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### trait:
Individuation
* is essential for creation exists only in a vacuum
- mediated in comparing two alternative solutions to the same task
* is the ability to act as an individual yet remain emotionally connected to the family
- process where by adolescent's establish an independent identity
- trend of history
* means different things to different people depending on their life' s demands
- self-realization, or full and balanced personal development
* process that leads to a more mature, balanced, 'rounded' person.
* suggests a commitment to inner growth and development.
Inherited trait
* are carried on structures called genes
- passed through the genes of parents to their children
* can be a physical trait or a behavior
- interact with environmental carcinogens
* have a big influence on personality.
Initiative
* are emotion.
* is one of the most important attributes of every leader
- traits most valued by employers
- simply the doing of something without being told
* is the ability to take the first step or move
- power of the public to initiate ordinances by petition
* procedure by which voters can a. directly make laws.<|endoftext|>### trait:
Intentionality
* Intentionalities are deliberation.
* emerges again as the ruler for the measurement of the development of self and other.
* is conscious, meaningful and always present
- first and foremost a relationship, on which consciousness and objects are founded
* is the key to achieving the goal of reaching all nations in our neighborhoods
- mark of the mental
- purposeful, positive, and planned activity that facilitates reconciliation
- what gives such a system the power to look outward at the extensional world
Luxury
* Luxuries are indulgence
- only for the very wealthy
- become necessities
- cause pain
- range from radiant heat to air conditioning
- support the economy
* comes in all shapes and sizes.
* furs such as mink are used in fur coats.
* is excessive desire, or even love of living sumptuously. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trait:
Mindfulness
* also has a quality of memory or recollection.
* begins with awareness.
* broader and larger function than concentration.
* can also be the deciding factor between life and death
- be so many things, but basically it is awareness of every moment
- decrease our stress and improve our health
- examine the mechanics of selfishness and understand what it sees
- offset a growing feeling of vulnerability
- pierce the mystery of suffering and the mechanism of discomfort
- transform pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral feelings into wisdom
* concept that is centuries old.
* develops day by day, and consequently, meditators gain penetrating insight.
* directs the power of concentration.
* has an element of denial in it.
* helps with emotion-driven behavior.
* is about taking control of our thoughts, actions, and intentions.
* is also a capacity of mind that everybody has
- fourfold
* is an ancient Buddhist practice which has profound relevance for out present-day lives
- interesting and unique way of living and dealing with stress
- opportunity to gain a better perspective and understanding
- attunement to today's demand to avoid tomorrow's difficulties
- awareness or attention, avoiding a distracted and clouded state of mind
- based on working with the psychosomatic body
- constant mindfulness with regard to body, feelings, thoughts, and mind-objects
- different from concentration
- egoless awareness
- encouraged through changing thinking patterns
- essential even in our daily life
- hard work
- hunger in context
- infinitely more than sitting meditation
- learned and practiced
* is mind open to the full body of experience each moment, the whole sphere
- realizing mind embracing mind
- necessary to maintain the purity of mental states
* is the ability to be present in the moment
- see clearly the truth of one s inner and outer experience
- art of paying attention and bringing awareness to our experience
- capacity of being there body and mind united
- complete, spacious, attentive awareness of everything in the present moment
- essence of patience
- key to knowing the mind, and so it's the starting point
- perfect tool for shaping the mind, and so it's the focal point
- ploughshare and the goad
- practice of finding that realm
- to be aware and alive to what is going on within and without
* is very powerful, it's like recollection or remembering
- simple on one level because it is simply being
* leads to higher wisdom and refined conduct
- insight, understanding, compassion, and love
- recognition of the energy essence of emotions
* means being truly present with life and allowing it to unfold without judging it
- fully experiencing what happens in the here and now
- mind is full, therefore it includes everything
- paying attention to the details of life, which always brings about new insights
- simply being there without movement
- to always be self aware and continually examine oneself
* perceives things deeply and with great clarity.
* permits nonjudgmental attention to ones own mental and physical processes.
* pervades sound and space.
* picks the objects of attention, and notices when the attention has gone astray.
* powerful technique for applying meditative insight to everyday life.
* produces a calming, relaxing quality in our minds.
* refers to keeping one's consciousness alive to the present reality.
* relaxes the mind and the body relaxes as a result.
* relieves suffering because it is filled with understanding and compassion.
* requires continuous alertness and attention.
### trait | mindfulness:
Mindfulness meditation
* includes two forms of practice, termed formal and informal.
* skill to be learned like any other.
Mistrust
* is emotion.
* reduces the probability of reporting income, whether exactly or approximately. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trait:
Passivity
* includes awareness of and sympathy with the horse.
* is often a catalyst to further destroy relationships.
* is the enemy of growth
- one thing that keeps people from changing and getting better
Phlegm
* are mucuses.
* can create a lot of different problems throughout the body
- the cause of hundred diseases
* general symptom of respiratory infections such as the common cold, or bronchitis.
* predominates in childhood.
Physical trait
* are harder to observe than mental qualities.
* can be size, strength, color, and more, which allow an animal to survive.
* used in segmentation include geography, demography and socioeconomic factors.
Playfulness
* can be an indicator of youthfulness in women.
* is frivolity.
Polygenic trait
* are controlled by two or more genes
- the result of the interaction of several genes
* are traits that are determined by more than one gene
- governed by the interactions of a group of genes
* can be additive, as in body size
- have many possible phenotypes
Propriety
* dictates gentility and neighborliness, which in turn represses rage and resentment.
* is behavior
- demeanor
### trait | propriety | appropriateness:
Age appropriateness
* focuses on the age group of children and where they are developmentally.
* refers to the predictable sequences of growth occurring in young children.
Good form
* are propriety.
* is propriety
Quantitative trait
* are characteristics controlled by many genes.
* provide effective descriptions of many complex diseases, including asthma. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trait:
Reliability
* Describes whether a measurement gives approximately the same result in repeated tests.
* Refers to the dependability of individual components of a system.
* affects the production of goods in three distinct ways.
* applies to computers too, of course, and to their operating systems.
* characteristic of the financial information.
* combination of two trains of thought.
* deals with whether the person's statements can be relied upon as being factual.
* defines the stability of a measurement.
* describes the consistency of results from an assessment.
* determines the time a clock can keep the time within a specified accuracy.
* focuses on strategies and technologies to manage networks for high-availability.
* function of forecast accuracy
- many things, including engineering, testing and integration
* involves consistency of performance dependability.
* is also a function of system complexity
- key factor in consumer purchasing decisions
- about forging trusted human relationships
- related to sampling
* is an aspect of construct validity
- assessment of our past actions regarding fulfillment of our promises
- important concept in science
- index of how accurately the examination measures the candidate s skills
- issue of trust
* is concerned about the stability of a measure over time of different raters
- with the design of products and reliability testing
- consistency of performance and dependability
- defined in the sense of showing up for scheduled work over an extended period
- directly related to quality
- more of a measure of consistency
* is one of the best known and oldest metrics
- biggest concerns of wireless optical networks
- responsibility
- something that comes with practice
- synonymous with quality
* is the ability of a company to meet the commitments made to customers
- selection device to measure the same thing consistently
- accuracy of measurement and consistency of results
- achievement of consistency in results
- assurance that the quality achieved today can be supplied well into the future
- concept that a higher initial cost can be traded off for a longer pavement life
- consistency of a measure
- cornerstone of the electrical industry
* is the degree to which an assessment or instrument consistently measures an attribute
- information is transferred accurately within the system
- likelihood that a certain thing caused a change in behavior
- measure of consistency for an assessment instrument
* is the most important concept involved in measurement
- dynamic characteristic of almost all software systems
- percentage of messages that worked
* is the probability that a service, once successfully initiated, runs to completion
- something won t fail during some defined period of time
- the entire transaction can execute properly without failure
- promise that our customers look for and expect year after year
* is the single largest contributor to product quality
- most important aspect of any network device
- term given to the accuracy of each evaluation
- trait corporate travelers value most highly when choosing where to stay
- virtue
- where the information economy hits the energy road
* means knowing when something has failed.
* measure of the precision with which is measured.
* measures internal consistency from one set of measurements to another
- the consistency of responses
* provides the reassurance that gives family members confidence in one another.
* ratio or fraction.
* refers the extent that observations can be replicated.
* refers to a record's authority and trustworthiness at the time of creation
- an instrument's consistency of results regardless of who uses it
- consistency in ratings from the evaluators
- how consistently a server runs applications and services
* refers to the ability of the instrument to repeatably measure the same number
- consistency and stability of performance appraisal measures
* refers to the consistency of a measure
- scores obtained by a person when re-examined
* refers to the consistency or replicability of scores or performances
- reproducibility of a measure
- stability of assessment results
- consistency, stability, and replicability of a measurement
* refers to the degree to which a test is error-free
- a test score is free from errors of measurement
- extent to which a measure provides consistent results
- internal consistency and relative stability of findings over time
- precision and consistency of scores derived from a test instrument
- quality of that value
- reproducibility of a measurement
- test giving consistent results over the years
- whether the measuring device is consistent in measuring whatever it measures
* reflects the degree to which true scores and observed scores correspond to each other.
* usually refers to consistency over time.
+ Applied behavior analysis, Characteristics, Analytic
* Both of these techniques help behavior analysts prove reliability. Reliability is the likelihood that a certain thing caused a change in behavior. If something has high reliability it is thought that the thing was the reason for a change in behavior. To show reliability behavior analysts must be able to analyze behavior. To analyze behavior they must have control over the behavior. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trait:
Reproductive trait
* Most reproductive traits are less heritable than production traits, but still respond to selection.
* show little response to selection, but they can be improved by crossbreeding.
Reticence
* is the opposite of flattery in many ways.
* means acceptance of defeatism.<|endoftext|>### trait | secrecy:
Mum
* More mums die from root rot than from freezing temperatures.
* Some mums are drug or alcohol addicts, or in poor health.
* are semi-hardy perennials
- susceptible to stem rot, powdery mildew, aphids and spider mites
* generally require regular fertilization and irrigation throughout the growing season.
* have a shallow, fibrous root system so water thoroughly during hot, dry weather
- large flower heads and aromatic leaves that alternate along the stem
* is secrecy
* offer a great diversity in plant habit, flower color, and form.
* require well-drained soils because of their relatively shallow root system.
Simple trait
* are traits that show simple Mendelian inheritance.
* come from complex genes.
Sociability
* common feature with very many other birds of prey.
* is as much a law of nature as mutual struggle
- sociality
- the extent to which a baby prefers to be with other people in general
* refers to our desires to live in a group.
Specific trait
* are, therefore, the outcomes of the interactions among many molecules.
* can also be the result of adaptations for other functions that have since changed.<|endoftext|>### trait:
Stoicism
* calls for a universal benevolence towards all humans.
* covers up nostalgia.
* deterministic theory.
* is all about the effect of emotions on the reason
- named after the mural-decorated porch, stoa poikele, which was found in Athens' Agora
* is the dualism of internal stability and external flux
- most influential philosophy
- thus a natural outcome of the Hellenistic experience
* means to be unaffected by joy, grief, pleasure or pain.
* recognizes that affection is necessary in dealing with women and kids.
Workaholism
* becomes a relationship with work that competes with other important relationships.
* can be very damaging to family and other outside relationships.
* disorder with some remarkable similarities to other addictive behaviors.
* is every bit as addictive and damaging as alcoholism and drug abuse.
* progressive syndrome.<|endoftext|>Transaction
* are a central abstraction used in implementing modern distributed systems
- causal loops in which each factor affects the other
- goal-directed human behaviors
- group actions
- just gifts bound together in pairs like the atoms of nitrogen in the air
- logical units of work that are executed together as a unit
* are price-based relationships in which the lowest bid takes all
- where the lowest bid takes all
- processes that complete a single business function
- representations of events
- sacred, based upon communal responsibility and obligation
- the unit of atomicity and isolation
* create values.
* involve services.
* represent one of the mechanisms commonly used to address reliability and correctness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction:
Commerce
* big driving force in how the Web evolves, but creativity is another.
* can clearly exist over the vast distances of space
- foster a large degree of social harmony, otherwise impossible with isolated societies
* considers differences between quantities sold in the foreign and domestic markets.
* creates wealth.
* drives invention and industry, which in turn changes society
- sales
* includes business activities.
* is about marketing and branding strategies.
* is also about improving the lives of real people
- value which leads to choices and inevitably to restrictions
- an ancient and respectable human activity that predates written language
* is commerce, whether it happens by click or brick
- takes place in a boardroom or a browser
- conversations
- one of the most powerful and rapidly-growing uses of the Web
- only a small sub-set of the communications on the Internet
- stations
* is the ability to take orders over the Internet
- heart of American culture to a large extent
* means businesses and jobs.
* microcosm of the federal government.
* now makes-up the largest growth sector of the internet.
* prime source of both jobs and, through trade, money.
* represents the bulk of economic activity as measured by employment.
* small subset of Internet usage. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce:
Agriculture
* AgriCultures liberate nutrients and minerals and are nitrogen-fixing.
* Most agriculture depends on conditions
- environmental conditions
- rainfall
- has resources
- includes domestication
- is concentrated on the coastal plain, where sugar is the main crop
* Most agriculture is done intensively in closed, hydroponic systems
- on small plots, often a distance from where the farmer lives
- rainfed
* Most agriculture relies on rain
- yearly rain
* Much agriculture is in the margin of forested lands.
* Remains basic form of life for most.
* Some agriculture destroys habitats
- suitable habitats
- eliminates trees
* Some agriculture kills baobab trees
- produces fruit
- results in population extinction
* accounts for about one-third of the national income
- almost two-fifths of the value of Tajikistan's economic production
- more than half of all suspended sediments discharged into surface water
- one-fifth of the Philippine economy
- only a small percentage of Libya's yearly domestic product
- roughly a quarter of national output
* accounts for the bulk of U.S. water use
- major part of water withdrawals, mainly for irrigation
- two thirds of the jobs and a third of all economic activity in Africa
- two-thirds of the jobs and a third of all economic activity in Africa
* affects both nitrogen additions and subtractions to the soil
- everyone
* allows large groups of people to live in the same location.
* also affects water quality through run-off containing pesticides and fertilizers
- can reduce nitrogen loss by reconstructing more wetlands
- contributes to land erosion and overuse of water and pesticides
- depends heavily on groundwater
- employs a tremendous number of people
- has a major impact on our state's economy
- introduces herbicides and pesticides into streams
- is the dominant activity in the rural household economy
- means feeding people
- plays a large role in Alexander
* also plays a significant role in the economy
- with cattle farming, vegetables and fruit
- special role in addressing problems of poverty
* also plays an important role in Wyoming's economy
- releases other materials into the atmosphere
- serves an important role in the economy
- significant component of the regional economy
- stands accused of exacerbating sexual inequality
- takes a toll on the world's water
- threatens ground water
* alters the natural cycling of nutrients in soil.
* attempts to tip the ecological balance in favor of humans relative to other species.
* basic industry for society.
* basically represents a disturbance, an anthropogenic gap, created in the ecosystem.
* begins with domestication of animals such as sheep and goats
- the first cultivation of plant crops
* benefits farmers.
* big business in the United States, and a lot of water is used to produce our food
- contributor to national emissions of the greenhouse gas methane
- part of the economy in Madagascar, including the growing of coffee and vanilla
* biological rather than an industrial process.
* biologically based industry and many of the problems are site specific.
* business that feeds the world.
* can also affect biodiversity outside the areas on which it is practiced.
* can be one of the most satisfying and rewarding ways to make a living
- vulnerable to the weather and market prices
- contribute modestly to mitigation through carbon sequestration in soils
- play either a positive or a negative role, depending on how it is managed
- support greater numbers of people than a hunting and gathering culture
* causes damage
- desertification
- permanent damage
* combines forests and mountain pasturage in summer, mostly beef but also sheep and goats.
* comparative latecomer to the so-called information age.
* complex system of producers and processors.
* concerns techniques, including the application of agronomic research.
* consists largely of subsistence farming and animal husbandry.
* constitutes the basic production sector in the economy.
* continues to be an important component in our balance of trade
- industry today
- plagued by a past legacy of central planning and state-ownership
- the largest sector of Punjab's economy
- dominate the basic economy
* continues to play a significant role in our economy
- an important role in Brazil's economy
- sustain millions of people in India
* contributes more than half of the gross domestic product
- the pollutants entering the nations rivers and lakes
- most to the state's income in the primary sector
- substantially to our quality of life
* contributes to atmospheric change in various ways
- declining water quality
* cornerstone of America s culture, economy and standard of living.
* coulds have effects.
* creates a chain reaction in terms producing jobs.
* cultural way of life.
* depends more and more on science and technology.
* depends on a reliable supply of good-quality water for many farm uses
- both components of biodiversity
- exports for one-third of all sales
- soil fertility
- the natural diversity of plants and animals that are domesticated
* directly degrades the landscape of Belize through deforestation.
* diverse sector represented by a complex mix of business enterprises.
* dominant activity in many countries.
* dominates the economy, but rainfall is scarce, and drought constant threat.
* dominates the economy, with cotton being the most important crop
* drives our economic engine, providing jobs and a tax base for our governments
* dynamic, rapidly changing industry that has an exciting future.
* employs about one-third of the population, mainly in subsistence farming.
* encompasses various elements of the food, fiber, and natural resource systems.
* explores the trade aspects of agriculture.
* flourishes during global warming.
* focuses on livestock, though some tropical fruits and vegetables are exported.
* food-driven business.
* forms the basis of the Zimbabwean economy
- economy, but all rural people also fish
* frequently increases erosion
- suffers the effects of droughts
* fulfils multiple functions, all essential to achieving food security.
* fundamental sector for the establishment of an appropriate food production system.
* generates sediment pollution in several ways.
* growing economic sector, and the country is approaching food self-sufficiency
* has a dual role as an energy user and as an energy supplier in the form of bioenergy
- great impact on the nitrogen cycle
- huge impact on the world
* has a positive and a negative impact on the environment
- role to play that goes far beyond ethanol
- significant influence on the rural economy and the countryside
- unique role in sustainability
- an enormous impact on the environment
- one of the highest occupational fatality rates of all U.S. industries
* has the advantage of being geographically tied to the state's resources
- third largest work force
* helps by absorbing greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.
* high-risk, unpredictable, and unstable industry.
* high-tech industry.
* important sector for food security and the struggle against poverty.
* improves quality.
- consumption in pursuing hunting, forestry and fishing activities
* involves animals from both land and water
- both the production and the culture
- the growing of one or two or at the most three crops a year
* is British Columbia's third largest resource industry behind forestry and mining
- California's number one industry
- Guatemala s most important industry
- Minnesota's leading industry and represents thousands of jobs
- Montana's largest industry
- North America's largest industry
- Pennsylvania's largest industry
- actually a water-intensive industry
* is also a branch of science
- leading cause of death and disabling injuries to U.S. workers
- primary source of groundwater pollution
- threat in third world countries
- an important part of Canada s economy
* is also an important source of contaminants in some aquifers
- as diverse as it is complex
- extremely important to the economy of some of the tribes
- important in the context of rural development and poverty reduction
* is also important to the French economy
- important, with fires used to clear the land before planting
* is also the largest source of methane and nitrous oxide emission
- source of many organic and inorganic pollutants
- vital to the Delaware economy
* is an active but declining industry, primarily in down-sloping areas
- area of the economy that is very vulnerable to climate change
- enormous and varied enterprise that is shaped by many forces
- enterprise with far-reaching impacts on our economy, environment, and communities
* is an essential element of mankind
- part of our region's economy and culture
- example of the effects of economies of scale
- extremely important component of the economy of the state
* is an important cornerstone of the Iowa economy
- industry in Hobbs and Lea County
- nonpoint source of pollution in the southeastern United States
* is an important part of Chile's economy, next to mining and forestry
- Indian economy
* is an important part of our heritage and our national security
- state's heritage and economy
* is an important part of the Philippine economy
- basin's economy and culture
- economy in Kyrgyzstan
- economy in terms of both employment and production
- economy of Azerbaijan
- island economy
- sector of the Kansas economy
- source of employment
- industry where additional research is needed
* is and has always been a science
- remains the engine of growth for many poor communities and poor countries
* is another arena that is greatly enhanced by the use and application of climate models
- important sector in Valencia
- word that is used when talking about farming
- at subsistence level and one of the major sources of employment
- based almost entirely on angiosperms
* is based on livestock, wheat and grapes
- maize and rice, but potatoes, beans and fruit are also grown
- nutmeg, cocoa, sugar cane and bananas
* is based on small but highly productive family-owned farms
- basic to Assam's economy
- biotechnology's future in Europe
- both a capital and fuel intensive industry
* is by far the biggest consumer of water worldwide
- sector even though Georgia is mainly mountains
* is by far the major consumer of water in Israel
- source of phosphorus inputs
- capital intensive
- carried out with low-levels of technology and inputs, resulting in low productivity
- central to the interests of developing countries
- centred on beef cattle and the production of cheese
* is characterized by low yields harvested in small plots, often of less than one hectare
- monocrop cultures
- classes
- classically a cyclical industry
- colossal in magnitude and occupies vast spaces
- common in the west, where center pivot irrigation of corn and potatoes is common
- complex issues
* is concentrated in the fertile northern part of the country
- river valleys and on the limestone plains
* is confined almost exclusively to small farms
- to small-scale activity because of poor soil quality
- confronted with important issues on the use of pesticides and pest control practices
- critical to both the economy of America and Illinois
- crucial to local economic stability
- defined broadly to include crop, livestock, forestry and fisheries
* is dependent on a plentiful supply of quality water
- upon many natural resources, such as land, water, air and energy
- devoted primarily to cattle and sheep raising
- diversified, with the harvesting of corn, peanuts, grain, and sorghum
* is dominated by the cultivation of export crops, primarily dates and limes
- raising of cattle and sheep
- today by sheep and cattle ranching and wheat farming
- economically important, as are sheep and cattle raising
- especially sensitive to climate
- essential for human health and well being, and for the economy
- extremely vulnerable to climate change
- farmers and ranchers livelihood
- focused on fruit, vegetable, vineyards and sheep farming
- food processing, packaging, transportation and marketing
- found in many areas of the state
- fundamentally ecological in nature
- heavily dependent on the normal arrival of the monsoon
- highly dependent on exports, more than twice as much as other sectors of the economy
* is important for achieving sustainable economic growth and reducing rural poverty
- in Orchard Hills
* is important to Iowa's economy
- Massachusetts' economy and culture
- every human being
* is important to the Mohawk Valley economy
- economy, although subject to periodic droughts
- in fact the first example of servile labor in the history of man
- integral to New York State's economy and culture
- intensive food production, and especially plant cultivation
- interpreted to include both livestock and plant practices
- key to the economic health of the State of Kansas
- life based on the care of the land
* is limited almost entirley to the raising of potatoes and other garden vegetables
- by erratic precipitation patterns and limited opportunities for irrigation
* is limited to a few areas of fertile soil and suitable microclimate
- areas next to streams
- production for the domestic market
- livestock or crops, as well as the needed management of farming
- mainly subsistence farming
- more than farming and ranching
* is more than just a sector of production
- an area of production
- twice as dependent on exports as the overall economy
- necessary to maintain the food supply
* is of major importance to the economy, particularly in the central and northern area
- preeminent importance to the economy of Kansas
- one issue that unites people,North and South,in a common interest
* is one of California's leading industries
- Missouri's biggest and most diversified sources of revenue
- Ontario's most important economic sectors
- Texas' most important industries
- our nation s most productive economic sectors
* is one of several land uses contributing to sedementation
- contributing to sedimentation
* is one of the United States' most dangerous occupations
- foundations of national development
* is one of the main branches of the albanian economy
- industries in Paraguay
- occupations of people in India
- major contributors of nutrients to the Bay
- most accident-prone industries in the United States
* is one of the most dangerous industries for all workers
- industries for youths
* is one of the most hazardous occupations in the United States
- sectors worldwide, alongside mining and construction
* is one of the most important materials produced in North Carolina
- sectors in the Kenyan economy
- influential aspects of our daily lives
* is one of the pillars of the economy of Gujarat as also of India
- upon which our strength and prosperity as a Nation rest
- state's top industries, providing one in ten jobs
- three most dangerous industries in the United States
- sector where there is no informed debate, no holistic view
- possible only in irrigated areas and in small patches of flood plain
- practiced by antiquated methods
- practised along milder coastal areas
- predominately subsistence based
- primary sectors
* is probably humanity's oldest technology
- the most inefficient component of the Russian economy
- protected by tariffs
- rain-fed in some places and irrigated in others
- represented by the leading sectors of farming and animal husbandry
* is responsible for an estimated one third of global warming and climate change
- over a third of emissions
- restricted to the few upland plains, open valleys, and terraced hillsides
- seafood, nursery stock, dairy products, vegetables and livestock
- second only to forestry as a form of land use in North Carolina
- specialized in potato growing, and milk and meat cattle breeding
* is still a major industry today
- producer of income
- very important part of the fabric of the Australian nation
- an important aspect of community life today
- important, especially production of livestock and tobacco
- significant to Spain's economy
* is still the largest industry, involving about two thirds of the population
- single source of greenhouse gases in Ireland
* is still the major economic base in many Asian countries
- source of employment and income generation
- most important sector, both in terms of employment and production
- strategically vital to the welfare and national security of all people
- subsidised and used as a political means to keep people living in the districts
- such an important part of the Australian economy
- that activity that produces commodities for the international market
* is the back bone of Pakistan's economy
- home of all settled societies
* is the backbone of Uganda's economy
* is the backbone of the Ghanaian economy
- New Zealand economy
* is the backbone of the economy and the culture
- of any country, either developed or developing
* is the basic economic activity of the Tzeltal peasants
- income-producing activity
- industry of the islands
- pillar of the economy
- basis for civilizations large and small
* is the basis of China's wealth and civilization
- everything in the world
- the stability and sustainability of almost all cultures
- beginning of all things
* is the biggest consumer of water through irrigation
- part of Indonesia's economy
- single user of water - used mainly for irrigation
- source of production and employment in rural areas
* is the chief industry, with most people engaged in subsistence farming or stock raising
- occupation in Liberia
- country's most important source of foreign exchange followed by animal products
- cultivation of crops and raising of livestock for human and animal consumption
- dominant industry in the rural sector
- driving force in the Shan economy
- economic, social, and environmental foundation of the Great Central Valley
* is the foundation and most important sector of China's economy
- the most important industry in the world
* is the foundation of our nation's economy
- successful economic systems
- stone for every African economy
- greatest industry of the Filipino people
- heart of Idaho's economy and the bedrock of rural communities
- key industry of the world
* is the largest and fastest growing sector of the province's economy
- employer of labor
- sector in terms of employment
- segment of the U.S. economy
- single segment of the U.S. economy
- user of water due to irrigation
- leading industry in Kansas
- linchpin to our economic future and success
* is the main cause of deforestation
- drain on the water supply
* is the main economy of North Dakota's people
- our region and the state
- profession of the state
- sector for the economic development of rural areas
* is the main source of income
- people 's income
- sediment in much of the state
* is the mainstay of Punjab' s economy
* is the mainstay of the ethnic group
- island's economy, with bananas being the main crop
- state s economy
- to Florida's economy
- major industry in many rural communities, and it has significant risks
- means of livelihood of about two-thirds of the work force in the country
* is the most dangerous occupation open to minors in the United States
- destructive activity on the face of the earth
- extensive and oldest traditional technology
- hazardous occupation in the United States
- important and prevalent occupation worldwide - and the most dangerous
* is the most important economic sector of Somalia
- sector of county-centered local economies
- protected industry in most foreign countries
- vulnerable sector of the economy
- widespread cause of nonpoint source pollution
* is the nation's largest industry
- single industry
- number one industry in the United States
* is the only economic sector in which private ownership is still important
- source of employment for seventy percent of Haiti s population
- peninsula's primary land use
- predominant sector of the Tanzanian economy
- primary basis of the economy
* is the primary economic activity in the Arab homeland
- the Arab world
- force behind life
- source of nitrate contamination
- principal economy of New Zealand
* is the principal industry in the southern part of the state
- on which the New Zealand economy is based
- principle force of the economy
- profession of the most of the people
- province's third largest primary industry, behind forestry and mining
- science that started civilization
- second largest use of land in the Potomac River watershed
* is the second largest user of antidumping and countervailing duty remedies
- leading source of impairment to Pennsylvania's rivers and streams
- most important sector of the economy after oil and gas
- sector of the state's economy most immediately at risk
- single most important part of the state's economy
- soul of every society
- source of the country's strength
- staple industry of mankind
* is the state's biggest industry
- chief water consumer
- main economic activity
- top industry
- world s oldest, largest, and most essential industry
- world's leading source of employment
* is thought by some as the growing giant consumer of IT and electronic technologies
- to be major contributor of non-point pollution
- threatened by agribusiness
- treated as a specialized form of industry with unique needs
* is twice as dependent on exports as the overall economy
- as the rest of the U.S. economy
- used primarily to support large concentrations of wintering waterfowl
* is usually the first economic sector to be affected by drought
- predominant economic activity and change and growth proceed very slowly
* is very dependent on the export market
- important in the national economy
* is very important to Florida's economy
- rain dependent and production can vary considerably year to year
* is vital for human existence, but so is our environment
- to both the Northern and Southern economies
- vitally important to the Maryland economy and to our culture and quality of life
* is, by far, the defining trade problem for much of the world.
* large and important ingredient for New York's economy
- component of our state's economy
* leading industry in every Great Lakes state and province
* mainly produces rice , tea , coffee , spices and rubber.
* mainstay of Michigan's economy.
* major contributor to Minnesota's economy
- the economy with dairy being the major agricultural industry
* major economic activity for majority of African rural people
- industry of Utah and is the backbone for many rural communities and towns
- polluter of ground water and aquatic systems
- source of nutrients to the Bay
* major user of ground water in Virginia
- water in certain countries
* makes heavy use of fresh water.
* manages land for both agriculture and wildlife.
* means to channel the Earth's resources into production of human bodies.
* multi-billion dollar industry.
* multi-faceted enterprise, which encompasses many layers of American society.
* net emitter of greenhouse gases.
* occupies the largest part of the member states surface
- most prominent place in Punjab s economy
* plays a dominant role in the Yuma County economy.
* plays a key role in human life
- the Texas economy
* plays a large part in that physical diversity
- the production of biomass power
* plays a major part in the Kenyan economy
- role in Culbertson s economy
* plays a major role in the regional economy
- security of food supply
- vital role in the economic stability of Indiana
* plays an extensive and essential part in today's economy
- important economic and social role in Brazil
* plays an important role in Australia s economy
- Stuart
- protecting and enhancing our environmental quality of life
- the local economy
- to driving and maintaining the economy of the country
* predominates in domestic production.
* presently contributes greatly to environmental degradation.
* primary user of Hudson River water.
* prime engine of growth in the process of development.
* produces a new crop every year, feeds the country, and cuts down on imports
- number of pollutants
- many situations which can cause injury or illness
- very little food
* proliferates on the fertile soils of river flood plains.
* provides a source of multiple livelihoods
- subsistence livelihood for the bulk of the population
- more services to society than just producing calories or income per hectare
- open space, wildlife habitat and economic activity
* ranks among the most hazardous industries
- second only to mining in terms of risk for fatal injury
* refers to the culture, to the community that develops from the cultivation of land.
* releases other powerful GHGs, such as methane and nitrous oxide.
* relies heavily on groundwater, especially where water is the most scarce.
* relies on irrigation
- it, but it can also be a major source of water pollution
- nonrenewable resources such as fossil fuels and mineral fertilizers
* remains Ireland's single largest emitter of greenhouse gases.
* remains a key sector of the economy
- major contributor to Canada's trade on international markets
- top economic sector
- one of Egypt's most important sectors
* remains one of the mainstays of the Cypriot economy
- most protected industries in many countries
* remains the base of the national economy
- mainstay of the subcontinent's economy
* remains the most important sector for employment and income generation
- significant sector of the economy
* remains the single largest segment of Georgia's economy
- most important sector of our economy
* removes plant material from the soil with the minerals.
* represents an important role in the state economy.
* requires careful tending of the plants or animals being raised
- water for animals and plants to grow
* results in fragmentation
* science, a business, and a profession.
* shapes social institutions like group labor, land tenure, settlement pattern.
* significant component of Ohio's overall economy.
* significant contributor to Australia s greenhouse gas emissions
- nitrogen levels in the soil
* state-controlled matter.
* still accounts for half of economic output
- drives the country's export economy
* strongly encourages partnerships throughout the agri-food industry.
* suffers from arid conditions and poor irrigation.
* surrounds and permeates all other types of ecosystems.
* sustains most of the working population.
* takes less land area to support a community of a given size
- place on small family farms, large farms, and industrial farms
* technology, and it disrupts the natural flow of things.
* too plays an important role in the state economy.
* unique kind of evolutionary relationship between a. plants and b. animals.
* uses chitosan as a feed supplement for hogs and as a seed coating
- gravity flow in elevators, in feed plants, and in soils
- insecticides and pesticides
- seventy percent of the freshwater in the world each year
- water mainly for irrigation
* usually takes the form of cattle ranching and some production of alfalfa hay.
* very important industry in the Ozarks
- sector in the economy of Texas and in the nation
* vital and dynamic component of the economy
- component of the rural economy
- part of our daily lives
- segment of our economy and our communities
* way of life in Cambodia
- life, and it is our livelihood
+ Agriculture in Azerbaijan: Economy of Azerbaijan
* Agriculture is an important part of the economy of Azerbaijan. The major crops for are agricultural cash crops, grapes,cotton, tobacco, citrus fruits, rice, tea and vegetables. A leading caviar producer and exporter in the past, Azerbaijan's fishing industry today is concentrated on the dwindling supply of sturgeon and beluga in the Caspian Sea
- Pakistan: Economy of Pakistan
+ Badghis Province, Economy: Provinces of Afghanistan
* Agriculture is the main source of people's income. The Murghab and Hari rivers makes the land suitable for farming. The province had a bad drought in the late 1990s and early 2000s. It is also one of the carpet-making capitals of the country.
+ Cape Verde, Economy: Islands of Macaronesia :: Islands in Africa :: Portuguese-speaking countries
* The economic resources of Cape Verde are largely dependent on agriculture and fishing. Agriculture frequently suffers the effects of droughts. The most important crops are coffee, bananas, sugar cane, tropical fruits, corn, beans, sweet potato and cassava. Banana, canned fish, frozen fish, lobsters, salt, and clothes are the main exports. The national currency is the Cape Verdean escudo. Remittances from emigration are another important source of resources for the State of Cape Verde.
+ Corrientes Province: Provinces of Argentina
* Agriculture is one of the main activities in the province. Crops include citrus, tobacco, rice, tea, cotton and yerba mate.
+ Graubünden, Economy
* Agriculture and tourism make up most of the canton's economy. Agriculture combines forests and mountain pasturage in summer, mostly beef but also sheep and goats. There are a great number of other resorts people visiting the country can go to in the canton.
+ Hokkaidō: Islands of Japan :: Geography of Japan :: Japanese culture
+ Kyrgyzstan, Economy
* Agriculture is an important part of the economy in Kyrgyzstan. Much farming is being done by hand and by horse.
+ Madagascar, Economy: Gondwana
* Agriculture is a big part of the economy in Madagascar, including the growing of coffee and vanilla. Madagascar sells more vanilla than any other country in the world.
+ Patuakhali District, Economy: Districts of Bangladesh
* Agriculture is the profession of the most of the people. Fishing is also a prominent profession of this district. Thousands of boats go into the deep sea to fish and come back with tons of fish. Paddy, Jute, and different types of vegetables are the main product of agriculture sector
- Thana, Economy
+ Punjab (Pakistan), History
* Agriculture continues to be the largest sector of Punjab's economy. The province is the breadbasket of the country as well as home to the largest ethnic group in Pakistan, the Punjabis. Unlike neighbouring India, there was no large-scale redistribution of agricultural land. As a result most rural areas are dominated by a small set of feudalistic Zamindaror the land-owning families.
+ Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha, Economy
* The islands had a very simple economy the mid-1960s, mainly based on the culture of New Zealand flax, a plant of the genus 'Phormium', that was used to produce fibers and ropes. Agriculture is now mainly for food, except for a bit of coffee. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
American agriculture
* has a constantly growing appetite for credit
- proud history of individualism
* is based almost entirely upon introduced species
- on vertical integration to achieve low costs
- more than twice as reliant on foreign trade as the U.S. economy as a whole
* major force in the global economy.
* world of opportunity.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
Animal agriculture
* chief contributor to water pollution.
* does suck resources.
* is also a major cause of global warming
- responsible for a variety of environmental health problems
- an important part of the economy of Oregon and the nation
- deeply interwoven with plants in the food production system
- exempt from the Animal Welfare Act and most state anti-cruelty laws
- intensive in many areas resulting in erosion and over grazing
- vitally important to human health
* living business.
* primary source of water pollution as well.
* uses precious resources in other ways as well.
* very important part of North Dakota s agricultural economy.
* wastes our food resources.
Commercial agriculture
* causes damage
- permanent damage
* for profit business.
* is one of the most highly regulated businesses in the United States.
* major contributor to the country's economy.
Contemporary culture
* IS agriculture.
* boasts avent-garde painters and musicians.
* includes a widespread pattern of lighthearted hedonistic recreational sex.
* is how oppressive ideologies are reproduced and disseminated.
* regards public activity as more important than domestic life.
Diversified agriculture
* growing sector of the economy.
* is described as increasing the number of types of agricultural production.
Ecological agriculture
* is one of the trends in agricultural restructurisation.
* protects ecosystems.
Indian agriculture
* is heavily dependent on the monsoon as a source of water.
* produce even in the domestic market.
Industrialized agriculture
* promotes uniformity in food crops all over the planet.
* puts animals in concentration camps where they become crazy and diseased.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
Irrigated agriculture
* is already the largest consumer of developed water resources
- also in competition with urban water use
* is by far the largest consumptive user of water in New Zealand
- user of water in the Southwest
- committed to protecting wildlife while maintaining farming operations
- practised only in selected areas and on a relatively small scale
- responsible for most consumptive water use, and decreases surface run-off
* is the backbone of the economy
- larges user of water in the western United States
* is the major consumer of water in Texas
- widespread in Colorado and irrigation systems can be sources of mosquitoes
* requires diversion of water, which reduces streamflows
- significant volumes of water
Korean agriculture
* is characterized by small subsistence farms.
* lags behind the general economy because of high costs.
Mechanized agriculture
* produces greater crop yields.
* requires more fossil energy
- the use of more fertilizers and pesticides<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
Modern agriculture
* involves the large-scale production of a single type of plant.
* is heavily dependent on non-renewable energy sources, especially petroleum
- one of the most international of enterprises
- the use of land to convert petroleum into food
* uses a narrow range of varieties
- variety of chemicals, pesticides and fertilizer to grow crops
- vast array of poisons
- wide variety of biocides to combat crop pests, weeds and diseases
* water hog, the largest user and waster of global freshwater supplies. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
Organic agriculture
* can contribute to local food security in several ways.
* differs greatly in input use from conventional agricultural systems.
* does have the potential for a large scale and very efficient production.
* helps keep their communities and the environment healthy.
* is actually quite dependent on manure from animals fed with non-organic crops
- an item in the Dutch agricultural politicy
* is based on a strikingly different set of values
- soil life community
- predicated on such a balanced ecosystem
- sustainable and in high demand
- the most commonly held example of a sustainable food production system
* offers important elements for the search of sustainability.
* production system that s here to stay
- that's here to stay
* promotes the long range sustainability of soil and water supply.
* requires a diversity of crops and livestock.
* respects the balance necessary for a healthy ecosystem
- land and the wild creatures who live on it
* seems to reflect a philosophy of respect for the land and nature.
* utilizes methods that minimize pollution from air, soil and water.
Precision agriculture
* allows more automation of equipment.
* is an emerging high-technology agricultural management system.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
Sustainable agriculture
* Most sustainable agriculture benefits small farmers.
* benefits farmers
* central issue in environmentally sound living.
* defines a method of farming that integrates agriculture and ecology.
* depends largely on a correct use of natural resources.
* is agriculture
- based on the principle of working in harmony with nature
- ecologically, environmentally, socially and economically sound
- inherently more localized and flexible than industrial agriculture
- more than animal husbandry
- one facet in the wider concept of sustainable communities
- the new postindustrial paradigm for American agriculture
- vital for the long-term viability of the agribusiness sector
* is, of course, a minority practice.
* means increased regulations for farmers
- many things to many people
* produces diverse forms of high quality foods, fibers and medicines.
* requires one to think like an ecosystem
- tools that enable decision makers to explore the future
* seeks to be compatible with many types of farm practices.
Traditional agriculture
* is proposed as a sustainable way of living in close contact with nature
- the main sector for employment and exports earnings
* places large stresses on the earth.
* requires input.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | agriculture:
Urban agriculture
* can be an important supplement to household income
- contribute to enhancing biodiversity in at least two ways
- play a significant role by recycling both waste water and solid waste
- revolutionize food production in terms of quality and local control
* has many benefits for city dwellers.
* is critical to Georgia's continued economic growth and security
- one way to grow food closer to home
- part of a worldwide trend
* is practised in many cities, often at a considerable scale
- the inner city and in the peri-urban areas
- the antonym of the monoculture
Business enterprise
* Many business enterprises base their entire corporations into the field of weight loss.
* Most business enterprises borrow to finance business expansion.
* is commerce
* offer designs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce:
Electronic commerce
* Most electronic commerce occurs across phone lines.
* begins with a global marketplace.
* by-product of literacy.
* can allow corporations to become more efficient and workers more productive
- also raise the economic hopes for developing businesses
- be a source of competitive strength for Tasmania and Tasmanian businesses
- help boost sales, lower costs and improve customer service
- significantly improve an organization s efficiency and effectiveness
- take a number of forms
* continues to evolve dramatically.
* creates an open marketplace with increased competition.
* depends upon the storage and processing of transactions in databases.
* draws hackers.
* encompasses all aspects of using the Internet for business or personal use.
* expands the market place.
* global phenomenon.
* goes beyond selling on the Web.
* growing area fuelled by the popularity of the Internet
- sales channel for business
* grows slowly.
* has implications for women as consumers, producers and organizers.
* has the potential to become a huge river of wealth creation
- lower the cost of business and increase consumer options
- offer consumers an enormous choice of goods and services
- substantially benefit business and consumers
* helps to alleviate the obstacles of distance, space, and time.
* hot topic in both the computer industry and the business world.
* includes all aspects of business processes enabled by Internet technologies.
* increases consumer susceptibility to unsolicited advertising and marketing.
* involves information publishing, data access and transaction processing
- relationships on the network
* is about doing business electronically
- in the age of computer and electronic networks
- on the web
- speed and flexibility
* is also about communictions
- computers
* is an area where graduates are in demand
- which is moving very fast in Canada and around the world
- ever-expanding area in the business world
- extremely significant component of today's technology-driven economy
- innovative approach to ensuring future sustainable economic growth
- issue in which our collective experience is just beginning to evolve
- opportunity for developing countries to expand trade
* is at the leading edge of business process innovation
- the trends that are transforming the world economy
- commercial activities
- de facto an international market phenomenon
- dynamic, competitive and market driven
- essentially a global, rather than a national, issue
- far and away the fastest growing area of business in the world today
- global by definition and essentially unrestricted by geography
- global, information driven, and technologically efficient
- heavily involved with attaching databases to web sites
- important to a business because the future of the company can be at stake
- in the process of reinventing how business is done
- increasingly global and can reinforce the trend towards tradeliberalization
- just a way for customers to shop on line
- key to every major industry today
- maybe number one way to sell products in the future
* is more than buying widgets online
- just buying and selling products online
- simply buying and selling over Web sites
* is much more than buying and selling goods online
- online transactions
- no different than any other type of commerce
* is one class of services in which authorization decisions play a prominent role
- example of the use of technology in the supply chain management process
- of the first products of the emerging internet economy
- part of a broader process of economic, social and cultural change
- possible through secure protocols
- remote commerce
- sales over the Internet, with or without on-line payment
- seen as a complementary promotional tool to personal selling
- set to be one of the driving forces behind the global economy
- simply a way to market and sell products over the Internet
- still new to most people
- technology for change
* is the act of buying and selling products or services on the web
- doing of business electronically
- enabler and integrator rather than the originator or purpose
- evolution of traditional business
- fastest growing use of the Internet
* is the future of business
- glue that holds the supply chain together
- leveler between great and small
* is the most potent vehicle to increase tax collection
- recent step in the evolution of business transactions
* is the new horizon for the business world
- way of business
- process of buying and selling goods electronically
- use of computer networks to improve organizational performance
- wave of the future for state licensing agencies
- way to the future
- today still a small but rapidly growing part of the business world
* makes it possible to trade at low cost across regions and national frontiers.
* means commercial transactions conducted over electronic networks.
* means conducting business electronically
- on the Internet
- of enabling and supporting such changes on a global scale
* method for effectively selling products and services via the internet.
* needs electronic meeting places to conduct business.
* occurs over an inherently global medium.
* potentially major source of growth for small and medium-sized activities.
* presents all businesses with new ways, reasons, and opportunities to change.
* raises a significant number of legal issues
- whole host of security and privacy issues
- many questions relating to the concept of permanent establishment
- serious privacy concerns for consumers
* rapidly evolving medium, as are the laws governing it
- growing area accompanied by the growth of the Internet
* refers to a wide range of transactions
- more than the buying and selling of goods over the Internet
* requires the ability to easily and securely submit and retrieve data.
* transcends geographic boundaries, cultural biases, and political differences.
* waits for consumers to get faster on-line access. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce:
International commerce
* improves living standards for all.
* is more important to our economy today than at any time in the past
- now nearly as common as interstate commerce<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce:
Internet commerce
* covers a wide variety of e-commerce operations.
* has many dimensions
- no geographical boundaries
* huge, important, and fast-growing segment of the U.S. economy.
* is especially suited to products that have several of the following attributes
- estimated to be hundreds of billions of dollars
- global, and the world Web of differing customs, practices and laws
- no more prone to fraud than other types of payment mechanisms
* is the fastest growing component of the online world
- method of doing business
- wave of the economical future
* takes much of the complexity out of everyday business interactions.
Mobile commerce
* payment system using mobile phones.
* route to creating pervasive, roaming ebusinesses.
Online commerce
* can make it easy for someone to purchase an item.
* continues to change the way that business is conducted.
* enables merchants to form interactive personal relationships with customers.
* is something that makes a lot of companies see dollar signs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce:
Production
* Most production depends on growth
- is of calcium and ammonium base
* Most production occurs during grow seasons
- in tissue
- uses energy
* Some production contributes to metabolism
- normal metabolism
- leads to sperm production
* Some production occurs in livers
- plants
- water
* affects atmospheres
- people's lives
* alters properties.
* brings relief.
* contributes to growth
- success
* costs themselves are a function of price inflation.
* creates interest.
* depends on availability
- vigorous growth
- water availability
- upon size
* determines fate.
* drives the economy and people then use the income they earn to both save and consume.
* flow and thus a rate of output per period of time.
* follows procedures.
* function of geophysical and geochemical parameters.
* generates effects.
* has consequences
- distribution
- functions
- have impact
- importance
- multiple functions
- negative consequences
- opportunity
- particular importance
* includes business activities.
* increases chances
- contact
- initial contact
- over years
- resistance
* involves knowledge.
* is acts
- always a type of production- a certain social body, a social subject
- an act
- composed of cycles, production, decreased production, or entire cessation
- creations
- displays
- exhibitions
- expressed in terms of live weight
- extraordinarily sensitive to tiny changes in host cells used for production
- industries
- largely dependent on the quantity and quality of food sources
- measured in the billions of pieces per year
- presentation
* is the act to produce material consumables
- creation of goods and services
* is the total volume of all coal produced in Wyoming, including surface and underground
- trona ore produced in Wyoming
- transformation of inputs into outputs
- thought to be a process of steps that go from thought to expression
* means an operation where a product is produced.
* occurs at time.
* occurs during brief grow seasons
* occurs in dense regions
- zones
- over time
- when stuff comes out, computing is when stuff just goes in
* process of continuous improvement.
* processes The solar radiation consists of a spectrum of wavelengths.
* promotes growth.
* provides benefits
- environmental benefits
- protection
* provides significant benefits
* refers to the rate of incorporation of energy and materials into the bodies of organisms.
* relies on applications.
* requires consumption
- field operations
- light
- maintenance
- money to invest in capital and to pay for labor
- power
* results in development.
* rises at night, falls by day, and affects our internal body clock and sleep cycles.
* serves purposes.
* spiritual, intellectual, and ideological phenomenon.
* varies among ecosystems, as well as over time within ecosystems.
* varies from places
+ Market economy: Economics
* Production occurs from an initiative of the owners.
+ Veal, Animal welfare: Meats
* Production indicates, calf health and mortality on seven red veal farms in Ontario. Preparing Holstein steer calves for the feedlot.
### transaction | commerce | production:
Acid production
* is maximized around mealtime because of the different stimuli to the parietal cell.
* limited to only the butt of the tube is indicative of glucose utilization.
Acorn production
* is highly variable among trees even in good seed years
- of primary importance to many birds and mammals
* varies among oak species, and with older, more mature trees producing more acorns
- from years | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Agricultural production
* All agricultural production takes place in the context of wider natural and social environments.
* affects the environment in many ways.
* consumes more fresh water than any other human activity.
* continues to increase as more people return to the land.
* differs dramatically between regions and seasons.
* includes cereal crops, oilseeds, vegetables, pastures, citrus and fruits
- livestock and field and vegetable crops
* is an important contributor to Jamaica's economy
- based on the plant growing
- concentrated on large, highly mechanized farms
- limited by a scarcity of arable land, and most food has to be imported
- of crucial importance in ensuring that food needs are met
- often marginal and labour intensive
* is one of the nation's most hazardous industries
- hazardous occupations
- possible in areas where there are no fuel or solid mineral deposits
- the predominant source of impairment in lakes
* occurs within a managed environment over broad landscapes.
* requires land, water and solar energy along with other variable inputs.
* takes place within farming systems.
* varies widely, primarily because of erratic rainfall
- with the season and longer-term environmental conditions
Ammonia production
* begins upon adding manure to a warm, moist soil.
* can augment proton excretion on an as-needed basis.
* increases as protein in the diet increases.
Animal production
* can be a challenge due to disease and theft
- lead to a very restrictive lifestyle
* requires a lot of fossil fuels.
Banana production
* employs, directly or indirectly, upwards of one-third of the work force.
* exceeds that of apple and almost that of all the citrus fruits combined.
Beef production
* Some beef production causes deforestation.
* is also a major cause of destruction of the world's rainforests
- grass based, with cattle grazing pasture for most of the year
- the major cause of the destruction of the world's rainforests
* represents the largest single segment of American agriculture.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Brewing
* are production.
* biological and completely natural process.
* craft and, like other crafts, has many different styles.
* hobby for men, men and women and especially for women
- women and men from ripe youth to active old age
* is an ancient and noble art, with roots that run long and deep
- art as well as a science
- the oldest existing brewing company in the state of Utah
* leading component of the food and beverage industry in Germany.
* means understanding living processes.
* process of fermentation, thus yeast does most of the heavy lifting when producing beer
- that grows and changes
* widespread industry, using local barley.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Cheese production
* is also important
- an art, like fine winemaking or brewing
* relies on applications.
* remains strong due to increased milk production and better cheese yields.
+ Belley: Communes in Ain
* The inhabitants are the 'Belleysans'. The local economy is mostly based around commerce. Cheese production is also important. The commune produces a cheese called the 'Tomme de Belley'. Famous people from Belley include Saint-Anthelme de Belley, a saint from the 12th century, Charles Millon, a politician and Maxime Bouet, a French cyclist.
Chemical production
* creates jobs and adds to economic activity around the world.
* is energy intensive.
* major market for salt.
Coal production
* continues to reach record levels as consumption continues to increase.
* covers brown coal and lignite. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Commercial production
* is by alkylation of anhydrous ammonia with methanol
- copolymerization of isobutylene with isoprene
* is by direct oxidation of ethylene
- phosphorus trichloride with oxygen
- union of elemental phosphorus with chlorine
* is from aniline, which is reacted with formaldehyde to form a polyamine
- isreacted with formaldehyde to form a polyamine
- ethylbenzene, obtained by alkylation of benzene with ethylene
- human activities | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Crop
* All crops can use poultry litter as a source of fertilizer.
* All crops have a varying degree of natural herbicide tolerance
- different root system structures
* Any crop can cause food allergy but a few food items cause most food allergy.
* Many crops are dependent on an active bee or other insect population for pollination to occur
- honeybee pollination for cost effective production
- under stress because of excessive rain
- benefit from lady beetles
* Many crops have a low tolerance of high chlorides in the soil and in fertilizers
- very low tolerance level to wind and wind blown soil
* Most crops also have spots of spider mites.
* Most crops are currently in the vegetative growth stage
- planted to achieve a given population of healthy plants per unit of ground area
- resistant to one or more herbicides
- attract bees
- can out compete weeds as long as they emerge before the weeds and form a canopy
- currently being grown for oil produce their oil in seeds or nuts
* Most crops depend on bees
- domesticate bees
- insect pollination
- moisture
* Most crops have abundances
- beneficial effects
- some degree of sensitivity to salt, because of the competition for water
- increase resistance
- occur in fields
* Most crops produce antimicrobial compounds
- flower stalks
- fruit
* Most crops provide basic food
- nutrition
* Most crops reduce diversity
- genetic diversity
* Most crops require adequate irrigation
- at least six to eight hours of full sun a day to thrive
- honey bee pollination
- more potash than sulfur
- soil temperature
- respond better to foliar feeding when the nutrients are applied during the morning hours
- use water
* Some crops actually benefit from selective irrigation
- affect insects
* Some crops are caused by dust storms
* Some crops are more likely than others to absorb non-nutrient toxic substances from soils
- sensitive to low boron levels than others
- very salt tolerant and can be irrigated with non-blended runoff
- cause yield reductions
- compete better with weeds than others
- contain enzymes
- depend on a certain range of soil temperatures for consistently good germination
* Some crops have diversity
- less genetic diversity
- lower water requirements than others
- types
- leave residues that suppress or prevent other crops from growing
- occur in offspring
- permanently occupy their turf, such as rhubarb, asparagus, grape vines and orchard trees
- produce seeds
* Some crops reduce growth
- weed growth
* Some crops rely on irrigation
* Some crops require good soil drainage
- much less energy input than others
- years
- show manganese deficiency much more readily than others
- tolerate cold while others are killed by the lightest frost
- vary in susceptibility to leaf mining
* also vary greatly in their tolerance to the various components of acidity.
* are also much less expensive to grow and maintain compared to the cost of producing animals
- body parts
- collections
- dependent on weather and on crowds
- easy to rotate from bed to bed preventing a buildup of pests
- for subsistence as well as a source of cash
- generally most sensitive to salinity during germination and emergence
- handles
- large in size considering the amount of time that they have to grow
- largely dependent on precipitation, which occurs mainly in a spring-fall bimodal pattern
- located in fields
- most susceptible at the seedling stage and when maturing and beginning to dry off
- obviously dependent on environmental conditions
- often susceptible to damage where wild boars are prevalent
- output
- part of whips
- plants that are grown for food or other uses
- rotated through the fields to replace nutrients in the soil
- slow-growing due to long periods of below average temperatures
- small grains, corn, sugar beets, potatoes, hay, and pasture
- susceptible to herbicide injury when very young or as reproductive structures are forming
* are the end result of nurturing
- foods that farmers grow
- main components followed by livestock and trees
- vegetables
* attract animals
- birds
* can also be specialties if they are produced in unconventional ways
- produce toxins under certain conditions
- be more resistant to drought and cool weather
- tolerate a certain amount of disease with no loss of yield or quality
- usually tolerate higher salinity of irrigation water under higher frequency irrigation
* consist primarily of livestock feeds such as alfalfa, meadow hay, pasture, and small grains.
* consists of food groups used for life in general.
* differ in their competitive ability
- response to water stress at a given growth stage
- responsiveness to shelter
- tolerance to salts
* freeze, and livestock can be killed.
* get their nutrients or food from the soil.
* grow and flowers bloom the year round
- best in the eastern countries and animals do well on the rich grasslands of the west
* grown biologically have a longer storage life which relates to a healthier food source
- hydroponically use water and nutrients more efficiently
* grown in South Kazakhstan include corn, small grain, hay, melons and cotton
- the United States are critical for the food supply here and around the world
- under stress tend to develop tolerance to blue mold at an earlier age
- within irrigation areas can directly contaminate waters with pesticides and fertilisers
* have a wide variety of uses and are an integral part of our existence and development
- benefits
* have different requirements
- time requirements
- direct effects
- great benefits
- properties
- tendencies
* impoverish the soil by removing from it the raw materials for the manufacture of plant food.
* include cabbages
- chinese cabbages
- soybeans
- tobacco
* includes business activities.
* involve labor.
* modified by biotechnology can one day produce healthier and more nutritious food.
* need attention.
* play crucial roles
- many benefits
- more energy for people than cattle, at a higher trophic level
- shades
* remain true to their parent and mature early.
- an adequate supply of nutrients
- compromises
- solar energy to develop and grow
- varying amounts of phosphorus relative to nitrogen depending upon the crop produced
* requirements The plant nutrients in biosolids are mostly organic.
* respond to many factors as they determine their daily water requirements.
* serve purposes.
* shade more and more of the soil as they grow, but soil evaporation continues.
* sown using no-tillage rely primarily on herbicides and competition to kill weeds.
* stunted by low fertility are often yellowish.
* suffer droughts, floods, pests, weeds, and soil constraints
- from lack of moisture and inadequate nutrition, and current yields are very low
* survive earthquakes.
* take in and store the energy from the sun
- up phosphorus in a soluble form
* tend to grow faster in warmer conditions.
* use the nutrients, and bacteria that remain in the reclaimed water die off
- water for several purposes
* vary greatly in their tolerance to acidity
- in the tolerance to sodium
* vary in their attractiveness to the moths as sites for laying their eggs
- specific nutrient needs
- tolerance to soluble salts
+ Intercropping
* Intercropping' is growing two or more crops next to each other at the same time. The main purpose of intercropping is to produce more crops in a given area. Crops are selected such that their nutrient requirements are different. This way, the crops can give the same returns but require less space.
+ Milot: Cities in Haiti
* The most important economic activity in Milot is farming. Some crops are sugar cane, cacao, tobacco and citrus fruits like orange.
+ Monte Plata, Economy: Settlements in Dominican Republic
* Farming is also an important activity. Some crops are sugar cane and fruits like orange.
+ Plantation
* A 'plantation' is a large farm which is specialized on farming one type of crop. The crops grown on plantations are usually for export, and not for local use. Crops grown on plantations include banana, sugarcane, coffee, tea, cotton and tobacco.
+ River, Important rivers: Biomes
* Many crops are grown along the sides of the Mississippi. It was also used for transport. The Mississippi flows through the states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Louisiana.
+ Soil erosion: Agriculture :: Soil
* This is a serious problem for people who want to grow crops. Crops are the foods that farmers grow. If the soil has eroded, the crops will not grow very well.
+ Toledo District: Districts of Belize
* The economy of Toledo relies heavily on agriculture. Crops grown include beans and corn, as well as rice. Cacao is grown for the renowned Maya Gold chocolate. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Crop production
* is based on managing a diverse set of inputs in varying environmental conditions
- critically important to the economy of the Northern Great Plains
- one thing, but livestock production is stuck with what ever nature does
- the basis of the economy
* varies widely because of weather conditions.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production | crop:
Agricultural crop
* Most agricultural crops occur in fields.
* Most agricultural crops provide basic food
* are distinct in terms of the amount of nutrients they take from the soil.
* become more important during winter.
* consist mainly of hay, alfalfa seed, barley, wheat, and potatoes.
* depend very largely on the supply of manure.
* drying is usually a good use for solar radiation.
* have use.
* produce potatoes, barley, oats, alfalfa and mint.
Annual crop
* Some annual crops require years.
* tend to be lower yielding per unit of height compared to perennial grass crops.
Cash crop
* are crops
- important in every country but vary in their distribution and profitability
* grown for export are copra, bananas, and cocoa.
* ranked by value are coffee, oil, cocoa, copra, tea, rubber, and sugar.
Cereal crop
* All cereal crops are members of the grass family.
* are mostly in the filling stages with early barley beginning to turn colour
- much more forgiving than non-cereals
* can withstand a certain amount of seedling blight.
* show characteristics 'V' shaped yellowing at the tip of lower leaves.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production | crop:
Cover crop
* affect insect and spider populations in apple orchards
- seedling growth
* are common in the central coast where production practices allow partial crop rotation
- key in improving soil tilth
- legumes, cereals or an appropriate mixture
- plants grown to cover the soil during idle periods
- short rotation winter crops such as rye grasses
- soil and climate sensitive
* benefit the soil in many ways.
* break the nematode and disease cycles.
* can also help control soil erosion
- improve soil structure as roots and root exudates promote soil aggregation
- provide shelter for insects
- suppress weeds chemically
- be annual or perennial
* can be annual, biennial, or perennial plant species that serve a variety of purposes
- winter annual, biennial, or perennial plant species
- become weeds
- enhance nitrogen production and can also reduce nutrient losses
- provide an increment of weed control by competing for light, water and nutrients
- reduce erosion from rain or wind, especially in the winter or early spring
* compete with forages for light, moisture, and nutrients
- weeds for light, water and nutrients
* have an important role in successful sustainable farming systems
- the potential to fix nitrogen
* help control weeds and conserve soil moisture.
* improve soil fertility and structure
- tilth, and supply organic matter to the field
* planted in late summer are an inexpensive way to build better soil for gardening.
* play crucial roles
* protect the soil surface and reduce sealing.
* provide benefits
- many benefits
- nutrients to the soil organisms while competing with and smothering weeds
- organic matter to the soil system
- plant nutrients
* reduce soil compaction while increasing water percolation and retention
- wind erosion and nutrient loss, and increase soil carbon
* reflect more solar radiation, allowing less to reach the soil surface.
* replace the bare dirt rows between orchard trees and grape vines.
* serve purposes.
* shelter the seeds from sunlight and physically interfere with seedling emergence.
* use soil water while they are growing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production | crop:
Crop insurance
* is an important risk management strategy for farmers.
* is based on market prices
- primarily on yield
* is one of the best risk management tools available to producers today
- most important risk management tools available to producers today
- tool that citrus producers can use to help manage production and price risk
* is the risk management tool of choice for our nation's farmers
- safety net legislators want to put underneath America's farmers
* offers financial protection against crop losses due to uncontrollable weather.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production | crop:
Different crop
* Different Crops have different water requirements and respond differently to water stress.
* expand harvest season and help reduce harvest stresses.
* have different nutrient needs, and so grow better at different CF values
- optimum growth under different levels of concentration
* reach full cover at different growth stages and times after planting.
* remove different amounts of minerals.
* require different pesticides, so variety limits exposure to any one type.
* respond to different fertility levels.
* use and replenish different minerals
- different amounts of water over the course of the growing seasons
Energy crop
* are also more resistant to disease and pests and relatively inexpensive to grow.
* are crops developed and grown specifically for fuel
- such as switch grass or poplar trees grown to produce fuels
### transaction | commerce | production | crop | field crop:
Field corn
* Most field corn has roots.
* can cross with sweet corn, making some of the sweet corn kernels starchy and flavorless.
* contains high amounts of starch and low sugars so fresh eating quality is poor.
* field crop
* is corn.
* is grown for feed, silage, and processing
- in the United States on more acres than any other crop
- on the most acreage
### transaction | commerce | production | crop | field crop | field corn:
Soft corn
* are result from bony prominences and are located between the toes
- usually interdigital and form over the phalangeal condyles between the toes
* can occur between the toes.
* come between the toes and are very painful.
* is field corn.
* resemble open sores and develop between the toes as they rub against each other.
Fodder crop
* Many fodder crops are conserved as hay, chaffed or pulped.
* Some fodder crops are components of compound feeds.
Food crop
* Most food crops depend on bees
- have thousands of varieties
* Some food crops are rice, corn, and beans.
* are less likely to be attacked by insects and can eliminate pesticides and herbicides
- rice, maize, legumes, potatoes, rye and barley
- usually mixed with cash crops to help ensure both sustenance and disposable income
Forage crop
* Most forage crops are grasses and legumes
- perennials, but others are annuals
- decline in nutritive value as they mature
- develop large numbers of small roots close to the soil surface
* are essential to Northeast agriculture
- much more salt tolerant than cereal and oilseed crops
* protect and improve the soil.
Important crop
* Most important crops provide food.
+ Monte Plata Province, Economy: Provinces of the Dominican Republic
* The most important economic activity of the province is farming. Some important crops are sugar cane, cacao and fruits like orange.
Irrigated crop
* account for only a very small portion of the total agricultural production.
* are alfalfa, cotton, small grains and vegetables.
Minor crop
* are high value fruits, vegetables and nursery plants.
* have a major impact on U.S. agriculture.
New crop
* can contribute to the diversification of agriculture.
* push up above the ground, and animals give birth.
Nurse crop
* can provide temporary protection until grass cover emerges.
* continue to be the preferred method of weed control and seedling alfalfa. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production | crop:
Oat crop
* have direct effects
* increase resistance.
* produce antimicrobial compounds
Other crop
* have seeds.
* include cabbages
- chinese cabbages
- vegetables
Root crop
* Most root Crops are frost tolerant and the edible portion is somewhat protected by the soil.
* Most root crops prefer a minimal amount of fertilizers
- use water
* are crops.
* do well in garden beds.
* play a smaller part in Australian arable farming than they do in North-west Europe.
* require less nitrogen fertilization than leafy crops.
Row crop
* are beets, corn, onions, beans, carrots and other vegetables
- poor users of soil N because of a limited root system
* leave a substantial surface area of soil exposed to wind and water erosion.
Seed crop
* depend on moisture.
* have benefits
- great benefits
Egg production
* Some egg production occurs in coastal water
* is called oogenesis
- correlated with the degree of care given the eggs or young
- limited to females
- minimal in the presence of fish
- reduced, and heavily infested birds refuse to eat and gradually lose weight
* occurs without sexual cross-fertilization of eggs.
* varies with body size
- the type of worm present
* very active farm industry.
Electricity production
* depends solely on the availability of imported petroleum products.
* is measured at the terminals of all alternator sets in a station
- the primary use of coal in the United States
Energy production
* affects land, air and water.
* is crucial to cell longevity
- emphasized because it produces more waste than any other industrial activity
- measured in kilowatt hours
* is one of the biggest sources of air pollutants in the world
- major functions of our metabolism
* pollutes the air in urban areas which has a negative influence on human health.
* uses another pathway with malic acid.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Factor of production
* All factors of production have a capacity determined by their physical and technological capability.
* Factors of production are costs of doing the activity, whether the cost is fixed or variable
- work, ground, capital, information, and environment
+ Economics, The subjects and objects in economics
* The objects in economic study are consumer goods, capital goods, and factors of production. Capital goods are goods which are necessary for producing other goods. Examples of these are buildings, equipment, and machines. Factors of production are work, ground, capital, information, and environment.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Food production
* Most food production promotes growth.
* Some food production occurs in plants.
* begins in southwestern Asia.
* consumes more fresh water than any other activity in the United States.
* critical and an essential renewable resource.
* crucial area in the new Nicaraguan economy.
* has, in vast tracks of the world, become an industry rather than a craft.
* is America's largest industry
- achieved by reprocessing soil and rocks in huge factories
- considered sacred and a ritual is performed after harvest
* is essential to our progress and to our nation's continued strength and security
- the maintenance of life
- guided by seasons of produce
- impossible in conflict areas, and famine often results
- mainly dependant upon land and water resources
- of prime interest in many parts of the world
- through the gardening of the soil and the pasturing of sheep and goats
- totally dependent on favorable growing conditions
- very much a function of climate, which in itself is unpredictable
* requires fertile cropland, freshwater, and sunlight
- high volumes of energy, water and land
* varies widely with seasonal conditions.
Fruit production
* long-term and time consuming activity.
* occurs when the pollinated plant starts to produce cylindrical fruit.
* year-round job. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Gas production
* begins as the waste is broken down by microbes.
* can cause high pressure and micro-cracking or intergranular decohesion.
* is an unavoidable byproduct of biological oxidation-reduction reactions.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Harvest
* Most harvest produces plants.
* Some harvest increases over years
- harvests are longer in growing than others, but they all grow in time
* affects habitats.
* alters abundances
- local prey abundances
* can mean harvesting of the food.
* contributes to conservation.
* depends on presence
- types
* has benefits
- conservation benefits
- impact
- indirect benefits
* has many benefits
- values
* includes business activities.
* is consequences
- gather
- part of farming
- seasons
* is the benefit of life and provides insight into life for all beings
- time to inspect fruit for red circular spots indicating scale infested tree
- usually after two seasons of growth
- where the people are
* leaves continually to keep plants compact and productive
- in the morning, when the oil content is highest
- just as plants begin to flower
- to use whole in meat dishes, stews and soups
* manufacturing process.
* meditation in movement.
* occurs when the leaves yellow and are almost dead.
* produces bushy plants
* provides food
- moisture
- sufficient moisture
* reduces availability.
* results in conflict.
* season of rejoicing.
* takes place year-round when seed pods ripen.
* word they use.
### transaction | commerce | production | harvest:
Early harvest
* can also prevent infestation by fourth generation larvae.
* is one way to mininuze leaf loss, therefore, preserving both yield and quality.
* prevents internal browning in Asian pears.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Horticulture
* Give a presentation on different types of seeds Demonstrate how to plant flowers.
* also makes use of mining products, and sometimes even mines themselves.
* broad and varied field.
* can benefit everyone.
* diverse field with various career options.
* dynamic segment of agriculture.
* far cry from Zoology.
* hands-on learn by doing course.
* has a community role.
- harvest time
* is an African export success story, particularly in Kenya and Zimbabwe
- important business
* is an important part of everyday life
- landscaping and is the backbone of a quality landscaper
- industry, profession, business, vocation and avocation
- basically a field or the study of growing plants for different purposes
- common today in tropical forests of the Amazon Basin
- considered an applied science , aimed at the production or growing of plants
- different things to different people
- labor intensive
* is one of the fastest growing agricultural sectors with rising export revenues
- agriculture sub-sectors
- segments in Georgia agriculture
- most fundamental skills utilized by mankind
- only one branch of agricultural plant science
- plant cultivation by slash and burn, or shifting cultivation
* is the art and science of growing fruits, nuts, vegetables and ornamentals
- growing of flowers, fruits and vegetables, and of plants for ornament and fancy
- mainstay of a number of regional centres across Australia
- science and art of growing fruits, vegetables, flowers, or ornamental plants
* mainly consists of greenhouses with vegetables and flowers.
* multi-billion dollar enterprise that offers a wide variety of career choices.
* offers fulfilling careers to millions of people.
* plays a critically important role in controlling soil erosion naturally.
* recession-proof industry.
* surprisingly large sector of the economy.
* very diverse field. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Industrial production
* Some industrial production relies on decay.
* is by gas-phase catalytic oxidation of propylene
- concerned with cement, synthetic rubber, leather, textiles and ceramics
- very varied in relation to the size of the country
* major contributor to air pollution problems.
* relies on applications.
* shows how much factories, mines and utilities are producing.
Knowledge production
* complex and time consuming process.
* involves stocks and flows of knowledge.
* process of structuring, presenting, and reflecting knowledge elements.
Mass production
* can lead to a reduction in raw silk yield.
* is production
- the ruin of the grande cuisine
* leads to mass consumption.
* makes computers less expensive.
* means large concentrations of lasting poisons accumulate
- the compounding of experimentation and experience into one standard design
* produces large volumes of a standard product or service for a mass market.
* requires scale economies, and scale economies require standardisation.
Meat production
* requires a chick that has been bred for fast growth and good feed use
- higher level of productivity per unit land area
- ten times as much land per calorie as grain or beans
* takes abundance, then reduces it to scarcity.
Military production
* form of economic production.
* is the greatest polluter of the environment.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Milk production
* Some milk production depends on honeybee pollination
* begins with the cow.
* depends upon special glands in the breasts, which are sufficient in all women.
* is also an important source of income
- directly proportional to the quality of forage the cows are consuming
- lower in women who smoke, and weaning is usually earlier
- maintained primarily by the release of progesterone
- one of the most nutritionally demanding stages of a bitch's life
* is stimulated by rhythmic kneading of a kitten's front paws
- the baby's suckling
* seasonal affair, particularly in Australia.
* varies between mares and various breeds.
* very important activity in many countries especially for derivatives products.
Mushroom production
* is also a major income source in some parts of Europe, North America and Asia
- encouraged by heavy watering, temperature reduction and light
- light dependent
* occurs indoors and is largely insulated from outside weather conditions.
Opium production
* increases along the highlands of Southeast Asia.
* painstaking, rigorous procedure that is illegal in many parts of the world.
* takes place mainly in the hilly country near Burma's border with China.
Organic production
* are mainly fruit and vegetables and processed foodstuffs thereof.
* emphasizes nonuse of chemical fertilizers and pesticides.
* is one way to minimize further food-related health risks
- the fastest growing segment of fresh produce
* represents the largest growth segment nationwide in agriculture today.
Overrun
* affects the taste, color and mouthfeel of a given product.
* refers to the amount of air that's stirred into the ice cream as it freezes.
Oxygen production
* More oxygen production occurs near the bottom because there are more plants there
- surface because there is more light there
* is another measure that can be used to indicate that photosynthesis is occurring
- one important function of biodiversity
Paper production
* is also a major industry along with wool,lamb,potatoes,apples and dairy products
- fueled by the state's plantation timber
- the County's largest manufacturing sector
* represents seven percent of the Spanish chemical industry.
Pecan production
* is the most geographically dispersed of commercial tree nuts.
* major industry in the southeastern United States.
Petroleum production
* key contributor to Australia's economy and trade.
* starts in Middle East. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Picking
* are actions
- guidings
- human activities
- manual labor
- output
- transport
* helps the tree to make new growth covered with buds.
* is active around rainfalls
+ Bass guitar, Strings and sound: Guitars
* Picks made of metal or plastic may also be used, and yield a sharper sound than plucking with fingers. Picking is sometimes combined with muting techniques to create distinctive sounds.
### transaction | commerce | production | picking:
Feather picking
* can result in bare patches of skin, or even breakage in the skin itself.
* form of self-mutilation which can can result from boredom and stress.
* is generally a problem of birds in captivity.
Mushroom picking
* is the main source of income for many people.
* tradition going way back.
Poultry production
* exists as an industry, because poultry and eggs are valuable as human food.
* generates large volumes of litter.
* involves a lot of labor.
* is also important
- based on a pyramid
- definitely lower on society's pecking order than milking cows or raising hogs
* very important source of animal protein for the entire Asian continent.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Primary production
* Most primary production affects atmospheres.
* Most primary production occurs during brief grow seasons
* decreases in winter and leaf production varies throughout the year.
* is an initial response process to increased nutrient loading
- high at the equator because of upwelling
- strongly seasonal, and can be elevated in mesoscale jets and eddies
* is the creation of new organic matter by plants and other autotrophs
- energy incorporated into green plants by photosynthesis
- rate of plant photosynthesis
- synthesis of organic compounds from atmospheric or aqueous carbon dioxide
- very high in coral reefs but low in surrounding waters
- in autotrophic organisms of an ecosystem
* represents the input way of inorganic carbon into the ocean organic carbon pool.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Seed production
* Most seed production occurs over time.
* Some seed production produces seeds
- requires pollination
* begins at an early age.
* follows a pathway in conifers that differs from that in flowering plants.
* has distribution.
* is directly dependent on the number of plants maturing in any particular year
- poor because flowers are limited to the vertically growing kudzu stems
- proportional to plant height
- typically lower in terrestrial plants
- variable and dependent on several environmental factors
* requires flower pollination and is therefore dependent on insect populations.
* varies greatly from place to place and year to year
- widely depending on climatic conditions during the growing season<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Sperm production
* begins and there is rapid growth of the penis and testes
- in the seminiferous tubules of the testes
* continuous process once puberty is reached.
* is affected by temperature
- called spermatogenesis
- constant following puberty
- controlled by hormones
- highly sensitive to body temperature
- reduced in men who drive a truck for hours or regularly sit in hot tubs
* occurs best at a temperature slightly below normal body temperature
- in a regular, monthly cycle
- on a continuous basis in healthy men without any sperm production problems
Spore production
* Most spore production varies from years.
* begins in early spring and continues until fall
* is favored by high humidity
- favoured by poor soils, high pH and wet weather
* occurs predominately at night or during long overcast periods.
* starts in the spring as temperatures increase and wet weather prevails.
Swine production
* has cultural as well as economic importance.
* impacts the environment and public health are listed below. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | production:
Tear production
* decreases with age
- aging
* is monitored while pets taking sulfadimethoxine
- the eye's natural and healthy response to cleanse itself of foreign substances
Textile production
* Most textile production is concentrated in large mills.
* is the leading manufacturing industry of India.
Theatrical production
* is production.
* use specular lighting to direct our attention to specific areas of the stage.
Tomato production
* is cut drastically as light intensities drop in the autumn
- reduced according to the amount of time the tomato plant is shaded
* occurs throughout the state with most acreage located in the southwest.
Wine production
* dates from at least the earliest known history.
* is also important in Western Germany
* significant industry in Australia.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce | production:
Yield
* also depend on locational factors such as soil fertility, rainfall, and temperature.
* are products.
* equals the dividend divided by the stock price.
* function of a security's purchase price and coupon interest rate
- processing line defect density
* is also commonly the best measure of economic efficiency.
* is designed for use in animals which are under stress
- to boost immunity, particularly at times of diet change or stress
- determined by the factors most limiting to productivity
- limited by the nutrient in shortest supply
- more related to the feet of row edge than to total ground area covered with plants
- reduced by the loss of leaves
* is the amount of beef versus fat on the carcass
- clean wool obtained from grease wool expressed as a percentage
- the profit divided by the amount of money invested
- culmination or the end result of that genetics by environment relationship
- current return on a bond in the market
* is the income received as a percent of what the investment cost
- return on the security to maturity
- load divided by the stream's drainage area
- number of students who are admitted and choose to attend
- percentage of admittees who enroll
- rate of return
* is what is paid to an investor on a regular basis
- the fund pays shareholders
- where the two crops have parted ways
* measure of how productive a crop is per unit area.
* refers to grain yield unless otherwise noted.
* represents the rate of return on a bond.
* term that describes how many chips can be garnered from one wafer of silicon.
* useful term that money people stole from farmers.
* usually refers to production per unit area of a single crop.
* can be different because of inflation. Extremely risky instruments with high yield are usually called junk bonds.
### transaction | commerce | production | yield:
Agricultural yield
* are constant or, in the case of some crops, declining.
* depend sensitively on climate and soil resources.
Crop yield
* are higher under irrigation and less dependent on the effects of weather.
* vary depending on initial soil fertility, spacing, care and maintenance.
Current yield
* is the annual return on the dollar amount paid for a bond
- interest rate as a percentage of the initial investment
* snapshot measure of the bond's value relative to other bonds.
* way to track the relative value of the bond.
Dividend yield
* compares the amount of cash paid to shareholders with the latest price of the stock.
* is calculated by dividing the dividend by the stock price
- the annual dividend payout divided by the average price of the stock
* refers to the value of the dividend paid, divided by the value of the stock.
Flour yield
* depends on variety, season, locality and grain plumpness.
* is expressed as a percentage of cleaned wheat on a constant moisture basis.
Low yield
* are mainly due to drought at the end of the rainy season.
* can pull down the positive effects of high prices. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce:
Sale
* also refers to turnover, gross income or revenue.
* are agreement
- capable of cover cost
- exchanges
* are generated by campaigns
- events
- particular events
* are located in clothing stores
- department stores
- occasions
- selling
- used for marketing
* contribute to values.
* could have effects
- harmful effects
* includes business activities.
* is an action which involves exchange of money for an item
- measured by net sales or net revenue generated
- one of the highest paid of all professions
* is the heart and soul of any retail business
- process of getting someone to buy the product or service being offered by the company
* process and folks generally buy to either make themselves feel good or to relieve pain.
* reach peaks.
* relationship sport.
* represent an important measure of a company's intrinsic, or internal, value.
* result from transactions.
* take places.
+ Kirkpatrick Sale, Views, Secession: American historians :: Writers from New York :: Cornell University alumni :: 1937 births :: Living people
* In 2004, Sale and members of the Second Vermont Republic formed the Middlebury Institute which is dedicated to the study of separatism, secession, and self-determination. Sale is director of the institute. In 2006, Middlebury sponsored the First North American Secessionist Convention, which attracted 40 participants from 16 secessionist organizations and was described as the first gathering of secessionists since the American Civil War.
### transaction | commerce | sale:
Arms sale
* are, of course, a form of foreign commerce.
* remain an important factor of bilateral trade today.
Direct sale
* is an expensive way to conduct business
- instant income and constant income
* new name for network marketing.
* occur when no value is added to the product by distributors in the supply chain.<|endoftext|>### transaction | commerce:
Tax evasion
* are evasions
- human activities.
* ' is the evasion of taxes by trusts, by persons or business. The term 'tax evasion' usually refers to when taxpayers deliberately misrepresent the actual state of their affairs to tax authorities to reduce their tax liability. This includes dishonest tax reporting, such as declaring less income or profit than the amounts which were actually earned. Tax evasion is an activity connected with the informal economy
* crime and, in the USA, is punishable by both fines and imprisonment
- but tax avoidance is legal
* form of theft and can be prosecuted.
- both a sin and a crime
- fraud
- one of the most common economic crimes
- punishable with prison
- the failure to pay taxes according to the law
- widespread in Madagascar, accompanied by bribery of customs or other tax officials
* national sport.
* problem in many developing countries.
* serious crime. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce:
Tourism
* accounts for about one-fourth of GDP and primary source of hard currency earnings.
* affects both regional development and the transports sector
- the livelihoods of the poor by changing their access to assets
* also allows people to get away from everyday life and put themselves into different worlds
- contributes significantly to the economy
- creates jobs and offers opportunities to expand an economy at a relatively low cost
- educates travelers about other cultures, thereby fostering understanding
- has direct and indirect effects on coral reefs
- is an important source of income
- major industry for rural areas
* also plays a considerable role in the economy
- major role in the economy
- significant role in the economy
- provides a major incentive for protecting and managing natural coastlines sustainably
- solid earner of foreign currency for the United States
* brings benefits
- economic benefits
- money into a community without requiring additional services, such as schools
* brings significant benefits
* business for tourism service providers.
* can also increase the value attributed to minority cultures by national policy-makers
- be a powerful tool for economic and social development
- bring many benefits, both direct and indirect, to mountain people and economies
- contribute directly to the conservation of sensitive areas and habitats
* can play a key role in sustainable development
- significant role in reducing poverty, if based upon long-terms strategies
* causes environmental, social and economic problems.
* clean industry.
* collects statistical reports on tourism and other areas.
* complex industry.
* comprises both domestic and international travel
- the activities of visitors traveling for leisure, business and other purposes
* constitutes one of the most important sources of income for the Turkish government.
* continues to be a mainstay of northern Nevada's economy
- the main foreign exchange earner
* contributes both directly and indirectly to the state's economy
- greatly to the economy of the Rocky Mountain states and provinces
- significantly to the Canadian economy
* creates at present the most number of jobs out of all of the world's economic sectors
- jobs and helps people realise dreams way beyond the travel and hospitality industry
- more jobs than any other sector for every rupee invested
* depends largely on the diversity and abundance of animals.
* depletes water supplies, especially in national economies such as Austria and Spain.
* developing industry.
* differs from travel as leisure differs from labor.
* dominates the Bahamian economy
- service sector and is the most important source of foreign exchange earnings
* drives growth.
* drives significant business growth
* dynamic and industry based specialism, global in nature and real world oriented.
* employs one-third of the working population directly or indirectly.
* enjoys a big share of the world services sector.
* fact of life in the modern world.
* focuses on appreciation.
* fragmented industry largely made up of many small businesses.
* generates valuable foreign exchange for many developing countries.
* global business
- industry that is made up of many different fragmented segments
* growing industry in the Inuit economy
- sector in Grenada
- specialty within geography
* growth industry - a leading creator of jobs
- as people of the world discover our enthusiasm for the great outdoors
- because of the country's many attractions
* has a high impact, socially and economically, on small-scale societies and communities
- dimensions
- disturbances
- economic dimensions
* has the possibility of becoming one of the biggest industries in future in the entire world
- potential to make a major contribution to the development of rural areas
* implies that people come to look and to see and to be served.
* is America's largest business service export
- Aruba's main industry
- Cuba's biggest source of hard currency followed by minerals, sugar and tobacco
* is Egypt's most lucrative economic activity
- primary source of revenue
- second largest source of foreign currency
- top foreign exchange earner
- Guatemala's second largest earner of foreign exchange
- Hawaii's largest industry
- Honolulu's largest source of income
- Jordan's second-largest generator of foreign exchange after remittances
- Kenya's largest foreign exchange earner
* is Kenya's second foreign currency earner after agriculture
- Mexico's second largest earner of foreign exchange
- Pennsylvania s second-largest industry
- Spain's biggest industry
- about leisure as well as discovery
- acknowledged as one of the world's leading industries in the new century
- almost as large an earner of foreign exchange as sugar
* is also a major industry as well as a vital source of foreign exchange
- sector of Alaska's economy
- source of income for Greece
- threat to turtles
- significant source of revenue and foreign exchange
- source of foreign earnings
- an important and developing industry
* is also an important economic activity
- industry in West Flanders
- part of the economy
- increasingly important sector of the economy
* is also important to Luxembourg 's tertiary sector
- Portland's economy
* is also one of the industries most affected by the Internet revolution
- state's most important industries
- world's fastest-growing industries
- very important, particularly along the Aegean Sea coast
- vitally important to the state economy
* is among the largest and fastest growing industries globally
- three largest industries in each of the western states
* is an activity with a high development potential
- appropriate route to economic growth in most developing countries
- emerging industry
- example of humans yielding well-being from cultural services
* is an important and growing industry
- source of income and employment for many small island states
- contributor to the country's economy
* is an important earner of foreign currency for the country
- exchange for the economy
- engine of economic growth and job creation
- growth sector
- industry for Italy, the world's fourth most popular tourist destination
* is an important industry in Florida
- Turkey
- that also provides many jobs
* is an important part of Europe's economy
- Hampshire's economy
- Nairobi's economy
- Pennsylvania's economy
* is an important part of the Las Vegas economy
- economy of Azerbaijan
- service sector of the economy
- sector in the provincial economy
* is an important source of foreign currency, and Jordan counts on it to grow
- value-added industry
- important, even vital, source of income for many regions and countries
- irreversible social, human, economic and cultural fact
* is another industry vulnerable to large swings in seasonal climate
- issue that plagues indigenous peoples around the globe
- key industry for development in Kyrgyzstan
- big business, and a major part of their economy
- central to the economy of many countries in the Caribbean
- challenging agriculture as the more important economic sector
- commercial enterprises
- common where there are concentrations of lakes
- considered the number four industry globally
* is currently the highest foreign exchange earner
- state's second largest industry
- embedded in a sustainable, interrelated economy that is specific for the region
* is important to the economy and leading source of foreign exchange
- important, especially in areas around lakes
* is increasingly important to economic development, especially in the coastal regions
- the economy of every country
* is now a major industry and source of foreign exchange
- one of the world's largest and fastest growing industries
* is now the biggest foreign exchange earner in the Australian economy
- country's principal source of foreign exchange
* is now the largest business sector in the world
- single economic activity in the world, and continues to grow
- state's third largest source of revenue, after lumber and agriculture
* is one of Arizona's primary economic engines
- Arkansas' most important industries
- Australia s largest and fastest-growing industries
- Australia's fastest growing and economically important industries
- Mexico's principal sources of foreign exchange
- Pennsylvania's largest industries
- Scotland s largest industries
* is one of the areas on which Francophones are focussing their economic development efforts
- biggest elements of the Egyptian economy
* is one of the country's important sources of income
- top foreign exchange earners
- fastest growing sectors of the economy since independence
- growth sectors of the world economy
- largest industries in the world
- most dynamic and competitive industries in Canada and around the world
* is one of the most important industries after mining
- industries in Mexico
- sectors in Egypt's economy
- successful sectors of the UK economy
- primary industries of New Orleans
- prominent and important aspects of life
- state's largest industries
- two largest sectors of the island's economy
- world's fastest growing industries
* is one of the world's largest and fastest growing industries
- and most diverse industries
- part of the concept of sustainable development
- perhaps the most visible industry in terms of ownership by foreigners
- recognised as a growth industry
- regarded as one of the most successful applications of electronic commerce
- seen as the country's hope for self-sustainability
* is the Gulf Coast's biggest industry in terms of economic impact and workforce
- basis of the island's economy
- biggest source of Corsican economy
- chief economic activity of the islands of Venice
- civilian aspect of imperialism
* is the country's primary industry
- prime source of income, followed by export of raw sugar and molasses
- principal generator of hard currency
- second leading foreign exchange earner
- fastest-growing industry today
- field where networking began first
- first and most important sector of a developing economy
- harbinger of good relations among Arab countries
* is the largest and fastest growing industry in the world
- fastest-growing industry in the world
- foreign-exchange earning industry
* is the largest source of foreign exchange
- income for Florida
* is the leading foreign exchange earner, followed by agricultural exports
- private industry
- sector in the Caribbean
* is the main means by which countries can afford to do so
- service industry and has undergone steady growth in recent years
* is the major contributor to the economy
- economic activity and is largely concentrated in the marine ecosystem
- foreign exchange earner for Kenya
- source of income in the summer and skiing in the winter
* is the most important growth area in both economies
- industry, and there growing offshore financial services sector
- sector in the economy
- foreign exchange revenue
- nation s third-largest retail sales industry, according to industry figures
- number one economic endeavor, which provides wealth to our economy
- primary economic engine which drives the Central Florida economy
* is the primary source of hard currency earnings
- revenue and jobs for many islands
- principal export for one third of developing countries
- role resulting from the fusion of the exploratory and the ignorant
* is the second biggest money-earner, after agriculture
- largest industry in the province of British Columbia
* is the second largest source of currency in Mexico
- foreign exchange in Uganda
- second-largest source of foreign exchange
* is the state's fourth largest industry, after high-tech, aerospace and agriculture
- largest industry in terms of revenue
- main source of income
- second largest industry after mining
- second-largest industry, after manufacturing
* is the state's third largest industry
- leading industry
- sum total of a travel experience
* is the third biggest source of foreign exchange in Malaysia
- largest industry for Mexico
- major area of the Philippines economy
- weakest component of consumer spending
- world s largest industry
- world's fastest growing industry
* is the world's largest and fastest-growing industry
- industry employing one of every nine people worldwide
- industry, affecting the lives of millions of people
- single largest industry
- today the highest single foreign exchange earner
* is vital to the economy and provides a large portion of foreign-exchange earnings
* key industry for southern Africa
- industry, providing a large portion of GDP and foreign exchange earnings
- part of Cairo's economy
* kind of travel that deconstructs difference.
* land-dependent industry.
* languishes when vile garbage washes up on shorelines.
* large market in The Gambia.
* leads to visitors.
* lets countries earn income by leaving their wilderness intact.
* lies fourth as a foreign exchange earner.
* major Australian export industry
- and rapidly growing industry
- area of new growth
- business in most of Tasmania
- contributor to the Quebec City economy
- earner and increasingly important to the national economy
* major economic component of Maine's economy
- factor in the Kingdom of Thailand
- employer of young people and one of the largest seasonal employers of students
* major foreign currency earner
- income source for many southwestern communities
- industry both within New Zealand and world wide
* major industry in California, and it depends on the weather in all kinds of ways
- Goa
- Utah
- Zimbabwe
- industry, as is agriculture
- player in the local and state economies
* major source of commerce
* major source of foreign exchange earnings
- hard-currency earnings
* major source of income for many countries
- of the countries bordering the Mediterranean
- revenue for developing countries
* makes an important contribution to the Canadian economy.
* massive industry throughout the world.
* means different things to different people.
* money making business especially in the countries with low capital.
* multi-billion dollar business.
* new and developing industry.
* particularly important player in the small business sector.
* plays a crucial role in forming the images of nation among people around the world.
* plays a key role in foreign currency earnings
- the reconstruction of Croatia's economy
- an important role in the economy
* popular force that transcends boundaries and frontiers.
* poses some threats to the environment, especially the endangered sea turtle.
* primary source in Umbria.
* principal component of the tertiary sector.
* provides a major portion of foreign exchange
- an important source of revenue for economic growth
* rapidly expanding industry.
* rapidly growing industry and one of the mainstays of the economy
- sector that offers more and more employment opportunities
* reduces the taxes paid by the average Maine citizen.
* remains one of the only industries to which the ordinary people have access.
* remains the key earner of foreign exchange
- major source of foreign currency and the dominant support for the economy
* significant earner of foreign exchange
- market for luxury goods
* substantial source of foreign exchange.
* sunrise industry for Namibia.
* tends to generate high levels of employment Tourism can benefit many sectors of the economy.
* very inportant industry in many latin american cultures.
* vital component of economic development in New Mexico
- part of the nation's economy
* voluntary activity and people make choices.
+ Antigua and Barbuda, Economy: Commonwealth realms :: Current monarchies
* Tourism is the main part of the economy. Antigua is famous for its many luxury resorts. Investment banking and financial services are also important.
+ Cantabria
* There are often pictures of red deer found from this area of Spain. There are also other unusual symbols that can be found. This attracts much interest and many tourists to this culture. The Cantabrian life revolves mainly around art, tourism, and fishing. Rich deposits of coal, iron, and zinc are also mined in the Cantabrian Mountains. Tourism is a very large part of the Cantabrian life, and their economic success.
+ Corsica, Economy: Mediterranean Islands :: Regions of France
* Tourism is the biggest source of Corsican economy. The island has a pleasant climate, beautiful mountains and really beautiful coastlines that make it a popular destination among the French and other Western Europeans. However, the island has not had the same level of intensive development as other parts of the Mediterranean. Tourism is particularly concentrated in the area around Porto Vecchio and Bonifacio in the south of the island and Calvi in the northwest.
+ Craig, Alaska: Cities in Alaska
* Commercial fishing brings much of the income in Craig. There are two harbors in the center of town. Tourism provides jobs and income to the community. Lodges are available to guests who visit the island for the salmon fishing as well as black bear and deer hunting. Another main employer in Craig is the U.S. Forest Service.
+ Economy of Azerbaijan, Tourism
* Tourism is an important part of the economy of Azerbaijan. In the recent years, Azerbaijan has also becoming a popular destination for religious, spa, and health care tourism. During winter, the ski resorts such as Shahdag Winter Complex are popular with foreign visitors.
+ Espaillat Province, Economy: Provinces of the Dominican Republic
* Tourism is a very important activity on the Atlantic coast, with many hotels in the region.
+ Ganges, Economical Significance: Rivers of India :: Rivers of Bangladesh
* Industries which require a large amount of water are set up on the banks of the river. The Ganges is popular for river rafting, which attract many adventurers in the summer months. Tourism is also a related acivity. In the modern times many resorts are made near the river.
+ Goderich, Ontario: Towns in Ontario :: 1827 establishments
* Goderich is located on the eastern shore of Lake Huron, at the mouth of the Maitland River. Tourism is important to the local economy. It is popular with tourists for the sunsets over the lake.
+ Greece, Economy: European Union member states
* Greece is a capitalist country, like the United States and France. Tourism is also a major source of income for Greece. Currently, the country is cutting costs and asking for loans in order to avoid bankruptcy. Greece also has a deficit, meaning that it buys more things than it sells.
+ Isle of Wight
* Many people like to go on holiday on the island. There are a lot of hotels and things for tourists to do there. The island really is quite spectacular. Queen Victoria used to like to visit the Isle of Wight where she had a house called 'Osbourne House'. Tourism is the most important industry on the island.
+ Israel, Economy, Tourism
* Tourism is one of the country's important sources of income. Tourists visit many archaeological, historical and religious sites, museums, nature reserves and beach resorts in Israel.
+ Kiribati
* Kiribati is one of the poorest nations in the Pacific Ocean. It has few natural resources. Tourism is an important industry.
+ Monaco: Monaco :: Italian-speaking countries :: French-speaking countries :: Current monarchies
* It is near southeastern France, on the Mediterranean Sea in Western Europe. French is the most common language spoken in Monaco. Tourism is the main industry. People in Monaco pay no income tax.
+ Nusa Lembongan: Bali :: Lesser Sunda Islands
* Tourism is the most important part of the economy of the island. Most tourist development is on the western side of the island at Mushroom Bay and Jungut Batu. Most local residents live in the central village of Nusa Lembongan. The other major industry is seaweed farming along the southwest coast between Nusa Lembongan and Nusa Cenignan.
+ Port Antonio, Jamaica
* In the 1880s Lorenzo Dow Baker started the banana trade in Jamaica which made Port Antonio grow quickly, with more and more tourists arriving and departing in the banana boats. Its population 1982 was 12,285 growing to 13,246 in 1991. It is the island's third largest port, famous as a shipping point for bananas and coconuts, as well as one of its most important tourist attractions. Tourism is a major contributor to the town's economy.
+ Samaná Province, Economy
* Tourism is very important in the province because of the beautiful beaches in the province.
+ Switzerland, Economy: German-speaking countries :: French-speaking countries :: Italian-speaking countries
* The banks of Switzerland and the insurance companies in Switzerland together produce eleven per cent of the gross domestic product. Tourism is important in Switzerland. There are many places for tourists. Davos, St. Moritz, Pontresina and Flims are in Switzerland.
+ Tasman Peninsula, Early history: Geography of Tasmania :: Peninsulas
* The prison at Port Arthur is now a tourist attraction. Tourism is a major business in most of Tasmania. Bushwalking is also popular in the remote parts of the peninsula. Popular places to walk to include Cape Raoul and Cape Pillar at the south west and south east ends of the Peninsula, on either side of the entrance to Port Arthur.
+ Ticino, Economy
* The weather in the canton is often inverse to that north of the Alps. This, and a warmer climate in general, attracts many tourists from other Swiss cantons. The lakes together with the sunshine are considered attractive. Tourism is the single most important economic factor in the canton.
+ Torbay: Unitary authorities in Devon
* Torbay' is a Unitary authority in England. 120,000 people live there. It is on the south coast and has over 20 beaches. Tourism is very important to the local economy.
+ Tourism, Damage tourism can bring
* Tourism can bring damage to the local area. Litter, scuba-diving and deforestation are problems for popular places such as St. Lucia, Hawaii and other exotic places. Scuba-diving can cause damage to coral reefs which are home to hundreds of species of sea animals.
* Tourism can damage the local culture, and certain local traditions are being put aside for tourists.
+ West Flanders, Industry: Provinces of Belgium :: Flanders
+ Zanzibar, Economy, Other options: Geography of Tanzania
* Tourism is a major foreign currency earner. A number of new hotels and resorts having been built in recent years. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transaction | commerce | tourism:
Coastal tourism
* is California's largest ocean-dependent industry
- vital to the U.S. economy
* mainstay of the country's economy.
* major portion of the gross domestic product in many small island nations.
Cultural tourism
* can finance preservation of cultural heritage.
* focuses on experiencing the arts, culture, heritage, and unique aspects of a place.
* is especially dependent on a mix of older building types
- one of the fastest-growing sectors of the economy
- ranked as the fastest growing sector of the travel and tourism industry
- the tourism industry equivalent of cause-related marketing
Heritage tourism
* is one of the fastest growing segments of the nation's substantial travel industry
- segments of the national and global tourism industry
- nation's fastest growing industries
- part of a larger trend known as cultural tourism
- the fastest growing segment of the tourism industry
* means jobs and incomes for local citizens.
Marine tourism
* involves a diverse range of marine-related tourism activities.
* is also the largest employer of the marine industries.
Sports tourism
* consists of golfing, horse-riding, water sports, diving, fishing and rowing.
* includes both spectator and participant activities and attractions.
Deal
* are agreement
- allotment
- boards
- deals because there is give and take and it is messy
- distribution
- part of card games
- results
- transactions
* program to deal cards.<|endoftext|>### transaction | deal:
Pulpwood
* accounts for about one-third of the annual harvest value of Mississippi's forest products.
* are softwoods.
* depends largely on the species cut and the pulping process.
* includes trees that are used to produce paper products.
* is found in cellophane, rayon, film and hundreds of other articles.
* is the chief forest product, but some lumber is produced
- raw material for the manufacture of newsprint
- used to make chips for pulp and paper manufacturing
- wood intended to be made into wood pulp, to produce paper and other pulp-based products
Secure transaction
* allow encrypted communications between clients and servers.
* ensure privacy of information.
Transference
* causes poisoning of both the good and the bad.
* exists in all human relationships.
* is characterized by patients' ambivalent attitudes toward their parents
- displacement
- primarily an act of the mind
- the distortion of encounter
* way to remember.
Transgenic organism
* Most transgenic organisms are generated in the laboratory for research purposes.
* Transgenic Organisms Find out more about transgenic organisms.
### transition period:
Early adulthood
* is entered when men begin careers and families.
* transition period.
Transition state
* are inherently unstable, since they are high-energy geometries
- saddle points on the system's potential energy surface
- the major focus of the activated complex theory and lead to rates of reaction
* control the rate of a reaction.
Transitivity
* determines how the direct relationships are combined into an indirect relationship.
* is an important criterion for rationality
- used to combine groups of overlapping senses into the largest sense groups possible
* widely accepted feature of chaos. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Translation
* are motion
- paraphrase
- transformation
* creative processing of language that can be applied in a wide variety of fields.
* daily practice of all lesbians.
* is an everyday practice
- essentially the gross motion of the parcel of fluid
- initiated through the formation of an initiation complex
- presented as a problem-solving discipline
- second step by which gene expression leads to protein synthesis
* is the conversion of information from one language into another
- the nucleic acid language into the polypeptide language
- most basic motion of tessellation
- paradigm, the exemplar of all writing
* is the process a cell uses to make a protein from the recipe given in the gene
- in which proteins are synthesized
* is the process of converting words from one language to another
- making the primary sequence of proteins from the amino acids
- used to aid in language learning
* major problem in the discipline of comparative labor law.
* means to transfer a message from one language to another in a written format.
* normally refers to written materials, i.e, going from one written medium to another.
* problem of belief.
* produces a peptide of linked amino acids, which is completed to form a protein.
* reliable science of communicating between different languages.
* takes place in the nucleus, and transcription takes place in the ribosomes.
+ Google Picasa, Version history, Windows
* Translation fixes for Hungarian and Chinese. Fixed a case that would result in an error when capturing images from webcams.
+ Wavelet: Mathematics
* Translation is described by b parameter and dilatation by a parameter.
* Latest 'tech news' from the Wikimedia technical community. Translations are available.
* Latest 'tech news' from the Wikimedia technical community. Please inform other users about these changes. Not all changes will affect you. Translations are available.<|endoftext|>### translation:
Literal translation
* are attempts to be absolutely faithful to the original languages.
* tries to be as close as possible to what is written in the original language.
+ Bible version debate, Types of translation, Formal equivalence: Bible versions
* One such method of translation is called 'literal translation' or 'formal equivalence'. Literal translation tries to be as close as possible to what is written in the original language. Often this means translating each word separately. These words are not in the source text. The second problem is that the reader must be familiar with the subject, to understand some of the translation.
+ Modern English Bible translations
* These translations are usually difficult to read. These translations change the ideas of the original Bible into English. Literal translations are difficult for some people to understand. But, non-literal translations can change the meaning.
Literary translation
* includes poetry, prose, or drama, from any period.
* is different from cultural translation in the nature of the texts used.
Transliteration
* helps memorizing the hieroglyphs.
* is transcription
- written and pronounced from left to right | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Transmission
* Most transmissions have genetic components.
* are communication
- fast, occurring at the speed of light
- gearboxs
- located in cars
- part of automobiles
- software
* can occur directly through contact with tissues or body fluids of animals.
* depend on climatic conditions
* have components
- cost
* involve energy
* is by ingestion of food and water contaminated by feces
- causation
- mechanical when insects transfer blood from a positive horse
- the passage of light through a transparent or translucent material
* lines Power lines that carry high-voltage electricity long distances.
* occur at levels
- low levels
* occures upon ingestion of cysts shed by animals or humans.
* occurs when contact is made with the blood of an infected person
- the flies feed on wounds
* refers to any exchange of data
- the movement of wholesale, high-voltage electricity through a power grid
* require contact
- development
* require direct contact
- physical contact
* take places.
### transmission:
Digital transmission
* involve the making of incidental copies to make the transmission possible.
* is the same language that a computer uses to talk to a printer.
* makes cell phones more like computers.
* refers to a particular kind of transmission facility implementation.
Droplet transmission
* can also spread influenza.
* has a specific mechanism of transfer, and droplets are five microns or larger.<|endoftext|>### transmission:
Hypermedia
* broadening of the term, and encompasses text, graphics, sound, and movies.
* can also contain pictures, sounds and video
- sounds, video
* enhances hypertext by adding video, sound, animation, and graphics.
* is an extension of hypertext
- characterised by the ability to change the retrieval and presentation of information
- text combined with graphics, movies, and sound
* is the combination of hypertext and multimedia
- multimedia such as texts, graphics, video, sound, etc
- presentation of information via more than one medium
- same thing as hypertext except that it includes text, images, sound, and motion
- to multimedia roughly what an index is to a book
* rapid reading experience of image, caption, and choice of navigation.
* rich field for discovering and applying patterns.
* subset of hypertext.
* superset of hypertext - it is any medium with pointers to other media
* tool for user-driven access to information.
### transmission | hypermedia:
Adaptive hypermedia
* is an area of research at the crossroads of hypermedia and adaptive systems.
* new direction of research within the area of user-adaptive systems.
Light transmission
* is the amount of light let into the car through the tinting.
* varies with composition. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transmission:
Mass medium
* Mass media are channels of communication through which messages flow
- mass because they re huge
- assume they produce programs or articles for the general public
* Mass media can be a useful tool for creating awareness among the general public
- create broad-scale social awareness
- especially foster negative stereotypes of out-group people
- device to fabricate 'resenmtiment'
- exerts a tremendous influence on American popular culture
- fulfill the universal human needs for information, socialization and entertainment
* Mass media has a number of outlets that keep Gainesville residents informed and entertained
- the potential to reach a larger audience, including non-literate populations
* Mass media is essentially a set of filters and rules which restrict what can be seen and heard
- known as the central nervous system of society
- mind pollution
- today
- refers to television, radio, newspapers, telephones, and magazines
- reflect the technology-induced fragmentation of mass markets
- reflection of society
- represent different things to different people
- seems out to kill people's careers
- teach that looking good and being happy go together
- tend to exaggerate and exploit drama
- tends to expose certain artists because of marketability
- transmit messages that are confusing at best and corrupting at worst
- treat sexuality as a commercial commodity
### transmission | mass medium:
Broadcast medium
* Broadcast media are government-owned
- mostly government-controlled
- state owned and favor the government
- includes radio and television
* are mediums.
* mass medium
Mechanical transmission
* is much less important in Canada than is biological transmission.
* occurs when a vector ingests a pathogen from a host reservoir.
Microwave transmission
* move communications in a line of site fashion from tower to tower.
* uses sound waves to transmit data communications signals.
### transmission | multimedia:
Interactive multimedia
* allow the viewer to choose the information they wish to see.
* is used to simulate practice reality using various modalities.
* new technology for an ancient culture.
* refers to the interactive audiovisual aspect of hypermedia systems.
Perinatal transmission
* Most perinatal transmission seems to take place around birth.
* can also occur while giving birth.
* can occur during pregnancy, delivery or breast feeding
- during delivery and through breast- feeding
- occur, especially during the infectious phase
* is particularly important in high endemicity areas.
Satellite transmission
* are also a problem to radio astronomy.
* is one of the oldest, most established techniques for videoconferencing.
Synaptic transmission
* fails in the absence of calcium ions.
* involves the regulated exocytosis of vesicles filled with neurotransmitter.
* occurs between a neuron and another neuron, or a muscle or a gland.
* persists in synaptotagmin mutants of Drosophila
* takes time.
Venereal transmission
* happens through fecal-oral contamination.
* occurs through direct fecal-oral transmission. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Transparency
* Transparencies are physical phenomenons
- contribute to ease of use and ease of programming
* aims at performance in terms of learnability and functionality.
* allows problems, opportunities, and issues to be discussed openly.
* also applies to layers, groups of objects, knockout shapes, stroke and fill.
* basic tenet of open societies and good governance.
* can be a useful indicator for overall water quality
- enhance economic performance in a variety of ways
* denotes free access to governmental political and economic activities and decisions.
* different kettle of fish altogether.
* dissolve of the diffuse color alone.
* fundamental organizing principle of markets.
* helps protect phyllosomes and the puerulus from predators
- to build trust in the electoral process
* is also important as a way of limiting the herd instinct of investors
- an enormously important element in the smooth functioning of any society
* is an important element in the sound management of modern economy
- factor in the practices of stock markets
- indicator of the impact of human activity on the land surrounding the lake
- central to increasing the level of public trust in sound science
- critical to establishing trust in decision making
- derived through a gray scale or color that dictates the level of transparency
- essential to the prevention of torture
- forced through all matter
- increasingly important for today's securities markets
- key to cross-border information sharing
- obtained by assigning one color to be transparent
* is one of the key issues in corporate governance
- most desirable traits of a social security system
- requirements of democracy
- only one element of good governance
- opaque in massive form and translucent in crystalline forms
- particularly common in the shallower and better-lit parts of the mesopelagic
* is the ability to peer into the recording
- foundation of trust
- idea of open, candid and honest information
- symbol of purity
- watchword - transparency of the thought process
- thus an important element to the efficient functioning of markets
- transparent to translucent
* is used in graphics appropriately
- to affect the transparency of a surface
- when one color is masked out
* key ingredient in peer pressure.
* major design movement.
* means information is available as it is developed
- the way in which the concrete world dissolves into near-emptiness
* media literacy site making all forms of media transparent to visitors.
* positive image in black and white or color, which is produced on transparent film.
* refers to the clarity and accessibility of the procedures and outcomes of the system
- degree that light can pass through a mineral
- detailed information provided about the methods and process used
* very vague word and can mean different things to different people.
* word that has taken on many related meanings nowadays.
* works with simple diagrammatic graphics, and with complex shapes.
### transparency:
Lantern slide
* are big, heavy, and fragile, since they are made of glass
- glass, positive transparencies
* is an old term used to describe transparencies.
Transparent object
* Most transparent objects are somewhat reflective as well.
* allow light to pass through essentially unimpeded.
* contain a much lower dark density, and thus produce weaker shadows.
* produce secondary rays either by reflection or refraction.
### transparent:
Zebrafish embryo
* are transparent.
* have three or four identifiable primary motoneurons per hemisegment. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Transport
* alone causes stress in rabbits.
* are the total flux of whatever property through a given area.
* carrying troops are transports carrying only troops.
* consists of free flights of electrons and holes interrupted by scattering.
* consumes a major part of the household s time and involves a major physical burden.
* database management system for critical care transports.
* defects within the cell constitute the molecular basis for some inherited human diseases.
* enhancing chemicals create nasal irritation and rhinnorhea.
* enzymes to the various cells.
* facilitates access to activities and services, and has a key role in the economy.
* has an important role to play in urban regeneration
- impacts on both the natural and built environment, and on human health
* includes sections.
* indicates the mobility of communities.
* is almost totally dependent on liquid fuels derived from crude oil.
* is also a sector of the economy that shows almost continuous growth in all areas
- an integral part of almost all daily subsistence and social activities
- altered in some seriously ill patients and as the result of some medications
- based on a steady-state flow field
- by snail-like animals called tilios
- catalysed by protein molecules in the cell membranes
- diffusion
- energy-consuming and is drastically reduced in the absence of oxygen
- essential to rural development and future prosperity
- indispensable to trade, tourism, development and the well being of any economy
- main source of nitrogen oxide emission
- mediated by specific shuttling receptors which belong to the importin beta superfamily
- now one of the major cycles of capital
* is one of the key sources of the carbon dioxide emissions that are warming the world
- major contributors to greenhouse gas emissions and urban pollution
- most acute problems facing disabled people
- proportional to blood concentration
- related to available albumin and blood perfusion through the adipose tissue
- selective, since only specific molecules enter or leave the nucleus
* is the communication method between the user of the service and the service itself
- fastest growing energy-consumption sector in the world
- movement to different points in space within a compartment
* key component for sustainable economic development among rural populations
- feature of modern life
* major consumer of energy
- contributor to environmental problems at the local, regional and global levels
- use of energy and burns most of the world's petroleum
* means to carry from one place to another.
* network sector and efficiency is maximised when network synergies are maximized.
* normally uses networks.
* often represents a major component of the final cost of food.
* phenomena in heterogeneous media
- high-temperature gases
- liquids and electrolyte solutions
- metals and semiconductors
- ordered and desordered systems
- porous media
- simple flow polymer melts
- soils
* plays a major role in promoting women s entrepreneurial activities.
* problem for young people across all ages.
* processes affecting banana prawn postlarvae in the estuaries of the Gulf of Carpentaria.
* processes in a turbulent medium
- groundwater systems
- with fluid-solid heterogeneous reactions
* reaches represent the conveyance of water through the river network.
* represents an integral part of production costs for industries.
* service which relies on other services.
* sugars to roots and growth sites, such as developing leaves and fruits.
* uses a lot of energy.
+ Transport, Transport, energy, and the environment:
* Transport uses a lot of energy. This can create pollution. But as more vehicles are used, more pollution is created. Ethanol and biodiesel pollute less than petroleum. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transport:
Active transport
* allows cells to transport materials against a concentration gradient.
* appears to be limited to drugs structurally similar to endogenous substances.
* can move substances against a concentration gradient
- only occur at intact, closed membranes
* consumes metabolic energy to move solutes against their concentration gradients.
* involves mineral-specific membrane transport proteins
- movement of substances against a chemical gradient
- using energy to move substances against a diffusion gradient
* is another form of diffusion
- especially important in maintaining proper ion concentrations inside cells
- important part of homeostasis as well as many important metabolic processes
- required to remove sodium from the cerebrospinal fluid
- slowed, decreasing the absorption of nutrients such as sugar, calcium, and iron
- used to adjust concentrations of various salts
- vital to all organisms
- yet another form of diffusion
* require energy to function properly.
* requires a carrier molecule and a form of energy
- the use of energy
* uses cellular energy to move substances across a cell membrane
- energy to move materials through a membrane
Bulk transport
* allows for nutrients to be transported over greater distances
- rapid communication between different parts of the body
- waste products to be removed more efficiently
* is responsible for the movement of nutrients and hormones in both animals and plants.<|endoftext|>### transport:
Bus
* Some busses allow bicycles to be attched to the front.
* are a reliable means of transport.
* are a very common form of local transportation
- popular form of transportation in Mexico
* are an important component of a sustainable transportation system
- part of a community's transportation system
- big, heavy vehicles and cause a vibration and shaking of residences
- five times as fuel efficient as cars
- simply the paths, or wires, that connect one component to the other
- slower than automobiles since they are stuck in traffic
* are the main form of inter-city transportation
- mainstay of public transportation in Albania
* are the most common public transport
- transport of the masses
- important form of public transportation in Taipei
- popular method of transport for both urban and inter-city travel
- streetcars of today
* carry teams
- wrestle teams
* cause extreme air pollution and give off a lot of carbon dioxide.
* es are efficient at moving people over distances of less than a mile or two
- just bundles of wires for carrying related electrical signals
* have mass
- numbers and symbols to identify what part of the city they cover
- routes
* help reduce dependency on auto use, the main contributor to air pollution and global warming.
* includes sections.
* is public transport
+ Bromsgrove, Transport: Towns in Worcestershire
* There is also a bus station in the town centre. Buses travel from the bus station to many places in Worcestershire and the West Midlands.
+ Everland, Attractions: Theme parks :: South Korea :: Tourism
* Bus ride through the zoo where various animals wandering around freely. In the caged bus, the visitors will see the roaming lions, tigers, bears, and sometimes some animals come up to the bus to catch the feed thrown by the driver.
+ Public transport, Types of public transport
* The main types of public transport are buses, trolleybuses, trams and trains. Trams were first used in the late 1860s and used to be pulled by horses. Now trams are electric and run on a line of cable. Buses drive on the road, like cars do. Trolleybuses are like buses, but they use electricity from two wires above the road. Trains run on a track and are very fast. Many places use trams and trains as a form of public transport.
### transport | bus:
Minibus
* are also common in bigger cities
* have forward facing seats with seat or lap belts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transport | bus:
School bus
* are automobiles
- common sights on urban streets and rural roads
- located in schools
- one of the safest forms of transportation a child can take to school
- taller and heavier than most other traffic and generally travel at moderate speeds
* are the safest form of ground transportation
- highway transportation
- way to transport children to and from school
* provide transportation for children enrolled in public schools.
* remain one of the safest forms of transportation in the United States.<|endoftext|>### transport | bus:
Trolleybus
* are also a common sight in many cities
- buses
- essentially electric buses that get power from electric wires
- like buses , but they use electricity from two wires above the road
* run on electricity which is usually bought from local utility companies.
+ Public transport, Types of public transport
* The main types of public transport are buses, trolleybuses, trams and trains. Trams were first used in the late 1860s and used to be pulled by horses. Now trams are electric and run on a line of cable. Buses drive on the road, like cars do. Trolleybuses are like buses, but they use electricity from two wires above the road. Trains run on a track and are very fast. Many places use trams and trains as a form of public transport.
Convective transport
* can act on even larger scales.
* occurs in the mobile phase, with mass transfer between the two compartments.
Dolly
* Dollies come in all shapes and sizes
- includes sections
* is transport
Fluvial transport
* reworks the sediment.
* varies over the hydrological year.
Littoral transport
* is the movement of material by waves and currents on the coastline.
* occurs both along the shoreline, as well as into the lake and onto the shore.
Nutrient transport
* can be by diffusion or by advective fluid flow.
* pathways across the epithelium of the placenta.
Paracellular transport
* accounts for only a small fraction of total intestinal nutrient transport.
* is by passive diffusion or by solvent drag.
Passive transport
* includes diffusion and osmosis.
* is an extremely important way for small molecules to get into and out of cells
* occurs down a solute s concentration gradient.
* requires no energy from the cell.<|endoftext|>### transport:
Public transport
* can play a major part in helping to reduce congestion and pollution on the roads.
* is an inexpensive and easy way to get around day and night
- invaluable mechanism for increasing economic opportunity
- cheap, fast, widely used and generally efficient
- one place where the disadvantaged and the non-disadvantaged meet
- part of transportation systems
- shit when run by capitalists or the state
- the only fully privatized urban service
* moves people while keeping cities compact.
* provides an accessible network of transport for people with special needs.
* Passengers don't need their own cars or other vehicles. Most public transport lets many people travel at the same time.
* right of the community and a responsibility of government.
* simple yet inexpensive way of visiting the surrounding villages and towns.
* useful way to reduce the impact of the car in areas of scenic beauty.
+ Public transport, Using public transport
* Many people who do not have cars use buses, trolleybuses, trams to go places near their house, and they use trains to go places far away. Public transport is good because it is easy to use so anybody can go on it.
* Public transport is also good for the environment. When many people use the same vehicle, fewer cars are on the road. Fewer cars make less pollution. Cost is low, because it is very cheap to catch public transport every day, which is why even people who own a car often use public transport. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transport:
Rail transport
* is planned as the main mode of mass transit, supplemented by road transport
- the most important, carrying a billion tons per kilometer per annum
* major means of transport in Japan.
Road transport
* can also be hazardous.
* is now the main source of urban air pollution
- one of the major sources of air pollution, especially in our towns and cities
* major source of carbon dioxide emissions.
Ropeway
* consist of cables, electrical and mechanical equipment.
* is transport
Sea transport
* is by far the cheapest form, both economically and ecologically
- extremely important for economic integration and for domestic and foreign trade
+ Inner Hebrides: Inner and Outer Hebrides
* Sea transport is crucial and ferry services operate between the islands and the mainland Britain. The Gaelic language and the Wee Free Church of Scotland remains strong in some areas. The landscapes have inspired a variety of artists, and there is a diversity of wildlife.
Sediment transport
* maintains high diatom abundance in dense deposit feeder patches
- densedeposit feeder patches
* processes at a nourished beach.
Shuttle
* Some shuttles have wings.
* are bobbins
- public transport
* includes sections.
* is public transport
* travel only a few hundred kilometers into space.
Solute transport
* enzymes related to stress tolerance in Listeria monocytogenes.
* includes advection-dispersion in the liquid phase and diffusion in the gas phase. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transport:
Train
* are capable of brakes
- consequences
- located in zoos
- magazines
- more energy efficient per person than cars, but less so than bicycles
* are one of the most common forms of travel in Sweden
- popular forms of transportation
- part of gowns
- used for riding
- video games
* carry cattle.
* create far less pollution than highways and airports.
* have carriage.
* includes sections.
* kill four people every year.
* leave stations.
* move people.
* reach length.
* use rails
- third rails
+ Cambuslang railway station: Railway stations in Scotland
* The station is owned and managed by First ScotRail. There is a train every ten minutes. Trains come more often at busy times of the day. The station has a ticket office at the top, with a bridge across the track and two ramps down to each platform.
+ Chicago, Travel: Cities with more than 500,000 inhabitants
* O'Hare International Airport, one of the busiest airports in the world, is a major center for air travel. Chicago has another airport called Midway Airport. Many trains use Chicago as a place to change loads and to change directions. There is also a canal between Lake Michigan and the Mississippi River called the Chicago River. The Chicago River is the only river to travel backwards.
* Some trains look like a special bus that can only drive on rails.
+ Public transport, Types of public transport
* The main types of public transport are buses, trolleybuses, trams and trains. Trams were first used in the late 1860s and used to be pulled by horses. Now trams are electric and run on a line of cable. Buses drive on the road, like cars do. Trolleybuses are like buses, but they use electricity from two wires above the road. Trains run on a track and are very fast. Many places use trams and trains as a form of public transport.
+ Rapid transit
* Usually it is in a city or urban area. Trains run very often, and carry a lot of passengers. Usually it is separated from other traffic by a concept called grade separation. Grade separation is when two streams of traffic cross each other on different levels, so they do not influence each other.
+ Train, Crew
* The 'driver' or 'engineer' makes sure the train works right, and speeds it up or slows it down. Every train needs a driver to make it run right
- Locomotives
* Some trains have electric motors in many or all of the cars. Usually both ends of the train have engineer's cabins. Those trains which have no separate locomotives are called 'diesel multiple units' or 'electric multiple units'. They are especially popular in commuter traffic in large towns and cities
+ Transperth: Australian railways
* Train services run on four lines that spread over the Perth metropolitan area. The lines are named Joondalup, Midland, Fremantle and Armadale. The new Mandurah line will be open late in 2007. All trains are operated using electricity.
### transport | train:
Electric train
* are trains that run by electricity and are guided by a cable overhead
- used for commuting
* have a long history, and they have advanced greatly during that time.
* require power that has to be generated, with attendant pollution.
Passenger train
* Some passenger trains carry people much longer distances.
+ Train, Types of Train, Passenger
* Passenger trains are usually very comfortable way of travelling. Many trains have electrical outlets and Wi-Fi hotspots for computers, and a special restaurant car for dining and refreshments.
Tram
* are located in cities
- street cars or trolleys
- used to transport miners, minerals and waste
* is transport
* travel as high as two hundred feet in the air. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### transport:
Vehicle
* Any vehicle is hybrid when it combines two or more sources of power.
* Most vehicles are like small power-plants on wheels, using gasoline as their source of fuel.
* Most vehicles carry gasoline
- depreciate as they get older
- equipped with side curtain airbags also include side torso airbags
* Most vehicles have batteries
- dead batteries
- engines
- radios
- provide energy
- transport only one person
* Most vehicles use brakes
- disc brakes on the front wheels
* Some vehicles get power from animals
- human muscles
- wind
* Some vehicles have air resistance
- automatic shoulder belts with lap belts that are fastened manually
- kill deer
- lose energy
- move on or in the water
- use banks of supercapacitors for storing energy instead of batteries. * move on land. Most land vehicles have wheels. Examples are bicycles, cars, motorcycles, and trains. * move on or in the water. Examples are boats, ships, and submarines. * get power from human muscles. Examples are bicycles and skateboards. * get power from engines. Examples are automobiles, ships, and aeroplanes. * get power from animals. Examples are carts and chariots. * get power from wind. Examples are sailboats and iceboats. * have no power. Examples are gliders and balloons
* account for almost one-third of all smog causing pollution.
* also contribute to the formation of ground-level ozone, or smog
- emit nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons which contribute to acid rain and smog
- produce greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming
* are also a major cause of smog, so less driving means cleaner air
- the leading source of hydrocarbons in urban runoff
- as definitely liquids as pigments are solids
* are capable of carry
* are located in freeways
- streets
- machines
- major sources of urban air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions
- mechanisms
- mediums
- notorious as death traps in tornadoes, because they are easily tossed and destroyed
- one of the dominant sources of urban air pollution in South Asia
- physical objects
- several models and colors of autos and trucks, as well as motorcycles
- subject to wear as they age
- substances
* are the fastest growing source of emissions
- major source of hydrocarbons at urban locations
- single greatest source of pollutants in Northern Virginia
* are used for mobility
* can alter skin absorption.
* come in all shapes and sizes, just like people.
* continue to increase in size, power, and fuel consumption.
* emit carbon monoxide, a pollutant that robs the body of oxygen, which is hard on the heart.
* have advantage
- fronts
- less emissions than they used to
- limits
* have many advantage
- more advantage
- momentum
- significant advantage
- size limits
- smell
* includes sections.
* means cars, vans, trucks, and buses.
* pose a serious threat for burrowing owls roosting along roads.
* produce a large percentage of air pollution
- share of our greenhouse gas emissions
- motive power
* range in size, shape and type of fuel used.
* still account for two-thirds of our air pollution.
- components
* using road fuel gases emit significantly fewer pollutants than petrol and diesel vehicles.
Water transport
* is also the only feasible way to ship most internationally traded goods
- largely non-existent in Ethiopia
- primarily the responsibility of the vascular tissue
- still a vital part of trade in many places
* occurs in all biological membranes.
* requires regulation, and dynamic control is provided by stomata.
### transportation systems:
Short line
* are transportation systems.
* railway which conducts business on a local or regional basis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trap:
Entanglement
* acts as a fundamental resource for many known quantum information processing schemes.
* are responsible for many of the strangulation deaths experienced on playgrounds.
* can lead to injury, illness, suffocation, starvation, and even death
- severe wounds, drowning or starvation
* causes animals to die slowly.
* form of coherence of matter waves over large space-time intervals.
* is an important aspect of quantum weirdness
- considered by many to be the most puzzling feature of quantum mechanics
- entrapment of an animal by carelessly discarded litter
- one of the most mysterious and fundamental properties of quantum mechanics
* is the other main quantum mechanical principle upon which quantum computing rests
- most common cause of marine harm
* occurs when two photons of light have related properties even when they are far apart.
* phenomenon unique to quantum physics.
* suggests that the universe radically interconnected entity.
Traumatic event
* appear to result in anger and depression.
* can affect children's and adolescents' emotional lives and development
- cause a state of shock
- lower still further the body's already weakened resistance to infection
- often trigger phobias
* cause severe stress reactions that are particularly hard to manage.
### travel:
Crawling
* are human activities.
* is how most search engines collect Web pages for indexing
- infantile, and crutches are for the elderly or infirm
- movement for movement's sake
- on the stomach, and creeping is on the hands and knees
- the most common mode of transportation in benthic habitats
- travel
* leads to walking, and walking leads to hopping, skipping, and jumping.
* plays an important part in the development of visual skills.
Crossing
* are paths
- points
- translations
- voyages
* is the major breeding method adopted for the development of new mulberry varieties
+ Los Angeles River, Crossings: Rivers of California :: Geography of Los Angeles, California
* Bridges that cross the Los Angeles River. Crossings are listed from south to north.
Traversal
* are crossings
- part of skiing
* is travel
Wandering
* are travel.
* is travel
### travelers:
Fiction writer
* are travelers.
* think of style as the writer's voice or use of language.
### treatable condition:
Lead toxicity
* causes haematological, gastrointestinal and neurological dysfunctions.
* has neurologic, hematologic, endocrine, cardiovascular, and renal effects.
* is recognized to be much more widespread than once believed.
* treatable condition.
### treatable medical condition:
Persistent anxiety
* can produce a variety of emotional and physical symptoms.
* treatable medical condition.
### tree-frog:
Chorus frog
* are the first frogs of spring.
* emerge from winter chambers to turn quiet ponds into opera houses.
Cricket frog
* are amphibians
- cold-blooded
- sexually mature when one year old
- tree frogs
* call later in the summer than most frogs.
* can leap great distances, despite their small size.
* re only about an inch long.
Spring peeper
* are amphibians
- members of the treefrog family
- tan or brown in color with dark lines that form a telltale X on their backs
- thumbnail-sized frogs found primarily in the swamp forest
* live in forests and feast on mosquitoes and flies.
### trees:
Cinnamon tree
* are trees.
* thrive in tropical maritime climates at low altitudes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trees:
Tall tree
* Most tall trees absorb sunlight
- grow up to feet
* Most tall trees have leaves
- tiny leaves
- provide shelter
- reach height
* Some tall trees bear flowers
- fragrant flowers
- harbor predators
- live in grassland
- provide food
- survive fire
* attract lightning.
* can be a safety hazard when canopies begin to overhang the roof
- block the view of tall buildings, or add interest to an angular building
* create a canopy of shade over the deep water.
* help identify old-growth forests, but so do numerous openings created by fallen trees.
* offer shade, lowering the water temperatures so fish can live in it.
### trials:
Jury trial
* are trials.
* survive primarily in the common-law countries, above all, the United States.
Triazine
* affect plants by inhibiting their ability to photosynthesize.
* also have a negative affect on the worms
- some activity on small grass
* are a class of herbicides which are used to control weed competition in corn
- compounds
- currently present in both ground and surface waters
- used to control annual grasses and broadleaf weeds
- very slightly more persistent on alkaline soils
* family of commonly used pesticides found in most garden products.<|endoftext|>Tribalism
* also determines how the system responds to an error.
* are beliefs
- states
* corrosive influence impeding democratic change and development.
* form of identity connected with geographical and ethnic attributes of a tribe.
* has social and epistemological manifestations.
* is against our view of the nation equal rights for all, special privileges for none
- ascendant as politicians exploit the ignorance of their tribal groups
- instinctively inherent in every human being
- literally the practice of being tribal
- the sense of the deep bond of family, the closed society as the norm of community
* provokes types of polarisation familiar to racism.
* seems to be the default mode of human political organization.
* takes on all kinds of shapes, colors, sizes and disguises.
Triumph
* follows victories.
* is companies
- raptures | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### triumph:
Landslide
* All landslides move downslope under the influence of gravity.
* Many landslides are the aftereffects of volcanoes or earthquakes
- occur where tightlines and drain pipes fail
- transform after they detach
* Most landslide affects life.
* Most landslide occurs in prehistoric time
* Some landslide is caused by earthquakes
- leads to tsunamis
* Some landslide occurs during intense storms
* Some landslides are large enough to create lakes by damming up rivers
- can block bridges and create a flood at the same time
* also impact on the quality of Canada's resources.
* are a common occurrence during the rnonsoon
- dramatic manifestation of the collision between humans and other natural forces
- geologic hazard that occasionally occurs in Kansas
- serious geologic hazard common to almost every state in the United States
- widespread hazard, affecting the entire country
- also a serious problem in both earthquake and flood zones
- another type of ground failure that are often highly destructive
* are common along highways built on steep hillsides
- following earthquakes in California
- in the rainy season making for slow travel
- on the steep walls of Cold Canyon
- dangerous and unpredictable
- dangerous, unpredictable, and can occur rapidly
- downslope movement, under gravity, of masses of soil and rock material
- dramatic examples of gravity erosion
- known also as landslips, slumps or slope failure
* are more widespread than any geological event
- other geological event
- most likely during or shortly after downpours
- much more likely to occur when the slopes are saturated by water
- natural occurring phenomena
- very common indeed in the Lower Himalayas
* associated with clearcuts or roads usually lack large wood, but are rich in sediments
- human land uses are the primary source of sediment
* can be destructive
- large and dangerous
- cerate large crevasses and reroute streams and rivers causing flash floods
- create large waves on lakes or embayments and can be deadly
- destroy mountainsides and suddenly unleash a volcano's fury
- devastate roads, posing great danger to passing vehicles
- kill
* can occur as flows, slides, or falls and topples
- in underwater, called a submarine landslide , coastal and onshore environments
- weeks or months after intense storms
- range in size from tiny to the size of subdivisions
- vary in size but usually they always involve a large ground movement
* cause fatalities and billions of dollars in property damage each year.
* caused by heavy rain frequently disrupt train services.
* causes damage.
* come in many forms.
* commonly occur with other major natural disasters, such as earthquakes and floods.
* continue to be triggered by aftershocks.
* differ in their type, speed, extent, and destructiveness.
* happen when a saturated mass of soil moves down a steep slope
- large amounts of rock suddenly fall down a cliff or mountainside
* has causes.
* help widen the troughs as the glaciers remove the bedrock support on upper slopes.
* is natural hazards
- victories
* make agriculture and construction hazardous and often destroy roads.
* occur frequently after rains, sending red clay into the sea
- in every state
- often, sometimes blocking the roads for hours
* occur when a mass of soil moves down the slope under the force of gravity
- gravity overcomes the force of friction
- masses of rock, earth or debris move down a slope
* occur when the shearing of forces exceed the resisting forces of earth materials
- slope changes from a stable to an unstable condition
- where they have before, and in identifiable hazard locations
* often have devastating effects on humans.
* represent the mass movement of rock and soil material downslope due to gravity.
* triggered by earthquakes often cause more destruction than the earthquakes themselves.
* usually occur with another natural hazard, such as an earthquake or flooding.
+ Earthquake: Plate tectonics
* When the earth moves offshore in the ocean, it can cause a tsunami. This can cause just as much death and destruction as an earthquake. Landslides can happen, too. This is an important part of the Earth's cycle.
+ Erosion, Erosion by gravity
* Gravity erosion is the simplest kind of erosion. Gravity simply pulls loose earth materials downhill. Landslides are dramatic examples of gravity erosion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### triumph | landslide:
Large landslide
* are part of the evolution of each Hawaiian island.
* occur around the world and also in the sea.
Rockslide
* are a natural process in Yosemite National Park
- common, especially in the rainy season
- landslide
* is landslide
* make for rough hiking.
* occur along a preexisting tilted fracture surface or bedding surface.
Underwater landslide
* Some underwater landslide leads to tsunamis.
* Some underwater landslide produces colossal waves
- triggers tidal waves
* are another cause of tsunamis.
* can also generate Tsunamis.
Trivia
* are information content.
* fast-paced game of knowledge.
* is an object
- the name of the game at the initial stages of language learning<|endoftext|>Trouble
* can also occur when the verb is in a modifying clause.
* comes largely when humans move into areas once the domain of wildlife.
* falling asleep or staying asleep common symptom of generalized anxiety disorder
- orstaying asleep common symptom of generalized anxiety disorder
* is caused when people disobey rules that have been established for the safety of all
- difficulty
- effort
- happening
* is located in roadblock
- streets
- part of life
- pregnancy
- the common denominator of living
* part of the human condition that is inescapable.
* starts when young people feel disconnected.
* usually occurs when the body loses heat faster than it can be produced.
### trouble:
Pressure point
* are a point between the heart and the wound where the pulse is easily felt
* are part of bodies
- skin
- points
- trouble
* is trouble | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Trout
* also eat grasshoppers and beetles when they happen to fall onto the water.
* also feed on adult mayflies while they rest on the water's surface to lay their eggs
- midges as they are hatching and after they have hatched into winged adults
- migrate into Sabine Lake in the early spring months
- take cover behind large, midcurrent rocks
- vary a great deal in size
* are a fresh water species of fish that are essential to many food chains including humans
- good eating fish especially when deep-fried
- popular bait for striped bass in several other states
- abundant in Ogden, Weber, and South Fork streams
- aggressive fish that defend individual territories in the stream
- both a predator of and competitor with the native frogs
- bullies
- cold water fish and are easy for even the novice angler to catch
- cold-water fish
- commonly large
- concentrated and hungry
- creatures of habit, and they are conditioned by their environment
- especially selective on rivers with a population of wild fish
- extremely vulnerable to degraded stream quality from increased development
- fragile creatures that can live only in the most pristine of places, in cold pure waters
- fresh water, shrimp are salt water
- generally cultured in raceways or ponds supplied with flowing water
- highly variable in color
* are in shallow water and easily caught in the first part of the season
- the shallow water coves because the water is warmer
- large, plentiful, and healthy
- mixed in size with many large to huge rainbows and browns
- perhaps the most sensitive of all Wisconsin fish
- plentiful, and can be caught with worms or eggs, spinners or lures or artificial flies
- predominant fishes, locating their food mainly by sight in the water
- sensitive to habitat, needing cold and clean streams
- still the most important species in Utah
- very spooky, especially in shallow water
* begin feeding selectively on nymphs as they rise from the bottom.
* cautiously rest in the cold pools, waiting for unsuspecting insects.
* consume aquatic insects, invertebrates and small fish.
* continue to be taken during periods of low or no generation.
* depend on the aquatic invertebrates.
* eat almost any smaller animal, including insects and tiny fish
- mayflies and other macroinvertebrates
- the tadpoles of the yellow-legged frog
* embody the spirit and complexity of our natural world.
* especially like to hide under fallen logs.
* find it difficult to tolerate each other's presence, especially in smaller streams and rivers.
* frequently swallow live baits more deeply.
* generally take large mayflies and caddis with an audible gulp
- the fly by way of suction, even when they strike
* get sick in polluted water, as do the aquatic animals they eat for food.
* grow increasingly wary with age and experience.
* have body language
- teeth along the length of the bone and char only on the front end of the bone
- thick bodies and blunt heads, and vary in colour
* inhabit some of the most beautiful places on earth
- specific lies in the river based upon their size
* learn to avoid fishing lines - after being caught once they keep well away from bait.
* live all around Colorado.
* live in both streams and rivers
- many of the lakes and streams in both ranges
* often cruise at night
- lie close in to access better feeding
* provide one of the major sources of recreation in much of Virginia.
* really change their appearance during their spawning period as with the salmon.
* require a good volume of water
- cold, clean, undisturbed streams
- cool oxygenated water, and feed on minnows and insects
* rise everywhere, even near the streamer fisherman's feet.
* stay in the deep water.
* suffer directly from the toxic and chemical wastes being dumped directly into the rivers.
* take much of their food below the surface of the water.
* tend to seek out and congregate in calm waters.
* thrive in the cool streams of Western North Carolina. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trout:
Brown trout
* Some brown trouts have tolerance.
* are active both by day and by night and are opportunistic feeders
- also the only fish ever to rest on the stream bottom
- far less aggressive than bows
- generally faster growing and longer lived than brook trout
* are highly resistant, but often are carriers of the disease
- territorial, aggressive during spawning and sometimes make migration
- more tolerant of warm water temperatures than Idaho's native trout species
- much more wary than rainbows and are usually far harder to catch
* are native to Europe and evolved with whirling disease
- Europe, Western Asia, and North Africa
- olive to dark brown with rust red spots on top and yellow to white below
- one of the most genetically diverse vertebrates known
- opportunists
- particularly well known for their selectivity
- predominant with rainbows and cutthroat as well
- reasonably distinct and easy to identify
- slightly more tolerant of high water temperatures than other trout
* are the most abundant with rainbow trout also present
- common of all southeastern Minnesota trout
- trophy size
- usually wild, rainbow and brook trout are stocked
- very competitive and tend to crowd out other fish, including other trout
* can often cope with such extremes of water flow
- withstand heavy fishing pressure better than other New York trout
* caught on fly are less likely to die after release than trout caught on bait.
* eat a great variety of food as do the other trout
* follow the spawning rainbows and pick off stray eggs.
* have a square tail with large spots on their backs and sides.
* is but one species kept at Saratoga.
* prefer cool, high gradient streams and cold lakes.
* require well-oxygenated, cold water.
* seem to be prowling in shallower depths.<|endoftext|>### trout:
Bull trout
* are a prime indicator of the health of forest ecosystems
- absent in watersheds with the most roads, stream crossings and timber harvest
- in trouble throughout most of their range in the northern Rockies
* are members of the char subgroup in the salmon family
- salmon family known as char
- predators that eat salmon
- very susceptible to habitat destruction and overfishing
* have a unique life cycle.
* reach maturity in four to seven years and live as long as twelve years.
* require large, deep pools for over wintering
- the cleanest, coldest water of any stream-dwelling fish in North America
Fresh trout
* has very little to no fishy smell.
* have very little or no fishy smell.
Golden trout
* are present in some lakes, predominantly in the West Walker drainage.
* feed on insects, especially caddis flies and midges, and also eat small crustaceans.
Infected trout
* carry spores that are very persistent, but the trout can survive for years.
* develop very persistent spores which can survive in moist environments for years
- survive in moist places for years
Large trout
* Most large trouts have different food habits
* can eat large prey.
* feed almost exclusively on other fish such as mullet, pinfish, pigfish and menhaden.
* feeding on emergers usually just create a bulge.
* make home in long riffles, classic pocket water, deep holes, and undercut banks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trout:
Rainbow trout
* Most rainbow trouts have diets.
* Some rainbow trout eat so much they grow much faster than other trout in similar water.
* abound in many lakes and streams
- two of the island s lakes
* are a popular game fish for fly fishers
- target for fly fishers , and several angling methods are used
- preferred species by pond owners in Western North Carolina
- an essential commodity in Tennessee aquaculture
- catch and release only
- highly competetive and readily interbreed with cutthroat
- large and abundant in the lake
- much more abundant
* are native to the Pacific Coast region
- coast and have been introduced widely to Wyoming
- Santa Margarita River
- often very colorful fish
- part of rainbow trouts
- present in several of the deep tributary lakes and below some of the dams
- probably the most important sport trout in Minnesota
- resident in the lake
- streamlined, salmonid form fish
* are the game fish in Cartwright Lake
- Silver Lake
* are the most common and hence most popular species of trout in Washington
- trout in Arkansas and are found in all state trout waters
- commonly caught fish
- very popular among fishermen
- western trout hearty, tenacious, elusive, and adaptable
* breed every three to five years.
* can be freshwater river trout or seagoing trout.
* eat many foods like crayfish and insects because they have such sharp teeth.
* exhibit growth.
* expose to alkaline water
* grow fast, get big, taste great and are fun to catch, because they jump like salmon.
- vary diets
- very small, fine scales on their torpedo-shaped body
* inhabit the open water habitat in streams more than the other trout species
- stream as well as steelhead in fall and early spring
* is an exotic species in Newfoundland
- caught in the rivers
- found in most lakes, streams and rivers
* is the coastal form of the species
- main stocked fish
* live in lake
- the nearshore area of the lake
* lose their bright coloration and turn darker in farms.
* prefer clear, cool, high quality water.
* require an abundant supply of high quality cool water.
* show an exponential relationship between length and weight.
* sleeping disease virus is an atypical alphavirus.
* survive on insects, crustaceans, and small fish.
Sea trout
* are brown trout that go to sea to feed
- trouts
- fished for especially at night using wet flies
- generally silvery and river trout olive-brown, both with spotted fins and sides
- known by lots of different names
- more commonly female in less nutrient-rich rivers
- part of brown trouts
- solitary hunters, preying on small fish and water creatures
* live in shoals when smolting and when feeding at sea.
Small trout
* continue to grow and are fed a commercially processed trout food.
* feed primarily on small crustaceans.
Trout fishing
* can be good in several lakes and streams, and the rivers.
* continues to improve as water temps warm.
* is almost nonexistent in some American states because of a foreign parasite
- best in late fall, winter, and early to late spring
- catch and release using artificial lures with barbless hooks
- poor due to high, muddy water
- popular in the summer months
- slow due to varying water levels
* sport for everyone.
Wild trout
* are extremely wary and difficult to catch
- solitary and alone
* swim in our streams.
Young trout
* are referred to as troutlet, troutling or fry.
* eat small items, such as plankton, crustaceans and insects.
* feed on insects and crustaceans
- primarily on insect larvae
### trouts:
Cutthroat trout
* are present and tend to occupy slack-water pools with overhead cover
- prey for larger fish as fry or fingerlings
- resident in Lead Queen Lake and caught easily with fly or baited hook
- visual predators
* grow to trophy size in some of the larger lakes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Trust
* Many trusts are structured to distribute inheritances at predetermined ages.
* Most Trusts have two or more Trustees
- trusts have identifiable beneficiaries
* Some trusts are single project trusts, set up to save a particular building
- assign ownership of the income and assets to different individuals
- create habitat for people rather than animals
- manage land owned by others or advise landowners on how to preserve their land
* acts like a lubricant that makes any group or organization run more efficiently.
* also allow a person to arrange for property to be put first to one use, then to another
- save heirs from the burden of financial responsibility
* are a great source of business
- means both of reducing tax liability and of simplifying inheritance
- popular estate planning instrument
- also great vehicles for transfering assets out of large estates
- basic estate planning tools
- complicated financial planning tools
- gifts that give back
* are legal devices that hold assets for the benefit of named beneficiaries
- entities
- private documents
- tax-planning tools in larger estates
- the cornerstones of effective estate planning
* can buy, own, and sell property
- help to reduce estate taxes while passing on assets to heirs
- own and sell property
- parcel out money over time, instead of all at once
- protect assets, avoid probate, increase privacy, and minimize taxes
- reduce income and death taxes
- serve a charitable purpose that also helps loved ones
* enable individuals to accomplish many different goals.
* grows and thrives when there genuine commitment to truth.
* have many uses in estate planning.
* involves risk and our perceptions of others.
* is companies
- consortiums
- made of honesty
- organizations
- part of faith
- properties
- traits
* keep businesses alive and surviving, generation after generation.
* occurs only when the child feels understood and accepted.
* play a central role in both national and international tax planning.
* provide a means whereby persons under a disability can be looked after
- protection from creditors, especially the creditors of beneficiaries
* replaces fear and intimidation.
### trust funds:
Public money
* are trust funds.
* comes essentially from taxation of the people and of their activities.
* is for public institutions
- there to be used for private gain
Charitable trust
* allow passage of assets to charity in various ways.
* are another type of irrevocable trust created by people with a lot of money
- subject to complex rules affecting income tax, gift tax and estate tax
* can often increase income to a donor from an appreciated asset.
* is trust.
* make it possible to move assets into a trust.
* minimize federal income and estate taxation.
* vary broadly in terms of their intended purpose.
Consumer trust
* company's most valuable asset.
* is an essential element of health care.
* is the key to Internet commerce, and consumers already trust their banks
- lifeblood of the life insurance industry | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### trust:
Land trust
* Most land trusts are also involved in environmental education
- private, nonprofit corporations
* Some land trusts are also involved in conservation education and related activities
- very particular about the lands that they receive or purchase
- help negotiate conservation transactions in which they play no other role
- preserve many different types of land
- purchase or accept donations of land or of conservative easements
* accept outright donations of property or conservation easements to prevent development.
* acquire, through purchase or donation, land or conservation easements on land.
* are an important tool for protecting land resources for the public benefit
- experts at helping landowners find ways to protect their land
- generally private, nonprofit charitable corporations dedicated to land conservation
- natural partners in preserving our nation's land legacy
- non-profit, charitable organizations which save land for public benefit
- nonprofit organizations that work to protect open space
- often all or almost-all volunteer organizations with limited budgets and resources
* are one of the fastest growing environmental movements
- tool to prevent the loss of low income housing
- tools people can use
* can act as a catalyst when public agencies want to buy protective interests in land
- also purchase or accept donations of land, or manage land owned by others
- help owners establish conservation easements
* help advise landowners on how to preserve their land.
* operate in rural, urban, and suburban areas.
* play important roles in watershed or community planning.
* protect land permanently and directly
- that has natural, recreational, scenic, historic or productive value
- property from development in more than one way
* provide a cost-effective approach to conservation.
* work cooperatively with landowners,the community, and government agencies.
Mutual trust
* comes from the past behavior of both parties.
* is an integral part of the components of job satisfaction
- natural when mutual respect is nurtured
* is the foundation of successful partnerships
- most important condition for the expression of deeper thought and feelings
* starts from communication and mutual understanding.
### trust | public trust:
Public employment
* is the most highly unionised sector of the economy.
* public trust.
Pure trust
* Pure Trusts are how the very wealthy protect their assets.
* are for security, asset protection, and the long term.
Testamentary trust
* are trusts that come into existence or are funded on the death of an individual.
* is trust.<|endoftext|>Turbidity
* Some turbidities lead to death
- turbidity can mean that there are harmful contaminants in the water
* Turbidities are cloudinesses.
* affects the aesthetic quality of water.
* blocks the sunlight that is so vital to aquatic life.
* can be an indicator of erosion, excessive nutrient loading and algal growth.
* caused by phytoplankton is usually highest in late summer - prime growing season.
* causes drinking water to be aesthetically objectionable.
* is basically a measure of how cloudy the water is
- cloudiness caused by sediment in suspension
- when water gets churned up with silt
* poses big problems in Florida s surface waters.
* refers to how clear the water is
- minute particles suspended in the water
* refers to the amount of suspended sediment within the water column
- waters sediment levels
* relates to the clarity of water
- effect that suspended particles have on water clarity
* serves as an indicator for the effectiveness of the water treatment process.
* threatens fish and other aquatic life.
### turbidity:
High turbidity
* can hinder the effectiveness of disinfectants
- reduce the effectiveness of disinfection
* indicates a risk of parasites, such as cryptosporidium.
* reduces the penetration of light. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### turbulence:
Countercurrent
* are another type of transverse current.
* is turbulence
Rip
* are invisible channels of water flowing away from the beach
- unpredictable currents, flowing away from the beach
* pick up kelp, debris, sand, giving water a dirty or muddy quality.
Turf quality
* is an overall visual rating of turf color, density, and texture.
* visual assessment of the turf as a putting surface.
Turgor
* gives structural support to plants.
* keeps petals and leaves extended into the air and prevents wilting.
* plays an important role in the support of soft plant tissue.
### two-layer product:
Electrical tape
* is an insulator
- located in repair shops
* two-layer product.
### two-way communication:
True prayer
* is an act of worship
- expression of the heart
- the response to the inner message
- therefore an expression of Christian faith
* two-way communication.
### two-way street:
International capitalism
* is imperialism.
* two-way street.
Typescript
* are matter
- programming language
- scripting language
* is matter
### typically mhz:
Computer clock
* Most computer clocks tend to drift a little, but usually only a second or two per day.
* are typically MHz.
### typing:
Touch typing
* are typing.
* is the real-time transfer of human ideas to the computer.
### tyre:
Intermediate tyre
* are used when the track surface is damp or during a light rain.
+ Formula One racing, Race, Pit stops, Wet weather tyres
* Teams are supplied with two different types of wet weather tyres. The intermediate and wet tyre. Intermediate tyres are used when the track surface is damp or during a light rain.<|endoftext|>Tyrosine
* also appears to have a mild stimulatory effect on the central nervous system
- does all of the above except for one factor
- helps with mood, alertness and stress resistance
* appears as fine, delicate needles in clusters or sheaves.
- stimulate the libido
* can act as a mild appetite suppressant.
* chemical found in all protein rich foods.
* confounds oxidative electrochemical detection of nitric oxide.
* enters the melanosomes and the enzyme tyrosinase catalyses it into dopaquinone.
* has an OH and so do serine and threonine.
* is amino acid.
* is an amino acid and building block for thyroid hormones
- hence component of proteins
- involved in the formation of norepinephrine which neural transmitter
- synthesized in the body from phenylalanine
- that works effectively when taken with glutamine
- which is found in most animal and plant proteins
- appetite suppressant and helps reduce body fat
- chemical compounds
- important to the structure of almost all proteins in the body
- made by a similar transamination reaction as that seen in phenylalanine synthesis
- needed for brain function
- phenols
- the immediate metabolite of phenylalanine
* is the precursor for both dopamine and noradrenaline
- dopamine, epinephrine, norepinephrine, thyroxines and melanin
* kinase dependent modulation of calcium entry in rabbit colonic muscularis mucosae
- inhibitors - potential for the treatment of primary brain tumours
- phosphorylates tyrosine of target protein
* mild antioxidant, reacting with free radicals that can cause damage to cells.
* non-essential amino acid synthesized from phenylalanine in the body.
* nonessential amino acid that is manufactured by the body or absorbed from food.
* precursor for the catecholamine norepinephrine
- of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine and dopamine, which regulate mood
- to a class of neurotransmitters called catecholamines
* reverses a cold-induced working memory deficit in humans.
* travels through the bloodstream to the brain, where it becomes L-dopa. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Uncertainty
* Many uncertainties exist in the science and application of genetic engineering.
* Refers to doubt concerning one's ability to predict outcomes.
* affects decisions.
* also exists in relation to wage development.
* arises due to measurement errors, systematic errors, and random sampling errors
- the inaccuracies of sensors used in measuring distances and angles
* associates with measurements.
* big source of psychological stress.
* can also lead to enormous societal costs
- be an aphrodisiac
* causes problems.
* central feature of any analysis of the potential risks of global climate change.
* characterizes the whole world.
* comes in degrees, sometimes small, sometimes very large.
* continues to characterize the financial markets.
* contributes to the excitement and suspense of living.
* differs from risk.
* discourages productive activity, saving and investing.
* embodies the idea of unknown probabilities, i.e. randomness of the external environment.
* exists because models are mimics of reality.
* explains many aspects of visual contrast detection and discrimination.
* fact of life common to all areas of science.
* function of the extent and quality of knowledge about a problem.
* gives rise to both opportunity and risk.
* is adaptive when problems change across trials.
* is an everyday experience
- important part of the environment of doing business
- inevitable characteristic of warfare
- associated with each link of the causal chain of climate change
* is caused by the difficulty of reliably and timeously detecting failures
- lack of evidence to support either belief or disbelief
* is central to environmental problem-solving
- trading
- common for most self-employed people, and especially for agricultural producers
- emotion
- expressed by means of qualitative certainty levels
- fundamentally part of the inherent honesty of the scientific process
* is inherent in combat
- the analysis of global warming issues
- modeled with a probability distribution on the state space
- part of the process of creation
- recognized as having an important role in policy making
- related to the prediction of incidental scenarios in the nuclear power plant
- relative to the possibility of a finer-grained cognitive domain
- replaced by abundance, and death is overcome by resurrection and immortality
- represented by probability distributions
* is the central issue of risk
- distribution of the er- rors of stage estimates about a specific discharge
- period between trends
- price employees pay for flying at a fraction of the standard ticket rate
- real challenge to artificial intelligence
- water which wears away the stone of resolve
* key difficulty in decision-making.
* limits effects.
* means that a variable, say, the oil price for the coming years, is simply unpredictable
- people are forced continually to glance back
* measure of the inability to predict.
* occurs while driving for many reasons.
* part of life.
* plays a very important role in the representation, access, and retrieval of information.
* refers to varying degrees of belief about various features of a process.
* stems from decisions
- patterns
* tends to make people uncomfortable.
* third major cause of difficulty in decision-making.
### uncertainty:
Economic uncertainty
* breeds volatility in the market.
* little like winter in that most things go into a holding pattern.
* means that jobs of all descriptions are in danger. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Unclaimed property
* Unclaimed properties are properties.
* can be any financial asset that appears to have been abandoned by the owner.
* includes both intangible and tangible property.
* is any financial asset that has been left inactive by the owner
- money or intangible property owed to an individual or business
- property abandoned by the owner for three years or more
- the blanket term given to abandoned assets, money or otherwise
* term given to assets or money that has been abandoned.
### uncommon diseases:
Blood cancer
* are uncommon diseases.
* is caused by malignancy that attacks the blood , lymphatic system , or bone marrow.
+ Blood cancer, Types: Cancer :: Blood disorders
Malignant change
* is uncommon.
* is very rare and manifests histologically as brain invasion
### unconsciousness:
Grogginess
* can be a sign of hypothermia.
* is unconsciousness
### understandable human feeling:
Indignation
* is an understandable human feeling
- anger
- hatred towards one who has done evil to another
- regarded as appropriate, controlled, positive type of anger
* vigorous spiritual reaction in the face of evident injustice.
### understandable human feeling | indignation:
Righteous indignation
* falls on sin and sin is no more.
* is concerned about the rights of others.
* mean between envy and malicious gladness.
* shtick Best left to frauds in politics.
* source of power and energy.
* useful kind of energy, if properly focused. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Unemployment
* Considers the physical and emotional impacts of unemployment.
* Identify the four types of unemployment.
* affects people differently
- some groups more than others
* also leads to anti-social behaviour caused by despair
- tends to be higher among poor household heads
* always increases at the beginning of summer.
* amounts to one half of the labor force.
* appears to fall even as trade deficits increase.
* becomes problems.
* breeds racial and gender intolerance.
* can have a devastating impact on individuals and their families
- mean sudden lifestyle changes for the entire family
- often lead to a loss of self-esteem
* causes severe economic problems.
* continues at the lowest rate in decades.
* continues to be concentrated in the young and unskilled population
- rise in most of Europe
* correlates strongly with a higher mortality rate due to heart disease and suicide.
* creates frustration which is expressed in negative actions.
* creates poverty and desperation
- social exclusion
* definite problem in Europe.
* depersonalizes people.
* exacerbates problems.
* exists only when money wages are arbitrarily raised or held above the market price.
* falls due to the high level of production.
* flow as well as a stock.
* has a devastating effect on communities, bringing poverty and despair
- pervasive and pernicious impact on health
- strongly depressing effect on happiness
- costs in addition to the obvious losses of income and security
* hits women and young people hardest.
* imposes a cost on the economy as a whole since fewer goods and services are produced
- costs on individuals and nations
* increases the competition for jobs, while decreasing wages.
* is also higher than average in the years surrounding devaluations
- relatively low in the United States and the United Kingdom
* is an economic problem, a problem of government and corporate policies
- unbalance between the supply and the demand of working hours
- another major cause of poverty in Africa
* is at a generation low and continuously declining
- depression levels
* is at historically high levels
- low levels
- some of the lowest measured rates in three decades
* is at the lowest rates in over thirty years
- root of most of the destructive forces in our societies
- built into the capitalist system
- common in Roma communities
- concentrated in groups of young people with particular experiences
* is considered low or high relative to the so-called natural rate of unemployment
- to be a 'lagging' indicator of the business cycle
- destructive of a person's identity and sense of self-worth
- endemic to capitalism
- endemic, and there are rising numbers of desperate people
- equally on the rise particularly in the developing countries
- felt most acutely by the young who comprise almost half the population
- followed by social problems such as alcoholism, malnutrition, crimes and illness
- half the national average
* is high because most people are either rural workers or work for the county council
- of discrimination
- for reasons other than inflexible labour markets
- high, and people struggle to make a living
- historically low and American companies are world leaders in the new technologies
- in double digits in many urban areas
- largely an urban problem
* is less important for a mature age person than for a young person
- than half the levels of the Great Depression
- like a contagion also because it spreads
* is low and people are still spending money
- with most of the workforce engaged in white collar employment
- low, and people have a choice in jobs
- measured as the percentage of the total labour force out of work
- much higher among women than among men
- never a price worth paying
* is now a hot issue in many advanced economies
- at record levels, as are the levels of poverty and inequality
* is one of the main reasons for immigration
- reasons leading to drug use
- serious problems in quite a number of countries in Southeast Asia
- permanently high, as in the Great Depression
- rampant among all nationality groups
* is rife and parents are unable to nourish their children
- at at least a quarter of the workforce
- in almost all countries
- riskier to life and limb than steeplejacking or mountain-climbing
- significantly higher for women than for men
- situations
- still a factor with the youth of today
* is the biggest waste of money there has ever been
- curse of many regional communities
- dark spot in the economic picture
- difference between labor force and employment by place of residence
* is the highest in Europe
- Georgia
* is the lowest in a generation
- it has been in a generation
- major cause of widespread poverty in South Africa
- useful for lowering wage rates
* is widespread among the wives and most live through their families
- and even the middle class is reduced to poverty
* major problem among parolees and contributes to their likelihood to recidivate.
* major problem in Botswana
- our society today
* means little money comes into an area resulting in poor maintenance of housing.
* national crisis.
* phenomenon of a changing economy.
* problem fundamental to the workings of the system.
* provides a measure of people at risk of being in financial or social distress.
* remains a major social and economic problem
- problem in virtually all transition economies
- high in many parts of California
* represents a loss of revenue for society.
* result of self-serving manipulations of the money system.
* rises around the world, and the outlook remains dim.
* still climbs when immigration declines
- impacts the young
* stressful time for the entire family.
* strikes all kinds of people from all parts of society.
* symptom of a sick economy and, indeed, a sick society.
* tax paid entirely by the employer rather than withheld from the employees wages.
* temporary condition.
* tends to rise during a recession
- rise, which eases wage inflation, although at a human cost
- run at about twice the national average
* therefore seems to have an independent causal effect on male mortality.
* tremendous blow in the lives of people.
* usually lags a downturn in the economy.
* The 'unemployment rate' is the number of unemployed people divided by the total population of that age group of a country. The unemployment rate is influenced by many things, including the government of a country to the average age of a country's population. Unemployment bad thing for society.
* varies negatively with output.
* world-wide condition.
+ South Africa, Economy: English-speaking countries
* Unemployment is very high. Income inequality is about the same as Brazil. Informal jobs went up. Overall unemployment got worse. The average South African household income went down a lot between 1995 and 2000. As for racial inequality, Statistics South Africa said that in 1995 the average white household earned four times as much as the average black household. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### unemployment:
Chronic unemployment
* affects one out of five workers.
* is common for individuals with traumatic brain injuries.
Cyclical unemployment
* is associated with recessions
- due to a. technology change or foreign competition
- the temporary unemployment caused by recessions
* occurs when the economy goes into recession.
Frictional unemployment
* helps the economy function more efficiently.
* is caused by the time it takes to find another job
- due to a. technology change or foreign competition
- short term
- temporary unemployment arising from the normal job search process
High unemployment
* exacerbates problems.
* good predictor of welfare rolls.
* is also a sign of economic stagnation for the state
- associated with lower inflation rates
* reduces wages, while high demand for workers increases wages and benefits.
Higher unemployment
* accounts for the lion's share of the rise in welfare dependency.
* translates directly into higher tax burdens.
Low unemployment
* boosts the real economic wealth of a nation - skills and knowledge.
* causes inflation.
* enhances workers bargaining power.
* goes with higher productivity.
* is one reason why middle managers are scarce.
* leads to higher median family incomes.
* makes for a job seeker's market.
* means a shortage of skilled labor in software, aerospace, and construction.
Massive unemployment
* common phenomenon in Africa.
* grips the people as communism moves out and market economies move in.
Structural unemployment
* is due to a. technology change or foreign competition
- changes in the structure of the economy or demand for labor
- high with about one in three persons officially unemployed
* occurs primarily because A. Of seasonal weather patterns or holidays, etc
- when A. workers have quit one job and are looking for a better one
* represents a mismatch between supply of labor and demand for workers.
Unemployment compensation
* is conditioned on prior participation in the labor force
- paid for a certain number of weeks
- social insurance
* offers basic protection against economic insecurity.
* protects, in part, the lost earnings of an employee who is out of work.
* provides a safety net for job losers in search of new employment
- income to an employee who is terminated
- temporary income for workers who have lost their jobs
Unemployment insurance
* covers relatively fewer workers and for shorter periods.
* is financed entirely by a tax on payrolls paid by employers.
* is funded almost exclusively by employers
- entirely by employer contributions
- more time-limited than in other countries
- paid to workers who lose their job through no fault of their own
- required of businesses with employees
### unfossiliferous:
Glacial sediment
* Most glacial sediment is unfossiliferous.
* Much glacial sediment is deposited by meltwater beneath or beyond the ice margin.<|endoftext|>### unhealthy habit:
Physical death
* is also a result of sin
- an unhealthy habit
- bad, but spiritual death means punishment through eternity
- but the beginning of the spiritual life, the eternal life
* is separation of the body and spirit
- soul and spirit from the body
- the passing from one place to another
* is the separation of the body and the soul
- from the soul
- universal only because sin is universal
* occurs when one is separated from the body
- the soul is separated from the body
* temporary separation of our corruptible flesh and our eternal spirit. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Unicellular organism
* Most unicellular organisms are microscopic, but some are visible to the naked eye
- of microscopic size and are thus classified as microorganisms
* Most unicellular organisms have cell membranes
- porous membranes
- live in environments
- produce biomass
* Some unicellular organisms are said to segregate salts of strontium from sea-water
- sensitive to light
- do interact when they combine briefly for reproduction
* are as such difficult to be classified into animals and plant categories
- bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes - anything made up of a single cell
- categorized as prokaryotes and multicellular under eukaryotes
- composed of one simple cell
- immortal
- invisible to the naked eye
* are made up of one cell
- only one cell
- single cell only
- often times less complex or adaptive as multicellular
- single celled and self sufficient as the name signifies itself
- small are mostly invisible to the naked eye
- typically smaller and less advanced
- ubiquitous to most environments on Earth
* are very different from multicellular organisms
- simple but they can carry out life
* can be innocuous to humans, but they are also responsible for diseases
- reproduce faster and in greater numbers
- use flagella, cilia, or pseudopods for motility
* carry out all functions of life
- specialized functions within a single cell
* consist of one general cell under which all activities are housed.
* do quite well.
* eat using a processes called phagocytosis.
* exhibit holozoic type of nutrition.
* have a cytoskeleton that provides structural support
- greater surface area to volume ratio
- one parents, and the multi-cellular organisms have two parents
- their own specific role to play in the unique ecosystem of nature
* include amoebas.
* perform almost all life functions as individuals.
* reproduce asexually by the process of binary fission or budding
- through cell division
* use cell reproduction to reproduce period.
+ Cell, Kinds of eukaryotic organisms, Unicellular<|endoftext|>Uniformity
* depends mostly on the mixing of the bath fluid.
* detriment to successful teamwork.
* includes gender, frame, muscling, weight, color, etc.
* increasingly bulldozes over local diversity, be it physical, biological or cultural.
* is almost wholly dependent on temperature control
- defined simply as how evenly a sprinkler delivers water over the ground
- regularity
- similarity
* is the hallmark of machines
- watchword of industrial agriculture
* key issue for high efficiency and high density compression of the fuel.
* leads to conformity
- fascism
* means every plant or soil surface receives the same amount of water.
* means that all kinds of visualization is approached in the same way
- property that is liable to the tax is taxed at a uniform rate
* plays a similar role in decisions regarding other types of irrigation systems.
* protects consumers and benefits businesses by ensuring fair competition.
* provides security while maintaining a standard of proper dress.
* refers to the evenness with which water is applied throughout a field.
* requires equality in the burden of taxation.
### unincorporated community:
South dildo
* South Dildo is an unincorporated community.
+ Dildo, Newfoundland and Labrador, South Dildo: Towns in Newfoundland and Labrador
* South Dildo is an unincorporated community. At the beginning of the 20th century, South Dildo had lumbering work. It supplied a schooner to the Labrador fishery. It had the roadside attraction of a wooden life-size humpback whale head. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### unique commodity:
Electrical power
* Most electrical power generates components.
* Some electrical power is consumed by bulbs
- light bulbs
- generated by wind
* Some electrical power requires heat water
* generating plants run on coal.
* has units of watts.
* includes the transportation and storage of fuel essential to that system.
* is central to every aspect of life
- derived from diesel generators and most buildings are heated with oil furnaces
- expressed in watts and function of the voltage and the current
* is measured in units called kilowatts
- necessary for many science experiments
- produced in real-time
- the bedrock of modern production
- transferred magnetically throught the iron core
* operates everything else.
* supplies to drive motors.
* supplies to electric drive motors
* unique commodity.
### unique plant:
Nerium oleander
* is one of the most widely used plants in California landscapes.
* unique plant.
Celtic culture
* are unique.
* is very ancient.<|endoftext|>### uniquely american field:
Emergency medicine
* draws upon various specialties in the course of patient care.
* has close links with a large number of other specialities.
* includes a lot of orthopedics, pediatrics and trauma.
* is medicine
- one of the specialties in which a doctor can enter a residency program
- real life
- the fastest growing field in medicine
* is the only field in urban areas in which feldshers are still used
- specialty that allows doctors to use every facet of medicine
- youngest of medical specialties
* uniquely American field. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Unity
* All unity unification of the many, and the many are meaningful only in relation to unity.
* accepts the virgin birth as an experience in the spiritual unfoldment of each individual.
* allows people to search and grow at a pace of their choice.
* also believes in eternal life and views the present moment as part of eternal life
- contributes to the strengthening of indigenous peoples
- creates an atmosphere of harmony and expectation of great things
- has to do with how various groups of people get along
* always has a cohesiveness that holds the diverse elements together.
* arises out of polarity.
* basic feature of the perspectival aspect of consciousness.
* begins with individuals.
- the oneness and freedom of all people
* can come only through uniformity
- exist only when there is allegiance to a single objective religious authority
* denies evil, pain, sickness, and poverty
- the reality of sin and evil
* describes the idea of tying the landscape together into an orderly design.
* exists because of allegiance to a single objective authority
- in a vacuum
- when elements are tied together to convey a common communication goal
- where there is life
* is achieved by color, form, and repetition
- when predicted oxygen uptake is equal to measured oxygen uptake
- all there is
* is also a solid ballclub
- the consequence of love
- always more difficult in prosperity than in adversity, when survival is at risk
* is an asset to every form of human enterprise
- expression of love
- important part of church life
- open-ended religion
- created by the posture or the way the women hold themselves
- essential if diverse peoples are to work toward a common future
- expressed through the children as the third element
- founded on truth, and is fostered by a clear exposition of truth
- inherent in the scene itself, what the eye can reach and no more
- love tying needy people together
- more a way of life than a religion
- one of the keys to the power of organized labor
- political parties
- primarily interested in building lives rather than churches or centers
- real and an open secret which stretches to eternity and embraces the totality of life
- seen in common anatomical features and in the universality of the cell theory
- singleness of effect or style, related style, or totality of related parts
- software
* is the atmosphere in which love thrives
- basic principle of all religions
- beginning point of love, the point where love can come to abide
- bond of trust
- feeling that everything in the work of art works together and looks like it fits
- first attribute of the church
- nature of things
- passage of integration and initiation
- secret, a complex, understanding and embracing unity
- weaving together of Spiritual interaction for a common purpose
- word which best describes the aim of the movement
- work of young men
- world's key, and racial harmony
- used to describe the sense of things belonging together in a work of art
- what brought the early church together
- whatever enlarges affiliation, loyalty, and commitment
* means acting with unity in reaching and carrying out our decisions
- one multiplied by itself
- oneness in spirit, aims, interests and feelings
* occurs when all have come back to Rome and are catholic.
* place where people come to enjoy the beauty of nature and learn about themselves.
* refers to the strength of the relationship between the elements of a visual.
* relates to a common thirst in our wilderness called earth.
* religious movement that began over a century ago.
* spiritual resource for daily living.
* teaches that death transition rather than an end
- the cross symbolizes the crossing out of all false beliefs
* way of life that leads to health, prosperity, happiness, and peace of mind
### unity:
Team unity
* big part of soccer.
* is essential in the game of volleyball. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### universal constant:
Popular music
* crazes extend beyond the groups and individuals themselves.
* has a separate language now, with many fewer words in common.
* includes a range of vocal styles.
* is about falling in love with the opposite sex
- much more threaded through everyday life than film or television
- music
- musical style
- one form of expression for the individual
- the backdrop for much of adolescent life
- what the most people like to listen to at the same time
* responds to, reflects, and influences our culture and society.
* tends to distort the image of police officers.
* universal constant.
### universal language:
Visual language
* allows the natural and optimized formulation of visual computing.
* introduce a new dimension to programming.
* is also a symbol system used for communication.
* universal language.<|endoftext|>### universal trait:
Dignity
* can have a look, an attitude, pride, or simple or elegant presence.
* characterizes our interactions with consumers, families and fellow employees.
* gives an individual a sense of value and worth.
* has nothing to do with sex or maintaining one's virginity.
* is associated with feeling good about oneself
- attributed only to sacredness
- bearings
- in moral excellence
- inherent in the fact of being a human being
- one of the more precious of human attributes
- pride and self-respect
- related to a student's sense of self worth and respect for others
- status
* is the difference between an honest person and a jerk
- property by virtue of which beings possess moral status
- simple ideal that the working class strives to achieve
- word that comes to mind
* means a sense of one's proper self-worth
- being worthy and honorable
- treating another as if they have intrinsic needs
* universal trait.<|endoftext|>### universal truth:
Hardship
* are necessary for the growth of our soul.
* bonafide condition difficult to endure.
* consists in thinking Hardship.
* depends on a family's individual and personal situation.
* encompasses more than mere economic deprivation.
* give birth to endurance, and suffering yields greater compassion.
* is an opportunity for growth, for building muscle
- difficulty
- misfortune
- the reality of their lives
* pay for employees sent to live and work in expensive places.
* universal truth.
### universal truth | hardship:
Economic hardship
* can also force children to become soldiers.
* common challenge many fathers face.
* contributes to a variety of health problems.
* is frequently on the heels of high debt and structural adjustment.
Undue hardship
* is an action requiring significant difficulty or expense for a business
* limitation on an employer's obligation to make reasonable accommodation.
* standard that takes into account costs and health and safety concerns.
### universally vector files:
Engineering graphic
* are universally vector files.
* is also a method of solving certain engineering problems.<|endoftext|>Universe
* All universes are as void as space.
* Many universes can exist, with all possible combinations of physical laws and constants.
* are biggest things
- content
- created by gods
- infinites
- made of string
- natural objects
- olds
* can be synchronous or anynchronous
- interact with each other at the quantum level via wormholes
- literally spring into existence as a quantum fluctuation of Nothing
* consists of two states.
* define the kinds of real populations in which it is relevant to test a particular idea.
* desire messes.
* divide to create two similar to cellular patterns.
* includes sections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### universe:
Nature
* All nature is governed by laws which annihilate evolutionary theory.
* Geneticsfocuses on advances relevant to human genetics.
* abounds with flowers, herbs, and wildlife
- healing herbs for the female reproductive system
- homologous organs
- microbial cultures in the air, soil and water
- spiral patterns from the shape of nautilus shells to that of galaxies
* also contributes to the process of regeneration
- gives children a place to play, a place they can run and jump, swim, and build forts
- helps supply the extra calcium needed in pregnancy by improving calcium absorption
- holds the power to heal, kill and transform ugliness into beauty
- includes the universe and the galaxies and has a lot of power
- influences personal values that enrich the human spirit and guide behavior
- introduces solids, liquids, and gases into the atmosphere
- orders the lives of other species through instinctive rhythms and harmonies
- places limits on the speed with which genetic change can take place within species
* also produces ozone each time lighting flashes
- nearer to the earth's surface each time lightning flashes
- provides babies with a natural sense of wonder to happily engage in learning
- sees and thus possesses the power of sight
* balances things so that the food webs last a long time.
* based tourism is the major sector of the tourism industry.
* book from which the wisdom of the divine can be read.
* breaks down formerly-living materials to make earth
- organic material, turning it into humus
- plant wastes through decay
- it down for the microbes to eat in the soil
* can adapt to change, even if it's human induced changes to the environment
- only produce low information things such as waves and crystals
* can produce even larger particle energies
- rainfall from clouds that are warmer than freezing
* causes the wheat's shell to crack by using temperature, humidity, and pressure.
* conserves water by recycling it over thousands of years.
* consists of one timeless, unified, rational and spiritual reality.
* contains elements that can contribute to health and well-being
- everything and, therefore, contains intelligences
* contributes about one fifth of the chlorine released into the atmosphere.
* controls animal populations with the availability of food.
* creates essential oils from basic hydrocarbon molecules.
* cycle, of which natural death part.
* describes what a person can do, but the person does it.
* designs reproductive strategies to produce the strongest, smartest, most viable organisms.
* determines association - lion in prides, sheep in flocks, deer in herd
- environment - squirrels in trees, trout in water, moles in ground
* dictates that the wolf be an efficient predator in order to survive.
* discipline of the understanding in intellectual truths.
* does have many sounds
- include science, philosophy and art
* erodes things according to their composition.
* everywhere is prolific of live things, animal and vegetable.
* evolves by keeping ideas that work
- forward in time
* exposes the fossil by using wind and rain to wear away the layers of rock.
* feeds off of the weak and the dead.
* flows into the mind and flows out transformed by it into the objects of perception.
* follows the universal effects of pleiotropy and polygeny.
* freezes seeds during their dormant winter period with no adverse effects.
* gives humankind love and humankind gives nature love.
* habitat within which various creatures live.
* has a cure for all kinds of diseases and dilemmas that occur in people
- habit of maintaining the integrity of the bloodstream at all costs
- nearly four billion year history of testing the materials and products and processes
- soothing, restorative effect on humans
- way of protecting creatures from starvation to the point of extinction
- air, sea, and land
* has many methods for mating the male and female cells
- recipes to mix oil and water
- strategies for making way for new generations to carry on evolution
* has many ways of ensuring the survival of the fittest
- taking care of water
- mechanisms to keep gastrointestinal contents flowing in the correct direction
- no other phenomena that are more ubiquitous and easily observed than change
- numerous agents which can quell the inflammatory response, usually without side effects
- some special natural defense systems
* has the ability to maintain balance within itself
- world's most extensive collection of Canadian skeletons
* hikes teach children about ecology and the importance of protecting our environment.
* human construction.
* human, mental construction.
* imposes rhythms that are weekly, monthly, and daily on all forms of animal and insect life.
* includes animals, trees, plants, and clean air
* influences human behavior by nature and nurture working together.
* invariably seeks out harmony and balance.
* is able to overrule the law of the conservation of energy
- absolutely indifferent to the human condition and governs by the rule of randomness
- academic journals
- all of reality
* is also a state of perfect equality amongst all men
- an object of beauty and wonder
- present in one of the light sources
- the sky and the wind, the rivers and the bedrock below it
* is always in a constant state of flux and change as is the individual
- of flux and transformation
* is an active, creative force or process, natura naturans
- ebb and flow which regulates the evolution and involution of all life forms
- element of the world, a mere characteristic to be encountered in the world
- evolving system characterized by a struggle for existence
- important source of new pharmaceuticals
* is an infinite sphere in which the center is everywhere, the circumference is nowhere
- of which the center is everywhere and the circumference nowhere
- sphere, whose centre is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere
* is an international journal of science
- jurnal covering all areas of science
- arguably one of the most prestigious scientific journals in the world
- beauty in motion
- blamed for many evils that are created by authoritarian systems
* is both good and evil
- scientific and spiritual
- celebrated in chant, song, and dance
- complexs
- controlled at every turn, even genetically
- cruel, but crueler are the unnatural acts committed by our fellow human beings
- eternal, but eternally in a state of transformation
- everywhere around the universe
- exploited by industry to generate profit, often by subsidization
- filled with abundant energy sources
* is full of cycles
- spirits and hence spiritual
- toxins and diseases that are very dangerous and destructive
- given through and as phenomena
- governed by laws that all contribute to making the world a beautiful place
- harmony and balance and eternity
- in the process of change all the time
- indifference to the individual, the species is favored over the individual
- instrumentally valuable in serving the needs of other organisms as well as our own
- integral part of human being
- interested in food and sleep, legs and livers, and babies
- layers of patterns interwoven with each other, forming systems
- life, all the species on earth
- made up of both body and soul
- much greater than human beings
- no more in the control of humans as it is animals
- often fierce and devastating, as is the case when tornadoes, hurricanes, etc. strike
- on the side of every human being
- one of the world's best science journals
* is part of all of our daily lives
- personality
- the divinity of the universe
- parts without a whole
- presumed to be the ultimate, self-existent, and sole reality
- rational because reason is none other than nature conscious of itself
* is reflected in art through works such as paintings, origami, and bonsai trees
- the human brain
- resilient and natural disturbances are part of the life cycle of all ecosystems
- respected and valued because it is part of the essence of god
- responsible for everything that is, at least on Earth
- simply a collective noun, a name for the sum total of the universe
- something to be controlled and consumed
- spiritual, mental, or organic
- system , or that which comes to be as the actuality of result
* is the best source for putting out fires
- common, universal language, understood by all
- earth's natural state in the absence of human interference
- eclectic relationship between animals, plants, earth, air and water
- flow diagram for everything that has a brain
- force of the tree
- general name for all things
- instigator of evil
- invisible valuation that creates and governs visible nature
- material world
* is the most cited general sciences journal in the world
- important aspect of the universe in which humans only play a part
- powerful physician of the body and mind
* is the only source of natural resources, both material and energy
- way in which fireflies can reproduce
- outcome of intelligent design
- realm of works of the creator
- reflection of the innate order, perfection and interrelationships of creation
- reservoir of power and energy
- revelation of truths normally unseen by the eye
- rivers and the lake of the world that animals drink from
- small creek in an open meadow or the vast mountains and rivers
* is the source of all life
- genetic diversity and resources necessary to our survival
- subject and object of some of our deepest desires and impulses
- substance, mind, the function
- symbol of spirit
* is the ultimate recycler and obeys the fundamental laws of science
- struggle, the struggle to live
- test of strength, endurance, and intelligence
- utilization of material
- wind beneath the wind
* is the world's leading science magazine
- most prestigious weekly journal of science
- thought of as something created by god for the use and benefit of mankind
- to be explained in terms of nature, without reference to the supernatural
- traits
- types
- vast, deep, high, intelligent, infinite, and eternal
- viewed as sacred
- well represented with animals, trees, flowers, sunlight and showers
- what it is regardless of belief, and it is the goal of science to understand how it works
- where children are growing up
- without the crown of human faculties and attributes
* kills for food.
* leading international science journal.
* leads everything, guiding every being in a specific direction.
* lends a hand to animals infected with gastrointestinal worms.
* likes balance so in most cases the electrons balance out the protons.
* limits all life forms sooner or later.
* living unity of living units, in each of which the power of the whole is present.
* maintains a kind of balance where certain extremes take place, which maintain the balance.
* major theme in our lives.
* makes many other beverages naturally, such as fruit juices, cider, and milk.
* means genetical factors that contribute to human development.
* metaphor for human life.
* never intends for all animals to reproduce.
* often shows light and dark colors working well together
- suffers when hedgerows are taken away to make fields bigger
- uses mimicry to confuse predators
* oneness with the earth and a oneness with oneself.
* operates on relative degrees, relative balances, and so on.
* own aromas that exist in every fragrant flower, herb and many fruits.
* part of a greater whole, which is beyond time and space.
* passes it continually through the water cycle.
* perpetuates life through a constant exchange of resources with the surrounding environment.
* physical manifestation of deity.
* plays a key role in healing.
* plays an important aspects in forming on one's personality
- part in keeping Queensland green and clean
* plays an important role in the growth and development of any forest, urban or rural
- success or failure of all wildflower plantings
* popular subject for many impressionist artists.
* potential place which stimulates humility and patience in humans.
* prefers to grow plants together intensively.
* process that can sometimes result in sentient minds like our own.
* produces animals that all possess a single common denominator, environmental adaptability
- chlorine as neutrons from solar radiation strike argon gas in the atmosphere
- hurricanes to transfer heat from the tropics to the northern latitudes
- hydrogel materials in the form of cell surface sugars
* produces ozone in other ways, too
- on a large scale when lightning passes through air
- the rest through geysers, the respiration of organisms, springs, and volcanoes
* projection of and an expression of spirit.
* promotes the vibrancy of a species by encouraging genetic superiority.
* provides a reservoir for healthy ecological functions and biological diveristy
- animals with a powerful instinct to flee predators
- biological means of converting solar energy into living plants and animals
- for many species to survive by having multiple offspring
* provides many different ways for a species to earn a living
- ways for animals to make themselves hard to see
- matter and energy in the form of atoms and molecules and solar radiation
- order and stability for humans
- silica, a vital nutrient, in a number of foods
- some natural pest control by the presence of insects which feed on other arthropods
* provides the food and shelter each time a leaf falls onto the ground
- inspiration for people, both artist and scientist, to create things
- major portion of the environmental influence on corn growth and yields
* recycles fresh water
- water by the water cycle
* refers to heredity, whereas nurture refers to environment.
* refuge to which people turn, time and again, to be nourished and revitalised.
* relationship where every organism has a niche.
* requires animals to work for food as an essential requirement of survival.
* responds to both quantities of humidity.
* retains the same relative scales throughout and between all living things.
* returns wood to the soil through the action of decay fungi, bacteria, and insects.
* rewards savings in many ways for many species.
* seeks a balance between populations of wildlife and their habitat.
* selects behaviors that increase the likelihood of sending one's genes to the future.
* serves as a symbol for the captivity and death of the soul.
* set of activities organized intrinsically by a set of principles
- miracles that happen all the time
* shuts off the light with the setting of the sun.
* sleeps through the night To be awakened by the morning dew.
* social product, but societies are also a product ofnature.
* soothes the soul and revives the spirit.
* source for many medicines etc
- of raw materials
* speaks in symbols and in signs.
* state of nothingness.
* synthesizes many stereoregular polymers, for example cellulose and rubber.
* then develops new cells which thrive on less oxygen.
* therefore codes all animals to hold their ground when right, and to slink away when wrong.
* thus satisfies herbivores, omnivores and even carnivores.
* tightly linked web of delicate relationships between organisms.
* too has power, unity, mystery, and beauty.
* ultimately acts as a guide and the soul of all moral being.
* unfolds in such a way that the strong survive and the weak perish.
* untouched by humans wealth of biodiversity, splendour, beauty and good reason.
* uses a free energy source, light, and lays it down
- dead wood to return nutrients to the soil
- only one enantiomer of amino acids in the construction of enzymes and proteins
- pigments , mainly chlorophylls , to absorb a broad part of the visible spectrum
* usually applies force as heat.
* valued resource for spiritual life.
* web devoted to nature writing and the American philosophy of nature.
* weekly international journal of science.
* works in cycles with no beginning and no end
- longer time frames than humans do
- on the principle that waste is simply a resource out of place
* works through dualism and that is why medicines and diseases continue to exist together
- the balancing of differential electrical, magnetic, and chemical charges
- to keep things in balance
+ Flurbereinigung, History: Agriculture :: Nature :: Wines :: Geography of Germany :: Food in Germany
* In the last few years the government have realized that the way the changes have been made are not always good. Nature often suffers when hedgerows are taken away to make fields bigger. Flurbereinigung today tries to keep some of the hedgerows and small groups of trees which sometimes stand in the middle of fields. They are good places for birds to nest and other animals like to live there, too. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### universe | nature:
Buddha nature
* is just another name for human nature, our true human nature.
* pervades the whole universe.
Mother nature
* can be hard on poor genetic examples of animals.
* is the goddess of the scientists and metorologist.
* presents the dog with insulation in the summer and in the winter.
Virtual universe
* can be very large, both in physical space units and in content.
* expand to the edges of imagination.<|endoftext|>### unlimited resource:
Geothermal energy
* Most geothermal energy affects environments.
* Most geothermal energy releases gases
- toxic gases
* Most geothermal energy uses effects
- heat
* Some geothermal energy produces steam.
* appears as stream from deep beneath the earth's surface.
* can contaminate the waste water and make it more difficult for disposal
- provide a continuous energy source for a long time
* clean and inexpensive form of energy used by many countries around the world
- renewable energy source
* comes directly from the natural heat generated within the interior of the earth.
* comes from heat trapped under the earth's surface
- natural heat below the earth's surface
- the heat deep within the earth
* comes from the heat within the earth, and is used to make electricity
* contributes a large portion of U.S.energy demand.
* has a very reliable future because it is constantly being produced in the earth.
* is America s leading renewable energy export
- an unlimited resource
- available wherever the earth's large oceanic and crystal plates slide apart
* is derived from hot dry rocks, magma, hot water springs and natural geysers
- magma, hot water springs, natural geysers, etc
- the natural heat of the earth
- energy produced from heat contained within the earth
- everywhere but mostly at a safe depth
- found at only a few special locations
- generated by groundwater in the form of steam
* is heat derived from the earth
- energy from deep in the earth
- manifested in a variety of forms and geologic settings
- nearly as old as the Earth itself
* is renewable and emits almost no carbon dioxide
- heat energy from deep in the earth
* is the heat contained below the Earth's crust
- natural heat of the earth stored deep below the earth's surface
- thermal energy generated and stored in the Earth
* is used best in the generation of electricity
- by pumping heat stored in land mass into buildings
* is used for heating all the houses there plus electricity production
- and cooling systems
- usually in the form of hot water or steam
* lies underneath the hotspots on the surface.
* produces almost no sulfur dioxide emissions and no nitrogen oxides.
* proven resource for direct heat and power generation.
- no carbon dioxide and few pollutants compared to fossil fuels
* represents the leading edge of heating and cooling technology
- home heating and cooling technology
- heat from inside the earth to make clean power
- steam from underground reservoirs to spin electric generation turbines
* uses the heat from deep underground to make electricity
- in the water to generate steam and drive turbines
* vast non-polluting source of heat and electricity.
* vital part of a sustainable future.
+ Renewable resource, Types of renewable resources, Geothermal: Energy :: Materials :: Economics
* Geothermal energy uses the heat from deep underground to make electricity. It can be used to produce steam which goes up a pipe, which then pushes a turbine. It is best used in places where the Earth's crust is not real thick. In the United States, most of the western states have areas where this works. California makes the most geothermal energy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### unmarried woman:
Spinster
* are unmarried women.
* is an old-fashioned word for women who never marry
- unmarried woman
+ Spinster, Other meanings: Family
* A spinster is also someone who spins yarn from wool using a spinning wheel. Spinsters use the yarn to make clothes like a tailor, seamster, seamstress. One famous spinster is the girl in the story of Rumpelstiltskin.<|endoftext|>Unnatural ill health
* All ill health begins in the digestive track and intestines.
* Ill health can result from distorted or compromised nervous system control of the body
- causes loss of productivity
- disordered energy cascade, a stagnant area and a dead end of congestion and pain
- has the biggest single negative impact on happiness
* Ill health is an unnatural state
- one of the primary causes for an individual or family's slide into poverty
- thought to be associated with imbalances or blockages in energy flow through the body
- makes poor families poorer, through loss of earnings and expenditure on health care
- pathological state
- potent cause of job loss and reduction in income
- takes time to develop
### unobtrusive technique:
Content analysis
* involves systematic study of messages conveyed in natural language text.
* is an unobtrusive technique.
* methodology that seeks to find patterns in textual data.
* product of the electronic age.
* research method used to classify and compare textual materials
- tool focused on the actual content and internal features of media<|endoftext|>### unpaid external experiences:
Clinical experience
* address the care of children with commonly occurring illnesses.
* are unpaid external experiences
- learning experiences
* focus on individual s responses to illness.
* is correlated with theory in the biological and behavioral sciences
- providing direct care to clients with acute or chronic illness
* occur during days, evenings, nights and weekends.
* occur in a variety of distributive health-care settings
- health care settings
- acute care agencies
* occur in acute care and community health settings
- in community setting
- long term care settings
- primary and long term care settings
- the acute care setting and in the community
* take place in acute care settings.
Unrelated organism
* come to resemble one another.
* living in the same environment often display similar characteristics.
Unsaturated compound
* can add hydrogen and become saturated
- undergo addition reactions as well as substitution
* react more readily than saturated ones.<|endoftext|>### unsaturated fatty acid:
Peanut oil
* contains a combination of monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats.
* great base for stir-fry oils, since it can take the high temperatures.
* has a high smoking point and is ideal for the high temperatures of a wok
- slightly more saturated fatty acids
- unique properties
* is an unsaturated fatty acid
- arachis hyopogaea , water is aqua and egg is ovum
- best since it has a high smoking point
- the main cooking medium
- used extensively for cooking and for preparing margarine
* is used in the Orient and is the oil of choice for Chinese cooking
- lotus paste to give it an added fragrance
- to fry foods
Unusual phenomenon
* Some unusual phenomena are caused by sunlight.
* Unusual phenomena affect presence.
### unweathered:
Laterite soil
* are unweathered.
* have many names.
Upholstery
* Some upholstery is part of stools.
* includes sections.
* is covering
- part of seats
- protective covering
- trade
Urea
* Some urea is excreted by animals.
* comes from muscles.
* contains water.
* excretes in urine.
* forms urine.
* have lower hardness, heat resistance and moisture resistance than melamines.
* is an organic compound
- formed by breakdowns
- synthesized in livers
* serves functions. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### urine containing myoglobine:
Myoglobinuria
* is always a big problem
- indicated by positive urinalysis with few RBCs on microscopic evaluation
* urine containing myoglobine.
Usefulness
* depends on ability
- accuracy
* is an important term in accounting
- quality
- the outlet of material
- thus a function of perception
* covers a scope much broader than notability.
### usefulness:
Avail
* are bands.
* is usefulness<|endoftext|>### usefulness:
Function
* Every function defined for complex numbers has a simple generalization to hypercomplex numbers
- depends upon an impulse generated in some part of the brain
* Identify mathematical functions.
* Many functions are the result of activity of the whole brain.
* Most functions relate to bone metabolism
* Some functions are also essential to pathogen reproduction and survival
- depend on energy
- involve phagocytosis
- relate to reproductive fitnesses
* are a fundamental part of any computer programming language
- way of assigning value to a natural resource
- about relationships between variables whose values co-depend on each other
* are assessed by blood tests
- examinations
- measurements
- covariants
- duties
- equal when they take on the same values for every point they are defined on
- expressions with the value of their return value
- mathematical objects that arise whenever one quantity depends upon another
- measured in terms of reproduction and viability
- predefined formulas that perform certain tasks
- procedures that can be called from within the Shading Language
- recursive functions
- social gathering
* are the internal nodes of the program trees
- methods for recombining data, for deriving new data from old
- utilities
* complex-valued function on the configuration space of two particles.
* determine behaviour.
* enhance survival.
* have different requirements
- parameters
- what are called arguments in mathematics
* help scientists.
* is an energy transformation
- insulator, protective tissue, and site of energy storage
- concentrated in the brain stem and in villages in the cortex known as centres
- energy expressed by or through vital force
* is one of the three important features of communication
- or more symbols seperated by commas
- plastic in the young brain
- related to structure
* is studied by computer modelling of the circuit architecture
- through the characterization of mutant phenotypes
* is the criterion that concerns how and when a musician uses a composition
- intended use of a object
- number of function calls that executed as a result of that line of source code
- special and normal action of any organ or part of a living animal
- to build, maintain, and repair body tissues as well as provide energy when needed
* protects heart, lungs, thymus, etc.
* refers to the transfer of energy and matter between the environment and the biota.
* relate to ability
- health
* relationship between a thing and other things.
* represent the systematic dependence of one quantity on another.
* require energy.
* solve problems.
+ Relation (mathematics): Mathematics
* An example for such a relation might be a function. Functions associate keys with values. The set of all functions is a subset of the set of all relations - a function is a relation where the first value of every tuple is unique through the set.
### usefulness | function:
Biological function
* Many biological functions are rhythmic such as heartbeat and breathing
- as the short rhythms of breathing and heartbeat
- depend on the interaction of small organized groups of proteins
* Most biological functions relate to bone metabolism
* does come down eventually to the protein level.
* emerges primarily from protein molecules. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### usefulness | function:
Brain function
* declines when oxygen levels fall due to a high-fat diet.
* is influenced for better or worse by drugs of various types.
* relies on appropriate protein.
* starts extremely early during the second month of pregnancy.
Cardiac function
* are assessed by examinations.
* is altered by neural activation.
* risk factor for paralysis in thoracoabdominal aortic replacement.
Cell function
* Some cell functions are common to both tracheal cells and midline glia.
* is affected by a large variety of signals from the extracellular environment
- very dependent on the ambient temperature
Cellular function
* Most cellular functions are sensitive to redox state.
* depends on plus and minus charges.
* take place in the cytoplasm.<|endoftext|>### usefulness | function:
Cognitive function
* are mildly impaired and strongly lateralized to the right hemisphere.
* depend on a network of brain regions.
* is as rich and diverse a domain as sensory function
- enhanced when carbohydrate is ingested as a hydration technique
- partly related to what's known as the brain-gut axis
- studied using word pair selection biases
- the mental process of knowing, thinking, learning and judging
* major factor in a person's functional capacity.
* ranges anywhere from moderate retardation to near-normal.
* refers to someone's ability to plan, remember, and exercise good judgment.
Enzyme function
* depends on the environment in which the reaction is occurring.
* variable activity, as is liver function.
Exponential
* are important for modelling different types of growth
- mapping
* arise naturally as the solutions to differential equations.
* per capita rate.
* start slowly and remain disarmingly out of sight.
Hash function
* are fixed values derived mathematically from a text message.
* have a wide variety of properties.
Immune function
* is assessed using energy panels in vivo or using patient serum in vitro
- decreased and infection is common and often is the cause of death
- dependent on iron-containing enzymes
- extremely complex and is influenced by a multitude of nutritional variables
- weaker when people are in a bad mood
* seems to play a prominent role in development and dissemination of melanoma.
Kidney function
* can worsen with pregnancy.
* decreases due to kidney atrophy.
* does decline with age.
Life function
* All life functions are confined within the boundaries of a single cell.
* are the processes that animals rely on to stay alive.
Logarithmic function
* are the inverse of exponential functions.
* turn multiplication into addition.
Loss of function
* can be mild jaw stiffness to being unable to open the jaw barely at all.
* is seen in lymphomas and lymphocytic leukemia.
Lung function
* can improve with recovery.
* describes how well a person can move air in and out of the lungs.
* increases up to thirty percent.
* is measured after the exercise test is complete.
Mental function
* All mental functions are part of the complex activity of prakriti.
* can deteriorate in advanced cases
- vary from severely impaired to normal intelligence
* is characterized by apathy, dullness, exhaustion, and depression
- clouded by heroin's effect on the central nervous system
* undergo deterioration.
Mitochondrial function
* Some mitochondrial functions are performed only in specific types of cells.
* declines with age.
* depends upon the coordinate action of two genomes.
* is greatly impaired during apoptosis
- therefore detrimental to the fidelity of mitochondrial replication
Motor function
* are the voluntary movements of our muscles.
* responds to stimuli by initiating muscular contractions or glandular secretions.
Physiological function
* Every physiological function depends on water.
* Some physiological functions associate with activations.
* is based on substance. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### usefulness | function:
Polynomial
* All polynomials are rational functions.
* Every polynomial can represent the denominator of the transfer function of an electrical filter.
* Mathematicians, scientists, and engineers use polynomials to solve problems. Polynomials are taught in algebra, which gateway course to all technical subjects.
* are a special case of the more general non-linear models
- entire functions
- expressions with one or more terms
* have a pole at infinity
- an important place in mathematics
- the type designation pol
* is mapping.
### usefulness | function | polynomial:
Quadratic
* is polynomial
* term in mathematics which simply describes curves and circles.
Potential function
* is derived by the connection of two gates.
* rely on experimental parameters such as force constants and equilibrium values.
Pulmonary function
* is compromised in children with mediastinal lymphoma
- normal
- the best predictor of disease progression in people with cystic fibrosis
* varies with age and level of injury.
Quadratic function
* Every quadratic function has a vertex and a vertical axis of symmetry.
* are very important in mathematics.
* play a special role in trying to optimize functions of many variables.
Renal function
* can deteriorate further, even after cessation of exposure to cadmium.
* has minor effects on levels.
* is assessed by creatinine clearance
- impaired, as evidenced by low sp gr urine, proteinuria, casts, and azotemia
Sensory function
* decline with age, too.
* means the ability to feel sensations, like pain.
Trigonometric function
* All trigonometric functions work with radians.
* Define the periodic condition of trigonometric functions.
* are functions associated with the circle
- ratios between two sides of a right triangle
* vary with the size of an angle.
Wave function
* Most wave functions determine behaviour.
* solve problems.
Serviceability
* is usefulness
- utilities
* pertains to the ease with which system issues are resolved.
* usually refers to control of deflections and crack widths at service loads.
User group
* are a way for offenders to exchange pictures, and arrange meetings.
* are clubs organized by people interested in sharing information about their computers
- that share a common interest in a specific platform or software
- distinctive groups of users
- grassroots organizations where anyone can participate and contribute
- organizations of computer enthusiasts which can be valuable sources of information
* exist around the world, where people share ideas and experiences.
### users:
End user
* are users.
* benefit from technology.
* have awareness
* is an user
### usually adjective modifiers:
Hyphenated word
* Most hyphenated words count as two words.
* are usually adjective modifiers
- words that are formed from two words
* count as a single word
- one word
### usually asymptomatic:
Light infestation
* are usually asymptomatic.
* can develop into moderate or severe infestations within a week or two.
* cause few symptoms.
* occur during the summer months.
Pharyngeal infection
* Some pharyngeal infection causes burns.
* is usually asymptomatic.
### usually basaltic:
Fluid flow
* are usually basaltic.
* can be rotational or irrotational.
* is measured with a wide variety of instruments
- relatively easy to predict in random materials
- represented as large arrows
* occurs perpendicular to the isolines of hydraulic head.
### usually diagnostic:
Chest radiograph
* are usually diagnostic.
* can be difficult to interpret especially in macaque species
- useful if the cat is symptomatic
* demonstrate diffuse interstitial prominence and pleural thickening.
* remain negative for pulmonary involvement.
* show an infiltrate in the right lung
- signs of bilateral interstitial and alveolar edema | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### usually friendly money:
Private money
* Some private money is invested in entertainment industry.
* affects, or infects, democratic politics in other ways as well.
* is usually friendly money.
### usually normal:
Plasma lipid
* are usually normal.
* consist party of cholesterol and triglycerides.
### usually plant hormones:
Growth promoter
* are usually plant hormones.
* have effects.
### usually progressive:
Kidney damage
* can increase tiredness and anaemia.
* can occur as a result of the muscle breakdown
- from frequent upper urinary tract infections
- if a child has an infection with or without bladder reflux
- occur, but is rare
- progress to renal failure
* is usually progressive
- the result of a disease or strong drug use
### usually radioactive:
Fission product
* Most fission products emit both gamma and beta radiation
- have short half-lives and therefore quickly decay
* Some fission products contain water
- emit high-energy charged particles as they decay
- have high thermal neutron capture cross sections
* are usually radioactive.
* cause other uranium atoms to split, starting a chain reaction.<|endoftext|>### usually rearrangement react:
Pericyclic reaction
* Many pericyclic reactions have similar reactions that are metal-catalyzed.
* Some pericyclic reactions go with heat , some go only with light
- heat, some go only with light.
* In organic chemistry, a 'pericyclic reaction' type of chemical reaction between organic compounds. Pericyclic reactions are usually rearrangement reactions.
* Many pericyclic reactions have similar stepwise radical processes connected with them. Chemists disagree whether some reactions are pericyclic reactions. Many pericyclic reactions have similar reactions that are metal-catalyzed. But these metal-catalyzed reactions are also not really pericyclic. The metal catalysts stabilize the reaction intermediates. So the reaction is not concerted, but rather metal-stabilized
+ Photochemistry: Chemistry
* Another way in which light can help reactions go is by changing the symmetry of a molecule. Some pericyclic reactions go with heat, some go only with light.
### usually untwinned orthoclase:
Alkali feldspar
* All alkali feldspars contain potassium and most contain sodium.
* is usually untwinned orthoclase.
### vaccines:
Mumps vaccine
* are vaccines.
* is one of the safest viral vaccines.
* is recommended for adults, particularly males, believed to be susceptible
- children, teens, and susceptible adults
* live attenuated virus strain prepared from chick embryo cultures.
* prevents sterility by preventing mumps infection.
Rubella vaccine
* crosses the placenta.
* is contraindicated for pregnant women and immunocompromised patients
- efficacious in preventing rubella infection and congenital rubella syndrome
* is recommended for adolescents and adults unless proof of immunity is available
- all adults, regardless of age
- non- immune women
### vagabond:
Hobo
* Some hobos now communicate via cellular phones and e-mail.
* are located in bridges
- people who hitch rides on freight trains
* desire pie.
* tend to stay near the floor and when they enter a room they follow the baseboard.
Tramp
* Most Tramps use a flesh colored nose that has a red tip.
* are fictional characters
- located in bridges
- vagrants
Valence
* are power.
* is how the employee feels about anticipated outcomes
* is the combining power of an atom
- value to the individual of various work outcomes
* refers to the attractiveness or utility of the reward to the individual
- value with place on the potential outcome
* role-playing game set in the far future.
* spread along valence links, and also along activation links. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### values:
Intrinsic value
* are values.
* is based on private market transactions and discounted cash flow valuations
- simply the difference between the spot price and the strike price
* is the built-in value of an option
- difference between the option strike price and the underlying futures price
- extent to which an options exercise price is below the current market price
- value of the option relative to the underlying futures price
* necessarily variable data point that depends on one's individual return needs.
* reflects the amount, if any, by which an option is in the money.
Vanadium compound
* are used in advanced ceramics.
* can cause severe liver damage.
### vanilla-scented:
White candle
* go through a mechanical whitening process that contains no chemicals.
* is vanilla-scented.<|endoftext|>Variability
* Much variability exists in the composition of similar organic materials.
* Some variability is on the time scale of decades to hundred of years.
* affects values.
* arises from something outside of the domain that psychology is intended to explain.
* biological fact.
* central feature of the gamma-ray sky.
* comes into play a lot in wind turbines.
* contributes to diversity.
* description of the tails of our curve - that is of the spread of scores.
* has effects.
* helps in the survival of the fittest.
* increases chances.
* is also important to know about when gathering and analyzing data.
* is an illusion of dimension
- inherent aspect of our world
- integral part of biology
- associated with eddies, phenomena similar to weather patterns in the atmosphere
- governed by many unknown laws, more especially by that of correlation of growth
- greatest in winter compared to the other seasons
- high in the regions of low rainfall
- measured by evaluating discrete sites in a field over time
- normal, especially for humans
- observed at a wide variety of periods
- present in machines, materials, methods, people, environment, and measurements
- random error that affects the ability to reproduce results
* is the degree to which scores in a distribution are spread out
- law of life
- raw material for natural selection
- result of human error in comprehending it
* refers to the actual variation of exposure conditions, intake, etc, in a population
- spread of dispersion of the data
- uncertainty in a supply chain
* reflects differences.
* relates to differences.
* shapes behavioral generalization functions in humans and animals.
### variability:
Climate variability
* appears to be mediated by landscape pattern
- sensitive to the mean state of the climate system
* captures disaster, abundance, and the adaptation of society.
* tends to have the greatest impact on people who are landless, poor, or isolated.
Genetic variability
* exists between all individuals to one degree or another
- in everyone
* is essential to the process of evolution and the formation of new species
- important for a number of reasons
- produced in meiosis as a result of crossing over and independent assortment
- required for natural selection to occur
- vital to preserving the species
* provides the raw material for natural selection and thus, evolution.
Spatial variability
* is high, with large gradients surrounding the maxima.
* refers to the range of the resource across a given region.
Uncontrollable variability
* influences the yield of each variety.
* is involved in the determination of yield average. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### variability:
Variegation
* are variability.
* blended matte color combination that simulates natural wood siding.
* can be regular, forming a pattern such as stripes, or irregular blotches and patches.
* changes throughout the year, based on temperature, light and nutrient content.
* intensifies with the arrival of spring and summer.
* is bland compared to many other plants
- sharpest in new foliage, becoming less apparent as the leaves age
* persists throughout the year.
* produces a quixotic expression of a gene, with the gene now turned on, now turned off.
* varies in babies produced from leaves.
### variable concept:
Legal age
* is an age
- set by state law
* variable concept.
Variable water content
* Water content controls microbial activity and the decomposition rate of crop residues
- indicates how much water is held in the soil
* Water content is found by dividing the weight of water in the soil by the weight of dry soil
- important for assessing changes in the water balance
- plays an important role in determining the quality and value of the crop
- variable property
- varies inversely with the fat content in meat
Various chemical
* act as agents to activate genes in a process called gene expression.
* are effective in controlling different fungi
- used to enhance the efficiency of nitrogen-based fertilizers
* can also affect health in both drastic and subtle ways
- attack fabric or metal and cause corrosion in wet scrubbers
* reverse the process of blood clotting.
Various event
* can occur during reproduction that cause irregularities in eggs.
* take places.
Various organism
* Most various organisms play essential roles
* Some various organisms cause deterioration.
* Some various organisms contain chlorophyll pigment
- live in habitats
* recycle dead organisms, fallen branches and leaves, or other organic material.
* reproduce either sexually or asexually. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Vegetable
* All vegetables are sources of fiber
- contain protein and too much protein consumption is unhealthy
- lose some of their nutrient value in any kind of cooking
- provide a variety of different nutrients
* Many vegetables actually produce and taste better when grown in the cool days of autumn.
* Many vegetables are also high in vitamin C, and can help prevent cancer of the throat and stomach
- closely related and have the same pests
- herbaceous plants
- most susceptible to aphid damage during the seedling stage
- ornamental in appearance
* Many vegetables are rich in fiber, minerals, iron, calcium, and vitamins
- vitamin C and other antioxidants
- unique to foreign countries
* Many vegetables contain all of the protein that the body needs
- indigestible carbohydrate, welcomed by the colon flora
* Many vegetables have nematode resistance and are readily available for the home gardener
- ornamental, as well as food value
- lose their fresh flavor during drying
* Most vegetables affect digestion.
* Most vegetables are actually very attractive plants which produce flowers before fruiting
- annuals
- best when harvested fresh and used promptly
- botanical fruits that develop from flowers on the plants
- high in fiber, low in sugar, and almost all are rich in complex carbohydrates
* Most vegetables are low in fat and calories, and they re full of vitamins and fiber
- quick-growing crops
- stems, leaves, or roots
- benefit from an inch or more water each week, especially when they are fruiting
* Most vegetables contain a small amount of plant lignins
- active enzymes
- amounts
- compounds
- essential minerals
- nutrient compounds
- starches
- sulfur compounds
- germinate readily, however
* Most vegetables grow best in slightly acid soil, and vine crops are no exception
- on neutral soil
* Most vegetables grow in countries
- gardens
- private gardens
* Most vegetables have a high fiber content
- rich color
- some acid which slows the growth of bacteria
- very little carbohydrate
* Most vegetables help bone health
- lose quality quickly after harvest
* Most vegetables prefer full sun, although leafy greens can be grown with half a day of sun
- several hours of direct sunlight each day
* Most vegetables provide carbohydrates
- necessary nutrients
* Most vegetables require food
- full sunlight
- moisture to a depth of six to eight inches
- six hours of sunlight per day
- respond to water deficit with reduced yield and quality
- retain moisture
- show a decrease in yield with increasing salt levels
* Remove any remaining flowers from summer vegetable plants.
* Some vegetables add proteins
- also contain fiber
- are dangerous for babies because they have high amounts of nitrates
* Some vegetables are part of bananas
- beets
- bloodroots
- buttercups
- cardamoms
- cereals
- clover
- cordgrasses
- corn
- dandelions
- fireweeds
- foxgloves
- geraniums
- gingers
- herbages
- legumes
- lettuce
- marjorams
- milkweeds
- milos
- oats
- parsleys
- peanuts
- pineapples
- plantains
- reeds
- rosemaries
- saxifrages
- sundews
- violet
- wheat
- worts
- spinach , carrots , onions , peppers , and broccoli
* Some vegetables are very good sources of the mineral iron
- prone to increased levels of UV light
- attract pests
- benefit from a sidedressing of fertilizer during the growing season
* Some vegetables contain a larger amount of carbohydrate thus increasing calories
- amino acid asparagines
- carotenoids
- chemicals
- irons
- polysaccharides
- products
- sodium salt
- soy products
- vitamin E which is also an antioxidant
* Some vegetables have a short harvest season
- concentration
* Some vegetables help blood pressure
- breast cancer
- intestines
- lower blood pressure
- lung cancer cancer
* Some vegetables help prevent breast cancer
- toxins
* Some vegetables make up diets
- nutritious diets
- mature so rapidly that they take up garden space for only a short time
* Some vegetables produce fluid
- seeds in a fleshy fruit, such as watermelon and tomato
* Use a mix of vegetables, some for seasoning, and some for bulk.
* absorb mineral goodness as they grow and animals digest it through their diet.
* add fiber to the diet and make it easier to digest the matza
- taste, color, texture, and nutritional value to many favorite meals
* also contain a wide variety of antioxidants and other disease-fighting compounds
- carbohydrates, but in small amounts
- most of the hazardous substances found in meat
- protein, but in smaller amounts
- some carbs, but foods in the meat and fat groups contain very little carb
- have fiber, which helps regulate children's bowel habits
* also provide fiber to aid in elimination of body wastes
- protein, vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, fiber, etc
- the body with energy-producing carbohydrates, as well as fiber
- work well in parchment, alone or combined with proteins
* are a fantastic source of vitamins and fiber
- good choice and are a good source of nutrients and fiber
* are a good source of key nutrients such as vitamin A, vitamin C and fiber
- total dietary fiber and rich in soluble fiber
- vitamins and minerals
- healthy snack food instead of high fat or high calorie foods
- major source of nutrition
- nutritious addition to any diet
- source of incomplete protein
- very important part of our diet
- wonderful source of vitamins, calcium and iron
- actually a better source of iron than meat
* are also a good source of fiber which aids in digestion
- naturally high in fiber
* are an essential component of a healthful human diet
- part of guinea pigs' diet
- excellent, low-calorie source of vitamins, minerals, and fiber
- important part of everyones diet
- basic to Chinese cooking and are found in some form in most dishes
- best lightly cooked or even eaten raw
- easy to grow from seed, with the exception of tomatoes and peppers
- edibles
- especially nutrient dense
- extremely protective against cancers
- generally low in calories and help diabetics lose weight
- genrally a good source of calcium, and green beans, in particular are a good source
- green things, rice and coffee beans
- groceries
- healthy for everyone, including people with diabetes
- herbaceous plants that can be eaten whole or in part
- herbs
* are high in fiber
* are important because they provide the body with many vitamins and minerals
- to get enough vitamins for health
- in most soups
- local, grown by island farmers
* are located in cans
- fridges
- markets
- refrigerators
- supermarkets
- vegetable gardens
* are low in calories and high in vitamins
- have no cholesterol
- provide fiber to the diet
- protein and the protein they do contain is of less value than animal protein
* are low in sugar and acid, which increases the risks for food spoilage
- most nutritious when eaten raw
- naturally low in fat and sodium, and also provide fiber
- often attractive plants
- other plant parts
- part of herbs
- particularly rich in vitamins and minerals
- peaceful living things that do no harm
- plant matter
- powerhouses of vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals and fiber
- present in all regions and almost every single country
* are rich in certain classes of phytochemicals
- fiber, antioxidants and many nutrients that are important for the human body
- structures that develop from one of the the three vegetative organs
- susceptible to several foliage, fruit, and root pathogens
* are the edible parts of garden plants
- foods most likely to be shunned by children
- main agricultural industry
- mainstay of a healthy diet
- major dietary source of beta carotene
- most abundant sources of folate, particularly green leafy vegetables and beans
- root, stem or leaf of a plant
- tubers
- usually a savory or maincourse food
- what food eats
* can absorb the metals into their root system, contaminating the entire plant.
* can also be a good source if grown in selenium-rich soils
- provide almost all the nutrients that a body needs
* can be a treat for the eyes, as well as the palate
- as filling as flavorful as any piece of meat, especially when cooked on the grill
- further sub-divided by type, e.g. leafy, legumes, fruit, and root
- stir-fried in water instead of oil to keep colors bright and flavors fresh
- contain iron
* can have beneficial effects
* can have similar beneficial effects
* can include chopped mushrooms, scallions or grilled vegetables
- tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, and onions
* combine well with animal protein
- legumes and beans
- non-gluten grains
- nuts and seeds
* come alive with a squeeze of lemon instead of salt.
* contain active enzymes
- calcium also
- fat in the form of vegetable oils
* contain many biologically active components
- other phytochemicals that are known to prevent heart attacks and cancers
- more nutrients than fruits, and less sugar
- much water and woody fiber
- phytochemicals that appear protective against colorectal cancer
- so many substances that nobody knows for sure which ones truly prevent disease
- very little fats and skunks are mainly vegetarians
- vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients that include anti-cancer substances
* continue to carry on life processes even after picking
- cook a short time after being microwaved
* cook very quickly in the pressure cooker.
* differ in their nutrient or fertilizer requirements.
* freeze best when they are blanched, dipped in boiling water, then quickly cooled.
* germinate at different rates.
* grow best in rich soil in at least six hours of direct sun.
* growing underground are the depository of countless very small creatures.
* grown in contaminated soil can absorb chemicals
- without the use of pesticides are tastier and healthier
* have a variety of end uses
- almost no saturated fat and no cholesterol
- fields
- high values
- more fiber and less of a sugar content, generally
- neither the neutrality nor the texture of raw fish
* have no carnitine
- properties
- rations
- several good properties
- their own special flavors
* hold a significant position in the hierarchy of Jordanian food.
* improve taste.
* include broccolis
- cabbages
* is produce
* lose some vitamins just by sitting around
- water because they are alive and respiring
* maintain their color and flavor.
* may have benefits
- health benefits
* may have other benefits
* mix with vegetables.
* naturally vary with region and ,season.
* need nutrients.
* offer benefits
* offer tangible benefits
- vitamins, minerals, and fibre in a variety of flavours and textures
* play a very important role in Italian cuisine.
* play an important role in Mexican cuisine
- human nutrition
* primarily contain monounsaturated fat and polyunsaturated fat.
* provide a great source of vitamins and minerals for parakeets
- variety of vitamins and minerals essential for health
- healthy doses of various vitamins, antioxidants and fiber
- many minerals, vitamins, enzymes and medicinal substances
- nourishment
- plenty of essential nutrients and fiber and are virtually calorie-free
- small amounts of protein
- starch, fiber, protein, vitamins, and minerals
- use with many vitamins and minerals
- varying amounts of other vitamins and minerals, too
- vitamin A, vitamin C, folate, some calcium and some iron, plus potassium
* remains are a rarity in Palaeolithic contexts.
* require at least six hours of direct sun each day
- full sun for optimum growth
- the best of soils and irrigation
* result in reductions.
* start losing enzymes from the moment they re picked.
* starts, herbs, annuals, perinnels, shrubs, trees and bulbs.
* stimulate the secretive functions of various glands within the body.
* supply nutrients that are important for growth and development
- the carbohydrates
* tend to shrink when they get cooked.
* thrive in full sunlight.
* usually rattle when they are dry.
* vary according to the different regions and the season
- in their ability to grow in cool and warm temperatures
+ Food group, Common food groups: Nutrition
* This is usually a large group. Most times, only grains, are a larger group than vegetables in nutrition guides. Some vegetables are spinach, carrots, onions, peppers, and broccoli.
+ Snack
* Vegetables are a healthful snack.
+ Soup:
* A 'soup' is a kind of food. People make soups by boiling things in water. Then they put the things they boiled into a bowl and eat them. Vegetables are in most soups. You can also put meat in soups. Soups that are thicker than normal, with more meat or vegetables, are stews. The liquid in soup is broth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable substitute:
Agar agar
* is derived from gelidium species of red sea vegetable
- used in the manufacture of pills and ointments
* vegetable substitute.
* vegetarian alternative, and can be substituted for gelatin.<|endoftext|>### vegetable:
Artichoke
* are a good source of potassium
- flowers
- green
- located in refrigerators
* are part of artichokes
- the thistle family and are actually the flower bud of the plant
- plants
- stuffed, and artichoke stems, carduni, are dipped in a flour paste and fried
* are the ultimate finger food
- unopened flowers and stems of a kind of thistle
- vegetables
* come from Provence and Brittany, and in each region they are prepared in different ways.
* have a subtle, sweet and somewhat nutty flavor
- leafs
- thorns
* make all wines taste metallic.
Asian vegetable
* Some Asian vegetables resemble nothing else, like moqua, also known as fuzzy melon.
* are readily available in Western supermarkets today.
* continue to gain popularity among consumers nationwide. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Bean
* Most beans are naturally low in fat, especially saturated fat.
* Most beans grow in blue mountain regions
* Most beans have distinctive flavor
- produce beans
- require warm soil
* Some beans are excreted by civets.
* Some beans are excreted by indonesian civets
- palm civets
- wild civets
- more oily and can be ground after drying for a day
- cause hallucination
* Some beans contain fiber
- plant toxins
- cook faster depending on how old they are
* Some beans have anatomies
- capsules
- endosperms
- only one or two seeds, and some beans have as many as nine or ten beans
- leave residues
- pass through digestive tracts
- produce oil.
* contain a lot of fibre. They are also high in protein
* absorb the flavor of the liquid they are cooked in.
* add flavor.
* also affect blood sugar levels less than any other carbohydrate-rich food
- return nitrogen to the soil, so they offer a double benefit
* are a concentrated source of nutrients in a low-calorie package
- food group
- good source of folic acid
* are a good source of protein and an alternative to meat
- and vitamins
- staple to vegetarian eating
* are a great source of fiber and protein
- protein and fiber
- protein, and a great meat substitute
- terrific protein source but have considerably less fat than red meat
- vital part of a fat-free diet because they are high in fiber and extremely low in fat
- warm season crop which prefers fertile, well-drained soils
- warm-season crop
* are also an important source of potassium and many micronutrients
- complex carbohydrates
- prime candidates for growing and releasing large numbers of thrips
- rich in calcium
- susceptible to sclerotina
- terrific sources of protein and other important nutrients
- among the oldest foods known to man
- an excellent source of insoluble fiber
* are an inexpensive and readily available source of nourishment
- another crop where an individual gardener can show off specific tastes
- buff-colored with a white eye
- cancer fighting and balance blood sugar
- done when they can be easily mashed between two fingers or with a fork
* are edible and delicious when young
- especially good when young
- especially fiber-rich
* are excellent sources of B vitamins, magnesium, folate, and fiber
- folate and beta-carotene, as well as of fiber
- many vitamins and minerals, protein, and fiber
- fruit
* are good for low-sodium diets as they contain only the salt added by the cook
- spleen food, especially kidney beans
* are high in antioxidants, which is good for the human system
- fiber and more satisfying than many other foods high in carbohydrate
* are high in fiber and protein, and contain relatively small amounts of fat compared to meat
- low in fat, and surprisingly versatile
* are high in protein, as well as fiber
- carbohydrates and fiber
- vegetable protein but low in fat
* are highly susceptible to frost in both spring and fall
- root rots associated with wet soils
* are important food sources in the world
- legumes
- less expensive and healthier and provide better protein than meats
* are located in bean bags
- soup
- cans
- coffee
- containers
- jars
- plates
- low in fat, and high in protein, carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals
* are low in fat, high in fiber, and packed with essential vitamins and minerals
- low-fat sources of protein, fiber, iron and folic acid and also contain some calcium
- mixed with ash and stored in clay pots
- more digestible when combined with sea vegetables
- one of few plants that are best eaten when immature
* are one of the best sources of dietary fiber
- oldest dietary staples
- part of beans
* are rich in calcium, and fortified orange juice supplies substantial amounts as well
- protein, body builders
- the minerals iron , zinc , magnesium and potassium
- sensitive to both dry and wet conditions
- software
- subject to several viruses and root disorders and white and gray mold
- susceptible to many diseases including bacterial and fungal wilts
- the easiest to grow, wheat is second, and corn is the hardest
* are used for bean bags
- cooking
- nutrition
- planting
- very popular as they are high in fiber and protein
* are very sensitive to fertilizer injury
- seed-placed fertilizer
- winter comfort food
* belong to a family of plants called legumes
- the legume family
* can serve as an alternative to meats
- tolerate a great deal of leaf damage and still yield well
* cause a desire to farts.
* come in an amazing array of colors, shapes, and flavors
- different shapes, colors and sizes
- number of phytochemicals that are important in fighting disease
- fiber and at least five other cholesterol cutters
- indigestible sugars indigestible by people, that is
- large amounts of the complex sugar raffinose
- no cholesterol, and are low in fat
- protein folic acid and fiber
* continue to cook and tenderize as the pressure reduces slowly.
* create their own nitrogen and are light feeders.
* develop the typical felty gray coloured mold on leaves, stems and pods.
* do grow from seeds.
* dry out and become tough if stored too long.
* give off a substance into the soil that is beneficial for next year's root crops.
* grow best in a sunny location, where the soil is warm, loamy and lightly fertilized
- on well-drained soils
* have a short growing season and are harvested when the pods are immature
- an anti hunger effect
- aroma
- cholesterol-lowering properties
- lysine
- no gender
- own distinctive flavor
- something else that meat lacks, phytochemicals, compounds found only in plants
- the same phytic acid issue as grains
* help by manufacturing neurotransmitters and by regulating energy releases in the brain.
* make a great meat substitute and are virtually fat free
- significant economic contribution to Colorado farmers
* naturally add nitrogen to the soil because of a symbiotic relationship with bacteria.
* need nutrients.
* provide a good amount of fiber, B vitamins and magnesium
- five times more fiber than whole wheat bread and more fat-free protein than lean meat
- protein, vitamins, carbohydrates, fiber and more phytochemicals
- the body with a great source of vegetable protein and fiber
* reach their maximum sweetness about a month after flowering.
* reduce bad cholesterol levels, beans improve intestinal tract functioning.
* require periodic rehydration, mimicking the monsoon weather of their native Mexico.
* take somewhat longer, though kidney beans grow more quickly than some other bean types.
* taste differently dependent upon where they are grown.
* turn green when cooked
- solid pink when cooked
* use in kitchens. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable | bean:
Baked bean
* Baked Beans Soak a quantity of beans overnight
- over night in cold water
* are a staple side dish for various types of barbecue.
* are located in cans
- cupboards
* contain carmel color of unknown source.
Black bean
* are a common example of legumes
- great source of folate
- staple food in Asia and Latin America
- rich in fiber, beneficial antioxidants, folates, protein, minerals and B vitamins
- the other major category of beans grown in North America
* can reduce the risk of heart disease.
* common bean
* take a long time to cook.
Canned bean
* are faster to make than dried beans.
* make summertime cooking easy and cool.
* produce less gas, but are often loaded with salt.
Cooked bean
* are high in protein and fiber and low in fat.
* can provide up to nine grams of fiber in just one cup.<|endoftext|>### vegetable | bean:
Dry bean
* Dry Beans are and continue to be an important and valuable commodity to Michigan agriculture.
* Many dry beans contain a good source of potassium naturally.
* are an economical source of protein compared to meat and other meat alternates
- excellent, convenient source of soluble fiber
- extremely sensitive to frost and thus the growing season is quite limited
- high in protein
- legumes that biologically fix N through a symbiotic N fixation process
- rich in protein, iron, calcium, phosphorus and potassium
* is very susceptible to fertilizer salt injury.
Entity bean
* are long-lived, because they are tied to persistent data
- mainly for representing persistence data, such as records in a relational database
- objects that represent data in a database
* represent data in a database and the methods to act on that data
- domain model
Fava bean
* are also important in the diet
- another legume favored in the eastern Mediterranean for ages
- harbingers of spring, although they continue to appear into the summer
- more difficult to eat because the seed coat is inedible
* do best in moist, rich soil.
* is susceptible to aphid damage, especially from the bean aphid.
* prefer clay soils, while other peas and beans do best on lighter soils.
Garbanzo bean
* are excellent sources of protein and B vitamins.
* contain both soluble and insoluble dietary fiber.
* tower over shorter lettuce plants.
Mexican bean
* Some mexican beans have capsules.
* have a particular character to their taste.
Soy bean
* are an excellent source of protein
- good sources of isoflavonoids
- one of the most highly genetically engineered crops
- the most important bean crop in the world
* have a form of estrogen in their cells
- tremendous medicinal potential
Vanilla bean
* Most vanilla beans have aroma.
* add flavor. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Cabbage
* Most cabbages have flat leaves.
* It lot like broccoli, cauliflower or Brussels sprouts. Cabbage is eaten in many ways around the world. Coleslaw and sauerkraut are popular foods that use cabbage. It is also used to make kimchi and borscht, and can also be used in salads. Red cabbage juice can be used as a pH indicator. Cabbages are usually green, but they can also be red.
* also seems to deter stomach cancer.
* are cooler than cucumbers
- cruciferous vegetables
- crucifers
* are located in freezers
- grocery stores
- markets
- plates
- supermarkets
- part of cabbages
- usually green , but they can also be red
* can also be a good source of vitamin C if eaten raw or lightly steamed.
* cause gases.
* comes in just about every color of green.
* contains a lot of glutamine, an amino acid that has been shown to heal ulcers
- chemicals that help heal both gastric and duodenal ulcers
- insoluble fiber in the form of cellulose
- nutrients that help to heal stomach ulcers and improve varicose veins
- oltipraz, brassinin and phenethylisothiocyanate
* cool season vegetable which can be produced in the spring, fall and winter in Georgia.
- which is thought to help protect against carcinogens
- vegetable, which contains cancer-fighting compounds called indoles
* difficult crop to grow because it is susceptible to many insect and disease pests.
* discourages breast cancer.
* grown commercially under normal conditions biennial.
* hardy vegetable that grows well in fertile soil.
* hardy, cool-season crop that does best under uniform cool, moist conditions.
* high-fiber vegetable and is low in sodium, too.
* is also a source of potassium and fiber
- staple diet
- an excellent source of vitamin C and a good source of folacin and fiber
- damn hard to dehydrate without turning brown
- fermented to make German sauerkraut and Korean kimshi
- good hot, particularly when cooked with meats, but also great cold as coleslaw
* is grown in fields
- the cooler, coastal regions of California
- hardy, inexpensive and keeps well as sauerkraut
- harvested when it reaches adequate size, depending on variety and growing conditions
- important in diets because it cruciferous vegetable which helps fight cancer
- more susceptible to wire stem and downy mildew than Chinese cabbage
* is the food of choice for numerous hungry worms
- only salad green that never harbours parasites which infests humans
* is used in salads or coleslaw, boiled, baked, processed into sauerkraut, or pit stored
- slaw, salads, sauerkraut and cooled dishes
* lasts many, many days un-refrigerated.
* makes a crunchy and nutritious alternative to the iceberg lettuce normally used in tacos.
* member of the large family of cruciferous vegetables, which are rich in nutrients.
* most important Chinese vegetable, and they enjoy eating lots of it.
* prefer cool temperatures and full sun.
* provides a lot of nutrition for a few calories.
* readily absorbs moisture from the air.
* require cool conditions
- deep, fertile and well drained soils
* shallow rooted crop.
* tends to cook-down as it cooks.
* usually is inexpensive, and it keeps longer than lettuce.
* very close relative of broccoli.
### vegetable | cabbage:
Red cabbage
* are plants.
* contains a chemical that acts as an indicator
- pigment called flavin
- the pigment anthocyanin and is used for pickling
* differs only in color.
* has almost twice the dietry fibre of regular cabbage.
* is loose-leafed in red to purple hues.
Savoy cabbage
* has a tender texture and is mostly used for salads
- attractive, crinkled leaves that form a looser head
* is pale- to dark green with crinkled leaves, overlapped in a loose head. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Canned vegetable
* are also usually high in sodium
- great for babies as they are usually softer than fresh or frozen
- high in salt, and canned fruit is high in sugar
* are higher in sodium than fresh or frozen
- which can cause additional fluid retention and added weight
* are located in cans
- pantries
* contain salt.
* have a much higher sodium content than fresh or frozen vegetables.
Cardoon
* are a close relative of the artichoke, grown for their thick fleshy leaf bases
- part of cardoons
- vegetables
* is sensitive to frost.
* keep their vase shape until late in the season, when a branching central stem shoots up.
Chard
* is beets
- green
- part of chard
- plants
- rich in beta carotene, vitamin C and calcium
* leaves freeze well after blanching, but the stems become soggy and rather unappealing.
* packs a huge amount of vitamin A and it is naturally high in sodium.
* stems have a delicate flavor much like asparagus and are prepared in a similar way.
* tolerates cold weather and frost as well as hot days in the summer.
### vegetable | chard:
Swiss chard
* beloved kitchen-garden vegetable in Italian cuisine.
* cultivar of the petioles of the leaves.
* has a contrast of dark green leaves against crisp flat, white stems
- more variability of leaf colors than other greens
* heat-tolerant green.
* heavy producer of greens very similar to beet greens.
* is very popular in the Lyons region and in Corsica.<|endoftext|>### vegetable:
Chile
* When capitalized usually refers to the South American country which borders on Peru.
* has a Mediterranean climate and has potential
- level of extreme poverty that is far worse than other countries in Latin America
- presidential system of government
- an elected national parliament
- excellent seafood due to the climate and the Pacific having very cold water
- four seasons, but at the opposite months of North America
- free trade agreements with most Latin American countries, Mexico and Canada
- laws to limit discrimination against women in the workplace
* has no specific legislation to regulate the development and use of biotechnology
- standards for emissions and environmental quality
- territories or colonies
* has one of the best health care systems in Latin America
- highest levels of literacy in Latin America
- the greatest concentration of large telescopes in the southern hemisphere
* is located along the southwestern coast of South America.<|endoftext|>### vegetable | chile:
Cayenne pepper
* Most cayenne pepper has properties
- vitamins
* Some cayenne pepper boosts metabolism.
* Some cayenne pepper contains chemicals
- various chemicals
- grows in zones
- helps lung cancer
* Some cayenne pepper helps prevent cancer
* helps in pain relief
- to make blood pressure levels normal
* increases peripheral blood flow, bringing nourishment to the scalp.
* is also helpful for relieving intestinal gas
- very effective to use as a home remedy for strep throat
- another natural stimulant
- capsicums
- great for human beings
- grown all around the world and is used to add zest to most dishes
- particularly effective at resolving vulvovaginitis, a common infection in women
* is the lingua franca of chile
- most popular type of pepper sold throughout the world
* spicy seasoning used to give a kick to various dishes.
* stimulates blood circulation
- hair growth and prevents thinning of hair
- the eye tissue and improves circulation
Southern chile
* Southern Chile is an area of high precipitation rates.
* Southern Chile is rich in forests and grazing lands and has a string of volcanoes and lakes
- and grazing lands, and features a string of volcanoes and lakes
- forests, grazing lands, and features a string of volcanoes and lakes
- tends to be wet all year round, featuring frequent disturbed, changeable weather | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Cruciferous vegetable
* are also fat-free
- high in fiber and low in fat
- famous for their cancer fighting and prevention properties
- part of crucifers
* refer to plants that have cross-shaped leaves.
### vegetable | cruciferous vegetable:
Cauliflower
* cruciferous vegetable
* tends to get mucked up in cheese sauces and the like.
### vegetable | cruciferous vegetable | cauliflower:
Purple cauliflower
* is actually a type of broccoli that is purple
- safe to eat
* type of broccoli sold in southern Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom.<|endoftext|>### vegetable | cruciferous vegetable:
Radish
* Some radishes are elongated and dazzling white, others are bulbous and black.
* also are popular in salad mixes or by themselves
- attract flea beetles when planted near cole crops
- have healthy green leaves
* are a cool-season crop
- good source of food for humans
- also trap crops for some garden insects
- another root crop that grows well in the fall
- cool weather crops
- cruciferous vegetables
- drunkards and require a lot of water
- fairly easy to grow
- good for creating a flower garnish quickly
- intolerant of poorly drained soils
- located in refrigerators
- members of the mustard family, the famous Cruciferae
- mostly water, so they like to stay moist and cool in the refrigerator
- root vegetables
- roots
- susceptible to clubroot, though turnips are resistant
- the fast food of the gardening world
* belong to the mustard family, Cruciferae
* can be round or elongated
- burst if they have been exposed to water and then rapid drying
* contain a volatile ether which is particularly useful as a solvent for mucus or phlegm
- kaempferol, which has anticancer properties
* germinate and grow quickly.
* grow best during the cooler parts of the growing season
- in cool weather, and they are able to withstand frost
* grow well in film cans on capillary matting under a light-bank
- with cucumbers and beans
* have no marked nutritive values but are highly relished for their pungent taste
- shallow root systems do keep watered
* make excellent trap crops for cucumber beetles among squash and cucumbers.
* prefer cool and moist conditions for best growth.
* reportedly have a chemical, raphanin, that some day assist keeping thyroid levels balanced.
* require high levels of nutrients due to the short growing season and small root system.
* take many forms and are used in a large variety of ways world-wide.
### vegetable | cruciferous vegetable | radish:
Oriental radish
* are much bigger than most of the radishes grown in the United States.
* require a deep, rich soil with all lumps or rocks removed.
Winter radish
* come in several shapes and colors and can be stored just as carrots are stored.
* keep longer if stored in a cool place.
* require a longer growing period than spring radishes.
Dark green vegetable
* contain amounts.
* provide carbohydrates.
Dehydrated vegetable
* are fresh vegetables that have been cleaned, trimmed, and cut into pieces.
* have a unique texture and flavor.
Different vegetable
* are good sources of different nutrients.
* require different temperature and humidity levels for proper storage
- temperatures for germination and growth | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Eggplant
* All eggplants are high in potassium and are considered a natural laxative and sedative
- have a dimple at the blossom end that can either be round or oval
* Most eggplants become rich purple and have a high gloss.
* are delectable vegetables
- fruit
- heavy feeders and benefit from regular fertilization throughout the growing season
- herbs
- in the same family as tomatoes and peppers
- part of eggplants
- slightly larger plants than peppers and are spaced slightly farther apart
- suitable for growing in large containers or tubs
* are very perishable and become bitter with age
- responsive to the use of plastic mulches in the Midwest
* become bitter with age and are very perishable.
* bruise easily so harvest gently.
- small amount of nutrients
- no egg
- their best flavor when they are harvested young
* love warm temperatures and grow best in full sun.
### vegetable | eggplant:
Asian eggplant
* are long, slender and light purple in color.
* are milder and more delicate in flavor than American and Italian types
- flavor than other types
Japanese eggplant
* are a beautiful purple color.
* is smaller and thinner than regular eggplant.<|endoftext|>### vegetable:
Fresh vegetable
* account for about a quarter of all vegetable exports.
* are an important part of the bird diet
- green
* are located in fridges
- markets
- refrigerators
- low in calories and rich in essential, health-enhancing nutrients
- more nutritious than frozen or canned
- the second most important part of the house rabbit diet
- usually high in vitamins, minerals, and fiber
- very important in avoiding scurvy
- whole foods, as are most grains
* contain very little sodium.
* require only rinsing in cold water before cooking.
* retain their color and crispness
- vitamins, colors and flavors
* tend to cook more slowly than meat.
Frozen vegetable
* are a dinner table staple that go with meat loaf or tuna casserole
- as nutritious as fresh ones
- cleaned for human consumption, and flash frozen to maintain nutritional value
- located in freezers
- nutritionally inadequate compared to fresh
* can contain more nutrients than some fresh produce, so they're a useful stand-by.
Fruit vegetable
* Most fruit vegetables contain essential minerals
* Most fruit vegetables help bone health
- prevent cancer
* Some fruit vegetables help blood pressure
- lower blood pressure
* may have benefits
- health benefits
* may have other benefits
Green vegetable
* Most green vegetables contain amounts.
* Most green vegetables provide carbohydrates
* Some green vegetables belong to families
- lily families
- contain calcium
- have calcium
* are generally low in calories
- high in calcium and magnesium in just the right proportions
- important to the African diet
- part of meals
- very low in calories while high in water and fiber
* have a protective effect
- components
- high values
* include cabbages.
Heirloom vegetable
* are old-fashioned varieties passed down from generation to generation
- tastier and hardier than their hybrid counterparts
* come in far more varieties than modern hybrids do.
Leafy green vegetable
* have high values
* provide nutrients.
Leafy vegetable
* Most leafy vegetables contain amounts
* Some leafy vegetables belong to families
- sunflower families
- have calcium
* adapt easily to containers.
* are easy to grow.
* contain abundant amounts of provitamins A, e.g., beta-carotene
- more vitamins and minerals and fewer calories than any other vegetables
* require quick, continuous growth for best quality. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Lentil
* Some lentils have gases.
* are a good source of protein, iron and some of the B vitamins
- great source of satiating protein and fiber
- low residue-producing crop
* are a staple in Nepal
- the Indian diet
- super source for folic acid
- an underappreciated legume
- another food with naturally high nutritional content
- complex carbohydrates, a nutritional category known to have substantial health
- disc-shaped legumes similar in size to peas
- good when washed and carefully boiled in fresh water
* are low in calories, low fat, cholesterol free and inexpensive
- fat and have a very short cooking time
- often mixed with grains , such as rice , which results in a complete protein dish
- part of lentils
- particularly important in India today
- poor competitors with weeds
- relatively tolerant to drought, and are grown throughout the world
- rich in beneficial antioxidants, folates, protein, minerals and B vitamins
- sold in many forms , with or without the skins , whole or split
- susceptible to aschochyta blight and anthracnose
* are the most popular source of nutrition for the vegetarian diet
- second largest special crop produced in Canada, after dry peas
- used throughout India , the Mediterranean regions and the Middle East
- virtually fat-free, low in sodium, and a rich source of complex carbohydrates
- well adapted to semi-arid, cool conditions
* come in colors that range from yellow to red-orange to green , brown and black.
* contain more folate than any other unfortified food.
* grow best on flat or slightly rolling land.
* have a distinctive earthy flavor
- mild, often earthy flavor, and they're best if cooked with assertive flavorings
- the second-highest ratio of protein per calorie of any legume, after soybeans
* hold a prominent place in the Moroccan diet.
* is adapted to all soil types, from sand to clay loam, if there is good internal drainage
- provided drainage is adequate
- cool growing conditions, and the young plants are tolerant of spring frosts
- an edible legume or pulse crop
* produced in North America has larger seeds than that from India and the Near East.
* run the color gamut from green to yellow, and the size gamut from small to even smaller.
* tend to have higher levels of Ascochyta infection than peas.
* work well in a rotation with cereals, such as spring or durum wheat.
+ Lentil, Background: Faboideae :: Vegetables
* Different kinds of lentils exist, including a variety of large and small lentils. Lentils come in colors that range from yellow to red-orange to green, brown and black.
* Lentils are sold in many forms, with or without the skins, whole or split. Red, white and yellow lentils are decorticated, i.e., they have their skins removed
- Nutritional value and health benefits
* Apart from a high level of proteins, lentils also contain dietary fiber, vitamin B1, and minerals. Lentils are often mixed with grains, such as rice, which results in a complete protein dish
- Preparation
* The seeds only need very little cooking. Lentils have a distinctive earthy flavor. They can be used to prepare an inexpensive and nutritious soup all over Europe and North and South America. Sometimes they are combined with some form of chicken or pork. They are frequently combined with rice, which has a similar cooking time. In the Middle East such a dish of lentils and rice is called 'mujaddara' or 'mejadra'. Rice and lentils are also cooked together in khichdi, a popular Indian dish.
* They can be used to prepare an inexpensive and nutritious soup all over Europe and North and South America. Sometimes they are combined with some form of chicken or pork. They are frequently combined with rice, which has a similar cooking time. In the Middle East such a dish of lentils and rice is called 'mujaddara' or 'mejadra'. Rice and lentils are also cooked together in khichdi, a popular Indian dish. Lentils are used throughout India, the Mediterranean regions and the Middle East. In rare cases the lentils are mixed with dairy cheese
- Production
* Lentils are relatively tolerant to drought and are grown throughout the world. About half of the worldwide production of lentils is from India, most of which is consumed in the domestic market. Canada is the largest export producer of lentils in the world and Saskatchewan is the most important producing region in Canada. The Palouse Region of Eastern Washington and the Idaho Panhandle, with its commercial center at Moscow, Idaho, constitutes the most important producing region in the United States. Canada produced 520,000 MT and, according to the market analysis company STAT Communications, will likely export 400,000 MT during the 2003-04 marketing year, which runs from August to July. The FAO estimates world trade in lentils totalled 1.2 million MT in 2002, with Canada exporting 382,000 MT during the calendar year | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Other vegetable
* can have beneficial effects
* can have similar beneficial effects
* contain amounts.
* grow in gardens.
* have color
- rich color | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Pea
* All peas are a good source of vitamin A, vitamin C, folate, iron and phosphorus
- of vitamin A, vitamin C, thiamin, folate, iron and phosphorus
* Most peas are in the bloom to podding stages.
* Most peas have edible flowers
- seeds
- white flowers
* Some peas have green seeds and others have yellow seeds.
* also contain some anti-nutritional factors that can interfere with digestion.
* are a good source of DNA because they are a seed
- very good source of vitamin A and B-complex vitamins
- also a rich source of microminerals, water soluble and fat soluble vitamins
- among the world's oldest crops
* are an annual plant
- attractive host crop for nematodes
- difficult to grow in the spring garden
- easy to grow and are commonly used in classrooms to teach children about plant biology
* are high in protein and promote strong muscles, bones and plumage
- soluble fibre and therefore help prevent heart disease
- in some places in pod
- normally self-fertilizing, but artificial cross fertilizations are readily done
- one of the oldest crops
- small and lightweight, but can only be used with the aid of a special tool
* are the best fertilizer for land
- leading cause of kidney stones and bladder stones in ferrets
- very sensitive to atrazine residues
* can be tall or short
- fall victim to several diseases, including powdery mildew, fusarium wilt and root rot
- have either white or purple flowers
* come in a multitude of varieties.
* contain reasonable quantities of B vitamins.
* fix nitrogen doing miraculous things for the soil.
* freeze beautifully if they are fresh.
* grow best during cool weather.
* grow best in slightly acid , well-drained soils
- well-drained sandy soil
- well-drained, fertile soil
* grown on supports are less liable to destruction by birds.
* have a relatively simple genetic structure
* is responsible for the thrill and energy of falling in love and infatuation
- structurally and pharmacologically similar to catecholamines and amphetamine
* leaves, or leaves from the pea plant.
* like to be planted in cool weather.
* means pulseless electrical activity or no heart beat but continued brain activity.
* often get pea weevils, which are nasty critters that lay eggs in the flowers or young pods
- show very poor stands when grown in the backyard
* perform best when planted in the spring
- very well on cereal stubble where the soil nitrogen is often depleted
* present few insect problems.
* promotes energy, elevates mood and is involved in attention, focus, and cognition.
* require a good supply of nitrogen during vegetative growth and seed formation
- plenty of potash and phosphorus
* rot in soil that is cold and wet, so it helps to keep the rain off as well as warm the soil.
* show dwarfed plants and seeds with a thick coat.
* stimulates the nervous system and triggers release of endorphins, the body's own analgesic.
* stop producing pods.
* substance found in chocolate in trace amounts.
* thrive in cool, moist weather and produce best in cool, moderate climates.
* use tendrils to climb a trellis.
* vary widely in seed size.
+ Annual plant: Botany
+ Evolution, History, Mendel: History of science
* Some peas have green seeds and others have yellow seeds. Mendel used artificial pollination to breed the peas. His results are discussed further in Mendelian inheritance. Darwin thought that the inheritance from both parents blended together. Mendel proved that the genes from the two parents stay separate, and may be passed on unchanged to later generations.
+ Pea, Description of 'Pisum Sativum': Faboideae :: Model organisms
* It is a cool-season vegetable crop. They do not thrive in the summer heat of warmer temperate and lowland tropical climates, but do grow well in cooler high altitude tropical areas. Peas grow best in slightly acid, well-drained soils. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable | pea:
Chick pea
* are an excellent source of protein, fibre, complex carbohydrates, vitamins, and minerals
- relatively drought tolerant due to the long tap root
* have a slightly nutty flavour and are versatile and cook quickly.
Dry pea
* are a cool season crop with a restricted root system
- brown and wrinkled
- good sources of protein, iron, potassium and thiamin
* demand adequate moisture and react badly to drought and high temperatures.
Field pea
* are in the late flowering to podded stages
- legumes
- part of field peas
* is an alternative crop being grown in North Dakota for multiple markets.
Frozen pea
* are located in freezers
- kitchens
- lower in sodium
* retain their color, flavor and nutrients better than canned and are lower in sodium.
Snow pea
* Snow Peas Use tender leaves.
* are crisp, tender, full of flavor
- green peas
- the flat-podded type used primarily in Oriental cooking
- typically dull green and a little limp
* grow best in a soil rich in phosphorus and potassium, and with plenty of organic matter.
Southern pea
* are legumes and can draw nitrogen from the atmosphere
- self-pollinating
* thrive in the middle of a hot, dry summer.
Raw vegetable
* are difficult to digest
- often more appealing than cooked, especially to younger children
- uncommon for all babies and toddlers
- vegetables
* can also transmit the disease.
* contain antioxidants which protect the body from damaging oxygen-free radicals.
* give fiber.
* grown in contaminated soil can also contain the harmful organisms.
* lose their crispness, but can be used for cooking, stews, etc.<|endoftext|>### vegetable:
Root vegetable
* Most root vegetables contain compounds
- nutrient compounds
* Some root vegetables have concentration
- places
* are also tasty when braised
- low in calories and fat but high in carbohydrates
- rich in sodium, calcium, potassium and iron
- the ideal winter vegetables, providing plenty of fibre, vitamins and minerals
* benefit from a light sprinkling of dill during cooking.
* grow best in soils with a certain pH balance.
* have a natural sweetness that shines when roasted in a hot oven.
* mash nicely by themselves or in combination with other root vegetables.
### vegetable | root vegetable:
Murphy
* Murphies are optimists.
* lives in Webster, Texas
- rapids
Spud
* can fly.
* come in a variety of sizes.
* grow best in cool temperatures.
* root vegetable<|endoftext|>### vegetable | root vegetable:
Sugar beet
* Most sugar beets belong to families.
* Some sugar beets absorb nutrients
- reach maturity.
* ' plant. Its roots contain a high amount of sucrose. This can be made into sugar. Sugar beets are grown for sugar. The sugar beet is related to Chard
* are a hardy crop that can adapt to a variety of soils
- actually an agricultural crop that is commonly grown for sucrose production
- an important part of a crop rotation cycle
- forms that have been selected for higher sugar concentration
* are grown commercially throughout the world in cooler, temperate climates
- quite drought tolerant
* biennial species.
* can handle heavier soils as long as they are in full sun and have good drainage.
* continue to mature.
* has two years of development from germination to seed set.
* have other useful byproducts.
* is an annual crop that is propagated by the seeds of the flowers
- important crop
* is grown along the Belgian border
- in the UK and the rest of Europe
- more difficult to transform and to regenerate than many other crops
- strongly self-sterile setting few or no seeds under strict isolation
* is the main crop to suffer from millipedes
- only sucrose storing crop species cultivated in temperate climates
* poor competitor with weeds, particularly early in the season. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Sea vegetable
* Some sea vegetables contain polysaccharides
- help toxins
* alkalize and purify the blood from the effects of a modern diet.
* are a good source of iodine for vegans
- superior source of vegetable protein
- especially high in minerals such as calcium
- extremely rich in vitamins, minerals and nutrients
- seaweed
* come in green, brown, red and blue-green algae.
* have superior nutritional content.
Specific vegetable
* Some specific vegetables are good sources of B vitamins, calcium and iron.
* have periods of growth when a good supply of water is essential.
Tomatillo
* are part of tomatillos
- plants
- small, pale green, and covered with a papery husk
* begin to ripen when they turn from green to light yellow.
* have a lemony tomato flavor
- tangy, lemony flavor | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable:
Tomato
* All tomatoes are red when ripe
- bear fruit at different times
* Most tomatoes are high in lycopene, the pigment that makes tomatoes red
- red, but some special kinds are yellow or orange when they are ripe
* Most tomatoes contain phosphate
- potassium phosphate
- have values
* Some tomatoes are orange or yellow.
* Some tomatoes have height
- horns
- kinetic energy
* Some tomatoes have same height
- help cancer.
* ' red fruit. It is shiny and smooth, and has many small seeds. The tomato is green when it is unripe. It slowly changes color from green to red as it gets more ripe. There are many different types of tomatoes. Most tomatoes are red, but some special kinds are yellow or orange when they are ripe. Also, some tomatoes are as small as strawberries, and some will become as big as apples. Tomatoes are used a lot in Italian food. They are also used to make ketchup. Sometimes, people mistake tomatoes for vegetables, but they aren't, because they contain seeds
* add flavor, color, and nutrition to any dish
- salty flavor
* also contain the antioxidant lycopene
- vitamin C and other nutrients
- have the compounds in their skin, but the natural levels are much lower
- taste great when smoked
- vary in growth habit
* appear to be significant contributors to lowered risk.
* are a favorite of aphids and slugs.
* are a good source of lycopene, a naturally occurring plant substance
- vitamin C and a source of vitamin A, folate and potassium
- high acid food, but peppers, onions are low acid foods
- low-risk crop
- major source of the strong antioxidant lycopene
- particularly rich source of several carotenoids, including lycopene
- rich source of an anti-oxidant called lycopenes
* are a rich source of lycopene, a carotenoid that powerful antioxidant
- an antioxidant caroteniod
- phytochemicals
- staple for almost any cuisine and organic ones taste especially good
- very versatile seasoning that can be used in stews, sauces, and salads
- vital constituent of pizzas and other convenience foods
- warm season crop, planted after danger of frost and the soils are warm
* are also a good source of folic acid and potassium
- host
- an important crop, followed by other vegetables and cut flowers
* are also good caterpillar food
- plants to use in containers on the patio, deck or lanai
* are also high in lycopenes, another cancer fighting compound
- on the list of America's favorite garden plants
- very common in the Zambian diet
* are an American fruit that was exported to Europe as an ornamental
- annual and can be grown in any zone
- easy and popular vegetable to grow
- excellent source of vitamin C and a good source of vitamin A
- important crop in North America
- insignificant source of other vitamins
* are another cancer-fighting salad ingredient
- crop that carry genetically altered genes
- available in a wide variety of colors, sizes, and shapes
- beneficial for oily skin because they contain natural exfoliants and acids
- by far the richest source of lycopene in our diets
- capable of mumbling, self locomotion, and horrible violence
- cholesterol free, sodium-free, and rich in fiber
- cousins to nightshade and have poisonous leaves, but edible fruit
- difficult to grow from seed
* are easy to grow but grow best in full sun in well drained beds
- from a plant
- either determinate or indeterminate
- extremely versatile and nutritious
- flame roasted to caramelize their sugars and give the flavor a rich depth
- fruits because they are the ovaries of the plant and contain the seeds
- fruits, botanically
- full of lycopene , another potent antioxidant
- great for salads, sandwiches, vegetables, sauces, etc
- healthy for several reasons
- herbs
* are high in acid
- lycopene, a plant chemical which aids in prostate cancer prevention
- important for the vitamin K and the acid content
- light feeders of nitrogen but require a fair amount of phosphorous
* are located in markets
- refrigerators
* are low calorie fruit which provides adequate nutrients
- in calories and also provide folate, vitamin C and potassium
- meaty and have excellent flavor
- medium-sized and full of juice and good, rich flavor
- members of the nightshade family
- native of tropical America
* are native to Peru
- the Americas, in the Andean mountain region of South America
* are of tropical origin and like warm weather
- prefer warm weather
- officially a fruit but are commonly considered a vegetable
- one of Florida's most important vegetable crops
* are one of the easier crops to grow
- easiest of vegetables to grow, especially in a greenhouse environment
- most important and valuable horticultural crops grown in Western Australia
* are one of the most popular garden veggies
- vegetables grown in Colorado
- popular, versatile and widely grown fruits
- state's top cash crops
- part of tomatos
* are particularly good at preventing prostate cancer
- rich in the antioxidant lycopene
- sensitive and have been used as indicator plants
- poisonous to humans
- relatively easy to transplant
* are rich in an anti-oxidant called lycopene
- antioxidant called lycopene, which is credited for the reduced risk
- calcium, potassium and phosphorus
- fiber, carbohydrate, potassium and iron
* are rich in lycopene, an antioxidant related to beta-carotene
- but have little beta-carotene
* are rich in vitamin C and also contain vitamins A and B, potassium, iron and phosphorus
- low in calories
- sources of vitamin C and lycopene, both potent anti-carcinogens
- second only to potatoes in their level of cultivation in the United States
- slow to germinate and slow to start producing fruit
* are small, an inch or so in diameter, and a healthy golden color
- pock-marked, and incomparably sweet
- smooth, crack-resistant, and continue to set over a long period of time
- so easy to grow from seed
- software
- subject to many diseases
* are susceptible to a wide range of foliar diseases
- early blight and late blight
- technically a fruit, as are beans, peas, etc
* are tender perennials
* are the basic ingredient in many salsa recipes
- best source of lycopene
- leading container vegetable
- main winter vegetable, melons the main summer vegetable
* are the most common vegetable in home Gardens
- commonly grown garden vegetables
* are the most popular garden vegetable crop in North America
- vegetable grown in home gardens
- widely home-canned product in the United States
- number-one vegetable grown by home gardeners
* are the primary natural source of lycopene
- richest source of lycopene, a powerful antioxidant
- state fruit of Ohio
- third most popular vegetable, after potatoes and lettuce
- usually faster than peppers or eggplants
- vegetables because they are cooked and served the way vegetables usually are
- versatile, as they are fine for canning, paste, or just eating fresh
* are very acidic when cooked
- fragile and bruise easily
- high in potassium
* are very sensitive to injury from herbicide chemicals
- night temperatures
- susceptible to watering problems
- warm-season perennials grown as annuals
- well suited to container gardening
* belong with oregano, basil, fresh parsley, and dill.
* blooming during hot temperatures have improper fruit set and reduced yields.
* can be many other colors besides red, including yellow, orange, green and purple
- grow very well organically, provided the soil is well enriched with organic matter
- start to crack during warm, rainy periods, especially if rains follow a dry period
* carry a gene for the molecule that ensures self-destruction.
* come in almost every color of the rainbow
- several varieties including cherry, medium, plum and beefsteak
* come in two basic growth habits
- classes, determinate and indeterminate
* contain a high amount of lycopene
- an antioxidant called lycopene, which seems to have an anti-cancer effect
- both Vitamin C and betacarotene
- high concentrations of vitamin C, a known cancer-fighter
- lycopene, an antioxidant with strong anti-cancer effects
- p-coumaric acid, chlorogenic acid and lycopene
- phytochemicals, which help reduce risk of cardiovascular disease
- substances that prevent cancer causing cell unions
- vitamin A, and they also contain beta-carotene
* continue to be one of the most popular vegetables grown in the home garden
- touted as an important food in helping to combat heart disease
- ripen after they are picked as long as they are stored at room temperature
* define gardening success.
* demand a growing medium rich in organic matter.
* deter some bugs away from celery, and they also provide some shade for celery.
* develop fairly extensive and deep roots
- gray mold on all above ground plant parts
* do almost no cross-pollinating, but some varieties of corn have to be kept a mile apart
- come in both red and green
- quite well with chives, onions, carrots, garlic, and marigolds
- require at least four to six hours of sunlight
* experience some insect problems with cutworms and a few other garden pests.
* grow best in full sun planted directly in the ground or in containers
- more acidic soil
- soils which have lots of organic matter
- easily in the greenhouse
- gills
- in very dry conditions in many parts of the world without a problem
- on vines
- rapidly in warm weather
- well in soils rich in organic matter
* growing in pots are especially vulnerable to drying out.
* have energy
- green fruit that is growing very quickly
- no cholesterol and no saturated fat
- plastids which store a red pigment
- their best flavor when they are fully ripe
- two growth stages vegetative and reproductive
* lend their flavor to sorbet and granit surprisingly well.
* lie red in the sun.
* like to be consistently moist to avoid blossom end rot
- planted deep
* lose their firmness quickly if they are overripe.
* love the sun and they thrive in well-drained beds.
* often produce earlier and larger fruits when staked and trained.
* originate in the tropics.
* prefer rich soil kept moderately moist.
* provide potassium, iron, phosphorous and some B vitamins.
* require a great deal of light especially for setting fruit.
* require about one inch of water a week
- six to eight weeks from seeding until they reach transplant size
- at least an inch of water per week
- constant care to stay healthy and produce fruit
- nitrogen for top growth, phosphorus for fruit development and potassium for roots
- steady sunlight and regular watering
- uniform moisture after setting fruit
* respond to mulching because they require stable soil moisture.
* run from yellow to deep purple in color.
* show blossom end rot, which is the end of the tomato rots before the fruit ripens.
* sing blues, though only colors they know are dull green, bright red.
* turn red when ripe.
* vary in acidity due new tomato varieties and changing soil conditions.
* wil grow large, if planted in the sign of the Scales. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vegetable | tomato:
Determinate tomato
* are a bush type tomato that reach a certain plant height and stop growing
- great for canning or smaller spaces
- small, compact plants
- the bush types
* grow, then flower and fuit in a short period of time.
* produce all their fruit at one time.
* stop growing and flowering when they reach a certain height.
* tend to have compact plants and the fruit ripens more closely together
- reach a determined size and then stop
Diced tomato
* are relatively new in supermarkets, with consumers showing preference for chunkiness.
* come in lots of seasoning variations
- many varieties
Whole tomato
* have more fiber than peeled tomatoes, which have more than tomato juice.
* tend to crack and collapse completely when they thaw.
Yellow tomato
* Most yellow tomatoes are bland in flavor.
* are generally too watery and wan in flavor.
Vegetable gardening
* great way to grow vegetables.
* is work which rewards well.
Watercress
* Some watercresses have roots.
* are plants.
* contains mustard oil, a compound that flushes excess water from the body.
* does best in spring and fall seasons and has a tendency to bolt in the hot summer months.
### vegetables:
Mustard green
* are a longtime favorite in the United States
- also a source of calcium that can be important to lactose intolerant individuals
- great raw, in salads, or as a cooked greens
- usually slow cooked or blanched and added to soups, purees or sautes
* come in a host of varieties that each has distinct characteristics.
* is vegetables.
* mature quickly and are best planted in early spring or fall.
### vegetarians:
Intelligent being
* Some intelligent beings are vegetarians.
* can recognize the work of another intelligent being.
* inhabit both the physical and the spiritual dimensions.
Male mosquito
* Most male mosquitoes emerge from pupas.
* Most male mosquitoes feed on blood
- nectar
- plant nectar
- mosquitos are vegetarians
* Some male mosquitoes feed nectar
- on sources
- plant juice
* are attracted to the note produced by the wing vibration of the female.
* drink only sugary fluids such as flower nectar.
* mate with females one to two days after the females emerge.
* survive only on plant juices
- primarily on flower nectar
* swarm when it is time to mate.<|endoftext|>Vehicle
* A craft job
* Craft have capability
- time travel capability
- includes sections
- occupation
- use techniques
- vehicle
- works of baked clay or terracotta continue to be a major art form in India
* Crafts Make craft items that are suitable for different activities
- snowflakes out of paper
- also play a big role in the holiday season
* Crafts are classes
- hobbies
- mainly in wood, pottery, leather, metals, hard stones and bamboo
- making
- recreational activities
- skills
- vehicles
- wood carving, metalworking, plaiting, and mat and basket weaving
- provide an important source of income for people of various cultures worldwide
### vehicle:
Aircraft
* are also efficient vehicles for transporting microbes
- particularly sensitive to fatigue because of their thin, highly stressed structures
* have a wide variety of instruments that react differently to electromagnetic radiation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | aircraft:
Aeroplane
* All aeroplanes produce lift through their wings in order to fly.
* are artifacts
- devices
- low and slow
* fall to the earth from time to time.
* flying over ordinary towns can see roads that look like a spider 's web.
* have Arctic air conditioning
- seats
* includes accelerators
- aircraft engines
- bases
- ceilings
- floors
* includes fuel gauges
- indicators
- lines
- pods
- systems
- fulcrums
* includes gas gages
- tanks
* includes gasoline gages
- hood ornaments
- navigation light
* includes petrol gages
- power trains
- radar domes
- ribs
- room light
- sections
- tail assemblies
- walls
- windshields
* is an aircraft
+ Milton Keynes: Towns in Buckinghamshire
* Milton Keynes looks strange to people from other towns. Aeroplanes flying over ordinary towns can see roads that look like a spider's web. But when they fly over the city, they see that its big roads look like a net or a grid. The people who live in Milton Keynes call the spaces between the busy roads 'grid squares' and that is where they live. Nobody lives right next to the big roads, so there are no trucks going past the front door of people who live there. So really, Milton Keynes often seems more like a 100 little villages than a big city.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | aircraft | aeroplane:
Jet
* Some jets also have inertial navigation systems onboard to help pilots find their way
- can exceed the speed of sound
* also provide astronomers with a unique glimpse of the inner workings of the star and disk.
* are a much common phenomenon in active galactic nuclei
- conical sprays of subatomic particles confined to a certain narrow width
* can also originate from gluons radiated by partons in the initial state
- fly in space
* carry passengers across oceans and around the world.
* have a lot of parts which spin on a central shaft.
- floors
- indicators
- lines
- tanks
- hood ornaments
- jet engines
- power trains
- radar domes
- ribs
- sections
* is the largest Tokamak in the world.
* only occur in pairs, going in opposite directions.
* shoot off from the poles of the black hole, perpendicular to the disk.
### vehicle | aircraft | aeroplane | jet:
Water jet
* point to a specific area of the body and thus provide specific relaxation and therapy.
* work simultaneously to massage all reflex points of the body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | aircraft:
Airplane
* All airplanes follow the same laws of physics
- have a limit to the amount of weight they can safely carry into the air
* Every airplane has a specific takeoff speed, where lift overcomes gravity.
* Make Markets.
* Many airplanes fly in the stratosphere, because it is very stable.
* Most airplanes also have flaps attached to the wings
- are fixed wing
- burn fossil fuel with air to get energy, but that has no future
* Most airplanes carry air cargo
- fly in paths
* Most airplanes have computers
- horizontal and vertical tails to make the airplane stable
- instruments
* Most airplanes use combustion engines
- gas turbines
- internal combustion engines
* Some airplanes fly in stratosphere.
* Some airplanes have different types of propellers
- lose power
- reach ages
- use propellers for the propulsion system instead of jets
* also create a great deal of pollution.
* also have wing flaps
- provide platforms for remote sensing, and some sensors operate from land
* always try to take off and land into the wind.
* are aircrafts.
* are also good places to catch colds or the flu
- notoriously dry environments
* are capable of bombs
- crashs
- near airports
- stalls
- taxis
- designed to withstand even the most wicked of storms
- films
* are located in air
- aircraft carriers
- hangars
- skies
- war
* are mechanical hawks
- objects, subject to imperfections and faults
- more expensive to purchase and maintain than automobiles
- mutually interchangeable human flying tools
- notorious for having high levels of positive ions
- one of the worst places for people who have allergies
- responsible for air, noise, and water pollution
- safer because of their increased sophistication, newer power plants pollute less
- tradeoffs in performance, time, and lifestyle
- up in the air spreading sound waves
* are used for air transportation
- flies
- flight
- traveling
- warfare
- vehicles
- very top-heavy, so they tip easily
* cabins, for example, consist mostly of plastics, or polymers.
* can find their altitude by using air pressure
- fly because the law of aerodynamics higher law than the law of gravity
- only fly so fast and turn only so sharply
* come in many different shapes and sizes
- shapes and sizes, but they all have similar parts
* come with manuals
- their own call letters
* coming in to land often fly over car parks.
* connect distant points on the globe.
* contrails only form under certain conditions.
* crash down to earth when pilots and crews disappear.
* create dreams
- thrust using propellers, jet engines , or rockets
* don t just go down at airports
- take off until everyone is wearing seat belts
* drop toxic chemicals regularly from the air.
* expand horizons.
* fall from the sky.
* fly because their wings throw air downward
- they push air down
- between cities without having to pay for air space
* have a lot of surface area
- major influence on lives' of society
- maximum load they are capable of carrying safely
- weight force, too
- dual flight controls
- strict weight and balance limits
- two magnetos for safety reasons
- wheels
- bases
- ceilings
* includes fuel gauges
- pods
* includes gasoline gages
- navigation light
- radar domes
- sections
- the most expensive means of communication
* make noise that disturbs residents of homes near the flight path.
* move fast enough to get around bad weather
- large numbers of business passengers or vacationers
- very fast through the air
* need runways.
* often take off and land against the wind.
* produce huge amounts of greenhouse gas emissions.
* provide safe travel for two main reasons.
* regularly carry several hundred passengers.
* retract their landing gear in flight for the same reason.
* seek the widest areas to fly.
* slide from earth to air, bound for distant parts of a smaller world.
* sometimes crash, and it is always a shock to the system when one goes down
- roar as they approach their runways
* stay up because air currents along the wings create pockets of no resistance, or vortexes
- the wings move air downwards
- in the air because they have wings
* still fly four to five times faster than zeppelins.
* take off by using full speed
- horizontally and can move in a forward direction only
- on angles
* takeoff and land at airports.
* use altimeters to estimate their height as well
- areodynamics to make less drag and go faster
- propellers or jet engines
* usually take off and land into the wind.
* watching popular pastime all over the world.
+ Altitude, Altitude in aviation and in spaceflight: Aviation :: Physical geography
* Airplanes can find their altitude by using air pressure. This pressure can be measured and this can be converted into a height above sea level.
+ List of aviation terms, Aircraft
* It has wings that do not move. The wings on some fixed wing aircraft can move a small distance but are generally fixed in one position. Most airplanes are fixed wing.
+ Wing, Artificial wings: Animal anatomy
* Airplanes also have wings. Those wings cannot be moved, they are stable, but the wings also produce lift, so the airplane will get off the ground if you move it fast enough. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | aircraft | airplane:
Paper airplane
* Most paper airplanes find stability by being high-winged airplanes with dihedral wings.
* Paper Airplanes Make some paper airplanes.
* are capable of flies
- created by humans
- made of paper
- toys
Real airplane
* are hollow and light.
* have round engines and two wings.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | aircraft:
Airship
* Most airships are non-rigid airships.
* ' are kind of aircraft. Airships stay in the sky by floating. This is different from aeroplanes that stay in the sky by moving. An airship floats like a balloon. But an airship is different from a balloon. An airship has an engine for power and a way to control its direction of movement. A balloon does not have an engine or a way to control its direction of movement.
* can transport large numbers of people and freight.
* is an aircraft
+ Airship, Kinds of Airships: Aircraft
* Non-rigid airships have no structures in them. Non-rigid airships are also called blimps. Most airships are non-rigid airships.
Chopper
* Some choppers have edge blades.
* are motorcycles
- tooths
* have two or three blades.
* includes aircraft engines
- bases
- ceilings
- floors
* includes fuel gauges
- indicators
- lines
- systems
* includes gas gages
- tanks
* includes gasoline gages
* includes petrol gages
- power trains
- room light
- sections
- walls
* is grounder
### vehicle | aircraft | dirigible:
Blimp
* Some blimps have engines that can rotate in different directions to help steer.
* are air ships
- large balloons stretched out to look like an egg or cigar
- located in skies
- reactionaries
* have no structure of any kind within the envelope, only helium and air.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | aircraft:
Glider
* All gliders use an aerofoil to slow their rate of descent.
* Most gliders eat insects.
* Some gliders come with lines which can shrink, stretch, or have broken cores
- feed on nectar from flowers.
* are controlled by their pilots by using control-sticks. In gliders with two seats, each pilot has a control-stick. Gliders always have seats for the pilots
- airplanes that fly for hours without using an engine
- capable of unpowered flight
- located in porchs
- reclusive animals
- social and communal by nature, and they crave time and attention
- unpowered aircraft which are towed into the sky by a powered aircraft
- very small and difficult to see, unless they are in a turn and the wing is visible
* begin their soar with the help of external propulsion.
* can fly hundreds of miles along ridges, for example, in Pennsylvania
- make a sound like a barking puppy
* come in Redwood or Pine
- all shapes and sizes
* descend relative to the air in which they are flying.
* do bark and have been known to bark all night long
- bark, usually at night
* have a tendency to hide their illnesses, in the wild, an ill glider dead one
- tendencies
- ceilings
- indicators
* includes gas gages
- tanks
- gauges
* includes petrol gages
* love most fruits, especially melons, grapes, raisins, oranges, and kiwis
- to jump and climb
* produce a number of vocalisations including barking and hissing
- at least three distinct odors
* propagate backward with respect to rake propagation.
* shriek as they dive out of the canopy, wary being in Powerful Owl territory.
* use thermals to soar with the eagles.
+ Gliding: Aircraft :: Animals
* Gliding' is when an object or animal goes through the air without active flight. All gliders use an aerofoil to slow their rate of descent. Glider planes have wings, and gliding animals have membranes which they stretch out. By using rising air they can prolong their stay in the air. The word 'soaring' describes this, and is also used for the sport of gliding.
Gyroplane
* are more maneuverable than airplanes and can take-off and land in much shorter distances.
* use that same principle of autorotation that maple seeds do. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | aircraft:
Helicopter
* Most helicopters accomplish yaw control using the small tail rotor
- are much more complex than airplanes with many moving parts
- have what is known as a constant speed rotor
* Some helicopters can have as many as six main rotor blades, and up to five tail rotor blades.
* Some helicopters have a nose landing gear while others have a tail landing gear
- the sight mounted on their mast or the top of their rotor
* are also a part of the aviation force structure
- different from airplanes
- especially useful in treating large areas and in mountainous terrain
* are located in air
- airports
- machines
* are used for flies
- transport
- travel
* arrive at scenes.
* cause more disturbance to bird colonies than fixed wing airplanes.
* don t have de-icing equipment and in cold weather they can t fly into clouds.
* especially are a major transportation vehicle for the offshore oil industry.
* flying from icebreakers are the ship's eyes to locate objects over the horizon.
* get lift from their rotor blades.
* have a growing number of general aviation uses
- much poorer safety record than fixed-wing aircraft
- bases
- floors
* includes fuel gauges
- tanks
- sections
- walls
* normally fly low and slow
- land and takeoff into the wind
+ Helicopter, Uses
* Helicopters are especially useful when there are floods and other disasters. Food packets, water, medicines and clothes are dropped from the air to people on the ground who cannot be reached by road. When people are injured, helicopters can carry them to hospitals faster than an ambulance on the road. Helicopters are also used by the military, because they can move troops and equipment to places an airplane cannot take them. Guns can be mounted on them, and missiles can be shot from them.
Jet aircraft
* Many jet aircraft fly in the stratosphere because it is very stable.
* Some jet aircraft fly in lower stratosphere | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | aircraft:
Plane
* All planes intersect on the equator.
* Every plane has a speed where the wing simply stops flying.
* Every plane is associated with a plane number
- characterized by the number of units in x and y direction
* Most planes have flaps
- wings
* Some planes carry mammals
- fly differently than others
* Some planes have continuous displacement
- neoprene boots, or boots covered with rubber, that can be inflated with air
* are capable of crashs
- fall
- near airports
- degrees
- essentially the same as worlds
- fast
- flat surfaces that extent infinitely in two directions
- hand tools
- hangars
- runways
- skies
- taxiways
- meanses of transportation
- power tools
- rivers
- shapes
- spheres with infinit radius and lines are circles with infinite radius
- vehicles
* can also make aerodynamic contrails from the wing surfaces or propellors
* carry women.
* change, depending on the position of the body.
* contain bike frames
* didn t fall from the sky.
* fall from the sky when engines eat water.
* figure A two-dimensional figure that lies entirely within a single plane.
* fly at dawn, because usually there is very little wind in the early morning.
* flying upside down, even with cambered wings, can deflect enough air to get lift.
* have blades
- mechanisms
- screw mechanisms
- seats
- tails
- windows for seeing side to side, up and down, and forward
* includes accelerators
- aircraft engines
- ceilings
* includes fuel gauges
- indicators
- pods
- systems
- fulcrums
* includes gas gages
- tanks
* includes gasoline gages
- hood ornaments
- navigation light
* includes petrol gages
- power trains
- radar domes
- ribs
- room light
- tail assemblies
- walls
- windshields
* is an aircraft
- defined by point and normal
* kill people.
* leave trails.
* rise above the sky, flying low, flying high.
* work in three dimensions, but a boat is limited to two.
+ Fixed-wing aircraft, Parts, Tail: Aircraft :: Aerospace engineering
* This helps the plane fly straight. Some planes have more than one tail, like the Antonov An-225. Some planes also have no tail, like the flying wing design.
+ Plane (mathematics): Surfaces :: Math stubs :: Shapes :: Geometry
* A 'plane' is a perfectly flat surface extending in all directions. Try to imagine the ceiling of a room, only extended into all directions infinitely. All planes are flat surfaces. If a surface is not flat, it is called a 'curved surface'.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | aircraft | plane:
Airliner
* also move faster and climb better, which tends to minimize ice.
* are airplanes.
* can fly over mountains and bad weather.
* fly just above the tropopause and just below the speed of sound.
+ Aircraft: Aerospace engineering
* Big aeroplanes for transporting people are called 'airliners'. Now airliners need less than seven hours to travel across the Atlantic Ocean. Airliners are the quickest way to travel. Airliners can fly over mountains and bad weather. Airliners have complex technology to make them fly quickly, safely, and for less money.
### vehicle | aircraft | plane | airliner:
Airbus
* is an airliner
* usually have rows of seats along side lavatories or galleys.
Biplane
* can usually have more lift than similar monoplanes , but also create more drag.
* have a stronger structure but they produce more drag than normal fixed-wing aircraft
* A 'biplane' Fixed-wing aircraft that is heavier than air but can fly. Biplanes have a stronger structure but they produce more drag than normal fixed-wing aircraft. Biplanes can usually have more lift than similar monoplanes, but also create more drag | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | aircraft | plane:
Fighter plane
* Many fighter planes have two engines.
+ Rhamphorhynchus, Rhamphorhynchoids: Pterosaurs
* The analogy would be planes. Early planes were highly stable, and so are airliners. Fighter planes are fundamentally much less stable, and have to be in order to jink about. This needs such fast reactions that the details are worked out by computer, with the pilot indicating where to go.
Glider plane
* have wings , and gliding animals have membranes which they stretch out.
+ Gliding: Aircraft :: Animals
* Gliding' is when an object or animal goes through the air without active flight. All gliders use an aerofoil to slow their rate of descent. Glider planes have wings, and gliding animals have membranes which they stretch out. By using rising air they can prolong their stay in the air. The word 'soaring' describes this, and is also used for the sport of gliding.
Hand plane
* are ancient , originating thousands of years ago.
+ Plane (tool): Woodworking tools
* Hand planes are ancient, originating thousands of years ago. Early planes were made from wood and blades first from bronze and later from iron and even later from steel. The cutting blade or iron was held in place with a wooden wedge.
### vehicle | aircraft | plane | hydroplane:
Floatplane
* are seaplanes.
* comes in different sizes.
Sailplane
* Most sailplanes have one retractable wheel, which of course needs to be extended before touchdown.
* also use a straight wing design.
* are able to fly without engines by making use of rising air-currents
- graceful in the air, but helpless on the ground
* can keep flying for hours and hours and can sometimes even outclimb powered planes.
* fly in clear weather.
* generally are less expensive than scale models with motors.
* is an aircraft
Subsonic aircraft
* have a leading horizontal stabilizer and a trailing elevator for pitch control.
* operate primarily in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere.
Supersonic aircraft
* Many supersonic aircraft have a similar needle at the nose.
* are intrinsically less fuel efficient than subsonic aircraft.
* replace some jets for long distance travel.
* use low bypass turbofans or turbojets with afterburners. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Bicycle
* Most bicycles come with all-around tires, designed to work well enough in most conditions.
* Most bicycles have frames
- front mounted, brushless, permanent magnet hub motors
- tubes
- wheels
- intended for smaller children come with training wheels
* Some bicycles are even more expensive than motorcycles
- have grease in their freewheels that can cause problems when it gets very cold
- lose energy
* always yield to pedestrians.
* are a frequent mode of transportation
- great means of transportation, although most people simply walk
- healthy alternative to vehicles, and produce no emissions in their use
- highly efficient alternative to cars
* are a major form of transportation
- source of childhood injury
* are a popular means of transportation all over the world
- for college students
- primary form of transportation in Uganda
- recognized form of transportation
- serious mode of transportation for most children and teenagers
- useful means of transportation when used properly
* are also a common source of significant injuries
- fuel saver for short trips
- effective crime-fighting tools when used in densely populated urban areas
- among the most frequently stolen types of property
- an important part of most children's lives during the elementary school years
- bikes
- cheaper modes of transportion than cars
- dangerous things
- enviromently-friendly means of transport as well
- everywhere in Vietnam
- faster than cars
- inherently unstable in yaw and roll
- legal vehicles
* are located in bicycle shops
- garages
- labs
- parks
- sheds
- stores
- streets
- toy stores
- universities
- made of metal
- meanses of transportation
- more technologically advanced than motor vehicles
- prevalent all over the Netherlands as the land is quite flat and easy to cycle around
- public transportation
- quiet and slight, difficult for normal motorized humans to see and hear
- responsible for following the same laws as cars
- subject to the same rules and laws as motor vehicles
* are the liberators of space in our communities
- manifestation of elegant simplicity
- most efficient mode of transportation ever invented
- perfect synthesis of body and machine
- to be parked in bicycle racks or chained to light poles or other stationary structures
- top-heavy, have poor brakes, and provide no protection to their riders
- toys
- traffic
* are used for entertainment
- racing
- rides
- riding
- rushs
- traveling
- welding
- usually able to last for several years if maintained properly
- vehicles according to Florida state law
* are vehicles and are required to obey traffic laws just like other vehicles
- subject to traffic laws
- supposed to be ridden on the road
- that can travel at high speeds under demanding conditions
- vehicles, and as such are unfortunately involved in many accidents
- where most advances in machining and metallurgy take place
* brakes use friction to stop the wheels from turning.
* can be a means of transportation, physical fitness or racing
- fun to ride, especially if the rider is suicidal
- the fastest and most efficient way to navigate crowded cities
- become a permanent part of the American transportation culture
- create dangerous situations when they prevent people from moving
* can go places which are inaccessible by cars
- where cars are unable to go
* come in different sizes.
* commuting offers an alternative to driving a vehicle.
* consume less energy than cars.
* contribute to community vitality, livability and a clean environment.
* exceed ownership of autos worldwide.
* generate less friction because they have only two tires.
* have a tendency to move forward
- pedals
- seats
- spokes
* have the advantage of being able to go anywhere and be parked anywhere, unlike cars
- same rights and responsibilities as motor vehicle drivers
* helmets Always wear a helmet when riding a bicycle.
* helmets save lives, but only if they are worn
* help keep trails open.
* includes axles
- bases
* includes bicycle seats
- coaster brakes
- fulcrums
- handlebars
- sections
- sprocket wheels
* know when to keep quiet.
* offer the same degree of individual mobility as automobiles.
* play an important part of everyday life in a city such as Kyoto.
* predominate as the main mode of transportation.
* provide a cleaner and cheaper form of transportation compared to automobiles
- an alternative means of transport
- police officers with fast, flexible cost-effective transportation
* relieve congestion, improve mobility and reduce air pollution.
* save money, save time, and the environment.
* seem to be the main mode of transportation.
* take longer to stop than cars do.
+ Ho Chi Minh City, Geography: Cities in Vietnam
* Bicycle riding around the Mekong delta is very easy in dry weather. Because of the flatness, roads and buildings sink into the draining soil. Lying water keeps pollution very close to city homes. The rising tides can flood many districts when the moon is fullest. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | bicycle:
Bicycle racing
* is an inherently dangerous activity that can result in serious injury or death
- the second most popular spectator sport in the world, behind only soccer
* means any contest of speed or competition where bicycles are used.
Bicycle theft
* crime that causes finiancial loss and inconvenience for the community.
* is one of the more common crimes which occur on campus every year.
Electric bicycle
* are light and go fairly slowly, so regenerative brakes achieve little
- the first affordable electric vehicles
* can go farther and faster than conventional bicycles.
* decentralize power away from corporations and toward individuals.
* have small electric motors that assist pedaling by the rider.
Mountain bicycle
* Most mountain bicycles have tires.
* are a human scale, minimal impact, sustainable form of off-road recreation.
* can also snag weeds.
* have sturdier frames, more upright handlebars and wider tires with heavy tread<|endoftext|>### vehicle | bicycle:
Mountain bike
* Many mountain bikes have suspension systems to cushion the rider from bumps on trails.
* Most mountain bikes feature sloping top tubes for more stand-over clearance
- have wheels
* Some mountain bikes have suspension for increased shock absorption.
* are able to bridge the gap between automobiles and foot patrol
- also easier to get used to for new riders
- better equipped to handle rough terrain
- by far the most popular types of snow bikes
- designed for all types of terrain, from flat gravel paths to steep rocky trails
- low impact, environmentally safe, and respectful of both hikers and nature
- slower than a road bike, and there is less wind-chill at a slower speed
- sturdier than road bikes
- useful, as they are ideal for covering rough terrain
* come in a wide range of sizes and styles.
* concentrate weight in a small area, quickly wearing grooves into the ground.
* don t like water.
* have shocks that take the place of the front fork
- special tires for rougher terrain
* intended for off-road biking are typically lighter and have better amenities.
* tend to have adequate ground clearance, although most, alas, have vertical dropouts.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Bike
* Most bikes have brakes
- disc brakes
- wheels
* Most bikes use bags
- handlebar bags
- sealed caged ball bearings
* Some bikes have attitudes, often due to bad parenting
- charging systems that chronicaly over charge the battery
- tall windshields
- use friction
* are O.K., also dogs on leash
- a commodity that has wheels
* are capable of crashs
- skids
- everywhere, being ridden by virtually everyone, regardless of sex, age, or size
* are located in garages
- streets
- toy stores
- much more energy efficient and environmentally friendly than cars
* are used for commuting
- riding
- transport
- vehicles, just like cars and trucks
* are, in fact, the world's most popular transportation tool.
* come in a staggering array of shapes, sizes and colors.
* have bars
- functions
- gears, just like cars
* includes axles
- bases
* includes bicycle seats
- coaster brakes
- fulcrums
- pedals
- sections
- spokes
- sprocket wheels
* reach areas
- congest areas
* riding on narrow, natural surface trails is as old as the bicycle.
- tubes
* walking and other non-motorized forms of transportation are the way of the future.
### vehicle | bike:
Bike theft
* crime of opportunity.
* is classified legally as theft
- common in some communities
- somewhat of a major socio-economic problem
Electric bike
* All electric bikes allow pedaling and many require pedaling.
* are immune to traffic jams
- just regular bikes with an electric motor on the back wheel
- simple to maintain and repair
Recumbent bike
* allow one to pedal while leaning back with one's feet out in front.
* have seats which look like a chair and allow the user to lean back with support. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | bike:
Road bike
* are efficient because they are sturdy and light
- for longer distances
- for endurance and speed freaks
* give up quite a bit in comfort, but gain efficiency in top speed.
* tend be lightweight and full of speed
- to be more expensive than mountain bikes
+ Bicycle, Types of Bicycles: Human-powered vehicles :: Cycling
* Road bikes are efficient for longer distances. Many have clips to attach your shoes, rather than just pedals. There are variations, as some road bicycles have regular tires. A road bike can go very fast and is a good choice when participating in a bike race. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Boat
* Many boats have plastic materials on the instrument panels that are very sensitive to sun light.
* Most boats also have a coxswain who steers the boat and gives commands to the rowers
- carry anchors
- charge their batteries with an engine-driven alternator
* Most boats have plywood decks located deep in the hull
- sails
- their maximum steering effect at maximum speed
- use either portable toilets or holding tanks, which contain untreated waste
* Some boats have anchor lockers, which allow the anchor to be stored below deck
- eyes
- flashlights
- glass bottoms so the non swimmer can enjoy the beauty of the sea
- names that form the basis of legends
- sails, some are powered by rowing with oars, and some use motors
- take in more water than others
* Some boats use energy
- propellers
- thermal energy
* are a major form of transportation because of the states' vast network of rivers
- capable of sinks
- crafts
* are located in bays
- bodies of water
- garages
- harbors
- lakes
- oceans
- made of fiber
- means of transport
- modes of transportation
- notorious for their capability to carry heavy loads
- ships
* are the main means of transport
- most environmental means of traveling
* are used for fishermans
- floatings
- launching
- recreation
- sailing
- skiing
- travelling
* are used for water skiing
- skis
- vessels that operate in one of the most hostile environments in the world
* can leak oil or fuel into their bilge
- make waves too
- sink fast
- transport people or goods across the water
- arm men
* contribute to marine noise pollution and can strike animals.
* dives, shore dives, during the day, or at night.
* docks with brush can harbor fish.
* experience buoyant forces
* have divers
* includes anchors
- bases
- hulls
- ribs
- rider plates
- rudder blades
- sections
* move on the surface of the sea.
* pumping human sewage directly overboard also contribute to the nutrient problem in our waters.
* refer to fishing, ship building and commerce.
* sail daily to retrieve natural sponges.
* sink due to thunder and whirlpools.
* use rudders.
* usually travel through water at speeds faster than the speed of water waves.
+ Iceboat
* They have sails. Most boats are made to fit only one person.
* A 'boat' is a vehicle used to travel on water. It is smaller than a ship. Some boats have sails, some are powered by rowing with oars, and some use motors.
+ Puget Sound: Geography of Washington (U.S. state) :: Seattle, Washington
* Puget Sound' is a sound in Western Washington. It is a large area of salt water that is partially cut off from the rest of the Pacific Ocean. Many of Washington's cities, like Seattle and Tacoma are next to the sound. Many boats travel on the sound. Some of the boats are Ferries which take people from the main part of Washington to the islands in the sound. Many boats come from across the Ocean from places like Japan, and China to trade in Washington.
+ Rhine-Main-Danube Canal: Canals :: Buildings and structures in Germany
* It is in Bavaria in the south of Germany. It goes from Bamberg, past Nuremberg, to Regensburg. It was finished in 1992. Boats can now travel from Rotterdam in the Netherlands all the way to the Black Sea.
+ Sail: Boats
* A 'sail' is a large piece of cloth on the top of some boats. The wind goes around the sail and makes the boat move through the water. The piece that the sail is attached to is called a mast. Some boats have many sails, and some have only one. Usually, small boats have only one sail, and bigger boats have more. Boats with sails are called 'sailing boats'. There are many different names for different kinds of sailing boats with different kinds of sails.
+ Surface, Examples of Surfaces | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | boat:
Barge
* are boats
- generally the least expensive way to transport crops and fertilizer
- specialized scows built for that purpose, or cut down from sail boats
- watercrafts
* slip down rivers hauling heavy loads of coal and grain.
* stir up sediments and tear up fish.
* use inland water to move oil cheaply from producers to consumers.
### vehicle | boat | body part:
Body canal boat
* A canal boat boat
* Canal boats are boats.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | boat:
Canoe
* Many canoes develop rocker when leaned because the bow and stern pop out of the water.
* Most canoes treat canoeing as a means to an end.
* A 'canoe' small boat, that is often driven by manpower or womanpower, but also commonly sailed. Canoes are pointed at both ends and usually open on top, but can be covered. The most famous of rowers include the Szwedo of Luke in which he was the first man to complete 4 laps the woodend river in less than 3 days, beating the record of 4 laps in 4 days.
* are an Aboriginal invention
- boats
- like shoes
* are located in campgrounds
- mountain streams
- one of the earliest boats known to man
* are shallow-draft boats whose delicate shape has much in common with Viking ships
- with a fine, delicate shape
- small boats
- two person boats
- universal in style, with variations occurring in material, weight and length
* are used for boating
- fishing
- fun
- paddlings
- recreation
- water transportation
- vehicles
* come in a variety of materials, sizes, weights, and they all have unique purposes
- all shapes and sizes, from long and narrow, to short and wide
- many different sizes and shapes to meet different needs
* easily tip over with only the slightest movement of weight.
* includes anchors
- bases
- hulls
- ribs
- rider plates
- rudder blades
- sections
* tripping season starts as soon as lakes are free of ice.
* used by the natives of the Pacific islands are very long and narrow.
### vehicle | boat | canoe:
Kayak
* Many kayaks have a shallow V hull with slightly flared sides.
* Most kayaks have a flatter and rounder bottom than Greenland kayaks
- flexible back rests to prevent back injuries
* Some kayaks always come with a rudder
- can never have a rudder
- personal computers
- products
* includes anchors
- bases<|endoftext|>### vehicle | boat | canoe | kayak:
Modern kayak
* come in a wide variety of designs and materials for specialized purposes.
+ Kayak: Boats
* A 'kayak' is a small boat that is driven by manpower. It typically has a covered deck, and a cockpit covered by a spraydeck. It is propelled by a double-bladed paddle by a sitting paddler. The kayak was used by the native Ainu, Inuit, Aleut and Eskimo hunters in sub-Arctic regions of northeastern Asia, North America and Greenland. Modern kayaks come in a wide variety of designs and materials for specialized purposes.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | boat | canoe | kayak:
Sea kayak
* allow access to hidden channels with secret hot springs and pristine ancient forests.
* are easy to learn to use
- paddle and designed to be stable in most water conditions
- great for large lakes, but they're tough to portage between lakes
- high performance for more efficient paddling on long trips
- like canoes of the ocean
- limited in surf play and glass boats and rudders are prone to damage
* are longer and are made for ease of control over distance
- much more stable than whitewater kayaks
- much more stable than whitewater boats
- sleek, fast and very seaworthy
- the ideal way to explore the many bays, islands and lagoons
- usually very stable and less tippy than whitewater kayaks
* come in several different sizes.
* have long, sleek, stable hulls and track well over open water.
Whitewater kayak
* have a closed deck and a cockpit that seals with a waterproof skirt.
* tend to shorter, and can turn on a dime. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | boat | canoe | kayak:
Wooden kayak
* are light weight as well as being strong and beatiful.
* can take harder blows in rapids than fiberglass.
Dinghy
* Dinghies are rowboats
- small boats
* Dinghies includes anchors
- bases
- hulls
- ribs
- rider plates
- rudder blades
- sections
* Some dinghies are rowboats.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | boat:
Ferry
* Ferries There are many ferries operating across the Irish Sea.
* Ferries are an extension of the state highway system
- located in bodies of water
- ships
- transportation
- used across seas, lakes and rivers
* Ferries are used for ferries
- vulnerable to currents and weather
- can be a time to relax and rest
- come in all shapes and sizes
- connect the many islands, carrying trains, automobiles, bicycles and people
- leave roughly every half hour during the day, and every hour late at night
* Ferries link Ireland with Brittany in France, which is also a Celtic region
- a number of islands and fjords
- mean long waits, usually in the rain
* Ferries operate between ports on the Pacific and Caribbean coastlines
- the mainland and offshore islands
* Ferries run much more frequently in the summer than in the winter
- on the hour in winter, on the half-hour in summer
- tend to service relatively short routes many times a day
+ Ferry: Public transportation :: water transportation :: Ship types
* A 'ferry' is a boat or ship that is used to take people, vehicles or goods across water. Ferries are used across seas, lakes and rivers. Some places in the world can only be reached by ferry while travelling by regular traffic, because they have no roads or railways with bridges or tunnels, nor any airports at which to land aeroplane.
+ Road Town: Capital cities in North America :: British Virgin Islands
* The Harbour is the dock for many of the ferries servicing the island. The ferry terminal is at the southwest end of Road Town. Ferries run during the day every day of the week. The HM Prison on Main Street is the oldest building in Road Town. It was built in the 1840s. People disagree about where the borders of the town are.
Lifeboat
* Most lifeboats carry oars.
* A 'lifeboat', also known as a 'liferaft', small, stiff or inflatable boat carried for emergencies in the event of a disaster on a ship. Lifeboats are required by law to be on larger ships.
* are located in boats
- safety devices
* includes anchors
- ribs
Motor boat
* Some motor boats use propellers.
* are part of the daily life of the sport.
* use gas to move.
Oar boat
* are smaller than motor boats and can accommodate four to five people.
* carry three to five passengers, plus one guide.
Pontoon boat
* are generally more expensive than float tubes or U-boats.
* ride higher and travel more quickly across the surface, and require less effort.
### vehicle | boat | powerboat:
Powerboat racing
* involves lots of skill, lots of money, and lots of risk.
* very much family-oriented sport.
Speedboat
* are boats
- motorboats
* have powerful motors.
### vehicle | boat | river boat:
Keelboat
* have a haevy concentration of weight, usually lead, in their keels.
* river boat
Scull
* are oars
- shells
- sports equipment
- bases
- rider plates
* means each person uses two oars.
Steamboat
* are boats
- steam
* car rental company that rents cars subject to a rental agreement.
* cone-type geyser erupting from two main vents.
* is famous for huge amounts of powder after storms
- the world's tallest geyser
* sail on inland waters such as rivers and lakes.
Towboat
* are also important in assisting ship dockings.
* can create large waves and strong currents.
Wooden boat
* are particularly susceptible to toledo worms and other borers.
* have aluminium masts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Car
* All cars accumulate some combustion chamber deposits as they grow older
- are things that have four wheels
- burn fossil fuel
* Commuting Commuting is another common form of driving.
* Includes drivers of cars, station wagons, sport utility vehicles and vans.
* Many cars have both heaters and air conditioners
- brake pad sensors to warn of pad wear
- drum brakes on the rear wheels and disc brakes on the front
- use actuators powered by engine vacuum to open and close the throttle
* Most cars are over-sprung if they have a truck frame.
* Most cars carry men
* Most cars have acceleration
- an automatic choke, which slowly opens as the engine warms up
- automatic turn signals and brake lights
- energy
- engines
- high torque
- kinetic energy
- maximum energy
- moderate temperature
- oil temperature
- starter motors
* Most cars use a chemical engine that burns fuel inside it
- radiator to cool the engine
- boost intermittently and the engine is running in vacuum most of the time
- chemical energy
- gasoline
- pistons
* Some car cleaning products contain formaldehyde
- jacks work on the principle of a screw
- cars adopt suspension systems and have special steering motors
* Some cars are completely electric and produce no air pollution at all
- fuel and electrically powered, and others are solar powered
- burn diesel or ethanol
- cause death
- contain bags
- even have sensors in the seat to detect the number of occupants
* Some cars have a single serpentine belt that drives everything
- accidents on the road
- air bags that are six feet long
- automatic shoulder belts with lap belts that are fastened manually
- dashboard-mounted indicators to tell the driver when a headlamp has burned out
- daytime headlights or automatic headlights that are always on
- power-assisted brakes, which increase the pressure applied in the braking system
- steering wheels with telescoping adjusters that allow drivers to move the wheel away
* Some cars kill birds
- cats
- deer
- rabbits
- squirrels
- require stabilizers to steady the chassis against front end roll and sway on turns
* Some cars use friction
- motors to raise and lower the windows
- transmission fluid in the power steering which is dark red
- wear out brakes faster than others
* add to noise, stress, congestion, and are responsible for urban sprawl.
* allow people to go wherever they want whenever they want.
* also are a source of water pollution.
* also contribute to ground level ozone known as smog
- pollution of air and water
- kill around ten people each and every day in the UK through accidents
- make a lot of pollution
- pose a burn hazard
- produce a significant amount of carbon dioxide, which contributes to global warming
- symbolize raw power
* are a huge source of chemicals like carbon monoxide
- leading cause of air pollution and global warming
- luxury of the rich
- major cause of consolidated cities
- safe place to be since rubber tires insulate
* are a significant cause of monarch mortality during migration
- contributor to climate change
- source of air pollution
- symbol of our physical being
- among the greatest causes of premature deaths of lizards in Arizona
* are an important part of our daily lives
- source of VOCs
* are big contributors to air pollution problems
- dangerous things that take attention and skill to operate
- complex devices used in a complex environment
- evil, evil things
- fast and assume cyclists know what they're doing
- heavy polluters of the environment
- important tribal totems, and define truth, beauty and the American way of life
- like people, except that they have wheels, engines and anti-lock brakes
- machines that changed our ability to go places
- major contributors to global warming, urban sprawl, water pollution, and oil spills
- more and more expensive and hard for the poor to afford
- now nearly as sensitive to weight distribution as airplanes are
- objects of power, statements about self and more
- often responsible for greatly inflated footprints
- our largest source of air pollution
- part of the teenage culture
- problematic because within our culture they imply a watcher, an enforced society
- smaller than a baby's finger-nail
- solely responsible for ozone pollution
- subject to a different weight standard than trucks and vans
* are the biggest contributor to air pollution and one of the biggest to water pollution
- source of greenhouse gasses and the largest single cause of ozone smog
* are the largest cause of our air pollution in most urban areas of Georgia
- single source for nitrogen oxides
* are the leading cause of crippling handicaps
- death for our youth
- main cause of bicycle accidents
- major source of air pollution
- most common type of transport used
* are the single largest cause of air pollution in the world today
- producers of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons
- world s single largest source of global air pollution
- transportation and status symbols
- vehicles and trucks are vehicles
- very harsh on the environment and are a major contributor to global warming
- wasteful in terms of how they use space compared with bikes or public transport
- what the adult world give to adolescents to spend time in away from home
* are, at their most basic, utilitarian machines of transportation.
* arrive at destinations.
* become ovens in a flash and animals die every day from excessive heat.
* brake suddenly, and pedestrians run to avoid collisions.
* burn gas to release the energy stored in the fuel.
* can and do overheat in the winter.
* can be a real irritant to people with allergies
- dangerous in the winter
- dangerous, even when they're parked
- become airborne at speeds less than that needed to break some trees
- burn grain alcohol instead of gasoline
- drive any direction, cross whenever they want, and turn without signaling
* can kill nose hairs As pollutants increase in the air, hay fever symptoms also increase
- people or they can transport people
* can run on ethanol like they do on gasoline
- pure ethanol or a mixture of petrol and ethanol
- still be dangerous when they're parked
* cause a host of environmental problems.
* consume enormous amounts of space and radically change the landscape.
* contribute half of Maine's air pollution.
* crash daily.
* create an incredible amount of pollution.
* dirty up the air with several types of pollution that worsen asthma.
* do, shoes do, and so do tires.
* drip oil and farms have fertilizer runoff.
* dumps themselves cause local pollution with high concentrations of lead, cadium and zinc.
* emit benzene as unburned fuel, or as fuel vapors that simply evaporate.
* emit carbon dioxide
- in the form of carbon dioxide, a gas identified with global warming
- greenhouse gasses, such as carbon dioxide, which contribute to global warming
- toxins into the air
* empower individuals to control their own transportation.
* engage the mind and body and set both in motion.
* even communicate with one another by use of lights and horns.
* expand our choice of where to live and work by making travel faster and less expensive.
* figure prominently in the fabric of our culture.
* greatly vary in size, and therefore in mass.
- dozens and dozens of wheels
- internal structures
- load
- mixed effects on society, but most people are glad to have cars
- positive acceleration
- quite an effect on the environment
- resistance
- roll resistance
- spoke wheels
- style
* idling in traffic create more air pollution than moving cars.
* impose significant economic costs on society.
* includes accelerators
- auto accessories
* includes automobile batteries
- trunks
- backs
* includes brake bands
- bumper guards
- bumpers
- cabs
* includes car batteries
- doors
- mirrors
- seats
- ceilings
- cylinder blocks
- emergency brakes
- engine blocks
- fan belts
- fans
* includes fuel gauges
- lines
- fulcrums
* includes gas gages
- tanks
* includes gasoline engines
- gear levers
- glove compartments
- hand brakes
- head restraint
- headlamps
- hinges
- hood ornaments
- horn buttons
- hubs
- infrastructures
- luggage compartments
- odometers
* includes petrol engines
- poppets
- power trains
* includes rear lamps
- roof peaks
- room light
- seat belts
- second gear
- speedometers
* includes tail fins
- thermostats
- transmission systems
- voltage regulators
- walls
- windshields
- wipers
* is is Southern California.
* kick up dirt and send sparks flying when they collide with walls and other vehicles.
* kill grass with weight and gas
- millions of cats each year
- more people per year than guns
- people and economies
* kill thousands of people
- toads in Austria as they attempt to migrate to their breeding grounds
* kills in the fall and in winter conditions account for many opossum deaths.
* leave pavement
- roads
* necessary transportation for people who live in the California.
* overheat in the winter as well as the summer.
* oxidize, and bodies melt.
* pollute our air, cause asthma and other serious respiratory ailments, and heat up the planet
- the air and cause traffic jams
* pooling or using a bicycle for transportation helps reduce pollutants on our streets
- saves money and fossil fuels
* produce carbon dioxide.
* reflect sunlight when driving.
* remove the civility and humanity normally present in society.
* rust faster in areas with a lot of snow if salt is used on the roads.
* seats A parent's lap is the most dangerous place for a child to ride.
* tend to drive faster on wider streets.
* thrive on speed.
* transfer chemical energy into mechanical energy.
* travel better when on their wheels
- fast and can appear suddenly
* use a third of world's oil
- independent suspensions
- less gasoline today
- up energy and cause pollution
* using leaded fuel are one of the biggest sources of air pollution in our cities.
* usually have disk brakes on the front wheels and drum brakes on the rear wheels
- four wheels and an internal combustion engine
* wear out, rocks crumble, the moon's orbit decays and the stars burn out.
+ Car, Technology: Automobiles
* In order for a car to work, it must have fuel. The most common fuel is petrol, which is called gasoline in America. Some cars burn diesel or ethanol. A few can run on several different fuels. Alternative fuel vehicles use less common fuels like natural gas, wood gas or electricity. In some countries, such as Brazil and Sweden, a mixture of ethanol and petrol, called 'gasohol' in Brazil and 'E-85' in Sweden, is used as automobile fuel.
+ Engine, Piston engines: Machines :: Motors
* Most cars use a chemical engine that burns fuel inside it. This is called an internal combustion engine. There are many different types of internal combustion engine. They can be grouped by fuel, cycle and configuration.
+ Hybrid: Classical genetics :: Green vehicles
* By extension, other things may be called hybrids. Some cars are hybrids. They have a mixture of two different kinds of motors, electric and gasoline.
+ King Fahd International Airport, Airport infrastructure, Car parking: Airports in Saudi Arabia
* The parking area accommodates 4,930 cars. Cars enter the car park through a roadway that leads to the second floor. There is direct access to the passenger terminal from the parking on the first floor which lies under the access road with exits leading to the main roads. Parking charges are 1 Saudi Riyal per hour, which is a flat rate regardless how long you stay. There are no special long term parking rates.
+ Radiator, Cooling: Auto parts :: Home appliances
* Most cars use a radiator to cool the engine. To produce power, engines must burn a fuel. This creates a lot of heat. If the heat is not removed, the engine will overheat and stop running. The radiator is connected to the engine with hoses.
+ Remagen: Rhineland-Palatinate
* Remagen' is a town in Germany in Rhineland-Palatinate, in the district of Ahrweiler. It is about a one hour drive from Cologne , just south of Bonn, the former capital of West Germany. It is on the River Rhine. Remagen has many historic buildings, churches, castles and monuments. Cars are banned from the big pedestrian zone which has plenty of shops. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | car:
Black car
* can look a little sterile or silvery white in the direct sunlight.
* get hotter in the summer sun than white cars.
Car insurance
* is in many ways analogous to homeowner's insurance
* protects unlucky people that are the victims of accidents.
* provides protection and assistance, financially and legally.
* requirement for state residents
- in Egypt, but many drivers drive without
Car washing
* can use a lot of water.
* is car washings
* uses very little water compared to lawn watering.
Convertible
* are as old as the American automobile
- cars that go all the way, all the way down, that is
- securities that contain both equity and fixed income characteristics
- security
- sofas
* combine elements of stocks and bonds.
Electric
* are cars.
* usually have five strings.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | car:
Electric car
* Many electric cars use a lithium-ion battery and an electric motor which uses rare earth elements.
* Most electric cars have power.
- easier to use, cleaner and cheaper than their gas counterparts
- independent of the technique used to create the power
- one of the favorite weapons in the regulatory war against urban air pollution
- significantly quieter than conventional internal combustion engine automobiles
* are the latest in environmentally friendly transportation
- solution to air pollution
* glean power from banks of batteries.
* has best efficiency from power in to power on the road.
* have big batteries instead of engines
- no tailpipe emissions
- the advantage of much lower emissions than conventional vehicles
* run on electricity alone, so they are zero emission vehicles
- without burning gasoline, and therefore, produce no exhaust pollution
### vehicle | car | electric:
Electric heating
* can also lead to dry nasal cavities.
* is more efficient than fuel-based heating.
Electric lighting
* consumes a large portion of electricity in commercial buildings.
* is increasingly common nowadays, but modern theatrical equipment is still rare
- located in grocery stores
Fewer car
* promotes economic development, improves air quality and benefits business productivity.
+ Public transport, Using public transport
* Public transport is also good for the environment. When many people use the same vehicle, fewer cars are on the road. Fewer cars make less pollution. Cost is low, because it is very cheap to catch public transport every day, which is why even people who own a car often use public transport.
### vehicle | car | freight car:
Boxcar
* are twelves.
* freight car
* ride higher than other cars, about five feet off the ground.
* A 'boxcar' railroad car that is enclosed and used to carry freight. Boxcars have side doors of varying size and operation. Some boxcars have end doors and adjustable bulkheads to load very large items.
Hot car
* can be deadly for children As the thermometer rises, so does the risk for death.
* means a vehicle which transfers hot coke from the oven to the area of quenching.
Hybrid car
* Most hybrid cars have engines.
* adjust to weather, traffic and driver s habits.
* are cars with at least two power sources
- possibly the saviors of the ozone
* combine a gasoline engine with an electric motor.
* pair a gasoline engine with an electric motor that recharges as the cars are driven.
* use a combination of electricity and fuel to run.
Jeep
* are Jeeps
- companies
- division
* can jump when they drive over ramps.
* have windows.
* is hard to start when cold.
* tend to be slow and mechanically fragile.
Lighter car
* allow for lighter structural parts, achieving further reductions in mass.
* require smaller engines, and smaller engines weigh less. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | car | limo:
Berlin
* city in a constant state of flux
- of museums
* collection of villages.
* forest-dependent community, manufacturing lumber, and pulp and paper products.
* has many gardens, lakes, woodlands, and parks that cover about one-third of the city
- numerous underground and elevated railways
* is also a city of sciences
- based on stars and rings, and American cities are usually rectangular grids
- home to people from almost every nationality and faith
* is located in Worcester County, Maryland's only county bordering the Atlantic Ocean
- a remote mountainous region of El Salvador
- now the largest construction zone in Europe
- popular with people of all sexual persuasions
* is the capital and chief uban center of Germany
- the biggest city of Germany
* is the capital of Germany
- the re-united Germany
- capitol of the state of Brandenburg
- largest city in Germany and has a history like no other.
* The city is in the eastern part of Germany. It is about west of Poland. Berlin has an area of. The rivers Havel, Dahme and Spree run through Berlin.
* is in the middle of Brandenburg. But it is not part of Brandenburg. It city state
* new city built on old foundations.
* symbol of the links between our peoples.
* world-famous city and one of Europe's largest.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | car:
Limousine
* are an expensive form of auto transport and are usually offered for rich citizens
- automobiles
- cars
- rare
- the order of the day for participants in the holy union
* can seat up to ten passengers, while sedans seat three people.
* The chassis of limousines are often extended via certain automobile makers. Limousines are an expensive form of auto transport and are usually offered for rich citizens. Among the least rich, limousines are reserved for special occasions, usually weddings or funerals. The cars are usually owned by large companies, government or certain broadcasters, although they are sometimes owned by private citizens.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | car:
Modern car
* Most modern cars have disc brakes on the front wheels, and some have disc brakes on all four wheels
- the cylinders arranged either inline or a V shape
* Most modern cars use aluminum radiators
- fifth gear when cruising at high speed
* have all sorts of modcons like floors, engines and brakes
* use unit bodies, also called unibodies or monocoques.
+ Ford Model T, How to drive a Model T
* The brakes on a Model T work the rear wheels by the use of brake bands inside the transmission. Modern cars have brakes on all four wheels.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | car:
Motor car
* are a big danger to the birds.
* start because of the sulphuric acid in their batteries.
+ Cassowary, Endangered species: Birds of Australia :: Ratites :: Endangered species :: Flightless birds :: Struthioniformes
* The Southern Cassowary is now listed as endangered in Australia. Scientists think there are only between 1200 and 1500 cassowaries left in Australia. Many of the forest places that they like to live in have been cleared for farming and other development. When Cyclone Larry hit the Mission Beach area in 2006 a lot of cassowary forest was flattened. Animals such as wild pigs, dogs and cats, have become a big threat to the birds. Motor cars are a big danger to the birds.
Race car
* Most race cars use pistons.
* are expensive and they travel at speeds in the triple-digits
- located in race tracks
- sports cars
* have brakes.
* operate with unmuffled engines and can generate harmful noise levels.
* tend to be light.
Solar car
* are electric cars, they just make their electricity from the sun.
* make almost no noise at all as they run.
Sport car
* Most sport cars carry passengers.
* Some sport cars experience lower air resistance. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | car:
Sports car
* appear to be items that sell themselves.
* are cars
- fun to drive because they pick up such great speed in a small amount of time
- located in race tracks
* correlate with the least amount of seat belt use.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | car:
Taxicab
* are an integral part of the Island's public transportation system.
* are, potentially, one of the purest forms of entrepreneurship.
* provide transportation for passengers with folding wheelchairs at no surcharge.
+ Kota Kinabalu, Transportation, Land: Cities in Malaysia :: Capital cities in Asia
* Regular bus services operate around the city. Minibuses or vans are also used besides buses as an alternative public transportation. There are two main bus terminals in the central business area. The terminal along Jalan Tun Razak provides internal bus services towards different part of the city and its outskirts. Taxicabs too are around the city.
Carriage
* includes axles
- brakes
- infrastructures
- sections
- suspension systems
- wheels
* is boxs
- mechanisms
- part of typewriters
- uncommon in infancy and early childhood but increase with age
### vehicle | carriage:
Stagecoach
* are coachs.
* is carriage
* provider of public transport services in the UK and overseas.
### vehicle | carriage | whisky:
Malt whisky
* Most malt whisky is used in the production of blended whisky.
* is whisky
Chariot
* Most chariots are pulled by horses
- white horses
* are carriage
- cars
* become lighter, stronger and faster.
* includes brakes
- wheels
* move like the Rook in Western Chess, that is, any number of squares along a row or column.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Electric vehicle
* Most electric vehicles accelerate just as fast as gas-powered ones.
* Most electric vehicles use a battery-powered electric motor as a power source
- gasoline
- regenerative braking to recharge the battery pack
* are a special type of dedicated vehicle
- almost twice as efficient as gasoline vehicles
- an environmentally friendly alternative to conventional cars
- similar in many aspects to vehicles powered with internal combustion engines
- superior to fuel cells in infrastructure
- very energy efficient
- zero emission producers
* have a short range, based on battery life
- advantage
- many advantage
- significant advantage
- zero tailpipe emissions
* reduce the amount of primary energy used and consume very little petroleum.
* run exclusively on battery power.
* use gasoline.
Forklift
* Some forklifts have hydraulic systems to spread the forks.
* are extremely useful tools that can become lethal weapons if used improperly
- heavies
* are located in construction sites
- factories
- loading docks
- warehouses
* are used for driving
- liftings
* can be dangerous, especially to pedestrians.
Fuel cell vehicle
* have advantage.
* have many advantage
- more advantage
### vehicle | go-cart:
Wheelbarrow
* Some wheelbarrows have a wide bar across the back instead of a thin support.
* are carts
- simple tools
* have a tendency to tip if overloaded or pushed over uneven ground.
* includes axles
- brakes
- handles<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Go-kart
* includes automobile batteries
- bases
* includes brake bands
- systems
* includes car batteries
- ceilings
- cylinder blocks
- emergency brakes
- engine blocks
- fan belts
- fans
- floors
* includes fuel gauges
- indicators
- lines
- fulcrums
* includes gas gages
- tanks
* includes gasoline gages
- gear levers
- hand brakes
- headlamps
- hubs
- odometers
- pedals
* includes petrol gages
- poppets
- power trains
* includes rear lamps
- room light
- second gear
- sections
- speedometers
- suspension systems
- tail lamps
- thermostats
- transmission systems
- voltage regulators
- walls
- windshields
- wipers
Gondola
* Some gondolas carry families.
* carry tourists.
- infrastructures | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Heavy vehicle
* Most heavy vehicles run on diesel fuel, which contains sulfur.
* are a major contributor to elevated noise levels.
* impose a heavy burden of maintenance costs on country roads.
Hybrid vehicle
* are far more efficient than conventional gasoline-powered cars.
* combine a traditional internal-combustion engine with an electric motor and battery
- an internal combustion engine with an electric motor and battery
Land vehicle
* Most land vehicles have wheels.
+ Vehicle
* Some vehicles move on land. Most land vehicles have wheels. Examples are bicycles, cars, motorcycles, and trains.
Launch vehicle
* Most launch vehicles are multi-stage rockets with two or three separate rocket stages.
* provide energy.
Lighter vehicle
* made with aluminum get higher gas mileage and produce fewer emissions.
* require less power to accelerate, climb hills, cruise, and stop.
Locomotive
* are used for motion
- power
- work
+ Category:British Rail locomotives
* Locomotives built or ordered by British Railways and post-privatisation companies. Locomotives are sub-categorised according to type.
### vehicle | military vehicle:
Aircraft carrier
* are airports at sea
- ships
- warships
- weapons
* can travel the high seas indefinitely, and have all the pure water they can drink.
* have a similar size of crew complement.
* military vehicle
+ Warship, Modern warships: Ship types
* Aircraft carriers are airports at sea. US Nimitz class carriers can weigh over 100,000 ton.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | military vehicle:
Battleship
* are larger, better armed and armored than cruisers and destroyers
* represent the culmination of centuries of naval strategy and warship design.
* A 'battleship' large armored warship with a main battery consisting of heavy caliber guns. Battleships are larger, better armed and armored than cruisers and destroyers. With the rise of air power, guided missiles, and guided bombs, large guns were no longer deemed necessary to establish naval superiority and as a result battleships faded from use.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | military vehicle:
Cruiser
* are cars
- transient users, who travel at leisure on water, that is, who engage in cruising
* Cruisers and Frigates are often now the same size. They are mainly used to launch guided missiles or to shoot down enemy airplanes. Cruisers are usually slower and larger and have longer range than frigates. Most cruisers and frigates are large enough to hold helicopters on the back of the ship. This part is called the fantail. Cruisers can usually hold one or two. Although they are smaller, some frigates are designed to hold two or three.
Destroyer
* are battleships
+ Warship, Modern warships: Ship types
* Destroyers are smaller and faster than cruisers and frigates. They are usually used to hunt down enemy submarines. Sometimes, they will also attack enemy airplanes. They can also go closer to shore than larger ships. This allows them to attack things on land.
### vehicle | military vehicle | destroyer:
Tin can
* are actually mostly steel
- steel with a thin tin coating
- cans
- destroyers
- located in trash
- made of steel and are covered with a thin layer of tin
* used for storing food are made by electroplating tin onto iron.
### vehicle | military vehicle | military plane:
Attack aircraft
* can be fighter airplanes or helicopters.
* They are designed for attacking enemy ground or naval forces, especially moving ground or naval forces, like tanks, soldiers and warships. Such aircraft attack their targets while flying low. They were much used in World War II, and later also took over the job of dive bombers. Attack aircraft can be fighter airplanes or helicopters.
* military plane | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | military vehicle | military plane:
Bomber
* are aeroplanes
- aircrafts
- criminals
- people
- sandwichs
* are used for kill
- launchs.
* often fly low to the ground to confuse enemy radar. Most cannot fly very fast. Because of this, bombers are not outfitted to fight other airplanes. To make up for this, bombers in the past had many machine guns<|endoftext|>### vehicle | military vehicle | military plane | bomber:
Water bomber
* are used both by air forces , administrations , and private societies
- forces, administrations, and private societies.
* A 'water bomber' is an aircraft dedicated to firefighting, and in particular for forest fires. It can be a helicopter or a sea plane. Generally it conversion of a former military or cargo aircraft, but some were designed and built at the beginning like water bombers. It is the case of Canadian Canadair CL-215. Water bombers are used both by air forces, administrations, and private societies
Warship
* Some warships also carry naval aircraft
- A 'warship' ship carrying weapons, which is used by the navy. Some warships also carry naval aircraft
* are fast, heavily armed and carry very little cargo
- made in many different sizes
* come in many shapes and sizes.
Modern vehicle
* Many modern vehicles have compact spare tires.
* Most modern vehicles use a negative ground electrical system.
Motor home
* Most motor homes use power
- solar power
* Some motor homes use air pressure to create vacuum to operate the air conditioning system.
* are units where the motor and the living quarters are integrated in the same unit.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Motor vehicle
* account for about half of the ozone-forming emissions in North Carolina
- approximately half of all air pollution emissions
* account for at least half of all air pollution in the United States
- the carbon monoxide pollution in Washington
- over half of the carbon monoxide emissions in our area
* are a documented major source of air pollution throughout the state.
* are a major source of air pollution
- certain toxic air contaminants
- pollutants
- significant source of water pollution too
- also a significant factor in lead emissions
- an integral part of American life
- another major source of particulate pollution
- located in motels
- major contributors to pollution
- one of the major causes of air pollutants
- responsible for much of the air pollution in our major cities
- the dominant source of air wastes in most Australian cities
* are the largest contributors to air pollution in the United States
- producer of air pollution in the Bay Area
- single source of atmospheric pollution worldwide
* are the largest source of air pollution in Oregon
- ozone-forming pollutants in Vermont
- leading source of air pollution in the Bay Area
- major contributor to air pollution in Australia
- second biggest source of carbon pollution
- single biggest source of atmospheric pollution
* cause both primary and secondary pollution.
* emit both nitrogen oxides and VOCs
* equipped with catalytic converters also emit significant amounts of nitrous oxide.
* generate fumes called oxides of nitrogen, key ingredients to ground-level ozone.
* have a major role in global warming, climate change, and ozone depletion.
* means every vehicle which is self-propelled.
* produce both nitrogen oxides and hydrocarbons
- most of the air pollutants in Australia's urban areas
* related deaths continue to be a major cause of childhood accidental deaths.
* transport most agricultural products.
* use paved roads and trails. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Motorbike
* are by far the most common vehicles, followed closely by bicycles.
* includes automobile batteries
- bases
* includes brake bands
- light
- systems
- cabs
* includes car batteries
- wheels
- ceilings
- cylinder blocks
- emergency brakes
- engine blocks
- fan belts
- fans
- floors
* includes fuel gauges
- indicators
- lines
- fulcrums
* includes gas gages
- tanks
* includes gasoline gages
- gear levers
- hand brakes
- headlamps
- hubs
- infrastructures
- odometers
- pedals
* includes petrol gages
- poppets
- power trains
* includes rear lamps
- room light
- second gear
- sections
- speedometers
- suspension systems
- tail lamps
- thermostats
- transmission systems
- voltage regulators
- walls
- windshields
- wipers
### vehicle | motorbike:
Moped
* Most mopeds have a quick acceleration in comparison to cars.
* are motor scooters
- slower than roller skating women
* combine gas power with people pedaling.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Motorcycle
* Most motorcycles have one carburetor that has no adjustment while the others can be adjusted.
* Some motorcycles have a sidecar that can carry another passenger
* It does not have 4 wheels like a car. It has 2 wheels like a bicycle. But it has a motor like a car. A motorcycle is normally driven by one person. A passenger can also ride on the back of the motorcycle. Some motorcycles have a sidecar that can carry another passenger
* are air-cooled, which means they are cooled by the flow of air over the engine
- allows the full width of a lane in which to maneuver
- an efficient method of transport within the city of Toronto
- common and weave in and out of traffic to avoid traffic jams
- harder to see at night because most have only one taillight
* are less stable and less visible than cars, and they have high performance capabilities
- than cars, and they have high-performance capabilities
- located in garages
- motor vehicles
- smaller than cars and trucks, therefore, they are harder to see
* are used for rides
- rushs
- transportation
* are, for the most part, single occupant vehicles.
* can be dangerous
- hide in small places and are hard to see
- stop in a shorter distance than a car
* carve ruts and intensify erosion in dirt roads used by harvesters.
* generally have better brakes than police vehicles.
* have a higher rate of fatal accidents than automobiles or trucks and buses
- blind spots just as other vehicles do
- rapid acceleration and high speeds
* never have headaches.
* present a narrow silhouette and are usually much shorter in length than an automobile.
* react differently to traffic, weather and road conditions than cars.
* seem to attract dogs.
* tend to attract dogs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Rocket
* All rockets generate thrust by igniting an mixture of fuel and 'oxidiser'
- operate on the same basic principles of propulsion
* Any rocket can achieve a very high speed if it accelerates for a long time.
* Describes the basics of chemical rockets, with a blurb on nuclear rockets.
* Make a cone shape from construction paper and tape to make a rocket ship.
* Most rockets carry fuel.
* Most rockets have energy
- mass
* Most rockets use bottles
- solid fuel
* Some rockets have stability
- send space probes into space to find out about other planets
* actually work better in space than they do in air.
* are artifacts
- herbs
- jet engines
- located in orbits
- machines
- part of rockets
- single-use unmanned vehicles without guidance after launch
- used for space exploration
- visual signals
- vital and effective weapons of warfare
* can supply the power to anything that needs to be propelled
- take an unexpected turn while up in the air
* do accelerate in outer space
* emit a variety of substances depending on their propellant.
* framework for developing websites using XML.
* generally use liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, solid rockets use aluminium pellets.
* have about ten seconds of fuel and follow ballistic paths after the fuel is exhausted
- different color lighting
* includes power trains
- rocket engines
* launch by burning fuel.
* make holes in the skin of the world.
* provide forces.
* take people, spaceprobes and satellites up into space.
- the same type of fuzing as projectiles and mortars
* very fast growing salad vegetable, grown for the rich flavoured leaves.
* work in space because they are completely self-contained
- on the principle of Newton's third law of motion
- the same way, by throwing material out at high speed
### vehicle | rocket:
Chemical rocket
* are expensive but they can carry fragile cargo including people
- powered by exothermic chemical reactions of the propellant
* fuels Two main classes of chemical-rocket fuels exist, liquid and solid.
* have limited fuel exhaust speeds.
Missile
* Most missiles carry nuclear weapons
* In general, 'missile' may refer to any thrown or launched object aimed at a target. Nowadays, it means, mostly, a self-propelled guided weapon system. Missiles are used in war to destroy military targets. Missiles can carry explosives or other destructive loads
* are bombs
- located in war
- sections
* targeting also depends on the platforms from which they are launched.
### vehicle | rocket | missile:
Ballistic missile
* are missiles
* are the ideal vehicle for delivering chemical- biological agents
- weapon of choice for many developing nations
Cannon ball
* Most cannon balls have mass.
* are usually solid lumps of metal.
* fall faster than feathers.
* roll down hills, arrows bounce off the ground and blood pools form from corpses.
Space probe
* Some space probes have solar panels on the outside of their bodies.
* can carry special cameras and instruments far out into the solar system.
* travel to the moon and planets.
Sea rocket
* grows only on sandy beaches and is quite uncommon on the eastern shore.
* is found on beaches above the high tide line and sometimes in dunes.
Stage rocket
* Most stage rockets use solid fuel.
* use fuel
Thruster
* are rockets.
* work like rockets, but without the requirements for large amounts of rocket fuel. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Sailboat
* Most sailboats are monohulls, meaning that they have a single hull floating the boat
- have engines for their doldrums
- require a bow stand with a vee top to prevent the bow from dropping forward
* Some sailboats carry food.
* always land on the leeward side of a pier.
* are another specimen of aerodynamic engineering
* are located in lakes
- sea
- part of regattas
- sailing vessels
- vehicles
* drift by as the winds gust off the water.
* generally are only fast across the wind.
* have another wing under the water called a keel
- masts
- sails
* includes anchors
- bases
- hems
- ribs
- rider plates
- rudder blades
* often make good rowboats.
* sailing ship
* utilize both true wind and apparent wind.
### vehicle | sailboat:
Sailboat racing
* is both art and science.
* requires team members to develop individual skills.
Scientific writing
* has many different formats, depending on the discipline.
* is formal communication.
* learned skill.
* requires the use of precise language.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Scooter
* Some scooters have a motor , some have pedals , and some are pushed with the foot
- motor, some have pedals, and some are pushed with the foot.
* A 'scooter' bicycle or tricycle with very small wheels. Some scooters have a motor, some have pedals, and some are pushed with the foot. Scooters with motors are called 'motor scooters'. There are many different kinds of scooters such as motor scooters, kick scooters. One brand of kick scooter is Razor
* are a dependable, and fun form of transportation
- another mobility device for individuals who have difficulty walking
- less stable than bicycles and more difficult to control
- like cars
- the invention of the devil
* can gain speed quite quickly
- usually break down into parts for placement in the trunk of a car
* enable social connections.
* includes axles
- brakes
- sections
* share the same risks as bicycles.
* use the same type of wheels as in-line skates.
### vehicle | scooter:
Electric scooter
* allow a simplified method of travel.
* are a great means of transportation and go just about anywhere.
* can move small mountains.
* lack safety features. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Ship
* Most ships carry sails
- have sails
* Some ships also use boilers for auxiliary power
- carry animals
- emit light
- have afterburners, which use fuel and always thrust in the direction the ship is facing
* are a major means of microbe transportation
- artifacts
- large vehicles
* are located in oceans
- ports
- made of wood
* are used for sailing
- travel, trade and war
- voyages
- watercrafts
* arrive at destinations.
* biscuits date back to ancient Roman and Greek days.
* burn heavy fuel oils but they call it bunker oil
- high-sulfur fuel that is responsible for the sulfur dioxide emissions
* can also flood and catch fire
- swamp and sink if they ride too low in the water
- transport HAB organisms in their ballast water
* carry ballast water to keep the ship stable when it's empty
- captains
- cargo
- goods on the world's oceans and waterways
- machines
* come in all shapes and sizes.
* constructed largely of metal can float on water, while metal coins sink in a glass of water.
* have a lifespan and once they've reached that lifespan, they break down
- beams
- bridges
- devices
- fire protection devices
- functions
- tractor beams
* hit sails.
* includes anchors
- bases
* includes cargo areas
- decks
- ceilings
- fireplaces
- floors
- gyroscopes
- hubs
- log lines
- piston chambers
- readsides
- ribs
- rider plates
- ridge ropes
- room light
- screw propellers
- sea anchors
- sections
- storage areas
- walls
- weather sheets
- window frames
- windowpanes
* is big seagoing vessel, big enough to carry smaller boats.
* lie in shallow water and are now covered in corals and fish.
* lose power.
* made in Korea carry crude oil and other cargo in all seas of the globe.
* maintain stability by storing water in a tank.
* move easily across the waves of the sea.
* powered by diesel engines create and transmit some vibration, especially at the stern.
* refers to ship building.
* transport people
- rafts of logs to sawmills
- the majority of international trade goods
* use water.
+ Eilat: Cities in Israel
* Eilat is at the southern end of the Negev Desert and the northern end of the Gulf of Aqaba on the Red Sea. It is an important port for Israel. Ships bring many products to Israel from the Far East and other places here.
+ Flag of convenience
* Flag of convenience' is a word from shipping. Every ship needs to be registered in a port. The laws of the port are valid for the ship's crew. In some countries the rules are not as strict as in others, or they are cheaper to use. Many owners of ships from other countries register their ships in one of those easy or cheap countries. The ship might never even come anywhere near that country, but it must fly the flag of the country where it was registered. This is then called a flag of convenience.
+ Flag: Messaging
* A 'Signal Flag' is a flag used by ships to send messages to other ships or to people on land. Every ship keeps many different signal flags for use in different situations. Signal flags are also used for racing.
+ Territorial waters: Law of the sea
* Territorial waters', or a 'territorial sea' is a belt of coastal waters that go at most from the edge of a coastal state. The territorial sea is land of the state. Ships are let to sail on it. Ownership also extends to the airspace over and seabed below.
* A 'ship' is a large vehicle used to travel on water. It is bigger than a boat. Ships are used for travel, trade and war.
### vehicle | ship:
Big ship
* are more energy-efficient than other forms of transportation such as trucks or trains.
* tend to have great mass but are also, hopefully, able to float.
Cargo ship
* are ships.
* carry imports and exports between Africa, America, and Europe
- passengers and freight alike in varying conditions of comfort | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | ship:
Large ship
* are less affected by wave motion siply because of their size
- located in sea
* can also absorb light boats
- float because they contain a great deal of empty space
* carry cargo around the world.
* cause tremendous pollution both in port and at sea.
* create a suction that pulls water out of adjacent marshes.
* kill more right whales than any other documented cause of mortality.
Larger ship
* have several masts , with the size depending on the style of ship.
+ Mast: Ship building
* The 'mast' of a sailing ship is a tall vertical pole which supports the sails. Larger ships have several masts, with the size depending on the style of ship.
Lightship
* Some lightships are unmanned floats with automatic acetylene lights.
* are ships
- simply ships moored into place with lights on top
Minesweeper
* are games
* math game.
### vehicle | ship | passenger ship:
Ocean liner
* are located in sea
- used for transportation
* passenger ship
* use on-board UV systems while at sea.
* Usually, ocean liners travel long distances. The ships used for short distances, for example across a channel, a lake, or between an island and the coast close by, are called ferries. Ocean liners are used for transportation. Cruise ships are different, they are used for pleasure.
### vehicle | ship | passenger ship | ocean liner:
Cargo liner
* are liners.
* is an ocean liner
Cruise ship
* are just bus tours that happen to be on the water
- liners
- motorboats
- used for vacationing
+ Ocean liner: Ship types
* Usually, ocean liners travel long distances. The ships used for short distances, for example across a channel, a lake, or between an island and the coast close by, are called ferries. Ocean liners are used for transportation. Cruise ships are different, they are used for pleasure.
### vehicle | ship | pirate ship:
Corsair
* are pirates.
* pirate ship<|endoftext|>### vehicle | ship:
Shipwreck
* Most shipwrecks occur near shore.
* are a concern for all the atolls in the northwestern chain
- rich source of history and our artistic past
- accidents
* are located in oceans
- ruins
- the stuff of legend, tragic stories of lives lost and cargo destroyed
- wreckage
* includes anchors
- bases
* includes cargo areas
- decks
- ceilings
- fireplaces
- floors
- gyroscopes
- hubs
- hulls
- log lines
- piston chambers
- readsides
- ribs
- rider plates
- ridge ropes
- room light
- rudder blades
- screw propellers
- sea anchors
- sections
- storage areas
- walls
- weather sheets
- window frames
- windowpanes
* offer scientists a unique opportunity to study the past.
* provide habitats for fish.
* still happen, but most people drown
- occur in modern times despite dramatic improvements in propulsion and navigation
* tend to overflow with marine life.
Space ship
* land in the ocean.
* travel at warp speed in order to reach distant star systems.
Steamer
* are cooking utensils
- steam
- used for cooking
* can be plastic, as well.
- boilers
- ceilings
- log lines
- power trains
- ridge ropes
* includes steam chests
- engines
- storage areas
- weather sheets
* replace hand engines.
* usually contain a rack on which the pan or mold of food rests while it cooks in the steam. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits