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### beginning | fecundation:
Pollination
* Learn about the roles of bees, pollen, and flowers.
* Most pollination has ecological values
- is dispersed by the wind and by insects transporting pollen between plants
- leads to production
- needs for reproduction
- occurs at stages
* Most pollination occurs in late springs
- probably occurs by selfing, though ants are possible pollinators
* Observe the plants closely when blooming starts to see if bees are visiting the blooms.
* Some pollination contributes to diversity
- food production
* Some pollination contributes to global food production
- occurs during periods
* Some pollination occurs in angiosperms
- autumn
* Some pollination occurs within same years
- produces products
- promotes speciation
- requires pollinators
- takes places
* allows the plant to reproduce by creating new seeds.
* also has a direct effect on size
- requires consideration of pollenizers
* appears to be accomplished by air currents.
* assist with fertilization, and hence a new seedling is formed.
* big industry in New Zealand.
* can also occur within the same flower.
* can be a limiting factor in horticulture
- of two types
* can occur naturally by means of wind
- on any particular cantaloupe flower for one day only
- over several days
* causes the flower to close.
* common mutualistic interaction.
* depends on pollen blowing from the male cone to the female cone
- the yucca moth
* happens as the insect attempts to mate with flowers.
- success
- value in two very different senses
* illustrates mutualism between flowering plants and their animal pollinators.
* involves gametes and fertilisation and can produce new varieties of plants.
* is absolutely essential for production, since sweet cherries are self-incompatible.
* is accomplished by a small midge that breeds on the surface of open water
- winds
- only by insect-agency, and where insects fail no fruits are ripened
- achieved by long-tongued insects such as butterflies
- affected by cold weather and reduced pollinating insect activity
- also important for creating heavier crops and larger fruit
- always by wind
* is an important factor when selecting and planting tree and small fruits
- part of a plant life cycle
- intricate series of events which ultimately results in plant reproduction
- assured by insects, but the wind is also reported to be an effective pollinator
- both environmentally and economically significant to humans
* is by a species-specific wasp
- an array of small dipteran and hymenopteran species
- flies attracted by the disgusting smell
- flies, wasps, and bees
- hoverflies and other insects
- insects such as thrips, flies, and bees
- insects, including hawk moths
- various insects such as thrips, flies, and to a small extent, honey bees
* is by wind or insects, most species are monoecious, some are dioecious
- carried on by insects
* is carried out by flies and beetles
- mainly by ants and aphids, with vespertine anthesis
- central to successful reproduction in most plants
- completed when pollen from an anther lands on a stigma
* is done naturally by the wind
- through insects
- effected by the wind, insects, hummingbirds, etc
- entomochorous and likely anemochorous
- entomogamous
- entomophilous, mostly by bees which produce a honey with a distinctive bitter taste
* is essential for the commercial production of many fruit, vegetable and seed crops
- if plants are to produce seed
- to many fruit, nut and seed crops
- essentially plant reproduction
- extremely important in kiwifruit production
- how nature selects genes from plants for future generations
- important for plants to reproduce and grow
- impossible without the aid of insects
- impregnation
* is largely by insects
- wind driven and occurs successfully when another elm is planted close by
- mainly by bees, which are attracted by the fragrance of the flowers
- most effective when it happens under water
- mostly by honeybees, and wind pollination is limited
- mutually beneficial to plants and to pollinators
* is necessary for plant reproduction
- seeds to form in flowering plants
- the flower to be able to reproduce
- of no value without fertilization
- often done by nocturnal insects but self-pollination also occurs
- one area where symbiosis is very evident
- part of sexual reproduction in plants
- performed mainly by beetles, but bees have also been observed visiting the flowers
- primarily entomophilous even though the flowers are without nectaries or nectar
- promiscuous business
- simply the transfer of pollen grains from an anther to a stigma
* is the act of transferring the pollen grains to the silks by wind or insects
- arrival of pollen at or near the surface of a receptive ovule
- fertilisation of a plant and occurs in many different ways
- fertilization of a flowering plant
* is the first stage in the development of a pecan nut
- step in the process of sexual reproduction in plants
* is the movement of pollen from the anthers to the stigma
- the male part of the flower to the female part
- into the pistil
- process that starts the sexual mechanism for procreation
* is the transfer of pollen from an anther onto the stigma of a flower
- the anther to the stigma of a flower
- the stamen to the pistil of a flower
* is the transfer of pollen grains from anthers to a receptive female stigma
- from the anther to the stigma
- the whole male gametophyte to the female plant
- transport of pollen from the anther onto the stigma
- variable, especially in droughted areas
* means the transfer of male pollen to the female's stigma.
* necessary step of sexual reproduction in flowering plants.
* occurs as a happy accident for the flower
* occurs at the water's surface at the whim of wind and wave
- by with or animals
- several ways
- most effectively by honeybees
- near the water surface and pollin is distributed by wind and water currents
- once a genetically compatible pollen grain lands directly on the ovule
- via wind or insect
* occurs when a pollen grain is transferred from the anther to the pistil
- lands on the stigma
- bees gather nectar from flowers
* occurs when pollen falls on the exposed silks
- grains come into contact with the stigma
* occurs when pollen is delivered to the stigma of a carpel a
- moved from anthers to stigmas
- lands on the female parts of a flower
- meets A. male reproductive parts of a different plant species
- the pollen grain penetrates the micropyle of the female scale
- wind carries pollen to the micropylar opening of the ovule
* often suffers when temperatures are high.
* prerequisite for fertilization.
* probably is affected by honeydew covered silks
- takes place at or shortly after dawn if pollinators are available
* produces the seeds as the flowers develop into grape berries.
* refers to the deposition of pollen onto the stigma
- transfer of pollen granules from flower to flower
* requires a vector to carry the pollen from the anther to the stigma.
* results in conditions
- creations
* starts the production of seeds.
* starts when a field bee crawls around a plant blossom
- into a plant blossom seeking nectar
* takes place around the clock
- in plants with the help of wind, water and insects
- over large distances carried by the wind and insects
* takes place when a bee travels from one flower to another
- pollen is transferred from the male anther to the female stigma
* then occurs between plants, and requires a mobile pollinator.
* usually happens as a side-effect of finding food.
* very important part of the life cycle of a flowering plant
- cycle of plants
+ Orchid, Reproduction, Pollination
* Pollinators are often visually attracted by the shape and colours of the flower. The flowers may produce attractive odours. In some extremely specialized orchids, such as the Eurasian genus 'Ophrys', the labellum is adapted to have a colour, shape and odour which attracts male insects via mimicry of a receptive female. Pollination happens as the insect attempts to mate with flowers.
+ Poplar, Reproduction: Trees :: Malpighiales
* Pollination is by wind. It contains tiny light brown seeds surrounded by tufts of long, soft, white hairs which help wind dispersal. Willows and poplars of Great Britain and Ireland'. Trees of Britain and Europe'. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### beginning | fecundation | pollination:
Insect pollination
* Some insect pollination takes places.
* assists many crops to set seeds to be planted next year.
* enhances seed yield, quality, and market value in oilseed rape.
* is common in temperate latitudes
- essential to production of many crops
- integral to food security in the United States
- likely due to cone exudations
- necessary for commercial production of most vine crops
- the work of one special bee thriving only in Mexico
Poor pollination
* can also cause misshapen fruit
- result in improperly shaped fruit
* results in conditions.
Self pollination
* is certain in bisexual The transfer of pollen grains from flowers
- when pollen is transferred from the male to the female parts on the same flower
* occurs as fertile seed is produced.
Wind pollination
* can work in angiosperms too, where almost-monocultures occur.
* is less efficient than animal-assisted pollination
- most efficient where there are dense populations of the same species | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### beginning:
Fertilization
* Most fertilization has effects
- functions
* Most fertilization increases deciduous growth
- shrub growth
- leads to development
- makes reproduction
- occurs at time
* Most fertilization occurs in aqueous environments
- cavities
- control environments
- gametophytes
- mantle cavities
- pistils
- springs
- summer
- stimulates germination
- triggers pregnancy
* Some fertilization affects distribution
- fitnesses
- follows embryo development
- involves fusion
- occurs at nights
* Some fertilization occurs in angiosperms
- carapaces
- foxes
- laboratories
- mammals
- mucous tubes
- red foxes
- produces sporophytes
- stimulates growth
- triggers egg activations
* accelerates the rate of stand development.
* activates the egg to complete meiosis and begin development.
* acts as a stimulus.
* affects the tolerance of plants to dry weather.
* allows the flower to develop seeds.
* begins in the fallopian tube
- when a man's sperm cell enters a female's egg, creating a zygote
* biological process that has important social, economic and medical implications.
* can help produce large flowers
- provide nutrients necessary for plant growth and improve overall health
- thus take place several weeks after mating with the male
* causes cortical rotation and thereby creates bilateral symmetry.
* completes the sexual process, and as a result produces a seed from a fertilized ovule.
* creates a diploid embryo, which grows into the sporophyte, and the cycle then repeats.
* defects in sperm from mice lacking fertilin beta.
* depends on availability
- water
* determines the size and quality of the flowers and foliage.
* effects on physically protected light fraction organic matter
- physically-protected light fraction organic matter
* enhances both weed biomass and seed production.
* forms a zygote which enlarges by water uptake to form an auxospore
- the diploid zygote and triggers the onset of embryonic development
* further establishes the polar axes within the egg.
* helps trees withstand repeated defoliation.
- genetic variation
- variation because two haploids become a diploid
* involves a number of changes in the sperm and ova
- several steps
* is almost always external
- also an effective and economical way to prevent the growth of many aqua-tic weeds
* is an active process which requires an interaction between the sperm and the eggs
- important biological process resulting in the first embryonic stage, the zygote
- avoided by preventing contact between spermatozoa and the ovum
- by means of spermatozoids which swim in water
- complete when the sperm and egg nuclei fuse
- creations
- dependent on water - sperm are splashed or swim to the archegonia
- enrichment
* is important on both upland and flatwoods pine plantations
- to keep plants growing vigorously
- in most cases cross-fertilization
- most likely to occur from intercourse during the six days that end in ovulation
- much more difficult to accomplish when sperm motility is reduced
* is one of the things that makes cotton more intensive and challenging
- step of the reproduction process both in animals and plants
- only the beginning of animal reproduction
- possible even in cases with scant sperm or compromised sperm function
- sex at the genetic level, and seed are seed
- the penetration of the egg by a sperm
- unnecessary for many of the spring flowering shrubs
* is usually external, but in brooding species occurs in the mantle pallial cavity
- internal, another adaptation for terrestrial life
* leads to a gestation period of about fifty to seventy days
* means adding nutrient to soil.
* mediates within-tree phytochemical induction by the gypsy moth in oaks.
* mitogenic stimulus that triggers the zygote to re-enter the cell cycle.
* occurs ad the fertilized macrogamete becomes an oocyst.
* occurs after the deposition of the cocoon
- plant is pollinated
* occurs and a zygote is produced within the host cells
* occurs and the fertilized eggs are harvested either surgically or non-surgically
- formation of a zygote, sporophyte and then finally a fronds develop
- then eggs travel down the oviduct
- as the eggs and milt intermingle
* occurs by chance
- combining egg of female and sperm of the male
- zygote dies
- externally in most species
- externally, with development following in the open water
- high up in the oviduct and a shell gland puts on the shell afterward
- if the sperms meet an egg
* occurs in a tube
- an aqueous environment
- fallopian tubes
- mesohyl followed by development of flagellated larva
- much the same way in all flowering plants
- spring summer
* occurs in the a. vagina
- archegoniophore
- body cavity or just after the ovum enters the oviduct
* occurs in the fallopian tube or oviduct
- tubes rather than in the laboratory
- female's reproductive organs
* occurs in the laboratory outside the woman's body
- when the sperm are mixed with the eggs
- laboratory, hence the term test-tube baby
- mesenchyme and the zygotes develop into ciliated larvae
- outer portion of the tube when the sperm penetrates the egg
* occurs in the oviduct leading to the uterus
- or ovary itself
- proximal oviduct ampulla
- upper half of the oviduct
- uterine tubes
* occurs in the water and the eggs become sticky
- column
* occurs inside the female coral, and a small planula develops inside it
- umbrella and a microscopic sporophyte forms within the tissue
* occurs internally and results in the production of jelly-like eggs
- in the female
- internally, and is followed by a long period of gestation
- naturally in the fallopian tubes
- only if a sperm meets an egg from the same species
- outside of the body for organisms such as fish
- shortly after pollination and begins the process of seed development
- through pollen-tubes with two male nuclei
* occurs when a father's sperm and mother's egg unite at the time of conception
- female gamete and a male gamete join to create a zygote
- male and female gamete join to form a zygote
* occurs when a sperm and egg interact
- fuses with an egg to form a zygote
- swims to an archegonium
- unites with the egg
* occurs when an egg and a sperm cell fuse to form a diploid zygote
- is joined with a sperm and an embryo results
- flagellated sperm swim to the egg
- one of the sperm nuclei unites with the egg nucleus
- sperm and egg nuclei unite
- the egg and sperm fuse and join
* occurs when the male and female cells unite to produce a seed
- gametes unite with the female egg in the ovule
- sex cell joins the female sex cell
* occurs when the nuclei of an egg and a sperm cell fuse to form a zygote
- the sperm and egg meet and join together or fuse
- nucleus of a sperm cell fuses with the nucleus of an egg cell
* occurs when the sperm nuclei fuses with the female egg nucleus
- successfully enters the ovum's membrane
* occurs within the oviduct
- protection of the archegonium
* often takes place without the formation of an ovum at one of the two oocyte stages.
* process which takes place gradually and in secret.
* produces a diploid zygote which develops into the next sporophyte generation
- zygote, and meiosis produces haploid spores
- an embryo that stimulates another hormone to maintain the uterus lining
* promotes selective association of the abl kinase with the egg cytoskeleton.
* provides nourishment.
* refers to the initiation of a new human being
- union of the sperm and the egg to form a zygote
* relies on spermatozoa for most sexually reproductive animals.
* requires at least a thin film of water so sperm can swim to egg
- moisture
- water to be active
* restores chromosome number to the normal state
- diploid chromosome number and paired condition for alleles in zygote
* results in a diploid zygote
- an embryo which develops inside protective layers of tissue
* results in constant growth
- population growth
* results in the development of oocysts that are excreted in the stool
- oocysts, which are excreted in the stool
* results in the formation of oocysts, which are then passed out with the feces
- zygote which begins to develop into an embryo
- production of a zygote
- re-establishment of the diploid number of chromosomes
* returns the haploid gametophyte generation to the diploid sporophyte generation.
* slow process in pines.
* still takes place in the fallopian tube, like normal.
* stimulates growth and increases water needs
- of phytoplankton which is, in turn, consumed by filter-feeding carp
- seed germination
* stimulates the growth of plankton algae
- secretion of wall material which occurs in the periplasm
* takes place after a flagellated sperm swims to the archegonium
- at that time, but embryos remain in a dormant state for several weeks
- by osmosis
- during the morning, and the flowers usually wither and die about noon
* takes place in che uterus
- oviduct around midpoint of dark cycle
* takes place in the fallopian tube close to the ovary
- mid portion of the tube, called the ampulla
- open water and cell division begins
- upper oviduct before albumin and shell are added
- water column
* takes place inside the anemone instead of in the water
- females and results in planula larvae
- sporophyte which is retaining the gametophyte
* takes place internally , although the mode of sperm transmission varies widely
- for boa constrictors
- once mature flowers have developed on the tomato plant
* takes place outside the body in a small glass dish
- prior to elongation of the stalk, and a sporophyte is formed
- when a choanocyte fuses with the egg
* takes place when the male and female cells unite in the ovule
- sperm and egg nucleus unite
* takes place within the clitellum, a thicker glandular mid section band of the body
- placein the water
* therefore occurs outside the body.
* triggers completion of meiosis in most vertebrates
- the completion of meiosis and the female pronucleus is formed
- their activation and the onset of development | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### beginning | fertilization:
Double fertilization
* Most double fertilization provides nourishment.
* Some double fertilization occurs in angiosperms.
* is unique to angiosperms.
* means both sperm fertilize.
* process unique to angiosperms.
* produces a zygote and endosperm, a nutritive tissue.
* results in production.
* special derived trait of the flowering plants.
Excessive fertilization
* Some excessive fertilization stimulates growth.
* can also lead to blossom drop
- waste money and contribute to environmental pollution
- create noxious algal blooms
- predispose peaches to severe bacterial spot infections
* causes the plants to grow large and tilt in the pots.
External fertilization
* occurs outside an animal's body
- the body of the female
* occurs when sperm meet the egg outside of the body
- the sperm and egg combine outside of the organism<|endoftext|>### beginning | fertilization:
Internal fertilization
* Some internal fertilization occurs in foxes
- mammals
- red foxes
* is most common among terrestrial animals.
* occurs and one or more egg mass is laid and attached to submerged vegetation
- in mammals, insects, birds, reptiles
* occurs inside the body of the female
- female body in terrestrial or land animals
- mainly in cartilaginous fishes
- when sperm meet the egg inside the body cavity of a female
- within an animal's body
* results in fewer zygotes a.
* takes place after insemination of a female by a male through copulation
- in hens also
- when the male and female copulate
Nitrogen fertilization
* Some nitrogen fertilization results in disorder.
* appears to increase ergovaline levels in endophyte-infected fescue.
* enhances the water use efficiency of forage plants.
* is critical to achieve high production.
* is required for maintaining golf turf
- optimum hay, pasture or seed yields in most areas
* stimulates germination
- herbivory by snowshoe hares in the boreal forest
- seed germination
Proper fertilization
* helps to invigorate affected trees.
* is also an important component of good shelf life.
* produces healthy large leaved plants.
* promotes deep roots and drought tolerance.
* stimulates plant growth, increases fruit size, and boosts total production.
Random fertilization
* has no effect on the overall genetic structure of a population.
* is when each gamete has a unique set combination of genes.
Successful fertilization
* requires that sperm interact with the egg or oocyte in specific ways.
* results in pregnancy.
* triggers pregnancy.
First step
* are beginnings.
* cause variation.
* involve actions.
Housing start
* is an indication of consumer confidence in making long term financial commitments.
* measure the number of units permitted that actually start construction.
* represent the number of dwellings for which construction has begun during a period.
Human birth
* is full of suffering.
* is the rarest among all living beings
- of all births
* purely animal process.
Icebreaker
* are activities conducted near the beginning of a session
- companies
- ships
* make sure that ships move whatever the weather.
* use air reconnaissance, when available, to locate leads and open water.<|endoftext|>### beginning | icebreaker:
Huge icebreaker
* work to keep a path open so ships can reach the port.
+ Arctic, The Arctic today
* Russia has a huge port city right in Lapland, within the Arctic Circle. Murmansk is the largest city north of the Arctic Circle. The port is kept ice-free by the warm waters of the Gulf Stream coming up around Norway and Sweden from the South Atlantic. Huge icebreakers work to keep a path open so ships can reach the port. The port ships out fish, minerals, and lumber to Russia and the rest of the world.
Inauguration
* are beginnings
- initiations
- times of beginning
* define presidents and their times. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### beginning:
Menarche
* are starts.
* indicates onset of puberty in girls with appropriate ritual celebration.
* occurs after the peak growth phase has passed.
* represents stage V of pubertal development.
Onset
* are consonants and consonant clusters found at the beginning of single-syllable words
* bring harvest.
* refers to when the insulin starts to work.
* result from deposition.
### beginning | onset:
Age of onset
* depends upon the age and rate of progression of the underlying disease process.
* is after three months of age
- important in determining the prognosis of the patient
- typically in late adolescence or early adulthood
- usually mid to late life
* tends to be similar within families.
Start
* are advantage
- beginnings
- lines
- turns
* cause starts.
* start with thinks.
Startup
* Focuses on companies in business less than one year.
* Many startups utilize employees and their personal credit cards to pay for company expenses.
* are beginnings.
* do product innovation based on technology invented somewhere else.
* naturally focus heavily on technology development.
* pride themselves on their nonhierarchical organization.
* raise money by trading equity.
### behavior problems:
Ecological problem
* Most ecological problems relate to science.
* are behavior problems
- human behavior products
Behaviour
* Most behaviour is exhibited by animals
- cats
* Some behaviour is exhibited by mammals.
* causes problems.
* compounds problems.
* follows patterns
- predictions
* has components
- effects
- heritable components
- roles
- significance
* involves interaction
- performance
* is an activity
* leads researchers.
* offers insight.
* relates to possessions.
* requires energy.
### behaviour:
Aggressive behaviour
* are part of the normal behavioural patterns of almost any animal species.
* is combative and disregards the rights of others
- most likely to be observed in groups where a dominance hierarchy exists
Emergent behaviour
* is an interesting phenomenon that can be observed in natural systems
- known from flocks of birds, schools of fish and herds of land animals
- the result of the interaction of other, usually more simpler, behaviours
* very interesting area in the study of agents.
Good behaviour
* is about being polite and thoughtful to other people.
+ Behavior: Ethology :: Psychology
* Children are taught what is good behaviour and what is bad behaviour. Good behaviour is about being polite and thoughtful to other people. It is the kind of behaviour that people in a society expect from others.<|endoftext|>### behaviour:
Human behaviour
* All human behaviour has consequences for all other humans.
* Much human behaviour involves negotiating reproductive contracts between men and women.
* complex interaction between genes and the environment.
* follows no physical law.
* is affected by many variables
- determined by countless variables, including free choice
- different in normal situations and in risk situations
- flexible, characterized by freedom from genetic, or other, determination
- modelled mathematically
- placed in context by studying the sexual activities of other animals
- realized by neurons as little as a table is created only by atoms
- seen both as a determinant and as an outcome of environment
- shaped by interpersonal, cultural, social and economic factors
- therefore a mixture of freedom and necessity
- without doubt the dominant factor in the cause of accidents
* reflects society. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### behaviour:
Instinctive behaviour
* behaviour pattern that the organism naturally follows.
* can be variable and responsive to the environment.
+ Instinct, Overview: Psychology :: Ethology
* Instinctive behaviours can be variable and responsive to the environment. Any behaviour is instinctive if it is performed without being based upon prior experience, that is, in the absence of learning. Sea turtles, newly hatched on a beach, will automatically move toward the ocean, and automatically swim when they are in the water. A joey climbs into its mother's pouch upon being born. Honeybees communicate by dance the direction of a food source without formal instruction. Other examples include animal fighting, animal courtship behaviour, internal escape functions, and building of nests.
Racist behaviour
* causes fear, shame, inferiority and tears down the self-esteem of the victim.
* ranges from genocide and physical violence to verbal abuse and racist jokes.<|endoftext|>### behaviour:
Territoriality
* Territorialities are behavior.
* also varies among cheetahs.
* appears to place a limit on the number of breeding pairs in a given area.
* concept which is virtually impossible to determine in the computer context.
* is an advantage since it is largely the territorial males which end up mating
- imperative for man as it is for all other mammals
- common among animals in both ecosystem types
- often most strong towards conspecifics , as shown in the case of redlip blenny
- proper to practically all life forms
- the opposite of integration
* principle by which members of a community are to be defined.
* raises especially when there are more males than females in a tank.
* varies temporally.
* vital aspect of identity and of self-determination for Indigenous peoples.
### behind glands:
Parathyroid gland
* Most parathyroid glands secrete parathyroid hormones.
* Some parathyroid glands are behind glands
* secrete hormones
### behind stomachs:
Abdominal organ
* All abdominal organs appear normal, except for the stomach.
* Some abdominal organs are behind stomachs.<|endoftext|>Being
* All beings are conscious and all know suffering
- the expression of their own karma
- breathe
- fear suffering
- share the wish to be happy and avoid suffering
* Every being can react differently, thereby creating their own reality
- has an infinite ability to survive
- is said to belong to oneness
* Some beings have long bodies that are wrapped in flat strips of burning iron.
* are autonomous, active and interoperable to the point they behave like living individuals
- no longer in a state of being when they're dead
- states
- subject to death even when they attain old age
* belonging to the third elemental kingdom have an influence on the astral body.
* has characteristics.
* have an aura One aspect of life is electrical
- four eyes and wings
### being:
Finite being
* can become non-being.
* have a natural limitation comprehending the infinite One.
Healthy being
* is the polar opposite of obsessive-compulsive behavior.
* way of living in the world.
Sentient being
* All sentient beings are subject to a cycle of birth, growth, decay and death
- can equally live happy and fulfilling life
- desire to live
- have Buddha nature
* are capable of love
- vulnerable to destruction because of internal failure and external conflict
* learn best by hands-on experimentation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Belief
* All beliefs are human creations, which can be accepted, rejected or modified by people as they wish.
* Most beliefs affect survival.
* Most beliefs have concepts
- roots
* Some beliefs actually function as fact and govern our values.
* Some beliefs are like blinders, shutting off the power to choose one's own direction
- rigid, like the body of death, impotent in a changing world
- govern our relations with each other
- relate to death
- weaken a child's selfhood
* Some beliefs weaken a person's self hood
- self-hood
* A 'belief' firm thought that something is true, often based on revelation. Belief is usually a part of belonging to a religion. It is different to scientific knowledge that can be tested, but belief is not able to be tested. For example, a person may believe in God or gods
* act as self-fulfilling prophecies that influence all our behaviors.
* add to the number of children in orphanages.
* affect actions
* affects behavior and behavior affects the body.
* allow the mind to stop functioning.
* also become more resistant to change as children grow older.
* always influences behavior.
* are basic 'assumptions' of right and wrong
- beliefs and art is art
- content
- decisive in shaping children's choices from friends to lifestyle
- essentially tied to action-they contribute to the production of behavior
- generalizations about how the world is
- habits of action, a determination to act in some specific way
- important to many people in the world today
- located in human minds
- oriented towards protection of the body
- part of faith
- particular matters that individuals consider to be true or false
- powerful engines that drive autonomic and automatic behavior
- relative and vary from religion to religion, culture to culture
- sacred only to the extent that they remain private
- subjective emotions and expectations
* are the bedrock upon which all experience is built
- deep rooted beliefs that a person holds dear
- prearranged, organized filter to our perceptions of the world
- primary source of our attitudes, reactions, feelings, and behavior or actions
- products of primitive minds
- rails on which lives run
* are what divide people
- people hold to be true, or what they believe to be facts
* become facts.
* can also change ways of life
- change in response to new information and experiences
- greatly determine what happens to a person and how they handle their health problems
- hurt people just as much as actions
* cause the mind to stop functioning
- trust
* certainly influence expectations and ways of interpreting phenomena.
* change naturally and organically as people align with their goals and values.
* combined with values drive the actions of each individual.
* come from experience
- to be seen as facts through folk wisdom, propaganda, myths, superstitions
* comes with the kinds of prayer that are manifest in action.
* concerning guardian spirits vary among the various tribal cultures.
* counts as knowledge when it corresponds to some kind of reality.
* creates reality
- substance
* denotes that the person involved actually supposes the fact in question to be true.
* determine all of our experiences
- happiness or the lack of it
* differ from both truth and values.
* drive anger or pain
* form the center of all of our behaviors.
* forms the greatest part of our perceptions.
* frequently play a vital role in the kinds of art produced.
* generate thoughts and emotions, which create experiences.
* give rise to reality.
* have a fundamental effect on the ability to act and on how things are done
- impact
- interest
- objects, that is beliefs are generally about something
- references
- the power to create and the power to destroy
* influence behavior
- events
- major events
* is at the basis of attitudes and opinions
- belief, by definition
- concerned with revealed truths which are inaccessible to reason alone
- encounter with what is real and true
- freedom
- ignorance
- nothing but a state, an internal, represntation that governs behavior
- religion's sizing chart
- seen as hope, doubt is seen as fear
- very important in healing
- when someone else does the thinking
* occurs through faith.
* often give a foundation for values.
* point on a continuum of knowledge from no knowledge to absolute knowledge.
* rule over our emotions, which in turn determine our behaviors and actions.
* starts where knowledge ends.
* tend to be self-fulfilling. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief systems | astrology:
Chinese astrology
* argues that one's personality profile can be revealed form one's birth time.
* has twelve signs, each corresponding to a single year.
* is based on the traditional astronomy and calendars
* ranks among such earthly, human sciences as psychology, sociology, philosophy.
Electional astrology
* is the art of precise timing to enhance a desired outcome.
* shares many methods with horary astrology.
Indian astrology
* contains a vast heritage of techniques.
* shares the same system as Western astrology of linking zodiac signs to elements.
Medical astrology
* blending of science and religion.
* recognizes that one's personality influences one s health.<|endoftext|>### belief systems | astrology:
Thai astrology
* has a 'color of the day' for each day of the week.
+ Color of the day: Astrology :: Thailand
* Thai astrology has a 'color of the day' for each day of the week. The color is based on the color of the God who protects the day or Navagraha. For example, the God of Sunday is Surya which has as the red color. These colors of the day are the traditional Thai birthday colors. For example, King Bhumipol was born on Monday, so on his birthday places in Thailand will be decorated with yellow color.
Political ideology
* Political ideologies are comprehensive systems of political beliefs
- change over time making what was once legal becomes illegal
- range from pluralism to authoritarianism
* is belief systems
- made of ideals
- part of ideology
- the third method of conquest
- used for people | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
Angel
* Are Messengers Of Our Higher Power.
* Many angels are animals, and many animals become angels in our lives.
* Some angels come from a higher planes than others
- follow death
- help human beings
- identify death
- make people feel good inside
- take the form of humans
- work with a number of people
* abound as sources of seed money and wisdom.
* also function as heavenly warriors and as guardians
- have grades or ranks and they vary in ability and power
- minister or serve
- superimpose themselves on individuals in order to bring a message
- worship
* always have a circle of light, a halo around their faces, and sometimes their whole selves.
* appear at the intersection of life and death
- points of biblical history
- from secret places deep within the soul
- in different forms
- on the pages of sacred writings of nearly all the major world religions
* appear to people in reality and in dreams
- some in their full Etheric winged form to bring news or guidance
* are a beautiful existence of light and appreciation for the joy of being
- completely separate order of beings from men
- pool of energy
- popular subject in folklore, literature, and art
- single consciousness with individual expression
- able to take on a host of forms and shapes
- about bringing order to our lives and the world
- actually men
* are also role models
- territorial spirits and are assigned to particular earthly territories
- an integral part of visions of all kinds
- ancient beings whose true form is composed of intelligence and feeling
- angels, and humans are humans
- another race of beings occupying the same space and time as mankind
* are beings of light and can take beautiful forms
- that have the ability of movement without wings
- who actually do something to make a difference, to make a life count
- big and strong
- bodiless, immortal spirits , limited in knowledge and power
- both spiritual and physical as well except they can choose to manifest in either form
- capable of having sex and reproducing
- celestial beings of a higher vibrational level than guides
- closest of all to people
- concerned for lost souls
- creatures of light
- different from humans
- eternal
- evangelists
- extremely powerful beings
- films
- genderless, although they have have male or female type energies
- good spirits, unlike their counterparts the demons
- heavenly friends sent from above to spread peace, comfort and love
- human figures with wings
- instruments of peace
- invisible beings
- light because they have no burden of pride
- light, tall and proportionate
- like humans, just different evolutionary paths
* are messengers of divine guidance
- providence
- neither male nor female
- non physical beings that appear to prophets in prophetic visions
- often merely flesh and blood, short of perfection, yet capable of miracles
- only present as individuals
- patrons
- popular in decorative use
- possibly the evolved forms of mankind
- powerful thought forms that help to hold the world together
- present in all of Scripture
- prettier and happier when they smile with their heart
* are private individuals who invest their own funds in start-up companies
- own money, mainly in startups
* are pure light
- spirits whose natural state is to be disembodied
- pure, without guile, without sin, loving, and all forgiving
- purely spiritual and splendid beings whose nature requires no food, drink or sleep
- real and present in our world
- rivers
- special guardians
* are spirit beings
- spirits whereas believers are flesh and blood
* are spirits, however they are inhuman spirits
- serving the bidding of the monarch of the universe
- stronger than men
- supernatural beings to whom are attributed greater than human power and intelligence
- symbolic images of protection, faith, and love
* are the Order closest to humanity
- gatekeepers to the soul
* are the guardians of hope and wonder, the keepers of magic and dreams
- our souls
- hope of humanity
- light that illuminates our soul's divinity
- love that overcomes hatred
- ninth and last order of angels
- tomb finders
- universal
- very powerful spirit beings
- watchers and attendants of heirs of salvation
* are wealthy individuals who finance start-ups typically ignored by venture funds
- invest their own money
- regularly make investments in small businesses
* believe in making things luminous, very luminous
* can appear in the form of ordinary people
- be good or bad
- cause a heart to sing
- celebrate and have joy, and presumably other emotions as well
* can fly because they take themselves so lightly
- even though they are well grounded
- or float without moving their wings
- speak only from their angelic intelligence, which is limited
- travel faster than light
* carry messages of love
- the essence of innocence and purity
* come from the angel world to teach mankind to be more divine.
* come in all different shapes and sizes, some seen and some unseen
- forms and guises - some heavenly and some earthly
- kinds of personalities and backgrounds
* come in all shapes and sizes and colors
- and they do both little and heroic things
- shapes, sizes and colours
* come in all sizes and ages
- shapes, in all ages and skin types
- shapes,all ages and skin types
- many forms
- into all of our lives in a variety of ways
- to help when danger is present and minister to lonely sick people
* communicate with humans in many ways
- one another telepathically
* create the images they want to manifest and hold the images.
* do exist on Earth.
* enjoy a spiritual existence that transcends physical limitations.
* exist and interact with human lives.
* exist in a state of joy
- much higher dimensions
* fly because they can take themselves lightly
- so high in the sky-even higher than birds
* follow a hierarchy similar to that of an army.
* frequently go hand and hand with miracles.
* generally prefer to maintain a low profile and they enjoy their privacy.
* have a special relationship with children
- different functions
* have no bodies
- hearts
- illusions about human nature, but they are prone to certain subtle misconceptions
- soft, feathery wings
- special roles, one of which is to serve as our guardians
* have the ability to appear
- exorcize
- their own language
- to bring joy, and it is said that they take many forms
* hold a candle, cross, or heart.
* includes corpi
- flight feathers
- lobes
- quill feathers
* inhabit human forms.
* invest in people.
* is complex being
- the alien term
* keep the world safe for humming birds and butterflies and rainbows in spring
- hummingbirds and butterflies and rainbows in spring
* lift themselves above the clouds by reaching for the stars.
* like to know whom they are dealing with and how they present themselves.
* litter the metaphysical landscape from ancient times to the present.
* live in the heavens and earth, while jinn live only on earth
* love to sing and play, And rest and relax.
* make music with their voices and by beating their wings
- nests
* metaphor for grit, wisdom, bravery, and caring.
* never get tired, therefore they are always at work
- struggle with the moment of life
* often appear in human form before Mankind, wingless and in contemporary clothing
- step in, do good and disappear
- take on the form of men
* operate in a number of ways, sometimes through groups of pooled funds or individually.
* paint with sound and sing with color.
* permeate stories in the Torah and the Bible.
* play a lesser role in most mainline Protestant theology
- an important role in many other religions
- harps
* possess personality and though spirits, they have their own distinctive bodies
- the ability to love and to show love
* promote closeness and foster tenderness.
* record the good and bad deeds of humans.
* respond to prayers and thoughts of love.
* roam the earth intervening in the lives of people in crisis.
* sometimes play gold harps.
* speak through music and sing to to frighten away the darkness
- their voices, and work by their hands
* spiritual being
* symbolize trust.
* take on countless forms, They can be many things.
* teach young mothers how to care for their children.
* too can travel at tremendous speeds, far exceeding the limits of the physical world.
* typically have wings, are delicately beautiful and either glow or are surrounded by halos.
* usually do their work without being seen by men.
* wear black wing tips
- brilliant, bright colours
* wears long white robes and have wings and a halo.
* work in hospitals to bring hope to the otherwise hopeless
- intimately with humanity
- most closely with humanity
- primarily on the emotional plane | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | angel:
Archangel
* are divine messengers of the highest order
- members of a very powerful group of angels
- the leaders of all the angels
* is an angel
- books
Cherub
* are angels
- babies
- descendants of Cupid
- located in heaven
* learn the importance of music in worship through praise and performance.
* sing and play upon airy spinets
- at worship services several times per year
Guardian angel
* are organisation.
* can provide sustenance.
* have a job - to assist humans.
* work on a wing and a prayer.
### belief | angel | guardian angel:
Good spirit
* guardian angel
* work to influence people to compete in the market place fairly.
Seraph
* are angels.
* have six wings, and their voices can shake doorposts and thresholds.
* im are guards over holy heavenly things
- have six wings, two cover their faces, two cover their feet, and two are for flying
* is an angel
Basic belief
* are the foundation of a world view.
* explains the core of Ethical Culture.
Christian belief
* Many Christian beliefs are grounded tradition rather than in scripture.
* go against the use of mind manipulation methods.
* is based on objective evidence.
* is the acceptance of the truth of the gospel
- third element of Christian tradition
* move the individual to live a life of humility.
Conviction
* feeling of being dirty, along with a desire for cleansing.
* is final judgment
- original power, the source to create infinite wisdom, without limits
- the result of comparing one's sinful self with absolute righteousness
* judgment of guilt.
* person's highest wealth.
* produces guilt, which feeling of blameworthiness.
* reflection of our soul.
### belief | conviction:
Criminal conviction
* Some criminal convictions prevent employment in social work.
* can result in fines, imprisonment, or both.
Cultural belief
* Some cultural beliefs relate to death.
* can bind women to painful, destructive, dangerous relationships.
* influence behavior.
* vary widely in different parts of the world.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Devil
* are carnivores and always hunt in packs
- evil spirit
- exclamations
- fallen angels
- located in hell
- marsupials
- more powerful than demons
- responsible for all the evil in the world and they seek to possess transmigrated beings
- trouble
* breed in hell and dogs with hearts of stone.
* cause a desire to lies.
* devour all the flesh, hair and bone they come across while scavenging.
* eat anything from small invertebrates such as insects to wombats and wallabies.
* have more faith than most people.
* is evil spirit
* live for about seven years in their natural habitat of dry bush and scrub land.
* maintain bush and farm hygiene by cleaning up carcasses.
* mean undeveloped spirits who once lived in the flesh.
* prefer open forest to tall forest, and dry rather than wet forests.
* typically make circuits of their home range during their hunts.<|endoftext|>### belief | devil:
Tasmanian devil
* Most Tasmanian devils die before they are adults.
* are both scavengers and hunters
- found only on the Australian island of Tasmania
- solitary and nocturnal, preying on rabbits, chickens, and other small animals
- useful in that they eat road kill from the side of the road
* have an excellent sense of smell
- sharp teeth and very strong jaws
* live five to eight years.
* maintain home ranges in the wild, which vary with the availability of food.
* occupy a unique niche in their habitat
- very unique niche in their habitat
* reproduce just once a year.
* store extra fat in their tails. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | devil:
Thorny devil
* are variable in their use of space
- well-known for the many, large spines on their bodies
* can remain active at a wide range of body temperatures.
* continue to grow until at least their fifth year.
* have a bimodal pattern of activity.
* live in a range of Australian deserts, all of which are hot deserts.
* use a gulping oral mechanism to move water along the grooves and into their mouths.
Doctrine
* affect mental states
* are beliefs
- one way that mysterious inner events are expressed in words
* promote life.
### belief | doctrine:
Abolitionism
* are doctrines.
* cuts across all divisions.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Animism
* also ascribes magical powers to animals, heavenly bodies, or other created objects.
* ascribes to all things of the universe the faculty of action, similar to that of man.
* is also prevalent in Cambodia.
* is common particularly among the mountain tribes
- within deinonych tribes
* is considered to be the earliest form of spiritual expression
- unsophisticated
- one way to reintegrate the human species into the community of all species
- simultaneously pantheistic , polytheistic , and deistic
- the belief in spirits
* is the belief that life is produced by a spiritual force apart from matter
- plants, inanimate objects and natural phenomena have living souls
- there are spirits which influence human life
- foundation of objectum-sexuality
- pattern of belief that all objects in the universe have spirits
- personification of natural forces as gods
* sacralizes that which it animates.
* world view based upon a belief that spirits are indwelling in nature.
+ Chinese mythology, Gods, Creators: Asia :: Mythology
Antinomianism
* is defined by the matrix culture
- the very opposite of legalism
* reckless disregard for moral law, especially the moral principles of Scripture.
Catholic doctrine
* believes that human beings are born and created in freedom.
* comes primarily from tradition stuck together with a few Bible names.
* imagines that authority resides in the church.
Christian doctrine
* denies salvation to the unbaptized.
* is arguably among the most politically revolutionary thought of all time
- what the Bible teaches
Creationism
* conforms to theSecond law of thermodynamics.
* is much harder to back up scientifically than evolution.
* reverses the scientific process.
* stems from hard scientific fact.
* takes root where Europe, Asia meet.
### belief | doctrine | creationism:
Creation science
* are creationism.
* discipline concerning the origin of life on earth.
* good, scientific model that stands on empirical evidence.
* is considered by most to be a pseudoscience
- far from extinct
* religious dogma. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine | creationism:
Intelligent design
* are creationism.
* is another explanation saying that life was developed by a smarter being.
* is the key to dislodging the materialism in our culture
- systematic study of intelligent causes and the effects they leave behind
* suggests that life is too complex to have evolved.
+ Intelligent design, Concepts
* Intelligent design suggests that life is too complex to have evolved. Scientists have discovered that even a single cell is complex. The genes in a cell code have a huge amount of information. Therefore that information, like computer programming, has to come from an intelligent source and cannot be made randomly. This is thought to be because the properties of entropy say things cannot grow in complexity by randomness.
+ Kitzmiller, et al. v. Dover Area School District, et al., Trial: Intelligent design :: United States law :: Former good articles
* Evolution is the commonly accepted scientific theory that explains how all of the different kinds of life developed from a simple beginning. Intelligent design is another explanation saying that life was developed by a smarter being. A school district in Dover, Pennsylvania wanted to tell the students about intelligent design. They wanted teachers to tell their students about intelligent design at the same time they taught evolution.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Creed
* are brief and simple, with the rest left to individual consciences
- but interpretations of Scripture
- essential for the health of the church
- important
- statements of personal faith
- truth in labeling
- universal as summaries of the truth of the gospel
* can become formal, complex, abstract, and sometimes assumed as equal to Scripture.
* do count.
* express and promote unity of faith and practice.
* give strength to individuals seeking to understand life and religion.
* have their rightful function in every land.
* help identify departures from the clear teachings set forth in Scripture.
* is belief systems.
* only contain truths that are in the Bible, and can be proved by the Bible
- serve as a summary of Biblical doctrine
* provide a means for the church to state the truth in a summary public form
- safeguard against error in what a church teaches
### belief | doctrine | creed:
Tenet
* are opinions, doctrines, principles or dogma held by a person or organization.
* is creed
Descriptivism
* claims that moral terms are purely descriptive.
* differ according to the nature of the truth conditions they say determine meaning. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine:
Dualism
* also gives birth to fragmentation, separation, alienation and isolation.
* are doctrines.
* is also a common sense idea. For example it form of dualism to say that a thing is either hot or cold, good or bad, mine or somebody else's, with no allowance for possible states in between.
* arises in Eastern philosophy as well.
* constantly separates man and woman from the sacred, nature from man, and spirit from matter.
* divides the universe into two types of substance, material and mental.
* expresses the important idea that the individual continues to exist beyond death.
* holds that there are two fundamental substances.
- implicit in the work of humanistic pioneers
* is an ancient concept and deeply rooted in Greek thought
- pagan heresy that deeply infected the church
- archaic notion which needs to be removed from our consciousness
- characteristic of Western thought
- problematic for the study of communication once that assertion is accepted
* is the belief that there are separate physical and non-physical aspects of reality
- dominant theme of eastern thought and philosophy
- root of all suffering
- thus opposed to both materialism and idealism
- when people believe that that mind and body are in some way separate from each other
* opposes 'interior' to 'exterior' in the existent.
* places a detailed understanding of mind and consciousness beyond the reach of science.
* suggests that life can be separated into good and evil.
+ Mind, Studying the mind, Philosophy: Psychology :: Philosophy
* Dualism' and 'monism' are the two main ways people try to solve the mind-body problem. Dualism is when people believe that that mind and body are in some way separate from each other. Oxford University Press. Aristotle,Robinson H. 1983. Essays on Aristotle's De Anima'. Oxford University Press.
### belief | doctrine | dualism:
Cartesian dualism
* defines mind and body as separate substances.
* is, of course, traditionally associated with the view that animals lack minds.
Radical dualism
* is found among many people besides millennialists, including law enforcement agents.
* typical feature of human thought.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Egalitarianism
* are doctrines
- political ideology
* bourgeois ideal because it merely means 'equal before the law'.
* distorts the Bible's teaching, and the biblical order of human society.
* foundational element of the competing worldview of unbelief.
* is hostile to hierarchies and distinctions
- linked to liberties, the right and power of people to make individual decisions
* is the antithesis of elitism
- spirit of our age that insists on everybody being equal
- wrong because it is the same as communism
* pragmatic solution to uneven distribution of wealth.
* religious belief.
* sees the individual as able to pursue any line of activity.
Epicureanism
* According to Aristippus, Epicurus believed that the greatest good was to have certain pleasures, and to reach a state of mind where there is no fear and no pain. Epicureanism form of hedonism, because it declares that pleasure is the only good there is.
* is one of the most notable influences the Greek world bestows on Roman civilization
- the best-known form of ancient hedonism
* subtle way to destroy the human body through pleasure and promiscuity.
False doctrine
* means that the teaching is false, false prophecy means the prophet is false.
* symptom of an unhealthy religious life. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine:
Formalism
* Every formalism way of moving from one region of knowledge to another.
- practice
- typically mathematical languages
* is found the world over in all religions
- the repetition of gesture and word without engagement of mind, heart and soul
* is, and has always been, the main style of all advanced cultures and civilizations.
* means the renunciation of representational content.
* says mathematics is nothing but calculations.
* tyranny even when self-imposed, as it usually is.
* usually refers to an over-emphasis in ethics or aesthetics on form over content.
Functionalism
* are doctrines
- scientific theories
* fails to explain meaning as embodied, con-scious experience.
* is primarily concerned with the role religion plays in society
- the epistemological servant of globalisation and global competitiveness
* stresses the role of consciousness and behavior in adapting to the environment.
### belief | doctrine | gospel:
Dogma
* correlate to our ascetic attitude.
* have sharp teeth, and when backed against the wall, they can bite.
* is beliefs
- creed
- religious doctrines
- used for tyrants
Humanism
* always ends where it starts, namely, with man.
* can be sacral as well as secular.
* puts humanity at the centre of reality.
* stands for that which is exactly opposite the Kingdom of God
- the open mind in an open society
* teaches atheism, autonomous man, amorality, evolution and one-world socialism.
Humanitarianism
* also means basic morality indispensable for human being.
* also means basic morality indispensable for human being. Among them, Geneva Conventions on the matter made at the time of wars are well known.
* concern for the welfare of human beings.
* is as old as humanity itself
- the expression of stupidity and cowardice<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Internationalism
* are doctrines.
* central focus of higher education policy worldwide.
* condition sine qua non for belonging to the network.
* dilution or distortion of original culture.
* is an absolute opposite for capitalist globalization
- important dimension of the growth of neuropsychiatry
- integral part of the revolutionary experience and ideology
- modernity, according to their creed
- opposed to racism and national chauvinism
* makes it easier for the rise of and unlimited power of tyrants.
Majority rule
* basic tenet of our democracy.
* is fundamental to the concept of democratic centralism.
* is the first principle of democracy, vulgarly put
- standard for adopting proposals in a democracy | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine:
Multiculturalism
* actually promotes racism.
* can be subject to abuse.
* comes from shared suffering
- in varying kinds and varying degrees of intensity
* cover-up for a new racism.
* creed that is repugnant and serves no good purpose.
* denotes the promotion of ethnocultural equality and respect for diversity.
* depends on truth.
* developmental process.
* facilitates the broadest of cultural understanding and global development.
* fact of life.
* fraught issue in the current socio-political ethos in the United States.
* fundamental part of campus diversity.
* goal of virtually every institution, including big business.
* has an inclusive vision of diversity and equality.
* helps to legitimize whole new areas of consumerism.
* implies a continual effort of construction and deconstruction.
* increasingly characterizes our political, economic, and personal lives.
* internalises the nationalist world order in each nation state.
* involves the principle of mutual obligation.
* is Canada's version of cultural pluralism
- about the world, all the world
- all about equality,a fair chance, sharing with others
* is an academic discipline
- issue central to the lives of American children, especially in California
- analyzed by applying the concept post-normal science
- broader than ethnicity
- code for the gradual elimination of Western traditions
- constituted by double standards
- historical revisionism
- inherent in all group work
- more than the physical presence of different peoples
* is one of the most divisive concepts in our society
- way to manage cultural diversity in a community
- organized anarchy of the mind
- preferable to ethnic violence
- racism in a politically-correct guise
- the word of the day, bringing diverse perspectives to all subjects
- woven into the very fabric of Canadian life
* lives, and breathes.
* makes culture hereditary.
* means equal coexistence of different cultures
- greater appreciation of different cuisines
- managing diversity
* part of life and is embraced by the Fusionist movement.
* permeates the curriculum and school culture.
* perspective which provides a central set of practice principles.
* profound betrayal of the fundamental principles of the new ethnicity.
* refers to the fact that everyone has culture.
* remains principally a phenomenon of elite colleges.
* results in alienation.
* seeks to bring diverse peoples together to celebrate their differences.
* starts with each person.
* theoretical PC absurdity.
* tree that bears no fruit, but plenty of poison.
* white people joke. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine:
Nihilism
* are anarchy
- doctrines.
* Apart from Nietzsche, a popular text which draws heavily on nihilism is the novel Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky. Nihilism is associated with postmodernism
* credits no-one who seeks, upholds or defends any good whatever.
* exerts a strong influence in today's world, and has brought widespread spiritual confusion.
* has nothing to do with indifference as a passive attitude against reality.
* ignores the side of life which is concerned with mental conditionality.
* implies that reality comes from the collective unconscious.
* injects our collective body with the morality of the herd.
* is active evil with delusions of righteousness
- always a form of acedia
- one possible response to grasping one's cosmic insignificance
- rejecting all political, philosophical, religious, and moral principles
* is the black hole of philosophy, liable to swallow everything that gets close to it
- dominant philosophy
- general rejection of customary beliefs in morality or religion
* kind of philosophy carved out of a pervasive experience of emptiness.
* proud daughter of western civilization.
* rare trait in fish but trout are full of it.
* rejects the good as such, heavenly or otherwise.
* suggests that life is without objective meaning.
* ubiquitous meeting and parting, giving rise to many dimensions, levels, and universes.
Nuclear deterrence
* is deterrence.
* requires a conditional intention to commit a monstrously evil act.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Pacifism
* are beliefs
* can absolutely work as a universal absolute.
* covers many types of opposition to warfare.
* has many different forms.
* is always a preparation for war because it undermines justice
- bad theology and worse politics
- deeply, deeply ingrained in the Japanese psyche
- objectively pro-Fascist
- of the same historical lineage as democracy
- often humanistic, politically, culturally, or socially determined
* is the belief in peaceful reconciliation of human differences
- clearest form of cowardice, possessing no willingness to fight for anything at all
- unspoken first law of the spiritual world
- voice of helplessness
* leads to slavery.
* means different things to different people.
* only works when the tiger is still in the cage.
* remains a common Adventist position.
Phenomenology
* Phenomenologies are doctrines.
* aims to know the ways in which experience as consciousness intends the objective.
* attempts to reconcile what humans experience with what humans suppose know via theory.
* concerns itself with consciousness.
* is sensual, physiological.
### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory:
Aesthetic
* are important, but water clarity also has a major impact on marine ecosystems.
* can include the study of art from all cultures and all times.
* philosophical theory
* refer to the appearance of the water which can be discolored as a result of particulates
- criteria that concern graphic aspects of readability
Deconstructionism
* is part of a movement called poststructuralism.
* philosophy that rejects value judgements based on one's own cultural values. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory:
Determinism
* concernes the question of whether every event is completely determined by a prior cause.
* eliminates moral obligations.
* is correct in that every event has a cause
- limited by the scope of events it can determine
- restricted to what is clearly biological, leaving wiggle room for the self-made self
- shown to coincide with reductionism
* is the belief that some system of events is entirely causal, nothing more, nothing less
- concept that events in the past fully determine events in the future
- doctrine that the universe is to some extent, in some way, determinate
- key to convergence
* refers to the choices which an automaton has in order to make the next move.
* seeks to explain conditions which fatalism is content to describe.
* thus becomes the foundation of all scientific progress and criticism.
* word which is often used to define a closed system of meaning.
+ Free will, In philosophy: Philosophy
* Determinism is the concept that events in the past fully determine events in the future. To illustrate this Pierre-Simon Laplace proposed a thought experiment in 1814, which he called Laplace's demon. If deterimism is the case, then there can be no free will.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory | determinism:
Economic determinism
* is common sense.
* means that historians think history is mostly caused by economics.
+ Historiography, Approaches to history, Determinism
* Determinism means that historians view history as being more caused by certain factors than other factors. The two most common types of determinism are geographic determinism and economic determinism. Geographic determinism means that historians think history is mostly caused by geography. Frederick Jackson Turner thought that. Economic determinism means that historians think history is mostly caused by economics. Charles Beard thought that. Other historians believe that history is caused mostly by politics or mostly by a struggle for natural rights, but these are not usually called determinism.
Fatalism
* are determinism.
* is determinism
* is the belief that all events are predetermined and controlled
- concept that all events happen by blind, impersonal forces, i.e., by chance
- lazy man's way of accepting the evitable
* philosophy for the oppressed.
* says that all is destiny.
Genetic determinism
* implies a fatalistic attitude toward health and disease.
* is the view that the phenotype is precoded in or determined by the genotype.
Technological determinism
* comes in different forms.
* is the reification of technology
- theory that technology is an autonomous force that changes society<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory:
Empiricism
* denies the possibility of spontaneous ideas or a priori thought.
* elevates the scientific method of investigation in order to attain knowledge.
* falters before death.
* gives facts without religion.
* implies going to the best source for material.
* is an ignorant and arrogant philosophy
- investigations
- merely organised observation
- one of the founding principles of the modern scientific approach
- restricted to particular things
* is the philosophical doctrine traditionally opposed to nativism
- practice of relying upon observation and experiment
- scientific method and utilizes the senses
- use of observation of the physical universe as a way to know about it
- very much like phenomenalism
* plays a fundamental role in church legitimacy.
* specifically repudiates propositions in the realm of metaphysics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory:
Existentialism
* also questions the relationship between philosophy and human existence.
* centres everything on the moment.
* chooses to look at issues that traditional philosophy ignored.
* covers a wide range of thinkers and it indeed has a group of atheist adherents.
* espouses commitment and authenticity.
* focuses on the experience and meaning of the person who is suffering the condition.
* identifies the inadequacy of natural science to give an account of personal selfhood.
* is hypermodernity, still depending on signs and symbols to validate their beliefs
- metaphysical pornography
- notoriously hard to define
* is the end result of the age of imperialism
- most important modern philosophy, and it is essentially a negative one
- philosophy that places emphasis on individual existence, freedom, and choice
- third type of philosophy
- very different from many other 'philosophies'
* leaves man without hope.
* philosophical movement that stresses individual existence
* philosophy dealing with man's aloneness in the universe
- that is very different from other ways of thinking
* postulates man's existence as a free individual.
* reaction against both metaphysics and the essentialism of 'pure' phenomenology.
* stresses the importance of individual choice.
* way of thinking about human freedom.
+ Albert Camus: 1913 births :: 1960 deaths :: Accidental deaths in France :: Atheists :: French philosophers :: French novelists :: French playwrights :: Marxism :: Road accident deaths
* Camus wrote novels and plays. Camus was born in Algeria, a country in North Africa. He had French parents. Camus was an existentialist philosopher. Existentialism is a philosophy that is very different from other ways of thinking. Camus won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1957.
+ Jean-Paul Sartre, Sartre's life: 1905 births :: 1980 deaths :: Atheists :: Continental philosophers :: Disease-related deaths in France :: French novelists :: French philosophers :: French playwrights :: Marxism :: Writers from Paris
* This story explains the way of thinking of existentialism. Existentialism is a way of thinking about human freedom.
+ Theatre, History, Plays from the 1900s
Mentalism
* is the art of mind reading.
* philosophical theory
Naive realism
* is the belief that people everywhere see the world in the same way
- to be distinguished from modest realism
* philosophical theory<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory | naturalism:
Methodological naturalism
* is the principle underlying all of modern science.
* way of acquiring knowledge.
+ Naturalism (philosophy), Method and science: Epistemology :: Philosophy of science
* Methodological naturalism is the principle underlying all of modern science. Some philosophers extend this idea, so that it applies to all of philosophy as well. Science and philosophy, according to this view, are said to form a continuum. W.V. Quine, George Santayana, and other philosophers have advocated this view.
Nominalism
* believes that ideas are only names and have no practical application.
* is supposed to deal with the universe of discourse in moderation.
* variant of conceptualism.
Operationalism
* is found in other sciences.
+ Positivism, Operationalism, Examples: Philosophy :: Ethics
* Operationalism is found in other sciences. In psychology, intelligence has often been the result of measurement by a standard IQ test.
Physicalism
* holds that consciousness is entirely physical.
* is the of being prejudice against people with disabilities.
### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory | physicalism:
Dialectical materialism
* differs from mechanical i.e. in the question of things and processes.
* is physicalism
* sees economic relations as a function of the level of productive forces. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory:
Pragmatism
* also rejects the problems of essential nature because they are transcendental.
* calls for the creative use of ANY tool which works.
* claim made by idle politici-ans.
* defines 'agreeing' to mean certain ways of 'working,' be they actual or potential.
* expresses one of the main inspirations of our culture.
* is based upon the philosophy of science
- melioristic
- perhaps most important in the area of standards and interoperability
- presented as the philosophic counterpart of democracy
* is the defenestration of idealism
- name of the game
- offspring of maturity
- wrong because it is centered on the present, the self, and material
* largely explains the spread of evangelical movements, analysts say.
* polite way of saying that there is no vision.
* posits that the truth is never final.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory:
Relativism
* affirms that moral right and wrong are only socially and individually determined.
* can become moral nihilism in the same way that divine command can become absolutism.
* contends that all conduct is relative to the circumstance.
* denies any unique privilege of one view over all others.
* holds that moral truth is subjective to the person who holds the truth.
* is also theologically incoherent, since neutrality is impossible concerning truth claims
- an invitation to vice
- based on the tenet that certain knowledge of any and all truth is impossible
* is often just another word for subjectivism
- the first refuge of repressive governments
- seen as required for a democracy of ideas and norms
* is the belief that everything matter of opinion
- great disease of modernity to most conservatives
* is the idea that all things are relative
- anything goes
- standard for determining personhood
- watchword of the liberal modernist theologian
* makes light of truth by claiming that contradictory beliefs can be just as true.
* means how something relates to another and the signifcance of it.
* problem for the faith today because it puts all religions on the same level.
* results in radical individualism.
* says that in the evolutionary and naturalistic universe nothing is fixed and definite.
* seems to destroy scientific claims to rationality.
* shows itself primarily in matters of truth and morality.
* stresses that the data can only be seen relative to a particular observer.
* takes on different forms depending on how radically right and wrong are thought to vary.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory | relativism:
Cultural relativism
* argues that all who say they have claim to the land, have such a claim.
* claims to be based on a scientific view of morals.
* is the attitude that other ways of doing things are different but equally valid.
* provides a possibility for achieving peace.
* says both truth and value are relative
- that all human action is relative to the culture where the action happens
+ Ethnocentrism, Ethnocentrism and anthropology: Cultural geography :: Sociology
* All people tend to use the values of the culture we were born in. One of the main goals of anthropology is to not use ethnocentric ideas. Anthropologists try to see other cultures from the point of view of a person from that culture. This is also known as 'cultural relativism'. Cultural relativism says that all human action is relative to the culture where the action happens. Anthropologists know that they have to not use the standards of their own culture if they want to understand another society correctly.
Ethical relativism
* eliminates the notion of a moral mistake.
* is the theory that holds that morality is relative to the norms of one's culture. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | doctrine | philosophical theory | relativism:
Moral relativism
* comfortable moral position because it requires nothing of the moral agent.
* is hard-wired into our culture.
* kind of subjectivism.
* major foundation of abortion.
* poor foundation for managerial decision-making.
* says that there are no universal moral principles
- is no absolute right or wrong
Semiology
* interprets texts as a system of signs or symbols.
* is based on two concepts - genotext and phenotext.
* philosophical theory
Sensationalism
* is messages.
* philosophical theory
Solipsism
* can be dangerous to most people.
* fatal disease in a journalist.
* is incoherent.
* is the extreme idealist view that there is no world beyond our mind
- philosophical idea that only one's own mind is sure to exist
- view that the self is the only thing that can be known and verified
Teleology
* is based on the proposition that the universe has design and purpose
- in disfavor today
- the study of design or purpose in natural phenomena
* makes scientific study possible.
* refers to the use of the ultimate purpose or design as a means of explaining a phenomenon.
* relates to tautology.
Vitalism
* embraces the inter-relationship of mental, emotional and physical experience.
* is fundamental to naturopathy.
* popular philosophy in many cultures.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Populism
* are doctrines.
* builds on resentment and anger against abusive power.
* can move to the left or right.
* cornerstone of the state and form of the consciousness of national sovereignty.
* cuts across the traditional labels of right, center and left.
* has no political agenda per se.
* implies a lack of leadership.
* is expressed uniquely in different historical eras
- the social glue of Venezuelan politics
- their creed
* means listening to the people and hearing what they have to say.
Precept
* are a manifestation of a mindful life.
* are the rules Buddhist laymen, monks, and nuns follow
- of life
Prescriptivism
* descendent of emotivism.
* has a long history.
Religious doctrine
* are doctrines.
* inform or guide laws, customs, morals.
* is steeped in, and bounded by references to good and evil and original sin.
Secular humanism
* aims to bring out the best in people so that all can achieve fullness in life.
* has no god, bible or savior.
* is the official religion of the public education system
- same as communism
* naturalistic, nonreligious worldview.
* remains trapped in collective self-centredness.
* wants a world for 'the big, the bright and the beautiful'.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Secularism
* calls for the separation between the religion and worldly affairs.
* can have worldwide negative religious liberty consequences
- never bring peace to mankind
* cultural laissez faire.
* is primarily concerned with the here and now
- supported by advances in science and developments in technology
* is the domination of temporal things
- only solution to the problems of fundamentalism
- principle that there exist no gods or purely spiritual entities
- silence before the storm
- thus integral to democracy
* is, simply, the separation of religion from life.
* pleads that our lives be given entirely to earthly interests.
* religion, a religion that is understood.
* ridicules belief and commitment.
* takes the view that religious beliefs are irrelevant to how society operates.
* very subtle form of heresy.
Total depravity
* asserts that our entire being is involved in sin.
* holds bondage all mankind, except for grace.
* is the doctrine that all of our nature is corrupted by sin.
* teaches that men and women from birth are rotten to the core.
Transubstantiation
* reflects Roman Catholic faith in the literalness of the words of the Bible.
* scholastic or Aristotelian figment of the twelfth century. | {
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} |
### belief | doctrine:
Universalism
* affirms that the universe is one.
* heresy with both pagan and Christian forms.
* is committed to individual freedom of belief
- reason and is open to new insights, from whatever source
- grounded in the tension between two standards
- itself non-creedal
- real religion
- the doctrine that all men and women are ultimately saved
* is, of course, the opposite to particularism.<|endoftext|>### belief | doctrine:
Utilitarianism
* Do that which generates the greatest shit for the greatest number.
* also allows for the evaluation of efficiency.
* approaches moral problems by whether their effect on society is positive or negative.
* are doctrines.
* argues that ethics derives from a calculus of opposites, pleasure and pain.
* can argue on either side of controversial issues
- lead to social injustices, particularly in social distributions
* has two moral concepts, equality and utility.
* holds that it is the common good that is to be advanced.
* ignores the importance of intentions.
* is an egalitarian political theory
- committed to the measurement and comparison of the societal good
- one of a number of attempts to render moral judgements 'scientific'
- probably the best-known teleologial theory
* is the basic form taken by teleological approaches
- best-known form of consequentialism
- ethical theory that is based on the consequences of our own actions
- most common expression of a still broader moral theory, consequentialism
- view that right actions and institutions maximize aggregate happiness
* is, however, wholly inadequate as a basis for developing a moral rule of life.
* looks merely at consequences and ignores moral principles.
* normative moral theory, i.e. a way of deciding what actions are morally good.
* offers a practical method of calculating hedonic value.
* places a moral veneer over our silence about ethics.
* recognises that there are practical limitations on calculating 'utilities'.
* requires firms to consider the greatest good for the public at large.
* says that actions are right if promote the greatest happiness of the greatest number.
* seeks to provide the greatest good for the greatest number of people.
* theory for making moral decisions.
* very intuitive theory.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Expectation
* are a natural outgrowth of beliefs
- part of the universe that make things happen, both negatively or positively
- way of creating limitations on our experience
- assumptions
- contexts
- feelings
- individual subjective evaluations
- often a self-fulfilling prophecy
* are the counterpart of perception
- most powerful influence on why people have difficulty seeing wildlife
- root cause of grief
* blood relative of hope and faith.
* can affect inflation, at least in the short term.
* contains things in the future.
* drive behavior.
* future hope in either things, events or people.
* guide identification of objects in the environment.
* have profound affects on education outcomes for students of all levels and backgrounds.
* is like a blind act of faith, which can make the invisible visible
- the future outlook of faith
* kind of ego.
* leads to behaviour that supports development or maintenance of symptoms.
* play a huge role in consumer selection in a global economy
- role in communities as well as in individuals
- an important role in comprehension
+ List of emotions, Robert Plutchik's theory: Non-verbal communication :: Lists
* Expectation is more neutral.
### belief | expectation:
Cultural expectation
* create social reality.
* is for boys to masturbate early in adolescence.
High expectation
* play an important part in many Native cultures.
* tend to be correlated with high achievement.
Parental expectation
* can encourage positive attitudes and personal best.
* influence a child's development. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | expectation:
Rational expectation
* assumes that people use all the information they have as well as they can.
* say that people are intelligent instead of just plain reactionary.
Unrealistic expectation
* are notorious for causing holiday stress.
* can lead to frustration and discord.
* cause depression.
* increase anxiety and agitation in the person and stress for the caregiver.
* lead directly to stress and, indirectly, to illness.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Fairy
* Fairies actually see the flow of life through all things.
* Fairies are beautiful and magical creatures
- common to folklore all over the world
- different in many ways
- diminutive human beings
- invisible and inaudible like angels
- magical creatures that have captured the imagination of many
- mythical beings of folklore and romance
- nature spirits
* Fairies are the fallen angels
- guiding spirits of locations on earth
- cache food for winter, using primarily dried nuts, berries
* Fairies can be good to humans, or bad
- very tiny, or very large
- catch the sparks in bottles and make things fly
- come in all different forms
- exist all over the world
* Fairies have real butterfly wings
- their homes in hills, lakes and rocky mountains
- very limited intelligence
* Fairies live no more than seven years
- under the stones
- love to dance and are fond of the music of fiddles, harps, tambourines, and cymbals
- traditionally kidnap babies in order to leave changelings
* Most fairies look like miniature humans, although there are some who can appear as small animals.
* Some fairy armadillos use claws.
* has wings.
* is being
- intelligent agents
* spiritual being<|endoftext|>### belief | fairy:
Elf
* Elves Are mostly wolf-blooded, though a few pure bloods remain
- also can see in the dark
* Elves are able to see in the dark, or see infrared spectrum in daylight
- bipeds and usually grow to heights of greater than six foot
- born about one year after their begetting
- bright flashes of light in the night sky resulting from lightning within thunderstorms
- carefree nature spirits who dance andplay stringed instruments
- fair skined and typically have light hair
- good at archery and the making of cloaks
- lithe and intelligent and excel in spellcraft
- masters of earth-based magic, which is no necessarily nature magic
- merry creatures who live in colonies under the earth
- naturally immortal
- still powerful manipulators of magic
* Elves are the first of the eight families of fairy People
- shortest lived, lasting significantly less than a millisecond
- thin, expanding doughnuts of light found on the lower edge of the ionosphere
- unable to cross moving water
* Elves are very bright, short flashes of lightning high above the clouds at the very edge of space
- powerful but rare creatures
* Elves can be rather arrogant to all races, but they especially disdain dwarves
- shape-shift into the various creaturs of the forest such as caterpillars
- wield many kinds of weapons and cast magic spells, too
- combine fighting, bow and magic skills
* Elves have a natural affinity for magic and things magical
- great empathy, especially with animals
- moderate prowess in both fighting and magic
- several types of magic
- learn to use magic
- live for centuries
* Elves make dolls
- fake suns
- supposedly have hollow backs and are never quite corporeal in our world
- tend to be tall and slender and spend most of their time dancing in the woods
- typically have four children or fewer
- usually hunt and fish a good deal of their own food but most supplies are bought from outside
* Some elves have human appearances with exception of animal feet, ears, skin, or teeth.
* like to help in the garden, helping to grow plants and food. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | fairy | elf:
Blood elf
* Blood Elves are of medium height and very thin, ranging in color from brown to pink to white.
+ World of Warcraft, Gameplay, Races, Horde: 2004 video games :: Blizzard video games :: Massively multiplayer online role-playing games :: Windows games
* Blood Elves are of medium height and very thin, ranging in color from brown to pink to white. They have green eyes and long eyebrows.<|endoftext|>### belief | fairy | elf:
Leprechaun
* Most leprechauns live to be about three hundred years old.
* always dress in green frock coats that have seven silver buttons.
* are a race of cobblers whose craftsmanship is beyond compare
- aloof and unsocial able live alone, make shoes, and have a pot of gold
- always difficult to find and harder to contact
- carnivorous
- creatures
- dwarf-like creatures who strongly resemble men
- from Ireland
- imaginary beings
- keepers of the gold, burying there treasures in pots or crocks
* are little make-believe fairies from Ireland
- that live in Ireland
- people
- probably the best known beings of Irish folklore
- solitary creatures and spend their time making shoes and brogues
- tiny people dressed in green and they collect pots of gold
- tiny, wizened old men and women fairies
- widespread in Ireland and the nearby isles
* enjoy playing tricks on people.
* is an imp
* keep pots of gold hidden away in a special place.
* live in Ireland like normal people.
* love apples
- to play tricks on everyone
* never lie.
* spend their entire lives collecting and hoarding gold coins.
* supposedly carry two leather pouches.
* traditionally work as cobblers.
Night elf
* Night elves are tall and muscular.
+ World of Warcraft, Gameplay, Races, Alliance: 2004 video games :: Blizzard video games :: Massively multiplayer online role-playing games :: Windows games
* Night elves are tall and muscular. Their skin can be colored purple to pale white.
Wood elf
* All wood elves have the natural ability to hide and forage.
* Wood Elves differ from the other elves in sacrificing armor for speed.
* is elf.
Female fairy
* Female fairies ballet about stretching their skirt hems, and have huge hair.
* Some female fairies are deadly to human lovers.<|endoftext|>### belief | fairy:
Gnome
* Most gnomes are friendly people who love to tinker with all manner of inventions and sciences
- have dark tan or brown skin and white hair
* are a good-natured people and fond of company
- also common
- dwarfish living in caves and mountains
- elemental spirits of earth
- fond of tunnels, so they work in mines
- located in lawns
- maxim
- naturally inquisitive creatures that take great delight in mechanics
- part of south parks
- particularly fond and protective of their families
* are similar to both fighters and magic-users
- dwarves, but they're shorter and slimmer
- software
- songs
- subterranean creatures who make their homes deep underground
- the protectors of all the 'treasures' below the ground
- very widespread species, known to a number of human races
* can cast spells even when in armour
- have light to dark brown eye colour, and their hair is white with little exception
- tinker and create nice trinkets such as infravision goggles
* consist of a number of different types.
* is fairy
* speak gnome, goblin, kobold, and dwarf.
* tend to favor rural environments.
Pixie
* have the gift mesmer and the gift of tongues.
- software
* live in England, where they pull pranks on people.
### belief | fairy | water spirit:
Undine
* Some undines inhabit waterfalls, others live in rivers and lakes.
* is water spirit | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
Faith
* 'belief in' or a 'complete trust' in someone.
* All faiths have environmental teachings
- periods of abstinence
- work for some people
* Focuses Upon the Resurrection.
* IS the cross for which the world scorns the believer.
* Many faiths believe sexual intercourse is something that is to be saved for marriage
- have stories of rainbows being a message from the heavens
- use wine in rituals
* Most faiths accept either the absence of any actual, personal god, or else they worship many gods
- are patriarchal, reflecting the societies in which they're based
* Some faiths claim that prayer is the ultimate personal experience
- consider marriage an aid to religious instruction
- prohibit drinking coffee
* acquires different qualities when it is in company with the mind of man.
* alone is the basis for our salvation.
* also has a growth pattern.
* also involves repentance or genuine sorrow for sin and willingness to turn away from sin
- some paradoxes
- the elements of trust, loyalty and commitment to someone or something
- means confidence, as in the testimony and reputation of other people
- plays a large part in how involoved a person is in a religion
- transcends belief
* also works through love, love being the greatest casts out fear
- to heal our relationship with the material environment
* always is the beginning or origin of action.
* begins where man's power ends
- one knows and has experienced the limitations of rational thought
- with knowledge
- in the truth or trustworthiness of something
* believes and lives according to that belief.
* bird that feels the light and sings while the dawn is still dark.
* brings out the power of the mind.
* by-product of humility.
* call to action, to live differently.
* can alter vision
- be good or bad, wise or stupid
- bring people together because they all believe in the same thing
- chase out fear, or fear can chase out faith
* can grow cold and weak very quickly
- in a life where humility and gratitude make up the bulk of the soil
- mean belief, trust, or faithfulness
- refer to many things
- see by revelation more than senses ever saw
- transcend divisions and barriers created by racism, tribal conflicts, and hatred
* carries the sun inside itself and shines it out in the dark.
* causes a desire to kill
- actions
* church committed to mission support, family ministries and community service
- that wants to know what the Bible says and how it impacts our daily lives
* clear understanding of the revealed Word of God.
* comes by hearing, hearing with the heart.
* comes from knowledge
- receiving the Word of God
- trusting the birth and death process and rising from the ashes
- what is heard, but it also comes from what is seen
* common ingredient in the human experience and in humankind's story.
* communal heritage
- phenomenon
* complex of belief, confidence, obedience, love.
* comprehends everything, and without faith there is nothing.
* conceives the ideal of whatever is to be believed.
* condition of salvation, but it is also a gift.
* contact sport.
* corresponds to grace the way tasting sweetness corresponds to honey on the tongue
* creates a desire and joy in doing good things.
* decision involving one s whole existence
- one's whole existence
* derives from seeing.
* dialogue between the soul and the self.
* dies when it is reduced to a custom, to a habit, to a purely emotional experience.
* direction of looking.
* divine gift.
* dominates reason, which ought to be subordinated to faith in everything.
* embraces many truths which seem to contradict each other.
* establishes reality and truth, including in science.
* exists and expresses itself in many forms.
* explains the way things are , which is another way of saying what is true.
* fire in the heart.
* firm belief in something for which there is no proof.
* fundamental part of our lives.
* generates energy to put things in motion.
* gift that everyone has
- which needs to be cherished and encouraged
* gives birth to prayer
- eyes to the soul
- life meaning, purpose and direction
- rise to practice and study, and practice and study serve to deepen one's faith
* grows as a living faith is shared
- out of and builds upon belief and produces action
* guides the soul to go beyond.
* has a history of individuals and classes responding
- long tradition of excellence in the fine arts, particularly in music
- communitarian roots and social implications
- little place in genealogy
* has nothing to do with probabilities
- worldly understanding
- profound impact
- the power to embrace people in countless ways
* has to do with our experiencing the object of our faith in our heart
- the most fundamental of human experiences
- two elements
- very real power to make things happen
* helps one cope with cancer.
* implies conviction, trust, and commitment
- the idea of hope
* increases in the earth
- with age
* involves a kind of living on the edge
- being faithful
- belief and prayer
* involves believing and acting upon that belief
- the truth, but it is more than assent to the truth
- commitment and risks
- knowledge, trust and action
- moral change
- our minds, our hearts and our wills
- the intelligence, the emotions, the instincts, the appetites
- waiting on a promise
* is 'complete trust' or 'reliance upon'
- Bible living
* is about beginning to see more clearly, about opening our eyes to the possibilities
- being sure and certain of something
- belief, hope, trust, and endurance
- accepted as a substitute for a whole and complete righteousness
- action and decision
* is all about trust and risk
- in all, both in the beginning and progress of Christian life
- that remains
* is also a power and can often make very special things happen
- about honesty
- important to the civility of our country
- in the way of life
- the result of teaching
* is always a gift to be shared
- insecure, and intolerance is an expression of that insecurity
- the way of, though never the reason for, salvation
* is an absolute, unreasoning belief in something
- abstract idea that can help or be abused
* is an act of acceptance
- the spirit, but presumption is the flesh trying to imitate the spirit
- trust at conversion and an attitude of trust throughout life
- that catches up the entire personality
* is an action verb to be done something with
- word - a verb
- actual substance of positive life giving energy and power
- assertion of transcendent meaning when faced even with the injustice of death
- assimilating grace
- assortment of dignified religious ceremonies
- assumption, makes an affirmation, and takes an action
- element of childhood
- essential attribute of a scientist
- example of taking results out of the future
* is an important part of our lives, inside and outside of religious matters
- the fabric of our society
- word in the Bible
- inner tunic of such pure whiteness that it blinds the sight of every intellect
- interchange between persons
- intrinsic part of each moment of our daily lives
- organ of knowledge, and love is an organ of experience
- outgrowth of a relationship
- another word for trust
- as much a part of our life as breathing and sleeping
- assent that goes beyond the evidence
- assurance or a guarantee
* is based on experience
- facts and evidenced by experience
- knowledge, on intimate, personal knowledge
- only on a sense of giftedness
* is basic at the point of entry to the Christian life
- to human nature and, like human nature, it expresses itself in many forms
- basically trust, and trust implies relationship
- belief even in the face of contrary evidence
* is belief in action
- spite of, even perhaps because of, the lack of evidence
- the absence of evidence
- what is unseen
- plus action
* is belief without evidence
- rational evidence
- reasons
- belief, trust in the honesty, and trust of another
- bigotry and superstition
- born in witness of signs
* is born of mystery, of promise, and of hope
- the preaching which generates divine life in the ones who listen to it
- when the heart is cracked open enough to receive
- both spiritual and practical
- central to the gospel which is proclaimed by faith
- certain because it is founded on reason
- commitment and trust
- composed of the heart's intention
- concerned with spiritual or heavenly things
- confidence in the risen Savior
- conscience, the foundation of which is laid in childhood
- contagious and is easily spread
- contrary to reality, as the world knows it
- contrasted with the actual appearance of heavenly things
- conviction without evidence, and sometimes even in the face of contrary evidence
* is created by beliefs
- credited as righteousness
- deeper than either moral virtue or intellectual belief
* is defined primarily as that which is reasonable and makes the most sense
- by personal experience and what makes sense
- definitely a substance that all people utilize in one fashion or another
- different from knowledge
- energy, a force that provides the belief that South Africa can succeed
- essential for healing
* is essential to salvation from our past sins
- essentially a belief that our actions are founded on our beliefs
- established conviction regarding things unseen and grounded expectation of things to come
- evidenced in deeds
- expectation based on a fact
* is expressed in holy living
- love and service, in word and deed
- through cultural expressions
* is faith wherever it is found and without regard to the age of the world in which it is found
- whether young or old and it is the engine that runs the Kingdom
- faith, whether it is in a god or in no god
- famous to paleontologists
- fear turned inside out
- for that which lies on the other side of reason
- formed through personal trusted relationships
- fundamental in the Christian community
- given through the language of the heart
- governed by the spirit
- identified as an important influence on the decisions and behaviors of teens
* is important in the total healing process, with or without medical treatment
- to civility
- in all things - from the beginning and right through our Christian life
* is in general the belief of the mind that a certain statement or condition is true
- persuasion of the mind that a certain statement is true b
- the hearing of an anointed word
* is increased by exercise, by being put into use
- put to use
- integrated with all facets of parenting
* is knowledge borne out of religious experience in the Christian and Catholic context
- laughter at the promise of a child called laughter
- life and work
* is life lived contrary to the evidence on every hand
* is like a medicine that is prescribed by a doctor
- the difference between having read about how to make a cake and actually making one
- lived within the individual, as an individual
* is located in churchs
- synagogues
- love on the battlefield
* is made possible by the in dwelling of the spirit and the revelation of scripture
- up of belief and trust
- manifest by obedience
* is meant to be shared
- move mountains and uproot trees
- mediated through the culture of the family, the tribe, the nation
- mental, spiritual, and abstract
* is more than intellectual agreement with a statement or concept
- religious observance
* is necessary for salvation, of which, the basic elements are courage, action, and risk
- never just words or formulas
* is one of the big three right along with hope and love
- thing when a stock is cheap and the future looks bright
- only faith when there is no apparent reason or justification for it
- opposed to sight, but never to reason
- our supernatural intellect, so to say
- perceived as a mental acceptance, a lack of doubt
- personal trust or belief
- pictured as a reality
- political, social, and ethical
- power, a talisman that works wonders
- rather similar to repentance
- really a way of living
- reason's opposite
* is related to action, to living, to being and doing
- response to evidence
- revealed in the difficult times of life
- rooted in the certainty of a clearer and more perfect perception of reality
- security where no security can be seen
- shared and spread one person at a time
- shown in actions
- sight and knowledge
* is simply another word for trust or confidence
- one part of the whole process of salvation
- the ability to believe without seeing
- somehow a living thing, pulsating with the power of self fulfillment
- something someone has about something when there is no evidence for it
* is something that comes from within
- is to continue grow
- works in funny ways
- very different from belief
- which transcends reasonableness, rationality, and even emotions
- sometimes opposed to reason , and belief to knowledge
* is spiritual strength
- touch
- supposed to be able to move mountains
* is tested in suffering, and faith is also born in suffering
* is that assurance of things hoped for, the evidence of things unseen
- foundational gift that expresses itself through a life of commitment
- quality or power by which the things desired become the things possessed
* is that which a person holds to be the hard-boiled truth about reality
- allows reason to flourish
- has in it a principle of life
* is that which stands on realities, seen or unseen
- under , or the foundation, of things hoped for
* is the Amen, the righteousness by going to the right hand
- ability and the willingness to believe and act where doubt is still possible
* is the ability to be flexible in the unknown
- look beyond the visible into the invisible
- absence of all forms of doubt
- activating force of the priesthood
- actuating motive that leads to baptism and makes it effectual
- agency of that salvation
- answer to fear
- antithesis of works
- assent of the understanding to any truth
- assurance of the heart in the adequacy of the evidence
* is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things unseen
- unseen spiritual realities
- what is hoped for and hope involves that which is unseen
* is the assurance that precedes the act which ultimately yields the evidence
- that really real world exists
- attitude of celebration
* is the basis for their moral conduct, social conscience, and sense of compassion and humanity
- of testimony
* is the belief and conviction that all things are possible
- in the unknown, as belief is the faith in the known
* is the belief of testimony, and where there is no testimony there can be no faith
* is the belief that Hashem exists
- an ideal exists without proof
- such new possibilities are there for the seeing
* is the bird that feels the light and sings when the dawn is still dark
- light when the dawn is still dark
* is the bird that sings while it is still dark
- it is yet dark
- capacity to believe without proof
* is the channel on which the boats of answered prayer sail
- through which salvation comes
* is the common denominator in every victorious man and woman
- their beliefs becoming their reality
- condition of the heart through which salvation is applied
- confident assurance expressed in a song of belief
- conviction that something unproved by physical evidence is true
- cornerstone of any healthy relationship
- courage to face reality with hope
- criterion of the superiority of the Muslim society
- critical element without which any ritual or religious practice is meaningless
- critique of the past and gives meaning to the present
- crown of creation
* is the cure for our doubts and our fears
- to doubt
- currency of eternity
- daring of the soul to go farther than it can see
- delicate balance between giving and receiving
- diametrical opposite of hardness of heart
- element which allows our imagination to break free of the constraints of knowledge
- enduring quality which forms the basis for hope
- energy of motivation, providing multitudes of deeds
- enlightenment of the understanding
- essential prerequisite of true repentance
- eye for seeing the invisible
- eyes, ears, and hands of the soul
* is the first grace and the source of all others
- of the three theological virtues
- principle in the science of theology
- resting-place of the soul
* is the foundation for establishing our lives on an eternal course to happiness
- from which hope is cast within the veil
* is the foundation of Christian character and the security of the soul
* is the foundation of all Christian graces
- that man does
- prayer, as belief is the foundation of religion
* is the foundation on which a life of obedience is built
- all our hopes for the future are built
- other things are built
- fountain of courage and doubt the source of fear
- fuel that drives both commerce and religion
- full assurance of hope
- fundamental key to success in spiritual life
- gate that opens our minds and hearts, removing boundaries and limitations
- good key that unlocks the door
- ground of Christian belief, and it always has been
* is the hand by which the soul takes hold upon the divine offers of grace and mercy
- which grasps
* is the highest expression of belief or confidence
- passion in a human being
- indispensable prelude to the beatific vision, the supernatural end of man
- inescapable foundation to life
- initial window of the soul that lets the light of the revelation of righteousness in
- instrument by which righteousness is procured
- instrumental cause of forgiveness
- key that touches the Savior
* is the key to getting people free of demons
- holiness
* is the key to the Christian life
- lions' jaws
- which unlocked the door
- law of life
- life of the soul
- lifeline that binds Torah and the soul to the real world
- main support of life
* is the means of appropriating the shield
- which brings about our sanctification
- medium of the latent expectations that form the basis of one s subjectivity
- mightiest force in the universe
- most powerful force in the universe
- mother of sweetness, confidence and joy
- noun form and believe is the verb form of the same Greek word
- one great condition of prayer
* is the only condition of sanctification
- crisis of life
- cure for fear
- guarantee, Where risk is all, of our integrity
- way of opening up the depths of reality, even one's own reality
- operating principle of life
- operative principle of kingdom citizenship
* is the opposite of fear
- refusal
- skepticism
- origin of the Path and the mother of all merit and virtue
- overcoming principle in the world's conflict
- placing of one's trust in someone or something
- posture of openness
- power of love
* is the power that created the universe
- destroyed the walls of Jericho
- powerful ability to do great things
- precursor to knowledge
- principal saving grace, and unbelief the chief damning sin
- principle of all holy and acceptable obedience
* is the real content, meaning and gist of anything spoken or written
- or essential part or element of anything
- response dimension of the relationship
- restful experience of the work of grace in our lives
- result of our believing
- same as trust
- sight of the soul, and it is far better than the sight of the senses
- simplest example of existential action
- step beyond belief
- stopgap to experience
- story of fisherman going forth from their nets
* is the substance of hope
- the things hoped for, the evidence of the unseen
* is the substance of things hoped for, and the evidence of things unseen
- substitute for knowledge when knowledge is unavailable
- thing that brings success
- title deed to things hoped for
- tool by which religion makes truth
- underlying factor that explains why people do what they do
- unspoken, nameless and formless yearning for completion and wholeness
- vehicle of hope
- very fabric of life in any field of endeavor
- victory, that overcomes the world
- vision of things unseen
- work in which all works is embodied
- thought of as something that one believes blindly - with no supporting evidence
* is to believe in divine possibilities
- that greatness can be embedded within the frailty of our own fallibility
- promote unity and understanding among people of different backgrounds
- sin what light is to darkness
* is to the soul what life is to the body
- spiritual realm what the five senses are to the natural realm
- true knowledge, of course, it is the knowledge of the truth
* is trust in another, hope in another, being vulnerable to another, even loving another
- the healing powers of the mind
- internalized
* is trust, based on experience
- dependence, believe, obedience
- while faithfulness is the ability or quality of maintaining or keeping trust
- understood as trusting personal acceptance of the truth of the gospel
* is used for trust
- usually a product of desire
- vivified, vitalized, living belief
- voluntary submission within a person's own power
* is what carries the day, rather than arms
- happens when hope and trust come together
- integrates the knowing and the unknowing
* is what is left when there is nothing left to do
- what can be stripped away, is
- there when there's no one around
- it takes for each survivor to learn to become human again
- makes one invincible
- results from belief allowing itself to be questioned, examined, tested
- witnessed by acts of charity and justice
* is woven into every aspect in our daily lives
- the fabric of life
- written throughout the geography and the history of the heartland
* is, above all, openness-an act of trust in the unknown
- effectively, both a noun and a verb
- in simple terms, belief and trust
* leads to confidence, trust, loyalty, and allegiance
- growth and growth leads to practical results in life and service
- prayer and is nourished by prayer
* leap against logic, a product of desire.
* life-long process of exploration and discovery, filled with detours and questions.
* lights up the eye of the human, which has the capability to spark the heart of the world.
* living, dynamic relationship that is more akin to trust than anything else.
* looks beyond the physical world into what is invisible and eternal.
* loose term generally applied to emotional attachment.
* makes a difference in the lives of people
- life possible in the physical world as well as in the spiritual world
- people believe
* makes the difference in the world, and it makes a difference in our lives
- heart a sacristy or holy of holies
* matter of belonging
- life and death
- memorizing truth and living by it
* matter of personal choice
- taste, like enjoying theater or playing golf
* meaningful human activity.
* means belief in something without proof it exists or happens or happened
- believing in something even if there is no evidence, even in spite of counter-evidence
- fidelity, loyalty, and honor among men
- showing everybody else how pious one is
- taking the risk of really believing
- that a new life has been planted in the soul
- to trust and to let oneself be led
- trust, conviction, and is coupled with obedience
* mental capacity, and an action is in the material world.
* mindset, a context, a way of life in which all the other things of our life are set.
* much richer word that implies a living relationship.
* negation of reason.
* non-rational belief in some proposition.
* often exists in contradiction to reason.
* only has meaning when faith has an object.
* overcomes the illusion of the darkness, of evil.
* part of salvation.
* peculiar type of obedience.
* personal issue and individual for each family.
* persuasion and assent to truth upon the authority of another.
* plays a rather limited role in the daily lives of psychopathic ministers
- significant role in whole person wellbeing
* power which moves mountains.
* powerful law of the Kingdom of God.
* powerfully affects the way one lives and what one becomes.
* precursor to trust.
* present because it presence.
* presents the central religious problem for the Western world today.
* produces miracles, salvation, healing, answers, and revival.
* product of the inner man.
* provides people with a sense of morality, duty and loyalty that extends beyond ideology.
* puts the fire in the blood and strengthens the heart, thus faith brings fearlessness.
* reaches to the unseen, and grasps eternal realities.
* refining grace, it consecrates and purifies.
* refusal to panic.
* relationship of love.
* requires openness and, often, the suspension of belief.
* resides in the baptism and in the hope that it confers forgiveness.
* response to evangelism.
* resulting in action is the only kind of faith that is real.
* saving power.
* school that exists in the midst of a thriving economy and a group of thriving churches.
* seems to be an occupational hazard for physicists.
* sees the future as a present reality
- things that are out of sight
* series of steps.
* serves as our spiritual hands by which the gift is received at a particular moment in time.
* shapes every aspect of their lives.
* sign of health.
* source of strength for many people.
* stronger and more consistent motivation for obedience than fear
- drive in the face of danger than fear
* synonym for trust.
* takes a threefold aspect in accordance with the inherent nature or tendencies of the man.
* tangible force, the basic substance of the universe.
* then has three elements - knowledge, belief, and trust
- is the link, the one link, between the sinner and the Sin-bearer
* total attitude toward life.
* treasure of life which is enriched by being shared.
* trust that what happens is supposed to happen.
* trusting, a love.
* turns hope into assurance, conviction, and reality.
* verb, an action word.
* very common commodity exercised daily in everyday affairs
- important part of farming and everyday life
* virgin grace, it is joined with sanctity.
* virtue of certitude that has to exist without even an aorta of distrust or doubt
- which there is so little
* vital act of the new-born soul
- newborn soul
* volitive act that transcends knowledge.
- sight, insight and imaginative reflection and devotion and commitment
* woman sitting in a folding chair.
* word signifying action
* work of the spirit.
* works in combination with love
- only by love
* worldwide religion with more than five million members around the globe.
+ Human, Culture, null, Religion and spirituality: Hominins
* Religion is a belief in a higher being, spirit, or any system of ideas a group of people believe in. People who believe something strongly have faith in whatever it is they believe. Faith can bring people together because they all believe in the same thing. Millions of people believe in God, some people are very religious, some people are atheist and believe in no god, and some people believe a mixture of science and religion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | faith:
Bad faith
* concept that is subjective and difficult to prove.
* form of self-deception which in making use of freedom denies it.
* is one based on a falsehood.
* legal term that means dishonesty of belief or purpose.
Blind faith
* can jepordize one's health.
* foolish basis for satisfaction that one's agents are acting on one's behalf.
* is an inferior form of faith
- faith without evidence
- just as much a handicap as physical blindness
- no faith at all
- the belief in something without evidence or contrary to the evidence
* leads to blind fury when the basic tenets of a belief are dashed.
* misrepresentation of reality.
Confession of faith
* is for people who have never belonged to a church.
* leads to service to others.
Evangelical faith
* is that state of mind in which eternal things are apprehended as realities.
* present the value of their church experience clearly and constantly.
Genuine faith
* direction of looking.
* includes repentance, and genuine repentance includes faith.
* is concerned about the brother's repentance and forgiveness
- expressed in positive choices
Good faith
* is any set of beliefs that reinforce the species in it's quest for truth
- the opposite of bad faith
* theory of defense in false return cases
- tax evasion
Natural faith
* involves trust.
* is part and parcel of the human experience
- that faith which originates as part and parcel of the human experience<|endoftext|>### belief | faith:
Religious faith
* All religious faiths worship freely.
* Any religious faith involves prayer, an object of worship and practice.
* Some religious faiths describe a type of god who possesses both good and evil elements
- object to cremation, while others virtually require it
* can greatly enhance our everyday lives intellectually, spiritually and emotionally
- have a very positive benefit for children as well as adults
- provide much comfort at the time of a death
* demands spiritual practice.
* drives some to intolerance.
* is at the heart of education at parochial schools.
* is based on accepting the infallibility of the mystical experiences of dead people
- validity of the mystical experiences of dead people
- feelings rather than facts
- the basis for the Amish way of life
- very important in teaching young people abstinence
* key element in many people's lives.
* orients a person toward the ultimate meaning of the world.
* seeks to find the meaning of existence.
* source of strength in a society.<|endoftext|>### belief | faith:
True faith
* belief that causes on to act on what is believed.
* brings about repentance and love, and all good things.
* can help in changing the circumstances of a situation.
* entails true repentance.
* humble faith.
* involves both the present and the future.
* is always in a heart bruised for sin.
* is an essential grace, and a main-spring of Christian life
- operative faith, a faith that really works
* is built on accurate knowledge
- the foundation of sound Bible knowledge
- grounded upon knowledge
- inseparable from the experience of divine holiness and divine love
- spiritual hygiene
- that which gives rise to righteous action
- the working out of love
* judicious intelligent grace, it knows whom it believes, and why it believes.
* shapes every part of our lives.
* way of health for the whole man because it goes out of itself to Another. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | faith | yoga:
Hatha yoga
* are yogas.
* blend of traditions.
* body balancing system.
* gives strength and flexibility without depleting one's energy.
* goes far beyond mere exercise.
* has many variations or styles.
* increases health for ALL practitioners, and can unite body, mind, and spirit.
* involves the practice of postures known as asanas.
* is an umbrella term which covers all physical yoga
- another exercise form that is gaining much popularity
- composed of a series of postures or poses called 'asanas'
- for all ages and all body shapes
- probably the best-known yoga practices of western society
- the most common yoga
* liberates the flow of prana within the body.
* promotes hormonal balance, menstrual regularity and organ tone.
* uses various postures called asanas.
Integral yoga
* aims at the unity of personality growth and spiritual intuition.
* gives yoga an affirmative and dynamic form.
* modern version of the traditional yoga systems of India.
Iyengar yoga
* is meditation in action.
* zeroes in on the body's alignment by strictly adhering to the correct postures.
Karma yoga
* is concerned with selfless work and good deeds.
* is the path of action
- yoga of service
- unconditional and without expectation
* makes it possible for anyone to seek moksha and still perform one's dharma.
* relates to an attitude of service to others.
Mantra yoga
* focuses on chanting and can be a very spiritual practice.
* uses the concentrated repetition of a word or phrase to aid in the control of the mind.
Raja yoga
* emphasizes physical and mental control.
* is the royal path of meditation.
Freedom of belief
* holds the place that is ordinarily accorded to doctrine in orthodox religions.
* is absolute, yet the state can regulate certain religious actions.
* means freedom of action.
Genie
* are humanlike beings who dwell on the elemental planes.
* commercial on-line service provider.
* is people
- the second-largest mobile portal in the U.K., and one of the largest in Europe
* uses statistical methods and neural networks to model gene structures.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Goblin
* always attack in waves.
* are a little larger, usually one to three feet, but sometimes much larger or smaller
- product of European myth
- adept in primitive magic, with many varieties of caster
- dumb, weak, ugly, but very quick
- evil spirit
- generally wary around orcs, but sometimes find themselves slumming it in an orc horde
- masters of concealment and they hide in forests, where they are virtually nondetectable
- pranksters, and are known to rearrangitems in the house or tangle horses manes
- short, ugly, and green
- small, troublesome, and ubiquitous throughout the Mhorannese world
* generally come in three varieties.
* have no permanent home, living temporarily in old trees and under moss-covered rocks.
* is evil spirit
* multiply like rabbits.
* usually travel in familly tribes of eight to a dozen goblins.
+ World of Warcraft, Gameplay, Races, Horde: 2004 video games :: Blizzard video games :: Massively multiplayer online role-playing games :: Windows games
* Goblins are short, ugly, and green. They are very greedy and like to destroy things. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
God
* All gods are one god.
* Many gods have different names
- oracles or avatars
- represent a part of the natural universe
* Most gods create blind creatures
- great sea creatures
- live creatures
* Some gods create animals
- beasts
- draw their power from the faith and awe of their devotees
* Some gods have gods
- heads
- many names
- more than one name
- roles
- make men
- open spiritual eyes
- possess power
* appear as powerful components of theory because they are modeled on powerful real organisms
- framed in myth and color
* appear in animal and human guise, manipulating mere mortals to guide the turning of the world
- dreams
- most easily when they live in our consciousness
* are a race of their own, whose power depends on the number of their believers
- attested from the earliest time of Egyptian civilization
- different, both genetically and psychologically, from people
- gods because they have unfolded the godlike
- humans who attain enlightment and are liberated from rebirth
- important in Pharaoh
- intelligent beings
- mortals, men are immortals, each living in the others' death and dying in the others' life
- part of people's desire to know how the world works
- sacred
- something people worship
- sometimes stars and planets, sometimes they are cognitive centers
* are the main guides in real life, the dead takes the role in the afterlife
- people who own the database
* are, by definition, supernatural beings.
* become saints occasionally, demons more often.
* can rationalize where material objects can only causally explain.
* differ from human beings in a particular way.
* display similar and dissimilar nonverbal behaviors.
* exist as they are evoked to meaningful existence by the individual psyche
- to devour information
* have an ascendancy over the angels, who are ministering servants.
* need angels.
* reveal answers.
* spiritual being
* symbol of protection.
* take on many forms in mythology and their roles are varied.
* usually possess superhuman powers, but few are considered omnipotent.
+ Popol Vuh, Contents, Summary: Religious texts :: Maya civilization :: Creation myths
* Gods create world.
### belief | god:
Door god
* are often in pairs, one for each side of the door.
* are often in pairs, one for each side of the door. The first door gods may have been made for a Chinese Emperor, more than 1300 years ago. They showed his two best soldiers.<|endoftext|>### belief | god:
Goddess
* All goddesses are symbols of insight and the gods represent compassion.
* Most goddesses have heads.
* Some goddesses appear to threaten patriarchal values
- can change how they look, so they have two or three different images
- govern death
* are deity
- women
* sing laments over their dead sons, lovers and brothers.
* tend to come in groups of odd numbers.
+ Devi
* Hindus believe in millions of female gods. Each goddess of the Hindus has her own story and history. They all look different too. Some goddesses can change how they look, so they have two or three different images. Some learned persons think that all Hindu goddesses are different forms of a single big or supreme goddess. Some learned persons also think that worship of goddesses by Hindus shows their respect for female gender. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | god:
Nymph
* All nymphs are aquatic, and resemble the adults in many respects.
* Most nymph becomes mature adults.
* Most nymph feeds on detrituses
- live prey
- organic detrituses
- goes through immature stages
* Most nymph has different size
- mouthparts
- pierce mouthparts
- wings
- inhabits sandy bottoms
- reaches adulthood
* Most nymph requires oxygenate water
- varies in color
* Most nymphs develop into wingless adults
- gradually grow wing pads and then transform into winged termites called alates
- occur under stones in well aerated streams
* Some nymph feeds on mites.
* Some nymph has antennas
- front legs
- gills
- predator fish
- skin
* Some nymph has strong front legs
- structures
- tubes
- lives in water
- resembles wingless adults
- varies in length
- nymphs even hunt on land
* Some nymphs live in burrows in the mud, while others live in quiet or swift waters
- underwater for three years or more
- make hinged trapdoors which they can pull down for protection
* again seek a host, feed, drop to the ground, molt and become adults.
* appear dark gray and pale banded between abdominal segments.
* appear in large numbers in autumn and early winter
- late spring
- similar in shape to adults but lack wings and are generally gray in color
* are about the size of an aphid
- abundant
* are active during blooming
- in the spring
- almost constantly in motion and are active throughout the day and night
- also green and wingless, lacking the enlarged prothorax
- always wingless
- at first mobile and then settle down by inserting their stylets into plant cells
* are baby lice that mature in about seven days
* are bright red but become darker with maturity
- by legend a favorite chase of satyrs, and are slender and lithe
- dark green with a light-colored stripe running down the back
- darker than the adults, wingless, and usually covered with spines
- devoured in turn by many carnivorous animals , especially fishes
- difficult to distinguish from adults, but are generally smaller and lighter in color
- dragonfly babies that live in the water and have no wings
- easy to remove by hand-picking
- even smaller with small wing buds
- extremely beautiful females
- flat and oval and appear glued to the lower leaf surface
- flat, elliptical and scale-like
- generally lighter green in color
* are green in color with black spots
- or dull orange
- heavily spined and shaped somewhat similar to the adults
- just baby insects
* are less mobile and easier to control
- than two millimeters in size
- mainly responsible for infecting humans with Borrelia burgdorferi
* are more likely to be found feeding on the undersides of leaves
- feed on humans than larva
- rounded and colored red and black when young
* are most active in spring and summer
- numerous on the undersides of leaves but can occur on shaded upper leaf surfaces
* are mostly black and spiny
- shiny brown, broadly oval, flat and spiny
- normally green, but at high densities their color shifts to orange
- often white
* are oval and black with a white waxy fringe
- shiny yellowish to reddish brown
- shaped with coloration similar to adults, but are smaller and wingless
- pale and wingless, with red eyes
* are pale green in colour
- with a reddish head and legs
- yellow to green
- paler, are shorter bodied, and lack the long caudal siphon
- pear-shaped like adults, wingless
* are present and active during the summer months
- only in the spring
- red-tinged
- reddish-brown
- responsible for most damage that is usually apparent in the spring
- round and bluish-gray with red marks
- sexually mature in two to four months and full grown in a year
- similar but smaller
* are similar in appearance to adults except that they are smaller and lack wings
- the adults but lack fully developed wings
- appearance, but smaller
- color but have no wings
- shape, form, color and habits but have no wings
- structure but smaller than the adult
* are similar to adults although some nymphs are smaller
- and molt into their wings
* are similar to adults but are smaller and wingless
- smaller and white in colour
- without wings
* are similar to adults except in size
- that they lack a complete set of wings
- with wing buds developing with each molt finally becoming full wings
- apterae in appearance except that they are smaller
- slightly smaller than the adult but similar in shape
- slow growing and can take nine months or more to become adults
* are small, non-motile, and nearly the same color as the foliage
- wingless versions of adults
- wingless, teardrop-shaped, ranging in color from yellow orange to brown in color
* are smaller and light brown in color
- but closely resemble adults
* are smaller than adults and are yellow or amber colored
- the wingless adult but similar in shape and color
- versions of the adults and larvae resemble nymphs but have only six legs
- smaller, oval, and spiny
- solid bright red and develop black markings and wings as they mature
* are spiny and much darker than the adults
* are the immature form of the adult species
- forms of the kudzu bug which hatch from the eggs
- size of a poppy seed
- tiny and tear drop-shaped
- translucent, oval in outline, and very thin
- usually green with numerous black spots on their backs
* are very difficult to detect and easily overlooked
- kill with pyrethroids
- effective to fish pre-hatch, especially in still waters
- similar to the adults, except they are smaller and lack fully developed wings
- small and like to stay close to the scalp where they feed
- whitish green and wingless
- wingless and gray, having a body shape similar to the adults
* are wingless, but otherwise similar to the adults
- uniformly brown colored, and run very fast
- yellow or pinkish red, with a light colored band across their backs
* becomes adults
* begin feeding immediately after emerging from eggs
- hatching during bloom and continue to hatch into the petal fall period
- sucking blood immediately
* complete the same cycle as do the larvae.
* continue to be the fly of choice
- feed on the host through all instars
* cover themselves with white, cotton-like secretions.
* crawl from the water onto a partially submerged rock or log to emerge into adults.
* develop faster in areas that are humid
- on grasses and vegetable crops
- prominent black dots on the top of the thorax and abdomen
- their wax overcoat slowly as they mature into the final adult stage
- through five growth stages, or instars, and have incomplete metamorphosis
* develop through five instars over a period of five to six weeks
- that resemble adults but aresmaller and oval
- several wingless instars before becoming sexually mature winged adults
- throughout the summer and overwinter as last instars
* differ in appearance from the adults in that the wings are absent or in a reduced form.
* does damage
- little damage
* eat a young fruit and flowers, etc and adults eat other small insects or caterpillars
- other underwater life forms such as mosquito larva
* emerge from the oothecae as tiny insects.
* emerge in early spring and feed on undersides of leaves
- five to seven days and flatten themselves against the leaf to feed
- the spring and feed on developing buds, flowers, and new leaves
- within five to seven days
* feed and develop during the summer
- winter and mature by spring
- grow through the summer, and mature into adults in the fall
- mature through five instars in about six to eight weeks
- molt five times before becoming adults
- move as a colony, guided by the adult female
* feed for at least a month and develop through four instars before becoming adults
- five to eight weeks before entering the adult stage
- four to five days and then drop from the plant to pupate in the soil
- from buds and young leaves
- on small aquatic organisms, and occasionally tadpoles and small fish
* free themselves from the oothecae by working in concert.
* get wing pads at the fifth molt.
* go from one stage to the next by moulting, changing their skin.
* go through seven molts before becoming adults, which takes approximately one year
- three instars and a pupa stage before reaching adulthood
- multiple stages
- several stages
- suck mouthparts
* have a dull, brick-red bodies with relatively long legs and antennae
- prehensile labium, adapted for seizing prey
- beautifully complex body shapes, with gills for breathing underwater, and no wings
- bright red abdomens
- eight instars requiring three years for the life cycle
- long cylindrical bodies
- much longer antennae, functioning mouthparts and are aquatic
- no wings and readily run backwards, sideways, or forward when disturbed
- nonfunctional wing pads whereas adults have fully developed, functional wings
- similar appearance to adults, but smaller and paler
- six legs, and adults have eight legs
- spiny projections arising over the body
- stubby egg-shaped bodies
* have the ability to sway males of any race to do what they want
- same type of mouthparts as the adult, and they both eat the same kind of food
* inhabits bottoms
- river bottoms
* is insects
- larvas
* live in a pond or stream
- the water and eat small fish
- inside leaf galls throughout the summer months
- under rocks or in sediments
* look like adults except smaller, and lack wings
- only smaller
- without wings which they eventually molt into
- adults, though they lack a few small characteristics
- miniature adults without wings
* look like small adult lice, but are only about the size of a pinhead
- versions of adult crickets with a few differences
- small, wingless adults
- the adults but are without wings
- tiny adults without wings
* look much like adult water scorpions, though smaller, of course
- adults except for color, being white to olive green to grayish brown
- nearly identical to their parents except in size
* look similar to adults, but they are smaller, lighter in color, and wingless
- mature adults, but lack fully-developed wings
- very similar to adults
* lose the bacteria when they molt.
* make up a big part of the diets of many fish, including trout, bass, and panfish.
* occur in late spring and summer, and are about the size of a poppy seed.
* often catch fish when nothing else does
- congregate at the bottom of building walls
* pass through five instars
- nymphal instars before molting into the adult stage
* pass through five stages and reach adulthood by late august
- four to five moults before reaching adulthood
- two moults
* progress through five instars before becoming adults
* reach adulthood in six to eight weeks
- maturity in five to ten months, with faster maturation at higher temperatures
* remain underground until they are ready to molt to adults.
* require a blood meal in order to molt and reach the next level of development
- five to six weeks to mature into adults
* resemble adult mole crickets with less-developed wings
- scale insects but are smaller and female nymphs lack the spot
* resemble adults but are much smaller and lack fully developed wings
* resemble adults except for their smaller size, lack of wings, and are paler in color
* resemble adults except they are smaller and lack wings
- in habits and appearance but are smaller and wingless
- adults, but have few legs and are considerably smaller
- aphids but are much more active than aphids
- miniature, wingless adults
- the adult form but are smaller and lack fully developed wings
* resemble the adults but are yellow in colour
- except for size and the absence of wings
- in shape but are smaller
- wingless adults except for their smaller size
- wingless adults but are somewhat smaller
* secrete several types of waxy structures.
* seek shelter and are inactive until the following spring.
* shows characteristics.
* soon cover themselves with white, cotton-like secretions.
* start out life as a plain tan color but slowly molt to become very incredible looking adults.
* take bluegills wherever the panfish are found.
* tend to move sideways and quickly retreat to the opposite side of the leaf when disturbed
- remain concentrated near the head region
* vary in color as they mature.
* walk sideways or backwards to hide on the underside of the leaves.
+ Metamorphosis, Insects, Incomplete metamorphosis or 'hemimetabolism': Developmental biology :: Animal anatomy
* Insects with incomplete metamorphosis have three life stages. These insects start as eggs, which are usually very small. When the egg hatches, a larva or nymph comes out. Nymphs are just baby insects. Most of the time, the nymph looks similar to the adult, but it is smaller, may have different colouration, and does not have wings. Finally, it changes into a mature adult with wings. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | god | nymph:
Dragonfly nymph
* Most dragonfly nymph feeds on live prey
- has eyes
* Some dragonfly nymph lives in water.
Dryad
* are very slow moving tree spirits with a deadly whip attack.
* can also speak with plants.
* have high cheekbones and amber, violet, or dark green eyes.
* is nymph.
* often appear clothed in a loose, simple garment.
Emerge nymph
* Most emerge nymph goes through stages.
* goes through several stages
Female nymph
* have four instars.
* resemble the adult except for smaller size
- larger adult females
Larger nymph
* are grayish white with dark heads, legs and antennae.
* can capture and eat tadpoles or even small fish.
Newborn nymph
* are oval at first and become slightly elongated.
* are very important in the distribution of woolly apple aphid
- spread of the woolly apple aphid
Older nymph
* are a grayish white, with dark legs
- all gray
- black with a white spot between the wing pads
- flat and brown
- greenish and fringed with hairs
- light gray in color with black legs
- yellow green to green and wingless
* have dark, prominent wing pads
- four black spots on the thorax and one on the abdomen
* resemble adults but lack fully-developed wings.
Tiny nymph
* becomes adults.
* can have difficulty eating from undamaged leaves.<|endoftext|>### belief | god | nymph | water nymph:
Naiad
* All naiads have very narrow, inch-long leaves that have definite teeth on their margins.
* Some naiads even have a long lower jaw that can shoot out and grab prey.
* are also serious predators.
* are aquatic and possess gills for breathing
- distinctive in water
- nymphs
- planets
* can forcefully expel a jet of water to propel themselves with great rapidity.
* have piercing mouthparts for catching underwater prey
- two caudal filaments and external gills
* is water nymph
* live in most aquatic habitats.
+ Dragonfly, Reproduction, Larvae: Odonata
* While living in the water, the naiads eat as many aquatic insects as possible, as well as other small creatures like tadpoles and minnows. Hidden among the plants, a naiad will lie in wait for prey to swim by. It can then squeeze water out of the rear of its abdomen like a jet stream. This moves the naiad forward very quickly, allowing it to snatch its prey with its powerful jaws. Some naiads even have a long lower jaw that can shoot out and grab prey.
Wingless nymph
* Most wingless nymph becomes adults.
* hatch from the eggs and go through four to five molts before reaching maturity
- eggs, and molt several times to reach adulthood in about two months<|endoftext|>### belief | god | nymph:
Young nymph
* Some young nymph has antennas
- resembles adults
* appear similar to the adult aphid but covered with a white waxy filament.
* are a dull blue-green
- blue-green in colour, and look like aphids but are more active
- gregarious and feed together in groups
- small, flat, and hard to see
- strongly gregarious, a behavior that dissipates slightly as the nymphs mature
- the most susceptible stage to insecticides, while adults are difficult to kill
* can slip and fall into the foodplant's water reservoir.
* hatch and settle on the developing new twig growth in spring.
* have black abdomens and a red thorax
- three horns instead of the one seen on the adults
* migrate to the axils of leaf petioles and of forming fruit.
* resemble adults in appearance and diet. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | god:
Saint
* Every saint has a past and every sinner a future
- past, and every sinner has a future
- specific day of the year
* Some saints have dramatic conversions after years of being in love with the world
- the power in five minutes to change the heart of any human being from evil to good
* are active after death and can be prayed to
- deity
- humans who achieved a high level of perfection and are role models for other humans
- imperfect people moving toward perfection
- individuals of zeal and courage
- intelligent agents
- men who have freed themselves from the world of matter and who have overcome sin
- ordinary people who have one distinction - faith in Jesus
* are people of action
- still struggling against sin's temptations
- that the sun shines through
- who lived heroic lives and who are examples to the church
- synonymous , or are associated , with holiness
- the living symbols of religion and are the true benefactors of humanity
* become saints by the way they live their lives.
* can heal people through prayers in the Name of Christ Jesus.
* desire good.
* go to sleep spiritually.
* is the scriptural term for persons saved under the plan of salvation within a dispensation.
* like to do good things for others.
* live in the state of forgetfulness.
* lives and their images are a major part of medieval life.
* often become saints due to their empathy for others.
* rise from various economic situations, from varying cultures and vastly different ages.
+ Saint (disambiguation), Religion
* The word comes form Latin 'Sanctus', which means holy. In general, saints are believed to be good examples of how people should live, or what people should do. Saints are synonymous, or are associated, with holiness. In the Roman Catholic Church, to become a saint, you have to go through a process called canonization, which is performed by the Pope.
### belief | god | saint:
Dervish
* Some dervishes spend their lives mostly in craggy solitude.
* are Muslim devotees
- acrobats of the soul
* can use a car, have a family.
* view the spinning ceremony as a way to ascend to spiritual perfection.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Magic
* arises to prominence when the boundary of self is either expanding or contracting.
* attempts to produce miracles on demand.
* can be wishful thinking.
* comes from within
- in regular and menthol
* deals with power and control.
* demands ignorance and uncertainty, and most of all impotence.
* draws forth the energy of the earth to create change.
* explores the essence and power of everything.
* influences the world.
* is always unpredictable and dangerous
- everywhere, and contains everything
- fusion, in real doing, of wonder, sensitivity, intensity, and integrity
- hot and fiery, evoking desire
- illusion
- in a broader sense a variety of technology
* is located in air
- covens
- many things to many people
- occult psychology
- rare, difficult to wield, but extremely powerful
- religious rituals
- supernaturalism
- symbolic of creation
- used for entertainment
* lies deep in the soil, and wafts through the air.
* occurs when talented professors unlock intellectual potential in students.
* plays a key role, too, in traditional medicine
- more prominent role in A Clash of Kings than it did in A Game of Thrones
* relates to the personal power of one.
* seeks to alter the normal, to change reality.
* takes the place of science.
* tries to make things happen by using specific words and actions.
+ Final Fantasy, Gameplay: Fantasy movies
* Magic is common in the game. The way characters get magic depends on the game. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | magic:
Black magic
* deals with the forces of involution.
* is an attempt to conjure evil results through assistance with evil spirits or demons
- another area where the birds are used
- based on the degradation of sex and of the creative function
- concerned with the form, with matter
- mahavidya without the light of atma-vidya
- practiced and animal sacrifices are used in sacred pagan ceremonies
- ruled over by the moon
- satanic and demonic
- used for purposes while so-called white magic is summoned to perform good
* represents the magic of death.
* works with opposing poles.
Necromancy
* Necromancies are divination.
* holds a place of honor among ancient oracular arts.
* is contact with the dead, actually demons in disguise, as familiar spirits
- divination by communication with the dead
- taught in the City of the Dead, in Hades
* is the act of conjuring the dead for divination
- seeking of the spirits of the dead
* requires a bone.<|endoftext|>### belief | magic | necromancy:
Witchcraft
* All witchcraft is based on making curses.
* Pagan folk-religion of personal experience rather than transmitted revelation
* Path with depth.
* abounds and spells are often cast.
* are sorcery.
* benign earth religion.
* can have at least two, mutually incompatible meanings
- broad political ramifications
* class of magic characterized by two things.
* has many holidays and rituals
- much in common with magick
- nothing to do with long black dresses, black lipstick, or spiked collars
- some very positive and life affirming teachings
* implies evil doing.
* is also very widespread.
* is an ancient religion requiring child sacrifice which has resurfaced in our day
- that has been practiced since the Roman times
- based on paradigm or worldview
- both a religion and a way of life
- everywhere
- evil magic a person uses to do harm to another person
- for desperate situations
- generally a Spiritual, Earth-loving religion
- in the churches
- neither white magick nor black magick, simply magick
- one of the oldest religions, surviving centuries of persecution
- part of African traditional medicine and has to do with evil spirit
* is practised and some men are thought to be able to turn into tigers
- openly everywhere
- prevalent
- quite prevalent
- recognized in the United States as a legitimate religion
- soul-force allied with demonic power
* is the 'craft of the witch'
- art of worship
- illegitimate use of authority in a spiritual dimension
- mistress of the city of Salem
- practice of trying to control others for personal gain
- spirit inside, and for lack of a better word, science
- very much a magickal way of life
- worldwide in scope but has had greatly varying roles at different times and places
- worship and the art and a gift is using a tool or ability
* leads to an eternity in the lake of fire.
* means something different to people who have read the books.
* offers bondage to rituals.
* operates by spells, curses, hypnosis.
* personal faith.
* positive religion that reveres nature.
* refers to sorcery, superstition, the occult and horoscopes.
* relies on an internal quality or disposition of the witch.
- of respect and honor
* religion, and magick tool.
* seeks to conjure up the dead.
* spiritual path and way of life that is both personal and individual.
* strongly imbues the view that all things are independent and interrelated.
* unique religion.
* way of tuning one's self into nature and the natural energies found in all things.
* word that frightens many people and confuses many others.
* work of the flesh.
* works around a general principle that there are two planes or levels of 'reality'.
Real magic
* is the ability to please a room full of children.
* transaction of the heart.
* uses laws that haven t yet been discovered. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | magic:
Sorcery
* deals with gathering power from grimories
- the magic of illusion and magical perception
* is magic.
* operates by charms, music, drugs.
Negative belief
* impact our lives dramatically.
* lead to maladaptive behaviors.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Opinion
* Many opinions exist about the musk gland, which is on the inside of each hind leg below the hock.
* are assertions or statements that a person believes to be true
- beliefs about reality
- ideas that have been drained of all vitality
- the small change in the exchange of ideas
* bases on facts.
* can change lives, but opinions based on false beliefs can lead people into trouble.
* is judgment
- legal documents
- located in newspapers
- messages
- what people believed about light, for instance, before Newton's prism experiments
* judgment, belief, or estimation.
* supports positions
- prefer positions<|endoftext|>### belief | opinion:
Different opinion
* Many different opinions exist as to what happens to personal experience after death.
+ Soul: Death customs :: Theology
* Many philosophies and religions say that a 'soul' is the part of a living human being which is supernatural and lives after death. It cannot be discovered by science, because it cannot be tested in any controlled way. Many different opinions exist as to what happens to personal experience after death. Most atheists say that there is no such thing as a soul, and that the body is the only part of a person.<|endoftext|>### belief | opinion:
Judgment
* are a key problem in the study of logic
- conclusions or inferences based upon supporting facts
- opinions based on values, beliefs, or philosophical concepts
* has consequences
- practical consequences
* has reach consequences
* involves assessments.
* is acts
- also an important role to a profession
- court decisions
- due processes
- norms
- one of the biggest topics in the Scriptures
* is the ability to distinguish right from wrong and to set priorities
- constant evaluation of things as right or wrong, good or bad
- ego's way of bettering oneself at the expense of the other
- traits
* mental act of evaluation through comparison or contrast.
* reflects cultural values
* relates to knowledge.
* takes places.<|endoftext|>### belief | opinion | judgment:
Conclusion
* Living-donor nephrectomy is associated with low surgical morbidity.
* apply to simulation.
* are assumptions.
* are part of addresses
- narration
- syllogisms
- propositions
- sections
- settlements
- supported by observations
* base on common sense consideration
- evidence
- facts
- limit evidence
- new scientific evidence
* come from important observations
* come from several important observations
* depend on inference.
* derive from experience
- own experience
* draw from activities
- comparison
- investigations
- island biogeography theories
- scientific investigations
* have management.
* help hypotheses
- original hypotheses
* require experimentation.
* rest on interpretations.
### belief | opinion | judgment | conclusion | breakup:
Annulment
* court-ordered dissolution of an invalid marriage.
* declaration that the marriage never existed
- which says there was no propar marriage in the first place
* is different from divorce in that a divorce ends a valid marriage
* procedure to establish that a marriage was entered into improperly.
Defeat
* are despair
- endings
- failure
* is failure
- the price trial lawyers pay for success
### belief | opinion | judgment | conclusion | drug withdrawal:
Cold turkey
* are expression
- singles
- withdrawals
* drug withdrawal
* induces less suffering and creates a shorter period of withdrawal.
### belief | opinion | judgment | conclusion | fade:
Brake fade
* occurs when the pads and rotors are overheated.
* temporary condition caused by high temperatures generated by repeated hard braking. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | opinion | judgment | conclusion | shutdown:
Layoff
* are about decreasing headcount while trying to maintain productivity
- another form of capitalistic oppression
- closures
- common when accounts are lost, major clients cut advertising budgets, or agencies merge
- the ties that bind
- usually a sign of what has happened rather than a precursor of things to come
* can be traumatic events.
* is severance of an employee from the work force due to lack of work.
* spread a fear virus that can leave an entire organization weakened and open to attack.
Waiver
* are the technical means by which charter schools operate.
* occurs in cases where youths meet certain age and offense criteria.<|endoftext|>### belief | opinion | judgment:
Decision
* affect ability
- activities
- biodiversity
- children
- life
- many children
- success
- the ability of subordinates to effectively and efficiently perform their jobs
- ultimate success
* are choices
- individual and personal things
- made by individuals and by society on issues relating to science and technology
- play
- results
* are the point at which principles are converted into actions
- product of human beings thinking
* base on assumptions
- awareness
- conditions
- different values
- environments
- evidence
- facts
- guidelines
- incomplete information
- weather information
* can have impact.
* concern rules.
* define aspects.
* depend on resources
* follow criminal trials
- recommendations
* have consequences
- cost
- effects
- little effects
- problems
* impact cost
* include harvest regulations
- set harvest regulations
* is the secret of happiness in religion.
* lead to selections
- solutions
* made by individuals can impact the global supply of many resources
- during surgery, quite literally, can mean the difference between life and death
* make improvement.
* making Arguments about how best to reach decisions are fundamental to anarchism
- by consensus significant characteristic of Japanese society
- involves a process of deciding what is important and worthwhile
- often involves more people, more politics, and more bureaucracy
- under uncertainty challenge faced by many decision makers
* means alternatives.
* need analyses
- approval
- detail analyses
* relate to authority
- development
* require community participation.
* require full community participation
* support choices
- healthful choices
- purposes
+ Decision-making: Psychology :: Politics
* Every decision making process produces a final choice. The output can be an action or an opinion.
+ Direct democracy: Forms of government :: Anarchism :: Democracy
* In a 'direct democracy', which is also called 'pure democracy' the decisions are not taken by representatives. All decisions are voted on by the people.
+ Local government in Germany, Running local government, South German system
* The mayor is elected by the people, and he heads the council and the town government. The council is responsible for nearly all decisions. Some decisions are taken by the mayor. The council may give some of its tasks to the mayor, in which case they cannot change the mayor's decision.
### belief | opinion | judgment | decision:
Appointment
* are decisions
- disposals
- films
- furnishings
- occupations
- pacts
- schedules
* means assigning a person to fulfil a particular office or position.
### belief | opinion | judgment | decision | appointment:
Nomination
* are appointments
- recommendations
* is an appointment
Economic decision
* have a direct and indirect effect on social and environmental health
- an enormous influence on society and the character of our lives
* involve moral choices and are subject to moral accountability.
Important decision
* affect life.
* base on information
- weather information | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | opinion | judgment | decision:
Move
- turns
* cause moves.
+ List of chess terms, B, Blindfold chess
* Chess played by a strong player without being able to see the board. The player is not blind, but sits with his back to the boards, or wears a blindfold. Moves are called out in 'notation'.
Dismissal
* are notice
- permission
- terminations
* is judgment
- the disenrollment of a student for an indefinite period of time<|endoftext|>### belief | opinion | judgment:
Moral judgment
* agree with religious ones in believing in realities which are no realities.
* are expressions of our feelings.
* depend on value judgments.
* determine how to apportion factors to the causal and background fields.
* imply a claim to be objective and rationally justified or valid.
* is everybody's right and responsibility.
* prediction of wrong doing by all, simply because one committed a trespass.
* report moral facts, and moral claims are literally true or false.
* result from feelings.
Snap judgment
* are a problem that faces interviewers when conducting an interview.
* lead to stereotyping that prohibits careful consideration of people's abilities.<|endoftext|>### belief | opinion | judgment:
Subjectivity
* Subjectivities are judgment.
* begins with the body.
* can also depend on ones gender.
* is also devoid of persisting psychic entities
- an endowment of All That Is
- common to all human experience
- defined with respect to objectivity
- essentially the first person experience of the activity of the conscious brain
- located in a violent confluence of the spectacles of war, technology, and capital
- reduced to the status of a 'mere object' by exchange-value
- relativism
* is the complement of objectivity and they coexist in a reciprocity
- true foundation of the ego's existence
- where prejudice most easily shows
* refers to the numinous reality revealed deep within every being - the depth of reality.
* relation of power which works through the production of subjects of truth.
* tries to be an object instead of accepting the fact that it subject.
Summary judgment
* decision on the merits.
* forecast of the evidence used to determine if a jury trial is needed.
* legal technique which is used to avoid trial.
* mechanism by which judgment can be entered without a trial.
* preferred process to dispose of legally unmeritorious claims.
Value judgment
* are often implicit in the way facts are expressed.
* underpin social thought.
Preconceived notion
* are popular conceptions rooted in everyday experiences
- the locks on the door to wisdom
* is opinion
Scientific opinion
* is divided about the biological nature of the agent that causes SEs
- on the biological limits of human life
* regarding the extent of the universe vary widely.
* supports positions
- prefer positions
Originalism
* are beliefs.
* method, in truth the only legitimate method, of constitutional interpretation.
Phantom
* Many phantoms persist for years in various degrees of severity.
* are industry.
* complete darkness burns with radiant heat shelter the visionary orbs light.
* is located in operas
- spirit
Popular belief
* is that the almighty power enters the human body and blesses the people.
* sees figureheads as all female and beautiful beings.
Popular opinion
* dictates capitalism helps the rich and hurts the poor.
* is bank opinion
- built by politicians to encourage opposition against religious movements
Possibility
* bases on assumptions.
* deserves consideration.
* is an outlook
- concepts
- expectations
- options
* raises concern
- issues
- moral issues
- safety concern | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | possibility:
Chance
* allows some pollen to land on the scales of female cones.
* alone is the source of all innovation and creation in the biosphere.
* also determines the development of an organism.
* are risk.
* depend on contexts
- several factors
* exists when everyone is on an equal footing.
* extracts data from maps, graphs, tables and charts.
* has many faces, inscrutable insect eyes that multiply like mirrors reflecting a single point.
* involves how likely the outcome is to occur.
* is affected by people's misconception of what the garden really represents
- also a magazine about statistics
* is an invalid mechanism to explain the complexities seen in all parts of the cosmos
- undeniable feature of the created universe
- in a continual state of lust
- invoked to explain random events
- possibility
- reflected in the way the items are arranged on a particular card
* is the creator and designer of the universe
- element in which courage thrives
- most important factor in change
* lies in the realm of accidental causes.
* magazine about statistics and the use of statistics in society.
* peppers our lives with uncertainty - but uncertainty can be quantified through probability.
* plays a role in our lives, in a way that is sometimes very threatening
- an important part in what species arrive and when
- as important role in phenomena causing disease
- the dominant role in short term performance
* tells time by how large plants have grown.
* thus plays a large role in determin- ing which species happen to bridge the gap.
### belief | possibility | chance:
Random chance
* argues against human development.
* can be the cause of singular events.
Marksman
* are films
- shot
* is shot
### belief | possibility | marksman:
Rifleman
* Riflemen are responsible for maintaining a high level of combat readiness
- the backbone of every armed ground force in the world
* are birds
- marksmans
- soldiers<|endoftext|>### belief | possibility | marksman:
Sniper
* Some snipers are famous for having killed hundreds of enemy soldiers.
* are marksmans
- skilled workers
- typically underachievers who tend to be rebellious and defensive
* rifles cause squads to test for pinning, if a wound is taken.
* shoot targets that are far away.
* usually wear camouflage clothing, to avoid being seen.
+ Sniper, Famous snipers
* Some snipers are famous for having killed hundreds of enemy soldiers. One such sniper is U.S. Marine Corps sniper Carlos Hathcock, who was famous in the Vietnam War for wearing a white feather in his hat. Other snipers are famous for being able to kill an enemy from very far away. However, in the Afghanistan War, snipers from the Canadian Army broke the record with a shot of
- Sniping, Camouflage
* Snipers usually wear camouflage clothing, to avoid being seen. Camouflage does not work very well when the person wearing it is moving because the eye sees movement much better than shapes or colors
- Sniping: Military :: Firearms
* Snipers shoot targets that are far away. Because the bullet shot by a sniper has to travel a very long distance, the sniper has to be very careful when taking aim. There are three main things that have an effect on the accuracy of the shot. The sniper must plan for these things
### belief | possibility | marksman | sniper:
Police sniper
* Most police snipers are trained by the military.
+ Sniper, Police snipers: Military :: Firearms
* Police departments train and use snipers. These snipers mainly serve on the SWAT team for their department. Often they are called upon to provide security at special events, or to make sure that other snipers do not murder someone. This job is called counter-sniping. Most police snipers are trained by the military. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | possibility:
Potential
* are numeric values of goodness or badness associated with an individual room.
* has effects
- negative effects
* is possibility.
* leads to transformation.
* requires experience
- knowledge
### belief | possibility | potential:
Matric potential
* includes osmotic, adhesive, and capillary pressure.
* is analogous to the effort required to draw fluid through a straw
- another term for pressure potential or pressure head
- important in terms of modifications of plant-water relations and infiltration
Positive potential
* gives negative free energy and spontaneous reaction.
+ Bodhi: Buddhism
* All positive potential including unlimited compassion, skill and wisdom are said to be realized. The enlightened being is free from samsara.
Prospect
* are potential.
* is potential<|endoftext|>### belief:
Public opinion
* can change rapidly.
* common outcome measured by evaluators of mass media initiatives.
* consensus process that moves with amazing speed with out modern communications.
* constitutes one of the cornerstones of democracy.
* determines how law evolves.
* has a different role in foreign policy making than in domestic policy, for instance.
* has an ethical dimension
- impact on how judges view law
* is a. the collected attitudes of citizens on a given issue or question
- all about perception over reality
- anti-tobacco
- as important in India as it is in the United States
- based on concepts such as beliefs, values, attitudes, and opinions
- civilization's most powerful currency
- created through awareness
* is important in the United States
- only in open, democratic regimes
* is the bedrock upon which democracy is built
- keystone of a democracy
- prime mover of public policy in a democracy
* tends to change with time and circumstances.
* vital force in the process of government. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
Religion
* All religion has a set of beliefs about where the universe came from, what it is, and why it exists.
* All religion is concerned with ultimate meaning
- related to life, and the life of religion is to do good
* All religions acknowledge that man's present state is unsatisfactory
- the uniqueness and marvelous potential of the human being
* All religions agree about kindness and compassion
- that there higher power and a divine plan
- are a dual system
* All religions are attempts to reach a single truth
- understand life from the human perspective
- basically the same
- capable of mediating salvific divine-human encounter
- cults by definition
* All religions are equal before the law, freely professed and separate from the state
- essentially One
- free to practice and proselytize
* All religions are in their nature kind and benign, and united with principles of morality
- mild and benign, and united with principles of morality
- inconsistent with mental freedom
- individual and personal
- man-made
- repositories of transpersonal experience and archetypal images
- attempt to apply the design of the cosmos to our individual lives
* All religions basically exhort mankind to be righteous and eschew evil
- speak the same language
- teach followers to do good deeds
- believe in life after death and many religions believe in reincarnation
- celebrate our sense of being at one with the natural world
- claim they reject violence
- come from the same Source
* All religions contain errors as well as truths
- some basic truths
- deal with the relative brevity of life
- die of but one disease, that of being found out
- elevate promise-keeping as a central virtue of human relations
- emphasise the importance of duties and responsibilities as distinct from rights
- enjoin moral codes of living for human beings
- espouse some form of prayer for the believer
- exhort man to cleanse the heart of malice, greed, hate and anger
- expect the worshippers to carry out certain duties
- go through phases of dilution
* All religions have a church, and it certainly helps their image, no to mention their organization
- record of providing a moral compass and dispensing wisdom to all people
- as their primary theme some philosphy regarding death
- creation stories
- different names for the ways of getting to the holy summit
- miracles, and so do all therapies
- practitioners or clerics
- rituals pertaining to death
- rituals, which are highly varied in form and intent
* All religions have some champion who can overcome death
- concept of ultimate reality
- sort of fertility rules or sexual codes of conduct
- source of truth and authority
- type of celebration
- special items or artefacts which are used in the practice of the religion
- stories that are contradictions
* All religions have their forms of worship
- own opinion
- rituals, their ceremonies and rites
- symbols of holiness
- incorporate mythology into their teachings or scripture
* All religions possess one or more parental figure idols the faithful can worship and prey to
- some form of religious document containing divine words of the one true faith
* All religions preach peace and harmony
- the same virtues
- present a world view
- primarily aim to restrict sexual and intellectual freedom in that order
- promote discrimination and division, leading to hatred and even violence and murder
- propagate unity for promoting the well being of society
- recognise that reconciliation requires confession and repentance
* All religions recognize that the divine transcends language
- the soul
- relate stories that have resonated with a group of people for centuries
- report numerous and equally credible miracles
* All religions share a belief that human beings can rise above circumstances and mistakes
- common foundation
- the same fundamental truths
- sometimes advance, sometimes decline
* All religions start as cults and retain some cultic behavior
- out as cults
- stress on surrender as the key component to making spiritual progress
* All religions teach a code of conduct that makes everyone more civilized
- codes of ethical behavior
- moral precepts for perfecting the functions of mind, body, and speech
* All religions teach that a sacrifice is necessary for forgiveness of sins
- man is an inhabitant of two worlds
- the life of a human being is much more important then any relic
- the sanctity of human life
- try to teach Love
- turn to myths in order to account for the origins of evil
- use symbols to express various concepts
* Any Religion matter of one's own beliefs.
* Any religion attempts to establish a basic morality through which order can be brought to society
- complex mixture of ideas, values, and beliefs
* Contains the Sacred texts of many belief systems.
* Discuss the impacts of religion, pro and con, on people and society.
* Every Religion has it's own spring festival holiday.
* Every religion also contains another set of teachings, practices and views
- contains, in varying degrees, elements that contribute to peace or war
* Every religion has a creation myth
- day, week or month that is considered the holiest of the year
- mystical core
* Every religion has an awareness of the basic ethical principles that govern humanity
- outer form or shell, and an inner essence or core
- books and writings that contain the truth
- both exoteric and esoteric aspects
- holidays to celebrate
* Every religion has their own established rituals, customs and traditions for wedding ceremonies
- variations of practice
* Every religion is birthed from some people's culture
- good that teaches man to be good
- of Asiatic origin and belongs to that part of the world
- the product of the generation in which it was introduced
- varied and complex in beliefs, customs, rituals and worship
- preaches that the essence of all morality is to do good to others
* Explores the various functions of religion using several major religions.
* Includes all aspects of religious observance and practice as well as belief
- organizations, programs, and journal articles
* Is Hatred
- Something To Believe And Do
* Many religions advocate that humans are to be blamed for the imperfections of the world
- also use the amount of consanguinity to define acceptable practices
- assume that the gods assume little or no interest in human affairs
- base their beliefs on the Bible, yet disagree with each other
- believe in world peace
- borrow from political methods to foster and maintain belief and behavior
- claim to offer some answers
- condemn the eating of horse meat
- consider any harm to another person a sin
- deal with infinite rejuvenation - an infinite time domain universe
- encourage forgiveness
- extol nobility and self-sacrifice and are monotheistic
- focus on a person's spiritual efforts
- get their most devout followers from the down trodden, sick, and the lonely
- glorify a hereafter to get people to die in battle or give money
- go out of their way to make people feel guilty about a very natural part of life
* Many religions have a Savior, though the way they use the idea varies
- view on abortion
- books and clergy to point the way
- certain days that are more important or holier than other days
- godparents or other adults who do something almost the same
- much to offer individuals and society
- mystic aspects that emphasize relationships between god and humans
- numerous gods, each being responsible for a different part of the universe
- prayer as a vital component
- private truths at their heart
- religious activity the moment one opens their eyes waking up from sleep
- rituals to follow such as a wake or visitation, a funeral, and a burial
- sub-groups which are called denominations
* Many religions have the objective to recruit and dilute other belief systems other than their own
- ritual of guarding fire, guarding a flame
- their own particular formal styles and codes of dressing for formal ceremonies
- various denominations
- very strict rules about food and modesty, which carers have to understand
- offer a belief in the afterlife that includes a resolution to the justice problem
- participate in their religious ceremonies using incense made with essential oils
- place an individual on their own, striving for spiritual perfection
- read passages from the Bible or other sacred literature as a part of their services
- regard the evils of the human condition as a result of ignorance
- rely on faith and revelation that the spiritual world exists
* Many religions require followers to dress in a certain way or wear certain items of clothing
- the ashes to be handled in dignified manner
- revere trees
- seem to have certain ethics in common
- still have female deities that play important roles
- stipulate that the head be the first part of the body to enter the cremation oven
- support, in part, criminality
* Many religions talk about the search for peace
- of the equality of humans
* Many religions teach that homosexual sex sin
- homosexuality is condemned
- tend to get man up early in the morning and face the rising sun for daily prayer
- think frugality is important and good
* Many religions use incense in their traditional ceremonies
- scriptures out of context to support their own purposes
* Most religion has dietary guidelines
- kinds
* Most religions accept periodic abstinence
- acknowledge either supplemental or higher authorities than that of human reason
- agree that a higher power is in control of our lives
- allow autopsy
- also have the idea of reward and punishment after death
- approve of body donation
* Most religions are based on that soul idea
- ritualistic and assuring
- secret societies
- attempt to explain in their own ways the mysteries and vagaries of the infinite
* Most religions believe humans are special
- in fasting during times of prayer and meditation
- that people are less than what they are intended to be
- consider lies immoral and truths moral
- constantly change in response to external changes
- define the same principles
- demand adherence to a set of guidelines
- deny the existence of death
- depend on the passage of the soul from the earthly level to some other
- dictate that men view and while women are viewed
- do share a basic set of core morals, which are consistent with a free society
- embrace the philosophy of good works as a means to salvation
- explain to their followers how the world works and the future
- generally oppose abortion
- grant exceptions from religious duties to people who are sick
* Most religions have a cosmogeny either explicitly or implicitly
- parallel figure that brought moral teachings to the people
- strong transnational element
- tendency to oppress opposing views
- an ethical system
- chants that serve the purpose of nourishing the spirit
- cult activity, or a cult, that is central to devotional activity
- prophets with varying messages and varying interpretations of the outcomes
- regular prayers for both community and private worship
* Most religions have sacred books that tell about their religion
- places that are important to their religion
- rituals or ceremonies that are used to celebrate their beliefs
- some form of sin be it in the form of transgression against god or karma
- something to say about money
- special buildings where people meet
- teachings about angels or similar beings
- tenets of faith
- their own style of funeral ceremony
- traditional pilgrimage sites, such as sacred rivers, shrines, or buildings
- traditions of the healing and curative powers of touch
- virgin birth myths, hero quests, and teach charity and humility
- writings they consider sacred
- look upon organ and tissue donation as a meritorious act
- make rules about human morals
- permit cremation
- place a high priority on compassion and being a good neighbor
- preserve sacred scriptures in book or scroll format
- recognize malevolent spirits, troublemaking deities, forces for evil
- refer to some truth beyond the appearances
- see homosexuality as somehow deviant or 'unatural'
- strongly discourage divorce and the breakup of the family
- support brain autopsy and tissue donation
* Most religions support organ and tissue donation as a charitable act of love and giving
- donation as an act of kindness
* Most religions teach people to forgive
- that there are good and bad spiritual powers
- treat women as second class citizens
* Most religions use a way of knowing much like the child's
- altruism as their definition of good
- utilize the Web to promote understanding and healthy discussion
* Much religion actually promotes separation, judgment, fear and even hatred.
* Some Religions tend to produce fanatics.
* Some religions allow officiants from other faiths to perform ceremonies in their houses of worship
- also advocate emigration to escape rights violations
* Some religions are hostile to asexuality
- open to change from without and that is their right and choice
- very concerned about making sure their adherents get into the world to come
- ask great sacrifices, and put heavy burdens on their followers
* Some religions believe in supernatural powers or beings
- that the ending of suffering or repeated birth and death is the final goal
- claim they are the true religion
- condemn homosexuality
- consider it a sin to have sex before marriage
- demand human sacrifice
- disapprove of medical treatment
- do teach people to be unhappy
- emphasize fear and superstition, which are, in a way, the opposite of faith
- encourage a man to have several wives
* Some religions even prohibit water allocation by market forces
- require the use of alcohol to further the observance of the specific deed
- try to build a new character, by giving the person a new appellation
- find buildings and rituals to be important
- forbid women from owning or inheriting land
* Some religions have an uncaring or preoccupied god
- one or none
- their own calendars with their own new year
- limit people of their faith to cemeteries devoted specifically to that faith
- live on morals only
* Some religions make a virtue of suffering
- suffering a virtue
- offer adult manuals for counselors and mentors
- permit various styles of polygamy, yet American laws prohibit such things
- posit a witness, an observer, independent from the activity
- proclaim that some or all matter had a beginning at some point in time
- prohibit sexually exciting oneself while alone
- promote very healthy life styles - no alcohol or tobacco
- propose that sickness and death are caused by past life events
- say prayers before they eat
- see the body as where the soul lives
- seek the path to spirituality through withdrawal from the physical world
- speak of 'grace'
* Some religions teach devotees to shun medical examinations, including medical testing
* Some religions teach that celebrating holidays or birthdays is wrong
- desire is wrong and that it needs to be subdued and subjugated
- view it as mind itself.
* It can also refer to someone who has helped people achieve Salvation. Many religions have a Savior, though the way they use the idea varies
* addresses itself to fundamental questions relating to the meaning of human existence
- moral issues
* affects everyone at some point.
* allows humans to tolerate their repressed and instinctually repressed life within society
- one to test the grounds of the spiritual and physical realms
* also act as protectors of morality
- affects political beliefs
- burdens people today, even as it has through the centuries
- controls society through the belief that the god commanded social rules
- embrace many of the ideas discussed below that oppose premarital sex
- gives voice to experiences of injustice and disorder
* also has a major impact on regional food
- an influence
- have a significant impact on our attitude towards natural resources
- helps people fill a moral vacuum
- leads people to depend on fate and thus lose self-confidence
- makes an imprint on the land, in terms of land use, and the landscape
* also plays a large part and can have a dramatic effect on our morals, values and ethics
- part in homophobia
- role in how people view the drug war
- provide a picture of the greater whole in which all living beings are related
- talks about the body
- vary in the number of gods acknowledged
* always becomes a physical thing
- involves proselytization and doorstepping
- is hailed as the cure for the world's evils
* amplifies the good and evil tendencies of individual souls.
* appears to act as a shock-absorber against physical and mental disease
- have three major effects on attitudes
- help vaccinate marriages against divorce
* are a guide for men.
* are all alike - founded upon fables and mythologies
* are as much vehicles for human wickedness as for positive politics and public life
- thick as autumn leaves
- barriers
- big on symbolism
- concerned with spiritual matters that are subjective, personal, and private
- conclusions for which the facts of nature supply no major premises
- cultural institutions only
- different roads converging to the same point
- different, and multifarious
- famous for their customary answer to the problem of desire
- filled with different fears that humans have had throughout many centuries
- homes for the soul
* are like plants
- the branches of one Tree
- many and diverse, but reason and goodness are one
- more interested in the conversion of souls
- notorious for having quite rigid, or narrow, boundaries
- particular spiritual paths
- paths to the heart, philosophies paths of the minds
- personal belief only, and if one religion is good, all religions are good
- psychotherapeutic systems in the truest sense of the word, and on the grandest scale
- still important in our country
- superficially different, they believe, but essentially the same
- the great fairy-tales of the conscience
- to make people happy
- unproved, most likely figments of human imagination
- vertical and thoughts horizontal
- vitalistic and science is mechanistic
- what dreams are made of
- widespread
* are, at their core, made up of sacred moments and sacred knowledge
- of course, notorious for their claims of unique and exclusive access to the truth
* asks questions of meaning, purpose, and value.
* basis for community.
* bathe their children and their saved with water.
* bearer of respite.
* begins as an external force
- only when man responds to the data
- the moment faith expresses itself in human activity
- with the efforts of man
- in a higher being, spirit, or any system of ideas a group of people believe in
- with faith
* belongs everywhere and in all parts of human life
- in the emotional realm
* blocks the development of rationalism as the guiding principle of human development.
* bridge to the spiritual-but the spiritual lies beyond religion.
* brings morality to politics
* broadly defined comprehensive response to what is taken to be the ultimate reality.
* can also assist modern people in their quest for community
- offer hope of supernatural intervention to solve the problems of life
- play an important part in character development
* can be a blasphemous blindness
- destructive element in our lives
- anything that the person practicing it desires
- blind and dead
- become a divisive wedge within families
- condemn secular culture
- destroy a person's mind or happiness
- dull the pain of oppression in a number of ways
- have the power to transform, to save
* can indeed be susceptible to misuse by political forces that aim to divide
- breed superstition, conflict and resistance to change
- lead to war
- make or break a family
- offer solace to the bereaved and comfort to the frightened
- only profit from healthy skepticism, as science profits from a strong sense of wonder
- play a role in terms of counselling victims of corruption
- produce bigots in every denomination
- promote a sense of selflessness in the face of a higher power
* can provide a solid foundation for what intellectual theories can never actualize
- answers, meaning, inspiration, peace, and so on to an individual
- many answers about how a person can live, but no explanations about why
- purify science from idolatry and false absolutes
- separate people and families
- set high ethical standards and can provide intense motivations for ethical behavior
- shape the lives of many people
- sometimes be a dangerous thing
- take healthy and unhealthy forms
- transcend life and death because it is the way of love
- transform thinking
- trigger runaway socio-genic illness
* candle inside a multicolored lantern.
* caste the fear of dreaming into so many people.
* cause or set of beliefs pursued with fervor and devotion.
* causes each individual to want to serve others
- people to correct their morality
- wars, contention, and intolerance
* ceremonial observance.
* challenges people to be better versions of themselves.
* change as societies change.
* claim to be the source of our values and morals.
* claims the source of what it teaches god
- to be in possession of an absolute truth
* cognitive coping technique.
* combination of lies called the doctrine of demons.
* come in many forms from animism to the search for enlightenment.
* come, live and die.
* comes and goes on One Life to Live.
* comes from the Latin word religare which means to bind
- root meaning to bind together
- in an infinite variety of forms
* commit suicide when they find their inspirations in their dogmas.
* common aspect of all societies which can be studied objectively
- basis for death penalty opposition
- belief of a community and serves as the backbone of a culture
- bond among spongers
* concept necessary to maintain values
- used to maintain control
* concern with primal truth.
* conscious choice.
* consider nature a living, inter-connected sphere.
* consists of piles and piles of rules, and turns everyone into cogs on a wheel.
* constitutive element of human existence, individually and collectively.
* contributes the marking of time in most other major civilizations as well
- to a decline in aristocratic values
* controls through fear and intimidation.
* create, and thrive on, passionate commitment and passionate conflicts.
* creates agnosticism
- and reinforces rifts between different communities
* crosses the national barriers and becomes the center of history.
* deal in faith and belief
- with powerful human fears and drives - the fear of death and the drive to sex
* deals with emotion while science deals with reality
- imagery, that has to have an emotional appeal to gain general currency
- matters of faith
- meanings of life and death and is based ultimately upon faith
- the symptoms of sins and the conditions sin brings
- ultimates, especially with the ultimate purpose of man's presence on earth
* depends on the sufficiency of character.
* designates degrees of severity to sins.
* deterrent to salvation.
* develop in specific geographic and social milieux
- over long period of time within a culture
* dictates how individuals treat each other
- the various rituals in the dying and bereavement process
* dictates, in many ways more than law, the behavior of a given people.
* die when they are proved to be true.
* differ based on principles, way of life, festivals, method of worship and so on
- from each other, as irrigation systems do
- only in nonessentials
* difficult concept to put into words.
* directory of internet resources for the academic study of religions.
* directs and controls our lives
* disagree on such basic notions as when an individual is truly dead.
* distinguish themselves on their uniqueness.
* do so by differentiating between the sacred and profane.
* does have a role in American life and the schools are part of that life
- play a significant role in democratic politics
* dominates some cultures and is less important in others.
* don t melt in the so-called melting pot of America.
* draws people into the community and away from themselves.
* drives people to do what they think is right
- science and it matters
* echoes infantile states of 'bliss'.
* emerges from within the individual.
* emphasizes charity, forcing the turnover of hard-earned dollars to the poor
- leadership
- unscriptural traditions of men
* employs catechization, a systematic instruction of theories based on faith and revelation.
* enables the family to transcend itself.
* enfolds the whole of life, there is no dichotomy between life and religion.
* engulfs people with a fear of the supernatural.
* enriches the lives of people.
* espouses mythology, mainly concentrating on the prevailing mythologies of the day.
* even attempts to explain why humans are here and what their purpose is
- contributes to scientific knowledge
* exerts a profound influence on all societies and many of the world's peoples.
* exists merely to help monarchy and clergy exploit the lower classes
- to legitimate power and privilege
* explains life's mystery to man
- the divine idea through adherence to rules revealed in scripture
* expresses humanity's deepest desires and celebrations.
* faith acquired and is changeable.
* feeling, or sometimes it is expressed as a relationship.
* focuses on different behaviors and social dimensions.
* force for unity and peace.
* frees one from births and deaths
- sorrow and pain
* gain their power by being standards of value.
* generally begin with a presumption of the existence of an absolute god or being
- gives positive purpose and cause to living
* give expression to the underlying spirituality of different cultural traditions.
* gives a distorted view of reality by claiming false things to be true
- feeling of security to many people
- person an identity and helps strengthen one s mind, body, and spirit
* gives meaning to death and life
- love and compassion
- purpose and meaning to our lives
* goes hand in hand with violence in schools
- to the core of people's value system
* great antidote to materialism because it teaches people that soul is immortal.
* grow up out of fear.
* grows from the heart as much as from the head, and it cries out to fuse body and mind.
* guides man to the true path leading to happiness.
* harnesses deep emotions which can sometimes take destructive forms.
* has a basic anthropomorphic origin
- central place as a source of common wisdom, black or white
- history of justifying atrocities
- large influence on one's life
- legacy of bowing to social pressures borne by conservative forces
- major impact on attitudes about reproductive choice
- responsibility to all people, which demands the encouragement of safe sex
- strong influence on traditional ways of life
- substantial basis in science
- an important role to play in human rights education
- at least an equal claim to authority in defining human destiny
- biologic value for the person
- enshrined prophets, then limits viewpoints regarding the beliefs they conveyed
- epistemological structure
- great influence on people's attitudes
- immense political power
- little significance as an actual source of conflict
- many functions for our society
- meaning for all of human existence from the moment of birth to the moment of death
- ministers
- much more to do with the emotional and the spiritual being within
* has no bearing on whether people succeed in their careers
- necessary connection with life after death
- place in publicly-funded schools
- wider outlook than making churchmen
* has nothing to do with basketball
* has the last priority in most people's lives
- power to identify people, and can be interpreted in a number of ways
* has to do with communal worship and liturgy
- the wholeness of human life
- help people to find and reclaim their dignity and sense of worthiness
- totalitarian impulses
* have a positive vision of peace coming from their most basic beliefs
- strong binding function and a cohesive element
- as their very soul and basis, a deep, abiding, and serene faith
- both positive and negative aspects
- different reasons for environmentalism, but most are 'greening' to some extent
- humility in their code of ethics
- little faith in themselves
- power as long as there are enough people believing into the dogma
- their origins in human cultural prehistory
* helps human beings find meaning in life and history
- individuals live a harmonious, peaceful life
- maintain the social order
- people to overcome or simply deal with hardship and loss
* highly ambivalent historical reality.
* hinders the development of scientific knowledge.
* historically suppresses science and progress.
* holds that it does for the purpose of creating sin
- to an external appearance of godliness
* hospital for spiritually sick people who want to be healed.
* human attempt to conceptualize spirituality in a paradigm
- enterprise
* identify something as sacred that they consider part of the supernatural world.
* imbues each passing day with a sense of holiness.
* immediately represents the inner nature of man as an objective, external being.
* implies people.
* includes all aspects of religious belief, observance and practice
- both ancestor worship and a heirarchy of nature gods
- information on feast and fast days observed by most major religions
- specific beliefs and practices, while spirituality is far broader
- strong animistic concepts and practices
- the practices, beliefs and observances that are part of a faith or religion
* inevitably preoccupies itself with theology and doctrine.
* influenced by dualistic philosophies view the material world with suspicion and hostility.
* influences Somali dietary practices
- the egyptians greatly
* instills good morals and provides faith.
* institutionalizes the functions of sacredness and omnipotence.
* invariably espouse the soul and an afterlife as a reality.
* involve belief in the supernatural, atheists reject all belief in the supernatural.
* involves a search for hope, for belonging, for security, for a better way of life
- ultimate values
* is Catholic.
* is about absolutes
- epiphany and knowledge external to the self
- ethics and values, and science is about facts
- obedience and acceptance
- obeying the rules
- the saving of souls
* is about the search for a moral tribe to call one's own
- ethical values in life
- what is always slipping away
- admonition, and it means being pure
- alive in the Australian community, in both conventional and unconventional forms
* is all about belief and faith
- also a main focus in how they live their lives
* is also a major factor for most parents who homeschool their children
- social factor
- two edged sword
- an influence on contraceptive use
- important in the personal decision-making process
- powerful because it offers people a way to be good
* is also the community
- discipline of ritual and the restraining virtue of court-enforced boundaries
* is always about culture
- personal but never private
* is an adaptation in human social systems that improves the resilience of the system
- aid to drug-free living
- antidote to classroom murders
- approach to believing
- aspect of Malay identity and the state is the guardian of all things Malaysian
- attempt to understand the meaning of the universe
- economy of the heart, and that organ remains mysterious
- effective way of building communities with solid shared values
- element in many conflicts, and it is also being exploited by many politicians
- endeavor to reconcile the two
- essential part of the human race, giving meaning to life
- experience in the mind
* is an important and central issue in people's lives
- facet of life in Fiji
* is an important part of life in the Bahamas, they have a lot of churches
- popular culture in Latin America
- source of comfort and healing when confronting cancer
- inheritance
- insult to human dignity
- integral component of Jamaican life
* is an integral part of Bahamian life
- Haitian life and culture
- civil society
- life, but open to sikh non-turban men
- our culture
- organization in which people band together to pursue perfection
- organized set of beliefs, rituals and practices
- ancient memory
* is and always has been a tool for mass population control
- has always played a role in society, now more than ever
* is another facet of culture that is commonly etched into the landscape
- name for society
* is another way to develop and express one s worldview
- stifle our minds and enclose in a box away from the world
- anti-science
- any individual's pursuit of answers to the unknown or unexplainable
* is as basic a discipline as science, and as reputable intellectually
- healthy and normal as life itself
- integral part of society as anything other, but even more so
* is at the epicenter of the postmodern revolution
- source and sustaining core of every culture
- authoritarian, sexist, and homophobic
* is based on belifes and how one person ties themself to their own religion
- fear, egoism and ignorance and has been the cause of wars, murders and racism
- individual and lineage ancestor cults
- mysticism
- basic to human experience
* is basically a container for faith
- philosophy centered on the idea of dealing with death
- an outward formal expression of one s spirituality
* is belief in a supreme being
* is both an agent and victim of globalization
- interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary in nature
- built upon faith
- but a myth and superstition that hardens hearts and enslaves minds
* is central to all aspects of life throughout history
- their lives, but it is never considered to be a reason to be overly solemn
- childishness
- claimed to be the invention of the people of a particular time and location
- commitment to a morality or value system
- common sense
- communal psychotherapy
- composed of a set of core values surrounded by rituals and culture
- concerned primarily with spiritual things, the psychical world is secondary
* is concerned with freedom because religion often affirms a commitment to human dignity
- what allows the community to function
- considered a private matter in which people can make their own choices
- created by religious leaders
- crutchs
- culturally and historically everywhere
- currently one of the least common uses of the Internet by teenagers
- dead with out a living spirit alive in today's world
- deadly because it interferes with relationship
- death insurance with a non-renewable policy
* is defined by doctrines
- here as that which infuses one's life with meaning
- to include all aspects of religious observance, practice, and belief
- discussed as it pertains to women
- distorted and misused as a means for other interests
- duty and life is duty
- either scientific or unscientific, that is, it is either truth known or truth unknown
- encoded in the personality by symbols
- equal in importance to kinship and politics for the structure of Yoruba society
- essential part of black culture
- essentially an awakening in the experience
- everywhere - sacred cows, men, statues, shrines, temples, stupas, and buildings
* is expressed by study and participation at Catholic schools
- in culture
- faith, a belief, something to aid with the problems of life
- falsehood
- first and foremost a way of seeing
* is for people who are afraid they'll go to hell
- to go to hell
- scared of hell, and spirituality is for people who have been there
- believe in hell, spirituality is for people who have been there
- the most part the result of parenting
- force of belief cleansing the inward parts
- formalism
- founded upon assertions and beliefs, many of which are unprovable
- free in regard to opinions, as contrasted to actions
- harmful because it claims knowledge of an absolute truth about what it is to be human
- held in the medicine bundles which contain sacred objects, that have magical powers
- how our spirituality is living itself out in the world
* is human beings trying to understand and shape spirituality
- nature reflected, mirrored in itself
- identified with nationality
* is important because it informs our actions
- to a democracy becausereligion is the custodian of moral knowledge
* is important to many people and they enjoy reading, talking, and hearing about it
* is in evidence throughout modern society
- league with both the religionist and the secularist
- many cases at the heart of ancient civilizations
- sharp decline in the West
- the business of faith and the interpretation of myth
- interwoven into the structure of each day
* is just another way to belong to some social group
- one cause of communitarian strife
- the adoration or the seeking of the truth
* is largely a matter of attitude and belief
- revelation and to a very small degree human enquiry
- life-affirming, and a means of harmonizing humankind with the natural world
- like truth or science
- limited to churches and some narrowly defined religious activities
- made by man, for man
* is made up either of symbols or of activities that are mediated by symbols
- of regulations, restrictions, and ritual
* is man made by man so suit the needs of man
* is meant to be a bridge between the sacred and the secular
- in everyday life a thing of unspeakable joy
- serve mankind
- mixed in with everything else for children
- monism, whereas every dualism is anti-religious
* is more about a set of beliefs
- central to Egyptian culture than religion is in American culture
- or less a means of achieving a powerful attitude
- than places and buildings and words
- most certainly a very significant aspect of human experience
- music
- narrative and is best understood as part of a complex hermeneutic ecology
- natural to human beings
- necessary to correct the effects of learning
- neither chemistry nor literature
- no longer about supernatural beliefs and the after-life
* is no longer the center of man's existence nor the center of society itself
- focus of daily life for most Japanese people
- respecter of persons
- noted on government identity cards
- now part of science
- of divine origin
* is often an element in conflicts or is misused as such by politicians
- something that is on the outside
* is one area that contains forests of red lights and sacred mines for critical thinkers
- motivation, primarily among Muslim populations
- of five major matters that child custody law addresses
* is one of the greatest advantages of mankind, and all men view it in that light
- hottest topics in cyberspace
- things that every culture has
- vital elements of human existence
- perspective based on faith while science is based on hard evidence
- topic that is now being discussed more and more on the Internet
- only one of many aspects of prehistoric life to come into clearer focus in recent years
- opium for the people
- organized spirituality
- organized, institutionalized spirituality
* is part of a normal life
- the fabric of daily life
- partly the result of the child-like feeling that seeing such things can create
- philosophy and a way of life
* is powerful because it connects people with their origins and group identities
- predicated upon the concepts of unconditional love and forgiveness
* is primarily a social phenomenon
- purely a human phenomenon
- quintessentially a social phenomenon
- quite different from relationship
- really important to people, the way sex is
- recognized as an eloquent, symbolic and poetic means of transmitting moral values
- regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful
- relative to the individual
- ritual without righteousness
- sanctioned as a proviso of faith
- science fleeing the investigation of matter
- secondary to our fascination with nature in deep mid-winter
* is seen as having a certain limited competence
- part of everyday life experience
- something ancient
- primarily as a negative influence through the seventeenth century
- significantly related to type of marriage
- simply one duty among others to accomplish, an obligation to meet, a task to fulfill
* is social action
- something to be respected and honored
- studied as a significant expression of human culture in the past and present
- subsumed under society and culture
- such a strong aspect of life that it supersedes all changes that take place
- supposed to be about harmonious living
* is supposed to be the cause of unity in the world
- most elevated expression of the human spirit and condition
- rehabilitate the soul of individual and of our nation
- unite people
- taken seriously and everyone can multiply and divide in their heads
- taught as a way of life, with the utmost respect for all religious denominations
* is taught in public schools
- schools from an academic point of view
- schools, and children have the right to be taught their own religion
- on a daily basis, but is lived every moment
* is that thornless rose Throughout eternity it blooms
- which binds things together, which binds people together
* is the art of learning to live in amazement
- attempt to search for meaning in an otherwise chaotic universe
- basis for most daily life
- bedrock of morality and morality is the foundation of a good society
- belief and worship of a god or higher power through prayer or other ritual
- beliefs and values of a particular group which govern the way in which they live
* is the cause of most wars and killings in the world
- unity, harmony, and peace
- center of most of life in Nepal
- characteristic of the soul made manifest in outward conduct and activity
- child of faith
- consciousness of there being something above and beyond oneself
- cosmic joke of all time
- creed, code, cult of a particular denomination
- desire for peace, harmony and love
- discipline dealing with personal and societal ethics
- education about the origin
- emotion of reverence that it inspires
- enemy of the cross
- expression of one type of fundamental experiences of humanity
- fire which works with the candle ie
* is the first and most important quid pro quo for the universe
- sense of community
- theoretical science
- flesh's attempt to solve man's problems
- foremost cause of war and death
- form spirituality takes when enacted in groups
- fount of all education or teachings
- fountainhead of traditional customs in family and community life
* is the greatest curse that has ever come to the earth
- heart and guts of humanity's pursuit for meaning, understanding and values
- hearth of spirit
- highest aspiration of civilisation and it requires the most subtle mind
- human response to being alive and having to die
- improvement of the old nature through respect for lofty principles
- income of the church
- interface of spirituality and culture
- language of the spirit in man
- last refuge of human savagery
- leading type of organizational involvement for all age groups
- ligament of spiritual life
- light of the world
- main influence on attitudes and behaviour
- man-made structure of expression that has been standardized
- manifestation of divinity already in man
- most transparent prism through which one can see all dimensions of human life
- nature of substances
- one thing that gives purpose to writing
- only social institution that affords such a moral role
* is the only thing holding back our cultural evolution
- more powerful than sex
* is the opiate of the fascists
- masses, the soul of a soulless world
* is the opium of the masses
- original altered state of consciousness
- outward expression of that faith
- practical aspect of philosophy
- principal source, as well, of serious and long-standing moral qualms about fiction
- product of right hemisphere function
- proper moral custodian in society
- reaction of the total man to the total reality
- relationship with the absolute
- result of freedom
- return of the repressed
- root of all evil
* is the science of the ignorant
- motive of life
- set of behavior manifest by people based on the things they believe to be true
- shell, while spirituality is the kernel within that shell
* is the source of many good things - art, music, literature
- strongest supernatural force in peoples lives
- thread of faith, our rich heritage which is woven into the fabric of our day
- transformation of philosophy into behavior
* is the way by indemnity to restore in reverse love, life and lineage
- in which spirituality is interpreted and expressed
* is the way to live life with nature
- rule people when they have been afraid of the unknown
- the realisation of the highest perfection
- whole of man responding to the whole of reality
- thereby the origin and limit of all rationality
- therefore a destroyer of man's happiness
- thought, felt, and acted out in social and cultural contexts
- thus both a mechanism or order and of change
* is to be taught by action and from the Bible
- bridle the tongue, keep pure, help others
- serve and fulfill the faith, or spiritualthings
- tradition and drama, woven into faith and belief
- tradition, ritual, ceremony, and learning the difference between right and wrong
- traditional and includes ancestor worship
- true, because it talks about and practices such subjective qualities
- truly a way of life and permeates every part of Balinese culture
- universal
* is used as a mobilising ideology by both Jewish and Palestinian nationalism
- in conjunction with militarism and each of the other symptoms of fascism
* is used to manipulate people
- provide a foundation of belief
- serve the political agenda of certain factions in Indonesia
- useful to the ruling classes
* is usually ancestor worship, in any case, tribal, exclusive, and non-proselyting
- dogmatic in nature - based on faith
* is very important for women's rights in Saudi Arabia
- much interwoven in the fabric of life
- present in their daily life
- vital force in human life but it is so on spiritual plane
* is viewed as an assault on the conscience
- unimportant in family life
* is what gives the individual the self-validating power of the group mentality
- individuals do with their solitariness
- is or was believed, a set of beliefs which motivates a course of action
- keeps the poor from murdering the rich
* is, after all, one of the things people fight wars about
- in grosser minds, an enemy to self-knowledge
- ultimately, an enemy of humanity
* keeps many people in line and also adds diversity to the world
* large part of many people's lives in the Austin area.
* largely defines the world view of people who are devoutly religious.
* lays the foundation for hypocrisy, falsehood, and deception of every description.
* leads to death.
* legitimates the social inequities in societies.
* lies closer to the heart of human nature and has a wider currency than science.
* life of meditation.
* like to claim they hold some sort of a monopoly on morality.
* love affair, a love affair with existence.
* major factor in the Middle East
- force in human experience
- influence on the value systems and the behavioral patterns of many nations
- part of many cultures
* makes people artificial
- feel safer
- lazy
- self-definition, liberation, and freedom real and substantial in people's lives
* man using a divining rod.
* man-made institution.
* mass delusion or paranoid wish-fulfilment.
* matter of faith
- individual conscience
* mean choosing a position which can never be done philosophically.
* means a binding together
- basic education
- different things to different people
- of controlling the masses
- placing an infinite with another infinite
- to an end
* model for understanding of the spiritual word
- that provides meaning
* neccesary evil.
* necessarily has a lot do with sex.
* necessary element of development of a society.
* necessity for inner peace.
* never moves at the pace of science.
* normally includes rituals, but it is much more.
* occupies an important place in life.
* offer sustaining wisdom for life and work.
* offers a sense of protection to people in their daily lives
- structure of meaning and purpose for the individual and community
* often ask for vows of poverty, chastity and obedience
- finds itself in a contest for the hearts and the minds of people
- lies at the root of conflict between different cultural groups
- pertains to ritual, dogma, judgmentalism, and other human-made concepts
- plays a smaller or nonexistent part in modern child rearing
- sees it as a barrier to enlightenment
- stifles freethinking
- tries to explain why there is pain and suffering in the world
- uses hypnosis
* only deals with the life hereafter, acts of faith, spiritual rituals, worship and morality.
* operates on a different framework than psychiatry does.
* part of a lot of people's lives, and it just comes up
- human history
- our cultural ethos
- the culture of a country
* performs an integrative function.
* permeates all aspects of life in Bali, and therefore temples can be found everywhere
- the very air they breathe
* personal and private matter
* personal matter for individuals, families and churches
- that partakes of the uniqueness of each person
* place where things are brewing.
* plays a big part of equality.
* plays a big role in hating gays
- their culture
- central role in the lives of millions of people in South Africa today
- huge role in the stem cell debate concerning issues with their religion
- key role in the lives of the villagers
* plays a large part in most countries
- role in the adolescent progression of our society
* plays a major role in communities of color
- defining that cultural diversity
* plays a major role in the Indian way of life
- lives of all cultural groups
- powerful role in teens' everyday lives
* plays a very important role in the Jamaican community
- the country
- the lives of people in Uganda
- an important and unique role in our society
* plays an important part in daily life
- the identity each group claims for itself
- traditional life
- village life
* plays an important role in people's lives
- the region's educational heritage
- what foods people eat and how it is prepared
* plays no part in spiritual healing
- role in the life of a vampire
- only a minor role in their lives, if at all
* powerful tool that can mobilize any nation to raise arms to defend their beliefs.
* practice of rituals and ceremonials which can easily stifle the move of the spirit.
* precedes philosophy, both in human history and in the history of an individual person.
* prescribe how people ought to be oriented toward the sacred, personally and socially.
* prevades all aspects of life.
* prevents science from falling into the marsh of obsolete materialism and moral nihilism.
* primary expression of human experience.
* prime example of an objective truth.
* principle which the practice of all ages has deeply impressed upon the human mind.
* promote an anthropocentric view, to the detriment of our species
- variation in language, dress, and familial culture
* promotes globalization by opposing it.
* provide an explanation of what is ultimately real.
* provides a collective connection through a common form of life
- haven for confession and atonement
- means to overcome fear
- moral code for mankind
- an order, a purpose, and an explanation of the inherent pain of living
- meaning, gives answers about the universe
- models of parts of the world, so does politics, so does tradition and mythology
- psychological support for important events and in crises
- support for marriage and usually discourages divorce
* pursue goodness.
* puts emphasis on external ceremonies.
* quenches the desire of man.
* reaches more people than any other sector of civil society.
* reaction to infantile helplessness.
* realm in which there are many strongly held positions and deeply felt emotions.
* recognize and foster human dignity and the inter-relationship of all life on earth.
* recognizes a creation.
* refers to a divine communication that makes relative the social and economic order.
* reinforces the revival of ethnic identities.
* relates to separate groups of people, special buildings, and tradition.
* reliable source of happiness, true.
* relies on faith since it has so few facts.
* represents a fundamental human appetite
- huge financial and work burden on mankind
- all that is irrational and hidden in human experience
- unenforceable taboos that lead only to neurosis
* require miracles.
* restricts sexual enjoyment.
* results from an experience of the holy or the sacred.
* rightly builds upon the doctrine of the immortality of the soul.
* ripples through every part of American culture, perhaps more than anywhere in the world.
* ritual fueled by hope.
* run in the form of a religious conviction continuum.
* s very existence hinges on the ability of being able to pass beliefs to future generations.
* sacred engagement with that which is believed to be a spiritual reality.
* say that they work towards the spirituality of mankind.
* says that each man possesses an innate tendency towards good.
* scientific theory.
* see basic human rights as rooted in the Author of all life and being.
* seeks to deal with the whole of life.
* seems to be hard wired into our organism.
* seeps into every facet of Indian life
- part of Indian life
* serves as an instrument of socialization
- another identifier of who is on what side
- largely as a means of de-humanizing the other tribe
- the world of morality
* set of beliefs, attitudes and practices.
* sets the basis on which all actions can be judged.
* social creation.
* socially created phenomenon that forms and changes with time.
* sometimes has a more powerful influence on human life than does law
- presents a split personality
* spawn hatred and bigotry, and Jerusalem seething cauldron for all that malevolence.
* stabilizing influence upon society.
* stands in people's mind.
* starts with an article of faith, and everything flows from that.
* stepping-stone to further knowledge.
* stifles truth and fosters enmity.
* strengthens nature and brings to fruition the seeds of virtue that reside in it.
* strongly affects the kinds of goods and services acceptable to Muslim consumers.
* structure of relationships and necessitates a shared language.
* subject of faith.
* substitutes recollection for revelation.
* suggests devotion and fervor.
* supports the reality of the devil and fans the flames of superstition and fear.
* takes birth in heart, whereas politics in the mind
- care of the whole personality of man
- the form of gods perpetually fighting and becoming devils
* teach it as a characteristic of self.
* teaches a person how to calm down the senses and make the heart and mind peaceful
- about the Spiritual World that our physical senses are incapable of experiencing
- prejudice, discrimination and even hate
- redemption and the ability to forgive
- that there is divine element greater than the individual self
- the infinite worth of each individual
* tend to form around the spiritual high points of the path
- prey on fears of the sick and elderly, society's most vulnerable
- promote hatred against minorities
* tends to be dogmatic, exclusive, divisive and narrow
- rigid and dogmatic
- support the normative structure of the society
* theme that many children's writers seem wary of tackling.
* tool used by the bourgeoisie to subvert dissidence and achieve control.
* tremendous force in human society, for both good and evil.
* tries to explain the meaning of life.
* try to encourage people to be good.
* typically separates physical beings from spirits, as if one can exist without the other.
* unifying element in Israeli society and politics.
* unites people as much as it divides people
- through shared symbolism, values, and norms
* universal and complex experience
- aspect of human culture
- reality which takes on many forms
* unquestionably helps define a society.
* use calendars to set holidays.
* uses prayer, sacraments, worship and spiritual disciplines
- ritual to manage strains of everyday life
* usually encourage parents to raise their children as followers of that religion.
* value the artist as instrument through which the beauty of god's creation is reflected.
* varied, highly specialized, and broadly integrative field.
* varies in different areas of Europe.
* vary according to their founders, beliefs and practices
- tremendously in their tolerance for masturbation
* very civilised thing that came into existence
- important aspect of our life
* very personal belief system varying from individual to individual
- that varies from individual to individual
- powerful force in any society, no matter how affluent
- private and personal experience that many individuals look toward for guidance
* view the body as separate from the spirit.
* views temporal life as a transient state to be endured in hope of eternal salvation.
* vital part of our world.
* wants to be seen by others.
* way of life and an attitude to the universe
- living in terms of contact with Reality, personally conceived
- seeing the world and everything in the world
* way to explain randomness
- hold groups together
+ Abortion, Opinions about induced abortions, Religious views
* Many religions have a view on abortion. Most religions generally oppose abortion. Steen, Edwin et al.
+ Cremation, Ways of keeping or disposing of the cremated remains: Death customs
* The family then has a few options of what to do with the remains. Usually the ashes are buried in an urn at a cemetery plot just as a coffin is buried in normal earth burial. Many religions require the ashes to be handled in dignified manner. Family graves are also popular in Japan and Thailand.
+ Frugality, Philosophy: Philosophy :: Economics :: Virtues
* Many religions think frugality is important and good. The Quakers and Puritans are two examples of Christian religions that put high value on frugality.
+ Funeral: death customs
+ Godparent: Christianity :: Judaism
* A 'godparent' is an adult who sponsors a child during a formal religious ceremony or rite. Many religions have godparents or other adults who do something almost the same. Usually a godparent must be a member of the religion of the child.
+ Harm: Psychology
* Most religions have sacred books that tell about their religion. For Christians this book is called the Bible. Muslim peoples have another book, they call the Qur'an. Jews call their book the Torah.
* Most religions have sacred places that are important to their religion. Jerusalem is seen as sacred by Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Mecca is sacred in Islam, and Ise in Mie Prefecture is sacred in Japanese Shinto. In Hinduism the river Ganges is seen as holy.
+ Homosexuality, Religion
* Many religions teach that homosexual sex is a sin. Such religions traditionally include Islam, Christianity and Judaism. Usually, it is only the act of sexual intercourse that is considered sinful and not natural. Not all believe the attraction, is sinful, just the actions in response to the desire.
+ Human body, Fields of study: Anatomy
* Religion also talks about the body. Some religions see the body as where the soul lives. Some see the body as like a church. This is because a church is where people worship God. These people think God should be worshiped inside people. Some religions think the body is made from chakras that connect us to the universe
- sacrifice: Superstitions
* Over time human sacrifice has become less common around the world, and sacrifices are now very rare. Most religions condemn the practice and present-day laws generally treat it as a criminal matter. Nonetheless it is still occasionally seen today, especially in the least developed areas of the world where traditional beliefs persist
+ Human, Culture, null, Religion and spirituality: Hominins
* Religion is a belief in a higher being, spirit, or any system of ideas a group of people believe in. People who believe something strongly have faith in whatever it is they believe. Faith can bring people together because they all believe in the same thing. Millions of people believe in God, some people are very religious, some people are atheist and believe in no god, and some people believe a mixture of science and religion.
+ Kinship, Types: Social sciences
* Consanguinity' means to be related by blood. Laws in some countries use the amount of consanguinity between two people. For instance, deciding who is allowed to be married. It can also be used to decide who can receive property after death if there is no will. Many religions also use the amount of consanguinity to define acceptable practices.
+ Meaning of life: Religion :: Philosophy
* Many religions, ways of thinking, and creative artists have tried to find the 'Meaning of Life'. Some people say that we will never know what the meaning of life is. Many religions claim to offer some answers. There are also ways of thinking called philosophies which claim to answer this large question. There are also artists who paint or create sculptures to attempt to explain it.
+ Religion, Religious beliefs, Morality:
* Most religions make rules about human morals. The rules of how people should act to each other are different in different religions.
+ Religion, Traditions, Buildings
* Most religions have special buildings where people meet. They are often called temples. In Judaism, they are called synagogues. In Christianity, they are called churches. In Islam, they are called mosques. People often try to make their religious building as beautiful as possible
- Groups and institutions
* An institution is one name for an organization. Many religions have organizations that manage the way that people who follow the religion are to act. The organization might employ religious leaders, educate people into the ideas of the religion, manage money, own buildings and make rules. Many religions have sub-groups which are called denominations. In Islam, for example, there is Ahmadiyya, Sunni, Shia and Sufism
+ Swami Vivekananda, Famous Quotes: 1863 births :: 1902 deaths :: Religious leaders | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Abrahamic religion
* are very popular monotheistic ones.
+ God, God in the Abrahamic religions: Gods and goddesses
* Abrahamic religions are very popular monotheistic ones. Well-known Abrahamic religions include Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Monotheistic means the people in these religions believe there is only one God.
Asian religion
* Some Asian religions have the cult of ancestor worship.
* have a long and intriguing history in America.
Catholic religion
* is as bad or as good as any other.
* very visual religion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Cult
* All cults are based on some sort of faith in something being true, regardless of the evidence.
* Many cults are elitist groups
- stress righteousness and morality
- use traditional religion as a basis for their beliefs
* Most cults provide some means for charismatic power to be applied to the healing of mind and body.
* Some cults actively recruit young teens and children
- explicitly deny central doctrines of the Christian faith
- have living dynamic leaders who control every aspect of their followers lives
- stress human potential
- use religion as a hook to pull in unsuspecting people
* also harm society in important indirect ways
- have a hierarchical structure for members from initiates to high priests
- regard the body as a source of corruption
- try to engender total faith in an unchallenged leader
* are a fact of life in our society
- star-spangled part of the American tradition
- almost by definition closed societies
- authoritarian in nature
- bands
- created by ideology
- far more nuclear than mainstream religions
* are groups of people
- that trade a sense of salvation and belonging for the ability to think for oneself
- inherently ephemeral and loosely organized
- lead by people who make their followers believe that the leader has supernatural powers
- like religions, only they want total control and usually permit no conflicting opinions
- made of people
- more strongly devoted to a leader, where as sects are splinters of established churches
- of many varying and even opposite beliefs
- part of the religious systems of the world
- primarily a social and cultural rather than a psychiatric or legal problem
- somewhat like guilds in that they provide a collection of powers for members
- very small, they are lifeless and they tend to follow a person
* attract people on the fringe of society, people already on the edge.
* can give teens a sense of higher purpose and a feeling that there is order in the world
* come in a variety of shapes and sizes.
* destroy the ego authority of the individual and create a helpless feeling.
* do things to people.
* dominate all aspects of their member's lives, controlling their minds and bodies.
* educate their children to follow certain norms established by the leader.
* gather around charismatic individuals who are the sole source of truth to their followers.
* generally believe their group is the fulfillment of prophecy concerning end times.
* is religion
* make salvation to some degree dependent on the works of man.
* often twist religious texts, such as the Bible, tosuit their own agendas
- urge their followers to live communally to avoid contamination by worldliness
* part of culture.
* prey on people who feel unable to say no.
* represent a force of religious innovation within a culture.
* rob a person of their own creativity and individuality
- individuals of the ability to make moral and social decisions that govern their lives
* tend to be emotionally and, sometimes, physically and sexually abusive.
* typically manipulate sleep patterns, diet, sexuality, and the flow of information.
* use fear to control their members
- mind control or pressure to keep their members
- mind-control techniques and forms of hypnosis to indoctrinate followers
* usually center around the leader and often the cult dies when the leader dies
- claim the Bible as authoritative
- have some kind of authoritarian, totalistic leader or prophet
* vary in how much financial and political power they wield.
### belief | religion | cult:
Modern cult
* Most modern cults echo the errors of ancient heretics.
* have many different practices and many different ways of leadership. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Different religion
* Many different religions compromise each other.
* believe in different deities.
* have different beliefs about what happens to people when they die
- canons
- dietary restrictions
- lifestyles, foods and customs
- positions regarding abortion
* hold different beliefs about a supreme being.
* observe calendars going back to their founder.
* take different views of work, savings, and material goods.
* teach different things about the afterlife.
+ Afterlife: Theology
* The 'afterlife' is what some people believe happens after death. Different religions teach different things about the afterlife.
+ Deity: Religion
* Different religions believe in different deities. Since there are many religions in the world there are many different ideas about how many deities there are, what they are, and what they can do. Followers of many ancient religions and some modern religions believe in many deities. The belief in more than one deity is called polytheism. The two largest religions on earth, Christianity and Islam, believe in only one God, which is called monotheism. Deism is the belief that a deity exists, but that the deity seldom or never intervenes in the universe.<|endoftext|>### belief | religion:
Eastern religion
* Many eastern religions celebrate the awe of the universe in an incredibly beautiful way.
* Most Eastern religions believe that a loved one is reincarnated after the body is cremated.
* Some Eastern religions have a similar feel
- seek a goal of non-desire
* accept reincarnation more readily than western.
* are esoteric, understandable only from within by the few who share the experience
- high on individual liberty and low on individual responsibility
* find salvation in meditation and enlightenment.
* is heavy on the spiritual and weak on the psychological end
- the only faith represented
* say they are the keepers of the keys
- hold the power
* teach reincarnation.
* tends to be more spiritually developed than psychologically developed.
False religion
* Some false religions have personal gods.
* causes instability within relationships leading to war.
* feeds the hunger for personal religious significance.
* promotes false faith.
* seek their votaries among the rich and powerful.
* teach that humans can become gods.<|endoftext|>### belief | religion:
Fundamentalism
* affects all religions and has a crucial corollary.
* are beliefs.
* arises from a person's general approach to life.
* breeds totalitarianism and intolerance.
* encourages a belief that the world is divided into sinners and the saved.
* frequently grows out of a feeling of being ignored and despised.
* is almost always a fear based faith
- an awful state of mind, and leads to war
- characterised by an unremitting hostility to equality, democracy and rationalism
- legalism, pure and simple
- mostly mental, concerned primarily with orthodoxy, with having right belief
- rationalist
- taken from the Christian use of the word
- terrorism and terrorism is fundamentalism
* limited slice of religions often exploited for political ends.
* literalist view of things.
* nefarious school of thought manifested as a dangerous political system.
* opposes, among other things, evolutionary biology.
* political expression of spiritual belief, hardened into dogma.
* word that's been taking a beating in recent years.
### belief | religion | fundamentalism:
Religious fundamentalism
* is the highest form of hypocrisy.
* tends to be detrimental to female rights.
Great religion
* All great religions represent the upsurge of religious emotions and religious attitudes.
* have great staying power.
Heathenism
* is religion
* rock harder than any which encases copper. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Heroism
* are courage.
* comes in many different forms.
* derives from meeting the challenges of survival as an individual.
* has to do with crafting individual stories out of a complex, collective world.
* is constant fidelity to our state in life
- in the eye of the beholder, or in the eye of the recipient of an extraordinary deed
- rare in war
- when somebody does something above and beyond the call of duty
* often inspires others.
* symbolizes the soaring potential of humankind.
Hindu religion
* has more scriptures than can be read in one life time.
* presents eternity as an endless repetition of cyclic processes.
Legalistic religion
* is one of conventions and convenience.
* undermines self esteem.<|endoftext|>### belief | religion:
Major religion
* All major religions accept organ donation as a gift of life to another person
- approve of donation
* All major religions approve of organ and tissue donation and consider donation the greatest gift
- and tissue donation and consider it a gift, an act of charity
- donations
- declare that molestation and rape of women are grave sins
* All major religions have codes of behaviour which contribute to the national sense of ethics
- respect for creation
- two aspects
- support eye donation
* All major religions support organ and tissue donation
* All major religions teach peace, tolerance, and love
- some variation of the values of love, compassion, and justice
- that theft is an evil act
* Every major religion teaches about the laws of cause and effect.
* Many major religions place a significance upon doves.
* Most major religions consider organ donation to be a gift of life to another person
- emphasize giving and have created organizations to encourage it
- have monastic traditions
- support organ and tissue donation and the concept of brain death
* Some major religions have large sects with additional scriptures or important works.
* are never completely unified or monolithic.
* support donation as a beneficial and generous act.
Modern religion
* Most modern religions regard the creation stories in the Bible as allegorical.
* is governed by the lust of the flesh.
Monotheistic religion
* have many problems.
* see other religions as false.
Mystery religion
* require a period of indoctrination before granting access to esoteric knowledge.
* take many forms, but all can be traced back to a single origin.
New religion
* All new religions go through a period when they are thrown to the lions and persecuted.
* abound, and old traditions take new forms.<|endoftext|>### belief | religion:
Organized religion
* Most organized religions offer strong support for creating communal connections.
* are communal activities involving group worship, prayer, and ritual
- like blind men touching an elephant
* has a permanent place in America.
* is an important part of the American fabric
- institution
- created by man
- dangerous where it can effectively censor or disparage people who disagree
- devoid of spirituality when it becomes dogmatic
- ipso facto opposed to intellectual freedom and the freedom of truth
- located in churchs
- often concerned only with upholding and justifying the status quo
- organized just in case
- the oldest, largest and most powerful political special interest group
* little different that being religious.
* plays a number on society, especially women.
* power structure that uses fear to maintain control.
* strange force in society.
* tool of patriarchy.
Pagan religion
* Most Pagan religions are polytheistic, celebratory faiths.
* are often nature-centered and supportive of gender equity.
* come from all around the globe, from ancient history and contemporary times as well.
* merge with christianity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Paganism
* abounds with diversity.
* appears to be clouded in an aura of sexuality and mystery.
* are religion.
* broad and diverse group of religions.
* can offer much of the ceremony and ritual that pantheism needs.
* celebrates what is natural.
* certain way of life.
* comes from the Latin word paganus, which means a country dweller.
* dates back thousands of years.
* encompasses many groups and comes in many different forms.
* has roots in the ancient nature religions of Europe and Africa.
* includes a bunch of different kinds of nature-based religion or spirituality.
* is about freedom.
* is an ancient religion, and the root of many Celtic, Greek and Roman traditions
- earth based religion, with roots in agricultural society
- earth-based religion
- at odds with the gospel
* is based on the worship of nature
- upon religious ideals and myths from the evil imaginations of men
- considered to be an eccentric faith in the West
- defined simply as a collection of nature-venerating religions
- essentially poly-theism in the form of worship of human instincts
- open to all, regardless of race, nationality, gender, or sexual orientation
- simply the natural gravity of the human spirit, the line of least resistance
- still alive and well in our modern world
* is the belief in two or more Gods
- rich native religious stew of traditional society in the Mediterranean
* joyful religion.
* path of tolerance.
* real religion.
* reflects a concern for our planet which is unparalleled among other modern belief systems.
* religion of great, ancient traditons far older than any other religion can claim
- individuals, and our own belief systems differ widely
* respects only the powerful, the successful, the strong.
* sees humanity and the seasons as part of a single whole.
* way of life for a lot of people.
* word used to describe a very broad range of beliefs.
### belief | religion | paganism:
Druidism
* are paganisms.
* can help create an environment in which such leadership can develop.
* is about seeking the truth
- one of the world s most misunderstood religions
- our modern adaptation of ancient Celtic religion
- public worship for relatively large groups
Finnish paganism
* is close to Scandinavian paganism and Baltic paganism.
* is close to Scandinavian paganism and Baltic paganism. The Finns believed that there were many gods.
Pentecostalism
* great factor in fast growth areas.
* is all about healing
- communicated in stories, testimonies, and songs
* religion of the disinherited in Brazil.
* represents an even greater dependence on Gnostic tendencies.
Polytheistic religion
* are found in the lowlands, which also have received Protestant missionaries.
* have many gods.
Prophetic religion
* are about the outer world.
* demands repentance and change.
* kill spirituality.
Religious cult
* Most religious cults attract the disillusioned members of organised religions.
* are tax-exempt.
* is religion
* predate the Internet by thousands of years.
* problem faced by many governments in the world.
### belief | religion | religious cult:
Cargo cult
* are cults
- one of the more unusual mixtures of Asian religion and Western materialism
* religious cult
Religious denomination
* Many religious denominations provide sexual education for youth.
* Most religious denominations consider a wedding ceremony to be a form of worship service.
* Most religious denominations have English services on the weekends
- churches or meeting halls in the town
* Some religious denominations operate managed care plans.
Religious order
* Many religious orders elect their superiors and, of course, the pope is chosen through an election.
* follow a life cycle that resembles that of a Protestant sect. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion | religious order:
Sisterhood
* are bands
- kinship
* can provide real solutions for single parents.
* consists of women with different majors, backgrounds, and personalities.
* is religious order
* strengthens the bond between friends.
Religious sect
* All religious sects are ideas of divinity.
* Many religious sects make an exclusive claim on truth.
* are liberal with adjectives
- probably more prevalent than ever before in our world today
* is religion
Sect
* Many sects have variant views of reincarnation.
* Most sects practice the cult of the founder.
* are break-away groups from more mainstream religions and tend to be in tension with society
- only possible as elements in a closed religious system
* believe that they are protecting a true faith or belief.
### belief | religion | sect:
Christian sect
* All Christian sects recognize the Bible as the primary source of revelation.
* Some Christian sects refer to the literal understanding of biblical text as normative.
* are many and varied.<|endoftext|>### belief | religion:
Several religion
* forbid homosexuality or bisexuality.
* have a system of monasteries.
+ Monastery: Religious buildings
* Several religions have a system of monasteries. Christian monasteries have a chapel for the monks to worship. They are also not allowed to own anything. Everything they use, including their clothes, belongs to the monastery. During the Middle Ages after the Roman Empire was defeated, monasteries were some of the few places where knowledge still existed.
+ Religion and homosexuality: Controversies :: Religion :: LGBT
* Relations between 'religion and homosexuality' change with time, place, and religion. Several religions forbid homosexuality or bisexuality. Others accept it. Religions that forbid homosexuality include Mormonism, the Catholic Church and some other divisions of Christianity. Hinduism accepts homosexuality and bisexuality. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Shamanism
* are animism
* awakens for the recipient deeper states of consciousness and soul searching.
* can be therapeutic in counteracting anxiety and other psychic and psychosomatic disorders.
* enables people to reconnect with the living earth and hear again nature's voices.
* exists intribal cultures aroundthe world and hasdone so for centuries
- with or without ritual, and with or without religion
* has a long history in Anglo-European countries
- many fetishistic elements
- obvious connections with nature and the countryside
* honors a reverence for all of life.
* is about being within and a part of the world, a knowing rather than an unconscious part
- ageless wisdom
* is an ancient technique of spiritual empowerment basic to all humans in every culture
- older practice than that of a priest
- based upon the principle that there are other realms of existence other than our own
- closely related to Mongolian nomadic culture
- compatible with other spiritual traditions
- different from animism
* is one of the most ancient and unifying practices within our human heritage
- universal, and most primitive forms of religion on earth
- oldest psycho-spiritual practices known to man
- option in the holistic approach to schizophrenia
- our common human heritage
- probably the oldest spiritual practice on the planet
- synonymous with the intake of powerful hallucinogenic substances
* is the belief in an unseen world of many gods, demons, and ancestral spirits
- oldest spiritual system in the world
- original religion of Inuit
- religious practices of some Aboriginal healer
- science of faith, and faith can profoundly direct evolution
- use of shamanic practices within a shamanic value system
* is the world's oldest healing and teaching tradition
- tradition, and is found in all cultures of the world
- spiritual tradition that has beenpracticed for thousands of years
- thousands of years old and has been practiced or lived in all quarters of the world
- viewed as a way to to maintain communication between the Hmong and the spiritual world
- well developed
* means something different to each person who uses the title.
* often involves a healing circle.
* is different from animism. Unlike this kind of religion, it is not an organised movement.
* practice which sees spirit in all the manifestations of nature.
* recognizes that everything is alive, sacred, and connected.
* relies heavily upon ceremony and ritual to evoke the desired trance.
* religion in the broadest sense.
* represents a fusion of the experience and practice dimensions.
* speaks of beliefs, attitudes, convictions or ideological practices.
* supports a passionate way of being.
* teaches one to be healthy, joyful, and eager to be of service to others.
* term applied in Siberia to belief in spirits and supernatural powers.
* typically includes animal guides and spirit guides.
Sikh religion
* prohibits idolatry, caste system, sati, use of wine and tobacco smoking.
* rejects distinction based on ownership of economic resources.
Traditional religion
* All traditional religions view homosexuality as a sin.
* cites heterosexual marriage as the ideal for sexual expression.
* is about beliefs
- the stomp dance
* provide no ethical certainties.
* tends to be very suspicious of anything that is related to astrology.
Tribal religion
* Many tribal religions are polytheistic in that they have belief in many gods.
* embrace ancestor worship. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | religion:
Various religion
* divide the commandments differently.
* exert different influence on different ethnic groups
* have rules governing the killing of animals for food.
* publish their scriptures, and religious books and journals.
* view salvation and sin differently, too.
+ Ten Commandments, Differences in teachings and interpretation, Different numbering: Old Testament
* The commandments passage in Exodus has more than ten important statements, there are 14 or 15 in all. Various religions divide the commandments differently. The table below shows those differences.
Western religion
* Most Western religions regard such a practice as contrary to gaining eternal life and happiness
- western religions approve of organ donation and view it as the ultimate act of kindness
* are esoteric, public, democratic, open to all.
* focus more on order while other religions see the void as the ultimate.
* say they hold the power
- yes, and every mechanism has a creator
World religion
* Many world religions emphasize confession
- use fasting as a tool for spiritual advancement
* Most world religions teach that when people die they become spirits.
* are well represented.
* encountering one another and listening and sharing wisdom can indeed save the world.
* seek their version of contentment.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Religious belief
* Many religious beliefs decline as education level rises
- disagree with channeling or such communication as works of the devil
* Some religious beliefs contradict science
- do make predictions
* are VERY sensitive and create visceral feelings
- a function of the culture in which one lives
- accidents of birth
- against common sense
- at the core of our life choices and our lifestyle
- important correlates of behaviors and attitudes
- only one way of describing a deeply held set of values
- personal
- still an important motivation for being involved in philanthropy
- the bedrock on which free society is built
- under the protection of laws and regulations in China
* can also play an important role in vegetarianism
- be a positive force for people facing death from a terminal illness
- have a strong influence on views about health and illness
- never be coterminous with political ideologies
* cause the patient to refuse allogeneic transfusions.
* come in more shapes, sizes, and flavors than cups of coffee.
* cross political and geographical lines
- party and geographical lines
* form the basis for almost all of the discrimination against gays and lesbians.
* interact and reinforce other cultural sources of gender stereotypes.
* is based wholly upon faith and proof comes from revelation or religious authority
- filthy and gross beyond words and involves child abuse, bestiality, sodomy, etc
- one very important way in which many people express their spirituality
- simply an irrational deception of the unconscious
* play a large part in medical treatments, as do social customs.
* powerful motivator for the individual person.
* prevent battering.
* provide shape and meaning to one's perception of the universe.
* remains a significant component of human existence in the modern world.
* tends to be inversely correlated with what most scientists say is simple fact.
### belief | spiritual being:
Aeon
* are companies.
* spiritual being | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief | spiritual being:
Deity
* All deities reside in the human breast.
* Deities also play a large portion in a character's future in Horizons.
* Deities are just different names and forms, or symbolic representa tions, of the energies of nature
- supposedly the souls of people who lived especially virtuous lives
* Some deities are ancestors and others are the spirits of famous people.
* is averse to chaos and disorder, as is shown in creation
- neither the ground nor the cause of the universe
- seen as immanent rather than transcendent
- synonymous with bodhicitta
- the life-force that brings forth and inhabits all things and all persons
- within every atom
Faerie
* are nature spirit
- spirits of nature
* bring pleasure with gentle acts of kindness.
* can work in the garden, helping it to grow and blossom.
* have a rare gift for beautiful music.
* insist on being themselves, shape-shifting endlessly.
* live in hearts of children and dreamers.
* love music and to dance to hypnotic and beautiful sounds.
* spiritual being<|endoftext|>### belief | spiritual being:
Sprite
* are barely visible to the naked eye
- blood red flashes that appear with bluish tendrils dangling from the bottom of some
- dim and can only been seen with the dark adapted eye
- electrical phenomena that appear above thunderclouds, reaching the lower ionosphere
- elements, which exist in the cast and display in the score
- huge blobs of light that occur briefly above thunderstorms
- instances of a cast member on the Stage
- large red and blue flashes from the top of thunderstorms into the troposphere
- objects representing when, where, and how cast members appear in the movie
- playful nature spirits that live inponds, trees or other cool places
- predominantly red and they usually last no more than a few milliseconds
- things such as fonts and character pictures that appear in the game
- two dimensional objects that are usually transparent and often animate
* are very much like elves, but they have wings and green skin
- short duration optical flashes that extend into the ionosphere during storms
* cause variations in the received amplitude and phase of low-frequency radio transmissions.
* is beverages
- soda
- soft drinks
* last only a few tens of milliseconds.
* often can have transparent areas.
* present right after dark.
Trickster
* are the opposite of culture heroes.
* come in a fascinating variety of shapes and sizes.
Spiritual belief
* are abundant, and often irrational and sacred to the believers
- many and vary greatly
* continue to give meaning and direction to all activities in traditional cultures.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Spiritualism
* also involves methods of healing and the investigation of psychic phenomena
- proves that spiritual qualities are the only permanent treasures of life
* are beliefs.
* comes in many guises
- to cleanse out the dregs and wretchedness of humanity
* conjures up images of fake spirit-rapping, gloomy seances, and dramatic mediums.
* encompasses the term innatism , which suggests that ideas cause behavior.
* force for liberty, freedom and peace.
* has no major book of beliefs, nor even a creed.
* is basically a modern religion of mediumship, whose main ritual was the seance
- considered a religion
- frequently misunderstood and sensationalized by the media and movies
- one of the more widespread supernormal practices nowadays
* is the declared enemy of materialism
- highest form of political consciousness
- latest attempt to transform man into a god
- only religion which harmonizes with science in every way
* religion whose basic tenet and practice is conversing with the dead.
* reveals the spiritual oneness of all mankind.
* thrives on faith.
* transcends reason.
* way of life.
* wonderfully non-dogmatic religion, science, and philosophy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
Supernaturalism
* is essential to Western religion.
* pervades our species, consuming billions of person-hours and trillions of dollars
- whole species, in one form or another
* redeems liberalism from banality and crude historicism.
* still has a great hold on today's philosophies.<|endoftext|>### belief | supernaturalism:
Exorcism
* always are, whether performed by priests or witchdoctors or anyone in between.
* are always full of the unexpected
- long, arduous, and often violent
- supernaturalism
- violent and creepy
* eliminates all conditions of possession, and all environmental hauntings.
* establishes the natural states of stability and security.
* is done in different parts of the world by unsaved men
* is the rite of driving out demons
- treatment for severe cases
* leaves seven dead.
* subject that many people are still uncertain about.<|endoftext|>### belief | supernaturalism:
Occultism
* are discipline
* can never be an end in itself.
* is supernaturalism
* is the metaphysic of dunces
- study of occult
* often involves drugs, idolatry and sexual perversion.
* reflex-action to the subjectification of all meaning, the complement of reification.
+ Occult, Occultism
* Occultism is the study of occult. There is often a strong religious element to these studies and beliefs, and many occultists profess adherence to religions such as Gnosticism, Hermeticism, Satanism, Thelema, and Neopaganism. While Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam are generally not considered as occult, some of their modern interpretations can be, such as the interpretation of Hinduism within Theosophy or the various occult interpretations of the Jewish Kabbalah.<|endoftext|>### belief:
Superstition
* Many superstitions revolve around ants.
* Some superstitions are cultural or personal instead of religious
- believe the owl to be a foreshadowing of death or misfortune
- find their origin in practical sense when considering safety and reducing risk
* also extend into the religious realm
- plays a part with black being considered lucky in some parts of the world
* are also anxiety producing
- bad things
- belief systems
- habits rather than beliefs
- lies
- unreal alot of people believe in superstitions
* encourage people to believe that a certain action can cause an unrelated event.
* global, with different belief in different cultures.
* has a long pedigree in Madagascar.
* have their root in the folk customs and beliefs of various cultures.
* impedes education and fosters ignorance.
* interferes with the happiness of mankind.
* is everywhere prevalent in the world
- expectation based on desire
- for subhumans
- like a magnet
* is part of life
- the Egyptian way of life
- pervasive in our everyday lives and even more so in athletics
* is rife in Bali, although beliefs vary widely even within families
- hi-fi circles
* is the abuse of religion
- bedrock of all sport
- exact opposite of religion because it interferes with that understanding
- religion of feeble minds
* means ascribing to a creature powers it possesses neither by nature nor by grace
- the attribution of supernatural power to purely natural things
* now surrounds years in which the lunar calendar counts the eighth month twice.
* play a role in all professional sports, but it seems none as big as in hockey.
* plays a role in some pockets of Chinese population.
* say that sighting the creature can bring ill fortune, illness, or death.
* seems to play a role in the basic daily life of most Roman citizens.
Superstitious belief
* are easy to define within the scientific framework.
* can effect one s thoughts, behavior and decisions.
* tend to emerge when life becomes unpredictable and uncon-trollable. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
Totemism
* are beliefs.
* changingconcept that varies from clan to clan.
* is another common practice in Africa
- the belief that there bond between humans, animals, and natural objects
* means of preventing incest and as a ritual reminder of murder of the father.
* primitive religious concept holding that evil can reside in an inanimate object.
+ Freud's psychoanalytic theories, ' Totem and Taboo'
* The incest taboo rises because of a desire for incest. The purpose of the totemic animal is not for group unity, but to re-enforce the incest taboo. The totemic animal is not a symbol of God but a symbol of the father and it is an important part of religious development. Totemism originates from the memory of an event in pre-history where the male group members eat the father figure due to a desire for the females. The guilt they feel for their actions and for the loss of a father figure leads them to prohibit incest in a new way. Totemism is a means of preventing incest and as a ritual reminder of murder of the father. This shows that sexual desire, since there are many social prohibitions on sexual relations, is channeled through certain ritual actions and all societies adopt these rituals so that sexuality develops in approved ways. This reveals unconscious desires and their repression. Freud believes that civilization makes people unhappy because it contradicts the desire for progress, freedom, happiness, and wealth. Civilization requires repression of drives and instructs such as sexual, aggression, and the death instinct in order that civilization can work.
Traditional belief
* figure into medicine in other ways as well.
* is that it monster that emerges at night to eat anybody who is around. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### belief:
Vampire
* ARE seductive creatures that enthrall their victims.
* All Vampires go blind when the sun comes up
- vampires have a soul, but it is trapped within the body
* Many vampires have a limited form of empathy.
* Most vampires can take a few moments of sunlight before they begin to burn, but it is painful
- prey on the innocent
* Some Vampires seek to gain control over the mortal world.
* Some vampires develop substitute addictions who can range from chocolate to more serious drugs
- have origins
- notice a change in muscle movement
- prefer the expression thirst
- wish to fight mummies, even if they have never met a mummy or been to Egypt
* also comprise a very small percentage of Goths
- gain enhanced combat abilities at night, suffering penalties during the day
- have greater reflexes than humans
- suffer from holy water, treating it like acid
* appear in the folklore and legends of many cultures dating back to ancient times.
* are a form of the hungry ghost
- able to eroticize whomever they desire, but that desire can be indirect
- also highly sexual, and they often prey on members of both sexes
- always rich, because they've lived a long time and accumulated stuff
- beings of transformation and metamorphosis
- blood relatives
- capable of bites
* are creatures of the night
- that maintain immortality by sucking blood from humans and animals
- dead people that drink blood to survive
- energy feeders and feed off the blood and psychic and pranic energy of others
- evil spirit
- great lead characters for stories, books and movies
- intelligent agents
- legendary for their endurance
- malleable creatures
- mammals
- multilingual
- myth
- nocturnal animals
- normal people taken over by another being
- only creatures acting like humans
- similar to man in respect that no two are alike
* are slightly harder to kill
- more combustible than lighter fluid
- soluble in blood and cause it to evaporate without leaving a film
- some of the most popular villains in modern mythology
- stated to freak out when they smell human blood
- supernatural
- terrestrial organisms
* are the bodies of the dead, and ghosts are the spirits of the dead
- living dead
- most fearsome and fascinating of all creatures of folklore
- recently dead
- warriors
* attack in areas without hair or feathers or where the hair is scant.
* bats stomachs and kidneys rapidly separate the water from the rest of the blood.
* can bite monsters to suck the blood of the victim
- breed with humans, but the birth always kills the mother
- feed off dead bodies to recover health
- never resist light
- only feed upon living blood, though from a variety of sources
* can sleep in the day
- upside down
- spread their disease by killing an uninfected player
* can, however, build a type of immunity to sunlight depending on their age and constitution.
* cause fear.
* come from all countries and races
- nationalities and races
* consider themselves immortal.
* crave the sensations of heightened awareness.
* display no reflection in a mirror, nor do they cast a shadow.
* do exist.
* drink only blood.
* exist on nearly every continent on Earth and in nearly every society
- outside of time
- where people fear to go, in the depths all that which culture shuns
* experience a calling to the darker forces and an affinity to a nocturnal lifestyle.
* fear light, have pale skin, and grow fangs.
* feed on the blood of warm-blooded animals such as birds, horses and cattle.
* fly from their roosting caves at night to locate prey.
* generally are male, and rabies is seven times more frequent in men than in women.
* generate feelings of longing, lust and fear of disease and death.
* get the joy of flying around and living forever, werewolves get the joy of animal spirits.
* hate garlic.
* have an aversion to garlic
- extreme durability to pain
- incredible healing ability
- weaknesses during the day
* is evil spirit
* legends originate in occurrences of porphyria, a rare skin disorder.
* love to be hugged.
* only suck blood at night.
* practice the cult of drinking blood.
* require blood in order to live.
* sometimes attack people
- come in the form of cuddly house pets
* stalk the streets at night.
* turning into bats is found in Dracula. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### believability:
Plausibility
* establishes that a concept or model is more than just a belief or conjecture.
* is believability
- credibility
### believers baptism:
Scriptural baptism
* guarantees the continuity of a church.
* is believers' baptism
- by immersion
* requires a complete immersion in water
- the saved to be baptized<|endoftext|>### believers | protestant:
Fundamentalist
* Most fundamentalists say infants and young children are automatically saved, no matter what
- stress the importance of an emotional experience of being born again
* Some fundamentalists say about mysticism It begins in mist and ends in schism.
* are concerned with why the price is what it is
- disciples
- humans
- protestants
- uncomfortable with processes of spiritual growth and discovery
* believe that the Bible means exactly what it says.
* claim repetitive prayer is forbidden by Scripture
- to interpret the Scriptures literally
* control the production of literature and the appointment of missionaries.
* focus on the earnings of companies within specific sectors.
* have a tendency to want to convert others.
* only accept science when it agrees with what their religion teaches.
* range across the spectrum of public discussion - from religion to politics.
* say holy water superstition that has no basis in the Bible.
* simply believe in the fundamentals of the Christian faith.
* still call gays evil, but society at large is more tolerant.<|endoftext|>### bending:
Flexion
* causes a small increase in canal diameter and volume as the vertebral lamina are separated.
* decreases disc protrusion and reduces stenosis
- the angle between articulating bones
* increases metabolite transport into the disc
- the space in the joint, making more room for further bleeding to occur
* is primarily by the hamstrings, short head of biceps, gracilis, and sartorius.
* occur when shoulder joint muscles contract to anteriorly move humeruses.
* opens the apophyseal joints and reduces posterior disc stress.
* stop humeral extensions.
* stretches the ligamentum flavum to reduce stenosis.
### bending | flexure:
Dorsiflexion
* are flexion.
* is flexure
- movement of the toes toward the shin
- reassumed as the hip is flexed and the leg extended
- stronger in the push-off leg of all athletes, except novices
* is the amount of fore and aft flexibility in the ankle joint
- upward flexibility the foot has within the ankle joint
* takes place mostly in the ankle joints but also slightly in the tarsal joints.
Hunch
* are for dogs making love.
* is bending
- feeling
- websites
Beneficial organism
* Most beneficial organisms play roles.
* can help control unwanted ones.
### benign condition:
Geographic tongue
* benign condition.
* descriptive term for the map-like appearance of some people's tongues.
* is described as a psoriasiform mucositis
- thought to be an autoimmune disorder and is no way related to oral herpes
* relatively common tongue problem that normally responds to topical steroids. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### benign non-behavioral characteristic:
Skin color
* Some skin color depends on sunlight.
* benign nonbehavioral characteristic.
* benign, non-behavioral characteristic.
* can change by expansion or contraction
- depending on habitat colors, humidity, stress, and temperature
- rapidly by varying the amount of blood in the skin
- vary, usually consisting of dark brown spots on white or yellow background
* changes from blue to a bright red color.
* depends on several pigments.
* describes well, skin color.
* develops early.
* good indicator of perfusion status.
* has no moral significance one way or the other.
* is an easy way to identify one group from another
- dark, ebony to black when mature
- described by an array containing all of the flesh tones in the person's hands
* is determined by at least three genes in humans
- two sets of genes
* is determined by the amount of melanin found in the skin
- climate a person lives in
- melanin pigment in the skin cells
- size, melanization and distribution of melanosomes
- three to five gene pairs
- difficult to describe
- due to the variation of a substance called melanin in the skin
- ivory, eyes are blue, green, or brown
- known to change after they have consumed nourishment
* is merely a reaction to a dangerous environment
- an accident of birth
- most intense in full sunlight
- natural
- polygenic
- produced via pigment cells called chromatophores
* is the most important factor determining a person's risk for skin cancer
- primary unit upon which type has been based
- result of the melanin pigment created in the skin cells
* makes no differnce to who a person is.
* provides an important cue for face detection.
* ranges from tan to shades of gray or red.
* small difference.
* tends to be very light, from bluish-grey to white.
* varies according to the amount of melanin in the epidermis
- with latitude and certain people are tall or have brown hair
Breast cyst
* Most breast cysts contain fluid.
* are benign
- fluid filled sacs which occur in the breast of premenopausal women
- generally benign
- harmless and very common
- related to several things
Sebaceous hyperplasia
* can be difficult to clinically differentiate from basal cell carcinoma.
* is benign
- somewhat dependent on hormones and is prone to appear at puberty
Benthic organism
* Many benthic organisms attach themselves to rocks and stay in one place.
* Some benthic organisms burrow into sediments for food or protection.
* are an important part of the food chain, especially for fish
- found on or in the seabed
- in direct contact with bottom sediments and pore waters
- members of the lower food web that have adapted to life on the bottom | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### benzodiazepine derivative:
Diazepam
* benzodiazepine
- derivative
* binding inhibitor has a wide distribution and multiple biological actions.
* blocks cholecystokinin induced defensive burying in rats.
* crosses the placenta and is secreted in breast milk.
* inhibits forskolin-stimulated adenylyl cyclase activity in human tumour cells.
* is also effective in single or intermittent dosage
- drugs
- highly lipid soluble and penetrates the brain rapidly
- in a class of drugs called benzodiazepines
* is metabolized by the liver and excreted mainly by the kidney
- to N-desmethyldiazepam and oxazepam
- muscle relaxants
- occasionally beneficial for patients with major depression or psychosis
- sedative
* is the drug of choice in treating seizures in the dog and cat
- most commonly administered anxiolytic
- oldest antispastic agent
- only drug that consistently relieves muscle stiffness
- tranquilizer
* long-acting oral and parenteral benzodiazepine.
* member of the benzodiazepine family.
* passes into breast milk.
* reduces spasticity by depressing the central nervous system
- stress-induced analgesia in humans
* relaxes skeletal muscles by inhibiting spinal polysynaptic afferent pathways.
* relieves anxiety and nervousness.
* strengthens the effect of other nerve agent antidotes.
Benzoquinone
* inhibits the growth of microorganisms and prevents damaged fruit from rotting.
* is toxic to bacteria and helps prevent decay in damaged plant tissue. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Berry
* All berries are edible raw or in jams and pies.
* Berries Provides nutritive support to the heart and circulatory system
- Soak in vinegar or milk
- abound in just about every color
- answer to names like bakeapple, partridge, and alpine bear
- appear on plants
* Berries are a cluster of yellow to blackish-green berries
- favorite of robins and other birds in early spring
- main source of fresh food during the summer for most aboriginal people
- source of food for wildlife
* Berries are also difficult to cap and some berries occasionally split
- great on cereal or yogurt
- of great benefit to the urinary tract
- rich in potassium
- an excellent food, containing many vitamins and easily available sugars
* Berries are an important source of carbohydrates and fats in the diet of migratory birds
- spruce grouse food during spring, summer, and fall
- attractive to other birds
- blackberry-like, oblong and black in color
- blue-black when mature and are a favorite food of birds in the fall and winter
- cancer-fighting, apples provide fiber, oranges and mangos offer vitamin C, and so on
- common fruit that the Palm Cockatoos consume
- eaten worldwide and often used in jams , preserves , cakes or pies
* Berries are edible fruit
- raw or cooked
- raw, and the juice is often used as a substitute for lemon juice
- to many species of birds
- effective laxatives on account of the acids and seeds they contain
- even lower on the glycemic-index scale than apples and pears
- extremely poisonous
- food to a number of birds and animals and are used in making jams, jellies, and pies
- frequently harmful
- fruit which are generally small and quite fragile
- high in fiber
* Berries are highly palatable to a wide variety of birds and mammals
* Berries are large in size and has traditional raspberry flavor
- size, blue in color, firm, have dry scars, good flavor and good shelf life
- light in color with a good scar and firmness
- located in roofs
- low calorie fruits when eaten raw
* Berries are medium in size and fair in appearance and flavour
- that grow in medium to large clusters
- one of the largest groups of fleshy fruits and have highly elaborated pericarps
- palatable to many species of birds and mammals
- part of berries
- poisonous though used as an emetic
- quite susceptible to water loss which results in fruit shriveling and loss of gloss
- relatively high in carbohydrates and soluble solids but contain little sodium or fat
* Berries are rich in vitamin C and energy content but low in fats
- C, carbohydrates, and energy content but low in fats
- sources of vitamin C, folic acid, and dietary fiber
- ripe when they are easily pulled from the core without getting squashed
- small , sweet , liquid , bright colored fruits
- susceptible to infection from bloom until they begin to ripen
* Berries are the frosting on the cake of life
- only fruit that grows in the Arctic
- toxic to most native song birds
- typically fleshy or juicy and contain several to many seeds
* Berries are very aromatic with aluminum blue color
- easy to eat
* Berries attract ants
- birds, especially cardinals, mocking birds and thrushes
* Berries can also show signs of sunburn, especially the red raspberry and blackberry
- be so dense on a plant that the foliage is almost completely hidden
- carry seeds
- change colors, borne in clusters
- collected near roads can contain high levels of hydrocarbons and other chemicals
- come in many shapes, colors, and taste
- consist of seeds
* Berries contain fiber
- reddish seeds
* Berries contain several compounds shown in clinical studies to support prostate health
- large seeds
- drop off and sprout just as the leaves begin their late fall return
- expand further, begin to soften, and accumulate sugar
- grow in areas
* Berries grow on bushes
- female holly trees
- hawthorn bushes
- huckleberry bushes
- grown in warmer latitudes have more flavor
* Berries have appearances
- benefits
- deep red color
- delicious taste
- distinctive flavor
- health benefits
- properties
- similar appearances
- small seeds
- sour taste
- sweet flavour
* Berries includes peels
- sections
- look like blueberries
* Berries make delicious desserts and salads as well as tasty condiments for cooked meats
- excellent jellies and wines and are eaten by many species of birds
- up a large part of their natural diet in winter
- occur on plants
- produced on thorny bushes are tarter and hold their flavor better in cooking
* Berries provide an irresistible magnet to many birds
- carbohydrates and fats, especially in the late summer and fall
- food for other birds
- range in color from bright red, through dark purple, and into the blues
* Berries resemble blueberries
- in appearance buckthorn berries, except that their color is green-brown or brown
- resist sunburn
- stick on their bills and are then flown to other trees where they are deposited haphazardly
- take over a year to ripen
- tend to be acidic during the early part of the season
* Berries turn black color
- vary in size, from half to slightly larger than commercial size
* Many berries contain juices that can easily stain, affording use as a natural dye.
* Most berries appear on plants.
* Most berries attract ants
* Most berries contain fiber
* Most berries grow on bushes
* Most berries have color
* Most berries turn black color
* Some berries are commercially important.
* Some berries attract bears
- finches
- become plants
* Some berries contain acid
- toxic compounds
- feed squirrels
- grow on vines
- have lipids
- possess medicinal properties which act as cures for some minor ailments
- produce trees
* Some berries remain on trees
- red or green at the stem end after the blossom end is blue
- berry s become fragrant and brightly colored to advertise their ripeness to animals
* is edible fruit
- fleshy and holding it's seeds on the surface
+ Arctic, Plant life
* Only in the protected valleys or along the riverbanks are small trees able to grow. Rivers come into the Arctic from the warmer south. The places along their banks are a little bit warmer than the rest of the tundra. This means trees can grow there. 0therwise only a few clusters of bushes grow sparingly. Berries are the only fruit that grows in the Arctic.
* Berries are small, sweet, liquid, bright colored fruits. Due to this, they are able to bring more animals towards them and spread their seeds.
+ Huckleberry: Berries :: Ericaceae
* The fruit of most species of huckleberry can be eaten. The berries are small and round. Berries range in color from bright red, through dark purple, and into the blues. In taste the berries range from tart to sweet. They have a flavor similar to that of a blueberry. Huckleberries are well liked by many mammals such as bears and humans. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### berry:
Black berry
* Black berries contain seeds
- last all winter on female plants
* Most black berries contain seeds.<|endoftext|>### berry:
Blackberry
* Blackberries Cut away old canes and reduce the number of new ones.
* Blackberries are abundant in eastern North America and along the Pacific Coast
- among the easiest of all fruits to grow
- an example of an aggregate fruit
- biennials and begin bearing the year after planting
- classified based on growth habit
- edible fruit
- highly productive with no input of toxic chemicals
- in the early ripe fruit stage
- information appliances
- native to several continents, including Asia, Europe, and North and South America
- part of a late-season group of fruits that are high in sugars
- quite drought-hardy, but require considerable water during the fruiting period
- red when they are green
- ripe when they are plump and very dark purple, almost black
- sensitive to wet soils
- soft
- the silver lining of a very black cloud known as blackberry briars
* Blackberries bear fruit on canes that grew the previous year
- on last years growth
- can grow in a wide variety of soils, but they do best on sandy loam or clay loam soils
- contain both soluble and insoluble fiber components
- do best in deep well drained soils such as sandy loams and loamy sands
- form a shelter for small animals and birds, such as quail
- grow as vigorous vines that require heavy pruning at proper times
* Blackberries grow in a wide range of soils, but they fare best in well-drained soil
- abundance all throughout the Delta in the summer
- wet areas across the United States and Europe
- throughout the United States
- wild throughout most of Europe
* Blackberries have perennial root systems and biennial canes
- similar looking leaves but the undersides are green
* Blackberries includes peels
- sections
- produce succulent fruit in summer on woody canes
- range in size from having only a few seeds to being as big as strawberries
- require abundant moisture while the berries are growing and ripening
- seem to ripen in clusters, with whole clusters being ready at the same time
- thrive in temperate climates with well-drained loose soil | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### berry:
Blueberry
* Blueberries also contain folic acid, ellagic acid, and bacterial inhibitors
- yellow pigments
- have a place in the annals of folk medicine
- require more moisture than most plants
* Blueberries appear to be an effective anti-aging remedy, at least in lab animals
- retard the aging process because of their antioxidant properties
* Blueberries are a good source of vitamin C, provide some fiber, and are low in sodium
- great source of vitamin C and a good source of fiber
- native berry to North America
* Blueberries are a natural in cobblers, crisps, jams, muffins, and pies
- laxative
- relative of the cranberry and are native to the United States
- about three times bigger in size as bilberries and they taste alike
* Blueberries are also a good source of carbohydrates and fiber
- great topping for breakfast cereals
- attractive ornamental shrubs
- great sprinkled over cereal, or yogurt, or low-fat ice cream
- among the favorite fruits of nutritionists
* Blueberries are an also important food source for wildlife during the summer
- extremely important food source for bears
- important food source for birds and mammals
- insignificant source of other vitamins
- blue, cherries are red, etc
- common in the woods of Canada and North America
- difficult to propagate, and survival of rooted cuttings is poor
- easy to pick because they grow on low bushes
- finicky plants
* Blueberries are good for making jelly, jam, pie, muffins, and many other foods
- high in iron and mineral salts
- in middle fruiting stage
- indigenous to North America
* Blueberries are low in calories and packed with antioxidants
- fat and contain no sodium or cholesterol
- mainstays in the East and Northwest, where the plants flourish in acid soils
- more tolerant of spring frosts than most other fruit crops
* Blueberries are native to Canada and range from the far north to the south
- South America
- northeastern Minnesota, where they grow on hillsides and in bogs
- nutritional powerhouses
- one of summer' s greatest bounties
* Blueberries are one of the few fruits indigenous to North America
- most popular berries in the United States
- overall very important for food and cover for wildlife
- part of the heath family
- poor competitors with weeds
- popular with people and birds
- self-fertile
- susceptible to root rots in poorly drained soils
- the third most popular fruit in the United States
* Blueberries are very low in calories
- sensitive to drought and irrigation is essential in most areas
- virtually fat free
- well adapted to drip irrigation systems
- youth berries
* Blueberries begin their life as a little, green berry
- to turn color before they are fully ripe
- bloom fairly early, and often experience frost damage
* Blueberries can also be an effective anti-diarrheal agent
- be blue or black, with a powdery, silver-white sheen on the skin
- grow in a wide range of soils, temperatures and other conditions
- take damp, even boggy, areas if they have good sunlight
* Blueberries contain a variety of compounds
- more Vitamin A than any other berry
- develop their maximum sweetness a few days after they initially turn blue
- fight the bacteria that causes diarrhea
- grow areas
* Blueberries grow in acid conditions and do poorly in alkaline Colorado soils
- clusters on bushes
- clusters, with berries at the bottom ripening before the ones at the top
- two varieties, lowbush and highbush
- on the same plant as their name
* Blueberries have a shallow, fibrous root system
- small root system adapted for moist soil conditions
- fibrous roots
- the same season as raspberries
- white or pink flowers in bell-shaped clusters on the shoot tips
* Blueberries includes peels
- inhibit blood platelets sticking together reducing blood clots
- lead the list of antioxidant foods
- play a healthyrole in a healthy diet
* Blueberries prefer moist soil, but also adequate drainage
- nitrogen in an ammonium form over a nitrate form
* Blueberries remain alive after harvest, respiring and producing heat
- popular and sought-after around the world
- require ample moisture and do especially well in areas of high rainfall
* Blueberries require an acid soil and prefer nitrogen in the form of ammonium
- cross pollination for a successful fruit set
- specific soil conditions for good growth and production
- ripen earlier than do cranberries
- run the biggest risk of experiencing very cold weather and frosts
- thrive in acidic soils
* Blueberries tolerate irradiation without adverse effects
- partial shade, but full sun is preferred
- turn from purple in acid to green in base
* Blueberries usually begin bearing the second or third year after transplanting
- fruit the third season after planting
- have a grayish waxy deposit on the skin, which is called bloom
- yield nectar and pollen, but bees visit the flower predominantly for nectar
* Most blueberries bear fruit.
* Most blueberries have few problems with insects or diseases
* Some blueberries grow feet
- produce berries.
* Blueberries have a sweet taste, with a little acidic hint. Wild blueberries have a stronger taste. Blueberries are good for making jelly, jam, pie, muffins, and many other foods | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### berry | blueberry:
Highbush blueberry
* Highbush blueberries are distantly related to cranberries and azaleas
- hardy in central and southern Iowa
- grow quite well in the northern third of the state
* Some highbush blueberries have very high levels of anthocyanin and some less.
* is one of the most agriculturally important blueberries of North America.
Wild blueberry
* Wild blueberries are a replacement crop for European bilberries
- grow thickly under the spruce trees
- take two years to bear fruit
+ Blueberry
* Blueberries have a sweet taste, with a little acidic hint. Wild blueberries have a stronger taste. Blueberries are good for making jelly, jam, pie, muffins, and many other foods.
Bright berry
* Bright berries contain seeds.
* Bright berries have flavour
- sweet flavour
* Most bright berries contain seeds
Bright red berry
* Bright red berries contain seeds.
* Bright red berries have flavour<|endoftext|>### berry:
Currant
* Most currants have flavor
- produce fruit
* Raise extra plants by taking hardwood cuttings from healthy bushes.
* are about one-quarter the size of ordinary raisins, and are typically used in baked goods
- shrubs
- subject to a variety of insect and disease pests
- tiny raisins, usually from the Mediterranean region
* can replace blueberries.
* do best in cool soil temperatures with full sun
- fertile, loamy soil that has good drainage
* grow best in summer humid, cool regions with great winter chilling.
* have a high nutrient requirement
- unusual flavor
* includes peels
- sections
* perform best in cool, moist, well-drained sites.
* tend to have a milder flavor than gooseberries.
### berry | currant:
Black currant
* Most black currants have flavor
- produce fruit
* are currants
- part of black currants
- ripe when the fruit has a deep, purple-black color
* grow on woody shrubs and are frankly homely beside their glossy relations.
* have a strong and unusual flavor
* perform better when different cultivars are grown together.
* produce fruit on young new wood of the previous season's growth
* sweeten and highlight the mild flavor of China teas.
Red currant
* Most red currants produce fruit.
* are among the most beautiful of fruits.
* boast soft, green leaves followed by brilliant red clusters of tasty berries.
Elder berry
* Elder berries are higher in vitamin C than other high-C fruits such as oranges.
* is good for the respiratory system and digestive system.
Fleshy berry
* Fleshy berries contain seeds.
* Most fleshy berries contain seeds.
Green berry
* Green berries affects lungs, kidneys, heart and nervous system
- occur on plants
* Most green berries occur on plants.<|endoftext|>### berry:
Hawthorn berry
* Hawthorn berries are a stronger diuretic
- also high in B - vitamins and other important nutrients
- famous in Europe for the circulatory system, especially the heart
- particularly beneficial for the treatment of angina
- the best herbs for strengthening and protecting the heart
- can help in treatment of high or low blood pressure, tachycardia, and arrhythmia
- have a long history of use as a heart tonic
- seem to enhance enzyme metabolism and oxygen utilization in the heart muscle
* is high in a thickening agent called pectin
- used in Europe in several different formulations
Infected berry
* Infected berries remain firm compared to healthy berries, which soften as they ripen
- firm, compared to ripening healthy berries, and drop easily
* Infected berries turn from light brown to dark brown, then shrivel and turn hard and black
- white or salmon in color as other berries ripen
* Some infected berries turn dark brown and shriveled, and are referred to as mummies. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### berry:
Lingonberry
* Lingonberries also make a great accompaniment to meat and cheese dishes.
* Lingonberries are beautiful and delicate-looking ornamentals
- relatives of cranberries, grown in many Scandinavian countries
- similar to cranberries and are popular in Scandinavia<|endoftext|>### berry:
Persimmon
* also contain potassium and calcium, minerals that can help control blood pressure.
* are a good source of vitamin A, contain a very small trace of fat and no cholesterol
- preferred food during autumn, and other wild fruits are eaten when available
- beautiful, much like flowers and sunsets are
- fruit trees
- native to the orient, as well as the United States, depending on the type
- one of the easiest fruit trees to grow
- plants
- ripe when slightly soft and give slightly when gently squeezed
- small, easy to grow trees which are adapted to most of Texas
* bloom late, usually escaping spring frosts.
* can have a few seeds or be seedless.
* continue to ripen after they are picked off the tree.
* have a tip-bearing growth habit which requires careful management.
* reach their full color while still hard.
### berry | persimmon:
Oriental persimmon
* are larger and heart-shaped.
* have few insect, disease, or other problems.<|endoftext|>### berry:
Red berry
* Most red berries contain seeds.
* Most red berries have flavour
- sweet flavour
* Red berries appear on spadix in summer and persist into fall.
* Red berries are a food source for birds
- evident on a few plants
- attract birds
- fall from bare trees
- grow in small clusters
- sour taste
- help the body make collagen, the protein needed to keep skin supple, smooth and healthy
- last through winter and develop on trees that bear pistillate flowers in late spring
- remain on tree late in fall
Saskatoon
* are berries
- cities
- native to Alberta
* enjoys more hours of sunshine than any other major Canadian city.
* is rife with racism, sexism, and homophobia.
* lies in a region of the world that has very definite seasons.
* provides cover, nesting and roosting for several bird species.
Serviceberry
* Serviceberries also grow on rocky and sandy soils.
* Serviceberries are noticeable in the woods in spring, flowering before most other trees leaf out
- some of the earliest spring-blooming trees
- grow well in a wide range of soils
Simple fruit
* are fruits that develop from a single ovary.
* is berries. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### berry:
Strawberry
* Most strawberries have surfaces.
* A 'strawberry' plant that grows fruit that people eat. The fruit of a strawberry is red when ripe, and has edible seeds on the outside. Many people eat strawberries on ice cream, or dip them in sugar. Strawberries are rich in vitamin C which may help you fight off colds. Many strawberries are grown on strawberry farms and the farmers often have hives of bees that live on the farm to pollinate the strawberries. Strawberries are technically aggregate fruits, containing more than one fruit.
* Strawberries Combine the jelly and water
- Make strawberries for art
- Peg down runners from new plants into the soil or pots of compost to root
- Wash and remove caps from fully ripe, firm berries with a deep-red color
- actually grow in little green bushes close to the ground
* Strawberries also add flavor to compotes, preserves, chutneys, and stuffing
- contain healthy levels of folic acid and are high in fiber and low in calories
- develop a gray fuzzy mat on the fruit
- have achenes
- lose vitamin C during browning, heating and cooking
- are a cool weather crop, producing most of their growth in the spring and fall
* Strawberries are a good source of potassium, too
- vitamin C, but vitamin C is very common in fruits and vegetables
- great source of boron, a bone-protective mineral
- member of the rose family
- small fruit that is ground grown
- true California crop
- aggregate achenes
* Strawberries are also a crop that has been successfully grown hydroponically
- excellent for jams, jellies, and pies
- fat-free and low in calories
- ripe for the picking
- among the plants that reproduce using runners
* Strawberries are an easy to grow prennial
- example of a plant that produces stolons
- birthmarks
- edible fruit
- full of vitamin C, potassium and fiber
- fully ripe when uniformly red
- herbs
* Strawberries are in bloom in southern and central areas of the state
- to small green fruit, depending on the variety and site
* Strawberries are located in forests
- refrigerators
- low-calorie fruits when eaten raw
- luscious simply eaten raw or in shortcake or fruit salad
- naturally fat, sodium, and cholesterol-free
- one of the champions of nutrition, along with cantaloupe
* Strawberries are one of the most chemically-intensive crops in America
- widely distributed fruits in the world
- part of the rose family
- resistant to the Southern root-knot nematode
- rich in vitamin C and fiber
- shallow-rooted plants and benefit from irrigation
- subject to many soil-borne diseases and insects
- susceptible to several fruit rots
- technically aggregate fruits , containing more than one fruit
* Strawberries are the first fruit to ripen in the spring
- most hardy of the berries and can withstand shipping and storage
- only fruit that have seeds on the outside
* Strawberries are very high in folic acid
- productive plants for the space they occupy
- susceptible to frosts in the spring
- vulnerable to a handful of soil pathogens
- weird they bear their seeds on the outsides of their fleshy fruits
* Strawberries can be sour
- help smokers reduce the risk of developing lung cancer
- survive all but the most severe drought periods
* Strawberries consistently rank near the top of lists of foods most heavily sprayed with pesticides
- show high levels of fungicides
* Strawberries contain a lot of vitamin C and iron
- cylic acid which helps clear skin and remove dead skin cells
- depend largely on wind and gravity to pollinate
- don t grow on raspberry canes and dogs don t have kittens and cats don t have puppies
* Strawberries especially can become moldy if they sit for too long
- lose their freshness very rapidly once they are cut
- generally are productive for two years before plants succumb to diseases
* Strawberries grow best in a deep, sandy loam soil, rich in organic matter
- well drained, sandy loam soil, rich in organic matter
- loose, fertile, sandy loams containing large quantities of organic matter
- well-drained, reasonably fertile soil
- on soils having high organic matter content and high fertility levels
- better in a garden site that is open to direct sunlight most of the day
- from runners, stems that grow horizontally rather than vertically
- fuzzy white stuff, but it took a long time to grow
- luxuriantly
* Strawberries have a very high vitamin C content and are versatile as a dessert food
- more vitamin C than oranges, more sugar per ounce than a delicious apple
- the most calories but crackers are only twenty calories behind
- vitamin C, fiber and of course they're yummy
* Strawberries includes peels
- sections
- is one example of vegetation that reproduces asexually
* Strawberries perform best if planted with full sun exposure and in rich, well-drained soil
- in light, free-draining soils on a sunny but sheltered site
* Strawberries prefer a loamy soil with a good mix of sand, silt, and clay
- well drained soil, high in organic matter
- full sun and well-drained soils
- primarily depend on wind and gravity to pollinate their flowers
- produce fruit most of the summer and tolerate marginal soil and light shade
- reproduce through horizontal stems called runners
* Strawberries require a site that is fully exposed to the sun
- moist, fertile soil and protection during the winter months
- regular feeding to produce a good crop
- well-drained, fertile, moist soil, and thrive in cool weather
* Strawberries respond best in medium-textured soils
- to the addition of water through some form of irrigation
- show some new growth from the crowns
- variety of images of strawberries | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### berry | strawberry:
Wild strawberry
* Most wild strawberries have surfaces.
* Wild strawberries are strawberries
- the first to ripen followed by black raspberries and finally blackberries
- arise from short thick rootstocks anchored to the ground by tough wiry roots
- form mats of runners across the surface, and deep-rooted willow thickets develop
- reproduce from seed and from runners
Wild berry
* Some wild berries are toxic to certain species as well.
* Wild berries can be a good source of food or extremely poisonous.
### better camouflaged:
Black moth
* Most black moths have offspring
- organs
* Some black moths carry diseases.
* can begin to outnumber white moths when the black moths are better camouflaged.
* produce more eggs than gray ones, but they die immediately after reproducing.<|endoftext|>### betters:
Fresh food
* All fresh foods have the potential of having microorganisms present.
* Any fresh food is subject to attack by microorganisms.
* Most fresh food contains a large amount of water
- nutrients
- foods are low in sodium
* Some fresh food provides moisture.
* are our best sources of antioxidants and active digestive enzymes.
* cause hives more often than cooked foods.
* consists of vegetables.
* contains nutrients.
* includes fish.
* is betters
- important to Chinese cooking
- organic matter
- prepared food
- solid food
* lose vitamins fast the longer they are canned, cooked, or frozen.
* plays important roles
### beverages:
Coke
* absorbs more light in the blue end of the spectrum than in the green and red areas.
* are a major source of earnings
- the only other mosquitoes found throughout the range of EE in the United States
* consist of binder and filler phases.
* fuels the process of making molten iron from iron ore in the blast furnace.
* is beverages
- cocaine
- fossil fuel
* is located in bars
- cans
- movies
- theaters
- soda
- soft drinks<|endoftext|>### bi-monthly publication:
Avatar
* All avatars have the ability to gesture.
* act as semi-autonomous communicative agents.
* are a set of information that one presents to others
- agent or character representations that appear in a virtual world representing the user
- another medium of communication, beyond verbal mediums such as speech or text
- earthly creatures believed to contain the essence of a deity
- only the beginning of living in cyberspace
- representations of humans in the virtual world
- the form in which humans appear in virtual worlds
- virtual humans controlled by a live participant
* bi-monthly publication.
* can dance, wave, walk, and perform other actions.
* is Hindu deity
- imagery
- similar to the Christian concept of incarnation but is different in two significant ways
* reside in virtual reality.
* set of tools.
* sort of incarnation.
* webzine aimed at helping developers build interactive applications.
+ Neopets, Pets, Avatars that are earned: Websites :: Online games
* Many avatars have to be earned. These are the avatars that people want most. These avatars are the hardest to get. These avatars may be gotten in many different ways.
### bi-polar:
Energy system
* Every energy system has a positive and a negative pole.
* are bi-polar.
* become increasingly important as energy costs rise.
* differ from region to region, depending on the availability of natural resources.
### biased term:
Puppet state
* is government
+ Puppet state: Politics
* A 'puppet state' is a country that is officially independent, but not in practice. Puppet governments are usually kept in power by military force provided by an occupying country. Puppet state is a biased term. It is used to denigrate the government of the alleged puppet state. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biblical term:
Covenant
* Are Legal Or Illegal.
* are agreement
- between persons
* are legal agreements
- documents, legal oaths of faithfulness between parties
- promises
- the means by which fortunes are transferred from one generation to another
* biblical term.
* come from a pattern in Scripture.
* create living relationships.
* is agreement
* is an important ingredient in building community
- part of biblical history and, therefore, theology
- irrevocable, indissolveable commitment breakable only by death
- one of the major legal conceptions which appear in the Bible
* means a binding oath made between parties
- and obligation, treaty or pact and a relationship between two parties
* transcend social contracts, and they endure for all time.
* turn strangers into family.<|endoftext|>### biblical term | covenant:
Communion
* Some communions discourage shaving men except for surgery.
* expresses the unity that is the universe - a single, if multiform, energy event.
* family meal.
* involves the positive construction of affective solidarity.
* is al- ways supposed to be beyond time and space
- also an act of obedience
* is an act of confession, self-examination and praise
- trust
- denomination
- in the form of a small piece of prosfir, or blessed bread, soaked in wine
- intercommunication
- rituals
- that which is shared between the three persons of the Holy Trinity
- the sacrament of blessing and gratitude
* means the act of sharing
- to be partners, to be intimate with, to fellowship
* sacrament - considered to be an outward sign of an inward grace.
* sign of the unity of faith and practice.
* spiritual event.
* state of sharing or exchanging the same set of thoughts, feelings and attitudes.
* time of commitment
- reflection
- that goes beyond our heads
### biblical term | covenant | communion:
Spiritual communion
* is something that only experience can claim.
* takes place through prayer and meditation in the silence.
Covenant theology
* is federal theology and the head of the household IS the family's representative
- what governs the Anglican church
* underscores the eschatological dynamic of reciprocal self-gift.
Deontological ethic
* are biblical
- duty-based ethics
* is strongest where utilitarianism is weakest.
Lutheran worship
* includes song and prayer from many Christian traditions.
* is biblical.<|endoftext|>### biconcave discs:
Red cell
* are biconcave discs
- important to carry oxygen to keep other cells alive
- normocytic to microcytic
- often bent and squeezed as they are pushed through the tiny capillaries
- resistant to stress and rupture easily
* are the carriers of oxygen throughout the body
- easiest to replace by transfusion
- first to recover after such exposure
- oxygen carrying cells in blood
* can form stacks called Rouleaux.
* carry oxygen and are frequently used in the treatment of anemia
- used to treat anemia
* carry oxygen from the lungs to the rest of the body, so they are very important
- the tissues and remove carbon dioxide
* contain hemoglobin, a pigment which carries oxygen to the tissues of the body
- iron in the hemoglobin
* depict new persons and they fade to blue as they get older.
* deteriorate dramatically when stored in the refrigerator.
* have a large nucleus
- characteristic appearances according to the specific deficiency
* lack mitochondria.
* lyse in homozygotes, producing the disease 'sickle cell anemia'.
* pick up oxygen in the lungs.
* transport oxygen to body cells and remove carbon dioxide.
### bifurcation points:
Green dot
* are bifurcation points
- links of particular interest to teachers
- signals detected four or more times
* is the equilibrium position.
* represent asteroids in the main belt between Mars and Jupiter
- events occuring less than a year ago, but more than a month ago | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### big-volume, cash business:
Casino gambling
* big-volume, cash business.
* cannibalizes local businesses.
* direct threat to Hawaii's image, economy and community.
* form of entertainment.
* is legal
- more of a reality in Nevada than anywhere else
- now legal in many states
- the worst of gaming industries<|endoftext|>### biggie:
Contraception
* More contraception makes fewer people
- means less unintended pregnancies which leads to fewer abortions
* belongs to the culture of death.
* can and does fail.
* case in point.
* costs money.
* dates back to times when life was simpler.
* device that is used against reproduction and the natural processes of the body.
* distorts the meaning of human sexuality.
* has a long and inventive history
- major influence on birth rates and fertility
* helps prevent pregnancies, safe sex prevents infections.
* is absolutely basic to women's health care
- all about choices - an example of an unnatural practice
- any method that reversably interferes with a couple's opportunity to conceive
- assumed, as is free love
- basic health care for women
- birth control
- certainly preferable to abortion as belated birth control
- immediate if the shot is given in the first five days of the menstrual cycle
- inherently sinful
- intrinsically evil, leading to degrading actions, such as abortion
- like wanting to raise funds for a good cause, but forging a cheque to do so
- necessary for women's equality
- part of Biblically responsible Christian stewardship
- pretty much trial and error
- recommended until one year after menses cease
- seen as the responsible way to act
* is the drugged mentality that leads to abortion and more
- keystone to the prevention of unintended pregnancy
- thus a perennial banner issue for the feminist movement
- vital to modern society, enabling women to take control of their childbearing
- wrong because it defies the unitive and procreative elements of sexual intercourse
* leads inevitably to abortion and abortion always leads to the destruction of society.
* life issue, primarily.
* means prevention of pregnancy.
* nips abortion in the bud.
* opposes chemistry too.
* pays, in a big way.
* poses a challenge to the pro- life movement.
* protects young people from pregnancy and disease.
* refers to preventing conception or fertilization.
* responsibility for BOTH people in the relationship.
* seems to work best when a woman and man choose a method and use it together.
* subtle but effective form of domestic violence.
* thus a 'trigger' for abortion.
* turns the sexual act against life, against the very power that makes it so meaningful.
* violates both meanings of the conjugal act
- the dignity of the human person in several ways
### biggie | contraception:
Surgical contraception
* Provides information about the types of surgical contraceptive methods.
* is contraception
- sterilisation
### bilateral, i:
Congenital cataract
* are bilateral, i.e. , present in both eyes
- ones that are present in the lens at birth
* can affect one eye only or both eyes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### billion dollar industry:
Advertising
* also allows creativity and mass communication across media.
* are capable of increase demand
- commercial enterprises
- located in newspapers
- marketing
- mediums
- part of promotions
* attempts to affect attitudes.
* billion dollar industry.
* business insurance.
* business of communication
- deadlines
* business' way of educating consumers about their products.
* causes people to smoke.
* changes the content of media.
* combination of science and art.
* comes in many colors, shapes and forms.
* communications method that avoids the privacy issue
- tool
* competitive activity enabling manufacturers to compete for market share.
* contributes to giving consumers more choices.
* cut-throat business where being competitive is the key.
* directly affects the strength of loyalty a consumer has for the favorite brand.
* even affects the way children play.
* form of propaganda.
* has a big influence on children's attitudes toward money and possessions.
* influences the quality of products.
* involves actual ads in print, video, or broadcast media
- buying television or radio air time, or space in a newspaper or magazine
* is about getting the word about a client's product out to consumers
- market communication, which is about communicating with people
* is also a major factor in the determination of who comes out on top
- the voice of free enterprise
- today's most popular offspring of art
- an ever-evolving, constantly growing industry
* is an important aspect of promoting a stallion
- facet of marketing
- part of marketing
- industry just like politics or entertainment
* is an integral part of selling automobiles
- the corporate expansion of the tobacco industry
- invention of the capitalist society
- another factor encouraging children to smoke
- antithetical to reasoning, and to teaching children how to reason
- as important to a business' health and growth as fertilizer is to a crop
- considered one of the mass media
- designed to sell products, services, and entertainments
- marketing's most visible form of communication
- measured by sales barometers
- most prominent in a free market economy
- news - about products and services
- one of many methods by which lawyers can inform the public about legal services
* is one of the basic tools of the retail business
- communication components of marketing, a part of the promotion mix
- growth industries of the German economy
- magical forms of making money, and it multiplies
- reasons people buy newspapers
- simplest forms of persuasion
- ways to make money
- traditional form of promotion
- placed within the marketing context of consumer behavior and market segmentation
- publicity
- receiving compensation for promotion of goods or services
- salesmanship
- seen as a major influence on the desires, needs and lifestyles of people today
- still the art of selling
* is the art of making whole lies out of half truths
- commercial basis of most media
- deliberate formulation of product advantages in a carefully selected medium
- engine that fuels the economy
- fine art of convincing people that debt is better than frustration
- first element of marketing
- force multiplier which extends the recruiter's presence in the marketplace
- foundation of independent, diverse and affordable media
- function of raising that brand's awareness
- greatest art form of the twentieth century
* is the lifeblood of newspapers
- television, newspaper, radio and the Internet
* is the lifeblood of the broadcasting business
- marriage of analysis and imagination, of marketing professional and artist
- price of free publicity
- primary method of competition in the tobacco industry
* is the promotion of any non-university product
- goods and services
- science of arresting human intelligence long enough to get money from it
- shop window of every corporate body
- traditional money earner for providers of free Internet access
- unifying voice of industry
- used by virtually every business to build sales volume
* is used to remind consumers about company products
- stimulate demand
- where most businesses make their largest marketing mistakes
* large part of marketing.
* major component of any company's success in a capitalist society
- corporate communications
- key to buying and selling a home
- vehicle for presenting images and forming attitudes
* mass communications tool appropriate for mass audience media.
* means of selling a product.
* medium that only works with repetition.
* message intended to solicit commerce for the benefit of the sender.
* miscellaneous collection of advertising work.
* new factor introduced in the environment of the Internet.
* often exploits women in the selling of products.
* Many people agree that they influence our identity and they have a huge impact on our life. They influence our identity by using things such as techniques, stereotypes and targeting our audience. Our personal identity is who we are and what things make us up such as occupation, beliefs, personality, self esteem, lifestyle, relationships, friends, how we look and what we wear. Advertisers use techniques to grab people's attention. For example, to make a burger look tasty in advertising, it may be painted with brown food colouring, sprayed with waterproofing to prevent it from going soggy and sesame seeds may be superglued in place. Advertising can bring new customers and more sales for the business. It can be expensive but can help make a business make more money.
* paid message distributed to a mass audience.
* part of every culture
- web page design
* pervasive part of today's society.
* plays a key role in shaping customer opinions and behavior
- major role in the tobacco market
- significant role in marketing products and services in the Nigerian market
- an important role in crisis management
* redistributes income rather than increasing income.
* service in which companies purchase and control the message being delivered.
* source of information about products.
* tool for communicating information and shaping markets.
* tries to generate desire by creating certain images that become consuming.
* uses people to move products.
* way for firms to avoid serious price competition - look at the auto industry
- of life for most competitive businesses
+ Advertising, Types of advertising
* Advertising happens in many different ways. Many products are advertised on television, although not all channels permit advertising. The advertisements usually appear during breaks between a television show. They are usually for products, other television shows or movies and are not normally much longer than 30 seconds. Some radio stations have audio advertisements that play between programmes.
* Advertising also takes place on websites. They are often still images or flash animations. The owner of the website will get money when a user clicks on the advertisement. Sometimes they will get a percentage of the money if they buy a product. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### billion dollar industry | advertising:
Advertorial
* are ads
- advertisements, which take the form of web site copy
* is an advertising
### billion dollar industry | advertising | circular:
Circular dichroism
* arises from the electronic transitions of chiral compounds.
* is obtained only within absorption bands
- the difference in the absorption of left and right circularly polarized light
- useful in the differentiation of geometric and optical isomers
Commercial
* are ads
- commercial advertisements
- located in television
* cause a desire to eats.
Commercial advertising
* is about psychological manipulation
- an accepted use of the Internet
* refers to business sales or dealer sales.<|endoftext|>### billion dollar industry | advertising | commercial:
Commercial fishing
* Includes trawling vessels and activities and catches.
* are fishing
- work
* causes pollution from fuel and the miles of gill-nets left trailing in the sea.
* dead or dying industry on the coast.
* is also a growing part of the state's economy
- an important industry in Florida
- an important but declining industry
- banned or heavily restricted on some of the world's richest fishing grounds
- economically significant in California, especially in certain coastal cities
- important along the Gulf Coast
* is one of our nation's most hazardous industries
- the most important human impacts on the marine benthic environment
- organised around target species and has a large impact on their populations
- ranked as one of the deadliest professions in the world
* major industry, as is tourism.
* vital contributer to the Yucatan economy.
+ Dillingham, Alaska: Cities in Alaska
* Dillingham was once known as the Pacific salmon capital of the world. Commercial fishing is an important part of the local economy.
Commercial zone
* are areas dedicated for businesses.
* exist throughout the United States.
Infomercial
* are advertisements
- commercials
- lengthy television presentations designed to sell a single product or concept
- the worst possible source of information about products
* come from a different part of the mercantile world.
* rely heavily on consumer testimonials to sell products and services.<|endoftext|>### billion dollar industry | advertising:
Direct mail
* game of numbers.
* is ads.
- effective, low-cost medium of advertising available to small businesses
- direct marketing
- niche marketing
* is the most cost-effective method of contacting the largest number of people quickly
- effective, affordable means of advertising for businesses of all sizes
- second largest form of advertising in America
* marketing medium that is cost effective for any size business.
* medium designed to generate an immediate response.
* multi-billion dollar a year business.
* represents a direct communication between the producer and the customer.
Effective advertising
* is geared toward helping customers buy and helping marketers sell
- the power of persuasion
* occurs when the consumer receives a message enough times to change behavior.
False advertising
* can be a problem with resorts and getaways
- lead to a large recovery for a group of deceived consumers
* is often the cause of consumer complaints.
* occurs when a misleading statement about a product or service deceives the public.
Flyer
* are located in conferences
- word documents saved in rich text format
* have characters.
* is an advertising
* tend to love to fly, so they approach their birds with anticipation and a light heart.
Institutional advertising
* focuses on the name and prestige of a company
- organization, generating a particular image or concept
* is advertising designed to enhance a firm's image or reputation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### billion dollar industry | advertising:
Internet advertising
* Internet Advertising is the cheapest way to reach millions of people.
* fraction of the cost of more traditional forms of media.
* is the fastest growing advertising media on the planet
- market for advertising in the world
- most cost effective way to advertise
- today's electronic billboard and the way of the future
- wave of the future
* lopsided business.
Mobile advertising
* is method of advertising via mobile phones or other mobile devices like tablets
* ' is very similar to online or internet advertising. Mobile advertising is method of advertising via mobile phones or other mobile devices like tablets
Newspaper ad
* are ads.
* can also counter the publicity that hate groups attract.
* is an advertising
### billion dollar industry | advertising | newspaper advertisement:
Classified
* Buy and sell kids' toys, furniture and books
- or sell parts and trucks
* are located in newspapers
- part of newspapers
* newspaper advertisement
Online advertising
* is an idea whose time is coming
- important part of today's e-commerce in order to attract other businesses
- just as important as print advertising in today's world
- most successful when branding and interactivity go hand in hand
- one of the best ways to target a specific group of customers
- the fastest growing commercial sector of the Internet
* works because it reaches the online audience in their medium.
* works, especially for brand building.
Television advertising
* changes attitudes about drinking.
* engages children as passive consumers who watch and listen.
* has a significant effect on increasing adolescent drinking.
* is THE best form of advertising that ANY company can do.
* sells products by exploiting lifestyles, wishes and desires.
Tobacco advertising
* induces children to initiate tobacco use.
* influences the decisions of young people regarding tobacco use.
* is restricted from actually showing people smoking.
* plays a central role in persuading young people to smoke.
### billion-dollar industry:
Golf equipment
* billion-dollar industry.
* is sports equipment.
### billion-dollar industry | golf equipment:
Golf cart
* are mode of transportation to beach and tennis
- off-highway vehicles
- the only means of ground transportation
* is golf equipment
Golf club
* Some golf clubs have clubs for hire
- thin shafts
* are clubs
- made of metal
* tend to be expensive.
Binary ammonia
* Ammonia binary compound
* Ammonia is bases
- chemical compounds
- inorganic compounds
- located in cabinets
- solutions
- toxic substances
* More ammonia is lost into the air when the manure is spread onto fields.
### binary ammonia:
Ammonia toxicity
* can occur.
* is believed to be a cause of otherwise unexplained losses in fish hatcheries
- one of the greatest challenges with rotifer production
* natural by-product of normal protein synthesis.
Ammonium ion
* are a toxic waste product of metabolism in animals
- formed in the breakdown of amino acids
* contain nitrogen and hydrogen.
* help keep free nucleotides in solution.
* is ammonia | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### binary ammonia:
Anhydrous ammonia
* Some anhydrous ammonia comes up river on pressurized barges.
* can be dangerous to use.
* can cause devastating eye burns
- severe burns upon contact
- severely dessicate corn leaves
* causes severe burns when it comes in contact with skin.
* chemical used in the production of methamphetamine.
* colorless gas or liquid chemical which is highly toxic to human beings
- with a distinctive odor
* comes out of nurse tanks as a combination of vapor and liquid.
* common liquid fertilizer often used on cotton.
* freezes on contact at room temperature.
* high-pressure liquid that becomes a gas at atmospheric pressure.
* hydroscopic compound, which means it seeks out moisture
* is added shortly thereafter, producing chloramine.
* is also corrosive and can burn the skin and eyes
- potentially toxic to workers and corrodes silage-handling equipment
- an effective preservative for grasses
* is an extremely dangerous agricultural product
- hazardous substance used in refrigeration systems
- important source of nitrogen fertilizer for crops
- applied at the rate of sixty pounds per ton
* is both a fertilizer and feedstock for production of other nitrogen products
- dangerous and inexpensive
- caustic, and therefore also can burn
- colorless, liquefied gas under pressure
- combined with oxygen, in the presence of a catalyst, to make nitrous oxide
- dry or pure undiluted ammonia
- one of several nitrogen fertilizer products
* is one of the ingredients used to make methamphetamine
- most widely used sources of nitrogen
- oldest commercial refrigerants known
- pure substances
- stored and transported in the liquid form in pressurized containers
- the form used primarily in refrigeration and agriculture
* is the most intense
- widely used source of N for direct application in the United States
- source of nearly all nitrogen fertilizer made in the United States
* is used as an agricultural fertilizer and industrial refrigerant
- widely and in large quantities for a variety of purposes
- very effective
* nitrogen liberating fertilizer.
* strong alkali that can cause painful skin burns.
* toxic gas.
Atmospheric ammonia
* contributes to formation of complex sulfates, which cause smog and acid rain.
* reacts with the gases produced by car exhaust and forms particulate nitrate.
Excess ammonia
* cross the ruminal wall and is transported to the liver.
* is absorbed by the blood and passed in the urine as urea.
Binary calcium carbide
* Calcium carbide binary compound
* Calcium carbide is carbide
- chemical compounds
- manufactured by heating lime with coke
* Calcium carbide reacts with water to form acetylene
- form lime and acetylene, an explosive gas
Binary common salt
* Common salt binary compound
* Common salt is more valuable to give to the livestock and the preserving of foods
- the basis of intravenous saline solutions
* Common salt is used as a preservative for fish, meat, amla, raw mangoes and tamarind
- to prevent the growth of micro-organisms
Binary compound
* Most binary compounds are stable to heat.
* are composed of two elements only
- substances that contain two elements
### binary concept:
Truth value
* are equally important to the values of religious satisfaction.
* binary concept.
### binary data:
Image file
* are binary data
- time series representations of data files
* eat up a large amount of disk space.
* is an unsigned byte array file of the given dimensions.
* signed long integer array file of the given dimensions
- short integer array file of the given dimensions
* unsigned short integer array file of the given dimensions. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### binary digits:
Machine code
* is binary digits
- code
- computer code
- considered the first generation of programming languages
- source code
- what assemble code
* refers to the program instructions in hexadecimal form.
* An instruction tells the computer to do one thing. The operands are usually memory addresses. An instruction set list of the opcodes used in a computer. Machine code is what assemble code. Other programming languages are compiled to or interpreted as.
+ Binary numeral system, History: Numbers
* Binary was invented by many people but the modern binary number system is credited to Gottfried Leibniz in 1679, a German mathematician. Machine code is binary digits.
Binary hydride
* Hydride binary compound
* Hydrides are alloys containing nickel, rare-earth metals, aluminum and manganese
- react with water, so there are no hydrides found in nature
### binary hydride:
Metal hydride
* Some metal hydrides can store even more volume than liquid hydrogen.
* are a safe mobile storage method
- heavy, expensive, and release heat during the hydrogen absorption process
- intermetallic alloys that, when cooled, absorb hydrogen gas into a solid form
* provide a means for safe, high-volume density hydrogen energy storage.<|endoftext|>Binary sodium chloride
* Most sodium chloride conducts electricity.
* Sodium chloride binary compound
* Sodium chloride can cause eye and skin irritation if used in too high concentrations
- partially dry an organic phase when used as a concentrated brine wash
- comes from underground deposits sea water, brine
- cube
- does precisely nothing to pH and hardness
* Sodium chloride is added to the ice to lower the freezing point of the ice
- also very soluble
- always sodium chloride
- an electrolyte
* Sodium chloride is an example of a crystalline solid
- a strong electrolyte
- an antacid
- an ionic crystal
- ideal encapsulation material
* Sodium chloride is an ionic compound, that is the components are present as ions
- basic table salt
- by far the most common salt that exists naturally on the Earth
- called an ionic compound
- chemical compounds
* Sodium chloride is common salt
- table salt which is important in animal nutrition
- commonly deficient in swine rations
- formed by the combination of sodium and chlorine
- important for animal nutrition
- inorganic compounds
- mined in a similar manner
- nutrients
- odorless but has a characteristic taste
- only one of more than six million known compounds
- relatively inexpensive, but it can burn plants and corrode metal and concrete
- soluble in water and very slightly soluble in ethanol
* Sodium chloride is the chemical name for common table salt
- most common chlorine ore
- salt most commonly used to season food
- same in the U.S. as it is in China
* Sodium chloride is used because it is cheap and easy to obtain in large quantities
- for three reasons
- in veterinary medicine as emesis causing agent
- relatively inexpensive salt compared to calcium chloride
- synthetic form of salt - table salt
* Some sodium chloride exists as crystal.
+ 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.
+ Chlorine, Occurrence: Chemical elements :: Halogens
* Chlorine is not found as an element. Sodium chloride is the most common chlorine ore. There are some organic compounds that have chlorine in them, too.
+ Crystal structure: Chemistry :: Minerals
* The 'crystal structure' of a chemical is the shape of the crystal. There are several shapes of crystals. Sodium chloride is a cube. Copper sulfate is triclinic. Most things, even metals, have crystal structures. Some crystals fit more atoms in them than others. These crystals weigh more. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### bio-engineered food:
Transgenic crop
* are bio-engineered food
- environmentally friendly
- under development that resist pests and insects
* can provide important environmental benefits.
* contain genes from viruses, bacteria, animals and other plants.
* gain weight.
* have great potential in animal health, neutraceuticals, and pharmaceuticals.
### bioassay:
Immunoassay
* are highly specific but are less sensitive.
* is bioassay.
* offer the potential of rapid, inexpensive, sensitive and specific detection methods.
* use antibodies to detect the presence of drugs.<|endoftext|>### bioassay:
Pregnancy test
* Most pregnancy tests depend on the process of agglutination.
* Some pregnancy tests detect hormones
- use antibodies
* are bioassay
- medical tests
- most accurate if they are done after a menstrual period is missed
* based on blood samples are more sensitive than urine tests.
* can be either urine tests or blood tests.
* detect increased levels of human chorionic gonadotropin.
* identify pregnancy by looking for hCG in the urine or blood.
* measure the amount of hCG in the urine.
* take at least ten days to detect a pregnancy.
Radioimmunoassay
* greatly reduce the number of animals needed.
* is bioassay
### biochemical:
Physical addiction
* is biochemical.
* is when a person's body actually becomes dependent on a drug
* occurs when a chemical becomes essential for the body or metabolism to function. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biological brain disease:
Alcoholism
* IS a chemical, physical addiction to alcohol
- treatable and alcoholics can live full, productive lives without ever drinking again
* affects all socio-professional classes
- almost every part of the body
- both males and females of all ages and every ethnic culture
- families
- five elderly men for every one woman
- many families
- nearly every family on the reservation
- one out of three American families
- the entire family
* also depresses the activity of the enzymes
- increases the risk of liver and digestive disease, certain cancers, and suicide
- interferes with the person's experience of personal and emotional growth
- leads to other diseases such a liver failure
* always starts with a single drink.
* assaults sanity by depleting key antidepressant chemicals in the brain.
* biological brain disease.
* brain disease, and the brain is still a frontier for biological research.
* can also cause bone and muscle weakness
- lead to vitamin K deficiency
- trigger a host of personal problems
* can be a cause of iron deficient anemia
- progressive and fatal psychological and physical disorder
- easily misunderstood
- begin as a subtle shift from social drinking to a dependence on alcohol
* can cause intrauterine-growth retardation
- various medical and psychiatric conditions or increase their severity
- certainly cause psychological problems
* can develop as early as adolescence and continue in older age groups
- starting in adolescence and continuing into older age groups
- kill the alcohlic
- mask an underlying depression
- result in folic acid deficiency
- run in one's family and make a person much more prone to addiction than others
- skip a generation
- tear a family apart
* causes a similar peripheral neuropathy
- stigmas
* ceases to exist when the alcoholic volitionally chooses to stop drinking.
* certifiable and often incurable disease.
* chronic disease characterized by repeated and uncontrollable drinking of alcohol.
* chronic disease of the brain that is often fatal
- that can cause emotional and social problems
- illness characterized by remissions and exacerbations
* chronic illness characterized by the habitual consumption of alcohol
- intake of alcohol
- where alcohol is habitually consumed
- which manifests itself as a disorder of behavior
- medical disease that can cause emotional and social problems
- progressive illness
* chronic, incurable, progressive and fatal illness.
* chronic, progressive and sometimes fatal disease
- progressive, relapsing brain disease
- relapsing disease
* common predisposing factor.
* complex disease
- disorder with many different causes and outcomes
* condition with a social stigma.
* continues to be a rampant undetected treatable disorder in the elderly.
* contributes to crime, violence, spousal abuse, and child neglect
- domestic violence, with sometimes fatal beatings
* costs the community millions of dollars every year.
* cuts across all social, racial and economic lines.
* demands the focus and attention be placed on the drinking alcoholic.
* desvastating and deadly illness.
* disease and it is treatable.
* disease in which a person has an overwhelming desire to drink alcoholic beverages
- the affected individual is addicted to alcohol
* disease of isolation, so healing together offers the best results
* disease that can be treated
- start with a first drink
- happens irrespective of age, class, socio-economic status, etc
- often tears apart families
- tends to develop over time and progress through stages
* disease which affects memory and neurochemical pathways in the brain
- needs the most expert medical care
- often begins during the teen-age years
- with many dimensions
* disease, kind of like diabetes or high blood pressure.
* disease-just like diabetes or high blood pressure.
* does nothonor the value of others
- run along family lines
- tend to run in families
* erodes an individual's ability to function, physically, emotionally, and spirituality.
* exacerbates hyperglycemia
- the difficulties of many families
* factor in domestic violence and child abuse which can both lead to homelessness.
* familial illness.
* family disease
- problem and recovery family struggle
* favours scurvy and anaemia.
* form of chemical dependency.
* has NO social boundaries such as status, race, religion, or sex.
* has a good recovery rate with treatment with the support of the loved ones
- greater impact, but receives the least public funding, of any major health issue
- way of repeating itself through generations
- clear, definable symptoms, like other diseases
- nothing to do with irresistible impulses or uncontrollable urges
- physical, social, emotional and behavioral effects
- physiological factors, genetically determined
- the characteristics of a disease
* horrible disease that affects many people.
* increases following a severe economic depression.
* is about four times more common in men than in women
- adisease
* is also a disease that can be acquired over a long period of time
- rife
- so widespread, and can ruin somebody's career at any age
- an acceptable, even socially beneficial, disease for an active geologist
* is an addiction disease, the inability to control one's alcohol consumption
- addiction, and addiction disease, like cancer
- epidemic in America that affects the lives of many
- equal opportunity disease
- equal-opportunity disease that knows no bounds
- illness that consumes entire families
* is an illness, and as such, can be effectively treated
- just like asthma or diabetes
- older word that refers to a clinical syndrome
- overwhelming desire to drink alcohol even though it is causing harm
- another leading cause of cirrhosis and liver cancer
- called a family disease because it adversely affects everyone around the alcoholic
* is caused all groups of people
- by genetics, through childhood experiences and as a learned behavior
* is characterized by craving, uncontrolled drinking, tolerance and physical dependence
- denial
- chronic, which means it continues for a long time
- common because of mindnumbing rigidities, regimentation and hopelessness
* is considered a disease
- to be a disability
- discussed as it affects the individual and the family
- drug addiction
- especially likely when individuals grow up with one or more alcoholic parents
- frequently fatal
- hereditary and certain people have a genetic predisposition to alcoholism
- impaired social function and altered health secondary to excess alcohol intake
- impulsive behaviour
* is indeed a most costly burden on the whole society
- problem towards teens
- irreversible
- just one of many causes of cirrhosis
- known to compromise the immune system
- learned inadequate responses to life's problems
* is more prevalent in disadvantaged populations
- than double civilian levels
- nothing to be shamed of because it is genetic
- often a missed diagnosis requiring a team approach
* is one of our most lethal illnesses-certainly our most misunderstood
- the major causes of nutritional deficiency in the United States
* is one of the most common illnesses seen by doctors
- psychiatric disorders in Canada, and one of the most costly
- prevalent and dangerous addictions in the world
- serious problems in the United States today
- oldest and most widespread diseases in Russia
- saddest diseases around
- only one of many health and social problems associated with alcohol use
- our most untreated treatable disease
- particularly less likely to be recognized in elderly women
- possibly a risk factor in the etiology of the disease
- rampant among the desperate and the poor
- recognized as a major health problem
- regarded as disabling if it substantially limits a major life activity
- related to pessimism and vice versa
- serious at any age
- something that can be hidden or easy to spot
- still a very 'subliminal' disease, for the sufferer and loved ones
- the dependence on, or addiction to, alcohol
* is the disease in which a person is addicted to alcohol
- produced by the repeated misuse of ethyl alcohol
- nation's number one health problem
- ninth leading cause of death in the United States
- number one drug problem in the United States
* is the primary cause of cirrhosis
- chemical causing addictive disease in our country
- second ranking disease in the United States today
- thought of as a family disease because it affects everyone in the family
- truly a family disease
- under diagnosed and under treated in most primary caresettings
- underrecognized late in life
- underrecognized, underdiagnosed, and underreported
- viewed as the number one health and social problem in the Black community
- widespread and treatable
* kills people.
* knows no racial, social economic or sexual barriers.
* leads to times of withdrawal and low self esteem.
* learned behavior, because no one makes a person drink alcohol.
* lives for itself and itself alone.
* loves gray areas.
* major health problem here in the United States
- problem as well as drug addiction
- social and medical problem in the United States and in most of the world
- social, economic, and public health problem
* means addiction to alcohol.
* mental and physical disease.
* moral weakness.
* often reduces a person's life expectancy by around ten years.
* only affects men.
* painful physical addiction every bit as powerful as the strongest narcotic.
* permanent condition.
* physical addiction, but it is also a very serious sin.
* presents differently in different people.
* primary and chronic disease that families are ashamed about and deny.
* problem in Poland
- that never goes away, until death
* progressive and fatal disease.
* progressive disease that only gets worse by drinking irresponsibly
- if untreated
* progressive disease, meaning it can be caused by routine consumption
- gets worse with time
* progressive illness involving the excessive, inappropriate use of alcohol
- that gets worse as drinking continues
* relative contraindication.
* remains a scourge in the Native American world.
* results in loss of control.
* risk factor for nutritional deficiency
* ruins the individual physically and emotionally because of the dependency.
* runs in families.
* screws children up.
* self inflicted disease.
* serious and widespread disease
- social and health problem with no pharmacologic solutions on sight
* starts with that first drink.
* stems from genetic, environmental, and psychosocial factors.
* takes a toll on personal finances, health, social relationships and families.
* tends to beggary, and nearly all beggars, thieves and tramps are given to drink.
* term commonly used to describe the medical disorder of alcohol dependence.
* terrible disease that ruins lives.
* travisty and tradgedy.
* treatable disease that one can recover from with treatment
- responds to intervention and treatment
* type of drug addiction.
* type of drug dependence that is both psychological and physical
- with both physical and psychological indications
* usually develops over a period of years
- slowly, and can happen at any age
- has strong negative effects on marital relationships.
* ' is the medical condition of people who often drink too much alcohol. Some people who suffer from alcoholism feel that they have to drink alcohol, even when it causes health and social problems. Alcoholism means addiction to alcohol. People who suffer from it are called 'alcoholics'. Very often, other interests disappear. Many alcoholics do not think they have a problem with drinking alcohol. With time, they better support bigger quantities, and their personality changes.
* condition with a social stigma. As a result, people suffering from it, avoid being diagnosed or treated, as this may be shameful, or have social consequences. The evaluation responses to a group of standardized questioning common method for diagnosing alcoholism. These can be used to identify harmful drinking patterns, including alcoholism. In general, problem drinking is considered alcoholism when the person continues to drink despite experiencing social or health problems caused by drinking
* very serious disease that affects a large number of people.
* weakens and destroys the body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biological brain disease | alcoholism:
Chronic alcoholism
* can also cause weakening of the blood vessels that cause a hemorrhagic stroke
- impair mental faculties, particularly memory for recent events
- be cause for significant bone loss
* damages the brain, liver, heart, and other organs.
* frequent cause of low calcium and magnesium levels.
* impairs the sexual functioning due to many causes.
* increases the induction dose of propofol in humans.
* is associated with ovulatory failure, early menopause and menstrual disturbances.
* leads to liver disease.
* occurs when there are both physical and psychological addictions.
### biological disease:
Bipolar illness
* biological disease.
* can cause serious problems for the sufforer and family members.
* combination of intense, energetic highs and extreme lows.
* complex array of symptoms, often missed or misdiagnosed.
* has different forms and everyone responds to treatment differently.
* is also a significant risk factor for suicide
- systemic, genetic, lifelong and dangerous
- treatable<|endoftext|>### biological necessity:
Procreation
* ProCreation is an artificial life simulator.
* biological necessity.
* is accomplished by the intimate interaction of one male and one female entity
- bound up with creation
- certainly possible in the destructive sexual acts of incest and rape
- seen as the most important role of a woman in marriage
- the most basic function of all living things
* is the only moral purpose of intercourse
- reason for sex in marriage
* natural phenomenon indeed, but within specific limits.
* naturally generates an adult.
* only occurs when two organisms are in adjacent spaces.
* takes many forms and employs seemingly endless variety among species.
* uniquely human process.
### biological necessity | procreation:
Miscegenation
* appears to have been a popular activity of all men throughout all ages.
* are reproduction.
* is procreation
* leads to mixed marriages and mixed marriages lead to mongrelization of the human race.
Biological organism
* Most biological organisms have health.
* behave differently under different conditions.
* use many mechanisms of change.
### biological phenomenon:
Psychopathology
* Psychopathologies are adaptive mechanisms.
* biological phenomenon.
* generally results from the denial, frustration or twisting of our essential nature.
* has an ambiguous, though strategic position in anger.
* is less a label than an excessive or inhibited aspect of natural functioning
- the study of the nature and development of mental disorders
- very complex | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biological research:
Cloning
* Learn what cloning is and how it began.
* abolishes the genetic difference between parent and child.
* allows an infertile man to have a genetically related child
- multicolour sorcerers to split down into two or three one colour sorcerers
- scientists to use the chromosomes they what for cell production
- the continuation of species facing extinction
* already exists with animals.
* also brings invaluable ways of reproduction
- fall under the topic of reproductive technologies
- has the power to cure infertility
- provides better research capabilities for finding cures to many diseases
* also reduces the amount of time needed for breeding
- needed for reproduction
* are biological research
- human activities
* can allow scientists to study cures for sickness
- also benefit in the area of transgenics
- be a way for humans to make up for their intrusion with nature
- convert old cells into young cells
- even put an end to any sibling rivalry
* can help carriers of genetic defects to have healthy children
- replenish a herd of animals within a very short time period
- mean a couple of different things
- only work when the recipient egg somehow resets the donor DNA to an embryonic state
* case in point.
* change in genetics.
* comes from insecurity and from being centered on public opinion.
* concept, which arouses strong reactions.
* controversial issue for people.
* creates a genetically identical copy of an animal or plant
- life from life
- ordinary children who grow up to be unique individuals
* denial of death.
* entails the production, rather than the creation, of a child.
* exceeds the limits of the delegated dominions given to the human race.
* exists in nature in some animal species and is referred to as parthenogenesis.
* first step to making human-ready pigs.
* form of asexual production at the cellular level.
* fundamental technique used in many labs.
* gives the un-reborn the right to have a second chance at life.
* goes against most religious beliefs, teachings, and values.
* has a huge potential in providing human replacement parts for the future
- place in conservation
- many benefits for the human race
- some value for plant and animal husbandry
- the potential to change the world for infertile couples almost overnight
- to do with more than simple replication
* implicates the destruction of manipulated embryos.
* involves producing a genetic twin from a single cell, for example a skin cell
- genetic copies
* involves the deliberate duplication of the genome of an existing person
- placing of a somatic cell nucleus into an oocyte
- propagation of DNA fragments in a foreign host
- use of two cells, an unfertilized egg, the recipient
* is accomplished through a process called nuclear transfer.
* is an affront to human dignity
- artificial generation of life and can only hinder true freedom
- attempt to copy life or to reproduce life
- insult to humanity
- another way of referring to vegetative reproduction
- as cloning does
- asexual reproduction
- at odds with the traditional concept of family
- banned because of the safety of the baby
- based on a process called nuclear transfer
* is based on nuclear transfer, involving the use of two cells
- which involves the use of two cells
- basically the asexual reproduction of identical copies of genes and organisms
- beneficial to humanity
- comparable in safety to a number of other medical procedures
- considered by many to be both unethical and immoral
- dangerous
- described as taking the cell of something and making an identical copy of it
- done through a process of nuclear transfer
- essential to all biotechnology futures
- for people with worse problems than blocked or cut tubes
- illegal in England
* is important for biotech companies
- in narrowleaf cottonwood gallery maintenance
* is just another method of giving birth
- the opposite
- leagal
- less common in animals although identical twins are human clones
* is like copying
- nuclear energy
- more accurate in an embryo than microinjection
- much like giving birth
- natural to some animals , but rare in mammals
- no exception because it aids the creation of life
- now a scientific possibility
- one method discussed as an option for bringing extinct species back
* is one of the hottest, ethical topics in controversy in today s society
- most controversial areas of contemporary science
- practiced by the rock covering that spreads as individuals simply pull in two
- promoted by some cytokines and inhibited by others
- radically different in another way
- seen as a possible way to aid some people who have severe medical problems
* is simply reproduction without sex
- the process of making an identical, yet time delayed, replica
- successful only if the parent was well adapted to the present environment
* is the answer to many medical questions, and to a better quality of life
- artificial reproduction of an organism that is an exact duplicate of the original
- attempt to replicate the unlovable out of the ruins of lovelessness
* is the creation of a genetically identical creature from the DNA of an other
- genetically identical copies of a single parent cell or organism
- doubling of a human or animal
- genetically identical duplication of an organism through asexual reproduction
- latest example of the quest for domination over humanity
- making of an exact copy of an organism
* is the process in which multiple identical copies of an entire entity are made
- of copying one part of a picture to another
* is the process of creating an identical copy of an original organism or thing
- identical individuals
- genetically duplicating an individual
* is the process of making a genetically identical organism through nonsexual means
- an exact genetic copy of someone or something
- replicating an identical gene, cell, or organism from a single ancestor
* is the production of a genetically identical organism from the same individual organism
- an exact copy of a cell, any other living part, or a complete organism
- recreation of a human being in isolation
- replication of an existing genome, and it s simply a copy
- sincerest form of flattery
* is the ultimate dehumanizing of human reproduction
- depersonalizing of human reproduction
* is the way amoebas reproduce
- to make many copies of the original
- unnatural
- used to produce new individuals that are useful in farming and agriculture
- very useful and very important to human beings
* is, in fact, the perfect reproductive technology for dead people.
* laboratory procedure of duplicating cells.
* lacks respect in human dignity.
* legitimate treatment of infertility.
* means copying.
* moral problem.
* necessary step in human technological development.
* new form of eugenics and results in the exercise of control over other s lives
- technology in biology
* occurs naturally all of the time
- and is widespread in both animals and plants
- in many species on earth, including humans
* offers a promising future in medical treatments
- potential medical benefits, for example, such as organ renewal
* one of the major breakthroughs in the twentieth century.
* only makes a genetic copy of the cell with the engineered genetic sequence.
* part of genetic engineering.
* poses a hugely misunderstood and underestimated threat to humans.
* prevents society from advancing.
* process for creating a genetic twin of an individual
- of producing clones
- that creates a genetic duplicate of an individual
- used to obtain an identical organism asexually
* produces genetically identical offspring, either male or female.
* provides a means for lesbians to have children as a couple
- method of obtaining information without the delay of progeny testing
* refers to any attempt to produce a genetically identical copy of another organism
- the production of an identical genetic copy
* represents a way to control the future through our genetically altered children
- the height of genetic reductionism and genetic determinism
* scientist's dream that becomes more of a reality everyday.
* sidesteps the normal process of conception.
* takes the genetic material of an existing person and uses it as the basis of a new person.
* technique that is partly successful in frogs.
* technique, an instrument.
* theoretically can pre serve a genotype forever.
* threatens identity and individuality.
* tool and, as such, is good or bad according to the use it is put to by human beings.
* transforms the cloned individual from a subject into an object of production.
* turns procreation into manufacture.
* uses a human being as a means to an end.
* violates the religious values of many religions.
* way of producing a genetic twin of an organism, without sexual reproduction.
* works somewhat for embryonic cell cultures.
+ Clone: Genetics :: Cell biology :: Developmental biology
* Cloning is natural to some animals, but rare in mammals. An exception is the Nine-banded armadillo, which normally gives birth to identical quadruplets. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biological research | cloning:
Animal cloning
* common practice.
* has many applications.
* is extremely inefficient.
* lucrative business.
* natural extension of the genetic engineering techniques now being developed.
* reality today.
Gene cloning
* is the process of isolating and making copies of a chromosome.
* permits direct detection of gene mutations.
* requires a basic knowledge of the gene's sequence, or flanking sequences.<|endoftext|>### biological research | cloning:
Human cloning
* All human cloning blatant denial of human dignity.
* bomb that can potentially detonate in our faces.
* can offer infertile people a higher chance of success
- refer to either reproductive or therapeutic cloning
* carries with it the increased potential for abuse, human exploitation.
* crime against human dignity and humanity.
* deep invasion of human parenthood.
* falls conceptually between two other technologies.
* form of playing god since it interferes with the natural order of creation.
* goes against the dignity and sanctity of each individual person.
* has potential to save lives and make better the quality of life of future generations.
* is about generations being genetically like each other
- amongst the most controversial forms of the practice
- an inherent violation of human dignity
- arguably the most sensational aspect of gene manipulation
- divided into two categories that are approached differently in terms of policy
- even more controversial than animal cloning
- illegal in Australia
- just a meter of time
- most notably one of the most controversial issues in medical science
- now possible
- overhyped
- the next step in science, but it has raised many ethical and scientific questions
* is unethical and immoral
- because it upsets the balance of nature
- within reach and the carbon-silicon boundary has begun to evaporate
* is, at present, illegal across the world.
* poses a huge risk to society and nature.
* possibility in playing a big role in our future.
* produces a human embryo.
* represents a dangerous and unethical use of technology.
* technique violating human dignity protected by the Constitution.
* very important subject that science needs to address.
* violates every moral principle.
Molecular cloning
* means taking a gene, a piece of DNA, out of the genome and growing it in bacteria.
* refers to the process of making multiple copies of a defined DNA sequence.
Positional cloning
* is used to isolate the genes for molecular analyses.
* leads to isolation of genes for a number of human diseases.
Reproductive cloning
* are clonings.
* is expensive and highly inefficient
- used to produce any particular type of animal desired<|endoftext|>### biological research | cloning:
Therapeutic cloning
* are clonings.
* has the potential to benefit vast numbers of people.
* involves embryonic stem cells
- growing tissue for patients that is genetically identical to their own
- the use of two separate new technological possibilities
* is an additional affront to human dignity
- nuclear transplantation
- the process by which a person's DNA is used to grow an embryonic clone
* means killing.
* offers the possibility of overcoming the problem of transplant tissue rejection.
* refers to the cloning of stem cells from human embryos.
### biologically female:
Lesbian woman
* Most lesbian women have a female gender identity.
+ Gender identity, Examples of transgender people: Sociology
* A lesbian woman is biologically female. Most lesbian women have a female gender identity. Some lesbian women may have some male gender roles. She may dress in masculine clothes, cut her hair short, and work in a job that men usually have. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Bioluminescent organism
* Most bioluminescent organisms are found in the ocean.
* are a target for many areas of research.
* produce light through chemical reactions in their bodies.
+ Bioluminescence, Biotechnology: Physiology :: Biochemistry :: Light sources
* Bioluminescent organisms are a target for many areas of research. Luciferase systems are widely used in the field of genetic engineering. Luciferin' can be added to molecules and cells to make them visible under the microscope.<|endoftext|>Biome
* All biomes are ecosystems, but ecosystems can be larger or smaller than biomes.
* Every biome is home to a number of ecosystems.
* Most biomes are determined by their characteristic weather pattern or climate.
* are a crude way of classifying the ecosystems of the world
- group of living things made up to be a society
- means of classifying vegetation into distinct groups, at a very broad scale
- broad categories of natural plant communities
- broken down into ecosystems
- characterized by consistent plant forms and are found over a large climatic area
- classification schemes which define biomes using climatic parameters
* are defined by climate regimes and biogeography
- factors such as plant structures, leaf types, plant spacing, and climate
- ecosystems that make up the land
* are global ecosystems
- patterns of plants and animals and the communities they live in
* are large areas of land that have a certian climate, ecostem, and appearance
- expanses of the earth's surface covered by plants with a similar growth form
* are large geographic areas that have the same climate and life forms
- regions containing distinctive plant communities
- sections of land, sea, or atmosphere
- vegetational subdivisions including all animals and other organisms
- major types of vegetation that are characteristic of broad geographic systems
- named in more than one way
- natural things
- products of climates, soil types, chance, and history
* are regions in minecraft with specific properties, like forests, oceans or tundras
- of similar climate and dominant plant types
- simply environments that have some things in common
- subdivided into associations made up of societies
* are the largest geographical biotic community division
- recognizable subdivision of terrestrial ecosystems
* are the major regional groupings of plants and animals discernible at a global scale
- type of ecological communities
- things that live in particular habitats
- world's major habitats
* move as the climate changes.
* play a crucial role in sustaining life on earth.
* refer to the different types of areas that a Terraria world can contain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biome:
Desert
* All deserts have great temperature variation
- very little rain
* Many deserts are rocky with scattered plants and shrubs
- can quickly get cold once the sun sets
* Many deserts have mild winters, while others have freezing temperatures and snow
- no drain age to a river, lake, or ocean
* Most deserts are cold at night
- hot in the day and cold at night
- located within two belts near the equator
- semi-arid , arid or hyperarid , with the exception of Antarctica
- very hot, but cold deserts also exist
- have cacti
- occur in regions that typically have high atmospheric pressure
* Some deserts are among the planet's last remaining areas of total wilderness
- hot while others are cold
- in the Mountains
- near oceans
- can be cold for most of the year
- extend to the seashore
* Some deserts form prairie regions
* Some deserts have a more delicate ecosystem than the most intricate rain forest
- pie crust
- color patterns
- features
* Some deserts have lots of cactus
- trees
- low productivity
- mountains
- no rain for intervals of several years
- provide water
- receive only three or four inches of rain a year
- support animals
* also have different species of plants from coastal sage scrub.
* are also fragile environments
- hard on plants
- among the most inhospitable environments for animal life
* are areas of light rainfall with little or no plant or animal life
- where evaporation exceeds rainfall
- arid environments
- at the top of the wilderness list for danger and death
- biomes that receive very little rain
* are characterized by their limited precipitation
- in an overall lack of water
- consequences
* are defined by the amount of rainfall
- their dryness
- dries
- dry and hot
- dry, hot places
- extreme
- extremely dry areas that are hot during the day and often cool at night
- formed in several ways
- generally barren with little vegetation or animal life
- hard places for mammals to live
- hot, dry places
- indeed the most inhospitable of all places to live
- interesting in satellite imagery because they can look like clouds or snow
- light-coloured
- likely to become more extreme and result in increased soil erosion
- lonely, empty-seeming places
- natural things
- non-sugared and wholesome
* are one kind of terrestrial biome, for example
- of the few habitats that are actually increasing in size
* are places where the reality is more than just virtually real
- there is very little rainfall throughout the year
- regions that receive less than ten inches of rain a year
- terrains
- terrific places to hike and camp in the late fall and early spring
* are the driest places on earth
- home to many living things
- there, and different skies, And night with different stars
- too hot and mountain regions are usually too rocky and rough
- tracts
* are typically French with rich cakes and deserts
- dry areas that experience extremely small amounts of rainfall
- usually very, very dry
- very bare
* are very dry places
- regions with limited plant and animal life
- hot and dry
- windy, and windy conditions contribute to evaporation
- yellow, grasslands light green, and forests dark green
* can also be plains.
* can be either hot or cold
- within any layer
- hold economically valuable resources that drive civilizations and economies
- take the form of flat land, mesas, and mountains
* cover a third of all land masses and are located in polar as well as equatorial regions.
* cover about one seventh of the earth's surface
- one-fifth of the earth's surface
- the central section of the Western Plateau
* do scary things to people.
* generally hove a more or less open shrub vegetation called scrub.
* get very little rain.
* hamper large-scale or long movements.
* have a varied species of animals that have adapted to the harsh climate of the desert
- cactuses
* have extreme temperatures ranging from scorching hot summers to freezing cold winters
- little soil because moisture is so low and the rate of chemical weathering is slow
- sparse vegetation
* includes oases.
* make up the hottest biome, but can also get cold temperatures in winter.
* occupy almost one-quarter of California.
* occur where evaporation greatly exceeds the rainfall.
* often provide little shelter from the sun for large animals.
* originate by several different mechanisms that result in five types of deserts.
* present a very challenging environment for animals.
* show as light colors.
* take up about one third of the Earth's land surface.
* tells of sand, desert plants, animals, peoples and minerals.
* tend to preserve what was there before so people can dig it up.
* termites often consume entire above-ground portions of plants.
* typically have a plant cover that is sparse but enormously diverse
- record the highest temperatures
* usually have at least one permanent drainage system of dry stream beds
- low humidity , and tropical regions have high humidity
- lack the O Horizon
* vary in age.
+ Arid: Weather
+ Humidity: Meteorology :: Weather measurements | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biome | desert:
Arid desert
* are home to a wide variety of rodents and their coyote predators.
* exist within a few miles of lush forests.
Coastal desert
* are in moderately cool to warm areas.
* form where there cold ocean current offshore.
* house a variety of plants.<|endoftext|>### biome | desert:
Cold desert
* Some cold deserts have a short season of above-freezing temperatures
- features
* are covered with snow or ice.
* have grasses and shrubs as dominant vegetation.
* receive their precipitation as snow.
+ Desert, Cold deserts
* There are hot deserts and cold deserts. Cold deserts are covered with snow or ice. Some cold deserts have a short season of above-freezing temperatures. These deserts are called tundra. If the temperature of cold deserts remains below freezing year-round, they are called ice cap.
Hot desert
* Some hot deserts have at least one permanent stream.
* climates feature hot, typically exceptionally hot, periods of the year.<|endoftext|>### biome | desert:
Subtropical desert
* are the hottest, with parched terrain and rapid evaporation.
* have very hot summers and warm winters, with little rain.
+ Subtropics: Geography
* The 'subtropics' are a climatic region of the world. They lie bewtween the tropics and Temperate zones. The temperate zones are more towards the geographical poles, the tropics are more towards the equator. Humid subtropical areas have hot summers and mild to warm winters with abundant rainfall. Mediterranean climates are considered subtropical. Subtropical deserts have very hot summers and warm winters, with little rain. Different subtropical areas have different types of plants. Humid subtropical areas have evergreen and deciduous trees, Mediterranean areas have scrub, and deserts have cacti.
True desert
* have very few plants.
* is never as green, and always has more space between individual plants.
### biome | grassland:
Lea
* Most LEAs are public schools in the local community.
* carries chocolate and has the bone coat and broad top of head with the tinniest of ears.
* is grassland<|endoftext|>### biome | grassland:
Meadow
* Most meadows attract deer.
* Most meadows have diversity
- ecological characteristics
* Some meadows are dominated by grass
- attract butterflies
* also attract mammals ranging in size from field mice to deer.
* are flat grassy lands usually found near rivers
- home to wood ducks, great blue herons, warbling vireos, warblers and black bears
- located in countrysides
- lows
- part of nature
* burst forth with flowers that nourish deer, birds, and butterflies.
* contrast between wetlands, rock outcrops, heavy forests, and open grasslands.
* have characteristics
* produce a profusion of wildflowers during the brief summer.
* provide foraging habitats for birds and for mammals such as caribou, moose, and voles.
* remain open grasslands because annual mowing keeps trees out.
### biome | grassland | meadow:
Alpine meadow
* Most alpine meadows have diversity.
* Some alpine meadows open the ridgetops.
* are common where prolonged snowmelt keeps the soil moist all summer
* extend for miles in places.
Open meadow
* Some open meadows are dominated by grass.
* are alive with colors and fragrances throughout the summer.
Seagrass meadow
* are protective nursery areas for many estuarine and ocean fish.
* provide food and refuge for many marine animals.
Wet meadow
* are flooded in the spring and dry by fall.
* provide one of four known nesting sites in Oregon for the upland sandpiper.
Open grassland
* Most open grassland contains trees.
* Most open grassland is dominated by grass
- wallaby grass
* Some open grassland dominates environments.
* scattered through woodlands provide brood range for turkeys and grouse. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biome | grassland:
Pasture
* Fall armyworms continue to cause problems in pastures and are occurring in large numbers.
* Many pastures have fence rows full of potentially poisonous plants.
* Most pasture is dominated by grass
- tame grass
* Most pastures are filled with weeds that horses are more than happy to consume
- support tall fescue and white clover
* Some pasture is part of countrysides.
* Some pastures consist of a number of populations of different species or cultivars
- have very little growth and livestock are being supplemented with hay
* affects on water intake.
* are abundant and of good quality, notably in Mauritania
- both in the Sahelian and Sudanian zones
- following above normal rains in the Sahelian zone
- also dry in Arizona and Oregon
- dormant due to dry weather
- green, and grass is growing
- larger fenced areas which have been cleared of trees and planted with grass
- subject to many potentially harmful toxic plants
* can consist of one or more species
- include any mixture of grasses, legumes, brush, and trees
- t get green enough for grazing without sunlight being able to hit the ground
* contain a diverse mix of plant species.
* continue to be stressed by dry soil conditions.
* dry up, leaving nothing for animals to eat, and they die.
* includes woodland pastured and pasture land other than cropland pasture.
- fields
- high in energy, protein, and palatability when it is in a vegetative state
- located in countrysides
- often part of a crop rotation or a permanent use of land too difficult to till
- part of countries
* provides habitats
- pheasant habitats
- the basic nutrient requirement for the ewes throughout the year
* require fertilizer and lime regularly in order to produce large quantities of forage.
* tends to be high in energy and protein when it is in a vegetative state.
* varies greatly from one area to the next, depending on climate and soil conditions
- tremendously throughout the country and with the seasons
### biome | grassland | pasture:
Common land
* All common land is private property, whether the owner is an individual or a corporation.
* is pasture
Green pasture
* is high in vitamin A, but much is lost during drying and storing.
* symbolize prosperity and wellness.
Irrigated pasture
* are a common mosquito habitat in Colorado
- one way to diversify from irrigated wheat, corn and grain sorghum production
* attract ibis and long-billed curlews.
Lush pasture
* causes growth to slow due to change of feed.
* danger zone for ponies.
* give cover and habitat for wildlife.
Perennial pasture
* grow and contribute to soil organic matter from early spring to late fall.
* lock farmers into grazing.
* offers some protection against the variation in production of annual plants. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biome | grassland:
Prairie
* All prairies are different in the amount of rainfall and the seasonal temperature.
* Most prairie contains wildflowers.
* Most prairie is dominated by grass
- vegetation
- possesses grasshoppers
* Some prairie attracts birds
- butterflies
- has diversity
- prairies also have a few trees
* Some prairies have short grass, some have tall, and some have mixed grass
- tall course grasses and others have short grass species
* absorb a lot of rain, reducing erosion and runoff.
* always lack good soil.
* are an important part of America's history and natural heritage
- the ecosystem
- open track of land
- areas where fire very important component
- as beneficial to game species as they are to nongame wildlife
- big areas of land that are covered in grass
- dependent on fire
- diverse grasslands with an abundance of wildflowers and few woody plants
- essential for the survival of many plants and animals
* are extensive areas of flat or rolling grasslands
- grasslands with a diversity of wildflowers and few shrubs or trees
- flat grasslands
* are found across North America and have been symbolized in numerous works of literature
- in landscapes too dry for forests and too wet for deserts
- generally humid and are densely covered in tall grass
- grasslands with tall grasses while steppes are grasslands with short grasses
- in areas of more seasonal rainfall
- located in the interior of North America
- more common than in the other subregions
- one of the most distinctive aspects of the North American landscape
- stable ecosystems
* are the grasslands found in the central part of the North American continent
- most endangered ecosystem of North America
- unique ecosystems dominated by grasses and other non-woody plants called forbs
- vast open areas dominated by grasses
- warm in summers and cold in the winters
- wide open areas without any trees
* bloom from spring to fall.
* can be home to a variety of wildlife and plants
- tropical or temperate
* cover most of the states west of the Mississippi River.
* depend on fire to maintain the ecosystem stability and diversity.
* generally consist of native plants, rather than alien plants.
* has abundances
- disturbances
* have cold winters and hot summers with a moderate amount of rain and snowfall
- trees, but few
* increase ecological diversity.
* is books.
* rattlesnakes also use the prairie dog dens and are common throughout the refuge
- have a diamond shaped head which is set off from the relatively thin neck
* support a large community of invertebrates
- an enormous diversity of organisms
* take time to heal themselves and become functioning ecosystems.
+ Midwestern United States, Geography: Census Regions of the United States
* The land in the Midwest is generally thought of as being flat. This is true of several areas in the Midwest, but there are parts that are not flat. For example, the eastern Midwest near the Appalachian Mountains, the Great Lakes basin, and northern parts of Wisconsin, U.P. of Michigan and Minnesota are not flat. Also, the northern part of the Ozark mountain range is in southern Missouri. Prairies cover most of the states west of the Mississippi River. Less rain falls in the western Midwest than in the eastern part. This causes different types of prairies. Areas in northern Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, and the Ohio River valley are not very developed.
### biome | grassland | prairie:
Dry prairie
* are only wet after heavy rains.
* require frequent fire to suppress invasion of shrubs and trees.
Mixed prairie
* includes both tall and short grasses.
* occurs in drier regions, taller grasses such as prairie cord grass and big bluestem.
Native prairie
* distinctive landscape which is rapidly disappearing from northeastern Illinois.
* is one of the most endangered ecosystems in Canada.
* threatened habitat in Saskatchewan's sea of cultivated fields. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biome | grassland | prairie:
Wet prairie
* Most wet prairie is dominated by grass.
* can also remain dry for long periods of time.
* have excellent farming soil.
- slough grass and sedges
- the preferred habitat in the west, bogs and swamps in the east
* require, the least frequently flooded hydroperiod, of any Florida marsh type.
Savanna
* Many savannas simply look like open parks with scattered trees.
* Most savanna supports graze mammals
- savannas probably experience mild fires frequently and major burns every two years or so
* Some savanna receive as much rainfall as a tropical dry forest, others as little as deserts.
* intersperses with open woodlands<|endoftext|>### biome | grassland:
Savannah
* Many savannahs have trouble adapting to change.
* Most savannahs occur in countries.
* Some Savannahs almost seem to be affectionate towards their owners
- savannahs find in grassland
* Some savannahs have ability
- attributes
- intersperse with acacia woodlands
* Some savannahs intersperse with open acacia woodlands
* are highly intelligent and can be trained to do many things
- indescriminant, and voracious eaters
* are one of the most popular monitor lizard pets
- newest and most exciting cat breeds available today
- secretive, especially small ones who are prey for other, larger, animals
- smaller, with shorter, notched tails
- the white throat's smaller cousins which inhabit areas further north
- very difficult to breed
* come in a variety of beautiful colors and patterns.
* get along wonderfully with children and other household pets such as other cats and dogs.
* have a rainy period during the summer
- incredibly sharp claws, and can easily shred a hole in screen
* is grassland
* seem to bond with and can be trusted with well behaved children.
* sparrow eating the shell from the first hatched egg.
* species all fill a particular niche within their ecosystem.
* usually are less expensive to purchase than some of the other monitor species.
Temperate grassland
* Most temperate grassland has trees
- includes steppes
* Some temperate grassland has hot summer
- warm summer
* are areas of open grassland with very few trees.
* are characterized as having grasses as the dominant vegetation
- by short grasses measuring just a few inches in height
- the most threatened of the world's ecosystems
* have a low diversity of wildlife, but a high abundance of wildlife
- harsh winters and hot summers
- hot summers and cold winters
Tropical grassland
* Most tropical grassland contains trees
- has density
* Some tropical grassland occurs in regions
- same regions
* are called savannas
- found in tropical wet and dry climates
- hot year round
- warm year round, but usually have a dry and a rainy season
Terrestrial biome
* are classified by climatic factors and types of primary
- determined primarily by climate, especially temperature and rainfall
* can change over short distances in mountainous regions.
* have well-defined boundaries. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### biome:
Tundra
* Russian word.
* also contains permafrost, or permanently frozen soil.
* can take centuries to recover from even slight disturbance.
* climates Tundra climates are dry, with a brief, chilly summer and a bitterly cold winter.
* fabless semiconductor firm, producing chips for the embedded systems market.
* fragile plant, and if damaged can take hundreds of years to recover.
* globally holds carbon equal to one-third of that in the atmosphere.
* is an environment characterized mainly by the absence of trees
- flat and cold with low plants like grass and moss that only grow during the short summer
* is found in the extreme North of Canada and Asia
- near the poles
- generally low, flat and treeless
- land that remains frozen throughout the year
- separated from the boreal forest of the subarctic region by the treeline
* is the coldest and driest of all the biomes
- picture of absolute beauty
- primary biome of Antarctica
- underlain by permanently frozen ground called permafrost
- wetland
* more stable breeding area than Prairies, less subject to drought.
* reindeer live in large herds, though they fragment and become smaller in the winter months.
* swans winter across the United States
- on the water and sleep afloat
+ Biota: Biology
* Biota' is a common term in biology. It means all the living things at a particular time or place. Because it includes all the living members of a given environment, the term is used especially in ecology. A similar term is biome, which refers to large geographical regions. Tundra is a biome.<|endoftext|>### biome:
Woodland
* Most woodlands contain decay trees
- snags and den trees
* Most woodlands have deciduous trees
- layers
- ranges
* Most woodlands provide breed habitats
- diets
- nest habitats
- vary diets
* Some woodlands are dominated by willows
- intersperse with grassland
- possess wolves.
* have an understory of shrubs and herbaceous plants including grasses. Woodlands grade into shrubland in drier conditions or in early stages of plant succession. Higher densities and areas of trees, with largely closed canopy, and nearly continuous shade and are often called forests
* also are critical for water catchment
- provide much of the watershed's habitat for animal, plant and bird life
* are among the most endangered and poorly conserved ecosystems in Australia
- bottomland hardwoods with pines intermingled
- comparable with rainforests in terms of biodiversity
- dynamic, changing from year to year
* are mixed hardwoods dominated by oaks
- hardwoods, mainly oak and maple
- of the eastern hardwood type
* are the home of bluebells, primroses and celandines
- most prominent plant community
- natural condition for most areas of the state
* become fragmented, decreasing the amount of available habitat for wildlife.
* can be very dark
- occur in association with prairies, but more frequently they exist surrounding glades
* commonly consist of elm, soft maple, willow, and shrubs tolerant of wet sites.
* consist mostly of live oak and loblolly pines.
- native and exotic trees
* form boundaries.
* include debris
- woody debris
- food and shelter in the summer and overwintering sites for hibernation
* support various wood products, hunting and other recreation.
### biome | woodland:
Ancient woodland
* are the British version of North Americas old-growth forests.
* supports numerous threatened plants and animals.
Deciduous woodland
* Most deciduous woodlands provide breed habitats
* typical breeding and hunting habitat for the Eurasian sparrowhawk.
Greenwood
* are forests.
* case-study in how to sustain popularity in show business.
* is Canadian.
* lot softer than dry seasoned wood and consequently easier to cut with a stone tool.
Riparian woodland
* are strips of forest destroyed by fire.
* is absent from draws and stream corridors.
* overlap with foothill woodland along the banks and on the surrounding slopes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Bioterrorism
* is always a criminal act
- terrorism
- the deliberate use of microorganisms, or their toxins, to cause death or disease
- usually an accident
* looming threat, increasingly so within the borders of the United States.
* terrorist act
* topic that has recently been the subject of intense study and debate.
Biotic organism
* are the living elements such as micro-organisms, animals, and plants.
* is able to reproduce themselves.<|endoftext|>### bipartisan addiction:
Soft money
* allows corporations, unions and individuals to get around contribution limits.
* are funds with sources other than state appropriations.
* bipartisan addiction.
* consists of unregulated political contributions to parties.
* contribution made to political parties.
* counterfeit issue.
* huge loophole used by special interests to get around campaign finance regulations.
* includes labor money.
* is corporate and union money given indirectly, through the parties
- described as any funds provided by groups outside a candidate's campaign committee
- dollars given to the party as a whole or for promotion of an issue
- for devising ways to get better results with hard money after the grant period
- funds contributed to a political party instead of to a specific candidate
- illegal for campaigns to accept directly
- insecure funding, usually available for a year or less
- large, unlimited, unregulated donations to political parties and PACs
- money that is raised outside a campaign by groups that support a particular candidate
* is political contributions
* is the loophole of all loopholes
- most corrupt money in the current campaign finance system
- name given to unlimited, unregulated contributions for party-building efforts
- primary source of big money in politics
- principle cause of political corruption and voter apathy in America
- term for unlimited donations to political parties
* is the unlimited, unregulated contributions to political parties by special interests
- donation to political parties
- money that has no business influencing politics
- unregulated money from corporations, unions, and rich people
* is unregulated donations to political committees as opposed to candidates
- funds that unions, corporations and individuals can donate to parties
- unrestricted contributions to political parties
* legal term for campaign contributions that are exempt from important restrictions.
* loophole for big-dollar contributors to donate unlimited amounts of funding.
* makes up a relatively small proportion of money in politics.
* refers to largely unregulated donations to candidates.
* refers to the large, federally unregulated contributions made to political parties
- unlimited, unregulated amounts which can be given to the political parties
- unlimited funds collected by political parties
Bipedalism
* exposes less body surface to direct solar radiation.
* is quite common in the animal world.
### bipolar activity:
Gaming
* bipolar activity.
* chance to think and strategize.
* form of entertainment, just like any other game.
* highly regulated industry.
* includes the risk of having social problems of crime and pathological gambling.
* involves the creation of an artificial environment or situation.
* is Nevada's largest industry.
* recreation industry intended specifically for adult entertainment.
### bipolar activity | gaming:
Online gaming
* is already a leading driver of Internet growth
- one of the best ways to have fun and meet people on the internet
* remains one of the Internet's more popular attractions today.
### birds:
African penguin
* are birds
- found along coastal areas and offshore islands
- friendly and inquisitive and engage in a variety of behaviors
* eat mostly fish supplemented by a few percent of crustaceans.
* have pink glands above their eyes that become pinker as the penguin gets hotter.
* live and breed on the coast of South Africa and on the off shore islands. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### birds:
American dipper
* occupy an unusual niche in the songbird world.
* search for insects in fast-moving streams.
Arctic tern
* are birds
- considered threatened or a species of concern in certain states
- long-lived birds, with many reaching fifteen to thirty years of age
- medium-sized birds
- the champions of long distance migration
* have the longest migration known
* spend the summer in the Arctic, raising their babies.
Black tern
* are birds
- smaller than common and Arctic terns
* eat mostly insects but also take small fishes.
Domestic duck
- generally bulkier, with larger, rounder heads and shorter bills
- the type most people choose for their needs
* is very fat.
* tends to be cooked till the skin is crispy and the meat gray and tasteless.
Domestic turkey
* are much heavier and larger than wild turkeys
- larger than the wild turkeys
* can actually fly for great distances.
* eat a balanced diet of soybeans and ground corn.
* have a reputation of being less than brilliant, docile, slow moving creatures
- black legs and wild turkeys have pink legs
Gouldian finch
* Gouldian Finches are apprehensive birds generally evading populated areas
- extremely social birds
- colorful and energetic birds commonly kept as pets
* come from the north of Australia, the warmest part of the country.<|endoftext|>### birds:
Large bird
* Many large birds look alike.
* Most large birds belong to families
- eat prey
* Most large birds have heads
- offspring
- plumages
- white plumages
* Most large birds live in habitats
- on shores
- take food
- use keen senses
* Some large birds eat babies
- have patches
* are birds.
* can be dangerous, inflicting serious injury to people
- easily tear small toys into smaller, easily choked on pieces
- go a day or two without consuming much food
* defend large territories.<|endoftext|>### birds:
Little penguin
* Little Penguins are opportunistic in their selection of prey items
- live in sandy burrows at night and go to the ocean during the day
* Most little penguins live on coasts.
* Some little penguins are drowned when amateur fishermen set gill nets near penguin colonies.
* are the only penguin species that breeds nocturnally - that is , at night
- breeds nocturnally - that is, at night
* can breed as isolated pairs, in colonies, or semi-colonially.
* have one call that changes to mean different things.
* live in the park
* mature at different ages.
* use rock crevices or caves for their nests.
+ Little Penguin, Behavior, Calls
* Little penguins have one call that changes to mean different things. Most calls have a rhythm of two repeated sounds
- Reproduction
* Little Penguins live in sandy burrows at night and go to the ocean during the day. They can be found right around the south coast of Australia, from Perth in the west to Coffs Harbour on the east coast. They are found all around Tasmania. The largest Little Penguin colonies in New South Wales are on Montague Island, Tollgate Island and Brush Island | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### birds:
Macaroni penguin
* Most macaroni penguins feed on fish
- krill
- small fish
* Most macaroni penguins have backs
- faces
- natural predators
- several natural predators
* Most macaroni penguins return to breed colonies
* Some macaroni penguins eat krill.
- monogamous and pair bonds are long-lasting
- sometimes confused with Royal penguins
- the main avian consumer of Antarctic krill in the vicinity of South Georgia
* build a crude nest by scraping a shallow hole in mud or gravel among rocks.
* eat mostly krill with small amounts of squid.
- bills
- black chins
- large orange bills, red eyes, and pink feet
- reddish-brown bill and pink legs and feet
* live in Antarctica.
* love to slide down ice, They thinks it's so fun and very nice.
* moult once a year, a process in which they replace all of their old feathers.
* start their day in foraging and remain busy until dusk.
* take other small crustaceans and they seem to maintain their breeding success.
Northern flicker
* are birds
- plentiful, plus a variety of songbirds in the spring and summer
- woodpeckers
* eat thousands of ants.
* excavate nest holes in the trunks, which other birds later occupy.
* have black spots on a tannish-white breast and belly.
Pileated woodpecker
* are the largest of our resident woodpeckers
- the common woodpeckers found in most of North America
- year-rounded residents in Wisconsin
* depend upon mature forests to survive.
Prothonotary warbler
- common along the cypress-lined waterways
* enjoy nesting in hollow knees, of which there are plenty.
* prefer nest sites within or near wetlands.
Roseate tern
- terns
* breed primarily on small offshore islands, rocks, cays, and islets.
* feed primarily on American sand lance, a small marine fish.
* spend the summer in mixed breeding colonies with the common tern. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Birth
* Defects Congenital malformations are the leading cause of infant death.
* Every birth condensation, every death a dispersal.
* Includes stories of pregnancy, birth, and related ideas.
* Many births are from unmarried single women, often teenagers
- necessary to guarantee survival of some to adulthood
* Most birth occur during daylight hours.
* Most births are normal, healthy and uncomplicated
- out of wedlock
- twins with the occasional set of triplets
- twins, although triplet and quadruplet births sometimes occur
- happen during the dry season
- occur during daylight hours and require no human assistance
* Most births occur during the peak of the rainy season
- wet season when food resources are in abundance
- in the daylight hours
- produce a single offspring, but twins are born one out of every six or seven births
- tend to take place around dawn or dusk, which is when guinea pigs are most active
* Some birth defects cause damage
- births are part of lifespans
* When born, a child's bones are supple.
* affects our entire mental, emotional, and spiritual well being.
* also marks the beginning of the formation of a baby's permanent teeth.
* are beginnings.
* are part of human experience
- people
- rare, and mothers often abandon or even cannibalize their young
- the main component of population growth
- usually single, although, as with humans, twin births do also occur from time to time
* asphyxia substantial cause of brain damage in newborn babies.
* begins the human clock.
* can occur at any time of year but are most common in the late spring
- throughout the year
* choice for life of the child.
* completes the process that began at conception.
* culturally patterned life cycle event that has personal and political significance.
* defects Many birth defects occur as random events
- among offspring of firemen
- in offspring of adult survivors of childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
* describes our movement from the spirit world to mortality.
* follows death, just as waking follows sleep.
* give the names of the child and the parents together with the birth date.
* happen when they happen.
* happens at the end of a process or time cycle.
* is about families being born together
- women giving birth in dignity, with as little interference as possible
- actually a transition from one form of life to another
- also the ultimate act of reproduction
* is an extension of our sexuality and is meant to be pleasurable
- important event to the Walbiri because infant mortality rates are so high
- individual experience and expression of self
- beauty and giving, love and dignity
- both the cause and the cure for man s sin
- caused by desires and actions, and birth becomes the cause of further desires and actions
- determined by multiplying Population by birth.fraction
- followed by change and decay and death and rebirth
- like the death and rebirth of the mother
- more than a physical or medical event
- often the occasion of prophecy
- primitive and human, the final product of the human reproductive system
- suffering, old age is suffering, sickness and death are sufferings
- the arising of the psycho-physical phenomena
* is the beginning of a life
- it all, ground zero, the moment from which the clock starts ticking
- moment in which one's life appears as both gift and call
* is the most important biological event in the life of any human being
- point in the history of any human being
- point at which the fetus becomes an actual human being in the legal sense of that term
- process by which the fetus is expelled from the uterus
- ultimate sexual act of a woman
* natural and healthy process, and a significant event in every woman's life
- separation of mother and child
* natural, healthy process and a significant event in every woman's life.
* normal, physiological process.
* occur during rainy season when food is plentiful
- in mid-winter, after a pregnancy of ten months
* occur throughout the year in equatorial Africa, peaking in wet seasons elsewhere
- year, with a peak in the summer
* painful process, for both mother and child.
* physical experience
- process, even a painful process
* picture of life, as it is the beginning of life on earth.
* probably occur most often in the water.
* process, connected to the life and desires of each individual mother.
* profound event in a woman's life.
* records throughout time demonstrate that births of males and females are about equal.
* refers to something having formerly been nonexistent now coming into existence.
* replace migration as main force in population growth.
* represents the ultimate revelation of that which is hidden.
* sacred event.
* sexual act, and often having sex in labor helps facilitate the process
* starts by the muscles of uterus starting to contract.
* symbol of awakening, emerging, changing, and new beginnings.
* takes place in isolation and the precocial young can stand and walk shortly after birth.
* usually occur at night, any time of the year and every four years or so
- in months of heavy rainfall, but can occur year-round
+ White-headed capuchin, Reproduction: Monkeys :: Mammals of America
* Mating takes about 2 minutes. The gestation period is 5 to 6 months. A single young is born. Twins can sometimes be born. Most births happen during the dry season. It is from December to April. The baby is carried on the mother's back for about 6 weeks. After 4 to 5 weeks the baby can get off from its mother's back for a short period of time. At 3 months it can move around by itself. Some babies will be mostly independent earlier. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### birth:
Hatch
* are parturition
- shadings
* begin to increase as baetis mayflies and caddis fill the mid-day sky.
Home birth
* grows in popularity each year.
* is legal in every state.
* lot more common in the Netherlands than it is in the States.
* safe, responsible choice for many healthy, pregnant women today.<|endoftext|>### birth:
Live birth
* are births.
* can be hard to time.
* does have some advantages over laying eggs.
* is also common among terrestrial snakes in warmer areas.
* means that the babies come out of their mother fully formed and ready to face the world.
+ Cleidoic egg, Discussion, Live birth: Reptiles :: Birds :: Zoology :: Developmental biology :: Evolutionary biology :: Biological reproduction
* Live birth is a comparatively recent adaptation. Monotreme mammals do still lay eggs. It is the marsupial and eutherian mammals which developed live birth. Actually,the embryo developing in the womb has the same membranes round it as does the embryo inside a bird egg. Mammals give birth to live young because the development takes place internally. Live birth has evolved independently a number of times in reptiles, for example Ichthyosaurs gave birth to live young.
Natural birth
* Some natural births have perineal tears.
* is the product of human love.
* requires labor and pain, but once born no one wishes to return to the womb.<|endoftext|>### birth:
Premature birth
* Most premature births are preventable, caused by such factors as poor diet.
* are at least twice as common with black mothers than with white ones.
* can also be the result of an illness in the unborn baby
- be a serious danger to a newborn
- occasionally occur and some or all the babies die at times
* is dangerous for both the mother and the baby
- linked to increased infant death rates and impaired higher brain function
* is one of the greatest health hazards of humankind
- leading causes of infant mortality
- the birth of an infant before the full term of pregnancy
* major risk factor for neonatal deaths.
* occurs when an infant is born earlier in pregnancy than normal.
* strong risk factor for criminality.
+ Birth, Related medical words: Biological reproduction
Preterm birth
* account for two thirds of all infant mortality in developed countries.
* are a major cause of low birthweight and other health problems in infants.
* increases the risks for infant illness and death.
* is more common in multiple pregnancies
- one of the major healthcare problems of the western world
* major cause of infant illness and even death
- neonatal mortality and morbidity | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### birth:
Reincarnation
* also claims to insure justice.
* concept that perceives an evolution of the soul on a physical plane.
* ensure a continuous advance in the successive races of men.
* false belief.
* form of works salvation.
* is an intermediate state, but resurrection is an ultimate states.
* is an opportunity to evolve through many personalities
- reach a goal
- ancient belief prevalent among most people on the earth
- based on karma
- believed to explain suffering and karma
- change
- embodiment
- facts
- in no way compatible with the Christian faith
- like changing one's clothes
* is one of the few articles of faith which is utterly incompatible with bigotry
- most wide-spread of Wiccan beliefs
- part of somebody else's worldview
- portrayed in a lively depiction of souls dancing out of their bodies
- seen as the process of repeated chances to rediscover true life
- similar to the concept of a resurrected body
* is simply the continuance of life
- end of one spiritual state and the beginning of the next
* is the belief that an individual human soul passes through a succession of lives
- law of return, of evolution in action, and karma is the cause of that return
- means of personal growth and learning
- mystifying of DNA genetic reality
- path to soul development
- replication of the self-concept
- to be reborn as another individual, usually someone different from the one before
* limits the recycling to humans.
* means that one has had and can have more than one life.
* portal to spirit.
* principle that transcends both science and religion.
* relates only to the body.
* seeks to provide the ultimate answer for understanding suffering and injustice.
* therefore is an accepted part of the Wiccan faith.
* universal system of checks and balances.
Transmigration
* are reincarnation.
* includes the possibility that a soul can be born into the body of an animal.
* is driven by chemoattractants, a process known as diapedesis
- rooted in Jewish traditions, but have universal aspects as well
Twin birth
* are common in good habitat range
- rare
- relatively rare in humans and vary in frequency with the ethnic group
- the norm, and all family members help rear the infants
* can occur, but are rare.
* occur on rare occasions.
### birth | vaginal birth:
Active birth
* is an attitude of mind.
* vaginal birth
Natural childbirth
* has different meanings to everyone.
* is also, in most cases, easier and shorter than medicated births
- an ideal for a natural process
- birth with little or no use of painkilling drugs
### bits:
Snaffle
* are bits.
* can have many kinds of mouthpieces and cheek ring styles.
* tend to encourage a horse to travel with a low head and a stretched neck.<|endoftext|>Bitterness
* comes from tannins extracted from grape skins, stems and seeds, and from barrel aging.
* common flaw, as is starchiness, a raw flour taste.
* decreases with frost, and varies from variety to variety.
* develops when plants are subjected to stressful growing conditions.
* disappears in older leaves after a frost.
* force of destruction and bondage.
* heavy load that gains weight with time.
* is almost always a negative in wine
- an attitude that refuses to forgive offenses
- angry resentment
- cause of bitterness
- characterized by an unforgiving spirit and negative, critical attitudes
- hatred
- loss, frozen in resentment
- the result of powerlessness in the face of anger
* kills faith in the one source of true, undying help and compassion.
* movement of displeasure seated in the soul.
* natural characteristic of dandelion.
* plant with a disease.
* plays a big part in anger and rage.
* root that has defiled many.
* spreads and infects others.
* taste that can be quite polarizing.
### bitterness:
Envy
* gives birth to hatred and animosity.
* is bitterness
- mortal sin
* plays a part in spreading rumors. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### bitterness:
Grievance
* are allegations
- an informal approach to resolving conflicts
- complaints
- internal complaints received directly by health insurance plans
* means a written expression of dissatisfaction.
Grudge
* Some grudges are the result of physical and psychological abuse.
* are films
- resentment
* is bitterness
### bituminous coal:
Illinois coal
* contains high levels of sulfur.
* has high sulfur content.
* is bituminous coal.
Black clothing
* is common in emo and goth subculture.
+ Black, Meaning of black: Colors
* Black can stand for strength and power. Black clothing is common in emo and goth subculture.
Black matter
* helps shield organic matter from radiation.
* is found universally, especially in the amorphous state.
Black object
* absorb all colors of light because the absence of light means no light is reflected
- different wavelengths of light
- wave lengths
- heat faster than the lighter colored surroundings
* radiate heat better than shiny objects.<|endoftext|>### black solid:
Cadmium telluride
* black solid.
* is commercially available as a powder, or as crystals
- used to make electricity in solar cells
+ Cadmium telluride, Properties: Tellurium compounds
* Cadmium telluride is a black solid. It reacts with acids to make toxic cadmium compounds and toxic hydrogen telluride gas. It does not dissolve in water
- Uses
* Cadmium telluride is used to make electricity in solar cells. It is one of the best things. It can be mixed with mercury to make mercury cadmium telluride, good in infrared detectors
American black
* Some American blacks trace their heritage to Latin-American, Asia, or Pacific Islands.
* have nearly double the incidence compared to whites.<|endoftext|>### black:
Carbon black
* can also irritate the eyes, nose and throat.
* coal-like material used to make other products.
* dry solid.
* gives the tire extra hardness and durability.
* is carbon
- formed by incomplete combustion of natural gas or liquid hydrocarbons
- in a car's topcoat
- made primarily from a petroleum-based feedstock
- produced by partial combustion of natural gas
* is the competitive absorber all tire manufacturers use
- general term used to describe a powdery commercial form of carbon
* is the most commonly used UV stabilizer
- reinforcing agent
- used as a filler and reinforcing agent for rubber
* key input used in the manufacture of automotive tyres.
* lot like graphite.
Elastic fiber
* appear as wavy, refractile lines embedded in a dense regular connective tissue.
* are black
- long threads of the protein elastin
- present in the valve but most of the valve is made of dense collagenous tissue
* decrease in number and diameter with age.
* form a branching network of thin, eosinophilic fibers.
* have their own characteristic amino acid components, desmosine and isodesmosine.<|endoftext|>Blackboard
* Web-based learning environment.
* are boards
- treasure chests of exam material
* course management system that helps faculty get educational materials online
- instructors provide web sites for their courses
* includes sections.
* is an artifact
- freedom - freedom to communicate, to create, to administer
- one of the most popular and widely used distance education products
* program used to construct course sites on the web.
* system for delivering instruction over the Web.
* tool to supplement classroom instruction and to enhance communication.
* way for the student to be interested and participate at the same time.
* web server that can be accessed like any web page.
* web-based tool to deliver online instructional resources.
### blades:
Razor blade
* Most razor blades are die-stamped.
* are blades
- located in cabinets
- razors
- straight edged, curved, and serrated
* remain sharper longer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### bleach:
Chlorine bleach
* can also pass through a septic system without breaking down
- cause yellowing
- dull the shiny finishes on sinks, bathtubs and other porcelain enamel surfaces
- produce small amounts of dioxin which well known carcinogen
- react to the alloys in gold resulting in pitting or discolouration
* contains sodium hypochlorite, a chemical precursor to chlorine.
* good disinfectant and toilet bowl cleaner.
* is also available in a granule form
- very effective at cleaning up the mold and mildew
- an example most people recognize
- caustic and toxic
- considered a hazardous material
- corrosive to electronics
- dangerous to marine life and can be a health risk for people
- ideal for treating water
- the only bleach that kills mildew
* is, paradoxically, a much stronger oxidizer than oxygen bleach.
* mildly corrosive oxidizer.
* rids plastic of unpleasant odours.
* strong oxidizer.
* toxic ingredient.
* turns wood white and affects the color of any finish that is applied.
Household bleach
* good disinfectant for water.
* is diluted sodium hypochlorite
- ineffective in cleaning surfaces as are most chemical disinfectants
- the only disinfectant needed in the water for storage
Oxygen bleach
* Most oxygen bleaches are powders
- work best in hot water
* are available in both a dry and liquid form
- color safe, and are marketed as such
Blend
* are combinations
- mix
- mixtures of two or more straight coffees, usually combined for an enhanced flavor
- seed mixtures of two or more pure varieties
* consist of 'mixtures' of different chains forming separate phases.
* contain particles of more than one color.
* is mixture
* reduce fat in bakery products.
* sounds to make words or parts of words.
### blend:
Polymer blend
* can also include additives, reinforcements, and fillers.
* macroscopically homogeneous mixture of two or more different species of polymer.
### blending:
Confluence
* are blends
- events
* property of the presentation of a system of rules.
Homogenization
* changes that by straining the fat through tiny pores under great pressure.
* is an effective method used to study the micro-structure of materials. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blessed process:
Sanctification
* Trinitarian act.
* blessed process.
* can also be selfish.
* complete, instantaneous second work of grace subsequent to salvation.
* consecrating of the new life and a dying out to our self life.
* daily work.
* destroys the desire to sin and is obtainable by faith.
* gift just as salvation gift.
* growing experience for growing people.
* involves a real change of qualities and disposition
- death, death to self, death to the ego
- separation from the world and sin
* is also by faith.
* is both a crisis and a process
- privilege and a duty
- process and an event in our lives
- effected by all the virtues, by which also sins are taken away
- glory in the seed, and glory is sanctification in the flower
- growth
- justification in action
- moral or experimental, justification is legal or judicial
- pictured in the holiness laws of the nation of Israel
- religious ceremony
- separation from sin
* is the inward purification of that person
- necessary counterpart to justification, or the forgiveness of sins
- outgrowth of gods unmerited mercy
- present portion of salvation
* is the process of becoming holy
- getting out of sin and being made holy
* is the result of justification
- lifelong obedience
* is the word used to describe the process of kicking the habit of sin
- the process of something or someone becoming holy
- work of a lifetime
- therefore the result of a relationship
* is what The Purity Ring is all about
- makes a 'saint' to differ from an 'aint'
* means more than being freed from sin
- purification or holiness
- to be made holy
* naturally leads to a life of good works.
* personal reward that follows personal righteousness.
* plays an important part in our salvation.
* purging or cleansing process.
* religious ritual
* requires cooperating with divine grace in doing good works.
* term of frequent use in the Bible.
* theological term for being set apart.
* war-time word.
### blight:
Tomato blight
* are common problems in the home garden.
* is blight
- caused by several kinds of fungi
Walnut blight
* infects developing leaves and nuts.
* is blight
Blindfold
* includes sections.
* make it impossible to see.
* represent the unknown element of business.
* A 'blindfold' piece of cloth tied over a person's eyes. Sometimes a blindfold is made of material other than cloth. Blindfolds make it impossible to see.<|endoftext|>Block
* Most blocks vary in shapes.
* Vandalism in progress but only if the user has been disruptive. Requests made in bad faith may result in you yourself being blocked. Blocks are different to bans.
* are meant to be preventive.
* acetylcholine in muscarinic receptors.
* are areas
- artifacts
- collections
- cubes
- housing
- injections of medication onto or near nerves
- made of bricks
- real examples of shapes, numbers, dimensions, and volume
- sets of fields that serve a common purpose
- simply a unit of measurement, where all the macro nutrient density is the same
- small areas usually bounded on all sides by streets
- solid objects
- solids
* have internal passageways
- mass
* hold atoms with valence electrons in same subshell configuration.
* includes sections.
* is an architecture for managing metadata
- online building toy for kids of all ages
* made of pebbles are conglomerate, formed from stream gravels.
* neurotransmitter, acts on hypothalamus.
* quickly dissolves in fresh water.
* range in colour from light brown to nearly black. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### block ciphers:
Modern cipher
* All modern ciphers use keys together with plaintext as the input to produce ciphertext.
* Most modern ciphers are block ciphers.
+ Ciphertext-only attack: Math stubs :: Cryptography
* Every modern cipher attempts to provide protection against ciphertext-only attacks. The process of selecting a new cipher design standard usually takes many years and includes exhaustive testing of large quantities of ciphertext for any statistical different approach from random noise.
Anvil
* Most anvils have both flat and curving surfaces.
* are extremely heavy. They are made in different sizes. He walked around the villages of Bedfordshire with a small anvil and a few tools on his back. His anvil was wedge-shaped, so that he could knock it into the ground when he needed to do a repair. His anvil is now in the John Bunyan museum in Bedford
- blocks
- part of forges
- software
* can be an endocrine disrupter when used at high concentrations in a lab.
### block | briquette:
Charcoal briquette
* are the easiest to use and best for controlling the temperature.
* produce carbon monoxide, a colorless, odorless killer
### block | bullion:
Gold bullion
* comes in many different forms and is struck by many countries.
* is equal in value to gold eagles or gold sovereigns weight for weight
- well known as the currency of last resort
Concrete block
* are precast and used as building blocks.
* come in a variety of sizes.
Conduction block
* are the diagnostic hallmark of the disease.
* can cause either bradycardia or tachycardia.
* occurs principally in motor neurons and muscle.
Dice
* are small cubes with different dots on each side.
* are useful for probability, games, counting, various operations, and place value
- teaching probability, permutations, and combinations
- usually some sort of regular polyhedra
* tend to accumulate positive and negative energy.<|endoftext|>### block:
Ice cube
* Ice Cubes See how fast different sized ice cubes melt.
* are made by filling a tray with water and putting it in a freezer. Many freezers also have an icemaker. Icemakers make ice cubes and put them in a bin. After that, they can be put in a glass
- a common household item which exemplify the thermoplastic principle
- another best choice for treating prickly heat caused due to hot and humid temperature
- frozen water
* are located in freezers
- people
* can also serve as a ready supply of safe water in emergency situations.
* can be effective because they are ingesting fluid
- white instead of clear in appearance when made with hard water
* float on water because they are lighter than the water.
* is shown floating in water with one side above and parallel to the water surface.
* melt in liquid water.
Nerve block
* Most nerve blocks are more dependent on volume of drug injected than the total dose.
* are a most effective way of giving postoperative pain relief
- only one part of the process in solving a persistent pain problem
* can also help to control pain
- relieve tone
Pupillary block
* complication of cataract surgery with or without lens implantation.
* is the most common mechanism of angle closure after cataract extraction.
Red block
* are undecayed and blue are decayed atoms.
+ Super Mario Bros. Deluxe, Gameplay, Vs. Game: 1999 video games :: Game Boy Color games :: Mario platform games
* Game, two players link up using the Game Boy Color link cable. The levels are full of white and red blocks. Red blocks block the player while white blocks make it easier to go through the level.
Sanding block
* are as numerous as, well, grains of sand.
* helps to knock down irregularities on the cut edge. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### block:
Slab
* are blocks
- hot or cold rolled into sheet metal or plates
* can vary in thickness from a few centimetres to three metres.
* create floors in building models.
* fail initially as a unit and then break up into smaller blocks as the snow moves downslope.
* generally have a thickness that is much less than both their length and width.
* have factors.
* includes sections.
### block | slab:
Concrete slab
* are subject to bending stresses, deflections, sags, creep, and cracking.
* can effectively span spaces and carry loads without deforming.<|endoftext|>### block | slab:
Tile
* absorb energy.
* allow the child to create cubes, pyramids and other shapes.
* are ceramic
- covering
* are located in computer games
- homes
- roofs
- rooms
- showers
- walls
- made of clay
- men
- part of roofs
- slabs
- solid objects
- the simplest form of ceramic art
* are used for art
- bathrooms
- builds
- decoration
- flooring
- kitchens
- wall covering
- wood and marble sculptures that cast shadows
* drained soils are essential for no-till agriculture on any soil type.
* have color
- sides
- surfaces
* is considered any decorative, modular surface covering
- more expensive than carpeting and comparable to wood
* layer of hot rock under the crust but above the core.
* vary in size, thickness and density.
+ Mosaic, Making mosaics: Art
* Some tiles look as if they are made of pure gold. The side with the gold gets put into the mortar. Then the gold can be seen through the glass, but cannot be scratched off.
### block | slab | tile:
Porcelain tile
* has a long life cycle that results in fewer replacements and reduced waste.
* have excellent chemical resistance.
* is also frost-proof, so it can be used in swimming pools and fountains
- virtually impervious to stains and wear
Tessera
* are part of mosaic
* is the Greek word for mosaic.<|endoftext|>Blockbuster
* are hits
- television shows
- the movies that seem most poised to rake in the big money
* have many uses, such as relaxation, crawling, hopping and tossing.
+ Art film, A comparison of an art movie and a blockbuster movie: Movies
* To understand why movie directors make art movies, one has to know about blockbuster movies. Blockbuster movies are part of the reason why people make art films. Movie directors making art films try to make them very different from blockbuster movies. The movie is a more personal statement by the director. Blockbusters are made for commercial reasons and art films are made for personal reasons.
* Blockbusters often use simple stories and characters that have been used before in other movies. Art movies usually use strange or unusual stories and characters that the audience may not have seen before.<|endoftext|>### blocking | supporting | balancing:
Load balancing
* becomes a problem in cellular layouts under dynamic demand patterns.
* can also refer to the communications channels themselves.
* crucial component of building scalable systems.
* function of knowing all the available paths to a given destination network.
* increases the use of network segments, thus increasing effective network bandwidth.
* is an important problem in parallel computing
- outbound service, handling only packets being sent from the server
- another method service providers use to stream media across multiple servers
- vital in parallel computation
* means directing routines to individual processors.
### blocks:
Abstract type
* have existential types.
* represent sets of concrete types. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blocks:
Breed
* ALL breeds are subject to genetically-linked defects in health and temperament.
* All breeds carry the mite on the surface of the skin
- have genetic health and temperament problems that can be passed on to their puppies
* All breeds share common ancestry, having descended from wolves
- the fabulous ability to control the movement of other animals
* Any breed can suffer from allergies.
* Every breed has an organization dedicated to the rescue and placement of dogs.
* Many breeds are capable of and responsible for fatal attacks on people
- genetically inclined to use their mouths to do a job
- develop corneal dystrophy
* Many breeds have an inherited predisposition to developmental entropion
- different standards for shearing
- hip dysplaysia, vision problems, and blood disorders
- the characteristics of puppies until they are well over two years old
* Most breeds are large, nocturnal, burrowing animals with heavy, broad, intimidating bodies
- begin cycling in cooler weather
* Most breeds have a scissor bite which is when the upper incisors tightly overlap the lower
- strong desire to do something physical - to run, hunt, retrieve or herd
- behavioral characteristics
- bones
* Most breeds have different color
- genetic characteristics
- eyes
- hairs in all diffferent stages of the growth-shed cycle at the same time
- noses
- ravenous appetite
- sex
- straight noses
- produce meat
- reach adult body weight
* Most breeds survive climates
- temperate climates
- tend to have at least one inherited eye problem
* Some breeds actually have a propensity for hearing loss.
* Some breeds adapt to environments
- local environments
* Some breeds are easier to care for than others
- known to be aggressive and are great in the right situations
* Some breeds are more inbred than others
- inclined to physically protect their property
- likely to acquire perineal hernias than others
* Some breeds are more prone to biting than others
- developing cataracts than others
- health problems than others
- sensitive to certain anesthetics than other breeds
* Some breeds are notorious for being suspicious of strangers
- their drool
- prone to constant medical problems
* Some breeds are prone to physical problems such as hip dysplasia, ear cankers, and eye anomalies
- problems such as hip dysplasia, ear problems and eye anomalies
- tree-climbers, and others swim in fresh or salt water
- can develop skin and coat problems if over-bathed
* Some breeds have a 'colder' nose that others, meaning a better nose for weaker scents
- genetic predisposition towards aggressiveness
- high incidence of deafness
- agressive roosters, others have roosters who are just kind
- average lifespans
- body types
- diseases
- expectancy
- feathers
- hearty appetites and tend to put on weight easily
- larger numbers of bulls that sire small calves
- life expectancy
- particular rules for toe length, pads, bar shoes, or shoe weight
- physical attributes that reduce their risk of fly strike
- sheep
- stronger odors than others
- tails
- help reproductive success
- make better guard dogs than others
- produce sheep
- reach puberty
* Some breeds reduce diversity
- genetic diversity
- remain in heat until they mate
- require a lot of exercise daily both physical and mental
* Some breeds seem to be more susceptible to a certain forms of cancer
- grow more slowly than others
- simply live longer than other breeds due to breed health, body structure and genetics
- tend to be beefier than others
* also differ in color
- with respect to volume of milk produced and milk composition
* are animal groups
- variety
- video games
* have appetite
- basic characteristics
* have different characteristics
- distinguish characteristics
- expression
- heads
- issues
* have long necks
- periods
- particular characteristics
- reputations
- tendencies
* include horses.
* is an animal group
* need care
- diets
- food
- owners
- puppy food
* produce beef
- taste beef
- maturity
* require care
* result in production
- variation
* show evidence
- tolerance
* take places.
* vary in appearance, but also in temperament, activity level and other behavioral factors.
+ Oregano, Growing Oregano for cooking: Herbs :: Lamiaceae :: Medicinal plants
* A closely related plant is marjoram from Asia Minor. That plant has a completely different taste. This is because phenolic compounds are missing in its essential oil. Some breeds show a flavour intermediate between oregano and marjoram. The Oregano plant is also commonly found in the mediterranean region, and the black sea. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blocks | breed:
Cat breed
* Most cat breeds allow several different colors or color patterns under their breed standards.
* Some cat breeds have expectancy<|endoftext|>### blocks | breed:
Different breed
* Many different breeds exist throughout the world because of the different interests of dog breeders.
* Most different breeds have characteristics.
* Most different breeds have different characteristics
- genetic characteristics
* Some different breeds have different size
- life expectancy
- lifespans
* do different types of races.
- food needs
- differing personalities
- higher incidences of particular defects
- their own characteristics and temperament
* react differently to dogs.
+ Equestrianism, Racing: Horse riding
* Racing' tests the speed of a horse. Different breeds do different types of races. The most popular type in the U.S. is Thoroughbred racing, where only horses of this breed can participate in galloping around a track. Most horses that are used for racing are ridden by professional riders called jockeys. Usually the people that own or train the horse do not ride it in the races.
Dog breed
* All dog breeds are different and can react to different diets in a variety of way
- susceptible to certain illness and health conditions
* Most dog breeds are named after the place that they originated or the person who created the breed.
* Most dog breeds have behavioral characteristics
- require care
* Some dog breeds are more prone to one or the other
- particularly dangerous
- have lifespans
- retain rounded, floppy ears throughout life
Giant breed
* Most giant breeds reach weight.
* Some giant breeds have lower activity level than many smaller breeds
- years
* tend to be short-lived.
Large breed
* Some large breeds enter puberty later.
* have slightly shorter life spans than small breeds.
* show evidence.<|endoftext|>### blocks | breed:
Mixed breed
* are a kaleidoscope of their special combination, history, and environment
- also more temperamentally sound than purebreds
* are often the happiest and healthiest dogs
- smartest, sweetest and have the best temperaments of all dogs
* bearing a strong resemblance to purebred cats are fairly common.
* can be as beautiful, intelligent., loving, and as companionable as purebreds.
* make excellent pets, no better or worse than purebreds
- just as good pets as purebreds
* tend to have the characteristics of their component breeds.
Pony breed
* are more likely to become recumbent.
* make up some of the oldest domesticated horse breeds in the world.
Selective breed
* Some selective breeds produce sheep.
* result in production
- variation
Several breed
* are prone to congenital hip problems.
* comprise what is commonly called a pit bull.
Small breed
* Most small breeds are full-sized at six or eight months.
* Most small breeds reach adult body weight
* are very fragile, and can get sick quite easily, especially if they stop eating.
* seem to have more problems with their teeth than large breed dogs.
* tend to cycle more regularly than the larger breeds.
* tend to mature faster than large breeds
- more quickly and live longer
Cell type
* Most cell types contain microtubules.
* Most cell types perform certain tasks
- tolerate exposure to the sheath fluid preservative and thrive after sorting
* Some cell types can occur in chains or clumps
- carry both co-receptors
- tend to clump during the propidium iodide staining procedure
- use vectors
* can vary among species and within a single individual.
* differ in their patterns of spread and in their treatment characteristics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blocks:
Common type
* Some common types are derived from bees who use the clover flower 's pollen.
+ Honey: Spreads :: Hymenoptera
* Much like wine, there are several varieties of honey with different tastes, colors and textures. Some common types are derived from bees who use the clover flower's pollen. It is thick and has a medium color. Acacia flowers produce another common variety.
Data type
* Data TYPEs are the primary means of storing data.
* Most data types use all the bit patterns that can be formed with the eight bits of a byte.
* are simple data entities such as strings, numbers and dates
- types of data e.g. text data
- values
* describe the format of the data.
* form the basics of any programming language.
* is duality of values and operations.
* represent one kind of business rules, that constrain database values to be valid.
Deciduous type
* Some deciduous types have good fall color.
* are the hardiest, while evergreen varieties thrive in warmer regions.
Different type
* give rise to our sense of colors.
+ Carrot: Root vegetables :: Apiaceae
* Many different types exist. The Latin name of the plant is usually given as 'Daucus carota'. Many people use it as a vegetable. The plant has an edible, orange root, and usually white flowers. Wild carrots grow naturally in Eurasia. Domesticated carrots are grown for food in many parts of the world.
Endemic type
* are most likely to develop on islands because they are isolated.
+ Endemism: Ecosystems
* Endemic types are most likely to develop on islands because they are isolated. Endemism can also occur in areas which are separated from other similar areas like the highlands of Ethiopia, or large bodies of water like Lake Baikal.
File type
* are four characters that are used to identify files.
* refers to the basic nature of the data.
Forest type
* account for two-thirds of all terrestrial ecoregions.
* have very different development patterns, natural disturbances and appearances.
Mating type
* are of essential importance for sexual selection.
* is determined by genes present at the mating type locus
- the presence of proteins on the surface of the cilia
Mime type
* MIME types allow a Web server to tell a browser what type of data to expect.
* MIME types are a standard way of specifying the type of a document
- standardized file formats that are used by specific software packages
- can describe text, graphics and all sorts of other application formats
- form a standard way of classifying file types on the Internet
Personality type
* Some personality types are more vulnerable to eating disorders than others
- deal with stress better than other personality types
- have more of a tendency to have impulsive, aggressive behaviors than others
* affects how someone recovers from a stroke
- stroke delivery
* are distinguished from personality traits , which come in different degrees.
* refers to the psychological classification of different types of people.
Rock type
* Most rock types are Jurassic to Mesozoic deposits of sedimentary and volcanic rock types.
* are far fewer than on Earth.
Skin type
* All skin types can benefit from the nutrients of the sea.
* Some skin types are more sensitive than others.
* is the most important factor in determining a person's risk for skin cancer.
* respond differently to ultra - violet light.
* vary in sensitivity to caustic irritation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blocks:
Soil type
* Every soil type mixture of sand, silt, clay, and organic matter.
* Many soil types are sensitive to a range of accelerated erosion and other degradation hazards.
* affects water absorption and the soil s maximum water holding capacity.
* are products of many factors
- soil series separated by the texture of the surface horizon
* arise from differences.
* can affect fuel use and power requirements for tillage operations.
* can also affect frost
- surface water contamination
- water demand
* dictates the frequency of fertilizer application.
* differ in their ability to retain water against gravity and release it to plants.
* impacts water holding capacity.
* influences the amount of fertilizer needed.
* is important, with much variation in nutrient content
- second only to climate in determining the nature of the forest
- to a large extent dependent on climate
- very important in planning for and using an irrigation system
* key factor in water penetration and root uptake.
* physical characteristic that impacts the earthworm.
* range from black clay to red sand
- light sands to heavy clays
* sampling involves sampling sections of the field that have similar soil types.
* span from sandy loam to clay.
* vary tremendously, affecting how well the soil willingly absorbs water.
Terrestrial type
* have a more enlarged hindgut compared to fish.
* rooted in soil require a well-drained, finer textured growth medium.
Tissue type
* Some tissue types recognize patterns.
* is determined by a blood test. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blocks:
Type
* Ia supernovae derive their energy from a runaway nuclear fusion of a carbon-oxygen white dwarf.
* Some types act as a sponge, storing and releasing contaminants at various times.
* Some types affect animals
- mature animals
* Some types are able to transmit the causes of diseases from one host to another
- caused by bacteria
- risk factors for cancer, and others can cause relatively harmless genital warts
- boost immune responses
* Some types can cause cervical cancer
- genital warts while others can cause cervical cancer
- male hormone-like changes, such as acne, reduced breast size, and facial hair
- establish persistent infections in the tonsils, adenoids, and intestines
- even convert sunlight into electricity
* Some types cause diseases
- gastroenteritis
- human diseases
- warts on any part of the body
- contain nutrients
- contribute to energy
- eat slugs and snails
- form and cool deep within the earth and are exposed by weathering
- gain weight in their lower body
* Some types grow in colonies that can be large
- tall and some grow as mats
* Some types have cancer
- photosynthetic surfaces
- kill aphids
- live in trees
- occur in vegetation where they prey on plant pests
- release toxins that a painful to prey and swimmers alike
- represent an important food source for other animals, particularly reef fishes
- shun light for protec- tion and for reduction of heat produced in their bodies
- use chlorophyll photosynthesis
* There are numerous forms of cancer that affect the human body.
* affect activities
- patterns
* are blocks
- categories that resources are placed in according to their format, medium, or source
- characters
- defined by the presence and placement of subsidiary cells
- descriptions of objects with a common specification
- kinds
* are motivated by the goal of communicates
- writes
- names for sets of syntactic values
- sets of classes, subtyping is set inclusion, and genericity is class substitution
- symbols
- terms of a process algebra that describes dynamic aspects of the behaviour of objects
- the specimens upon which scientific names are based
- thus finite sets of classes, rather than just single classes
* can have impact.
* category of person as defined by such factors as sex, age, occupation, and personality.
* checking asks whether a term can be given a particular type.
* creation of both art and science.
* depend on circumstances
- upon conditions
* displays the value of a variable or any arithmetic expression.
* exist in places.
* follow initial treatments
- undesirable responses
* form letters, manuscripts and information on standardized forms and records.
* full-text searchable field that contains the translation of the record type code.
* group of letters designating the types of tags affected.
* have beautiful color
- black color
- certain characteristics
* have considerable economic potential
- definition
- different color
* have excellent fruit quality
- high potential
- many different color
- potential impact
- purposes
- same average energy
- significant impact
* have specific characteristics
- unique characteristics
- yield potential
* influence results.
* involve bonds
- chemical reaction
- complicate chemical reaction
* is about our innate, usually unconscious, preferences
- an indicator of the functions the metadata is intended to support
- defined by the space around it, whether between letters, words, or lines
- one important component of the complex human personality
- only one of the ways of describing the dimensions of an individual's personality
* is the attribute type, given as a string
- foundation of graphic design
- ideal or standard of perfection for the breed
- tool that gives form to communication
* is the type of the drive or media
- parameter
* model for exhibited behavioral styles at a given time.
* perform certain tasks
* provide deer habitats
- good deer habitats
- important habitats
- suitable habitats
* refers to the classification of issues as either tasks, defects, features, or enhancements
- general type of symbol
* require knowledge.
* retain characteristics.
* shorthand way of describing four sets of mental processes.
* show cognitive skills
- effects
* specifies the type of variable, character or numeric.
* string that describes the resource.
* symbolic constant describing the information that is fed back for each vertex.
* term whose subfields describe the types of the fields to be read.
* use electricity.
+ Bird flu: Diseases caused by viruses
* There are many types of influenza A, which was first found in a bird in Italy in 1878. Most types have weak symptoms, such as breathing problems, similar to the common cold.
+ Pangolin: Mammals
* They have scales on their skin. There are different types of pangolin. Some types live in trees. All pangolins eat ants and termites. They catch their food using their tongues. Pangolins curl up when they feel scared so that their soft belly is hidden from attack. In southern China and other countries people kill pangolins to eat them. Because of this, there are not many pangolins left in some places.
+ Personality psychology, Different Perspectives of Personality Research
* Trait theory suggests that there are both traits and types within people that create the personality. Types are discontinuous categories that have qualitative differences. Traits are stable qualities in people that have continuous dimensions and quantitative differences. Examples of traits are things like fairness, intelligence, confidence, and helpfulness. Individual differences are reflected in the amount that a trait is seen. Within trait theory, there are many different approaches to how traits operate and to what extent. A Nomothetic view of traits suggests that traits are universal and it is possible to compare traits among individuals.
+ Pokémon, Trading card game: Anime
* The type affects how effective an attack is. For example, a certain Lightning-type Pikachu card can use an attack that normally deals 80 damage. Types can also make things less effective. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blocks:
Type of businesses
* Many types of businesses generate hazardous waste
- produce hazardous waste
* Most types of businesses can be successful on the Internet.<|endoftext|>### blocks:
Typeface
* Many typefaces also have shilling fractions with denominators that descend.
* are the foundation of graphic design.
* can have a variety of widths.
* describes a distinctive design applied to a set of visually related symbols.
* fall into certain classifications based on their design characteristics.
* grow with typography and graphic design, and they change all the time.
* is meant to reflect the types of the entities involved in expressions
- the style of lettering
* means characters with a common design and shape.<|endoftext|>### blocks:
Valencia type
* have three to six small seeds per pod.
+ Peanut, Types of Peanuts: Vegetables :: Faboideae
* Valencia types are coarse, and they have heavy reddish stems and large foliage. Peanut pods are borne on pegs arising from the main stem and the side branches. Most of the pods are clustered around the base of the plant, and only a few are found several inches away. Valencia types are three seeded and smooth, with no constriction between the seeds. Seeds are oval and tightly crowded into the pods. There are two strains, one with flesh and the other with red seeds.
* Valencia types are coarse, and they have heavy reddish stems and large foliage. Peanut pods are borne on pegs arising from the main stem and the side branches. Most of the pods are clustered around the base of the plant, and only a few are found several inches away. Valencia types are three seeded and smooth, with no constriction between the seeds. Seeds are oval and tightly crowded into the pods. There are two strains, one with flesh and the other with red seeds. The seed count is 65 to each ounce.
Variegated type
* exhibit a pinkish-red color on the leaves when euonymus scale is present.
* lose their coloration when grown in insufficient light.
Vegetation type
* Many vegetation types undergo rapid change, such as floating vegetation or cleared areas.
* Some vegetation types require fire.
* affect patterns.
* vary from humid tropical forests in the east to the high, cold deserts in the west.
Wild type
* is the term for flies that are normal and have no mutations.
* refers to the allele that is the most common in the wild for a specific gene.
### blood pressure:
Arterial pressure
* causes water and solutes from the blood to filter into the capsule.
* changes with less sensitivity.
* is blood pressure.<|endoftext|>### blood pressure:
Diastolic pressure
* is blood pressure
- lowest arterial pressure when ventricles are relaxing
* is measured when the heart relaxes in between beats
- while the heart rests between beats
* is the blood pressure at the time the heart is relaxed
- guideline for medical treatment
- minimum pressure in blood vessels when the heart relaxes between beats
* is the pressure of the blood between heartbeats when the heart is at rest
- on the artery wall at the relaxed state between each heart beat
- remaining as the left ventricle relaxes
* is the resting pressure between beats
- during the heart's relaxation phase
* occurs when the heart is in the relaxed state.
* refers to the pressure between pumpings and is therefore lower.
Systolic pressure
* is the blood pressure at the time the heart is contracted
- first number given in blood pressure readings
- force with which the heart works to pump blood through arteries
- maximum pressure in blood vessels when the heart beats
- measurement taken when the heart contracts and pumps blood to the body
* rises along the arteries.
+ Blood pressure
### blood problem:
Normocytic anemia
* blood problem.
* is the most common type of anemia. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blood sport:
Litigation
* blood sport.
* cost of doing business
- that adds nothing to the bottom line
* due process
* growth field in probate and trust.
* is both a means of protecting the rights of injured parties, and a means of education
- everything associated with trial depositions, motions, arguing before a jury, etc
- increasings
- part of the process that preserves peace
- proceeding
- the art of communicating the client s point of view to a judge or jury
* is the civil alternative to fist-fighting, to armed insurrection, to war
- analogue of war
- process of seeking justice for injury through the courts
- study of the resolution of disputes in the context of our system of courts
- traditional way of resolving commercial disputes
- use of a formal court system to settle disputes
* lengthy, costly and often destructive process to engage in in business.
* major aspect of workers' compensation.
* often involves the settlement of a dispute and the agreement of the amount of a claim.
* procedure to resolve a dispute arising out of a variety of factual circumstances
* refers to the resolution of a dispute by law suit or court action.
* resolution of disputes through the judicial system.
### blood sport | litigation:
Custody battle
* are litigation.
* is litigation
### blood ties:
Blood tie
* are blood ties.
* end at death.
### blood-borne dinoflagellate:
Causative agent
* blood-borne dinoflagellate.
* is the human papilloma virus.
### blowing:
Heavy wind
* are common in the surrounding desert.
* is blowing.
Katabatic wind
* are cold and dense air pulled downhill by gravity.
* begin as inversion winds.
* originate in the interior of the continent.
North wind
* Most north wind contains vapor
- water vapor
* Some north wind causes snow.
* have the opposite effect, driving the water out.
* pushes air.
West wind
* cause choppy conditions and small craft have a difficult time navigating.
* coming down off the Rockies also bring a sudden warm up during winter.
- most common with many windy days
* mean a land breeze. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Blue
* All blues tend to shift toward a purple hue.
* Most blues have some type of relationship with ants.
* also differ from other catfish in that they are more migratory
- promote a connection with one's higher self, a sense of peace and intuition
* appear in early spring and again in fall
- on the eastern United States coast as seasonal migrants
* are a rare catch in the U.S. coastal areas of the Gulf of Mexico
- among the most traveled species of shark
- an even shade of blue-grey and Buffs a golden buff colour
- colder than normal
- common in the alpine shrub-steppe of the high Andes
- for bisexual or homosexual males
- larger and have more meat, smaller heads and a higher dress-out, or edible, percentage
- softer fins designed for continuous use at slightly lower forces
- some of the smallest butterflies
- sorrow songs of the common Negro
* are the biggest of all whales and are in fact the largest creature ever to have lived
- color the fall fashion
- ethnic group that was in control of our government when that woman's husband died
- everyday people's music
- mediators of the world
- most emotional personalities in the aura spectrum
- only penguins to have bluish-grey feathers
- result of a recessive dilute color gene
- smallest of all penguin species
- topographic lows, and reds and pinks are topographic highs
- tranquil and cold
- very small butterflies
- water, while greens indicate the presence of plants and plankton around the globe
* associate with shales that in the field are often grayish.
* become a standard feature of honky tonks and dancehalls.
* bring unity to society The Blue personality is what keeps everyone working together.
* can be dark gray to silver
- have variations
* come out of blacks that have been bred to blues,whites,splash,or blues.
* cry when they are happy, hurt, angry, sad, or for no apparent reason at all.
* feed day and night but most are caught during the day.
* form of dance currently enjoying a resurgence.
* forms the basis for most successful contemporary music, regardless of the style.
* fundamental part of jazz, and flamenco can be thought of as Spanish blues.
* genre that from the first had influential and popular women artists.
* have a broad, forked caudal fin, and the lower jaw protrudes slightly beyond the upper jaw
- smoky or grayish-blue eyes
* is Blood.
* is about everyday things and experiences
- tradition and personal expression
* is an artform
- ecstatic form - it is said that the blues is all soul
- existential music
- idiom that everyone can feel
- black music
- cold color
- coloring
- depressions
- folk songs
- gospel music
- intrinsic to our psyche
- mood
- organizations
- primary color
- recognized as an American art form all over the world
- singles
- states of mind
* is the blues, or rock is rock, with the words secondary
- foundation of rock and soul and even much of jazz
- fourth most popular music in America
- root of all modern music
- soundtrack for beer and soap commercials
* is, at root, a folk idiom.
* like to feed on asters, wild flowering mustard, and also lupine.
* love to be with other people.
* music of the heart and soul.
* musical form, the basis of blues and jazz composition
- style that anyone with talent can learn to play and sing
* never goe out of style and gray new popular color in all shades from charcoal to silver.
* part of American history.
* people s music.
* prefer clean, flowing rivers and can tolerate salinity more than other species of catfish.
* rad guitarist.
* represent cooler water, greens and yellows are warmer water
- the deepest water
* scales gives blues scale patterns of various levels.
* share emotions Blues like to talk about their emotions with others.
* show low surface temperatures, both at the polar regions and in areas covered by high clouds.
* sort of religion.
* state of depression and melancholy.
* tend to choose the humanities, arts or social sciences as their areas of interest
- recede into the picture plane, while warmer hues come forward
- run on the half tides when the tide is either halfway in or halfway out
* text form.
* transformation for survival, relief, joy, hope and understanding.
* try to bring out that which is good in others.
* turn pink, greens turn brownish-yellow, and browns turn red. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### blue:
Azure
* also stain basophilic cytoplasmic granules in some cells metachromatically purple.
* are blue
- colour
- skies
* is blue
Cobalt blue
- pigment
- rare for flasks
- semi-opaque
* is the characteristic color of stoneware decoration
- most luminous color in a stained glass window
- used widely by artists
* remains a popular colour for glasses.
* ' cool blue colour. People used to make it using cobalt salts. Cobalt blue is used widely by artists.
Great blue
* Great Blues have a special powder in their down feathers, which they shake off and onto fish.
* like to nest in tree tops.
Light blue
* cool tone rather than warm.
* good color for television.
* has a lighter value than dark blue.
- wave crests
- what they see when they look up so high
* require copper, while dark blues require very small quantities of cobalt.<|endoftext|>### blue:
Sapphire
* Many sapphires are small, ratty and have poor colouring.
* have long history. Tradition says that the tablets of the Ten Commandments were made of sapphire, so strong a hammer could not break them, and would break instead if it hit them. The ancient Persians believed that the earth sat on a big sapphire and that the big sapphire made the sky blue.
* are often heat treated to improve their color
- one of our favorite gemstones
- related to rubies
- very hard stones, so store carefully to avoid scratching other jewelry
- well known among the general public as being blue, but it can be nearly any color
* changes from purple to a blue green.
* coating on lens helps cut down on glare.
* come in a variety colours such as green, yellow, blue, white and pink.
* come in all colors, blue being the most favored
- spectrums of color, except for red
* comes in every color of the rainbow and the other colors are rarer than the blues.
* exhibit more colors with greater intensity than any other gemstone.
* exhibits very low thermal expansion at cryogenic temperatures.
* have a royal legacy as engagement ring choices
- jewels
- minerals
- people
- perhaps the toughest and most durable gemstone available on the market
- precious stones
* mined are a mixture of dark blue, parti-colours and fancy stones.
* occurs in many colors ranging from colorless to black.
* range from white through blue, violet, yellow, and green to near black.
* render black magic harmless, and help the wearer discern falsehoods.
* vary in color from deep blue to white.
### blue | sapphire:
Blue sapphire
* are one of the most highly prized of the corundum species.
* is the best known color.
* make the wearers more psychic and able to see the consequences of certain decisions.
* strengthens the bones, increases longevity and helps calm the nerves and emotions.
Turquoise
* calms the mind and is cooling to the nervous system.
* contains copper and aluminum.
* helps reduce premature aging.
* occurs as nodules and veins that are either blue or green in color
- small, blue transparent crystals and as thin opaque turquoise veins
- thin veins parallel to the cleavage in the black slates | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### bluegrasses:
Kentucky bluegrass
* are bluegrasses
- dark green with medium-textured blades
* common lawn and pasture grass.
* cool season plant and tends to languish in hot weather.
* has a dark green color and grows in most soils with moderate amounts of water
- the ability to replace prairie grasses that are shaded for half of the day
* is adapted to a wide climatic region which includes arid states like Nebraska
- range of mineral and organic soils
- attractive to wildlife
- dark green in color with medium-textured leaves
- distinguished from Canada bluegrass by the shape of the stem
- more resistant to winter desiccation and ice sheet injury
- most productive in the spring or during periods of cool, moist weather
- native to Europe, Eurasia, and possibly North America
- slightly slower to establish than many other cool-season grasses
- susceptible to diseases such as brown patch and melting out
* is the first grass to brown out in the summer and tall fescue is the last
- most common lawn grass
* is the most popular lawn grass in the United States
- of the turf grasses in northern Nevada
* is the most widely used turfgrass in Michigan
- species in Nebraska
- preferred grass for most homelawns in Indiana
- used extensively in waterways
- winter-hardy and capable of withstanding temperature and moisture extremes
* occurs over much of Europe and Asia, where it is believed native.
* prefers full sun, although a few cultivars have tolerance to light shade.
* requires moist, well-drained, fertile soil.
* spreads by rhizomes.
* strongly rhizomatous, mat-forming, perennial grass.
* true sod-forming grass because it spreads by underground stems.
* turfgrass with a panicle-type seed head.
* uses between four and six pounds of nitrogen per thousand square feet in a year.
### blues beverage:
Muddy water
* Some muddy water flows into lakes.
* blues beverage.
* can carry even larger particles
- hide rocks and other obstacles as well as being just plain deep
- suffocate minnows in the seine
* is an environmental concern because it suffocates fish and destroys salmon habitat
- famous musicians
- harmless to horses, though they probably prefer clean water
* makes it difficult for fish to migrate and find food.<|endoftext|>Board
* Some boards have screws that allow the bottom to be removed, for dust removal.
* are boardings
- committees
- councils
- dashboards
- electronic white-boards, to allow group collaboration, and are in use today
- fares
* are located in buildings
- stores
- lumber
- made of wood
- sheets
- surfaces
- used for buildings
* can contain knots, which are the remnants of tree limbs, splits and wanes
- rot and weaken
* certify environmental medical specialists
* do best in soft, sandy soil near a wetland area.
* feature electronics.
* have grain patterns
- levels
- same patterns
- some wear on corners and edges, some soiling
* includes sections.
* meet requirements.
* placed on the ground around plants act as collection sites for slugs.
* require maintenance.
+ Mario Party 9, Gameplay: 2012 video games :: Mario Party games :: Wii games :: Wii-only games
* Seven boards are available. One of the boards must be unlocked. Boards now take a straight path. A game ends when the players go around the board once. After a game ends, the players face off against a boss. Each board has a different boss.
### board:
Cement board
* are a common underlayment for ceramic tile in damp areas such as bathrooms.
* is made from aggregated slurry with a layer of fiberglass mesh embedded into each side. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### board | dry wall:
Particle board
* dry wall
* is made by finely chopping sawdust and resin
- gluing wood chips together under pressure, using formadehyde-based glues
* is the base material used in most manufactured kitchen cabinets
- major contributor of formaldehyde to the home environment
- used in building construction and furniture making
- very dense, heavy, and flat.
* ', also known as particleboard and 'chipboard', wood product made from chips of wood or sawdust. Particle board is used in building construction and furniture making. It is cheaper to make than plywood but not as strong. Type 1 particle board expands when exposed to moisture. For that reason is is not usually recommended to be used outdoors. Type 2 particle board uses waterproof glues and can be used outdoors
* wood product made from wood chips or sawdust glued together.
Drywall
* acts like a sponge and absorbs water past the flood line.
* comes in a variety of sizes and thicknesses.
* consists of a relatively soft gypsum core that is covered with a thick paper
- thin layer of gypsum between two layers of heavy paper
* goes by many names, including gypsum wallboard, plasterboard and sheetrock.
Floorboard
* are boards
- floors
* are located in carpets
- closets
- part of cars
* includes sections.
Glue board
* are a cheap and popular way to get rid of rodents, insects, and sometimes snakes
- safer alternative to snap traps when kids and pets are present
- also effective for trapping woodrats
- alternatives to traps
- better suited for mice and safe for children and pets
* involve the use of a non-toxic sticky substance on heavy squares of cardboard.
* lose their effectiveness in dusty areas unless covered.
Palette
* are art supplies
- boards
- scope
- where colors are selected, layers are modified, and other preferences are configured
* can exist individually or they can be nested together.
* tend toward glowing, nearly neon, colors.
### board | palette:
Color palette
* appear to change unintentionally.
* primary component of design.
* works with set and lights.
Plastic board
* appear to be a major use of mixed plastics.
* are easier to clean and sanitize<|endoftext|>### board:
School board
* Some school boards have no teacher-librarians at all.
* are a school district's governance
- community members who establish rules for how the district is run
* are responsible for maintaining and improving the quality of teaching
- setting policies that are carried out by administration
* are responsible for the administration of teachers, staff and schools
- performance of every employee under their supervision
* have a significant level of responsibility in the use of resources in schools.
Skateboard
* are boards
- located in state parks
* are motivated by the goal of freedom
- fun
- teenagers
- toys
* can also be expensive to replace.
* have ball bearings
- three basic parts
Snowboard
* All snowboards are prone to unwanted vibration, especially on icy slopes.
- sports equipment
* have enough surface area to float high on the snowpack
- two rails
* tend to be shorter than skis which reduces the lever arm of force produced by any twist.
* use much of the same construction and manufacturing techniques found in skis.
* work best on ice when they move along their long axis all the way through a turn.
Surfboard
* Most surfboards have a stabilizing fin on the back.
- just one of the many petroleum-based products at landfills
- long, platform-like pieces of sporting equipment used to ride waves
* consist of a long, polystyrene core.
* have no footholds.
* ridden over simulated waves reveal how to apply balance in order to surf successfully.
### boas:
Rosy boa
* are boas
- reptiles
* eat meals.
* have particular requirements | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits