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### choice:
Economic choice
* are ethical choices about what is important to build a community.
* involves changes to the existing state.
Favorite
* Portals A portal website that has information on almost everything under the sun.
* are choices.
* vary from regions.<|endoftext|>### choice:
Food choice
* Most food choices depend on vegetation conditions.
* Some food choices affect health.
* affect weight loss.
* can have a substantial effect on a child's future health
- indicate social status, religious beliefs, celebrations or even gender
* depend on conditions
- history, culture and environment, as well as on energy and nutrient needs
* follow an addictive pattern, with nutrient deficiencies based on poor food choices.
* have impact
- incredible power
- positive impact
* play an important role in disorderly eating patterns.<|endoftext|>### choice:
Freedom of choice
* feeble rejoinder when the issue is global suicide.
* is absolutely integral to the philosophy of liberalism
- as important in how one lives as in what one reads
- inherent in religious freedom
- replaced by a chronic sense of shame or obligation
* is the guiding philosophy behind the design
- hallmark of western secular pluralist democratic societies
- right to be tortured
- what many parents support now in respect to their children's education
* large factor in the desire for personal isolation.
Good choice
* are foods high in fiber, such as grains, fruits and vegetables.
* include oatmeals.
Healthy choice
* Limit all fats and oils.
* Some healthy choices improve health.
* have incredible power
Informed choice
* fundamental value of health.
* is part of a free-market economy
- the process of choosing from options based on accurate information and knowledge
* phrase more appropriate than informed consent.
* pre-condition of informed consent.
Lifestyle choice
* Some lifestyle choices improve health.
* are a major cause of chronic illness.
* help life.
* influence the quality and length of our lives.
Mate choice
* Some mate choices aid reproductive success.
* increases a component of offspring fitness in fruit flies.
* is also a key element of mating systems
- highly visible in lek mating
Poor choice
* Some poor choices affect women.
* can harm people, pets, wildlife, and the environment.
Public choice
* is the branch of economics that focuses on the choices that people make in politics.
* uses the tools of economics to study politics.<|endoftext|>### choice:
School choice
* is an idea whose time has come.
* is an issue most appropriately addressed by local school boards
- of basic social justice
- fundamentally an ethical moral issue, an issue of social justice
* is the practice of allowing parents to choose from among a variety of schools
- process of empowering parents to choose the best school for their child
- right name for a wrongheaded re-form of public education
* refers to providing vouchers for parents to attend non-public schools.
### cholinestorase inhibitor:
Parathion
* are chemical compounds
- insecticide
* cholinestorase inhibitor.
* is an example of an organophosphate
- one of a class of insecticides referred to as organophosphates
- pesticide
- practically insoluble in water
* poses a fire and explosion hazard in the presence of strong oxidizers. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cholinestorase inhibitor | parathion:
Methyl parathion
* is an insecticide that comes in two forms, white crystals or a brownish liquid
- organophosphate used as an insecticide and acaricide
- illegal for indoor pesticide use because it acts as a nerve agent
* is one member of a large class of insecticides known as organophosphates, or OPs
- of the most important insecticides
- registered only for outdoor use, chiefly on cotton fields
- used to kill insects on farm crops, especially cotton
* poisonous chemical that affects the central nervous system.
* powerful poison that affects the central nervous system.
* restricted use pesticide applied aerially and by ground methods.
* very toxic material, but it breaks down quickly.
### chops:
Pork chop
* are chops
- different than pork tenderloin
* can be boneless or bone-in, and they can come from the loin or the ribs.
### chosen behavior:
Responsible behavior
* chosen behavior.
* has nothing to do with the traditional methods of raising moral children.
Christian group
* Most Christian groups have standards of belief.
* Some Christian groups promote various creation science theories.
### christian theology:
Soteriology
* Soteriologies are christian theology.
* is Christian theology
* means a theological doctrine of salvation
- matrix of salvation, or better, liberation in the sense of freedom
Communicant
* are christians.
* tend to be environmentally conscious and seek peaceful resolutions to conflict.<|endoftext|>Chroma
* Displays a specific color of the content of the object as transparent.
* chart representing the skin color of one individual.
* corresponds to the intensity or purity of a color.
* indicates the degree of saturation of neutral gray by the spectral color
- strength of the color
* is on the horizontal axis of the constant hue segment
- the brightness or the dullness of a color
* is the intensity of a color
- or the saturation of hue found in a color
- quality that distinguishes a strong, dark color from a weak one
- relative purity or strength of the spectral color
- third dimension of color
* refers to the position of a tone within an octave and is, as such, repeatable or cyclic.
Chromium compound
* All chromium compounds have intense and varied colors.
* Some chromium compounds change color. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Chromosome
* Every chromosome contains DNA, the genetic material that is unique for each living creature.
* Every chromosome has a particular banding pattern
- twin that resembles it in length and centromere position
- is composed of many units called genes which determine the body s functions
* Many chromosomes have clear constrictions in their rods.
* Most chromosomes have regions that are very tightly condensed
- some genes that are potentially harmful or even deadly
* Some chromosomes are much longer than others.
* Some chromosomes are part of axons
- cells
- choanocytes
- dendrites
- eggs
- erythrocytes
- gametes
- leukocytes
- lymphocytes
- melanocytes
- neurons
- nuclei
- oocytes
- osteoblasts
- ova
- phagocytes
- spawn
- spermatocytes
- zygotes
- have a higher density of genes than others.
* The 'chromosomes' of a cell are in the cell nucleus. They carry the genetic information. Chromosomes are made up of DNA and protein combined as chromatin. Each chromosome contains many genes. Cytologists label chromosomes with numbers. The chromosomes', 6th ed.
* are present in every cell nucleus with very few and special exceptions. This means they are found in all eukaryotes, since only eukaryotes have cell nuclei. When eukaryote cells divide, the chromosomes also divide
* align along the metaphase plate matched with their homologous partner
- at the equatorial plate
- on equator
- singly on the metaphase plate
* also become visible when the nuclei divide
- change through time when markers called telomeres are added to their ends
- condense in preparation for cell division
* always come in pairs.
* analyses in chronic lymphocytic leukemia and related B-cell neoplasms.
* are DNA-containing morphological structures in cell nucleus
- a set of instructions which tell the cell how to work
- associated with histone proteins
- bodies
- circular and are the main site of genetic information
* are coiled structures made of DNA and proteins
- composed of DNA, a very long, linear molecule
- copied and stored in germ cells
- duplicated during interphase
- expressed in a pair of letters, called alleles
- extremely complex
* are found in different locations of a cell depending on the organism
- the center, or nucleus, of all of our cells, including the eggs and sperm
- further sub-divided into many bands that are numbered
- huge molecules containing many genes
- in the form of chrmatin
- individual, large DNA molecules in a cell nucleus
- labeled in red, and mitotic spindle fibers in green
- labile enough that genes can be transferred piecemeal from different places
- large enough to be seen under a microscope
- linear in form, and for that reason, so are gene maps
- located in the nuclei of most eukaryotic cells
- long stretches of amino acids
- protein molecules
- chromatin, which is made up of protein and deoxyribonucleic acid strands
- compacted chromatin
- metacentric if the centromere lies in the middle of the chromosome
* are microscopic messengers that contain all of the genetic information in our cells
- rod-shaped bodies which carry genes
- microscopically small, rod-shaped structures which carry the genes
- molecules of DNA complexed with proteins
- organized structures of DNA and proteins that are found in cells
- packages of genetic information found in every cell of the body
* are part of nucleuses
- passed down from generation to generation through the egg and sperm
- paternal and maternal, triploid
- pieces of DNA that code for the genes in the genome
- readily visible
- responsible for passing on hereditary traits from parents to child
- rod-like structures containing DNA and protein located in the cell nucleus
- rope-like structures made up of genes laid out in a series
- small thread-like structures that carry the genetic information within the nucleus
- small, irregularly shaped and difficult to count
- stained purple
- strands of DNA coiled around proteins
* are strings of DNA and serves as a model for the whole organism
- genes, covered by a protein coat
- structures carried inside each of our cells
* are the blueprint for how a body s cells develop and function
- bodies along which genes are arranged in a linear order
* are the carriers of genetic information in the plant cell
- hereditary material
- hereditory characters
- extended molecules of DNA that carry genes in both bacteria and eukaryotes
* are the materials that store people's genetic information
- within human cells that contain our genes
* are the microscopic rods that hold genes
- structures that carry an organism's genes
- package for DNA and genes
- physical structures in each cell of each organism that carry the genes
* are the structures containing the genes necessary for survival
- inside cells that contain genes
* are the structures that carry the genes
- hold our genes
* are the tiny pieces of DNA in each cell of the body that carry the genes
- structures on which our genes are located
* are thin strands of DNA, the genetic material that determines hereditary makeup
- genetic material found in cell nuclei
- material found in the nucleus of each cell
- thread like structures present in the nucleus of the cell
- thread-like structures located inside the nucleus of animal and plant cells
* are threadlike collections of genes
- parts of cells that carry the genes
* are threadlike structures found in every cell of the body
- inside each cell
- present within the nuclei of cells
- uncoiled and very thin
- units involved in inheritance
* are units of genetic information in the cells of the body
- unrelated to eye color in Drosophila
* are visible in cells during cell division
- only under magnification during certain stages of cell division
- where the genetic information is stored
- yet another way that make salmon unique
* arrange themselves independently along the middle of the cell just before it divides.
* arrive at the spindle poles
- pores
* assort independently during meiosis.
* attach to the mitotic spindle with microtubule assemblies called kinetochores
- spindle by their centromeres
* become longer, thinner and more compact
- shorter and thicker
- thicker and shorter, and are now easier to see
- visible under the microscope during mitosis and meiosis
* begin to appear, and spindle fibers begin to form from two centrioles
- move around in jerky movements
- uncoil and form chromatin
* can apparently revert to a primitive stage
- vary in size and shape
* carry genes and function in the transmission of hereditary information
- genes make proteins
- that control the characteristics of the body
- genes, smaller units that contain DNA, the code of life
- information that determines traits
* carry the essential genetic information of each cell
- genes that determine genetic traits
- information required for life under all conditions
* cluster at the middle of the cell ii.
* come in pairs in the cell's nucleus
- pairs, and there are hundreds, sometimes thousands, of genes in one chromosome
* condense and mitoric spindle forms
- mitotic spindle begins to form from the centrosomes
- further until they are distinct structures that can be seen with a microscope
- into visible, thread-like structures
* condense, become visible
- the nuclear membrane breaks down, and the spindle forms
* consist of DNA and protein
- both DNA and protein
- long strands of DNA that typcially code for proteins
- two chromotids held together by a centromere
* contain DNA, sequences of which make up the genes
- almost all of the genetic information that determines inheritance
- both DNA and proteins
- genes which are the basic units of inheritance
- genes, each encoded as a subsection of the DNA chain
* contain genetic information which determines the characteristics of the plant
* contain many genes, and each gene is responsible for determining part of all of a trait
- our DNA or genetic makeup
- the hereditary information of the cell
* counts for Mexican ferns.
* determine our eye color and height, as well as other traits
- sex in many species
* disappear as chromatin becomes diffuse.
* duplicate before mitosis
- just before nuclear division
- prior to cell division when forming new skin cells for reproduction
* end in tied loops, study finds.
* ends catch fire.
* exhibit preferential positioning in quiescent human cells.
* exist in different states throughout the cell cycle
- pairs in body cells
* exist in pairs in higher eukaryotes
- plants and animals
- individual animals
* finish moving to opposite poles of the spindle apparatus.
* form during metaphase.
* gather at opposite ends and new nuclear envelope forms
- the poles
* gradually shorten and thicken, and become visible as double stranded chromosomes.
* have a particular structure
- many different functions
- two chromatids
- various shapes and lengths, but each species has a specific pattern of chromosomes
* heal by acquisition of new telomeres.
* includes centromeres
- chomatids
- corpi
- sections
* lack histones and are always condensed.
* leave the nucleus during interphase.
* lengthen and become linear chromatin again.
* line up along the center of the cell
- at the equator of the cell during metaphase
- in center, spindle fibers connect to each chromosome at the centromere
- individually on the equator
* line up on spindle in center of cell
- precisely at the midline of the spindle
* mostly come in pairs like a pair of strings of beads of the same length.
* move to equatorial plane
- spindle equator, centromeres attached to spindle fibres
- the equator of the cell before splitting
* move to the metaphase plate , the plane equidistant between the spindle poles
- plate, the plane equidistant between the spindle
- toward the poles of the cell
* occur in pairs in body cells
- pairs, with a copy of a given gene on each chromosome
* pairing occurs only in meiosis.
* refers to the structure in a cell nucleus that carries the genes
- two chromosomes separating and moving to opposite ends of the cell
* remain condensed during interphase.
* replicate a
- as in mitosis
- during interphase and are double stranded at the beginning of mitosis
- in uncondensed state and form sister chromatids in the partent cell
* segregate to daughter cells during interphase.
* shorten and thicken with the spindle apparatus being formed
- every cell division
* show a tendency to spontaneous abnormalities including breaks and complex rearrangement
- evidence of physical exchange
- plants' secret complexity
* slowly lose base pairs at the end of their strands during replication.
* start to attach to spindle at their centromeres
* store and transmit genetic information.
* take different shapes in different types of organisms
- the lead in spindle assembly
* thus transmit the genes of the organism from one generation to the next.
* vary in number and shape among living things
- within the same species, making genetic variability certain
- size and in shape
* vary widely between different organisms
- in the number of genes they contain | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### chromosome:
Acrocentric chromosome
* are chromosomes.
* have a centromere very near to one end and have very small short arms
- the centromere located very near to one end
Autosome
* are A. the same as sex chromosomes.
* are chromosomes that carry information for non-sex characteristics
- determine traits of the organism
- eukaryotic chromosomes
- nonsex chromosomes that are the same number and kind between sexes
- the non-sex chromosomes
* come in pairs of homologous chromosomes.
* includes centromeres
- chomatids
- chromatin
- corpi
- genes
- sections
Bacterial chromosome
* are circular molecules of DNA while eukaryotic chromosomes are linear.
* consist of lots of short lengths of DNA joined together by proteins.
Different chromosome
* carry different types of information.
* contain different genes.<|endoftext|>### chromosome:
Homologous chromosome
* align at the equatorial plate.
* are a pair of chromosomes
- aligned at the equator of the spindle
- formed by DNA replication
- important in the processes of meiosis and mitosis
- independent of one another
- pairs of chromosomes that contain genes for the same traits
- seperated
- split in two and each gamete gets one chromosome
* are the matched pair found in a diploid cell
- same size and shape and carry genes for the same traits
* come together and pair along their entire length
* contain genes for similar characteristics
- the matching alleles donated from mother and father
* cross over.
* differ in banding patterns, the traits they code for and size.
* have genes for the same trait at the same point along their length
- the same genes arranged in the same order
* pair up.
Individual chromosome
* align on the metaphase plate.
* are in red and green.
* line up on the metaphase plate.
* occupy distinct territories within the nuclei.
* provide the skeletal framework on which genetic data are organized
- genomic data is organized
Normal chromosome
* are each one color.
* pair up to form rows, which facilitate their organization during division.
### chromosomes:
Eukaryotic chromosome
- linear, with the double helix sealing up at the two distant ends
* contain very regular structures called nucleosomes.
* have hundreds or thousands of replication origins
- multiple points of origin and multiple termini
* occur in the cell in greater numbers than prokaryotic chromosomes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### chronic condition:
Heart failure
* Can cause fatigue, ankle swelling and shortness of breath made worse when lying down.
* affects about five million people in the United States.
* alters the strength and mechanisms of the muscle metaboreflex.
* becomes more common as people age.
* can be chronic, rapidly deteriorating, or anything in between
- mild to severe
- have many symptoms
- intensify in a descending spiral if the blood volume progressively expands
* can involve the left side of the heart, the right side or both
- the heart, the right side, or both sides
- occur in several ways
* caused by underlying lung disease is called cor pulmonale.
* changes activation patterns during ventricular fibrillation.
* chronic condition.
* common and serious illness in the United States, particularly in older adults
- chronic disease that leads to disability and death
- problem and has high mortality, especially in elderly patients
* complex multisystem disease in which several predictors are categorical
- problem, best treated by a team of experienced professionals
* condition that occurs because the heart muscle is damaged or overworked.
* costs the Australian health system hundreds of millions of dollars each year.
* develops after myocardial infarction because cardiomyocytes fail to regenerate
- slowly
* difficult disease to treat.
* disease of epidemic proportions
- that is more common in the elderly
* happens when the heart is unable to pump enough blood to meet the demands of the body
- weakened heart can no longer pump a sufficient amount of blood
* has a large medical and economic impact on the elderly.
* has many causes
- different causes
* heart disease
* is almost always a chronic illness.
* is an inability of the heart to pump blood or meet the needs of the body
- to pump powerfully enough to circulate blood adequately
- caused by a number of diseases
* is different from a heart attack
- cardiac arrest , because the heart is still working
- than a heart attack
- divided into various types
- failure
- generally the result of other heart diseases
- increasingly common and is costly to treat
- more common in older people
- one of the most serious symptoms of heart disease
- serious, but it can be treated and controlled
- slightly more common among men than women
- sometimes the fault of a defective or diseased heart valve
* is the cause of death in most cases of hypothermia
- hearts inability to pump enough blood through the rest of the body
- inability of the heart to pump adequate amounts of blood through the body
- leading cause of hospitalization among the elderly in the United States
- most common reason for hospitalization in the elderly
* is the number one cardiovascular disease
- cause of death worldwide
* is the only form of heart disease on the increase in the United States
- major cardiovascular disease on the increase
- single biggest medical problem that blacks face
- their number one cause of death
- treated with diuretics and medications to make the heart contract more powerfully
- typified by the heart's inability to pump effectively
- very common in the elderly
* medical condition in which the heart has been weakened.
* misleading term.
* occurs under a number of circumstances.
* occurs when the heart cannon pump enough blood to meet the body's needs
- fails to pump enough blood to meet the body's demands
- loses the ability to pump blood efficiently through the body
- pumps too weakly to deliver enough oxygen to the body
- hearts pumping power is reduced
* progressive process, even if no new damage occurs to the heart.
* refers to the heart's inability to pump enough blood to meet the demands of the body.
* remains a serious threat to public health throughout the world
- the major cause of death and research is needed into novel drug approaches
* requires monitoring of the condition by the health care provider.
* serious condition, and there is usually no cure
- disorder that carries a possibility of reduced life expectancy
* serious, chronic disease.
* tends to be chronic and difficult to treat.
* treatable illness that can be managed.
* widespread, growing condition that robs people of quality and quantity of life.
* worsens with infection or other physical stressors.
* ' is when the heart cannot pump blood well. Heart failure is different from cardiac arrest, because the heart is still working. Someone with heart failure can have shortness of breath, difficulty lying flat, waking up breathless at night, swelling of the legs, and needing to urinate often during the night. There are many reasons why someone can get heart failure, but most often heart attacks, high blood pressure or problems with the heart valves. Some people with heart failure are treated with an artificial pacemaker that makes the heart work better. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### chronic condition:
Peptic ulcer
* Most peptic ulcers occur in the lining of the stomach or duodenum.
* are very common in the west.
* can cause massive bleeding, which requires blood transfusion or surgery
- develop into emergency situations
* cause black or tarry stools.
* is diseases
* look like mouth ulcers.
* occur in the stomach or duodenum.
* require the presence of acid-pepsin.<|endoftext|>### chronic condition | peptic ulcer:
Duodenal ulcer
* are peptic ulcers in the duodenum
- occurring in the top part of the small intestine
- the most common type
- three times more common than gastric ulcers
- virtually all benign
* come and go, but the duodenal ulcer disease persist.
* heal by reepithelization from periphery
- more slowly and recur more frequently in smokers than non-smokers
* is peptic ulceration
- stomach ulcer
* occur more frequently in men than in women.
* occurs more frequently in men.
* respond well to treatment but they can recur.
+ Peptic ulcer: Diseases and disorders of the digestive system<|endoftext|>### chronic conditions:
Dementia
* Some dementias are reversible
- do have cures
- respond to certain medications better than others.
* Very often, short-time memory, mind, speech and motor skills are affected. Certain forms of dementia cause a change in the personality of the sufferer. A person suffering from dementia will lose certain skills and knowledge they already had. This is the main difference to other conditions affecting the mind. People who suffer from learning problems, or lower intelligence will never acquire certain skills, people suffering from dementia will lose skills they have acquired. Dementia is more common in older people. Certain forms of dementia can be treated, to some extent. The most common form of dementia is Alzheimer's disease, which accounts for between 50 and 60 percent of all cases
* affects daily activities and social relationships
- different people in different ways
* affects people differently, depending on the area of the brain affected
* alters our perceptions of space.
* becomes common in the advanced stages of the disease
- more common with age
* causes different symptoms and signs than delirium b
- many problems for the person who has it and for that person's family
- people to lose memory and daily physical functions
* constitutes a growing public health crisis.
* denotes a chronic impairment in memory and cognitive abilities.
* interferes with daily activities and social relationships.
* involves chronic or persistent disorder of the mental processes
- damage of nerve cells in the brain, which can occur in several areas of the brain
* is chronic conditions
- insanity
- neurological diseases
* primarily affects older people.
* refers to a loss of thinking abilities, especially memory.
* results from distortion of the periventricular limbic system.
* tends to be a slow progressive illness, different than an acute event.
### chronic conditions | dementia:
Cause of dementia
* Some causes of dementia are reversible.
* is probably due to the thyroid's affect on cerebral metabolism.
Senile dementia
* generic term used to describe loss of intellectual function in the elderly.
* is actually a group of several different diseases
- simply dementia in the aging adult
- the result of old age and of acquired brain disease
* occurs when a person's mental state deteriorates as they age.
* pressing medical and social problem for modern societies.
Vascular dementia
* Most vascular dementia is related to stroke.
* is caused by a series of small arterial blood vessel strokes
- small arterial blood-vessel strokes
- characterized by memory loss and other declines in mental function
- the second leading cause of dementia among the elderly
* tends to progress in a stepwise fashion but can be static. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### chronic disorder:
Erosive esophagitis
* can be a precursor to more serious esophageal diseases.
* chronic disorder.
* is often a stubborn problem to treat.<|endoftext|>### chronic problem:
Acid reflux
* can also cause ulcers in the inner lining of the esophagus
- cause irritation in the throat
- induce a nerve reflex, the end result of which is bronchospasm
- irritate and inflame the esophagus, a condition known as esophagitis
* causes intermittent dysfunction of the contractions of esophagus.
* chronic problem.
* digestive condition that occurs when stomach acid flows back up into the esophagus.
* is more common when one is lying down.
* major symtpom.
* occurs when the normal one-way valve weakens and opens both ways.<|endoftext|>### chronic recurring disease:
Chemical dependency
* Disease of Denial.
* causes the related problems that occur in the user's or drinker's life.
* chronic recurring disease.
* chronic, progressive, and potentially life threatening disease.
* halts emotional development.
* is America's number one health problem.
* is an illness that affects all ages, including teens
- occurs without regard to age, sex, race or neighborhood
- illness, that, if left untreated is primary, progressive, and fatal
- often missed diagnosis in our aged population
- as process
- felt to be a frequent result of domestic violence
* is one form of addiction
- possible consequence of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs
- still a misunderstood, under-diagnosed, stigmatized disease
- the universal solvent
* primary disease process requiring exposure to alcohol or drugs.
* primary, chronic, progressive and fatal disease.
* touches both men and women.
* treatable medical illness from which, with support, patients can recover.<|endoftext|>### chronic, relapsing disease:
Drug dependence
* can develop through either psychological or physical processes
- occur with long-term use
* chronic, relapsing disease.
* general term which is applicable to all types of drug abuse.
* has an effect on a person s family, work and social networks
- both psychological and physical characteristics
* is addiction
- also highest among adults, both men and women, living with one parent
- defined by the presence of withdrawal signs upon discontinuation of the drug
- divided into two components, physical dependence and psychological dependence
- one such addiction, of which the most familiar is chronic tobacco use
- synonymous with addiction
* occurs if withdrawal symptoms develop when a narcotic is suddenly stopped
- in newborns when mothers take narcotics regularly prior to delivery
* phenomenon that is spreading.
* produces long-term alterations in brain function
- significant and lasting changes in brain chemistry and function
* requires that the drug produce psychoactive effects.
### chronology:
Timeline
* are an effective way to understand the chronology of historical events
- books
- graphs
- timetables or chronologies of key events in a period of history
- visual representations of events
* is chronology
* represent activities and related control points as they occur in real-time
- information that proceeds in temporal order
* show when events occurred over a specified period of time.
### church music:
Processional
* are an ancient practice, both religious and secular.
* is church music | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### church schools:
Catholic school
* Many Catholic schools have programs where school children visit nursing homes.
* are church schools
- particularly committed to instruction of religious and moral values
- special schools
* comprise a primary, a co-educational secondary and a boys' secondary.
* constitute the state's largest single nonpublic education system.
* emphasize religious vocations on career days.
* have a much lower per-pupil cost than the state schools
- an impact on the moral consciousness of our society
* know the human spirit and they still shape that spirit.
* receive government subsidies for working expenses and teacher salaries.
* reflect the diversity of contemporary society.
* strive to reflect and inculcate eternal values.
* teach students about life.
### churchs:
Protestant church
* Many Protestant churches have ministers or pastors instead of priests
- protestant churches teach against interethnic marriages
* Most Protestant Churches allow people to marry again after a divorce.
* Some Protestant churches insist on baptism by immersion
- refer to their clergy as pastors or preachers rather than ministers
* are churchs.
+ Priest, In Christianity, Protestantism: Religious occupations<|endoftext|>### cigarette smoking:
Smoking cigarette
* are cigarette smoking
- situations
* bad habit that some people learn.
* behaviorally motivated addiction.
* can also increase the risk
- cause low sperm counts and slow-moving sperm
* causes lung cancer
- our blood vessels to narrow
* contributes to yellowing of the teeth.
* deadens the nerve-endings for smell and taste.
* form of drug abuse that can lead to demonic control.
* is also a major cause of lung cancer
- as addictive as heroine or cocaine
- known to deplete levels of vitamin C and other antioxidants
- like being with a friend
- one of the top risk factors for illness and premature death
- the leading cause of avoidable death in the United States
* reduces the amount of oxygen to the heart muscle.
* starts as young as eight years of age.<|endoftext|>Cinema
* collaborative medium.
* director's medium.
* finds itself in the balance between art and industry.
* form of thinking.
* includes sections
- the formats of both film and video
* is an art form rooted in technology
- of layering disappearance
- urban art
- for the body, for the emotions
* is located in cities
- malls
- shopping malls
- towns
- the most prestigious cultural activity in the modern world
- theaters
- used for entertainment
* key to matters of the spirit, creativity and values of civilization.
- that depicts culture and society eloquently
* pumps images into our souls just like hearts pump blood to our bodies.
* universal medium.
* window on the world, with unboundless possibilities for expressing the human condition.
* worldwide phenomenon.
### cinema:
Indian cinema
* is music oriented.
* plays an essential part in the identity of the South Asian diaspora.
* very popular form of entertainment.
Multiplex
* are places for entertainment, period.
* is cinema
- telecommunication<|endoftext|>### circuits:
Wiring
* distributes electrical energy throughout the aircraft so it has to be reliable and safe.
* enables the stems to bend, and also lengthens a stem.
* is circuits.
* is located in computers
- electric blankets
- manual labor
- software
- source of radiation now that cold motors are used
* is the medium that conducts the data from one location to another
- nervous system of every electronic system
- normal means by which most businesses make their payments
- wiring
* refers to two techniques.
* requires knowledge of electrical codes.
### circuits | wiring:
Electrical wiring
* comes in many colors and sizes.
* is frequently a jangle of overloaded circuits
- located in buildings
* is one area in which it truly is better to be safe than sorry
- of the last steps in the construction of each building | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### circuits | wiring:
Parallel wiring
* allows several systems to be wired into one power source.
* is an integrative system, a closed system.
Series wiring
* disintegrative system, an open system.
* involves running one continuous length of inside wire in the attic or crawl space.
Structured wiring
* is the foundation of home automation.
* new technology created for the home automation and home networking markets.
* rationalised type of data wiring, usable for many different purposes.<|endoftext|>### citizens duty:
Promiscuity
* also generates detrimental social effects.
* can be physically as well as emotionally dangerous.
* citizen's duty.
* contributes to a moral decline in society.
* depends on the individual.
* drives sexual selection in a socially monogamous bird.
* generally implies lack of discrimination.
* inevitably leads to unwanted pregnancies that end in abortions in many cases.
* is common, especially among young people, who have few diversions
- loaded with negative connotations that just aren t true
- no more prevalent in the bisexual population than in other groups of people
- often a response to feelings of insecurity or lowered self-esteem
* is the pollen of life
- root cause of the present epidemic
* leads to increased sperm competition and males tend to have larger testicles.
* makes females dull and males flashy.
* promotes almost as many health hazards as do other sexual defilements of the body.
Citrus
* All citrus is grown and packed without harmful chemicals.
* Most citrus grown in New Zealand has a tendency to biennial bearing
- Texas is on sour orange rootstock
- citruses contain substances
* are edible fruit
- fruit trees
- part of citruses
- plants
* includes peels
- sections
* is edible fruit
* thrives in full sun.
### citrus | citron:
Candied citron
* has a distinctive tart citrus flavor.
* is sold in pieces, diced, and as part of mixed candied fruits and peels.<|endoftext|>### citrus:
Lemon
* are a great homeopathic remedy for sore throats and cough
- natural detoxifier
- an acidic fruit, as are most citrus fruits, but lemons are more acidulous than oranges
- good for digestions
- high in vitamin C, calcium, magnesium and potassium
- intense seasoners
- low in calories and sodium and fat and cholesterol free
- one of the important citrus fruits
- very rich in vitamin C, and contain potassium and folic acid
* contain citric acid
- flavonoids that act as an anti-cancer agent
* contain more sugar than strawberries
- thatstrawberries do
* has peels
- seeds
* have pink flesh,clear juice, acidic lemon flavor
- the lowest heat requirement of all citrus
* includes lemon peels
- rinds
* is artifacts
- bitters
* is located in fridges
- refrigerators
- part of lemon
- plants
- yellow coloreds
* provide color and flavor on menus for garnishing, baking, and cooking.
* serve both decorative and culinary purposes.
* sharks swim into the lagoon with the incoming tide, then leave as the tide begins to turn.
* tend to take away the flat, beany flavor that some people object to in tofu.
* taste sour. The juice, zest, and pulp are often used in cooking, often on fish and other meat for better taste. Lemon is also used to flavour drinks, such as lemonade or soft drinks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### citrus:
Orange
* All oranges are fruit.
* Some orange grows in areas
- places
- yards
- oranges grow in other places in the United States like Florida
* activates the thyroid which is representative of carbohydrates.
* also contain folic acid which can help prevent the risk of birth defects
- vitamin C, potassium, calcium as well as the b vitamins niacin and thiamine
* are a favorite with orioles
- good source as well as concentrated fruits such as prunes, dates and figs
- actually modified berries
* are also a low-fat and easily metabolized source of carbohydrates
- source of potassium, thiamin and calcium
- very good source of dietary fibre
- protective and their skins burn fragrantly
- always orange
- an important food source in many parts of the world for several reasons
- competitive Oranges enjoy competition and are aggressive in their desire to win
- firm, heavy for their size, and evenly shaped
- of Asiatic origin and have long been cultivated in hot and warm temperate climates
- one of the most popular fruits around the world
- placed under Citrus genus
- probably native to China
- spheres
* are the most consumed within the fruits
- widely grown fruit in the world
- origin of orange juice
- state's single most valuable crop
- unknown in the wild
- used for flavoring, candy, food, and drinks
- vitamin A rich
* can also help soothe a feverish person
- be sweet or sour
- serve as a drink and container
* conduct electricity.
* contain flavanoids, which are one of the largest groups of dietary antioxidants
- vitamin C, plus abundant folic acid, potassium and fiber
* goes between red and yellow, green between yellow and blue, and purple between red and blue.
* grow on trees, and are the main constituent of orange juice.
* have a high vitamin C content
- lot of sucrose, which is affected by acarbose
* hybridize freely.
* includes orange peels
- sections
* is citrus fruit
- colour
- located near orange trees
* is part of fruit
- pigment
- rounds
- sweets
- used for warning signs
* prefer a rich, sandy soil, and warm year-round temperatures.
* range from the grapefruit colored basswood to the burnt umber of beech and white ash.
* represents areas of the cell where the microtubules originate.
* seem to be of a brighter yellow than that of lemons.
* signify gold and wealth
- good health, and the number eight sounds like the word for prosperity
* stands for life and vibrance, originality and individuality.
* stimulates the milk producing action of the breast after child birth.
* strengthens the immune system and the lungs, helping ward off spring allergies.
* symbolize good fortune because they are sweet and one of China's most abundant fruits.
* taste differently based on their position on the tree.
* usually range from approximately two to three inches in diameter.
+ 2011–12 United States network television schedule, Legend: 2011 in entertainment :: 2012 in entertainment :: American television
* Orange indicates movies.
+ Orange (fruit)
* Oranges are an important food source in many parts of the world for several reasons. The juice is a refreshing drink. They last longer than many other fruits when they are stored. They are easy to transport because each orange comes in its own tough skin which acts as a container. They can be piled into heaps or carried in bags, lunchboxes and shipping containers without being easily damaged
- (fruit), History
* Nowadays, many people of the world eat an orange or drink orange juice every day, because oranges are one of the best and cheapest sources of Vitamin C. Human bodies, unlike many other animals, do not manufacture Vitamin C, so a human needs vitamin C in their diet regularly. Oranges are also a very good source of dietary fibre. But they do not contain high amounts of minerals. If a person eats an orange and a banana together, then they have had a very nourishing snack that supplies both vitamins and minerals | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### citrus | orange:
Bergamot
* are citrus fruit
* attracts hummingbirds, butterflies, and bumblebees.
* eases headaches and soothes troubled stomach, while Sandalwood relieves sore throats.
* is made up of the organic essential oil, Citrus bergamia
* is very easy to grow, perferring a light moist soil in either sun or shade
- preferring a light moist soil in either sun or shade
* reaches a height of about one meter and has scarlet flowers.
Bergamot orange
* fragrant citrus fruit native to northern Italy.
* is orange
Mandarin orange
* Most mandarin orange is part of mandarins.
* Some mandarin orange grows in areas.
* Some mandarin orange has flowers
- fragrant flowers
Sour orange
* are more difficult to recognize as understock because they resemble sweet oranges.
* bumpy green-orange fruit that looks like an orange but tastes like a lime.
* is orange
- rated as highly susceptible to nematode infection<|endoftext|>### citrus | orange:
Tangerine
* acts on the lungs and spleen.
* are actually the same as mandarin oranges, but have been developed in California
- fairly easy to peel and have seeds
- part of tangerines
- plants
- smaller and easier to peel than common oranges
- symbolic of good luck, and oranges are symbolic of wealth
* have a deep orange color and a pebbly-textured peel that is easy to remove.
* A 'tangerine' is citrus fruit related to the mandarin orange. Tangerines are smaller and easier to peel than common oranges.
* is also a tasty addition to beverages and desserts
Valencia orange
* are thin skinned and perfect for juicing.
* have seeds.
* produce the best juice for freezing.
### civic responsibility:
Jury duty
* Jury duties are civic duties.
* civic responsibility that is supposed to be accepted anyway, if at all possible.
* common obligation of citizens.
* is an important obligation of all citizens
* is the moment in time where all walks of life serve a mandatory sentence
- small world to end all small worlds
* right and a responsibility of American citizenship.<|endoftext|>### civil obligation:
Child support
* can make a significant difference for many children with disabilities.
* civil obligation.
* covers only ordinary living expenses for a child.
* different issue from child custody.
* is always modifiable when there material change of circumstances.
* is an area of law which generates more myths than almost any other area of family law
- important factor in lifting children and families out of poverty
* is based on ability of the father to pay and the needs of the child
- basic needs and requirements for children
- both parents' responsibility to provide for the child
- gross income
* is based on the income of both parents
- parents' earnings and on the child's needs
* is calculated based on the amount of time each parent spends with the child
- income of both parents and the number of children
- upon BOTH parents incomes and timeshare with the children
- crucial when people are moving off of public assistance
- determined by the income of the parties as well as other factors
- for the care and maintenance of children
- love and emotional support
* is money paid by one parent to the other for support of the minor children
- parents pay to help other people support their children
- our process of replacing fathers with money
- set by statute as a percentage of the person's net income
- society's way of organizing the financial contribution of both parents
- tax-free income to the custodial parent
* is the money that is paid to the party who has primary custody of the child
- obligation of parents to provide financial support for their children
- right of the child and visitation is the right of the parent
* message to a child.
* tends to be paid when both parents have equal access to their children after divorce. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### civil rights:
Civil liberty
* Civil liberties are anti-majoritarian, and usually unpopular, by their very nature
- liberties proctected from governmental intrusion
- the rights and freedoms that all citizens enjoy in a democratic society
- emphasizes the liberty of the individual
- refer to freedoms that every individual has a right to posses
* has to do with rights to assemble, free speech, fair trials, and religious freedom.
* is civil rights
- simply the enjoyment of the fundamental rights in their full extent
Freedom of press
* has greater First Amendment protection than freedom of broadcasting.
* is civil rights
- synonymous with democracy
Clade
* Every clade is, by definition, monophyletic.
* are hypotheses of ancestry, and are governed by the rules that govern all of science.
### clairvoyance:
Precognition
* are clairvoyance.
* falls under the category of psychic phenomena, which subset of the paranormal.
* happens when the event seen, lies in the future.
* is clairvoyance
* is the ability to be aware of the future
- know about something before it actually occurs
- predict future events
- see into the future
- view events before they occur<|endoftext|>Clarity
* cardinal virtue in communication.
* describes the clearness or purity of a diamond.
* fundamental perfection of thinking and a crucial aim of critical thinking.
* happens when the subject is brought to the light of day.
* is affected by algae, soil particles, and other materials suspended in the water.
* is an aspect of style as well as of organization
- indication of a diamond's purity
- clarity
- dependent on suspended particulate matter in the water
- related to the goal of speaking to a wide audience
* is the degree of transparency of the crystal point or points on a cluster
- hallmark of the language of manuals, which are task-oriented
- presence or absence of flaws, which occur when the stone is being formed in nature
- understandability
- used to describe the presence of impurities on and within the gemstone
* key factor, because pure water has no color.
* measure of how much and how many flaws there are in the diamond.
* measures our distance from an object of thought.
* natural product that contains no harsh chemicals and is easy and safe to apply.
* process of writing and rewriting.
* refers to freedom from pollen grains, air bubbles, or other suspended materials
- how many flaws, or inclusions, are in the diamond
* refers to the absence of internal flaws or inclusions
- clearness and accuracy of wording
* worldwide organization promoting clear legal language.
### clarity:
Focus
* causes focus.
* is clarity
- concentration
- magazines
Perspicuity
* is clarity
* means literally to see through something.
Translucency
* is clarity
* occurs when some rays are strong enough to blow right through the surface.
### class b felony:
Aggravated kidnapping
* Class B felony.
* can carry a sentence of life without parole.
Aggravated robbery
* Class B felony.
* is the taking of property by force or threat of bodily harm.
* occurs when a person is armed with a dangerous weapon while committing a robbery.
Genital mutilation
* are body modification.
* is genital mutilation, regardless the sex on which it's perpetrated
- performed throughout the world in varying degrees of severity
- permanent
Voluntary manslaughter
* carries a significantly shorter sentence than murder.
* class B felony.
* includes killing in heat of passion or while committing a felony.
* is considered a killing which occurs in heat of passion
- the unlawful killing of a human being without malice | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### class c felony:
Assisted suicide
* Class C felony.
* are rare, survey of doctors finds.
* felony in Missouri.
* form of elder suicide, and part of the problem.
* has great potential for abuse.
* is 'bad for medicine'
- also legal in Albania and Luxembourg
- based on ideology, as opposed to medical urgency
- death by doctor-prescribed drugs that the terminally ill patient swallows
- distinguished from active euthanasia
- illegal in most countries that have laws on suicide
- legal in Oregon
- often in the news
- one form of voluntary euthanasia
- second base, helping the chronic and terminally ill end their lives
- suicide committed with the aid of another person, sometimes a physician
* is the act of ending one's life with the assistance of another individual
- most compassionate solution for a suffering person
* kills a human being, but there is another victim.
* straddles the line between active and passive euthanasia.
* topic that continues to attract significant public interest.<|endoftext|>### class c felony:
Forgery
* Forgeries are crime
- falsification
- fraud
* is an important issue for security printers and banks
- fraud, as is any other unauthorized access to someone's bank account
- imitation
- increasingly common, particularly email forgery
- limited to documents
- one of the lowest level crimes on the Kansas sentencing grid
* is the process of making or adapting documents with the intention to deceive
- signing of someone else's name
* large and growing industry.
* serious crime.
### class c misdemeanor:
Disorderly conduct
* Class C misdemeanor.
* is misdemeanors.
### classes:
Brotherhood
* combines the concept of individualism within the framework of mutual cooperation.
* emerges from being together for the sole purpose of enjoyment.
* evokes awareness of cosmic consciousness and the journey of the soul.
* is classes
- kinship
- located in fraternity houses
* means selflessness.
* takes other forms than blood bonded.
### classic calculus problem:
Maximization
* classic calculus problem.
* is an increase
### classic calculus problem | maximization:
Profit maximization
* involves a trade-off between profit margins and market share.
* is also an important goal for economic mechanisms.
* leads to consumer satisfaction.
### classic fashion cosmetic:
Red lipstick
* classic fashion cosmetic.
* has a tendency to attach itself on the teeth, which is very unappealing.
### classical music:
Baroque music
* Most Baroque music has comparatively little variations in dynamics or tempo.
* is classical music
- said to be a measure of the times in which it was written
### classical, well-developed discipline:
Systematic botany
* classical, well-developed discipline.
* forms a groundwork for all sciences dealing with plants.
* includes both.
* is the science of classifying and naming plants.<|endoftext|>### clathrate compounds:
Gas hydrate
* are clathrate compounds
- hydrocarbon molecules, such as methane, trapped in ice
- ice-like materials that form out of water molecules
- methane gas molecules trapped in lattices of ice
* bind immense amounts of methane in sea-floor sediments.
* contain a matrix of frozen water surrounding molecules of natural gas.
* decompose rapidly in conditions comfortable for humans, say the scientists.
* exist in many Arctic regions, including the North Slope of Alaska.
* form and become stable when water reaches a certain temperature and pressure
- when methane and water are together under pressure
* occur abundantly in nature, both in Arctic regions and in marine sediments
- naturally in many parts of the world | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clean sport:
Sailing
* are boating
- competitive sports
- departures
- fun
* clean sport.
* coed sport, but there are regattas during the year for women only, as well.
* communication-intensive sport.
* competitive sport combining the elements wind and water.
* cultured art.
* involves pushing and pulling boats, ducking under hard booms and occasionally falling in.
* is almost unique as an outdoor activity that minimizes rather than accentuates disability
- also a competitive sport
* is an Olympic sport
- ever-expanding sport
- as much a mental sport as it is physical
- no longer a sport that can separate itself from the world of media
- one of the four Olympic sports spectators can watch free of charge
- probably the sport with the longest history. * also a competitive sport. It is one of the sports in the Olympic Games
* parenthetic sport.
* pastime that many believe is only available to the wealthy.
* popular summer sport, enjoyed around the world.
* recreation that is enjoyed by people of all ages and backgrounds.
* science and art.
* sport for all and a sport for life
- kids can enjoy right away - and for the rest of their lives
- that can be enjoyed by people of all ages
* visual sport.
* way of life for which there is no substitute.
* weather dependent sport.
+ Denmark at the Olympics, History: Sports in Denmark :: Nations at the Olympics
* Danish athletes have won a total of 171 medals. Sailing is their best medal winning sport.
### clean sport | sailing:
Solar sailing
* becomes attractive as a means of thrust on long voyages through interplanetary space.
* enables space travel without fuel.
* unique and elegant form of propulsion which transcends reliance on reaction mass.
Tack
* are bearings
- connectors
- devices
* are located in asses
- bulletin boards
- cabinets
- carpets
- cork
- message boards
- shoes
- walls
- nails
- sharps
- short, sharp pointed nails often used with carpet, fabric and paper
- tools
- turning<|endoftext|>### clean sport | sailing | tack:
Halter
* are designed to catch, hold, lead and tie animals, and nothing else
- part of harnesses
- sense organs which are essential for stable flight
- sleeveless shirts
- tops
- wings
* make it easy to stop barking dogs by closing their mouths.
* vibrate at high speeds during flight.
+ Halteres, Function: Flies :: Evolutionary biology
* Halteres help balancing and improve flight. They help flies to perform their fast aerobatics. In addition to providing rapid feedback to the muscles steering the wings, they also help stabilise the head during flight. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clean sport | sailing | tack:
Trapping
* Some trapping is done during winter months for fox, wolf, etc., while seals are hunted year-round.
* cash income and also used for clothing.
* common method of rat killing
- utilized by sportsmen and landowners
* highly sophisticated skill requiring a high level of training.
* is also an important means of income.
* is an effective control method for controlling house mice
- way to eliminate voles in small areas
- essential tool for keeping wildlife populations stable
- important part of the culture and economy of the residents of southwest Alaska
* is most effective when gophers are pushing up new mounds, generally in spring and fall
- pushing up new mounds, usually in spring and fall
- rooted in the lives and traditional cultures of Alaska's people
- the best way to remove rabbits in cities, parks, and suburban areas
* is the most efficient and cost-effective method in managing mole populations
- selective, humane approach to regulating furbearing wildlife populations
* is the most successful and practical method of controlling moles
- method of getting rid of moles
- only feasible method for controlling overly abundant populations of predators
- other most common means of collecting animals for the fur industry
- safest and easiest method for controlling rats
- use of devices such as snares, pits, and deadfalls to capture or kill an animal
- used to control and eliminate any feral American mink
- wet ink printed on top of wet ink in process-color printing
* key to integrated pest management in tree fruits.
* plays an important role as a tool to control nuisance and predatory wildlife.
* produces furs which are a beautiful natural product and which are renewable resources.
* provides northern people with food, clothing and income
- raw materials for the fur industry
* refers to the amount of overlap between colors.
* traditional art that is under a great deal of public scrutiny.
* very versatile way of capturing animals.
* wildlife management tool used by biologists to protect endangered species.
### clean sport | sailing | tack | trapping:
Live trapping
* can be an effective way to remove cottontail rabbits.
* is also an effective way to capture armadillos
- an effective method of reducing woodchuck numbers in a small area
* poor solution at any time of year, moreso in winter.
Optical trapping
* is accomplished by photons that go through, rather than bounce off, a target.
* method for non-mechanical manipulation of small particles.<|endoftext|>### clean water:
Clear water
* allow sunlight in, promoting algae growth and attracting prey.
* allows fish to easily be observed
- light to reach the symbiotic algae living within the coral polyp's tissue
* are best for wetlands because they allow light to reach underwater marsh plants.
* causes a desire to scuba dives.
* has low turbidity.
* is clean water
- just the opposite since bass tend to rely primarily on their sight to acquire food
- usually much harder to treat than muddy water
* lets light penetrate more deeply into the lake than does murky water.
* looks blue because it reflects the sky.
* reflects little radiation, so it looks black. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cleaner
* Many cleaners contain a mixture of soaps and detergents, along with dyes, perfumes and water.
* Most cleaners are family-owned businesses that want to be responsible community members
- relatively safe to use, and have only a small impact on the environment
* Some cleaners are alkaline and also contain surfactants
- liquid
- so alkaline or acidic they are more dangerous than others
- useful in combination with medications to help in delivery
- very dangerous because they contain acid, bleach, or something else harmful
- break up wax, while others dry the ear canal
- can break the weak hydrogen bonds between dye and leather fibers
* Some cleaners contain acids or chlorides which can start new corrosion
- ammonia which is reactive
- other ingredients to produce gases and heat to be more effective
* also affect the quality of our local streams, rivers and lakes
- have high levels of fragrance often use to mask other odors
- know, sometimes, when their customers die
* are laborers
- shopkeepers
* can be harsh to the skin and damage eyes.
* cause more damage the longer they sit on the surface.
* contain detergent and bleach, and work best at removing dirt and mildew
- best on dirt and mildew
- heavy abrasives to deep clean and remove severe oxidation and stains
* contains substances
- toxic substances
* feed on the parasites and damaged tissues of the skin and mouth of larger, host fish.
* is shops
- used for dirt
* learn that tumors host edible parasites.
* often think that cleaning a ward is the same as cleaning a home or an office.
* represent the largest volume of hazardous substances in a typical household.
* routinely remove external parasites from reef residents.
* use the solvent tetrachloroethylene, also called perchloroethylene or perc.
* uses chemicals to remove old wax, bug remains, tar and other build-up.
+ Housecleaning, Cleaning chemicals
* Alkaline chemicals like soap and baking soda are able to get things like mud and hamburger grease off. Acidic chemicals like vinegar and orange juice are able to get off things like mustard, wine, tea, coffee, rust, dry soap suds, and lime scale. Flammable solvents like turpentine are able to remove things like paint. Disinfectants kill germs like fungus and mold. Soap is a kind of cleaner. Some cleaners are so alkaline or acidic they are more dangerous than others. Some cleaners are liquid. Some are dry. Some are in between. Some pour out of box or bottle. Some are sprayed.
* Acidic chemicals like vinegar and orange juice are able to get off things like mustard, wine, tea, coffee, rust, dry soap suds, and lime scale. Flammable solvents like turpentine are able to remove things like paint. Disinfectants kill germs like fungus and mold. Soap is a kind of cleaner. Some cleaners are so alkaline or acidic they are more dangerous than others. Some cleaners are liquid. Some are dry. Some are in between. Some pour out of box or bottle. Some are sprayed. Some are wrapped in paper or are taken out of a box
- Health: Home
* They get a new sponge or dishcloth. People wash dishes right after meals to make cleaning easier and the kitchen cleaner. They take the kitchen trash outside and put it into a garbage can. Little flies, rotten smell and no more room in the kitchen trash basket may be why. People read the directions to make sure they know how to safely use the cleaner. Some cleaners are very dangerous because they contain acid, bleach, or something else harmful. The label might say to wear goggles or rubber gloves. It might say to open the windows for fresh air. People store bottles and boxes of cleaner in their original containers to know what they are and to be able to re-read the directions on them. They never mix cleaners. This is to prevent accidents and harmful chemical reactions
### cleaner:
Carpet cleaner
* Most carpet cleaners find it difficult to make an adequate income just cleaning carpets.
* contains substances | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaner:
Household cleaner
* Many household cleaners contain ammonia
- bleach that can damage carpet
- plant nutrients such as phosphorous and potassium
- give off toxic fumes
* are the number one cause of poisoning of children.
* can contribute greatly to poor indoor air quality
- look like food
* help remove dirt after a flood.
Powdered cleaner
* are better at removing allergens while cleaning.
* remove allergen while cleaning.
Professional cleaner
* care about their neighbors, customers, employees and environment.
* use a variety of wet and dry methods similar to home cleaning methods.<|endoftext|>### cleaner:
Shampoo
* Most shampoos are a mixture of many detergents as well as colours and fragrances
- contain sulfides
- have gels
* Some shampoos claim to relieve the skin irritation caused by fleas.
* Some shampoos contain proteins
- salt
- vitamins
- enhance growth
- have detergents which are there to rid the hair of dirt
* adverts almost always use gorgeous, female shoulders to sell their products.
* are detergent
- for cleansing
- hair care
- liquids
* are located in bottles
- cabinets
- hair salons
- motels
- showers
- supermarkets
- only effective for a day or less
* are the cornerstone to dandruff control
- mainstays in the treatment of seborrheic dermatitis of the scalp
- toiletry
* are used for cleaning carpets
* can affect the coat's shine by removing sebum
- wash out lingerie and remove tough stains
* complicated substance of infinite constitution and utility.
* contain certain pesticides such as pyrethrins, carbamates, and citrus peel derivatives
- grease cutters and ingredients to lift grime and dirt away
* containing selenium sulfide can cause eye damage and hair loss
- tar are useful for itchy, scaly scalps
* contains no synthetic detergents.
* do more than clean coats and enhance their texture.
* helps root out lice.
* is alkaline, while conditioner is acidic.
* is an all-purpose cleansing formulation to relieve symptoms of seborrhea
- elegant antiseborrheic, antipuritic formulation with menthol
- attention
- detergent, just like dishwashing detergent, bathroom cleaner, and engine block cleaner
- the cleanest, healthiest, most manageable whale in the sea
- to clean the hair
* kills lice completely in minutes.
* often contain pyrethrin
- damage hair due to the intensive cleaning chemicals inside
* treats lice infections.
* work by applying water and shampoo to the hair.
* works well and helps to replenish the oils in natural bristles.
### cleaner | shampoo:
Baby shampoo
* can quadruple for shaving, washing out clothes, and for bath soap.
* good mild soap to use in adding herbals.
Dandruff shampoo
* are located in bathrooms
- drug stores
- grocery stores
- houses
- pharmacies
- supermarkets
* can also help.
* is to combat flaky scalp.
* strips the build up of minerals from hard water.
* tend to dry out even the oiliest hair.
Dry shampoo
* are particularly useful and effective for greasy hair.
* can also be effective in absorbing oils and odors.
Human shampoo
* are harsher and are formulated with a different pH than what a dog needs.
* can strip a dog's coat of essential oils.
Lindane shampoo
* is used to treat only lice infestations.
* prescription medication that can kill lice and lice eggs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaner:
Soap
* All soap comes from the reaction of fat and sodium hydroxide
- is made with the use of water
* Carving Soap carving fun and inexpensive way for kids to learn the basics of sculpture.
* Many soaps are salts of fatty acids with an alkali base
- irritate the skin of a child with eczema
* Most soap is manufactured by large companies and is sold in discount stores and supermarkets.
* Most soaps are alkaline and unless pH balanced can cause skin irritation if used excessively
- kill all stages of the louse except the egg
* Some soap causes cell damage.
* Some soap contains boraxs
- ethanols
- tea tree oil
- is used up by reacting with hard water minerals to form the film
- kills aphids
* Some soaps contain antiseptics which are claimed to destroy the bacteria which cause spots
- wash better than others at lower temperatures
* act by impairing the waxy layer of insect exoskeletons
- selectively on many pests including aphids, squash bug nymphs, leafhoppers, and thrips
* acts as a pesticide
- solvent for imbedded dirt
* also are products in the rosin and modified rosin resin line
- can help wash away the urushiol
- has some medicinal purposes for animals, so be sure to take plenty along
- kills the orange and black milkweed sucker bugs
- prevents glue from sticking together
- works best in hot water
* are also bases, and naturally are quite slippery
- biodegradable, but break down rather rapidly
- chemically similar to liquid hand soaps
- from Greece and Portugal, many made from pure olive oil
- made from animal fats or vegetable oils
* are sodium oleate and sodium stearates
- or potassium salts of long chain fatty acids
- the sodium or potassium salts of long-chain fatty acids
- virtually non-toxic to the user and they degrade rapidly in the soil
* based on coconut oils are the most environmentally friendly.
* basically loosens the dirt from our hands and body.
* breaks down the crystalline structure of salt.
* breaks the skin
- surface tension of the water, causing the ants to drown
* can also aid in the passage of insecticides through the waxy insect cuticle
- be phytotoxic to some crops, and harmful to some beneficials
* can burn some skin sensitive people or hurt eyes
- tender leaves
- the skin even worse
* can cause a film to form on jewellery, dulling it
- on karat gold jewelry, making it appear dull and dingy
- choking and vomiting
- come from people's homes, factories or car washes
- contain animal or vegetable fat
- definitely cause flakiness and dehydration
* can dry and irritate the skin
- out the natural oils and promote chapping
- have some detrimental effects on grass and other plant life
- kill bacteria that cause odor
* causes the water bubble to fall apart and spread out, also soaking through the wax paper.
* cleansing agent made from the interaction of fats and oils with alkali.
* common household emulsifier.
* complicated molecule.
* compound substance.
* contact poison for many insects and it leaves no residue.
* contain all the natural, glycerin to nourish and soften the skin
- ingredients that can be drying to skin
- phosphorus
- powdered oatmeal, organic honey, ultrarich carrier oils and pure essential oils
* containing higher amounts of liquid vegetable oil have tracings more difficult to detect.
* contains fats.
* continues to be used in hospitals, orphanages and clinics.
* degreaser and can also irritate skin.
* derives from products.
* disrupts the membranes of the bacteria....
* dissolves the grease that lets bacteria stay on the hands.
* emulsify oil, breaking it into invisible droplets that disperse through the water.
* good lubricant by itself and is added to petroleum oil making grease.
* has additional properties
- chemicals that can pollute the water
* have low mammalian toxicity
- phosphates
- the ability of hooking people
* helps to dissolve cell membranes.
* is 'hydrophyllic', or water-loving, and dissolves readily in any moisture
- alkaline and disturbs the acidic environment
* is an extensible XML messaging protocol that forms the foundation for most Web services
- ideal substance because it is made of long chains of carbon and hydrogen atoms
- basically a mixture of fat and lye
- bribes
- capable of liquids
* is generally a sodium salt of certain fatty acids
- hard when cured
* is located in cabinets
- doctors
- gift baskets
- jails
- sinks
- made by mixing an acid and a base to produce soap
* is made from animal and vegetable fats, oils, and greases
- fat and alkali
- or vegetable oil, and detergent is made from mineral oil
- boiling fat together with a strong alkali
- different oils and fats
- fats and lye
- of Glycerin and lightly scented
- maple and burgandy in colour
- marketed also as chips, flakes, and beads and in powdered form
- needed for removing the thickeners from tools, equipment and mixing vessels
- objects
- part of the cleansing process
- placed in toothpaste to create a foaming action
- poison to fishes
- rare in facilities for juveniles
- solids
- subsidiaries
* is the alkali salt of fatty acids
- common name for the sodium salt of a fatty acid
- gateway to marriage, employment and entertainment
- island's second most important export after agricultural products
* is the most popular cleanser, but synthetic detergents are used as well
- detergent, but synthetic detergents are also used
- oldest cleanser, usually a mixture of sodium salts and various fatty acids
- used as a cleansing agent or detergent
* is used for bathing
- clean skin
- personal hygiene
- showerings
- smelling
- washing dishs
- washings
- to decontaminate skin exposures
* kills aquarium fish
* kind of cleaner.
* leave skin feeling dry and even itchy.
* leaves residues.
* liquefies the fat and makes it easier to clean.
* luxury that they receive only once or twice a year.
* mere combination of fat or oil, and lye.
* mixes with water.
* now come in all shapes, colors and scents.
* penetrate the waxy covering on the insect s body and cause death by dehydration.
* product that everyone can use.
* reacts with calcium ions in hard water so it forms a scum of calcium sterate.
* reduces the cohesive force, and breaks the surface tension
- surface tension and allows a film to form
* remove stains by magic.
* removes the protective oil from the skin and upsets the acid-alkaline balance
- oils from the skin, causing excessive drying and increased rash
* result of a chemical reaction between lye, fat and water.
* simply loosens bacteria, which then are rinsed away with water
- rinse away with water
* strips the skin's protective acid mantle.
* supposedly work because they are basic.
* tend to be alkaline which neutralizes acids
* vehicle for scent.
* waxy solid made from sodium hydroxide mixed with fats
- that is used in cleaning that helps increase the cleaning ability of water
* work by smothering soft-bodied insects like aphids or thrips.
+ Housecleaning, Cleaning chemicals: Home
* Surfactants make water able to get things wet faster. Alkaline chemicals like soap and baking soda are able to get things like mud and hamburger grease off. Acidic chemicals like vinegar and orange juice are able to get off things like mustard, wine, tea, coffee, rust, dry soap suds, and lime scale. Flammable solvents like turpentine are able to remove things like paint. Disinfectants kill germs like fungus and mold. Soap is a kind of cleaner. Some cleaners are so alkaline or acidic they are more dangerous than others. Some cleaners are liquid. Some are dry. Some are in between. Some pour out of box or bottle.
+ Soap bubble, How to make soap bubbles, Procedure: Water
* How easy it is to make soap bubbles depends on a vast number of factors. Every soap is different, and environmental conditions influence performance, too. For example, dusty air is unfavourable, and so is wind. Also, the more humid the air is, the better, which means making soap bubbles is easier on rainy days. Altogether, the best procedure for finding the perfect solution is the trial and error method.
* When mixed with water during bathing or washing, they help people and clothes get clean by lowering the chance of dirt and oil to get to the skin or fabric. Soaps are made from animal fats or vegetable oils. There are two basic steps in making soap. They are called Saponification and Salting-out of soap. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaner | soap:
Antibacterial soap
* can also help keep the bacteria count down.
* encourages the development of resistant bacteria.
Bar soap
* is soap
* spreads bacteria from one person to another.
* vary in contents from brand to brand depending on the fats or oils used.
Biodegradable soap
* appear to have the least harmful effects.
* are most effective when rinsed off on land where soil bacteria can degrade it.
Commercial soap
* Many commercial soaps contain lye
- remove natural glycerin to be used in other ointments and lotions
* Most commercial soaps have their glycerin extracted and sold to other industries.
* are mixtures of fatty acid salts.
* have the glycerin removed during production for resale.
* remove the glycerine and they sell it for other uses.
Deodorant soap
* are often very harsh and drying.
* is preferable as it helps fight bacteria more than regular soaps.
Dish soap
* Some dish soap contains boraxs.
* is very effective against most breeds of flies, including horse flies.
Hand soap
* are only acidic enough to remove unwanted skin oils.
* is used as a pesticide in everyday life to control germs.
+ Soap, References: Care
* Hand soaps are only acidic enough to remove unwanted skin oils. For other forms of oil, Dishwashing soap is acidic enough to remove almost all forms of oil without damaging other petrolium products such as Plastic. It does not damage skin either.
Harsh soap
* can irritate the skin and make acne worse.
* made to deodorize have the same effect on the body's largest organ.
* strip natural oils from the skin.<|endoftext|>### cleaner | soap:
Insecticidal soap
* Many insecticidal soaps are also effective in controlling mites so check the label.
* can also be effective in controlling aphids
* can be an effective low-toxicity pesticide, but it kills insects indiscriminately
- effective for controlling the nymphs
* helps to wash-off honeydew and kill psyllids.
* is also excellent for inhibiting the spread of spider mite, for example
- an alternative that often provides good control
* is effective against mealybugs
- on the crawlers or young scales
- effective, as are products with neem
- nontoxic and easy on the plant
- potassium salt-based and controls aphids, red spider mites and mealy bugs
- similar to regular soap except it is highly refined
- used in the spring because it is less likely to burn new spring leaf growth
- useful for sucking insects
* kills many types of insects, including some beneficial species, on contact
- only by direct contact with the insect
- when it covers the insect
Ivory soap
* is different because it floats.
* more drying soap than many others.
Natural soap
* are best when aged, the older the better
- low-tech, inexpensive and user friendly
* contain the glycerine that was originally part of the oil or fat to generate the soap.
Regular soap
* combine with dissolved calcium and magnesium to form soap curds or soap scum.
* removes protective oils.
Soap making
* chemical process known as saponification.
* delicate blend of art and science.
* has a messy past based on a chemical reaction that appeared magical.
* homestead skill often forgotten in discussions of colonial days.
* is nothing more than a chemical reaction that occurs when the lye responds to the fat.
Toilet cleaner
* Most toilet cleaners contain chlorine and hydrochloric acid
- work by killing harmful bacteria in the toilet
* are cheaper to buy than to rent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaner:
Toothpaste
* All toothpastes contain abrasives to clean tooth surfaces.
* Always use a specially formulated dog toothpaste.
* Many toothpastes contain bits of fossil diatoms.
* Most toothpaste is toxic, and leaves a residue.
* Most toothpastes contain fluoride
- glycerin which acts both as a plasticizer and a moistening agent
* Some toothpastes boast higher fluoride concentrations than others, but the difference is negligible.
* Some toothpastes contain antifreeze
- nettles
- papain, an enzyme used to tenderize meat, as a whitener
* also contains abrasives
- contributes to general oral hygiene and a sense of well-being
- helps freshen breath
* are located in bathrooms
- dentists
- drug stores
- mouths
- sinks
- suitcases
- tubes
- toiletry
* can also come in many different flavours
- be a dangerous substance
- clean teeth and linoleum and tile floors
* colloid, because it's part solid and part liquid.
* contain gentle abrasives to help clean tooth surfaces
- several ingredients
* containing fluoride can be potentially toxic to youngsters who eat large quantities
- is also beneficial
* has benzene, tin, and strontium
- fluoride in it as does most drinking water
- to be bought specially as many toothpastes contain glycerin
* helps to keep the mouth fresh
- reduce tartar buildup, but only professional cleaning removes tartar
* is another material that some people use to clean jewelry
- good for polishing chrome
- made from minerals
- one of the least abrasive toothpastes on the market
- to bad breath as deodorant is to bad body odor
* makes teeth white.
* never hurts the taste of good scotch.
* often contains xanthan gum to give the toothpaste a smooth texture.
* removes water stains.
* works on cleaning and protecting the teeth.
+ Toothbrush: Tools :: Teeth :: Hygiene
* The 'toothbrush' is a tool to clean teeth. The toothbrush has a small brush at the end of a handle. Toothpaste, which often contains fluoride, is commonly added to a toothbrush to help clean the teeth. Both toothpaste and toothbrushes come in many different colours. Toothpastes can also come in many different flavours.
+ Xanthan gum, Uses: Food and drink
* Toothpaste often contains xanthan gum to give the toothpaste a smooth texture. People who have trouble swallowing add xanthan gum to drinks and other liquids to make them thicker and easier to swallow.
Ultrasonic cleaner
* Ultrasonic Cleaners Use ultrasonic cleaners for diamonds, rubies, and sapphires only.
* are ideal for cleaning bearings
- usually safe, but avoid steam cleaning
* can damage emerald, opal, pearl, and some other colored gemstones
- worsen inclusions and weaken color
Window cleaner
* Most window cleaners contain either soap or detergent.
* are cleaner
- located in cabinets
* have one of the more dangerous professions. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaning:
Bathing
* also aids in the reduction of such external parasites as fleas and ticks
- relaxes the nervous system
* appears to be pleasurable and is essential to elephants
- for most elephants
* are diversion.
* are used for bubble baths
- cleanliness
- pleasure
- relaxation
- washings
* can also help loosen crusts from inflamed skin
- be healthful to the skin, adding moisture and treating skin conditions
- consume an enormous amount of water
* cause clean skin
- nudity
- wet skin
* common cause of dry skin.
* concern for ulcerated hemangioma.
* good way to clean the skin and wash the toxins away.
* helps birds to stay warm by keeping their insulating feathers in tip-top condition.
* helps keep elephants cool
- the feathers in good condition, which in turn, can help keep the bird healthy
- remove parasites from the elephants' skin
- the bowels, stomach, and liver, giving energy and new life to each
* increases the digestive fire, especially if the water little cold.
* induces normal preening behaviors and deters plucking.
* is about being clean in many senses.
* is also beneficial in keeping the skin and feathers in good condition
- helpful in stopping many skin irritations from developing
- an act of cleansing body and soul
- another source of losing full or portions of feathers
- communal, with birds stimulated to participate by observing others
- critical for maintenance of feathers for insulation and flight
- important for parrots, whose skin can become dry and itchy, leading to plucking
- one of our most ancient rituals
- part of grooming also
- practised as a rain-charm in some parts of Southern and Western Russia
- relaxing and helps to make the transition from the mundane world to the spiritual one
* is very important to canaries during molting and breeding
- finches during moulting and breeding
* seems to have been an important act in ancient Ireland
- trigger increased digestive activity that brings on defecation in the water
* traditional relaxing bedtime ritual.
* uses the most hot water in the average household.
* washes away surface oils, allowing the skin to dry out.
* when dehydrated helps to replenish moisture right through the pores.
* Most bathing is done in hot water or hot steam. However, splash baths function like a cold shower to help people cool off on hot days. A jogger is shown, in this multiple exposure picture, running through the Dundas Square splash pad to cool down.
### cleaning | bathing:
Frequent bathing
* can aggravate dry skin, and hot baths can promote itching
- also contribute to soft, weak hooves
- tend to dry out a ferret's skin
* has the tendency to dry out the skin.
* helps to prevent infection.
* is discouraged as it removes oils that protect the ferret's fur.
* removes natural oils from the coat causing dry skin
- oils from the skin and makes the skin much dryer
Regular bathing
* creats an unhealthy environment for all kinds of critters such as fleas and fungus.
* keeps the fluids from getting stale or uncomfortable.
Sponge bath
* are the best way to bathe in space.
* can be effective between showers or baths.
Housework
* are cleaning
- exhaustings
- work
* is an important part of home making
- for the benefit of the whole household, including the one doing the work
- housework even in space
- one of the things couples argue about
* is work
- directly opposed to the possibility of human self-actualization | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaning:
Sanitation
* Decreases population based pollution.
* Provides commercial and residential collection of municipal solid waste.
* also plays an important role in controlling apple scab.
* can almost always help reduce losses from scab and other minor diseases.
* critical component of control measures.
* has everything to do with whether milk passes or fails the daily milk grading process.
* helps prevent the spread of Dutch elm disease
- to control slugs and snails
* includes storm sewers and sanitary sewers.
* involves cleaning up all spilled or unused pet food especially at night
- keeping the area clean
* is absolutely essential for controlling the spread of infectious diseases
- accomplished by house-breaking at an early age
- achieved with the addition of a disinfectant, most commonly chlorine
* is also an extremely important component to the control of Listeria
- important disease management strategy
- quite important in the control of the papaya fruit fly
* is also very bad, so people often get sick with diarrhea and other diseases
- important in reducing the incidence of baby pig scours
* is an effective control for some foliar diseases
- important and often overlooked practice to control diseases in the home orchard
* is an important means of control
- reducing cricket feeding and breeding sites
- part of incubating
* is another common method of cultural control
- method to prevent spreading weeds
- best for controlling levels of exposure
* is critical for disease control
- reducing beetle numbers
* is critical in cockroach control
- keeping many diseases in check
- the germination process
- to the control of all household insect pests that feed on foodstuffs
- enhanced when food is served on clean, white doilies rather than on permanent-ware
- especially important when feeding calves liquid diets
* is extremely important in controlling black spot
- when trying to control apple anthracnose
- generally the most effective way to prevent bacterial disease
- helpful in apple maggot control
* is important as weevils move from old fields to infest new plantings
- because nematodes are easily spread with infested soil or plant material
* is important for control of any greenhouse crop disease, and poinsettia is no exception
- leaf-spot control
* is important in controlling iris leaf spot
- reducing the amount of fungal inoculum available for new infections
- to successfully grow brambles
* is key for controlling pests in greenhouses
- to managing gall rust diseases
- likely to be particularly effective in controlling worm infections
* is more important in the confines of the orbiter than on Earth
- within the confines of a spaceship or space station than on Earth
- often at or below third world standards
- one of the achievements of modern public health
- particularly important for weevil population management
- poor and the risk of disease increases as the weather gets warmer
- practiced by properly disposing of cull piles and by removing volunteer potato plants
- responsible for collection of all residential trash and garbage
- several boards nailed together over a ditch to preseve modesty
- such that the children suffer an unusually high rate of viral diseases
* is the best control measure for drain flies
- method of reducing problems that can arise once roses are established
- way to manage weeds in greenhouses
- creation and maintenance of healthful or hygienic conditions
* is the first and most important step in control of filth flies
- step in combatting infestations
* is the key to longer shelf-life and product safety
- prevention
- reducing house dust mite populations
* is the most important aspect of prevention
- strategy in reducing widow spiders infestations around the home
- practical method of spider control
* is the primary means of controlling the other two virus diseases
- method of population reduction where infested stored products are found
- removal or cleaning of sources of pest infestation
- simplest means of controlling mealworms
* is very important in preserving the blooms
- the overall management of brown rot
* is very important to reduce cockroach infestations
- the production of good quality milk and to the health of the herd
* key method of controlling the disease.
* means that environmental conditions are compatible with health.
* pertains to both the cleanliness and wholesomeness of the food.
* plays a very important role in preventing mold in bread.
* problem in some regions.
* remains a primary concern, particularly in urban areas and relief camps.
* simple way to eliminate pest problems.
* supplies Special items for infant, elderly or disabled family members.
* usually keeps the disease in check.
* very important component in successful gardening. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleaning | sanitation:
Ecological sanitation
* based on biogas technology can turn human and animal excreta into energy.
* is based on natural ecosystems.<|endoftext|>### cleaning | sanitation:
Good sanitation
* does decrease the risk of some diseases.
* helps prevent many diseases.
* including soil sterilizations helps to control nematodes.
* involves the removal of old grain and dust in and around the gain bin
- and dust in and around the grain bin
* is especially important for trees infected with anthracnose
- essential in reducing disease problems
* is important for preventing mastitis in goats in milk
- in reducing disease occurence in nurseries
- most important within and immediately adjacent to trees that are to be protected
* is the best and most economic way to control rats
- first step to controlling the spread of bed bugs
* limits rodents' sources of food and shelter.
Proper sanitation
* can reduce insect pests significantly
- the risk of many diseases
* increases the quality of cider and prolongs shelf life.
* is an important step in controlling house mouse populations
- critical in lice control
- essential since the infective organism is transmitted via manure
* is the key to any type of long range pest control
- the elimination of tapeworm infestation worldwide
- vital to keeping pets healthy, and shelters face unique sanitation challenges
### cleaning | scrub:
Coastal scrub
* can be treeless.
* is low, dense, dry forest near the coast.
Scrub typhus
* cause of fever in regions of Asia and the Pacific.
* is an infectious disease
- caused by the parasite Rickettsia tsutsugamushi
- bacterial infection
* is common in east Asia and the west Pacific
- eastern Asia
- most common in east Asia and the western Pacific
* occurs in the Asiatic-Pacific area bounded by Japan, India, and Australia.
* serious disease for military personnel.
### clear weather:
Sunny location
* are clear weather
- natural things
* have air movement
- drainage
* have good air movement<|endoftext|>### clear, colorless gas:
Butane
* Refers usually to a mixture of isobutane and normal butane.
* clear, colorless gas.
* comes in disposable tanks
- low pressure cartridges
* common fuel source for cooking and heating.
* decidedly low-tech way to power nanosatellite thrusters.
* has four carbon atoms chained together
- molecules, so it's heavier than propane
- more than one, and the number of energy minima goes up rapidly with molecular size
* is alkane
- chemical compounds
- gases
- highly flammable
- light, clean and requires no pumping or priming to produce an instant flame
- lighter fluid
- paraffin
- sniffed to get high, much like sniffing gasoline or paint
* is sold in canisters , for cooking and camping
- and is typically already pressurized
- the first alkane to have isomers
* is used as a fuel in lighters
- an energy source by a number of bacteria
- in cigarette lighters
* tasteless, odorless fuel, perfectly suited as a lighter medium.
* turns into a liquid when put under pressure.
+ Butane, Dangers
* Butane is dangerous. Inhalation can lead to death by asphyxiation. Contact with the skin can lead to frostbite. If the liquid comes in contact with the air, it will explode
- Uses of Butane: Fuel
* Butane is sold in canisters, for cooking and camping. It is also used as fuel in cigarette lighters, and as propellant in aerosol sprays or deodorants. Some kinds of Butane are used in refrigerators
### clearly innermost | cytoplasmic body part:
Membrane
* Cytoplasmic membrane is clearly innermost
- only unit membrane system of majority of prokaryotes
* Some cytoplasmic membranes result in leakage. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cleavage
* All cleavages are equal and the blastomeres are loosely arranged rather than in tiers of cells.
* Most cleavages involve division.
* are areas
- chemical processes
- part of pregnancy
- states
- well developed and commonly seen in specimens in rocks
* begins in the gastric pouches
- to form between the single cell, dividing into two
- while the egg is still in the hen s oviduct
* can form steps on the outside of the crystal, each parallel to the cleavage direction.
* characteristic of the bond strength of mineral.
* clean split along a flat surface.
* continues as the embryo develops
- moves down the oviduct toward the uterus
* continues, forming a mass of cells which organizes itself into the blastula.
* describes a mineral that breaks along flat surfaces.
* ends up producing a blastula, a hollow ball of cells
- with the formation of the blastula
* follow synchronously and rapidly.
* furrows form in animal cells, and cell plates form in plant cells
- now appear in the cytoplasm, which divide the contents into zoospores
* gives rise over a number of hours to hundreds of cells.
* involves subdivision of a huge cell into smaller and smaller cells.
* is almost indiscernible in one direction
- an orderly process of cell division
- cellular division
- confined to animal pole
- described according to the crystal direction and how easily it is obtained
- distinct in one direction
* is distinct in two directions lengthwise, prismatic
- equal and spiral, and no polar lobes are formed
- fair in four directions forming octahedrons
- faster in the pigmented animal pole
- force concentrated at one edge and exerts a prying force
* is good in one direction but only seen in the larger crystals
- parallel to the flat pinacoid face
- three directions forming cubes
- two directions at right angles
- guided by the atomic structure
* is holoblastic and equal
- radial forming different types of blastula and gastrula
- rotational
* is imperfect in one direction
- two directions, prismatically
- indeterminate and spiral
- indistinct in one basal direction
- made up of two separate processes, karyokinesis and cytokinesis
* is one of the most useful properties for identifying common minerals
- property that is undeniably tied to the structure of a mineral
* is perfect in four direction forming cubes
- one direct but only distinct in another
* is perfect in one direction and distinct in another
- distinct in two other directions
- forming thin sheets
* is perfect in one direction parallel to the a and c axes
- to the prominant pinacoid
- producing thin sheets or flakes
* is perfect in one direction, basal
- less so in another direction
- several oblique directions
- the lengthwise direction
- three directions, forming rhombohedrons
* is perfect in two directions at close to right angles
- forming splintery fragments
* is poor in one direction, basal
- three directions parallel to the faces of the rhombohedron
* is poor in two directions parallel to the prism faces
- prismatically and in the basal direction
- present along planes separated by microscopic dimensions
* is related to the mineral's crystal structure
- structure of the mineral and is usually parallel to other mineral faces
- sometimes distinct in three directions forming rhombohedrons
- superficial, at one pole of the large yolky cytoplasm
* is the first few mitotic divisions of the fertilized egg
- stage of embryogenesis
- initial division of a fertilized egg
- number of directions of smooth planar breakage
- tendency of a mineral to break in certain preferred directions along smooth planes
* is the way minerals split along planes of weakness
- that a mineral breaks along well-defined planes of weakness
- thus a direct consequence of the geometry and the type of atomic bonds within a mineral
* is total and quite regular, forming a hollow, single-layered blastula
- spiral, and often unequal
* is total, equal and of a typical spiral nature
- unequal and spiral
- unequal, and regular
- unequal and spiral, and the micromeres are relatively large
* is unequal and spiral, with large polar lobes appearing during the first two divisions
- polar lobes forming during the first two divisions
- usually in three directions parallel to the rhombohedron form
- very poor in two directions
* leads to morphological and biochemical changes in the virus particle.
* new fabric the develops in rocks during deformation.
* occurs as the zygote is passing along the oviduct before the egg is laid
- at oblique angles with daughter cells either moving to the right or to the left
- in oviduct
- typically in either one, two, three, four, or six directions
* provides the embryo with a large number of cells for continuing the trip.
* refers to a smooth parting
- planes of weakness in a crystal structure along which a crystal tends to break
* refers to the egg dividing into numerous cells
- way that a mineral breaks
* series of mitotlc cell divisions that transform the zygote into a blastula
- rapid cell divisions that produce a ball of cells from the zygote
* sometimes competes with saponification.
* surface usually parallel to a crystal face.
* takes place along planes that cut across the longest, weakest bonds in the structure.
* test to determine the way a mineral splits in planes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cleavage:
Holoblastic cleavage
* leads through gastrulation to a trochophore larva, similar to that of mollusks.
* occurs when the cleavage furrows pass through the entire egg.
Spiral cleavage
* can be determinate - if cells are separated they form a partial embryo.
* produces a trochophore larva.
### clerking:
Double entry
* Double entries are bookkeeping.
* visas for people requiring visas for re-entry into Zimbabwe.
Client
* are books
- cases
- located in offices
+ Comparison of Internet Relay Chat clients, General
* Clients listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development.
### clients:
Thin client
* Thin Clients are inexpensive machines that function solely to provide the user with internet access.
* are PCs that rely on servers to harness their processing power, applications and data
- the next generation of computing<|endoftext|>### clinical diagnosis:
Brain death
* clinical diagnosis.
* condition in which all indications of brain function have permanently ceased.
* is an accepted medical, ethical, and legal principle
- established medical and legal diagnosis of death
- defined by medical authorities as irreversible cessation of all brain activity
- different from a coma
- diseases
- extremely traumatic to the family of the patient
- irreversible cessation of all brain functions, including the brain stem
- one situation which merits euthanasia
- recognized as human death only in the context of organ transplantation in Japan
- the irreversible absence of all brain function
* is the irreversible and complete cessation of all brain and brain stem function
- permanent loss of all brain function
- loss of all functions of the brain
- permanent and irreversible loss of all brain functions
- total cessation of brain function, and there are tests to determine that
* is when all brain activities cease
- the brain function stops forever
* legal definition of death.
* marks human death in the scientific medical sense.
* means that all brain function has ceased, and there is no possibility of revival
- the patient is legally dead
- there total absence of brain activity
* occurs in just four to six minutes unless the heart rhythm is restored
- when the brain is starved of oxygen, usually after the heart stops beating
* refers to a condition when the brain losses all function. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clinical procedure:
Neutering
* acts as both a preventative measure and a cure.
* also helps dominance behaviors in dogs if done early enough
- prevent unwanted behaviors such as spraying
* also prevents spraying from male cats
- the passing on of hereditary diseases
- reduces the risk of cancer in males
* are sterilization.
* can also help prevent certain types of cancer
- quite literally save a cat's life
- reduce the incidence of prostate and testicular cancer
- cause fatal diseases
- decrease the rabbits aggressiveness
- help to temper aggression in some dogs
- reduce the inclination toward possessiveness
* clinical procedure.
* decreases embarrassing behavior traits like leg-mounting.
* does facilitate retraining of the dog.
* eliminates the powerful odor of the tomcats urine.
* eliminates the risk of testicular cancer and reduces the risk of prostate disease
- tumors as well
* enhances the quality of life for any domestic animal.
* greatly increases longevity.
* has no meaningful effect on prostatic tumors.
* helps control territorial marking
- level the playing field and reduces the hormonal stress that can stir up rivalries
- solve the pet overpopulation problem
* involves the surgical removal of the male's testicles.
* is also in the best interest of pets
- by far the most effective method of preventing spraying behavior
- necessary to prevent fighting and roaming in males
- often a painful process for pet owners and pooches
- said to help prevent aggressive tendencies
- sterilisation
* is the primary method of sterilizing male cats
- male dogs and cats
- male pets
- procedure used for male pets
* is the surgical removal of the reproductive organs of a pet
- testicles of a male animal
- testicles of a pet
- sterilization of a male animal by removing the testicles
- term for the male cat's procedure
- very beneficial to the health of the cat, especially if performed at an early age
* lessens a dog's temptation to roam, as well as to fight.
* lessens the male cats urge to wander, too
- risks of prostate problems and testicular cancer
* makes males far less likely to roam or fight and prevents testicular cancer
- roam or fight, and helps prevent testicular cancer
* makes pets fat and lazy
* makes pets less likely to roam the neighborhood, run away, or get in fights
- the neighborhood, run away, or get into fights
- the neithborhood, run away, or get into fights
* minor surgery.
* painless operation when done by a licensed veterinarian.
* reduces aggression against other animals
- aggression, especially in males
- fighting and abscess development in male cats
* reduces the animal's desire to roam, which decreases fighting and bite-related problems
- chance of prostate disease and some of the hormone related cancers of the dog
* reduces the incidence of prostate cancer and disorders
- and prostate disorders
- natural body odor from the ferret and helps with population control
- risk for prostate cancer and prostatitis
- tomcats tendency to spray in the home
* refers to the sterilization procedure for male cats and dogs
- surgical removal of a male companion animal's testicles
* relatively safe and painless operation done by a licensed veterinarian.
* safe and relatively painless operation done by a licensed veterinarian
- when done by a licenssed veterinarian
* saves lives and can greatly decrease the risk of canine cancer.
* seems to take a heavy toll on golden retrievers.
* significantly lowers the risk of prostate cancer in male dogs.
* simple surgical procedure in which the pet's reproductive organs are removed.
* stems the pet s ardor, averts nuisance behavior, and prevents motherhood.
* turns a male into a sissy and a female gets overweight. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clinically asymptomatic:
Female carrier
* Some female carriers have no health problems or symptoms related to carrying the hemophilia gene.
* are clinically asymptomatic.
* can have a normal X chromosome that is abnormally inactivated.
Cloak
* Most cloaks are made of bulk materials
* Some cloaks are worn by women.
* are covering.
- of velvet and cloth, principally
* hide an inexhaustible amount of sub-dimensional storage space.
* includes sections.
### cloak:
Wrap
* are cloaks
- sandwichs
* evergreens with burlap and pull the branches together to reduce water loss.
### cloak | wrap:
Bubble wrap
* are located in post offices.
* helps small rodents maintain body temperature.
* is another example of plastic sheet or plastic wrap or film, all of which is recyclable
- one material that has shown insulating potential
- used to help protect the product during shipping
* plastic sheet with soft air-filled blisters.
* strange device generally used for packing material.
Word wrap
* feature used by all word processors.
* process that automatically formats text.
### closed oven:
Dutch oven
* are ovens
- pots
- very common and are used to cook pan de campo and guisotes
* closed oven.
* come in a variety of sizes.
* have a flat bottom sitting of three short legs protruding about two inches.
* supply fresh baked biscuits, cakes, and cobblers.
### closely-related logical problem:
Circularity
* closely-related logical problem.
* is roundness.<|endoftext|>Cloth
* Most cloth is washed in water.
* Some cloth is covered by cloth
- dry cloth
- made of cotton
* gives more insulation than plastic.
* includes hems
* is an artifact
* is located in bathrooms
- bedrooms
- bolts
- closets
- clothing stores
- kitchens
- tables
- made of fiber
- mixture
- textiles
* is used for bedding
- cleaning
- dustings
- patchs
- polish
- washing dishs
- washings
- wipings
* is washed in boil water
* roll towels and electric hand dryers provide a paperless form of hand drying and reduce waste.
* takes many forms, and serves many purposes.
* weaves from fibre
- nettle fibre | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth:
Alpaca
* also are easy critters to maintain
- have a more luxurious wool than llamas
- require access to plenty of fresh water to drink
* are a herd animal native to the Andes Mountains in South America
- adaptable in almost any environment
* are also fully insurable against theft and mortality
- only half as tall as llamas, standing about thirty-six inches at the withers
* are beautiful, intelligent, wool-producing camelids
- serene animals that originated in the Andes Mountains of South America
- camelids, and their cousins are llamas, vicunas, and guanacos
- easy to care for and require little space and time
* are extremely disease resistant
- hardy and adaptable to most climates, altitudes and conditions
- fabric
- gentle animals and they enjoy association with people
- grazers and like sheep, horses and cattle, and they chew their cud
- handsome, intelligent, earth-friendly creatures that respond well to human interaction
* are hardy animals and the mortality rate is very low
- that graze on grass and are easy on the land
- in strong demand, but still rare outside their native South America
* are intelligent and are easy to train
- can be trained
- mammals
* are members of the South American camelid family
- camelid family which also includes llamas, camels, guanacos and vicunas
- much like diamonds
- music and art, grace and beauty
* are native to South America and produce fleece
- the harsh mountainous regions of the South American Andes
- only limited in their mere numbers
- part of the camelid family, a cousin to the llama
- perhaps the world's gentlest creatures with a great affinity for children
- pseudo-ruminants, with a single stomach divided into three compartments
- quiet, gentle, intelligent, easy to handle and disease resistant
* are quite a bit smaller than llamas
- rugged and are disease resistant
- raised strictly for their fibre which is fine and woven into high-class clothing
- rare in the U.S. and take a long time to reproduce
- relatively low maintenance animals
- reptiles
- right in the middle of the sheep and llamas
- ruminants and are exceptionally efficient in utulizing the nutrients in grass
* are ruminants with three stomachs and very efficiently convert hay and grass to energy
- three-compartment stomachs
- ruminants, that is, they chew cud like a cow
- sheared annually, usually in the spring
- shorn once a year
- shy and quiet, easy to train and handle, and extremely intelligent
- similar to small llamas
- small and easy to handle
* are small, easy to handle, and disease resistant
- gentle creatures with small appetites
* are smaller and daintier than llamas
- than their llama cousins, and produce fibers used in textiles
- susceptible to many of the intestinal parasites that affect ruminants
- the small cousin of the llama and are a valued fiber animal
* are very efficient at utilizing fodder
- healthy and tend to be easy keepers
- quiet, docile animals that generally make a minimal amount of sound
- rare in the United States
- smart animals and are fairly easy to train
- tolerant of their living conditions
* come from South America and have a rich history with a nearly tragic end.
* come in a broad spectrum of colors of very luxurious fiber, more than any other livestock
- wide variety of colors
* communicate through body language and a gentle humming sound
- soft humming noises and unique body language
- with hums and bleats, movements of tail and ears, and varying postures
* connect well with children and adults.
* do spit, but normally just at each other.
* don t over eat but browse gently, allowing faster pasture regrowth.
* eat grass and hay, and also receive vitamin and mineral supplement pellets
- hay supplemented with grain pellets
- grasses and chew a cud
* go without food and water in their natural alpaca habitat, but doing so stresses an alpaca.
* have a bottom row of teeth, and an upper gum without teeth
- high resistance and can go without food or water for days
- passive, intelligent, curious nature
- reproduction rate of one percent per year
- strong market, for both well-bred animals and their excellent fiber
- fleece and alapaca fur for yarn
- pads instead of hooves and are gentle ruminants
- soft padded feet, are gentle on the land and can be easily transported
- two sets of teeth for processing food
* is cloth
* look like goats that have been put out to tender and privatised.
* make a variety of sounds.
* mostly inhabit the high plains regions of Chile, Bolivia and Peru.
* originate from the Andes Mountains in Peru.
* possess a multi-chambered stomach.
* produce one of the world's finest and most luxurious fibres
- and most luxurious natural fibers
- their abundant and luxurious fiber in twenty-two recognized colors
* reproduce almost every year and about half of their babies are female
- year, and about one-half of their babies are females
* require less maintenance and are easier on the terrain than horses
- much less food than most animals of their size
* require very little additional feed besides pasture grass
- minimal housing in most any environment
* thrive in most climates.
* typically have few birthing problems. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth:
Batik
* are on raw silk or cotton using industrial grade fabric dyes.
* is cloth
Calico
* always exhibit odd or downright suspicious behaviour.
* are one of the domestic cats that have the biggest population in the world.
- notable for desserts
* means multi colored or spotted.
Canvas
* are art supplies
- cloth
* are located in art galleries
- museums
- mats
- oil paintings
- part of rings
- setting
* are used for art
- cover boats
- covering
- tents
* includes hems
- sections
### cloth | canvas:
Tarp
* are also key for digging, providing shade in the blistering sun.
* come in handy for shelter from rain, sun, wind and snow.
Chino
* are fabric.
* can be Khaki color.
Damask
* Most damasks have arching canes and flowers that bloom in small clusters.
- once-blooming with extremely fragrant blossoms, for which they are most often noted
- really old garden roses, having been grown in biblical times
- tallish shrubs with hooked thorns and wonderful foliage
* have large blossoms with a strong, distinctive fragrance.
- the fragrance of love, and of love potions
* reversible patterned weave often used for elegant table linens.
Elastic
* are rubber bands that connect the upper and lower braces
- typically of medium to heavy weight
* come in many colors and sizes.
* create vertical resistance.
* differ in their stretch and recovery characteristics.
* is capable of rebound
- stretchs
- part of underwears<|endoftext|>### cloth | elastic:
Ink film
* becomes soft when it gets wet.
* is elastic.
* is flexible and insulating
- thick
- gloss and resistant to abrasion
* is hard and resistant to abrasion and chemicals
- scratch
- suitable for thick substrate
- relatively soft and suitable for thin substrate
* is resistant to abrasion
- water, content of the container and abrasion
- weathering, chemicals and yellowing by heat
- soluble in water
- thick and dense, which means good opacity
* is tough and resistant to abrasion or crumpling as well as elastic
- very hard and resistant to abrasion
Gauze
* Some gauze is part of bandages.
* includes hems
- sections
* provide a moist wound healing environment when kept moist.
Herringbone
* are fabric.
* are located in herrings
- suits
- particularly prone to kinking
- patterns
### cloth | homespun:
Russet
* are the workhorse of the potato world.
* have a high starch and low sugar content.
* is homespun
Khaki
* also hides the dust and dirt.
* can be an attractive color.
* color, but is now synonymous with a military twill pant.
Knit
- important, either in cotton cardigans or tunic shapes
* are motivated by the goal of clothing
- mittens
- sweaters
- needlework
* end with blocks.
* often stretch in width and shrink in length.
* photograph well, as there are fewer wrinkles.
* travel well and resist wrinkles.<|endoftext|>### cloth:
Lace
* allow one to adjust to get the best fit, but take the longest to put on and take off.
* bugs on azaleas and aphids or whiteflies on gardenias are common.
* hold the body tight and demand the wearer to be transformed.
* ' fabric, patterned with open holes in the work, made by machine or by hand. Lace is very lightweight and open, and the patterns usually have many holes and frills.
* is cloth
- cord
- located in weddings
- made by knitting, crocheting and weaving
- netting
- part of shoes
### cloth | lace:
Macrame
* are lace.
* is lace
- present in every culture in one form or another | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth:
Linen
* absorbs moisture with difficulty.
* are an integral part of the stylizing of a table.
* covers a variety of raw materials known as flax or linen.
* grows from the ground in individual stalks, similar to human hair.
* is cloth
* is located in cabinets
- closets
- cupboards
- homes
- hospitals
- shirts
- natural fiber
- organic matter
- paper
* is used for comfort
- dryings
- tablecloths
- washings
- wearing
* responds better to stain treatments than cotton, but linen can be damaged by bleach.
Linen cloth
* are very durable, outlasting cotton by many years.
* is mentioned in all four gospels.
### cloth | linen | bed linen:
Pillowcase
* are great for smaller lizards and most snakes.
* are located in bedrooms
- beds
- used for decoration
* is bed linen
Doily
* Doilies are linen.
* is linen
Macintosh
* always have clocks.
* are a huge force in academic computing, and so is the Internet
- computers
- family
- information appliances
- personal computers
- raincoats
- the original modern computers
* can also act as carriers of viruses for other platforms.
* have various formats for attaching binary file formats.
### cloth | metallic:
Metallic silver
* is black.
* powerful medicine that has protected humanity for thousands of years.<|endoftext|>### cloth:
Natural fiber
* Most natural fiber absorbs water
- includes cotton
- fibers are neutral or acidic
* absorb moisture best.
* alternate from short to long.
* are both warmer and cooler than synthetics
- extremely absorbant materials
- food sources for mildew
- from animals or plants
- made from plant, animal and mineral sources
* come from plants and animals.
* cost and weigh less than glass fibers, yet they have comparable technical properties.
* is cloth
* tend to burn and the residue is crunchy or an ash.
* work best, like cotton and wool.
### cloth | natural fiber:
Staple fiber
* are short fibers measured in inches or fractions thereof.
* is natural fiber
- fibre<|endoftext|>### cloth:
Rayon
* Most rayon is made by the viscose process.
* Some rayons wrinkle easily and become weak when wet.
* are cellulose
- fabric
- plastic
* burns much as cotton does, as it is celluose and is hard to tell from cotton with a burn test
- rapidly and leaves only a slight ash
* cellulose fiber, as cotton is, but made from the cellulose in wood usually.
* contributes to the danger of tampons and dioxin because it highly absorbent substance
- and dioxin because it highly bsorbent substance
* expands longitudinally at high humidity.
- made from a natural polymer that is specially treated before making the fabric
* is made from cellulose and fibers of wood
- fibers derived from wood pulp
- cellulose, which in turn often comes from wood
- wood or other fibrous materials, which are reduced to the fibers of cellulose
* is used as a substitute for silk
- on a large scale for making textiles, tyre-chord, carpets and surgical dressings
- to increase the absorbency of tampons and pads
* natural fiber made from wood pulp.
* regenerated cellulose fiber which is almost pure cellulose.
### cloth | rayon:
Acetate
* Some acetates are worth more than their weight in gold.
* It is formed when acetic acid is deprotonated. Acetates smell like acetic acid. They turn brown when heated.
* are generally soluble.
* form the building blocks for cholesterol.
* is chemical compounds
- organic compounds
- salt
### cloth | rayon | acetate:
Cellulose acetate
* fiber used to filter blood as it is pumped into the patient s body.
* is cellulose
* obtained from wood is unsatisfactory.
* seems to be the best.
Potassium acetate
* biodegradable liquid de-icer with good ice melting capacity.
* places a lower oxygen demand on receiving waters than does urea.
Red cloth
* appears red in sunlight, and red by the illumination of the red light from a neon tube.
* is used to attach the feathers to the shaft. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth:
Satin
* are also cooler against the skin than some of the nylon tricot fabrics.
* can sometimes feel quite cold.
* includes hems
- sections
* is an expensive fabric and only used in costly garments
- smooth cloth
- woven from silk, polyester, acetate, or even blends of fibers
Scrim
* are distinctive since there is empty space between threads.
* is cloth
Serge
* are fabric.
* heavy wool fabric which has traditionally been used in fine saddle making. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth:
Silk
* Most silk comes from worms
- constitutes silk thread
- has surfaces
- silks are smooth, whereas wool or cotton with ridges is rough
* Some silk contains many nutrients
* absorbs moisture, which makes it cool in the summer and warm in the winter.
* also has long fibres except for the noil
- is used for movement
* are fibrous proteins that form heterogeneous, semi-crystalline solids
- only receptive to pollen for about ten days after emergence from the husk
- susceptible to infection during the first five days after initiation
* comes from spinnerets
* fiber made of protein, like wool or hair.
* goes with leather.
* helps remove sweat
- to make hair appear shiny by coating the hair and reflecting the light
* is acceptable chemically, but it is significantly less durable than cotton or linen
- also especially suited to screen printing
* is an animal fiber made from the viscous fluid of the silkworm
- example of a macromolecule, as are all proteins
- ideal fabric for light weight travel
- and has been an important economic resource throughout history
- another fiber used in Maya weaving
* is as critical to the success of salticid spiders as it is to other spiders
- strong as a steel wire of the same diameter but is very light sensitive
- at first light in colour but darkens with age
- best ironed wet with a warm iron
- books
* is considered one of China's greatest luxuries
- the finest medium for color dyes
- cool in warm weather and warm in cold weather
- extremely high in tensile strength, exceeding that of nylon
- highly receptive to dyeing
- hydrophobic, meaning it is naturally water resistant
- less freely absorbent
- little used in interior decoration
* is located in chinas
- garments
- japans
- parachutes
- shirts
- ties
* is made by tiny caterpillars trying to spin cocoons for their transformation into moths
- from silkworm cocoons
- natural materials
* is one continuous filament fiber
- of nature's strongest fibers, stronger that steel, and wax discolors the thread
* is one of the oldest textile fibers known to man
- fibres known to man
- strongest fibers so once the color is colorfast, the material lasts
- organic fiber
- organics
* is produced by the silk glands and released by the spinners
- with few chemical fertilizers and practically no insecticides
- within the silk glands of spiders
- recognised as luxurious but is also the strongest of natural fabrics
- resistant to most mineral acids, except for sulfuric acid, which dissolves it
- secreted from abdomen glands as liquid, then hardens as it leaves body
- sensitive to sun and wet blocking
- special in many ways
* is the best cashmere wool in the world
- natural fiber for the human skin
- essence of Chinese embroidery
- fabric of choice by artists over the centuries
- fibre silkworms weave to make cocoons
* is the most expensive fiber used in the weaving of Oriental rugs
- non-allergenic of all the natural fibers and is extremely lightweight
- only natural filament fiber
- principal commodity
- shiny fiber made by silkworms to form their cocoons
- strongest of the natural fibers
- warmest natural material
* is used as a glove lining for greater breathability and extra comfort
- because it is ultra thin, and has high tensile strength
* is used for boxers
- clothing
- drag lines, which are lines of silk that are anchored to a surface
- fingernails
- internal sutures, such as fetal skin sutures, and for ligatures
- slips
- widely throughout the world by professional silk artists
* is very easy to use and knot
- soft to touch and keeps warm
- woven of raw silk
* made by Sydney funnelweb spiders is used as cross hairs in optical instruments
- from wild silkworms is called tussah silk
* natural fiber that accomplishes the same wicking process
- with great insulating properties
- fibre an animal protein like wool
- protein fiber, like human hair, taken from the cocoon of the silkworm
- retainer of body heat, lets moisture wick through to the outer sock
* part of our Japanese daily life and culture.
* produces static electricity by friction.
* producing caterpillars prefer to feed on the leaves of the mulberry tree.
* protein fiber like wool
- that has an unusual composition in that it consists of only a few amino acids
* readily accepts acid type dyes and can also be colored with marking pens.
* regulates moisture without adding insulation and has an amazing ability to avoid odor.
* serves purposes.
* starts out as a liquid in the salivary glands.
* strong, soft, lustrous fibre extruded by certain kinds of moth and spiders.
* takes dyes remarkably well, for colors that are vivid, true, and long-lasting
- natural dyes readily, giving strong saturated color
* turn brown and dry up after the fertilization process occurs.
* unique part of Indian culture and tradition.
* very strong and durable, natural fabric.
+ Butterfly, Life cycle, Caterpillar
* All caterpillars can make silk. The silk is made from the salivary glands. Silk starts out as a liquid in the salivary glands. The caterpillar draws out the silk into a small thread. The silk hardens as soon as it is exposed to the air. Caterpillars use silk to make nests or cocoons.
+ Silk, Chemical properties: Fibers :: Cloth
* Silk is resistant to most mineral acids, except for sulfuric acid, which dissolves it. Perspiration makes silk yellow. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth | silk:
Corn silk
* acts as a natural diuretic.
* favorite food which is often consumed as it grows.
* is part stigma, part style
- used for bladder complaints, as it has a cleansing effect on urea as it circulates
- very beneficial in treating urinary tract infections and helps to pass urinary stones
Tussah silk
* is similar to shantung, with silk from the wild
- the most common type of wild silk
* rough, durable, washable fabric known as shantung or pongee.
Wild silk
* comes silkworms which feed on a variety of leaves, including oak and cherry trees.
* has a tan colour derived from the tannin in the oak leaves.
* is made by the tussah worm of India and China, which feeds on oak leaves
- the product of the tussah worm of India and China, which feeds on oaks
Spandex
* are cloth
* is cloth
- heat sensitive, and the fabric easily gets permanent shiny marks on it
- more resistant to washing, perspiration, and heat than latex
Tapa
* are bark
* are small appetizer-sized dishes best eaten in vast quantities
- portions of foods, both hot and cold, served in wine bars and taverns
* originate from Spain.
Tapa cloth
* is made from the inner bark of a tree, the paper mulberry tree.
* plays a significant role in rituals and celebrations.
Tartan
* are a beautiful blending of a few basic colors into many different patterns
- in a sense totemic, and can act as symbols or standards for a family or clan
* includes hems
- sections
* is cloth
Terry
* Terries are fabric
- musicians
- nuts
- toweling
- have kids
* Terries includes hems
- sections
* font of information on hints and techniques for turning.
- co-inventor of the lithium recycling process
* maker of wooden flutes for Irish and Classical music.
* member of the following philatelic origanizations.
Tweed
* are desirable for outer wear, being moisture resistant and very durable.
* is located in closets
- clothing stores
- only three days old
- used for hats
Velvet
* Some velvet protects antlers.
* are an odorless alternative to other dog chews
- durable, lasting, velvety-textured chews that resist cracking or splintering
* is located in clothing
- coffins
- jewelry stores
- voices
* tolerate a wide firing range, and can be used on most temperatures and clay bodies.<|endoftext|>### cloth:
Wool
* Most wool comes from sheep
- soaks in oil
* Some wool attracts blowflies
- conducts electricity
* absorbs moisture and allows for air circulation near the skin
- readily and reduces foot perspiration and discomfort
* accounts for a small percentage of carpeting sold today.
* alleviates allergies, asthma, chronic pain with safety and comfort
- safety and healing warmth and comfort
* allows air to reach the skin and reduces the chance of skin breakdown.
* can be sheer, thin, soft, thick, stiff or anything in between.
- the hair of sheep and silk thread is spun from the cocoon of the silkworm moth
* consists of a fine, long and elastic protein called keratin
- protein fibers
* continues as it has for the last ten thousand years, as the premier clothing fibre.
* hats over ears.
* helps regulate body temperature because it is an absorbent fiber.
* is coats.
* is located in butts
- sheep farms
- shirts
- sweaters
- materials
* is natural fiber
- organic matter
- protective covering
- used for sweaters
* pillows, mattress pads and comforters regulate the temperature in all seasons.
* reacts badly to abrupt temperature changes.
* relies on flocks of sheep and goats that often denude environmentally fragile land
- large flocks of sheep that denude fragile, arid areas of earth
* resists dirt and needs cleaning less frequently then other fibers.
* shrinks in hot water.
* sleeps warm in the winter and cool in the summer.
* soaks in baby oil
* works the same way as polypro but can be itchy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloth | wool:
British wool
* Most British wool is used for coarse fabrics such as carpets.
* tends to be used for coarse fabrics like carpets.
Cashmere wool
* is well-known almost anywhere in the world.
+ Kashmir, Economy, Agriculture: British India
* Cashmere wool is well-known almost anywhere in the world. Cashmere wool is wool from Cashmere goats. Because of conflicts over the territory however, most Cashmere wool no longer comes from Kashmir.
Merino wool
* has a much finer fiber diameter, which makes it itch-free
- softness unmatched by other wools
* socks for sports, dress, and casual wear.
* very fine and quality wool that actually helps to regulate body temperature.
Sheep wool
* can be blond, red, beige, brown, silver or gray.
* is spun and is used in clothing such sweaters, mitts, and pants
- the primary material used for weaving but yak and goat hair are also used
Worsted wool
* are lightweight for spring and summer.
* is one of the best fabrics to consider
- usually very fine and used for suits and fine fabric
- wool which is carded and combed so that all the fibres are parallel
Woolen
* do, however, provide exceptional warmth due to their density and ability to trap air.
* is cloth
### clothes:
Apron
* are also an essential article of clothing to provide
- always worn over regular work clothes or coveralls
- part of fairways
- paved surfaces
- sites
- worn to protect clothing
* can provide better protection from corrosive and irritating liquids than laboratory coats.
* includes apron string
- hems
- sections
* protect the most vulnerable outside area of a dress, the front, from spills and soiling.
* symbolize the role of helper.
Blouse
* are bodices
- located in suitcases
- shirts
- tops
* includes collars<|endoftext|>### clothes:
Costume
* are attire.
* are located in operas
- theaters
* includes sections.
* The word 'costume' is used to describe a set of clothes that someone is wearing in order to say something about their personality. Some costumes are special to particular countries or areas. They are worn because people are proud of their country. Actors in a theatre wear costumes because they are pretending to be a particular person in a play or ballet. Costumes can be worn for carnivals or parties.
+ Swashbuckler movie: Swashbuckler movies
* Swashbuckler movies are one of the most flamboyant Hollywood genres. These movies are unrealistic. They are often set in the Renaissance, in Arabia, or on pirate ships. Sets are elaborate. Costumes are lavish. Swashbuckler movies attract big audiences. These audiences want to forget their boring everyday lives. They can escape their lives in the adventure, romance, and daring stunts of the swashbuckler movie. Famous actors who portrayed swashbucklers are Errol Flynn and Douglas Fairbanks.
Denim
* Some denims have an extra layer of fabric fused to the inside knee area.
* includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- hip pockets
- lap covering
- pant legs
- pocket flaps
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
- zippers<|endoftext|>### clothes:
Footwear
* allows people to walk on rough surfaces such as gravel roads without hurting their feet.
* can play a crucial role in maintenance, healing and prevention.
* epitomises the variety of Antarctic activities and conditions.
* has good traction
* includes foot grounders, shoes or booties
* is also important when using a walker
- usually some type of runner, preferably with some grip
* matter of personal choice.
* sometimes plays an important role.
* ' is an item of clothing made by humans that covers and protects the foot, including the soles of the feet. Footwear allows people to walk on rough surfaces such as gravel roads without hurting their feet. Some types of footwear such as boots help to keep people's feet dry, or help to keep people's feet warm in cold weather.
* tends to be manufactured in natural rubber producing countries. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | footwear:
Hosiery
* is footwear.
* usually is sold in department stores near other accessories such as handbags and scarves.
Improper footwear
* can cause or aggravate existing foot problems.
* major cause of injuries to feet, knees, and ankles.
Proper footwear
* helps limit shock and stress.
* is important in Spring hiking when trails are wet and muddy.<|endoftext|>### clothes | footwear:
Sock
* Most socks are made of fiber
- synthetic fiber
* Some socks are heavy and worn by large men, Some socks are for ladies, proper and thin
- worn by big football players, They ride high, with stripes, and match their wearers.
* They absorb sweat and help to keep the foot dry. Socks also give comfort to people's feet and keep them warm in cold weather. They are usually made of cotton or wool. Toe socks' are socks that wrap each toe separate from the others. Socks can be worn on the feet. Socks come in an array of different colors
* are an afterthought in many people's wardrobes
- capable of warm foots
- for people of all shapes and sizes, short ones, fat ones, and even high-risers
- garments
- hosiery
* are located in beds
- bureaus
- drawers
- gyms
- houses
- shoes
- suitcases
- thread
- one of the more beneficial disposables of modern times
- sports-specific for running, tennis, light running, light hiking, walking and aerobics
- to be worn with tennis shoes at all times
- used for comfort
- what people wear, people here and people everywhere
* can decrease friction between the feet and shoes.
* can eat any place they want
- anywhere they want
- wherever they want
* come in every size, shape and form.
* correspond to shoe size.
* have primarily to keep feet warm and dry.
* includes sections.
* is hose
* proxy protocol for firewall traversal and remote access to servers.
* symbolize strength of soul, sense of reality, and beginnings.
* uses sockets to represent and keep track of individual connections.
### clothes | footwear | sock:
Synthetic sock
* allow more air to penetrate the sock which draws away moisture and cools the foot.
* dry quicker than wool.
Stocking
* are a piece of ladies apparel that serve no conceivable purpose
- located in suitcases
* includes sections.
* is hosiery
- provision
- used only to introduce or reintroduce smallmouth to a body of water
* represents the number and distribution of living seedlings over the plantation.<|endoftext|>### clothes:
Garment
* Most garments are worn by women.
* Some garments are made of fur
- worn by ladies
* are clothing
- located in suitcases
- made of cotton
* includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- cuffs
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- pockets
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
* made by home-based outworkers are strongly related to fashion trends
- of specially formulated fibers can provide powerful protection against the sun
* tend to lift up from normal body positions when crutches are used.
* vary significantly in fabric, style, color, compression, and price.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment | bathing suit:
Bikini
* are attire.
* are located in beachs
- closets
- swimming pools
- no longer just for the young
- part of the lifestyle of young, confident girls
- swimsuits
- worn at the hips
* bathing suit
* have less material.
* render the wearer invulnerable to any form of damage.
+ Bikini panty: Underwear
* Bikini panties' are a type of underwear. They are usually worn by women, but can be worn by men as well. They look like a bikini bottom, but are made out of cotton, silk, lace or other fabrics that are used to make underwear. Bikini panties are a very popular style of underwear and come in many styles. Bikinis are worn at the hips. The rear coverage of the bikini is not as full as with the brief. Bikini is the most widely worn style among women worldwide. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | garment | cape:
Spit
* Many spits have a hooked or curved end.
* are dangerous places in tsunami-prone areas
- elongate ridges of sand or gravel that project from land and end in open water
- long narrow ridges of sand and shingle which project from the coastline into the sea
- projections of current-drifted that extend out into open water
* can involve blows
- hits
- insults
- leaves
- splats
* commonly develop in the direction of shore drift.
* ends with coughs
- swallows
* is expulsions
- located in mouths
* is motivated by the goal of dry mouths
- hate
- newspapers
- part of racks
- skewers
* normally form at the mouth of a bay and curve inward.
* often form a straight ridge of sediment across a bay.
* usually form at the mouth of a bay due to long shore current and beach drift.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Coat
* More coats equal more light.
* More coats mean less ultraviolet rays, flare and glare
* Most coats are made of materials
- waterproof materials
* Most coats have color
- cuffs
- different color
- double layers
- fur wrist cuffs
- hues
- inner layers
- membranous layers
- patterns
* Most coats help animals
- hares
- predators
* Some coat beads to treat infection
- soft tissue infection
- coats are so long they nearly touch the ground
* Some coats have distinct odor
- heat
- peculiar smell
- saddles
- spheres
- spots
* Some coats help cold weather
- react differently to different ingredients
* Some coats reflect light
- sunlight
- tend to be greasy
* are garments
- hair
* are located in backpacks
- closets
- wool
- part of mammals
- protective covering
- without collars, lapels or pockets
* come in a variety of lengths from short to long
- wide range of types and textures
- most colors and patterns
- irregular patterns
- reddish color
- satin sheen
* includes bands
- breast pockets
- button holes
- coat buttons
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
* leaves with liquid polyurethane to seal, and let dry.
* provide protection.
* tend to grow faster in the summer than in the winter.
* vary in density depending on their habitat.
### clothes | garment | coat:
Gilding
* calls for damp and rainy weather.
* is the adornment of a surface with gold or metal leaf.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment | coat:
Gilt
* are bonds
- coating
- deprived of protein resulting in reduced growth rate and decreased carcass lean
- notorious for all farrowing under the only tree in a pen
- the popular name for UK government bonds
* generally take longer to eat their feed than sows.
* have a greater lysine to energy requirement than barrows
- slower eating speed than sows
- lower antibody concentrations in colostrum
* produce less colostrum.
* take longer to feed than sows.
* typically have better growth performance and remain leaner at heavier weights.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment | coat:
Jacket
* Most jackets have inch waists
* Some jackets are worn by men
- contain laminates bonding several thin layers of different materials
- have short legs like a shorty, others feature leg holes similar to a woman's swimsuit
* are also good for hiding things in, like a baby s nose or a cannon
- clothing
- films
- hard, thick, cover the skin completely
- in lightweight fabrics with soft lines
* are located in closets
- people
- suitcases
- outerwear that is used for all kinds of weather
- part of potato
- peels
- shells
- wrapping
* can be short or long, but they're closer to the body.
* have cuffs
- softer shoulders and are shaped without heavy structure
- split cuffs
- zippers
- hems
- sleeve | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | garment | coat | jacket:
Bolero
* are dance music
- popular in Spain and Spanish America
* is drought tolerant and performs well under adverse growing conditions.
* is the main musical romantic expression of all of the Spanish speaking countries
- quintessential musical exponential
* platform which seven of the world's major banks are participating in.
Doublet
* Transform one word into another by changing a single letter
- to another by changing one letter at a time
* are jackets
- often a sign of two written sources
Dust jacket
* Many dust jackets have clear plastic mylar protective covers.
* turn to dust.
Swallowtail
* Many swallowtails have an osmeterium, including the Zebra Swallowtail
* Some swallowtails have red spots on their wings.
* are strong fliers.
* do well in aquaria, eating any fish food.
* refers to the posterior extensions on the hind wings of some species.
Lab coat
* are coats
- white
* provide protection to the individual from minimal exposures to hazardous materials.
Overcoat
* are made from a warm, heavy cloth or even animal fur.
* An 'overcoat' long coat which is worn over other clothes. Overcoats are made from a warm, heavy cloth or even animal fur. They go below the knee in length. A coat that is knee length is known as a 'topcoat'. Overcoats have been worn for hundreds of years. Many armies dressed their soldiers in overcoats during the winter.
Patina
* Some patinas change more rapidly depending on the oxidation factors surrounding the bronze.
* develop on nature's timetable rather than man's.
Photographic emulsion
* are particularly sensitive to shorter wavelengths of light, blue and violet.
* contain silver halides, because of their sensitivity to light.
Protective coat
* Most protective coats provide protection.
* Some protective coats help pandas.
Puppy coat
* are finer then adult coats
- soft, thick, and woolly
* is very dense and soft, easily tangled and can take several hours a week to groom.
* starts to be replaced by the adult coat.
Raincoat
* are coats
- garments
- located in backpacks
* have a plastic outers shell and fleece lining.
* includes bands
- breast pockets
- button holes
- coat buttons
- collars
- cuffs
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
### clothes | garment | coat | raincoat:
Mac
* are immune.
- hems
- lap covering
* replicate and segregate as natural chromosomes.
### clothes | garment | coat | slicker:
Con artist
* Some con artists make a habit of ripping off businesses.
* are criminals
- films
- often women
- people
- skilled liars who spend a lot of time polishing their sales pitches
- thiefs
- workers
* know how to hook people when they are vulnerable.
* prey on trusting individuals.
Embezzler
* are deceivers
- typically bookkeepers or accountants in small firms
* display universal behavioral symptoms.
* often abuse alcoholic beverages and other mind and mood-altering drugs.
* rationalize their behavior to conform with their own morals and ethics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | garment | coat | slicker | hypocrite:
Smoothy
* Many smoothies contain added sugar in addition to the sugar naturally in fruit, juice, or yogurt.
* Most smoothies are made of fruit
- make from coconut yogurt
* Smoothies are a great way to get fruit and dairy products
- type of cold drink made with an electric blender
- as close to health food as food fads get
- fruit and yogurt blends known for their taste and nutrition
- similar to milk shakes
* Some smoothies have fiber
- provide proteins
+ Milk shake, Comparison between smoothies and milkshakes: Milk :: Dairy products :: American food
* Milk shakes are similar to smoothies. Smoothies are a type of cold drink made with an electric blender.
* Smoothies are similar to milk shakes. Milk shakes are also a cold drink made with an electric blender. Milk shakes are usually made with milk, ice cream, and sweet syrups, such as chocolate syrup.
Shill
* are decoys
- often expensively dressed women
* is an accomplice
Swindler
* also exploit fear, especially with older people and in times of economic downturn.
* are deceivers
- skilled liars and experts at verbal camouflage
Smooth coat
* Most smooth coats have hues.
- much denser fur, like a giraffe or wildebeest
* shed the most, dropping hair continuously year round.
Thick coat
* Some thick coats reflect sunlight.
* protects animal in colder climates.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment | coat:
Varnish
* Some varnishes can become soft and sticky when temperatures are high.
* are another early creation of man.
* can be a prominent feature in many landscapes.
* increases the sense of depth in oil paintings.
* intensify the appearance of pigments on the painting surface by the refraction of light.
* is coating
- consumable products
- finish
* is located in desks
- tables
* reacts more or less in the same way as ink.
* tends to darken with age which is why many old paintings have required cleaning.
### clothes | garment | coat | varnish:
Fixative
* Most fixatives immobilize the tissue antigens by forming cross linkages.
* alter the rates of vaporization and hence the sustained scent development.
* are varnish.
* is varnish
Veneer
* are coating.
* are custom-made shells specially prepared to make teeth look completely natural
- that are attached directly to a tooth
- used to treat some of the same problems as bonding
* can improve the colour, shape and position of teeth.
* have a much longer life expectancy and color stability than bonding.
### clothes | garment | coat | veneer:
Porcelain veneer
* are the most recent application of the art and science of cosmetic dental bonding
- thin shells of porcelain that are bonded on to the existing teeth
* are ultra-thin shells of ceramic material, which are bonded to the front of e
- which are bonded to the front of teeth
- ceramics, which are bonded to the front of teeth
White coat
* Most white coats help hares
- predators
* Some white coats help heat.
Winter coat
* Most winter coats have layers.
* are thick and shiny.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Diaper
* Most diapers contain some form of polyacrylate, a material which is extremely absorbent.
* Some diapers have stools.
* are a cornerstone of all that is good and funny
- lethal commodity
- about one of the most useful all around pieces of cloth in existence
- also great for temporary hoof protection
- fabric
- garments
- never to be worn in the water
* includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- cuffs
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- pockets
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
* keep seats safe from poop.
### clothes | garment | diaper:
Cloth diaper
* allow for more air circulation to infected or irritated skin.
* are as easy as disposables to put on and remove
- environmentally safe and economical
- very natural
* clean easier if they are soaked in water until ready for wash. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | garment | diaper:
Disposable diaper
* are available in most industrialized nations
- the greatest source of landfill material today
* can hold an amazing amount of urine before they leak.
* contain the carcinogen dioxin
- wood splitters
* generate four times as much solid waste as cloth diapers.
* swell up, then fall apart in a thousand tiny pieces in the water.
Wet diaper
* are another indication of baby's intake.
* can contribute to hypothermia, and warm weather makes babies ripe for diaper rash.
* indicate baby is getting enough fluid, and BMs indicate baby is getting enough calories.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Domino
* Some dominoes have a side that is blank
* ' game played with small tiles called dominoes. A domino rectangular tile with a line in the middle that separates it into two sides. Each side has a number of black spots. The number of spots is different on each domino. Some dominoes have a side that is blank. The games possible with these objects resemble card games
* are blocks
- cloaks
- masks
- table games
* includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- cuffs
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- pockets
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
* is about access to information
- people working together effectively
- an application server
- larger than the Anatolian, short and cute birds
* manufactures industrial inkjet and laser printing equipment.
* world leader in the manufacture of coding equipment used in a wide range of industries.
Gaiter
* are essential to keep snow or scree out - with straps passing under the boots
- leggings
- shoes
* come in a variety of shapes, styles and sizes.
* commonly freeze up.
* extend the same protection to feet and shins, and can be worn over any standard boot.<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Jumper
* Most jumpers use visual cues for altitude determination.
* Some jumpers have kinetic energy
- like to perform a pre-jump on the ground
* also pike, flip, and do handstands as they move between the ropes.
* are connections
- coveralls
- dresses
- jackets
- plastic plugs with metal sleeves that form a circuit between a pair of pins
- rows of pins that are used to change settings and close connections
- small pins on the board with plastic or metal devices that go over the pins
* includes button holes
- cuffs
- lap covering
* jump with different groups of people.
* tend to forget to keep their legs extended.
### clothes | garment | jumper:
Cardigan
* Some cardigans experience hip dysplasia or cataracts.
* are bands.
* are bigger, and longer in body
- longer in body, and taller at the shoulders
- sweaters
* have large and prominent ears in proportion to the size of the dog
- proportion to their size
* includes button holes
- pockets
- zippers
* usually have flashings of white hair in their coats.
### clothes | garment | jumper | pullover:
Sweatshirt
* Most sweatshirts cover stomachs.
* Some sweatshirts cover hips.
* are also common for both men and women
- long-sleeved and bear the same logo
- navy in color and come in s, m, l, xl, xxl sizes
- pullovers
* come in a wide array of weights and fabric content.
- sections
- skirts
* tend to run small.
Skydiver
* Many skydivers think angle of attack means the angle of the parachute relative to the ground.
* are parachutists
- unique people
* buckle up their parachute harnesses.
* can glide to a safe landing even after traveling at high speeds.
* jump from planes flying high above the earth.
Kilt
* are skirts that men wear in Scotland
- traditional clothing
* includes bands
- cuffs
Legging
* are garments
- long pants
- stretchy and can be worn close to the skin
- collars
- pockets
- various leggings, and greaves
* protect the lower leg and feet from molten metal or welding sparks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | garment | neckwear:
Necktie
* Use paper or scrap fabric to cut out necktie shape to decorate.
* are ties.
* come in many shapes, sizes, colors and styles.
* is neckwear
Tie
* Explain the purpose of ties.
* are small rubber rings or fine wires that fasten archwires to brackets
- the last stop in male fashion expression
- where they can express themselves in terms of color and design
### clothes | garment | neckwear | tie:
Bola
* Some bolas have balls of equal weight , others vary the knot and cord
- weight,others vary the knot and cord
+ Bolas, Design: Weapons
* Some bolas have balls of equal weight,others vary the knot and cord. Gauchos use bolas made of leather cords with wooden balls or small leather sacks full of stones in the ends of the cords.
Drawstring
* adjust to changing temperatures better than elastic or tailored waistbands.
* can catch on playground and other equipment, and can strangle young children
- strangle young children if caught on playground and other equipment
* is ties.
Petticoat
* are uncomfortable to travel in
- undergarments
* have two pocket slits located on the sides and a drawstring gathered waist for comfort.
Raglan
* are garments.
* includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- cuffs
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- pockets
- raglan sleeve
- sections
- skirts
- stripes<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Scarf
* Scarves also come in all kinds of colors and patterns.
* Scarves are an inexpensive way to change an outfit s look
- the least expensive way to expand a wardrobe
- very fashionable and come in an infinite number of colors and patterns
* Scarves can easily blow in a child's face and obstruct vision
- fall off and get caught under skate blades causing the skater or others to fall
* Scarves come in many different sizes and shapes
- sizes, shapes, and fabrics
- red, blue, green, purple, turquoise, maroon or gray
- silk and art silk variations
* Scarves includes bands
- cuffs
- protect against dust and wet towels from extreme heat
* are accessories
- clothing
* are located in drawers
- suitcases<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Shirt
* Some shirts have molecular structures
- sleeves , which cover the arms
- sleeves, which cover the arms.
* A 'shirt' kind of cloth which is made to cover the chest and upper body. In North America this covers many types of clothes, including T-shirts and, polo shirts etc. In British English, a shirt has a garment with a collar, sleeves with cuffs and a full vertical opening with buttons. Some shirts have sleeves, which cover the arms. T-shirts are a type of shirt which has smaller sleeves. These sleeves cover the shoulders. Shirts which do not have sleeves are sleeveless
* are clothing
* are located in closets
- dressers
- made of materials
- part of outfits
- tops
* are used for advertisements
- covering
- dressings
- match color
- uniformity
- warmth
- wearing
* cover chests.
* have buttons
- button holes
- pocket flaps
- shirt buttons
* provide protection.
### clothes | garment | shirt:
Jersey
* cows produce milk valued by cheesemakers.
* has nine breeding seabird species, of which seven nest on the north coast
- one of the largest tidal movements in the world
* is an island to the south of England near France
- the most densely populated state
- type of fabric
* operates in the European time zone.
+ Jersey (disambiguation)
### clothes | garment | shirt | jersey:
New jersey
* are located in universes.
* have worlds.
Tee shirt
* are a traditional merchandising route for most sports
- like personal billboards, the ultimate expression of inner self through outerwear
- one of the standard clothing items for casual wear
* come in fashion as well as basic styles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | garment:
Suit
* Some suits leave the arms exposed and end at either the knees or ankles.
* are a kind of uniform for businessman, and some people tend to prefer uniforms
- an important part of the professional world
- attire
- businessmans
* are located in closets
- suitcases
* are made of friction materials
- playing cards
- hems
Sweater
* are garments.
- drawers
- trunks
- tops
- wores
* includes button holes
- collars
- cuffs
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- pockets
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
### clothes | garment | sweater:
Turtleneck
* are casual attire
- in wool
- jerseys
- sweaters with a high, tubular collar
* tee shirt
Swimsuit
* are garments
- located in beachs
- rare
- swimwears
* dry in minutes.
### clothes | garment | trouser:
Pajama
* also come in envelopes.
* are comfy and provide great protection from the sun, both tops and bottoms
- safer for children than nightdresses<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Underwear
* are clothing
* are located in backpacks
- made of cotton
- undergarments
* can be outerwear
- say a lot about a person
* gives added protection in the groin area where pesticides have the quickest dermal uptake.
* includes bands
- collars
- stripes
* is an element in a mystic ritual linking men and women
- made by trained, sadist baboons who want to take over the world via a universal wedgie
+ Underwear, Function
* Underwear is worn for many reasons. They keep outer clothes from being made dirty by sweat. Some people wear corsets to make their torsos a certain shape. Women may wear sports bras which give them more support. This is more comfortable, and lessens the chance of damage to the ligaments of the chest during vigorous exercises such as jogging.
### clothes | garment | underwear:
Lingerie
* connotes black satin, lace, and the unfastening of hooks.
* is an underwear
- braille
* is located in department stores
- more of a gift for guys than girls
- where love, sex, and romance intertwine<|endoftext|>### clothes | garment:
Veil
* add a resin-rich surface to pultruded parts, and can also reduce wear on pultrusion machinery.
* are a beautiful, sensuous and mystical way to exercise and express oneself
- kind of non-verbal communication
- accessories
- fingertip length and often trimmed in satin and given a sparkly sheen
- located in weddings
* come in different styles and lengths.
* constitute the principal part of most head-dresses.
* dance in the light of full-spectrum rainbows.
+ Veil, Veils as communication: Accessories :: Culture :: Human communication
* Veils are a kind of non-verbal communication. They always have some kind of unspoken message.
### clothes | garment | veil:
Niqab
* Some niqabs have one or two holes for the eyes.
+ Niqāb: Islamic dress
* A 'Niqab' is a piece of clothing. It is for Muslim women. Women who wear niqab in public are called Niqabi. There are many Niqabis in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar,Yemen and Egypt. Niqab covers all the woman's body including the face. Some niqabs have one or two holes for the eyes.
Wet suit
* are durable and can withstand lower temperatures
* provide warmth and protection in case of accidents or falls at high speeds. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes:
Glove
* Measure the circumference of the fullest part of the palm, excluding the thumb.
* Most gloves cover hands
- only come in sizes small, medium, and large
* Some gloves are made of leathers
- protective against certain chemicals, while others are almost useless
- textured to increase gripping ability without reducing sensitivity
- even have padding or extra leather around the thumb.
* A 'glove' piece of clothing that covers a hand. There are many different kinds of gloves. Gloves are made of many different fabrics and materials, and gloves are used in many ways
* also help reduce the effects of limb vibration as limbs are fed into the chute.
* are a form of personal protective equipment
- safeguard against cuts, scratches, splinters, and rope burns
- accessories
- also good for giving a grip, particularly when they have a ribbed surface
- an item of attire for surgeons
- capable of fits
- essential when working with hazardous substances
* are located in cabinets
- rubber, nitrile, polyurethane, or neoprene
- notorious for wearing out quickly - pay attention to the fingers
- only one type of protective equipment
- to be worn when handling infectious waste bags
- worn in sports, the most common reason being for extra grip for the competitors hands
* can also help reduce risk of infection from bio-hazardous materials
- reduce soreness to the hands and wrists on long rides
- have microscopic holes, tears, or other imperfections
- prevent cuts, infections, and burns
- protect the hands
- puncture during use, and some dental materials increase glove porosity
- spread germs just as easily as bare hands
* come in many shapes and sizes, from motorcycle gloves to gardening mitts.
* enable the modern motorcyclist to have warm hands with more freedom than in years gone by.
* encourage people to handle coral and other marine organisms.
* even hide an individual's hands.
* give some protection, although they can be easily pierced by large fangs.
* have different size.
* have no resident bacteria, only transient bacteria
- ridges or crevices in which the bacteria can hide
* help prevent chemicals from being absorbed through the skin
- pesticide from being absorbed by the skin
* includes sections.
* is baseball equipment
* making is and art that requires time, devotion and skill.
* play an important role in sport.
* prevent any possible disease transmission through open cuts or abrasions.
* protect hands from harsh household cleaners.
* protect the hands from hazardous chemicals, sharp items, and blisters
- when contact with wastewater or highly contaminated surfaces is likely
* provide a barrier between infectious agents and the skin
- better grip on tools and prevent cuts and scrapes from sharp branches
- protective barrier between the substances being handled in the lab and the skin
- temporary layer of protection and are permeable to some substances
- only a temporary layer of protection and are permeable to some substances
* reduce both strength and dexterity.
+ Glove, Gloves worn in sport: Accessories :: Protective clothing
* Gloves are worn in sports, the most common reason being for extra grip for the competitors hands. Like in golf, baseball and goalkeepers in soccer.
### clothes | glove:
Fingerless glove
* allow knot-tying and other tasks without exposing hands to the cold.
* provide protection and dexterity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | glove:
Latex glove
* are less expensive than synthetic rubber gloves and therefore widely used
- located in laboratories
- necessary when dealing with chemicals or bio-hazardous material
* are the major contributor for latex allergies
- most common cause of latex allergies and severe latex allergic reactions
- thin line of defense against infection
- usually less expensive than synthetic rubber gloves
- very permeable to methyl methacrylate and quickly deteriorate when exposed
* come powdered or powder-free.
* have a much lower defect rate
- some protection against irritants and infectious agents
* offer dependable and inexpensive protection
- very limited chemical resistance
* protect against bloodborne pathogens and biohazards.<|endoftext|>### clothes | glove:
Mitten
* are accessories.
* are better for warmth than gloves
- protection than fingered gloves
- than gloves, which allow cold air to circulate around the fingers
- more effective in retaining warmth than gloves
- much warmer than gloves
- now in production that are warmer than wool and made from recycled plastic
- often warmer than gloves
- similar to gloves, in that they cover the hand and help to keep it warm in cold weather
- warmer then gloves because fingers share warmth when they touch each other
- warmer, much easier to get on and off, and come in a wide variety of colors and styles
* come in pairs.
* includes sections.
* keep a person's hands warm in very cold weather better than gloves.
* keep hands warmer because of the close contact of the fingers
- the fingers closer together
* offer more insulation than gloves and provide more overall comfort.
* tend to be warmer than gloves.
* warm the hands more effectively than gloves.
* A 'mitten' type of protective clothing used to cover the hand. Mittens are similar to gloves, in that they cover the hand and help to keep it warm in cold weather. However, while gloves have coverings for four fingers and a thumb, mittens only have a covering for all of the fingers, and for the thumb.
+ Mitten, For sports: Protective clothing
* Mittens keep a person's hands warm in very cold weather better than gloves. For this reason, people who do sports in very cold temperatures often wear mittens instead of gloves. Arctic explorers and snowmobile drivers in Northern Canada usually wear mittens in the extreme cold.
Nitrile glove
* are somewhat more expensive than either latex or vinyl
- suitable for most procedures involving chemical handling
- tougher and resist tearing more than latex gloves
* resist a wide range of chemicals that are harmful to either latex or vinyl.
Protective glove
* are to be worn by staff when there possibility of contact with bodily fluids
- when cleaning bodily fluids
* can keep skin safe from gardening chemicals.<|endoftext|>### clothes | glove:
Rubber glove
* are essential for mixing and using sodium hydroxide
- the best choice when working with pesticides
- uncomfortable to wear as they are hot in the summer and cold in the winter
* do extend up the forearm to just below the elbow.
* offer insulation from the hot water and protect hands and nails from staining.
* protect against mild corrosive material and electric shock
- hands from dirt, chemicals, water and thorns
- sensitive skin from damage due to chemical contact or sensitivity
- the skin from adsorption of chemicals
Gown
* Some gowns are worn by brides.
* are dresses
- garments
- located in hospitals
- universities
- usually now only used for formal or ceremonial occasions
* includes collars
- hems
- sections
- zippers
### clothes | gown:
Bridal gown
* Many bridal gowns have a stiff mesh petticoat to keep a big skirt shape.
* are gowns
- hand-cut and finished
- notoriously difficult because of the delicate and expensive fabrics involved
* come in a wide variety of styles, materials, colors, lengths and prices. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | gown:
Disposable gown
* Some disposable gowns have the end of one tie covered by a disposable strip.
* are the protective clothing provided by the school.
Wedding gown
* Some wedding gowns have trains that detach.
* are dresses
- formal wear
- located in weddings
* come in many styles, fabrics and price ranges.
* tend to run small.
Headdress
* are clothing.
* includes sections.<|endoftext|>### clothes | headdress:
Cap
* are helpful in reducing the transmission of STDs, including gonorrhea and chlamydia
- important for initiation of translation
- the number of international appearances each player on the team has made
* protect the scalp and, to some degree, the face.
+ Armillaria gallica, Humongous fungus: Fungi
* Two clusters of mushrooms growing in a bed of green moss. The mushroom caps are densely covered with small scales and are a reddish-brown that gets deeper in the center. Some caps appear shiny as is covered with a translucent slime.
### clothes | headdress | cap:
Beret
* are lined in black cotton and have a simple white paint stamp for size.
* get dirty very easily and are difficult to wash.
Bluebonnet
* add nitrogen to the soil by fixating atmospheric nitrogen through root nodules.
* are abundant all over
- any of various blue-flowering plants in the lupine genus and the pea family
- as much a part of Texas culture as longhorns and cowboys
- lupines
- part of the legume, or bean, family
* blanket surrounding hillsides and valleys during spring.
* have white tips on the petals.
Family cap
* are genocidal measures being pushed by the ruling class.
* deny additional payments for children born to women who are already receiving welfare.
Ferrule
* are caps
- fittings used to form a holding point on a piece of wire rope
- mirror-finished stainless steel
- solid metal
- usually nickel
* have an important effect on the overall action of a fly rod.
Market cap
* is simply the number of shares outstanding x the price of the stock.
* refers to the worth of a company in the financial markets.
+ Market capitalization, Related measures: Business :: Legal terms
* Market cap reflects only the 'equity' value of a company.
Plastic cap
* are located in cabinets.
* come in various styles.
Safety cap
* are dummy plugs that fill empty electric outlets or sockets.
* help protect children from hurting themselves with medicines.
Tammy
* Tammies are fabric.
* is visual and linguistic learner. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | headdress:
Hat
* Most hats are black or dark in color.
* Some hats are worn by officials.
* A 'hat' type of covering for the head. There are many types of hats. Hats are different in different parts of the world. These hats are just used for decoration. People who make hats for men are called hatters, and those who make hats for women are called milliners. Some types of hats or caps are worn as a sign of highly specialised social roles. For example, bishops can wear mitres and some lawyers wear wigs.
* also can aid in avoiding ticks and sun.
* are a part of Hawaii lifestyle
- symbol of maturity and honor, a way to stand tall and walk with pride
- usually the means of old fashioned secular expression
* are also good for keeping one's bald spot dry in the rain
- great in maintaining body heat
- incredibly important in cold weather
- for sun protection and sports
- hot molecules because they are implicated in transcriptional activation
- plastic with felt and come in White, Ivory or Black
- the best way to minimize UV radiation exposure to the face, head, ears, and neck
- useful against exposure to sun
* can also protect the eyes and face from damage.
* come in all shapes and sizes
- several sizes because heads come in all sizes
* control our perceptions of people.
* follow the fashion in clothes and hairdos.
* help keep the sun off in summer and the warmth in during winter.
* includes bases
* reduce the risk of skin cancer, premature aging, sunburn, and sunstroke.
* shade the face and neck from the sun's harmful rays.<|endoftext|>### clothes | headdress | hat:
Boater
* All boaters know that the marine environment is different than the environment on land.
* Every boater is responsible for keeping waterways clean and safe from pollution.
* Many boaters get into the sport of boating for the love of speed and water.
* Some boaters even consider knot tying a method of relaxation
- try drifting when breezes are light
* are hats
- located in boats
* can keep lookouts in known whale feeding and breeding grounds, and keep their speeds low.
* impact water quality by dumping waste, mishandling fuel, and damaging habitat.
Bonnet
* Some bonnets have a pronounced ridge or two ridges running perpendicularly on the crown.
- sections
* work well with either shampoo or solvent based chemicals.
Bucket hat
* are popular in the same brushed cottons and washed cottons as baseball caps.
* come in a variety of colors and in two sizes.
Castor
* allow for easy movement between work surfaces.
* are mountains
- stars
Cloche
* are bell-shaped glass jars designed to keep plants warm when unexpected cold snaps strike
- protective covering
* protect the crop from wind, hail and heavy rain during winter and warm the air and soil.
Leghorn
* also have a dominant inhibitor of brown shell color.
* are capable of considerable flight and often roost in trees if given the opportunity
- one of the best known breeds of chicken
- probably the worst breed to try and set eggs under
- prolific layers of white eggs
- where grocery store eggs come from
Pith helmet
* Most pith helmets have a wide brim that flares out to protect the face and sides of the head.
* prevent local heating of the head and sunstroke in the tropics.
T hat
* applies to all the chemicals used in an additive such as a stabilizer or deicer etc.
* is the last word of a long psalm, a very long psalm
- masculine nominative singular form
- natural way of things for slave owners | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes | headdress:
Hood
* Some hoods also have a rod that is attached to the hood itself.
* also help to keep the air warm.
* are a great protection against shell fragments
- criminals
- headdresses
- neighborhoods
* are part of airplanes
- automobiles
- cars
- protective covering
- roofs
- vicinities
* block unwanted illumination from the workplace.
* cover heads
- the ears, hair, and neck, with a tapered fit for head and neck
* includes sections.
* seem to have been used to keep bare heads warm, in place of the traditional skull caps.<|endoftext|>### clothes | headdress | hood:
Fume hood
* are a major source of energy consumption
- an important feature in any laboratory using hazardous chemicals
- important safety devices, but they are only useful when used and maintained properly
- jammed with radioactive waste
- laboratory equipment
- located in chemistry labs
- sometimes necessary when working with chemicals
- the primary method of exposure control in the laboratory
* have a large glass window that is opened when a scientist needs to get inside
- proper direction of airflow
- safety glass windows or safety shields for use with potential explosives
* protect workers by capturing, containing and exhausting potentially hazardous vapors.
* stop a person coming into contact with hazardous fumes
* A 'fume hood' or 'fume cupboard' large piece of scientific equipment common to chemistry laboratories. Fume hoods stop a person coming into contact with hazardous fumes. They contain an air pump that sucks fumes away from the person using them.
* have a large glass window that is opened when a scientist needs to get inside. The window protects the scientist from splashes of chemicals or explosions that could harm them. Most chemical reactions are done inside a fume hood
Turban
* are accessories
- headdresses
- much worn of an evening
- part of the national dress in Afghanistan
* can be very large or quite modest depending upon region, culture, and religion
- versatile head coverings
* come in a wide variety of colors.
Jean
* are common to all genders as are sweaters and jackets.
* are located in bedrooms
- closets
- clothing stores
- drawers
- gaps
- houses
- malls
- shopping malls
- shops
- thrift stores
- long pants
- soccer players
* are used for clothing
- fashion
- utilities
- wearing
* includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- hems
- hip pockets
- lap covering
- pant legs
- pocket flaps
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
- zippers
Outfit
* are attire
- located in closets
- units
* is an unit | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothes:
Uniform
* Some uniforms are worn by soldiers.
* are a common way that people are unified in our everyday experience
- attire
- outfits
* can foster a oneness that nurtures a feeling of belonging to something outside of oneself.
* establish identity, both for the wearer and for the public.
* have details
- sleeve
* place more emphasis on the person inside than the clothes they are wearing.
* stresses on bone cause uniform growth and repair.
+ Baseball uniform: Uniforms :: Sports clothing :: Baseball equipment :: History of baseball
* A 'baseball uniform' is clothing that baseball players wear during games. They mostly do this to show that their job is playing the sport, baseball. Most baseball uniforms have the names and uniform numbers of players who wear them somewhere on the uniform, usually on the backs of the uniforms to tell different baseball players from each other. Baseball shirts, pants, shoes, socks, caps, and helmets are parts of baseball uniforms. Players also wear gloves, but they are not considered part of the uniform, since the players can choose their own glove. Most uniforms have different logos and colours to tell which team is which.
* A 'baseball uniform' is a kind of clothing that baseball players wear. They mostly do this to show that their job is related to playing the sport, baseball. Most baseball uniforms have the names and uniform numbers of players who wear them on the uniform somewhere, usually on the backs of the uniforms to tell different baseball players from each other. Baseball shirts, pants, shoes, socks, caps, and gloves are parts of baseball uniforms. Most uniforms have different logos and colors to tell which team is which.
+ Waiter: Food and drink :: Occupations
* Many waiters and waitresses are required by their employers to wear a uniform. Most uniforms used are black and white or all black. Historically the term waiter was used to describe customs officers who waited on the high tide for vessels to come in carrying goods to tax.
### clothes | uniform:
Military uniform
* are uniforms.
* is an uniform
* represent the very best and very worst of mankind.
Wig
* Most wigs have adjustment tabs inside near the ears.
* are short or on ponytails.
* can be hot in the summertime, but they do conserve body heat in the colder months.
* come in various sizes, such as average, petite, and ultra petite.
* includes sections.
* stay in fashion for men until the end of the next century. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Clothing
* All clothing is made from natural fibers such as cotton, rayon or silk.
* Some clothing is able to absorb the toxic material and maintain it close to the skin
- considered to be inappropriate because it causes distractions.
* Humans are the only animals which wear clothing. Clothing is made from many materials, such as cotton, wool, or polyester fabrics and leather. In cold climates, people also wear heavy, thick coats such as trenchcoats.
* It also helps people project an image. Often, clothing form of self expression. Adults in different social or work situations present different views of themselves by the clothes they wear. Young people have an entirely different form of dress to express their personalities. Often people will simply follow popular fashion styles so that they will fit in. Clothing is far more than just a means to protect our bodies
* Wear loose clothing and underwear
- minimal clothing to provide greater skin surface area for heat dissipation
* also affects the heat stress
- affords protection from the elements
- can produce a static charge that affects electrode response
- has the use to remind people of their loyalties and obligations
- provides protection from ultraviolet radiation
- shapes the rave culture
* are covering.
* are located in backpacks
- closets
- clotheslines
- department stores
- drawers
- floors
- hampers
- houses
- malls
- shops
- suitcases
- trunks
- washing machines
- used for advertises
* attracts cat hair in direct proportion to how dark it is.
* can also be a problem if it becomes tightly wound around the baby
- help prevent skin cancer, another health concern of farms
- include knitted or crocheted clothing and accessories
- interfere with the heat releasing effects of sweating
- and has in history been made from a very wide variety of materials
- be any type of apparel such as a nightgown, sportswear, formal attire
- become wet from the inside as well as from the outside
- burn rapidly and cause severe burns
- enhance or limit independence and productivity
- help to reduce the effects of wind
- spread unwanted bacteria to seafoods
- tell a lot about a person
- wrap around the coral and smother it by cutting out light and water circulation
* comes in many styles.
* creates air space that absorbs body heat.
* depends on the time of the year and what sort of activity the person is doing.
* direct indication of wealth.
* expresses cultural identity and clashes as well as hides identity.
* function of the interior life in ways beyond what art is.
* has different meanings in different cultures
- nothing to do with individuality
* helps protect against infection and prevents fluid loss
- ration sweat by slowing evaporation and prolonging the cooling effect
- to prevent heat loss - hence keep clothes on if able
* hides the natural diversity of human body shapes and sizes.
* is addiction, pollution and disease.
* is also an important marker of cultural distinctiveness and class position
- old form of body protection
- vulnerable to silver-nitrate staining
* is an essential element for all types of travelers
- extravagance that can easily be avoided
- ideal medium in which to implant mobile bio-environments
- another area in which most people can save
- articles designed for everyday wear
- connected to agriculture
- important in the Bible
* is inappropriate when it is sleeveless, revealing, or form fitting
- revealing, strapless, backless, or form fitting
- just fabric lying flat until someone puts it on the body
- loose, voluminous, and light in weight
* is made from many materials , such as cotton , wool , or polyester fabrics and leather
- plant fibers
- reused clothing as well as from recycled plastics
- scraps and other recycled or donated fabrics
- much more than a covering for the body
- one category of material expression of culture
* is one of the external things about a character
- primary causes of skin irritation
- way where the difference and separateness between the two ethnic groups is apparent
- separate by size and gender
- soft, light and breathes
- subject to availability of fabric
- that which can hide or conceal dangerous objects
* is the badge of society's gender distinctions
- first line of shelter protection, have the right clothes for the right environment
- key to survival
- main way people communicate their status
- ultimate sign of who is submissive and who is powerful in our culture
- used to signify one's place in society
- very important for everyone, including animals like the spotted owl
* made of wool is best, or synthetic fibres that have insulating properties similar to wool.
* often builds up static electricity.
* provides protection from the elements by increasing the insulating capacity of the body.
* reduces radiation loss by lowering our effective surface temperature
- the effectiveness of sweating as a means of cooling the body
* reflection of personality.
* related accidents occur more frequently than one realizes.
* sheds water and dries faster to maintain comfort, even in wet conditions.
* substantiates our sense of self and our place in society.
* symbol of man's higher nature.
* thus serves as a means for the spread of in- fectious diseases.
* ubiquitous part of our lives.
* varies by age and location.
* vast world, and encloses many types.
* veil which separates mankind from the world of the beast. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothing | attire:
Proper attire
* is neat clothing that allows for complete freedom of movement.
* means being fully clothed with shoes or slippers on the feet.
### clothing | bandeau | uplift:
Isostatic uplift
* is the result of deposition of loess in periglacial regions.
* rise in sea level relative to the land level.
Casual clothing
* is standard wear in Cairo with few places insisting upon formal attire.
* is the norm for enjoying events such as sports venues, attractions and museums
- style for all occasions
Coverall
* When working with pesticides, it is best to wear more layers of clothing.
* are nice at keeping bottom layers dry as well as providing an extra layer of clothing.
* provide total body protection from potential exposure to hazards.
### clothing | coverall:
Smock
* also look neat, clean and increase the perception of professionalism and uniformity.
* are a loose, lightweight overgarment worn to protect the clothing while working.
* help to minimize problems with street clothing and possibly hair.
Diving suit
* help insulate the diver from the cold temperature of the water.
* A 'diving suit' type of protective clothing worn by scuba divers when they swim underwater in oceans, lakes, and rivers. Diving suits help insulate the diver from the cold temperature of the water. There are several types of diving suits, including wetsuits and dry suits.
Dress
* Some dresses require certain fabrics to drape correctly and look well.
* affects attitude and behavior.
* are apparel
- blue
- capable of actions
- garments
* are located in closets
- shops
- one piece garments without separate jackets and skirts
### clothing | dress:
Business dress
* are acceptable in fields that are less formal and less conservative.
* is form of nonverbal communication all too often overlooked by men and women
- more formal with both men and women usually wearing suits
- the same as most other places in the world consisting of suits and ties
* tends to be more formal and men and women usually wear lightweight suits.
Casual dress
* increases productivity as it is comfortable.
* is shoes and clothing designed for informal or relaxed occasions.
* is the norm in Savannah
- style for all activities and meetings<|endoftext|>### clothing | dress:
Polonaise
* are dresses.
* have a cutaway , drapes and an overskirt , worn over a petticoat
- cutaway, drapes and an overskirt, worn over a petticoat.
* The 'polonaise' Polish dance. It started as a folk dance and then became popular among the Polish nobility. It follows a distinctive rhythm as illustrated above. Many polonaises are composed in what is called ternary form, or song form, or minuet and trio. The music of the A sections is similar in both sections, if not exactly identical. The B section is entirely different. It provides contrast in some way to the A sections. In the courts of the aristocracy musicians would often play a polonaise from the gallery while the people danced below in the reception hall
+ Polonaise (clothing): Dresses
* A 'polonaise' is a type of gown that has a bodice and an attached skirt. They started in the early 18th century. Polonaises have a cutaway, drapes and an overskirt, worn over a petticoat.
Sportswear
* are attire.
* includes shorts, tracksuits, T-shirts, polo shirts and trainers. It also includes some underwear, such as the jockstrap. Sportswear is also often worn as casual fashion clothing.
* is more than three times the size of the dress shirt market
- streetwear
Trade dress
* extends to the design of an Internet web site.
* is the legal term for a product's distinctive aesthetic design features
- total image of a product, package and advertising
* protects businesses that create an inherently distinctive look and feel.
Western dress
* is popular among the the world over.
* symbolises a loss of family control. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothing | formal wear:
Formal shoe
* Most formal shoes are patent leather.
* are formal wear
- patent leather shoes
### clothing | furnishing:
Drape
* add an extra layer of insulation.
* are cloth
- covering
- manners
* block out sunlight and heat better than blinds.
* can hide a small window or minimize a large window.
* have many advantages over stitched clothes, especially when beauty is an important value.
Drapery
* Draperies can provide added insulation in winter.
* is fabric.<|endoftext|>### clothing:
Gray
* All grays have zero saturation.
* are also common
- probably the wariest of Pennsylvania's squirrels
- sensitive to aquatic pollution
- the most commonly reported race of aliens
- very adaptive to their surroundings, be they tree-lined streets, farm land, or parks
* breed and calve along the Pacific shores, humpbacks and blues in the Sea of Cortez
- in the lagoons along the Pacific
* can go through many changes with maturity, often dappling and turning white over time.
* grow to a large size.
* have equal amounts of all three colors
- good vision also though their habitat is extremely murky
* is clothing
- organizations
* live in nests and dens.
* often hole up for three or four days at a time during severe weather.
* ordinarily look darker on light backgrounds.
* oxidize to rusty browns.
* smell out nuts which they bury for winter food.
* start with a medium gray to black undercoat.
* tend to print muddy.
* typically travel alone or in pairs.
### clothing | gray:
Dark gray
* is memory used, light is how big the partition is.
* is the best followed by light gray, cinnamon brown and white
- most common color
- period during which the actual document is modified
Knee pad
* are a sensible way to save skin and prevent more-serious tendon or ligament problems
- sports equipment
* can help prevent knee injuries.
Light clothing
* reflects more than dark
- the sun most effectively
* tends to distract attention.
Lightweight clothing
* is suggested during the summer months, when the days can be hot and humid.
* is worn year-round, with a sweater or jacket occasionally useful in the winter
Loose clothing
* can become entangled in lifts, tow ropes and ski poles
- towropes and ski poles
* can catch fire if exposed to heat sources
- on moving parts and cause an accident
* caught in machinery is another factor in both upper and lower extremity amputations.
Muff
* are also hot in warm weather.
* cause a desire to dives.
### clothing | muff:
Ear muff
* are located in drawers.
* require a good seal around the ear
- solid shell and seal around the ear to attenuate noise
Nightgown
* adjust to body changes better than pajamas.
* is an underwear
Protective clothing
* can be effective against biological hazards at wastewater treatment facilities.
* is both tuff and tender
- dark and has a tight weave
- suggested to protect against the ants stinging and biting<|endoftext|>### clothing:
Spacesuit
* have their own heating and cooling systems and a radio communication system.
* provide atmospheric pressure.
* serve many functions.
* use lithium hydroxide canisters to remove carbon dioxide.
+ Space suit: Protective clothing :: Spaceflight
* A 'spacesuit' is an article of protective clothing worn by astronauts when they travel into outer space or into the upper atmosphere. Spacesuits are completely sealed, so that an astronaut can survive in the harsh, cold, and airless environment of space. Spacesuits have their own heating and cooling systems and a radio communication system. Spacesuits also provide a supply of fresh air for the astronauts to breathe and create a normal atmospheric pressure. Spacesuits cover the entire body, and they have gloves for the hands and a helmet for the head, including a clear visor for the face. Astronauts wear spacesuits when they fly in the space shuttle, rockets, or space stations. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### clothing:
Tiara
* also look elegant on women with round faces.
* are now the hottest item for bridal headwear.
Tight clothing
* can also hinder mobility
- contribute to the migration or rejection of piercings
- force bacteria into the urethra
- restrict blood flow, leading to a danger of frostbite
- trap moisture and promote bacterial growth
* creates warmth and moisture that are favorable for the growth of yeast
- which are favorable for the growth of yeast or bacteria
* restricts the blood flow into the extremities.
Traditional clothing
* are clothing.
* can often cause unforeseen problems for people with physical limitations.
* colorful skirt, worn by both men and women, called a sarong.
* forms a part of Turkish traditional culture.
Warm clothing
* is especially important for excursions in the mountains or on the sea.
* is needed for higher altitudes at night
- outdoors during the winter months
Wet clothing
* causes excessive body heat loss.
* goes on in the morning so that dry clothing is always available at night.
* increases the risk of cold injury.
* loses insulation
- the ability to hold in heat
White clothing
* is an image of glory.
* represents living a simple life, a pure life.
* tends to get dirty and stain fast.
Winter clothing
* can hide extra pounds.
* is made with the hair left on.
Wrapper
* are a software layer transparently interposed between the application and operating system
- air grown, without fertilizers and pesticides, by small farmers
- casings
- materials
* resist water absorption when the crayon is soaked in water.
### clothing | wrapper:
Plastic film
* are easier to make than pure carbon films
- lightweight, safe to handle, chemically stable and extremely versatile
* can enable a farmer to cut, bale, and wrap the hay all in one day.
* is formed by either slot casting or blown film extrusion.
* prevent weeds, but they also tend to suffocate plant roots.
### clothing | wrapper | plastic wrap:
Cling film
* is used to ensure the easy removal of the hull from the mold.
* plastic wrap | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cloud
* All clouds contain water vapors
- form as a consequence of rising air
- have different names and each cloud can be used in predicting storms
* Every cloud has a silver lining, but millions of people are struck by lightning each year.
* Many clouds are formed a rising current of air.
* Most clouds absorb light
- affect climates
- appear in atmospheres
* Most clouds are in a constant state of creation and destruction
- the troposphere
- produced by mist
- very large structures that pass over the spacecraft in a day or more
* Most clouds associate with intense thunderstorms
- powerful thunderstorms
* Most clouds bring precipitation
- weather
- cause rain
- come from air
- compose of water
* Most clouds consist of dioxide
- glow particles
- ice particles
- microscopic particles
- sulfur dioxide
* Most clouds contain carbon
- continually move and change shape
- cover large areas
- create greenhouse effects
- deliver rain
* Most clouds depend on conditions
- weather conditions
- float high in the air
* Most clouds form at tops
- single layers
- through a process called expansion cooling
* Most clouds have bottom bottoms
- centers
- density
- motion
- rotation
- slight rotation
- indicate weather
- lead to precipitation
- move into areas
- never manage to rain or snow
- occur within the troposphere
- pass overhead without producing rain or snow
* Most clouds produce light precipitation
- provide moisture
* Most clouds reduce light
- visibility
* Most clouds reflect little sunlight
- resemble thin cirrus
- result from the upward movements of air masses
* Most clouds result in clouds
- wall clouds
- vary in thickness
* Some clouds add energy
- affect transportation
- appear in patches
* Some clouds are caused by air
- diffraction
- great fleecy masses, and others look like giant feathers
- more diffuse at their edges than others
- near the ground
- so thick and dense that no stars can shine through
- too thin to be seen with the naked eye
- white, snow is white, some swans, geese and other birds are white
- associate with rotation
* Some clouds become air
- positive charge
* Some clouds cause allergic reaction
- skin reaction
- come from bottoms
* Some clouds compose of crystal
- ice crystal
- plasma
* Some clouds consist of ice crystal snowflakes
* Some clouds contain crystal
- fall as precipitation
* Some clouds form at boundaries
- generate radiation
* Some clouds have bases
- earth
- regions
- starlights
- indicate weather that is fine and others tell of approaching storms
- make up atoms
- move current
* Some clouds move in overnight, with a light breeze
- winds dying down
- occur at levels
* Some clouds occur in conditions
- tropospheres
* Some clouds produce abundant showers
- coronae
* Some clouds produce heavy rain
- light showers
- snowfall
- steady snowfall
- tornado
* Some clouds provide rain
- strong updrafts
- reduce heat
* Some clouds reflect income solar radiation
- states
* Some clouds resemble cumulus
- small cumulus
- result from absorption
- seem to have very sharp edges, while others have diffuse, wispy outlines
- surround atomic nuclei
* absorb light, too
* affect climate by trapping heat emitted from the Earth and by reflecting sunlight
- climate, and are in turn affected by changes in the climate
- living things by their cosmic rays
* affect the climate but changes in the climate, in turn, affect the clouds
- diurnal temperature range as well
- weather greatly
* also blanket the Earth, preventing severe extremes of temperature
- change because of the action of winds and other moving air
- cover a huge altitude range on Earth due to the complex effects of solar radiation
- create some patterns of light in the sky such as halos
- form by lifting
- have an effect in keeping the earth's surface warm
* also play an important part in the earth's weather
- role
- scatter, absorb, and emit radiation
- transport energy away from the surface of the Earth
* alter the Earth's energy balance by altering both the incoming and outgoing energy.
* always blow northwards.
* appear and bring to men a chance to rest from looking at the moon
- bright white when viewed from above because they reflect sunlight back into space
- white in the day, unless they bear precipitation, upon which they are steel gray
* are a collection of very small drops of water or tiny pieces of ice that are held in the air
- direct expression of the physical processes taking place in the atmosphere
- great source of uncertainty in predicting future climate
- major source of uncertainty
- visible mist of billions of water and ice particles floating in the sky
- vital part of our environment
- absent or rare on snow-covered winter panoramas to minimize the dominance of white
* are accumulations of tiny water droplets in the lower atmosphere
- water droplets, condensed from vapor-saturated air
- accurate weather predictors
- aerosols
* are also an important indicator of climate change
- good emitters of longwave radiation
- weak and insubstantial, just as bodies are in a traditional Christian sense
* are an ever changing parade of color, shape, and mystic beauty
- example of the existence of water vapor
* are an important part of earth's weather
- our everyday lives
* are an indicator of approaching weather
- humidty
- integral part of condensation and the water cycle
- animals
* are another factor influencing the levels of ultraviolet reaching the surface
- important factor in determining climate
- source of albedo that play into the global warming equation
- weather element that is familiar to children
- bags of water
* are capable of rain water
* are classified according to how they are formed
- look and how high the base of the cloud is in the sky
- collections of millions of tiny droplets of water
- common on Earth but they cover completely Venus' atmosphere
- composed of millions of water droplets that have condensed
- condensed water vapor in the atmosphere, either in a liquid, or solid form
- continuously in the process of evolving in the atmosphere
- critically important in regulating the temperature of the Earth
- difficult to estimate because they are constantly moving and are irregular in shape
- evident as light areas due to their high albedo
* are formed as the water vapor condenses
- by evaporating water vapors that condense when they reach cooler air
- when water droplets and pieces of dust join together in the atmosphere
- gases and particles suspended in the atmosphere
- generally patches of stratocumulus, and rain is rare
- given different names based on their shape and their height in the sky
- gloom
- good indicators of weather fronts
- grey because of our perspective from earth
- hazy or milky areas in a diamond
- high flying fogs
- high-flying fogs
- huge collections of water or ice particles in the air
- impermanent, but the sky is stable
* are important both in climate modeling and for short-term weather predictions
- processors of atmospheric aerosol particles
- little drops of water or ice hanging in the atmosphere
* are located in air
- blue skies
- ground levels
- weather reports
- made up of water droplets, supercooled water droplets, or ice crystals
- microscopic inclusions that lower transparency
- most commonly in a negative state of electricity, but sometimes in a positive state
- never still, they are always in motion
* are nothing but water in the air
- more than water vapor that condenses and accretes into a visible form
- often a greenish-black color
* are one form of condensation
- of the greatest areas of uncertainty in climate change science
- open air
* are part of skies
- what is known as a feedback mechanism
- physical phenomenons
- reflective in all bands, and usually appear white, gray or pink
- solid colored white polygons
- suspicion
- symbols of things that cross borders freely
- the least understood piece of the climate change puzzle
* are the most common form of visible moisture
- crucial factor causing uncertainties in model estimates of global warming
- significant influence on solar radiation
- result of condensation and sublimation of water vapor in the atmosphere
- same on different scales, and even blood vessels branch out fractally
- signposts of the weather
- sky's way of moving water from one place to another
- symbols of wrath to sinners
- they, without water
- transparent to ultraviolet light, which is why clouds offer no protection from sunburn
* are used for cool temperature
- dreaming
- hails
- shades
- sleet
- valuable aids in weather forecasting
- vaporized water
- very important in terms of identifying weather patterns
- video games
* are visible concentrations of water droplets or ice crystals in air
- forms of water vapour which occur when saturated air condenses
* are water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere
- that have condensed from atmospheric water vapor
* are water vapor that has cooled and condensed back into tiny droplets of liquid water
- which goes up when the heat of the sun's rays strikes the rivers and lakes
- vapor, or other bulxious gases
* associated with thermals include low to mid level cumulus clouds, and cumulonimbus clouds.
* attach to nothing, and so drift freely across the sky.
* block entire surface
- out the sunlight, making the sky appear grey
* blowing inland from the coast bring rain to the mountains.
* bring fresh water
- nice weather
- rain and shade
* build overhead and eventually develop into snow showers as they move downwind.
* can act as a natural sun shield by reflecting light back into space
- diffusers between the sun and earth, softening and spreading the light
- affect chemistry in many ways
- also bring destruction or even death, in the form of hail or tornadoes
- appear white, grey, or dark depending on conditions
- be fascinating to study, and satellite images show cloud patterns on a global basis
- build up during the summer to produce spectacular thunderstorm activity
- cast shadows on the terrain
- cool and give a false impression that there is little risk of sunburn
- exist in a variety of shapes and sizes
- go either way depending on the clouds and suns position
- last anywhere from a few minutes to days
- lead to cooling by reflecting incoming solar radiation
- limit air power, while rain can limit all movement and combat
- reduce growth by half
- reflect sunlight, but they can also trap heat warming up the planet
- sometimes bring destruction in the form of hail or tornadoes
* catch the last red-orange rays of the setting sun and the first light of the dawn.
- somewhere above the sky
- time to time - and bring to men a chance to rest from looking at the moon
- in different shapes and designs
* come in many different colors, shapes, and sizes
- sizes and a seemingly endless variety of shapes
* come in various forms, and contain various degrees of shade
- shapes and sizes and occur at varying altitudes
* commonly form in rising air.
* consist mainly of water vapor.
- small water droplets that, despite below-freezing temperatures, remain liquid
* constantly moisten the tree trunks, which are covered with moss.
- millions and millions of water droplets and ice particles suspended in the air
* cool Earth by reflecting incoming sunlight
- Earth's surface by reflecting incoming sunlight
- the earth by reflecting sunlight
* cover areas
- most of the United States
- the forest more than half the time greatly reducing the light intensity
* create a perspective space so that the sky seems to rise beyond the limits of the ceiling
* created by convective currents tend to form in very random patterns.
* cross the field of view from time to time.
* decrease the heating in the laser rod and cause the focal length to shift severely.
* develop when air is lifted
- water vapor attaches itself to microscopic matter called nuclei
* develop, then showers.
* dissipate and bright sunshine can prevail quite frequently.
* do appear to have a mind of their own
- create rain
- have silver linings
* drop rain.
* effect the temperature too.
* exist in the atmosphere because of rising air.
* float across the sky everyday.
* float in the air and water flows in the river
- up to the heavens
* fly higher during the day than during the night.
* form along a cold front as the air rises
- the boundary in the absence of boundary layer turbulence
* form and produce rain as they rise in altitude
- rain falls, filling rivers and streams
* form as a result of condensation driven by adiabatic cooling
- the drops of water grow
- water vapor condenses around tiny particles
* form by the condensation of water vapor
- vapour through cooling
- from droplets of water and tiny ice crystals
* form in a variety of different ways
- areas where air rises and cools
- many sizes and shapes
- same place over an area though air is rushing through the spot
* form in the atmosphere because air containing water vapor rises, cools, and condenses
- sky and it begins to rain
- near the ground and trap some warmer temperatures nearest the ground
- over the water and advance toward shore
* form randomly, as on Earth, so on average there are always several layers
* form when air containing vaporised water cools
- damp air is cooled, usually by rising
- moist air cools
* form when the air rises
- rushes upward
- atmosphere can no longer hold all the invisible air vapor
- water in the air condenses on small particles of dust
- warm, particle-rich air meets cool, moist air
* form when water vapor condenses and molecules cling to each other
- around tiny particles floating in the air
- where condensation is occurring
* form, electrical disturbances occur and the temperature decreases with altitude
- they dissipate, and form again
* formed by rising puffs lack flat bottoms and are short lived.
* gather before a storm.
* generally decrease the amount of ultraviolet radiation reaching the Earth's surface
- form, survive and grow in air that is moving upward
* have a net warming effect on the surface, in contrast to clouds at lower latitudes
- strong yet subtle effect on climate
- compositions
* help redistribute extra heat from the equator toward the poles.
* help to hold in the day's heat and keep the morning temperatures warmer
- spot monarchs
* hide in a hole in the sky, and rain makes applesauce.
* increase when the latent heat is released as the vapor condenses into clouds.
* indicate fair weather
- important meteorological processes such as convection, fronts, and mountain waves
* influence the amount of sunlight reaching Earth's surface
- weather in many ways
* interact to a significant degree with both long and short-wave radiation.
* just keep circling the Earth around and around, and around
- earth around and around
* keep winter nights warmer than they are on clear nights.
* learn how to look at clouds.
* lose their water as rain or snow, which is called precipitation.
* lower global temperature
* meet cool air, and rain or snow falls to the ground.
* melt together.
* move across the skies and produce shadows on the ground as they cross the sun
- along the jet stream like a conveyor belt
- around the world, propelled by air currents
- as slow as snails
- from image to image, but the snow cover remains stationary
- in after a sunny start of the day
- slowly, over the moon's light creating darkness, unable to see
- through the atmosphere in bands more or less parallel to the equator
* move with the wind, airplanes and birds create their own direction
* normally form in that way, but they can also form differently, depending on the condition.
* obscure the sky as the seasonal polar hood forms overhead.
* occasionally are visible in the atmosphere.
* occur where atmospheric motions are upward.
* often block satellite images
- bring more wind
- form as air is forced over mountain ranges
- hide large areas of the Earth's surface
* owe their origin to the sun.
* play a complex role in the Earth's radiation budget
- critical and complicated role in regulating the temperature of the Earth
- dual role in the atmosphere
- key role in the overall radiation budget
* play a major role in feedback mechanisms to stabilize the world's climate
- the production of oxidants and acids in the atmosphere
- significant role in the Earth's climate
* play an important part in the water cycle, and therefore the climate of a region
- role in defining climate
- important roles in the Earth's climate and postulated global warming
* present a difficult challenge to observers since they are constantly changing.
* produce drizzle
* provide little protection from the sun's rays
- one of the keys to understanding the weather
- rain, snow, and other precipitation to the land
- shade as they drift across the sun
* race overhead, storms arrive to pelt the land, and butterflies flutter across the land.
* react to light sources for backlit and noctiluscent effects.
- the amount of incoming shortwave radiation, therefore they exhibit a cooling effect
- radiation back
- some incoming sunlight back to space, but they also reflect heat back to Earth
- sunlight well and so show up bright on the visible imagery
- sunlight, reducing the amount of energy reaching the surface
* reflect the moisture in the air and the signature of the wind
- solar energy and lower the Earth's temperature
* regulate the Earth's thermostat.
* release life-giving water
* rent by storm, or formed smooth and layered by steady strong winter winds over long ridges.
* represent water vapor that has condensed into either liquid water or ice or both.
* resemble cirrus
* result from the condensation of water vapor into liquid water droplets or ice crystals.
* riding above most of the atmospheric methane are bright.
* rise majestically over mountain peaks.
* roll over night and day.
* seem to be related to the seasonal sublimation and condensation of polar-cap material.
* show characteristics
- development
- little vertical development
* slowly roll in lap after lap when a storm approaches and the rain begins as a drizzle.
* stop the heat from both going in and out from the earth.
* store enormous amounts of energy.
* strongly influence our planet's climate.
* surround some peaks in the Andes Mountains
- the lower part of the globe
* swirl by in constant slow motion.
* symbolize the celestial realm.
* take a number of shapes.
* tend to dissipate and no longer release rain when the cloud layer decreases in altitude
- in air moving down a mountainside
* thus have both direct and indirect effects on the Earth's energy balance and water budget.
* transfer the excess water over land, where it falls as rain.
* travel at different heights and speeds, and in opposite directions.
* turn black Because they like to join Together and sing like thunder.
* undergo thermal reorganization due to radiative effects as they evolve.
* usually accompany floods, which affects delivery of clear imagery.
* usually form near an inversion
- when warm air rises, cools and condenses
- where air moves upward
* warm the winter hemisphere and cool the summer hemisphere.
+ Cloud, Cloud classification:
* Clouds are classified according to how they look and how high the base of the cloud is in the sky. This system was suggested in 1802. There are different sorts of clouds because the air where they form can be still or moving forward or up and down at different speeds. Very thick clouds with large enough water droplets can make rain or snow, and the biggest clouds can make thunder and lightning.
+ Fact, Facts as statements, Examples of fact statements: Philosophy
* Clouds are usually white.
+ Global dimming, Causes and effects: Climate change :: Environmental issues
* Clouds stop the heat from both going in and out from the earth. This process is complex and it changes according to the time, location and the height above the sea level. During the day, more sunlight stops from going in. This cools down the Earth. During the night, the heat in earth stops from going out. This slows down the heat from going out the earth.
* The atmosphere always has a little bit of water vapor that humans can not see. Clouds form when the atmosphere can no longer hold all the invisible air vapor. Any more water vapor condenses into very small water drops. That is what a cloud is.
* Clouds are heavy. The water in a cloud can have a mass of several million tons. Cloud droplets are also about 1000 times heavier than evaporated water, so they are much heavier than air. When water changes from gas to droplets, this makes heat. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud:
Aerosol
* Most aerosols are generated by sources
- water sources
- used by nations
* Most aerosols come from natural sources
* Most aerosols contain a low percentage of active ingredient
- liquid gases
* Most aerosols enter atmospheres
- lower atmospheres
* Some aerosols are generated by economic growth
* Some aerosols are generated by rapid economic growth
- contain toxic materials, others contain corrosive chemicals
- follow eruptions
* Some aerosols have cool effects
- increase heat
- make the atmosphere warmer because they absorb energy
- promote chemical reaction
* Some aerosols promote complex chemical reaction
* Use up or give to someone who can use it up if safe to do so.
* absorb and reflect light, producing the haze in cities
* actually help improve the accuracy of the velocity measurements.
* affect electro-optical propagation and the transfer of radiant energy in the atmosphere
- our environment at the local, regional, and global levels
* also affect biogeochemical cycles and human health.
* also affect the Earth's radiation balance through their effects on clouds
- atmosphere in different ways
- properties of clouds, with a cooling effect, but a large uncertainty
- can form under the conditions of fire or uncontrolled polymerization
- form when gases are converted to fine particles in the troposphere
* also have an important effect on global climate
- relationship to ozone
- lead to cloud burning in the subtropical area
- play an important role in the global atmosphere
- use environmentally damaging propellants
* appear in the stratosphere and troposphere as well.
* are Ammonia ice, water ice, ammonia hydrosulfide
- a viable method for controlling resistive behavior
- also the nuclei around which clouds droplets form - no aerosols, no clouds
* are collections of particles suspended in gas
- particles, suspended in air
- colloids
- dispensers
- dust, water vapor, pollution, clouds, etc
- effective only if sprayed directly onto the bee
- excellent at increasing the reflectivity, or albedo, of the earth s atmosphere
- far from being fully understood
- important because they provide a location for water to condense and form clouds
- insoluble particles suspended in a gas
- liquid medications that are suspended in a gas that forms a mist
- minute particles suspended in the atmosphere
- of great interest in numerous science and engineering applications
- part of every day experience - for example cigarette smoke, or atmospheric haze
- particles dispersed in gas
* are particles suspended in a gas, such as air, and are often associated with haze
- small particles or droplets in the atmosphere, with sizes on the order of a micrometre
- small-suspended particles that scatter and absorb solar radiation
* are sprays that contain intoxicating propellants
- propellants and solvents
- suspensions of propellants and active ingredients such as paint or pesticides
* are the main cause of micro-centrifuge contamination
- major uncertainty associated with global climate models
- tiny and microscopic particles of dust, smoke and ash
* are tiny particles in the air, which can be inhaled
- present in the atmosphere
- such as dust and soot
* are tiny particles suspended in the air
- solid or liquid droplets in the air
- ubiquitous in the troposphere and stratosphere
- under pressure
- usually in a pressurized container
- very fine particles of liquid or solid substances suspended in air
- visible as haze when present in large quantities
* behave a lot like chemical vapors.
* can affect climate in many ways
- energy inputs to the Earth, since they can block solar radiation
- also provide sites for heterogeneous chemical reactions in the atmosphere
* can be natural, such as fog, or manufactured, such as smoke
- projectiles when bursting
- wet or dry liquid or solid
- escape from the centrifuge unit and become dispersed in the air
- have important consequences for continental-scale patterns of climate change
- heat as well as cool
- reflect sunlight, much like clouds
* cans Acids and drain cleaners.
* collection of particulates.
* contain gases
- toxins
* containing pyrethrin, rotenone and pyrenone are available
- synergized pyrethrins, resmethrin, permethrin or propoxur also are available
* cool the climate locally by scattering sunlight back into space
- parts of planet by reflecting sunlight
* directly scatter and absorb radiation.
* disperse the substance in tiny droplets that can be inhaled or absorbed through the skin.
* essentially decrease conductivity by vastly increasing the mass of the charge carriers.
* have a cooling effect due to their ability to reflect incoming sunlight
- effect, which offsets, in part, the warming effect of greenhouse gases
- direct effect on the atmosphere's radiation budget
- two-fold cooling effect on climate
- other impacts
- significant effects on air pollution, climate, visibility and human health
- toxic propellants which can explode
* impact the performance of infrared, visual, and laser systems.
* interact both directly and indirectly with the Earth's radiation budget and climate.
* is collected on quartz fiber tape
- powered by compressed air
- self-generated upon activation of the system
- the scientific term used to describe particles suspended in a fluid, such as air
* major means of transmission.
* oven cleaners are among the worst contributors to indoor air pollution.
* play a negligible role.
* pose a different, but equally-lethal danger
- similar risk
* reflect solar radiation back to space, and, in so doing, cool the Earth
- sunlight, making the surface cooler
* released by human activities are also capable of influencing climate.
* require propellants, valves, etc., as well as containers.
* resulting from human activities include sulfate aerosols and soot from fossil fuel burning.
* scatter back to space and absorb solar radiation
- proportional solar energy to frequency
* usually contain pyrethrins.
* vary considerably by region.
* works better on greasy stains. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol:
Anthropogenic aerosol
* absorb sunlight, which warms the planet.
* tend to produce negative radiative forcing.<|endoftext|>### cloud | aerosol:
Atmospheric aerosol
* Most atmospheric aerosols originate at Earth's surface. are products of photosynthesis.
* are a significant source of direct and indirect global climate forcing
- very fine particles suspended in air
* can significantly modify the predicted warming of greenhouse gases.
* have a major impact on the climate of Mars, as well as of the Earth.
* is of global interest and has an important impact on our daily lives.
* play a major role in the chemical and radiative processes in the atmosphere
- an important role in climate change | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol:
Fog
* Most fog increases humidity.
* Most fog is caused by air
- moist air
* Most fog occurs in cold weather
- fogs tend to be found under conditions of light wind
* Some fog occurs on surfaces
- refers to clouds
* also occurs when the air is cooled below a critical temperature called the dew point.
* are frequent along the coast, especially in summer
- merely clouds on the surface of Earth
- rare, and are usually confined to the early morning hours of midwinter
* begins to form when water vapor condenses into tiny liquid water droplets suspended in the air.
* can act like a brick wall to lasers.
* can also form over cold, snow-covered ground as warmer air moves in
- overnight within a region of higher pressure
- appear at any time of the year
- completely block the reflector when other lights remain visible
- define limits of redwood groves, but fog also plays a key role in water use by the redwoods
- form suddenly and can dissipate just as rapidly
- pose a serious threat to motorists
* carries sound and it was often foggy in the mornings.
* classic example as it consists of very small water droplets dispersed in air.
* cloud based on the ground, rather than in the atmosphere.
* cloud in contact with the ground
- touch with the ground
- near the ground
* cloud that forms on the ground
- has formed on the ground
* cloud that touches the ground or the surface of a body of water
- ground, so the closest clouds get to the ground is to touch it
* combined with smoke can cut visibility to nearly zero.
* comes from landward direction
- the direction of the ocean
* common factor off the California coast in winter.
* contains very tiny liquid water particles, like a cloud, and floats, like a cloud.
* creates a marbling or curling effect in beams of light, where haze creates a solid light beam.
* form when moist air is cooled, or when cool air has water vapor added to it.
* frequently develops in winter.
* happens frequently in the summer and blizzards and storms in the winter
- when the water vapor condenses into particles as air temperatures cool
* has a color field.
* helps to define light beams and radiate colors, and can add an eerie ambiance to any scene.
* is an aerosol
- basically a cloud at ground level
- changes in temperature and air pressure
- classified by the way it forms
* is common during the summer months along the immediate coast and major river drainages
- especially along the coast
* is common in the cold air ahead of a warm front
- ahead of the front
- evening and early mornings
- morning throughout the year
- summer, rain in the winter
- valleys on winter mornings, due to nocturnal raditional cooling and drainage flow
- on the coast
- composed of billions of tiny water droplets floating in the air
- essentially very low clouds, consisting of water vapor cooling and beginning to condense
* is formed because the air within the chamber is cooled when the pressure is quickly dropped
- by five different cooling mechanisms
- frequent on the plains in the cold season
* is just a cloud at ground level
- that happens to be hanging around on the Earth's surface
- less common in the winter
- literally a cloud on the ground
* is made of small water droplets suspended in the air that reduces visibility
- tiny liquid water droplets, lightweighted enough to remain suspended in the air
* is made up of tiny water droplets or , in very cold conditions , ice crystals
- droplets or, in very cold conditions, ice crystals
- merely a cloud at ground level
* is most common in the fall and spring
- prevalent and thickest during the morning hours
- much heavier and thicker than haze and tends to block out the light
* is often a prelude to large thunderstorms
- present when drizzle falls
- thickest in valleys and low-lying areas
- perhaps the best know atmospheric, but all air contains some amount of particulate matter
- prevalent during summer months
- produced by vaporizing a special fog fluid under high heat
- rain before it collects together to form raindrops
- rare except in winter
- simulated by blending the color of the fog with the color of each ray
- the visible aggregate of minute water droplets suspended in the atmosphere near the surface
- typically thicker in low places as the heavy air flows downward
- very rare, usually occurring early on winter mornings
* occurs during about one-third of summer days
- periods
- more often than any single precipitation type at all temperatures
- occasionally at any time of the year
* occurs when moisture is cooled and condenses in the atmosphere near the surface of the earth
- stratus clouds are in touch with the ground surface
- the air is saturated and the invisible water now becomes visible
* often appears in low-lying areas
- develops overnight and comes onshore during the morning
* often forms in low places because as the air cools it becomes heavier and flows downhill
- on cold,clear nights as the temperatures drop to the dew point temperature
* represents the saturation of air near the ground surface.
* sealing roads process of spraying a thin layer of oil onto a road surface.
* sometimes disappears before mid-day.
* stratus cloud in contact with the ground.
* temporarily increases water potential in Florida scrub oaks.
* usually occurs in low areas such as valleys, canyons and craters
- surface-based form of stratus
* variation that reaches the ground.
+ Buenos Aires, Weather
* Buenos Aires has a mild weather. During the 20th century the temperature has gone up because of the urbanization. Rainfall is 1222.6 mm. per year. Summers are warm and humid. Fog is frequent.
+ Liancourt Rocks, Climate: Islands of South Korea
* Liancourt Rocks can have harsh weather conditions. This is because of its location, and small size. Sometimes, ships are unable to dock because of strong northwestern winds in winter. The climate is warm and humid. It is heavily influenced by warm sea currents. Fog is a common sight. In the summer, southerly winds dominate. The water around the islets is about 10 degrees Celsius in spring, when the water is coolest. It warms to about 25 degrees Celsius in August.
* Fog is made up of tiny water droplets or, in very cold conditions, ice crystals. These water droplets make up the fog or mist. There are many types of fog, such as evaporation fog, advection fog, radiation fog, and upslope fog. The thickness of fog varies depending on the atmosphere, temperature, weather and location. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol | fog:
Advection fog
* Most advection fog is caused by air
* involves a breeze or moderate wind
- very moist low level air moving over cold ground
- common along the pacific coast of the United States
Dense fog
* is most common in the spring when warm air masses ride over melting snowpack.
* plagues the mariner most often in spring and early summer over the open lake waters.
* reduces visibility.
Heavy fog
* are common along the coast in summer
- rare, and are confined chiefly to the coast
* is visibility below one quarter of a mile.
* occurs mostly during the winter and early spring.
Ice fog
* Most ice fog occurs in cold weather
* fog that forms as ice crystals instead of water droplets.
* is common during the winter<|endoftext|>### cloud | aerosol | fog:
Mist
* Most mist creates water.
* Some mist is caused by heat.
* are tiny droplets of liquid suspended in the air
- liquid droplets usually created by spraying, mixing, or cleaning activities
- very small droplets of liquids that are inhaled
* can be as high as mountain tops when extreme temperatures are low.
* commonly shroud the hills during the monsoons.
* covers areas
- mirrors, walls, and ceiling
- nursery areas
* descend quickly and the temperature can drop dramatically.
* encourages growth.
* is clouds
- located in waterfalls
* leaves daily to counteract the drying influence of artificial heat.
* loaves with water and turn occasionally while they bake.
### cloud | aerosol | fog | mist:
Thick mist
* are a common occurrence, sometimes even occurring in the winter months.
* is common during the hot humid summers.
Pea soup
* is fog
- food
- served at canteens, restaurants, homes and in the army always on Thursdays
- soup
- the staple diet of skaters who ride long-distance treks past windmills and dykes
* remains a popular dish in restaurants where tourists enjoy a true taste of old Quebec.
Radiation fog
* Some radiation fog occurs on surfaces.
* can occur in a variety of synoptic conditions.
* is caused by cooling close to the earth's surface
- common over land in late fall and winter
- most common in autumn and early winter
- usually a few meter deep and typically lasts for only a few hours after sunrise<|endoftext|>### cloud | aerosol:
Fume
* Many fumes can be deadly to birds, and flying can stir up dust and feathers that are very flammable.
* accumulate in the walls or other surfaces.
* are definitely toxic and including ingestion probably account for most toxic occurances
- especially hazardous to birds
- gases
- harmful to the aluminum antenna parts
- heavier than air and sink to the floor
- solid particles of evaporated metal
- very small recondensed particles, which have a very small particle size
* can also contaminate food stored in refrigerators or freezers
- be moderately to highly irritating to the lungs
* can cause headaches and dizziness, convulsions and unconsciousness
- headaches, dizziness and stupor
- irritation of respiratory tract
- permanent damage to cornea of eyes
* can damage eyes and lungs
- lungs, permanently
- produce asthma-like symptoms
- strongly irritate the nose, throat and lungs
* cause irritation of eyes and respiratory passages.
* escaping from the gas tank contribute to the formation of ground-level ozone.
* generated during brazing can be a serious hazard.
* is an aerosol
* smell strongly of garlic when heated.
### cloud | aerosol | fume:
Exhaust fume
* can kill all trace of human scent.
* contain deadly carbon monoxide. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol:
Smoke
* All smoke contains pollutants, some of which are toxic.
* All smoke is harmful to the lungs
- respiratory system
* Most smoke affects health
- quality
- sperm quality
- causes lung problems
- comes from cigarettes
* Most smoke contains carbon monoxide
- carcinogen
- chemicals
- dioxide
- know carcinogen
- numerous carcinogen
- small particles
- substances
- sulfur dioxide
- harms children
* Most smoke has chemicals
- effects
- harmful chemicals
- health effects
* Most smoke has serious effects
- irritates lungs
- is generated by fire
* Most smoke produces carbon monoxide
* Most smoke reduces health
- oxygen
* Some smoke affects homes.
* Some smoke causes air pollution
- blindness
- cancer
* Some smoke causes coronary diseases
- heart diseases
- death
- depressions
* Some smoke causes fatal diseases
- lung diseases
- inflammation
* Some smoke causes lung cancer
- premature death
- respiratory diseases
- severe depressions
* Some smoke contributes to cancer
- goes into lungs
* Some smoke harms babies
- fetuses
- includes hydrocarbons
* Some smoke increases energy levels
- induces atherosclerosis
- influences perceptions
* Some smoke is generated by burn electrical wire
- reduces infiltrations
- residues cause cancer
* acts as an irritant to the eyes and respiratory membranes.
- non-smokers more than smokers themselves
- skin
* also can affect a non-smoker
- contains tar, nicotine and carbon monoxide
- forms a layer of buildup, which reduces efficiency
- makes the airways slow to heal
- repels midges
* always contains carbon monoxide which can be lethal.
* are of various kinds, each one significant of a particular object
- the solid version of silver tabbies
- toxic, albeit to differing degrees
* bothers people.
* can affect the flavor of honey.
* can aggravate allergies
- ocular allergies for smokers and nonsmokers alike
* can also contribute to mucous membrane irritation so avoid it if possible
- stick to wood surface
* can be a warning of danger
- annoying and cause damage to property
- dark black to light grey
- just as dangerous as fire
- cause reddening, itching and watering eyes
- contain a variety of dusts, gases and vapors, depending on what is burning
- degrade the effectiveness of many types of lasers
- fill a building in a very short period of time
- have negative short and long-term health effects
* can involve cancer
- dies
* can make coughs worse
- it difficult to breathe, damaging breathing passages
* can make the breathing problems and coughing worse
- child's coughing and breathing problems worse
* can overwhelm a child or adult in minutes
- achild or adult in minutes
- remain in an area for many days
- significantly reduce the firefighter's abilities to sense changes in fire behavior
* cans have effects.
* causes damage
- flowers to die quicker, as does excess heat caused by ovens and televisions
- smoke inhalation
- the airways to narrow, making it more difficult to breathe
* circles the intravenous and dissipates in fluorescent lights.
* clogs the air form fires burning away in Mexico.
* comes from a fire
- being used in games, and mold and mildew from being locked in a closet for years
- in several different forms, including dark black, blue, and white
* common term used for particulates large enough to be visible.
* complex product of combustion.
* consists of carbon particles, which can conduct electricity.
* containing hexachloroethane is used to extinguish fires.
* contains a wide variety of mutagens and rodent carcinogens
- benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide
* contains carbon monoxide which is toxic to the brain
- monoxide, which reduces the blood s oxygen carrying ability
- deadly gases, and heat rises
- heavy metals lead, cadmium, polonium, arsenic
- hot and toxic gases
- nicotine, which causes the blood vessels to constrict
- particle of unburnt carbon that make it look black
- poison gases
- toxic fumes and can be deadly
- toxins
* contributes to problems.
* damages blood vessels
- the strength of blood vessel walls
* easily travels throughout a building and is only held back by physical barriers.
* ends with dies.
* floats in the warm evening air.
* fumes linger in bedding and air and toxins accumulate on walls and f urniture.
* generally disperses well in an unstable atmosphere.
* goes into the ear canal and melts the ear wax, and sucks it out by a vacuum.
* happens as soon as the motor power adds a bit of heat.
- so many toxins that it causes lung cancer in non-smokers who inhale the smoke
* helps keep away coldness and mosquitoes.
* increases symptoms of asthma and allergies.
* irritates airways
* irritates the bronchial passages, which prolongs the cold symptoms
- eyes, nose and bronchial tubes
- mucous membranes and vocal cords
* is aerosols.
* is also a component of internal combustion engine exhaust gas , particularly diesel exhaust
- problem in Venezuela
- very harmful to books and computers
- an example of fine solid particles dispersed in gases
- carbon or soot from burning
- composed of fine particles of a solid dispersed in a gas
* is created as wood smolders in electrically heated wood box
- extremely variable in particle size and toxicity
- full of carcinogens
- harsh on lungs, and best used in a water-pipe
- hot and rises, so it is less dense along the floor
* is in a solid state
- the air and liquor is on the breath
- indications
- inhaled and held
- inhibitive or even corrosive to certain optical systems
* is located in air
- bars
- lofts
- skies
* is made up of evaporated water, carbon dioxide and unburnt particles of the fuel
- tiny particles that can lodge in the lungs
- particles, gases and water vapor
- microscopic particles, and is trapped as well
- more pervasive than most people think
* is motivated by the goal of addicteds
- often more deadly than flames
- one of the most well known and common irritants contributing to asthma
- particulate matter consisting of very fine solid particles and condensed vapour
- poisonous
* is produced by burning leaves, twigs, clippings, prunings or even paper
- in large quantities
- responsible for More deaths than actual fires
* is the greatest danger in a fire
- leading cause of death in house fires
- major cause of death in residence hall fires
- number one killer in fires
- product of incomplete combustion
- reason most people die in a house fire
- thing that makes electrical circuits work
* is used to conceal units and individual weapon systems
- describe a certain condition of visibility
- screen or obscure
- suffocate wombats in their burrows and possums in their hollows
* is usually the culprit that overwhelms fire victims like the Erwins
- result of incomplete combustion or certain engine operating conditions
- vaporization
- very effective at reducing visibility
* kills the sense of smell and therefore taste.
* known respiratory hazard and asthma trigger
- trigger for asthma attacks
* lingers in drapes and carpet and can cause breathing problems.
* makes all things that are electrical work
- electronic circuits work, since circuits stop working once the smoke escapes
- hair and clothing stink
* mixture of carbon particles and water vapor
- solid particles and gases
- soot and other particles with the gases produced by combustion
* never occurs in a lake, which is heterologous with things that contain fire.
* often have white around the eyes and a lighter colored belly.
* passes through bronchi.
* permeates everything with which a smoker comes into contact.
* permeates the atmosphere
- etheric and is able to 'dissolve' ambient charge in an environment
* primarily means visible smoke, but even in common parlance can include the smell.
* provides cloud condensation nuclei, particles of matter on which cloud vapor condenses.
- the ability of radioactive ions to form a conductor and the alarm is activated
* released by forest and management fires inhibit rainfall.
* results in damage
- skin damage
* revelatory of the fluids and at the same times a revelatory fluid of the subtle entities.
* rises and can be dangerous if too much is inhaled
- during a fire
- from stacks because it is warmer than the surrounding air and thus less dense
- in space
- nearly vertically
- vertically with little if any drift
* rises, so the cleanest air is near the floor.
* sign of a fire
- that certain lands are being cared for properly
* stains walls and chewing tobacco is very damaging to carpets.
* tends to rise, breaking up and becoming diffused.
* triggers responses.
* type of pollution that can be seen because it is made up of solid particles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol | smoke:
Black smoke
* Most black smoke contains carbon.
* changes color to a grayish-yellow color, similar to the color of hay.
* indicates that the air-fuel mixture is too rich to burn completely.
* is cause when too much wind hits the flame
- characteristic of a petroleum fire
- generated by burning organic hydrocarbons in a specially designed firebox
* means incomplete, inefficient burning.
* rising from a burning candle good indicator that the wick is too long.
* seems to color everything, including a man's spit.
+ Papal conclave: Popes
* Black smoke means there is no decision yet.
Blue smoke
* can indicate engine oil being burned in the combustion chamber.
* is formed by combustion of the engine's own lubricating oil
- from oil burning
- usually an indicator for burning oil
* means that the car burns oil
- the engine is burning oil and too many hydrocarbons are being released
* occurs when oil is entering the combustion chamber and is burning along with the fuel.
* sign that the engine is burning oil, and that there is engine wear.
Breathe tobacco smoke
* damages blood vessels
* irritates airways.
Dark smoke
* forms dense clouds, visible from long distances.
* is better than white smoke since it absorbs the light and blends in with ground objects.
Dense smoke
* can overload a filter with particles, eventually breaking it.
* is emitted when burned without sufficient oxygen
- product is burned without sufficient oxygen
- produced when product burns
- usually highly toxic and reduces visibility substantially
Fag
* are artistic, and homophobes have a strong work ethic.
* is smoke
Inhale smoke
* Some inhale smoke causes cancer
- lung cancer
* causes damage.
Passive smoke
* can cause almost as much aging as smoking itself
- lead to a build-up of fluid in the middle ear
* disrupts the protective process of endothelial cells.
* is also a hazard for pregnant women.
* pollutes the air. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol | smoke:
Secondhand smoke
* Most secondhand smoke causes lung problems.
* Most secondhand smoke has chemicals
- harmful chemicals
* Some secondhand smoke causes cancer
- diseases
- lung cancer
* can affect adjoining units in multi-family housing.
* can also cause asthma, pneumonia, and bronchitis in children
- disease in non-smokers
- serious harm to children
* can be extremely harmful to both children and adults
- harmful in many ways
- cause health problems for nonsmokers
* can cause lung cancer in non-smokers
- serious health problems, especially for children
- sickness in children
- sore eyes and upset stomachs
- kill
- produce six times the pollution of a busy highway when in a crowded restaurant
* cancer-causing agent with no safe level of exposure.
* causes irritation of the eyes, nose, and throat.
* causes lung cancer and other health problems
* causes many harmful side effects
- lung cancer deaths annually
- middle ear disease in children
* causes more cancer deaths than all other regulated carcinogens combined
- than teary eyes and runny noses
- reddening, itching, and watering of the eyes
- wheezing, coughing, colds, earaches, and asthma attacks
* comes from all tobacco products, including pipe tobacco and cigars
- cigarettes, pipes or cigars
* contains arsenic, cyanide, ammonia, and formaldehyde
- benzene, formaldehyde, carbon monoxide and ammonia
- many dangerous chemicals that have been proven to cause cancer
- oxides of nitrogen, nicotine, carbon monoxide and a number of carcinogens
- smaller amounts of the same chemicals that harm smokers
* continues to be a major health-risk factor.
* damages lungs.
* harms persons of all ages.
* has an especially bad effect on infants and children whose parents smoke
* increases the risk of lung cancer in dogs.
* irritates the eyes, nose and throat
- tube that joins the nose with the middle ear
* is also a confirmed cause of nasal sinus cancer in nonsmokers
- classified as a known human carcinogen, or cancer causing agent
- either harmful or potentially harmful
* is especially harmful for babies
- to young children
- exhaled by the smoker
* is harmful to children with asthma
- children, and burning tobacco can cause fires
- indeed hazardous to one's health
* is known to cause cancer
- increase the risk of heart disease and lung cancer
- one of the more controversial public health issues
* is the name for the smoke given off by a burning cigarette, cigar or pipe
- only source of nicotine in the air
- smoke exhaled by the smoker
- third leading cause of preventable death in the United States
* kills tens of thousands of people each year.
* major health hazard
- risk, especially to children
* makes clothes and hair stink.
* personal and public health hazard.
* results in damage
- skin damage
* serious health risk to children.
* significant threat to public health.
Smoke testing
* helps identify plumbing leaks in buildings.
* involves forcing smoke-filled air through a sewer line. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol | smoke:
Tobacco smoke
* Most tobacco smoke contains chemicals
- substances
- harms children
* Some tobacco smoke causes death
* Some tobacco smoke causes fatal diseases
- lung diseases
* Tobacco Smoke can make asthma worse.
* aggravates coughing.
* can aggravate asthma symptoms or trigger an attack
- also cause gum disease, tooth decay and bad breath
- cause sore eyes, throat, and can cause headaches
- hurt the mouth , throat , and lungs
* can make asthma attacks more severe
- hair and clothes stink
* causes damage
- fatal lung disease to non-smokers
* co-carcinogen with radon.
* complicated pollutant - an airborne mixture of toxic particles and gases.
* consists of solid particles and gases.
* contains a multitude of poisons
- number of psychoactive compounds besides nicotine
- carcinogens which cause lung cancer
* contains harmful carbon monoxide
- chemicals and nicotine is poisonous to cave animals
- hundreds of toxic substances, many of which are also found in the workplace
- large quantities of toxic chemicals
* contains many carcinogens harmful substances that damage cells
- odorless chemicals and gases
- more than four thousand substances, most of which are harmful
- naphthylamine and nitrosamines, which cause lung cancer
- nicotine, an addictive drug, as well as thousands of other substances
- poisons that sicken and kill nonsmokers as well as smokers
- tar
- thousands of chemicals
* contains toxic chemicals including carbon monoxide, cyanide, and polonium
- compounds such as carbon monoxide, nicotine, tar, and formaldehyde
- traces of arsenic
- up to four percent carbon monoxide
* damages a child's overall health
- blood vessels
* deadly indoor air pollutant as well, but there are no high-tech solutions.
* does kill.
* has an immediate affect on health
- many carcinogens - substances that damage cells
* hinders the body's ability to absorb oxygen.
* increases the risk of lung cancer and heart disease, even in nonsmokers.
* inhibits the action of the lung cleaning cilia.
* is also a source of combustion by-products
- an important source of indoor air pollution, posing a threat in the workplace
- harmful to non-smokers
- an aerosol that dries fast
- by far the most important source of humans
- clearly a health hazard to smokers and non-smokers alike
- dangerous to nonsmokers
- harmful to everybody's health
- hazardous to health
- injurious to skin
* is known to contain PAHs
- several carcinogens
- made up of various chemicals that make smoking addictive and unhealthy
* is one of the most complex indoor air contaminants known
- difficult smells to remove from a car
- rain clouds
- still a problem, especially in homes
* is the biggest cause of indoor air pollution
- main risk factor for most types of lung cancer
- major source of human exposure to nitrosamines
- most common and deadly source of indoor air pollution
- theoretically harmful to health, whether it comes from cigarettes, cigars or pipes
* kills living things - including people, animals, and plants
* major indoor pollutant, but the risk can be eliminated by eliminating the smoke.
* makes the workplace a flawed environment.
* poses a real and immediate danger to health
- the greatest long-term risk
* produces cancer of the lung and bladder, cardiac and respiratory disease
- chemicals that damage the cells of the cervix
* puts others at risk through environmental exposure.
* releases benzene into the air.
* source of toxic reactive glycation products.
* spreads quickly through offices and buildings
* triggers responses.
+ Smoke, Smoke from tobacco: Waste
* When people smoke tobacco in cigars or cigarettes, they are burning the tobacco and inhaling the smoke. Tobacco smoke can hurt the mouth, throat, and lungs. It can cause mouth, throat, or lung cancer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | aerosol | smoke:
Toxic smoke
* Some toxic smoke is generated by burn electrical wire
* is emitted by all natural organic substances.<|endoftext|>### cloud | aerosol | smoke:
Wood smoke
* attacks our body cells up to forty times longer than tobacco smoke.
* can be harmful when it is inhaled by humans
- cause irritations of the nose, throat and sinuses
- damage sperm and cause birth defects
- often trigger allergic symptoms
* contains approximately two hundred compounds, some of which are carcinogenic
- both particles and gases
- formaldehyde and hydrocarbons
- hundreds of chemicals
* contains many gases and chemicals including many carcinogens
- organic compounds known to cause cancer as well as other toxic compounds
* is caused by the incomplete combustion of wood
- more carcinogenic than equal volumes of secondhand tobacco smoke
- pervasive
- the number one air pollution problem in residential areas during the fall and winter
* problem for children and adults with asthma and allergies.
Stratospheric aerosol
* are of particular interest
- usually too sparse to have any effect on atmospheric UV transmission
* play an important role in the formation of polar stratospheric clouds.
* reduce the transmission of sunlight into the umbra.
Sulfate aerosol
* Most sulfate aerosols are particles that can be inhaled.
* are both small and chemically stable.
* have a negative forcing since they reflect sunlight back out into space.
Cirrocumulus cloud
* Most cirrocumulus clouds produce light precipitation
* appear as small, rounded white puffs that appear in long rows.
* are found in the same high levels as cirrus.
* indicate good weather.
* look like many small tufts of cotton hanging high in the sky
- very small round balls or flakes
Cirrus cloud
* Most cirrus clouds affect climates
- bring weather
* Most cirrus clouds consist of ice particles
- produce precipitation
* Some cirrus clouds compose of crystal
- ice crystal
* Some cirrus clouds have crystal
* bring nice weather
Cold cloud
* Some cold clouds contain only supercooled water.
* exist at or below freezing.<|endoftext|>### cloud:
Contrail
* are a trail of condensed water vapor produced by jet aircraft flying at high altitudes
- composed primarily of water, in the form of ice crystals
- condensation trails left behind jet aircrafts
- formed by two basic processes
- generally at the same altitude
- the result of normal emissions of water vapor from jet engines
* are the white lines that sometimes form behind high flying aircraft
- trails that planes leave in the sky
- wispy, cloud-like trails that follow jets as they arc across the summer sky
* can form many shapes as they are dispersed by horizontal and vertical wind shear
- through the addition of water vapor to the air from the jet engine exhaust
* cause a positive mean radiative forcing at the top of the atmosphere.
* form due to moisture in the aircraft exhaust.
* spread apart and evaporate with time.
* tend to warm the Earth s surface, similar to thin high clouds.
### cloud | contrail:
Normal contrail
* come from the engines and wingtips of high-flying aircraft.
* dissipate less than one minute after formation.<|endoftext|>### cloud:
Cosmic dust
* can ferry in organic molecules.
* comes from asteroids and comets.
* is located in space.
* is split into further types of dust , based on the dust 's location
- dust, based on the dust's location. * dust, based on the dust's location. These types include intergalactic dust, which can be found between galaxies, interstellar dust, found between stars, circumplanetary dust, which can be found around planets and in planetary rings and interplanetary dust, which can be found between planets
Cumuliform cloud
* Cumuliform clouds are flat-based, massive, globular clouds.
* are common over mountainous areas during summertime
- just one type of cloud | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud:
Cumulonimbus cloud
* Most cumulonimbus clouds associate with intense thunderstorms
- powerful thunderstorms
- have tops
* Most cumulonimbus clouds result in clouds
- wall clouds
* Some cumulonimbus clouds have regions.
* Some cumulonimbus clouds produce heavy rain
* produce precipitation.<|endoftext|>### cloud:
Cumulus cloud
* Most cumulus clouds bring weather
- deliver rain
* Most cumulus clouds indicate fair weather
* are classified as low yet vertically building clouds
- clouds that have significant vertical development
- convective clouds
- detached cauliflower shaped clouds usually spotted in fair weather
- large clouds that sometimes look like big, fluffy cotton balls
- lumpy and can stretch high into the sky
- optically thick
* are puffy clouds that form in warm weather
- white clouds that usually have a flat base and they can bring bad weather
* are the fluffy, white cotton ball or cauliflower-looking clouds with sharp outlines
- lovely, puffy ones that are good for finding shapes in
- usually very isolated with large areas of blue sky in between the clouds
- very common, especially in warm and moist climates
- white, puffy clouds that look like pieces of floating cotton
* can continue to build into towering cumulonimbus , or thunderstorms
- look like animals or people
* change to cumulonimbus clouds.
* come in four distinct species, cumulis humilis, mediocris, congestus, and fractus.
* form via atmospheric convection as air warmed by the surface begins to rise.
* form when air, heated by the sun, rises and cools like bubbles rising in an aquarium
- strong air currents point upwards
- thermals carry moisture upwards
* have sharp outlines and a flat base.
* identify regions where moisture is mixed to the cloud condensation level.
* look like cotton balls and cirrus clouds look like strands of angel hair
- fluffy balls of cotton wool
* make beautiful sunsets.
* owe their existence to the heating of the earth's surface by the sun.
* resemble heaps of cotton or a piece of popcorn, or even cauliflower.
* show development.
* stack like donuts into a flanking line of clouds.
Dark cloud
* Most dark clouds produce precipitation.
* are regions of high dust concentration
- usually deep and more extensive
* form and rain or hail falls.
Dust cloud
* Most dust clouds are very large.
* absorb blue light, leaving a yellow-red glow.
* are clouds.
* lower global temperature
* reduce visibility to zero.
Funnel cloud
* become tornadoes once they touch the ground.
* can drop out of thunderstorms with little or no warning
- form over bodies of water, too
* form most frequently in association with supercell thunderstorms.
Gas cloud
* Most gas clouds have motion.
* collide and form new stars.
* form and move around in the protogalaxy on orbits.
* pile up, collide, fragment, and form new stars.
Grey cloud
* Most grey clouds produce precipitation.
* Some grey clouds produce rain.
High cloud
* Some high clouds contain crystal
- ice crystal
- have bases
* are the types of clouds that produce a warming effect
- very cold, so they appear white
* reflect less energy, but trap more of The energy emitted by the surface.
* tend to be darker, where low clouds are lighter colored
- trap heat and have a warming effect
* warm the Earth's surface.
Higher cloud
* have progressive lower temperatures.
* indicate both dryness of air and higher atmospheric pressure.
Interstellar cloud
* are monitors of the history of element evolution
- the nurseries of stars and planets
* yield clues to the origins of the element lithium. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud:
Lenticular cloud
* are caused by a wave wind pattern created by the mountains
- characteristic of all mountain ranges and form in response to wind
* are lens-shaped clouds that can result from strong wind flow over rugged terrain
- result from a strong wind over rugged terrain
- nearly stationary with respect to the ground
- smooth and solid in appearance and have been mistakenly photographed for UFOs<|endoftext|>### cloud:
Low cloud
* appear gray on an infrared satellite picture while high clouds appear white.
* are often quite thick and reflect lots of sunlight back to space.
* are warmer and generally are composed of droplets
- still, so they appear as a dark shade of gray or black
* cool the Earth by reflecting solar radiation back into space.
* have a cooling effect on the Earth's surface.
* prevent air support.
* produce a cooling effect.
* reflect sunlight and have a cooling effect on Earth.
* tend to be warmer than higher clouds.
Magnetic cloud
* are a subset of CMEs.
* take two to three days to arrive at Earth.
Massive cloud
* Most massive clouds have centers.
* Some massive clouds produce tornado.
Noctilucent cloud
* become visible after sunset.
* is an unusual phenomenon of the Earth's upper-atmosphere.
* look similar to cirrus clouds.
Orographic cloud
* are common on Earth.
* is often in contact with the ground at the hill top.
Rain cloud
* Most rain clouds are negatively charges at the base and positively charged at the top.
* are down low and are real dark.
* pick up water and they are heating.
* release water.
Roll cloud
* are similar to shelf clouds.
* can also develop in the absence of thunderstorms.
Scud cloud
* are small, detached, wind-torn clouds that often form near thunderstorms
- which often form near thunderstorms
* go through continuous rapid changes.
Storm cloud
* Some storm clouds become positive charge.
* are clouds.
* can build up electrical charges as water and ice droplets tumble about inside.<|endoftext|>### cloud:
Stratocumulus cloud
* are large and lumpy, round or rolled-looking, and often cover the entire sky.
* are low, lumpy and gray
- puffy and gray
- with irregular masses
- masses of puffy clouds with little or no space in between
- same in appearance to altocumulus and are often mistaken for such
- the main type of cloud that can produce crepuscular rays
* can result when layers of clouds are heated from below and convection follows.
* consists of large, rounded masses of stratus that form groups, lines or waves.<|endoftext|>### cloud:
Stratus cloud
* Most stratus clouds form at tops.
* Some stratus clouds affect transportation
- are caused by air
- move current
* are a uniform gray and usually cover most of the sky
- very low dark uniform gray color
- another type of cloud
- generally shapeless
- good indicators that precipitation is approaching
- gray and uniform in appearance
* are low clouds that produce a hazy, gray veil with a uniform base throughout the sky
- layers of thick, gray clouds typical of overcast days
- low, flat clouds
- sheetlike and spread like flat layers across the sky
- the lowest clouds
* are uniform gray in color and almost cover the entire sky
- grayish clouds that often cover the entire sky
* are very gray and long and they usually resemble fog in the sky
- low-level grey layers or patches of clouds with fuzzy edges
* build up when warm moist air rides up slowly over a bank of colder air.
* can persist for days in anticyclone conditions.
* extend in flatter formations than cumulus ones.
- flat layers or uniform sheets
- in layers
* indicate storms.
* look like a layer of fog that never reaches the ground
- featureless gray to white sheets of cloud
* produce a drizzle or light mist, never an honest rain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cloud | stratus cloud:
Altostratus cloud
* are common in the advance of a warm front, preceding the nimbostratus
- higher than stratus clouds
- middle level clouds
* form the highest layer
- when a front of warm, moist air meets a body of cold, dry air
Thick cloud
* Most thick clouds consist of dioxide
- sulfur dioxide
- create greenhouse effects
- produce precipitation
* absorb uv radiation effectively.
* containing dust can make background stars invisible.
* create effects
* have a higher albedo than thin clouds
- high albedos and show up bright in the satellite image
Thin cloud
* Most thin clouds compose of water.
* Some thin clouds produce coronae.
Thundercloud
* are all that is visible on the dark earth in the background.
* build up large amounts of electrical energy.
* tend to be very dark.
Warm cloud
* exist at temperatures above the freezing point.
* form above the freezing point of water.
* processes dominate precipitation production.
White cloud
* Some white clouds compose of crystal
- ice crystal
* are native to streams in Southern China where they are now thought to be extinct
- very docile, small, cooler water fish
* swirl in the atmosphere, and blue oceans cover much of the planet.
### clouds:
Puffy cloud
* are clouds
* begin to develop vertically and darken.<|endoftext|>Clue
* are board games
- evidence
* are located in drawers
- mysteries
- toy stores
- the facts that lead to the truth
* is an indication
+ Million Dollar Password, Gameplay: Television game shows :: CBS network shows :: 2008 television series debuts
* The game is played in two parts. The first part of the game has two contestants and two celebrities. Both contestants play 30-second rounds where they try to get five words from clues given by their celebrity partner. Clues have to be one word. The celebrity can give as many clues as they want for each word. They must wait for a response from the contestant before giving a new clue. Only one clue can be given at a time. After each contestant plays, they switch partners. The contestant who gets the most words after four rounds wins and moves on to the Million Dollar Password round.
+ Only Connect, Format, Round 3: Connecting Wall: 2008 television series debuts :: 2000s British television series :: 2010s British television series :: BBC television programmes :: British television game shows :: Panel games
* Each team is given a wall of 16 clues and must work out the solution, which will be four groups of four connected items. The puzzles are designed to suggest more connections than actually exist. Some clues look like they fit into more than one category. Teams score 1 point for each group found within 2 minutes 30 seconds. They may make all the guesses they want until they have identified two of the four groups, but have only three guesses for the remaining connections. Teams can then score 1 additional point for identifying the connection within each group, even if they did not spot them earlier. Two bonus points, for a total of ten, are earned for getting everything right. On 1 March 2010, an interactive online version of this round was put on the Only Connect website.
### coachs:
College coach
* are coachs.
* begin careers.
* help children learn court skills and sportsmanship.
* work weeks.
### coal seams:
Black layer
* are coal seams.
* is caused by gas buildup under the green surface.
### coarse-silty:
Gird soil
* are coarse-silty
- moderately extensive in intermountain valleys in western Montana
* have a frigid temperature regime and a xeric moisture regime.
Coaster
* Some coasters have engines.
* are located in desks
- tables
- movers
- protective covering
- residents
- ships
* go forward two feet for every foot they climb.
* have bottoms
- diameters
- sides
* includes sections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Coating
* Some coatings protect against corrosion, thermal fatigue, and oxidation.
* also contain chemicals to reduce the formation of algae or mildew
- play a major role in modern nails
* are also beneficial when used to prevent clumping
- critical as the first line of defense against corrosion
- dielectric, electron beam and ion assisted
- dressings
- fabric
- nonconductive
- substabces put on a finished sheet of paper
* can affect the look and feel of fabrics.
* extend from the ultraviolet to the infrared.
* generally have poor strength, ductility and impact properties.
* improve the energy efficiency of a roof by reflecting a major portion of the sunlight.
* is associated with chromosome silencing
- non-reactive and lasts at least ten times as long as filament sources
* means to chemically and physically alter surfaces of fabric.
* prevents acid corrosion
* represent an important area in surface modification technologies.
### coating:
Ceramic coating
* find application in engine components, cutting tools, and industrial wear parts.
* is the best way of treating headers to guard against high-temperature discoloration.
Elastomeric coating
* are flexible, of course.
* offer reliable waterproofing, without the seams that often create leaks.
Lacquer
* Most lacquers begin to dry quickly, so avoid going over areas that have already been coated.
* are glossy, semi gloss or matte
- polymer solutions to which pigments have been added
* coat metals trapping cyanide and other nasty chemicals.
* contain solvents that are highly toxic by inhalation and moderately toxic by skin contact.
* have a tendency to lift or raise some enameled surfaces.
* is coating
- gum
* seem much more resistant to masking problems than many acrylics.<|endoftext|>### coating | lacquer:
Black lacquer
* is used to cover the entire surface area of the plaque.
* is used to paint the entire piece
* is used to paint the exterior and interior of the box
- and red lacquer for the interior of the box
- and red lacquer is used to paint the interior
- and red lacquer the interior of the box
- and red lacquer to paint the interior of the box
- and red lacquer to paint the interior of the piece
- and red lacquer to paint the interior of the scene
- of the box and red lacquer for the interior
- of the box and red lacquer to paint the interior
* is used to paint the outside and red lacquer is used to paint the inside of the box
- and red lacquer to paint the inside of the box
- of the box and red lacquer to paint the inside
Japan
* are countries
- islands
- part of pacifics
* have beachs.
* is lacquer
### coating | lacquer | japan:
Japan japan
* Japan Japan consumes the most shrimp per capita of any nation in the world.
* Japan Japan country rich in heritage and deep rooted beliefs
- very interested in the tastes of America
* Japan Japan is an island country in the North Pacific Ocean
- nation situated off the east coast of the Asian continent
- the largest export market for New Zealand's horticultural products
- media-rich country
Metallized coating
* expand and contract at a rate more similar to the base metal compared to paint.
* provide corrosion protection to steel by sacrificial and barrier protection
- the benefit of defect tolerance
Optical coating
* are an inherent part of many optical structures.
* improve image sharpness and contrast. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### cockroachs:
German cockroach
* Most german cockroaches begin life
- have developmental stages
* Most german cockroaches have distinct life stages
- wings
- produce secretion
- show different behavior
* Some german cockroaches become adults.
* Some german cockroaches have black race stripes
- insect metamorphosis
* Some german cockroaches undergo distinct phases
- use wings
* are by far the most common species of roach that infest homes or restaurants
- cockroachs
- insects
- known for their ability to reproduce quickly
- mainly active at night, when they search for food and water
- omnivorous scavengers
- one of the most challenging insects to control
* are the most prolific breeder among all cockroaches
- of the pest cockroach species
- widely transported insect pest in the world
- number one roaches found in homes in large numbers
* begin life as eggs within an egg casing known as an ootheca
* breed continually
- continuously with many overlapping generations present at any one time
* can live and breed by the thousands in areas where humans live and work
- in almost any room of a home or building
- multiply very quickly and become a nuisance in large numbers
* have a tendency to live in areas where food is prepared, such as the kitchen
* prefer a warm, moist environment
- dark, warm, humid areas near sources of food and water
* produce a large number of nymphs in each ootheca
- odorous secretions that can affect the flavor of various foods
* reproduce rapidly.
* show behavior
* thrive in undisturbed, protected habitats that contain food and water.<|endoftext|>Coconut
* Most coconuts are produced by palm trees
* Some coconuts cause allergic reaction.
* also are low in other necessary nutrients such as vitamins and minerals.
* are an abundant natural resources, completely biodegradable, and environmentally safe
- another main produce of the archipelago
- classified as a fibrous one-seeded drupe
- coconut palms
- fruit
- green when young and brown with the hard inner nut when ripe
- located in trees
- monecious, mature fruit contains one seed which is the largest one known
- part of coconuts
- plants
- plentiful, and both the milk and dried fruit are used to flavour meals
- salt tolerant growing right on the beach, but do better a few hundred feet back
- seeds
- soaked in lagoons and cracked by hand to collect the fibers
- solid objects
- specialized for water dispersal
- the fruit of the coconut palm tree
* are the most important of all cultivated palms
- widely grown perennial crop in the Pacific
- way palm trees reproduce, it is the seed
- well known for their ability to float on water to reach land where they can germinate
* can float for thousands of miles until they are cast up onto a sandy shore
- thousands of kilometres across the ocean before being washed up upon the shore
- make rope, soap and candles
- travel for thousands of kilometres across seas and oceans
* come in a number of shapes and sizes.
* counts as a dried fruit.
* float on the ocean to the next shore.
* forms another versatile means of food and occupation.
* grow in tropical countries
- on palm trees
* growing regions are as far north as Hawaii and as far south as Madagascar.
* have milk
- no root hairs
- the most uses, such as in handicrafts, traditional medicines and food
* is located in Little Bay Jamaica and is one of the safest places in the entire world
- solid food
* litter the sand.
* plays a prominent role in all religious offerings.
* regrow indefinately.
+ Coconut palm: Trees :: Arecaceae :: Fruits
* Coconut from Ivory Coast. A coconut is a large nut. Coconuts grow in tropical countries. The flesh of a coconut is white and can be eaten raw or used in cooking. It is used in many of the foods we eat for flavour. It is native to tropical areas. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cocoon
* Is the pupa of moth.
* Some cocoons contain very little silk at all.
* aims for a complete separation of the three layers.
* are extremely tough and persist on trees long after the moth has emerged
- formed either during copulation, or after the two worms have separated
- found on small twigs and branches and also in deep furrows of bark or under loose bark
- natural objects
- shades of white, cream and yellow depending on silkworm genetics
- sticky, attracting dirt and debris
- tan to brown, oval in shape, and are found on the ground under the tree
- tough, white and stick firmly to the bark of the fruit tree
- very tiny, and the shape of a lemon
* commonly contain fine yellow or yellowish-white powder.
* includes sections.
* is an XML publishing framework.
* large oval structure, usually slightly pointed at one end.
* occur on vegetation or in the soil litter.<|endoftext|>### cods:
Atlantic cod
* Most atlantic cods have heads
- live in habitats
* are a shoaling species and move in large, size-structured aggregations
- apex predators and adults are generally free from the concerns of predation
- fish
- omnivorous, feeding at dawn or dusk on a variety of invertebrates and fish
* grow at different rates in different areas.
* has a wide distribution on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean.
* have a light-colored belly and a long, light, lateral band along their body
* is an important food fish in both Europe and North America.
* tend to move in schools, and some groups of cod show extensive migrations.
### coelomate:
Protostome animal
* All protostome animals are coelomate
- worm-like
* exhibit spiral determinate cleavage, with the blastopore becoming the mouth.
Cofactor
* Some cofactors are small organic molecules called coenzymes.
* act as protein catalysts.
* are any non protein molecules that give an enzyme functionality
- compounds
- divides into two categories, one being coenzymes
- generally stable to heat whereas most enzyme proteins lose activity on heating
- nonproteins essential for enzyme activity<|endoftext|>### cognitive strategy:
Distraction
* are confusion
- inattention
- revisions
* can be a powerful way of temporarily relieving even the most intense pain
- lead to loss of concentration and falls
- reduce the baby's attention to painful sensations
* cognitive strategy.
* diminish ability to concentrate and think clearly.
* is confusion
- focusing attention on something other than the pain
* is the division of the attention among several interests and is the foe of all learning
- tabloidization of the mass mainstream media
* plays an important role in soothing aches and pains.
* spiritual problem born of a life of busyness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Coho
* are anadromous, and can adapt to live entirely in fresh water
- native to most of the Pacific rim
- one of the most aggressive biting salmon
- semelparous, and both male and female adults die soon after spawning
- swift, active fish
- the last of the salmon to spawn and the most acrobatic of the Pacific salmon
* feed primarily on alewives, smelt, and other small fish.
* fry live in rivers and streams for over a year
- remain in streams for over a year
* gives high yields of bright-red, very firm berries.
* has a finely textured flesh with rich pink color.
* have a longer body with a conical head
- black tongues, white gums and small irregular spots on the upper half of their tails
* inhabit the waters off the northwest coast of the U.S., British Columbia and Alaska.
* prefer open water, nearer the surface.
* return to freshwater between the ages of three and four to spawn.
* salmon almost always rear in pools formed by large wood
- have silver sides and a deep blue back
- in offshore waters
* spawn in gravel in freshwater rivers near the sea or far upstream.
* spend only one winter at sea, returning the next fall to spawn.
* tend to hide, so it is advisable to look in pools and riffles and beneath exposed tree roots.
* usually live for three years and grow rapidly in their final year.
* vary in the amount of time they spend at sea.
Coincidence
* are accidents
- everywhere and can happen any time
- positions
* have great importance
* is an accident
* lead to causes
- lead causes
* occur in most lives.
Cold event
* is associated with heavy kremt rainfall.
* seem to be more strongly coupled to higher latitudes.
### cold intolerant:
Marine toad
* Some marine toads eat frog toads
* are cold intolerant.
Coldness
* is temperature.
* leads to strong fixed-location pain.
### coldness:
Cool
* are coldness
- singles
* cause cools.
### collaborative activity:
Experimental science
* Most experimental science involve measurements.
* collaborative activity.
* community activity.
* generalizes into laws set of experiments already performed.
* includes physics, chemistry, genetics, and some branches of astronomy.
* is actually the search for cause and effect relationships in nature
- the queen of sciences and the goal of all speculation | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### collaborative activity:
Professionalism
* Maintains high standards of business ethics.
* advocates the importance of rest.
* also means involvement
- treating everyone with courtesy, regardless of their job title or status
* commitment to the highest standards of excellence in the practice of medicine.
* critical aspect of an effective teacher.
* demeanor that invokes highest standards and demands being met in kind.
* denotes that the educator values, practices and encourages lifelong learning.
* distinctive area of study with specific thoughts about professions.
* encompasses integrity and ethics.
* extends beyond the code of professional responsibility.
* form of elitism.
* helps to build the level of trust.
* implies and demands the acceptance of responsibility for making decisions
- that the control or standards of the group comes from the members
* includes being present, on time, and engaged
- confidence, competence, appearance, attitude, and interaction with others
* inherently conflicts with unionization and cartelization.
* involves effectiveness in the real world
- real-world
- employing expertise to help other people meet their goals
* is about accepting limitations, sharing resources, helping people
- achieved through education, an ongoing process
* is an attitude
- outlook, an attitude
- defined in different ways by different organizations
* is extremely important in using e-mail to respond to a future employer
- to one's career success
- grounded in the cultivation of beneficial human relationships
- independent of relationships with people involved
- marked by, and raised to, a supernatural Christian vocation
- one of the foremost concerns of cyber-shoppers
- part of any organization that believes in helping our general public
- personal identify and commitment to nursing
- primarily an attitude and a way of life
* is the blood sucker of the helping services
- key to upgrading and enforcing ethical standards in the media
- to do with codes, contracts, training, and standards of practice
- what happens when ambition drifts away from the poem and towards the poet
* key component of nursing
- to a well-run business
* means abiding by some of society's feelings about porn on the Internet
- an understanding of the environment that the media works in
* means being dedicated advocates for our patients
- engaged in or worthy of, the high standards of a profession
- getting involved
- skill and competence in representing our clients
* necessary offshoot of the growth and specialization of the modern world.
* refers to any oral presentations, class participation, and class attendance.
* serious rehearsal for a quality performance.
* set of behaviors, a mind-set, and a life style.
* state of mind.
* stretching activity.
* trait that all too few in wrestling possess.
* way of thinking, and it is on the right track to doing the right thing.
* word that funding bodies know, Though they see little such in fund submissions.
### collaborative social experience:
Real science
* attempts to derive laws that can explain observed phenomena.
* collaborative social experience.
* is done at the frontiers of both personal and collective knowledge.
### collagenous:
Stroma
* is collagenous
- compact with cells stellate with sparse cytoplasm
* is the amorphous material inside the chloroplast
- solution in the central region of chloroplast
- thick, middle layer of cells in the cornea | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### collapsed lung:
Pneumothorax
* also can occur when the lung or chest wall is damaged during a medical procedure.
* are abnormalities
- collapsed lungs
- diseases
- illnesses
* condition where air or gas is trapped in the fluid membrane surrounding the lungs.
* is an abnormality
- rare but can happen with deep placement of the needle and in unskilled hands
- relatively rare
- the cause of the patient's presenting clinical manifestations
* medical emergency.
* produces sharp chest pains and severe shortness of breath.
* refers to air accumulation in the chest cavity.
* serious condition that can be caused by any number of factors.<|endoftext|>### collapsed lung | pneumothorax:
Closed pneumothorax
* is when air or gas gets in the pleural space without any outside wound.
+ Pneumothorax, Closed pneumothorax
* Closed pneumothorax is when air or gas gets in the pleural space without any outside wound. This sometimes happens when the lung is already injured somehow, like from diseases such as cancer or cystic fibrosis. The most common cause of closed pneumothorax is called spontaneous pneumothorax. The cause of spontaneous pneumothorax is not known.
Open pneumothorax
* is when air gets into the pleural space from an injury to the chest.
+ Pneumothorax, Open pneumothorax
* Open pneumothorax is when air gets into the pleural space from an injury to the chest. This can happen with stab wounds, like from a knife. It can also happen after a gunshot injury.
Traumatic pneumothorax
* occurs when a physical injury causes the lung to collapse.
* results from an injury, penetrating or otherwise, to the chest.<|endoftext|>Collar
* Some collars ARE effective in minimizing tick infestations.
* Some collars are part of anoraks
- blouses
- capes
- cardigans
- coats
- denims
- diapers
- garments
- gowns
- jackets
- jerseys
- jumpers
- kilts
- laundries
- leggings
- nightdresses
- raincoats
- robes
- scarves
- shawls
- shirts
- sweatshirts
- underwears
- cover mouths
* are bands
- common on trees such as mulberry and sycamore
- hoops
- part of necks
- placed on sheep or goats that are pastured where coyotes are likely to attack
* are popular for cats and kittens, although most are too large for really young kittens
- ways of managing interest rates on long-term cash deposits
- restraint
- soft and can reach as high as the ear lobes
* break hair and cause matting.
* can choke or injure cats, or become lost
- pose a hazard for pets, since they can get caught or restrict an animal's air passage
* come in two shapes.
* includes sections.
* is formed around animal's neck
- made of heat-resistant urethane to reduce melting
* made of cardboard, tin cans, or aluminum foil are effective barriers to cutworms.
* rot is sometimes so severe in India as to cause growers to abandon their plantations
- occurs at the base of the trunk and extends to just below the soil line
- or infection of the root collar area relatively new disease phenomenon
* serves as liquid seal to help prevent thread corrosion.
* vary in terms of relief and width.
### collar:
Choker
* are collars
- jewelry
* are located in boutiques
- jewelry stores
- kennels
- prisons
- necklaces
- scaled-down chicanes and work singly
* are used for decoration
- dogs
Flea collar
* are effective for adult fleas
- unnatural
* work really well around the head and front half of the body.
Radio collar
* are used to study many different species.
* placed on bears transmit signals to an overhead satellite.
Ruff
* are among the largest of all living lemurs
- fixed in their plumage color and behavior throughout their lives
* breed in wetland meadows and inhabit fields and marshes in winter.
* is birds
- part of bridges
- sandpipers
- turns
* spend the most time in trees and eat the most fruits of all large lemurs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Collectible
* Investigate the world of collectibles.
* are anything collectors enjoy collecting.
* are located in boxs
- shelfs
- much more popular than antiques
* can be natural, such as rocks, flowers, insects, butterflies, etc.
* is an object
### collectibles:
Stuffed animal
* are collectibles.
* are located in amusement parks
- fairgrounds
- halls
- toy stores
* are used for comfort
- gifts
- presents
* can also attract a lot of dust.
* harbor allergens
- the tiny allergens
* have practical uses, too.<|endoftext|>Collection
* Refers to a particular grouping of books and other related items.
* are a working tool of zoological taxonomy
- created by computer programs
- ensembles of distinct entities or objects of any sort
- located in garages
- publications
- sets of objects of the same type
- super tools for creating and managing data structures
* heirarchically organize groups of variables or properties associated with a class.
* hierarchically organize groups of variables or properties associated with a class.
* are made in England for needy French refugees.
* is basically the intake of sunlight into the home.
* time of gathering together as a body at the end of each evening.
### collection:
Agglomeration
* happens on a number of different levels.
* is also related to the availability of labour.
* means some of the silver atoms are starting to share electron rings.
### collection | agglomeration:
Clod
* can create air pockets around the root ball.
* form very often in clayey soils.
* is agglomeration
* usually slake easily with repeated wetting and drying.<|endoftext|>### collection:
Aviation
* also depends on petroleum fuels
- plays an important role in military activity
* always has inherent risks due to weather and mechanical concerns.
* brings families together across continents and links customers to businesses across oceans.
* can motivate children without even leaving the ground.
* contributes to the creation of jobs in virtually every sector of the economy.
* even plays a crucial role in the growth of e-commerce.
* global industry with local, national, and worldwide opportunities.
* growth industry.
* high-tech, swiftly evolving, competitive business operating in a global arena.
* high-technology, rapidly changing, competitive business operating in a global arena.
* highly skilled profession.
* includes all flying done by general aviation, the military and the airlines.
* is an area in which our diplomacy yields tangible, practical and noticeable fruits.
* is an ever-evolving blend of science, innovation, art, and creativity
- innovation,art, and creativity
- international business
- at the heart of the travel and tourism sector, now the world's largest industry
- crucial to the national economic survival of an archipelago nation
- dependent on communication, navigation and surveillance services to operate safely
- important because aviation and aerospace both exhibit the limits of our technology
- industries
- key to economic development in any nation
- more than airplane sales, and service
* is one of the fastest growing industries in the world
- most dynamic industries in the world, offering many opportunities
- world's largest sectors
- said to be the cradle of cosmonautics, and with good reason
- the fastest growing mode of travel in the world
* is the safest mode of transportation available to the world's travelers
- way for families to travel
- vital to the ability of nations to be active in the growing global economy
* network business.
* peak which applies to all technologies.
* plays a critical role in our state's transportation system
- key role in Latin American economic development
- particularly important role in fighting forest fires
- an important role in Idaho | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### collection | aviation:
Civil aviation
* high-tech industry making great demands on skills at all levels.
* operates to International standards, which take many years to develop.
Commercial aviation
* does fly in thunderstorm weather, and it is safe to do so.
* is an extraordinarily safe human endeavor.
General aviation
* falls under the responsibility of the federal states.
* flies almost four billion air miles every year.
* includes all flight operations except military services and commercial airlines.
* is all aviation other than commercial and military aviation
- an important part of the aviation system
* plays a vital role in our nation's economy and air transportation system.
Biota
* are collections.
* create structure Plants affect structure by creating soil, eroding rock, etc.
* includes primarily fish populations, but also supporting organisms.
* refers to the sum total of life in a particular region.
Coin collecting
* can be an art form.
* has standards for describing the condition of coins.
* is habit forming
- like bowling and golf.
* very old hobby. Even Julius Caesar collected coins. Some coins are very expensive, because more people want them than there are copies of the coin. Some coin collectors like to collect one coin of each date, or one coin of each King or Queen of a country
Compilation
* is the process in which the raw text is turned into actual machine code.
* is the process of converting the source file into object code
- translating source code into object code
+ Machiavel, Discography: Belgian musical groups :: Progressive rock bands :: Hard rock bands
* Initial release are in 'bold'. Compilations are in 'italic'. Re-release are not highlighted.
Data collection
* comprise numeric data, images, text documents audio and video.
* comprises a portion of the factors influencing information retrieval.
* critical part of consumer behavior.
* dynamic, responsive, ongoing process that is reviewed periodically.
* fundamental and critical part of descriptive statistics.
* is essential to weather forecasting
- just one of the ways in which biologists use computer hardware
* major part of a neural network solution.
Fleet
* are part of airlines
- bus lines
* can play an important role in reducing global warming and air pollution emissions.
* represent the primary military capability of any race.
Herbarium
* are collections.
* presses use heavy weight on top to flatten plants.
Insect collection
* Most insect collections begin by making a killing jar of fresh specimens.
* are essential for studies of entomology.<|endoftext|>### collection:
Mythology
* Many mythologies speak of the divine taking various physical forms.
* Mythologies are our common heritage
- terribly important in the life of societies and civilisations
- develop based on the sources of sustenance
- take many forms, both from one culture to the next and within each individual culture
* Some mythologies depict fairies as always female.
* deals with universals of human experience.
* exists in all that Indian children create.
* is both convention and ontological ground
- many different forms of art,fantasy, etc
- philosophy made concrete
- social anthropology
- treated in alt.mythology
* lives and breathes.
* often addresses the theme of good conquering evil
- conquering over evil
* refers to music being brought to the people of India from a place of celestial beings.
* tends to follow specific motifs, and also to have common characters within it.
### collection | mythology:
Ancient mythology
* contains stories of unicorns, horses with a single horn at the forehead.
* depicts time as being like a man who has long hair in front but is bald in back.
* is replete with stories of gods who took on the form of men. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### collection | mythology:
Babylonian mythology
* sees the main reason for the creation of man to grow food for the gods.
+ Garden of Eden, Where the name Eden is from: Old Testament
* Babylonian mythology sees the main reason for the creation of man to grow food for the gods. This is different in the Bible. There, god created plants as food for humans, and animals to keep them company.
Chinese mythology
* equates the Phoenix with grace and high virtue.
* states that the rat brought the gift of rice to humankind.
Greek mythology
* contains mythological elements from different cultures and histories.
* has many gods of the waters.
* holds that a monster is pinned beneath the mountain, struggling to escape.
* is home to some of the most well known myths of all time
- the written echo of oral traditions ancient before Stonehenge
- very similar to Roman mythology in that the gods are the same
* tells the tale of another man who became an elk.
Hawaiian mythology
* includes the creation stories and legends about the gods.
+ Hawaiian religion: Religions :: Religion in the United States
* Hawaiian mythology includes the creation stories and legends about the gods. There are several gods in Hawaiian religion and mythology. The figures in Hawaiian religion consists of several groups.
Hindu mythology
* describes the first appearance of the linga as a pillar of fire.
* says that the peacock has angels' feathers, a devil's voice and the walk of a thief.
Indian mythology
* describes the wolverine as a trickster-hero, and a link to the spirit world.
* is one of the richest in the world.
* recounts the exploits of gods, demons and mortals.<|endoftext|>### collection | mythology:
Norse mythology
* is famous far beyond the Nordic borders
* relates several possibilities for afterlife.
* set of beliefs and stories shared by Northern Germanic tribes.
* version of the older northern Germanic mythology.
+ Urðarbrunnr
* It is situated under the Yggdrasil or the world tree. Norse mythology is a version of the older northern Germanic mythology. Here they would meet and decide things, presumably laws of nature and magic and love and war.
* Norse mythology is a set of beliefs and stories shared by Northern Germanic tribes. It was not handed down from the gods to the mortal. It had no scripture. The mythology was passed on from one generation to the next in the form of poetry. It continued to be passed down this way through the time of the Vikings. The original beliefs were long lost.
Roman mythology
* has many interesting gods and goddesses.
* is much like Greek mythology
- very much like Greek mythology
Signage
* are collections.
* has a distinct impact on how people perceive a company or message.
* is an integral part of today's visual world
- the oldest medium of mass communication or in other words outdoor advertising
* medium of advertising competing keenly for it's share of the business.
* primary way in which visitors interact with what has been created by architects. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### collection:
Spiral galaxy
* All spiral galaxies have a disk, with light enhanced along spiral arms
- seem to rotate too fast
* Many spiral galaxies have bars across their centers
- similar flat rotation curves
* Most spiral galaxies contain a single thin disk of stars.
* Some spiral galaxies are visible
- have big bulges and some have little ones
* Spiral galaxies abound in the universe, but spiral sunspots are definitely an unusual twist.
* Spiral galaxies appear blue due to the large number of young stars
- to be flat when viewed on their edge
* Spiral galaxies are complex X-ray sources
- disc shaped galaxies that have distinct spiral arms
- disk-shaped like our own Milky Way
- flat disc-shaped collections of stars with prominent spiral arms
- great collections of stars moving on nearly circular orbits with a disk
- ones in which star formation is still occuring
- other collections of stars that resemble our galaxy
* Spiral galaxies are rich in gas and dust
- the gas and dust needed to form new stars
* Spiral galaxies contain large amounts of dark matter
- concentrations of gas and dust
- middle-aged stars along with clouds of dust and gas
* Spiral galaxies have a center of gravity or nucleus and spiral arms that rotate around the nucleus
- disk and a bulge, and spiral arms in the disk
- thin, pancake-shaped disk, with a spherical bulge at the center
- gas and exhibit star formation
- unmistakable characteristic features
* Spiral galaxies look like flat disks with bulges in their centers and beautiful spiral arms
- pinwheels
* Spiral galaxies make up about two-third of the galaxies in the universe
- over two-thirds of all known galaxies
- resemble spiraling pinwheels
- tend to contain more middle-aged stars along with clouds of gas and dust
* is galaxy.
Stamp collecting
* can be a business, an art form or even a topic of conversation.
* disease, and it can become terminal.
* is one of the most popular hobbies in the world.
Zoology
* can be both a basic and an applied science.
* deals with animals while botany is the science which treats of plants.
* encompasses many specialties
- the principles of biology related to animals
* is biology
- treatises
* records the evolutionary history of the animal world. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Collision
* All collisions have the same momentum before and after a collision.
* Many collisions cause the electrons to wander and eventually to stop
- occur when cars are overtaking and passing one another
* Most collisions create electric charge
- encountered in everyday life are inelastic
* Most collisions generate energy
- heat
- involve forces
* Most collisions occur because of human error rather than mechanical failure of the car
- in the fall when breeding season causes deer to be more active
- when people see the problem too late and have little time to react
- probably involve members of bound galaxy groups
- produce dust
* Most collisions result in nuclear reaction
* Some collisions alter atomic structures
- cause mortality
- have energy
* Some collisions produce black holes
- dust clouds
* Some collisions produce massive clouds
- result in energy.
* A 'collision' occurs when two objects come in contact with each other. All collisions have the same momentum before and after a collision. Examples of collisions include car crashes, bouncing a ball, and playing pool. Collisions are made from two smaller sections called elastic and inelastic collisions
* are a very common process in our solar system
- accidents
- disputes
- elastic, there is no overall net gain or loss of energy
- responsible for attenuation in the ionosphere
* are the most common type of personal watercraft accident
- number one direct cause of death for right whales
* can also give rise to spiral structure
- strip the gas out of galaxies
* can change individual molecular speeds bu the distribution of speeds remains the same
- but the distribution of speeds remains the same
- occur when machinery starting a left turn is hit by a car passing from behind
* cause damage
- disorder
- fragments of both bodies to depart from near the point of impact
- property damage
- separation
* cause significant damage
* change individual molecular speeds but the distribution of speeds remains the same.
* common cause of injury.
* could have devastate results
* create a burst of energy in which a particle takes form
* eject great burst of stars and gas.
* involving drunken drivers are the nation's single greatest killer of young people.
* is an occurrence
- evident when they change color
* is the dominant form of ion-neutral interaction
- most expensive part of auto insurance
- what happens when two keys hash to the same memory slot
* occur on city streets
- two objects, or people, bump into each other
* play an important role in cue sports
- influencing the evolution of asteroids
* result in a compression force, pushing two plates together
* stimulate a burst of star formation.
* transfer energy
- kinetic energy
### collision:
Elastic collision
* Most elastic collisions involve forces.
* are collisions in which both momentum and kinetic energy are conserved
- there is no loss of kinetic energy
* conserve both linear momentum and mechanical energy
Galactic collision
* can spur rapid star birth as gas clouds are heated and compressed.
* continue today.
Inelastic collision
* are common whenever sticky things or pointy things collide
- what cars and occupants do
* conserve both total momentum and energy just as elastic collisions do.
* occur when two objects collide and share momentum as a single body.
Collocation
* are characteristic, co-occurence patterns of words
- compositional with hierarchical relations among the lexical units
* describe words that tend to be used together in a language.
* is used as an organizing principle.
* refers to arranging materials on a similar topic together.
* remains an important part of the Web hosting market.
### colonial corals:
Tabulate coral
* are colonial corals.
* lack septae.
Colonial organism
* Most colonial organisms have bilateral symmetry
* are the result of many identical individuals joining together to form a colony. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Color
* All color comes from white light.
* All colors are UV stable and resist alkali, acids, and water borne chemicals
- a result of the amount of reflected light seen by the naked eye
- genetically possible
- light fast
- blend gently together, with very little spotting or defined line between colors
- emanate from one source or one primary color
- have the same wavelengths
- intensify at spawning time
- reflect a different quantity of light as well as a different wavelength
- travel in waves within light
- used on the wood pieces and rawhide are safe non toxic food coloring
- work for all skin colors
* Describes how to add colors into a HTML document.
* Every color has a different personality
- distinct wavelength
- wide range of shades
- an opposite
- is represented by a mixture of red, green and blue color percentages
* Learn about how colors mix to form other colors.
* Many colors are due to interactions between atoms
- light sensitive
- sensitive to light
- consist of mixtures of pigments
- have universal meanings
* Most color absorbs heat
- changes over time
* Most color comes from chlorophyll
- inorganic pigment
* Most color depends on genetic factors
- habitats
* Most color helps flower plants
- reflects sunlight
- varies degrees
* Most colors are due to preferential absorptions
- come in small to xlarge sizes
- consist of many wavelengths mixed together
- contain some proportion of all wavelengths in the visible spectrum
- have several meanings, but they are closely connected with each other
* Select the cell or range of cells.
* Some color absorbs energy
- radiant energy
- radiation
- affects absorption
* Some color attracts insect pollinators
- insects
- pollinator insects
- predators
* Some color comes from materials
- organic materials
* Some color depends on atmospheric gases
- health
- surface temperature
* Some color reflects heat
* Some colors also have physiological effects
- appear more vibrant than others, although flesh tones always appear fairly natural
* Some colors are a combination of pigment, structural color, and diet
- dark, because they absorb more light, and incidentally more heat too
- easier to see on a light or dark background
- mineral pigments and others are organic dyes
* Some colors are more abundant that others, however, all colors are visible
- attractive for videography or photography
- common in certain parts of the world, based on local tradition
- the result of a mutation which prevents the production of a certain pigment
- white, gray, black, and brown
* Some colors change from light to darker tones with the seasons
- more than others
- enhance a person's aura and others detract
- last better, yellow in particular, whereas blues and pinks can fade over time
- look like reduction when fired in oxidation
- reflect light while others absorb light
- scatter more completely than others
- slow down more than others and so they bend more than the others.
* are retained from the old edit count templates. If you want a more customized version, feel free to make a copy in your userspace
* There are many ways to define colors.
* Use the three light sources to demonstrate the effect of mixing red, blue, and green light.
* absorb certain wavelengths of energy and reflect other light energies.
* act as automatic color therapy for a room or an entire building.
* acts as a counterpoint to the natural elements of wood, water and stone.
* actually occupy a three-dimensional space.
* additives subject to batch certification are synthetic organic dyes, lakes, or pigments.
* affect moods and emotions
- in humans
- our behavior and alter our mood
* affects consumer assessment of quality, freshness, safety and taste
- everyone
* affects our beadwork, emotions and our life
- lives on a daily basis
- psychological impression of food
* affects people and can act as a symbol
- physically, emotionally and psychologically
* affects the appearance of size and weight, and often affects a person's feelings
- color reproduction of lighter tints
- overall appearance of a graphic as well as the detail that the viewer sees
- subconscious and influences people especially when it comes to business
- surface temperature of the mulch and the underlying soil temperature
- way our homes look, and our buying decisions
* allows a flowering plant to be more specific about the pollinator it seeks to attract.
* also affects light penetration and therefore the depth at which plants can grow
- alters our perception of space
- appear different in the subdued light of a cloudy day than in bright sunlight
- can influence mate recognition by females
- change according to their surroundings
- communicates mood
- convey messages
- create a certain mood
- encodes time
- figures prominently in the value of a diamond
- have mathematical relationships with one another
- helps define the depth of an image, by adding shades to the objects displayed
* also is an important component in private spaces
- indication of semen quality
- important, particularly with self-portraits
- used to identify the different areas
- vital in setting objects apart from their backgrounds
- occur as an integral part of biochemical reactions
* also plays a role in determining personality
- an important role in determining a diamonds value
- reproduce beautifully, with great depth and clarity
* appear differently under different lighting conditions
- faded or changed in hue
- more vibrant in the tropics
* appears like magic when the white light is turned on.
* are Symbolic Different cultures apply very different meanings to color.
* are a prominent feature of the clothing worn, especially sports clothing
- result of interference between light reflected from the front and back of each hole
* are also important for feeding the young
- to pay attention to in a dream
- an important part of art
- best and plants are more compact if grown in full sun, but they are shade tolerant
- black, white, and various tones of brown, also combinations of black or brown with white
* are bright and catch the eye
- even from corner to corner as well as off-axis
- vibrant without any bleeding
- vivid without a trace of noise
- vivid, but never enter into problems with bleeding or blooming
* are bright, clean and saturated
- usually coming from the glow of the cubes' walls
- vibrant and photo-quality
- well-defined, and solid as a rock
- codes that indicate the mission relationship in day to day work
* are consistently accurate with a wide range of skin tones
- rich and varied in tone
- dark at the bottom and light at the top
- described using a combination of varied hues, tones and intensity levels
- different algae species within coral
- dominants of grays and blacks
* are due to different kinds of corpuscles, each a particular color
- holes in upper atmosphere
* are easy to change
- choose in harmonizing shades
- either warm or cool, depending upon the hue
- energetic with a kaleidoscope effect
- energy, made manifest as light
- especially vivid, including blood reds and golden ambers
- extremely vivid with no signs of over saturation
- fairly strong and hot hues reproduce without any color noise or distortion
- frequently bright, with high contrast
- grays that are enriched with colors like sage green and lavender
- greenish outdoors, and reddish to violet under artificial light
- important to most children
- impossible to represent in their exact state
* are in blues, reds, purples, and greens
- spectral order, with black below blue and white above red
- tertiary tones of green, blue, light brown, purple and orange
- varying combinations that include browns, greens and reds
- mainly in shades of red, yellow, or brown
- many and mixed, coupled and co-ordinated
- more often solid and neutral than bright and patterned
* are mostly different shades of pink
- shades of blue and white
- much more brilliant than portrayed in patterns
* are natural and have well saturated hues
- nothing but vibrations that are vibrating at different frequencies
- notoriously difficult to perceive and describe objectively
- painted on a sky never seen our visions make sounds, so our senses believe
- permanent when dry
- pigment concentrations, with red colors indicating highest values
- powerful symbols
- primal to our lives
- primarily in the purple to lavender spectrum, some with splashes of white
- primordial ideas, the children of light
- quite vibrant and are reproduced without any form of chromatic distortion
- rich and full, and range all over the spectrum
- screen printed in solid or halftone colors
- sharp, vibrant and distortionless from every angle
* are simply different wavelengths of light that are reflected by objects back
- light waves of different lengths
- soft earth tones
- softer and more subtle like an opal that is illuminated by the morning light
- solid with no noticable noise
- solid, with natural schemes and correct flesh tones
- symbolic of the emotions
* are the children of light, and light is their mother
- effect of particular frequencies of vibration and polarities
- transparent, even black
- true and solid
* are typically brightest as the breeding season approaches, and palest after breeding
- in the warm range, from golden yellow through orange and into reds
- unaltered, as light is transmitted uniformly over the entire spectrum
- used to show the different states
- usually clear and vivid, without any distortion
- vague and intensify as the sun comes up
- variable during development and among individuals
* are various shades of dark to light green
- pale yellow
- yellow to light yellow-green
- very vivid and are reproduced without a trace of color noise or bleeding
* are vibrant and are reproduced without and form chroma noise or bleeding
- reproduced without any signs of chroma noise or bleeding
- to the point of being unreal
- visible light energy of certain wavelengths
* are vivid and bright, almost unaturally so, but fade immediately after death
- extremely lifelike across the spectrum
- reproduce flawlessly
- vivid, and images have more depth and three-dimensionality
- warm earth tones of brown, gold, green, and dark red
* arises from the way the pigments react with light
- when a molecule absorbs some portion of the visible spectrum
* attracts attention, adds vitality and increases people's willingness to pay attention
* attributes related to the wavelength distribution of light.
* becomes a means of differentiating between one figure and another, between figure and ground.
* begins with light.
* behave somewhat differently when mixed on a computer.
* big part of quiltmaking.
* blend and overlap to give a wide range of value and hue
- easily on almost any surface
* blind the eye.
* bloom and fade, shadows grow longer and more ominous, light becomes darkness.
* broadly refer to linguistic group.
* can actually affect our physiology
- advance and recede and have certain psychological connotations
* can affect balance
- infrared
- our thoughts, moods, actions, and emotions
* can also affect moods
- camouflage and warn when there is nothing about the insect that is harmful
- differ between sexes or ages within a species
- elicit aggression
- indicate a wine's age
* can also make a graph or chart easier to understand
- room feel large or small
- animals more attractive to each other when they mate
* can alter the proportions of a room
- way a room looks and feels
- always brighten old furniture
* can be a clue to minerals
- misleading characteristic of a mineral
- poor indicator of actual ancestry
- integral with material
- mixed to make new colors
- red to pale green, depending on light, temperature and soil
- translucent, transparent, or opaque
* can be very bright in the daytime, but in the dark, they are dim and dull
- powerful if one stops looking for faces or objects in a painting
- change dramatically depending on changes in their surrounding colors
* can change the amount of light and heat that are absorbed
- entire mood of a room
- convey warmth, weight, etc
* can create a mood or an emotional response
- or confuse a composition
- definitely affect mood
- describe and identify objects
- effect the tone or mood of a room dramatically
- effectively assist in distinguishing graphic cues
- energize, soothe, drain, nurture, etc
- even hide, reshape, or accentuate the appearance of the body's shape
- evoke positive emotions, alter perceived sizes and minimize cosmetic flaws
- express emotion, it can describe our moods and feelings
- fade and whites turn yellow
- flow from one area to the next in transitions that are virtually seamless
- gradually intensify or become lighter or darker gradually
- have positive and negative impact
- help to identify one system from another
- impart a sense of temperature
- include shades of green, blue-green, yellow, brown or red
- induce all sorts of responses
* can make a square room seem less so by making one wall lighter than are the other walls
- distinctions and associations
- mean and represent many things
- mix and interact
* can play a critical role in how a car looks
- very important role in design
- an important role in logo design
* can range from colorless to black
- rich greens to bright yellows, reds, oranges, blues, violets, and more
- serve as camouflage, a warning to other animals, or a way of reflecting or absorbing heat
* can soothe or excite
- invigorate, make a large room feel cozy or make a small room look larger
- suffers from being too close to nature
- sway thinking, change actions, and cause reactions
* can vary according to the intensity of the heat and the chemicals used
- greatly between different populations, ages, and individuals
- visually reduce the size of buildings that are larger than others in the neighborhood
- work magic, too
* carries visual meaning, it directs attention, it can emphasize or obscure features.
* causes physiological responses that can affect vision, hearing, respiration and circulation.
- as the garment moves
- depending on depth
- dramatically during mating
* change in appearance as the ambient light level changes
- response to a change in the pH of the soil
- on a regular basis to keep things from getting boring
* change, rhythms change, and sounds change.
* changes from top to bottom within a bar are changes over that time period
- the temperature of a room and has a definite affect on our moods
- with angle of viewing and types of light
* chart a chart used to compare against the color on the test strip for blood sugar level.
* clue to a wine's age.
* code the number of evaluations on a line.
* come from a shading of the surface and have no physical interpretation.
* come in a continuum
- forest or snow
- with potent emotional, psychological, and symbolic associations
* comes from cells full of pigment known as chromatophores
- markers or paints blown with air
- organs full of pigment cells known as chromatophores
- the visible spectrum of light
* comes in different dark colors
- the guise of berries in reds, yellows, whites, purples and blues
* common feature among birds, most of which can see color, for purposes of breeding
- of the transition metal ions
* consist of various shades of bold blue, white, reds, and green.
* contours correspond to peak ground accelerations
- permit human eyes to analyze distance and depth better
* conveys more optical weight than black and white.
* correspond to out-of plane displacement caused by bimorph stresses
- surface chlorophyll content
* corresponds to amplitude at the corresponding time and frequency
- beak color
- temperature, increasing from violet to red
* cover the entire spectrum in virtually every shade except blue.
* create moods - for better or for worse.
* critical indicator of colloidal silver quality.
* darkens worms so they are closer to natural fish food colors.
* defining principle of place.
* depends largely on water temperature.
* depends on factors
- melanin content in skin
* depends on the amount of work that a muscle has to perform
- species, individual variation and food
- water clarity
* depends upon coat color
- vibration, the rapidity of the rate and wavelength
* depict intensity of gene expression.
* describes the amount of color the diamond contains.
* designates where significant temperature increases occur.
* directly affect the emotions.
* distinction of visible light only.
* does play an important role in energy conservation.
* effect the eye differently.
* elicit an emotional response from people.
* even change slightly as it warms up.
* evoke different emotions
- specific emotional responses
* evokes emotion, affects spatial relationships and can even imply perspective.
* exhaust on an uneven curve according to the electrolyte content of the dyebath.
* exists only in conscious minds
- our minds
* expresses energy and emotion as well as establishing space and defining form.
* fade and wear over time
- slightly when a dried color flow piece is exposed to sunlight
* form of energy.
* function of distance from the origin
* generally appear brighter in fabric.
* give foods a desired, appetizing or characteristic color.
* go through growth periods just like people.
* good indicator of the age of a wine
- sign of flavanoid content in foods
* gradually lightens as the animal ages and periodically molts.
* has characteristics
- impact on reading, comprehension, learning and promoting ideas
- wave length
* have a definite impact on the nature, psychology, body and soul of an individual
- an effect on people and evoke emotional responses
- different meanings, too
- healing qualities for the body, mind and spirit
- individual frequencies that are unique to each
- symbolic meanings in all cultures
- the ability to affect our emotions
- value, intensity, tint, and shade
- various connotations, as well
- visual effects on each other
* heal because of certain molecular reactions that occur in the organs due to light.
* help to classify different elements and different concepts
- form neighborhoods or defined areas
* helps discriminate between objects and various surface properties
- in many ways, to distinguish one thing from another, and just to enhance visibility
* impacts our mood, our appetite, our energy level.
* improves object recognition in normal and low vision.
* indicate the stars' surface radiation flux.
* indicates temperature in units of melting temperature.
* influence our lives in many ways.
* influences our emotions and actions.
* inspire emotion.
* intensifies with age.
* intensify and pigments are permanently bonded into the surface during baking.
* intensify with more light and during the growing season
- weather and fertilization
* interact with one another when in close proximity.
* is IN body
- absolutely everywhere
- absorbed by and reflected off of media
- added in the manufacturing process in the form of pigment
* is affected by culture and by physical reactions to color
- food colors, blood, chemicals, disease, and medications
- almost everything in Opals
* is also important in healthcare design
- of major importance in making a room come alive
- one of the big reasons that attract people to minerals
- part of the kilning process
- the primary means used to identify links
- useful for manipulating attention
- variable from frog to frog, including tan, reddish, gray, brown, black or green
- always more intense when seem with the naked eye than with any lens
- among the things which differ most frequently between browsers, platforms, and monitors
* is an allegory about the sacredness of life
- awareness of sorts, with great potential for rewarding the aware
- efflux of shapes, commensurate and perceptible to sight
* is an element of design that has many functions
- which unifies and harmonizes
- essential element of every woman's outfit
- experience in our minds
- expressive element because it affects our emotions
* is an important aspect of art and of life
- the graphic identity
- communication tool when used carefully on web pages and in programs
* is an important component influencing the appearance of an object in an image
- of garden design
- factor to beauty, rarity and value
- feature in some minerals, such as fluorite, pyrite, and galena
- part of any quilt
- property of foods that adds to our enjoyment of eating
- index into an internal table of rgb colors
- analyzed by prisms and photoelectric cells
* is another element that can create mood
- feature on human faces
- marker of festivity
- qualitative way of describing light
- appearances
* is applied by paint instead of powdered glass
- taking care to match prior day's colors, tones and hues
- with the idea of symmetry in color as well
- appreciated by persons doing activities like craftwork, painting, or viewing photographs
- azure, deep blue or pale blue if found in small crystals or crusts
- best in light shade
- black and white, with all proportions from totally black to pure white
- both an art and a science
- characterized by the axial component of the polymer stress tensor
- coded to the radial velocity of the gas
* is colorless or white, sometimes tinted red, blue or yellow
- colorless, white or gray
* is created as part of the basic raw materials
- by reflected light
- defined by bits
- dependent on coat color
* is described in scientific terms by using color models
- terms of tone and hue
- determined by how strongly a group of cones are stimulated
- electromagnetic energy and affects the hypothalmus gland
- emblems
- energy vibrating at different frequencies
* is energy, it is light
- just as perfect light is energy
- equivalent to cut when it comes to being fashion forward
- essential in the makeup of an individual salmon
- examined in relationship to observed hue, value, and intensity
- flags
- frequency of light
- from iron
* is fundamental to almost all aspects of Multimedia
- the symbolic system of the quipu
- harmless and is the color after suspended particles have been removed
- highly important to the honeybee in searching for flowers
- how our eyes and brains distinguish different wavelengths
- impacted by lighting
* is important as bees see in a different spectrum of light from people
- for indicating the temperature and workability of the metal
* is important in many ways
- the finished look of the rug
- when meat and poultry are purchased, stored, and cooked
- independant of coating thickness
- influenced by neighboring colors
- integral to human perception
- intended to convey meaning and to provoke thought
- interest
- just one characteristic that goes into defining a standard
* is light on fire
- with a faint smell
- literally in the air
- located in plates
- made different by cutting and separating shells
* is measured by measured by measuring the reflectance of different wavelengths
- in heat
- more intense when weather is cool
* is most intense in full sun
- of all about awareness and perception
- often the result of many internal changes
- natural wood coloring
- nothing more than light energy
- nourishment to our spiritual life and plays a very important role in feng shui
- observed in objects that reflect or emit certain wavelengths of light
- often very important in helping the animal hide in an environment
* is one of paint's most distinguishing qualities
- several properties that are used to assign class
* is one of the best ways to identify a mineral
- clues to determining a soil s horizon
- easiest elements to change
- elements artists use to create a piece of work
- first things someone notices about a picture
- joys of light, and of living
- more simplistic concepts in nature
* is one of the most important ways to create warmth
- noticeable features of a plant
- widely used processes of determining the classification of rocks
- primary elements that unifies our visual identity
- principle elements of the visual arts
- only visible with light
* is our brain's interpretation of our eyes' detection of different wavelength visible light
- limited perception of the way materials absorb and reflect light
- response to light waves which they reflect
- part of the electromagnetic spectrum
- perceived by the human eye in a conceptually straightforward way
* is perhaps one of the most important factors in philately
- the major stimulus that effects our decision-making process
- permanent, ultraviolet resistant and an integral part of the polyethylene composition
- produced by the absorption of selected wavelengths of light by an object
- proportional to temperature
* is related to chemical composition
- temperature via the Blackbody Law
- represented by adding red, blue, and green light
- sensed by the cones in the retina
- significant for the creation and understanding of architectural elements in space
- something that can be frustrating to deal with in acrylic painting
- studied in terms of furnishings and finishes as related to space, form, and light
- symbolism
* is the Web designer's palette
- child of light
* is the color code for the border
- of the text
- deeds and sufferings of light
- easiest common denominator to establish
- fat of fabrics, texture is the cartilage
- first thing people notice when they approach a building, or enter a room
- happiness of love that comes along the way
- hue and value of the food product
* is the human judgment of the color response
* is the key to communicating without words
- tourmalines polularity
- literal color of the stone
- means by which form initially reaches the human eye
- measure of value
- most obvious and attractive feature of gemstones
* is the natural hue of the stone, and diamonds come in every color of the spectrum
- next element in the progression from dot to line to tone
- only property used for polygons
- physics of light
- real divisive force
- repitition of a sequence of pitches
- same as wavelength
- sensation registered when light of different wavelengths is perceived by the brain
- superlative gem property of turquoise
- therefore a property of light that depends on wavelength
- timbre
- transparent with green shine to it when viewed under a light
- typically various shades of green
* is used as an aid for learning, and as a potential aid for some learning disabilities
- the primary element in both creating composition and evoking mood
* is used for attraction
- things other than page back ground
- in thermoregulation by lizards and roadrunners and many others
* is used to change the appearance of text
- convey information, create a feeling, and evoke associations
- decorate, describe and express
- denote class species relationships in the class hierarchies
- describe the color present within a gemstone
* is used to distinguish different atoms
- the tracks of different particles
- types of pieces as well as their affiliation
- highlight culturally related groups
* is used to represent a difference in value or relationship
- magnitude
- save the viewer from thinking too much
- show the variation of different kinds of curvature on the surfaces
- simultaneously represent the value of the v components in the equation
- visually differentiate nodes that are taken, free, and inoperable
- useful for distinguishing lines
- useually dark amber to copper
* is usually colorless on smaller crystals and white or gray on the larger crystals
- to white or beige
* is usually colorless, white or pale shades of yellow, blue, pink or rose
- the result of the quality and type of diet
* is variable according to the climate and weather
- weather conditions, moving from cinnamon to gold to apricot-orange
- varied with colors of pink, salmon-pink, yellow, colorless, red and even brown or black
* is various shades of golden
- yellow, green, pink and brown as well as colorless
* is very important for flasks, with aquas being the most common and cobalt blue the rarest
- in conveying the mood the painting is to communicate to the viewer
- when building in certain regions of the globe
- important, primarily for accurate dyeing of wool
- much a part of the fabric of commerce
- visible features
* is what the eyes see when light is reflected off an object
- world loves to see
- when they're high
* is white or colorless with shades of gray, blue and green
- with patches of any color, except liver
- white, colorless, pale yellow, pale red, gray or black when impurities are common
* key driver of value
- feature used in the identification and classification of soils
- way that restaurants manipulate the eating experience
* light beige
- green, which darkens as the summer progresses, then turns orange and red
* light, tawny brown which can appear gray or almost black, depending on light conditions.
* lighten after having been heated.
* look different depending on their relationship to surrounding light rays
- so much lighter when they're printed on fabric because fabric is more porous than paper
* magical element that gives feeling and emotion to art and design.
* major component in GUIs
- factor in making rooms appear cozy or spacious
- part of pictures too, serving to layer meaning on top of meaning
* map matter density, which increases as colors move from yellow to blue to red.
* match when the three responses of light are the same.
* matter of indifference
- perception and so is fashion
* mixture of Titanium White and Magenta.
* modifies the coolness of northern light and the warmth created by a southern exposure.
* most useful indicator for hydric mineral soil.
* neural sensation.
* often have different meanings in various cultures
- reflects chemical compositions
- varies with moisture content of a soil
* only applies to visible light.
* operates on a perceptual level.
* part of the human vision system.
* particular problem with imagemaps in which clickable areas are delineated by color.
* perceived in additive models are the result of transmitted light
- subtractive models are the result of reflected light
* physiological response of our brains to light of different wavelengths.
* play a big role in camouflage.
* play an important part in the way the mask is used
- role in our impressions
* plays a big role in eye fatigue
- critical role in medical diagnosis
- large part in the physical world
* plays a major role in reflecting light
- reinforcing the mood evoked by the relationship of form and line
- particular role in restaurants
- role in spotting fish as well
* plays an important iconic role in identifying the inner qualities of the various characters
- role in a room's ambience
* pointer to the array of colors to fill in.
* popular trend in many breeds.
* preferred by most butterflies are pinks, reds, purples, and whites.
* property of light and matter, but it is also a part of human vision
- that describes itself
- with three sub-elements
* psychologically affect our moods and feelings.
* quickly fade in spring sunlight.
* quiet combination of gray and green.
* radiating energy and can have a physical and well as psychological influence on humans.
* range from clears, whites or off-whites, and blacks to virtually any shade or deep color hue
- light to very intense shades of green, blue green, or yellow green
- through every shade, hue and light
* refer to the coat of arms of L nemaa
- peatbogs and peat industry
- sea, beach and sun
* refers to any solid color
- colors of ink
* refers to the color of the ferret's guard hair, undercoat, eyes, and nose
- frequency and wavelength of light that is reflected from a mineral's surface
* refers to the gradations of grayness and yellowness in the cotton
- whiteness and yellowness in the cotton
* reflect off the enamel on teeth, making shade matching for cosmetic dentistry difficult.
* reflects composition in a very general way only
- differences
* relates to insect wing technology.
* remain bright and lifelike, with no shifts in hue
- for and beautiful for years in most every climate
- brilliant, nutrients are retained and flavors become more intense
- intense if the plant is displayed in bright indirect sunlight
- vital in various lighting circumstances
* represent different concentrations of sediment
- kinetic energies of the atoms
* represent the electric current density
- states of individual motor cells which constitute the map
- surface topography
- water depths
* represents a logic that is just as unrelenting as the logic of form
- temperature of the hot gas
- the amount of plastic deformation in each cell
* reproduce with a natural level of saturation and healthy looking flesh tones
- good saturation and without any traces of chroma noise
* reproduce with natural flesh tones and solid saturation
- looking flesh tones and highly saturated hues
- vivid hues and natural looking flesh tones
* respond to light conditions and they become subordinates to the goddess of nature.
* result from washes of iron, cobalt, manganese, chrome, copper, vanadium, and other minerals.
* result of dye penetration into the coating
- the interaction of light with matter
* results from reflection refraction
* returns to white when estrogen level falls prior to delivery.
* run from pale blue to dark green.
* seem to change when placed next to lighter or darker colors because of contrast
- vary with amount of sunlight
* seems to fade in the sun.
* sensation, a physiological phenomenon
- existing only in our minds
* serves as a form of protection for animals
- several different purposes in artistic composition
* show limited variations from light to dark greenish gray.
* show the difference between humid, tropical, and temperate zones
- stimulus orientation which best activates each region of the cortex
- thickness of the ozone layer over the Earth
* shows distribution
- how intense the energy of a given frequency is, at a given time
* significant aspect of a flower's consciousness.
* soft white, occasionally with pink flushing or aging to pink.
* speak their own language and evoke emotions instantly.
* spreads and darkens over time.
* supplies the light energy that supports our very life essence.
* symbolize different qualities in various European cultures
- ripeness and fertility
* taking on a symbolic meaning is common in expressionist painting.
* telltale sign of surface temperature.
* tend to be misrepresented when viewed on the computer
- bleed and fade with time
- wash out in midday, especially in summer
* tends to be towards the red end of the spectrum, especially when dimmed
- date an image, depending on the day s taste and technology
- fade to brown with exposure to sunlight
* term used for a particular part of the description of the appearance of an object.
* therefore contributes to a sense of depth by defining spatial relationships.
* too have different meanings in different countries.
* unique light blue for crusts and a deep blue in microcrystals.
* use the sense of sight.
* used are of vegetable and chemical dyes.
* usually offer natural saturation, but there are times where the hues appear a bit pale.
* varies according to lighting conditions
- between materials
- depending on exposure to sunlight
* varies with age
- species and even with the time of year
- year to year, depending on summer heat
* varies, but coyotes are usually grey.
* vary considerably when reproduced in different mediums
- considerably, ranging from white through pinks, reds, yellow and orange
- depending upon mineral content and place of origin
* vary from monitor to monitor, as do individual perceptions and lighting conditions
- near white to all shades of pastels to the brightest and darkest colors
- stone to stone
- strain to strain and include various types of solids and pastels
- greatly, with patterns depending on habitat, size and maturity
- the same as in natural stone
- widely from species to species
- with the weather, the time of day and the season
* vary, with the gas borne generally being lighter in color.
* very common way to try to identify a mineral.
* very important aspect to the feelings of natural beauty and serenity
- tool in web page creation
* vibrate at different frequencies.
* work differently when seen through reflected light.
+ Map coloring: Cartography :: Mathematics
* Map of the United States. Colors are used to show the different states.
* Results of the US Presidential election in 2004. Colors are used to show the amount of support each candidate received.
+ Roe, Around the world, Asia, Japan
* Color ranges from orange to light yellow. Humans eat the roe either raw or briefly cooked. Sea urchin roe is a popular food in Korean cuisine. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Accent color
* is same as body color, except on black or white cars, when accent color is red.
* provides harmony, balance, movement, and excitement.
Additive color
* are the opposite.
* combines the three colors to make white.
* is light created by mixing together light of two or more different colors
- used in scanners and computer displays
Auroral color
* can cover the entire light spectrum.
* depends on the type of atoms and molecules struck by the energetic particles.
Background color
* can be a transition of two colors.
* depends on color of animal.
* is another method of developing a brand
- the button's face color while foreground color is the text color
- used for background filling when the background is turned off
* makes gradient fills and fills in the erased areas of an image.
* represent the temperature of the midplane, increasing from blue to red.
Black color
* can develop because of oxidation.
* helps hide soiling in industrial application
- job applications
* is prepared by holding an earthen plate over the smoke of a burning wick
- probably due to micron-sized carbonaceous matter or clay
Blackness
* crystallizes out of fog moving forwards.
* is color
### color | blackness:
Ebony
* Ebonies are also notorious for being slow growing
- trees
- wood
* is blackness
* refers to the heartwood of various species.
Body color
* can vary from gray to white, tan, and black.
* is extremely variable, depending upon the waters from which it is taken.
* varies by species.<|endoftext|>### color:
Bright color
* Most bright color helps flower plants
* Some bright color attracts insect pollinators
- insects
- colors fade in full sun, but in general the plants prefer bright, sunny locations
* are everywhere in solid pieces as well as patterned ones
- ideal for capturing attention
- loud and tend to advance, while dull, less intense colors are quiet and recede
- safe and non-toxic
- surfaces facing towards the sonar
* are the best because they can be seen at a great distance
- easiest to tell apart
* attract animals with a good sense of sight, such as the hummingbirds.
* can be over stimulating to young children
- help attract a user's eye contributing to higher response rates
* express high energy and emotion.
* hold a child's attention and focus during therapy or swim lessons
- up well to brilliant sunshine, and attract the eye even from a distance
* is color.
* makes people feel more energetic.
* predominate in the costumes of both sexes.
* reflect visible light.
* represent strong, clear feelings, perhaps about children, family or creativity.
* seem to make a person happy as dark colors make the opposite effect.
* serve as a warning to potential predators.
* show the concentration of stress at the edges of delamination.
* stimulate activity and subdued colors encourage reflection
- baby's development
* tend to appeal to young children.
Brighter color
* appear to have been weathered by time and nature.
* attract our eyes first, and if overused, can cause visual confusion.
* is the reason many gardeners prune smokebush to the ground in late winter.
* represent a larger flux of neutrinos
- denser regions of hydrogen
- regions of higher porosity
Brilliant color
* contain a unique double color system that resists fading.
* is the hallmark of the marigold. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Brown
* also grow faster and larger.
* are bigger than grizzlies thanks to their rich diet of fish
- carbon rich and are usually dry
* are dry materials such as wood chips, dried leaves, dried grass, and other plants
- chips, dried leaves, grass and other plants
- eminent as the climate is hot, and dry
- for heterosexual males
- high in carbon and provide the energy source for microorganisms
- low intensity reds
- more resistant to the disease and their progeny are vital to maintaining wild trout
- slightly oxidized and greens a mixture of blue and yellow
- such things as straw, wood chips, autumn leaves and sawdust
* can grow to huge sizes.
* commonly feed on mayfly and caddisfly nymphs, grasshoppers, worms, crayfish and minnows.
* have dark whiskers under the chin, and yellow bullheads lack coloration in their whiskers
- two extra days rest
* is colour
* still patrol the thin water near shore.
* symbolize down to earth features.
* usually remain invisible until sun is off the water.
Brown color
* are due to flavones, and more often to tannins in the cell walls.
* come from tannin, a bitter waste product.
* shows distribution.
### color | brown:
Dead grass
* is brown
- used to make the nest
* takes on a brownish-yellow color and the blades are stiff.
Female duck
* Most female ducks are brown.
* select the nest site, usually within the home range of the drakes with which they mate.
Sepia
* have a much richer and deeper coloring.
* is brown
Cold color
* indicate low gravity, warm colors indicate high gravity.
* signify higher average velocities, while warm colors signify lower velocities.<|endoftext|>### color:
Color change
* allows camouflage among substrates and apparent disappearance into the currents.
* can accompany a physical change, too.
* can occur in the skin where sclerotherapy has been performed
- swiftly, or they can change with the seasons
* denotes change of color and color grain pattern.
* indicate that antibodies are adhering to the proteins.
* is distinct and non-reversible
- slow and caused by the production of more melanin - morphological color change
- triggered by the shifting rhythm of day and night
* occur early in the sap boiling process.
* range from yellow to brown to black, from solid colors to speckled.
* resulting from heating are permanent in most gemstones.<|endoftext|>### color:
Color coding
* form of visual display often used to prevent errors.
* helps in organization.
* identifies the language families considered to be represented in California.
* is one of the first methods that is inlayed over systems
- the assignment of color to a number, letter or particular item that shows meaning
- used both for molecular structures and for human tissues and organs
* is used for both molecular structures and for human tissues and organs
- communicates
- in the site map to quickly identify content in the site
* is used to assist the user to distinguish between stars, nebulae and galaxies
- designate work and play areas
- indicate the magnitude of form factors
- show the state of each product
* makes it possible to see at a glance which devices are in alarm.
* reflects individuals and families tracked across multiple pieces of information.
* uses all digits and letters. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Coloration
* Most coloration comes from pigment
- depends on types
* Most coloration has noticeable seasonal variation
- reflects heat
* Some coloration absorbs heat.
* Some coloration absorbs radiant heat
- solar heat
- changes over time
- comes from food
- serves protective functions
* also varies with age.
* attracts attention.
* behavioral adaptation found only in mammals a structural adaptation.
* comes from melanocytes which produce the brown pigment melanin
* develops on cooler extremities - ears, nose, tail, feet and legs.
* includes blue-gray and white fur during the winter, which then darkens during the summer
- shades of gray, tan, or reddish brown
* is choices
- influenced by radiation, just as tanning takes place upon exposure to sunlight
- one of the easiest changes for organisms
- somewhat variable, and there appear to be two primary color phases, dark and pale
- used to distinguish different oils
- usually patterns of grays, browns, and blacks, but there is variation
* is variable and in some cases quite striking to the human eye
- between and within species
* resembles that of regular cats, with a tendency toward dark shades and bright eye colour.
* result of standing waves or resonances in a room.
* results from heating the leaves in the brazing process.
* tends to be darker in humid climates and lighter in arid climates.
* varies depending upon the species and stage of development
- from locations
- widely based on subspecies , forms and habitat
### color | coloration:
Aposematic coloration
* is highly visible and indicates the presence of some defensive mechanism
- present in both the target species and the mimic species
- protective coloration
* occurs in both target and mimic species.
Blue coloration
* dye added to the epoxy to enhance observation of porosity.
* is actually a dark bluish gray with dark nose and foot pads
- one indication of a submucus cleft
Cosmetic coloration
* has two different types.
* is another mechanism by which male birds use to try to attract a mate.
Cryptic coloration
* exists in some forms.
* is common in birds but many have bright patterns
- protective coloration
- their principle defense mechanism against predators
- very general in the animal kingdom
* provides camouflage, hiding the animal from predators.
* type of camouflage.
Dark coloration
* Most dark colorations begin to lighten after four weeks of treatment.
* Some dark coloration absorbs heat.
Colouration
* depends on it s environment.
* is color<|endoftext|>### color | colouration:
Pigmentation
* can range in shades from very light pink all the way to dark black patches.
* depends on the habitat as well as physiological state.
* gives protection against sun damage.
* good indicator of egg production for the first six months a bird has been laying.
* is caused by melanin which protects the skin from sun
- common, especially with bowenoid neoplasia
- dependent upon the color or markings of the coat
- deposition
- normal elsewhere than in the eye
* occurs in nearly all living organisms.
* tends to be more extensive and pronounced in people with brown skins.
### color | colouration | pigmentation:
Pigmentation change
* are the most undesirable side effect of dermabrasion.
* indicate thermal sensory deficits.<|endoftext|>### color | colouration | pigmentation:
Polyphenic pigmentation
* is adaptive for species which reproduce several times a year.
+ Polyphenism, Other examples, Seasonal changes: Developmental biology :: Genetics
* Polyphenic pigmentation is adaptive for species which reproduce several times a year. Different pigment patterns provide camouflage throughout the seasons, and alter heat retention as temperatures change. Because insects cease growth and development after they are adults, their pigment pattern is set in adulthood. In the case of the Peppered moth, 'Biston betularia', the caterpillars are polyphenic. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color | colouration | pigmentation:
Skin pigmentation
* is determined by the amount of melanin present in the skin.
* product of the geographic origin of a persons ancestors.
* varies according to the coat markings color.
Common color
* Most common colors are dark red, olive green, white, and black.
+ Habanero chili: Capsicum
* The 'habanero chili' is a type of chili pepper. Unripe habaneros are green. They color as they mature. Common colors are orange and red, but white, brown, and pink are also seen. Typically a ripe habanero chili is long.<|endoftext|>### color:
Complementary color
* add intensity and brightness to a painting.
* are any two colors that when combined produce white light.
* are opposite and create visual energy
- colors and are very important when mixing colors for painting
* are opposite each other on a color wheel like red and green or blue and orange
- the color wheel, like orange and blue
- one another on the color wheel
* become most effective when they produce maximum color contrast.
* is color
* seem to vibrate when placed side by side.
Cool color
* are blue, purple, and green.
* are blues, grays, purples, and greens
- greens and violets
- shades of blue, violet and green
- the colors on the color wheel from yellow green to and including violet
* have blue undertones, like pinks, purples and magentas.
* lean towards blues, blue violets and greens.
* recede and are known as calming.
* reflect light, and they make the room feel cooler.
* tend to receed and warm colors advance. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Coral
* All coral is made up of polyps, tiny animals that resemble upside-down jellyfish.
* All corals are fragile, and require a very specific aquatic environment in which to live
- in the phylum Cnidaria , the same as jellyfish
- begin as a single polyp
- open up more, although there are some exceptions
* Many corals are soft on the inside but have a hard outer covering called an exoskeleton
- very sensitve and are great water quality indicators
- can survive and grow without eating, as long as the zooxanthellae have enough light
- grow on the outer reef front but they also grow well in the lagoon
- growing side by side and one on top of another, form a reef
* Many corals have different growth forms
- zooxanthellae living within the tissues of the polyps
- live in water that is already near their upper temperature limit
- living together form a coral reef
- usually recover from a short spell of bleaching
* Most coral is found in the Mediterranean Sea or in the Pacific off Japan and Taiwan.
* Most corals are colonial organisms
- colonial, creating masses of cups fused together
- colonies of many individual animals that share a common skeleton
- examples of endosymbiotic relationships between themselves and photosynthetic algae
- red, pink, white and blue
- build large reefs that provide habitats for many other forms of life
- depend on light
- feed at night
- go through a planktonic stage of life
- grow on a hard substrate
* Most corals have a sting, harmless to humans, which can damage or even kill encroaching neighbors
- different patterns
- growth patterns
- many different patterns
- yellow polyp
- host a number of facultative and obligate symbionts, especially crustaceans
- prefer to grow in clear, warm tropical waters
- require a hard substrate on which to establish
- secrete a hard skeleton of calcium carbonate
* Some corals also consume very small fish
- block sunlight
- brood their eggs in the body of the polyp and release sperm into the water
- contribute to growth
* Some corals depend on conditions
- initial states
- do thrive in silty environments and even feed on organic-rich sediment particles
- even show preferences for certain types of zooplankton
- exhibit mass spawning
- harbor small algae cells in their tissues
- have ability
- live as separate individuals, others are colonial and form extensive reefs
* adapt and modify their environment by forming calcium carbonate skeletons
- to closed systems better after they have been in our care for several years
* also absorb nutrients, including inorganic nitrogen and phosphorus, directly from water
- acquire nutrients from feeding on a wide variety of zooplankton
- are usually sessile and colonial
- capture food
- compete with each other for space and light
- feed on small planktonic animals
* also have a symbiotic relationship with the green algae called zooxanthella
- stinging cells which can cause irritation to sensitive skin
* also provide natural filtration of seawater for their neighbors
- shelter for the crustaceans
- reproduce sexually
- require high light levels for photosynthesis
- slough off large amounts of slimy mucus when stressed
- use the mesenterial filaments to digest organic matter from the sediments
* are a group af animals that look like colourful underwater plants
- member of the phylum cnidaria, which also includes jellyfish and anemones
- able to colonise new environments through sexual reproduction
- actually a result of a combination of plant and animal life
* are also at the base of the food chain and provide food for the rest of the reef community
- sensitive to pollution of many kinds
- under attack in other ways
- among the most reproductively prolific marine organisms on earth
- anatomically simple animals that belong to the phylum cnidaria
- animals related to jellyfish and sea anemones
* are animals that allow tiny algae cells to grow in-between their two cell layers
- have a symbiotic relationship with a microscopic algae called zooxanthellae
- with their skeletons on the outside
- animals, but they also have microscopic, single-celled plants living in their tissues
- anthozoans, the largest class of organisms within the phylum Cnidaria
- both animals and plants
- calcium carbonated animals that live at the bottom of the ocean
* are colonial animals related to sea anemones
- cnidarians
- invertebrate marine animals whose skeletons help to build up reefs
- colonial, and so the polyps communicate with one another
- colonies of individual animals and plants which succeed through collaborative strategies
* are colonies of tiny animals which trap plankton for food
- tiny, delicate animals called polyps
- complex and poorly understood animals
- delicate animals and chronic human disturbance can cause permanent damage
* are dependent on light , because the algae are important partners , and they require light
- little photosynthetic microorganisms called zooxanthellae
- epifaunal, sessile filter feeders
- examples of colonies of zooids of the Hydra type
- fragile living organisms that only grow a few inches a year or less
- good predictors of mass extinction events
- host to microscopic algal cells called zooxanthellae, which live within the coral tissue
- hunters
- in the phylum Cnidaria, the members of which have radial symmetry
- invertebrates
- large colonies of small animals called polyps
- living animals
- livings
* are located in oceans
* are marine animals living in ocean ecosystems around the world
- members of the phylum Cnidaria, the same as jellyfish and sea anemones
- naturally fragile in their build and are easily damaged by even a snorkel's fin
- no different
- one example of a foundation species in many islands in the South Pacific Ocean
- part of lobsters
* are related to jellyfish, form large colonies, and have associated algal partners
- sea anemones, and they all share the same simple structure, the polyp
- sensitive to muddy waters
- so pretty that some people make reef aquariums
- special living animals that grow into fantastic shapes and sizes
- still common, but less diverse
- susceptible to diseases and bleaching
- suspenision feeders
* are the 'building bricks' of the reef
- second most productive ecosystem behind rainforests
- skeletons of living animals
* are tiny animals, called polyps, that are related to and look like sea anemones
- flower-like animals that live in colonies
- plant-like animals that depend on clean, clear waters and sunlight to survive
- tiny, soft-bodied organisms that thrive in large colonies in warm, shallow ocean waters
- two fold
* are very delicate and depend upon water quality to thrive
- efficient marine organisms that thrive in nutrient-poor environments
- particular about where they build reefs
* attack each other with stinging cells in order to gain more territory.
* begins as an individual polyp the size of a pea
* belong to a group of animals that include sea anemones, jelly fish, and hydroids.
* belong to the class Anthozoa
- same group of animals as anemones and sea jellies
* belongs in the same animal group as hydras, jellyfish, and sea anemones.
* bleach in Florida.
* bleach, or lose their bright colors, in water that is too warm.
* bleaching due to global warming is the most serious threat to coral reefs.
* build their hard skeletons from calcium carbonate, a mineral extracted from sea water
- skeletons in annual rings, like tree rings
* can also adapt to fluctuating conditions
- capture zooplankton as a food source by suspension feeding
- die due to natural disasters
* can be either rock hard or soft
- small solitary animals or large reef-building colonies
- solitary or colonial
- only live in shallow water, just below the ocean's surface
* can reproduce asexually and sexually
- by at least five described strategies
- both sexually and asexually
- either sexually or asexually
* can survive a bleaching event, but they are under more stress and are subject to mortality
- occasional short-term siltation events
* collection of small, individual coral animals called polyps.
* come in many shapes and sizes
- various distinctive shapes and sizes
* compete for space in different ways
- on the reef by using one of several methods to combat other corals
* continuously feed at night in correspondence to the vertical migration of plankton.
* depend on a symbiotic relationship with dinoflagellate algae
* deposit calcium carbonate underneath the layers of tissue in species-specific patterns.
* develops as large colonies of individual animals.
* die faster off open tidal passes than protective islands.
* die, but reef remains.
* differ in their aggressive abilities.
* enable data on surface ocean conditions to be extended back beyond the instrumental record.
* exist in a symbiotic relationship with a. fungi
- warm seas, at moderate depths with sufficient light
- only in a very delicate balance of warm, clear water, sunshine and proper salt levels
* exists throughout the world's tropical oceans.
* expend more energy to create a fully developed planula.
* extend their tentacles to bring in food.
* feed in a variety of ways
- mostly on plankton
- on zooplankton, primarily at night
* flourish in nutrient-poor, clear, tropical waters.
* form an interesting mutualistic relationship with microscopic algae called zooxanthellae
- fairy rings, so follow the circle
- large colonies in shallow tropical water
- the structural and ecological foundation of the reef system
* fringing the islands support some of the most diverse marine ecosystems in the world.
* get their common name from how they look.
* grow and provide the framework for extension of the reef
- at different rates
- below algal ridge lagoon bottom make of rubble from algal ridge
- best on the edge outside of the reef facing the open ocean
* grow in a wide variety of forms as the types here demonstrate
- abundance, and colorful tropical fish swim in schools in the park under the water
- warm shallow waters that receive plenty of light
- mostly in tropical seas, and trees only on land
- on rocky outcrops in some areas of the Gulf of California
* growing on a volcano likes to be near the surface, and it keeps growing to stay there.
* grows during the day when it is sunny.
* grows in the Indian Ocean according to the encyclopedia
- shallow oceans surrounding the volcano
- warm climates where there is clear salt water and sunlight
* hard, multicolored calcium skeleton secreted by certain marine lifeforms called polyps.
* hardened, living byproduct secreted by certain marine life.
* have a mutualistic relationship with algae
- their zooxanthellae
- rigid pecking order
- skeleton of calcium carbonate which is easily fossilised
- type of body form called a polyp
- animal symbionts called zooanthellae
* have both asexual and sexual reproductive strategies
- sexual and asexual reproduction
- polyp structures similar to anemones but corals are usually colonial and much smaller
- polyps also, as do most cnidarians at some point in their lives
- still other ways of feeding themselves
- tentacles covered with stinging cnematocysts that harpoon and paralyze their prey
- the potential to help humans
- two strategies for sexual reproduction- broadcast and brooding
* have very par- ticular requirements that determine where reefs develop
- specific requirements for light, temperature, water clarity, salinity and oxygen
* heterogeneous cluster built in three phases.
* host a variety of other organisms.
* is abundant and cheap and can be harvested without environmental damage
- actually a tiny living animal
- alive in the Red Sea
* is also a lucrative international commodity
- material that goldsmiths use with great success
- at risk through pollution and the effects of tourism
* is an animal that grows in colonies in the ocean
- ideal material to study as it forms yearly bands, much like the banding seen in trees
- calcium carbonate with a trade of carotene
- created by the action of sedentary species of cnidarians
- described along with other organisms that live in the coral reef community
- especially fragile
- extremely sensitive to sediment
* is found in all the oceans of the world
- shallow coastal areas
- mainly in Japanese and Hawaiian waters and the Mediterranean
- likely to keep pace with sea level rise
* is made of the exoskeletons of many thousands of tiny marine animals called polyps
- up of small animals called polyps which live in symbiosis with tiny algae
- mined and burned to produce lime and cement
- neither a stone nor a plant substance, but the skeletal remains of a sea creature
- plentiful the fish life is restricted to small but plentiful tropicals
- razor sharp and any cut can quickly become badly infected
- soft under water, and hardned by the air
* is the calcareous skeletons of marine animals
- calcite shell of the coral animal
- color of the new millennium
- egg mass of a female lobster
- prefered color to the butterflies
- stony skeletal structure left behind when certain marine plants and animals die
- very ensitive to changes in the environment which can lead to destruction
- what became of the archaic information network known as the Web
* leave daily growth rings in their skeleton, similar to trees.
* live at the uppermost boundary of their temperature tolerance
- attached to the seafloor, especially in shallow, tropical seas
- best in clear waters with low nutrients
* live in colonies consisting of many individuals, each of which is called a polyp
- in shallow water in the tropics
- warm oceans
- mainly where the seas are warm and shallow
* lives a symbiotic life.
* living structure that regenerates as erosion reduces it to dust.
* microscopic marine animal that lives together in colonies for protection.
* national treasure in the archipelago.
* needs ample oxygen and light to grow
- warm, shallow tropical water and often grows near to the surface
* normally live in symbiosis with algal plants, but warm temperatures upset the relationship.
* nourish themselves in a remarkable number of ways.
* occupy a very important role in the oceans.
* occur for the first time in Ordovician rocks.
* often contain photosynthetic symbionts and live in shallow waters where light penetrates.
* only grow by two centimetres a year.
* performs a similar function in the ocean.
* predominantly reproduce sexually.
* produce a natural weedkiller
- mucus which serves as food and forms an important input in the detrital food web
- the reef structures on which countless other organisms, including human beings, live
* protect against tsunamis.
* provide shelter and nutrients for the algae.
* provides a place for a very rich community of algae that are the basis for the community
- age of deep water
- food and shelter for many of the oceans creatures
- way to age deep water
* push their biochemical pathways to the limit.
* receive coloration from the photosynthetic pigments of zooxanthallae.
* reefs the thrive and grow best in high energy surf.
* rely on water currents to provide food and oxygen as well as removal of waste.
* remove and recycle and carbon dioxide
- minerals from ocean water to build enormous colonial skeletons
* reproduce asexually by budding or fragmentation
- in several different ways
- sexually, often in mass spawning events
* require clear water of low nutrient status
- clear, clean, nutrient-free waters to thrive
- years to grow and colonize a small portion of a reef
* respond to both natural changes in the marine environment and to anthropogenic pollution.
* secrete a hard covering around their bodies for protection
- colorful pigments to warn predators that they are poisonous
* seem to absorb water more than other mushrooms.
* signifies the red sands of the desert.
* simply release eggs and sperm into the water.
* spawn at about the same time during the night a couple of days after the full moon.
* spend the majority of their life as a polyp, and jellyfish as a medusa.
* store their food in the form of fat and glycogen.
* strives to transform the whole ocean into coral islands.
* takes thousands of years to grow but only seconds to destroy.
* thrive as long as temperatures remain at or below certain temperatures for a given site.
* tilt seaward, preventing sediment accumulation on flat coral surfaces.
* use a variety of methods to obtain their food
- several different methods of asexual reproduction
- tentacles to ensnare their food
- the nematocysts to defend themselves and to capture prey
- their tentacles to capture prey
* usually are less than three feet long.
* weakened by bleaching are more vulnerable to storms, predators, and disease.
+ Algae, Life style, Symbiosis
* Less well known are the algal relationships with animals. Reef-building corals are basically social Cnidarian polyps. Corals are dependent on light, because the algae are important partners, and they require light. Corals have evolved structures, often tree-like, which offer the algae maximum access to light. The corals' waste-products provide nutrients for the algae so, as with lichen, both partners gain from the association. The algae are golden-brown flagellate algae, often of the genus 'Symbiodinium'. A curious feature of the partnership is that the coral may eject the algae in hard times, and regain them later.
+ Atoll
* Charles Darwin, who is most famous for his theory of evolution, was the first person to find out how atolls form. He said that volcanoes in the ocean sometimes wear away or sink deeper. Coral growing on a volcano likes to be near the surface, and it keeps growing to stay there. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color | coral:
Brain coral
* are an important reef building species throughout the tropics
- stony corals
* extend their tentacles at night to catch food.
* get their name from the folds and turns in the coral skeleton.
* grow more slowly, but their solid skeletons stand strong in storms.
* hard or stony coral.
Dead coral
* decay faster into sand than live corals.
* is bleached white, stressed to death by environmental factors
Finger coral
* is the most common species along with lobe coral.
* snap easily and litter individual rest sites.
Fire coral
* are also abundant in the Bahamas
- pantropical meaning they are found in the warmer waters and often shallower depths
* is very common in the Red Sea.
* look like hard corals, but upon closer observation, they often have a furry coat layer.
Gorgonian
* are a diverse group, with most species occuring in tropical and sub-tropical waters
- very common animals on our reefs, gently waving in the currents
* have a flexible skeletal structure which sways with the water currents.
### color | coral | gorgonian coral:
Sea fan
* appear in shades of red, yellow, or orange.
* are gorgonians
- pale lavender or green fan-shaped corals
* gorgonian coral
* have structures known as sclerites.<|endoftext|>### color | coral:
Hard coral
* Many hard corals are extraordinarily light and seem to imitate plant forms.
* Most hard corals can reproduce either sexually or asexually.
* Some hard corals have ability.
* are hermatypes or reef-building corals and often require zooxanthellae for survival.
* are the basis of the tropical coral reef
- most significant group of corals in terms of reef building
* build by secreting calcium carbonate skeletons.
* form coral reefs, which serve as a home for many sea creatures
- the massive structures of the reef
* have an internal, rock-like, chalky skeleton that remains when they die.
* is just the opposite.
Healthy coral
* are more likely to recover from bleaching, scientists say.
* is very colorful and rich with marine life.
Live coral
* Some live corals produce excess slime when shipped.
* has many very beautiful colours.
* require strong lighting, with proper spectrum and immaculately clean systems.
Modern coral
* deposit a single, very thin layer of lime once a day.
* live only in seawater, so a marine origin can be inferred for the structure.
* range from the Triassic to the present.
Mushroom coral
* are soft corals and have no exoskeleton but grow on rock.
* resemble the attached or unattached tops of mushrooms<|endoftext|>### color | coral:
Soft coral
* Most soft corals rely on the ocean current to supply necessary nutrients.
* are an important component of coral reefs
- colonial animals and some do have calcium carbonate skeletons of a sort
- important competitors for space on reefs
- in abundance here, including large gorgonian sea fans, and sea anemones
- similar to their hard coral cousins, but lack a hard limestone skeleton
* come in shapes that look like whips, plumes, or fans and have only eight tentacles.
* comes in dramatic, often electric hues of orange, red, pink, and white-fringed by purple.
* exert no direct effect on coral reef fish assemblages
- reef fishes
* has flexible skeletons that can sway in strong currents.
* have a skeleton of horney tubes, spikes and rods.
* look like trees or bushes.
* populate the deeper waters, especially where there is current.
* reproduce by both sexual and asexual means.
* require extremely good water quality
- medium to slightly high water flow
Staghorn coral
* form the forests of the reef.
* grow rapidly, but are easily damaged in storms.
Stony coral
* are animals which help build our coral reefs
- found in warm, shallow waters of the world
- the major reef architects
* employ several methods of asexual reproduction.
* is the most common sort but there is another type of coral soft coral.
* produce limy cases that build the reef. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Dark color
* Some dark color absorbs energy
- radiant energy
- radiation
* absorb a lot more heat than lighter ones because they absorb more light energy.
* absorb heat and are more likely to suffer from moisture problems
- while light colors reflect it
- heat, which warms the chilly spring soil
* absorb light and require higher bulb wattages
- sunlight, and light colors reflect sunlight back out to space
* absorb the heat
- sun's rays
- visible light and convert the light energy into heat
* are also a great way to hide radiators and other eyesores
- concentrated and serious in their effect
- dominant and lambs often darken in color as they age
- eye-catching, but also tiring to the eye
- harder to see
- more expensive than lighter colors
* are still pale
- preferred in professional clothing especially for men
* can reduce visibility in a room.
* capture heat and make most people more attractive to mosquitoes.
* have a raised appearance much like a silkscreen.
* heat better than lighter ones.
* hinder light reflection.
* hold heat better than do light colors
- more heat from the sun
* impedes light penetration.
* indicates soil contains much nitrogen and organic matter.
* interfere with bar code reading.
* is color.
* offer more protection than light colors.
* provide more protection than light colors.
* provides contrast, making it easier to work with light colored foods.
* represent cool, downflowing gas, and light areas are warm and upflowing
- gyttja while light-colors represent inorganic terrestrial sediment
- high acoustic power at a given time and frequency
* reproduce better.
* require a lot of white to get to a light color, so start mixing from lighter to dark.
* show better silhouettes against the sky when worked near the surface
- estrous females and alpha males
* tend to absorb sunlight, and light colors tend to reflect sunlight back out to space
- trapping the heat that warms the planet
- create the feeling of being closed in
* tendto crock more than light colors.<|endoftext|>### color:
Darker color
* absorb comparatively more light
- light and thus retain heat, warming a room
- radiant heat while lighter colors reflect radiant heat
- sunlight and heat, as well as make it darker inside the tent
* block more sunlight than lighter colors.
* correspond to brighter objects.
* dry more slowly because they contain the solvent glycol.
* give the impression of decreasing the size of facial features.
* produce more masking while lighter colors produce less.
* refer to larger values.
* represent higher wind velocity, which is measured in in knots.
* seem to accentuate color variations with results appearing more pronounced.
* tend to block more sun
- make already small rooms look even smaller
- show lint and accumulated dust more readily than light or medium colors
* work with darker clothes and frosts, glosses and mattes all look current. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Different color
* absorb different wavelengths of heat.
* act differently within a picture.
* affect people in different ways
- the eye differently
* are associated with different wavelengths
- encouraging different parts of plants to grow
- more uncommon and significantly increase the value of a tooth
- the result of different sized spheres
* cause reactions in our bodies and minds.
* come from different amounts of darkness being added to the white light
- combinations of gases
* correspond to different wavelengths of light.
* designate different races or forms.
* emit various wavelength frequencies that have an effect on the mind and body.
* express different moods.
* have different effects on people
- hues
- size wavelengths
- the effect of enhancing or suppressing certain activities
* indicate different levels of emotions and physical well-being
- materials that reflect radio waves differently
* mark their sides, describing their physical properties, almost like a name.
* mean different things in different cultures.
* refer to different velocities as the galaxy is rotating.
* reflects differences.
* represent different precipitation intensities
- temperatures, with the hottest material appearing the darkest
* result from different wavelengths.
* work for different people.
Face value
* are values.
* is color
- the amount the issuer promises to pay at maturity
- usually the amount the issuing company promises to pay at maturity
* refers to the printed amount shown on the savings bond.
Fall color
* are blends of gold and red
- bright yellows
- often more vivid in cloudy weather than on sunny days
* begin as deciduous trees lose their leaves.<|endoftext|>### color:
Flower color
* Some flower color attracts pollinators.
* are a mixture of pink, rose, and purple bicolors
- mainly deep pinks, crimsons and purples
- mostly white and yellow, but some kinds have orange, pink or red coronas
- predominately lilac-blue to white
- quite diverse but tend toward pinks, purples and whites
- shades of white, lavender, rose, purple, and pink
- somewhat limited, mainly blue, purple, and white
- subtle, blushed, creamy pastels
- usually pink, red or white
- variable, mainly shades of yellow, orange, and red
- vibrant red, pink, white, lavender, and true blue
* are white and shades of pink, red and purple
- with a tinge of pink, turning purplish-rose and green with age
* can be almost any combination of white, pink, red, magenta and purple
- blue, pink and white
- red, blue, white or violet
- violet, blue, red, salmon and sometimes white
- vary with weather and become more gray than tan
* fade in and out and most blooms last over a week.
* includes orange, salmon, shades of pink, shades of red, white and lilac.
* is basically an off white or cream color
- blue in acid soil and rose-pink in a neutral or slightly alkaline soil
- changeable depending on the weather
- determined by a pair of alleles which are located on a different chromosome
- related to the aluminum available to the plant
- the result of mixing the two pigments in different proportions
* range from blue to white and pink
- dark red to light green
- purple to red, pink and white
- white through pastel shades of pink to red and purple
* range in shades of deep maroon, lavender-blue, rose, pink and white
- lavender, red, rose, or white
- pink, rose, red, white, scarlet, purple and some that are bi-color
* seems to be secondary in Episcia breeding.
* varies and depends on species
- from shades of pink to purple
* vary according to variety, most often white, blue, violet, purple, or yellow
- from whites through reds, purples, and blues
- with soils, rainfall, and, of course, genetics
* vary, depending on variety, from lavender, through light purple to red. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Fluorescent color
* are brighter, and research shows they are much more conspicuous to the human eye
- effective on crankbaits in many conditions
* attract quite a bit of attention.
* make copy paper harder to recycle.
Food color
* is an important sensory attribute, especially for Asian raw noodles.
* treat different poodings, and modern medicine treats mental illnesses.
Gold color
* are always solid brass.
* is determined by the percentage of alloys that are included in the metal. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Green
* All greens are free of fat and cholesterol
- contain chlorophyll which purifies the blood of the toxins that cause skin eruptions
* Many greens grow best in cool weather and mature in a relatively short amount of time.
* Most greens are a great source of protein
- snap to start from seeds, germinating in a few days and growing quickly
- abundant sources of calcium
* Trim off tough stems.
* actually come in a wide variety of colors, textures, shapes, and flavors.
* also campaign for greater democratic control and openness in institutions of power
- help bring nature indoors, making a hot, sunny room seem cooler
* are also a great source of vitamin C , iron and folate
- committed to fairness and non-violence
- anything that is fresh and green
- excellent sources of calcium
- extremely bright
- fierce and passionate people who do what they do because of commitment to values
- fragile
* are fresh moist materials, such as fresh grass cuttings and kitchen food scraps
- fresh grass cuttings and limited kitchen food scraps
- good for harmony, forgiveness, compassion and understanding
- important providers of nitrogen in the composting process
- long-term investors
- medium-size
* are more about money than the environment
- committed to the environment and motivated to do something
- movers and shakers when it comes to taking action
- nitrogen rich and are usually moist
- one of the most regular nesters, nesting every other year
- rich in folate that helps to reduce blood levels of harmful amino acids
- small and fast
- symbolic of gardens, meadows and forests
* are the fifth most nutritious vegetable in the world
- innovators of the world
- nitrogen source of the pile
- very low in calories and sodium
* believe diversity is both a cause and an effect of a healthy society.
* believe in a democratic, decentralized society of self-reliant individuals
- empowerment of all, and in equality of rights, opportunities and responsibilities
* believe that all people have a genuine contribution to make to society
- people know best how to solve their own problems
* can be laxative in large amounts
- include such things as lettuce, endive, chickweed, clover, watercress, and spinach
- stain a rabbit's fur
* come from all walks of life
- in all shapes and sizes
* define racism as prejudice plus power.
* give the nitrogen necessary for protein formation
- way to brilliant hues of yellow, orange and red
* have a slightly sweet flavor and can be cooked or served in salads
- magnesium which helps maintain calcium levels
- some brown patches at their highest points, but overall are in good shape
* have the necessary fiber and nutrient content for our iguanas
- smallest head size compared to their body size for a sea turtle
* help build the blood and keeps the blood alkaline for more oxygen.
* is colour
- environmentalists
- part of golf courses
- political parties
- sites
- vegetables
* mean various lives.
* often combine a structural blue with a yellow pigment
- take on a blue-green shade
* push back against browns on blades and branches.
* recognize that the Earth sustains all life processes.
* represent life, growth and vitality.
* sometimes have a difficult time initially categorizing themselves as one particular color.
* swim with powerful beats of their wing-like front flippers.
* tend to be small, round and flat
- have either blue tones or yellow
* think globally and act locally.
* use contour, and to lesser degree grain, to create excess speed.
* vary from dark teal, hunter, to celadon
- in size
* works well in most combinations of green shades. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Green color
* Most green color comes from chlorophyll.
* come from special algae.
* is dominant to blue colors
- good on jade and many other stones
- pen ink
* refers to the connection with nature and agriculture.
* represent soils containing salts and more abundant vegetation.
+ Salt evaporation pond: Geology :: Ponds
* The color tells how much salt there is left in the water. Green colors come from special algae. In middle to high salinity ponds, an alga called Dunaliella salina shifts the color to red. Millions of tiny brine shrimp create an orange cast in mid-salinity ponds. Other bacteria such as Stichococcus also contribute tints. These colors are especially interesting to airplane passengers or astronauts passing above due to their somewhat artistic formations of shape and color.
### color | green:
Chrome green
* is pigment
* mixture of chrome yellow and Prussian blue.
Dark green
* are a good source of vitamin A and vitamin C.
* dark shade of green.
* have more of an olive tone and emerge as classic colors.
* is masculine, conservative, and implies wealth
- often popular for logos and signboards
Green marketing
* is marketing products that are safe or beneficial to the environment.
* legitimate approach to selling products, including electricity supply.
* links certain attributes of a company's offering to environmental concerns.
Green tomato
* Some green tomatoes have horns.
* are green
- more acidic than ripened tomatoes and can be canned safely
- tomatos
Healthy vegetation
* appears as red, and deforested land and urban areas appear as light blue.
* is green.
* reflects differently than unhealthy vegetation
- more infrared than dead and dying vegetation
- very well in the near infrared part of the spectrum
Leafy green
* Most leafy greens share the same insect pests, including aphids, leafhoppers, and leafminers.
* Some leafy greens are no higher in iron than white meat.
* are great sources of folate, orange and yellow veggies provide beta-carotene
- important
- spinach and lettuce
* can tolerate light shade.
* contain E and B folate.
* cook more evenly if partially thawed and separated before cooking.
* prefer high-nitrogen.
* run the gamut of flavors.
Light green
* can lighten the body colour too much and can, importantly, increase suffusion.
* good neutral color.
* is for freeways.
* light tint of green.
Salad green
* adapt well to wide row gardening.
* are low in calories, but the calories add up quickly if drowned in a high-fat dressing
- very easy to grow in containers
* grow very quickly.
* thrive in the cool months.
Soccer field
* Most soccer fields have grass.
* Some soccer fields cover square yards.
* are located in countrysides
- parks
- playgrounds
- school yards
- schools
- stadiums
- towns
- playing fields
* are used for competitive sports
- play sports
Soylent green
* government manufactured food source made from dead human bodies.
* is made of people.
Traffic light
* Some traffic lights seem to ignore cyclists.
* are safety standards.
* click or beep so blind people can tell whether the light is green or red.
* convey their signals through color.
* exist only in the big cities.
* have three colors.
* is located in crossroads
- intersections
- streets
* reduce the frequency of right-angle collisions.
Wild green
* can be tangy, and if the leaves get too big, they become too fibrous to eat easily.
* remain an important late winter food in the Mediterranean region. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Grey
* Some greys appear to be genetically engineered replicants, with minimal internal organs
- have mutliple inner eyelids
* also are popular animals for use in medical research because of their size and short hair.
* are a product of recessive genes, so they are difficult to breed for, and just pop up
- as familiar to the world community as domesticated cats and dogs
- born black or dark brown
- devoted to each other and preen each other just like the lovebird species of parrots do
- gregarious by nature, often occurring in large flocks, ever watchful for predators
- just like people in that they are each individuals
- rare, but there are a number of duns, palominos and creams
- the kidnappers, who beam innocent humans up to their hovering spaceships for vivisection
* can be very good pets, but they tend to be shy around strangers.
* feeding on the ground can only escape a hawk by flying.
* grow to a large size.
* have big feet and toes which develop rapidly.
* is colour.
* use the perches as well as the nest boxes for mating.
### color | grey:
Grey mongeese
* Some grey mongeese occur in areas.
* Some grey mongeese occur in many areas
- protect areas<|endoftext|>### color:
Hair color
* Most hair color depends on factors
- genetic factors
* can be blond or brown.
* comes from a pigment or color produced by the skin
- in Red, brown or auborn
* follows the same basic principles as eye color.
* happens because of a kind of pigment called melanin.
* is alike in both sexes
- also due to the presence of melanin
- created by a pigment called melanin
* is determined by melanocytes, cells that produce pigment
- more than one gene
- due to pigment in the cortex
- liquids
- mixture
- passed down by parents only
- probably even more complicated than eye color
- used for identifying an individual for emigration or crime detection purposes
* ranges from light brown to black, and eye color can be black, gray, blue, or green.
* tends to fade in the sun.
* varies from black to white.
+ Hair, Human hair, Hair color:
* Hair color is passed down by parents only. Natural hair color can be given only by genes. It is impossible to have a hair color that is not passed down genetically by both mother and father. This relies on dominant and recessive genes carried by a parent. These genes may not be the color of their hair, however, many people carry genes that are recessive and do not show in their traits or features.
Harmonious color
* have a common element.
* tend to be either yellowish or bluish.
Hot color
* Place large pieces of construction paper on the ground in full sunlight.
* project outward and attract attention.
* stimulate appetites.
Lighter color
* are always softer, with less visual antiquing
- areas where the vegetation is less healthy or more sparse
* mean that more light is reflected.
* reflect light better.
* reflect more heat so they last longer
* reflect the most light
- sun's heat
* tend to be more active, and deeper colors tend to be passive.
Mineral color
* are also the most opaque artists' colors
- mostly opaque
* can vary from specimen to specimen. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Mottle
* are color
- common or many in shades of gray, yellow, brown or red
- dominantly of low chroma and are common or many
* are few to common in shades of brown, yellow and red
- many faint to distinct shades of gray, brown, olive, or yellow
* are few to many in shades of brown, gray, and yellow
- of gray, yellow, brown and red
* are in most pedons in the lower part and vary considerably in amount, size, and contrast
- shades of brown and gray
* are in shades of brown, red, and gray
- yellow, and gray
* are in shades of gray, brown, and red
- red and brown
- red, brown, or gray
- yellow, brown, gray, and olive and range from few to many
- the shades of brown, gray and olive
- various shades of brown, red, and gray
* are present in the lower few inches of the argillic horizon in some pedons
- subhorizons in some pedons
- streaks or spots of different colors
* commonly have higher chromas.
* is color<|endoftext|>### color:
Natural color
* Some natural color attracts insects.
* are expensive to produce and as they come from plant material
- mixed black, brown, gray, cream and white
- usually pastel pink, yellow, blue, orange, and various gray shades, even white
- very striking combinations of black, red, yellow, orange, and white
* lend themselves best to video transmission.
* produce best in clear water, bright light conditions, and sparse cover.
* work best in clearer water.
* works with virtually any color scheme.
Neutral color
* appeal to the largest group of people.
* are beige or cream, and gray
- shades of white, gray or beige
* can make a room feel light, airy and evoke a feeling of tranquility.
* show the least fading, but darker colors absorb more heat into the space.
Ocean color
* catch-all for suspended sediments, algal biomass and other oceanic parameters.
* is made up of varying concentrations and types of phytoplankton.
Opposite color
* are more affective against one another, as are people with opposite innate colors.
* make natural darkeners for one another because they pull into use the full spectrum.
+ Complementary color, Art and design: Color
* Opposite colors are called complementary.
Orange color
* come from a substance called carotene and the yellows from xanthophyll.
* is artificial aging.
* positive reaction to a presence of nitrite residues.<|endoftext|>### color:
Pastel
* are also useful when wishing to create colour
- bands
- drawing
- less saturated colors
- light color
- light, so it's hard to get dark, rich colors
- logical choices for colors
- one of the simplest artistic media
- pure sticks of colour
- pure, unadulterated pigment
- the most versatile, vibrant medium on the planet
* can weigh heavily on the eye.
* combine the elements of painting and drawing into one medium.
* compulsory second-year course in many tertiary institutions.
* have the stature of oil and watercolor as a major fine art medium.
* is color
- pure pigment
- the single best medium for learning about color
- usually too dry to use exclusively on most surfaces
* powder as easily as chalk, but some colours are susceptible to fading.
* vary in permanence and in hardness.
### color | pastel:
Oil pastel
* are a smoother media, good for symbols
- raw pigments combined with oil binders instead of gum
* employ a non drying oil and often a higher proportion of wax.
* have numerous advantages as an art material.
Soft pastel
* are a crumbly, particulate medium.
* comes closest to painting with pure pigment.
* have minimal binding agents and contain proportionately more pigment than hard pastels.
Peel color
* begins showing in late summer.
* is yellow as is juice color. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
People of color
* appear in popular and news media and occupy positions of power and status.
* are disproportionately at the bottom of the income distribution curve.
* are less likely to have health insurance
- receive a pension or to have savings income
- more likely than whites to be victims of crime
- naturally deficient in some way and inferior to white people
- now a majority of the state's population
- some of the most beautiful people in the entire world
* comprise two-thirds of all prisoners nationally.
* continue to experience poverty and unemployment disproportionately.
* have lower incomes than whites
* suffer a disproportionate number of pesticide poisonings.
* tend to have less adequate access to health insurance and healthcare than whites.<|endoftext|>### color:
Pink
* Many pinks are hardy perennials, while others are half-hardy and grown as annuals.
* are circumpolar in distribution, though greatest concentrations occur in the Gulf of Alaska
- delicate and soft
- flowers that have been prized in gardens for centuries
- youthful looking and usually have translucent skin
* blend well with soft colours such as lilac, peach and rose.
* bloom first year from seed if started early.
* exhibit uniform coloration from light to reddish pink.
* is colour
- pastel color
* live only two years.
* offer a sense of well being and make people feel affectionate and positive toward others.
* reach maturity in two years.
* respond to fertilization.
* shade into blues and greens, and sounds slow and change pitch.
### color | pink:
Old rose
* are great plants for the landscape due to their clean foliage and full shape
- roses
- very fragrant and offer a wide variety of growth habits
* is pink
* offer a great variety of flower form and color and even variation in leaf shape and color.
Pretence
* is color
* leave human beings when they are near death.
Primary color
* Every primary color is the complement of a secondary color.
* are a set of colors that combine to produce all other colors
- hues which can be mixed to create all other colors
- overwhelming to the eye and make on-line reading difficult
* are the defining colors of the wheel
- three colors that make up all other colors
- traditionally for young children<|endoftext|>### color:
Process color
* are where the mud comes in.
* have a unique quality because they can be combined to form a rainbow of other colors.
* involve mixing cyan, magenta, yellow, and black to recreate the colors of a photo.
* is necessary to reproduce color photography.
* is the special use of red, yellow, blue and black to produce a full range of colors
- use of two or more primary colors to create other shades
* is used to create colors by combining cyan, magenta, yellow and black
- reproduce color photographs or pages using more than four different colors
* uses a combination of four separate inks to create a full-color image.
### color | purple:
Purple swamphen
* eat vegetable matter and small animal prey.
* form small groups that usually have more males than females.
* live in freshwater and brackish wetlands containing plenty of emergent vegetation.
* use a variety of mating systems, ranging from monogamous mating to communal mating. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Red
* also prefer pinfish and shrimp fished under a cork over rocky bottom.
* appear dark, and greens appear somewhat lighter and duller
- redder, blues are bluer and greens are greener
* are also the top bean source of iron
- more likely than any other colors to invade clothes of other colors
- red oak, red maple, and sumac
- redder and greens are greener
- redfish, a popular sport and eating fish
- shallower water depths, whereas blues are deeper
* are the ones that usually breathe
- people who add life to the things they touch
* become redder and all other colors become richer and darker throughout the animals body
- become richer and darker throughout the dogs body
* can be bitter
- benefit from seven to nine years' aging
- indicate selfishness, hate or temper
- keep for ten years, occasionally more
* embarrass Wolves.
* fly up and drop like petals on an autumn day.
* get lighter as they age.
* go very deep and dark, pinks go to a deeper shade and yellows deepen only a little.
* have a rosy color and are rich in flavor
- bright, wide open eyes and nicely rounded wattles
- well-developed senses of smell and hearing
* love to live in physical reality, to manipulate their environment.
* mature well for six to eight years.
* often develop in the autumn under the influence of sunny days.
* range widely, especially when looking for mates.
* remain strong, from auburn to dark red.
* represents ozone levels that are unhealthy for everyone.
* seem to be more susceptible to mange than gray foxes.
* stimulate our nervous system and increase assertiveness.
* stimulates the creative right hemisphere of the brain.
* tend to 'disappear' in a dim light
- tell more in terms of age and quality by their color
+ Team Fortress 2, Game modes, Control Points, Attack/Defend: 2007 video games :: Shooter video games
* RED begins with all the points in their control. BLU wins if it captures all of RED's points. RED wins if it prevents BLU from capturing all points before the timer expires.
### color | red:
Blood orange
* Blood Oranges exhibit a red blush on a brilliant orange skin.
* are red inside and have a red juice, hence the name.
* have dark red pulp and juice of excellent flavor.
* is red.
Carmine
* are red.
* trains people in NLP and Hypnosis.
Deep red
* Deep REDS are a product of strontium.
* are the sun-sets in mystical places
- sunsets in mystical places
* fully saturated color, while pink is much less saturated.
Red corundum
* is called Ruby
- the ruby, while all other gem quality forms of corundum are called sapphires
+ Sapphire: Gemstones :: Birthstones
* Sapphire is actually just corundum and is one of the hardest minerals on the hardness scale. The usual color that sapphire comes in is blue. Sometimes it comes in black, yellow, pink, purple, clear, green, orange, white, but it never comes in the color red. Red corundum is called Ruby.
Vermilion
* are colour.
* good pigment for protecting iron and steel and is therefore used in paints.
- surrounded by forests and an abundance of wildlife
* regional centre for a number of provincial departments.
* thinks that the light moves outward at the same speed in all directions.
Reddish color
* is mainly due to oxides of iron and aluminum.
* occur regularly in areas and some raccoons are darker colors.
Saturated color
* More saturated colors represent values with higher magnitudes.
* contain pure color only, colors desaturate to gray. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Secondary color
* All secondary colors are mixed in the brain.
* Every secondary color is the complement of a primary color.
* are colors that are produced by combining two primary colors
- made by mixing the primary colors of light together
- midway between the primary colours on the colour wheel
* are the hues between the primary hues on the color wheel
- three colors that are equal distant from the primary colors
- two primary colors mixed together
+ Color wheel, The secondary colors
* The secondary colors are on all color wheels. Secondary colors are made by mixing the primary colors of light together. These three colors are called the 'subtractive colors'. The secondary colors can be mixed with the primary colors to make tertiary colors.
Shell color
* depends on the breed of the hen.
* is determined by the breeds of hens
- genetic, and the genes responsible are known
Soft color
* is applied with graphite in combination with translucent layers of oil.
* promote quiet and concentration.
Soil color
* are sometimes easier to see when moist
- variable and are generally related to rock type
* can serve as an indicator of many soil properties.
* constitute a standard measurement during soil description.
* good indicator of aeration and drainage.
* is determined by comparing the color of the soil to the chips in the color charts.<|endoftext|>### color:
Subtractive color
* subtract or absorb elements of light to produce other colors.
* works best when the surface or paper , is white , or close to it.
+ Primary color, Subtractive primaries: Color
* Media that use reflected light and colorants to produce colors are using the subtractive color method of color mixing. In the printing industry, to produce the varying colors, apply the 'subtractive primaries' yellow, cyan, and magenta together in varying amounts. Subtractive color works best when the surface or paper, is white, or close to it.
Tint
* are colors mixed with white
- simply the opposite of shades
* is color
Tone color
* is determined by the loudness of individual harmonics or partials within a single tone
- individual harmonics within a single sound
* special sound that makes an instrument or voice sound different from another.
Transparent color
* are see-thrus in red, fluorescents, yellow, amber, green and blue.
* helps to even out skin tone.
True color
* are often difficult to recognize in a world shrouded by mass indifference.
* seem to be shining through, once again.
* increases the amount of data transmitted between participants.
- distinguished from apparent color by filtering the sample
Vibrant color
* are possible by adding color pigments.
* distinguish numerous tropical fish, fans, and coral.
* retain luster even after years of heavy use.
Vivid color
* have high intensity and dull colors have low intensity.
* image life and growth, energy and harmony.
* stimulate people to activity.<|endoftext|>### color:
Warm color
* are good for rooms that get little sunlight
- high concentration, cool colors are low concentration
- red, yellow, and orange
* are reds, browns, oranges, and yellows
- yellows and oranges
- shades of red, yellow and orange
- usually much more comforting than cool colors
* have yellow undertones, like rusts, oranges and corals.
* lean towards reds, yellows, peaches, pinks and red violets.
* represent clean sands, while colder ones correspond to clays
- regions of net melt and cool colors are regions of active ice growth
- water flowing eastward and cool colors show westward flow
* tend to advance in a spatial relationship with cool colors which tend to recede
- make things look near and cool colors create distance | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
White
* Most whites hold negative images of people of color.
* are a minority in two other states, New Mexico and Hawaii, and in the District of Columbia
- school fish that prefer deep, open water
- severe minority on the planet
- world minority, vastly outnumbered by colored
- active as human rights campaigners and lawyers
- black and blacks are white
- morally deficient due to a lack of skin pigment
- more likely than blacks and men more likely than women to support the death penalty
* are more likely to drink, smoke and attempt suicide
- place the elderly in retirement homes than non-whites
- than twice as likely as blacks, for example, to own a rifle or shotgun
- nearly twice as likely to be fans of hockey as are blacks
* are now a minority in California
- officially a California minority race
- often light pink, and pinks often acquire a brown ting
- reinforced bonded finishes that maintain their gloss through years of use
* are the biggest bloc vote in the United States
- most notorious for changing colour as they grow
- people who invented free speech
* build and live according to what their genes dictate.
* can only be victims of a hate crime if they are homosexual.
* do hold more power in society than people of colour.
* dominate in power sports such as weightlifting, gymnastics and wrestling.
* donate almost ninety percent of kidneys in the United States.
* generally have higher incomes than do blacks.
* have fewer multiple births than families of African ancestry
- highly sensitive detectors in their snouts
- the highest rate of deaths due to coronary heart disease
* is colour
* live in a world of power and privilege, blacks in another world entirely
- twice as long as blacks
* support the death penalty more than blacks, and men more than women.
* tend to be more mobile because they have higher incomes than members of some minority groups
- claim that the best way to reduce racism is to reduce black crime
- congregate in river bends, where currents have dug deep pools
- go online at higher rates than minorities
- react less than reds
* use nursing homes about twice as much as people of color.<|endoftext|>### color:
White color
* Some white color reflects heat.
* can maintain the coloring of tile surfaces.
* enlarge objects and dark colors do the opposite.
* has slightly better reflective quality than natural metal.
* indicate a large difference in intensity of neighboring pixels.
* is due to absence of carbonaceous matter
- recessive in rodents and sheep, but dominant in most poultry and in pigs
* is the mourning color
- symbol of purity, innocence, and faithfulness
* represents purity and justice.
* stands for purity.
### color | white:
Great white
* are considered social creatures that travel in a group called a school or a shoal
- relatively uncommon large predators that prefer cooler waters
- the largest predatory fish on Earth
* attack their prey with a mouthful of razor sharp, serrated triangular teeth.
* have a slaty brown or charcoal topside and white underside.
* migrate long distances.
White coloring
* All white coloring is caused by recessive genes.
* begins to appear when the birds approach four years of age.
White sapote
* are often most productive following wet winters.
* have a taproot and other fibrous roots that are wandering and greedy like citrus.
Whitey
* are bands.
* is White | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### color:
Woman of color
* Women of color are approximately twice as likely to have an abortion as White women.
* Women of color are even less likely to have a pension than are white women
- more likely to live in poverty than are white women
* Women of color are less likely than white women to receive necessary gynecological care
- to receive early and regular prenatal care
- particularly at risk for poverty in their old age
- can portray their ideas of how the world works
- create the gender gap
- die from ovarian cancer at disproportionate rates
- face the problem of sexism within the context of racism
- reflect a diverse group of women
Yellow
* are savory, best suited for cooking.
* can vary in color from a fox type of red to a light cream.
* is coloring
- ore
- primary color
Yellow color
* indicates the presence of peroxides.
* is result of leading red veil followed the green veil.
### color | yellow:
Chrome yellow
* is pigment
* pigment color used in painting.
Yellow toadflax
* difficult target for biocontrol.
* is an invasive plant that spreads vegetatively by rhizomes
- common in Minnesota and looks similar
- self-incompatible and relies on insects for pollination
- suspected to be mildly poisonous to livestock
* stand on rough ground in Ontario.
Yellow trap
* attract thrips and whiteflies.
* catch many kinds of insects and it is often difficult to recognise the thrips.
### colored:
Organic dye
* Some organic dyes have high reflectance in the far red.
* are colored.
### coloreds:
Negro
* are coloreds
- islands
- people of color
* compete against each other to be a source of cheap, temporary labor.
* firmly believe that police brutality and harassment occur repeatedly in Negro neighborhoods.
* never kill their wives.<|endoftext|>### colorless crystalline solid:
Potassium fluoride
* colorless crystalline solid.
* is chemical compounds
- inorganic compounds
- made by reacting potassium carbonate with hydrofluoric acid
- somewhat toxic
+ Potassium fluoride, Preparation
* Potassium fluoride is made by reacting potassium carbonate with hydrofluoric acid. This reaction can make potassium bifluoride. Potassium bifluoride is a mixture of hydrofluoric acid and potassium fluoride
- Properties: Potassium compounds :: Fluorine compounds
* Potassium fluoride is a colorless crystalline solid. It rarely occurs in the ground. It dissolves easily in water. It can react with glass. Hydrofluoric acid is more effective at reacting with glass, though. It has to be stored in plastic or platinum containers
- Safety
* Potassium fluoride is somewhat toxic. It is corrosive to glass. It can burn when spilled on skin | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### colorless solid:
Ammonium nitrate
* colorless solid.
* common fertilizer.
* encourages decomposition of ponderosa pine needles under laboratory conditions.
* is also one of the primary chemicals used in the Oklahoma City bombing
- an excellent form to use because surface volatilization losses are minimized
- explosives
- ionic compounds
- made by reacting ammonia with nitric acid
- nitrate
- of major importance in blasting
* is the most common form of N used on blackberries
- nitrogen source
- same substance used in the Oklahoma City bombing
* is used as a fertilizer
- nitrogen fertilizer
- in the production of explosives
* very important fertilizer.
+ Ammonium nitrate, Preparation
* Ammonium nitrate is made by reacting ammonia with nitric acid. This reaction is very violent. It can be made by reacting sodium nitrate with ammonium sulfate. This makes a solution of ammonium nitrate and sodium sulfate. When the mixture is cooled, the sodium sulfate is crystallized and can be filtered
- Properties: Nitrogen compounds
* Ammonium nitrate is a colorless solid. It dissolves in water. It makes water cold when it dissolves. It is an oxidizing agent. When it is heated gently, it turns into water and nitrous oxide. It can detonate when heated strongly
- Uses
* Ammonium nitrate is used as a fertilizer. It contains more nitrogen than most fertilizers. It is also used in explosives used by terrorists. It can be used as an oxidizer in rockets
Arsenic acid
* is acid
- chemical compounds
- used in the making of some dyes and organic arsenic compounds
* reacts with iodide to make iodine.
+ Arsenic acid, Properties: Arsenic compounds :: Acids
* Arsenic acid is a colorless solid. It absorbs water from the air. It is a strong oxidizing agent. It is similar to phosphoric acid. It can be deprotonated three times, making various arsenates. Arsenic acid reacts with iodide to make iodine | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### colorless solid:
Potassium nitrate
* Some potassium nitrate causes gastroenteritis.
* common nitrate.
* is believed to prevent the protein from denaturing in the acidic milieu
- inorganic compounds
- ionic compounds
- one of the safer sources of potassium
- the main explosive ingredient in gunpowder
- toxic substances
* is used in explosives
- producing matches and explosives
* little toxic.
* needs to be very hot before it melts.
* primary ingredient of fireworks.
* strong oxidizer.
* very rich source of oxygen.
+ Nitrate: Nitrogen compounds
* It is a strong oxidizing agent. It is found in the earth in some very dry places. Potassium nitrate is a common nitrate. Nitrites are similar.
+ Potassium nitrate, Properties: Potassium compounds :: Nitrogen compounds
* Potassium nitrate is a colorless solid. It dissolves in water. It is a common source of the nitrate ion. Potassium nitrate is a strong oxidizer. It decomposes to potassium nitrite and oxygen when heated. Its pH is almost neutral.
* Potassium nitrate is a colorless solid. It dissolves in water. It is a common source of the nitrate ion. Potassium nitrate is a strong oxidizer. It decomposes to potassium nitrite and oxygen when heated. Its pH is almost neutral. It burns with a lilac flame
- Safety
* Potassium nitrate is a little toxic. It also can start fires easily
* Potassium nitrate is used in explosives. Oxygen from the air is the most common chemical that is used for oxidation, which is how most fires and explosions happen. Some explosions will use up oxygen so quickly, though, that there is not enough to finish the reaction, and the explosion is not very strong. Potassium nitrate replaces the need for oxygen and takes up much less space, which lets the explosion be stronger and faster. It is a main ingredient of gunpowder
+ Rocket candy, Preparation: Fuel :: Rockets
* First, the potassium nitrate is ground or milled. It needs to be made into a powder. Then the potassium nitrate is mixed with powdered sugar in a pot. When the heat is turned on, the sugar melts. However, this method does not actually melt the potassium nitrate. Potassium nitrate needs to be very hot before it melts. Its melting temperature is 613 degrees Fahrenheit. So instead of melting, the grains of potassium nitrate are coated with the melted sugar.<|endoftext|>### colorless solid:
Sodium chlorite
* are chemical compounds.
* is also the trigger for the release of chlorine dioxide
- made into chlorine dioxide for infectious disease control
- the most common chlorite
* reacts with hydrochloric acid to make chlorine dioxide.
+ Chlorine dioxide, How it is made: Chlorine compounds :: Oxides
+ Chlorite: Chlorine compounds
* It is an oxidizing agent. They can be known as salts of chlorous acid. Some chlorites are explosives. It can be made by dissolving chlorine dioxide in a base. It can also be made by reduction of chlorate with hydrogen peroxide. Sodium chlorite is the most common chlorite.
+ Sodium chlorite, Properties: Sodium compounds :: Chlorine compounds
* Sodium chlorite is a colorless solid. It is a powerful oxidizing agent. It disproportionates sometimes. It forms the unstable chlorous acid when reacted with a strong acid. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### colorless solid:
Zinc sulfate
* can also be mixed with lime or soda ash to form a longer lasting film on leaves.
* is chemical compounds
- considered to be the most effective foot rot treatment
- crystal
- foliar-applied to assist in boll maturation and opening
- sulfate
* is used as a disinfectant and as a white pigment in paints
- in dyes and pigments
- usually the best, safest compound for man and beast
* looks like and can be confused with Epsom salts.
* preferred source since it dissolves fairly easily and also supplies sulfur.
* readily available and economical source of zinc.
* synthetic form of the mineral zinc.
+ Zinc sulfate, Properties: Sulfur compounds :: Zinc compounds
* Zinc sulfate is a colorless solid. It dissolves in water. It can react with bases to make zinc hydroxide.
+ Zinc, Uses, As zinc compounds: Chemical elements :: Transition metals
* Zinc oxide can be used for sunscreen or paint pigment. Zinc oxide also is a semiconductor. Zinc chloride is used to preserve wood so it does not rot. Some fungicides have zinc in them. Zinc sulfate is used in dyes and pigments. Zinc sulfide is used in fluorescent bulbs to convert the ultraviolet light to visible light.
### colorless solution:
Arsenous acid
* colorless solution.
+ Arsenous acid, Properties: Acids :: Arsenic compounds
* Arsenous acid is a colorless solution. It is a weak acid. It reacts with bases to make arsenite salts. It is highly toxic. It cannot be made in a crystalline form because it turns into arsenic trioxide and water again. It is similar to phosphorous acid, although it is not a strong reducing agent.<|endoftext|>### colorless:
Healthy cell
* are colorless
- rich in blood supply with radiant energy and fully functional
- then permeable to water and nutrients necessary to maintain optimum health
* can ignore acyclovir, but infected cells activate acyclovir.
* divide in a controlled way, but abnormal cells keep on dividing and dividing.
* grow and divide in an orderly way.
* grow, divide, and replace themselves in a way that keeps the body in good repair
- an orderly manner
* have 'self-antigens' on the surface of their membranes
- the ability to break down and eliminate unwanted proteins
* make for healthy bodies.
* tear apart the transport molecule and the iron drifts safely off.
* turn brown and abnormal cells turn white or yellow.<|endoftext|>### colorless:
Rubidium compound
* makes a red-violet color in a flame.
+ Rubidium, Properties, Chemical compounds: Alkali metals :: Chemical elements
* Some rubidium compounds have a mixed oxidation state, though. Rubidium chloride is the most common rubidium compound. Rubidium hydroxide and rubidium carbonate are also used commonly. Rubidium compounds makes a red-violet color in a flame. Most rubidium compounds are colorless. Rubidium compounds are not as common as other alkali metal compounds, such as sodium compounds. Otherwise, they are similar.
### colorless, corrosive liquid:
Acrylic acid
* colorless, corrosive liquid.
* corrosive material that causes skin and eye burns on contact.
* has vapors that can irritate the lungs, nose and throat.
* is an essential building block material for products made by both companies
- carboxylic acid
- embryotoxic and teratogenic
* occurs as a corrosive, colorless liquid that is miscible with water.
* strong irritant to the skin, eyes, and mucous membranes in humans.
### combinatorial optimization problem:
Query optimization
* combinatorial optimization problem.
* is an important aspect of relational database design
- integral part of relational database management systems
- categorized into static and dynamic optimization
### combustible thermoplastic:
Polycarbonate plastic
* combustible thermoplastic.
* has the best impact resistance of all materials. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Comet
* All comets are part of the suns family, just as the Earth and the other planets
- consist of a nucleus, a coma, and a tail
- have a coma which never changes b
* Any comet has the possibility of impacting Earth, while very few asteroids ever can.
* Many comets also have a tail made of gas.
* Many comets have extremely eccentric orbits
- two tails
* Most comets are and remain extremely faint.
* Most comets are only a few kilometers across
- observable through a telescope
- too faint to be visible without the aid of a telescope
* Most comets have orbits that take thousands of years to complete one circuit
- very eccentric orbits
- remain undetected frozen balls of ice in the outer reaches of our solar system
* Most comets travel around the Sun in elliptical paths
- in a three shape
- typically go through the inner solar system with no major changes to their orbits
* Some comets also develop separate, curved tails or dust clouds
- are bright, others have long tails, still others have interesting orbits
- come into the inner solar system every few hundred years and travel around the Sun
- go so near the sun that they completely evaporate and burn up
- have short periods of less than seven years
- never come back, with orbital periods of tens of thousands of years
- seem to act differently in nearly the same conditions
* Some comets travel a fifth of the way to the next nearest star
- is such long orbit that they are near the sun once in thousands of years
* affect Earth.
* also carry the noble gases argon, krypton, and xenon
- develop dust and gas tails
- follow different kinds of paths
- grow tails
- have frozen carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, and a few other chemicals
- leave waste products behind in their orbits, in the form of millions of meteoroids
- vary in the different types of trace elements and hydrocarbons are present
* always orbit the sun in the same direction as the planets orbit.
* appear as little blurs in the sky when far away
- fuzzy and nebulous, the comets are far off the sun and return to distant regions
- in our skies from time to time
* appear to be bright balls with fat tails
- come primarily from the direction of the constellation Hercules
- hang in the sky, changing position slowly
* appear, brighten and fade away.
* approach the sun briefly - closest approach to the sun of all objects is called parahelion.
* are a bit like giant dirty ice-balls with diameters between five and fifty kilometres
- mixture of ice, water and frozen gases
- real problem, and can do nearly as much damage as asteroids
- vehicle that brings organic materials to the Earth
- about the same size as the smaller asteroids
- almost always invisible to astronomers until they become active
* are also cause many of earth's well known meteor showers
- chunks of rock, but they have ice mixed in as well
- icy balls
- an amazing part of our sky
- astronomical objects
* are balls of dirty ice that measure from a few hundred yards to several miles in diameter
- mineral-laden ice that orbit the sun
* are balls of ice and rock, and they travel far out beyond the planets
- that orbit around the sun
- believed to represent the most unaltered material in the solar system
- blocks of frozen ice mixed with cosmic dust
- bodies of ice, rock, and organic compounds that can be several miles in diameter
- candidates, for they appear sporadically, move, and even seem to point down to the earth
* are chunks of ice, gravel, dust and rock stuck together in a lumpy ball
- rock and ice that orbit the Sun in elliptical Paths
- clumps of dust and ice a few miles across and they are very loosely held together
- cold bodies consisting of frozen gases and boulders
- composed of significant fractions of water ice, dust, and carbon-based compounds
- conglomerates of ice and rock
- cosmic icebergs
- delicate, gossamer objects
- different in nature to asteroids
* are dusty 'iceburgs' in space and can contain large rocks held together in a matrix of ices
- early-formed 'ice balls', with eccentric orbits
- easy to find because they are bright, being surrounded by vast clouds of water vapour
- frozen relics from the formation of our solar system
- fuzzy, luminous objects that orbit the sun
- generally smaller than asteroids and travel in the broadest oval paths about the sun
- giant dirty snowballs in space, made of ice and dust
- huge dirty snowballs that are found in the farthest parts of the solar system
* are hunks of ice and dirt a few miles wide
- mixed with dust and rock
* are icy bodies that reside far away in the solar system where it is cold
- which grow long tails of gas and dust when they come near the Sun
- independent masses of ice and debris that orbit around the sun
- interplanetary bodies that contain abundant ices and dark, carbon-rich soil
* are invisible except when they are near the Sun
- to people on Earth, except when they are near the Sun
- irregular in shape, with their longest dimension often twice the shortest
* are large chunks of ice and rock that are floating in space
- leftover material
- like large dirty snowballs traveling through space
* are located in orbits
- outer space
- universes
* are lumps of ice made of water , carbon dioxide , methane and ammonia
- ice, rock and dust
* are made up of a mixture of frozen water, gases and dust like dirty muddy ice balls
- the most primitive material in the solar system
- mostly icy material that spend most of their time far from the sun
- mountains of ice and rock that orbit the sun
- much larger than asteroids
- objects composed mostly of ice and dust that grow tails when they approach the sun
* are only visible when they are near the Sun in their very eccentric orbits
- they're near the sun in their highly eccentric orbits
- patches of light that appear in the night sky from time to time
- present at large distances from the sun
- probably similar to the planetesimals from which the planets formed
- shy creatures and disguise themselves often as nebulae
- similar to asteroids, but they are composed of various ices as well as rocky material
- single-tailed goldfish and are considered the most hardy of all pond fish
* are small bodies of ice and dust which travel around the Sun
- members of the solar system, usually a few miles or kilometers in diameter
* are small, icy bodies that orbit the sun
- irregularly shaped bodies composed mainly of ice and dust
- something like dirty snowballs that populate the very outer parts of the solar system
- sources of water
- the best-preserved remnants of the material from which the solar system formed
* are the icy left-overs
- leftovers from when our solar system formed
- most numerous sizeable bodies in the solar system
- remainders of material formed in the coldest part of our solar system
- solar system's long-distance travelers
- warm fuzzies of the firmament
* are thought to consist primarily of ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, and water
- originate from a region beyond the orbits of the outermost planets
- time capsules that hold clues about the formation and evolution of the solar system
- too small to be seen from large distances
- typically a few miles in diameter
* are usually dust and ice
- in highly elliptical or hyperbolic orbits
* are very old bodies of ice mixed with rock and organic material
- old, mostly made of icy materials, and they move on the same plane as the planets
- small in size relative to planets
- visible for two reasons
- white and creamy, like milk
* arrive nearby after falling in as far as a light-year to approach the sun.
* become fountains of gas and dust as they get near the Sun.
* begin to form a coma as a result of sublimated gasses as the nucleus nears the sun.
* break apart under small stresses.
* bring in new dust.
* can and do break up into pieces
- be spectacular objects seen in the night-time sky
- change from dull to brilliant over the course of days or hours
- create a meteor shower when they run into the atmosphere
- exhibit highly variable behaviour as the nucleus heats up
- suddenly brighten or fade from view in a matter of hours
- take hundreds of years to go around the sun
- vary in brightness on short time scales
* can, and have, struck the Earth.
* change at short intervals
- throughout their orbit around the Sun
* circle the sun and are assumed to be as old as our solar system.
* collide with planets.
* come and go, and some only appear once
- from two regions in the outer solar system
* comes from a Greek word that means long hairy star.
* consist mainly of ice and dust
* consist mostly of dirty ice
* consist of primarily volatile molecules making up various ices
- two parts, a tail and a coma
* contain a lot of ice
- dust, ice, carbon dioxide, ammonia, methane and more
- lots of water
- many of the organic materials thought to be essential for the origin of life
- matter left over from the formation of the solar system
- methane and ethane
* disintegrate too quickly
- rapidly and have no mechanism to reform
* do it easily whenever they pass close enough to the sun to heat their frozen nucleus.
* dominate the celestial imagery in Hawaiian myths.
* don t streak or run.
* expel dust and gas, usually from localized regions, on the sunward side of the nucleus.
* explain photography of the solar system and optical systems for magnification.
* generally follow parabolic orbits.
* generally have two tails, a dust and a gas tail
* generate their own light.
* graze the heavens from time to time.
* have a nucleus
- extremely exaggerated orbits
- highly elliptical orbits
- interesting side effects
- no light of their own, but reflect sunlight
- tails and because of that people used to think that a comet was the hair of a woman
- the most eccentric orbits of any solar system object
- three distinct parts, the nuculeus, coma, and the ion tail
* includes sections.
* lack the solid substance.
* lose a little mass every time they go by the sun and blow off gas and dust
- material and thus brightness with successive passages near the sun
* mop up and vastly amplify a minute surviving fraction of bacteria from a presolar cloud.
* move against a field of background stars
- around the sun like planets, but in an oval course
- but nebulae are stationary
- very slowly across the sky
* natural object
* obey the laws of gravity, as do the planets.
* often have two tails, a sweeping dust tail and a thinner, straighter plasma tail
- move quickly against the starry background
* originate from sources outside the solar system
- the outer regions of our solar system
* passes close to earth.
* pose a much smaller risk than asteroids.
* really have two visible tails.
* release particles along a cometary orbit via the tails.
* represent an intermediate stage in planet-building, and they contain much water ice
- some of the oldest, basically untouched objects in the solar system
* reveal themselves as local sources of hydrogen.
* seem to appear suddenly because they brighten when they come close to the sun
- be little more than chunks of dirty ice
* spend most of their time a. in the outer solar system
- in one of two areas
- well outside the inner solar system
* talks about comets in general.
* traditionally have negative connotations.
* travel in elliptical orbits and their tail usually points away from the sun
- something called an elliptical orbit
* usually mean the end of things, like dinosaurs
- peak several weeks after being closest to the sun | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### comet:
Active comet
* can also cross the Earth's orbit with the potential for collision.
* have high proper motion.
Periodic comet
* are comets that have an established pattern of orbiting the sun.
* have a special place in astronomy, because their orbits are often the same.
+ List of comets, Periodic comets: Astronomy lists
* Periodic comets have a special place in astronomy, because their orbits are often the same. We know when they will visit us, and we can plan to watch them, and send space probes to look at them.
Command
* are authority
- military units
- speech acts
- status
* sequence of bytes sent in the data field of a command packet.
### command:
Unity of command
* is essential to the economy of time.
* means that all forces are under one responsible commander.<|endoftext|>### commendable practice:
Vegetarianism
* also holds many benefits to a healthier lifestyle.
* attracts people of all ages.
* boosts heart health and cuts our death rate due to heart disease, stroke and cancer.
* brings with it a new relationship to food, plants, and nature.
* can be a very healthy lifestyle choice
- an adequate diet if followed properly with careful planning
- bring about the right mental attitude for peace
- lower rates of obesity, heart disease, hypertension, diabetes and some cancers
- reduce the overburdened medical costs of the nation
* commendable practice.
* does help people.
* ensures health, fitness and glowing skin.
* form of boycott.
* growing movement in many age groups, and adolescents are no exception
- trend with today's kids and teens
* has a long and revered tradition in Indian culture
- firm roots in religion
- such a positive image that people want to be called vegetarian
* healthy choice as long as a wide range of foods is eaten.
* is about working together
- actually revolutionary compared to old traditions and beliefs
* is also a great investment in the kind of world where investments flourish
- environmentally more sound
- one of the precepts of yoga
* is an automatic cholesterol cutter
- cholesterol-cutter
- umbrella term that covers different styles of eating
- unrequired and unimportant practice
- as much a state of mind as it diet
- considered mandatory for everyone
- healthier, cheaper, simpler and more spiritually grounded
- healthy, veganism more so
- less stressful on the entire ecosystem
- natural, based on a universal truth
- now more popular than ever, according to new figures
- practiced whenever possible
* is the abstinence from meat, fish, and fowl
- of meat, fish, and fowl
- diet of many popular celebrities
* is the future of food
- mankind
- practice of living solely upon vegetables, fruits, grains, and nuts
- strongest in Britain and growing steadily in Germany and Belgium
- un-American
- usually a diet, while veganism lifestyle
- viewed as an illness or a condition
* is, however more than a matter of diet.
* makes sense to a lot of people.
* means nutrition without any products from dead animals such as meat, poultry or fish.
* offers the world a future full of hope and promise.
* only excludes meats and fish and still provides for a well-rounded diet.
* personal choice.
* popular choice for many individuals and families.
* product of unnatural human conceptualizations.
* reduces methane.
* relates to how people understand the world and their bodies on a fundamental level.
* seems to be a booming trend.
* tried and tested diet - a diet to be trusted.
* very healthy, environmentally aware, animal friendly lifestyle
- important halfway house
* widespread practice.
### commendable practice | vegetarianism:
Macrobiotic diet
* are generally too restrictive for people with cancer, especially during treatment.
* consist mostly of whole grains and beans.
* is vegetarianism | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commercial activities:
Banking
* allows firms to store emission reduction credits for subsequent use.
* appears as a kind of alchemy, making wealth out of credit, something out of nothing.
* are commercial activities
- finance
- professions
- social events
* automated teller machines are a familiar form of an information kiosk.
* begins, more than half a millennium ago, with correspondent relations.
* competitive business based on the customer feeling safe and secure.
* contributes to the nation's overall effort to increase wetland area.
* depends on confidence of depositors in financial institutions.
* has the anticipated effect of changing the timing of emissions.
* is about trust
- all about human capital
* is an industry where confidence in the institution is crucial
- mergers and acquisitions are a constant occurrence
- conservatism
- one industry that lends itself to a relationship survey
* is one of the United Kingdom's key service industries
- few sectors in Asia that has real earnings power
* is one of the most highly regulated and protected industries in the world
- rapidly evolving of industries
- type of business that e-commerce has benefited, as the graph below shows
* is the carry-over of unused allowances from one control period to the next
- link between the two main areas of finance described above
- most-regulated industry in the United States
- second oldest profession in the world
- uphill slope that meets the wall
* long haul business.
* noble profession.
* prime example of an industry that can profit from professional services.
* profession which uses arbitration to a surprisingly limited extent.
* relationship business.
* remains one of the most important industries for study in the Western Hemisphere.
* service business.
* variation of the concept of insurance, the shared pooling of risks.
+ Charlotte, North Carolina, Economy
* Banking is very important in Charlotte. Many banks, such as Bank of America and Wachovia have headquarters in the city. There are also many other big companies in Charlotte.
### commercial activities | banking:
Central banking
* flaw that has been exploited to the maximum.
* is an absolute necessity for dictatorial control over a nation.
Internet banking
* leads into electronic bill presentment.
* saves time and money.
Investment banking
* is the dynamic and competitive 'sister' within the banking industry
- territory of the major U.S. and European banks
* means hard work, high risk and high rewards.
* profession characterized by extremes.
Private banking
* has a legitimate function, but it has too often been used to manage dirty money.
* is conducted by many commercial banks.
* very lucrative sector of banking in the United States and around the world. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits