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### commercial enterprises:
Agribusiness
* Most agribusinesses tend to be large corporations.
* addresses the range of operations and management practices related to agriculture.
* are commercial enterprises.
* comprises the largest portion of the U.S. economy.
* eliminates family farms and small towns.
* growing industry, providing opportunities related to every business field.
* have their roots in the plantation system.
* is business
- more economics than science, although science happens
- one of the most profitable sectors of the U.S. economy today
- the second locomotive of Chile's economic growth
* is the study of business and economic aspects of the agricultural sector
- the business and economics of agribusiness firms
- term given to the food and fibre industries
- world's biggest and most important industry
* leading employer of women in developing countries.
* major player in the central Illinois economy
- recipient of welfare subsidies
* produces food only at the cost of losing family farming and farm communities.
* pumps millions of dollars into the economy each year.
* remains strong, particularly in management and research.
* routinely feeds antibiotics to animals to promote quicker growth and fatter profits.
* tends to be family oriented.
### commercially available chemical:
Indium sulfate
* commercially available chemical.
* is used in the production of indium or indium containing substances.
### commercials:
Television commercial
* are commercials.
* encourage children to crave toys or other products indiscriminately.
### commissaries:
Small store
* are commissaries.
* can survive and thrive.
### commodities market:
Forward market
* are part of the banking system.
* commodities market
Futures market
* Most futures markets have history dating back to their inception of trading.
* are like the forward markets in terms of basic economics
- one way producers can reduce price risk in marketing their output
* commodities market
* exist for many commodities and currencies.
Computer component
* Most computer components contain nickel, lithium, cadmium, chromium, and mercury.
* are commodities
- computer hardware<|endoftext|>### commodities:
Financial service
- information-intensive businesses
- public utilities which provide essential public services
* contribute significantly to the nation s total exports, GDP and employment.
* creates and sells intangible financial products or services.
* form the leading group when it comes to the introduction of the euro.
* fuel the engine of international trade.
* have a vital role in all branches of economic activity.
* is concerned with the design and delivery of advice and financial products.
* is one of the most heavily regulated sectors in Japan
- important sectors in the modern economy
* lie at the heart of a modern economy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Commodity
* All commodities possess a definite quantity of human labour.
* Commodities are artifacts
- important to the Australian economy as they account for the majority of our exports
- objects
* Commodities are the known potentially valuable metals reported for each deposit
- lifeblood of capitalism
- opium of the people
- can also include foreign currencies and indexes
- consist of goods and services
- define a broad spectrum of products and instruments
- includes sections
- tend to be inputs
* Commodities vary considerably in their temperature tolerance
- in price, depending on it's supply and demand
* Every commodity is created through human power and the addition of natural resources.
* Many commodities exhibit seasonal cycles in their price movement
- some type of cyclical or seasonal price pattern
* Most commodities trade on a commodity exchange.
* Some commodities are precious enough that they can be economically mined at very low grades.
* general word for something that can be bought and sold and has intrinsic value.
* is an artifact
* means a single raw product.
* trends Long-term copper prices closely follow economic activity in metals manufacturing.
* waste dispersal system.
### commodity:
Basic
* are commodities
- computer language
- programming language
- software
* popular database program.<|endoftext|>### commodity | basic:
Basic research
* advances the knowledge base for both physical and mental health.
* involves fundamental investigations of the nature of things.
* is at the foundation of all sciences, all medicine, and all technology
- conducted to elucidate the molecular properties of pathogenic viruses
* is one of many forces that contribute to the nation's economic development
- the pharmacologist's domains
- research that has the goal of discovery
- seen as the pacemaker of technological progress
- the foundation of good health
* is the foundation on which applied research is built
- science and technology rests
- lifeline of practical advances in medicine
- study of how the world works in order to understand it, nothing more
* seeks to shed light on the fundamental mechanisms of disease.
Cargo
* includes sections.
* is located in aeroplanes
- airplanes
- boats
- ships
- trains
- merchandise
* is used for smuggling
- transport<|endoftext|>### commodity:
Dishwasher
* Avoid placing a dishwasher next to a refrigerator.
* Detergents Highly toxic chemical.
* Many dishwashers have energy-saving cycles
- plastic inside
* Most dishwashers heat incoming water to fully activate the detergent
- sterilize automatically because of the hot water they use
- use one of two different methods to fill with water
* Some dishwashers require the temperature to be slightly higher.
* actually use less water than hand-washing.
* always have wood panels.
* are also a large water consumer
- excellent for cleaning dishes due to the high temperature of the water
- hard on knives
- laborers
* are located in apartments
- kitchens
- machines
- particularly effective at transferring the chemicals from water to indoor air
- used for washing dishs
* can generate hundreds of kilograms each year.
* have seals that last much longer if they remain wet and are used regularly.
* household appliance
* operate at very high temperatures and water is sprayed with force at the contents.
* save time in doing the dishes manually.
* use a large amount of water and electricity to heat the water.
* use less hot water and less energy
- water than hand washing
* usually use less water than hand washing.
### commodity | dishwasher:
Automatic dishwasher
* Automatic Dishwashers operate most efficiently when they have full loads.
* waste water compared to washing by hand. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity:
Dryer
* Most dryers use a warm-up phase that heats and tumbles clothes while they are still wet.
* Some dryers enhance hair growth
- have sensors to stop drying when clothes are damp dry for ironing
* Some dryers kill dust mites
* are appliances
- located in basements
* expose flammable materials to heat.
* is an appliance
### commodity | dryer:
Tumble dryer
* can also increase indoor humidity and promote mould growth.
* use an enormous amount of electricity.
### commodity | entrant:
Interloper
* are viewed by native species as foreign elements.
* is an entrant<|endoftext|>### commodity:
Export
* account for a quarter of gross domestic product
- third of America's economic growth
- an increasing share of our state's farm economy
- more than half of Taiwan's gross national product
- nearly an eighth of total U.S. economic output
- one out of five manufacturing jobs in the United States
- one-third of the country's income
* actually increase when prices are down.
* are a major component to the farm economy - when they're down, the industry suffers
- vital component of economic growth
- agriculture's source of future growth in sales and income
- also a vehicle through which foreign disturbances impact the local economy
- an important indicator of global competitiveness
- commodities
- emissions arising from the production of secondary fuel which is then exported
- exports from the United States
- films
- fundamental to our economic growth and our future standard of living
- goods that change hands from a person residing in the U.S. to a person residing abroad
- important to the state's economy
* are products that a country sells to another country
- the United States sells to foreign countries
* are the driving force behind Mexico's economic growth and job creation
- fastest growing segment of the economy
- future of American agriculture
- most important measure of our global competitiveness
- path to future growth and continued competitiveness in the global marketplace
- price of imports
- things sold to other countries
- transfers of any commodities, software, or technologies to foreign entities
- vital to a healthy economy
* can mean big profits for a small business.
* consists of goods and services that are sold to non-residents.
* constitute a minimal portion of the bulk of Egyptian economy.
* depend on quality, service, and reliability of supply as well as price.
* drive food industry growth.
* generate jobs, economic activity, and income
- wealth and jobs
* is the biggest driving force in creating jobs in modern economies
- vital for balance of trade, and hence economic viability
* mean jobs for our people, profits for our businesses, and growth for our economy.
* refer to goods brought out of Singapore.
* remain one of the main pillars of the Dutch economy.
* represent the balance of domestic production with little change in carry-out stocks.
* support one out of every five manufacturing jobs in the United States.<|endoftext|>### commodity | export:
Agricultural export
* are a significant contributor to the nation's economic health.
* constitute a fifth of the total exports of the country.
* provide enough income to pay for any necessary food imports.
+ Israel, Economy, Agriculture
* The government develops, helps finance, and controls agricultural activity, including fishing and forestry. Israel produces most of the food it needs to feed its people, except for grain. Agricultural exports provide enough income to pay for any necessary food imports. Most Israeli farmers use modern agricultural methods. Water drawn from the Sea of Galilee irrigates large amounts of land in Israel.
Net export
* is the export minus import.
* tend to decline as income rises.
Oil export
* account for about a third of government revenues.
* are Angola's main foreign currency earner
- crucial to the country's economic recovery | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity:
Foodstuff
* All foodstuffs are generally safe to eat.
* Many foodstuffs contain certain concentrations of zinc.
* acquire meaning and a place in the cuisine structure of a region.
* are also critical to sustaining military operations.
* can be a minor component in a person's overall pesticide exposure.
* is food.
* naturally contain small amounts of nickel.<|endoftext|>### commodity:
Freight
* Refers to either the cargo carried or the charges assessed for carriage of the cargo.
* adds to the price of everything, especially fresh food.
* comes in all types of sizes and shapes.
* forward is term that describes the transfer of goods from one shipping firm to another.
* hard cost that they have to pay.
* includes sections.
* is also a major user of the overall transportation system
- rates
- the number one cost that producers and users have to take into account
* means commodities transported by a vehicle or vessel for a fee.
### commodity | freight:
Air freight
* is based on weight or volume
- the transport of choice for zoos and entertainment parks exhibiting wild animals
- usually the first freight mode to experience any changes in economic activity
* subset of world trade, which is directly related to world economic growth.
### commodity | icebox:
Fridge
* are electrical devices
- located in kitchens
- places
- refrigerators
- used for refrigeration
* household appliance
* includes field magnets
- ice makers
- refrigeration systems
* use lots of power.<|endoftext|>### commodity | icebox | fridge:
Freezer
* Most freezers keep dry ice
* Some freezers have cold packs.
* are kitchen appliances.
* are located in flats
- frozen turkeys
- garages
* are used for freeze food
- freezes
- icing beers
- storage
* have setting
- the tendency to dry out foods
- thermostats that work the same way that the thermostat in a house works
- ice makers
* use for food.
+ Ice cube: Water :: Drinks
* Ice cubes are made by filling a tray with water and putting it in a freezer. Many freezers also have an icemaker. Icemakers make ice cubes and put them in a bin. After that, they can be put in a glass.<|endoftext|>### commodity:
Import
* account for a third of the sheep and lamb consumed in the United States
- about half of our nation s overall oil consumption
* affect employment negatively and exports have a positive effect on wages.
* also generate jobs and create economic activity
- help keep inflation low and expand the purchasing power of families
* are commodities
- customs value
- foreigners
* are products it buys from other countries
- that a country buys from another country
* are the life-blood of thousands of businesses employing millions of American workers
- price government pays to get other nations to accept our exports
* controls Some countries regulate the import of portable computers.
* general term used to pull an image etc.
* help keep prices down while jobs, compensation, and productivity increase at home.
* includes goods and services purchased from the rest of the world.
* increase when local production declines compared to domestic demand and vice versa.
* modularizing operator that allows including a theory within another.
* refer to the inflow of commodities from other countries, released by the customs.
* represent about half of domestic consumption.
### commodity | import:
Parallel import
* involve cross border trade in goods, without the consent of the manufacturer.
* let countries buy drugs through third parties at lower prices.
Laundry
* Laundries are clothing
- garments
- located in cellars
- workplaces
* Laundries includes bands
- button holes
- collars
- cuffs
- hems
- lap covering
- pocket flaps
- pockets
- sections
- skirts
- sleeve
- stripes
* is also an important chore that children can help with at an early age
- cotton , wool , or plastic , woven into garments
- household linen | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity:
Merchandise
* is commodities.
* is located in markets
- shops
- shows
- wares
- where the money is made | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity:
Microwave
* All microwave ovens leak some electrical radiation.
* Many microwave ovens heat from the outside edge toward the middle.
* Most microwaves cause heat
- do have an internal fuse
- only penetrate a few centimetres into the food
* Most microwaves produce enough heat
- use energy
* Some microwave ovens use radiation.
* Some microwaves have a little metal 'ceiling fan' in front of the microwave emitter
- dishes
- one-button controls for items such as beverage reheat or popcorn
* are RF fields at high frequencies in the GHz range.
* are a form of electromagnetic energy, or radiation
- radiation that is very similar to sunlight and radio waves
- energy that travels at a high frequency in short wave lengths
- magnetic and electrical energy moving through space
- radiant energy
- lot like light waves, except that they're a lot bigger
- specific kind of light
- type of electromagnetic energy like light waves
* are actually an invisible form of light
- just radiowaves of higher frequencies
- also useful in studying magnetic materials
- appliances
* are electromagnetic energy and the heat food in microwave ovens every day
- waves of the same class as radio and light
- energy waves which cause heating when absorbed into tissue, such as microwave ovens
- high-frequency waves that travel through the air in order to transmit data
- ideal for producing puffed snack foods
- in the centimeter range
- just part of the whole spectrum of electromagnetic energy
- kitchen appliances
* are located in apartments
- kitchens
- low-energy waves that, like visible light, fall within the electromagnetic spectrum
- near the top of the frequency spectrum
- part of the shortwave region of the spectrum
- particularly effective in drying the inaccessible core areas
- simply a source of heat energy just like gas and electricity
- strictly line of sight
- used for preparing food
- very short electro-magnetic waves
- victims in the cooking world
* bounce off metal.
* break down chemical bonds in an inert nitrogen atmosphere.
* can cook food in one-fourth or less the normal cooking time.
* can create heats pockets that can make the meal too hot for the child
- hot spots in food that can cause burns in the baby's mouth
* can heat a food unevenly and form hot spots
- unevenly, forming hot-spots
- rapidly penetrate and fix tissue
- see through clouds and at night
- seriously deplete foods of their nutrients
- superheat some spots leaving other spots cold even in liquids
* cause cancer
* cause the water molecules in food to vibrate rapidly
- to vibrate very rapidly, which results in heating
- to vibrate, producing heat that cooks the food
* cease to exist as soon as the power to the magnetron of a microwave oven is switched off.
* come in a variety of colors
- handy for re-heating food if there is one available
* consume less energy than conventional ovens and give off less heat.
* cook by exciting water molecules to a boil
- from the inside out
- much faster at the edge of a dish than in the center
* cooking thermometers work quite well.
* do nothing more to food than heat it.
* drying is among the emerging alternatives to convection wood drying kilns
- quick and easy method to dry small amounts of herbs
* effect the central nervous system.
* effectively cook without overcooking the surface and help reduce cooking losses.
* enter a cavity from the left
- through the floor of the oven cavity
* fall into the radio frequency band of electromagnetic radiation.
* have a number of applications, such as microwave ovens, radar, and telecommunications
- designs
- higher energy, and x-rays and gamma rays have the highest
- just enough energy to make molecules spin and rotate like a top
- long wavelengths, and therefore, low temperatures
- longer wavelengths than light waves
- relatively long wavelengths and, as a result, little energy
* heat unevenly.
* includes photons
- sections
* interact with human tissues primarily according to water content.
* is also easy to move if there change in a network
- in use, but only to dry clothing
* keeps information, and technology, moving.
* open up the Blood Brain Barrier.
* operate on a logarithmic scale.
* ovens Description of how microwave ovens work
- heat foods unevenly and cause hot spots
* pass easily through rain, smoke, and fog which block lightwaves.
* save more than time.
* seem, for numerous reasons, to be the best means for intergalactic communication.
* selectively heat with little direct heating of most solids.
* sintering allows complex shapes to be manufactured with savings in time and energy.
* slow down as they travel through materials.
* supplement fryolators.
* tend to heat food evenly.
* undergo a reflection from a fine wire screen.
* use less electricity than conventional cooking because they cook faster at lower wattage
- non-ionizing radiation, meaning that food is largely left intact
* vary in wattage.
* warm water.
* work by shooting tiny waves called microwaves through food
- great for drying small quantities of herbs in mere minutes
- just the opposite | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity | microwave:
Microwave heating
* allows quicker uniform heating.
* can also cause a breakdown of the nutrients in formula
- especially damage the eyes and testes
* is instantaneous, selective, and volumetric.
* offers many advantages over conventional heating.
* tends to overcook foods before they are dried completely.
Napkin
* are located in cabinets
- tables
* includes sections.
### commodity | napkin:
Bib
* are for babies.
* is cloth<|endoftext|>### commodity:
Oven
* All ovens crack as they cure, as moisture is driven out, and as the heat level is slowly built up.
* Most ovens have a heat deflector to direct heat out of an element hole in the cook top
- tendency to have hot spots
- basic components
- power
* Most ovens use chemical energy
- electricity
- extra energy
- fans
* Some ovens draw out the air and force it back through a filter.
* Some ovens generate microwave radiation
- provide various aids to cleaning
* Some ovens use electricity converted into heat energy to cook food
* also vary in the way that they are controlled.
* are appliances
- boxs
* are capable of brown bread
- cool temperature
- roasts
- electric even though most stoves are gas
- for food warming purposes only
- household appliances
- kitchen appliances
* are located in homes
- pizza places
- prisons
- restaurants
- major appliances
- processors of discrete batches of objects , very much like ovens used in a bakery
- torture chambers
* are used for burns
- cooking
- preparing food
- roasting
* can be very hot and dangerous for small children.
* feature fans
- metal fans
* have basic components
- enough power
* require energy only periodically since the insulation holds in the heat.
* survive today as burned rock middens.
* tend to be mini-ovens.
* usually can use a variety of methods to cook.
* vary in power and efficiency.
* work by convection.<|endoftext|>### commodity | oven:
Broiler
* also develop leg problems because of the inhumane breeding to maximise meat production.
* are born to die, they stress so easily
- chickens reared specifically for consumption, as distinct from egg-laying hens
- larger than fryers
- usually high-heat components employed to cook meats
- young, tender laying hens that have lost their usefulness as egg layers
* cook by radiant heat.
* is an oven
* often develop leg problems from being bred to grow too heavy too fast.
* perform well when only enough light is available to find feed and water.<|endoftext|>### commodity | oven:
Convection oven
* Some convection ovens have fans.
* are to baking what wind-chill is to being outside on a cool day.
* can speed up baking and improve results.
* cook food faster and use less energy
- faster, at lower temperature and with less electricity
* distribute the heat all around the product with a fan system.
* have a fan that continuously circulates hot air through the oven cavity
- forced fan circulating hot air enabling food to cook faster and more evenly
* use fans to circulate air and ensure even heating
Electric oven
* Some electric ovens get that warm if the oven light bulb isleft on overnight.
* are often larger than comparable gas ovens, and broil meats more evenly.
Pizza oven
* Some pizza ovens produce a lot of kitchen heat.
* use a continuous fire in the oven during the baking.
Solar oven
* are a good low-temperature heat source.
* concentrate solar energy in a small space and are used for cooking and drying food.
* use both direct and indirect solar radiation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity:
Refrigerator
* Most refrigerators are dry deserts inside that wilt vegetables.
* Most refrigerators contain little moisture
* Most refrigerators have a light bulb that goes on when the door is opened
- capacity
- circuits
- cool capacity
- hold food
* Never put more than one major appliance on an electric circuit.
* Some refrigerators fill with ice.
* Some refrigerators have high humidity levels
* Use explosion-proof refrigerators for cold storage of flammable chemicals.
* also don t control humidity, important in keeping corks moist and securely sealed.
* are located in apartments
- garages
- houses
- machines
- major users of electricity
- one of the largest consumers of power in the average household
* are the biggest energy hogs in the home
- users among household appliances
* are used for cool things
- cooling drinks
- freezing food
* can be huge consumers of energy.
* come in different sizes
- with or without ice makers
* have advantage
- to be heated, rather than cooled, to preserve food
* includes refrigeration systems
* is natural non living things.
* often contain freezer compartments as well as ice-making machines.
* tend to be both damp and full of odors
- small because most cheeses, veggies and meats are fresh
* use a little less than one fifth of all the electricity consumed in the homes.
* use more electricity than an other item in the home
- energy when located near a heating vent or stove
- one-sixth of a home s energy
* vary in size and in the clearance space they require.
### commodity | refrigerator:
Modern refrigerator
* Most modern refrigerators have magnetic seals around the inside of their doors.
* use a regenerating cycle to reuse the same refrigerant over and over again.
Salvage
* is about saving skills as well as objects
- commercial activities
- commodities
- properties
- rescues
* is the responsibility of taxonomists
- value at the end of the depreciation
* usually refers to grasping anything of value from a sunken ship or fire-ravaged building.<|endoftext|>### commodity:
Stove
* All stoves consume oxygen
- have a single jet that all the gas vapor blows out from
* Many stoves are multipurpose and can burn wood or logs.
* Most stoves also have firebricks or metal plates to prevent burnout
- come with such a needle as a separate tool
* Most stoves have a bottom drawer
- flames
- surfaces
- use a mixture of fuel to perform better in colder temperatures
* Some stoves have a flame shield in front of the catalytic combustor
- large heating capacity
- safety release valve in the cap
* also lessen emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide.
* are devices
- electrics
- heaters
- kitchen appliances
- living rooms
- tents
- more dependable in bad weather and are less harmful to the environment
- traditionally the symbolic sources of fortune because food is cooked there
* are used for boiling water
- cooking
- warming food
* burn inefficiently in an enclosed space with inadequate oxygen.
* come in steel, cast iron, and soapstone.
* cook meals.
* have flames
* includes bases
- grates
- sections
* is made of wood.
* produce carbon monoxide.
* serve a range of different purposes.
### commodity | stove:
Electric stove
* Some electric stoves have a flat ceramic surface with heating elements hidden beneath.
* retain heat longer than gas stoves after use.
* stay hot for a few minutes after they're turned off.
Gas stove
* Most gas stoves have a broiler.
* are a source of combustion by-products
- capable of heat water
* can warm a room by pushing a button.
* give off a gas called nitrogen dioxide that irritates breathing passages and eyes.
* have jets
- pilot light
* offer cozy warmth and the appeal of a wood fire with the convenience of gas.
* tend to work better in high alititude and freezing conditions than propane.
Hot stove
* burn fingers.
* can cause burns. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### commodity | stove:
Wood stove
* are popular for their cooking ability and because they double as a heating source
- very popular in rural areas
* burn warm as toast.
* provide heat to take the chill off the cool fall nights
- when needed
Tablecloth
* are located in tables
- plastic and rust-colored
- used for decoration
* come in round, square and oblong sizes.
* includes sections.
* is linen
Toaster
* Most toasters convert electric energy
- produce heat
* Most toasters transform electrical energy
* are capable of brown bread
- electrical devices
* are kitchen appliances
- tools
- machines
- shiny, luxury objects
- supporters
- used for toasting bread
### common, too:
Chile pepper
* Most chile pepper has complex flavor
* are common, too
- notoriously hot
- rich in vitamins A and E, as well as contain carotene
- the fruit of a perennial plant related to the nightshade
- today as much a part of Mexican life as ever
- used as red, green, fresh, dried and smoked
* common name given to the pungent chile cultivars.
* is pepper.
### commonalities | solidarity:
Social solidarity
* constitutes the foundation of national unity.
* is also why Canadians are reluctant to sue their doctors
- the basis of people's solidarity or togetherness
Commonality
* Commonalities are generality.
* is found by focusing on our Catholic beliefs, common roots, and common values.
* means that the similarity between aircraft types results in lower costs.
* refers to the degree to which meanings are shared versus highly individualized.
### commoners:
Everyman
* are commoners
- play
* common man
* play that deals with the struggle between lies and virtue.<|endoftext|>### commons:
Mental disorder
* Many mental disorders are treatable.
* Most mental disorders are simply ways of defending against pain.
* affect more than the afflicted.
* are a factor in more than half of the suicides in North America
- as real as illnesses like heart disease, cancer, or diabetes
- common and universal
- far more common than cancer, diabetes, heart disease or arthritis
- less common, and are likely affect less than one child in ten
- major sources of disease-related disability
* are medical illnesses and are treatable
- illnesses, as are heart disease, cancer and diabetes
* are real and debilitating
- health conditions
- illnesses, just like diabetes or other physical ailments
- real, diagnosable and treatable
- serious
* are the health condition that most limits the ability to work
- second leading cause of disability among young adults
* can affect anybody
- range from depression to schizophrenia
- seriously disable people
* continue to go undiagnosed and untreated.
* has big impact
* impairs ability.
* is commons
- diseases
- resolved by uncovering the unconscious and understanding the conflict
* provide scientists with invaluable information about the human brain.
* range from minor peccadilloes to total dysfunction.
* represent a grave threat to the health and well-being of older adults.
* start at ages depending on the illness and sometimes, gender.
* unfold over a lifetime and are often undetected during a child's early development.
### commons | mental disorder:
Transvestism
* are practice.
* is brought about by trauma in early life
* presents serious contradictions for feminism.
* sexual fetish, a kinky thrill that generally develops sometime after puberty
### commotion:
Tempest
* are artwork
- windstorm
* is commotion | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Communication
* All communication form of selling
- occurs between people who have varying degree of familiarity with each other
* Describe the communications process and barriers to communication.
* IS the importance of the net, free communication between all people of the planet.
* Identify common types of communications devices, interfaces, topology and protocols.
* Most communication is through scent markings and sounds
- satellites in use today are geostationary
* Some communication is done without thinking, such as by changing in posture.
* also involves conflict which part of every family
- works with teamwork
* are impaired when under the influence of drugs and alcohol
- key to relationships in organisations, and gossip natural human impulse
- lines that link actors to use cases
- now the backbone of the world s economy
- the carriers of information
* back and forth process which leads to understanding.
* basic element of human interaction
- part of any health care system
- skill needed to establish and maintain sound relationships in the home
* burgeoning field increasingly influencing all of our social institutions.
* can be a source of information, comfort, and encouragement
- in words although more often it is through signs and symbols
- express universal experiences and ideas in order to create understanding
* can occur among machines around the world at a variety of speeds
- even in families where the husband leans inward and the wife leans outward
* comes in many forms
- languages and forms
* common bond between all species.
* complex exercise of talking and listening in a reciprocal fashion
- process including the verbal, nonverbal, and symbolic modes
* complex, pervasive phenomena.
* concern which pervades all aspects of a student's life.
* consists of concepts created by agents in reaction to their particular environment
- various sounds and gestures
* constitutes a transformational power that allows the creation and fixation of meaning.
* creative process.
* critical concern in both special education and higher education
- element in helping children develop values
- workplace skill
* deals with relating to people.
* delivery system.
* depend either on wires or on the use of the electromagnetic spectrum.
* describes the process of exchanging information between two agents.
* discipline that involves the study of symbolic behavior in many contexts.
* disturbances in schizophrenia and mania.
* drives the information age.
* exists everywhere in the animal kingdom.
* field of extremely rapid growth and technological change.
* field that has developed an extensive body of knowledge
- provides opportunities in radio, television and film
- relies on a variety of research methods
* flourishing field that permeates all of our social institutions.
* foundational process that affects all of our relationships and interactions.
* function of intention
- management
- the intention both to send and to receive
* fundamental activity of human beings, individually and in society
- process by which patterns in a medium move through time and space
* hallmark of all highly-evolved species.
* happen when someone sends ideas or thoughts to another person or group of people.
* has an important role to play in reassuring people.
* helps animals survive
- dolphins coordinate their hunting techniques so that the whole pod catches food
* improves and trust increases as people work through change.
* includes verbal, nonverbal and written forms of sharing thoughts and feelings.
* involves both understanding and expressing language
- contextual transmission, analysis, interpretation and evaluation of messages
* involves listening, processing what is heard, speaking, reading and writing
- speaking, reading, and writing
- relationships based on shared responsibility around common goals
* involves the creation, transmission, and reception of messages
- negotiation of meaning
- sending and receiving of messages
- study of messages and their meaning
- transfer of information from one person to another
- various skills such as speaking, listening, reading and writing
* is about spreading knowledge and empowering others
- telling stories and sending messages
- the sharing of ideas, thoughts and points of views
- abstraction
- acts
- affected by emotions, as well as by physical surroundings
- also apparent between younger animals and their mothers
- an act
* is an area of study that blends exceptionally well with studies in other disciplines
- that one can always learn more about
* is an essential ingredient to the growth of capillary electrophoresis
- life skill that is woven into all aspects of daily living
- skill for managers in the health sciences
- tool for human learning
- event which is at once social, economic, political, cultural, and technological
* is an exchange of desires
- extremely vital component in all aspects of daily living
* is an important aspect of any society or collection of individuals
- part of creating change
- increasingly important aspect of computer science
- instrument of government
- interpersonal dynamic relationship
- investment in the competitiveness of a business
- irrigation of ideas
- unwritten contract between and among people
- another area in which the hand plays an important role
* is any behavior which someone else interprets as bearing a message
- way that animals share information
- anything that involves dealing with people
- at once the oldest and newest of academic disciplines
- auditory as well as visual, and olfactory
* is both a process and an area of knowledge
- one of the oldest and one of the newest fields of study
* is by intuition and telepathy
- thought, so that there is no speech of words
- central to human activity and essential to teaching and learning
- communication, regardless of what language it occurs in
- complex, involving a variety of facial expressions, gestures and vocalizations
- complicated for people with autism
- composed of words, body language, and tone of voice
- comprised of skills in speaking, writing, reading and listening
- connections
- conversation, debate, discussion, persuasion and public address
- defined here as the conveying of information from one individual to another
- different from computing
- difficult when everyone is speaking a different language
- done with instinct, gesture, and energy
- easier, when two people are speaking the same language
- essential for healthy sexuality in a relationship
* is essential to every human being and to every aspect of life
- essentially the passing of information between individuals
- events
- fundamental to the very organization of society and to life as it is lived today
- grounded in culture
- how people share information
- human nature
* is important among wolves within and among packs
- any time groups of people work together
- for each human being
* is important in all relationships
- therapy, but especially speech therapy
- any human endeavor
* is important in every field of life
- profession
- mathematics because it creates a universal understanding of symbols
- in fact one of the most basic human functions
- intimacy
- key in the relationship between mentor and child
- mainly a measure of sociability
- mediated via neuronal connections that form during development
- more than simply understanding the words being spoken
* is more than the external exchange of words
- process of speaking clearly
- most productive when people understand and respect each other's styles and ideas
- often a major barrier to a parent-child relationship
* is one of the greatest joys of life
- major functions of a manager's job
- most complex elements of interpersonal relationships
* is one of the most important aspects of a relationship
- aspects of sexuality between two people
- components of a loving relationship
- elements of human endeavor
- human attributes
- ways people have control over their lives
- pervasive, important and complex aspects of human life
- powerful things in the world
- oldest fields of study in Western education
- small ways one can 'give back' to a host country
- only the medium by which conversations occur
* is part of almost every professional field in the world
- what the arts do
- partly a physiological process and partly a psychological process
- people related
- perhaps the most integral component of any relationship between living creatures
- personal A person sends signals that evoke meaning in a receiver
- possible only with conscious beings
- primarily a function of trust
- rare outside of mating season, as they are solitary animals
- really the transmitting of ideas from person to another
- referred to as a process to emphasize that it is always changing, always in motion
- related to organizational structure and to formal and informal interaction
- skill and art
- something that breaks down after a while
- stressed through social and cultural situations, games, songs, arts and sports
- telephone, telegraph, radio, and television businesses
* is the ability to communicate an idea from one mind to another
- convey an idea from one mind to another
- activity of replicating information
- art that is most essential to the continuing progress of civilization
* is the basic essential in the process of acquiring and using knowledge
- means of teaching and guiding
- basis for commerce, friendship, learning, and understanding
* is the basis of all relationships
- animal - animal interactions
- people's interactions with one another, which is the basis of groups
- understanding and dialogue
- on which decisions are made
- beginning of knowledge
* is the central focus of language use
- process of life
* is the common bond that can make it work
- which binds together the unique and the diverse
- core of all relationships
- cornerstone for every relationship, every interaction
* is the cornerstone of any civilization
- palliative care medicine
- currency through which every achievement is accomplished
- engine of the economy
* is the essence of almost all professions
- social interaction
- essential skill of life
* is the exchange and flow of information and ideas from one person to another
- of information in a common frame of reference
* is the exchange of information, ideas and emotions
- ideas, thoughts, and feelings
- thoughts, feelings and information
- expression of feelings ideas behaviors between two or more people
* is the foundation for cooperation, coordination, collaboration and change
- interaction between human beings
- just about every aspect of leadership and relationships
* is the foundation of all good relationships
- fourth area of stress
- function of language
- future of the Internet, and computers are the tools to connect to the internet
- giving or exchanging of information
* is the glue that holds an organization together
- the individuals in an organization together
- goal in effective speaking
- heart of Corporate Culture
* is the interchange of ideas across space
- thoughts, opinions and information
- key to a civilized society
* is the key to any business or organization
- relationship, from a marriage to a business relationship
- family harmony
* is the key to relationships and belief systems
- at work, at home, anywhere
- success in any type of relationship, whether with a partner or friend
- surviving physically and emotionally with a chronic illness
* is the lifeblood of any meaningful, close relationship
- democracy
- every successful parenting team
* is the lifeline of an entrepreneur's business
- today's business world
- lubricant of commerce
- main function and purpose of language use
- means by which people share words, ideas and feelings
- medium in which attention grows
* is the most important part of business, politics and human interaction
- skill in life
- tool for businesses, and relationships in general
- powerful means of influencing people
- talked about and least understood area of human behavior
- necessary basis of all social interaction
- oil that keeps everything working properly
* is the only real state in which language exists
- way to release emotion - negative or positive
- predicate to all human action
- process by which information is passed from one person to another
* is the process of creating shared meaning and, ultimately, shared life
- exchanging information and ideas
- expressing one's self in connection with others
- passing information and understanding from one person to another
- sending and receiving messages in ways that create understanding
- sharing ideas, information, and messages with others
- transmitting feelings, attitudes, facts and ideas
- where one person transfers meaning to another person
- process, and interactions are the elements of community formation
* is the reason for literacy
- the Internet was created
* is the sharing of knowledge among people
- meaning, or information, with another
* is the soul of democracy
- strategy for developing an optimal chain of marketing activities
* is the study of how humans make meaning, transmit and receive it
- human message production
- task of helping another person understand our thoughts and experiences
- thread that ties it all together
* is the transfer of information from one person to another
- knowledge and information
- transmission of ideas from one individual or group to another
* is the transmission of information from one individual or group to another
* is the transmission of meaning from one individual or group to another
- to others
- or exchange of information
- two way exchange of information or ideas
* is the vehicle for productive or destructive management and resolution of conflicts
- way to cope with less time over more distance
* is to convey meaning over language, which is arbitary
- make and share meaning
- share in common, to participate in
- very important to birds
- viewed as a transactional process involving verbal and nonverbal cues
- vital to elephants, who rely on a social network for survival
- vitally important to social creatures
* is what lets communities change, and what keeps communities together as they change
- makes the process of change work
- within agencies, between agencies, and between agencies and communities
* is, after all, the essence of all forms of art.
* learned skill which most attorneys believe they are good at
* lies at the heart of human existence.
* live component of human nature.
* major aspect of making an organization work effectively
- part of learning
* makes interaction between people possible, and interaction builds relationships.
* matter of perception.
* means exchanging information and understanding one another
- for exchanging intimacy with others
- of public relations and an important way to influence public opinion
* measures the skills required by the work to convey and receive messages.
* necessity for learning and life.
* occur in many forms such as written, oral, or electronic messages.
* occurs almost solely in written form
- by a number of sensory modes
- in many different contexts in a person's life, both personal and professional
- through body posture, ear movements, and low humming sounds
* oriented sounds are musical tones traditionally associated with electronic tasks.
* personal matter because people communicate in different ways.
* play a predominant role in leadership.
* play an important role in human actions
- increasingly large role in the business processes of retail chains
* plays a complex and profound role in shaping both individuals and society
- critical role in agents' abilities to transfer information
- great role in the accounting world
* plays a key role in new approaches to men
- the success or failure of managers
- pivotal role in the search for peace and the growth of trade
* plays an important role in building better relationships
- real estate transactions
* primitives in programming and specification languages.
* problem at all levels of society.
* process of exchanging messages in a shared code
- making or doing something, and a process of coordination
* process of sharing experience 'till it becomes a common possession
- which begins with life itself
* profession that demands the highest of standards.
* profound process that defines the human condition.
* refers to the process of conveying meaningful symbols from one person to another
- ways people send messages to each other
* requires cognitive processing just as it requires the perceiver to construct meaning
- relationship, where words and ideas are passed from one person to another
* resonance between two or more people.
* series of events that are best described by the shape of a circle.
* sharing of meaning.
* skill to be learnt.
* skill, and it takes practice to improve and master it.
* small price to pay for freedom of expression.
* social phenomena
* sounds are produced between mother and calf, as well as between adults
- for giraffes are moaning, snoring, hissing, and flutelike sounds
* starts with being able to relate to a person in their own style.
* still refers to the creation, distribution, and management of information and ideas.
* synonym for life.
* takes on a number of different forms in Senses.
* takes place in many forms
- the present, past and future
* takes place when ideas from one person enter the mind of another person
- information passes from a source to a receiver
* tool for image-shaping, opinion making and influencing.
* two-way interaction.
* two-way process by which information is passed between emitters and receivers
- involving an audience
* typically connotes fluency in reading and writing, and speaking and listening.
* vital element between one spirit and another
- force in society
* vital part of policing
- the nursing process by which stressors are identified
* way of modern life
- to ask and give the answer to the same question
* word that is often thrown about when talking about group dynamics
- so often used without thinking
* works by exchanging information or messages.
+ Communication, How communication works
+ Computer, The Internet: Tools
* One of the most important jobs that computers do for people is helping with communication. Communication is how people share information. Computers have helped people move forward in science, medicine, business, and learning, because they let experts from anywhere in the world work with each other and share information. They also let other people communicate with each other, do their jobs almost anywhere, learn about almost anything, or share their opinions with each other. The Internet is the thing that lets people communicate between their computers.
* Communication has many ways, and happens all the time. Not only humans communicate, most other animals do too. Some communication is done without thinking, such as by changing in posture. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication devices:
Fax machine
* Most fax machines use thermal paper, which turns black where heat contacts it.
* are communication devices
- electronic devices
* are located in offices
* are the curse of mankind
- least controllable technology when one transmits patient information
* can transmit anything already on paper.
* handle the delay and jitter of packet networks.
* have a special language for communicating with each other
- calendar functions
* provide a new form of fast communication, but also require energy and paper.
* store incoming and outgoing pages in memory.
* use the same devices to communicate with one another.
* waste ink.
Assertive communication
* enhances self-esteem and relationships.
* expresses ideas and feelings about condoms.
* involves verbal and nonverbal messages.
* is less stress-producing than passive or aggressive communication.
* valuable skill to have when refusing offers or behaviors.
Asynchronous communication
* can involve group learning.
* changes the dynamics of work and how people contribute.
* emphasizes individual learning.
* is the prevailing standard in the personal computer industry
- used for several reasons
* means that communication is delayed.
* protocol for coordinating serial data transfers.
Business communication
* is communicating
- essential to the health of any organization
* key aspect of what it takes to succeed.<|endoftext|>### communication:
Circulation
* Compare the anatomy and efficiency of open and closed circulatory systems.
* There are two types of channels that carry blood around our bodies.
* begins early in fetal life
- with oxygenated blood entering the fetus through the umbilical vein
* carries heat to the cold surfaces.
* causes nutrients and sediments to be mixed and resuspended.
* explain how air and storm systems travel over the Earth's surface.
* helps increase oxygen levels in the water.
* improves in all the arteries of the body, both large and small.
* improves, internal organs function better, and muscles and joints become more flexible.
* is academic journals
- an escalation of energy
- as important to financial health as it is to physical, mental, and emotional health
- counts
- deemed to have been established once fluid reaches the surface
- dissemination
- spread
- the number of copies sold by a magazine in one issue
- vital, the feet are one of the first places to get cold
* occurs in the hotter, lower layers of the mantle.
* provides a crucial missing link connecting inflammation to heart attack.
* refers to lending and borrowing library materials.
* releases nutrients and renews hypolimnetic oxygen.
* then serves to bring newly oxygenated blood to the tissues of the body.<|endoftext|>### communication | circulation:
Blood circulation
* becomes decreased so it has to be relieved immediately through surgery.
* ceases partially or completely.
* delivers oxygen and removes carbon dioxide from all of the tissues of the body.
* drops as heart begins to slow down.
* increases, but digestion slows down or even stops.
* is enhanced as the capillaries open, for example
- increased by the dilation of capillaries
- regulated in the lower abdomen
- very important to deliver nutrients especially oxygen to the organs
Collateral circulation
* connects the proximal and the distal aspects of the vessels over time.
* is divided into anterior and posterior systems.
Impaired circulation
* can mean slow or poor healing when injuries do occur.
* is certainly a large part of the problem with diabetic healing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | circulation:
Poor circulation
* can also cause problems with healing
- lead to swelling and dryness of the foot
* can make feet cold and puffy and interfere with the healing of wounds
- injuries and infections more difficult to heal
* increases the risk of ulcers, cramps, and gangrene.
* is implicated in many diseases
- one of the leading causes of sulfur spots and unwanted algaes
- the cause of many dangerous health problems in people with diabetes
- thought to be one cause of phantom pain
* leads to irreversible nerve damage throughout the body.
* means a poor flow of blood, which slows healing.
* prevents foot tissues from fighting infection.
* suffered by people with diabetes is often a sign of blocked or narrowed arteries.
Pulmonary circulation
* begins with the right heart.
* enhances the diffusion of dissolved gases into and out of lung capillaries.
* is circulation
- normally at much lower blood pressures than the Systemic circulation
Systemic circulation
* circulates blood from A. right ventricle to left atrium.
* delivers blood to all parts of the body.
* major part of the overall circulatory system.
Collective communication
* form of electronic democracy.
* involves every process in a specified group.
* means all processes within a communicator call the same routine.
Daily communication
* helps reinforce values and identify and resolve problems.
* is the foundation for a trusting relationship between teachers and family.
Didacticism
* dies hard in children's literature.
* is communication<|endoftext|>### communication:
Discussion
* Most discussions treat sexual orientation as a dichotomy between heterosexual and homosexual.
* happens, but both are firmly resolved.
* is always good. You could direct your questions to one person, instead of everyone.
* is healthy. RFX is not a strict time limit. The fact the TRM voted instead of closing is no big deal. In the even that all crats have become involved, I'm sure that an administrator can be found to close the RFX discussion. Sometimes someone other than a crat may have to close.
* is located in meetings
- speechs
+ Wiki: Internet slang :: Software
* Users can also discuss things on wikis. Discussion can help people understand things better, or gives people a chance to tell their views. In Wikipedia the talk pages are for that, but in some wikis, the article and the discussion are in the same page.<|endoftext|>### communication | discussion:
Dilation
* can be a uniform enlargement or irregular and result in the formation of pouches
- cause bleeding and laceration
* distorts the normal fiber angle, which adversely effects systolic torsion.
* expands and brightens an image, while erosion shrinks and darkens.
* is accomplished by contraction of radial muscles running from the pharynx to the body wall
- an important part of the optometric exam
- expansion
- part of the physiological process of migraine
- performed with improvement of the patient s symptoms
- required in order to stop the vagina from closing
* makes the eye very sensitive to sunlight.
* occurs by tensile cracking and is necessary to lift sliding blocks over asperities
- in all abortions and it is done by two methods
* takes from eight to twenty-four hours in a woman who has never given birth before.
### communication | discussion | dilation:
Esophageal dilation
* is the technique used to stretch or open the blocked portion of the esophagus.
* relatively quick and simple procedure with a low complication rate.
Pupillary dilation
* can precipitate an attack of narrow angle glaucoma in susceptible persons.
* has a limited role in the management of posterior subcapsular cataracts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | discussion | dilation:
Time dilation
* implies that time travel into the future is possible by going fast.
* is caused by differences in either gravity or relative velocity
- the apparent slowing down of time of a body moving at relativistic speeds
- triggered by disparities in both gravity and relative velocity
* predicted effect of the cosmological paradigm.<|endoftext|>### communication:
Effective communication
* can develop from the understanding of patterns and structures
- help a person achieve success in life
- mean the difference between life and death for the planet
* critical part of acting with sexual integrity.
* drives changes in the marketplace.
* hallmark of all successful organizations.
* includes the ability to read, write, speak, and understand body language.
* is also important in ensuring industry growth
- an interchange of information and ideas
* is central to all human activities
- the constructive management of conflict
- critical to effective management in any organization
- especially important in the world of business
- essential for the function of modern society
* is fundamental to all aspects of human functioning
- effective human relations
- more than an exchange of words
- one of the most effective ways to manage a salesperson
- rooted in knowing how and when to just listen
* is the ability to successfully coordinate meanings and actions with others
- cornerstone of effective action
- exchange of understanding between the sender and the listener
- heart and soul of any organization
- life-blood of all good relationships
- very important in business relations
* key component of the management of breast cancer
- to the success of an organization
- to many variables affecting honest behavior
* leads to the achievement of organizational goals.
* requires skills in conveying and receiving messages.
* skill that needs constant attention.<|endoftext|>### communication:
Electronic communication
* allows it to happen.
* are unwritten and easy to fabricate or alter.
* breaks down all kinds of barriers of space and time.
* can be a time sink
- through text, video and audio graphics
- help FPs regain control over how they take care of patients
- provide respondents with time to reflect, prior to responding
* cheaper and more effective way to communicate on short notice.
* covers a wide range of services.
* discourse, the giving and taking of information.
* dissolves all borders and distance.
* evens the communication field.
* has the potential to strengthen our democracy.
* is also increasingly recordable, and, as such, discoverable
- an effective means of getting important information out promptly
- constantly in a state of dynamic flux or change as the media evolves
- fast and easy, and it is rapidly becoming fairly ubiquitous
- often a great way to get information
- predicated by the availability of resources - hardware
- super-fast and very inexpensive
- ubiquitous and less personal in nature than other forms of interaction
- vulnerable to interception, misdirection, or rerouting
* makes only sense if there is something to communicate.
* manifests through electricity.
* matter of signal and noise.
* play an increasingly important role in everyday life of European citizens.
* sends instant messages across the world.
* tend to bond groups together. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication:
Exam
* is communication
+ English as a second language, Testing: English language
* There are many English exams. These English exams are important for learners. They may show how well a person can use English. It is very difficult to compare different English exams. Every exam is a little different. Read Testing English as a foreign language for more information.
+ Higher education: Education
* Generally, you must be 18 years old or over to enter higher education, having completed primary school and secondary education first. Usually some kind of selection is used. Exams can be of state, local or university level. Sometimes no selection exists. Some open universities encourage older adults to apply, whether they were good at school or not.
+ Junior Certificate: Qualifications
* The exams take place every June, with English always the first exam. Exams usually end with the subjects that the fewest people take.
+ Testing English as a foreign language, Compare exams
* It is very difficult to compare English exams. Every exam is a little different.
### communication | exam:
Fecal exam
* analyze for intestinal parasites.
* are useful for parasites that characteristically pass their eggs in the feces.
Quiz
* is examinations.
* zes are collections of questions, answers and explanations stored on a web server
- crude tools to encourage students to read and remember
- useful ways to learn and to reinforce what is taught
Functional communication
* is the essence of understanding and using a foreign language.
* phenotype, based upon communicative genes.<|endoftext|>### communication:
Good communication
* can help create positive feelings between teachers and parents
- people identify and improve risks and opportunities
- mean the difference between making coffee and making presentations
* helps children learn and promotes good behavior.
* is an important measure of family health and parental success
- parenting skill
- important between couples about what needs to be done and who needs to do it
* is important in life and it starts with good hearing
- problem-solving
- the relationship with parents and adolescents
* is one of the most important aspects of sexual pleasuring
- valued skills in the workplace
* is the bedrock of human relationships
- difference between having a friend, and knowing a friend
* means trying to listen clearly to the words, feelings, and behavior of others.
* skill important to the continuation of social play.
* skill that can be developed through practice and the sharing of experiences
- takes great knowledge and practice
- which can be learned
Group communication
* exists among three or more people who have some common purpose.
* is just one form of group survival information.
Hazard communication
* consists of documentation and identification of packaging and vehicles.
* is the social dialogue about risk by a variety of parties.
Human communication
* focuses on theory in media, intercultural, and organizational contexts.
* implies cooperative interaction.
* involves the exchange of energy between two humans.
* is about metaphors, and metaphors are build on socially constructed knowledge
- progress
- built on the usage of all our senses
- essential to learning, working, and social interaction
- physical, psychological and social
* parallels spiritual communication.
* provides a critical model for interactivity.
Informal communication
* is as important as formal meetings in community.
* means that mathematicians interact in a private session. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | intercommunication:
Sharing
* are distribution
- mutuality
- overlappings
* comes about as the natural outcome of meeting people and building relationships.
* concept that is hard to define and is often confusing to children.
* decreases misery and increases joy.
* derates the score of individuals that are similar to other individuals in the population.
* goes beyond food and beyond mating.
* is also how they approach their work.
* is an affirmation of our lives and relationships with alcoholics
- exclusively one-way form of communication
- important concept in the hotel world
* is an important part of Mexican culture
- building friendships
- the Inuit culture
- central to social life
- contagious behavior
- intercommunication
- itself an achievement in the values of local and indigenous communities
- one of the best ways to meet people from all over the world
- something that children learn, and often by our example
* is the art of living
- basis of collaboration among people
- glue that binds the various dimensions of complexity together
- human behavior that describes the exchange of knowledge
- what makes people prosper
* means that computers can receive information that was intended for other machines.
* normal adult activity.
* refers to the grid points of the board.
* rides with co-workers or neighbors can reduce stress and improve employee morale.
* syllabi is one way of sharing ideas and supporting the efforts of colleagues.
### communication | intercommunication | sharing:
Car sharing
* Car Sharing is essentially time-sharing a car as well as a car use reduction strategy.
* are shares.
* can only work in communities whose residents can get to work without a car.
* concept that has been prevalent in Europe for years.
* is joint access and ownership of a car.
* provides an economic incentive to alter patterns of car use.
* saves money over owning a vehicle.
Cost sharing
* can contribute to health equity and the sustainability of health services.
* form of user fees.
* non-financial transaction representing contributed time or materials to a grant.
* refers to the sharing of actual program or project costs.
Data sharing
* form of communication by a common piece of global data.
* happens when organizations share or compare personal information in any format.
* is controlled by access restriction on the Web.
* permits information to be transferred from one individual to another.
File sharing
* is also common on home networks where there are two or more systems
- one of the most system-dependent networking functions
* is the beginning of the end of recorded and broadly distributed popular music
- option that is most dangerous on the Internet
* slows down significantly as network traffic increases.
Information sharing
* allows the tailoring of marketing information to meet individual preferences.
* can also be a cost-saving device for financial services providers
- create new roles for citizens in managing environmental problems
* focuses upon comprehensive and multidirectional information exchange.
* helps catch criminals and prevent fraud.
* is the key to knowledge networks
- rock-solid foundation of scientific discovery
* leads to task sharing and resource sharing.<|endoftext|>### communication | intercommunication | sharing:
Job sharing
* allows individuals to split the responsibilities and duties of one position
- two employees to share one position
* form of part time work in which two individuals share a full time position.
* gives parents the chance to continue their careers while raising their families.
* lets parents work part-time while their children are in school.
* means two people share the responsibilities, salary and benefits of one full-time job.
* philosophical approach to work and life.
* preferred way of working.
* variation of flextime and has been used successfully in many organizations.
* voluntary program. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | intercommunication | sharing:
Resource sharing
* involves cooperative action by at least two libraries or library systems.
* is an increasingly important component of library collections and services
- common in libraries
- the key to saving time and money
### communication | intercourse:
Anal intercourse
* is especially risky due to the delicate tissue involved
- sexual perversion
* is the least frequently practiced form of anal sex
* stretches the opening to the size required for a large bowel movement.<|endoftext|>### communication | intercourse:
Sexual intercourse
* is another easy way to damage the hymen along with horseback riding and biking
- the natural and most common way to make a baby
+ Hymen, What might damage the hymen: Anatomy of the female reproductive system
* When a girl reaches puberty, the hymen becomes stretchy. Sexual intercourse is another easy way to damage the hymen along with horseback riding and biking. The hymen usually breaks after having sexual intercourse, so in some cultures, women with hymens were seen as virgins. A woman's hymen can also break while playing some sports and some women are also born without a hymen.
+ Sexual intercourse, Reproduction: Biological reproduction :: Human sexuality
* Sexual intercourse is the natural and most common way to make a baby. It involves a man and woman having sex without birth control until the man ejaculates, or releases, semen from his penis into the woman's vagina. If this works, the now fertilized ovum sticks to the side of the uterus and the woman becomes pregnant. The fertilized ovum then develops into a human. Medically, it is called a pregnancy until birth.
Unprotected intercourse
* can result in sexually transmitted diseases.
* is the riskiest sexual behavior.
Vaginal intercourse
* can cause pregnancy
- drive bacteria present on the vulva into the urethra
* is the preferred method of many men.
Intercultural communication
* fact of life in today's world.
* is the most important form of communication that exists.
* occurs among and between individuals of different societies
- when individuals or groups form contact and exchange messages<|endoftext|>### communication:
Interpersonal communication
* has a content and relationship dimension.
* involves two individuals.
* is always impaired
- central to the study of human communication
- contextual
- controlled by feedback of information, as is all voluntary behaviour
- different in a virtual classroom
- fast, and allows two-way feedback
- governed by rules
- occurs when two or more people interact through communication
- out of fashion in a world of cell phones
- sort of a combination of psychology, linguistics and sociology
- stressed in everyday interaction
- the communication that takes place between persons
* takes place in several modes and by different channels
- time, especially to sustain increases in condom use
Lack of communication
* can be a big problem in the workplace
- the source of stress and strain
- lead to unsatisfying and unsafe sex
* causes more problems between people than any other single thing.
* increases the perception of being compartmentalized.
* inhibits the interaction between people.
* is the most common cause of customer dissatisfaction in the service industry.
* primary root cause of divorce.
Mass communication
* examines issues of creating, distributing, and receiving mass media messages.
* involves the creation, dissemination, and reception of many kinds of messages.
* is communicating
- in printed form
- issuing
- one of the most powerful forces yet invented
- social events
- targeted at a disperse audience
* models for the study of mass communications.
* powerful and complex set of processes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication:
Medium
* All Mediums are psychic.
* All media absorb mitogenetic rays fairly readily
- are metaphors of the body
- mediums eventually die or change shape
* Many mediums lend themselves to the expression of instant, spontaneous emotion.
* Media Promote a balanced and non-stereotyped portrayal of women in the media
- There are many different types of media
* Media also act as a check on local government in the United States
- seeks to shape audiences into political constituencies
* Media are ad-driven businesses
- businesses with corporate interests and commercial implications
- businesses, commercial enterprises
- cultural institutions
- extensions of our senses
- important in focusing decision-makers on importance of data
- mass communication vehicles, like magazines, newspapers, outdoor, radio, and television
- mass-produced messages that shape dominant cultural representations
- primarily businesses driven by a profit motive
- sources of ideas about society, but so are other sources, such as travel
* Media are the forms of communication associated with particular ways of representing knowledge
- largest employer in the world
- physical forms in which a message is incorporated and displayed
- things the teacher uses to show to, or work with, the class
- thus the vehicles of cultural communications
- become tools of both oppression and resistance, of both entertainment and enlightenment
* Media can also refer to the various types of data communication, such as video, audio, and print
- vary in their ability to handle time
- be liquid or solid
- create a sense of sharing and belonging or a feeling of exclusion and isolation
- have a direct influence on political and social issues
- lead people to the right or wrong directions
- promote an unrealistic image of how people look
- provide fact, fiction and perception
- consumes more time in an American child s life than any other activity except sleeping
- creates public perception
- defines happiness by consumption and progress by global business
- enables even smaller ethnic minorities to survive with distinct cultural identity
* Media have biases which make certain things easier and others more difficult
- huge impact on culture
- social and political implications
- the power to reach out and directly influence the minds of average people
- unique aesthetic forms that are closely related to content
- helps create stereotypes
* Media is mass produced and provides information which can act as a source of social control
- non-carcinogenic
* Media literate people know how to act
- seek alternative sources of information and entertainment
- use television for their own advantage and enjoyment
- often influence each other
* Media play a critical role in raising environmental awareness
- crucial role in the life of neo-Pentecostals
- critical social, cultural and political roles in society
* Media plays a role in shaping our view in what is considered normal and what is considered deviant
- very vital role in making or breaking the careers of cricketers
* Media plays an important role in labeling Roma population as criminals
- setting the environmental agenda
- instrumental role in communication
- produce information and entertainment
- usually detach feelings from sexuality, too
* More media means more surface area where particles can be captured.
* Most media are also dependent on corporate advertising to finance their activities
- starts with words and simple drawings on paper
* Some media also contain dyes or chemicals that select for a desired organism
- are small pieces of huge corporations
- retains small quantities of anions , negatively charged ions, in addition to cations
- use more than one form of information
- mediums believe they can see ghosts
* appear to be capable of conjuring up spirits of departed friends.
* are additives which alter or enhance the characteristics of the colour
- environments
- liquids
* are located in seances
- stores
- people who exhibit psychic abilities when aided by a nonphysical spirit entity
- psychics
- states
- substances
- transmissions
* claim to have psychic powers and extra sensory perception
- help individuals communicate with deceased friends and relatives
* get their information through thought patterns comeing into their conscious minds.
* is instrumentation
* specialize in knowing how to interpret the visions and the knowing.
+ Open content: Software :: Art :: Free content
* Any media can be open content, from text and pictures to video and sound. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | medium:
Contrast medium
* Contrast media are substances given intravenously or orally to assist in viewing a particular area
- has no color and looks like water
* are mediums.
Digital medium
* All digital media have a far shorter 'shelf-life' than paper.
* Digital media degrade with age.
* Digital media is multilinear
- such an embryonic field
- looks like photography in most respects
- redefines the very identity of cinema
- require new ways of doing business with people
- work in progress<|endoftext|>### communication | medium:
Electronic medium
* All electronic media is digital.
* Electronic media alter the structure of thinking itself.
* Electronic media are cheaper than paper and postage
- integral aspects of our lives
- supplements to the human organism
- can reach and touch people in significant ways
- create an audience whose shifting moods are as impersonal as the weather
- critical component to reaching the largest number of persons
- exists in far more forms than books and libraries
- gather news as quickly as papers, but can disseminate it at the speed of light
- have more foreign ownership than newspapers
* Electronic media is controlled by the state
- much easier to update than paper
- means it goes out in digital form, such as a CD or multimedia presentation
- play a particularly unique role during times of crisis and war
- provides new means for publishing information and accessing information
- reduce our sense of isolation and individualism
Filter medium
* Filter media is to be treated with antibacterial and antifungal agents.
* Most filter media have a mechanical function.
Interactive medium
* Interactive media are both the future and the present.
* Interactive media are the latest entrants into the arena of social communication
- into the arena of technologies of social communication
- is used to effectively and efficiently support the subject at hand
* are part of the entertainment and fun of browsing the Web.
News medium
* All news mediums have methods of correcting inaccurate reporting or errors in stories.
* News media form a major nervous system of society
- is soft on crimes when committed by black robes or white collars
- play a key role for providing publicity as a public service
Nutrient agar
* is one of the most widely used media in microbiology.
* special food used to grow bacteria in the laboratory.
* very low quality medium.
Social medium
* Social media can also be a powerful tool in perpetuating herd behaviour.
* Social media is an additional channel for building relationships that drive revenue
- more than just the communication of words
- plays a big role when it comes to communication between genders
- powerful tool of communication
Sound medium
* Sound media are necessary to present a stimulus for recall or sound recognition.
* substance in which sound waves travel.
Toluene
* is an organic compound
* occurs as a colorless, flammable, refractive liquid, that is slightly soluble in water.
Xylene
* are a natural products of many plants, and are a component of petroleum and coal tar
- resistant to hydrolysis, since there are no hydrolyzable functions
* can also cause headaches, nausea and vomiting, tiredness and stomach upset
- damage the liver and kidneys
* is solvent.
* passes into the blood soon after entering the body.
Mobile communication
* are the lifeline of the transportation industry.
* introduces transient effects within a network.
* is presently one of the most dynamic sectors of the economy
- today the fastest growing segment in the information technology field
* work by limiting transmitter powers.
Modern communication
* All modern communications depend on electric signals.
* links people in all corners of the globe. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication:
Nonverbal communication
* assosiates experiences of the senses sound, smell, vision, touch, and taste.
* can also motivate individuals
- take place through the physical arrangement of space
- be a motivation tool
* consists of facial gestures, body expression and hand movements
- several codes working in concert
* has a strong link to culture
- different meanings for different people or groups
* includes images, actions and behaviors used to transmit messages
- much more than body language
- the use of touch, facial expressions, and body language
* involves every facet of our lives
- using body language to convey a message
* is about using other than verbal means to send a message
- an elaborate code written nowhere yet understood by all
- basically the act of speaking without using any words
* is communication using body language, facial expressions, or hand movement
- without words, facial expressions, and gestures
- culture-bound
- frequently limited which is interpreted as low cognitive ability
- just as strong as verbal communication
- learned and practiced often on an unconscious level
- one way to express thoughts and feelings
- particularly useful in some everyday situations
- present even if there are no words being spoken
- something that is understood without saying a word
* is the exchange of ideas using signs, signals, and hand gestures
- only way babies can communicate with the world
- primary means of forming first impressions
- sum total of our body's communication
- what counts
* key element in today's business world.
* lies at the heart of both language and culture.
* powerful conveyor of meaning.
* refers to a variety of forms of communication excluding language.
* very powerful form of communication.
### communication | objection:
Gripe
* are objections.
* is an objection
Online communication
* does help in certain kinds of information exchange.
* has a profound effect on learning.
* is considered a virtual community
- different from most other forms of interchange in significant ways
- enticingly similar to things that have existed for a century
- only one weapon in the arsenal of the white supremacist movement
* plays a vital role in preparing children for their adult lives.
* tends to be extremely informal in nature.<|endoftext|>### communication:
Open communication
* can lead to a deeper sense of trust and intimacy.
* helps overcome fearful or negative attitudes.
* is essential for healthy, trusting relationships
- in helping adolescents postpone sexual involvement
- to a working relationship between parent and child
- important to the child as well as the parents
- necessary to understand another's feelings and wishes
* is the foundation from which a solid business relationship is built
- of a productive client-professional relationship
* is the key to an honest change of feelings
- ensuring that nothing falls through the cracks
* major ingredient in community problem solving.
* provides the basis for married couples to trust.
Optical communication
* makes data transfer quicker and easier, even in wet and dirty locations.
* provides the backbone for both the Internet and modern telephony.
* require optical fibers that absorb light negligibly.
* run over fibers that work best when intact. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication:
Oral communication
* includes speech, speechreading and the use of residual hearing
- using spoken language to communicate ideas
* involves both listening and speaking.
* is also an important skill of a lawyer
- significantly richer than the written language because of delivery
- investigated as the essence of the teaching-learning process
- to include experience in a telephone interview activity
- understood as a tool for conveying ideas accurately
* is used in class discussions and presentations
- meetings and presentations with clients
* is very different, because it can communicate passion
- important in law enforcement
Organizational communication
* can flow in different directions.
* focuses on communication in the workplace
- within an organization
- large group dynamics
- the nature of communication in the workplace
* is investigated through examining symbol-using systems.
Paralanguage
* are communication.
* can also communicate emotions.
* is communication
* is the ability to communicate without meaningful words - just gestures and voice tones
- study of nonverbal cues of the voice
+ Nonverbal communication, Paralanguage
* Paralanguage is the study of nonverbal cues of the voice. Various acoustic properties of speech such as tone, pitch and accent, collectively known as prosody, can all give off nonverbal cues. Paralanguage may change the meaning of words.
Personal communication
* is extremely important in employee satisfaction levels
- far richer than electronic communication
* is the most effective means of learning and changing
- way of the future
- where the children communicate with each other one on one<|endoftext|>### communication:
Persuasion
* are books
* ' is often confused with manipulation, which is the way to get people to agree with something that is not in their best interest. Persuasion is meant to benefit one or more parties in the end
* generally involves the communication of simple ideas.
* is communication
- behavior that can be understood, changed, and improved
- often the critical factor in the success or failure of a project
- one of the three major purposes of communication
- propaganda Communication of information is education
* is the approach of public relations
- the super salesperson or the efficiency expert
- concommitant of choice and the freedom to choose
- deliberate attempt to change someone's attitude
- form which the exhortation assumed
- goal of the written word, the spoken word, unspoken messages
- means by which principle directs power toward the truth
- process of creating, reinforcing or changing people's beliefs or actions
- professional way of getting along with fellow workers, including family members
- technique of the technically able, one who is versed in numbers and facts
- used to build and win credibility Public communications
- what keeps the whole universe together
* occurs when an audience believes that it shares the speaker's conclusions.
* particularly important component of communication.
* works to persuade people to change their attitudes and behaviors.
Poor communication
* frequent cause of accidents.
* major cause of stressful situations.
* symptom of a dysfunctional group.
Positive communication
* can be one of the healthiest habits of all
- increase both supervisors' and employees' self-esteem
* focuses on respect for the child and involves both speaking and listening.
* helps families support each other through many different life experiences.
* is also the key to good relationships at work
- important in healthy families
- the key to love and romance
* leads to nurturing relationships, cooperation, and feelings of worth.
* tool to develop resiliency.
Postal service
* are capable of weapons
- shipping companies
- the traditionally way of receiving mail
+ County, Japan
* Postal services use it. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | psychic phenomenon:
Psychokinesis
* can probably only influence real chance events as for instance radioactive decay.
* is believed to be the cause of many hauntings that occur all around the world
- legitimized as the reciprocal to the gain in knowledge
* is the ability to move objects at a distance without any known physical force
- power to affect matter by mind alone
- word used to describe many different abilities
* psychic phenomenon
+ Psychokinesis, Abilities: Psychology<|endoftext|>### communication | psychic phenomenon:
Telekinesis
* are psychic phenomenons.
* can affect physical events that nominally occurred in the past
- make one's hair stand on end
* is another phenomenon that some parapsychologists describe
- created by higher levels of consciousness
- dependent on synthesis, which in turn is dependent on responsibility
- part of physical reality, just as telepathy is
* is the ability to move objects using mental power
- direct movement of physical objects by the mind
- power to move or change matter
* is the supposed 'moving objects with the mind'
- movement of objects by using only the mind
* very rare gift that usually manifests accidentally when a person is angry or upset
- strong energy flow
Radio communication
* All radio communications use radio waves to transmit and receive data at different frequencies.
* play a very important role in many organizations.
Real communication
* happens in silence and with the use of the senses.
* involves hearing more than words.
Risk communication
* is an offshoot of risk management
- based on structured answers that can be utilized during crises
- used to educate and inform policy makers and the public
* special area of communication.
Satellite communication
* can play a big role in disaster relief.
* dominates Norwegian space activities.
* is able to serve a wide portion of the earth s surface
- global in nature
- typical of what electrical engineers work on
Scientific communication
* Some scientific communication is dependent on manipulation of formulas.
* occurs in many different ways.
Speech communication
* involves the study of how human beings use symbols to communicate messages.
* is communication
- difficult in high intensity noise
- one of the most fundamental human communication channels
- something people everywhere continuously take for granted
* provides the foundation for higher learning.
Supportive communication
* is the opposite of problem-solving.
* means allowing the other person to feel good about solving a problem.
Synchronous communication
* can occur when several students take a course during the same time period.
* enables two people to talk to each other simultaneously.
* takes place in the same time frame such as a telephone conversation.
Technical communication
* is defined by the characteristics that it entails
- the literature of science and technology
* tends to focus on discourse about technology.
Telephone communication
* is known as wireless telephone.
* regulates the number admitted at one passing.
True communication
* calls for some shared life experiences and empathy with others.
* is about revealing our innermost selves
- based on a shared understanding of the language used to convey messages
- bi- or multilateral, an exchange involving giving and taking
* occurs when one's message is understood by others, and they can respond in kind
- others understand one persons message, and they can respond in kind
Utterance
* also mean something within a context.
* are speech acts.
* have sound.
- expressing vocally or the power of speaking
- what swings from the belly of a cow | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication | utterance | cry:
Bellow
* are blowers
- cries
- expensive and generally are used extensively for photomacrography
- used by blacksmiths or metalworkers for smelting and welding
* drive gas valves controlled by mathematical equations instead of tweening.
* A 'bellows' is something that blows air into a small opening in order to make something work. The bellows will have a kind of sack which has air in it. When the sack is squeezed the air is pushed out. Bellows can be quite small and operated by hand, for example for stoking a fire in an open fire place. They can also be very large, such as bellows that produce air for a large pipe organ to be played. Bellows are used by blacksmiths or metalworkers for smelting and welding. They are also used in small musical instruments such as bagpipes, accordions and concertinas. The harmonium has bellows which the player operates by pumping with the his feet.
Caw
* church for all pagan and neo-pagan paths.
* neo-Pagan, green church.
### communication | utterance | cry | coo:
Chinese cook
* add soya sauce to foods while they are cooking.
* use two temperatures of oil for deep frying
- vegetable oil and lard
Home cook
* Most home cooks make pumpkin pie with canned pumpkin filling
- use pork butt cut into bite-sized chunks and stewed
* enjoy preparing veal for special occasions or for casual dinners such as barbecues.
* recognize that food satisfies more than hunger.<|endoftext|>### communication | utterance | cry:
Moo
* All MOOs contain internal communication and information systems.
* All MOOs have social aspects
- topography
* Most MOOs do have some place where generic objects are on display
- have quota limits measured in the number of objects or bytes
* are a subset of MUDs
- descendants of MUDs and are typically either socially or educationally oriented
- interactive rooms where people can chat with each other in virtual rooms
- internet accessible, text mediated virtual environments well suited for distance learning
- multi-user spaces that permit many people to gather and communicate in cyberspace
- one of the older Internet technologies
- real time interactive language sites in 'virtual reality'
- text-based virtual worlds
- typically social text-based virtual realities
- very informal places
* come in many forms and can be purely social such as games.
* contain rooms, objects, and programs that make up the virtual environment.
* have an object-oriented programming language, and are more 'social' in nature.
* use pictures on screen for some objects, while MUDs use only text.
* vary in the extent to which they attempt to enforce good manners.
Exclamation
* are complaints
- utterances
* is an utterance
### communication | utterance | exclamation:
Interjection
* are also the first and easiest words to learn in another language
- breaks
- exclamatory words that express strong emotion
- parts of speech
* are words that express sudden or strong emotions
- used to express strong feelings
* is an exclamation
### communication | utterance | laugh:
Snicker
* are candy bars
- laughs
* chocolate and tan dachsie.
Snort
* generally are more frequent in young horses.
* network sniffer which detects and logs suspicious network traffic. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### communication:
Verbal communication
* Most verbal communications use cues from both the visual and acoustic modalities to convey messages.
* are frequently easier to understand when visuals are used.
* is an important and even essential tool in human interaction
- critically important to relationships
- different from written communication
- possible in even the noisiest manufacturing environments
* is the act of conveying meaning by means of speech
- most important type of communication within the marriage relationship
- use of words and language in order to provoke a meaning in others
- unique to human beings
- used majority for protesting or cursing
* new string of the web used mainly by humanity.
Verbal expression
* is communication
* leads to language development, an important aspect of learning to read.
* starts the process for learning especially when the mind is young.<|endoftext|>### communication:
Visual communication
* can, in many contexts, be much more effective than text.
* field that offers a variety of employment possibilities.
* includes movements of the head, mouth, tusks and trunk.
- effective during the day but can be seen by predators
- important to most fish
- performed by males when they open their mouth and reveal their teeth
* is the most important way of communicating during the first year of life
- purpose of graphic design
* plays an important role in human communication and interaction.
* predominates, and mating and competitive displays are common.
* useful source of communication when dugongs are in close contact.
Vocal communication
* includes a variety of whines, growls, barks, whimpers, squeaks, and howls.
* involves honking and soft warning calls.
* is important in the hen-chick relationship
- limited due to poor development of vocal chords
- rare, only being used when startled, fighting, or stressed
- used primarily during times of fear or excitement
* plays an important role in bonobo society.
Vocalisation
* are an integral part of the collared peccary community.
* is communication
Web communication
* encourages development of technology, publishing and journalism skills.
* is different from printed text.
### communism:
Revisionism
* is an equal opportunity disease, one that can afflict conservatives as well as liberals
- essential component of every science
- evolutionary science
- communism
- less about the past and more about the future
- one form of bourgeois ideology
* means to revise a generally accepted fact.
* promotes historical awareness and international understanding.
* respectable body of knowledge.
### communist democracy:
Democratic centralism
* forces everyone to speak up.
* is communist democracy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### community effort:
Crime prevention
* begins at conception, and even earlier.
* benefits every community, every neighborhood, and every resident.
* community effort.
* crucial investment that can and does reduce juvenile crime.
* goes beyond locks, lights, and alarms.
* is about people working together.
* is also an issue for residents of college owned houses
- important during hotel stays
* is an attitude
- investment in the future
- on going duty that is performed each and every day by each officer
- awareness and participation by everyone
- critical to reducing crime victimization and rehabilitating offenders
* is everyone's business, and involves more than just home or business security
- job
- responsibility
- more dangerous than crime
* is the responsibility of every member of the community
- result of a process which is developed day after day
- where the criminal justice system begins
* major element of community policing.
* means watching out and helping out.
* requires self-awareness, the awareness of family or friends, and prior planning.
* starts by keeping kids involved in their community and off the streets.
* starts with peaceful interactions on every block and in every street
- residents educating others on crime awareness
* takes the opportunity away from the criminal to commit the crime.
* tool of government.<|endoftext|>### community effort:
Water conservation
* benefits the environment and the economy.
* can affect wastewater collection and treatment systems
- be a big problem in some parts of the world
- help halt wasteful habits
- prolong the life of any soil absorption system
- save on water and sewer fees
* consists of any beneficial reduction in water losses, waste, or use.
* critical part of managing water supply.
* decreases the amount of wastewater generated by our families.
* has both financial savings and environmental benefits.
* helps prevent overloading in the drain field.
* is an important factor in Southern Nevada's water resource picture
- conservation
- especially important during droughts
- everyone's responsibility
* is one important way to stretch existing water supplies
- way to protect our shared supply of water
* is practiced except in the case of personal water consumption
- extensively on the state's farms and ranches
- stewardship of our natural resources
- the wise use of our resource to ensure an adequate supply
* leads to river restoration.
* major concern everywhere in the world.
* means using water intelligently
- water bans and doing without
* national policy in Singapore in view of our limited water resources.
* plays an enormous role in the survival of the Snail Kite.
* reduces sewage flows and corresponding treatment costs.
* saves cities money by conserving energy and reducing capital and operating costs
- money and energy | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### community endeavor:
Economic development
* All economic development is associated with increased energy consumption.
* begins with developing skills and work habits in people
- the change from traditional to innovative ways of thinking
* brings lucrative work to even the poorest of the poor.
* community endeavor.
* has important limitations
* implies an improvement in the economy of a local area or region.
* involves retaining existing businesses as well as attracting new enterprises.
* is about long-term growth
- what investors perceive
- an exercise in mutual cooperation for the common good
- both a private and a public sector activity
- concerned with overall business activity and jobs
- critically related to research and graduate education
- supposed to remove impediments to the improvement in women's status
- synonymous with improvement in the quality of life
* is the basis on which foreign trade grows
- corollary of growth
- direct result of hard work, and the creation and transfer of knowledge
- key to continued prosperity
- lifeblood of any community
- precursor to health
- responsibility of both the public and private sector
- sine qua non of the next millenium
- truly individual empowerment through education
- understood to be, at the very least, a rise in GDP per capita
- workforce development
* long-term effort, based on sustainability.
* means growth.
* needs dependable water, as does agriculture.
* occurs in a global marketplace
- when the income level and productive output of an area increase
* provides jobs.
* raises prices as well as incomes.
* refers to funding for all other purposes.
* requires that businesse s have access to land, capital and workers.
* takes places.
* version of natural development.
Community group
* are dynamic with people belonging to different groups that evolve over time
- local organizations
* can increase family involvement in children's learning.
### community issue:
School violence
* All school violence begins with bullying.
* affects every aspect of a child's life.
* community issue.
* gauge of the regional crime situation.
* involves more than guns, knives, and gangs.
* is concentrated in large urban schools
- less often physical abuse
* part of a larger societal problem.
* reflection of an increasingly violent society.
* social issue.
Community property
* Community properties are properties.
* is property acquired during the marriage.
* method for defining the ownership of property acquired during marriage
- of co-ownership for married persons only
* refers to a form of property ownership between spouses.<|endoftext|>### community responsibility:
Environmental protection
* community responsibility.
* global goal with no national boundaries.
* is about public health, an efficient economy, and a strong future
- an economic issue as well as a quality of life issue
- only one aspect of sustainable development
- present in fiction as well as non-fictional literature
* major growth industry that creates new jobs.
* means chaining a dog in the yard.
* new theme that came to be at waste management.
* popular campaign all over the world.
* prohibits development on hillsides and in wetlands or riparian zones.
* represents the very essence of resource allocation and management.
* requires public responsibility for pollution.
* two-edged sword for nuclear power. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### community-based discipline:
Family medicine
* community-based discipline.
* has a key role in the preparation of students and residents for rural practice.
* involves continuing care for patients of all ages with all types of problems.
* is actually a fairly new term used to describe an old discipline.
* is based in the community and is significantly influenced by community factors
- upon continuity
- comprehensive medical care with particular emphasis on the family unit
- medical practice
- much more than primary care
- the key to health-system integration
* provides care across all age ranges and to both genders.
* specialty that serves people at every stage of life.
### commutation:
Subrogation
* are substitution.
* concept that has been around for a very long time.
* consequence which equity attaches to certain conditions.
* doctrine steeped in equity and generally governed by equitable principles.
* is commutation
Compact
* are cars
- cases
- contracts between sovereigns
- market substitutes for gasoline
* are used for drives
- transport
Compact object
* Some compact objects are also useful as astrophysical probes.
* are white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes.
* play an important role in both physics and astrophysics.
### companies:
Diesel
* are a different breed
- greener and more energy efficient than gasoline engines
- the most energy-efficient internal combustion engines
* have no ignition systems, carburetors, nor spark plugs.
* is ICE
- companies
- fossil fuel
- liquid fuel
* leave a smelly, oily residue.
* provide propulsion for almost all commercial vessels.
* require excess air for complete combustion
- higher compression than gas engines due to the fuel quality
### companies | diesel:
Clean diesel
* produces fewer hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide as well.
* refers to any diesel fuel formulated to reduce emissions.
Conventional diesel
* causes much pollution in the form of hydrocarbon and sulfur emissions.
* has a greater energy and carbon content relative to petrol.<|endoftext|>### companies:
Hummer
* Most hummers occur in Missouri during the spring and fall migratory periods.
* Some hummers also hunt and eat insects.
* also eat flower nectar and high-protein insects
- take sunbaths, positioning their breast towards the sun and fluffing out
* are capable of living for extended periods without nectar as a component of their diet.
* are very territorial by nature, especially when protecting food sources
* can fly backward, vertically and pause in midair
- preform extraordinary aerobatics because of their unique anatomy
* do eat other food, primarily small insects.
* eat insects for their protein.
* emit far more air pollutants than cars.
* have a fast breathing rate, a fast heartbeat, and a high body temperature
- great memory, they do, in fact, return each year to their previous feeding source
- the least number of feathers of all birds
* is companies
- division
- pitch
- singers
* like to perch and are very territorial during courtship with fantastic aerial displays
- in a protected area before flying to the feeder
* love the color red.
* love to bathe
- build their nests in thorny and twiggy type bushes and trees
* often groom their heads and necks with their feet, uses the front three claws like a comb.
* preen themselves with their bills and claws.
* simply pursue their prey until they catch it.
### companies | hummer:
Rufous hummer
* are both aggresive and intolerant of other species at the feeder.
* travel farther north of any other hummingbird species.
Rollerblade
* are companies
- faster and easier to maneuver
- skateboards for the uncoordinated
* have wheels. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### companies:
Tactic
- located in japans
- military science
- municipalities
- planned moves or plays that rely on players working together
- specific actions that make up a strategy
- the actual ways that the strategies are executed
* plan of action
* refer to the subset of behaviors within a given genetic strategy.
Velcro
* holds things together without fasteners, buttons or zippers.
* is companies
- connectors
- extremely sensitive to heat
- in the class of materials called polymers
- textiles
* tends to wear out after a few months.
* is patented.
### compensation:
Reparation
* are compensation
- expiations
* broader concept than compensation.
* involves a duty arising from harm which has been done.
* is an essential element in the administration of international justice
- like paying a debt, a payback, a return of something that is owed to another
- more about collective responsibility than hereditary guilt
* means of keeping the free money flowing.
### competence:
Proficiency
* is competence.
* leads to achievement and self-esteem.
* reading knowledge of a foreign language.
* refers to the ability to communicate effectively in the target language. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Competition
* Occurs when there is limited resources shared by two species.
* affects markets
- the size of populations
* also forces animals to be less selective when grazing
- leads to constant change in the marketplace
* alters the perception of noxious heat and cold in male and female athletes
- stimuli in male and female athletes
* basic requirement for consumers to benefit from healthy market conditions.
* benefits consumers by keeping prices low and the quality of goods and services high.
* biotic factor that influences where an organism can live.
* business relation
* can be the stimulus a bureaucracy needs in order to change.
* can occur between individuals that are members of the same species
- members of the same species and between members of different species
- within one species or between different species
- produce inhibiting levels of anxiety
* chess game.
* cost reducing consideration in any industry.
* culturally imposed attitude.
* device to dupe and divide workers.
* drives a person to achieve more and strive to do their best
- firms to offer the consumer the best price
- prices toward cost
* enhances quality, economy, and productivity.
* exists in both capitalistic and socialistic societies
- when the niches of two species overlap
* forces companies to continually improve their products and services in order to survive
- organizations to focus on customer needs, increase quality and reduce costs
* form of controlled warfare
- cooperation, and males have a long tradition of intensive training
* fuel of growth, progress, and, partially, our economy.
* fundamental ecological process.
* happens between members of the same species
- within a population and between populations
* increases the strength of natural selection.
* induces adaptive shifts in caste ratios of a polyembryonic wasp.
* influences price and terms.
* is about securing rank at the top of the social hierarchy
- actually destructive to children's self-esteem
- all areas of athletics
- also a reason for birds to migrate north in summer
* is an aid to an industry
- attitude based on the sense of one's own superiority over other religions
- essential element in the efficient working of markets for goods and services
- expression of fear
* is an interaction between organisms or species in which both the species are harmed
- in which both interacting species are harmed
- basically between equal people
- beneficial to human well being
- between companies and technologies
- central to athletics, but it is an essential ingredient to life as well
- conflict
- critical to the process of creating wealth for the average citizen
- cultural activities
- equal to changes and people's capability to cope with changes
- everything in life
- for light, water, and nutrients
- global and intensifying, bringing a new level of insecurity to developed nations
- group actions
- indeed the hallmark of capitalism
- located in sporting events
- naturals
- of limited value in the world of ideas
- one of many interacting biotic and abiotic factors that affect community structure
* is one of the greatest forces of structural reorganisation of our societies
- staples of daily life
* is part of sports
- the American way of life
- physical events
- reflected in economics by 'willingness to pay'
- strong for light, soil is poor due to the rapid recycling of nutrients
* is the American way of life
- backbone of American political and economic institutions
- bastion of free enterprise
- controlling mechanism of capitalism
* is the driving force in the American economy
- of our economy
- engine that fuels innovation
- essence of sports, and it is the essence of the American experience
- force which causes advertisers to target children
- interaction among organisms as they struggle with one another for survival
- key to economic growth
* is the law of the jungle
- universe
- natural state of affairs in a market economy
- normal state of nature
- principle upon which our free market economy is based
- process that made the U.S. economy the envy of the world
- struggle between organisms to get sufficient resources to survive
- thing that makes the world work, and socialism suppresses competition
- valued as a way to maintain a well-educated workforce
- what keeps prices down
* is when animals or plants fight for things needed for survival
- plants and animals compete with each other for resources within the habitat, eg
* leads to economic efficiency.
* likely affects species diversity.
* means to promoting economic efficiency and free trade.
* mechanism by which innovation is forced.
* motivates people to perform better, as in sports and in music.
* natural phenomena and archetype.
* occurs between animals and also plants when any resource is limited
- species that are trying to use the same resources
- two or more organisms
- in virtually every ecosystem in nature
- naturally between living organisms which co-exist in the same environment
* occurs when a limited resource needs to be divided among individuals
- organisms occupy the same or similar niches
- species compete for the same resource
- two organisms fight for the same limited resource
* often encourages technological innovation which can lead to cleaner forms of generation
- occurs between members of the same species
* part of nature, it is part of being human.
* plays a very important role in ecology and evolution.
* power struggle for control of all aspects of the relationship.
* promotes economy, efficiency, and effectiveness in public expenditure.
* proven technique to make organizations efficient and achieve savings.
* reduces niche breadth, leading to more species along a resource continuum.
* refers to the state of a market, particularly how businesses behave in a market.
* regulating force in capitalist systems.
* relationship in which two organisms brawl in order to obtain limited resources.
* results when two different species try to fill the same niche.
* rules the lives and forms of our plants.
* shapes the natural world to a great extent.
* source of discipline in the market, or in any social organization for that matter.
* survival of the fittest.
* therefore exists for nitrogen in the forest canopy between the tree, fungi and microbes.
* underground can be for limited water supplies and nutrients needed for growth.
* universal phenomenon.
* value derided in most parts of the world.
* works when consumers have truthful information by which to make buying decisions
- informed consumers have a range of options and make informed choices
+ Bhutan, Sports: Bhutan :: Current monarchies
* Bhutan's national sport is archery. Competitions are held regularly in most villages. Cricket has gained popularity in Bhutan, particularly since the introduction of television channels from India. The Bhutan national cricket team is one of the more successful affiliate nations in the region. Football is also an increasingly popular sport.
+ Chess and computers, Chess engines
* Competitions are run by putting engines against each other, and the results are published. There is a World Computer Chess Championship, in which the details of the rules may determine which software wins. Software may also be rated on other scales, such as ease of usage.
+ Music competitions
* A 'music competition' is an event in which people compete for prizes by performing music. Music competitions can be for solo performers or for small or large groups such as orchestras, bands or choirs. Some competitions are for young people who are starting to make a professional career in music. Other music competitions may be for amateurs, which means that professional musicians are not allowed to compete.
+ Sexual selection, Modern views, Competition between members of the same species: Evolutionary biology
* Today, biologists would say that certain evolutionary traits can be explained by competition between members of the 'same' species. Competition can be 'before' or 'after' sexual intercourse. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### competition:
Fair competition
* is fundamental to the free enterprise system
- the base for economic development
* means lower prices, cleaner air, and a stronger economy.
Free competition
* is thus a fact in electricity generation.
* right of all, which implies responsibilities.
Global competition
* demands leaders who draw from diverse experiences.
* is an inescapable fact of corporate life
- more economic than military
* very real economic force working to keep rates down.
Healthy competition
* can make people strive to improve.
* tends to make skaters go a little faster.
Imperfect competition
* generates excess profits at the expense of payments to labor and capital.
* remains a controversial area in economics.
Increased competition
* can also change market prices.
* trend across North America.
Indirect competition
* company with the same product or service but a different market.
* is when a common limiting resource acts as an intermediate.
International competition
* demands a climate of lower taxes and regulation to remain productive.
* is an additional source of long-term structural unemployment
- characterized by the increasing dynamics of innovation
Interspecific competition
* can lead to the extinction of one of the species competing.
* is between organisms of different species
- competition occurring between individuals of the same species
- too rare to structure communities of insects on plants
- waged between species
* occurs when different species compete for resources.
* reduces fitness in scleractinian corals.
Intraspecific competition
* is competition among members of the same species and is density dependent
- between members of the same species
- for resources between members of the same species
* occurs within the species.
* refers to competition between individuals of the same species.
* tends to have a stabilising influence on population size.
Light competition
* begins when plants begin to shade each other.
* helps force the hardwoods to grow in a straight up direction.
Market competition
* dynamic process that produces long-term benefits for the public.
* is the discovery of comparative advantages.
Monopolistic competition
* combines elements of both perfect competition and monopoly.
* contains some characteristic of monopoly and some of perfect competition.
* is characterized by product differentiation
- in between monopoly and perfect competition
Price competition
* heavy driver of innovation and technological advance.
* is acute particularly in the service industries
- significant in the computer software industry
- the free market's way
Price war
* are also common in oligopolies
- game theory
- intense in the PC market, so enterprises can negotiate better deals than ever before
* exist in all forms in insurance.
Sperm competition
* decides who gets to sire offspring.
* is responsible for many sexually selected traits in gastropods.
Tax competition
* can be a means of exerting pressure on public expenditure.
* forces governments to cater to the needs of taxpayers in the global economy.
* is one of the few areas in which small size confers an economic advantage
- rife among European countries seeking to lure investors
- the bane of governments worldwide seeking higher levels of tax receipts
* liberalizing force in the world economy.
True competition
* can only exist in freedom and under the full protection of individual rights.
* is between options, companies, or schemes that are different.
Unfair competition
* commercial tort that evades precise definition.
* is the name of the game in real estate. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### competitive industry:
Printing
* Some printing presses use lead type because it can be easily shaped.
* belongs with sculpture and epigraphy.
* causes the emulsion to break down where dust is present.
* competitive industry.
* constitutes the third largest manufacturing industry in the United States.
* custom manufacturing industry.
* high-energy use.
* high-tech process, but it is the people who count.
* is also a slow process when a lot of people are trying to print.
* is an age old process of applying ink to a substrate, like paper for instance
- art with many variables in the printing process
- commercial enterprises
- especially important in a school environment
- localized coloration that also achieves multi-colored effects
- one of the technologies which has changed the world
* is the reproduction of materials for publishing or for internal use
- second oldest profession in the world
- therefore the continuation of writing by mechanical means
* manufacturing process that requires a commitment to relatively expensive equipment.
* matter of rolling out the ink on the block until it is loaded with ink.
+ Lead, Uses, As an element: chemical elements :: metals
* Lead is used in the ballast of sailboats. It is also used in weight belts for scuba diving. It is also used to make shotgun pellets and bullets for small arms. Some printing presses use lead type because it can be easily shaped. It can be used outside because it does not corrode in water.
* Printing is one of the technologies which has changed the world. It is an efficient way to multiply writing, so that copies may be made available to all people. Printing is therefore the continuation of writing by mechanical means.
### competitive industry | printing:
Book printing
* is specific with regard to sizes, page count, inks, photos, prepress, etc.
* process that is unique to printing.
* very specific type of printing.
Edition
* are groups
- impressions
- issues
* is printing
+ Petrushka, Story: Ballets choreographed by Michel Fokine :: Ballets Russes productions :: Ballets starring Nijinsky :: Compositions by Igor Stravinsky
* When Petrushka sees her, he begins a display of frantic gestures and athletic leaps. The Ballerina is frightened and hurries away. Petrushka falls to the floor in despair. The clarinets mock him. A trumpet call signals the end of the scene. Editions russes de musique, n.d.
### competitive industry | printing | edition:
Extra
* are artifacts
- companies
- editions
* is an edition
Limited edition
* are editions.
* is an edition
Gravure
* is printing
* transfers an image from sunken areas cut into the surface of a cylinder.
Laser printing
* is much less expensive than photocopying
- the most common technology used by network color printers
* new technology that uses a four-color process to reproduce images.
* produces images that are heat fused to the paper and are waterproof and durable.
Relief printing
* encompasses a broad range of techniques and possibilities for artists and designers.
* involves a print matrix which has a raised surface.
* is one of the oldest printmaking techniques
- the oldest printing technique
Screen printing
* involves stretching a porous mesh material over a frame to form a screen.
* is the ideal process for producing items for clubs and groups
- most adaptable and versatile printing medium
* makes it possible to print on the substrates with various shapes and sizes.
* versatile and relatively cheap method of creating designs on suitable garments.
Thermal printing
* is similar in appearance to a laser printer's printing on paper.
* non-impact method of coating images on paper and synthetic film.
* uses no consumables other than thermal paper. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### competitive process:
Innervation
* Most innervation is ipsilateral, except for the intestines and pelvic viscera, which are bilateral.
* are distribution.
* competitive process.
* directs receptor synthesis and localization.
* is by the frontal branch of the facial nerve
- posterior auricular branch of the facial nerve
* is from branches of the facial nerve
- terminal branches of the frontal branch of the facial nerve
- increased by nerve contraction
### competitive process | innervation:
Sympathetic innervation
* is primarily postganglionic from prevetebral sympathetic ganglia.
* occurs from the thoracic ganglia.
* supplies mainly vascular smooth muscle.<|endoftext|>### complete genetic anomaly:
Achondroplasia
* complete genetic anomaly.
* disorder of bone growth.
* genetic disorder of bone growth that is evident at birth.
* is an autosomal dominant bone disorder that causes dwarfism
- inherited disorder of bone growth
- fully penetrant and shows no variation of expression
* is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait
- by an autosomal dominant gene that causes abnormal cartilage formation
- one of the most common causes of dwarfism
- the commonest disproportionate dwarfism
* is the most common form of autosomal dominant inherited dwarfism
- short-limb dwarfism
- type of dwarfism
* rare form of dwarfism. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### complete protein:
Soy protein
* Many soy protein contain alll the amino acids an adult require.
* Most soy protein diets lower cholesterol.
* Most soy proteins have effects
- favorable effects
- reduce excretion
* Some soy proteins affect trials.
* Some soy proteins cause allergies
- soy allergies
- derive from soybeans
- have vitamins
* appears to reduce cholesterol, too.
* are often a hidden ingredient in prepared foods
* broaden the acceptance of soy products as key components of the worldwide food system.
* can balance high estrogen levels
- essentially serve as a fat reducer
* can, in fact, enhance the nutritional quality of other vegetable proteins.
* causes less urinary calcium loss than animal protein.
* comes from soybeans - part of the legume family that also includes peas and lentils
- the legume family that includes peas and lentils
- soybeans, one of the major sources of protein worldwide
* complete protein.
* concentrate available as corse granules or grits is used in emulsion type sausags.
* contains a group of compounds called isoflavonoids
- all the essential amino acids found in animal protein
- isoflavones
- less sulfuric amino acids and phosphorus than animal proteins
- phytoestrogens
- several anticancer agents including genistein and other isoflavones
* dairy-free complete protein containing eight essential amino acids.
* decreases post-exercise fatigue.
* exerts several cardioprotective effects.
* has lower levels of sulfur-containing amino acids than meat
- many of the properties of conventional thermal-set plastics
* helps conserve calcium in the body
- lower cholesterol levels
- stabilize blood glucose levels
- sustain energy all day long and assists in building lean muscle mass
- to lower blood cholesterol in people who have high blood cholesterol levels
* is also a good supplement for vegetarians who are sometimes deficient in protein
- of the highest quality
- the major ingredient in soy-based infant formulas
- an excellent non-animal source of complete protein
- available as a liquid, flour or concentrated powder
- believed to lower endometrial proliferation
* is derived from soy beans, which have a higher protein content than any other legume
- the soybean plant and a good, although incomplete, source of protein
* is especially beneficial for women
- high in the amino acid glutamine
- found in flour, tofu, tempeh, milk and isolates
* is good at controlling insulin levels
- for animal as well
- great for weight loss
- high in a natural type of hormone called isoflavones
- suppose to reduce the risk of coronary heart disease
- the primary plant protein in both rations
- very safe because it food
* isolate consumption protects against azoxymethane-induced colon tumors in male rats.
* lowers cholesterol levels and prevents against heart disease
- the fat in traditional items while still leaving in the taste
* plays a major role in reducing the risk of coronary heart disease and cancer.
* protects kidney function.
* provides all nine missing amino acids, making it a complete protein.
* reduces cholesterol levels.
### completely aquatic:
Eastern hellbender
* are completely aquatic.
* breed in late summer and early fall.
### completely benign:
Fibrocystic condition
* Most fibrocystic conditions are completely benign.
* is the most common lesion affecting the female breast.
### completely different:
Native mammal
* Most native mammals are marsupials
- have spines
* Some native mammals graze on twigs.
* are completely different. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### completely harmless:
Horsehair worm
* Most horsehair worms are observed among vegetation near ponds and streams
- start life
* are completely harmless
- harmless to people, pets, and plants
- long and whitish and live inside a grasshopper
- typically dark brown in color, but some are tan, yellow or black
- white when they first emerge from the host's body
* reproduce sexually, in spring, early summer, or autumn.
### completely non-toxic:
Flea comb
* are completely non-toxic
- especially nice to deflea dogs
- inexpensive, and one of the easiest ways to help control the spread of fleas
* has fine teeth to grab and pull fleas from hair.
* have fine teeth that remove adult fleas from fur
- very fine teeth that pick up fleas, eggs and droppings
* take more time but work well without chemicals.
Complex compound
* Most complex compounds compose of carbon.
* Most complex compounds form materials
- plant materials
* Some complex compounds are made of acid
- amino acid
- use energy
* can have tens of reaction steps that sequentially build the desired molecule.<|endoftext|>### complex field:
Synchronization
* complex field.
* graceful approach to maintaining lock with the network timing standard.
* is adjustment.
* is an important aspect in the design of complex, concurrent embedded systems
- issue that arises when multiple animacies share state
- coordination
- disrupted if women live with men
- essential to the effective operation of telecommunications networks
- fundamental to biological systems
- one of the major reasons for low performance of parallel algorithms
- sometimes a side-effect of sending data between threads
* is the process of making the design and data in the replicas identical
- real-time coordination of separate data sources
- word of today
- two or more oscillators that simultaneously jump up and down
* means that the size of the table is synchronized.
* occurs in a certain frequency region that is called synchronization region.
* phenomena in nature and technology.
* refers to Publisher's ability to link hypertext and pages.<|endoftext|>### complex health issue:
Childhood obesity
* appears to be the main reason for the increase in diabetes among youngsters.
* can lead to adult obesity and chronic health problems.
* complex health issue.
* elevates blood pressure and total cholesterol independent of physical activity.
* is already the leading cause of sustained high blood pressure in children
- associated with various health-related consequences
* is at an all time high
- epidemic levels
* is caused by a variety of factors
- many factors
* is on the increase and gaining attention both in Canada and worldwide
- related to many of the same cardiovascular risk factors as is adult obesity
- the most visible consequence of a diet lacking in healthy choices
* major public health problem.
* problem because it is an important predictor of adult obesity.
* serious problem that increases a child s risk for adulthood diseases.
### complex injuries:
Serious burn
* More serious burns cause white, charred skin and loss of pain sensitivity.
* are complex injuries.
* need intensive treatments
* result if contact is made with skin before it is diluted.
### complex legal manner:
Bodily injury
* complex legal manner.
* includes bodily harm, sickness, or disease
- injury resulting in death
* is physical pain, illness or any impairment of the physical condition.
* means physical pain, illness or any impairment of physical condition
- illness, or an impairment of physical condition
* risk inherent in the sport of wrestling. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### complex legal process:
Eviction
* are one of the many unpleasant things that can happen to a tenant
- widespread and are used by all sides as a form of ethnic cleansing
* complex legal process.
* is compulsion
- due processes
- the forced removal of a tenant from an apartment
* legal procedure.
* legal process that often requires a court order
- times requires a court order
* threatens the mechanisms by which the poor survive in cities.
### complex legal process | eviction:
Retaliatory eviction
* is dispossession
* legitimate defense to forcible entry and detainer.
Complex organism
* More complex organisms are called eukaryotes and they consist of many cells
- multicellular
- feed on the less complex
- have more complex digestive systems
- require a greater number of genes to perform life functions
- tend to have more genes
* Most complex organisms generate solid and liquid waste
- have types
- use organs
* tend to reproduce sexually. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### complex phenomena:
Leadership
* Defines the roles of a leader, and how they work in the context of the volunteer world.
* Is An Art - An ethical, means based, approach to organizational change
- the epitome of a model in being non-judgmental
* affects both foreign relations and internal stability.
* also means making unpopular decisions that have a long term goal in mind.
* also means working collaboratively with others and addressing environmental issues
- with a variety of stakeholders in a situation
- occurs continuously in informal groups, communities and other unorganized settings
* begins in the mind and the heart, and it works itself out in everyday life
- with a belief in the possibility of a better society
* can be a body of people who lead a group or the ability to lead
- bring the best or the worst out of people
- happen at various levels of an organization
* comes in many different forms, and functions in many different ways.
* complex phenomena.
* concept of owing certain things to the institution
- that allows for both horizontal and vertical applications
* continual demand for performance.
* critical element of workgroup success.
* deals with vision, effectiveness, and results, focusing on people.
* delicate balance between respect, control and motivation.
* depends on the ability to make people want to follow.
* determines how a company is perceived in the marketplace.
* developmental process that requires training
* does make a difference in the life of a society and in the course of history.
* dynamic process learned through experience.
* encompasses a learned set of knowledge, skills, and attitudes
- many of the fundamental currents of human experiences
* flourishes at all levels and in all sectors.
* focuses on human interactions while management is interested in process and results.
* form of service.
* function of a community
- the leader's motivation, skills, style and level of conceptual ability
- vision and change
* fundamental skill in health care.
* gives people a sense of power, hope, and makes things happen.
* group process.
* grows when an initiative is driven and owned by the population.
* has to do with how people are.
* includes instilling leadership in others.
* involves a powerful psychological relationship between the leader and the led
- set of skills that are learnable
- attitudes, skills, and knowledge that can be learned
- flexibility, orientation to values, and openness to change and new ideas
- getting people to tackle tough problems, and it skill that can be learned
- helping people see the world differently
- inducing change, and it takes skill , intentionality, and persistence
- inspiring, informing, and reassuring people that it is possible to make change
- long-term investments in people and enduring relationships of trust and respect
- taking risks, as well as teaching, guiding and directing of others
- the ability to bring about a desired change or action from or with others
* is ability
- able to influence and motivate others
* is about being agents of change
- building trust through shared purpose, vision, and shared values
* is about change, about making choices to bring about positive change
- and change is about taking risk
- communicating vision, or more simply, dreams of what is possible or imagination
- creating an environment where other people can succeed
- empowering others to reach their full potential
- getting things done and helping people reach their potential
- having a vision and communicating that vision to every employee
- how to manage people - with honesty, truth, care and compassion
- living our values and optimizing the natural dynamics of the living system
- making hard decisions
- motivating others to follow, perform, and achieve
- people and change
- principles and beliefs
- the ability to influence, to have an impact, the ability to master change
- volunteeringto contribute to the success of the organization or community
- action by anyone that influences others to follow
- activities
- all about influencing the affairs of the world
* is also about influencing people by providing purpose, direction and motivation
- responsibility
- confused with authority or position
* is an act of self-selection
- activity that everyone participates in on a regular basis
- ageless topic that has been studied from many different viewpoints
- art that requires self-confidence, creativity, and the courage to take action
- essential component of management
- evolutionary process
- expectation of responsible citizenship
- extension of who a person is
- extraordinary development of a person
* is an important aspect of sorority life
- earmark of success to most people
- role in the vitality of a congregation
- interpersonal influence directed toward the achievement of a goal or goals
- observable and learnable set of practices
- another characteristic that has emerged from group processes
- any intentional act that results in progress
- bodies
- both a calling from within as well as a set of skills to be practiced
* is central to the course of human history
- public affairs
* is characterized by accountability, courage, foresight, and integrity
- the willingness and ability to assume responsibility
- cognitive influence that affects the way other people think and therefore act
- critical to every great human achievement
- developed through learning to be a servant
- different in periods of change
* is essential to colleges' and universities' sensitivity to values in higher education
- ensuring organizational effectiveness and managing change
- explored in the context of moral, ethical and social responsibilities
- for men, women and children
* is found in being the servant of all
- many different forms and often in unlikely places
- guys making plays, and making plays at the right time
- hard work and sometimes boring, like going to meetings
* is important because it influences the destiny of people
- in organizations because leaders are the ones who make things happen
- in a constant state of learning and growth
* is involved in enabling leaders to function as creatively and as effectively as they can
- with doing the right things
- key to enabling communities to move ahead and adapt to change
* is learned by doing
- effort and hard work
- mainly about communicating a vision and getting others to commit to that vision
- measured on resourcefulness, influence, responsibility, and self-confidence
- more effective when people are willing to work collaboratively for a common purpose
* is more than a position of power
- being elected for public office
* is often about shaping a new way of life
- ego-based behavior
- the antithesis of popularity
* is one of the highest forms of service
- hottest topics in business and professional organizations
- most observed and least understood phenomena on earth
- ordinary everyday activity performed by ordinary people
- people development
- practiced in the presence of others
- problem-solving involving the art of strategy and tactics
- responsible for everything the organization does or fails to do
- sacrifice and humility
- seen as more than having a particular style, being charismatic, or giving orders
- selfless service to one's unit and country
- servanthood
- service to others through vision, risk, and love in action
- somebody who looks after their people
* is something that can take a person many places in their route to success
- comes from anybody, any class, anywhere
* is something that is hard to define, but everybody knows it when they see it
- innate in a person
- most everybody desires to have
- status
- strength, power, helping others, vision, giving back, success
* is that aspect of management concerned with getting results through people
- role that connects the parts to create a whole
* is the ability to facilitate action and guide change
- get extraordinary achievement from ordinary people
- guide others in direction, course, or action towards a common goal
- influence the behavior of other people
- influence, motivate, and direct others
- lead away from the boundaries of cultures
- obtain followers
* is the ability to see reality as it really is and to mobilize the appropriate response
- the invisible
- take charge and make results happen without being told to do so
- transmit ideas into action
- unlock people's potential to become better
- work with people and solve problems very effectively
- accomplishment of a goal through the direction of human assistants
- achievement of results through people
* is the art of accomplishing more than the science of management says is possible
- treating everyone differently, equally
- authentic expression of the integrated whole that our lives are
- capacity to translate vision into reality
- common element of all successful organizations
- conjunction of good ideas and good character
- core that drives all policies
- glue that holds the staff together
- interaction that develops between the leader and the group
- job of management
- key lever in achieving organizational change
- mother of all signals
- pivotal force behind all great achievements in human history
* is the process of creating, sustaining and directing energy
- creating,sustaining and directing energy
- directing, initiating, regulating, and coordinating group activity
- facilitating our becoming and learning
- influencing individuals and groups to set and achieve goals
- product of creativity and effort
- secret ingredient in every successful organization
- skill needed to bring people to the table, start talking and keep talking
- union of people burning with the same great idea
- wise use of power
- vital to nations, communities, and organizations
* is what brings countries together
- creates change
- occurs between heroics
- our system of government is all about
- solves problems
- turns a gaggle of individuals into a superior force
- where no control is needed because of the healthy leadership
* is, by definition, doing things through the efforts of others.
* key role in becoming a teacher.
* learned behavior
* learning strategy.
* lifelong development process.
* matter of influencing others towards some goal or objective.
* means getting along with people
- things done through people
- having the best brands, the best operating practices and the best people
* means listening to and caring about people
- to, and caring about people
- to want something, and to be able to show the way to realize what one wants
- working cooperatively with others to accomplish agreed upon goals
* mix of knowledge, values, skills, and behaviours.
* moves people towards common goals, principles and values.
* necessary kind of social action at work, in the community, within the family.
* necessity that communities require in order to accomplish their vocation.
* occurs when one takes an ordinary idea and deals with it in an extraordinary manner
- that is our lifestyle
- willing, pro-active and trusting followership is earned
* pathway towards empowerment.
* people sensitive skill.
* personal discipline, and when applied correctly, affords the ability to lead people.
* plays a very important function in the development of any country
- the development of every country
- an important role in large-scale change efforts
* process of getting things done through people
- influencing others toward the achievement of goals
- interaction that occurs between leaders and followers to determine goals
- mutual influence directed at achieving purposeful results
- that any person can perform
* quality of the service relationship between designers and clients.
* real driver of corporate profits.
* refers to ability to inspire, influence, or guide others
- the ability to inspire, influence, and guide others
* relation-based activity.
* relationship which celebrates diversity and thrives on collective involvement.
* requires empowerment of the individual by the community
- ideals that stimulate and energize people
- responsibility and the ability to motivate others
- the ability to touch others' feelings
* responsibility shared by all members of the organization
- with fewer rules than grand expectations
* revolves around people.
* role played by one person in a group.
* self-referral process.
* service to others or to community.
* set of practices that can be learned and productively applied.
* set of skills that anyone can acquire
- can be taught and learned
* shared phenomenon
- responsibility, focused on achieving the organization's vision and mission
* skill like any other that can be developed over time.
* skill that can be developed and nurtured
- improved with practice
- learned like any other skill
- taught, cultivated, and ultimately shared with others
- directly connects to the real world
- is practiced constantly
- most gifted students possess
* skill, which can be learned.
* spiritual act.
* three-way relationship among leaders, constituents and concepts.
* trait that some people possess naturally
- which requires both physical and mental maturity
* transformation process.
* way for leaders to help people discover their creative potential.
* word that is spinning through today's conversations. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### complex phenomena | leadership:
Helm
* are leadership
- mountains
* are part of motorboats
- sailing vessels
- ships
- tugboats
* is leadership
Organizational leadership
* concept best learned through experience.
* draws on disciplines including business, history and literature.
* focuses on transforming possibly more than one environment.
* is one of the most widely researched topics in organizational psychology.
* matters most during a period of stress and uncertainty.
Political leadership
* involves more than the crafting and execution of laws.
* is much like religious leadership
- something to be ignored or overcome
* legitimizes action, channels resources and holds the bureaucracy accountable.
* means prioritizing in a world of endless crises.
Responsible leadership
* is important for the success of a sorority.
* means following the principles of ethical decision-making
- fostering interdependence between teams, suppliers, and customers
Shared leadership
* is leadership with greater potential.
* means that everyone plays a leadership role at some point or another.
Spiritual leadership
* involves the application of spiritual values and principles to the workplace.
* is more than leadership exercised in a church setting.
* matter of superior power, and that can never be self-generated.
* sacred responsibility.
True leadership
* is about taking people to a place they wouldn t go to by themselves
- grounded in a state of being rather than doing
- rooted in spirituality
- the art of changing a group from what it is to what it ought to be
* occurs when people follow the leader as an act of their own free choice.
Complex phenomenon
* Complex phenomena transfer energy.
* Some complex phenomena involve forces.
### complex process:
Child development
* complex process.
* continuous process from conception through adolescence.
* follows a pattern similar to that of culture.
* is presented as a joint responsibility of home and community.
Human vision
* allows the discrimination of only about sixteen levels or intensities of gray.
* declines with advancing age.
* focusses on lip movements.
* is complex systems.
* is different from dog vision because there different sense of acuity
* is very much keyed to color
- poor in relation to some animals<|endoftext|>### complex psychosocial variable:
Social support
* appears to play a role in reducing caregiver stress.
* can also significantly and directly reduce stress
- occur in many forms
* complex psychosocial variable.
* has a huge impact on reducing stress
- major impact on an individual's and family's well-being
* is an important factor in the period after childbirth
- community and identity
- intrinsic to the relationships within African-American families
- linked to parenting and toddler outcomes
- regarded as a central to coping with stressful events
- the environment everybody needs in order to be productive and contribute
* means having people to lean on during difficult times.
* mutual process.
* protects against many negative effects of stress.
* strong buffer against stress and even appears to strengthen the immune system.
### complex variable:
T k
* are atomic formulas.
* complex variable. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Complexity
* Complexities are inevitable when society has the basics wrong.
* affects decisions.
* also affects planning and certainty.
* arises from facts.
* characteristic of a lack of understanding
- systems in which many elements are integrated to form a whole
* degenerates into simplicity and ultimately into randomness.
* describes the thought process the brain uses to deal with information.
* emerges from hierarchy.
* evolves mainly through duplications and mutations in structural and control genes.
* factor related to knowledge required by the job.
* familiar theme in the organisational sciences.
* feature of the phenomena most theories aim to explain.
* gives systems the capacity to self-order themselves.
* grows when energy flows.
* has effects
- moderate effects
* involves making connections and relationships.
* is aggravated by uncertainty
- also a feature of the neural system
* is an adversary of accountability
- important topic, as well for finite algebraic structures as for infinite ones
- born out of simplicity
- bounded by Order and Disorder
- caused by the collective behavior of many basic interacting agents
- concerned with the number of iterations, the depth of the recursion and so on
- defined by the number of dimensions, or sources of variation, that are related
- determined by the amount of information in a pattern
- difficulty
- grown from simple systems that already work
- introduced through sorting and searching algorithms
- involved in searching libraries and other research sources for information
- measured in the number of objects
- necessary for stability in any association of plants, birds, animal and pests
- one of the defining aspects of life
- possible only when it is liberated from linear, teleological time
- something which is built up in easy steps from simplicity
* is the creation of increasingly diverse offspring
- curse of the digital age
- degree to which an innovation is perceived as difficult to understand our use
- essence of the technological civilization
- method necessary to increase higher order thinking
- nature of Ukrainian history
- price paid for increased sophistication, thoroughness and accuracy
- primary difference between the brains of humans and animals
- prodigy of the world
- quantity of environmental information present in a landscape
- scale most appealed to in organic and social evolution
- science of 'non-linear dynamics'
* looks at how evolving systems function and adapt.
* mainly occurs as linear or exponential in the number of board points.
* means of worst case analysis
- time and time is money
* new way of viewing the collective behavior of many simple but interacting parts.
* planning goal in and of itself.
* refers to an event of small probability
* refers to the layout of the building or environment
- variety or diversity of aromas perceived
* reflects complexity.
* requires evidence.
* There is one for making no assertion of notability which is pretty cut and dry. I would think no context is pretty straight forward as well, if you can't tell what the article is talking about then it has no context. Complexity however is very arbitrary. I have seen numerous debates over if a word is simple or not and many opinions on the same word. But as goblin mentions we could simply use mechanical means to make the call, however I am not a huge fan of that.
* tax burden.
* word used a lot.
### complexity:
Cyclomatic complexity
* count of the number of decision statements in a piece of code.
* is based entirely on the structure of software's control flowgraph
- the graph theoretical complexity of a computer program's flowchart
Structural complexity
* can alter canopy physiology and defines habitat for canopy-dwelling species.
* refers to how the surface area on a plant is put together. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### complexity:
Tapestry
* Tapestries are a form of fine-art for the wall
- fabric
* Tapestries are located in art galleries
- castles
- houses
- one of the oldest and most luxurious types of fabric
* Tapestries are used for art
- wall hanging
* bimonthly magazine with articles, columns and features of interest to women.
* differs from embroidery in that there is no 'support' fabric.
* includes poetry, prose, drama, and other literary forms.
* is an open-source, component based framework for creating sophisticated web applications
- probably the oldest of the flat-woven patterned carpet weaves
* ranks among painting, sculpture and architectures as one of the major visual art forms. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### complicated air pollutant:
Cigarette smoke
* Most cigarette smoke affects quality
- skin
- sperm quality
* Most cigarette smoke contains carcinogen
- chemicals
- know carcinogen
- numerous carcinogen
* Most cigarette smoke produces carbon monoxide
- reduces health
* Some cigarette smoke causes cancer
- death
- premature death
- induces atherosclerosis
* aggravates experimental colitis in rats.
* can accelerate the decline in lung function related to asthma.
* can also be a significant trigger of an allergic headache
- cause asthma attacks
- be lethal
- cause air passages to close up and make breathing more difficult
- start an asthma attack as well as damage the airways
* causes an increased expression of a receptor on the surface of lung cells
- chronic inflammation in the lungs, leading to chronic bronchitis
* complicated air pollutant.
* consists of a mixture containing thousands of different organic chemicals.
* contains acetone, which is the prime ingredient of fingernail polish remover.
* contains carbon monoxide, formaldehyde and thousands of other chemicals
- chemicals which can damage the endothelial lining
- cyanide, a deadly poison
- formaldehyde, a chemical used a preserve dead frogs for biology class
- high levels of free radicals- compounds implicated in disease and aging
* contains hundreds of chemicals that are known to cause cancer
- which can damage lung tissue
* contains many carcinogens
- powerful mutagens
- methanol, a wood alcohol
- mutagenic heterocyclic amines, and so does prepared food
- nicotine, tar and other poisons
- one chemical
- several thousand chemicals
- specific cancer-causing chemicals
- thousands of substances
- tiny particles, which can be collected on a filter pad in a laboratory
* contaminates everything it touches, even people.
* decreases the blood supply of oxygen and helps build up cholesterol in the arteries.
* good example, where a film of the smoke can settle everywhere.
* has cadmium in it and so smokers breathe in cadmium
- chemicals that can make normal cells change into cancer cells
* increases a child s chance of middle ear disease
- the risk of stroke
* interferes with the eye's antioxidant defense mechanisms.
* introduces formaldehyde into an environment.
* is akin to any strange odors, like pets.
* is also a source of benzene
- always a major problem for asthmatics
- an irritant that can further aggravate allergy symptoms
- biologically active
* is high in oxidants and depletes the body of vitamin C and other antioxidants
- the heavy metal cadmium
* is known to contain molecules known as free radicals
- degrade hyaluronic acid
- located in bars
- one of the most common dangers for singers
* is the most common allergen
- cause of COPD cases in the United States
* lowers testosterone levels.
* major trigger of asthma symptoms.
* makes all allergic conditions worse.
* paralyzes the cilia it contacts in the sinuses and lungs for twenty-minutes.
* pollutes the air in enclosed places, which also affects the nonsmokers present.
* prime suspect, but tobacco use is declining in the United States.
* puts added strain on the heart because it causes vessels to clamp down or constrict.
* reaches the brain faster than drugs that enter the body intravenously.
* source of exposure to benzene.
### components:
Stereo speaker
* are components
- speakers
* help the process by separating the voice by earphone. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Composition
* Is the organization of elements or the arrangement of form in a work of art.
* Most compositions contain oxygen.
* Most compositions have lower average molecular weight
* Some compositions consist of proteins.
* are creations
- essays
- mixture
- placements
* can refer to the area of a sheet in which the design appears in a drawing or print.
* change over periods
- time
- pigment
* counts trinucleotides from any set of sequences.
* craft that requires practice.
* have average weight
- details
- more details
- titles
* includes sections.
* involves both sides of the brain at the same time.
* is altered by the harvesting, drying process, and storage of plant material.
* is an occupation demanding the highest levels of skill
- operation on relations that yields a new relation
- how the elements of a work of art are arranged
- important in the classification of the non-foliated metamorphic rocks
- organization or arrangement of form in a work of art
* is the arrangement or form of the piece
- construction of a system from a set of primitive components
- key technique by which systems of software components are constructed
- make up of art, arrangment
- pedagogy of written discourse
* is the way that forms are arranged in a work so as to create depth or distance
- the elements that make up a picture are arranged
* is, in short, an application of a composer's theories about music.
* plays an even greater role in determining a magma's viscosity.
* possess antimicrobial properties
* refers to the actual species of organisms that comprise and ecosystem
- mineralogy of the particles making up the rock, and of the cement
- process of setting type
- proportionate quantity of lean pork or muscle in a carcass
* refers to the way the parts of an image are arranged or planned
- shapes, lines, and colors are combined in the painting
* support theories.
* varies among types of animals and has been quantified for human, nonhuman, and dairy.
+ Category theory: Mathematics
* Composition is a way to make a new arrow out of two arrows. If two arrows form an elbow shape, then they have a composition arrow from the start of the first to the end of the second. Composition obeys some axioms, or equations.<|endoftext|>### composition:
Body composition
* better expression of fitness than body weight alone.
* can change due to treatment, control of dietary energy intake and tube-feeding.
* changes due to fat deposits in the trunk
- in women
- with age
* consists of lean body mass and body fat.
* does affect energy use.
* is another important component of fitness
- determined by measuring body fat
- often part of the perception of optimal exercise performance
* is one component of fitness that greatly influences health
- measure of a person's overall physical fitness
* is the body's proportion of fat and muscle mass
- difference between fat mass and lean mass
- fat in the body versus the nonfat in the body
- ratio of lean body mass to fat body mass
* key factor in overall fitness.
* varies by age, selected general health factors, genetics, and status of training.
Chemical composition
* differs among the species of aloe.
* is highly variable from outcrop to outcrop and within outcrops
- indicated by color
- much like that of pyroxene
- the most widely used basis for classification
* varies from cell to cell and species to species
Gas composition
* Some gas compositions have effects
- indirect effects
* is detected by matched thermal conductivity cells
- determined by the method of partial pressures
- monitored continuously using an on-line gas chromatograph
* varies with sludge characteristics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Compound
* ALL Compounds are Solids under suitable conditions of temperature and pressure.
* All compounds can exist as solids , at least at low enough temperatures.
* All compounds containing alkali metal cations and the ammonium ion are soluble
- chromium are colored, and they have found many industrial uses, also
- decompose upon applying heat
- grow old
* All compounds have a definite composition by mass
- net oxidation state of zero
* Any compound is made up of two or more elements.
* Every compound absorbs a characteristic set of colors of light.
* Every compound has a definite ratio of elements by mass
- certain features and a chemical formula
* Many compounds are salts or hydrates and lose an acid or water when heated.
* Many compounds have lifetimes less than a second
- more than one mechanism of action
- no warning properties
- inhibit glycolysis at different steps of the pathway
- react with atmospheric nitrogen to give dinitrogen complexes
* Most compounds are formed by bonds
- reaction
- made of hydrogen
* Most compounds are produced by microorganisms
- other organisms
- break apart when they are ionized
* Most compounds can have effects
- similar effects
- come from proteins
* Most compounds consist of atoms
- carbon
- chemical elements
- oxygen atoms
- types
* Most compounds contain atoms
- carbon atoms
- fillers and coloring agents, and some contain short fiberglass reinforcement
- potassium
- sulphur
- containing mercury are poisonous
* Most compounds contribute to concrete products
- development
- final products
- relative resistance
* Most compounds derive from dead plants
- enhance effects
- enter bloodstreams
* Most compounds exist in environments
- states
* Most compounds form materials
- plant materials
* Most compounds have amounts
- antimicrobial properties
- behaviour
* Most compounds have chemical bonds
- compositions
- covalent bonds
- density
- distribution
- energy density
- harmful effects
- large amounts
- negative effects
- powerful oxidize properties
- profound effects
- triple bonds
- unique compositions
- inhibit oxidation
- interfere with ability
- lose potency
* Most compounds make up other substances
* Most compounds mix with hot water
- move through chloroplasts
* Most compounds possess physical properties
- similar physical properties
- produce effects
- promote growth
- provide nutrients
* Most compounds react with elements
- other elements
- reduce absorption
* Most compounds remain in atmospheres
- upper atmospheres
* Most compounds retain own characteristic properties
- supply energy
- support metabolism
* Most compounds undergo couple reaction
- degradations
- use in treatments
* Some compound leaves live for months
- compounds absorb light
* Some compounds accumulate in animals
- tissue
* Some compounds act as hormones
- steroid hormones
- stimulants
* Some compounds activate biochemical reaction
- adsorb onto airborne particles and other surfaces
* Some compounds affect central nervous functions
- system functions
- fate
- humans
- neurotransmitters
- photosynthesis
- survival
- appear in urine
- are also more toxic to aquatic life at higher temperatures
* Some compounds are excreted by animals
- graze animals
- kidneys
- livers
* Some compounds are excreted by vertebrate kidneys
* Some compounds are formed by acid
- breakdowns
- interaction
- highly toxic to humans, whereas others are essential for life
* Some compounds are made of acid
- amino acid
- calcium
* Some compounds are more harmful to the ozone layer than others
- reactive than the others
* Some compounds are produced by algas
- bacteria
* Some compounds are produced by common bacteria
- soil bacteria
- cook meat
- fungi
- glands
- harmful algas
- host plants
- infect fungi
- secreted by microorganisms
- stable, while others decompose easily
- toxic to plants or animals, and can be carcinogenic or mutagenic
- volatile and readily dissolved
* Some compounds attract beetles
- cucumber beetles
* Some compounds become food
- gases
- substrate
- bind calcium
- can act as either oxidizing agents or reducing agents
* Some compounds can be poisonous if mishandled
- toxic to human, bird and fish
- combine in more than one crystal form
- have both types of bonds
- carry oxygen
* Some compounds cause acute diseases
- allergy symptoms
- asthma
- cancer
- cervical cancer
- contraction
- death
- excretion
- fevers
- irritation
- liver cancer
- neurological symptoms
- odor
- ovulation
- sickness
- skin irritation
* Some compounds cause water excretion
- quality problems
- wind
- change color
- combine with oxygen
- come from granite
- conduct electricity
* Some compounds consist of acid
- fatty acid
- magnesium
- silicon
* Some compounds contain acetylene
- alcohol
- benzene rings
- boron
- chlorophyll
- cocoa powder
- copper
- dandelions
- element boron
- fluorine
- helium
- high energy bonds
- hydrocarbons
- irons
- milk
- more than one functional group
- phosphorus
- simple sugar
- sulfur
- uranium
* Some compounds contribute to acid rain
- flavour
- health problems
- convert into oil
* Some compounds decompose before melting
- in several stages, reaching stable plateaus
- decrease oxidation
- derive from acid
* Some compounds destroy layers
- ozone layers
* Some compounds deter animals
- herbivores
- many potential predators
- discourage predators
* Some compounds dissolve in compounds
- ease pain
* Some compounds encourage biochemical reaction
- excrete in urine
* Some compounds exhibit different physical properties below ambient temperature
- whole number ratios of elements
- exist in atmospheres
- fall to earth
* Some compounds fight cancer
* Some compounds find in aloe juice
- broccolis
- citrus fruit
- cone snail venom
- cycads
- germ
- green tea
- parsleys
- pollute water
- raspberries
- red raspberries
- soy food
- wastewater
- wheat germ
- wood
- form crystal
* Some compounds have a depressing effect on plant growth whereas others act as growth hormones
- actions
- common names that are still used worldwide
- modes
- natural hormones
- negative impact
- nuclei
- steroid nuclei
- the same empirical and molecular formula
* Some compounds help break down carcinogen
- breast cancer
- byproduct
- certain cancer
- heart diseases
* Some compounds help prevent breast cancer
- tumor growth
- improve health
* Some compounds increase acidity
- levels
- testosterone levels
- induce behavior
- influence certain products
* Some compounds inhibit absorption
- fat absorption
- peristalsis
- protein synthesis
- reproduction
* Some compounds interfere with absorption
- steroid metabolism
* Some compounds involve in glycolysis
* Some compounds isolate from acacias
- buttercups
- kill microbes
- make up plastic
- mix with enzymes
* Some compounds occur in diets
- offer potential for use in the prophylaxis of nickel dermatitis
* Some compounds participate in atmospheric reaction
- present both a carcinogenic and chronic health risk
* Some compounds prevent atherosclerosis
- uptake
* Some compounds produce aroma flavor
- during smoke
- fibre
- spicy flavor
- synthetic fibre
- promote microbial activities
* Some compounds protect hearts
- hosts
- spinach plants
- provide energy
- react to salt
* Some compounds reduce inflammation
- regulate metamorphosis
* Some compounds release energy
- heat energy
- into water
* Some compounds require chemical reaction
* Some compounds resemble estrogens
- human estrogens
* Some compounds show increases, some show decreases
- variability
* Some compounds stimulate cell growth
- digestion
- digestive secretion
- support growth
- trigger responses
* Some compounds undergo combustion
- complete combustion
* Some compounds use energy
- in production
- used as weed killers are effective for moss control
* There are more carbon compounds than there are compounds of all other elements combined.
* accumulate in the bird as it ages and lead to difficulty in breeding.
* affect values.
* always contain elements in fixed mass ratios.
* are a combination of two or more elements that form a molecule
- chemically combined elements
- chemicals made from atoms of different elements joined by chemical bonds
- combinations in fixed proportions of the chemical elements
* are combinations of two or more elements in definite proportions by mass
- elements, Make two lists on the chalkboard
- enclosures
- chemical combination of elements
- elements comgining chemically in a specific ratio
- from the bonding of two ore more elements
- groups of two or more elements that are tied together
- homogeneous forms of matter
- less likely to keep well in solution
- medications specially made from scratch
* are pure chemical material that consists of two or more elements combined together
- substances made up of more than one element
- sophisticated products, their protein and vitamin content being closely monitored
- substances containing different atoms always combined together in a specific ratio
* are substances that can be broken down through various chemical processes into elements
- have molecules containing atoms of more than one elements
* are surrounded by tall walls
- the result of chemical reactions between elements
- toxic through accumulation
- two or more elements chemically combined
- wholes
* begin to break down as soon as they enter the body.
* can b decomposed, or broken down by simple chemical reactions.
* can be ions, too
- organic or inorganic
- solids, liquids or gases
- exhibit a property called chirality that can dramatically change reactivity
- form when chemical reactions occur
- pass through intact skin
* compose of atoms
- hydrogen atoms
- combinations of atoms of different elements in whole number ratios
- fixed proportions of their constituent elements
- two or more elements in fixed proportions
* consisting of oppositely charged ions are known as ionic compounds, or salts.
- two or more atoms in a fixed ratio
* containing bonds between carbon and a metal are called organometallic compounds
- hydroxide are usually insoluble
- only chlorine are subject to limited use, are toxic, and can cause arrhythmias
- the following chemicals are good for homeowners
* contains cocoa powder but no cocoa butter.
* diffuse passively through porins.
* epithelia frequently, and simple sometimes, have several types of cell present.
* extracted from foxglove have wide application in modern medicine.
- when masses of different elements combine in small whole-number ratios
- differing absorption coefficients for each wavelength
- plenty
- smell
- sources
- taste
* include alcohol
- solvent
* inhibit functions
* involved include cyclohexylmaleimide, ethynylcyclohexene, and ethynylcyclohexanol.
* leaves, when they fall from a tree, fall as a unit with all their leaflets in tact.
* may have beneficial effects
- numerous beneficial effects
- roles
* play important roles
- lead roles
* prevents bacteria from adhering to bladder walls and rest of the urinary tract.
- minimal effects
* produced by fungi can be toxic to humans and other animals.
* provide advantage
* reacts with water or moist air to liberate hydrogen chloride.
- tooling and supply costs by eliminating inks, paints, and dyes
* refers to a specific and limited type of complexity
- tire's rubber, fabric and tread construction
* require applications
- repeat applications
* show characteristics.
* support health
* turn diesel fuel and gasoline into jelly.
* typically are made up of molecules.
* umbels with numerous yellow flowers, the petals of which are rolled inward.
* use in applications
* using the other half are oxides, sulfides, sodium antimonate, and antimony trichloride.
+ Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry, Basic operation: Mass spectrometry :: Laboratory techniques
* The operator then injects the liquid into a stream of gas. The gas flows through a tube with a special coating. Because each compound in the sample sticks to the coating in a different way, each compound comes out of the tube at a different time. So the coating is used to separate each compound that was mixed together in the sample. As each compound comes out at the end of the tube, it is ionized and gets an electric charge. Most compounds break apart when they are ionized. The different pieces fly under a magnet which separates the pieces based on their weight. A computer then measures all of the pieces of each compound. By comparing the measurements against a computer library of known compounds, the computer makes a list of the names of all of the compounds in the sample. The computer can also tell how much of each compound was in the sample. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### compound noun:
Home run
* are accidents.
* compound noun.
* is safety
* occur when any ball is hit in the air into the home run curtain.
Compound object
* are basically groups of objects.
* have no representations themselves.
### compound word:
Overburden
* Is layers of earth and rock covering a coal seam that is removed by using a dragline.
* can contain layers with pyrite, which when exposed to air and water, can produce acid.
* compound word.
* generally lacks any recoverable minerals and contains only trace amounts of metals.
* is deposited in nearby valleys and hollows
- stripped from zones of ironstone boulder concretions
- the soil and minerals that are removed in the mining process
### compounding:
Coalescence
* causes the oil to rise to the surface by neutralizing the droplets' surface charge.
* ceases or slows significantly, leading to the formation of agglomerate structures.
* is enhanced when colliding drops have opposite electric charge
- unions
* occurs when water droplets fuse to create larger water droplets.<|endoftext|>### compounding:
Consolidation
* can often bring about the loss of community involvement and attachment.
* fact of life in the advertising industry
- media business
* is combinations
- natural objects
- seen as hypoechoic regions that move with the patient's breathing
* is the process of grouping health messages from multiple national organizations
- term often used to describe the changes
* means of increasing efficiency, service levels, and product depth.
* merge or to unite into one system or body.
* natural trend in an industry that has historically been highly fragmented.
* occurs when two or more organizations are combined into one new legal entity.
* process by which soils decrease in volume.
* refers to the interpersonal skills necessary to advance and implement one's policies.
### compounding | consolidation:
Democratic consolidation
* is fostered by a number of institutional, policy and behavioural changes.
* vital concept for theory and policy concerning democratic development.
Horizontal integration
* is consolidation
- found in the interdisciplinary use of authors, works, and themes
- integration
- the merging of firms producing similar products
* occurs when a business expands in size and scope.
Vertical integration
* involves the passing of digital data through echelons.
- integration
- related to, but can exist independently from, consolidated firms
- the control by a single management of two or more stages of production
- where many companies are part of a large corporation
* refers to ownership across pricing points in a market channel.
### compounding | reunification:
Family reunification
* fluid and dynamic process.
* is important to the general health and well-being of refugees
- provided to children unaccompanied to the United States by their parents
* priority in official immigration policy.
### compounds:
Complex
* Many complexes have coordination bonds between a metal and organic ligands.
* Most complexes are stable to ambient conditions of heat, relative humidity and light.
* accumulate in the joints.
* are compounds
- feelings
- the basic structural components of the unconscious
- wholes
* have an equilibrium constant for their formation like any other chemical reaction.
+ Organometallic chemistry, Organometallic compounds, Coordination compounds with organic ligands
### compounds | complex:
Apartment complex
* Many apartment complexes do allow some caged animals
- have a swimming pool
* Most apartment complexes have animal weight restrictions
- garbage dumpsters or compactors and recycling centers
* Some apartment complexes are as small as four units while others have hundreds of individual units.
* are usually on easy-access roads and places to shop. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### compounds | complex:
Cancer treatment
* Many cancer treatments stop cells dividing and growing.
* Most cancer treatments are specific for a particular type of cancer.
* Most cancer treatments have side effects that can affect how a person eats, sleeps, feels and looks
- that can make a person sick while undergoing the treatment
* Some cancer treatments cause depressions
- make it difficult to swallow, a condition called dysphagia
- work to stimulate cells to commit suicide
* account for about one-third of the drugs in human studies.
* are complex
- notoriously difficult to evaluate
- very complex and can be affected by many things
* big business, run by doctors living in a world of hopes and dreams.
* can also cause depression and anxiety.
* can also cause pain and discomfort
- sometimes
- be either palliative or curative
* can cause appetite loss
- pain, too
- sound as dangerous as the disease itself
* can take both a physical and emotional toll on people with cancer
- on various forms
- several months to several years
* goes beyond chemotherapy, radiotherapy and surgery.
* has many side effects, including possible death.
* is an expensive and specialized mode of treatment.
* work on different levels within and around the cell.<|endoftext|>### compounds | complex:
Chaotic system
- deterministic, yet they are unpredictable
- extremely unpredictable and have no memory of the past
- found in many fields of science and engineering
- systems that can have more than one solution
* become unpredictable because they are so sensitive to their starting conditions.
* exhibit sensitive dependence on initial conditions.
* have at least two solutions
- the potential to behave in many different ways
* tend to be very simple in concept, but lead to enormous complexity.<|endoftext|>### comprehensible social process:
Negotiation
* are protection of corporate markets.
* comprehensible social process.
* conferring with another with the view to compromise or agree on some issue.
* critical skill in all educational settings.
* daily activity on and off the job.
* is about achieving an aim, about giving something in exchange for receiving something
- activities
- discussion
- simply communication among people or parties in an effort to reach an agreement
* is the art of adjusting expectations
- key to world peace
- mechanism by which people trade things of value in a civilized manner
- most common form of social interaction
* is the process by which human beings exchange items of value in a civilized manner
- parties trade things of value in a civilized manner
- of two adversarial parties trying to reach an agreement on a dispute
- way people trade valuables in a civilized manner
- when two lawyers get together and hammer out a deal
* life skill.
* process best seen as a complex set of skills based on well established theory
- civilized people use to reach agreement
* process of joining sides for mutual benefit
- making arrangements and setting terms through discussion
* refers to the action or process of negotiating or of being negotiated.
+ European Union member state: Europe-related lists
* Following the addition of Croatia in 2013, the EU's membership now stands at twenty-eight. Negotiations are also under way with other states. The process of enlargement is sometimes referred to as European integration. However, this term is also used to refer to the intensification of cooperation between EU member states as national governments allow for the gradual centralising of power within European institutions. Under the terms of the Treaty on European Union, enlargement of the Union is conditional upon the agreement of each existing member state as well as approval by the European Parliament. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### comprehensible social process | negotiation:
Collective bargaining
* are negotiation.
* assures the rights of teachers.
* can benefit residents and patients in several ways.
* complex process dealing with important interests.
* fluid process that requires flexibility.
* is among the most important issues in graduate medical education
- an adversarial process that can get nasty
- anti-democratic
- basically the renegotiation of the union contract with a company
- common in many sectors of the economy
- nearly nonexistent, especially in the private sector
- practiced widely, and unions are free of government control
- protected by law and is widespread in practice
- recognised in the Labour Relations Act and the Constitution
* is the expression in practice of freedom of association in the world of work
- of citizenship in employment
- lifeblood of the trade union movement
- process by which a union gains a contract with an employer
- where unions and their employers set pay scales and working conditions
* matter of power.
* occurs even though unions are small and fragmented
- when workers allow the union to negotiate on their behalf
* power relationship.
* system that works for women.
* tool for addressing workplace concerns
- used to determine work place conditions<|endoftext|>Comprehension
* are understanding.
* comes about by listening to language in large quantities.
* complex combination of problem solving and high level linguistic ability.
* depends on one's aptitude for learning some basic ideas by immersion.
* focuses attention and does make sense.
* increases when students talk with others about what they have read or written.
* involves extrapolation which includes making predictions based on understanding ideas
- interpretation which means explaining ideas and their importance
* involves the ability to distinguish between relevant and irrelevant information
- construction of meaning based upon the prior knowledge of the learner
* is always impaired when children have difficulty concentrating.
* is an understanding
- of oral and written language
- basically a guessing game
- clearly the goal of reading
- critical in education
- learned over a period of time
- stressed in reading with two tests given each week
* is the ability to explain, interpret and extrapolate ideas, concepts and information
- grasp the meaning of material
- understand the meaning of material
- aim of pronunciation for students
- basic level of understanding
- gateway to critical thinking
- main purpose of reading
- product of prior knowledge and the ability to integrate new information
* is the second level of academic performance
- of the three elements of the informed consent process
- ultimate purpose of reading
* requires inferencing, which plays a central role in reasoning and problem solving.
### computer files:
Configuration file
* are computer files.
* text file describes servlet's settings.
### computer games:
Action game
* are computer games
- the number one genre of game that is being played on a daily basis
* involve hand and eye skill under time pressure, strategy and problem solving.
Sports game
* Most sports games use motion-capture technology to accurately simulate the human body in motion.
* are computer games
### computer graphics:
Clip art
* Most clip art is also of younger people or people who look very elderly.
* computer graphics
* is art that is in the public-domain
- made and sold for reproduction use
- used when custom art is judged unnecessary or too expensive
### computer networks:
Bus network
* are computer networks.
* use a common cable which is shared by all devices.
### computer viruses:
Boot virus
* Many boot viruses are on the endangered species list.
* are computer viruses.
* infect boot sectors of diskettes and hard disks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concentrated around dalian:
Chinese production
* is concentrated around Dalian.
+ Wakame: Algae :: Vegetables
* It is distributed either dried or salted. It is often used in miso soup and salads. In Korea it is called 'miyeok'. It is used in salads, or as the main ingredient in miyeok soup. In China it is called 'qundaicai'. Chinese production is concentrated around Dalian.
### concentrated around marquette:
Urban development
* can push agriculture to less suitable land, with unintended results.
* has a significant impact on groundwater, affecting quantity, flow and quality.
* impacts habitats
- mediterranean habitats
* is concentrated around Marquette
- one reason wildlife habitat is shrinking and fragmenting in Texas
* is the biggest threat to endangered plants also
- plants as well
* occurs in a place.
### concept | abstract:
Abstract concept
* are ideas such as happiness or success, usually described by abstract nouns.
* require interpretations.<|endoftext|>### concept:
Abstraction
* Explain the difference between abstraction and encapsulation.
* are difficult to conceptualize without figurative language and imagery.
* belong to the realm of theory.
* can take many different and imaginary forms in cinema.
* characterize components that carry out computations and objects used in computations.
* fundamental building block of representations painting.
* has a specificity of meaning in the hands of a single artist.
* is also a mean of reducing complexity by handling different details at different levels
- entities
- indicative of process, progress and development
- literally to uproot, to take apart, to unleash the essence of reality
- one of the keys to scientific development
- paintings
- related to both encapsulation and data hiding
- removals
* is the art of eliminations and simplifications
- artist's way of transcending time, order and space
- computer scientist s tool to master complexity
- key for the generation of qualitative representations from observed data
- process of solving parts of a problem while ignoring other parts of the problem
- work of the human mind
- used to handle complexity even in everyday life
- what makes applied mathematics possible
* measure of uniqueness.
* more general concept than hierarchy.
* play a central role in reuse activities.
* plays a central role in software reuse
- syntactic analysis, as in other areas of linguistics
* refers to the level of abstraction in the display of information.
* sign of social isolation.
* uses non-representational images or forms to present underlying structures. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept:
Attribute
* are abstraction
- characteristics of an object
- data attached to the spatially located points, lines, areas, and cells
- general categories of numerical stats that all characters have
* are located in arrays
- calculuses
- descriptions
- parameters that help explain what function the tag or command is to perform
- personal characteristics
- properties
* are simply characteristics or properties of something or someone
- the characteristics of a particular brand or product
- small datasets to be attached to primary datasets or groups as metadata information
* are the descriptors of reality
- logical data values of an object
- measurable characteristics, be they quantitative or qualitative, of features
* are the properties and characteristics of entities
- way information about entities are stored
* are things like color, size, and alignment
- such as colour, habitat, eats
- used for identification
* become skills
- vital skills
* can evolve across generations to maximize survival and reproduction.
* collection of binary flags that describe some properties of the message.
* contains atomic elements of information.
* describe the characteristics of an object.
* have effects
- measurements
- names and symbolic attributes have symbolic attributes that have names
- spatial, functional, or logical relationships
* hold a piece of information that describes an object.
* influence disease occurrences
* model the structure of the real world entity.
* refer to the nature of shoreline features, such as rocky, sandy, muddy, and the like.
* represent the knowledge or skills that reflect in how leaders behave
- state of an object.
* All attributes are optional.
* This template has two types of variables to be called, those having to do with statistics, and those not having to do with statistics. All attributes are optional<|endoftext|>### concept | attribute:
Characteristic
* Burrowing owls can grow to be almost one foot tall.
* Many characteristics are inherited by offspring from their parents
- distinguish the primate group from other mammals
* Most characteristics are affected by both genes and environment.
* Some characteristics affect kidneys.
* Some characteristics are critically important to plants living on land
- shared by chimpanzees
* affect fitnesses
- management
- slope stability
* are integers
- located in people
- part of nature
- quality
* are shared by fossil whales
- summarized in tables
* associate with families.
* attract attention.
* change over time.
* contribute to differences
- success
* define aspects.
* determine classifications.
* develop over time
- years
* distinguish mammals
* enhance survival.
* evolve over time.
* explain variation.
* govern use.
* have advantage
- components
- heritable components
- values
* identify sex.
* include pain.
* indicate continuous growth
* influence choices.
* lead to variation.
* provide insight.
* reflect properties.
* relate to behavior
- ecology
- fire ecology
- status
* require harvest regulations
* show patterns.
* support hypotheses.<|endoftext|>### concept | attribute | characteristic:
Aspect
* affect development.
* are characteristics
* ratios Image sensors have different aspect ratios-the ratio of image height to width.
* refers to the direction a slope faces
- nature of the action described by the verb
* relate to performance.
* remain mysteries.
* require investigations.
+ Verb, Tense, aspect, and mood, Aspect: Grammar
* Aspect usually shows us things like whether the action is finished or not, or if something happens regularly. In English, aspect is usually shown by using participle verb forms. Aspect can combine with present or past tense.
Compatibility
* is situations
- sympathy
* refers to a learned relationship. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | attribute | characteristic:
Enhancer
* are able to stimulate transcription thousands of bp away.
* are sequences in DNa that can serve to activate transcription from any nearby promoter
- of DNA and the DNA is the same in all cells
- which greatly increase the expression of genes which are located nearby
* blockers only function when placed between a gene and an enhancer.
* can bind long distances from the start site of transcription
- increase transcription at promoters located several kilobases away
- interact with proximal promoters from distances of thousands of base pairs
* have a dense concentration of protein binding sites.
* increase transcription when bound, while silencers decrease it.
* is attention
* play an important role in eukaryotic gene regulation.
* usually function in a tissue specific and stage specific fashion.
### concept | attribute | characteristic | enhancer:
Transcriptional enhancer
* act in cis to suppress position effect variegation
- position-effect variegation
* are tissue and cell specific in their function.
Human characteristic
* Many human characteristics are also vestigial in other primates and related animals.
* Most human characteristics are polygenic, which means they are controlled by many genes.<|endoftext|>### concept | attribute | characteristic:
Immediacy
* Immediacies are celerity
- intuition
* depends upon hypermediacy.
* expresses liking and trust.
* hallmark of all their interactions.
* is both a liability and an asset of the Internet
- important when updating email lists
- precisely indeterminateness
- the driver of today's economy
* refers to the closeness of the source in time and space to the target person.
+ Combat stress reaction, Present-day treatment and diagnosis: Conflicts :: Mental illnesses
* Brevity is the initial rest period. Many soldiers return to duty after this brief rest. More seriously affected patients are referred to the next level. Immediacy is essential for treatment. Intervention should occur as soon as symptoms appear. Contact with the service-member's unit can help the soldier feel like a war fighter rather than a patient. Expectancy, the soldier should be told his reaction to stress is normal and is he is expected back with his unit. Service-members should be moved to a facility close to their unit but away from medical or surgical patients unless no other option is possible. Simplicity, keep it simple and use straightforward methods to improve physical well-being and self confidence.
Other characteristic
* affect management
- stability
* distinguish plants.
Physical characteristic
* Most physical characteristics evolve over time
- identify sex
* are varied and some people with DID have nonhuman alters.
* are, for example, the retina, the fingerprint, and the palmprint.
* attract attention.
* have long arms and hairy reddish or brown and live in tropical forests.
* play important roles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | attribute:
Feature
* Some features are the determination of the Earth's age, volcanic eruptions, and atmospheric change.
* affect capability
- reproductive capability
* are articles
- body parts
- complexs
- merchandise
- movies
* are part of faces
- magazines
- newspapers
- properties
- quantities of information that are associated with individual video frames
- the properties or characteristics of the product - What it is
* change over time.
* contribute to drainage
* contribute to efficient drainage
- water drainage
* define types.
* distinguish theories.
* enable organizations.
* ensure survival.
* have density
- equivalents
- evolutionary significance
- impact
* help ancient mammals
- animals
- different environments
- identification
- ocean environments
* highlight capability.
* include animals
- consumption
- dark sunspots
- options
- short stature
- size
* increase ability.
* influence distribution.
* make subjects.
* provide applications
- benefits
- evidence
* relate to body compositions
* rely on sensor types
- specific types
* say in statements.
* seen in the chromosphere are prominences, filaments, flares, and plages
- photosphere are sunspots and granulation
- on the planet surface suggest to scientists that water existed on Mars in the past
* serve purposes.
* use for identification.
* use in classifications
- plant classifications
* usually refers to things with a spatial component, whereas entities can refer to anything.
* vary among individuals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | attribute:
Feature cold
* Cold causes a desire to spit
- shivers
* Cold is adjectives
- communicable diseases
* Cold is located in freezers
- fridges
- space
- mild illnesses
- respiratory diseases
- sickness
- temperature
* Colds affect nearly everyone, but some cold virus infections have a subclinical course.
* Colds are a common cause in children
- of hives in children
- fact of life
- self-limited illness from which virtually all people recover in a few days
- also highly contagious, produce only mild symptoms, and goes away after a few days
- another common illness for school children
- common in young children, and five or six colds a year are quite common
- frequent among young children
- inflammations of the upper respiratory tract caused by a virus
- just the tip of the iceberg
* Colds are more frequent among the young and are more likely to occur during the winter months
- head congestion, scratch throat, and dry cough that come on over a day or so
- prevalent in winter than in summer
- most common during months when people tend to gather indoors
* Colds are one of the most common illnesses to affect people today
- frequent infections in childhood
* Colds are the most common illness among children
- prevalent infectious disease
- order of the day
- primary cause of absenteeism in schools and industry
- result of infection in the upper respiratory tract, which causes inflammation
- ubiquitous around the world except in very isolated communities
* Colds are upper respiratory tract infections caused by one of many different viruses
- viral infections
* Colds are very common at the time of teething and, therefore, most people associate the two
* Colds are viral infections and vitamin C in large doses has antiviral characteristics
- that usually occur after exposure to someone else who is sick
- begin slowly
* Colds can also produce sinus or ear infections
- travel from one person to another via coughs and sneezes
- last from two days to two weeks, but most people recover in a week
- lead to a middle ear infection
- occur at any time of the year and are of shorter duration
* Colds cause deafness
- swelling and inflammation in the sinuses and eustachian tubes
- come and go in less than two weeks
* Colds generally begin with a sore throat, runny nose, and sneezing
- involve a fever, yellow mucus, and body aches
- go through a succession of symptoms
- happen in the winter, earthquakes along fault lines, hurricaines in the ocean
- last two weeks in children and one week in adults
- occur throughout the year, but are most common in the late winter and early spring
- often begin with a scratchy throat up behind the nose
* Colds often lead to ear infections
- middle ear infections, which require antibiotics to treat
- starts with feeling tired, sneezing, coughing and a runny nose
- pass more easily in large groups, and colds in young children can lead to middle ear fluid
- recur frequently and resolve slowly
- represent viral eye infections, some of which are extremely contagious
- settle in the nose, throat, chest and ears
* Colds sometimes go down into the throat and into the trachea, producing a bronchitis or pneumonia
- travel down into the bronchial tubes and are attended with fever and rapid pulse
- start gradually, while flu hits suddenly
* Colds tend to be more of a problem during the winter months
- last seven to ten days, while allergies can go on for weeks
- travel upward or attack eyes
- typically cause swollen glands, low-grade fever, sinus and nasal congestion, and watery eyes
* Colds usually begin abruptly
- come on slowly
* Colds usually last about a week
- for a few days, but symptoms can persist for weeks
* Every cold affects the joints
- seems to affect the joints
* Most colds are highly contagious
- relatively mild and only last for about a week
- go away within a couple of weeks
* Most colds occur during the fall and winter
- in the fall and winter
* Some colds end in coughs
- open the door to other illnesses | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | attribute | feature cold:
Cold hardiness
* depends on the species.
* is initiated by decreasing daylength and temperature
- only one of the challenges to growing azaleas and rhododendrons
- similar to apple and pear, therefore hardier than peach
- the ability to resist injury during exposure to low temperature
* major limiting factor for northern production.
Extreme cold
* can also cause a similar injury referred to as frostbite
- cause hypothermia, which slows the heart and can lead to death
- drastically alter the basic properties of many materials
* is rare, and snowfall from year to year is minimal
- used to treat precancerous skin conditions as well as certain small skin cancers
Head cold
* develop easily into pneumonia and many cases have nose and sinus problems.
* is cold
North pole
* are cold.
* cause contraction and south poles cause expansion.
* magnetized water has a healing effect on skin ulcers such as bed sores.<|endoftext|>### concept | attribute | feature cold:
Ocean water
* Most ocean water absorbs sunlight
- affects regions
* Most ocean water mixes with deep water
* Some ocean water leads to contamination.
* absorbs light
* appears blue as it reflects the light of the sky.
* are always in motion
- typcially cooler than in Southern California
* contains salts and minerals that make it different from fresh water.
* contains seven times more salt than the human body can safely ingest
- the human body can safely metabolize
* has magnesium
- more salt and it is denser than any fresh water
* includes various salts, metals, and even dissolved gases.
* is cold
- composed of a substantial amount of salt
- pumped in to create a whirlpool current
- salty because salt mineral that is found in soil and rocks
- sampled for chemicals and organisms
- temperature selective, resulting in phytogeographic zones, regions and provinces
- the saltiest, with several ppm dissolved salts
- used as a coolant for plant systems to the sea
- very salty
- warmed at the equator and cooled at the poles
* serves the role of blood in starfish.
* stays warm for a long time, once it is heated.
* takes a lot more energy to heat than does the land surface.
* vary from deep marine blue to a more turbid green color
- a turbid green color
External
* are features.
* attribute outcomes of events to external circumstances.
* believe in fate while internals feel they can control destiny
- that the reinforcers in life are controlled by luck, chance, or powerful others
### concept | attribute | feature | external:
External fertilisation
* occurs when sperm randomly encounter eggs in the water column.
* takes place in frog.
External sovereignty
* concerns the relationship between a sovereign power and other states.
* forms the basis for tribes as nations to deal with other political entities.
External validity
* is the extent to which the findings of the study are applicable to the real world.
* refers to our ability to generalize the results of our study to other settings.
* subset of internal validity.<|endoftext|>### concept | attribute | feature:
Facet
* are flat triangles bounded by three edges
- joints in the neck that control movement
- labels which identify the type of demon
- relational structures that combine units and relations
- single defining aspects of concepts or objects
* are the joint surfaces of the articular processes, where the vertebrae fit together
- tiny planes on the diamond's surface, which give it sparkle and fire
* can swell like other joints.
* is the flat, polished surface on a diamond.
* joints the point at which two vertebrae meet and move against each other.
* represent the simple way to implement a mechanism to sort out information.
Facial feature
* are characteristics dictated by genetic inheritance
- smooth and very three dimensional
* become more apparent with age.
* drown in shadows and light reflections.
* start to form as well as tiny lungs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | attribute | feature:
Invariant
* are constraints associated with classes or interfaces
- properties that remain constant under a set of transformations
- useful for ensuring that objects behave as they're supposed
* form part of the external interface to an object.
* play a great role in Physics.
### concept | attribute | feature | invariant:
Class invariant
* are conditions that are guaranteed always to be true
- have to be met by any stable state of an object
- invariants on the methods of a class
* express the fundamental integrity constraints on a class.
Natural feature
* Some natural features are caused by storms.
* are areas that can or have been named after some natural thing in that area.
Redoximorphic feature
* are a type of mottling that is associated with wetness
- large enough to be seen with the naked eye
- present in some pedons
* occur in some pedons.
* range from few to common in shades of brown, yellow, or gray
- none to few in shades of yellow, brown, or red | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | attribute:
Human nature
* are attributes.
* being what it is, competition helps to get people to go up on stage and do things.
* can never really overcome nature.
* causes one to adapt slowly to a given situation
- people to develop strong attachments to trees
* conforms to evolution and change irregardless.
* consists of infinite variations upon a theme shaped by evolutionary forces
- soul and body
* demands that one's potential be fulfilled and further developed.
* drives one to rise up to the highest level possible.
* encourages people to want to share their opinions and thoughts.
* experiences suffering and cries out for relief.
* finds some form of peace in stability.
* guarantees that democracy requires constant nurturing and vigilance.
* has some characteristic flaws such as greed, hatred, and violence
- the gift of time
* includes an ability to resist every form of thought control.
* involves self and group interests.
* is alive and well ALL over the globe
- amoral until it begins to interact with society
* is an act of self preservation
- another reason that people make assumptions
- at least as changeable as social systems
- capable of cooperation as well as competition
- characterized both by healthy curiosity and an instinctual fear of things foreign
- completely and exclusively egoistic
- complex and includes many potentials, some good and some bad
- considered to be frail and faltering and viewed as rebellious and full of pride
- constant over time and space
- determined by the interaction of the productive forces and objective nature
- directed by the genes
- distinctive because of man's ability to communicate, to speak
- endowed with curiosity
- evil in itself
- fundamentally spiritual
- held to be unique and sacred
* is human nature even in the Islands
- nature, regardless of age
- human, no matter how dark and ugly
- involved, and it begins to show itself early in life
- made up of possibilities both for good and evil
- much the same in men and women
- regarded as fundamentally virtuous
- still human nature
* is such that people naturally compare things or copy great ideas
- the average individual is loath to work for good health
* is the basis of all religion and ethics
- capacity to become Javanese, for example
- common qualities of all human beings
* is the same all over the world
- everywhere
- throughout the civilized world
- today as in the Victorian era, and so are the laws of economics
* is to be conscious and to desire
- do what everyone else is doing and be a sheep
- interact with other humans whether it be physically, mentally, or emotionally
- overestimate in the short term, and underestimate in the long term
- used to justify inequality rather than search for reasons for inequality
- what is innate in humans
- why there's never been a real democracy on earth
* likes to place blame rather than accept responsibility.
* makes it easier to hate than to love.
* plays out regardless of geographical location.
* prescribes that with increasing amounts of toar, jealousy and greed emerge.
* refers to nearly permanent qualities which humans' posses.
* reveals all the landscapes of the world
- itself only in historical evolution
* seems subject to certain laws of the universe that are impervious to change.
* tends neither towards order nor disorder.
* tends to activate and fulfill all human capacities in an harmonious way
- relate everything else to action
- towards disorder
* thrives on negativity.
Infinite
* are combos that are endless until the person is dead.
* is an attribute | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | binomial:
Scientific name
* Explains the use of common and scientific names of sharks.
* Most scientific names are based on descriptive terminology.
* are always in Latin and often describe some attribute of the particular species
- formal names accepted by scientists around the world
* are important for finding out what kind of care the spider needs
- many reasons
* are in Latin or Greek
- often descriptive also, suggesting something about the animal
- the same worldwide
- used all the time in the wood industry, just like seed catalogs do
- usually in Latin or Greek
* consist of two parts, hence they are binomial.
* eliminate the confusion that can occur when using common names.
* help scientists to study organisms, especially when working with other scientists.<|endoftext|>### concept:
Component
* Some components contain natural latex proteins
- contribute to carbohydrate metabolism
* Some components contribute to healthy carbohydrate metabolism
- protect livers
* affect adult survival
- development
- success
* are chemically independent constituents of a system
- code modules used to perform specific functions
* are made of different materials
- the basic units of software that are composed together to form applications
- units of software that can be combined in various ways to form applications
* contain substances
- toxic substances
* contribute to variation.
* create flavor
- unique flavor
* determine characteristics
- trophic characteristics
* diagrams A component diagram is used in modeling physical aspects of the system.
* explore biological concepts
* facilitate activities.
* form of RGB that has gone through a simple resistor matrix.
* have brightness
- definite functions
- different functions
- factors
- negative resistance
- properties
- roles
- surface brightness
- values
* improve benefits
- cost benefits
* include designs
- heat
- light
- producers
* involve development.
* may have effects.
* need for growth.
* produce byproduct
- chemical byproduct
* produce toxic byproduct
* provide energy
- realization
* rely on features
- key features
* rely on several features
* require for growth.
* show values.
* stand-along object representing a collection of properties and behaviors.
* sugars of some common brown algae.
* use electronic equipment
- test equipment
* word that's fairly widely used now in computing.
### concept | component:
Biotic component
* are the living components in the ecosystem such as plants and animals.
* interact with abiotic components to obtain all the necessary conditions
- each other to determine the success of life in the ecosystem
Blood component
* are under-utilized in veterinary medicine.
* consist of pla maplus a number offormed elements.
Different component
* affect success.
* have different functions
Intersection
* Implement a topological sweep of the plane.
* account for about half of all bicycle-motor vehicle crashes.
* are joining
- junctions
* are located in cars
- cities
- city streets
- roads
- street corners
- towns
- part of roads
- points
- sets
- used for meet
* is the ordered set representation of the intersection of all the sets in Sets.
* means that the subset is the intersection between two or more supersets.
### concept | component | intersection:
Vertex
* Every vertex has at most one parent
- represents an oxygen atom
* Vertices are colored by their symmetry positions.
* Vertices are points in space, represented by little dots in level editors
- the nodes on the graph
* are intersections.
* is an intersection
* v is the vertex to be split.
* web-based tool that centralizes project communication.
+ 16-cell, Geometry
* All vertices are connected by edges except opposite pairs.
Organic component
* Some organic components consist of collagen.
* acts as a link between abiotic and biotic components.
- unique flavor | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | component:
Vital component
* Some vital components contribute to carbohydrate metabolism.
* Some vital components contribute to healthy carbohydrate metabolism<|endoftext|>### concept:
Composite
* Many composites are anisotropic.
* also allow the use of gemstones too small to be used otherwise
- are less prone to expand or contract with changes in humidity
* are also technologically important advanced structural materials
- both thermal and electrical insulators
- daisy-like flowers
- desirable materials for flywheels due to their light weight and high strength
- flowers that have many florets crowded together making one flower head
- made up of individual materials referred to as constituent materials
- materials that are composed of two or more different components
* are mixtures of particles of different types
- two or more bonded materials
- pieces of synthetic spectra and real data spliced to photometric points
- plastic-like materials made from differing quantities of fiber, plastics and glue
- simply a matrix of one material reinforced by fibers or particles of another
- solid materials made of substances with different physical characteristics
- stiff, strong, light-weight materials made with two or more materials
- structural products comprising a combination of dissimilar constituent materials
- the fastest growing sector of the wood-products industry
* are, by definition, a combination of fiberglass and resin.
* consist of a fibre carbon or glass, for instance cooked in a resin
- more than one material type
* exist in nature.
* fill a major role in military airframes.
* have at least two phases with different mechanical properties
* temperature as a function of time and position along the thickness.
### concept | composite:
Braided composite
* can withstand high bending deformation without property degradation.
* made of stiffer axial yarns possess a higher axial tensile and bending modulus.
Framework
* are software structures developed for a specific application domain
- the way in which different types of object interact together
* benefit communities
- global communities
* provide types.
* retain aspects.
### concept | framework:
Cornice
* are frameworks
- molding
- part of entablatures
- projections
- where the snow piles up and reaches over the edges of the rock
* can break away, causing an avalanche.
* fall avalanches occur when cornices break loose from the lee side of ridges.
* generally form faster during periods of high humidity.
Picture frame
* are frameworks
- located in shelfs
* hang on walls. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | framework:
Simulation
* detailed and mathematically sound tool for analysing and predicting system behavior.
* follows development.
* form of information processing.
* has negative values
* includes examples.
* involving circuit behaviour are examples of deterministic systems.
* is an area in which the application of computers seems highly appropriate
- implementation of theory
- important aspect of modern statistical computing
- techniques
* is the act of capturing an actual or proposed system in a software model
- process of eliciting and observing a model's behavior over model time
* makes assumptions.
* particular type of modelling.
* play a variety of roles in science in general and computer science in particular.
* are very useful all over the world, because in a simulation things can be controlled that might not be easy to control in real life. They can use or smaller versions of an object or system for testing or practice. They can often use smaller versions of things, like space ships or rooms, to simulate the real thing. They can also use a safer thing in place of a thing that is dangerous, like when astronauts practice in a swimming pool rather than in outer space. Astronauts also practice in simulations of the moon before they went and landed there, and in simulations of spaceships that move the way real spaceships do, so they can get used to it. Simulations often use computers or television. Computers are used to make simulations of what a spaceship's route might be on the way to the moon, to help plan the mission.
* plays an increasingly critical role in all areas of science and engineering.
* process of analyzing a design model using mathematical techniques
- that uses a computer to design a model of a real system
* provides information
- insight
- new insight
- useful information
* requires types.
* shows forces
- outcomes
* type of software which integrates the cognitivist approach.
* uses a computer to model, and thus understand, the behavior of a system.
* way to approximate real-world processes.
* widely-used technique for building realistic models of complex systems.<|endoftext|>### concept | framework | simulation:
Numerical simulation
* are the main means of research because direct experiments are impossible.
* can help interpret remote sensing data of the ocean surface.
* compare the way of phase space exploration of different genetic operators.
* deals with the modelling of a physical situation on a computer.
* fill a gap between physical experiments and analytical approaches.
* is an important and widely used tool in many areas of condensed matter physics
- used to predict fire growth within the compartment of origin
* method of current interest for predicting particulate flows.
War game
* Many war games use hexagonal grids instead of square grids.
* are simulation.<|endoftext|>### concept | framework:
Truss
* are a series of triangles fastened together with gusset plates
- an engineered built roof system that can span large areas without support in the middle
- bandages
- beams arranged to form triangles
- frameworks
- load
- located in buildings
- medical devices
- wood with a plywood covering and fiberglass shingles
* can support large loads without adding too much to the overall mass of an object.
* minimize cutting and framing on the job site, greatly reducing labor cost.
* tend to be a stronger lighter and less expensive approach to roof framing.
### concept | framework | truss:
Steel truss
* are unaffected by termites.
* cross at angles overhead.
Undercarriage
* are frameworks
* is as clean as the body
Valance
* lighting using fluorescent fixtures gives good lighting without a visible source.
* pouf style. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept:
Kind
* All kinds attract bees.
* Many kinds are climbers that dwell in trees
- poisonous, and some are brightly colored to advertise their toxic nature
- can grow either with or without air
- dig burrows to live in
- live as parasites in or on the bodies of other more harmful types
* Most kinds bear fruit in clusters
- feed on organic matter in the soil
* Most kinds make their home in the tropics, where they can find food all year
- the tropics, where they can find food the year around
* Some kinds are arboreal and are found in trees
- noted for spending long periods in hibernation
- complete the life cycle in less than a year, while others require up to four years
- contribute to death
- eat insects that they find
- even depend on other living things, such as a certain animal to pollinate their flowers
- exist in atmospheres
- give off a protective milky fluid with an odor like apple seeds
* Some kinds have a sac on either side of the head
- chemical identities
- health
- shells
- lay eggs and some give birth to living young
- live along temperate coasts and even in freshwater lakes
* Some kinds live in great rivers of Asia and South America, but the best known are found in the sea
- make acid rain that kills our plants and fish
- prefer vegetation near streams, ponds and marshes
* are categories.
* have aspects
- several variation
* support environments.
* vary among individuals.
+ Salami: Sausage
* The original salami was made from a mix of chopped pork and salt which was dried using air in a casing. People who are Muslim are not allowed to eat this type of salami because it is pork. Now there are many types of salamis made in some countries. Nearly all are seasoned with a combination of herbs and spices in addition to salt. Salamis are now sometimes smoked or cooked before air drying. Some kinds are made of beef while others mix beef and pork. Most, if not all Italian salamis have garlic in them, but few German kinds do, for example. Some, like a few salamis from Spain, include paprika or chili. The difference between some types is in how coarse or fine the meat is chopped. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept:
Natural law
* ALL natural laws are mathematical corollaries of basic symmetries.
* are code of conduct
- fixed dictates which are necessary for a peaceful society
- formulas which describe uniformities or regularities of nature
- inherent in creation
- simply descriptions of how the many entities constituting nature act
- subject to and limited by time and space, spiritual laws have no such limits
- the reason for cancer and earthquakes and other disasters
* bears more weight than human convention.
* consists of cause and effect, which is causality.
* designates the parent as a child's primary caregiver and teacher.
* determine the balance of life here on earth.
* governs all things
- what humans can know
* includes standards of justice which transcend laws made by humans.
* is an attempt to delineate the duties that are universal to every human being
- expression of eternal law
- by definition a description of regular occurrence
- concerned primarily with universal principles
- contrasted with positive law, the enactments of civil society
- same as in gospel by which all are commanded
- something internal, tied closely to our conscience
- teleological
- that law which seems to come from a higher source beyond the laws written by man
* is the highest law
- law which nature taught all animals
- managing intelligence of the universe
- manifestation of the duties that accompany our inborn right to everything
- written in the heavens and in our hearts
* limits events that can occur in response to triggering events.
* possesses absolute and objective moral truth.
* serves to prevent and resolve conflicts between people pursuing contradictory goals.
* simple law of humbleness, of messages to take after the natural.
* summarize patterns that recur in a large amount of data.
* takes precedence over civil law, custom and even divine law.
* term inclusive of climate.
* theory that says that there are laws given by nature , valid everywhere.
* treats all human beings as equal.
+ Rationalism: Epistemology
* Rationalism also influenced natural law. Natural law is a theory that says that there are laws given by nature, valid everywhere. Deism was also influenced by rationalism. According to deism, a supreme being created the universe. This being, and other religious truths can be determined by observing nature, and finding natural laws. This would make religions that are based on revelation unnecessary. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept:
Parameter
* Many parameters affect the formation of water-dissolved oil product fractions
- well being and growth of fish in aquaculture and aquariums.
* All parameters are optional.
* All parameters are listed.
* To use this infobox, copy and paste the infobox code in the usage section into the article. Add values to any parameter fields that apply. Most parameters are general, and apply to any religion. There are several parameters that only apply to one specific religion. Any parameter left blank will not be displayed.
* All parameters are optional. Do not link to an article more than once within the infobox.
* All parameters are optional. If no value is specified for the parameter, it will not be displayed.
* are specified in pairs. Up to 100 airlines can be specified.
* Most parameters begin with a capital letter.
* are colour and text.
* are described in the table below. For questions see the talk page.
* remain the same.
* All parameters can be any valid numeric expression which is evaluated before computing
* affect capacity.
* are addresses
- characteristics in a population
- constants
- factors
- information
- medical tests
- quantities
- the quantitative methods used to describe and compare surface characteristics
* are variables that change the shape of the probability model
- used in exposure and risk equations
* count is an integer specifying the number of blocks.
* define regions.
* describe orientations.
* determine distribution.
* distance Specifies the distance from the eye to the world space origin.
* evolve over time.
* functionName is the name of a function.
* govern choices.
* have better statistical properties
- positive responses
* indicate effects.
* is the address of a variable.
* lead to identification.
* provide information.
* show differences
- patterns
- similar patterns
* string is any string
### concept | parameter:
Required parameter
* are 'date', 'summary' and 'site'.
* are displayed in orange.
* are displayed in orange. Delete any unneeded fields when using the full template syntax.<|endoftext|>### concept:
Principle
* affect outcomes.
* apply to cases
- designs
- life
- matter
- spiritual life
* are basic truths, rules or assumptions
- essential truth, represented by or corresponding to facts
- generalization
- human qualities that form the core of effective servant leadership
- laws
- part of ethic
- rules or laws, often more general or basic than other rules and laws
* are the arrow of compass, our guiding star in the heavens
- rules that guide human behavior
* come from observations.
* describe changes in things
- conditions
* drive evolution.
* explain aspects.
* govern behavior
- development
- movement
- operations
- production
- theories
* guide actions
- classifications
- games
* have applications
- consequences
- different applications
- origins
- specific applications
* impact capacity.
* is generalization
* outline in books.
* provide further insight
- new insight
* underlie theories.
### concept | principle:
Biological principle
* are the basis for DNA computing.
* describe the way the world is.
Democratic principle
* are simply principles of communication, interaction and appropriate response.
* demand the right to organize and bargain collectively.
Economic principle
* enable business managers to make more intelligent decisions.
* guide actions. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | principle:
Ethic
* Define the rights and obligations of the respondent.
* Identify major ethical approaches and principles.
* Know the four models of ethical decision-making and how they help guide ethical decisions.
* Promote the welfare of birds and their environment.
* addresses questions of morality, such as what makes our actions right or wrong
- right and wrong using reason rather than faith or tradition
- topics in the philosophy of value
* also motivate many former meat-eaters to become vegetarians.
* are a basic ideal of what is morally right and wrong for all individuals of a society
- measure of character
- philosophical reflection of moral beliefs and practices
- series of personal decisions
- set of rules of conduct or moral codes
* are about trust and a sense of fair play
- values, ideals and aspirations
- all about relationships
* are an important part of public relations practice
- inescapable component of best-practice medical research
- beliefs that separate right from wrong or accepted standards of good and bad behavior
* are central in decision-making
- to magick
- complete, profound and alive only when addressed to all living beings
- critical in any field of engineering
- crucial in accounting
- different from countires, industries and profession
- essential for any community to function peacefully and therefore exist
- essentially questions of right and wrong
- ethics
- how one conducts oneself, and interprets rules, in relation to morals
- individualistic and situational
- just a branch of aesthetics
* are moral principles adopted by an individual or group to provide rules for right conduct
- rules or principles of behavior for deciding what is right and what is wrong
- standards that help guide behaviour, actions, and choices
- necessary for a human system to work
- principles or standards that guide professionals to do the moral or right thing
- reason and the contemplation of optimum survival
* are rules of conduct for a society
- optimal behavior
- standards of behavior that support an individual s and a society s values
* are the foundation of the profession
- professional standards of conduct that are displayed in sports
- voluntary, something one participates in if one is of good character
* become involved when value judgments are made in setting the limits.
* begins with the rejection of non-universalizable principles.
* belongs to the category of values typically formed and shaped during adolescence.
* choice between good and bad, between right and wrong.
* claims to address the subject of values in a practical manner.
* come into existence when individuals join together in a tribal unit
- play in adult relationships
* considers precedents set in law and other issues that can alter a person's perceptions.
* constitute one of the pillars of our society.
* context in which there are important non-scientistic versions of naturalism.
* deal with personal moral principles and values.
* deals with moral judgments involving moral decisions
- that which is good and that which is the right thing to do
- the proper relations with and responsibilities toward other people
* define a certain parameter where human beings can interact
- the social conditions necessary for human beings to thrive
* denotes man's conduct, which is formed accordingly within time.
* depends on a person s moral obligations as well as the structure of a business.
* distinctive type of knowledge.
* drive the laws of our society.
* embodies the transcendent virtues of patience, trust, love, and relationship.
* entails the development of practical wisdom about doing what is morally good or right.
* equate to morals.
* field of philosophy that deals with right and wrong.
* flows from consciousness.
* focus in all decision situations.
* function of time, location and knowledge.
* fundamental aspect of human society.
* general pattern of a way of life.
* gives necessary truths that hold for all rational beings.
* guide choices and raise consciousness.
* has a connection to motivation and to goals in human behavior
- role in sustainable leadership, as it does to corporate responsibility
- both a philosophical and a practical side
- no analytic truths about the nature of the good
- to do with decisions that involve making a distinction between right and wrong
* have no necessary connection with religion.
* involve judgement and making the right decisions.
* involves choices in regard to moral precepts
- morality, the nature of right as determined by a group or an individual
- the study of moral imagination, moral judgment, and moral action
* is about how people treat people.
* is about what is valuable and how to achieve it
- ought to be
- achieved through change, and successful change is achieved through ethics
- all about behavior
- also different from etiquette
- always the expression of a world-conception
* is an essential component of obstetrics and gynecology
- examined and carefully considered structure that includes both practice and theory
- important aspect of business generally and strategy, specifically
- integral part of mainstream management
- often misunderstood term
- central to a good life
- code of conduct
* is concerned with discovering a code of values by which one can guide ones actions
- free objects which are governed by moral laws
- human character and conduct
- justice, and fairness
- ethics in practice, and practice is daily practice
- important in all areas of society
- independent of religion
- just as demonstrative a science as the natural sciences
* is more than being religious, following a code of conduct, or having proper etiquette
- the avoidance of criminal behavior
- only one of the concerns that can stir up feelings against science
* is our nature, our inner necessity
- way of being human
* is part of doing and saying the right thing in society
- other fields of study in many ways
- the study of religion
- perhaps the most difficult area of philosophy
- primarily concerned with prescriptive statements
- reflection upon moral choices and morally relevant human behavior
* is related only to human beings
- to others
- rewritten to facilitate capitalism
- simply a matter of obeying laws and regulations
- something which everybody is responsible for
- split off from any objective moral order
- strictly a way of addressing things from a moral perspective
- systems
* is the art of determining what is right or good
- right living
- common denominator of science and religion
- delineation of broad principles which govern human life
- depth, form, and substance of doing business
- foundation for the life of the Buddhist layman and for the way leading to liberation
* is the foundation of integrity and credibility
- policing
- fragrance of wisdom
- investigation into the nature of moral judgement and moral reasoning
- key to fiscal and social success in business
- knowledge about which response to choose and which action to do in a given situation
- lifeblood of a free society and it can tolerate only so much adulteration
- philosophical understanding of good and bad, right and wrong
- practice of making a principled choice between right and wrong
- principles of right or good conduct
- rules and standards governing the conduct of an induviual with others
- science and art of moral decisions
* is the science of explaining why some things are right and others are wrong
- morals in human conduct
- values in human conduct
- sense of solidarity with other human beings
* is the soul illustrated in human life
- of Theosophy
* is the study of conduct, moral values, duties, actions, and ends
- cultural and personal behavior
- good and bad practice in a profession or field of study
- human actions
- proper behavior, while morality prescribes that behavior
- right and wrong in human action
* is the study of the basis of morality
- moral principles that guide that conduct
- values and worth
- very basis of spiritual life
- value driven, action oriented and determined by the situation
* leads to law and that leads to freedom.
* lifelong process of being and behaving.
* matter of common sense and experience
- doing one s duty, which derives from rules of reason
- instinctive, naturally human reactions
* means the strength which holds the consciousness bound to truth.
* more abstract study of right and wrong.
* offers definitions of ethics, metaethics, normative ethics, and applied ethics.
* often lags behind science.
* only exists in action and in relationships.
* part of all major religions
- politics, which is the most authoritative and architectonic science
* participatory activity.
* perfectly valid way of thinking about things.
* permeate every aspect of our lives.
* personal code of behavior.
* pertains to benevolence, non-malevolence, autonomy, and justice
- one's sense of duty
* play a role in the development of information literacy.
* plays a distinctive role with corporations
- major role in understanding the controversy that surrou nds genetic testing
- role in the everyday functioning of a business, company, or corporation
* policy listed in the employee handbook.
* precedes the thinking of the ego and the being.
* predominate over conformity and compliance, in religion as elsewhere.
* presupposes human freedom and human responsibility.
* publishes both theory and the application of theory to contemporary moral issues.
* reflects on morality.
* relates to effects.
* relative term.
* set of values that consistently guides our behaviors.
* sometimes cross the letter of the law, and sometimes accidents do happen.
* starts with individual scientists.
* subdiscipline of philosophy that studies right and wrong.
* system to assist in the analysis of such challenges.
* systematic way of looking at morality.
* theme that is strong and constant in Judaism.
* very broad concept that reaches into motivation, intent
- general term, which just means a set of values
* word used lightly and claimed by each of the factions to be on their side.
+ Ethics, What is ethics used for?
* Ethics is part of the study of religion. Some important ideas about what is good or bad have come from religion. See Ten Commandments.
+ Politics, Governments
* Ethics is a more abstract study of right and wrong. Ethics is usually more concerned with principle than law or politics or diplomacy, so many people think ethics is not practical. But without some agreement on ethics, there is probably no way to even have a debate, laws or an election. There is always some agreement on ethics and personal conduct in a political system. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | principle | ethic:
Applied ethic
* is the discipline committed to ask that question.
* subset of ethics generally.<|endoftext|>### concept | principle | ethic:
Business ethic
* are an extension of our personal ethics
- different from ethics
- formal and informal
- the key to profits
* has an interdisciplinary character.
* is also about relationships
- an output of economic success rather than an input to it
- just a category of ethics that applies in the world of business
- related to the philosophical assumptions about what is right
- simply a matter of obeying the law
- taught in UK universities by academics from a range of diverse disciplines
- the application of moral standards to business situations
* lies at the heart of avoiding abuses and creating a world that is safe for business.
* movement that rapidly finds advocates.
* relates to the decisions or actions of an individual within an organization.
* revolves around financial matters.
* spring from the classic theory of utilitarianism.
* tightens the definition to only productive organizations.
Christian ethic
* are realizable only in eternity.
* is based upon love
- essentially a social as well as a personal pursuit
* state that sexual looseness harms the soul as much as murder.
* teach self-sacrifice and love.
Computer ethic
* are ethics applied to the realm of computers and information systems.
* has to do with the standards of personal conduct when dealing with computers.
Discourse ethic
* are procedural rules for the public sphere.
* thoroughly anthropocentric moral theory.
Environmental ethic
* are inherent in our rituals and gatherings.
* attempts to guide environmental decisions involving competing values.
* concerns decisions on environmental problems that involve competing values.
* form of applied ethics.
* is one of the newest fields of philosophical study.
Feminist ethic
* diverse endeavor represented by a diversity of feminist ethical theories.
* is studied, as is the effects of colonialism on women and the environment.
Good ethic
* creates trust and commitment, and trust dissolves when ethics become compromised.
* hold that a good end can never justify evil means to attain it.
* is good for society as well as the economy.
Legal ethic
* are sometimes an oxymoron.
* concerns the standard of professional conduct and responsibility required of a lawyer.
* prohibit lawyers from making guarantees on the outcome of a case.<|endoftext|>### concept | principle | ethic:
Medical ethic
* Much medical ethics involves the application of moral theories to medical ethical problems.
* accepts that there right to a certain level of medical care.
* are concerned with the distributive part of comparative justice.
* growth industry.
* is an interdisciplinary research and teaching subject
- examined in relation to the practice of healthcare management
* large portion of the online library of information.
* preclude doctors from participating in executions.
* refers generically to physician, nursing, and healthcare ethics
- to values and guidelines governing decision making in medical practice
* revolves around clinical matters.
* vary greatly in different regions of the world.
Normative ethic
* is compared and contrasted with descriptive ethics and meta-ethics.
* is concerned with norms of action in terms of whether the action is right or wrong
- what 'ought' to be done
- the study of general normative principles or virtues
* seeks to set norms or standards for conduct.
Philosophical ethic
* includes two different domains.
* is the rational study of moral value.
Professional ethic
* are a major feature of all professions.
* calls for a personal commitment to the highest standards of morality.
* has a higher level of responsibility than civil or criminal law.
* is an integral and crucial component of paralegal education and practice
- different from personal morality | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | principle | ethic:
Situational ethic
* is another outgrowth of relativism.
* seems to be a part of the new philosophy of our age, political correctness.
Ethical principle
* are a part of the global culture
- the rules of conduct that are derived from ethical values
* describe the way the world ought to be.
* share morality by the definition of the overriding principles of the individual.
General principle
* are statements of lawful relationships between parts of nature.
* explain aspects.
Moral principle
* are principles.
* compass forever fixed and forever true.
* differ among cultures, and, within cultures, among individuals.
* have a universal and categorical quality.
### concept | principle | moral principle:
Categorical imperative
* Categorical Imperatives are principles of reason.
* are absolutes
- moral principles
Physical principle
* Most physical principles drive evolution.
* govern operations.
* underlie biological structures and functions
- the functioning of the eye, ear, and other body systems
Same principle
* apply to cases.
* guide classifications.
Scientific principle
* are formulae of regulation.
* underlie all scientific inquiry.<|endoftext|>### concept:
Rule
* Go game for two players.
* Many rules concerning food are taboos on eating certain types of meat
- govern the care and use of animals
* Some rules actually interfere with society's ability to meet important goals
- govern the status and distribution of women in science
* affect government
- small government
* apply decisions.
* apply to areas
- conditions
- ideal conditions
- mine areas
- people
* are an important paradigm in database programming
- part of everyday life
- concepts
- direction
- durations
- expectations of good behavior, and procedures are the practices that lead to good habits
- important when two or more people live together
- laws
* are located in classrooms
- football games
- meetings
- schools
- text books
- thes
- norms, and norms have little to do with logic or truth
- part of books
- pieces of code that execute when certain preconditions are matched
- propositions
* are rules and actual behaviors and practices are often something else
- policies are policies
- social contracts made for a purpose, and specific social purposes can change
- standards of behavior enforced by agents of non-governmental organizations
* are used for consistency
- guides
- rulings
- understanding
* can change how people live, get an education, receive medical care or carry on a profession.
* change over time.
* contribute to problems.
* depend on basic parameters
* drive behavior.
* function as helping guidelines or synopses of cumulative moral experience and wisdom.
* govern behavior
- consequences
- conversions
- motion
- outcomes
- reproduction
- selections
* governing international commerce often evolve according to the wishes of the powerful.
* have benefits
- examples
- exceptions
- impact
- minor impact
* help students.
* include requirements.
* influence effectiveness.
* lead to productive and predictable interaction between people.
* make differences
- little differences
* provide guidance.
* reflect benefits.
* require energy
- knowledge
* save life.
* single rule or list of rules.
* take effects.
* work by regulating behavior.
### concept | rule:
Authoritarian rule
* has a long tradition in Paraguay.
* is the oldest and most common form of government known to history.
Business rule
* Business Rules are expressions of knowledge.
* are a fundamental building block for information management
- policies that control the flow of the business tasks
- rules that govern the way a business operates
- the specifications that preserve the integrity of the logical data model
* control how data is synchronized. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | rule:
Bylaw
* Keep dogs on a leash.
* are rules adopted by an organization's membership
- which govern the internal affairs of an organization
Code of conduct
* Codes of conduct are formal mechanisms which, typically, are characteristic of larger organizations
- increasingly common in the U.S. apparel industry
- the companies' response to such claims
* is convention
- norms
Court rule
* are rules issued by courts.
* govern the conduct of business before courts.
Etiquette
* dates back thousands of years.
* is code of conduct.
* principles change over the years to reflect the social values of society.
### concept | rule | etiquette:
Internet etiquette
* implies discretion when linking to outside resources.
* is called netiquette.
Final rule
* include requirements.
* take effects.<|endoftext|>### concept | rule:
Guideline
* are criteria against which products, systems, or programs can be measured or evaluated
- information
- lines
* are provided by food manufacturers
* base on actual experience
* enable developer.
* encourage adults.
* establish values.
* have report requirements
* help accurate diagnoses
* include nutrients
- recommendations
- restrictions
* incorporate methods
* is guidance
* offer practical suggestions
* outline in articles.
* provide evidence
- more information
- overviews
- references
* suggest answers
- aspects.
* I am being told that it needs to say why it is notable, but multiple significant coverage in reliable sources is why the book is notable. That is the reason for notability guidelines. Guidelines exist because notability is subjective to each individual. On the English Wikipedia, an article does not need to be worked on if significant coverage has been shown
### concept | rule | guideline:
Dietary guideline
* are an important part of the big 'good health' picture.
* represent the practical way to reach the nutritional goals for a population.
* suggest that a woman consume no more than one drink per day.
Legal rule
* affect every aspect of our lives.
* apply to people.
Limitation
* affect growth
- patterns
- population growth
* are disadvantage
- regulations
- the soil from which creativity grows
- time limits
* convenient way of expressing the role of the environment on particular organisms.
* include extreme heat
* is disadvantage
Ordinance
* are laws passed by local governments and address issues such as noise and weeds
- the county commissioners
- rites that believers practice as part of their Christian faith
* commonly govern zoning, building safety, etc., or matters of a municipality
- building, safety, and other municipal matters
* legislative enactment of a political subdivision.
### concept | rule | ordinance:
City ordinance
* limit the number of domestic animals to four per household.
* prohibit smoking in public spaces.
Parliamentary procedure
* is simply an organized manner of conducting a meeting.
* is the means by which organizations make decisions
- result of centuries of accumulated experience
* is used by most governmental organizations, businesses, etc
- in meetings to maintain order
- to help keep order
* set of rules for conducting meetings.
* term many believe limited to student government associations.
* tool to organize and facilitate a meetings progress.
Phonological rule
* Describe the sound system of a language.
* constrain speech-sound production for biological and environmental reasons.
* describe the regularities of the sound system of a language.
Regency
* Most Regencies focus on the aristocracy.
* Regencies are positions
* is the next period of formation.
* safe, reliable and confidential place to enjoy online gaming action. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | rule:
Restriction
* apply to products.
* are restraint
- the sutures which interfere with normal pulsations are a common cause of disease
* can have benefits
- health benefits
* can have many benefits
* form of deprivation.
* influence distribution
- geographic distribution
* is the least severe form of deprivation of liberty
- resistance to airflow through the air cleaner system into the engine
* remain in places.
* require approval.
* All restrictions run concurrently.
### concept | rule | restriction:
Arms control
* is about good governance, and about saving money
- like neurosurgery
- limitations
- only one of several means for achieving the goal of national security
* is the agenda of stability through radical change
- opiate of the policy-making class in both parties
- unilateral disarmament
* means containing nuclear weapons.<|endoftext|>### concept | rule | restriction:
Caloric restriction
* decreases neuronal vulnerability to excitotoxic and metabolic injury.
* diminishes the age-associated loss of immunoreactive catalase in rat prostate.
* extends life span, possibly by activation of the stress response program.
* is the only established method of slowing aging and extending maximum lifespan
- way known to extend the life span of mammals
* reduces fiber loss and mitochondrial abnormalities in aged rat muscle
- in aged rat skeletal muscle
* seems to be associated with marked increases in intestinal absorptive capacity.
Calorie restriction
* attenuates myocardial postischemic inflammatory response.
* is difficult, since dieting is difficult
- known to reduce serum glucose and insulin levels
* is the cornerstone of weight-loss programs
- only documented method of extending maximum life span
* potent research model for the causes of aging.
* translates into lower levels of free radical production in the mitochondria.
Dietary restriction
* Most dietary restrictions can have health benefits
- many health benefits
* are far more problematic in children than in adults.
Fluid restriction
* is the rule because of potential brain edema.
* primary treatment for ascites.
Freeze
* are cold weather
- cooling
- pauses
- phase change
* can occur even in midsummer.
* cause freezes.
* drying is one method of producing instant from liquid
- the removal of water from food while the food is frozen
- low pressure, low temperature process
* keep iguanas limited to the southern half of peninsular Florida.
Sodium restriction
* corrects hyperfiltration of diabetes.
* is especially important for the elderly.
Tidal restriction
* can occur when roads and railroads are constructed over tidal creeks.
* have many detrimental affects to healthy salt marsh systems.
Rule of thumb
* is that roughage increases fat content in milk, whereas concentrate depresses it.
* says the natural log of the number of inputs.
Universal
* Some universals have to do with word order.
* are convention.
* make numbers possible.
### concept | rule | universal:
Moral law
* applies to every man, woman and child in the entire universe.
* apply to everyone.
* are universal.
* is natural law
- the only possible rule of moral obligation
* pure and simple idea of the reason.
* rule for moral action with consequences.
* rule of moral action with sanctions
* rule, to which moral beings are under obligation to conform all their actions.
Universal access
* gives all citizens the opportunity to participate in the economy.
* is the goal with respect to vision and hearing impaired and motion limited persons. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | rule | universal:
Universal life
* blend of term and whole life.
* combination of term and whole life.
* combines term insurance with tax sheltered annuities.
* is actually a combination of term insurance and a tax-deferred savings plan
- designed to be flexible life insurance
- kind of a cross between whole life and term insurance
- the most flexible type of life insurance policy
* type of whole life insurance.
* variation of whole life that offers greater flexibility.
Sort
* are operations
- people
- similarity
- unary predicate symbols which are interpreted as disjoint sets
* have advantage.
* make senses.
### concept | sort:
Bubble sort
* are the least efficient of sorting algorithms, but are the simplest to write.
* is an elementary and very slow sorting algorithm
- one of many different sorting methods | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept:
Value
* All values are self-determined by man, and only exist in the mind of man.
* Explains how to characterize a program in terms of the values it computes.
* Most values drive growth.
* Some values are a strong part of the person's personality make up and are resistant to change
- exhibited by animals
- change as leaders gain experience, others are fixed parts of their personality
* Some values change over centuries
- past centuries
- contribute to starvation
* are a product of our individual experiences
- set of beliefs based upon a code of ethics in a society
- abstract ideals about what a society believes to be good, right, and desirable
* are also closely related to ideals, and many ideals are carried by ethical principles
- fundamental beliefs that are non-negotiable
- always determined in the individual, unique minds of men and women
* are an essential part of each person's working and daily lives
- illusion created by the dominant class
- important component of motivation
- individual's stabilizing factors in a world where the only certainty is change
- integral part of a nation's infrastructure
* are attitudes about the worth of people, concepts, or things
- or importance of people, concepts, or things
- beliefs and standards that are important to live by
* are beliefs that guide behaviors
- people use to give meaning to their lives
- beliefs, principles, and ideals that guide behavior
- complex and are informed by race and socialization
- concepts of what is good, right, and important
- core beliefs such as duty, honor, and integrity that motivate attitudes and actions
- durations
- emotional connections between individuals, whereas science is value-neutral
- essential in a healthy society
- evaluative beliefs about preference, and serve as standards of judgment
- friends, bringing happiness in life
- how one defines what is right, fair and good
- ideas about what is desirable in life
- ideas, beliefs, and customs to which people are emotionally attached
* are important as they influence a person's behavior to weigh the importance of alternatives
- in all phases of education from early childhood onwards
- independent of demographics
- intangible feelings
- internal beliefs
- long range commitments to ends that people share culturally
- measures
- merely projections of our feelings upon external things
- norms or codes by which people live their lives
- only indirectly related to morality
- passions which trigger a bias for action
- principles to follow in achieving the goals of the organization
- principles, standards, or characteristics considered worthwhile or desirable
- shared ideas about what is good
- standards that have some intrinsic or estimated worth
- strongly held beliefs
- subjective preferences often implying what is right or wrong
* are the abstract concepts of what is right, worthwhile or desirable
- basis for all decision-making in life
- core principles which give meaning to our lives
- criteria for a sound social fabric
- glue that holds an organization together
- leaders beliefs and emotional feelings that drives the inner self
- lightness or darkness of the fabric
- princlies and ideas that people believe strongly in and that guide their behaviors
- result of our upbringing, our socialisation and our cultural background
- roots of behavior
- self-motivators that indicate what is most important in our lives
- source of accomplishment and satisfaction in life
- specific cultural goals towards which norms are directed
- stuff from which purposes are made
- treasure of life, making humans wealthy and rich
- unchanging, constant beliefs and norms that underlie the vision
- values for creatures with our particular sensibility
* are what an individual considers most important in life
- define and give our lives direction
- gives meaning to our experiences in life
- matter in life
- whatever people are willing to pay
* base on experience
- information
* can be about fun and happiness
- differ between people, families, and societies
- express mood or form
* combination of good rates and good service
- quality and cost
* come from parents.
* comes in many forms.
* correspond to situations.
* define the character of an organization.
* depend on characters
- circumstances
- locations
- patterns
* derivation of desire.
* describe what the organisation is about and give meaning to stake holders.
* describes the lightness of the color
- range of lightness or darkness of a visual element
- the relative lightness or darkness of a color as well as shades of gray
- worth of individuals in themselves or in the positions which they hold
* emerge out of the ordeals that men and societies go through.
* encompasses relative worth, utility, or quality.
* evolve and continue to develop just as the individual grows and develops.
* exist at individual, family, and society levels
- in the world objectively apart from human choice or human or animal consciousness
* exists in intangibles, and human capital is among the most important.
* explain what is good or bad, right or wrong, just or unjust.
* express our beliefs about what is important, good, right and fair.
* function of quality, as well as cost.
* function of the future earnings of a company
- retinal stimulation of the rods
* give information
- meaning to people's lives
* give value to life and quality to living
- to our living
* govern makers
- policy makers
* greatly affect the way people spend money.
* grow out of the experience of living in a particular environment.
* have both a cognitive and affective component
- fitnesses
- impact
- large uncertainty
* highlight variability.
* imply numbers.
* include variation.
* indicate benefits
- capability
- correlate responses
- differences
- effects
- negative responses
- positive effects
- significant differences
* influence our everyday behavior as well
- people's behavior and serve as criteria for evaluating the actions of others
* interact to generate new values and meanings.
* is abstract and imagined in the mind, and also embodied in money
- also one of the three properties of color
* is an especially important element in works of art when color is absent
- integer defining the nth check upon which the message was last found
- another term for brightness
- ascribed to something based on a comparison with something else
- divided into common value and value par excellence
- essential for people to function well over time
- in relationships among distributed intelligence
- inherently a human creation in a naturalistic universe
- low cost of ownership
* is measured by how well products and services meet the needs of the customer
- differently in every business
- price, quality, and service
- relative to demand
* is something that needs to be determined by each buyer
- which is part of it
- that upon which one acts to gain or keep
* is the 'fair' price that the most traders are comfortable with
- benefit that goes beyond actual service
- border thickness in pixels
- combination of quality and price
- darkness or the lightness of a color
- entry value to generate the random numbers
- height in pixels
- importance that acting man attaches to ultimate ends
- labour-time necessary for the making of a commodity
- lightness and darkness of a given hue
* is the lightness or darkness of a color
- the hue
- measure of customer choice
- number of seconds to pause between steps
- price divided by the duration of the memory
* is the quality of anything that renders it desirable or useful
- that gives something exchangeability in the marketplace
* is the ratio of benefits received to the sacrifice needed to obtain the benefits
- functionality to cost
- quality to cost
* is the relative darkness or lightness of a color
- of the soil color
- second dimension of color
- strength or darkness of the color
* is the value of name
- the data gets when the item is selected
- way animal interest and partiality are experienced in consciousness
- width in pixels
* is the worth of a service or product to a consumer
- an object to the person who desires it
- understood through the sense of value
- variation in lightness and darkness
- vertical space width in pixels
* is what prices in a free market accurately reflect
- the customers' demand as values and are willing to pay for it
* matter a lot in human behavior and they matter especially in both crime and drug use.
* means offering products and services that are of solid quality and sold at a reasonable price
- value of production
* measure of preference
- quality and benefit in relation to the level of investment
- or indicator of absolute worth or importance
* metric indicating the hop count to the destination host or network.
* neutral axis that refers to the grey level of the color.
* non-variable term, or another attributed variable.
* number determined in the absence of a market
- or starts with a number
* often change as the culture changes.
* perception in the eye of the user.
* personal, and constantly changing, concept.
* play an important role in making decisions about how to manage non-indigenous species.
* provide a source of energy, motivation and fulfillment in life, work and leisure
- evidence of spirit in human life
* refers to a quality of an object that satisfies a desire of tile subject
- how light or dark a color is
- the changes in lightness or darkness of the color
* refers to the degree of lightness or darkness in a color
- or darkness in any color
* refers to the lightness or darkness of a color, or hue
- of a hue
- of a tone
- strength of the desire for an option's feature or outcome
- subtle difference between shades of colors and tints of colors
* reflection of how everyone perceives an opportunity.
* relate to motion.
* relate to upward motion
- vertical motion
* related to food can include many things.
* relates to limits of time and amount.
* relative fact that varies in significance from zero to infinity
* represent combined global trading volume of exchange-traded futures and options
- typical values
* represents the amount of light reflected, or the brightness of the color.
* rise during the third trimester of pregnancy, reflecting fetal-skeletal growth.
* rises exponentially with market share.
* serve as guidelines.
* shape our organizational culture, and in the long run, culture determines performance
- perceptions and the selection of data
* show in tables
* spiritual as well as a financial matter.
* stem primarily from culture and education.
* subjective concept - it's in the mind of the beholder
- term, particularly in the horse industry
* tend to permeate and influence all aspects of our lives
- prioritize factors in our lives
* tends to rise sharply as weight and size increase.
* unite people Values that are held in common unite people and families.
* use equations
- follow equations
- similar techniques
* usually encode information having survival or prestige importance.
* vary from locations.
* yield statements.
+ Normal distribution: Probability distributions
* Many values follow a normal distribution. This is because of the central limit theorem, which says that if an event is the sum of other random events, it will be normally distributed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | value:
Abnormal value
* can indicate insulin resistance, and in some cases, diabetes.
* occur in liver disease and poor nutrition.
Alpha value
* are very useful in determining speciation.
* scale for the pixcels of the color transparency.
Army value
* are loyalty, duty, respect, selfless service, honor, integrity, and personal courage.
* emphasize the relationship between character and competence.
Attribute value
* are what data processing is all about.
* pair of attribute names.
* refers to the range within which a characteristic exemplifies the concept.<|endoftext|>### concept | value:
Book value
* are values.
* common accounting term, which reflects the historical cost of assets in a company.
* equals equity divided by common shares outstanding.
* focuses on tangible assets, such as inventory, accounts receivable and equipment.
* is an accounting measure of the assets of the business
- number
- linked to historic earnings success and reinvestment within a company
* is the best measure of a direct property loss
- sum of the assets accounts, net depreciation and amortization
- total assets of a company minus total liabilities
Cash value
* can be an important source of income for the future.
* is the interest earning section of a whole, variable, or universal life insurance policy.
Christian value
* Apply and demonstrate in daily life outside of school and home.
* are also good social values
- the source of peace, beauty, understanding and harmony among all mankind
* embody eternal truths which have attempted to follow over the years.
Cultural value
* affect sensitivity to crowding.
* are A. rules that specify or prohibit certain behaviors in specific situations
- very different around the world
* can include scenic and historic values.
* express what people believe the organization wants to happen.
Customer value
* function of speed, cost, and performance.
* is the basis upon which all business success is built and it is being forgotten
- benefits less the costs
Daily value
* Daily Values are numbers set by the government
- the label reference numbers based on current dietary nutrient recommendations
- can help consumers determine how a food fits into an overall diet
* represent the amount of nutrients considered desirable in a day's time.
Democratic value
* Most democratic values come from parents.
* recognize all cultures and languages as being equal.
Diminished value
* happens when a vehicle is wrecked or damaged in an accident.
* is the loss in a vehicle's market value due to accident damage and repair.
Eigenvalue
* always decrease with successive axes.
* are generally complex numbers
- useful in dynamical systems as well
* can lie within continuous spectrum.
* have the same meaning as the slope of a line in phase plots.
* quantify how much variability is in the direction of the corresponding eigenvector.
Enterprise value
* firm's market value plus debt outstanding, minus cash.
* is the total purchase price a buyer paid for the company.
* measure of the actual economic value of a company at any given moment.
Environmental value
* Environmental Values is concerned with the basis and justification of environmental policy.
* equals market value of the environment.
Existence value
* relate to all other valuations of the natural asset, such as scenic beauty.
* represents an individual's willingness to pay to ensure that some resource exists.
Extreme value
* are ones that dominate the random walk.
* have fitnesses.
Family value
* Family Values are a combination of all the Values of family members, their traditions and culture.
* are important in the Indian tradition
- powerful amongst a lot of people around the world
* vague term that at one point in time sort of meant something.
* variable with dynamic impact. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | value:
Future value
* current amount that is increased in the future by interest compounding.
* involves 'translating' current dollars into future dollars.
* is the process by which today's money grows in value over time.
Good value
* encompass all ethnic groups, cultures and faiths.
* is measured by far more than only price.
High value
* give information.
* positive imbalance between the cost and benefits of a specific product.
* product of high quality at a competitive price.
Instrumental value
* Instrumental Values are moral and competence based in nature.
* refers to something that is valued based on what it can do.
Insulation value
* are for summer conditions, heat flow down.
* vary with the type of material and the presence of water.
Investment value
* concept that is personal to each individual user.
* is used in the decision process to lease or to buy.
Land value
* is determined by the demand for living and working space
- dynamics of the local real estate market
- shaped by natural and social factors which is appropriated by landowners
* measures society's health and belongs to all members equally.
* near perfect metric of the health of a society.<|endoftext|>### concept | value:
Market price
* are central to the market process
- conveyors of information
- market prices, after all
* are the result of continuous changes in the balance of such wagers
- supply and demand
- whatever buyers and sellers agree on
* balance the costs and benefits to all parties of producing and consuming.
* bring personal self-interest and the general welfare into harmony.
* communicate information to buyers and sellers.
* coordinate the decisions of buyers and sellers.
* includes the land where a home is situated.
* is assumed to remain constant over time
- determined by supply and demand
* is the A. true market value
- most probable sales price
- whatever a forest owner agrees to sell their stand of timber for at a given time
* move based on supply and demand.
* reflect the prices that consumers are willing and able to pay.
* tend to form seasonal patterns that are repeated year after year
- move in the opposite direction of cattle numbers
* vary with plant species and product quality.<|endoftext|>### concept | value:
Market value
* are values.
* can diverge from intrinsic values.
* concept that refers to the external value of a property.
* declines because there are fewer buyers for rural practices.
* differs from investment value.
* is based on the age-old law of supply and demand
- upon what a buyer has actually paid for a property
* is determined by the activity in the real estate market and the general economy
- age, edition, supply and demand of the book
* is determined by the interaction between buyers and sellers in the market
- sale and purchase of properties in a county
- supply and demand for housing in the area
- vehicle s purchase price adjusted over time for depreciation
- driven by previous sales
- influenced by the type of change which is occurring at any particular time
- that value about which sales prices fluctuate and towards which they gravitate
* is the company's stock price times the number of outstanding shares
- determining factor on deciding which properties are reappraised
- most probable selling price of a property in an open market transaction
- stock price times the shares outstanding
* product of the price paid for the property.
Moral value
* are relative to a culture and time
- self-determined and situational
* are the objective expression of an absolute moral being
- self-interest of the community
* derive their source from human experience.
* grow out of human experience.
* resides in a person's own needs and wants.
* take the form of taboos, which are things that irritate or anger various spirits.
National income
* broader national level economic measure than is personal income.
* is the incomes created from producing the output. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | value:
Negative value
* are emissions, and positive values removals
- places where electrons reside
* can occur when a counter rolls over.
* link to rural poverty, deaths of infants, and rural population percentage.
* represent regions where flow was weaker over the mountains, than over the plains.
* suck light out of the world while positive values illuminate the world.
Normal value
* are lower in children and teenagers.
* depend on age and sex.
Nutrient value
* begins with genetics of the plant and animal.
* vary depending on the composition of the feed.
Nutritional value
* is similar to white bread.
* varies greatly among commodities and cultivars of each commodity.
Patriarchal value
* persist where there rural majority, even after revolutionary change.
* produce the opposite of bliss.
Positive value
* imply numbers.
* increase the amount of space, while negative numbers decrease the amount of space.
* indicate benefits
- effects
- positive effects
- responses
- the presence of water at the surface
* mean increased profits, negative values mean a reduction in profits.
* represent longitude values east of the Greenwich meridian.
Present value
* is based on a calculation of the price of spot silver on the commodity markets.
* is the discounted value of a future earnings stream
- value in today's terms of a certain amount of money in the future
* refers to today's value of a sum of money to be received in the future.
* represents a series of future cash flows expressed in today's dollars.
Religious value
* can play an key role in sexual decision-making.
* impart a sense of meaning and direction in life.
* permeate black thought on every level.
Residual value
* is an estimate of a vehicle's wholesale value at the end of a lease term.
* is the estimated recoverable value of the goods at the conclusion of the lease term
- forecast value of the vehicle at the end of the lease term
Shareholder value
* can mean bondholder losses.
* is all that matters Shareholders exercise the ultimate control over their company
- nothing but the total benefit to shareholders from investing in a company
* is the driver of our age
- estimated net cash flow for all future years
- new mantra of the global economy
Social value
* can be equally as important as formal law and legislation.
* express a concern for others.
Spiritual value
* are abstract, long-term, and easily lost in the daily chaos
- courage, moral depth, joy, peace, kindness, mercy, and contemplative wisdom
* require spiritual wisdom.
* thrive when passed from one generation to another.
Value investing
* involves a lot of analysis of the fundamentals prior to making a buy decision.
* is low-tech and out of fashion
- our asset management philosophy and our passion
* very real alternative to the agonizing volatility of investing in bubbles.
Value pricing
* involves a system of tolls that vary to maintain an acceptable travel speed.
* represents a pricing strategy that typically occurs within small niche markets. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept:
Vector
* Describe how to add vectors graphically.
* Every vector has a magnitude and a direction.
* Explain the difference between vector and scalar quantities.
* Find the magnitude, direction and component form of displacement vectors.
* Many vectors are actually viruses.
* Some vectors also contain an intron which increases expression levels of many cDNAs.
* Some vectors have characteristic equations
- habitat preference
- identities
- sequence identities
* act like a fleet of microscopic delivery trucks transporting genes into retinal cells.
* also represent relationships between energy events.
* are DNA molecules originating from viruses, bacteria, and yeast cells
- a means by which DNA is delivered to the target cell
- agents that carry inoculum of a disease from one host plant to another
- also very important in dispersing the seeds
- animals that transmit microbial disease-causing agents
- animate insect intermediates
- better suited to graphics composed of basic shapes, as in a corporate logo
- equal if they have the same magnitude and direction
- essential to the development of new plants with flowers
- first rank tensors
- fundamental in the physical sciences
- line segments drawn to represent both the magnitude and the direction of the quantity
- lines defined by moving objects
- lookup tables
- mathematical curves and lines, and are thus scalable
- order one tensors
- organisms that carry pathogens from one host to another
- part of root systems
- plasmids of bacteria that normally infect plants
* are quantities that are fully described by both a magnitude and a direction
- which include a direction
- quite useful in simplifying problems from three-dimensional geometry
- several species of the mosquito genus Anopheles
- special mathematical creatures that look like arrows
- straight lines
* are the difference of two vertices, hence they point from one to the other
- mathematical instructions for creating an object
- mathmatical relationships that governs how the tools in Draw are used
- plasmids which are used in genetic engineering
- vehicles used to deliver genes into cells
- things that can be added and scaled
- used to show distances and directions
- useful for describing forces and their effects
- usually fleas, ticks or possibly misquotes
- variables
- vehicles into which healthy genes can be packaged and carried into human cells
* based drawings have their image information based on mathmatical formulas of curves.
* borne illnesses, especially malaria and dengue fever, are likely to increase.
* can be insects, birds, dogs, rodents, or vermin
- use to graphically represent the mathematics of motion
- multiply in a number of ways
- represent directions
- store information about topology
- transmit pathogens to humans through direct contact such as bites
* depict the forces and represent the inclination and magnitude of each force.
* describe graphics according to their geometric characteristics.
* drawing file using lines and arcs and relatively small in size.
* have a direction and a magnitude
- length which real nonnegative number
- magnitude plus a direction
- arrangements
- limitations
* have magnitude and direction, scalars only have magnitude
- many uses in physics and other sciences
- one dimension and can be of type char or int
* help to determine the sum of velocities.
* include wind.
* indicate the direction and magnitude of the particle velocities.
* is an on-line scatter plot tool that dynamically plots one variable as a function of another
- the direction of something
* means an organism that carries an infectious disease to another organism
- something that has magnitude and direction
* measure displacements on a frame sampling grid.
* meet at eigen-directions.
* normally used are viruses, bacteria, and yeast cells.
* play a major role in the construction of arrays.
* represent a stream of numbers
- the dimensions which contribute variation in an assembly
* spaces over a field.
* spaces over arbitrary fields, subspaces, bases, linear transformations
- the real numbers are special in that they allow measurements of length and angle
* species adapts to different temperature threshold depending on the area it occurs.
* transmit disease by biting an infected host and then biting an uninfected target.
* use mathematical formulas to define shapes onscreen.
* used in gene transfer include viral and non-viral methods
- genetic engineering can infect a wide range of species
* usually bite at dusk and dawn.
+ Dimension, Dimensions and vectors: Geometry :: Algebra
* Vectors are used to show distances and directions. Vectors are often used in engineering and science, and sometimes in mathematics.
+ Malaria, How to prevent malaria, Control mosquitoes: Diseases spread by insects :: Parasites :: Apicomplexa
* Vector control' is one way to stop malaria. Vector means an organism that carries an infectious disease to another organism. For malaria, the vector is the anopheles mosquito. It carries 'Plasmodium' to people. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept | vector:
Cosmid
* are vectors.
* combine the advantages of a phage and a plasmid vector.
Insect vector
* are present and widespread.
* can cause many diseases as well a.
* is present and widespread.
* spread the disease from one plant to another.
Retroviral vector
* allow an efficient transfer of the genes of interest.
* are currently the most popular means for gene delivery
- the most widely used vehicles for somatic gene therapy to date
Vector control
* is applied population dynamics and hence is an aspect of applied ecology
- the most effective method of prevention in Latin America
* requires continuous application of pesticides.
Viral vector
* All viral vectors used for gene therapy are perforce recombinant.
* are currently the most efficient way of delivering genes
- one type being studied by a number of researchers
* can be extremely efficient in transferring genes, but can pose a safety risk.
Whole
* Every whole manifestation of Wholeness, but only at the level at which it actually operates.
* are concepts
- made of parts
- objects
* evolve as wholes.
### concept | whole:
Whole life
* Whole Life is the most basic type of permanent life insurance
- policy for parents of children with special needs
* is insurance coupled with an investment
- with an investment component that typically grows over time
* means that it covers the individual for that individual's entire life. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concept-based language:
Sign language
* allows deaf children to efficiently communicate and be successful in society.
* are an important way for deaf people to communicate
- complete languages capable of expressing both concrete and abstract concepts
- real languages
- true linguistic systems
* can be similar to each other
- useful, but only with other people who understand sign
- influence each other
* concept-based language.
* differ from each other just as spoken languages do.
* does have 'accents'.
* form of communication just like any language used by hearing people
- nonverbal communication
* full and complete language equal to any other language.
* gestural system which is widely used in the deaf community.
* is easier to see than speech reading or finger spelling
- human language
- in a sense a way the two groups can communicate with each other
- more visual and has slightly different grammar than spoken language
- no more universal than spoken languages
- probably the origin of base ten mathematics
* is recognized as bona fide language
- the official language of deaf people
- taught in associations for deaf people and in some schools and colleges
* is the basis for communication between deaf people
- best way that deaf children communicate with their family and friends
- most important part of deaf culture
- oldest way in which deaf people have communicated
- primary form of communication for the severely and profoundly hearing impaired
- understood to some degree by most deaf people
* is used as the first language
- by hearing impaired and deaf people all over the world
* make a difference by helping the deaf talk.
* more rapid form of communication than talking.
* plays a critical role in the lives of most deaf people.
* provides a tactile method for children to learn, play , and express themselves
- for rapid and efficient communication without the use of sound
* resemble oral languages in every way other than their modality.
* speaks to the sight.
* use hands and are understood with the eyes.
* vary around the world just as spoken languages do.
* A 'sign language' way of communicating by using the hands and other parts of the body. Sign languages are an important way for deaf people to communicate. Deaf people often use them instead of spoken languages. Spoken languages use sounds from the mouth and are understood with the ears. Sign languages use hands and are understood with the eyes. People who are blind and deaf can use sign languages too. They feel each others' hands while they are signing.
* A 'sign language' way of communicating by using the hands and other parts of the body. Sign languages are an important way for deaf people to communicate. Deaf people often use them instead of spoken languages. Spoken languages use sounds from the mouth and are understood with the ears. Sign languages use hands and are understood with the eyes. People who are blind and deaf can use sign languages too. They feel each others' hands while they are signing. Deaf people can use sign languages more easily than spoken languages.
* very old language.
* visual language and therefore is easier taught by the use of pictures
+ Sign language, Different sign languages: Disability :: Language-related lists
* However, sign languages are not totally independent from each other. Sign languages can develop from the same source. For example, ASL, LSM, and LSQ all developed from Old French Sign Language. They are part of the same language family. Sign languages can be similar to each other. BSL, Auslan, and NZSL are very much alike. Linguists sometimes talk about them as if they are one language.
* However, sign languages are not totally independent from each other. Sign languages can develop from the same source. For example, ASL, LSM, and LSQ all developed from Old French Sign Language. They are part of the same language family. Sign languages can be similar to each other. BSL, Auslan, and NZSL are very much alike. Linguists sometimes talk about them as if they are one language. Sign languages can influence each other. They sometimes copy signs from other sign languages
- Grammar of sign languages
* Sign languages are not simply mime. They are not gestures strung together without any rules. Sign languages are real languages
- Sign languages in deaf culture
* Sign language is the most important part of deaf culture. Through a sign language deaf people can create a social and cultural identity for themselves. They can communicate naturally with each other. The shared sign language helps hold their deaf community together. Hearing people use spoken languages to do the same things | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### concepts:
Taxonomic class
* are concepts.
* provide the basic sets of soil properties with which soil map units are defined.<|endoftext|>Concrete
* Some concrete has high conductivity
- thermal conductivity
* is strong in compression but weak in tension. For some purposes it needs to be reinforced with steel rods. These rods can be galvanised to prevent rusting and corrosion
* are the purest of the natural odorants
- usually solid, waxy, non-crystalline masses
* becomes harder and less porous as it ages.
* building material
* can by coloured or dyed with a limited palette of several colors.
* consists primarily of cement, sand, gravel and water.
* contains chemicals toxic to aquatic life.
* grows and shrinks much differently than asphalt.
* has properties
- strength
* includes sections.
* is construction materials
- generally stronger if made with less water
- gold
- however a brittle material that lacks ductility
* is located in carpets
- closets
- freeways
- streets
- only a decorative concrete finish applied to otherwise normal concrete
- pavement
- second only to water as the world's most heavily consumed substance
* is strong in compression , as the aggregate efficiently carries the compression load
- strong, durable, relatively inexpensive and can be formed into many shapes and sizes
- usually very porous, unless it has been sealed
* suffers damage
- structural damage
* tends to be alkaline, but the surface has the lowest alkalinity due to aging.
Concrete object
* act just like abstract objects.
* are complete, initialized objects that can be manipulated at run-time.
### concrete:
Precast concrete
* is cast and hardened before being used for construction
- concrete that is formed into structural members at a factory
* is used for architectural accents
- only for beams, columns, and walls in industrial buildings
Concreteness
* is quality
* refers to focusing on specifics rather than vague generalities.
### condiments:
Spread
* Some spreads get a significant amount of their calories from fat.
* are the differences in prices between different futures months.
* is condiments
- extensions
- girth
- pages
- part of publications
- travel
### condiments | spread:
Coverlet
* fit a bed much like a comforter in that they cover the top of the bed only.
* is spread
Hematogenous spread
* appears to be uncommon.
* is more common in children than in adults
- often to the lungs and liver
- the third pathophysiology
Metastatic spread
* is first to lymph nodes, and later, hematogenous.
* occurs early to other bones and lungs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Condition
* Many conditions are the result of a hormonal imbalance in the female body.
* Many conditions can affect the inner ear and cause vertigo
- size and intensity of a fire
- be responsible for an iron deficiency
* Many conditions can cause low blood pressure
- pain in the teeth
* Many conditions can lead to a false positive result, including flu shots, hepatitis, and pregnancy
- reduced blood count and similar signs and symptoms
- congestive heart failure
- weaken the heart and cause congestive heart failure
- cause an oven to heat irratically, or even unevenly
* Many conditions influence how well our bodies use oxygen
- the temperature at which each state change occurs
* Most conditions affect calf survival
- children
- dental health
- evaporation
- fetal development
- gene expression
- kidney functions
- light
- mental health
- metabolism
- mortality
- people
- plant growth
- protein metabolism
- subsequent fetal development
- thymus functions
- water evaporation
* Most conditions are caused by diseases
- viruses
- transmitted to humans
* Most conditions associate with cardiovascular impairment
- infection
- can have symptoms
* Most conditions cause coughs
- kidney diseases
* Most conditions contribute to obesity
- weevil outbreaks
- exist in habitats
- impact health
* Most conditions occur in aquatic environments
- climatic environments
- produce inflammation
* Most conditions promote bacterial growth
- liverwort growth
- refer to atmospheric conditions
- relate to plant growth
* Most conditions result in inflammation
- pain inflammation
* Some conditions actually increase the sun's intensity.
* Some conditions affect biology
- birds
- bones
- cats
- connective tissue
- dogs
- ear canals
- eyes
- families
- fitnesses
- glands
- herbivore density
- human eyes
- humidity
- larynxes
- man women
- melanocyte biology
- mice
- mothers
- muscles
- nurse mothers
- pathogen replication
- penises
- pipistrelle bats
- plants
- prostate glands
- skin
- squirrels
- stomachs
- the skin around the vagina
- are X-linked recessive , in that the gene is carried on the X chromosome
* Some conditions are caused by abnormalities
- chromosomal abnormalities
- diets
- fungi
- ingestion
- insects
- poor diets
- tiny insects
* Some conditions are exhibited by animals
- different animals
- such that the person experiences pain, spasticity, or lack of coordination
* Some conditions associate with allergies
- frequent urination
* Some conditions cause benign tumors
- blindness
- cell death
- disorder
- infertility
- intestinal damage
- premature cell death
- tract infection
- considered to be mental illness are straightforwardly brain diseases
* Some conditions contribute to death
* Some conditions create gases
- natural gases
- do preclude the use of certain psychiatric medications
- exist in environments
* Some conditions have genetic predisposition
* Some conditions have urinary infection
* Some conditions increase bacterial production
- inhibit the bladder's ability to release urine
- involve inflammation
- kill plants
* Some conditions lead to cancer
- prostate cancer
- sexual reproduction
* Some conditions occur in adult dogs
- ferrets
- individuals
* Some conditions occur in male guinea pigs
* Some conditions occur in young adult dogs
* Some conditions promote germination
- newborn survival
- reduce fitnesses
* Some conditions relate to bone health
- sexual health
- require growth hormone therapy
- respond to iodine therapy
* Some conditions result in baldness
- diabetes
- weaken plants
* affect activities
- adults
- appearances
- areas
- behavior
- detection
- goats
- likelihood
- movement
- offspring
- operations
- performance
- refraction
- severity
* affect subsequent development
- visibility
- weather
* affecting the mouth and teeth have a very direct effect on the rest of the body.
* allow situations.
* also plays an important role in toy collecting.
* are caused by deficiencies
- depletion
- events
- exposure
- herpes viruses
- contexts
- exacerbated by smogs
* are experienced by individuals
- expressions used to reduce the number or rows that the query has to search
- good health
- illnesses
* are part of agreement
- experiments
- premises
- procedures
- statements
- things that have to take place in order for the predicted results to occur
* associated with anxiety and stress include depression, phobias, and chronic fatigue
- dehydration appear to increase the risk of renal toxicity
- insulin resistance include high blood sugar, diabetes, and heart disease
* can change overnight, even during the coldest weather.
* can have adverse effects
- serious effects
- similar symptoms
- include delusions and thought disorders
* cause accumulation
- dormancy
- honk coughs
- innate dormancy
- pain sensation
* causing bleeding in late pregnancy pose a risk to both mother and fetus.
* change constantly on all the rivers, lakes, and oceans of the world.
* change over periods
* contribute to chances
- success
* create conflict
- problems
* determine variation.
* develop over time.
* encourage growth.
* exist in countries
- locations
- other countries
- regions
- subdivisions
* favor evolution
* have causes
- few different causes
- patterns
- side effects
- significant effects
* impair ability.
* include anxiety disorder
- bone diseases
- heart diseases
- injuries
* include metabolic bone diseases
- platelet disorder
- severe injuries
* influence choices
- life history strategies
* interfere with functions
- photosynthesis
* involve heat
- intense heat
* is the inherent physical characteristics of the air
- name of the game in all breeds
* lead to breakdowns
- dependence
- existence
- high productivity
- imbalances
- population growth
* lead to rapid growth
* leading to polymerization are heat and peroxide catalysts
* limit activities
- mangrove habitats
* persist for months
- several weeks
* present problems.
* produce effects
- rain shadow effects
* relate to growth
- involvement
* related to gene mutations are called genetic disorders
- soils include soil pH, fertility, and drainage
* represent problems.
* require attention
- close attention
- diagnoses
- enhance excretion
- examinations
* require immediate attention
- medical attention
- treatments
- maintenance treatments
* require medical attention
- proper diagnoses
- urgent treatments
* respond to treatments.
* run in families.
* sometimes seen in beagles include cherry eye, obesity, and ear infections.
* there control the survival and affect the success of all organisms.
* threaten health.
+ Mozambique, Geography and climate, Climate: Portuguese-speaking countries
* Mozambique has a tropical climate with two seasons. The wet season is from October to March and the dry season from April to September. Conditions vary depending on altitude. Rainfall is heavy along the coast and is less in the north and south. Yearly precipitation changes from depending on the region. Cyclones are common during the wet season. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Abiotic condition
* affect the distribution of organisms.
* differ sufficiently under shrub canopies relative to beneath grass canopies.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Abnormality
* Abnormalities affect development
- fetal development
* Abnormalities are present at birth
- retardation
- usually reversible upon discontinuation
* Abnormalities arise from spermatogenesises
- when the regulatory genes give the wrong signal
* Abnormalities associate with disorder
- severe disorder
* Abnormalities can also arise in the sex chromosomes
- indicate the risk for developing heart disease
- lead to an accumulation of the toxic calcium
- range from minor anatomic changes to total aplasia
* Abnormalities cause bone pain
- change over time
- develop in the arterial system
- exist in both donor and recipient nerves and they differ in appearance and aetiology
* Abnormalities have consequences
- devastate consequences
- reproductive consequences
- include activities
* Abnormalities often occur in the apical and posterior segments of the upper lobe of the lung
- liver and bone disease
- relate to skulls
- require treatments
* Abnormalities result from defects
- genetic defects
- inherent defects
* Abnormalities result in impairment
- mental impairment
* Many abnormalities gradually regress over a period of months
- occur with uterine fibroids
* Most abnormalities affect development
* Most abnormalities associate with disorder
* Most abnormalities cause bone pain
- have reproductive consequences
* Most abnormalities result from genetic defects
- in mental impairment
* Some abnormalities affect absorption
- bone health
- alter permeability
* Some abnormalities are caused by diseases
- infection
- protozoan infection
* Some abnormalities associate with deficiencies
- wilson diseases
- can increase the risk of infection
* Some abnormalities cause death
- inflammation
- sudden death
* Some abnormalities contribute to death
- life
- long life
- have probability values
* Some abnormalities lead to cancer
- oral cancer
- occur in birds
- prevent fertilization
- produce no symptoms early in life
- relate to types
* Some abnormalities result in anemia
- severe anemia
- show an extensive involvement of tissue, while others show very little
* is in a change from glutamine to valine
- the negative of law<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality:
Aberration
* are also important for the condensor
- any errors that result in the imperfection of an image
- optical imperfections that impair the resolution performance of a lens
- the blurring and distorting properties of an optical system
- what keep people from becoming totally disengaged
* come in many forms and flavors.
* induce a shape change in the ring, which depends on the focus position.
* is an abnormality
- interpreted as an effect due to the motion of the Earth around the Sun
- mental disorder
* only effect the phase of the intensity incident at the scattering spot.
### condition | abnormality | aberration:
Chromatic aberration
* arises because light slows down as it passes through a material.
* can create luminance artifacts at isoluminous-colour borders.
* causes the color of the cowstics to depend on the index of refraction.
* is aberration
- distortion
- mainly due to the water in the eye, which is the same from person to person | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality | aberration:
Deflection
* are a part of hockey
- bending
- movement
- physical properties
* causes changes in camber, caster, and toe angles, influencing steering control.
* happens when an object hits a plane surface.
* is aberration
* is an important source of lift
- undesirable effect from the use of sidespin
- to the right in the Northern Hemisphere and to the left in the Southern Hemisphere
* measure of how far the bridge sags when loaded.
* refers to the angle off relationship between the shooter and target.
+ Carom billiards, Equipment, Billiard cues: Cue sports
* The stick used to hit billiard balls, called a billiards cue, is different in some ways from the typical pool cue. These features make the billiard cue stiffer. This stiffness helps players in striking the larger and heavier billiard balls as compared with pool balls. Deflection is an undesirable effect from the use of sidespin. Sidespin is spin placed on a ball by striking it not at its center but off to one side of its center, causing it to spin as it travels down the table. Deflection causes a ball to travel not in a straight line in the direction it was struck.
Spherical aberration
* are most common in poorly made lenses.
* is distortion
- of the image, as explained in Flatness of Field
* makes object images look washed out, hazy, cloudy, milky, and low in contrast.
* occurs when the edges of a lens refract more light than the center.
Albinism
* Most albinism affects eyes.
- people from all races
* congenital abnormality
* is birth defects
- diseases
- hypopigmentation
* occurs throughout the animal kingdom.
### condition | abnormality | albinism:
Ocular albinism
* involves primarily the eye.
* is transmitted through either an X-linked or autosomal recessive mode.
Aneuploidy
* Aneuploidies are chromosomal abnormalities.
* Most aneuploidy causes spontaneous abortion.
* demonstrates a malignant potential in fibrohistiocytic tumors.
* is abnormalities
- characteristic of cancers
- chromosome abnormalities
Anorchidism
* can be unilateral or bilateral and is commonly observed.
* is an abnormality
Cardiac abnormality
* Cardiac abnormalities require treatments.
* Some cardiac abnormalities cause death
- sudden death<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality:
Chromosomal abnormality
* Chromosomal abnormalities affect development
- fetal development
* Chromosomal abnormalities are a common cause of neonatal death
- important diagnostic and prognostic findings
- more likely as women age
- the most common cause of spontaneous abortion
- arise from spermatogenesises
- can also play a role
- give rise to specific physical features
- zoom skyward with advancing maternal age
* Most chromosomal abnormalities affect development
- result from a faulty egg or sperm cell
Chromosome abnormality
* Chromosome abnormalities are genetic conditions
- identify high risk and low risk patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia
- represent a significant clinical and social burden
* Most chromosome abnormalities are sporadic with a small to negligible risk of recurrence
- occur as an accident and the chance of it happening again is low | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality:
Cryptorchidism
* can occur alone, however, and is also present in some genetic syndromes
- in some family lines
* common childhood disorder.
* condition in which the testes fail to descend.
* developmental defect in both animals and humans.
* greatly increases the dog's risk of testicular cancer and torsion.
* is an abnormality
- example of a sex-limited trait
- distinct from monorchism , the condition of having only one testicle
- rarer in cats than it is in dogs
* is the absence of one or both testes from the scrotum
- both testes in the scrotum after one year of age
* is the failure of one or both of the testicles to descend into the scrotum
- both testicles to descend from the abdomen
- main genital abnormality
- thought to be an inherited defect, and can be seen in any breed
* occurs at a much higher rate in a large number of congenital malformation syndromes
- in some cases
Dysplasia
* Many dysplasias simply fade away after a pregnancy.
* are pre-neoplastic and potentially reversible.
* is abnormalities.<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality | dysplasia:
Cervical dysplasia
* can be the first step in the development of cervical cancer.
* describes the entire range of possibilities for abnormal growth.
* is abnormal cell growth on the cervix
- an abnormal growth of the cells of the cervix
- classified as either mild, moderate, or severe
- considered to be a pre-cancerous condition
- when there are abnormal cells growing in the cervix that are pre-cancerous
* means disordered growth.
* step between a normal cervix and cervical cancer.
* term used to describe abnormal cervical cells.
Cortical dysplasia
* focal area of abnormal brain development.
* tends to spare the hippocampal formation and principally affects the neocortex.<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality | dysplasia:
Elephantiasis
* caused by lymphatic filariasis is transmitted through the agency of female mosquitoes.
* comes from the bite of tropical mosquitoes.
* is dysplasia
- one more of the several diseases transmitted through mosquitoes
- spread by the bite of infected mosquitoes
* is the leprosy found in modern times in Syria, Greece, Spain, Norway and Africa
- most awful disease known
- treated by plastic surgery
* resulting from timorian infection is rare.
* sometimes requires plastic surgery to restore the damaged skin parts.
* usually occurs on the lower legs or genitals but can occur on any part of the body.
Fibrous dysplasia
* disorder in which bone expands due to abnormal development of fibrous tissue.
* hamartoma of bone.
* is also common the in skull, ribs, and tibia
- characterized by normal bone being replaced by fibrous tissue
- usually first apparent in late childhood
* needs surgical treatment, curettement being adequate for long bones.
Retinal dysplasia
* is an abnormally developed retina and is genetically inherited
- common in dogs and cattle
- known to be inherited in many breeds
* type of retinal malformation.
Embryonic abnormality
* Embryonic abnormalities can occur in birds on a diet poor in copper.
* Some embryonic abnormalities occur in birds.
Fetal distress
- an outdated term that continues to be widely used in modern obstetrics
- common and often unrecognised
- more likely to occur with the more intense contractions of an induced labor
- most commonly the consequence of maternal distress
- the common denominator that results in the brain injury
* occurs when the baby's ability to cope with labor is compromised in some way.
* serious condition and one which warrants prompt attention. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality:
Fixation
* Some fixation occurs in legume plants
* also refers to an inability to adopt any different or new perspective on a problem.
* has an effect on activation-dependent platelet antibodies.
* involves processing the tissue to preserve the structure of the tissue.
* is holding the gaze direction towards the same environmental point through time
- one of the tests for determining whether a work has been reproduced in tangible form
- part of plastinations
- preservation
* is the ability to direct and maintain steady, central visual attention on a target
- first stage which aims to preserve the tissue in the original state
- inability to see a problem from a fresh perspective
* method of preserving the material and prevents decomposition.
* preserves the tissue and holds it together.
* stabilizes mainly proteins, and protein conjugates.
### condition | abnormality | fixation:
Chemical fixation
* occurs at high temperatures.
* stops microbial decay and stops chemistry almost completely.
External fixation
* has a definite role in the management of pelvic fractures.
* method of immoblizing bones to allow a fracture to heal.
Internal fixation
* is often the best treatment for hip fractures and complicated fractures
- used more often in younger people and for fractures that are well-aligned
* promotes union of the cortical graft to the host cancellous bone.
* requires surgery to attach a metal plate or rod to the pieces of broken bone.
* starts with surgical realignment of the bone.
Rigid fixation
* encompasses all of Lorenz's bone plating products.
* is important for graft vascularization and for minimal graft resorption.
Gigantism
* are diseases.
* is caused by an over secretion of the growth hormone produced by the pituitary gland
- excessive secretion of during childhood
- dysplasia
- extremely rare
- rare, and accompanies growth hormone secreting pituitary neoplasms
- usually a disadvantage for bacteria
* occurs before puberty and is caused by oversecretion of growth hormone. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality:
Humpback
* Sing for Their Supper Humpback whales have an interesting way of getting a meal.
* Some humpbacks have a very unusual way of catching their food
- whitish, oval-shaped scars, which are the marks of parasitic sea lampreys
* also practice a behavior referred to as lunging
- produce a variety of social sounds made by males and females
- sing at fairly high frequencies, which further limit the distance their voices carry
* are acrobats of the ocean, breaching and slapping the water
- almost black in color with white along their flippers and undersides
- baleen whales which means they filter their food through baleen plates
* are baleen whales, meaning they have no teeth
- sifting their food through the baleen filtres unlike toothed whales
- basically black or gray, with a white region on the throat and belly
- black or gray with white markings on their throats and bellies, flippers and tails
- both cosmopolitan found in all oceans and endangered
- cripples
- curious animals and sometimes approach close to boats
- curious, and often pop their head up above the waterline to look around
- easy to tell apart, using the black and white pattern on their tail flukes
- famous for their songs that they sing
- found in all the world's oceans
- generally blackish with white under and at the sides
- highly migratory
- mainly black on top and white underneath
- older, bigger perch which produce meaty fillets
- the acrobat of the whale world
* are the most acrobatic of whales with many behaviors visible at the surface
- articulate of all baleen whales
- underwater crooners
- very acrobatic whales that sing beautiful, complex songs
* breathe through the blow hole on top of their head.
* can consume a ton a food a day
- nearly a ton of food in a day's time
* come in four different colors, ranging from white to black to mottled
- to Hawaii's waters to mate, and to give birth
* eat by filtering food through baleen plates.
* engage in fantastic courtship and mating behavior which can last for hours.
* feed on small schooling fish and krill.
* gather into larger feeding groups and work together to surround and catch prey.
* have a color pattern on the bottom of their tail that is distinct for individuals
- small dorsal fin toward the flukes
- only one real predator that anyone knows about - killer whales
- similar tendencies
* lobtail more when the seas are rough and stormy.
* make up most of the whale population off Massachusetts.
* migrate between northern and southern latitudes in phase with the climactic cycle
- each year from polar water feeding grounds to tropical water breeding grounds
- seasonally, spending the summer in high latitudes and the winter in low latitudes
- to the North
* prefer to live along coasts.
* sieve food from huge volumes of water using specialised fringed mouth-plates.
* sometimes cruise along the coast and can be seen breaching.
* spend the warmer months in cool water and spend the winter in tropical waters.
* spinal curvature
* still inhabit all of the world's oceans.
* swim in pods of three or four as they migrate.
* tend to swim near shore during migration, increasing the likelihood of a sighting.
* use at least two methods of feeding.
### condition | abnormality | humpback:
Male humpback
* position themselves next to females with the untiring desire to copulate.
* serenade females with the longest and most complex songs in the animal kingdom.
* sing the longest and most complex songs of any animal.
Hydrocephalus
* accounts for a large proportion of adult patients with a diagnosis of dementia.
* is an abnormality
### condition | abnormality | hydrocephalus:
Acquired hydrocephalus
* can develop at any age as a result of head trauma or illness
- occur at any age
* is hydrocephalus that develops after birth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality | hydrocephalus:
Communicating hydrocephalus
* means that the fluid does flow normally to the outside of the brain.
* occurs when the flow of CSF is blocked after it exits the ventricles.
Hypervitaminosis
* disorder resulting from excessive dosage with one or more vitamins.
* is an abnormality<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality:
Kyphosis
* Some kyphosises occur in infants.
* are diseases.
* contributes more to paraplegia as a result of tension on cord with flexion.
* forward bending of the spine.
* is also common in teens and adults.
* is an abnormally increased rounding in the thoracic spine, as viewed from the side
- excessive round-back deformity common in teenagers
- measured on a lateral radiograph of the thoracic spine, taken with the patient standing
- spinal curvature, usually indicated by a forward bow in the upper back
- the result of a disease or congenital problem
* limits the ability to take a deep breath, can impair digestion and disturb one s balance.
* occurring at birth is rare.
* occurs in the thoracic spine while the lumbar spine telescopes on itself as it collapses.
* results from a variety of causes.<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality:
Maladaptive abnormality
* Maladaptive abnormalities can cause suffering and social discomfort.
+ Abnormal psychology: Psychology
* The definition of what constitutes 'abnormal' has varied across time and across cultures, and varies among individuals within cultures. It is often associated with a mental disorder. Abnormal psychology can be described as an area of psychology that studies people who are consistently unable to adapt and function effectively in a variety of conditions. There are different ways to classify mental disorders. Abnormal behaviors can be adaptive or maladaptive. Maladaptive abnormalities can cause suffering and social discomfort. These behaviors can also be irrational, unpredictable and dangerous.
Monorchidism
* is an abnormality
* rare condition in which only one testis actually develops in the dog's body.
Phimosis
* are abnormalities
- diseases
* can also occur if the foreskin is forced back before it is ready.
* is an abnormality
- inability to retract the foreskin fully
- commonly misunderstood and misdiagnosed
* is the condition in which the opening in the tip of the foreskin is too small
- name given to an unretractable foreskin
* name given to the condition where the foreskin is unretractable.
* tight preputial ring often made of scar tissue preventing retraction of the foreskin.
Progeria
* is accelerated aging
- associated with a short lifespan
- extremely rare
* rare genetic condition characterized byan appearance of accelerated aging in children.
Quantitative abnormality
* Quantitative abnormalities are secondary to decreased rates of globin chain synthesis.
* Some quantitative abnormalities have probability values | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality:
Regression
* Performs linear regression analysis.
* approaches accounting for measurement error.
* involves turning back to a stage or a behaviour that is familiar.
* is allegedly an indication that the child has been sexually abused
- also a form of prediction
- applied to fitting rate laws
- basically a loss of autonomy, a reversion to an earlier behavioral level
- confined to the area of language
- defense mechanisms
- natural and serves to help a child adjust to a new level of growth
- one of the most important and widely used techniques in statistics
- part of regression analysises
- reversals
- statistical methods
* is the loss of skills learned in school
- opposite, the retreat of a feature from the land
- process of returning to the mean
- reversion to an earlier stage of development in the face of unacceptable impulses
- tendency to re-read a sentence, phrase, or passage that has already been read
* is used to estimate the value of one variable when other related variables are known
- fit a line or curve through a set of data points using a least squares fit
* method by which a line is fit to data.
* normal part of development.
* often occurs in which wounds from the past can be effortlessly processed.
* way to test the influence one variable has upon another.<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality | regression:
Linear regression
* assumes that the function is linear.
* is one of a class of data analysis methods called linear least squares fitting
- statistical regression
- used to find the stripe size at which the relative amplitude is zero.
* has many practical uses
* special case of the least squares method.
* statistical procedure that is used to predict future values from past values.
* very widely known mathematical tool for modelling data.
* widely accepted and reproducible method.
Logistic regression
* commonly used statistical analysis for predicting dichotomous outcomes.
* is used when the dependent variable is binary or dichotomous.
* nonlinear form of regression.
* special case of generalized linear models.
Regression testing
* can also relate to data validation.
* is simply the retesting of reported bugs to ensure that they have been fixed.
* way to ensure that no new problems have occurred.
Stepwise regression
* is an alternative to splines for fitting noisy data
- suspect as a method for choosing a scientific model
* technique for calculating regression values with multiple input values.
Renal abnormality
* Renal abnormalities are common in heatstroke
- common, and most patients have proteinuria and microscopic hematuria
* Some renal abnormalities occur after initiations.
Sequela
* e are bone pain, fracture, proximal weakness and bone deformity
- miasmatic, they are simply the outcroppings of chronic miasms
* is an abnormality
Skeletal abnormality
* Skeletal abnormalities are more common among men with multiple X chromosomes.
* Some skeletal abnormalities are often present.
### condition | abnormality | spinal curvature:
Lordosis
* backward curvature of the spine.
* is excessive extension of the vertebrae, especially at the lumbar level.
* spinal curvature<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality | spinal curvature:
Scoliosis
* affects girls much more frequently than boys.
* are diseases
- illnesses
* is more common in girls than in boys
- patients with missense mutations
- than just a curve to the side
* occurs about five times more frequently in girls.
* occurs in both sexes, but girls are more likely to have more severe curvatures
- girls at the start of adolescence
* tends to run in families, and it affects many more girls than boys
* varies considerably in the extent of the curvature.
* worsens most rapidly when growth is most rapid, in the latter stages of puberty. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | abnormality | spinal curvature | scoliosis:
Congenital scoliosis
* develops secondary to a bony anomaly of the sacrum, vertebrae or ribs.
* is caused by vertebral abnormalities that are present at birth
- scoliosis that is present at birth
- the result of an abnormality of the development of the vertebrae
* result of a bone abnormality present at birth.
Idiopathic scoliosis
* appears to have a genetic predisposition.
* has a strong genetic tendency.
* has no identifiable cause
- known cause
* is broken down into four categories based on age
- scoliosis that results from no known cause
- seen in adolescents
* is the most common type of scoliosis
- type, and it has no known cause
Squint
* condition with misalignment of eyes.
* is also a very cool derivative of a blur filter
### condition | abnormality | squint:
Crossed eye
* affects five percent of all children.
* are a commonly used term for the technical phrases esotropia
- more common in premature babies than in full-term babies
- one type of strabismus
- usually easier to notice than lazy eyes
* common problem in institutionalized children.
* happen when one eye turns inward.
* is squint
### condition | abnormality | squint | esotropia:
Accommodative esotropia
* frequent sequela to surgery for congenital esotropia.
* type of strabismus.
Strabismus
* is abnormalities
- diseases
* occurs most often in young children.
* refers to any misalignment of the eyes.<|endoftext|>### condition | abnormality:
Transposition
* can create significant mutations and alter the cell 's genome size.
* causes a variety of genetic aberrations.
* contextsensitive operator that promotes the movement intra or inter chromosomes.
* involves both decompression of the nerve and moving the nerve
- creation of direct repeats from the original target sequence
- another example of non-homologous recombination
- calculations
- mediated by enzymes, such as a transposase
- monitored using a genetic assay
- playing
- the movement of a particular fragment of DNA from one part of a genome to another
* occurs from the l vector to the bacterial chromosome.
+ Modern defence: Chess openings
* The opening is hypermodern. Black does not occupy the centre, he counter-attacks the centre built up by his opponent. The system is extremely flexible, and there are many transpositions. Transpositions arrive at the same position from different move orders. There are players, including a few grandmasters, who play almost nothing but the Modern with white and black. The modern defence'. Winning with the Modern'.
+ Transposon: Genetics :: Evolutionary biology
Varix
* Varices are due to increased back-pressure on the hepatic vein
- fragile and can bleed easily
- large blood vessels which bulge into the esophagus and stomach
- prone to bleed, and anomalous great vessels can result in esophageal compression
* Varices can be straight, bead-like or nodular and tortuous
- rupture, causing massive bleeding
- grow until pressure is so high that the vessels rupture
- have thin walls and carry high pressure
* is abnormalities.
### condition | abnormality | varix:
Esophageal varix
* Esophageal varices are complications of the portal hypertension.
* Esophageal varices are prone to bleed due to their fragility
- resulting in massive hematemisis and blood loss
Varicosity
* is varix.
* results from a chronic increase in blood pressure, which dilates the vein.
Acidic condition
* can develop in streams and be harmful to fish and plants.
* slow the rate of decomposition in bogs.
Acute condition
* Most acute conditions heal very quickly, chronic diseases take longer.
* Some acute conditions are caused by ingestion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Addiction
* All addictions are mind-body problems
- sinful attempts to anesthetize life when our lives seem out of control
- have their rituals, which become almost as important as the substance itself
* More Addiction complex problem with multiple causes.
* Most addiction affects individuals.
* Most addictions are difficult to overcome alone
- have a psychological aspect
* Some addiction contributes to addiction
- drug addiction
* Some addictions are chemical based, while others are emotionally based
- harder than others to overcome
* Some addictions are more common among persons of different categories
- in one sex or the other, but no group is immune
- worse than others.
* takes place when the addictive element enters the body. Once under this control, the consumer does not have a completely free will, and listens to the addiction's bidding
* affects families, work places, value systems, and society as a whole
- whole families
* afflict many men and women across all walks of life.
* also can place people at increased risk for a wide variety of other illnesses
- has to be recognized as a result of many biobehavioral factors
- includes nicotine, food, sweets, eating disorders and so on
* always flourishes where there high level of despair and hopelessness.
* are a way to avoid or relieve stress
- actually compulsions
- always highly karmic in nature
- characterized by increased cravings
- compulsive, and involve no deep seated motivations in the subconscious
- difficult to break because they seem to ease the pain
- easier to deal with earlier in their process of development
- hard to overcome
- illnesses resulting from social sins
- of the same ilk
- often excuses for unacceptable behavior
- progressive illnesses
- really a form of idolatry
- sicknesses that are caused by the sin of voluntary excessive drinking or drug use
- usually destructive
* arise out of misguided responses to the deepest spiritual yearnings of our soul.
* become harmful when attention to family, friends and work suffer as a result.
* becomes a way to escape the social economic problems they face.
* begins as abuse , or each single use of a substance like marijuana or cocaine
- usage of a substance like marijuana or cocaine
* biologic disease with a genetic basis.
* biological, psychological and social process.
* blind, ceaseless pursuit of the drug, in an obsessive-compulsive rush to stay high.
* brain disease that changes a person's neurochemistry
- disorder in the sense that reward mechanisms and decision-making are impaired
* bring tragic consequences that are hard to overcome.
* can be a chief symptom for how that disharmony can become expressed in our lives
- cultural and sometimes ethnic in nature
- healthy or unhealthy
- immediate in young people experimenting, they are in denial they have a problem
- physical or mental, and they usually affect both victim and family
- physical, psychological, or both
- to substances, persons, or behaviors
- begin as a way to cope with uncomfortable situations
- come in many forms, one of which is substance addiction
- happen to men and women and writers alike
- include both physiological and psychological dependence
* can lead to depression, while depression can lead to any form of addiction
- malnutrition and hepatitis
- strike families of any background
* cause repeated behavioral problems and activity of use take up a lot of a persons time.
* causes a desire to smoke
- the addict to surrender freedom
* changes the brain, disturbing the normal hierarchy of needs and desires.
* choice and a decision.
* chosen lifestyle.
* chronic condition, and relapse is always possible
- disorder that requires long term treatment
- illness just like diabetes
- relapsing disorder
* chronic, often relapsing illness, like many other illnesses.
* chronic, progressive, relapsing brain disease
* chronic, relapsing brain disease that is treatable
* come in all shapes and sizes.
* comes from trying to deal with anxiety in ineffectual ways
* complex disease that involves both behavior and biology
- problem that deals with the environmental aspects of the patient
* complicated and seductive disease
- process that is described by tolerance, dependence and withdrawal
* connects social habits with behaviors that all too easily trigger a relapse.
* continues to be a serious issue for individuals, families, and our society.
* costly problem which has economic, social, and psychological consequences.
* create problems that lead to desperation.
* creates impaired health, harmful behaviors, and major economic and social burdens.
* crippling affliction.
* crisis in life and a life in crisis.
* describes the compulsive craving for a drug's psychoactive effects.
* disease of the body, mind, and spirit
- requiring long-term care and watchfullness
* disease that can treated just like diabetes, heart conditions and other diseases
- effects the entire family
- ends in either recovery or death
- exists on a continuum, meaning that it progressive disorder
- knows nothing about class, race, age
* disease which becomes worse over time
- preys on the poor and the culturally suppressed
- which, without recovery, ends in jails, institutions and death
- with particularly nasty consequences
* disease, and a genetic disease at that
- recovery very difficult process
- there is no cure, yet
* do wreak havoc on friends, relatives, and workmates.
* does begin with drug abuse, when an individual makes a conscious choice to use drugs.
* downward spiral.
* effects everyone in the family.
* family disease.
* form of duress
- problem-solving for the individual
* fuels the drug trade which rots societies both from inside and out.
* happen in clusters.
* has a complex psychological component to it
- many characteristics of a chronic illness
* has more to do with a behavior than a substance
- environments people live in than with the drugs they are addicted to
- physical, psychological, social-familial and spiritual aspects
* have a strong spiritual component
- some affect on the physical body that pleasure arises from for the addicted
* help avoid pain and intimacy.
* hide the hurt and bury the pain.
* is a, well, affliction, hornets on a breast of chicken
- accompanied by denial, shame, guilt and an attempt to rationalize the situation
- addiction is addiction
* is also a form of passion
- possible with the use of stimulants
- the one disease that requires self-diagnosis
- always an expression of a whole life-style and an accumulation of behavioral steps
- an award
* is an equal opportunity and a bi-partisan illness
- equal-opportunity problem
- equalizer
- explanation which tries to explain why people do certain things
- illness that society has injected into the vains of the poor
- incurable disease that can be treated with methadone, combined with counseling
- inherited biological disorder
- unconscious ritual
- unintended consequence of evolution of the brain
- analyzed as a psychological, social, and biological process
- both a physical and psychological process
* is characterized by compulsive drug seeking and use despite negative consequences
- relapses
- chronic in nature
- common, and in the U.S., abuse of prescription drugs is almost twice that of cocaine
- commonly an inherited trait
* is considered a disability
- definitely treatable in older adults
- differentiated from psychological dependence and physical dependence
- drug seeking behavior that is destructive
- fundamentally a brain disease
- in fact very rare in patients with chronic pain
- like a cancer that begins to subtly replace healthy cells with malignant growth
- marked by denial, delusion, defiance and defensiveness
- modeled as an unobserved stock that accumulates stochastically
- more of a health problem than a criminal act
* is no excuse for illegal behavior associated with obtaining drugs
- respector of persons
- now blatant on people's faces, especially in the lower working class
* is often a consequence of untreated depression
- replacement for parental domination and control
- the only pleasure they've known
* is one of the most serious health issues facing our twenty-first century culture
- way of falling over the edge
- overwhelmingly a rural phenomenon and concentrated in the north of the country
- part emotional, part physical, all disease
- psychologic dependence on an opioid for effects other than pain relief
- rare in children but a problem with adults
- slavery
- so popular because idolatry is as popular today as it was in biblical times
* is the body's way of coping with repeated doses of harmful substances
- compulsive use of habit-forming drugs for their pleasurable effects
- concern and fear of most patients and doctors
- dependence, both physiologically and emotionally, upon alcohol, drugs, or tobacco
- excitement of pursuing adventure of work
- first stage of alcoholism
- land of compulsive urges that are repeated, and repeated
- loss of control associated with taking a drug
- major public health issue of our time
- number one health problem in America - and no disease costs society more
- quality or state of being addicted
- result of an adaptive mechanism being abused
- toughest social problem
- thus equivalent to idolatry and the two terms describe the nature of human sin
- treated as a family disease, including working with children during the family program
- usually about two things, either escape or pleasure
- willful misbehavior
* kills ninety-five percent of the people who have it.
* knows no bounds of race, class, geography or gender.
* leads to a disturbance of lifestyle in which adequate nourishment is neglected
- crimes such as burglaries, robberies, domestic violence, and prostitution
* lifelong illness.
* loss of individuality, the inability to live real life, to have our own life.
* major factor in the use of drugs such as heroin, cocaine, and amphetamines
- risk of using illegal and controlled prescription drugs
* manifest as urges.
* means a dysfunctional use of a drug that has taken control of a person's life
- having no control over whether to use a drug
* medical problem that is treatable.
* moral condition as well as a medical one.
* necessarily lead to slavery.
* negatively affects and can destroy the spiritual life of a family.
* numb the senses.
* occurs because of multiple risk factors.
* occurs when a substance is required to maintain basic functioning
- repeated doses of opioids begin to lose effectiveness
- there is an imbalance that affects neurons in the brain's reward areas
* often begins at an early age, other statistics show
- creates an unstable family environment
- lead to guilt and shame, and addicts do their best to hide their problem
* physical but also a psychological phenomenon.
* physical, mental and spiritual disease that affects every area of a persons life
- mental, and spiritual disease that can affect every area of life
* presumably disrupts the brain's ability to make sound choices.
* primary, progressive, and fatal illness which responds to medical treatment.
* process rather than an event.
* progressive disease that can be fatal
- only gets worse
* progressive, predictable and ultimately fatal disease if left untreated.
* psychological problem manifested by drug-seeking behavior
- that compels people to abuse pain drugs
* reaches kids as young as ten years old through a trendy drug called ecstasy.
* resembles apathy when escape replaces reality.
* restrict our ability to dream beautiful dreams.
* result in a combination of factors including biological, psychological and social.
* reversal of healthy aims.
* robs our society of people who can lead productive and useful lives.
* serious illness.
* slave-master that destroys lives, families and spirits.
* slow seduction.
* state of chemically-enhanced stupidity which can be overcome by abstinence.
* stem from dysfunction in the brain's reward system.
* subject that seems to be featured heavily in media publications and on television.
* takes many forms, and usually has the same results
- our pride, self-esteem, family, loved ones, and even our desire to live
* takes place faster than any other drug
* tragic reality that strikes individuals, families and affects communities.
* treatable disease.
* treatable, though chronic and relapsing, disease.
* typically lead to antisocial behavior, destroy families, and promote criminal acts.
* usually leads to malnutrition and weight loss.
* very broad term
- common fear of people who take narcotics for pain relief | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | addiction:
Alcohol addiction
* biological and genetic disorder.
* brain disease which is manifested by loss of control over excessive drinking.
* causes financial ruin.
* is habituation
- life-threatening
- rampant
* major health and social problem in the United States
- problem that afflicts northern Labrador communities
Computer addiction
* can severly effect an individuals family and work environment.
* disorder that is spreading with the technology.
Food addiction
* cause health and self-image problems.
* starts within our emotions.
Self injury
* is an addiction.
* is the deliberate damaging of body tissue without conscious intent to commit suicide
- general term used to describe self-inflicted pain or injury on oneself
- when someone causes a self inflicted injury upon themselves
* way that some people deal with feelings.
Sugar addiction
* common culprit in the level of sports performance.
* primary symptom of sugar sensitivity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | addiction:
Tobacco use
* Most tobacco use begins during childhood or adolescence
- starts during childhood and adolescence
* Some tobacco use has adverse effects
* affects all individuals and societies.
* can also result in short-term, foul mouth odors.
* can cause infants to be born too small, or hinder intellectual or emotional development
- serious illness and even death
- decrease the absorption of vanadium
- disturb sleep
- increase an individual's risk for developing cancer
* can, for example, influence the impact of medication taken for psychiatric syndromes.
* causes cancer and any other number of diseases
- as well as respiratory and heart disease
- in many people as well as respiratory and heart disease
- devastating disease and premature death in every population in the United States
- emphysema, cancers and chronic pulmonary diseases
- lung cancer, heart disease, emphysema and impotence
- many other diseases
* causes more cancer here and in the rest of the world than anything else
- deaths in the U.S. than any other preventable risk factor
- premature deaths in the United States than any other preventable risk
- nearly all cases of lung cancer and more than one-third of all cancer deaths
- profound health and economic losses
- serious health problems and early death
- significant morbidity and mortality
- stained teeth, bad breath, and foul-smelling hair and clothes
* continues to be the leading lifestyle-related cause of death in Canada
- predict abuse of other substances
* creates enormous health problems in our communities.
* culprit for many forms of cancer and for greater heart disease risk.
* decreases the absorption of pantothenic acid.
* disorder which can be remedied through medical attention.
* drains resources from poor countries.
* has a damaging effect on women's reproductive health.
* increases the risk for cancer of the cervix as well
- heart disease and heart attack
* increases the risk of gum disease
- infertility, stillbirth and low birth weight
* involves physiological, psychological, behavioral and genetic factors.
- international problem
- another serious health problem for adolescents
- associated with increase in fetal loss, lower birth weight and premature birth
- both about the addiction to nicotine and the habit or behavior addiction
- considered, by many, to be a legal form of substance abuse
- detrimental to health with significant wider social costs
- discouraged in headache sufferers
- familiar behavior that still occurs in many public areas
- highly addictive
- known to cause lung cancer in humans, and major risk factor for heart disease
* is linked to poorer academic performance
- with marijuana use
* is more prevalent among the poor and amplifies other health problems
- in socioeconomically disadvantaged and underserved groups
* is one of the greatest burdens to the health and well-being of women around the world
- health risks facing our patients
* is one of the leading causes of many diseases, especially cardiovascular disease
- of preventable disease and death in New York City
- most common compromising factors in patients treated in the United States
- recognised as a major preventable cause of disease, disability and death
* is responsible for approximately one-third of all cancers
- nearly one in five deaths in the United States
- one of every five deaths
- the biggest preventable cause of premature death in the United States
* is the largest and most preventable cause of mortality in the United States
- public health threat to the Western Pacific region
* is the leading cause of cancer in Alberta and the Northwest Territories
- death in Alaska
- heart disease, emphysema and stroke in the United States
* is the leading cause of premature death in Canada and in the world
* is the leading cause of preventable death and disease
- death in Colorado and the United States
- death in the world today
- disease in the United States
* is the leading preventable cause of death in Oklahoma
- death in Ontario
- diseases and deaths in the United States
- major cause of lung cancer
* is the major preventable cause of disease in the United States
- disease worldwide
* is the most common form of compromise and the easiest to change
- important single preventable cause of death and disease in our society
* is the most preventable cause of cancer
- death and disease in the United States
* is the nation's leading cause of preventable death and disease
* is the number one cause of impotence
- premature morbidity and mortality in our society
- public health problem in the nation and in Colorado
* is the only behavior that kills more people
- factor that contributes to more preventable deaths each year
- possession or ingestion of tobacco in any form, regardless of the quantity
* is the single largest cause of premature death and preventable ill-health in Wales
- leading preventable cause of death in the United States
- most important cause of cancer in the United States
* is the single most important preventable cause of human disease and death
- risk to human health
* is the single most preventable cause of cancer
- of death and disease in New Jersey
- of death and disease in the state
- of death in the United States and in North Dakota
- single-leading preventable cause of death in the United States
- to blame for nearly one in three cancer deaths in the United States every year
* kills more people everyday than three jumbo jet crashes.
* leading cause of cancer and of death from cancer.
* major preventable cause of cancer.
* pediatric epidemic Tobacco use pediatric epidemic
- epidemic, as well
- problem worldwide
* reduces the delivery of oxygen and nutrients to gingival tissue.
* remains the leading avoidable cause of illness and premature death in Alberta
* remains the single largest preventable cause of death and disease in the United States
- most preventable cause of death in the United States
* scourge, a major cause of cancer, heart disease, and lung disease.
* seems to weaken the bones and slow production of new bone cells.
* significant public health problem in the United States and many other countries.
* takes an enormous, deadly toll each year. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Ambient condition
* Many ambient conditions control the germination and subsequent development of a plant.
* change the stress on a cable, and the stress alters the cable's birefringence.
Anaerobic condition
* Most anaerobic conditions lead to germination.
* Some anaerobic conditions are caused by tide
- prevent development
* can arise as a result of compaction or waterlogging
- produce odorous and toxic gases
* develop when water displaces oxygen present within the pore spaces of a soil.
* retard microbial degradation.
### condition | anaesthesia:
Regional anaesthesia
* is anaesthesia
* major topic of daily practice in hospitals for surgery and pain relief.
Analgesia
* begins within one hour and starts to peak in two hours.
* is the lack of normal pain sensation.
### condition | analgesia:
Epidural analgesia
* has a subtle tocolytic effect that is significant over an entire labor.
* is an effective method of pain relief during labour.
* is the most effective method of postoperative pain management
- providing pain relief in labour
* method for treating acute pain due to surgery, trauma and chronic illness.
* provides unquestionably the best pain relief for labor pains.
Postoperative analgesia
* is usually of only brief duration.
* major advance and is actively practiced by anesthesiologists.
Anchorage
* are areas
- arrivals
- fees
- part of seaports
- secure and waterways more like large salty lakes than the sea
* experiences similar rates of child abuse and neglect.
* is one of the cities in Alaska
- ways of speech of plants
* metropolitan city, primarily non-Native, with a history of cultural diversity.
* overlies an underthrust segment of the Pacific plate.
* reflects beauty in all seasons, whether blanketed by snow or bathed in summer sun.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Anemia
* can become a serious condition if left untreated
- problem if it remains undiagnosed and untreated
- have many causes, but the most common lack of iron in the body
- occur also if the red blood cells are broken down too quickly
* has many causes.
* is an abnormal reduction in the number of circulating red blood cells
- abnormally low level of red blood cells and hemoglobin in the blood
- easily treated condition
- iron deficiency
- another major cause of child morbidity and mortality in Africa
- confirmed through a blood test
* is diagnosed by a blood sample that counts the red blood cells
* is the last stage of iron-deficiency
- main side effect associated with ribavirin
- medical term for decreased red blood cells
* is the most common blood disorder
- warning of nutritional deficiency in children
- serious effect of lead on the hematologic system
- reduced numbers of red cells in the blood or generalized lack of blood
- result of a lack of enough hemoglobin
### condition | anemia:
Chlorosis
* induced by the action of toxins usually occurs uniformly in all tissues.
* is anemia
* ranges from light green to yellow and in some instances white.
Chronic anemia
* causes reduced energy and growth is retarded.
* occurs over a long period of time
- when there are persistent low red blood cells or hemoglobin
* reduces energy and growth is retarded.
Fanconi anemia
* is also a risk factor for developing acute myelogenous leukemia
- aplastic anemia
- diseases
- genetic conditions
- seriously under- or misdiagnosed
- very rare
* keeps the body from making bone marrow.
* occurs in all racial and ethnic groups.
+ Leukemia, Causes and risk factors: Cancer :: Blood disorders :: Blood cells
Favism
* are anemia.
* genetic disorder which involves the lack of a blood enzyme.
- the most common human enzyme deficiency
* occurs primarily among peoples of the eastern Mediterranean region. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | anemia:
Hemolytic anemia
* can also result when pyruvate kinase is deficient.
* can decrease red cell survival and lead to a decrease in glycated hemoglobin
- the oxygen available to liver cells and lead to their death
- lead to serious illness
- occur for many reasons, including heat stroke, parasites, viral infections
* disorder in which the red blood cells are destroyed too soon.
- common and is often accompanied by splenomegaly
- difficult to treat, and treatment depends on the cause
- very rare, but can get dangerous very quickly
Macrocytic anemia
* can be due to several causes.
* is anemia
* resulting from abnormal DNA synthesis is referred to as megaloblastic anemia.
Moderate anemia
* Some moderate anemia requires blood transfusions.
* Some moderate anemia requires multiple blood transfusions<|endoftext|>### condition | anemia:
Pernicious anemia
* affects males and females at about the same rate.
* can cause a metabolic neuropathy
- lead to severe permanent nerve damage
* causes weakness, numbness of the extremities, pallor, fever and other symptoms.
* fairly rare, but very serious condition.
- associated with anti-parietel cell and intrinsic factor antibodies
- basically a nutritional deficiency disease
- caused by the absence of intrinsic factor, a substance secreted by the stomach
- the most common cause
* serious medical condition.<|endoftext|>### condition | anemia:
Severe anemia
* Most severe anemia affects development.
* Some severe anemia leads to death.
* can be extremely debilitating
- life threatening
- life-threatening
* can cause cardiovascular collapse
- other problems such as difficulty breathing
- lead to heart failure
- make a person too weak to perform normal activities
- result from excessive uterine bleeding
* is often the attributable cause of death in areas with intense malaria transmission
- treatable through methods such as blood transfusions<|endoftext|>### condition | anesthesia:
Epidural anesthesia
* can slow down labor.
* comes with risks and benefits.
* disrupts labors feedback mechanism.
* involves inserting a tiny plastic tube into the epidural space.
* is also generally safe for the unborn baby.
* is associated with fewer opioid related side effects
- prolonged labor and an increased risk of chorioamnionitis
* is one method that can give relief from pain and discomfort in labor
- of the modern scientific advances that a mother has available today
* is regional anaesthesia
- anesthesia
- used more often than spinal anesthesia for labor
* limits the anesthetized area to the surgical site.
* offers longer-acting pain management without affecting the baby.
* safe and effective means of providing pain relief for women in labor. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | anesthesia:
General anesthesia
* can have side effects
- sometimes depress the person's central nervous system
* causes loss of consciousness with local anesthesia numbing a certain area.
* combines amnesia, analgesia, skeletal muscle relaxation, and sensory blockade.
* deeper plane where sleep is guaranteed and is available for most procedures.
* has a higher risk of complication than the actual abortion procedure
- number of benefits
* increases the risk of death from vacuum curettage abortion.
* is administered to keep the patient still during the procedure
- via a double lumen endotracheal tube
- another form of pain relief
- entirely painless
- given by a member of the department of anesthesia
- like sleeping
- necessary to carefully replace the prolapsed organ inside the body
- required for most Liposuction of the hips, buttocks, and thighs
* is the most common type
- preferred anesthetic for vasectomy reversal
* is used for emergencies during the birthing process
- major surgeries and leaves a patient completely unconscious
* is used for most major operations
- surgeries, and someone skilled at anesthesia is always present
- in the very rare cases where open surgery is required
- primarily for major operations, and the patient is completely asleep
- to keep the patient deep asleep and pain-free
- usually a combination of both inhalation and intravenous methods
- utilized routinely for young children
* makes a patient unconscious and insensible to any feeling.
* means of inducing sleep
- that a person is put to sleep with medications and feels no pain
- the person is put to sleep with medications
* nonphysiological state which often sig nificantly affects laboratory data.
* produces a loss of sensation throughout the entire body.
* provides complete relief from both anxiety and pain.
* puts the whole patient into a type of deep sleep.
* relaxes the pelvic muscles so the doctor can feel deep structures.
* renders a person unconscious so that the entire body feels no pain.
* requires either an anesthesiologist or a nurse anesthetist to be present.
* reversible state of unconsciousness and insensibility to pain.
* tends to cause vasodilation.
* type of anesthesia which puts the person to sleep.<|endoftext|>### condition | anesthesia:
Local anesthesia
* Most local anesthesia is given by injection under the skin.
* avoids some of the risks and side effects of general anesthesia.
* causes a loss of sensation in the anesthetized area.
* consists of two small injections, one behind the ear and one in the lower eyelid.
* is administered by injection or application directly to the eye
- anaesthesia
- considered safer than general anesthesia
- infiltrated into the area of surgery after intravenous sedation is administered
- injected into the muscle of the chest wall
- lidocaine injected into the cervix for a numbing effect
- much safer than general anesthesia
- placed at the sacral cornu
* is safer and less expensive than general or spinal anesthesia
- than local anesthesia with sedation
- similar, but often applies to the numbing of a smaller area
- the most common form of anesthesia used for abortion procedures
- to numb only the surgical area
* is used to minimize discomfort
- mitigate pain from needle access to the femoral artery
- numb the toe, and the ingrown portion of the nail is removed
- when suturing cuts or performing dental work
- used, usually supplemented with intravenous sedation or general anesthesia
* means that the person is awake during surgery.
* minimizes the potential for complications.
* numbs just the area where the surgery is taking place
- only the affected areas
- the chest area and the incision is small
* produces a loss of sensation to a small specific area of the body.
* provides numbness to a small area limited to where local anesthetic is injected | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | anesthesia:
Nurse anesthesia
* is an advanced clinical nursing specialty
- attractive career for both men and women
- evolving profession, sensitive to the needs of society and the profession
* profession which obviously attracts committed and caring practitioners.
Propofol anesthesia
* reduces emesis and airway obstruction in pediatric outpatients.
* shortens seizure length.<|endoftext|>### condition | anesthesia:
Spinal anesthesia
* is achieved by injecting certain local anesthetics into the subarachnoid space
- also difficult
- an example of a regional anesthetic
- considered safer than general anesthesia
- introduced, which evolves into the modern epidural
* is regional anaesthesia
- the simplest and safest technique
- used to prevent pain and maternal straining during the cerclage
* starts working immediately after the medication has been injected.
* works immediately but it only lasts about an hour.
Anhydrosis
* affects the ipsilateral side of the body with central, first-order neuron lesions.
* is the inability of a horse to produce normal amounts of sweat.
Annoyance
* is anger.
* mental condition
Anoxic condition
* destroy the flowers.
* exist close to the sediment surface.
* result in a shift from oxidizing to reducing environments in dugouts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Anxiety
* Anxieties can present in different ways
- vary in intensity from vague discomfort to acute panic
* Most anxiety affects minds
- is experienced by mothers
* Some anxiety actually stimulates the adrenal gland to produce an extra burst of positive energy
- is normal and can increase motivation and alertness
* actually consumes the individual.
* affects everyone, especially when there is excessive mental or emotional stress
- millions of people, and many have been helped by anti-anxiety drugs
* alone can bring on diarrhea
- delay the onset of labor
* also can cause fatigue
- causes emotional symptoms that include a feeling of being ill at ease or fearful
- exacerbates the experience of pain
- plays a role in teenage use of nicotine
- stops the brain from blocking the feeling of pain
* appears in dreams under various themes
- many forms
* arises from many causes and appears in many different forms.
* associated with depression is responsive to alprazolam.
* associates with illnesses.
* becomes a negative experience when it interferes with our ability to carry out daily tasks
- abnormal when it becomes excessive, irrational, and chronic
- disabling when people are unexplainably and uncontrollably tense
* big culprit in sleeplessness.
* can affect memory at any age
- aggravate a speech disability
* can also be one of the common symptom psychiatric disorders
- secondary to a medical condition
- the cause, as can simply getting older
* can also cause fatigue
- high blood pressure, another risk factor for heart disease and strokes
- give rise to panic attacks
- have a negative impact on work
- be a state that lingers for most of the time or occur just some of the time
* can be a symptom in other disorders, or anxiety can be the disorder
- of an underlying concern, worry, or fear
- the cause of illness, or anxiety can be an effect of illness
- become a pattern of response to social situations because of a self-reinforcing cycle
- block the ability to recall what has been recently learned
* can cause both physical and emotional symptoms
- carelessness
- overbreathing which lowers blood pressure
- people to linger beneath the bedclothes after they wake up
- prolonged labor and inefficient uterine contractions
- restlessness and agitation at night
* can come from the reactions that persons who stutter experiences every time they stutter
- uncertainty regarding interactions, physical danger, or new situations
- create an entire host of physical symptoms
- effect both the mind and the body
* can even afflict the young and elderly
- cause a child to develop a stomach-ache or to feel sick
- exacerbate an asthma attack
- have different triggers for different people
* can increase the risk of medical emergencies occurring during appointments
- severity of the reaction
- lead to poorer recovery
- make people act in ways they know to be irrational
- manifest as uncooperative behavior
- occur in both manic or depressed episodes
- often delay the ovulation cycle and further complicate treatment
* can play a huge role with inhibiting the orgasmic process
- part in wind
- predispose to depression
- raise the heart rate
- range from very low to pathologically high
- result in diarrhea, and depression often brings on constipation
- strain relationships with family and friends
* causes activation of the autonomic nervous system
- adrenal hormone output to increase
- clinging and a search for human comfort
- depression, which is why sometimes it can be treated with tranquilizing agents
- significant distress or impairment in functioning
- sleep loss
* comes from a concern over lack of control over circumstances
- root word signifying lack of breathing space, suffocation
* common emotion
- human experience
- problem that can effect people of all ages
- problem, but so is asthma
- side effect of interferon therapy
* commonly increases as hunting season draws closer.
* condition of agitation and distress.
* danger or an alert signal.
* decreases the threshold for pain and pain causes anxiety
- with an awareness of one's surroundings
* differs from fear in that the former has no object, but the latter does.
* direct or indirect side effect of some medications.
* disorders the most common of childhood disorders.
* encompasses many different types of emotional difficulties.
* feeling most people recognize.
* form of fear.
* future oriented emotion.
* general feeling of being worried.
* generally occurs as an occasional temporary reaction to the stresses of everyday life.
* has both physical and psychological components
- brain cells left
- effects
- it's roots in biology
- many symptoms
- physiological, behavioral, and psychological effects
- prominent affects on the heart
- tendencies
- three major components
* increases the body's oxygen demand and heightens the perception of pain.
* involves a state of tension or fear that occurs without clear cause
- cognitive and somatic components
- responses
* is about the future, and it invokes the past
- all about one's reaction to stress
- also a defence against aggressive impulses
- always combined with a sense of vulnerability
* is among the most common, most treatable mental disorders
- frequently cited contributors to psychological impotence
* is an adaptive mechanism
- emotion that can signal just the right response to a situation
- extremely unpleasant, self-perpetuating state, which guarantees unhappiness
- interplay between physiological arousal and cognitive thinking
- involuntary, or reflex reaction of the body
* is an unpleasant emotional and physical state of apprehension
- state ranging from mild unease to intense fear
- unpleasurable affect with both physiological and psychological symptoms
- another patient-related variable that can influence pain
- apprehension cued off by a threat to some value which the person holds essential
- associated with the excitement accompanying the birth of a new idea
- being show to play a significant role in a wide variety of conditions and disease states
- believed to hinder academic success while optimism predicts success
- caused by fear
- characteristically a disorder of young adults, and affects twice as many women as men
- characterized by excessive worry about unrealistic or exaggerated life circumstances
- common throughout the lifespan
* is created by expectations or thoughts about what is likely to happen
- from the unknown
* is energy that has no place to go
- without a goal
- evoked by suspicion of nonreciprocation
* is fear of the future or worry
- without a realistic threat
- fearful anticipation of coming danger, when there is nothing to trigger the fear
- fearfulness or uneasiness that arise from the anticipation of danger
- felt particularly in the chest area overlying the heart
- focused on the future
- important to creativity, intelligence, and to survival itself
- mental illnesses
- much more prevalent in older folks than depression
- normal to life and to systems of people, including the church
- often a component found within many other mental disorders as well
* is one of the civilized emotions
- evil conditions of the heart that comes from unbelief
* is one of the most common mental health issues experienced by individuals
- psychological concerns for college students
- distressing emotions that people feel
- frequently reported health problems
* is our body's response to fear or a threatening situation
- response to stress and the threat of pain
- part of the human condition
* is present in our natural vulnerability to nature, sickness and death
- long before symptoms of depression occur
- prevalent everywhere
- probably the greatest cause of sleep problems
- provoked by specific threats in the environment
- related to a natural response of the body to potentially threatening situations
- result of repression of basic conflicts
- said to be contagious, and persons close by feel restless and fidgety
* is the bad reactions to the self image
- body's normal reaction to stressful situations
- commonest cause of sleep disturbances
- dizziness of freedom
- feeling of being afraid, worried or tense, and threatened
- gate through which the inner pig emerges
- health of literature
- medical word for unreasonable fear
* is the most common mental illness and is very treatable if diagnosed
- symptom seen in a psychologist's or psychiatrist's office
- commonly reported side effect of smoking marijuana
- frequent emotional symptom reported by dyslexics
- natural state of human nature
- negative expression or judgment against following one's bliss or excitement
- number one mental illness that children and adolescents suffer from
- physiological and psychological response to an imaginary danger
- primary internalizing reason for child mental health referrals
- psychological response of dread or fear to an undetermined threat
* is the result of future-oriented thoughts
- some stressor
- suspension between anastophic and catastrophic expectations
- very big problem with a lot of autistic people
- wavering or frustration of an emotion
- useful because it motivates people toward self-actualization
- very common, so there can be many causes
- worry, apprehension or concern about something unknown in the future
* is, after all, one of the most common of human problems.
* leads to fear
- increased stress hormone levels
* learned behavior.
* level of concern, reasonable or unreasonable about what is going to happen.
* makes people long for a rational, certain future.
* means worrying about the future, and becoming tense or stressed as a result.
* mixture of physical and mental symptoms.
* natural emotional reaction to a threatening situation
- human response to a threatening situation
- part of being a parent
* neuroses, panic attacks and agoraphobia.
* nonpsychotic conditions in and of themselves.
* normal emotion and a powerful motivator.
* normal emotion that people experience when facing uncertainty or danger
- facing uncertainty ordanger
- experience that can become a problem for some people
- function of normal behavior
* normal human emotion
* normal part of childhood
- children's behavioral and emotional development
* normal part of life, and everybody gets a little bit anxious from time to time
- it occurs in seniors too
- physiological response in anticipation of a potential stressor
- reaction to cancer
- response to threatening or stressful stimuli
* normal, healthy feeling.
* often comes about when people hold in their fears until they begin to feel anxiety.
* often interferes with close relationships
- sleep and concentration
- is felt very keenly and expressed by women in the post-abortion period
- results from the incapacity to do so
- shows up in lack of affection for the baby and, in turn, self-blame and guilt
- stems from our worrying over the past or the future
* part of what it means to be human.
* persistent feeling of uneasiness or apprehension.
* physical and emotional state of apprehension
- as well as a psychological reality
* powerful and sometimes useful emotion for self-preservation.
* prevents women from having orgasms and prevents men from getting aroused.
* problem for patients because it is an unpleasant sensation
- when our body reacts as if there is danger when there is no real danger
* produces an increase in various physiological and mental processes
- stress which can become dangerous and produce conflict
* psychological arousal which results from an unrealistic fear.
* ranges from worry to fear to panic to terror.
* reaction to a real or imagined threat, a general feeling of uneasiness or dread.
* response to an unexpected threat or fear due to anticipating possible danger
- what is new, unknown or dramatic
* seems to be higher among the lower classes of society.
* sometimes starts with a difficult or painful experience.
* state characterized by vague fear or premonition.
* sticky substance infused with fear.
* still lingers in many forms.
* stong feeling of fear or dread.
* stress condition.
* survival mechanism.
* symptom of underlying concern, worry or fear.
* symptom, anxiety disorders represent various syndromes.
* temporary and often limited condition.
* tends to be more generalized and stable in nature.
* thin stream of fear trickling through the mind.
* usually begins with constant worry but can lead to panic attacks and agoraphobia
- hits in public places, old buildings or hospitals
* vague uncomfortable feeling of fear, dread, or danger from an unknown cause.
* very common disorder, which affects millions of people yearly
- precipitant of addictive habits
- presenting problem for people begninng psychtherapy
- problem that causes tremendous suffering
* warning signal similar to a trouble light on the dash of an automobile.
* worry about daily life can prevent a man from feeling sexual. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | anxiety:
Chronic anxiety
* can be a truly awful experience for a person, and some suffer needlessly from it
- lead to various somatic alterations
* is usually a milder more generalized problem.
Dental anxiety
* appears to be a gender-specific phenomenon.
* can develop into a phobia, which can be more life-limiting than anxiety.
Extreme anxiety
* can also occur without any association to a particular event or situation.
* medical disorder with a medication solution.
* occurs before tests.
Generalized anxiety
* condition that turns daily life into a state of worry, anxiety, and fear.
* is characterized by uncontrollable and excessive worry, tension, and anxiety
- usually less intense and more spread out over many hours during the day
* makes it difficult for people to concentrate and pay attention.
Hypochondria
* are anxiety
- illnesses
* is anxiety
Hypochondriasis
* are diseases.
* disorder with which most people are familiar.
* is actually more common in middle-age
- as common in men as it is in women
- characterized by severe anxiety over the possibility of having a disease
- distinguished by preoccupation with the underlying cause of the symptoms
* occurs equally in men and women.<|endoftext|>### condition | anxiety:
Insecurity
* Insecurities are anxiety
- danger
- emotion
- can cloud relationships
* also affects women and men differently.
* can make a person very unhappy.
* can produce problems in a relationship, and in sexual realtions
* causes some people to insist on being the giver rather than the receiver.
* fact of life.
* is THE source of ALL psychological problems, dysfunctional behavior and dependency.
* is also a reason that drives some people to try and establish superiority over others
- sign like the anorectic
- the experience of worry and fear
- an archetypal human condition and sometimes it can be crippling
- another reason that peer pressure plays such a large role in our lives
- one pathway that produces the bad health outcomes
- particularly acute in rural areas, where numbers of inhabitants are small
- revealed by verbosity, excessive adjectives and weak verbs
* is the hallmark of any creative field
- modern psychological term for fear
- usually the reason why people attack each other
- what they know, it is the kind of relationship they are familiar with
* makes people do unnecessary things out of fear of offending a supervisor.
* plays a major part in the lack of change.
* sometimes can cause a child to withdraw or behave aggressively.<|endoftext|>### condition | anxiety | insecurity:
Food insecurity
* Fighting food insecurity is therefore a major concern of developing countries.
* affects entire country of The Gambia.
* critical concern with widespread child and maternal malnutrition.
* exists in every single county in the United States.
* is an ever increasing problem affecting the working poor
- of prime concern in terms of both availability and accessibility
- primarily a problem of access rather than availability
* lies at the root of violent conflict.
* occurs when access is limited or uncertain.
Job insecurity
* Job insecurities are new reality.
* compels individuals to continually reassess and re-invent themselves.
* is directly proportional to the lack of skills. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | anxiety:
Moral anxiety
* is the fear of one's own conscious.
+ Freud's psychoanalytic theories, 'Anxiety and Defense Mechanisms'
* Freud noted that a major drive for people is the reduction of tension and the major cause of tension was anxiety. He identified three types of anxiety, reality anxiety, neurotic anxiety, and moral anxiety. Reality anxiety is the most basic form of anxiety and is based on the ego. It is typically based on the fear of real and possible events, for example being bit by a dog or falling off of a roof. Neurotic anxiety comes from an unconscious fear that the basic impulses of the id will take control of the person, leading to eventual punishment from expressing the ids desires. Moral anxiety comes from the superego. It appears in the form of a fear of violating values or moral codes, and appears as feelings like guilt or shame.
Neurotic anxiety
* is characterized by a fear disproportionate to the object involved.
* tends to immobilize people.
Performance anxiety
* can appear in late childhood and social phobia in adolescence
- take a variety of forms
* challenge for all athletes, including the youth athlete.
* is an example of a neurotic anxiety
- milder and specific to certain activities
- one of the most common causes of psychological impotence<|endoftext|>### condition | anxiety:
Separation anxiety
* behavior in which a dog is stressed when left alone.
* can continue off and on, though usually in milder forms, throughout childhood
- till the child s first day at pre-school
- explain why many children refuse to attend school
- lead to fouling in the house, chewing and barking
- occur in any breed and at any age
- often produce severe barking as well when the dog is left alone
* causes pets to become overly anxious and stressed when their owners are gone.
* complex and frequently profound behavioral disorder of dogs.
* condition that affects dogs who are over-attached to their owners.
* is arguably harder on the parents than on the child
- developmentally universal and normal
- felt for many reasons throughout a person's life
- more common among preschool through early elementary-age children
- one of the most common emotional disorders to afflict dogs today
* is perhaps the best-known behavioral ailment affecting our canine companions
- main reason pet owners have for giving up their Whippet
* is the biggest concern for little ones entering junior or senior kindergarten
- most common specific anxiety in companion dogs
- thought to be the number one anxiety problem in childhood
- treatable in older dogs as well
- very common for children at that age
* occurs in children who are school aged
- dogs of all ages and breeds
* problem that often brings on the first episode of feather plucking.
* produces the desire to return to and merge with the mother.
* real problem for many dogs.
* reality, for both mother and baby.
* starts at approximately nine monthe of age.
* stems from the child's inability to hold on to an image.
* syndrome in which a dog panics when it is left alone.
* tends to wax and wane throughout the toddler years.
* typical stage of development to an extent.
* very common problem among children, especially younger ones
- natural and healthy sign of a well-adjusted child
- real problem facing many children | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | anxiety:
Social anxiety
* doesnt just affect a person's social life, however.
* is among the least understood, and most misdiagnosed problem in the world today
- associated with a negatively distorted view of one's own voice
- many times mixed up with panic disorder
- severe pathological shyness, stemming from fear of rejection and humiliation
* is the fear of social situations that involve interaction with other people
- third largest psychological problem in the United States today
* learned response and habit that can be broken.
* permeates all of a person's life.
* progressive problem.
* responds to a comprehensive program of cognitive-behavioral therapy.
Test anxiety
* can come from many things
- negatively influence academic performance
* feeling of agitation and distress.
* form of social phobia.
* is the inability to function productively in math learning situations
- result of the fear of negative evaluation
* learned response to stress.
Arid condition
* Some arid conditions enhance speciation.
* favour salt accumulation.
Arthritic condition
* can cause soft tissue inflammation.
* share common symptoms but respond differently therapy.
Autoimmune condition
* Many autoimmune conditions target specific organs or tissues types.
* Some autoimmune conditions cause fatigue.
Baldness
* Most baldness is caused by either genetics or hormone imbalance.
* is depilation
### condition | baldness:
Male baldness
* is generally an inherited characteristic caused by male sex hormones.
* occurs only on the top of the head, leaving a fringe around the back and sides.
Blockage
* causes backups
- difficulty
- infection
- medical problems
* is caused by cancer.
* leads to impairment.
Cardiac tamponade
* can occur from both blunt and penetrating chest injury.
* is an emergency condition that needs to be treated in the hospital
- requires hospitalization
- diseases
- treated by needle pericardiocentesis
* life-threatening condition caused by fluid under pressure around the heart.
Certain condition
* affect growth.
* cause similar symptoms
* contribute to obesity.
Certainty
* All certainty is in the form of probability.
* is quality.
* leads to stability, and it is of the foremost importance in creating order in society.
* state of mind
### condition | certainty:
Cert
* are certainty.
* is certainty | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | certainty:
Confidence
* affects other people on an emotional level.
* also contributes a great deal to happiness.
* arises from a sense of personal value.
* begets an extroverted personality, which is also true of human psychology.
* big factor in how one performs
- thing in athletics
* builds more slowly than fear and panic.
* comes from being successful in anything in life
- knowledge that comes from the availability of information
* form of credit
- faith
* fundamental trait for flexibility.
* genuine sense of worthiness, goodness and most importantly acceptance of one's self.
* happens when folks feel good about themselves.
* is about a willingness to lead change through, with and for other people
- also an issue because many managers are afraid to hire people smarter than themselves
* is an attitude that comes from being prepared
- imperfect indicator of accuracy
- intuitive assessment of reliability
- belief
- directness and courage in meeting the facts of life
- everywhere the parent of despotism
- friendships
- fundamental to playing the game of roller hockey
- identified as a specific mode of coordination of actions
- important in both of their games and how they play
- meant as a way of correcting a vision impairment native to humanity
- one of the characteristics of success in the international economy
- secrets
- security
- the by-product of the faith, much as fire is the result of an initial spark
* is the key difference between a soft economy and a recessionary one
- to a dog that scents quickly
- name of the game in college football
- pause between heartbeats
- probability that the recognition is correct
- result of hours and days and weeks and years of constant work and dedication
- secret of strength
- state of mind achieved by being unaware of all the facts
* major player in solving the puzzle of any lake of any size.
* personal quality that can fluxuate very easily, especially in sports.
* plays a big role when determining passing or failing
- major role in the success and pleasure of fishing
* psychological property, a feeling of assurance that some proposition is true.
* social judgment.<|endoftext|>### condition | certainty | confidence:
Consumer confidence
* correlates closely with joblessness, inflation, and real incomes.
* is central to our economies
- critical to the strength of the retail sector
- divided into present situation and expectations
- important in most industries and most mediums of commerce
- of critical importance, particularly as it relates to Internet commerce
- simply a reflection of what the mass media are telling people
* key indicator to economic growth.
* leading indicator for the business cycle.
Self confidence
* can overcome fear.
* is confidence in one s mind
- one of the most important determining factors in mathematical performance
- that which remains unshaken even amidst disappointment
* serious problem for most Chinese people.
Inevitability
* Inevitabilities are certainty.
* combination of economic, biological, and social factors.
* is both grace and zero ground, the fuel of fate, the fire of fortune
Overconfidence
* human trait extending beyond investing.
* is certainty
- observed in many professional fields
- our greatest peril in natural resource management
- the cause of many mistakes in the political world
- well known to psychologists
* reflects an overestimate of the accuracy of one's predictions.
Chronic condition
* are a leading cause of death as well as morbidity
- family conditions
- medical conditions
- subject to periods of spontaneous remission
* tax the immune system.
Circumstance
* affect health.
* are ceremony
- possessions
* change perspective.
* contribute to survival.
* lead to convergent evolution
- improvement
* modify the relative intensity of good and of evil.
* require purposes.
* surround accidents. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | circumstance:
Playing field
* are circumstances.
* are located in parks
- schools
- open areas
- part of stadiums
- tracts | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Climate
* All climates have changes which occur on an annual cycle.
* Most climates affect areas
- biodiversity
- coastal areas
- global temperature
- growth
- life
- patterns
- population growth
- rainfall patterns
- ranges
* Most climates can have impact
- storms
- weather storms
- change environments
* Most climates drive erosion
- genetic erosion
- exist in regions
- experience frequent drought
* Most climates have behavior
- effects
- growth potential
- high humidity
- seasonal variation
- strong effects
- tremendous impact
- limit distribution
- occur during epochs
- promote growth
* Most climates reflect seasonal variation
* Most climates support decomposition
- long term growth
- productivity decomposition
- threaten survival
* Some climates affect bears
- elephants
- health
- reproduction
- allow much more power in summer than winter
* Some climates are hot, some are cold, some are wet and some are dry
- rainfall driven, and others are snow melt driven
- worse than others for people who have chronic sinusitis
* Some climates bring little rainfall
* Some climates contribute to consistent quality
- have protection
- lead to drought
* Some climates prevent growth
- tree growth
- promote safety
* Some climates show little seasonal variation
* ' means the usual condition of the temperature, humidity, atmospheric pressure, wind, rainfall, and other meteorological elements in an area of the earth's surface for a long time. Climate is different from weather. Weather is the condition of these elements right now, for shorter periods of time that are up to two weeks.
* can change after a long time. Recently, the world may be becoming warmer, as is discussed in global warming
- aspects
- the type of soils formed
* affects agriculture, energy use, transportation and population shifts
- all living things on the planet
- and shapes the land, plants and animals
- equipment and radio propagation characteristics
- everything
- taxonomic similarity of regions, but only partly
- tourism in many ways, directly and indirectly
- water loss from a watershed as well as providing water
* also vary over time and change very gradually over decades and centuries.
* always changes
- varies, even without human influence
* are conditions
- environmental conditions
- how warm and wet places are
* begins to cool and there is pronounced glaciation in the carboniferous.
* can be an influence on the development of cities
* can have dramatic impact
* change over time due to natural and human causes
- years
- rapidly on mountains, becoming colder the higher the altitude gets
- slowly, and there are wet and dry cycles
- threats to rare rainforest marsupials
* change, and plants and animals continue to evolve.
* changes dramatically
- throughout the year
- with increases in elevation
* comprises the average weather conditions that occur in a place over a period of years.
* controls salinity and temperature of the water which has everything to do with density.
* covers minimum and maximum temperatures for all four seasons.
* describes the long-term weather patterns over a specified time frame for a specific area.
* determine which plants and animals live in different places.
* determines building structure types as well as materials for construction
- plant growth
* determines where cherries grow best
- different species live
* differs widely within Temperate Asia.
* does, therefore, vary considerably regionally.
* drives sea change.
* exerts a powerful influence on the diversity and organization of continental ecosystems
- an undeniable influence on the surface of the earth
* experience drought
* favor survival.
* forces a stochastic character on erosion and sedimentation.
* helps to determine what weather can occur in a region.
* impact health.
* influences the type of ecosystem present in a geographical area
- weathering rates, particularly temperature and the availability of water
* is always dynamic, it vary from place to place and from country to country around the world
- an environmental condition
- continental and partly mediterraneous
- dependent upon land masses and oceans
* is different from one part of the world to another
- dry, due to the mountains that block the humidity coming from the Pacific Ocean
* is how hot or cold it is in a certain place over a long period of time
- the atmosphere behaves over relatively long periods of time
- like weather but over much longer time scales
- midcontinental with hot summers and cold winters
* is perhaps the most important in soil profile development
- ingredient in soil formation
- pervasive, and often includes a broad array of organizational phenomenon
- second only in importance to parent material as a controlling factor in soil formation
- sub-tropical, tempered by trade winds
* is temperate continental
- with generally warm sunny days and nights that can be cool
- temperate, with well-marked seasons, dry summers and relatively rainy winters
* lasts all the time, but weather lasts only a few days
- only for a few days
* link involves relationship of sea ice extent and global temperatures.
* may have effects.
* pinpoints areas of risk where training or skill development is advisable.
* plays a fundamental part in determining the movements of shorebirds.
* plays a major role in the moose-wolf relationship as well
- stability of Canada s prairie wetlands
- role in plant height, too
- very important role in the genesis of a soil
- an important role in landscape development
* processes on the Antarctic Plateau.
- products
* range from cold and snowy in the mountain regions, to mild and sunny near the coast.
* ranges from Mediterranean to cool temperate
- sub-tropical to cold temperate
- the tropical in the low lands to the arctic at the higher altitudes
* refers to atmospheric changes that occur over decades and centuries
- averages in weather conditions over a period of years
- climate variability across time scales
- the average weather characteristics in a given region
* refers to the conditions in the atmosphere in a place over a long period of time
- of weather in one place or region over a long period of time
- general long term conditions in an specific region
- statistical collection of weather conditions over a specified period of time
- weather over a long period of time
* regulates soil formation.
* relates to factors stretching from the ocean ' s depths to the atmosphere ' s outer reaches.
* remains relatively constant over longer periods and distances.
* results from long-term weather patterns.
* shapes the rhythm of their lives as well as their habitat and clothes.
* summarizes weather conditions over periods of time, usually months or years.
* therefore varies from weather because weather is concerned only with short term events.
* too has effect on our skin, scorching heat during summer cause severe itching in the body.
* varies according to altitude.
* varies by latitude due to two reasons
- considerably across the United States
- dramatically from one end of the country to the other
- due to Honduras' diverse topography
* varies from humid tropical in the southern lowlands to temperate in the northern highlands
- temperate rainforest, inland desert to snowfields in the south
- tropical to subtropical in all areas except the high plateaus and the mountains
* varies greatly from north to south
- summer to winter
- naturally over time-scales of decades to millions of years
- with elevation from desert up through juniper, pine, and spruce-fire forests
* vary from year to year and organisms adapt to the variation in climate.
* will have effects.
+ Pedogenesis: Geology
* Climate regulates soil formation. Soils are more developed in areas with higher rainfall and more warmth.
+ Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Science: Cities in Russia
* Climate is mild.
+ World history, Influence of climate: History :: Former good articles
* Climate has a very big effect on the way that humans live. Climate is different from one part of the world to another. Some areas are hot all the year, and some are cold. Some areas are dry all the year and others are wet. Most areas have climates that are warm or hot in the summer and cool or cold in the winter. Most parts of the world get rain at some times of the year and not others. Some parts of the world have seaside climates and others have mountain climates. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | climate:
Climate control
* are highly effective at cooling or heating the cavernous interior.
* biome distribution by an altitudinal gradient and a latitudinal gradient.
* helps to prevents paper from rotting and becoming brittle over time.
* is another hydrologic function of wetlands
- obtained by moderating the effects of sun, wind, and rain
- processing
Climate warming
* affects virtually all ecosystems worldwide.
* is unlikely to occur consistently throughout winter.
Cold climate
* Some cold climates prevent growth
- tree growth
* cause stomach aches.
Continental climate
* have little water moderation.
* product of a minimal influence from the oceans.
Different climate
* affect trends in different parts of the country.
* are a result of different air and ocean currents.
* have different patterns of temperature and rainfall.
* may have effects.
* work best for different trees.
Dry climate
* Some dry climates are alkaline.
* are better than rainy season because ukiyo-e are highly sensitive to humidity
- more subject to wind erosion than humid climates
* have their own heat challenges.
* predispose to recurrent nose bleeds.
Global climate
* Most global climates occur during epochs.
* is impacted by the same factors.
Hot climate
* Most hot climates experience frequent drought.
* Some hot climates lead to drought.
* can exacerbate diseases of the cardiovascular and digestive systems.
* experience drought
Mediterranean climate
* is characterized by the presence of a long period of hot, dry weather
- situated on the banks of the mighty Murray River
* yields highly variable stream flows.
Mild climate
* enables the surrounding country to grow rare plants and shrubs of both hemispheres.
* has a long growing season.
School climate
* is an ever changing factor in the lives of people who work and learn in schools
- related to parental involvement
* plays an important role in the development of the self-esteem of students.
* refers to the quality and character of school life.
Temperate climate
* Most temperate climates can have storms
- weather storms
* can be cool at night.
Tropical climate
* prevail except at higher elevations to the west of the Canal Zone.
* result from general circulation of the atmosphere.
Warm climate
* Most warm climates have high humidity
* Some warm climates affect bears.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Climatic condition
* Most climatic conditions affect severity.
* Some climatic conditions affect bats
- pipistrelle bats
* are diverse, ranging from temperate crop areas to tropical zones
- variable across the state
* control soil temperature fluctuations during the year.
* determine the extent of the disease.
* favor year round vegetable crop production.
* is primarily maritime in nature, cool in the summers and mild in the winter.
* place their limit upon men just as firmly as upon plants and upon animals.
* play an important role in the development of the disease.
* produce fine grass that a small flock of merino sheep graze on.
* range from extremely hot and dry to extremely cold and wet.
* vary from time to time and place to place
- year to year
- widely from season to season
Cold condition
* are often very dry conditions.
* can also lead to fatigue since the body uses energy to keep warm
- greatly aggravate a crusting problem, causing even more leafing underground
- produce adults which are dark grey
* require heating indoors.
* slow the rate at which they develop.
Cold sweat
* Use sage from a health food store.
* is part of fear.
Coma
* Most comas lead to death.
* Some comas precede death.
* can eventually occur, with slow, weak breathing and decreased heart rate.
* is unconsciousness | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition:
Comfort
* also means straps, buckles, pockets and compartments that are easy to use day after day
- relates to environment
* becomes the measure for what is right and for what is to be done.
* can involve hugs
- sometimes be at odds with size, particularly when it comes to chairs
* combination of temperature and humidity conditions.
* concept that has a strong association with nursing.
* depends on a balance of heat, moisture and pressure against points of the body.
* function of flexibility and weight.
* is aid.
* is an antidote for anxiety
- essential element in all happiness
- individual concept
- gratification
* is located in beds
- homes
- of paramount importance to all species
- one of a growing number of people making their own to trade
- pleasure
- something that everyone wants to have in life
- support
* is the best response parents can give a child that is awakened from a nightmare
- factor that separates home buying from ordinary real estate investment
- precursor to relaxation
- reduction of perceived risk
* major key when becoming intimate.
* relative term.
* word people use a lot in conjunction with P ramo.
### condition | comfort:
Human comfort
* function of temperature, humidity, and wind speed.
* is the primary determinant for design inside temperature and humidity.
Thermal comfort
* depends on the moist air conditions.
* is important for tourists, building designers and people with health concerns.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Crisis
* Crises always drive adaptation and innovation, the alternative is usually annihilation
- reveal a person's true character
* Crises are caused by humans
- frequently the mainspring of adaptive behavior
- periods of turbulence that can unite or destroy
- the times when the abnormal red blood cells form clots
- times when the symptoms of the disease are most evident
* Crises become annual occurrences
- bring out both the best and the worst in human beings
* Crises can arise quite rapidly during anesthetic recovery
- be normal and can even lead to transformation
- come in all shapes and sizes
- comes in everyone s life
- confront human beings in the United States and around the globe
- flood the body with stress hormones
* Crises have impact
- negative impact
- is the failure of statesmanship and war is the ultimate bankruptcy of statesmanship
- produce social unrest and looting
- refers to the issues in the plot at hand
- take many forms when they strike an organization, but most have common characteristics
* Crises threaten health
- public health
* Crises will have effects
- term effects
* Many crises are the result of vicious cycles or addictions.
* Most crises are caused by humans
- cause stress, so do life's normal ups and downs
* Some crises affect countries
- arise from natural disasters such as earthquakes, hurricanes, fires, and floods
* are emergencies
- situations
* cause focus.
* causes kids to change what they say, how they feel and how they act.
* comes in many forms.
* fact of life for a family with a member who has a bleeding disorder.
* forces people to change and change often brings new opportunity.
* is inherent to capitalism.
* is the natural state of most organizations
- true test of a person's leadership ability
* magazine that deals with religious issues.
* monthly magazine of religion, culture, and politics.
* time of danger and opportunity.
* usually entails sever pain in the abdomen, chest, muscles, or bones.
### condition | crisis:
Current crisis
* Current crises are caused by humans.
* Current crises become annual occurrences
* Most current crises are caused by humans.
Economic crisis
* Economic crises are the free market's escape valve for overproduction.
* Some economic crises affect countries.
* are financial conditions.
* can lead to social and political crisis.
* is an economic condition | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | crisis:
Financial crisis
* Financial crises can affect the economy in a number of ways.
* can occur without any currency crisis.
Global crisis
* Global crises threaten health
- public health
* Most global crises threaten health
Hemolytic crisis
* causes liver congestion and hepatomegaly as a result of degenerative changes.
* is the most common presentation of hereditary spherocytosis, as shown above.
Hypertensive crisis
* can cause very severe, generalized headache.
* is ofter accompanied by hypertensive encephalopathy.
* occurs once organs are damaged.
Crowded condition
* make it easy for diseases to spread quickly.
* tend to cause cannibalism among fishes and cmstaceans.<|endoftext|>### condition:
Curiosity
* Curiosities Use dark-colored candles.
* Curiosities are artificial satellites
- emotion
- part of human nature
- cause a desire to reads
* Some curiosities create life.
* ' is an emotion that shows a want or need to know new things. It is shown in behavior such as exploration, investigation, and learning. It is an innate behaviour of humans and many animal species. Curiosity major cause and force behind scientific research and other studies.
* is common to humans at all ages starting from infancy, through adulthood. It is easy to see in many other animal species, such as apes, cats, rodents, fish, reptiles, and insects. Although it is an innate behaviour of many living beings, it is not thought of as an instinct because it is not a fixed action pattern.
* basic human emotion, an inner driving force.
* can be a prime motivator for women to experiment sexually.
* common theme in fairy tales and literature.
* concerning evil and forbidden things cause of many temptations assailing the soul.
* is an important part of learning
- inherent part of our nature
- important because it's part of developing intelligence and an ability to learn
* is one of the certain characteristics of a vigorous mind
- main reasons individuals identify for their first visit
* is one of the most dominant of human characteristics
- essential tools for psychological understanding
- permanent and certain characteristics of a vigorous mind
- permanent and certain characteristics of a vigorour mind
- particular type of passion and one way of understanding the universe
- something that can be nurtured and developed
* is the demonstrated desire to know about other people, places, ideas, values, etc
- desire to know, and is clearly associated with attention
- key that turns the lock on generations of negativity, ignorance, fear and shame
* is the most common motivation among young children
- reason children play with fire
- single most powerful motivation of any healthy child
- wick in the candle of learning
- thus a fundamental human trait
- what allows children to learn and grow
* lust of the mind.
* natural, healthy instinct.
* normal and healthy human emotion.
* state of mind
* subjective quality of persons whereby they are eager to learn.
* way of life.
### condition | curiosity:
Human curiosity
* Some human curiosities result in death.
* drives our attempts to understand the workings of nature. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | curiosity:
Interest
* alone is the governing principle with nations.
* are 'why' people want what they want.
* are the concerns, desires, and fears that underlie a person's stated position
- needs, desires and fears underlying a negotiator's position
- likes and dislikes of people who work in each career
- needs, concerns, and values that motivate each person
* can also be the care or concern that someone has for something or someone.
* centered disputes exist because people have conflicting interests.
* charge for the time value of money
- using money
- on top of the value of the loan, that acts as a cost of the loan
* evolves for individuals as they go through their own personal experiences.
* factor that contributes to success on the job.
* fee charged to borrow money
- paid to the lender on a regular schedule, such as monthly or yearly
* fixed rate set with maturity.
* generates interest.
* includes animal reproduction
- investigations
- large animal reproduction
- patterns
* is also the price people pay to borrow money
- an essential component of the financial aspect of an individual or an organization
- any ownership or control of any profits or assets of such business entity
- called the Offspring of invested money
- charged to a person that borrows money
- compensation for the use or forbearance of money
- earned by investing in certain types of investments or savings accounts
- expressed as a percentage rate for a period of time
- fees
- money charged by a lender to a borrower for the use of the lender's money
- one variable that can change projections for profit quickly
- shares
- situations
- social groups
* is the amount of money charged for borrowing from a lender
- charge for borrowing money
* is the cost for the convenience of paying for purchases over time
- of borrowing
- difference between the discounted buying price and the amount paid at maturity
* is the fee charged for borrowing money
- paid or received for the use of money over a period of time
- fuel that is exploding the debt
- monetary and imputed interest income of persons from all sources
- opportunity cost of foregone consumption by households
* is the payment of income for the delay in receiving compensation
- someone receives for keeping money in a savings account
* is the price banks pay to encourage people to save at the bank
- borrowers pay to lenders for the use of their money
* is the price of borrowing the money
* is the price paid for early availability of funds
- the use of someone else's savings
- the government has to pay for taking out loans
* is what a borrower pays a lender for the use of the lender's money
- to a lender in exchange for the use of the borrowed money
* key factor in children s listening ability.
* major expense for businesses, because they finance fixed capital as well as inventory.
* measure of relevance of an item of state to the player.
* percentage lenders charge for the use of their money.
* plays a central role in the Western monetary system.
* provides opportunity.
* represents the rate at which people are willing to trade money today for money tomorrow.
* return to lenders while taxes can be thought of as return to government investment.
+ Interest, Other meanings of interest: Economics
* Interest can also be the care or concern that someone has for something or someone. If something is beautiful, or funny, or new, that might make the thing interesting. However, a very important concern, for example love or hate, is more than an interest. An interest can also be a task that someone likes to do or watch, like a game or a hobby.
+ Loan, Important components of a loan, Interest: Money
* Interest is a charge on top of the value of the loan, that acts as a cost of the loan. Interest is paid according to a rate called an interest rate. The interest rate varies from loan to loan and from lender to lender.
+ Pawn shop: Shops
* The person can get their valuable item back from the pawnbroker if the pay back the money they were loaned and pay interest on the loan. Interest is like a fee for getting to use someone else's money for a set time period. If the person who has borrowed money from the pawnbroker does not repay the loan and interest within an agreed-upon time limit, the pawnbroker can sell the valuable item to another customer to get back the money they loaned. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### condition | curiosity | interest:
Compound interest
* is interest earned on saving that includes previously earned interest
- that accrues to a preceding period s interest
* is the interest paid on accumulated interest as well as on the principal
- magic of savings
- secret ingredient of building wealth
* is what makes credit cards and loans so difficult to pay off
- millionaires have been using for centuries to get rich and stay rich
* means that interest is charged on the previous interest as well as on the balance.
* situation that can be modeled by an exponential function.
Concern
* alters habitats
- owl habitats
* imposes restrictions.
* includes security.
* influences choices.
* is anxiety
- emotion
- sympathy
* leads to conservation
- forest conservation
* relates to activities
- development
- performance
- safety
* requires treatments.
* Really a good work. All concerns are fixed. Some users stated that this very good article. So far, no reason to not promoted this article.
* term much used and often abused in business.
### condition | curiosity | interest | concern:
Affair
* are located in work
- social events
- transactions
- usually a sign of a relationship that has been in trouble for a while
* can occur in happy marriages as well as in troubled ones.
* cause divorces
- scandal
* is concern
### condition | curiosity | interest | concern | affair:
Extramarital affair
* are a form of pleasure
- taboo for many elderly both religiously and morally
* become a viable option to people who have publicly spoken out against adultery.
Ecological concern
* have an important role in production of polyurethane flexible foams.
+ Genetic engineering
* Critics have objected to use of genetic engineering on several grounds, including ethical concerns, ecological concerns. Economic concerns are raised by the fact GM techniques and GM organisms are subject to intellectual property law. Ecological concerns are more subtle.<|endoftext|>### condition | curiosity | interest | concern:
Environmental concern
* Many environmental concerns surround genetically modifying products to contain Bt.
* are the national security issues of the future.
* deal directly with the quality of life.
* grow out of the impacts of development and sprawl.
* have a great impact on the aviation industry.
* is one area in which Shanghai has a long way to go
- presently one of the major driving forces in biogeochemical research
- what economists call 'a luxury good', it goes up with prosperity
* revolve around nutrients, pathogens and odors.
* underlie the health of our people.
Health concern
* are a big factor for the majority of people living in big cities.
* can arise for vegetarians because of limited food choices.
* relates to development.
Separation of concerns
* concept that is at the core of software engineering.
* is important in information processing systems.
National interest
* combination of the security, economic, and ideological concerns of a nation.
* derive from national identity.
* means economic interest.
* tend to carry more weight than the well-being of people in far away countries.<|endoftext|>### condition | curiosity | interest:
Open interest
* is an indicator of how much interest there is in the contract
- one indication of longer-term investing in equity options
- the accumulated total of all currently outstanding contracts
* is the number of contracts outstanding at the close of the trading day
- at the close of trading each day
- derivatives contracts outstanding
- futures and options positions outstanding at the close of trading
- outstanding contracts on an option class or series
- positions held overnight after the close of trading
* is, simply, the number of contracts that exist at any point in time.
* refers to the number of outstanding contracts that remain open.
* represents the number of open contracts on an option at the end of each day. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits