.
Maternal diet
* Some maternal diets have effects.
* alters the sensory qualities of human milk and the nursling's behavior.
Mediterranean diet
* Most mediterranean diets consist of food
- prepare food
* Most mediterranean diets focus on food
- healthy food
- help diseases
- increase energy
- play roles
* Some mediterranean diets help prevent diseases.
* include fruit
- little red meat
- oil
- olive oil
Natural diet
* Most natural diets consist of fruit
- live prey
- have water
* Most natural diets play roles
- support roles
* Most natural diets play vital roles
* Some natural diets boost metabolism.
* Some natural diets consist of caterpillars
- hairy caterpillars
* are always more nutritious for wildlife than human food.
* include corn
Normal diet
* Most normal diets consist of fruit.
* Some normal diets consist of berries.
Nutritious diet
* Most nutritious diets create positive effects.
* create effects
* include wheat.
Omnivorous diet
* Most omnivorous diets consist of fruit
- contribute to health
- feature food
* Most omnivorous diets provide necessary nutrients
* Some omnivorous diets consist of berries
- grain
- nuts
- provide benefits
* base on food.
* include meat
* includes plants, insects, and mollusks.
Peanut butter diet
* help weight.
* lower levels
- triglyceride levels | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | diet:
Poor diet
* Most poor diets affect development.
* Some poor diets affect performance
- contribute to development
* Some poor diets have effects
- term effects
- lead to illnesses
* can also cause a person to have a foggy mind and be less present
- cause fatigue and slow healing
- impair mental efficiency
* can lead to coronary artery disease, obesity and atherosclerosis
- health problems serious enough to endanger their lives
* coupled with alcoholism is the most common cause of folate deficiency.
* leads to poor health, low work productivity, and impaired mental functions
- which can make asthma worse
Popular diet
* Most popular diets contribute to health.
* Some popular diets can contribute to decreased health and dental issues.
Proper diet
* Most proper diets consist of plants.
* Some proper diets consist of seeds.
* can make the teeth and jaw bones harder and healthier.
* include fruit vegetables
* is important for both physical and emotional well being
- the way to bring the humors into balance
- very important for good dental health
* slows the damage of aging.
Protein diet
* Most protein diets affect health
- cause excretion
- contain pollen
- help weight
* Most protein diets promote growth
- muscle growth
* Some protein diets consist of bacon
- help athletes
* Some protein diets improve glucose oxidation
* Some protein diets increase calcium excretion
- lead to abnormalities
- reduce consumption
* need for growth
- rapid growth
Raw diet
* Many raw diets are excessively high in fat, which can lead to obesity.
* Most raw diets consist of food
- fresh fruit
- meat
- muscle meat
- whole food
- play vital roles
* Most raw diets provide nutrients
- rich nutrients
* Some raw diets affect dogs.
* Some raw diets cause health problems
- serious health problems
- contain plenty
* include animal food
* include raw animal food
- vitamins
* offer benefits
- enormous benefits
* play roles
- support roles
Raw food diet
* consist of meat
* include beef
- grind beef
Rich diet
* Some rich diets have effects.
* include vegetables.
Special diet
* Some special diets help circulate insulin
* work by reducing the mineral building blocks or urinary stones in the urine.
Traditional asian diet
* contain essential nutrients
* include dairy products
Traditional diet
* Most traditional diets contain amounts
- salt
* Some traditional diets consist of milk
- contain plenty
* include dairy products
- preserve food
Typical diet
* Many typical diets contain hidden fats.
* Most typical diets consist of matter.
* Most typical diets contain amounts
- sodium
- provide proteins
* Some typical diets contain carbohydrates.
* consist of fruit
- salad
- fruit vegetables
Vary diet
* Most vary diets combine food.
* Most vary diets contain nutrients
* Most vary diets provide good nutrition
* consist of flake food
* include food
- fruit vegetables
- herbs
- other vertebrates
- preparation
- green vegetables | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action | diet:
Vegetarian diet
* Most vegetarian diets are low in or devoid of animal products.
* Most vegetarian diets consist of fresh vegetables
- contain proteins
- have b vitamins
- help weight
- provide intake
- reduce cholesterol
- support development
- tend to be high in bulk and low in fat
* Some vegetarian diets consist of grain
- strictly raw foods
- whole grain
* Some vegetarian diets have effects
* Some vegetarian diets provide benefits
- health benefits
* are compatible with health for persons of all ages.
* are generally high in both soluble and insoluble fiber
- lower in fat, sodium and cholesterol than the average diet
- great for athletes
- high in fibre and the iron and zinc present is poorly available
- naturally low in fat
- notoriously low in protein
- often protein deficient
- quite a bit higher in iron than omnivore diets
- typically lower in saturated fat and cholesterol
- usually higher in fiber than non-vegetarian diets
* can also respond to arthritis, asthma and many allergies.
* can be healthful and nutritionally adequate when appropriately planned
- adequate, but it needs to properly planned
* can be healthful for people of all ages, including infants and toddlers
- healthy, but they take planning
- very healthy and more than adequate in terms of protein
- provide adequate iron if the proper foods are eaten
* causes blindness in woman.
* consists of green plants.
* differ from one child to another.
* eases arthritis.
* encompass a wide variety of eating patterns.
* encourage wiser use of our animal resources
- land
* helps to maintain a peaceful state of mind.
- fortify food
- milk
- plant food
* is also high in fibre, another substance that detoxifies the body.
* offer protection against chronic disease in a number of ways.
* provides the required substances for a healthy life.
* put less strain on the environment.
* tend to be high in bulk and relatively low in calories.
* tend to be lower in fat than omnivore diets
- total fat
- contribute more fiber and less cholesterol than meat based diets
* use as little as one quarter the resources required to produce animal food.
* vary considerably depending on the degree of dietary restrictions.
Western diet
* Most western diets consist of fast food
- meat
- contain amounts
- provide minerals
* Some western diets contain carbohydrates.
* provide from several milligrams to a gram of flavonoids each day
* tend to be low in silica.
Zone diet
* Some zone diets help blood sugar.
* include proteins.
* recommend meals.<|endoftext|>### action:
Disambiguation
* is clarification
- illumination
* uses a smaller number of cells, or keys, to represent the entire alphabet.
* That different word than disambiguation. Disambiguation action. Disambiguous state. There point where we need to try and keep things both simple to use as well as simple in english. You can't do a double hop to use an alternate meaning of ambiguity. Basically it comes down to the point where, are you simplifying it too much.
* very important task in natural language processing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Distillation
* boils water to form steam that is then cooled and condensed to form pure water
- is then cooled and then recondensed
* commonly used method of on-site recovery.
* controlled process commonly used in chemistry to separate mixtures of liquids.
* eliminates all harmful tap water contaminants.
* has many applications.
* involves boiling water and collecting the vapor
- then collecting the vapor as it condenses back to water
- the process of vaporizing water by boiling it
* is an action
* is an effective process for producing highly treated drinking water
- water treatment technology for household and commercial use
- another technique to separate mixtures
- as old as the earth
- both an art and a science
* is considered the most advanced of water treatment techniques
- very effective over time because it requires water to boil
- natural processes
- notable for a number of accidents involving peroxidizable chemicals it has caused
* is one of the most effective types of demineralization
- oldest, most effective types of demineralization
- separatings
* is the most effective method for removing minerals from water
- of water purification
- widely used separation process in the chemical industry
- oldest and most common desalination process in use
* is the process in which water is boiled, evaporated and the vapour condensed
- of boiling and cooling a liquid to purify it
- used to make beverages with a higher alcohol content
- single most effective method of water purification
- technique used most frequently to purify liquids
- therefore a process for the separation of substances according to their volatility
* means heating the water until it boils and turns into steam.
* occurs in old copper stills, while small oak barrels are used for aging the spirit
- two modes, continuous distillation and batch distillation
* process by which a liquid can be purified
- of filtration by which water is boiled
* process that relies on evaporation to purify water
- separates two or more combined substances through heating
* produces clean water by evaporating the water from the input and condensing the steam.
* reduces heavy metals, but through the same process also removes beneficial minerals.
* removes oxygen and some trace metals from water.
* separates chemicals by the difference in how easily they vaporize
- out the ethanol so that it becomes more concentrated
- substances based on their volatility
- the alcohol in great part from the water
* uses steam to evaporate the essential oils from the plant.
* works because lighter molecules are a little quicker to evaporate
- best for purifying compounds that are liquids at room temperature
+ Still: Tools
* A 'still' is a tool used to clean a liquid. It does this by first boiling the liquid and turning it into a gas. This gas is then cooled, changing it back into liquid. Stills get their name from the word di'still'ation. Distillation is the process of boiling and cooling a liquid to purify it. Stills are most often used to create alcohol, but they can also be used with any liquid. Some examples are medicines and perfumes.
### action | distillation:
Binary distillation
* separates two chemicals.
* separation of only two chemicals.
Steam distillation
* destroys or reduces many valuable components in essential oils.
* is the common method employed for the production of oil
- preferred method of extracting oil
* produces no allicin , but converts alliin entirely to diallyl sulfides.
* provides the purest water available, leaving the impurities behind.
* refers to the distillation of two immiscible liquids.
* turns the spice into liquid form.
Water distillation
* can remove chemicals, heavy metals, salts, and other contaminants.
* is an effective process for producing highly treated drinking water.
Diuretic action
* is through stimulation of the glomerulus with little excretion of sodium.
* occurs in the kidney. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### action:
Diversification
* Most diversification occurs during cretaceous time.
* buffer against inevitable economic downturn.
* concept whose time has come again.
* cornerstone of risk management.
* helps spread risk between countries, currencies and markets.
* increases the chance of investing in securities that perform well.
* is an action
- essential ingredient in successful investing
- established tenet of conservative investments
- another principle that defies chaos
- conditions
- crucial if agriculture is to adapt successfully for the future
- fundamental to reducing risk
- ignorance
* is one of the main features observed lately in foreign investment
- reasons for conglomerate mergers
* is one strategy for combatting uncertainty in production and markets
- some medium-sized farms use for success
- way to minimize risk without sacrificing the potential to make money
* is the basic tenet for investments in the stock market or any other asset class
- golden principle of money management
- name of the game, with special stress on sports shoes
- secret to a successful, prudent and less risky investing
- switch from one productive product to a wider range of products
- traditional argument for investing internationally
- wave of the future
- what Banks do
* key principle underlying prudent portfolio management.
* means building a portfolio that includes securities from different asset classes
- having money in all three types
- investing in different sectors of the stock market and asset categories
- owning several different investments at once
* provides opportunity.
* refers to a portfolio strategy whereby multiple types if investments are held
- the numbers of securities held and their types
* simple yet effective way of managing investment risk.
* term used to describe a very simple fundamental.
* traditional way of reducing income variability.
* works in economics as well as nature.
### action | diversification:
Economic diversification
* can benefit rural areas.
* is one way of padding an economy against such shocks
- the watchword among business and political leaders
Drug action
* are the result of a chemical interaction with some part of the human organism.
* varies widely in older people.
Ecological succession
* can be advance or retarded by the action of man.
* force of nature.
* gradual change in species composition.
* is the predictable developmental sequence of species in a community
- process of one ecological community gradually changing into another
* occurs because living things change their environment by simply living in it.
* takes time.
Electronic warfare
* is an action
* needs to be integrated more closely with other forms of warfare.<|endoftext|>### action:
Electrophoresis
* also separates chemicals by weight and electrical properties.
* can also be highly effective for separating trace minerals.
* cornerstone of molecular biology.
* creates a set of bands in the gel, caused by migration of protein from the seed.
* fundamental tool of the molecular biologist.
- analytical method frequently used in molecular biology and medicine
- concerned with the conduction of electric charge in an electric field
- natural processes
- normally a statistical process involving many molecules of a given type
- simple, takes little energy and is highly automatable
- the flow of charged particles
* is the migration of a charged molecule in an electrical field
- charged molecules like proteins in an electrical field
- movement of a molecule in a solution by the application of an electric field
- separation of molecules by electricity
* laboratory technique used the to separate charged molecules
* natural phenomenon.
* permits diagnosis of rare entities such as analbuminemia and bisalbuminemia.
* processing technique widely used on Earth.
* technique used for the separation of molecules by means of electric current.
* then separates out the components of the mixture. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
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