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### vehicle | ship:
Submarine
* Many submarines have a shape which can be described as prolate spheroid.
* Some submarines can also fire antisubmarine missiles from the torpedo tubes
- carry pure oxygen
- run on diesel engines
* also carry mines to deny sea areas to enemy surface ships or submarines.
* are albums
- among the most complex structures built by man
* are capable of dives
- sinks
- combat vehicles that make a significant contribution to our national defense
* are located in oceans
- shipyards
- made of steel
- powerful weapons and their torpedoes can inflict great damage
- submersibles
- warships
* can carry torpedoes, cruise missiles, and mines for use in time of conflict
- hide under the water
* float in ocean, easily changing their depth.
* generally use radar only on the surface when leaving or entering port.
* have an inner and an outer steel shell, called a hull
- to be specially designed to withstand high pressures when they are deep underwater
- decks
- fireplaces
- floors
- hubs
- lenses
- periscopes
- readsides
- ribs
- room light
- rudder blades
- sections
- sonars
- vents
* military vehicle
- vessel used for operations on the sea surface and below the surface
* move in a straight line in any direction.
* rise and dive by filling large tanks with seawater.
* sink or float as they pump water in and out.
* use a similar principle to control their buoyancy, as do some fish
- sonar in order to steer around obstacles and avoid hitting fish and other submarines
* use sonar to find objects under the water, including other submarines
- locate other large objects and to find the depth of the ocean floor
* vary their weight by adjusting the amount of air in the ballast tanks.
+ Warship, Modern warships: Ship types
### vehicle | ship | submarine:
Attack submarine
* Many attack submarines can also deliver mines.
* Most attack submarines can carry and lay mines.
* are submarines.
* carry torpedoes to fire against enemy ships and submarines.
Modern submarine
* are able to dive and surface due to the invention of bouyancy tanks
- very much quieter and radiate very little noise except at very high speeds
* can fully submerge in less than a minute
- stay submerged for months at a time
- travel faster submerged than they can on the surface<|endoftext|>### vehicle | ship | submarine:
Nautilus
* are found in the South Pacific and Indian oceans
- sexually dimorphic and reproduce by laying eggs
* are the only Cephalopods with an external shell
- cephalopods who have an external shell
- extant cephalopods which have an external shell
+ Nautilus, Natural history, Reproduction and lifespan
* Nautiluses are sexually dimorphic and reproduce by laying eggs. Females spawn once per year and regenerate their gonads, making nautiluses the only cephalopods to repeat reproduction. The lifespan of nautiluses is about 20 years, which is exceptionally long for a cephalopod
- The shell: Cephalopods :: Living fossils
* Nautiluses are the only cephalopods who have an external shell. This is an ancestral or basal, feature. The animal can withdraw completely into its shell. It can the close the opening with a leathery hood formed from two specially folded tentacles. It is pressure resistant, but will implode at a depth of about 800 m. The innermost portion of the shell is pearlescent, blue-gray
Nuclear submarine
* are able to stay underwater virtually as long as they have food
- among the most complex structures built by man
- compact vessels with controls and perils spread throughout
* depend on their reactors to replenish their air supplies.
* have elaborate listening systems.
* produce their own air and drinking water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | ship:
Tanker
* Some tankers carry oil.
* are built to make money, and there are tremendous economies in size
- soldiers
- trucks that can be driven to a job site
* can also carry hazardous goods that can spill.
* carry liquids
- oil, gasoline, jet fuel, kerosene, diesel and other chemicals
- up to half a million tons of oil
* includes anchors
- bases
* includes cargo areas
- ceilings
- gyroscopes
- hulls
- log lines
- piston chambers
- rider plates
- ridge ropes
- rudder blades
- screw propellers
- sea anchors
- sections
- storage areas
- walls
- weather sheets
- window frames
- windowpanes
* move very fast, although their size makes their speed deceiving.
### vehicle | ship | tanker:
Supertanker
* carry thousands of tonnes of oil around the world.
* take several miles to stop from even a slow speed because of their tremendous inertia.
Whaler
* Some whalers also run farms and carry out trade in flax, potatoes, timber and fish.
* are mariners
- ships
* give the mothers and calves the day off.
* sell whales to fish wholesalers.
### vehicle | ship | whaler:
Norwegian whaler
* are fishermen for the majority of the year.
* can legally hunt, sell and consume whale meat and blubber.
* fish in the winter and autumn.
Sled
* Some sleds carry children
- daughters
* are vehicles.
* includes sections.
* often have vents cut in the sail, near the bottom of the kite, instead of using a tail.
Snowplow
* appear on all road units, and are left natural aluminum.
* are big, heavy pieces of equipment
- motor vehicles
* operate around the clock until all city streets have been plowed curb to curb.
* provide a fast, efficient way to keep roads open, but annual costs are often high.
* push the snow off the roads.
* travel under the speed limit when clearing the roads.
* usually leave a ridge of snow.
Space vehicle
* Many space vehicles have facilities for heating frozen and chilled food.
* can conserve energy by launching in the same direction as the rotation of the Earth.
* have momentum.
### vehicle | space vehicle:
Space shuttle
* Some space shuttles have toilets
- wings
* are capable of flies
- for bringing people in space
* are located in orbits
- solar systems
- universes
- rockets
- spacecrafts
* space vehicle<|endoftext|>### vehicle | space vehicle:
Starship
* are containers which can contain an amount of features
- large and can carry from hundreds to over a thousand crew members
+ Starfleet, Starships: Star Trek :: Fiction set in San Francisco, California
* Starships are large and can carry from hundreds to over a thousand crew members. They are capable of scientific research, as well as carrying weapons called phasers and photon torpedoes for defending the Federation. They travel much faster than the speed of light using an engine called warp drive. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Spacecraft
* Many spacecraft spin continuously in orbit for the same reason
- use a system of thrusters to apply the torque for desats
- spacecrafts run out of electricity
* Most spacecraft also rely on microchips, and thus transistors.
* Most spacecraft carry instruments
- primary instruments
* Most spacecraft have electrical power
- surfaces
- velocity components
- operate in the plane of the Earth's orbit
* Most spacecraft use chemical energy
- small thruster rockets to control their attitude
* Some spacecraft carry detectors
- have gravity
* are built so that the solar panels can be pivoted as the spacecraft moves
- with materials that act as shields against radiation
- held in orbit by the gravity of the planet which they are orbiting
- satellites
* can also orbit the Earth.
* depend on radar for docking, landing and tracking.
* have components
* immersed in plasmas in general attain a potential different from the plasma potential.
* includes bases
- floors
- heat shields
- infrastructures
- nose cones
- room light
- walls
* radiate infrared energy into space to keep systems from overheating.
* starting from the surface of Earth has a zero initial speed.
* typically carry some sort of optical system for viewing stars.
- engines
- fuel cells to produce electricity by combining hydrogen and oxygen
- ion engines
- small gyroscopes to sense their orientation in space
+ Escape velocity: Astrophysics
* Spacecraft starting from the surface of Earth has a zero initial speed. But, if it has enough fuel, it may be permanently accelerated by its engine until it reaches escape velocity. Then it will travel into space even after the engine is shut off.
### vehicle | spacecraft:
Spaceship
* Most spaceships have engines.
* always fly perpendicular to the same axis.
* are located in moons
* game in which the kids have to answer age-appropriate astronomical questions.
- ceilings
- floors
- sections
- walls
* space vehicle
Steamroller
* are vehicles.
* can be a distince hazard to travelling frogs.
* includes sections.
Streetcar
* are cheaper and more efficient to operate than buses and have less environmental impact
- located in streets
- propane powered, equipped with wheelchair lifts and air-conditioned
* make urban areas attractive because they cut car traffic and enhance pedestrian traffic.
* run on tracks, usually down the center of the street.
Stroller
* also come in other wheel sizes.
* are transportation for a child s first few years.
* come in all sizes and colors, designed for general use or a specific purpose.
* includes axles
- brakes
- sections
- wheels | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | tracked vehicle:
Snowmobile
* All snowmobiles feature heated handlebars, independent suspension, and tall windshields.
* Buy, sell, or trade snowmobiles.
* Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
* Some snowmobiles have skis in the front for steering.
* A 'snowmobile' motorized vehicle used for travelling over snow. It is like a car, only instead of wheels, it has treads. Some snowmobiles have skis in the front for steering.
* also disrupt the courtship and survival of bald eagles.
* are a convenient way to travel when it is calm - but also an extremely cold way
- tremendous danger to wildlife
- also a great way to get to other winter activities , ice fishing in particular
- an important way to provide access for people with disabilities
- dangerous
- easy to operate
- harder to handle on ice and hard-packed snow
- illegal in that area, due to noise pollution and avalanche prevention
- noisy, antiquated machines that are no longer welcome in our national parks
* are the primary mode of transportation in the winter
- way most folks travel in the park during the winter
* can accommodate two riders per vehicle
- damage tree stems, break trunks and remove bark
* cause far more pollution than automobiles do.
* frighten, isolate, and sometimes kill wildlife in the parks where they are now used.
* have a built-in handle bar warmers.
* limit park access to a wealthy few.
* provide one of the only ways to experience the hidden winter beauties of Northern Idaho
- trail grooming and trail marking
* scare wildlife, create air pollution and are noisy.
* tracked vehicle
* travel it in the winter.
* whip up and down.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Tractor
* Many tractor related accidents occur when traveling on roadways
- tractors have four wheel drive to get extra grip on the hills and in wet conditions
* Some tractors have power steering to make the tractor easier to drive for the farmer
- move on wheels, others move on a continuous track
* account for a large number of farm deaths each year.
* also can come with a hydraulic system which makes oil pressure to lift ploughs up
- cause severe long-term environmental damage by compacting the soil
- help farmers feed their animals
* are agricultural vehicles
- big pieces of machinery and can be very noisy
- common to all farm operations
- fundamentally top-heavy and unstable on anything but flat, even ground
- implement carriers, transport units and remote power sources
- just one piece of equipment farmers use to do their jobs
- located in farms
- the main vehicle on the roads
- trucks
- very important because they push, pull and lift other machines
* break springs and shackles.
* can also use the added weight of batteries for traction
- roll over
* have a seat that is designed for only one person.
* includes axles
- brakes
- sections
* ploughing between mature trees can promote coppicing from damaged roots.
* simply dissipate kinetic energy.
### vehicle | tractor:
Bulldozer
* are construction vehicles
* can rapidly remove all the overburden down to the top layer of limestone.
* use plows to clear mines from their own path.<|endoftext|>### vehicle:
Tricycle
* are also extremely effective over rough terrain and in mountainous areas
- an important medium of transportation
- made of steel
- small motorcycles with customized side-cars
* can have pedals , an electric motor , or a petrol engine.
* form the backbone of any extended activity.
* is an independent Buddhist quarterly magazine.
* offer the most stability for individuals with balance impairments.
* A 'tricycle' vehicle with three wheels. Tricycles can be called 'trike's. Tricycles can have pedals, an electric motor, or a petrol engine. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle:
Truck
* Many trucks have a frame that supports the body.
* Most trucks have wheels.
* Shows the history of trucks and trucking.
* Some trucks have kinetic energy.
* are a critical component of pavement wear
- very important to the European economy
- automobiles
- big cars
* are located in freeways
- garages
- rest areas
* are motor vehicles that are seen on many different types of roads
- the main means of transportation and thousands of miles of roads have now been paved
- used to transport people or things, they use fuel known as diesel
- what model railroaders call the wheels on the cars
* become passive killers when lighter vehicles collide with their sides or rear ends.
* brakes create heat when the truck is traveling downhill.
* carry cargo
- chain saws to cut apart the huge trunks that often block their way
- food, medicine, and goods of all kinds across continents
* come in a variety of shapes and sizes
- all sorts of color and shapes
* hate cars, and cars hate trucks.
* have a large frame, motor, and wheels
- mass
- momentum
- much larger blindspots on both sides of their vehicles than cars
- significantly different characteristics than cars
- steer wheels
- tires, railroads have tracks
* includes automobile batteries
- bases
* includes brake bands
- systems
- bumper guards
- bumpers
- cabs
* 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
- hinges
- hubs
- infrastructures
- odometers
* includes petrol gages
- poppets
- power trains
* includes rear lamps
- room light
- second gear
- sections
- speedometers
- suspension systems
- tail lamps
- tailgates
- thermostats
- transmission systems
- voltage regulators
- walls
- wipers
* leave driveways.
* play a role in every industry.
* represent the single most important mode of transport for agricultural produce.
* tend to be heavier than cars and have a higher center of gravity
- weigh more, have higher hoods and stiffer frames than cars
* transport small loads because of the heavy weight of the material, which is used in paint.
### vehicle | truck:
Dump truck
* are toys
* have heavy bodies to carry heavy loads.
Dumper
* includes fuel gauges
- fulcrums
- tanks
- pedals
- poppets
- room light
- transmission systems
- walls
- windshields
* sometimes denotes the buttocks, especially when they are large.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | truck:
Fire engine
* Fire Engines Play with trains, hats, clowns, frogs, and more.
* are trucks.
* have sirens.
* pump water and foam which is used to put out the fire.
+ Firefighter: Occupations :: Firefighting
* Firefighters have vehicles they drive fires and rescue operations. If the vehicle pumps water it is called an 'engine'. If it does not pump water it is called a 'truck'. A rescue truck mainly responds to and has equipment for car wrecks,collapsed buildings,search and rescue,stuck elevators and other things. If it carries the fire chief to fires, it is a fire chief car. Fire engines pump water and foam which is used to put out the fire. Fire trucks carry ladders and tools to help rescue people from burning buildings. Some engines carry first aid kits to help people who are injured or hurt. Fire engines can also carry tools and gear to rescue people from collapsed buildings,car accidents,stuck elevators, and many other situations.
### vehicle | truck | fire truck:
Ladder truck
* are fire engines.
* carry ladders.
* fire truck
Light truck
* are far less efficient than passenger cars.
* tend to weigh more than cars and get fewer miles to the gallon. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | truck:
Monster truck
* are the biggest, most powerful trucks in the world.
* are used for competition and popular entertainment
* A 'monster truck' vehicle usually styled after a pickup truck. It is changed or purposely built with very big wheels and suspension. Monster trucks are used for competition and popular entertainment<|endoftext|>### vehicle | truck:
Pickup
* are acceleration
- acquaintances
- collections
* are part of guitars
- transportation
* includes automobile batteries
- bases
* includes brake bands
- light
- systems
- bumper guards
- bumpers
- cabs
* 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
- hinges
- hubs
- infrastructures
- odometers
- pedals
* includes petrol gages
- poppets
- power trains
* includes rear lamps
- room light
- second gear
- sections
- speedometers
- suspension systems
- tail lamps
- tailgates
- thermostats
- transmission systems
- voltage regulators
- walls
- windshields
- wipers
* refers to both ionization and charge exchange.<|endoftext|>### vehicle | truck:
Pickup truck
* Most pickup trucks have four sets of shock absorbers, one for each wheel.
* A 'pickup truck' type of automobile that can move things. The back of the truck is open, like other types of trucks. It is very powerful for its small size. Pickup trucks have different shapes, sizes, and uses. Sometimes people would go ride in the back of the trucks to work. The back of the truck where the goods are placed is called a 'cargo bed'. The cargo bed may be covered with a cloth called 'tonneau cover' to protect the cargo from rain and dirt.
* are easy to load and easy to unload. They are especially popular at countryside, where they are used to carry various agricultural stuffs. Smallest pickup trucks are made from scooters by replacing the rear seat and rear wheel with an axle and cargo bed. They have only three wheels. Usually pickup trucks are same size as normal cars
- machines
* have different shapes , sizes , and uses.
### vehicle | truck | pickup:
Garbage collection
* allows the reclamation of storage for objects which are no longer needed.
* are pickups.
* global function.
* is performed by scanning objects in the database cache.
* is the automatic reclamation of computer storage
- process of reclaiming memory from objects that are no longer needed
* occurs when an incomplete file is in a destination queue.
Magnetic pickup
* are located in electric guitars.
* consist of a coil of fine wire in a magnetic field.
Unicycle
* advocates freedom of speech on the Internet.
* are vehicles.
* have a single tire, the rider of which is either on or off.
* hybrid online record label.
Wagon
* are located in backyards
- fields
- garages
- toy stores
- low four-wheel vehicles with open rectangular bodies such as toy wagons
* are used for transportings
- traveling
* have wheels.
* includes brakes
- sections
- spokes
* includes wagon tires
### vehicle | wagon:
Cart
* Most carts have two wheels on one end and two casters on the other.
* Some carts are pulled by animals
- have a rim to prevent things from slipping off
* are boxs
- carriage
- located in supermarkets
* hold, carry, and move things.
* includes brakes
* provide a safe way to transport food and utensils.
### vehicle | wagon | cart:
Rickshaw
* are a popular means of transport in many states including Manipur
- mini-taxis
- three wheeled taxis with metres
* carry people to shops that are reopening to sell medicines, clothes and supplies.
* come in many colors.
* pulling involves hard physical labour. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vehicle | wagon | cart:
Shopping cart
* are located in grocery stores
- supermarkets
- software programs that automate the process of online purchasing
- the software at the heart of most web stores
* offer a user friendly way for consumers to purchase products online.
* track what a customer is adding to a list of items to purchase.
* work with the use of a database.
Lorry
* Lorries are located in garages
- trucks
- vehicles
- wagons
* Lorries includes brakes
- sections
- spokes
* Lorries includes wagon tires
- wheels
### vehicle | wagon | lorry:
Heavy lorry
* Heavy lorries are used to carry deliveries and heavy loads.
+ Car, Technology: Automobiles
* Other types are able to carry many passengers or heavy loads. For example, family station wagons or estate cars carry from 5 to 9 people, or fewer people with lots of luggage. Heavy lorries are used to carry deliveries and heavy loads.
Watercraft
* are a common hazard for manatees
- crafts
- open air
* fall into two categories, lighterage and floating utility.
### vehicle | watercraft:
Ice boat
* are watercraft.
* can sail up to five times the speed of the wind.
Yacht
* are boats
- large boats
- sailboats
- ships
- small ships
* are used for cruises
- races
- sails
- transport
- travel
- vessels
* includes anchors
- bases
- hulls
- ribs
- rider plates
- rudder blades
- sections
* tend to be larger and more luxurious.
### veiy common:
Marine parasite
* Some marine parasites have oral suckers
* are veiy common.<|endoftext|>Vent
* Most vents are along the mid-ocean ridges, where magma is close to seawater
- part of submarines
- occur at points where the crust is much younger
* allow gases to escape to prevent the formation of blow holes
- heat and steam to escape
* are also home to giant clams, eyeless shrimp, and mussels
- cracks
- geologically old structures
* are located in attics
- houses
- roofs
- rooms
- orifices
- pieces of mesh in the kite sail
- portals
- slits
- where super-heated water squirts out of the sea floor
* blow air to further simulate motion.
* can introduce more moisture than they allow to escape.
* includes sections.
* remove cooking odors, smoke, humidity and air-borne grease and other cooking pollutants.
* spout hot water from the ocean floor and support unique organisms and ecosystems.
### vent:
Air vent
* are one way to prevent fogging.
* help to encourage aerobic decay in organisms.<|endoftext|>### vent:
Hydrothermal vent
* See pictures of deep sea hydrothermal vents.
* Some hydrothermal vents form roughly cylindrical chimney structures.
* are caused by magma deep in the earth
- cracks in the Earth's crust which spew out hot, mineral-rich water
- fissures in the ocean floor that leak hot, acidic water
- home to teeming communities of tube worms, crabs and fish
- often as big as three-story buildings
- one of the most spectacular features on the seafloor
- the direct contrast with constant temperature
* are very ephemeral
- important areas for the formation of mineral deposits
* release mercury Earth.
* remain active for a limited amount of time, perhaps ten to fifty years.
* spew up huge quantities of fine-grained particles into the water column.
* waterjets range from clear to coal-black.
Individual vent
* remain active for anywhere from a few decades to a few thousand years.
* stay active for anywhere from a few decades to a few thousand years.
### verbs:
Main verb
* are verbs.
* cognitive verb, such as think, know, wonder, dream, imagine.
### verse:
Alliterative verse
* highly complex, highly sophisticated system of prosody.
* is based very closely on the prosodic word and the prosodic phrase.
Iambic
* are verses.
* have two syllables.
* march from short to long. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### versus culture:
Western culture
* 'versus' culture.
* Most western cultures believe that man s challenge is to conquer and control nature.
* attributes a painful reality to love.
* believes in progress, but it fears knowledge and science at the same time.
* break down the raw experience of living to analyze it rationally and logically.
* considers love and compassion to be other-oriented.
* denigrates sexuality and relegates it to the margins of our lives.
* emphasis quantitative audio-visual as the working reality.
* emphasizes that our life and soul is ephemeral.
* expects that both men and women keep their genitals covered.
* has a way of seeing life as one monolithic existence.
* have inherently different characteristics.
* holds dominion over the entire universe now and into the foreseeable future.
* is an egocentric culture
- blamed for being obsessed with the human body and a lean and lithe appearance
- human culture
- one of the few in which they are considered erotic
- only one of the many cultures that have emerged in the history of mankind
- said to have experienced a paradigmatic shift from modernism to postmodernism
- today above all a culture of liberal democratic citizenship
* offers only two genders, man or woman.
* prides itself in citical thinking.
* teaches that snakes are deceptive and evil.
* tend to de-emphasize their mythic archetypes
- view both menopause and sexuality in the ageing woman negatively
* thinks of biology as inalienable.
* worships time.
+ Modesty, Different standards for men and women: Culture :: Clothing
* There are different standards of modesty for men and women. Western culture expects that both men and women keep their genitals covered. It also expects that women keep their breasts covered, most of the time. There may be exceptions for bathing, or breastfeeding.<|endoftext|>### vertebrate | bird | raptor | hawk | falcon | kestrel:
American kestrel
* Most american kestrels feed on diets.
* Some american kestrels eat animals
- domesticate animals
- insects
* Some american kestrels eat small animals
* Some american kestrels feed on insects
- large insects
* Some american kestrels have backs
- different roles
* are found throughout Pennsylvania
- most of North and South America
- kept and trained by humans for the sport of falconry
- monogamous
- sexually mature by their first spring
- small, swift, powerful birds of prey, with brilliant coloring
- solitary birds throughout most of the year
- the smallest falcons in North America
* can see in the ultraviolet light range.
* have brighter colored plumages than most other falcons
- different diets seasonally
* nest in cavities
- tree cavities
* pair bond and only mate with one individual.
Female kestrel
* Some female kestrels have different roles
* are slightly larger than male kestrels.
* tend to have slightly lower pitched and harsher voices than males.
Male kestrel
* are more colorful than females.
* have a rufous back and tail, and a pronounced black moustache.
### vertebrate | bird | waterfowl | duck | sea duck | eider:
Common eider
* Most common eiders winter in the Bering Sea and the Aleutian Islands.
* breed in Alaska from Kodiak Island to the North Slope.
### vertebrate | mammal | feline | cat | lynx | bobcat:
Male bobcat
* Most male bobcats have tails.
* are driven away after breeding, and the males seek other females
- slightly larger and heavier than females
* play no part in raising the kittens.
* reach sexual maturity at the age of two years old and females at the age of one.
* tend to be larger than females. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vertebrate | mammal | hoofed mammal | ruminant | bovid | bovine:
Oxen
* Many oxen are still in use all over the world , especially in poor countries.
* also have a temper.
* are generally dark brownish or blackish in color
- grazers, feeding primarily on grasses
- happy when they find bitter vetches to eat
- incapable of bursts of speed or energy
- steers specially trained to work in the fields
- still very common as work animals in other parts of the world
* carry boys and belongings.
* like to be part of big organisations like universities, corporations and hospitals.
+ Cattle, Uses of Cattle, Oxen: Bovines :: Domesticated animals :: Meats
* Oxen can pull harder and longer than horses, especially for very large loads. They are not as fast as horses, but they are less often injured or less likely to startle than horses are. Many oxen are still in use all over the world, especially in poor countries.
### vertebrate | mammal | hoofed mammal | ruminant | bovid | wild sheep:
Mountain sheep
* are common in the alpine zone of the Culebra Range
- some of the most specialized grazers
- wild sheep
* have eight sharp teeth at the front of the mouth.
* rely on extremely acute eyesight.
### vertebrate | mammal | primate | ape | chimp | bonobo:
Female bonobo
* Some female bonobos have breasts.
* engage in behavior.
### vertebrate | mammal | primate | monkey | baboon | mandrill:
Female mandrill
* Some female mandrills attain maturity
- sexual maturity
* are smaller than their male counterparts.
Male mandrill
* Most male mandrills have color
- snouts
- search for food
* are considered the most colorful of all mammals.
* do exist, but mandrill society is female-dominated.
- teeth
* live a solitary life and enter a group only when the females are ready for mating.
* protect the harem from predators and intruders.
* shake heads.
### vertebrate | mammal | primate | monkey | marmoset | tamarin:
Emperor tamarin
* Most emperor tamarins have claws
- fingers
- sharp claws
- thumbs
- inhabit territory
* are active by day and are very graceful, friendly, and playful monkeys.
* behave actively, rapidly, gracefully, friendly, and playful in the wild.
* inhabit rainforests
Golden lion tamarin
* defend territory.
* eat fruit
- sweet fruit
* feed on fruit.
* have molar teeth
* use fingers.
Golden tamarin
* Most golden tamarins eat fruit
* Most golden tamarins have molar teeth
* Some golden tamarins have nails
- sharp nails
Lion tamarin
* Most lion tamarins eat fruit
* Most lion tamarins have diets
* Some lion tamarins have sharp nails.
* appears to be restricted to primary lowland forest.
* are among the world's most critically endangered mammals
- in danger of extinction
* have a mane derived from long hairs on the top of the head, cheeks and throat
- long silky reddish, orange, golden, or buffy pelage
- molar teeth
- vary diets
Male tamarin
* perform most of the child caring to their young.
* play an extensive role in caring for the young by the father.
### vertebrate | mammal | ungulate | antelope | waterbuck | lechwe:
Kafue lechwe
* give a snorting-cough as an alert signal and during mating displays.
* live marshy habitats and prefer swamps and wetlands. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### vertebrate | reptile | serpent | constrictor | boa | python:
Ball python
* Most ball pythons eat rats
- rodents
* Most ball pythons have eyes
- jaws
* Most ball pythons have long life
- reproductive life
- upper jaws
* Most ball pythons kill animals
- prey animals
* Some ball pythons have cloacas
- prefer birds
* Some ball pythons reach maturity
- reproductive maturity
* are carnivorous and have mobile lower and upper jaws
- found in western to central Africa, just north of the equator
- quite common as pets
- secretive snakes that appreciate and utilize hide spots
- somewhat notorious for refusing to eat
* can stay connected for up to two days.
- well-defined patterns colored with yellows, browns and black
* live in dry grassland, savanna and forest edges.
* play a role in a religious cult known as a voodoo.
* prefer grasslands, savannas and sparsely wooded areas.
* sit and wait to ambush prey.
* spend most of their time on or under the ground in burrows.<|endoftext|>### vertebrate | reptile | serpent | constrictor | boa | python:
Burmese python
* Most burmese pythons have organs
- physiology
- sensory organs
* Some burmese pythons have capability
- claws
- live in rainforests
* Some burmese pythons reach maturity
- sexual maturity
* are an African snake, and also live in the jungles
- carnivores mainly eating small mammals, reptiles, and birds
- carnivores, surviving primarily on small mammals and birds
- crammed into tiny enclosures, fed barely enough to sustain life
- dark-colored snakes with many brown blotches bordered in black down the back
- light colored with dark brown blotches bordered in black, and a pale belly
- native to Asia, from eastern India through Vietnam and southern China
- semi-aquatic and are often found near or in water
- solitary animals and are generally only seen together during spring mating
* can pose a threat to human safety.
* eat a large range of animals.
* hatch from eggs.
* living in the southern Florida are apt to eat a diverse range of animals.
* reach sexual maturity in four to five years.
* require exceptionally clean cages.
Carpet python
* Some carpet pythons have ages.
* kill prey by constricting it until it suffocates.
Large python
* are the only snakes that incubate their eggs.
* can even eat larger mammals like the red muntjac, a type of Asian deer.<|endoftext|>### vertebrate | reptile | serpent | constrictor | boa | python:
Larger python
* can prey on animals as large as a house cat or a full-grown deer.
+ Python
* Some people think it is related to that of the Boa snakes. However, boas produce live young, while pythons lay eggs. Pythons can be found in Australia, Southeast Asia and Africa. Pythons can range from 3 feet long in species like ball pythons to 29 feet in species like reticulated pythons. Longer pythons have been seen, but the reports are not secured. Larger pythons can prey on animals as large as a house cat or a full-grown deer. In Africa, there are pythons that eat gazelles. To catch its prey, the python squeezes it to death, then swallows it whole.
### vertebrate | reptile | serpent | viper | pit viper | rattler:
Timber rattler
* are more poisonous, but bites are rare since they rattles before attacking.
* come in both yellow and black colorations.
### vertebrate | reptile | serpent | viper | rattlesnake | diamondback:
Western diamondback
* Most western diamondback rattlesnakes possess pit organs
- diamondbacks range in color
* Some western diamondback rattlesnakes occupy geographic ranges
- prey upon mammals
* Some western diamondbacks have feet
- predators
- venom
- live for years | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### very helpful:
Red link
* are 'very' helpful.
* are good. Say it again with me, red links are good. For people interested in a subject they are a quick and easy way to know what is missing and what needs to be created. We can 'not' use out own POV to make things smaller especially things like 'and others thought to be significant'. That is very much POV editing. Arbitrary cut offs like you mention above are contrary to a number of policies.
* We can learn from the dab pages of English Wikipedia. While I would not necessarily copy over every red link from a dab page on English Wikipedia, I would generally honor their naming conventions. I would not delete a pre-existing dab page or the red links from a dab page, because they do add value to a reader. The dab page can tell the reader whether the one Joseph Smith article is the person of interest. Red links serve two important purposes. First, they tell the reader what coverage is missing. Second, they encourage the creation of the missing articles.
* are ok. They are even good. These pages have existed for years. The fact the information is fictional is part of the purpose of these pages. Not to mention what you find interesting could be quite different than what others find interesting.
* Those are timeline articles. The significance is explained in the articles that are linked. Red links are good, red links are very very important as they encourage article creation. Removing red links very bad thing. History isn't just a list of names and dates, but timelines are, these articles are timelines. For the detail on those names and dates you go to the linked articles.
### vessel:
Fishing boat
* are located in sea
- vessels
* drag huge nets across the ocean's bottom.
* roll gently in protected harbours.
### vessel | fishing boat:
Dragger
* fish most often with nets that ride along the ocean bottom.
* fishing boat
* haul large, heavy nets along the floor of the sea, over and over again.
Merchant vessel
* are ships that are primarily used either for carrying cargo or passengers.
* come in different sizes and shapes.
Sailing ship
* Most sailing ships have between one and three mast but some have four.
* are sailing vessels
* dot the oceans, symbolizing trade and worldwide access to goods and markets.
### vessel | sailing ship:
Brig
* Some brigs have the gaff sail rigged on a separate mast just a bit astern of the main mast.
* are smaller vessels, used for carrying cargo.
Felucca
* are traditional Egyptian sailing craft without private cabins.
* generally have no motors, but have to sail wherever they go using current and wind.
Sailing boat
* are boats.
* refers to shipping.
### vessel | sailing ship | sailing boat:
Catamaran
- very fuel efficient
* can also suffer the slamming of waves on the structure spanning their two hulls.
* have twin hulls with a deck in between that minimize rolling in the ocean swells
- two hulls and are noted for their stability
* inherently have large stresses in their structures.
* sailing boat
Schooner
* are glass
- located in sea
- tall ships
* have a rich nautical history.
* sailing ship
Shrimper
* accidentally entangle turtles that are foraging where trawlers are working.
* are vessels.
* often speak fondly of the dolphins.
* report that shrimp can be found interspersed within the bryozoan mats.
### via blood vessels:
Distant metastasis
* Distant metastases are also common even if the primary tumor is controlled
- the only absolute criterion for the diagnosis of malignancy
- occur most commonly in the lungs and liver
- remain the primary cause of death and therapeutic failure
* is via blood vessels.
Vice
* Discuss personal feelings on smoking, drinking, and drugs.
* is evil
- located in workshops
- magazines
- software
- transgression
- used for squeezes | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Victory
* Victories are endings
- events
- singles
- success
* group that supports people in all stages of recovery from addictions.
* is success
* motorcycle made by rider for riders.
* Many songs have been made called 'victory songs'. Victory often comes with a lot of emotion. Victory is usually celebrated after winning, although there are many times not to, like after a war. The term began to be used in Roman antiquity.
### victory:
Checkmate
* are rare in competitive chess
- victories
+ Chess, Ways a game may end
* Checkmates are rare in competitive chess. The most common ends are decisions made by one or both players.
Runaway
* More runaways occur at night due to cover of darkness.
* are bands
* carry luggage or pillow cases tied to a stick.
* come from every social class, race, and religion.
* comprise the largest category of missing children.
### video games:
Sonic hedgehog
* are video games.
* contributes to oligodendrocyte specification in the mammalian forebrain.
* opposes epithelial cell cycle arrest.
* promotes rod photoreceptor differentiation in mammalian retinal cells in vitro.
Tera
* lives in California.
* means trillions, and flops is floating point operations per second.
Video quality
* compromise between bandwidth and other factors such as frame rate and size.
* function of frame rate, pixel resolution and monitor size.<|endoftext|>### video:
Digital video
* allows information and pictures to be compressed and displayed on monitors
- most people to make their own film
* can originate on a computer or be digitized from an analog source.
* divides the number of colors or gray scales into a distinct number of points.
* high-resolution video format that treats video and audio as digital information.
* is an alternative way of storing or distributing video
- both non-linear and digital
* is generated by sampling and quantizing analog video signals
- taking limited samples of analog video
- nothing more than a digital representation of the analog video signal
- represented as a sequence of digital images
* is the future of the Internet
- web
- transmitted over a cable in either a parallel or serial format
- used to clarify complex procedures
* tends to involve large files.
Interactive video
* combines video and computer technology.
* comes in various forms, one of which is distance learning.
Music video
* Some music videos have a technical event every second or more, which can only harm the brain.
* A 'music video' or 'music clip' short movie that represents a song on a television screen. Most music videos feature the artist who recorded the song singing or lip-syncing it on screen.
* are located in television<|endoftext|>Virion
* Some virions also contain other, non-structural proteins that are used in the viral life cycle
- infect the cell and remain part of it for some time
* acquire an envelope and undergo maturation as they bud through the host cell membrane.
* are particles
- released following cell lysis
* bud from cytoplasm
- through inner membrane of nucleus to outside of cell
* consist of one or more nucleocapsids enclosed within a single envelope.
* contain c.
* exit the cell by budding or cell lysis.
* includes atoms.
* includes chemical chain
- groups
- sections
* is pleomorphic, coronavirus often being disk, kidney shape or even rod like.
* seede to all the epithelial surfaces of the body.
### virtue:
Cardinal virtue
* are prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance.
* is virtue | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### virulently anti-christian:
Radical feminist
* are virulently anti-Christian.
* believe that women are being exploited because men profit from the thin ideal.
* feel that they are oppressed by the patriarchy.
* say that society patriarchy.
+ Radical feminism: Feminism
* Radical feminism' is a type of feminism. Radical feminists are sometimes called 'radfems'. Famous radical feminists include Andrea Dworkin, Catharine MacKinnon, Valerie Solanas, and Alice Walker. Radical feminists say that society is a patriarchy. In patriarchy, men have more social power than women. They harm women by oppressing them. Liberal feminists want to be equal to men. Radical feminists do not want equality within the patriarchy. Radical feminists want to get rid of patriarchy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Viscosity
* Most viscosity depends on forces
- intermolecular forces
- shear forces
* Some viscosities increase with a lower temperature, some with a higher temperature
- viscosity increases pressure.
* is used as a way to predict when volcanoes erupt. This is because the lava has a hard time getting out and may burst out when it can
* Viscosities are comparable to petroleum-based fluids
- can run from water thin to paste thick
* Viscosities range from paste to liquid
- thinner than water to thicker than paste
* affects heat generation in bearings, cylinders and gears due to internal fluid friction.
* also acts internally on the fluid between slower and faster moving adjacent layers
- depends upon the nature of the materials used in the composition of the glaze
- refers to internal resistance experienced by the fluid before it can flow
* basically means the mobility of something.
* becomes normal by stirring.
* can also be a drawback when it comes to magnetically driven electric units.
* cans have effects.
* causes the stillness of disinclination, velocity causes the stillness of fascination
- xenon to resist the oscillator's motion
* changes with concentration of cacao pod gum and gum karaya at different spindle speeds.
* controls the fill pressure.
* decreases because the starch molecules become shorter due to hydrolytic effects.
* denotes opposition to flow.
* depends on factors
- temperature of both air and water, but in opposite directions
* depends on the attractive force between the molecules
- chemical composition of the glass
* describes the thickness or resistance to flow of a contrast agent.
* determines a liquid's resistance to flow.
* flattens the effervescence of panic.
* has the dimensions mass per length per time.
* increases as temperature increases.
* increases with increasing silica content due to silica chain
- the length of the boiling time
* influences the spray pattern when the fuel is injected into the cylinder.
* is absolutely critical to inkjet printing
- also an important characteristic of a lubricant
* is an important property in determining the eruptive behavior of magmas
- of drilling fluids
- subject in chemistry and chemical engineering
- internal property of a fluid that offers resistance to flow
- associated with the ability of a fluid to flow freely
- consistency
* is controlled by the composition and temperature of the magma
- in the system by blending surfactants
- dispositions
- highly temperature dependent, and has common units of centipoise
- how hard it is for the fluid to move or flow
* is internal friction
- resistance to flow of a liquid
* is measured in terms of flow with water as the base standard
- with various types of viscometers and rheometers
- on the x-axis and increases to the right
- reduced by water and a lower silica content
* is the ability of a substance to resist flow
- degree to which a fluid resists flow under an applied force
* is the degree to which fluid resists flow of an applied force
- resists under an applied force
- level of thickness or thinness on a liquid
- lubricating capability of a lubricant
* is the measure of a liquid's resistance to flow
- how thick an oil is
- resistance of a fluid to flow
- the resistance to flow of a material when exposed to a shear stress
* is the most important physical property of a lubricant
- single property of lube oil
- oil's ability to flow at a given temperature
- physical property of any fluid to resist flow when pressure is applied
- property of fluid to resist flow
- ratio of shear stress to the rate of shear strain
* is the resistance of a liquid to flow
- to motion
- therefore, deformation is directly related to viscosity
* lies behind the skin friction component of drag.
* macroscopic transport property of a fluid.
* makes a real difference in fluid performance.
* means resistance to pouring.
* measure of a fluid's resistance to flow
- thickness or resistance to move
- fluids resistance to relative motion within the fluid
- lubricant's resistance to flow
* measure of an oil's flow characteristics, or thickness, at a certain temperature
* measure of how fluid a magma is
- resistive a fluid is to flow
- resistance to local change
* measure of the ease with which molecules move past one another
- flow characteristics of a liquid
- friction, or resistance to flow, in a fluid
- oil's thickness
* measurement of resistance to flow or how thick or thin an oil is.
* molecular property of fluid.
* occurs on a cellular level.
* offers the ability to change the Blend Mode of a layer.
* physical property of a liquid that describes how well it flows
- liquids that descibes how they flow
* refers to an oil's resistance to flow.
* refers to the body or flowability of an oil
- compound's resistance to flow
- rate of resistance to flow
- thickness of the oil
* remains constant at all temperatures.
* result of the internal friction of the material's molecules.
* tells how well a material clings to itself.
* varies with temperature and composition of liquid.
* very important subject in both chemistry and chemical engineering.
+ Friction: Force
* Internal friction in a fluid is called viscosity. Viscosity is how hard it is for the fluid to move or flow. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### viscosity:
High viscosity
* can interfere with free seal movement and cause seal face contact problems.
* flows slowly and with difficulty, like honey.
* is an indication that water is being lost, normally through evaporation
- responsible for the annoyingly slow flow of ketchup and molasses
- slow-flowing, like molasses or toothpaste
* magmas tend to produce taller, steeper, more explosive volcanoes.
Kinematic viscosity
* is the ratio of the absolute viscosity to the density.
* measure of the resistive flow of a fluid under the influence of gravity.
Low viscosity
* allows rapid penetration of most filters, including glass fiber and cellulose acetate.
* flows readily, like water.
* means that mafic magma is the most fluid of magma types
- the fluid flows easily
Plasma viscosity
* increases in the acute phase reaction.
* major risk factor for cardiovascular disease.<|endoftext|>Visibility
* Visibilities create a way of knowing irreducible to words and statements.
* also can refer to the clarity of objects in the distance, middle or foreground
- depends on location, season and how much of the sky can be seen
- means, in a way, greater transparency
- plays a part in bicyclist and pedestrian safety
* can tend to be low in the early morning hours, as morning fog is common in many areas.
* is affected by posture
- best in winter, when the trees are bare
- crucial in the process of linking entrepreneurs with managers and venture capitalists
- different than visuality
- important at night
- salience
* is the basis of political action
- degree of being visible
- maximum horizontal distance that can be seen
- way a person perceives another persons social identity to be
- unique among air pollution effects because it involves human perception and judgement
* occurs during phases.
* physical property
* plays a key function in the marketing of an institution.
* sometimes scary, normalizing experience and activity.
* varies with water depth, light intensity, and, of course, water clarity.
+ Abalone, Description, California: Gastropods :: Chinese cuisine :: Edible molluscs :: Gastropods :: Seafood
* An abalone diver normally uses a very thick wetsuit, including a hood, booties, and gloves. He or she would also wear a mask, snorkel, weight belt, abalone iron, and abalone gauge. An abalone iron is used to pry the abalone from the rock before it can fully clamp down. Visibility is normally five to ten feet. Divers commonly dive out of boats, kayaks, tube floats or directly off the shore.
* Visibility can be poor on foggy days.
+ MediaWiki:Gadget-Twinkle.js
* Visibility depends on the class used.
### visibility:
High visibility
* is what attracts advertisers.
* makes it easier for fire trucks to move safely through traffic.
Poor visibility
* can be dangerous for swimming and diving.
* danger on some wrecks.
* is caused by cars, industry, and woodburning.
* makes it difficult to avoid pedestrians, cyclists and animals.
* part of the big picture.
### visible:
Brighter star
* are visible.
* deliver more photons to the pixels of the CCD's than dimmer stars.
* have larger holes in the starsphere.
* have smaller magnitudes than dimmer stars
### visual art form:
Network analysis
* is the study of connections among people in a community or organization
- social relations among a set of actors
* refers to the examination of the possible paths through a network.
* visual art form.
Visual aspect
* can be colour, spatial frequency and 'naturalness' of the stimulus.
* is quality
### visual communication:
Demo
* are an art form
- computer programs
* is visual communication | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### visual communication | demo:
Display
* are a vital part of industrial and consumer products throughout the world
- way of transferring the machine s output to our input
- demonstrations
- disclosures
- electronic devices
- part of computers
- representations
- shows
- stylized gestures or positions used to communicate pieces of information
* machine architecture independent image processing and display program.
* play an important part in mating behaviour.
* produce color by mixing red, green, and blue light.
* refers to monitors, projectors, easels, screens, etc.
* vital function of the feathers in very many living birds.
### visual communication | demo | display:
Auroral display
* appear in many forms including bands, arcs, rays and sheets.
* are one of the most beautiful of all natural phenomena.
* vary from night to night and during a single night.
Color display
* produce color by mixing red, green, and blue light.
* take an enormous number of transistors.
Courtship display
* are used to synchronize breeding in colonies.
* continue until a female physically contacts a displaying male in the water.
* involve posturing by both the male and the female.
Electronic display
* Some electronic displays work with specific types of switches.
* have limited dimensions.
Facial display
* are partly innate and partly learned.
* indicate emotion, pain, brain function and pathology, and regulate social behavior.
Fanfare
* are used today as music at the start of television and radio news programs.
+ Fanfare, Fanfares today: Musical forms
* Fanfares are used today as music at the start of television and radio news programs. Often they are used as victory marches in video games, particularly Role Playing Games. Fanfares are also seen at military parades and events. The British Army bands all have a special teams of between four and eight trumpet players to play fanfares.
### visual communication | demo | display | fanfare:
Pedantry
* Pedantries are ostentation.
* adheres to forms and methods, to the sacrifice of the practical object involved.
* has no place in software engineering.
* implies an overly strict adherence to rules.
* is fanfare
Visual display
* are an efficient method of human information reception, analysis, and exchange.
* convey motivation in social encounters.
* play an important role in communication among psittacines.<|endoftext|>### visual perceptions:
Depth perception
* allows the beholder to accurately gauge the distance to an object.
* are visual perceptions.
* arises from a variety of depth cues.
* comes from the amount of overlap in the field of vision of the two eyes.
* depends upon binocular vision.
* does rely on binocular vision, but it also uses many other monocular cues.
* has monocular and binocular cues.
* is important in animals, such as hawks and owls, in order to hunt on the wing
- to primates
- poor at night
- related either to the water depth or the terrain elevation
- the visual ability to perceive the world in three dimensions
- very different under low light conditions
* very fragile visual function.
### vocalization:
Bird vocalization
* are an important model system in our research.
* is the major model system.<|endoftext|>Voice
* Most voices have pitch.
* Some voices can sing songs.
* also change with stress.
* are communication.
* are located in choirs
- mouths
- people
- radios
- telephones
- means
- more specialized in their function than layers
- simply the manner in which a character speaks and behaves
- singers
- sound
* are used for communicating
- recordings
- shoutings
- talking
- whispering
* can have male or female characteristics, some physical, some behavioral.
* do rise when people become excited, and the physical sensation of fear is inharmonious.
* is sound | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### voice:
Different voice
* have different musical pitches
- natural sounding ranges of pitch
+ Vietnamese alphabet, Letters of the alphabet, Vietnamese characters, Making the vowel sounds: Vietnam :: Alphabet :: Austro-Asiatic languages
* Different voices have different musical pitches. If a speaker uses strong pitch changes, it will probably be for pronunciation.
Human voice
* are a good hindrance for almost all animals
- instruments
* can also be seen as an instrument, air is brought into vibration by vocal chords.
Passive voice
* are voices.
* is something that is being done to the subject of the verb
- the primary cause of boring manuals
* tends to conceal rather than reveal information.
Tenor
* are direction.
* are located in choirs
- choruses
- jazz bands
- operas
- male singers
- meaning<|endoftext|>### voice:
Voice recognition
* allows data input without the use of keyboards and mice.
* can increase typing speed and accuracy.
* depends on computers.
* enables users to control their computers through speech.
* has help people with motor impairments to be able to interact with computers.
* identifies the basic pattern in the way a person speaks.
* is another method of identification
- viewed by some as the solution to handhelds' tiny keypads
* lets others control a computer by speech.
* major component of voice activation.
### voices:
Active voice
* are voices.
* is something the subject of the verb is doing.
* means engaging the subject of a sentence with an active verb.
* more natural way to construct sentences.
Void
* are books
- empty regions of space, where there is no detectable matter
- essentially incapable of transmitting structural stresses or nonradiative energy fields
* are located in space
- universes
- open spaces between soil particles filled with air, water, or a combination of both
* result from heating volatile compounds trapped inside the solder.
* tend to act as the nucleus for horizontal cracks.
Volatile compound
* Most volatile compounds play roles.
* Some volatile compounds are produced by bacteria
- common bacteria
- common soil bacteria
- contribute to health problems
* Some volatile compounds destroy layers
- ozone layers
- inhibit growth
* include solvent.
### volatile oil:
Eucalyptus oil
* Most eucalyptus oil has aroma.
* is volatile oil
* vary in chemical composition.
Turpentine
* Most turpentine is produced as a by-product of the papermaking process.
* Much turpentine is derived from tall oil from the paper industry.
* flows from the pine and other cone-bearing trees.
* is volatile oil
### volcanic eruptions:
Plinian eruption
* Some Plinian eruptions are so powerful they can change the climate for years at a time.
* have columns of gas and volcanic ash high into the stratosphere. There large amount of pumice into the atmosphere and very powerful gas blast eruptions.
* are volcanic eruptions.
### volcanoes:
Open triangle
* are volcanoes.
* is the summit of volcano.<|endoftext|>### volcanos:
Active volcano
* Most active volcanoes have fumaroles where volcanic gases escape to the surface.
* are also responsible for some of the world's most fertile soils.
* are on smaller surrounding islands
- the islands of Hawaii and Maui
- present and earthquakes are frequent
- very complex natural systems
- volcanos
* can be inaccessible, temperamental, and even dangerous
- go tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of years between eruptions
* dominate the skyline in many parts of the Pacific Northwest.
* erupt constantly.
* exist, and the islands are subject to destructive earthquakes.
* occur only when the island is directly over the hot spot.
* pose many hazards to life and property.
### volcanos | active volcano:
White island
* White Island continues to emit minor amounts of steam and gases, but no ash.
* White Island is an active volcano
- andescite volcano
- one of the most interesting volcanoes in the world | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Voltage
* Most voltage causes discharge.
* Most voltage creates fields
- magnetic fields
* Most voltage is generated by generators
- produced by batteries
* Most voltage produces discharge
- electrical discharge
- refers to voltage
- relates to power
* Some voltage applies to materials
- comes from batteries
* Some voltage is divided by resistance
- total body resistance
* Some voltage is generated by batteries
- devices
- turbines
- wind turbines
- produced by cuttlefishs
* Some voltage powers electrical devices
- small electrical devices
- pushes electric charge
* are compared to the ground to measure voltage.
* better-known quantity than electric field.
* can exist only where there current path
- set off most receptors
* causes current to flow, while resistance and impedance oppose it
* comes from various sources.
* concept that is related to potential energy.
* controls the balance between uptake and release.
* depends on battery types
- the light's wavelength and intensity
* describes how much energy the electrons carry.
* drop The loss of electrical pressure caused by resistance in a circuit.
* drops when a load is placed on the power system, or when the battery discharges.
* energizes phosphor atoms.
* expresses the amount of energy expended per amount of electric charge.
* gated ion channels are critically important in synaptic function.
* has functions
- origins
- to do with potential energy
* is an across variable
- electrical phenomenon
- energy measure, the energy carried by one coulomb of electrical charge
- analogous to water pressure
* is applied at both ends of the tube to generate an electric current
- between two electrodes in a probe immersed in the sample water
* is applied to certain areas, causing the crystal to turn dark
- which causes the crystal to turn dark
- approximately proportional to speed
- associated with electrostatic fields in space
- between two points in a circuit
- determined by the number of cells in the fuel stack
- due to a charge difference
* is electrical pressure or force
- energy per unit charge or electric field times distance
- equal to current multiplied by resistance
- indicated by a mechanical displacement of a pointer against a scale
* is like altitude
- an electrical pressure that pushes the coulombs through the circuit
- the height difference between two ends of a river
- measured by putting the galvanometer across the voltage drop to be measured
* is measured in units called volts and current is measured in units of amps
- volts , current is measured in amps and resistance is measured in ohms
* is measured in volts, V for short
- millivolts, microvolts and kilovolts
- on an interval scale , which means that only differences can be measured
- to estimate the amount of current thatcould flow through an animal
- only one facet of electricity
* is produced by a chemical reaction
- proportional to current - over a limited range
- required to create a current
- similar to water pressure
- something like electrical pressure
- sort of like electrical pressure
- the amount of pressure pushing the electricity through the wires
* is the difference in charge between two points
- electrical charge between any two points
- electric force that causes current in a conductor
* is the electrical equivalent of water pressure
- potential energy and is measured in volts
- energy per electric charge, it is measured in volts per coulomb
- force that causes the current to flow
- measure of electric potential
- most frequently measured electrical quantity
* is the parameter of electricity which causes current to flow when a circuit is completed
- that is the most used, and the most misunderstood
* is the potential energy per unit charge for a charge in an electrical force field
- to move
- power a battery can deliver
- pressure pushing the electrons through the wires, it is measured in volts
* is the pressure that causes the electrons want to flow
- makes electricity flow
* is the pressure that pushes electrical current through a wire
- electricity along, like water though a hose
- same across all resistors in parallel
- work done per charge
- therefore a direct measure of nerve conduction threshold
* measure of potential energy contained in the battery and is measured in volts
- the electrical energy of a circuit
* occur at nodes.
* physical variable that can be thought of in different ways.
* plays a role in the mobility of proteins on a gel.
* produces current
* reads low when vacuum is high, and increases as vacuum drops.
* relative quantity.
* represents the work involved in the transfer of electric charge from one point to another.
* results in electric energy
* specific measure of potential energy that is always relative between two points.
* unit of electrical current.
* varies according to the number of individual cells making up a stack.
+ Battery, What is inside a battery (the chemistry)
* Connecting the positive of one cell to the positive of the other, and the negative to the negative is called connecting them 'in parallel'. The voltage stays the same, but the current is added together. Voltage is the pressure pushing the electrons through the wires, it is measured in volts. Current is how many electrons can go at once, it is measured in amps.
+ Ground: Geography
* It is the dirt, soil and rock that we walk on. Ground in electrical language is the electrical charge of the earth. Voltages are compared to the ground to measure voltage. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### voltage:
High voltage
* Most high voltage produces electrical discharge.
* are dangerous for various reasons, but the risk of electrocution is the main one.
* breaks down electrical insulators, including paint, skin, and most shoes and gloves
- the two atoms of oxygen apart
* can leak off of conductors.
* produces discharge
* transforms the gas into a glowing mixture of separate proton clusters and electrons.
Higher voltage
* are more likely to kill and also more likely to cause skin burns.
* make signals propagate down wires faster but require more energy.
Low voltage
* can cause an electrical motor to slowly burn up.
* is very damaging to electrical equipment.
Stray voltage
* affects farm animals, especially dairy cattle.
* causes noise in electrical signals and deterioration of metals.
* concern of the dairy industry.
* is electrical current that leaks from power lines into the earth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Volume
* Partitioning - many applications have a limit on the maximum capacity of a disk volume.
* affects the overall loudness of the voice, and the changes can be heard immediately.
* also affects time and price.
* always has the units of a cubic length.
* are chunks of disk space containing files and directories
- proportional to the cubes of lengths
* change as the cube of the linear size.
* decreases as the mass and pressure increase
- cost due to increases in manufacturing efficiency
* depends empirically on pellet size
- on the effort made in forcing air through the vocal cords
* describes the quantity of three dimensional space than an object occupies.
* factor in retaining compost pile heat
- related to how much the athlete does
* form of release.
* function of the cylinder diameter and is controlled by adjusting the piston stroke.
* fundamental parameter in thermodynamics and it is conjugate to pressure.
* grows as a function of length cubed.
* includes capacity units
- displacement units
- volume units
* is also important in the pig business
- when it comes to angioplasties
- related to a building's function
* is an amount
- essential concept in students' learning of three-dimensional or solid geometry
- example of a physical property of matter
- derived from length
- directly proportional to absolute temperature
- expressed in cubic denominations, such as cubic feet or cubic inches
- generated by the interaction of time and price
- how much space something takes up
- influenced by a kayak's length, beam, prismatic coefficient, and depth or deck height
- integral of flow
- light at the current time
* is located in bookshelfs
- libraries
- loudest when the sound wave has nothing to deflect it
- made up of glandular breast tissue, fatty tissue, fibrous tissue, and ductal tissue
- measured at the bottom of the meniscus
* is measured in cubic units of length
- while area is measured in units squared
- decibels
- gallons, liters, or milliliters
- measures
- often measures in liters
- publications
- quality quantity
- quantities
- quite simply the number of contracts traded on a given day
- reduced due to conversion of solids to methane gas and carbon dioxide
* is related to length
- the amount of space an object occupies
- sales in units and price is the financial value paid by the buyer
- the amount of area inside the figure
* is the amount of space an object contains
- and object takes up
- enclosed by an object
* is the amount of space occupied by an object or a material
* is the amount of space that an object occupies
- an object or substance takes up
- matter take up
- three dimensional space an object occupies
- amplitude of the vibrations
- measure of how much a container can hold
- most important item of measurement in traffic engineering
* is the number of cubic length units it takes to fill a space
- shares or contracts traded during a given time frame - often one day
- quantity of three-dimensional space occupied by a liquid , solid , or gas
* is the space an object occupies, and mass is the amount of matter it contains
- three-dimensional space occupied by something
- total amount of purchases or sales transacted in a given day
* is the total number of contracts traded during a given day
- shares traded so far today
- threaded by electromagnetic fields
* is used for research
- to measure a space figure just as area is used to measure a plane figure
* key component of applied geometry.
* measure of the amount of space occupied by an object
- space occupied by a sample
* measurement of the amount of ejaculate.
* measures the amount of space an object takes up
- enthusiasm of buyers relative to sellers
- intensity of the change in investors attitudes
* plays a role in the time it takes for water to boil.
* refers to audio loudness.
* refers to the amount of space an object takes up
- loudness of the sound stimulation
- total space contained within a three-dimensional figure
* represents the number of contracts traded up until that time of the day
- participants willing to wager at various points of price and time
* running count of the number of futures contracts traded during the day.
* three dimensional measure so the doubling and tripling are cubed.
+ Minerals, Characteristics of minerals, Solid: Natural resources
* Volume refers to the amount of space an object takes up. For example a golf ball has a smaller volume than a baseball, and a baseball has a smaller volume than a basketball. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### volume:
Blood volume
* begins to change.
* changes during three-week residence at high altitude.
* continues to drop until it reaches the end-systolic volume.
* factor necessary for function and survival of an organism.
* increases, blood pressure and pulse rise, and cardiac output increases.
* is augmented by a number of factors
- important in many surgical and medical conditions
- the total amount of blood circulating within the body
* refers to the amount of blood in the human body.
Fluid volume
* has nothing to do with oxalates nor with goitrogens and hypothyroidism.
* represent workloads, corresponding to virtual waiting times in queueing parlance.
Liquid volume
* is measured using a unit called a liter
- the space a liquid takes up
* measure how much space a liquid takes up inside a given container.
Specific volume
* is the reciprocal of density.
* means volume divided by mass, which is the reciprocal of the density.
Stroke volume
* is determined by inotropy and preload
- increased with increasing strength of cardiac contraction
* is the amount of blood pumped by the left ventricle each time it contracts
- the heart can pump in one cardiac cycle
- volume of blood each ventricle of the heart ejects per beat
* refers to the amount of blood ejected from the heart with each heartbeat.
* represents the amount of blood ejected by the heart with each beat.
Tidal volume
* Tidal Volume measures the amount of air exhaled during normal breathing.
* decreases with increasing depth of anesthesia.
* is similar to an adult by four weeks of age.
* is the amount of air breathed in or out during a respiratory cycle
- entering or leaving the lungs in a normal breath
- expelled during a normal breath
- taken in during normal breathing
- inspiratory time multiplied by the flow rate
- volume inspired and expired during normal respirations
Voter turnout
* gets lower with each presidential election.
* is converse in states where the most money is spent on elections
- substantially higher in countries with automatic voter registration
* varies substantially depending on what offices are being elected
- substantially, depending on what offices are up for election
### voting issue:
Topicality
* Topicalities are interest.
* is interest
* voting issue.
Vulgarity
* begins when imagination succumbs to the explicit.
* is celebrated in all forms, from the sexual to the intestinal, with an emphasis on bowels
- quality
- simply the conduct of other people
* is the conduct of others
- loss of a feeling of shame
- when people talk about inappropriate things
* sign of indiscipline.
* very important ingredient in life.<|endoftext|>Wallet
* are cases
- containers that store trusted identities and personas
- gear
* are located in beds
- pockets
- purses
- made of plastic
- software
* have money.
* includes sections.
* really are online organizers of payment systems, such as organizing multiple credit cards.
+ Bitcoin, Technical Details, Wallets: 2009 establishments :: Commerce :: Currency :: Technology
* Wallets provide a handy way to keep track of all of a user's public and private addresses. Because addresses are pseudo-anonymous, anyone can have as many addresses as they want. This is useful for dealing with multiple people, but it can get complicated to manage multiple accounts. A wallet holds all of this information in a convenient place, just like a real wallet would. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
War
* All wars have environmental impacts, almost all of which are adverse.
* Many wars start over land, difference of religion and culture, or economic stress
- stem from people's fear of difference
* Most war causes death
- destruction
- violence
* Most war kills men
- young men
- leads to poverty
- wars occur in poor countries where food insecurity and hunger are rampant
* Some wars are fought in one theatre
- overt military wars, others are endemic situations of social and economic conflict
* affects aspects
- every aspect of a child's development
* aim at capturing slaves, assuring access to resources and strategic territories.
* also makes use of pain.
* always affects ordinary people and creates a vicious circle of violence
- brings destruction to many people and things
- comes down to planning and tactics
- leaves pain, suffering and open wounds
- means fear and fear is the weapon most used to control and manipulate humanity
* appears to be the only way in which offending countries are taught their moral lessons.
* are a factor which have particularly influenced the peoples who live in the Middle East.
* are a punishment for man's sin
- sins
- about people killing each other
- always a punishment for man's sins
* are as old as history
- stoppable as the manufacturing of weapons
- between kings and their armies
- justifiable only when waged in defense of weaker nations
- land disputes
- messy, and tens of thousands of people can easily disappear without a trace
- sometimes situations that present continuing or continuous emergencies, often in multiples
* are the fruit of human wickedness
- greatest disasters the world has ever known
- useful because they foster medical and technological breakthroughs
- very disruptive to the accumulation of wealth
* arises from social conditions and people s attitudes.
* brings death and famine
- misery, death and destruction
- out the good as well as the bad in people
- people together and creates a sense of belonging to a greater good
* business in any part of the world.
* can be one of the most dehumanizing experiences that humans have had
- bring out the best and the worst in people
- easily erupt when nations depend upon armed forces as an option for defense and order
- foster feelings of insecurity and anxiety in an individual
* can have a devastating impact on the economic and social fabric of a nation
- devastating effects on human health and the environment
- improve mankind, just as evolution by natural selection can improve species
- seriously affect a community, especially through the loss of lives
- spoil the value of money as inflation develops after months of conflict
* cause casualties
- the number of women to greatly exceed the number of men
- wounds and suffering that last far beyond the battlefield
* central feature of international politics.
* challenge to or from the value chain.
* colossal imposition on the moral judgment of mankind.
* come from lust or, modernly speaking, greed.
* compel people to flee.
* construct that has both sacrificial and ritualistic elements.
* contagion, whether it be declared or undeclared.
* contemptible act, an event of a breakdown in communication between nations.
* continuation of social peace by more extreme means.
* cost lives and money
- money and that money usually came from the peasants through the taxes that they paid
* creates destruction of lives and the productive capacity of a society.
* destroys countries
- families and pits people against their own friends and relatives
- infrastructures
- roads
* destructive force that continues to interrupt the growth of civilization.
* end with triumph and dominion or death or surrender.
* exacts a heavy toll on the physical, mental and psychological health of women.
* failure of policies that ought to be designed to prevent war from happening.
* game that is played with a smile
- where someone can get hurt or die
* greatly accelerates the rate at which technology advances.
* grows directly out of things which individuals, statesmen and nations do or fail to do.
* happen because peace is betrayed.
* has a devastating effect on human lives, the economy, and the environment in Africa
- tendency to erase the grey, and leave just the black and white, the right and wrong
- consequences
- devastate consequences
- serious effects
- sides
* have a habit of being fought in unlikely and unpleasant places.
* impacts bonobo societies
* implies the breakdown of social order.
* involve ruthless killing, even when short.
* is about conquering the enemy, taking everything they have and building a life for the people
- courage, fear and bravery, but the heat of battle also can eat up another emotion
- aggression on a very large scale and aggression is endemic to the human condition
* is also a cause for hunger
- the death of culture
- among the most horrific of activities pursued by mankind
* is an aberration, caused by bad government and wicked or evil national leaders
- act of force which theoretically can have no limits
- adult issue that affects children of all ages
- affair which concerns only the military and naval part of two countries
- ancient art, as old as the land itself
- area where the voice of the people is very important, as their security is at stake
- atrocity, and people on all sides are killed
- awkward term to apply to a conflict in which the balance of forces is so lopsided
- entity that grinds down minds, bodies, and souls
- everyday reality for millions of children
- evil that respects no persons
- external and internal hell that every veteran, male or female, has experienced
- industrial process
- old man's game played by boys
- between two states
- capital punishment on a great international scale
- caused by selfishness on the part of at least one country
- characterized by chance, uncertainty, and friction
- corporate welfare
- created by fears of lack, fears of the foreign, and a desire for control
- destruction of human life
- destructive to human society, and it is an intrinsic evil
- everyday life for millions of children
- evil, and it is often the lesser evil
- genocide, torture, cruelty, propaganda, dishonesty, and slavery
- hatred by other means
- hell when people are forced to fight, when the limit of consent is breached
- intended to inflict death and destruction on the enemy
- justified as defending or promoting the lives or condition of a country's citizens
- long periods of boredom and brief periods of feverish activity
* is made up by the mind, and poverty and hunger exist through our inefficiencies
- of things and motion
- mass murder and ecological tragedy
- men lying in agony beyond relief or saving
- neither wrong nor right, but murder and genocide is distinct in that it is wrong
- often a time for people to come together
- one human being murdering another human being
* is one of the factors which has contributed to the escalation of crimes
- great evils in existence
- results of sin
- personified with figures standing
- said to be the continuation of politics by different means
- seen by many men as even more of an exuse to rape and kill women and children
- terrorism by the strong and terrorism is the war of the weak
* is the absolute worst thing that human beings can be involved with
- activity that tightens the weave
- beast which eats the children
* is the continuation of politics by other means
- direct opposite of everything peace represents
- economy basis for a hierarchical society
- enemy of humanity
- ex- tension of the practices of the jungle into modern life
- farthest reaching and most infernal of all civilized calamities
- form nostalgia takes when men are hard-pressed to say something good about their country
- greatest form of terror
- indiscriminate use of weapons
- leading producer of poverty
- mass murder of workers
- mechanism for change in human culture
- most demanding and complex of human activities
- natural outgrowth of human nature
- one arena in which politicians have no place
- price for freedom
- principal way of gaining power
- rule of humanity, with peace the exception to that rule
- supreme manifestation of human helplessness
- taking of another's objects by force
- time when all the knightly virtues and beliefs come into play
* is the ultimate combination of the worship of all the things that they consider their greatest
- destroyer of economic justice
- measure of population balance
- tool of social and political control
- unfolding of miscalculations
* is the use of fear, pain, and loss to force the other to cooperate
- military force in combat operations against an armed enemy
* is the worst catastrophe of the human race
- scourge that destroys men, money, and morals
- way for people to solve their problems
- thought to be a karmic repercussion of slaughterhouses
- to men what childbirth is to women
- ultimately a reflection of and consequence of sin
- usually a conflict for land and the persons in the land
- waste, and waste is the greatest environmental crime
* is when humanity ceases to be human
- two nations are attempting to coerce each other
- zero-sum economics at work on an international level
* kill people.
* lead to destroyed or stolen crops and livestock and loss of vital workforce, just for starters.
- victories
* make billions homeless, injured and bereaved.
* manifestation of much that is repulsive about our species.
* means by which the individual and the group find their identity, and is largely ceremonial
- tears to thousands of mothers' eyes, when their sons go off to fight and lose their lives
- the killing of people, the deliberate act of taking human lives
- violence and organised crime
* moment in the creation of a new social totality.
* multi-faceted event with multiple causes.
* natural part of international relations.
* occur between countries with armies.
* occurs in regions
- when the level of greed amongst the rich is matched by the envy of the poor
* part of the human condition and movies tend to sanitize the horrors of war.
* permanent feature of the human condition.
* process of physical and psychological negotiation in a situation of extreme uncertainty.
* produce crises which can lead to socialist revolution.
- the sins of mankind
- of man's sins
* remains humanity's most destructive activity.
* requires soldiers
- the mass deployment of a nation's economic, strategic, and psychological resources
* results in death
* rite of passage for men, something akin to children for women.
* seems to be an organic aspect of social behavior.
* sees death.
* series of disasters which result in a winner.
* simply increases the hardship on children and families struggling to gain basic foods.
* social institution.
* sometimes separates marriage companions for one, two or more years.
* spirit taking lives away.
* springs from concentration of power in society, and from authoritarianism.
* start because people forget to consider the individuals in the opposing country.
* state of organized armed conflict between states or non-state actors.
* struggle within individuals as well as between individuals.
* take huge place in human history
- place less frequently between states, but increasingly within states
* takes a heavy toll on the lives of soldiers and civilians
- teamwork and cooperation between individuals
* teaches people to go out and destroy other people and to destroy other people's property.
* tend to develop their own rationale, to feed on themselves.
* tends towards the ultimate exertion of forces.
* time when all boundaries of civilization, decency and respect for life often break down.
* too are a common part of Indian mythology.
* usually bring out the best and worst in human nature
- result in some civilian casualties
* violates the order of nature and causes parents to bury their children.
* way of life
- to resolve a conflict when diplomatic means are deemed unsuccessful
* wipe out the accretions of civilizations and culture.
+ Book of Mormon: Mormonism :: Religious texts
* Usually, Book of Mormon stories show the Nephites as the more righteous, industrious and peaceful people and the Lamanites as wicked, lazy and warlike. Wars happen all the time between the two groups. But, near the end of the book, the Nephites become more wicked than the Lamanites, and all the Nephites die in their last war, except for one named Moroni who was directed by God to bury the Book of Mormon in a hill so that Joseph Smith Jr. could find it.
* 1988 - Nagorno Karabakh votes to separate from Azerbaijan and join Armenia. War breaks out soon after.
* War can hurt people on both sides. International law has tried to reduce the harmful effects of war. The signing of the Kellogg-Briand Pact and the development of the United Nations have tried to limit wars.
+ Theatre (warfare)
* Some wars are fought in one theatre. Other wars are fought in many different theatres. The Napoleonic wars were the first multi-theatre war in modern times. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### war vessels:
Large submarine
* Most large submarines are war vessels.
+ Submarine: Warships
* Most large submarines are war vessels. Some small ones are used for scientific or business purposes. Some rich people buy their own to explore under the sea and look at fish. A submarine is always called a boat, not a ship.
Chemical warfare
* covers only direct attacks on human life.
* is war
* But, we will not call it chemical warfare. Chemical warfare covers only direct attacks on human life<|endoftext|>### war:
Civil war
* Civil Wars are often the most vicious and brutal of human conflicts.
* Most civil wars have their roots planted in religious or other ethnic disagreements.
* can be just as destructive and damaging as normal wars between two different countries. Civil wars can linger on for many years. This is because civil wars tend to become complicated very quickly and differ. A civil war might start between two sides, but groups might break up and the new, different sides could start fighting each other. Groups of people who were not involved at the beginning can easily be sucked in, as they start getting weapons to defend themselves against both sides. Civil wars with many different sides all fighting each other have occurred.
* are far more likely to be caused by economic opportunities than by grievance
- worst of all wars
* condition of the extreme instability of society and the state.
* have a high potential to become pathological.
* is civil unrest
- much more common in a dictatorship than in a democracy
- the worst of all wars
- war within the same state
* major fact of life around the world.
* occurs between the king and the barons in which the barons are defeated.
* vary greatly in the amount of economic damage they do.
+ Hierarchy: Politics
* In dictatorship this is done by asking one powerful person to make the decision and then agreeing to force everyone to follow it. Any who will not are exiled, imprisoned, or killed, even if the decision is not very important, since the refusal to follow is taken as a challenge to the power structure itself. There is only one power network and all others are forced to become part of it, or fight it. Civil war is much more common in a dictatorship than in a democracy.
Flame war
* are flames that people hurl back and forth at each other
- to be avoided as they congest the Internet and can upset people
- when more than one person gets involved
* can involve dozens of people and can go on for weeks or even months.
* draw in people who have no control.
* occur when a series of flames are sent back and forth between two or more people
- people start flaming other people
Modern war
* direct assault on the innocents.
* involves sabotage , terrorism , propaganda , and guerrilla warfare.
* product of advancing science and technology.
+ Human, Culture, null, War: Hominins
* Modern wars are very different from wars a thousand or even a hundred years ago. Modern war involves sabotage, terrorism, propaganda, and guerrilla warfare.
Nuclear war
* causes death.
* is life and death
- threats
* plague invented by human beings through technology and science.
* threatens human continuity itself and impairs the symbols of immortality.
Religious war
* are a part of American culture.
* caused by exclusive faiths are well known all over the world.
* continue in Europe.
* wage continuously in the software industry.
Witch war
* Witch Wars are a revolt against the status quo
- force internal changes by breaking up old allegiances and formulating new ones
* are about elders and egos.
### warm heat:
Geothermal heat
* is warm heat.
* keeps the air dry, therefore, limiting bacteria growth.
* pumps use less energy than conventional systems.
Warm object
* All warm objects radiate infrared radiation.
* Any warm object gives off infrared radiation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### warmth:
Body warmth
* can go a long way.
* is trapped between the two coats, keeping the dog warm and dry in severe weather.
Warning
* are telling.
* is the signal word for pesticides that are moderately toxic.
* speech act<|endoftext|>### warning:
False alarm
* are a common bugbear of any alarm system
- nuisance to alarm users as well as their neighbors
* are an indicator of the quality of the alarm installation and user education
- unnecessary expenditure of police response time
* can be the result of clutter, noise in the sensor, or errors in signal processing.
* cause major problems and risk the safety of building occupants
- police response to alarm activations to be less reliable
* constitute a hazard to police officers and the general public.
### washing:
Laundering
* are houseworks
- washings
* enables criminal activity to continue.
* global problem from which no jurisdiction is immune.
* is the process by which illegally obtained funds are made to appear legal
* removes the bulk of the pesticide residue so what is removed by drying is small. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Water
* All water comes from melting snow and ice which has to be collected.
* All water contains dissolved minerals such as calcium and mangnesium
- fluoride
- sediment
* All water contains some fluoride naturally
- naturally occurring fluoride
- salt
- dissolves substances from the ground as it flows over and through it
- has bacteria in it, unless it has been purified and sterilized prior to packaging
* All water is important to fish
- made of billions and billions of water molecules
- open with patches of thin ice
- precious, part of the eternal cycle of life
* All water is purified for drinking
- using reverse osmosis
- naturally contains some fluoride
* All water tends toward the moon because there is no water on the moon
- towards the moon, because there is no water in the moon, and nature abhors a vacuum
- transported by the xylem is used for photosynthesis in the leaves
- used for drinking and cooking is bottled water
* All waters contain dissolved substances
- have some minerals unless they are distilled
* Always use distilled, rain, or reverse-osmosis water.
* Any water is frozen in the polar caps or in the soil.
* Freeze Over The bears know they have to move quickly.
* Is Life Touched Without water, our survival is doomed.
* Many waters can contain significant amounts of sodium without containing high levels of chloride.
* More water can evaporate into warm air than cool air
- helps to flush toxins out of the body
* More water is absorbed during shedding due to desiccation and evaporation
- lost if the temperature is high
- transported from the lower atmosphere
- used in factories than in homes
- leaves the tubule and reenters the blood stream, so less water leaves the body
- translates into the production of more fish food
* Most water absorbs carbon dioxide
- excess carbon dioxide
- heat
- sufficient heat
- sunlight
* Most water acts like liquids
- most other liquids
- adds vapor
* Most water affects growth
- health
- plant growth
- plants
- regions
- water quality
* Most water attracts crocodiles
- ducks
- insects
* Most water becomes atmospheres
- solid ice
- vapour
- water vapour
* Most water carries debris
- nutrients
- pollutants
- silts
- sugar
* Most water causes corrosion
- destruction
- extreme destruction
* Most water combines with salt
* Most water comes from clouds
- foods consumed
- precipitation
- sources
- streams
- the oceans
- tropical oceans
- conducts heat
- consists of hydrogen
* Most water contains air
- clay
- diatoms
- digestive enzymes
- elements
- enough oxygen
- gases
- impurities
- irons
- metabolic waste
- microorganisms
- mineral elements
- parasites
- protozoans
- sodium chloride
- some sodium which naturally leaches from rocks and soils
- sufficient oxygen
- tiny amounts of harmless substances, including algae, fungi and bacteria
- toxic gases
* Most water contains trace elements
- contaminated by industrial processes is dumped, untreated, into the sea
* Most water creates circulation patterns
- environments
- habitats
- power
- encourages root growth
* Most water enters extracellular fluid
- mouths
- roots
- the lake by direct deposition of snow and leaves by evaporation and seepage
- exists as vapor
* Most water falls as atmospheric precipitation
* Most water fills deep holes
- soil surfaces
- finds in oceans
* Most water flows along channels
* Most water flows from sources
- underground water sources
* Most water flows into basins
- cavities
- chambers
- gill chambers
- mantle cavities
- rivers
- over streambed
* Most water flows through basins
- cracks
- gills
- river basins
- forms lower layers
* Most water gets energy
- goes through eyes
* Most water has characteristics
- chemicals
- chlorine
- concentration
- conductivity
- current
- density
- depth
- destructive power
* Most water has different characteristics
- electrical conductivity
- enormous health benefits
- functions
* Most water has gravitational energy
- potential energy
- heat capacity
* Most water has high capacity
* Most water has high specific capacity
- kinetic energy
- large heat capacity
* Most water has low conductivity
- viscosity
- lower viscosity
- materials
- maximum density
- measurable conductivity
- more available oxygen
- much organic debris
- no discernible taste or flavor
- opposite momentum
- pressure
- same average kinetic energy
- some nitrates in it
- specific heat capacity
- vapor pressure
- water depth
* Most water helps arctic ice environments
- constipation
- in digestion
* Most water holds abundant life
- increases conductivity
* Most water is concentrated in the oceans
- excreted by kidneys
- filtered by kidneys
- in the troposphere, the lowest level of the atmosphere
- obtained from seeds and succulent plants
- returned to the atmosphere by evaporation from the oceans, lakes, and ponds
- used for irrigation
* Most water leads to corrosion
- erosion
- health problems
- leaves residues
* Most water maintains health
- skin health
- makes up ice
* Most water meets cold sea water
- salt water
- moves through sponges
- passes from mouths
* Most water passes into canals
- ring canals
- over gills
* Most water passes through alimentary canals
- envelope membranes
- particles
- pathways
- sand particles
- stone canals
* Most water possesses energy
- same temperature
- thermal energy
* Most water produces environments
- promotes microbial growth
* Most water provides aquatic habitats
- moisture
* Most water reaches aquifers
- height
- proper temperature
- underground aquifers
* Most water reflects energy
- releases oxygen
* Most water removes heat
- sediments
* Most water requires energy
- for growth
* Most water requires for normal growth
- rises into air
- runs off the surface, down a hill and eventually into a river
* Most water supports life
- ocean life
- turns into steam
- used to produce rice comes from rain and snow which falls in surrounding mountain ranges
- withdrawn for thermoelectric power production is used for condenser and reactor cooling
- waters contain some chloride in solution
* Much water contains dissolved solids or other material dissolved in solution.
* Much water is hidden however underneath the frozen surface and in the polar regions
- lost through the skin when there burn
- used in road construction by other methods, such as concrete and asphalt
* Some water absorbs energy
- heat energy
- accumulates in stems
- affects migration
* Some water also evaporates from estuarine vegetation
- moves by osmosis to the blood, as well as minerals
* Some water attracts ants
- birds
- hummingbirds
- mosquitoes
- predators
- prey
* Some water becomes acid
- bottoms
- conductors
- depth bottoms
- rich nutrients
- soluble salt
- toxic substances
- water vapor
- boosts metabolism
* Some water carries charge
- different pigment
- diseases
- magnesium
- much sediments
- scent
* Some water causes brain infection
- burns
- electrolyte imbalances
- giardiasis infection
- giardiasises
- illnesses
- severe brain infection
- sickness
* Some water changes into gases
- phases
* Some water changes to ice
* Some water collects in basins
- contractile vacuoles
- tubes
* Some water combines with carbon dioxide
* Some water comes from air
- melt snow
* Some water comes out of coal mines
- consists of salt
* Some water contains amoebas
- animalcules
- arsenic concentration
- calories
- cysts
* Some water contains decay matter
- organic matter
- harmful chemicals
* Some water contains high arsenic concentration
- hydrogen sulfides
- inorganic salt
- internal energy
- iodine
- larval mussels
- mercury
- metal
- micronutrient
- mineral salt
- nourishment
* Some water contains organic materials
- parameciums
- protozoan cysts
- raw sewage
- urine
- waste materials
* Some water contaminates with chemicals
- human waste
- controls oxygen levels
* Some water covers earth surfaces
* Some water creates current
- slime
- surface tension
- thick slime
* Some water decreases absorption
- food intake
- solid food intake
* Some water dilutes acid
* Some water dissolves carbon
- drives spin turbines
* Some water enters animals
- auditory canals
- biospheres
- blood capillaries
- body cavities
- crystal structures
- intestines
- lobsters
- lower atmospheres
- lungs
- nephrons
- pharynxs
- small intestines
- spiracles
- tracheae
- tubules
- even contains heavy metals
* Some water exists in equilibrium
- gas phases
- several states
- solid states
- various physical states
* Some water falls as rain snow
- flows along aquaria
* Some water flows in channels
- open channels
- stream channels
* Some water flows into lakes
- onward to the sea without becoming dirty
* Some water flows out of atriums
* Some water flows through aquaria
- dams
- permeable membranes
- seawater aquaria
- tunnels
- valves
- walls
- follows solute
- generates steam
- gives off energy
* Some water goes into in lakes, rivers, or streams
- through walls
* Some water has air
- certain properties
- electric charge
- electrolytes
- flowers
- foul odor
- gravity
* Some water has high heat
- latent heat
- resistance
* Some water has high specific gravity
- hollows
- indexes
- large hollows
* Some water has low gravity
- more buoyancy than other water
- overall electric charge
- refractive indexes
* Some water has specific gravity
- turbidity values
- unique properties
- weight
* Some water helps arthritis
- embryos
* Some water helps regulate body temperature
- remove waste products
* Some water holds air
- includes arsenic
* Some water increases density
- intake causes health problems
* Some water interferes with growth
* Some water is absorbed by plants and returned to the atmosphere as vapor
- captured by people and stored for a variety of uses
* Some water is caused by current
- movement
- ocean current
- transpiration
- collected in lakes and rivers or falls into the ocean
- consumed by cats
- deep and slow, some is deep and fast, and some is shallow and fast
- even part of living things
- expelled from gills
- generated by storms
- intercepted by vegetation before it reaches the surface of the earth
* Some water is lost from the aquifer by downward leakage into the underlying N-aquifer
- in the voiding of wastes via the urine and feces as well
- through evaporation during the cooling process
- to the groundwater table by deep percolation
- more acidic in areas with minerals in the soil
- obtained from the by-products of metabolism
* Some water is produced by catabolic reaction
- cellular respiration
- gasoline
- saturated with salt
* Some water is secreted by accessory glands
* Some water is stored as ice in the polar ice caps and alpine glaciers
- deep in the earth
- in reservoirs before being distributed through the water system
- transported over land before it is precipitated out
- used for growth and metabolism, but most evaporates into the air by transpiration
* Some water kills ants
- aquatic animals
- children
- cholera bacteria
- desirable plants
- dust mites
- hydras
- lilies
* Some water leads to bone disintegration
- limits sunlight
* Some water loses energy
* Some water makes it to the ground and soaks in the soil
- ocean, where evaporation continues to drive the water cycle
* Some water mixes with air
* Some water moves into gills
- phloem tissue
- quietly underground
* Some water moves through canals
* Some water passes into nostrils
- over feet
* Some water passes through concentrate urine
- cores
- gill slits
- glomeruluses
- pharyngeal slits
- produce urine
- shells
- vessels
- penetrates the ground and charges underground aquifers
- percolates into the ground and is stored as groundwater
* Some water produces acetylene
* Some water produces during cellular respiration
- electricity
- hydroxide
- potassium hydroxide
* Some water provides nutrients
- rationing is very common in the major cities in the summer months
- reacts with potassium
* Some water receives energy
- enough sunlight
* Some water reduces growth
- productivity
- releases heat
- replaces air
- requires heat
- results from spring snow
* Some water returns to air
* Some water runs off into streams, lakes, or oceans
- which feed into rivers, which feed into oceans
- seeps into the ground and becomes groundwater
- shrews with poisonous bites can kill large fish
- soaks deep into the ground where it enters large underground pools called aquifers
- stays around for longer periods
- takes heat
* Some water turns into ice
- visible vapor
* Some water turns to ice
- uptake occurs after germination
* Some water uses for flushes
- household purposes
- irrigation purposes
- urine production
- microwaves
* Some waters contain boron in sufficient quantities to become toxic to crop plants
- experience a hot bluegill pattern bite during the spawning season
- fall straight down to the ground
- have permanent pegs
* Some waters is part of caves
- grottos
- lithospheres
* abolish form through dissolution and give rise to new forms through precipitation.
* absorbs a relative large amount of heat when moving from a liquid state to a gaseous state
- tiny amount of carbon dioxide and changes it to carbonic acid
- body heat better than air
- different wavelengths of light differently
* absorbs heat effectively with little change in temperature
- energy from the sun and turns into vapors
* absorbs light and other electromagnetic radiation
- differentially
- so that with increasing depth the amount of light available decreases quickly
- some of the light that passes through it
- sunlight strongly so that light intensity decreases rapidly with increasing depth
- the waves, and heart from the energy cooks the food
- thermal energy at a heat source
- very little light and thus appears to be colorless
* accelerates the process by leaching essential organic minerals from bone
- tissue decay by providing for microbes and by facilitating degradative chemistry
* accounts for most of the volume of living cells.
* accretes to a stream when shallow groundwater seeps from the ground into a streambed.
* acquires ions when it passes through soil and rock that contain rich mineral deposits.
* acting as a heat sink is able to maintain low sample temperatures, retarding deterioration.
* acts a a lubricant and facilitates particle movement
- cooling agent to extinguish the fire
* acts as a catalyst by aiding ion migration
- for the kidneys to flush the toxins out
- lens and magnifies
- lubricant in saliva, mucous secretions, and joint fluids
* acts as a natural diuretic
- insulator to regulate the earth's temperature
- an insulator, protecting the roots of the marsh vegetation from the flames
- barriers
- both an acid and a base
* acts as the dispersing medium of the colloidal systems of living protoplasm
- main transportation system for the nutrients needed for plants to grow and live
- solvent and the dissolved substances act as the solutes
- to plasticize the silk fibroin and stabilize the processing
* actually behaves both like an acid and a base
- helps in the metabolization of fat
- weight to media, so a heavier plant means wetter media
* adheres to and climbs up materials like glass
- weakly to wax and strongly to itself , so water clusters into drops
- well to other surfaces
* adjusts the body's temperature and assists in digestion.
* affects everything from the simplest one-celled organizm to the most complex of all
* affects the climate of the Earth and changes the surface of the land
- earth s ecosystems in very important ways as well
- yield, fruit size, and quality
* aids the passage of fiber through the digestive system.
* allows ions in the magma to be extremely mobile and to form crystals quickly
- microbes to grow and travel around in the pile to decompose materials
- organic components to react, in ways that ultimately, allow replication
* alone is unable to dissolve the water insoluble ones
- removes the fluorine atom producing a non toxic acid
* also acts as a natural lubricant to limbs and joints
- shock absorber for the eyes and spinal cord
- an erosive force to create arches
- affects the landscape of the region
- aids the metabolic breakdown of proteins and carbohydrates
- allows the movement of oxygen into the seed
- appears as the exact opposite of the fire elce of life
- attracts lightning
- binds together the natural and social sciences
* also brings nutrition
- safety
* also can aid weight control by decreasing appetite and eliminating immediate cravings
- flow through cracks and other types of small cavities
- pick up substances resulting from the presence of animals or from human activity
- provide lubrication, or additional weight, that assists the material in moving
* also carries away the waste products created by exercising muscles
- biological life forms which can cause disease
- dissolved radon indoors
- many unwanted tree seeds
- nutrients through the soil
- off lots of electrolytes, so it has many benefits
- water pollutants and soil, both are deposited into aquatic ecosystems
- causes rust in pipelines, and can freeze in cold weather to block air flow
* also changes in color, clearness, odor, or taste
- comes in many different ways
- consists of transient structures involving large numbers of molecules
- contains chemicals that soften pickles
- differs from most liquids in that it becomes less dense as it freezes
- dilutes the digestive juices in the stomach, thus leading to indigestion
* also enters from the Pacific via the Bering Strait
- the atmosphere by evapotranspiration from plants and trees
* also evaporates from plants in a process called transpiration
- vegetation, soil, streams, ponds, and smaller lakes
- or is taken up by plants
- exercises a strong morphogenic influence
- exhibits the highest surface tension of any known liquid except mercury
- exists below land surface and as water vapor in the air
* also exists in a liquid crystal state near hydrophilic surfaces
- liquid form in the atmosphere
- exits through the stomata
- facilitates the release of unwanted emotions of fear, anger, pain and sadness
- fills one up so drinking water helps to satisfy hunger and helps one eat less
* also flows below ground through the porous underlying limestone
- into the soil from the surface more quickly
- flushes away metal particles to keep the surface from becoming clogged
* also has a bond to the land
- feminine significance
- great capacity to resist change
* also has a high latent heat of fusion
- level of surface tension
- hydrostatic effect
- powerful surface tension
- vast influence of milk production in a rabbit
- very high heat of vaporization
- an incredible amount of surface adhesion
- no lubricating ability and washes away existing lubrication
- petroleum-like odor
- the power to destroy the land through storms
* also helps control food intake
- dilute excess sodium in the body during water retention
- in weight loss and prevents kidney stones from forming
- maintain the body's temperature by evaporating from the lungs and the skin
* also helps prevent bladder infections, which are common during pregnancy
- dry skin, constipation, urinary tract infections and kidney stones
- skin look clear, plumped up and lustrous
* also helps the blood carry oxygen from the lungs to the body
- body maintain a constant temperature by acting as a thermostat
- food chain as it is an important source used to live for the plants
* also helps to control weight
- maintain muscle tone
- prevent the skin sagging that usually follows weight loss
- reduce the level of fear, as a woman is more relaxed and less stressed
- transport all the nutrients around the plant
- wash away soda and fruit juices which contain acids that can attack tooth enamel
- infiltrates the ground and goes into aquifers
- ionizes a small extent again giving background pH and conductivity measurements
* also is added as needed to moisten drier types of organic matter
- found around cells and in body fluids such as blood
- important for larger animals
- released in the body as foods are broken down and metabolized for energy
- vital for chemical reactions in digestion and metabolism
- keeps our electrolytes in balance
- leaves the body by transpiration through the cuticle and with the faeces
- limits the presence of wild hogs in hardwood swamps
- lubricates our joints
- maintains turgidity, which enables leaves to retain their shapes
- makes exercise safer by regulating body temperature and reducing cardiovascular stress
- move about in the ocean in streams known as ocean currents
* also moves across the membrane to reach equilibrium
- into and out of the fibre as the relative humidity of the air is changed
* also moves through cracks, joints, and solution channels in rock aquifers
- porous walls by capillary action
- vegetation and transpires to the atmosphere
- toward the soil surface where it evaporates directly into the atmosphere
- vertically downward to recharge underlying regional aquifers
- occurs in the soil and beneath the earth's surface as a vast groundwater reservoir
- picks up substances from animal or human activity
* also plays a major role in driving violent eruptions on the Earth
- the diversification of organisms throughout the world
- very important role in the survival of many wildlife species
- an important role
- many critical roles within the field of food science
- possesses cleansing properties
- powerful erroding force
- precipices in the form of drizzle, sleet and hail
- prevents sagging skin after weight loss by keeping it firm
- principal carrier for many substances of environ-mental interest
* also provides a home for insects, on which the songbirds feed
- an escape route for some animals who are hunted
- at least twelve times the resistance of air
- buoyancy to organisms
- habitat for fresh and salt water living resources
* also provides the pressure to move a root through the soil
- solvent medium for the uptake of minerals by plants
- reacts chemically with many substances, creating new substances or compounds
- reduces friction and increases pore fluid pressure
- represents baptism
- rids the body of unnecessary salt and toxins
- rises into the atmosphere from plants
- rushes over exposed soil rather than soaking into it, causing flooding
- seeks a horizontal plane
* also seeps from lakes, rivers, and wetlands into the saturated zone
- through soil to groundwater, which is in layers of rock called aquifers
* also serves as a raw material for many metabolic processes, including photosynthesis
- substrate or ligand for many other important chemical reactions
- to moderate the temperature during heat stress periods
- speeds up as it moves around an object, such as a rock in the river
- spreads on glass, which also has a high surface energy
- supports our body's nutritive and digestive processes
- suppresses appetite and naturally helps the body metabolize stored fat
* also tends to be relatively uniform in temperature
- reduce friction and prevent structures from abnor- mally adhering to each other
* also transports dissolved metals
- waste elements away from cells
* also works as the carrier for body waste removal
- transport for body waste removal
* always comes from the sky.
* always flows down through valleys or gullies, never ridges
- downhill
- downward and in time, can wear away the hardest granite
- perpendicular to the contour lines
* always moves by osmosis
- from a hypertonic solution to a hypotonic one
* always moves from areas of high water potential to areas of low water potential
- higher potential to areas of lower potential
- high to low water potential
- in the direction of more negative water potential
- occupies some of the pressure in a gas collected over water
- runs downhill, causing rill erosion
* appears black, while vegetation reflects in shades of orange to red
- dark blue to black, depending on the sediment content and water depth
- murky or turbid due to suspended matter
- to flow out from cliffs in crater or valley walls
* applied by drip irrigation has little chance of waste through evaporation or runoff.
* are a very dilute mixture of essential oil in water
- crystalline and warm
- milky green because of coccolithophore blooms
- rich in plankton and there are many species of fish
- shallow and used primarily by people fishing
* assists the body in eliminating biochemical waste.
* attenuates light by selective absorption.
* attracts attention
- more wildlife than specialized food
- waterfowl, which means better hunting
- wild birds
- wildlife of all kinds
* based inks are easier to clean up, but give different aesthetic results
- generally easier to clean up and emit less toxic fumes
- have greater coverage yield than alcohol based inks
- jet inks both dye and pigment type
- lubes get sticky and hurt after a period of hard wanking
* based lubricants are a key component in the practice of safe sex
- safe with condoms and wash off easily
- lubrication is important for the proper use of a condom
- make up washes off with soap and water
- paints also include a latex formula
* basic element of all life
- ingredient in bread baking
* basic necessity for all life
* basic requirement for life and health
* become choked with silt, oxygen levels fall and algae blooms
- less clear when sediments or algae blooms reduce the water transparency
* becomes 'ice' when it is very cold
- a conductor once it starts dissolving substances around it
- commodities
- hard like stone, and the surface of the deep is imprisoned
* becomes ice at low temperatures
* becomes scarce as it is diverted to urban areas and agriculture
- to urban areas and for crop irrigation
* begins certain biochemical processes within seed that accelerate cell activities
- to flow faster causing the banks and bottom to erode
* being a vital resource for all living beings, is also an important source of energy
- used to raise fish can make an excellent hydroponic nutrient water
* belongs to the earth and all species.
* bent molecule.
* better thermal conductor than air.
* big part of a sustainable future.
* bigger attractant for wild life than food and is extremely important factor for survival.
* binary compound
* boils at a lower temperature at high altitudes, so the egg has to cook longer
- due to lower pressure
- in a vacuum and higher under pressure
* boils at lower temperatures as altitude increases
- with the lower air pressure that occurs at higher elevations
- away for many hours so that the content of sugar increases
* boils faster in a covered pot and uses less energy
- on an electric element than it does over gas flames
- if it is heated above a certain temperature
- off in the inner solar system, as the nucleus is warmed by the sun
* bonding agent.
* born diseases still occur.
* borne diseases are prevalent
- present a major health risk dealing with waste water
* breaks through the ground surface in new locations
- up rocks into soil, so that plants can grow
* breathes to life.
* breeding ground for mosquitoes.
* bring dissolve oxygen to embryo.
* brings the nutrients into the soil that helps plants grow
- worms out of the earth
* bubbles in an icy blue color.
* build up from condensation, moisture and rain is bad for the coatings and paint on steel.
* builds up by melting either by frictional heating of the ice, or yearly melting and runoff.
* buoys shrinking cells that plums the skin and leaves it clear, healthy and resilient.
* can absorb a large amount of energy without a large rise in temperature.
* can absorb a lot of heat before changing temperature
- before it begins to get hot
- without changing temperature very much
- and release considerable thermal energy with little change in temperature
- copper from pipes and brass faucets as it sits overnight
- accumulate in end fitting and freeze
- act as a conformational lubricant for protein folding
* can act as either an acid or a base in reactions
* can also accumulate in a bedrock depression below the ice dome, such as a crater
- act as a weak acid or base
- affect the uptake of minerals as well as the elimination of body wastes
* can also be a serious danger to life - especially for our children
- deadly, as the carrier of toxic chemicals, parasites, and bacteria
- in the form of a bubble
- lost through stomata, so their opening is regulated by the plant
- part of a garden, even a very small one
- unavailable when frozen to ice
- very dangerous to hikers
- bring danger and death -Flood, Red Sea Happens to people who are unrepentant
- carry pathogenic protozoa as well as eggs or cysts of intestinal worms
* can also cause poor bearing life due to lack of lubrication and rust
- the formation of oxidation products and corrosion of metallic surfaces
- change from a water to steam, which is called evaporation
* can also come in contact with runoff water from urban developments
- the form of snow
- contain parasites
- create new water
* can also enter a building through leaks around windows, causing damage to walls and carpeting
- the atmosphere through transpiration
- erode mountains and other landforms down into plateaus
- fall from the sky in the form of hail, sleet or snow
- generate employment and sustainable livelihoods
- get into the atmosphere from snow and ice
- lead to decay or rot to occur in wood
- make babies too full for their regular feedings
* can also move through rock formations like sandstone or through cracks in rocks
- vertically in the ocean
* can also pick up contaminants from animals or from human activity
- present problems during the winter
- react directly with minerals in a chemical reaction
- return to the sky through a plant activity called transpiration
- seep into cracks in rock layers and then freeze
- stop constipation and help prevent hemorrhoids
- work down into the shoes from pant legs and socks on wet days
* can be a crucial factor in development and well-being or a major impediment to development
- destructive force as well
- good substitute for boredom eating
* can be a limiting factor and is an essential component of habitat
- resource for epiphytic plants
- liquid or a solid and can go back and forth from one form to the other
- pathway for the transmission of diseases
* can be a problem in areas where there has been extensive flooding
- summer a shelter in winter
- sacred element
- serious problem in low snow conditions
- source of life or of death
- an important source of chemical hazards
- any color and, in fact, many colors at once
- both a source of social integration and for society separation
- dangerous and boats are heavy moving objects
* can be deeper than it appears and water levels can rise quickly
- and water levels rise quickly
* can be deeper than it appears, and water levels can rise very quickly
- and water levels rise very quickly
- seems and water levels can rise very quickly
- fresh water or marine water
- hazardous to children who have seizures
* can be liquid or steam, depending upon what accidents exist
- water, solid ice, or gas vapor
* can be liquid, solid, or gas
- vapor, or ice at various places in the water cycle
* can be one conductor which allows a rapid flow of free electrons
- of the best fluids to drink
- salt water, fresh water, or brackish water
- scarce for wildlife in winter when natural sources are frozen
- become murky easily
- benefit dove hunters in other ways, too
- block the movement of air through the skin, causing the worm to suffocate
- boil at any temperature
- break rocks, and wear rocks away using pressure, and usually a lot of time
* can carry the broken down rocks, and so can wind
- weed seed from field to field
* can cause an explosion
- injector tip damage if diesel fuel becomes contaminated
- problems on many types of material
- swelling, warping or staining when it penetrates a finish
- underwater repairs to become brittle
- change from ice to water, which is called melting
* can change from one form to another with a change in temperature
- state to another Rain is part of the water cycle
- steam back to water, which is called condensation
- into water vapor at room temperature
- states by freezing or evaporating
* can change to become ice and water vapor
- or water vapor
- ice or steam, but it's always there
- climb up surfaces against the law of gravity
- coexist in the Earth system as liquid, solid, and invisible vapor
- collapse a slope after traveling beneath the surface from miles away
* can collect in the treads of the tire, and possibly freeze and expand
- inside a tank from condensation and cause internal corrosion
* can come as a raging flood and destroy entire communities
- from two places
- in a small, shallow dish with a rocky or sandy bottom
* can conduct electricity
- heat away from the body much faster than air of the same temperature
- contain decaying vegetation, causing humic and fulvic acids
- contaminate diesel engine crankcases as a product of combustion or due to coolant leaks
- convert the gas toxins in the form of liquid toxins
- create deterioration in many ways and locations
- cross the cell membrane through the lipid bi-layer and with special proteins
* can damage a straw bale wall and rot it away over time
- everything it touches
- most other roofing materials by rotting, cracking, or in the freeze-thaw cycling
- roads quickly
* can deposit minerals in the tiny spaces in the bone, called pores, and it turns into rock
- within rocks minerals that expand upon drying, thereby stressing the rock
- destroy landforms but is also where life originated
* can disperse seeds that fall into oceans and rivers
- the blood stain easily
* can dissolve into almost all substances
- more substances than any other liquid including sulfuric acid
- most of the mineral that hold rocks together
* can easily displace the air between the fibres or hairs of insulation, and disable it
- go in and out the fishpond during the tidal cycle
- spread laterally over a flat surface much as it does on a table top
- eat under and around a dam
- effectively disperse seed
- enter into the spongocoel from numerous pores in the body wall
* can enter the atmosphere by transpiration, and evaporation
- road base through surface cracks or from road sides
- evaporate before it reaches the roots
* can evaporate from plants, animals, puddles, and the ground in addition to bodies of water
- or disappear with the help of heat
* can even dissolve rocks, the source of many of the salts in seawater
- help constipation
* can exist as three states of matter
- in the solid, liquid, or gas phase
- on the surface of the earth and the air in all three states - solid, liquid or gas
- express a number of moods
- extinguish fire, and fire dries up water
- fertilize and stimulate growth
- float a boat, but can also sink it
* can flow and penetrate
- in and out of the stomach while it retains food and digestive enzymes
- over the land in streams and rivers
- readily through rocks with high permeability values
- uphill if it is under pressure in an enclosed pipe, such as a natural tunnel in ice
- freeze in pipes that pass through a cold location
- get into motors causing major damage, or cause flooring to rot
* can get into the cracks, where it repeatedly freezes and thaws, creating serious problems
- walls of brick structures and damage interior walls
- harm the chinchilla's fur
* can have a similar effect on out skin and overall appearance
- three characteristics
* can help dilute the urine strength and discomfort it produces
- ease muscle soreness, and assist in digestion
- get rid of constipation
- relieve constipation
* can hold a lot of heat
- an electrical current, or let one pass through it
- less dissolved oxygen as temperature increases
- together and form waves, rather than spreading out more readily
- increase or decrease the stability of a slope depending on the amount present
- indeed flow through tills and clays, just much more slowly than through sands and gravels
- induce a meditative state
- kill in three ways cold shock, drowning and severe hypothermia
- leach out color and flavor and can change texture
- lead to corrosion and improper compressor performance
* can leak in and damage internal components
- out and flood the nest
- leave permanent stains and raise the surface grain
- mean the difference between life and death
* can move back and forth from the cells
- downward through claystone at the rate of only inches per year
- long distances from source areas
- nitrogen several inches in the soil
- through the ground like a slow moving river
- offer our bodies multiple benefits that are essential for healthy living
- often attract as many birds as food
* can only boil when it can form bubbles
- hold a certain amount of dissolved minerals
* can pass through most membranes
- the perforation into the middle ear
* can pick up healthy minerals like magnesium and calcium as it travels through rock formations
- lead inside the home from household plumbing that is made with lead materials
- play an important role in weight control
- provide magnesium, but the amount varies according to the water supply
- quell the appetite in other ways
- receive the additional protons given off by an acid
- remain liquid at negative temperatures if it is very pure or under high pressure
- rise in minutes rather than hours
- roll a log, even a huge log, very easily and quickly
* can run off logging roads, pick up soil and pack streams with sediment
- right through very dry soil without wetting it
* can seep between the condom and the penis, possibly causing the condom to slip off
- into small cracks in a rock or other substance
- serve as a reservoir for many different disease organisms and toxins
- set the line between life and death
- significantly reduce the stress of allergic and sensitivity reactions
- slip in and out of the cell easily through the cell membrane
- smell and taste like plastic
- speed up the excretion of cocaine metabolites
- stand several inches in large areas of the forest
- stimulate neutron activity, spurring along a nuclear reaction
- stretch, strengthen and condition the body without risk of injury and pain
* can take many forms
- paths as it travels around the planet
- on infinite variations of color depending on the available light
* can then carry the soil away and leave little or no topsoil left for plants to grow
- enter the cell, ultimately causing it to burst
- transport metals that are bound to sediment particles
- trap dirt to a metal surface, allowing the oxidation process to occur
- travel to the top of very tall trees to leaves
- turn yellow, green, or even white
- vary in sulfate and carbonate content
- weaken subgrade soils and decrease their allowable bearing capacity
- wear away a rock
- yield riches
* carrier for many disease-producing organisms.
* carries away sediment and deposits it somewhere else
- fine material in suspension for long distances
- materials with it wherever it travels
- more oxygen than air and therefore makes gills more efficient than lungs
* carries nutrients and minerals to the plant's leaves
- oxygen to all cells
- through the plant
* carries nutrients to body cells and carries away waste
- cells and removes wastes products
* carries nutrients to the body and waste products out of the body
- plant roots by capillary action
- soil, silt, and debris downstream
- sound much better than air and the sound waves are picked up through the fish's body
* carries the dissolved sugar and other nutrients through the plant
- nutrients to the plants
- pollen from the male to the separate female flowers
- sugar into melons as they ripen on the vine
- thenutrients to the plants
- varying sizes of debris or dissolves it chemically
* carrying chemicals can be the cause of new minerals in the rocks.
* carves deep grooves in rock over time even though water seems an unlikely cutting force.
* cascading from one chamber to the next helps to oxygenate the water
- indoors naturally attracts people, just like it does outdoors
* cause parts to rust, and even a very small amount of rust can damage injectors.
* causes cancer
- change around the earth
- curing
- deterioration and rotting, as well as stretching of the leather
- erosion of the continents and produces sedimentary rocks
- grease fires to spread
- more damage to roads than poor materials, heavy traffic, or adverse weather conditions
- polymerization
* causes the jelly coat to expand, separating the eggs from each other
- nails to swell
- wood to expand
* ceases to drain out of the soil.
* changes from ice
- liquid to ice, and back
- solid to liquid when the molecules begin to spread further apart
- into vapour
* changes state as it cycles between the atmosphere, land, and bodies of water on Earth
- to become water vapour
* changes states between liquid, solid and gas during the cycle
- when temperatures fluctuate
- the physical characteristics
- themselves seem to spur growth
- to replenish natural trace elements
* characterizes change and represents the liquid state.
* chemical compound of hydrogen and oxygen
- reactant in many plant processes including photosynthesis
* chemically splits apart to form oxygen and hydrogen.
* chief symbol for feelings.
* circulates through our environment in a process known as the hydrologic cycle.
* clean up when wet.
* cleanser and a healer, used externally and internally.
* cleanses the body inside and out
- of toxins and helps the largest organ of the body, the skin
- inside of the body as well as the outside
- physical body, the mind and the spirit
* cleansing agent.
* clear, colorless, odorless liquid, the most common substance on the earth's surface.
* collecting on leaves makes drops much larger than rain.
* collects at the base of their leaves.
* collects in bark fissure
- beds
* combines hydrogen and oxygen.
* combines with certain salts to form hydrates
- salt to produce electrolytes, a key ingredient in conducting electricity
- virtually every substance, good or bad
* come from the sea and end up in the sea.
* comes directly from a mountain spring via gravity.
* comes from bores and is stored in tanks
- condensed moisture in the fuel tanks
- fruit as well as tree holes
- moist air heated by the sun
- rain collected in containers or channelled into storage barrels off roofs
* comes from the mainland through an underwater pipe
- rain, in drier climates some crops are irrigated
- two perennial rivers and drinking water from a mountain spring
- in by incurrent siphon, moves over gills
* comes in different forms, or states of matter
- ways depending on the temperature
- many shapes
- two forms - con gas or carbonated, and sin gas which is plain purified water
* comes in under pressure but leaves at a lower rate, but in greater volume, via gravity
- by gravity
- into existence out of earth, and psyche out of water
* comes into play as a lake and a number of creeks
- creeks, ponds and a lake
- the cannister where particles are trapped inside the filter medium
- mainly from annual precipitation
- out as the liquid product and the volatile organic waste goes into the vapor phase
* comes to the earth as rain or snow
- surface as springs through cracks in the limestone
- watershed in seasonal cycles, principally as rain or snow
- up to the surface through springs, and is often pumped for drinking water
- with bubbles, or without
* coming from streams or even drainage ditches can be colder at times due to melt offs
- in contact with the familiar calcium carbide generates the hydrocarbon gas, acetylene
- into the Gulf of Mexico from the Mississippi normally flows towards Texas
* commodity that is essential for life.
* commodity, just like fruit and vegetables and fuels.
* common denominator for all life on earth
- medium for rooting
- source for the introduction of infectious agents into the body
- substance but one with special properties
- symbol of the unconscious
- thread for life's continuance
* commonly occurs in the atmosphere in the form of water vapour.
* companion on more than half the holes in the form of channels that lead out to the sea.
* competes strongly with polymer for adsorption onto substrates.
* compound - it's two atoms of hydrogen and one atom of oxygen
- composed of the elements oxygen and hydrogen, chemically joined
- found on the planet Earth
* compound made of oxygen and hydrogen
- up of hydrogen and oxygen atoms
- the elements hydrogen and oxygen
- whose elemnets are hydrogen and oxygen
* compound, too.
* comprises a large portion of all poultry and poultry products
- most basic and critical component in all aspects of human life
- approximately two-thirds of a dog's total body weight
- chemical and biological components gathered from rain, soil, and runoff
- most of the weight of the saguaro
* condenses much more readily and can be trapped away from the still-gaseous methane
- naturally inside the tank from moisture in the air
* conductor of electricity
- whereas ice is an insulator
* conducts electricity well
- electricity, but only impure water
* conducts heat faster than air
- more easily than any liquid except mercury
* cones upward due to the pressure drop caused by oil production.
* connects all Earth systems.
* consist of only polar bonds.
- one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms
- two hydrogen and one oxygen atom
* constantly moves between the earth and sky
- passes into the mouth and is strained through a much-perforated pharynx
* constitutes a large part of the fluid content.
* containing an abundance of dissolved nutrients is capable of supporting a lush crop of algae
- chemicals kill the microorganisms found in the soil
* containing dissolved mineral salts enters the root hairs of the plant through osmosis
- salts freezes at a significantly lower temperature
- food and oxygen is pumped through the tube in to the shell
* containing high levels of coliforms is unsafe for recreational activity
- nitrate is particularly unsuitable for bottle-fed babies
- organic matter treated with chlorine produces THMs
- oxygen is gulped in through the mouth
- toxic substances is unusable, and expensive to decontaminate
* contains dissolved oxygen, enough of it to support life
- solids, all kinds of minerals
- essential nutrients that can help plants grow
- hydrogen, which is just an electron orbiting a proton
- ions that affect enzyme activity in the mash, and others that affect beer flavor
- lots of protons in the form of hydrogen atoms
* contains many impurities, including tiny suspended particles called colloids
- minerals which are necessary for good plant growth
- nutrients and minerals that are important to the survival of plants and animals
* contains minerals that are left behind when the water is heated or evaporates
- sediment out and grow like stalactites inside pipes
* contains no calories, fat, or cholesterol and is low in sodium
- carbohydrates or electrolytes
- fat, no calories, and no cholesterol
- vitamins
- oxygen molecules and are oxidizers
- very little nutrient and no support
* contaminated with dead dogs or menstrual fluids can be equally dangerous
- high levels of nitrate is considered unsafe to drink
- lead oxide goes everywhere
- manure contains more nutrients and becomes a vector for waterborne disease
- nitrates is dangerous for infants, pregnant woman, and old people
* contaminates with fecal materials
* continually cycles from earth to the atmosphere and back again.
* continues to move from the warmer soil below to the colder area above.
* contributes no energy and a liquid feed with less moisture usually has a higher energy value
- to resisting forces when sediment pores are partially filled with water
* controls histamine production
* cooling uses a heat exchanger to chill the forced air and is less commonly used.
* cools as it moves eastward
- more than air because it can absorbe more heat than air
- our bodies, carries nutrients through it, lubricates it and carries off wastes
* cools the body and prevents overheating
- during exercise
- plant during transpiration
- surroundings when it evaporates
* costs a great deal in energy and money to pump, move and purify.
* covers a high percentage of the earth's surface
- approximately three-fourths of the Earth's surface
- close to eighty-five percent of the planet s surface
- four-fifths of the earth's surface
- more than seventy per cent of the surface of the earth
- most of our planet
* covers most of the Earth's surface
- nearly three-quarters of the Earth's surface
* covers the land surface throughout the year in all years
- soil half of everyday
- three-fourths of the planet's surface
- two thirds of the planet's surface
- two-thirds of the world's surface
* creates a hospitable environment for the growth of micro-organisms such as molds or fungi
- ideal conditions
- many times more jobs in municipal and industrial uses than in agricultural uses
- more drag on a moving body, slowing locomotion
- multi-directional resistance to challenge every muscle
- places, which are difficult to gain access to like deep canyons and hanging valleys
- resistance and makes the muscles work hard without jarring and straining joints
- surface tension that holds the sand grains together
- unusual patterns
* creeps up paper by capillary action.
* critical component in the production of cantaloupes and specialty melons in Georgia
- watermelons
* critical component of all ecosystems
- both white-tailed and mule deer habitats
- issue for the survival of all living organisms
* critical nutrient for athletes
- part of life
* critical part of our environment
- everyday lives
- requirement in lactating cows especially in the milk production process
* critically important resource.
* crucial component of every living thing
- part of the grasslands ecosystem
* cushions our joints, protects our organs and other tissues, and more
- the body s tissues
* daily, life - sustaining requirement.
* deals with the emotions, feelings, also love and comfort.
* decreases fluid retention.
* delivers oxygen to muscles and cools the body.
* diet aid.
* difficult item to keep in supply during arctic outflow.
* diffuses freely across most cell membranes
- from where the water is more concentrated to where the water is less concentrated
* diffuses into cells independently of minerals
- the sieve elements
* diffuses out of the plant cell vacuoles, the cell become flaccid, and the plant wilts
- through the stomata down a diffusion gradient
* dilutes digestive enzymes, thus making digestion more difficult
- nitrate concentrations in the rumen and reduces the potential of toxicity
- the caloric content of food
* dilutes the urine and helps relieve irritation
- keeps calcium, oxalates, and uric acid in solution
* dipole molecule.
* disappears when it is changed into vapor or ice.
* dispersing fuel additives emulsify the water with the fuel.
* displays the nature of existence.
* disrupts the hydrogen bond in hair, making it weaker than dry hair.
* dissociates into hydrogen ion and hydroxide ion.
* dissolves about one part in seven thousand parts, and receives a brown color
- fat if and only if acetone dissolves protein
- minerals from rocks and carries the ions
- more substances than most any other liquid
- plaster or sheet-rock walls
- soluble minerals
* dissolves the chemical components
- solid boundaries in life
* diverted by ice is termed ice-marginal drainage.
* divides pressure equally on all parts of a woman in labour, thereby reducing pain.
* does as much as it travels or eddies, changing change, successively taking the same form
- belong in a program of winter bird feeding
- contain oxygen
- gradually absorb light
* does have hands
- soothing and cleansing qualities for body and soul
- help our bodies with temperature control
- react violently when it is combined with sodium metal
- weigh the same as chocolate
* dominates in winter, wood in spring, fire in summer, metal in autumn
- life, people and economy of Bangladesh
* donates electrons to the photosynthetic electron transport chain.
* douses fire, fire melts metal, metal chops wood, wood uproots earth and earth dams water.
* draining from the uplands carries sediments, nutrients, and other pollutants
- uplands carries a load of sediments and nutrients
- mineralized areas also can have very high arsenic concentrations
* draining off agricultural land obviously carries nutrients in the form of fertilizers
- the uplands carries a load of sediments and nutrients
* drains more quickly from large pores while water is held more tightly in small pores
- off rocks making the water low in inorganic and organic compounds
- or is released by the soil at very low soil water pressures
- through sand very quickly
* dramatically influences noncovalent interactions
- our weather especially in relation to storm development
* drawn from the Sea of Galilee irrigates large amounts of land in Israel.
* draws heat away from a warm body more effectively than air.
* dries up or is degraded by human activity at an alarming rate.
* dripping from corroded iron or galvanized pipe has a rusty color.
* droplets collide with each other in the clouds to form larger drops.
* dropping short distances into deep pools produces the most musical tones.
* drops on burning rocks
- pine needles, showing the effects of gravity, adhesion, and cohesion on water
- the outside of a cold glass of water are condensed water
* drops that fall when the temperature is below freezing , fall as SNOW
- form on the outside of a glass of icy water are condensed water
* drowns the taste of food while chemical concoctions shield it.
* eats up land.
* ecosystems both replenish and purify water resources essential to human health and well-being.
* eggplant frequently to reduce spider mite problems.
* elicits a wide range of positive effects on the human psyche.
* emits oscillations that are measurable from zero through Megahertz.
* emulsifying agents Carries away water and fuel system moistures.
* enables fish to move and migrate
- the soil to maintain a way in which all plant life can grow
* encourages alga growth
* entering human built structures cause water damage.
* entering the ground through sinkholes can carry soil, organic debris, and pollutants
- lake typically contains equal amounts of two isotopes of oxygen
- middle ear can cause an otitis media
- spongocoel is extruded via a large common opening called the osculum
* enters ditches
- fractures in the rocks and freezes
- infiltration ditches
- mouth and flows into the internal nostrils
- one nostril, then passes over several folds of skin and out the other
- rapidly when the soil is dry and cracked, and very slowly when the soil is moist
- root hair membranes
- saturate zones
- sieves
- soil through openings between soil particles
* enters the air either by evaporation or transpiration
- animal through a madreporite, a tiny sieve plate that keeps out pieces of debris
- aquifers where the rock layers are exposed to the land surface
* enters the atmosphere as vapour from bodies of water and from the soil
- through evaporation, respiration, and transpiration
* enters the body of the sponge through the osculum
- primarily by absorption from the gastrointestinal tract
- cave system through sinkholes, losing streams, and other points on the surface
- cell by osmosis and the cell lyses
- cells by osmosis
- fish's mouth, moves across the gills and passes out the gill slits or operculum
- gill chamber through the mouth
- ground from many sources
* enters the mantle cavity to the left of the head and exits on the right side
- mouth and leaves through the gill slits, and food is trapped in the pharynx
- plant via osmosis in the roots
- plants through the roots mainly in zone where the root hairs are located
- soil rapidly when cracked, but very slow when wet and cracks are closed
* enters the soil rapidly when it is cracked and dry and very slow when it is wet
- is dry and cracked and very slowly when it is wet
- is dry and cracked, and very slowly when it is moist
- is dry and very slow when it is moist
- target cell and ions leak out through the pores, resulting in target cell lysis
- their concentrated cell contents and effectively 'inflates' the cell
- through mouths
* enters through the eels' mouths and is propelled over their gills by the biting motion
- ostia and exit out through the osculum at the top of the animal
- root and is transported up the stem by specialized cells called the xylem
- tracheids and vessel elements
* erupts to the surface and freezes into an iced layer, hiding the original crust.
* escapes the plant through stomates , openings in the upper or lower surfaces of the leaves.
* etches into the rock over the oceans, leaving eroded patterns of endless variety.
* evaporates from lakes
- land surfaces
- ocean surfaces
- less readily from cool seas
* evaporates much faster from some fabrics than water lying on the skin
- slower in the cool shade
- off of oceans and lakes and eventually forms clouds
* evaporating from a puddle is an example of a physical property
- the plant surface or soil surface, is called evaporation
- out of plants is called transpiration
* everywhere is unfit to drink and the oceans are suffering.
* excretes in urine.
* exerts a force on the object to make it move
- steady downward pressure
- greater pressure on our bodies than air does
* exhibits the characteristic of surface tension.
* existing as a gas is called water vapor
- beneath the land surface occurs in two distinct zones
* exists as a liquid over a wide temperature range
- solid ice and in liquid form
- vapor in the atmosphere and is the stuff of clouds
- deep below and can sometimes be seen through clear spots in the clouds
* exists in abundance on our planet Earth
- almost everything on our planet
- one form or another in almost every system in the Galaxy
- the pore space of the rock matrix
* exists in three distinct phases at something called the triple point
- states- solid, liquid, and gaseous
- two basic structures, one more highly organized and one less organized
- independently of human needs
- mainly in the ocean and atmosphere
- naturally on the planet in all three states
- on Mars in the form of ice at the north and south Martian poles
- only in the ice
- today as ice in the northern polar cap and as vapor in faint clouds
* exiting through the excurrent siphon carries wastes from the body.
* exits the bioretention system by infiltration or evapotranspiration
- leaf through stomata, which are tiny pore spaces in the leaf
* expanding and contracting due to freezing can make things even worse.
* expands a little bit when it is heated, and like the atmosphere, the oceans are warming.
* expands as it begins to freeze, and ice takes up more space than the original volume of water
- freezes into ice
- heats, causing sea levels to rise
* expands as it is heated, and glaciers melt
- solidifies
* expands when frozen which forces rocks open
- heated, so a gallon of cold water is heavier than a gallon of hot water
* expands when it freezes making it less dense than the water from which it freezes
- freezes, so it pushes the rock apart
- gets hot
* expands when it is frozen because of the molecules drifting further and further apart
* expands, forming ice crystals as it freezes.
* extinguishes fire.
* extracted from streams is replaced by rainfall.
* facilitates all of the body's workings at a cellular level
- reactions between acids and bases
* fairly good conductor of electrical energy.
* fall to the earth as sleet.
* falling downhill is used to run turbines, which generate electricity.
* falling from a dam, rotates turbines of a generator and generates electricity
- leaves pick up oxygen to carry into the rivers
* falling from the atmosphere as either rain- drops or snow is termed precipitation
- to earth is called precipitation
- on land is destined for one of many fates
- over dams can drive turbines, a process known as hydro-power
- west of the Continental Divide runs to the Pacific Ocean
- rain or snow and soaks into the soil
- rain, which either runs off or soaks into the soil
- back to the earth in the form of rain, hail, sleet, or snow
- from cooling air
* falls from the clouds onto the Earth
- sky and flows downhill due to the force of gravity
* falls from the sky as rain and is then evaporated up into the sky by the sun
- rain, sleet, hail, or snow
- twelve openings, representing the twelve apostles and evangelism
- in a park in Cairns, Australia
- through pipes
- to Earth and makes it fertile which was believed to be the role of Israel among nations
* falls to the earth and absorbs carbon dioxide from the air and soil
- as snow or rain
- when it rains or snows
- surface as precipitation
- without any artificial force
* features outside riparian zones are inland bays.
* feeds wood, wood fuels fire, fire makes earth, earth creates metal, and metal holds water.
* feminine element and governs spells involving mirrors.
* fills canals
- in low areas of the basalt crust to form the world's oceans
* fills the beds only during heavy rainfall and when the snows melt in the Spring
- interstices, creating a three-dimensional diffraction grating
- oceans of the world up to sea-level making it a liquid, a type of fluid
* filtering through burned areas washes nutrients out of the soil and into waterways.
* filters down through the soil until it reaches the aquifer.
* finite resource, and fresh water but a tiny percentage of all earth's water
* flow over bare skin is usually a diver's biggest source of heat loss in warm water.
* flow through canopies of different seagrass species
- polypropylene track membranes modified by radiation-induced grafting
- temperate glaciers
- vessel perforation plates - effects of scalariform plate angle and thickness
* flowing by gravity is used to get wastes out of the house and then out of town.
* flowing downhill across the surface of the Earth is called runoff
- can place tremendous forces on pipe connections and bends
- in a large channel is called a River
* flowing from hydrothermal springs contain several dissolved minerals and gases
- the ocean is generally salty and cooler, while river water is fresh and warmer
- in Texas creeks, rivers, and bays is state water
* flowing in a pipe loses head, pressure or energy as a result of friction losses
- stream into a rock can eventually create a hole in the rock
- on the surface of the earth is runoff water
- out of the Klondike River often causes an initial shift in the ice
* flowing through a dam also generates hydroelectric power
- soil or rock material follows the path of least resistance
- underground also causes some kind of electric current
* flows across the gill filaments and oxygen is removed and passes into the blood by diffusion.
- among rocks
* flows at a natural pace
- varying speeds underground
* flows between blood and interstitial fluid across capillary walls
- cells through pits in the cell wall
- groundwaters and surface waters
- trees and trees grow in the water
- clean, cold, and abundantly for use by many dependent life forms
- directly from the gutter into storm drains and into rivers or straight to the ocean
- down to the sea
- downhill to the sea because it seeks to come together with the ocean
- faster in a layer of high permeability than a layer with low permeability
* flows from areas where the water table is higher to areas where it is lower
- bottom to top while air flows from inside to outside
* flows from cell to cell through pits
- the pits, and they also function in support
* flows from high head levels to low head levels
- places to low places
- lower to higher osmotic pressure
- place to place quickly and always finds a crack to spill through
* flows from the macropores toward the matrix
- roots to leaves through the center of the cell corpses
* flows in a curve
- and out of cells throughout the body except in some places in the kidneys
- from the cortex, generating a positive pressure
- the same way it flows into the cell, then gets squeezed mechanically out
- through the branchial siphon and is filtered by the pharynx
- in, the bacteria swell and eventually burst
* flows into a river
- aeration basins where oxygen is mixed with the water
- storage containers for drinking and other uses
- swamps and marshes from streams, or even an ocean
* flows into the Bay from streams, rivers and the ocean
- sponge body by way of pores all over the external surface
- like rivers across the burning sand and forms pools in the desert
- on the outside of a curved mirror, which creates an optical illusion effect
* flows out of the gill slits after passing over their gills
- wetlands by evapotranspiration , surface runoff , and sub-surface water outflow
* flows over streambed
- the tentacles, which are able to capture food and direct it to the oral aperture
- sideways, too, from the ground into the bottom of rivers, lakes, and the oceans
- slowly through the soil, often traveling a few meters or less per day
* flows through a constriction in a pipe
- turbine, spinning the blades, which rotate a generator, producing electricity
- at speed at high tide and is sucked back down through as the tide recedes
- filters which contains layers of anthracite coal, sand and gravel
- large pipes inside a dam and turns a large wheel called a turbine
- pharyngeal slits into atrium
* flows through pipes and electricity flows through wires
- to troughs outside the fences, where cattle and other animals can drink
- prefilter cartridges to remove suspended particles, such as silt
- sandy soil much faster than it moves through clay
- through, mixes naturally with oxygen, and is thus regenerated
- underground between cracks in rocks or pore spaces in soil
* fluid at typical land and ocean temperatures.
* fluid, and it's wet.
* flushes impurities from our systems, regulates body temperature, and aids in digestion
- out toxins and aids in reducing muscle pain
* follows across cell membranes by osmosis
- because of osmotic pressure
* follows by osmosis , generating a partial vacuum inside the bladder
- osmotic gradient
- solutes via osmosis
* follows the roots through the dirt, which causes erosion around the roots
- sodium into the hypertonic blood by osmosis
- through osmotic pressure into the tissues
* forces the oil deeper into the tissues.
* forms a medium for many metabolic reactions taking place inside the body
- vertex as it drains from one bottle into another
- chemical compounds
- droplets on a thin film of alkane wax on the skin of the apple
- small streams that feed into larger streams
- surface layers
- the most essential part of their diet
* free medium for cell and body enlargement.
* freezes and settles within the growing glaciers
- at common environmental temperatures and corrodes metal engine parts
- completely in the outer solar system
* freezes from the top down and floats, allowing fish to live in the winter
- floats, so fish can live in the winter
* freezes into ice crystals leaving behind increasingly brinier films and pockets of water
- when cooled
- or boils at specific degrees
- outside of cell rather than in the cell
- very quickly in cold weather
- with higher volume as a solid
* frequently has excesses of a particular mineral or ingredient such as nitrates
- stands on the surface, which is covered by a slimy algal growth in some places
* fundamental element in life
- part of our lives
* generally moves toward streams, especially in central and eastern Kansas.
- hot and evaporates into the sky and forms clouds
- in the cracks of rocks, then freezes
- into cracks and joints in bedrock
* gets into the air by evaporation or sublimation
- cracks, freezes, expands and pushes the cracks apart
- tiny cracks and it freezes
- out of the system through the kidneys, bowel, lungs, and skin
* given off by trees rises into the atmosphere and returns as rain.
* gives and sustains life, but it also takes life and injures
- life to the roots of the vine that with the sun's light brings forth the fruit
- life, as it restores, refreshes, supports life, etc
* goes around in a circle or cycle
- down into the soil and pushes out the air
- downstream for the force of gravity and nature
- faster when the channel is deeper, steeper, and smoother
- fro tracheids to air following a water potential gradient
* goes from being ankle deep to chest deep
- the root, up the stem, and into the leaves
* goes in through the mouth and out through the gills, which take oxygen from the water
- spiracles and out through the gills, freeing the stingray's mouth to eat
* goes into cracks in the rock and when it freezes, it expands
- the soil and starts working
* goes through cell walls and intercellular spaces
- cellular membranes and living cells
- three different states in the water cycle
* going down in rivers, some have half meter.
* good absorber of the energy from the sun
- conductor of electricity, so be careful
- evaporative coolant, and water also shows adhesion and cohesion
- example for evaporation and melting
* good example of a molecule with polarization
- such a polar molecule
- polar solvent and is often referred to as the universal solvent
- solvent and hence, acts as a transport medium
* gourds enough to keep foliage from wilting, but allow leaves to dry before nightfall.
* great carrier of heat
- force for bringing people together
- medium to exercise in
- substance for soaking up heat
- thirst quencher while other drinks can actually contribute to dehydration
* greatly accelerates the process of erosion.
* has a central oxygen atom and is bound to two other, hydrogen, atoms.
* has a clear blue colour
- reference to the etheric level on the material plane where an entity manifests
- cycle, a mixture of life
* has a density of about one gram per milliliter, and a thousand milliliters equals one liter
- five year shelf life
- frictional effect on the Earth
- greater heat capacity than dry ground
* has a high affinity for itself
- boiling and freezing point
* has a high capacity for holding heat
- storing energy
- dielectric constant
* has a high heat capacity and changes temperature slowly with changes in heating
- resistance to temperature changes so they occur slowly
* has a high specific heat index
* has a high surface tension measured by how difficult it is to break the surface of a liquid
- tension, allowing it to form droplets
- high-heat capacity and unique density qualities
* has a higher coefficient of transfer, and a higher specific heat
- density and elasticity than air
* has a higher heat capacity than almost any other liquid
- steel, for example
- latent heat of melting than any other commonly occur- ring substance
- specific heat than land
- vibration but is very closely related to ice
* has a large heat capacity so it gives off a lot of heat as it cools to freezing
- specific heat, whereas metals have a small specific heat
- larger heat capacity than land, and subsequently holds heat better
* has a low albedo but high absorption
- solubility when it comes to oil
* has a lower surface tension than most other ligands, causing water to have very low cohesion
- viscosity than honey or magma, which have relatively high viscosities
- major role in most physiological processes
* has a metallic flavor
- more stable seasonal temperature than air thus making for a more efficient heat source
* has a much greater mass than air and it contributed to a much greater thrust
- higher heat capacity than soil
* has a much higher specific heat and retains heat from the summer sun long into the fall
- than almost anything else
- natural capacity to dissolve carbon dioxide
* has a number of characteristics which make it an excellent extinguishing agent
- unusual physical properties that are critical to life on earth
- rather high surface tension, but mercury surpasses it by a considerable margin
- relatively high heat of vaporization, compared to other molecules
* has a remarkable ability to absorb and release heat
- animate people, especially kids
- rich symbolic meaning in Scripture
- small but nonzero expansion as it warms
- specific gravity of one
- tendency to creep up the inside wall of the graduated cylinder
- unique surface tension
* has a very high dielectric constant, so it has very strong return signal
* has a very high surface tension though it is such a small molecule
- tensile strength, more than sufficient to withstand the pulling forces
- value of surface tension because it has a high degree of hydrogen bonding
- important effect on melting
* has a very low molecular mass
- viscosity - it is thin and flows easily
- pure consciousness
- simple atomic structure
- slight blue color that can only be seen when there lot of water
- warming effect and can protect plants from freezing
- way of ruining electronic components
- all of the ingredients required to become a powerful, yet natural, sanitizing agent
- amazing healing properties
* has an amazing ability to absorb and retain heat
- extraordinarily high density
- impact on any chemical equation of which it part
- incredibly high specific heat, exceeded by few known substances
- international dimension where countries share a river, lake, coast or aquifer
- unusually high specific heat capacity
* has an unusully high boiling point
- molecular weight
- appearances
* has awesome destructive power
- bonds to both the land and all living things
- certain properties that help water flow reach the top of the plant
- cohesion - the molecules hold together
- colour, taste and touch and is fine
- completely different properties, being a liquid that is used to extinguish fires
- definite volume
- electrolytes but special drinks have a higher concentration
* has enormous benefits
- enough density that the buoyancy on a hot dog in water is enough to make it float
- even more potential for absorbing and storing heat
- excellent thermal mass properties too
- good conductivity, oil has poor conductivity
- greater capacity for removing heat than oil
- hazy appearances
- heat containing properties
- surface tension , or resistance to penetration or stretching of the surface
- immense attraction to all people
* has large capacity
* has many different properties
- forms and many voices
- functions in our body
- meanings
- properties and because of that it unique kind of environment to live in
- unique properties that allow it to be such a universal material
- unusual properties, and special compound because many substances dissolve in it
- useful properties for cells
* has more available oxygen
- mass per cubic foot than air, so it's density is higher
* has much less oxygen than air
- negative effects
- neither all frozen or all vaporized
* has no calories
- capillary attraction
- charged molecules
- lubricating properties
- memory, neither does light
- shape, flowing wherever it wants
- sugar and caffeine
- obvious importance for food, energy, transport, biomass, climate and environment
* has one of the highest heat capacities of any natural substance
- capacities of any naturally occurring substance
- only two shades of blue, and there are harsh transitions between colors
- over twice the specific heat capacity of ice or steam
- polarity so it can be heated in a microwave oven
- properties and characteristics that are very unusual
- reflective properties that worsen glare
- roughly twice the heat capacity of stone, brick, etc
* has several important functions in plants
- other unique physical properties
- vital functions in the body
- some interesting physical properties that have consequences for life
- soothing effect on children Playing with water can have a calming effect on children
- spiritual images of cleansing, purity, being used in most religions
- strong religious connotations throughout the world among many faiths
- sufficient depth
- surface tension, which is the result of water molecules adhering to one another
- tendencies
* has the ability to adapt itself totally to it's environment
- dissolve salts and carry dissolved carbon dioxide
- characteristics of cohesion and receptivity
- higher specific heat capacity
* has the highest cohesive force of any liquid except that of mercury
- heat capacity of any substance, except for ammonia
- largest heat capacity of any material
- most anomalous properties of any common substance
- power to cleanse and sustain
- property of freezing at
* has the unique ability to dissolve a wide variety of materials
- form weak bonds with other molecules
- take on the shape of the vessel that contains it
- three states of matter solid, liquid, gas
* has to advance faster in lighter soils than in heavier
- be melted from frozen blocks of ice caught in the fiord
- seep upwards through all the layers of the skin to reach the outer layers
* has two characteristics that are particularly important to lakes
- dimensions that are closely linked - quantity and quality
- unique physical and chemical characteristics
* has unusually high heat of vaporization
- low compressibility
* has value as a natural resource and a raw material for various water users and consumers
- mainly in use
- very little heat capacity
- weight, it has the potential to make things move
* healer with a long history.
* heats more slowly than land.
* heats up changes to water vapor and leaves the plants and rises into the sky
- much more slowly than either metal, but retains much more heat
- slower and cools slower
- up, changes to water vapor and evaporates, rises into the sky
* held in a soil is described by the term water content.
* helps a plant by transporting important nutrients through the plant
- woman to let go and focus inward as labor strengthens
- asthma in many ways
- blood carry nutrients from the stomach to all parts of the body to keep the body alive
- bury the animal in sediment
* helps carry nutrients through blood to the baby
- ozone across cell walls into the body
- carve desert lands
- cells to keep their form
- contract muscle
- determine a location's climate and life
* helps dilute the urine and prevent the concentration of stone minerals
- the formation of stones
- dissolve the stool, reducing chances of constipation
- diversity, and with diversity comes a greater multitude of nature's voices
- eliminate the fat from our system and keeps our skin moist and hydrated
- fiber soften and bulk-up body waste, which promotes regularity
- fight fatigue
* helps flush away excess fat during weight loss
- food debris and can dilute the sugar acids
- toxins from the body to prevent re-absorption
- waste out of the body
- food move through the intestinal tract, eliminates wastes, and prevents constipation
- generate power through two different processes, thermoelectric and hydroelectric
* helps in digestion
- the digestive process
- insustaining the life processes
- keep skin moist and aids in wound healing
* helps keep the body chemistry regulated and keeps the internal organs functioning properly
- lawns
- maintain the moisture of the lining of the internal organs of the body
- make urine
* helps metabolize fat, decrease appetite and prevent dehydration
- moisturize our skin
- organism that contain it to regulate their temperatures
- our bodies remove wastes
- people engaged in intense physical activity perform more efficiently
* helps prevent arthritis and back pain
- sagging skin that often accompanies weight loss
* helps reduce constipation
- stress on the kidneys, prevents constipation and prevents dehydration
* helps regulate body temperature through perspiration
- our body temperature
- release the energy
* helps remove from the body the waste created naturally by the body
- the impurities of the body allowing tissues to rebuild and repair
- toxins from the body, in particular from the digestive tract
- restore lost fluids and keeps mucus thin and flowing
* helps rid the body of waste and can relieve constipation
- spread disease
- the body flush out toxins and transport nutrients to the body
* helps the body to insulate itself against cold weather
- work more efficiently
- kidneys flush things out of the system
* helps to control Earth's weather and climate
- the weather and climate
- convert food into energy
- disperse heat, minimizing sweat, thus the loss of salts
- eliminate waste and also reduces the desire to snack
* helps to moisten and warm cold air before it hits the lungs
- oxygen for breathing
- provide places for animals to live, drinking water and places for flood control
- reduce stress to the joints
- regulate all the body processes and body temperature
* helps to transport nutrients to all tissues and transports waste out of our bodies
- nutrients, remove wastes, and regulate body temperature
* helps transport nutrients and waste products in and out of cells
- substances in the body
- transport, dissolve, and replenish nutrients and organic compounds in living organisms
- wash away food particles that bacteria feast upon
- with proper maintenance of our digestive system
- women cope with the sensations and surges of labor and birth
* here means the rain or dew that makes plant life flourish, thus producing wood in the process.
* high viscosity liquid, as opposed to molasses, which is very low viscosity.
* highly concentrated element containing great potential power awaiting release
- polar liquid, which is why it is so good a solvent
* hitting the ground can also evaporate, as well as soak into the soil.
* holding capacity designates the ability of a soil to hold water
- in soil is also important for plants
- refers to the amount of water held between field capacity and wilting point
- back most animals, and lave holds back the swimmers
- heat longer than land
* huge microwave absorber.
* hydrates the cells.
* hypotonic solution and lung fluids present in the fetus are hypertonic.
* impacts on all our lives.
* imparts the characteristic texture or crispness to fresh produce.
* improves quality
* includes all liquids
- ocean up to three miles offshore
- drive forces
- likelihood
* increases the conductivity of the air and so increases the intensity of the discharge
- gravitational force on an object
- oxidation rate of plutonium and uranium metals
* infiltrates more easily and is held in small soil pores
- through the soil and unconsolidated material, entering the aquifer
* infiltrating into deeper soil layers beyond the reach of plant roots is called ground water.
* influences the weather, life, and the shape of the land.
* initiates the complex chemical reactions that cause the binder to harden.
* invades tanks through leakage or condensation.
* invariably spills, presenting a health threat.
* is Arizona's most important natural resource
- California's most important natural resource
- More Precious than Gold
- THE most important factor of life
- able to 'cling' to substances that have hydrogen-bonding regions
* is able to absorb a great deal of heat with little change in temperature
- and retain heat, producing stable temperatures important to life
- diffuse freely between the two cells
- hold the vibration set off by the interplay of the light and the flowers
- remain on the poles only because of the low temperature
- travel through xylem vessels from roots to the tops of great trees
* is about a thousand times denser than air
- the most valuable resource Mars has because it can sustain life
* is absolutely essential for new plants
- to hydrate muscles and help with growth
* is absorbed by a plant's roots
- soil and vegetation
- stone tools between the time they are made and when they are found
- the roots is delivered to the leaves in veins
- faster than any other beverage and it is calorie-free
* is absorbed from the soil by roots
- into the cells of root hairs
- waste material as it passes through the large intestine
* is absorbed in the jejunum, ileum, and colon and then excreted in the feces
- large intestine , leaving the waste
- passively
- primarily by the A. colon
- quickly and they dry out rapidly
* is absorbed through and stored in roots for winter
- the roots and is transported to leaves through the xylem
- very rapidly causing the hair shaft to swell
* is abundant globally but scarce locally
- if it can be melted
- accentuated in childhood, fire is strongest in adolescence
- activated by energy osmosis
* is actually a liquid crystal capable of holding much information and subtle energy
- harmful to wood
- the most universal solvent
* is added by rainfall, irrigation or subsurface groundwater to the crop root zone
- through the help of fumarase, and fumarate is changed into malate
* is added to a budget by precipitation or condensation from dew and lost by evaporation
- sample of strong sulfuric acid
- dehydrated dried plums right before they are packed to consumers
- groundwater by gravity drainage from the deepest soil layer
- many products for several reasons
- picric acid to act as a desensitizer
- simulate the effects of rain
- the split molecules to fill in the missing atoms
- when hydrolysis breaks the bond between two amino acids
* is all around an island
- body tissue
- that is removed from concentrate
- almost as important as oil in the determination of Middle Eastern problems
* is also a bad conductor of heat
- carrier of disease
- compound of oxygen along with hydrogen
- constituent of most foods
- domain of the deepest emotions, passions, overwhelming feelings
- food source while mosquitoes are in their aquatic stages
- good conductor of heat
* is also a key resource for any future manned mission to the Red Planet
- that is used by a spectrum of industries in a variety of ways
- necessary ingredient for soil
- perfect conductor of electricity
- precious resource, essential for life
- purifier, and the myth of baptism to purify common one
- sign of life
- source of hydrogen and oxygen for chemical reactions
- symbol of purification
- very special feature of many national parks and all marine parks
- vital nutrient
- able to cross the amoeba plasma membrane by osmosis
* is also an accelerator of slow decomposition reactions
- essential part of natural ecosystems
- important part of an animal's diet
- integral component of a vibrant economy
- international geopolitical issue
- capable of interacting with polarized or charged regions of other molecules
- central to acid-base neutrality and enzyme function
- cheaper, environmentally safer, and non-flammable
- chemically inert
- common in the universe
- corrosive to certain materials
- dynamic, flowing and reflecting trees and clouds
- easily boiled and sterilized, thus reducing illness and in fact saving many lives
* is also essential for a healthy plant cell to function
- to move the nutrients from the soil into all parts of the plant
* is also essential to the community's qualtiy of life
- way a plant receives nutrients and provides energy for itself
- helpful in maintaining the good condition of feathers
- ideal for the replenishing the body
- important as a cushion for the brain
* is also important for maintaining a constant body temperature
- the preservation of wildlife
- in food and beverages
- inside most living organisms
- irreplaceable by other substances
* is also necessary for expending any energy and prevents dehydration
- to transport the soil salts in solution
- of great importance when talking about nutrition
* is also one of the best-known ionizing agents
- four elements possessing fundamental characteristics
- heaviest parts of life support on manned spacecraft
* is also present in the atmosphere in both liquid and vapor phases
- in solid , liquid , and vapor states
- responsible for dissolving and transporting nutrients through the body
- subject to contaminants resulting from the presence of animals or human activity
* is also the basis of cheap energy
- element of baptism
- most therapeutic environment for injuries and ailments of all types
- useful for washing wounds and for sanitation
- very important for spawning and successful reproduction
* is also very important in hockey players' diets
- the transport of heat for dissipation from the body
* is also vital to other living organisms
- the unusual biota, or animal and plant life, of the region
- also, in effect, food
* is always HgO throughout the world
- colder than air b
- in motion
- pure and fresh
- the solvent in aqueous solutions
* is an OK beverage, especially when nothing else is available
- absolute necessity for life on Earth
* is an abundant natural resource in the forests of the Central Volcanic Range
- resource that is also rare
- agent of life
- all-important issue for developing countries
- almost perfect conductor of electricity
- astrophysically interesting molecule
- attraction to birds
- economic and social good
* is an effective methanol fire fighting agent
- transporter of weed seed
- efficient conductor of heat, as it draws off heat twenty times faster than air
- electrical conductor
- electrostatic solvent
- element of life
* is an element that belongs in every garden, even a small patio garden
- is seriously threatened by technology and irresponsible human behavior
- embodiment of Yang
- enemy of hay quality
- especially effective shield for neutrons
* is an essential and critical component of life on planet earth
- but often forgotten ingredient in a healthy eating plan
- commodity for survival
* is an essential component for vegetable growth and health
- of aquatic and other water-dependent ecosystems such as wetlands
- to many different areas of everyday life
- compound to all living things
- element for life and a valuable but limited resource
* is an essential element in life to Southern California and to our families
- the generation of subduction zone magmatism
* is an essential element of baptism
- feng shui because the Chinese attribute wealth to water
- our lives and our economy
- factor in insect control
- for hiking
* is an essential ingredient and is involved in virtually every function of a cat's body
- for many human activities, notably including food production
* is an essential ingredient in concrete
- most manufacturing operations
* is an essential ingredient in the animal body
- composting process, but excess ultimately runs off
- macronutrient
- natural resource for humans
* is an essential nutrient and it contains zero calories
- for proper functioning of all organ systems
* is an essential nutrient that is critical to optimal physical performance
- involved in every function of the body
- to the human body
- which is involved in all basic physiological functions of the body
- nutrient, so it's very important
- of life, and in most countries the supply of it depends upon showers
* is an essential part of a garden designed to attract birds
- any healthy diet, and it's especially important when losing weight
* is an essential part of every body cell
- generating electricity
- the geologic cycle
- raw material in the manufacture of plant food
- transport vehicle for an array of nutrients, vitamins and minerals
* is an example of a Newtonian fluid
- compound substance, or chemical compound
- compound, because it contains more than one kind of atom
- heterogeneous chemical system of one component
- hydrogen-bonded substance
* is an example of a liquid of low viscosity
- that becomes gaseous when it is heated gradually
- mixture - it mixture of hydrogen and oxygen
* is an example of a molecule that has polar covalent bonds and engages in hydrogen bonding
- where all the electrons are paired
- polar solvent, capable of dissolving most other compounds
- matter, and all matter is made up of atoms
- excellent black body in the infrared electromagnetic spectrum
* is an excellent conductor for electricity
- leaving group because it neutral molecule
* is an excellent solvent and is the main component of blood
- of polar groups
- which is capable of dissolving many different types of molecules
* is an excellent solvent, capable of dissolving many chemical compounds
- temperature stabilizer
* is an extremely important aspect of gardens, and one that is often overlooked
- nutrient with respect to overall health
- resource in the state of California
- ideal medium for the transmission of sound
* is an important agent for the transport of sediment
- in shaping the earth's landforms
- catalyst and has an extremely high dielectric constant
- component of Silicon Valley's high technology industries
- constituent of plant food
- element of change
- ingredient in the traditional Chinese and Native American healing systems
- key to concentration
- medium for the movement of nutrients into and out of ecosystems
- natural resource in New Mexico
* is an important nutrient that is frequently overlooked
- sometimes overlooked when trying to maximize feed intake
* is an important part of any backyard bird habitat, especially for bluebirds
- human survival
- our daily lives whether it be for personal or agricultural use
- waste elimination
- player in the joints, too
- resource for food as it is the habitat of fish
- symbol of purification and a vast sea of repentance and prayer
- theme that is appearing no only in colors, but transparency too
- weathering agent as it infiltrates rock crevices
- yet often overlooked nutrient for cattle
* is an increasingly precious commodity
- scarce resource
- indispensable requirement for health and for nearly all activities of human society
- inherent part of all body treatments at Stress Out
* is an inorganic compound
- resource in liquid form
* is an integral component of most aspects of human life
- part of the life cycles and stages of life for some organisms
- irresistable force
* is an issue in southern Florida
- that transcends all sectors
- overlooked component that plays a key role in the survival of birds through the winter
* is an unusual compound with unusual properties
- substance with special properties
- and was the key to life and survival in Palestine
* is another area where green homes can be environmentally conscious
- ring-tailed lemurs had to get creative
- basic ingredient for attracting birds
- concern for wildlife during droughts
- important sign in baptism
- means for seed dispersal
- necessity for wildlife
- of Earth's main resources
- potential source of lead
- renewable resource
- universal metaphor for understanding
- way women stimulate themselves to orgasm
* is applied in excess of the total amount used by the crop and lost to evaporation
- slowly enough to allow all moisture to soak directly into the soil
- to the areas to be sweeped in order to keep dust and dirt particles down
* is arguably the most important abiotic factor in the arctic ocean
- substance on our planet
- single most important compound for the existence of life
- art in constant motion
* is as crucial to survival as air
- essential for wildlife as it is for humans
* is as important an issue as soil
- to honey bees as it is to other organisms
- old as the Earth
* is associated with cold, moisture, and downward flowing
- emotion, feeling etc
- feelings and camaraderie
- the emotional and intuitive processes
- wealth and emotions
- at least as unusual as carbon or phosphorus
* is believed to be a key ingredient for biological life to arise
- link to life on mars
- possess the power of anti-evil
- beneath the earth and above the sky
- bent by static electricity
- best to satisfy thirst and fruit juices replace potassium lost through sweating
* is better because it is easily absorbed by the body
- than any other fluid for keeping the body adequately hydrated
- bi-polar which means that, like a magnet, it has a positive and a negative charge
- black clouds building into a fierce summer storm
* is boiled continuously to produce steam
- to form steam which is then cooled and condensed to form pure water
- born from the mountains, fire from the heavens
* is both a common element of life and at the same time a critical medium for life to continue
- place or medium within which something gets cooked, and a cooking agent
- cold and wet
- potentially life sustaining and an ideal source of rocket fuel
- breeding ground for many biting insects
- by far one of the best materials to store heat
* is by far the most abundant chemical in the human body
- important solvent for chemical reactions
- called the universal solvent
- calorie free
- calorie, fat, and carbohydrate free
* is capable of dranks
- lifting great weights and rubbing off layers of rock
- short circuits
- wet towels
- wets
* is carried from a river and boiled for drinking purposes
- in clay pots to keep it cool
- through the plant by the transpiration stream
- to the leaves by the veins
- catchment
* is central to all life and access to water basic human right
- human existence
* is central to the functioning of planet Earth
- solution , precipitation and leaching of minerals from the soil profile
* is checked for chemicals, organics, pesticides and volatile organics
- twice yearly for coliform organisms
- clear and colorless
- clearest for colors of shortest wavelengths-the blues and greens
- clearly necessary for human life
- clears
* is collected by gravity into a tank
- in a few different ways
- into the central ring of the vacuole and actively transported from the cell
- colored because of the rust build up in the water line
- colorless, and wine has a rich color
- commonly a source of illness when traveling in foreign countries
* is composed of atoms, which are composed of molecules
- molecules consisting of two hydrogen atoms and one atom of oxygen
- molecules, which are composed of atoms
* is composed of protons and electrons, which are composed of atoms
* is composed of two gins, oxygin and hydrogin
- hydrogen and one oxygen molecules
* is composed of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom
- combined with one atom of oxygen
- parts hydrogen and one part oxygen
* is conserved wherever possible
- with great economy
* is considered a key ingredient for the existence of life
- major cause of international conflict in the next millennium
- purifier in most religions
- as pollutant if it is added to the soil in amounts that displace the soil air
* is consumed and two smaller compounds are made into one larger one
- as a reactant
- voraciously when available, but elands can abstain from drinking in dry seasons
- consumed, and is also the primary habitat in some ecosystems, like lakes and oceans
* is contained in all the tissues, both dead and alive
- almost all foods, primarily in liquid foods, fruits and vegetables
- pores within the coal
- contaminated by improper human-waste disposal
- contaminated, fish are dead in aquaculture ponds, and livestock and small livestock died
- continually on the move through the water cycle
- controlled by Earth
- converted into hydrogen gas and carbon dioxide
* is created and destroyed in natural chemical reactions within plants and animals
- by painting the river surface, and covering with layer of gloss meduim
* is critical around the world
- during hot weather
* is critical for compaction
- the first step in germination
* is critical to Tucson's survival
- good health and high milk production
- life-forms, even fungi
- our business, the planet and people around the globe
- reproduction of the fungus and infection of the tobacco plant
* is critical to the semiconductor industry, which purifies tap water
- survival of all creatures
- critically scarce in many places
* is crucial during the first and second growing seasons
- in energy absorption and transfer
* is crucial to all life
- every bodily function
- life, and the ever-growing population demands changes
- cycled physically and in the process can be redistributed globally
- dangerous, as it spreads the fire
- de-ionised for laboratory work
- decomposed into hydrogen and oxygen gases using electricity
- deep in our genetic memory, and it has a healing power
- delivered to stream channels by a combination of overland flow and subsurface flow
* is denser than ice
- oil, and honey is denser than water
- desire to manifest that goes with all life
- diamagnetic
- difficult to remove, and can itself cause corrosion
- dihydrogen monoxide but it is always called water
* is discolored after a rainstorm or during spring melt
- disinfected using silver ion
- disposed of by percolation and evaporation
* is distributed at the top of the pad and trickles down the fibers or cells of the pad
- very unevenly and with very variable purity over the surface of the earth
- drained away from the foundation of some houses by perforated pipes called drain tiles
* is drawn from aquifers and water bodies and conveyed through the urban system
- both surface and well water sources
* is drawn into a small tube by surface tension
- thick layer of coarse material which traps large debris from pond water
* is drawn into the intestines resulting in nausea, cramping, and diarrhea
- mantle cavity and washes through the gills
- off by a vacuum system
* is drawn out by osmotic pressure, and the urine is concentrated
- of the cells, shrinking the vacuole and the cytoplasm
- over the gill surfaces and gas exchange takes place there
* is drawn through the pore to provide the animal with food and oxygen
- sponge, which removes small particles and grows bacteria
- up into the plant shoot from the soil when water vapor evaporates from the leaves
- drinkable at any temperature
- earth's most precious resource
- easier to oxidize than sulfate ion
- ecological and economical
- effective at slowing down neutrons
- either pure or mixed
- electrically conductive as used on the fireground
- electrolyzed when it comes in contact with positve and negative electrodes
- encouraged to flow within the sponge by the action of flagellated choanocytes
* is equated with wealth, fish with money
* is especially damaging to magnetic materials
- good at dissolving salts
- important during periods of drought
* is especially important during the establishment period and under severe drought conditions
- long fruit-ripening period
- period of tuber enlargement
- in Alabama during the summer when rainfall is reduced
- when the weather is very hot or very cold
- vital during transplant establishment and root development
* is essential for all body functions, including temperature regulation and feed digestion
- life to exist
- plants and animals to survive
- the major chemical weathering reactions
- balanced health
- bryophyte reproductive activities
- carrying out many different roles within the body and staying healthy
- digestion, breathing, temperature regulation and overall well-being
- enzymes to function properly in the digestive process
* is essential for every cell in our body to function properly
- life function of the plant
* is essential for good health, and it's invaluable for achieving permanent weight loss
- grass to grow, yet weeds seen to do fine without it
- health and life
* is essential for healthy growth
- living both indoors and outdoors
* is essential for life and plays an important role in atmospheric and lithospheric processes
- ranks, perhaps, secondonly to oxygen as necessary for life
- underpins both economic and social development
- life, and safe water is essential for health
- most annuals
- muscle building
- plant life, starting from seed germination to growth into a mature plant
- proper circulation in the body
* is essential for proper digestion, good metabolism, and urinary tract health
- nutrient absorption and chemical reactions
- growth and development
- public health
- regulating the normal structure and functions of the skin
- running the central nervous system
- seed germination and establishment of seedlings
- shock absorption and sponginess and also to carry nutrients to the cartilage
* is essential for the continued health of the plant
- function of all important biological systems
- human body for many reasons
- production of steel
- survival of animals and plants
- transport of nutrients to and from the plant
- washing and moving out toxins
* is essential in passing foods into a living organism and in eliminating wastes from it
- preventing fatigue, especially during exercise
- regulating our body temperature, which is significant in hot, humid weather
* is essential to a healthy crop growth
- healthy, active life
- new shrub or tree in the first few days after replanting
- aid in digestion, which produces heat in fiber breakdown
- all forms of life
* is essential to all life and crucial for all societies
- life activities
- in all ecosystems
- processes and most economic processes
* is essential to all living things but it limited resource
- things, yet it demands no pay or recognition
- biological decomposition
* is essential to good health and economic progress
- to losing weight
- production, especially when it gets so hot and dry
- health and it relieves hunger pains
- keep waterfowl growing and healthy
* is essential to life and to civilization
- man's survival as it is for all life
* is essential to our existence
- wellbeing and survival
- physical and biological activity
* is essential to the body
- growth of any living organism
- health and vigor of a forest
- human body because all cell and organ functions depend upon water
- life of every cell
- weather and climate on Earth
* is essentially a perfect mirror, reflecting colors almost unchanged
- neutral, with a pH of
* is evaporated by boiling the syrup under a vacuum
- from bodies of water, the soil, and from vegetation
* is evaporated from the oceans and rains down on the continents
- stored on the continents in the form of ice
- so water vapor rises as well
- even a readily renewable natural resource
* is even more essential and basic to human life and endeavors than electricity
- important to the health of daylilies than feeding
- everything in the desert, where there is water, life is possible
- everywhere as all the winter ice has melted in the oppressive summer heat
- everywhere, as flowers and green and life
* is excellent at flushing out toxins and restoring health
* is excreted as a liquid or leaves as a gas, usually through respiration
- from the body in multiple forms
- onto the skin surface as sweat
- expelled from the body through perspiration and from the lungs, to cool the system
- expended primarily from interstitial and intracellular bodily fluids
- expensive to pump, treat, store and heat
- extracted for industrial, agricultural, or domestic purposes
* is extremely homogeneous, but sediments at the water bottom can be quite inhomogeneous
- important during the hot summer months
* is extremely important for pigeons
- the plant to be able to make food
- rare and a vital resource
- scarce, for both human and animal consumption
- fat free
- fat- free and contains no calories
* is filtered by kidneys
- for both organic and inorganic particulate matter
- further by plants and microbes that can absorb harmful chemicals from the water
- through a membrane that has passages smaller than the contaminant molecules
- filtrated in the ground during rain and flooding
- flexible and adapts to the particular circumstances it's in
- fluid and responsive
- fluid, however, and the flow around the propeller is altered by the shape of the hull
- fluorinated
* is for bathing
- destruction and burial
- human consumption as well
- force in one end of the spiral cylinder and out the out other end
* is forced by the waves into small holes, where it blows upward, making tiny geysers
- into an ordered arrangement with fewer hydrogen bonds when associated with lipids
* is forced through a semi-permeable membrane which rejects unwanted impurities
- system which breaks it into drops as small as five microns
- minute cracks in the earth s crust where it dissolves out many minerals
* is formed by one atom of oxygen and two atoms of hydrogen
- during the regeneration
- of two hydrogen atoms bonded to one oxygen atom
* is formed when hydrogen is burned by oxygen
- two atoms of hydrogen combine with one atom of oxygen
- found everywhere below the surface, in cracks in rocks and between soil particles
* is found in a number of places on Earth
- all three states or phases on the Earth
- different places
- it's vapor, liquid and solid state in the atmosphere
- low areas, sometimes underground
- many different forms and in many different places
* is found in the atmosphere, on the surface of Earth and underground, and in living organisms
- ocean, rivers, lakes, and ponds
- three forms - liquid, gas, and solid
- underground streams but there is little water on the surface of the planet
- only in deep wells, geothermal steam or the bodies of humanity
- free to flow from the surface underground and vice-versa
- freely available to birds at all shallow edges of ponds and streams
- from an underground aquifer and rainwater
* is frozen in the ground or crystallized above it as snow
- most of the time, producing frozen soil, permafrost
- fundamental in every area of our life
* is fundamental to photosynthesis and respiration
- the existence of all living things human, as well as plant and animal
- gained through natural precipitation and supplemental irrigation
- gathered in many ways
* is generally a good conductor, especially if it contains mineral elements
- minor source of nitrate in the diet
- potable in urban areas
- the fluid of choice because it moves rapidly through the stomach
- given in abundance during the summer, but less is given in winter
- glass's most public form
- good for the gastrointestinal system, the genitourinary system and the skin
* is great for the skin and has zero calories
- to help metabolize fat
* is hard to contain, can move around any object, can wear away rock
- detect from the outside because it is hidden below the ammonia clouds
- when it contains minerals like magnesium and calcium
- hard, but clouds carry it
- harder to pump than air
- hazardous for young children
- heated and returns to surface as hot springs and geysers
* is heated by electricity
- fission in the reactor
- hot rock
* is heated by solar energy backed up by an immersion heater or a butane gas water heater
* is heated in a boiler until it becomes high-temperature steam
- it becomes steam
- to boiling and turns to vapor, leaving behind contaminants
* is heated to the boiling point and changes to steam
- point where it evaporates
- until the liquid becomes an invisible, odorless gas
- using the solar system primarily
* is heated, and steam from the boiling water turns turbines and generates electricity
- turns into steam and spins a steam turbine which drives an electrical generator
- heaver than the oil and the alcohol
* is heavier than air
- ammonia but lighter than nitrogen
- heavy, but it is far lighter than the rocks of the Earth's crust
* is held between sand particles and holds the particles together
- by hydrogen bonds, ion-dipole bonds, and other strong chemical bonds
* is held in oceans, lakes and streams at the surface of the earth
- the soil by cohesion to other water molecules and by adhesion to colloid surfaces
- very tightly in the small pores making it difficult for plants to adsorb it
- within a given layer or geologic formation
- helpful For washing our faces, For cleaning our ears And all kinds of places
* is highly cohesive which means it sticks to other water molecules
- conductive of electricity, and improper use can cause serious injury or death
- essential for plants for various metabolic activities
- transparent in the visible portion of the spectrum
* is home to many mothers of nature
- of Earth's creatures
- wildlife and life to crops
* is important because it helps to prevent the needles from drying and dropping
- keeps the needles fresh and intact and keeps the tree fragrant
- prevents needles from drying and boughs from drooping
- symbol of prosperity
* is important for active play and sports and everyday activities
- evaporative body cooling in dogs
- fruit set and development and flower formation for the following season
- maintaining humidity and for sustaining trees
- the other nutrients to function
- wealth, success and purity
* is important in maintaining appropriate body temperature
- many geological processes
* is important in the desert, and quite a variety of wildlife is attracted to it
- early spring for brood rearing and later for cooling the hives
- scientists to study, because it is so important to people
* is important to animal growth and maintenance of body tissues, reproduction, and lactation
- avoid dehydration and to keep their kidneys functioning properly
- bighorn sheep survival
- insect life and wildlife, but it is scarce in the urban landscape
- maintaining a quality turf and minimizing pest problems, including weeds
* is important to the Earth and just as important for younger looking skin
- interactions of biological molecules because it stabilizes temperature
- when young plants are being established
- important, especially during bud formation and flowering
- impounded in the summer, creating droughts, and released in the winter, causing floods
* is in constant motion and becomes riled when attacked by wind and lightening
- great demand to support habitat as well as to meet the needs of cities and agriculture
- pasture
- thermal equilibrium with ice when it freezes at the same rate that the ice melts
- inanimate objects
- incompressible in an engine cylinder
- incompressible, so density is constant with depth in fluid
- incorporated into the body
- indeed the universal solvent
- indicated by the colour blue in small scattered areas
* is indispensable for all forms of life
- in the growth of trees so the cycle repeats with wood
- throughout the process of making soba
- ingested through food, also formed during metabolic reactions
- inherently polar
- initially absent and forms only by the dehydration of the formic acid
- injected with chlorine dioxide to destroy bacteria and algae
- injurious in proportion to the amount present
- inside a cone
* is instrumental in the body's cleansing process
- involved either directly or indirectly in virtually every physiological process
* is involved in every body process, including digestion, absorption, circulation and excretion
- part of human life and also for plants and animals
* is involved in the assembly and disassembly of biological molecules
- transport of vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and many other nutrients
- is tasteless and odorless
* is just as essential to human quality of life as it is to cypress trees and egrets
- important to certain pests as food
- one component of the ecosystem
- water until it freezes
- kept free from bacteria through massive chlorination
- key in Indian culture - it is central for all life
* is known as a natural solvent
* is known to exist in the present as ice in the northern ice cap and as vapor in faint clouds
- help speed up labor for many women, while also providing pain relief
- largely responsible for carving the mountains into their present conformation
* is less dense as a solid than as a liquid
- ice.That is, as water freezes, itbecomes less dense
- when frozen because of structure
- lethal to sperm cells
* is life and changes everything, even the hardest stone
- for the human and natural systems in south Florida
- in the Blue Nile
- to wet bogs and fens
* is life's basic ingredient
- bottom line
- lighter when in solid form than liquid
- limited in dry periods
- linked with the emotional body of humans
* is liquid and formless
- liquid, cool, and flows downward
* is located in backpacks
- bathrooms
- beers
- blizzards
- bottles
- bridges
- brines
- brooks
- buckets
- cactuses
- cans
- closets
- coffee
- comets
- coolers
- crushed ice
- deltas
- dentists
- dips
- downpours
- drips
- dunkings
- enema
- fog
- fountains
- gallons
- grapes
- gyms
- hot tubs
- hydroelectric dams
* is located in ice cubes
- icebergs
- icicles
- jars
- kettles
- meadows
- mud
- pees
- perfume
- restaurants
- septic tanks
- sewers
- sinks
- snowflakes
- soft drinks
- soup
- space shuttles
- splashs
- spray
- synagogues
- tears
- theaters
- thunderstorms
- tidal waves
- toilets
- tributaries
- tsunamis
- typhoons
- washing machines
- water balloons
- waterspouts
- whirlpool
- locked in the polar ice caps and in a layer of permafrost beneath the Martian surface
* is lost by evaporation , seepage , and flooding
- urine excretion, stool excretion, sweat, and respiration
- continuously from all parts of a plant above the soil
- from plants and gardens in two ways
* is lost from the body
- cell s interior, and dehydration promotes the destruction of the cell
- root zone by evapotranspiration and deep percolation
- stomata of the plant
- in the heat through perspiration
- off the land instead of soaking into the soil to provide moisture for plants
- primarily from above-ground biomass
* is lost through perspiration and breathing
- the surface of the plant's leaves
- transpiration or just used for maintaining the turgidity in the cells
- twigs and stems, even when leaves are absent
- urine, skin, breath and the feces
- twice as fast as in earthworms and forty times faster than in caterpillars
- love, friendship, emotion, balance, and intuition
- low in many rivers and lakes inland
- luckily one of the few things that expand when frozen
- made by melting snow and the water purity is exceptional
* is made from liquid oxygen and hydrogen in the space shuttle's fuel cells
* is made of molecules
- simple atoms and is plentiful in the universe
- tiny particles
- very tiny particles
- out of hydrogen and oxygen, so at first it seems like water has a lot of oxygen in it
* is made up of hydrogen and oxygen atoms
* is made up of the elements hydrogen and oxygen
- two nonmetals oxygen and hydrogen
* is made up of two different atoms called oxygen and hydrogen
- when glucose is metabolized into water, oxygen, and energy
- maintained at a constant level within each cell
- matter because it has mass and takes up space
- measured in inches
- melted steam
- mixed with sand and chemicals to create fracking fluid
- more acidic at levels near the water table
* is more dense than air
- fuel, so it always settles out to the bottom of the tanks
- essential for horses than food
- important in the Middle East than oil
* is more important than food during a time of survival
- important, as air travel tends to promote dehydration
- likely to flow around and away from small openings than from large ones
- liquid than the core of the Earth, and certainly more liquid than terra firma
- polar than ethyl ether
- scarce than normal due to drought times
- susceptible to bacterial contamination when it moves slowly
- than something that is stored in a lake, the sea, or that runs from the tap
- viscous than air
* is most important as fat burning uses water
- for growth in a new planting
- often the cause of active and serious damage to masonry
- moved underneath the body by most or all of the eight arms
- much denser than air, so sound travels farther and faster in water
* is much more dense than air
- naturally low in sodium and has no fat or cholesterol
* is nature's best diuretic
- driving force, a fact readily apparent in the mountains of Western North Carolina
* is necessary for all chemical reactions in the body and to maintain normal health
- drilling, mining, refining, and generating power
- drinking and is sometimes used for bathing
- drinking, and makes a dandy fuel when separated into oxygen and hydrogen
- every process in the body, especially the fat burning process
- fruit set, fruit size and plant vigor
- life, and balancing the water budget is essential for desert animals
* is necessary for many bivalves to eat and respire
- essential body functions
- our body to operate efficiently
- proper metabolic function
- spore germination and fungal growth
* is necessary for survival and an essential ingredient for evolutionary change
- of human and the proper functioning of body systems
* is necessary for the eggs to hatch into larvae, called wigglers
- survival of all living things
* is necessary to all life on earth
* is necessary to carry out chemical changes in living things
- the fertilizer within the plant and for normal growth
- cleanse impurities and to keep the skin well hydrated
- every living creature
- maintain life
- replace losses through vomiting, bleeding, discharge, and fever
- needed by plants to keep growing
* is needed for cell division and expansion
- digestion, assimilation and elimination
- ideal plant growth
* is needed for many chemical reactions to take place within living things
- uses in Illinois, from drinking to industrial processing to transportation
- phtosynthesis
- plants and animals to live
* is needed for the kidneys to rid the body of all poisonous waste substances
- normal functioning of every cell in the body of the reptile
- sperm to swim to the egg
- transport and to support reactions inside organisms
- in every bodily function or process
* is needed to absorb the sugar into the cells
- carry wastes out of the body
- humans, plants and animals
- keep food moving through the intestinal tract
- maintain the life of every living cell
- protect plants against frost damage in the spring and fall
- raise the country's livestock, be it cows, chickens, horses, or rabbits
- replace fluid lost in urine, faeces and breathing
- transport flagellated sperm to archegonium
- neutrals
* is never a problem even during dry season
- created or destroyed, it is recycled
- pure, but has mineral salts dissolved in it
- no longer the majority fluid
- normally the solute in a solution
* is obtained by reverse osmosis of seawater
- chiefly from succulent vegetation
* is obtained from drinking liquids and eating foods
- food and by licking wet leaves
- metabolism of food and from moisture in food
- mainly from the fruit and moisture adhering to leaves
* is obtained metabolically from food, and from moisture in food
- green vegetation and seeds, and from moisture in food
- leafy vegetation, seeds, and probably also from insects
- seeds and green vegetation
- through leaves the koala eats
* is obviously a major resource of the United States
- very important factor to plant growth
- an extremely important aspect of every ecosystem
* is odorless and tasteless liquid, but water can be in forms of solid and gas
- while the isopropyl alcohol has a strong smell
- of an indigo blue
* is often a forgotten nutrient because it is usually readily available
- source of epidemics
- difficult to find in winter
- harder to come by than food due to frozen conditions
* is often the afterthought nutrient
- limiting factor for Arizona wildlife
- liquid of choice as it has a high latent heat of vaporization, a desirable trait
- most overlooked nutrient
- used, the neutrons lose energy bouncing off the protons in the hydrogen atoms
- omnipresent in Vietnam
- on one side of the diaphragm and air is on the other
* is one atom of oxygen and two atoms of hydrogen
- case where the management of a resource is still sectoral
- key ingredient essential for life
* is one of Florida's most important resources
- Minnesota's plentiful and valuable resources
- South Florida's most precious resources
- a few basic necessities for development
- man's most important substances
- nature's most important gifts to mankind
* is one of our greatest and most important natural resources
- most abundant natural resources
* is one of our most important natural resources
* is one of our most precious natural resources, but quite often is taken for granted
- valuable natural resources
- vital resources
* is one of the basic conditions necessary to support life and economy in any human society
- ingredients for life
- requirements for maintaining a healthy lawn
* is one of the best conductors of electricity
- drinks to use before, during and after activity
- purifiers for the body and a necessary ingredient for life
- solvents known to man
- biggest factors in cave-ins
- earth's most precious and threatened resources
- essential elements needed to foster fungal growth
* is one of the few molecules whose density decreases as it solidifies from the liquid state
- substances existing on the Earth's surface in all three forms of matter
- that can become a liquid , solid , and gas
- key substances essential for human life in the urban system
- main necessities of civilian life
- major means of transport of arsenic in the environment
- many factors that can limit plant growth
* is one of the most abundant resources of the country
- common substances on the planet
- effective ways to cool hogs
- essential commodities for human survival, second only to breathable air
- fascinating molecules
* is one of the most important and frequently over looked components of a good diet
- draw for the bluebirds in the winter
- keys to survival
- natural resources of Andorra
- natural resources on earth
- needs of living things
- nutrients required by swine
- requirements for poultry
- requirements in order to succeed in farming
- resources for all life processes on earth
- substances on Earth
- substances on the face of the earth
- things on Earth
- limiting factors in growing roses
- needed things in the world
- plentiful and essential of compounds
- polar molecules known
- used and washed resources in American industry
- useful things on Earth
- versatile of all chemicals
- primary means by which pollutants and toxins are transported
- prime substances responsible for life
- required elements for plants to carry out photosynthesis and live
* is one of the strongest medicines that there are
- things in creation
- treatments for very high blood sugar because it helps dilute the high sugar
- two most important elements on earth in sustaining our lives
- world's best conductors
- way pathogens get around
- well-known exception, where the freezing point actually goes up as pressure decreases
* is only a quasi-universal solvent
- essential to the plant when the leaves start to develop a wrinkled texture
* is our Earth's most abundant yet most precious resource
- bodies, water is life
- essence, our very lifeblood, the most important nutrient in our body
- most abundant natural resource and home to many of our state's more unique creatures
* is our most important mineral resource
* is our most precious and essential natural resource
- resources, especially in the desert
- prominent chemical and most rapidly replaced chemical
* is oxidized at the anode
* is part of a deeply interconnected system
- passed through bed of resin and ions are exchanged between the water and the resin
- pea soup color, many fish and birds, algae covering plants, forming mats in spots
- perceived by many to be infinitely plentiful
* is perhaps the most important component of any ecosystem
- nutrient in our diets
- part of the diet
- obvious example of a molecule with partial charges
- single most characteristic substance of our planet
- persistent, and shapes the hardest rock
- placebos
- pleasing to someone thirsty because it satisfies the thirst
* is plentiful and forests stretch for as far as the eye can see
- during certain seasons, and drought conditions occur in other seasons
- in lakes, bogs, and marshes
- plentiful, but it is made up of two gases, oxygen and hydrogen
- poisonous during dog days
- polar and has lots of hydrogen bonds
* is polar and oil is nonpolar
- very non-polar
* is polluted by agriculture, residential and industrial wastes
- with sewage, toxic chemicals, metals, oils, etc
- ponded to a depth just below the sand surface
* is potable but saline, and many people use bottled water
- in towns and resort areas
- potentially the colorless gold of India
* is poured on women
- over hot rocks in a tent to create steam
- practically everywhere on Earth
- pre-eminent in the debate about managing the world's natural resources
- precious in the desert
- present as a liquid and as a gas in the atmosphere
* is present in all parts of the plant and in some cases is responsible for structural support
- three phases in Earth s atmosphere
- every aspect of the Earth's food chain
- the mucous and salivary juices of our digestive systems
* is prevented from exiting the stomach by a ring of muscle called the cardiac sphincter
- passing from bloodstream into lung passages
- probably one of the most over-looked nutrients
* is probably the most abundant volatile in most volatile rich asteroids near Earth
- consistent and powerful cause of erosion
* is probably the most important factor in keeping the body cooled
- resource used by agriculture
- thing in growing roses
* is produced and a larger compound is cleaved into two smaller ones
* is produced at the anode twice as fast as it is used up at the cathode
- by the fuel cells which generate electricity from hydrogen and oxygen
- from seeps, springs, and shallow, low-yield wells
- programmed to seam up correctly with other things that act like water
- pulled deeper underground until it meets a barrier
* is pulled into the cells after it
- intestine causing decreased blood volume and increased intestinal dilation
- through the body, and food is filtered out
- up the xylem by the force of transpiration , water loss from leaves
* is pumped from below ground, pulling salt water from the sea into the aquifers
- into the mouth and out across the gills counter to the direction of blood flow
* is pumped through it and all living suspended algae cells are killed
- the mucous net by the action of gill cilia
- pure, in that it has no calories, sugar, stimulants, depressants or chemical additives
- purer than other liquids
* is purified by many different processes
- in large part by the routine actions of living organisms
- of certain chemicals when it is passed through a layer of activated charcoal
- pushed out by centrifugal force
* is reabsorbed and returned to the body via vasa recta and the renal veins
- by osmosis and carries other solutes along by solvent drag
- from nephron tubules by osmosis
- passively in the kidney
- to thicken bile to mucus-like material
- recognized as an essential component of sustainable agricultural development
* is recycled again and again in the hydrologic cycle
- by natural processes on the Earth
- continuously through the water cycle
- for toilets and irrigation
- on a global scale, actually cycling through the biosphere
* is regarded as a regulative principle in spatial planning
- the fount of all life and can activate the body's healing energies
- released by the processes of photosynthesis and respiration
* is released during cellular respiration
- photosynthesis and evaporates into the atmosphere
- from the citrate and then regained in order to form isocitrate
- later in the year to augment summer flows
- when needed for irrigation
* is removed by evapotranspiration
- squeezing grapes as they kept to be frozen
* is removed from the blood and excreted through the nephridia
- ethyl acetate fraction on an anhydrous sodium sulfate column
- ocean primarily by evapora- tion, and to a lesser extent by freezing
- reaction by azeotropic distillation
* is removed from the soil by evapotranspiration
- somewhat slowly during some periods of the year
- rendered unsafe by human or animal faecal contamination
* is represented as being the factor that is most limiting
- by a circle and air by a half circle
* is required by all living things in order to survive
- the body as part of every metabolic process
* is required for blood, the lymphatic system, healthy skin and muscles
- fertilization in Bryophytes, as in most algae
- germination of all spore types
- nutrient movement into and throughout the roots
* is required for the body to function properly
- growth of food crops, livestock, forests, fish and wildlife
- sperm to swim to and fertilize eggs, forming zygotes
- stomach to digest food properly
- transport of minerals and nutrients
* is retained by surface tension
- only in small pore spaces by adhesive and cohesive forces
* is returned into the air by evaporation and transpiration
- to the body by both tubules
- reused, in some plants up to six times
- reversed osmose purified, making the waterquality, pure, soft and acid
- rich is minerals and the skeleton soaks up the water
- run over positive and negative electrodes, which ionizes the water
- safe or unsafe depending on the amount of bacteria in it
* is said to be one of the key building blocks of life
- soft, if it readily forms latter with soap
* is said to be the most spiritual of all elements
- universal solvent, able to dissolve most other substances
* is said to have a high specific heat while soil has a low specific heat
- healing powers
- sanctified by prayer and ceremonial action
- saturated when it can hold no more dissolved gas under normal atmospheric conditions
* is scarce and seasonal, draining underground via sinkholes and subterranean streams
- during the long dry season
* is scarce in Nevada
- many of the western Andean valleys and along much of the Pacific coast
- most parts of the West
- the backcountry, especially during the hot summer months
* is scarce, as the islands rely on rainfall
- so animals tend to congregate at the waterholes
* is second only to oxygen as essential for life
* is seen as having similar properties
- flowing in streams and rivers and tumbling in ocean waves
- sent to sedimentation basins to allow larger suspended particles to settle
- separated into hydrogen and oxygen by a solar-powered electrolyser
- several feet deep in places
* is shallow at the shore with gradual deepening
- in spots for children during certain times of the year
- shape changing
* is shared by everyone, drops of water travel the whole world through
- with dogs, some adept at drinking from water bottles
- so much more fine an element than Earth
- soft, it is gentle, and yet, it is water that erodes stones and rocks
* is softened by an ion exchange system
- passing through a bed of ion-exchange resin
* is sold for potable use
- in small and large plastic bottles
- something many people take for granted
- sometimes scarce along the coast
- source of varied pleasures, including canoeing, swimming, and fishing
- split in the process, releasing oxygen as a by-product of the reaction
* is split into hydrogen and oxygen
- ions, electrons, and oxygen
- oxygen, protons, and electrons
- split, giving off oxygen
- sprayed on the surface to hold down dust, but there shortage of water
* is still essential for the process of fertilization
- more dense, and like fire it can be seen by the naked eye
- present, attracting and supporting wildlife, even at the end of the dry season
- unsafe in many areas, thus fly and water-borne diseases are endemic
- water whether in the solid, liquid or gaseous form
* is stored in an underground cistern and purified without the use of chemicals
- and moves through fractures, cracks, and solution cavities
- different parts of the water cycle anywhere from minutes to millennia
- extracellular spaces
- fractures or openings that constitute a small volume of the total rock mass
- glaciers, polar ice caps, lakes, rivers, oceans, and in the ground
- layers of porous material
- soft tissue
- swollen parts of the plant known as succulence
- tanks and comes from two bores
* is stored in the atmosphere in all three states of matter
- ground - the water table
- rock, sometimes from one year to the next
- vacuoles of the tissue cells
- their thickened leaves and stems so they can survive dry periods
- various reservoirs for various periods of time
- void spaces within the rock or soil
- outside the cells and shows up in swollen feet, fingers, legs and hands
- strained through the gill rakers, and the shark swallows the food that is left behind
- strong, but clouds bear it
- stronger than rock
- strongly polar and has great affinity for ions
- substituted for the gases that are usually entering and leaving an animals body
* is such a basic, basic solvent that is required for every detoxification process in the body
- good solvent that some types of rock can actually completely dissolve in water
* is sucked from the earth
- up tiny tubes, which actually defies gravity
- superior to almost all other liquids when out in the sun
* is supplied to an oasis through underground streams of water
- crops by ditches, pipes, or other conduits
- supposed to be a symbol of positive energy
- sustenance
* is symbolic if cleanliness
* is symbolic of money and energy
- refreshment and cleansing
- taken in on a daily basis to prevent our dehydration
* is taken out of a river, lake or reservoir
- the polymer when two monomers are combined
- taken after digestion, to flush the uric acid part of the protein from the body
- up by the atmosphere from the earth's surface in vapor form through evaporation
- tangible personal property
- tested regularly for the presence of blue-green algae
- that space
* is the a great agent of change in our Earth system
- adjective that describes the noun, planet
* is the agent for the interaction between the sun and Earth's surface
- that is causing erosion at the ravine
* is the basic element in all life forms
- essential of life
- medium of life
* is the basis for blood, saliva, digestive juices and urine
- their life
* is the basis of all life
- living processes
* is the best conductor of electricity
- cough medicine
- drink drink juice just once a day
- extinguishing medium because anhydrous ammonia is highly soluble in water
- fluid and helps lubricate the mucus membranes
* is the best fluid for hydration
- most activities
* is the best fluid to drink for quick and efficient hydration
- quench a thirst
- hydration fluid
* is the best liquid possible to cleanse the tissues
- supplement on hot days
* is the best liquid to drink, being free of calories and drugs
- give to any child in the heat
- source of liquid
- better able to infiltrate and percolate downward through the soil
- biggest ingredient in our bodies, followed by fat
- blood life of Mother Earth
* is the blood of creation
- body fluid of life
* is the body's air conditioning system
- channel for energy
- natural air-conditioning system
* is the carrier of all nutrients to our cells, including oxygen
- the other key nutrients to the body
* is the cheapest diluent for environmental pollutants
- ingredient of prepared foods
- source of fluid for people working out an hour or less
- clear line between life and death in the desert
- coal of the future
- coin of the realm in space
* is the common denominator when it comes to seagull habitats
- element that links ecosystems
- ingredient in the body and is present in every cell
- thread that runs through most of the secrets of the Martian climate
- country's most important and abundant natural resource
- cradle of life, it is where everything started
* is the critical element in a riparian ecosystem
- factor for tree survival after planting
- death of coax
- defining feature of our geography, and our transportation system reflects that
- dispersing medium in numerous food mixtures
* is the dominant element, with rivers and lakes abounding
- transporting medium
- driving force of all nature
- economic lifeblood of our state
- element necessary for breeding mold and mildew
* is the element of absorption and germination
- all life- creation,passion,sexuality,and especially Love
- emotion and subconscious
- emotional energy in man
- the Northeast
- used in cleansing and shielding
- elixir required by every cell for optimum health
- energy, but that energy is still be controlled by the gate, which is the mind
- enviroment that the polypeptide chain exists in, interacts with, and responds to
* is the essence of all life
- life, while data brings life to a model
- our very being
* is the essential element needed for life and is continuously being recycled by nature
- ingredient of life and so early people sought habitats near sources of water
- solution for most of the chemical processes that transpire in the body
- figure of the body as a medium of exchange
* is the final electron acceptor
- evolution of nature's influence on the world's color palettes
- resting place of the hydrogen atoms
* is the first component of an applied latex paint to make contact with the substrate
- of all elements and out of water originates all life
- flow of larger masses called molecules and there is only one outlet pipe for water
- foremost carrier of information
* is the foundation of all life on Earth
- biological existence
- that human survival is built on
- fuel, shelter, and sustenance of space
- gift of life
- giver of life
- great unifier of life, the spring and sustenance of existence
- greatest erosive force on plateaus
- healthy, no-calorie beverage
- intermediate form between earth and sky
- keeper of memory and secrets
* is the key element for silverfish survival
- in dissolving and transporting reactants and products
- ingredient to life, and impacts the development of planets
* is the key to health, healing and rejuvenation at the cellular level
- high-yielding crops
- managing and controlling grazing management
- many functions of the body, and pure water is what our bodies require most
- our planet s variety of colors
- largest substrate in our body
* is the life force of the North Cascades
- of the desert
- lifeblood for the Yakima Valley and for any area that depends on irrigation
* is the lifeblood of California's agriculture
- Idaho
- Wyoming Agriculture
- a bog ecosystem
* is the lifeblood of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
- prairie
- lifeline of a nation and thus the livelihood of a whole nation is at stake
- lifesource of all humanity
- limiting factor for all aquatic life, plants, wildlife, and many types of recreation
- link that ties the terrestrial ecosystems with marine habitats and lowland urban areas
* is the liquid crystal of all biology
- part of the biosphere and is found everywhere
- state of matter which has a flowing, dissolving, carrying and cleansing quality
- magic dissolver
- main cause of deterioration of masonry building materials
* is the main component of drinks like milk, juice, and wine
- most of the cells in the body, especially muscle cells
* is the main constituent in the off-gas during the drying step
- of sea water
* is the main ingredient in any medium
- many cleaning supplies
- most soups
- mechanism of erosion in the desert, often due to episodic storms
- requirement for greening and thriving of the forests
- sustenance of man
- mainstay of life
* is the major component of the internal environment of all living things
- protoplasm which makes up the content of cells
* is the major constituent of almost all life forms
- tea and greatly affects tea quality
- ingredient of most fruit and vegetables
- molecule present in plant cells and organs
- part of all living things
- solvent of cells and extracellular fluids of all organisms
- material cause of all things
- medium and reactant for many biochemical processes
* is the medium by which mineral nutrients enter and are translocated in plants
- pollutants are transported and taken up by estuarine species
* is the medium for the chemical reactions of life
- organisms living in aquatic habitats
- water waves, and the rope is the medium for rope waves
* is the medium in which all chemical reactions occur in cells
- each element interacts to create the pond ecosystem
- much of life exists - streams, rivers, ponds, lakes, and oceans
- the plants grow
- through which every biological reaction takes place
- where almost all substances dissolve and many chemical reactions take place
* is the more active of the two
- common polar covalent bond
* is the most abundant and important solvent on Earth
- chemical in cells
- compound on Earth's surface
* is the most abundant substance at the surface of Earth
- on earth, and it constitutes the ideal medium for life
* is the most abundant, and possibly the most overlooked, substance in the body
- unique and important substance on Earth
- available compound on earth
- cohesive among the non-metallic liquids
* is the most common amphoteric substance
- cause of damage to goods placed in a self-storage unit
- compound in which they occur together
- form of contamination observed in gasoline
- fuel contaminant
- liquid on Earth
- molecular compound on the planet Earth
* is the most common substance found on earth
- effective transport medium for rounding particles
- essentail thing that humans put inot their bodies
* is the most essential element of life
- ingredient of life and the environment's most precious commodity
- nutrient and primary fluid for our bodies
- essential, most easily available and most often overlooked nutrient
- frequently used couplant in immersion and squirter scanning techniques
- fundamental resource any country possesses
* is the most important agent of chemical weathering
- and probably the most widely known substance on the Earth
- chemical of life for all living organisms on earth
* is the most important element for human survival
- in survival, even more important than food
- factor for pest survival
* is the most important ingredient in beer
- sports drinks
- material used by humanity
- natural resource at the Earth's surface
* is the most important nutrient for a healthy body
- active people
- animals and humans
- sheep as well as it is for all animals
- the survival of humans
* is the most important nutrient in a horse s diet
- to the dairy cow
- nutrient, yet it is often the most neglected
* is the most important of all the nutrients
- solvents, dissolving many gases, liquids, and solids
* is the most important part of a dog's diet
- a pig's diet
* is the most important resource for mankind
* is the most important solvent in chemistry and biochemistry
* is the most important substance on earth
- the body consumes
- variable in understanding atmospheric processes
* is the most important, yet most frequently forgotten, nutrient
- overlooked, nutrient for athletes
- limited and the most important natural resource there is
- limiting factor for agriculture
* is the most often recommended fluid for athletes
- served beverage during the course of a meal
- plentiful substance in our bodies
* is the most powerful element of the universe
- force in the universe
- solvent there is
* is the most precious of all natural resources
- resource on Earth
- valuable of raw materials trees collect
- vital of our resources
- normal medium for baptism
* is the number one attraction for tourists in the United States
- beauty treatment for a young and healthy complexion
- cause of roadway problems
- source of fluoride, and toothpaste is the second
- nurturer of all terrestrial and aquatic life
* is the one element that can play a major role in stable weight loss
- item no animal can live without
- of world's most precious resources
* is the only common substance that expands when it freezes
- emission when hydrogen is the fuel
- known substance that commonly exists in all three phases at once
* is the only liquid in the system
- that expands when it freezes, which makes ice float on a lake
- natural substance which exists in all three states of matter in nature
- object whose emissivity is constant under different conditions
- potentially pollution-free source of hydrogen
* is the only substance found on earth naturally in the three forms
- occurring naturally in solid, liquid, and gaseous states
* is the only substance on earth found naturally in three forms - solid, liquid, and gas
- that exists naturally in three states
* is the only substance that naturally occurs in all three states on earth
- occurs naturally in all three states
- thing that can take large amounts of heat from water
- origin of society
- other critical factor in the glycogen storage process
- patrimony of mankind
- predominant constituent of beverages and foods
- preferred media for heating coils
- prerequisite for all known forms of life
- preserver of life, circulating through the whole of nature
- primal element
- primary component of all cells in the body
* is the primary component of blood and secretions like tears, saliva, mucus, and gastric fluid
- determinant of travel in the desert
- ingredient in beer, so it is very important that the water tastes good
- limiting factor in seedling survival and growth of pinyon
- means by which plants take up nutrients from the soil
- medium for contaminants to enter Virginia's coastal waters
- reservoir of the organism
* is the primary solvent in biological systems
- which organic molecules are sustained in cells
- weathering agent on the Earth's surface
* is the principal factor in the growth of a plant, for without water growth is impossible
- solvent for cleansing
- source of endotoxin in parenteral products
- principal, or the element, of things
- principle of all things
- reference for solids and liquids, while air is the reference for gases
- resource most limiting to national development
* is the safest liquid to drink during heat emergencies
- supplement one can use everyday to cure diseases as well as to prevent
* is the second element representing blood, secretions of the glands, vital fluid etc
- factor necessary for animals to survive
- sign of claiming, cleansing and covenant
- simplest solution to acidotic overload in conditions of stress
* is the single most abundant substance in the human body
- critical natural resource in Jordan
* is the single most important commodity with any crop grown
- factor in taking off weight and keeping it off
- nutrient for either plant or livestock production
* is the single most limiting factor in plant growth
- to plant growth worldwide
- valuable resource for cities
- nutrient required in the greatest quantity by animals
* is the solvent and sugar and flavoring are the solutes
- essential for chemical reactions
- for life on the Earth
- that carries minerals from the soil to plants via the roots
- source from which people begin, as a baby from the womb
* is the source of all life and people discovered very early on the power of water
- both life and death
- life and also precious
- strongest agent of erosion
* is the substance of all living things and so is true with plants
- sum and substance of the world in which the fish is immersed
- sum, the composite principle of fire, earth, and air
* is the symbol of emotions, desire, and generation
- spiritual life
- typical thermal storage medium in solar water heating systems
- ultimate symbol of matter without form
- underlying element in all body fluids
* is the universal cleanser
- detergent
- growth regulator
* is the universal solvent and the basis of all life on our Planet
- therefore carries all types of dissolved materials
* is the very essence of life
* is the vital fluid that nourishes all life
- ingredient in the prevention of heat injury
- working fluid
- world's best known ground source
* is the world's most abundant resource, but only one percent of water is suitable for drinking
* is thicker than air
* is thought to increase their sense of touch
- move very slowly through the aquifer system
* is thrown on the banks of canals, rivers and lakes
- canals, rivers, lakes
* is thus a national resource
- able to flow into the spaces between the sediments forming the sandy layers
- tied to soil through watersheds
* is transferred among river basins, and river organisms are exchanged among continents
- between the hydrosphere and biosphere by evaporation and precipitation
- transformed to be used and obtained by the atmosphere and organisms
- transparent in the visible part of the electromagnetic spectrum
* is transparent, flames randomly flicker, moving clouds cast shadows while dynamic lighting
- so light shines through it
* is transported by a variety of processes
- the water cycle to all locations on Earth
- from the roots to the rest of the plant through special vessels in the plant
- to the leaves from the roots
- under pressure through a distribution network of buried pipes
- upwards from the roots by a process called osmosis
- trapped out as a by-product of the reaction
- treated using coagulation, flocculation, sedimentation and filtration
* is treated with chlorine before it is released
- which oxidizes the iron, which means it makes it form a solid
- truly a powerful factor in all ecosystems
- turned into wine
* is turned off in different parts of the country, for different periods of time
- the fall to prevent freeze-up and is turned on in the spring
- on and sent up the rectum through the speculum and into the colon
- two hydrogens for each oxygen, but the oxygen atom is sixteen times bigger
- ubiquitous on Earth
- unable to circulate and therefore thermal energy is lost
- under pressure in confined aquifers, and is recharged slowly
* is undoubtedly California's most precious resource
- one of the most ancient and universal of all symbols
- unique among molecules
- unstable because it is affected by temperature and pressure
- unsuitable for plants
- unusual as both a liquid and a solvent
* is unusual in being able to absorb a large amount of heat for a given change in temperature
- that the solid form has a lower density than the liquid form
* is used and consumed as a part of the digestion process and can lead to dehydration
- reused again and again by living organisms
* is used as a factor of production in agriculture, industry and households accross the world
- medium to transport nutrients into the cells for processing
- symbol of purification and cleansing
- both the diluent and the carrier
- collant in most locomotives
- the working fluid
* is used by livestock and poultry for drinking and cleansing
- plants to make food
- the craft to cool the rectennas and as a propellant in the last stages of ascent
- turf in the winter as shown in the table
- during the biochemical process of photosynthesis
- extensively for domestic use, in industry, and in agriculture
* is used for a moist heat
- number of purposes, most significantly bus washing
- agricultural irrigation, leisure, etc
- bathing, and keeps the feathers smooth anc clean
- crops , people, meadows, pastures, forest, woodland, and animals
- drinking and as an aid in the shedding process
- fighting wildfires
- heating and cooling, and for providing electricity as well as transportation
- irrigating crops
- many things, such as cleaning, bathing, cooking and drinking
- municipal and industrial purposes in the Houston metropolitan area
- recreational activities such as boating, rafting, kayaking, swimming, and fishing
- showerings
- such a variety of purposes that it is absolutely necessary to both man and beast
- various purposes
- washing dishs
- watering plants
- in all economic and in many municipal and domestic activities
* is used in many things
* is used in photosynthesis and to cool the plant
- so it is used up quickly
- power generation
- so many different ways
* is used in the home for drinking, bathing, cleaning and gardening
- incinerator's cooling and filtering systems
- leaves in a process of food manufacture called photosynthesis
- metric system to define the gram
- over and over by nature and is recycled in the water cycle
- several times to create certain moods and suggest ideas
* is used to cool and scrub exhaust gases in all of the rocket test cells
- equipment in the manufacturing process
- the machinery used to produce electricity
- describe the liquid form of matter
* is used to dilute and carry away wastes
- the desired amount of volatile solids to the desired volume
- dissolve many things in the home and in industry
- lubricate and cool the drill bit and prevent dust
- provide electrons and hydrogen ions but also produces oxygen
* is used to put off the fires
- out most fires
- refresh humans, animals, and plants
- remove excess heat that by-product of electricity generation
- simulate dispersant during training
- supplement precipitation for growing crops
- take away waste heat at power plants
- transport nutrients and wastes through living things
- up and hydrogen is made available for the electron transport chain
- used, however, in nearly all bodily functions
* is useful because it absorbs a lot of heat
- for cooling organisms
* is usually fluid and transparent
- present most of the year
* is usually the solvent, hence the term aqueous solution
- utilities
- valuable to humans as a recreational resource
- very dense and oxygen is dissolved in the water
* is very effective at absorbing heat without undergoing much of a temperature change
- transporting ions and dissolved nutrients in the human body
- moderator of neutron energy core is compact
- essential to plants
- far into the ground
- important as a solvent, in reactions, and in temperature regulation
* is very important for every day living
* is very important in Hawaii
- maintaining electrolyte balance
* is very important to birds during Spring and Fall migration
- chameleon growth and health
- the proper functioning of the human body
- important, as dehydration real threat in the warm months of the year
- necessary for helping the body remove fat, and for general overall health
- often the most limiting factor to crops in the soil
* is very precious and expensive
- vital for life
- virtually impossible to find, except when snow melts and runs off from higher elevations
- visualized as occupying the center of a tetrahedron, a solid with four faces
* is vital for each stage of growth from seeding to mature grass
- every system in our bodies
- life itself, and worldwide water consumption is growing
- life, progress, and development
- optimal muscle performance
- producing energy and transporting nutrients and toxins
- sustaining life on earth
- the irrigation of golf courses
* is vital to Florida's environment, our state's economy, and our future
- ecosystems, human health, agriculture and industry
- human lives and healthy communities
* is vital to life for many reasons
- in the arid desert
- our everyday lives at home, at work, and in our recreation activities
* is vital to the future of life on earth and to the survival of humankind
- health of the body
- life and growth of our communities
- virtually all parts of our diverse economy
- warmed as it passes through a heat exchanger
- wasted directly by leakage and indirectly by degrading the effectiveness of spray patterns
- water is water is life
- wet when it liquid but scientifically speaking, it is dry when ice or vapor
* is what allows all living things to survive
- helps fiber work
* is what makes our planet habitable and provides the foundation of life
- the fruit so juicy
* is where life originated
- they most often lay their eggs
- yin, and mountains are yang
* is, by far, the most common liquid on Earth
- indeed, one of earth's most precious and most vulnerable to pollution
* is, literally, the drink of life
- source of life on earth
- of course, absorbed through the roots and transferred into the plant itself
- therefore, a general medium in which both organic and inorganic processes occur
- well, water
* just has a lot less vapor than gasoline.
* keep clean water in a bowl large enough for the iguana to soak in.
* keeps body chemistry regulated and functioning properly
- kidneys performing at a high level
- mouth, nose, eyes, and skin moist
- moving and changing from a solid to a liquid to a gas, over and over again
- on circulating until it becomes steam
- saliva flowing, which dilutes the toxins created by plaque
* keeps the rods cool as the number of nuclear reactions gradually decreases
- skin moist and regulates normal functioning of the oil glands
- tree from drying out and the needles from dropping
* key element in children's health
- factor in efforts to eradicate food insecurity and rural poverty
* key ingredient for life
- part of digestion, kidney and intestinal functions
- reactant in cement hydration
- resource that is used by a spectrum of industries in a variety of ways
* kills bees
- more people than alchohol
* lacks electrolytes
- focus and takes on the shape of the environment
* large percentage of the cells that make up all living organisms.
* lawns during the early morning hours when temperatures and wind speeds are the lowest
- time of day when temperature and wind speed are lowest to reduce evaporation
* lawns early in the morning during the hotter summer months to reduce evaporation losses
- so that moisture penetrates at least a couple of inches
* leads to serious health problems
* leaks in at various places even when there is no rain
- on or near electrical equipment
- out to be replaced by air
* leaves a plant and rises into the atmosphere
- guard cells, cell walls limp, stomata close
- the atrium, a sac surrounding the pharynx, by way of the excurrent siphon
* leaves the body during normal respiration, in sweat, and body wastes
- primarily as urine excreted from the kidneys
- bog only through evaporation and by plants giving off moisture
- cell, leaving a shriveled up cytoplasm within the cell wall
- cells and the plants die
- finest veins and enters the cells of the spongy and palisade layers
- glacial system when ice is converted into water or vapor
* leaving a wetland is frequently cleaner than water entering the wetland.
* leaving an aquifer is called discharge water
- naturally or through pumping is called discharge water
* less significant contributor to lead toxicity than lead-based paint and dust.
* lies in a shallow plate
- on top of the subsoil and kills the deeper roots
* limited and fragile resource
* limited resource in the earth's closed ecosystem
- their habitat, which requires that gazelles use water efficiently
* limiting factor for growth
- in the growth of bacteria
* links all components of the environment and major force in shaping the landscape.
* liquid and it can take on the shape of any container
- remains so within certain physical criteria such as temperature and pressure
* liquid at room temperature due to hydrogen bonding
- the temperatures and pressures that are most adequate for life
- used in many different ways
- whereas the elements from which it is made are gaseous
- with low viscosity, and so it runs freely
- without color, taste, or odor
* liquid, but when it boils, it turns to a gas called steam
- whereas hydrogen and oxygen are gases
* logs prior to covering and seal edges with surrounding soil.
* loses and gains heat more slowly than air
- heat more slowly than either soil or air
- velocity as it moves down the alley due to friction and other forces
* lot more dense than air.
* lowers the solidus temperature of rocks at a given pressure.
* lubricant for the limbs and joints.
* lubricates joints and acts as shock absorbers inside the eyes and spinal cord
* lying in isolated areas also gives the illusion of over-watering.
* magical source and spiritual motivator.
* main component of millions of cells as well as the fluid that surrounds our cells.
* mainly moves through tracheids and vessel elements.
* mainstay in any athlete's body.
- key hydration levels in both winter and summer
- the healthy muscles, and healthy skin of our body
* major carrier of disease bearing germs
- factor in understanding universal phenomena, including the creation
- force of erosion
- habitat component affecting distribution, especially in summer
- health factor
- natural resource and supports all life forms, so it is of great importance
- requirement for, and a primary component of, all living things
- resource and is used from both surface and ground water sources
- source of fluoride intake
* make a drill that digs in the ground to find water.
* makes a good shelter for many animals
- chocolate seize up when melting
- for life, human and economic
- grapes grow
- it all work - the organics, the food, the microbes
* makes it easier for blood to flow in the vessels of the body
- electricity to pass through the body
- possible the maintenance of turgor in living cells
- seed soft and bring dissolve oxygen to the embryo
- strong hydrogen bonds
* makes the asbestos fibers less able to become airborne
- mix workable and activates hydration, the chemical reaction that hardens the cement
- things wet
* makes up a large part of our foods
- portion of many foods, particularly fruits and vegetables
* makes up about four percent of the oil sand by weight
- two thirds of the weight of cells
- eighty to ninety percent of all living organisms
- four-fifths of our own bodies
* makes up most of an animal's blood or plant's sap that feeds and keeps healthy living tissues
- the tissues of living organisms and is necessary for an organism's survival
- one-fourth of the weight of a strand of hair
* makes up the earth's hydrosphere
- largest percentage of beer
- three-fourths of the Earth''s surface and is the most common substance on Earth
* making machines have other natural enemies, bacteria and biological growth in the membrane.
* mays have appearances.
* means any storm water, surface water, snow melt or ground water
- different things to different people
* means life in the desert
- to a fish
- sustenance, and food production as well
- weight and weight means dollars
* mechanical weathering force.
* medium for fish.
* metabolizes fat and replaces fluid loss from activity.
* metaphor for spirituality and rebirth.
* minor, but very important constituent of the Earth's atmosphere.
* mix of salt and fresh.
* mixed with carbon dioxide is weak carbonic acid solution
- oil also reduces the lubricating value of the oil itself
* mixes with deep water
- road oils, grease and dirt to make roads slippery
* molecule made up of atoms which all contain electrons.
* molecule that consists of one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms
* monitor lizard and sea snakes such as the banded sea snake also have their home here.
* more constant, less extreme environment than air.
* moves about the Earth
- around Earth as it changes form
* moves away from the center towards the outside when it is spun
- relatively warm earth, comes closer to cold air and freezes
- axially through the xylem from roots to leaves following gradients of water potential
- back into the blood because of high osmotic pressure
* moves continuously from the atmosphere to the earth and back again
- through a natural system called the hydrologic cycle
- throughout the planet
- down a water potential gradient
* moves faster through larger pores than smaller pores
- sandy soils than through clay soils
- food through our digestive system and transports nutrients to various body locations
* moves freely across cell membranes by diffusion
- in and out of a plant's roots before it travels through the stems to the leaves
- from locations
* moves in and out of cells with ease, probably through channels
- most cells by diffusing through fat in the cells' outer membranes
- through gill openings
- through many small pores, and out through one large pore
* moves into an area with low concentrations and out of areas with high concentrations
- and out of all living systems
- guard cell from surrounding cells
* moves into the air through the process of evaporation
- fish by osmosis, passively, through the gills and the skin and the stomach
- gland to minimize the gradient of sodium and chloride ions built up inside
- root hairs by osmosis
- more quickly down a steep canyon than through a relatively flat valley floor
- much faster through large pores than small ones
- on, above, or below the surface of the Earth
- only by capillary action and air moves very slowly by molecular diffusion
* moves out of cells attracted to the ice crystals in the pore spaces
- collecting duct into blood, decreasing blood osmolarity
- the body cells to dilute the levels of sugar in the blood
* moves over a filtering structure, where food particles become trapped in mucus
- the Earth's surface, underground, or through the atmosphere
- rapidly through sandy or other coarse-textured soils
- readily through the spaces between the sand grains
- sediment far faster than wind can
* moves slower near the bottom of the riverbed because of friction
- through soils or rocks that are tightly packed together
* moves through a semipermeable membrane from a hypotonic solution to a hypertonic solution
- cavities underground
- membranes by a type of diffusion known as osmosis
- mulch to plant roots without spraying the surrounding soil
- nature in cycles
- soil due to the force of gravity, osmosis and capillarity
- the atmosphere in a continuous cycle
* moves through the environment in a continuous cycle called the hydrologic cycle
- hydrosphere in a cycle
- kidneys and bladder thus diluting the urine
- pores in the rocks much like water moving through a sponge
- spaces between sand particles and the cracks in the rock
* moves to all parts of the soil by capillary action or gravity
- the tissue or region where the water potential is the lowest
- too quickly through sand
- unceasingly from the earth's surface into the atmosphere and back again
- up from the roots, through vessels and tracheids, to reach the leaves
* moves up the plant through xylem, which specialized tissue inside the plant
- xylem vessels and through the cell walls within the leaf in a continuous stream
* moving at a low velocity can move only small fine particles such as clay, silt and sand
- move only small, fine particles such as sand, silt, and clay
- downhill can carry away pieces of rock and soil
- downward into the soil carries dissolved calcium
- from the earth to the atmosphere is called evaporation
- in the rock, below the water-table is called groundwater
- out of the soil into the plant is also an example of water moving uphill
* moving through an underground tunnel creates a small electric charge
- the molecular structure of soft lenses carries oxygen with it
* natural appetite suppressant
- force of erosion everywhere on Earth
- lubricant to all parts of the body, and helps the body discard waste naturally
- resource that gift for all humans and animals to use and benefit from
- solvent that eventually dissolves almost anything
- symbol of cleansing and newness of life
* natural, but often-scarce resource, which is essential for human life.
* naturally travels downhill or downstream
- varies in taste and odor at different times of the year
* nearly incompressible fluid.
* necessary component in several physical and chemical weathering processes
- to our environment
* necessary element in industry, and to attain self-sufficiency in food production
- that is attractive to all birds
- part of their habitat
* necessity for every living thing
- wetlands and a precondition for maintaining wetland structure and function
- in sustaining the lives of all biological organisms
- when making concrete bricks
* needs a nucleus, or core, upon which to form crystals
- surface to condense on
* needs for excretion
- nitrogen excretion
- to stay clean at home, and it also needs to stay clean where it is collected
- vary - time, soils, species, size, temperature, humidity, wind, light
* never changes
- stands still for a longer time to avoid bacteria growing
- stops, it's always flowing
* no-calorie beverage and can be consumed with meals and snacks.
* non-living thing.
* non-renewable resource.
* nonliving natural thing.
* normal byproduct of combustion in engines.
* nourishes our blood and cells and prevents the build up of toxic waste in our bodies.
* now becomes very important in the smelting process within the earth.
* nurtures infectious bacteria
- the earth and earth absorbs water
* nutrient, just like carbohydrates, fats, protein, vitamins, and minerals.
* oak frequently produces heavy acorn crops that provide food for many species of wildlife.
* occurs in sugar in three basic forms
- the liquid state as rain and dew
- three forms in nature
- naturally in three forms that people see every day
* offers natural resistance and provides relief to aching muscles and joints
* often acts as a lubricant along the base of the mass movement
- fills complex craters sufficiently intact to retain a central depression
- flows below ground for some distance and emerges as pure springs
- forms small ponds in the depressed centers of the polygons
- lubricates faults, filling in fractures and jogs
* only crosses isopycnal surfaces by mixing
- inches deep can be next to water that is several feet deep
* operates very differently than other liquids consumed.
* orchids early in the day, so the roots are dry at night.
* organizes detergent into soap bubbles.
* originating from mountain snow melt determines seasonal lake levels
- in the Caribbean Sea wash the shores of Ireland
* particiles only travel in a small circle as a wave passes.
* particles farther below the surface also trace out circular paths as a wave passes.
* passes a special light bulb where ultraviolet radiation kills contaminants
- by diffusion from a region of higher to a region of lower concentration
* passes from cell to cell through perforations
- the mouth into the large pharynx , which is lined by numerous gill-slits
- cell wall, through passageways in PM and tonoplast into vacuole
- pores easily
- the gravel bed, where a bacteria colony resides
* passing below the head travels more slowly and with higher pressure, creating lift
- through the earth has a higher potential than the minerals around it
* passively follows the ion gradient
- movement of sodium, due to solvent drag
* penetrates the soil better and the soil also holds more water.
* penetrating the pavement through cracks can cause damage in both warm and cold weather.
* percolates down through the soil through rainfall and recharges the portions of the aquifer
- vadose zone to the water table, forming a recharge mound
- from the surface and calcium carbonate features continue to grow in the darkness
- into a rupture zone after a quake
- through the soil profiles, carrying the salts with it
* percolating through the soil and bedrock causes saturation of the plains surface
- up through the sand exerts a drag force on the sand grains
* perfect medium to carry pollutants, unwanted vibrations and electromagnetic fields.
* phenomenal substance.
* physiological requirement.
* picks up energy from the sun and collects the energies that are stored in the earth
- wastes from both human and animal activities
* plants regularly if rain is insufficient but avoid wetting the foliage
- to increase healthy growth
- until they become established
- weekly during hot, dry, periods
* play an important role in maintaining the health and performance of the birds
- weight gain of broiler
- daily with food coloring, household utensils, etc
* plays a central role in assuring an adequate food supply
- the evolution and health of ecosystems and climate processes
- critical, but often ignored, role in our daily lives
* plays a crucial role in both the physics and the chemistry of star forming regions
- heat loss for seabirds
- fundamental part in our everyday life
- huge role in our everyday lives
* plays a key role in pale-yellow iris growth
- producing slope failure
- large role in disaster relief work
- limited role once the victim can no longer breathe
* plays a major role in agricultural production, municipal use, recreation and habitat
- weather, despite making up such a small fraction of the atmosphere
* plays a number of important roles in self-heating reactions
- significant role, being the heat-carrying media
- very large role in the formation of desert landforms
- vital physiological role in the intestine
* plays a vital role in nearly every bodily function
* plays an enormous role in how well our body functions
- essential role in the stability of foods
* plays an important part as well, as a symbol of a woman's sexual desire
* plays an important role in all of the body's systems and it's overall performance
- plant functions
- any weight-loss plan
- controling the temperature, as well as circulation and elimination
- photosynthesis in several ways
- redistributing energy
- the world economy
- weathering and breaking down rock
- important, life-sustaining role for dialysis patients
- important roles in the circulation of the earth's surface elements
* plays many roles in life
- vital roles in a healthy pregnancy
* plumps the skin, reduces aging lines and increases resistance to bacterial infection.
* polar compound, where as acetone is less polar and it evaporates quickly
- liquid whereas oil non-polar liquid
* polar molecule and good solvent for ionic and polar solutes
- has good heat transfer, so it good microwave-able material
- oil is non-polar
- as show in the figure below
- because the two hydrogen atoms are slightly to one side of the molecule
- made up of on atom of hydrogen and two atoms of oxygen
* polar molecule, composed of two hydrogen atoms bonded to a single oxygen atom
- resulting from the uneven distribution of charge in the molecule
- which means that there is an unequal sharing of electrons
- solvent and dissolves polar and ionic molecules
* polluted by chemicals or organic matter often supports only a few kinds of plants and animals
- toxics threatens our health and the health of our families
* pond where raccoons can have a drink.
* ponding in a depression forms a lake.
* poor medium for condensation polymerisation
- nucleophile due to low polarizability and high electronegativity of oxygen
- solvent of non-polar groups
* pouring off roofs or charging through ditches can cut a large hole in the soil
- straight onto the ground primary cause of wet basements and crawl spaces
* pours into the mouth of the shark and exits though the gill openings.
* power unchangeable by time.
* powerful erosive force on the planet
- force of change
- force, changing the shapes of continents
- indicator of sustainability
- solvent, it stores heat and cold well
* precious and expensive commodity in many countries and cultures
- finite resource in Texas
* precious and limited resource of the world over
- source here and throughout the world
* precious commodity and there limited supply in most communities
- at sea
* precious commodity in Culebra
- Texas, and businesses are favored when they conserve freshwater
- our semi-arid state
- the arid Southwest
- that is wasted by the meat industry
- life-giving resource
* precious natural resource that is in short supply in California
* precious resource in the desert state of Utah
* preciously scarce resource for all living things in the desert.
* preferred carrier when the pharmaceutical composition is administered intravenously
* prerequisite for all life on Earth.
* presents statistics on water supplies and industrial water.
* preserves life and cleanses.
* pretty heavy liquid, which explains why most people float in water instead of sink.
* prevents dehydration, keeps skin healthy and aids in digestion
- the tree from drying out and loosing color
- urinary tract, bladder, and kidney infections
* primary determinant of the character of natural ecosystems and modern economies
- requirement for many food production systems
- source for hydration
* primrose is common throughout Mississippi in ponds, lakes, ditches, and swamps.
* probably exists today, below the icy crust of Jupiter's moon, Europa.
* problem because water collects at the bottom
- for many African countries
* produces ideal breed environments
- negative ions, which can magnetize particles in the air, such as dust
* promotes better digestion and intestinal function
* protects the animals from bloodsucking insect pests and the oppressive heat of the day.
* provides a medium for harmful bacteria, mold, yeast and fungi to grow over time
- way to break the tension buildups of stress through relaxation
- an environment for living things
- fish and wildlife habitat, and supports a lush tropical forest
- moisture while oil seals in moisture, preventing evaporation
- nutrition and lubrication of cartilage
- relief from the heat and camouflage while hunting
- suitable habitats
- support for the body's joints yet optimizes the resistance to train the musculature
* provides the link between the study of soils, rivers, lakes and oceans and the lithosphere
- medium in which all metabolic reactions take place
- transportation for blood, nutrients, antibodies and waste
* public resource
- trust to be guarded at all levels of government
* purifier, both of body and of soul.
* puts out fire and air evaporates water
- fire, and fire evaporates water
- fires by cooling the burning material below the temperature needed for combustion
* quenches a flaming fire, and alms atone for sins
- our thirst and is used also used in cleaning
* quick and inexpensive medium for quenching
- first-aid in a poisoning emergency
* quickly absorbs many of the light wavelengths that are used in photosynthesis
- quenches lava, turning the outer surface of flows to glass
* ranks second only to oxygen as essential for life.
* rapidly disperses scents and almost everything underwater has a scent.
* raspberries plants during the day.
* rather important substance in many ways.
- out and covers the earth
* reaches the leaves from the roots by transpiration
- sensitive nerve endings through tiny pores in the snout's hairless leathery skin
* reactant in many decay processes
- photosynthesis and it is important for many other reactions
* reacts in many different ways.
* reacts with more substances than any other compound
- oil to form sludge and acids, and the result is accelerated engine wear
- the rocks in the presence of carbon dioxide
- uranium, thorium, and structural metals under certain conditions
* readily moves into the permeable alluvium and into fractures in the marl and limestone.
* recycles extremely slowly underground, too slowly to flush out or dilute toxic chemicals
- very slowly underground, too slowly to flush out or dilute toxic chemicals
* reduces armadillo damage
- dryness
- friction, and allows the ice to move faster
- the effect of gravity on the body
- light very differently from typical terrestrial materials
- the amount of pollution in our world
* regional rather than a global resource.
* regulates body temperature, carries away waste, and delivers nutrients throughout the body
- nutrients and oxygen to cells, and removes wastes
* regulates the Earth s temperature
- body's cooling system
* reigns as the limiting constraint for all economic activities.
* relates to kidneys.
* relaxes the pelvic floor muscles.
* released by plants product of.
* remaining in the root area forces air out, causing the roots to die from suffocation.
* remains above the surface, accumulates, and runs off in large amounts
- as a water droplet clinging to a dust particle
- at the surface, accumulates, and runs off in large amounts
- chemically unchanged, retaining the beneficial minerals
- high in many areas and on many rivers in the state
* remains in alligator holes throughout the year except during severe drought conditions
- the liquid state over a wide range of temperatures
- liquid within a large range of temperatures
- near the surface only as ice
- several years
* remarkable compound.
- oils on the skin
* removes the dyes and chemicals while heat causes shrinkage
- effect of gravity upon the body
- heat from a fire
- resource because it is circulated in the water cycle
- resource, but finite in quantity
* renewable, but finite resource.
* repelling agents still find two large fields of application in leather finishing.
* replaces the grass or lawn seen in many European and American gardens.
* replenishable resource, which comes from rain.
* represent a populous part of the world, people multitudes, nations, and tongues.
* represents both the abyss, and the fertile
- emotion, the womb and fertility
- healing and rebirth
- intuition, love and most other emotions
- life while fire represents light
- man, man is born of water, man is made up mostly of water
- purification of human beings
* represents the cleansing and the mountains represent where the people came from
- process of washing something away
* required ingredient for every living thing on Earth.
* requires energy to convert from a liquid to a gaseous state
* requires for excretion
- heat to evaporate
* resists temperature changes.
* resource most farmers once took for granted.
* restores the body fluids and quenches thirst better than anything else.
* retaining basins also allow water to be concentrated around the plants
- ditches also allow water to be concentrated around the plants
* retains heat longer than land, and also takes longer to heat and cool
* returning seawards often is in rip currents which pass the breakers zone.
* returns to Earth as precipitation
* returns to the air by evaporation from the sun and through transpiration in plants
- atmosphere through evapotranspiration
- earth in the form of rainfall, snowfall, sleet, dew and hail
- land surface at lower elevation than where it infiltrated
- surface by condensation in the atmosphere and precipitation
* rids the body of waste materials.
* rises above water table due to surface tension
- against the force of gravity
- by capillary action as soil dries
- from the ocean into clouds, the clouds move up over the mountain, and rain falls
- in the container due to an imbalance in pressure
- to the surface under hydrostatic pressure
- toward the surface of the soil
- up tree from roots to leaves through small tubes
* rising in springs and wells indicates rain.
* roses early in the day and avoid wetting the foliage.
* rows daily to promote germination and growth of young seedlings.
* royal coupling of hydrogen and oxygen.
* run off tends to be more concentrated away from the arch seams.
* running off a lawn or driveway during a heavy rain is nonpoint source runoff
- roads contains sediment, Phosphorus, and pollutants from cars
- upland areas picks up particles of soil and other debris as it moves downhill
* runs between the beak tips as a result of adhesion and capillary action
- down the furrows between plant rows
- downhill and stands in low places
- for only a few hours each day
- most of the year especially after a wet season
* runs off instead of going into the surface
- the land but never reaches the sea
* runs off the surface at a medium to slow rate
- negligible or low rate or is ponded
- rapid rate
- before it has an opportunity to soak into the soil
- slowly off the surface
- through the voids in the pavement to the soil underneath
* runs, and the cypress runs, and the wind runs in the wind, and the earth runs within itself.
* rushes in along with the potassium and dilutes what's inside the cell.
* rushes into the bladder as the inside and outside pressures equalize
- intestine to dilute the lactose
* saturates the soil and swells the mosses.
* saturating the soil forces worms to the surface.
* scarce and dwindling resource in Jordan
- valuable resource essential to human and animal life
- commodity in Africa
- national resource as well as an essential of life
- natural resource, but is at a constant total quantity
* scarce resource for the toads and they emerge with the first moistening of soil
- used in the agriculture, forest, and energy sectors
- resource, key for life of the people and the nature of our planet
* seeks to change everything it touches.
* seems magical because it changes form and is found in three states of existence
- to have special powers in getting rid of stress and rejuvenating our body
* seep s into cracks and crevice s in rock.
* seeping down from the land surface adds to the ground water and is called recharge water.
* seeps directly into the soil without wetting the leaves and flowers
- down into the ocean floor where it picks up mineral and nutrients
* seeps from between layers of rock on the wall of a cliff, crater, or other type of depression
- the blood vessels into the surrounding tissue, causing puffiness
* seeps into cracks and fractures in rock
- where it freezes and expands
- microscopic holes in the structure of the wood of a plant
* seeps into the cracks in mountain rocks, then freezes, causing the rocks to break open
- ground and flows under the influence of gravity towards the north
- soil and feeds the roots of the plants
* seeps through landfills and toxics end up in the water table
* selectively filters out light from the water.
* separates places.
* serious contaminant of hydraulic systems.
* serves a dual purpose in masonry mortars
- when it comes to fitness
* serves as a conductor for electricity, and that can lead to serious injury or death
- medium of transportation of raw materials and foods within the plant
- temperature regulator
- vehicle for transport of nutrients in the body
- an important transport medium, allowing nutrients to travel from soil to plant cell
- target, detecting medium, and shielding
* serves as the absorbent to separate the ammonia from the butane
- primary conduit of energy transfer in the overall earth system
- to increase the elasticity of tissue and promote tissue integrity
* settles in the open cellular layers wherever there break and promotes rotting.
* settles the soil around the root system, and helps the roots transport nutrients to the plant
- roots, and helps the roots transport nutrients to the plant
* shapes the earth's surface in many ways
* sheets off the wood surface and allows the wood to breathe naturally.
* shows an unusually large viscosity increase as the temperature is lowered.
* shrinks on melting.
* sign of life and signifies being cleansed from sin
- rebirth, spiritual rebirth especially
* simple common sense approach to flushing the kidneys.
* sitting at the base of plants causes root rot.
* slowly evaporates into water vapor over time
- moves through the aquifer, which acts as a natural filtration system
- passes out of the food to appear as fuzzy, grayish ice crystals on the surface
* slows down the speed at which atoms travel
- the reaction between butadiene and maleic anhydride
* soaks deep into the soil which protects plants from water stress.
* soaks into different soils at different rates
- the ground through pores between mineral grains and through cracks in rock
* softening units also remove iron.
* softens and helps to dissolve most anything quickly or over time.
* sold in countries for consumption can come in cans, laminated boxes and even plastic bags
- glass bottles is always more expensive than water in plastic
* solvent and dissolves minerals from the rocks with which it comes in contact
- because it dissolves a substance
* solvent for vital plant nutrients
- water-borne coatings
- that is necessary for many chemical reactions in the body, including metabolism
- which can dissolve thousands of substances
* sometimes becomes turbid during the early stages of development of a nearby sinkhole
- called the universal solvent, but some substances dissolve poorly in water
- cycles from the atmosphere back to Earth with a dramatic counterpoint
- gathers in tree crotches or rock crevices
- takes sand away from beaches
* source of life and growth for all living things
- for everything, including human beings
* special code-word which means eternal life
* speeds the oxidation reactions.
* speeds up as it flows over the curved, hydrofoil shape
- the effects of alcohol
* spells sustain life and repair damage or inflict grave injury and icy devastation.
* spirit, moistening everything on earth.
* spouts with a mysterious glow created by underwater light.
* spreads for miles into the trees, giving fish as much forest access as birds
- out horizontally as it descends
* sprouts Rapidly growing shoots that arise from latent buds on branches or trunks.
* stabilizes body temperature carries nutrients to cells and waste away from cells.
* standing for just a few days can produce many mosquitos
- in flower pots is an ideal breeding place for mosquitoes
* stands for inordinate amount of time
- liquid or something cold
- on top of pond ice
* stay in an inverted cup held there by atmospheric pressure.
* stimulates digestion.
* stimulates the capillaries in our skin to increase blood flow
- elimination process, removing wastes and toxins from the body
- life inside the seed
- touch and temperature nerve fibers in the skin
* stored under the earth's surface plentiful, yet precious, resource in most areas of Ohio.
* stores energy
* stores in stem tissue
- succulent tissue
* strongly absorbs infrared energy and weakly reflects red light.
* submerges the taste of food while chemical concoctions shield it.
* substance more precious than oil and gold
- needed for the construction of molecules
- without stability
* supports all forms of life
- life in the Georgia Basin and vital component of a complex ecosystem
- only so many forage fish, so many predators
- the bodies of living things
* suppresses the appetite and helps the body metabolize stored fat.
* suppresses the appetite naturally and helps metabolize stored fat
* surely has gravity.
* surrounding the cell has fewer solutes.
* surrounds harbors.
* sustains human life, it sustains our environment, and it sustains our cultures
* sustains the essence of existence
* swells the cells that give the blades shape.
* symbol of creation and purification
- life and nourishment
- luck and the Chinese word for water is soi
- renewal and new life
- the Torah
* symbolically implies biblical themes of refreshment, spirituality, and eternal life.
* symbolizes both life and death in hte Bible
- spirit and healing
- creative power to begin new life and to create in one's own life and prosper
- emotion, flow and the interrelationship of all things
- happiness in Thailand
- life, since nothing can grow without water
- purification and rebirth
- purification, ritual bathing, sanctified water
* symbolizes the blessings and benefits of salvation
- depth of the unconscious
- ocean of birth, life, death, and misery
- wealth and every time the lid is up, money flushes down the toilet
* taken from the ground can naturally take on some taste and odor of the surrounding ground.
* takes a bit more time to warm up and is able to retain the heat longer than land does
- as many shapes and forms as the embracing earth can allow
- longer to heat up than the land
- out the nutrients and the plants begin to pale in color
- some of the strain off the kidneys
* takes up more volume when it freezes so it becomes less dense
* taxis to connect commuters, shoppers and pleasure seekers to different neighborhoods.
* temperature a the shore can be lower due to currents bringing up cooler water from below.
* tends to attract to it more toxins than wet food does
- be a poor extinguishing medium for organic chemical fires
- bead up and roll off a lettuce leaf
- concentrate sand-sized particles in particular areas
- form aggregates in which four other molecules surround each water molecule
- have smaller changes in temperature when it absorbs the same amount of heat
- lay in pools, and debris accumulates on flat roofs because of their lack of run-off
- move rapidly and freely in the sand
- pass through the cuticle and into insects
- percolate slowly through overly clayey soils , and that can lead to puddling
- pull in on itself
* tends to run off and cause erosion rather than to soak in
- of clay soil
- spread burning liquid if large amounts used
- tie people together
* then diffuses from the soil into the root xylem due to osmosis.
* then evaporates at the same rate as healthy turf grass of plants
- to become clouds, which move over continents to rain again
- flows from the nephron into the blood by osmosis
- infiltrates the soil and flows to the ocean as runoff
- loses much of it's desirable properties as a fluid and a solvent
- penetrates between the fringe of coral and the land, forming a lagoon
- reappears during the formation of new stars and planets from the interstellar medium
- rinses off bacteria
- rises up from beneath the surface to replace the water that was pushed away
* therefore flows into the body by osmosis
- has a much higher specific heat than all other common materials
* thousand times more dense than air.
* thus freezes and thaws rather easily
- moves out of the tubules and ducts by osmosis into the interstitial spaces
- plays a prominent role in Vedic cosmogony
* transmits light of every color and, therefore, looks clear.
* transports the nutrients and waste products throughout the body.
* traveling through the soil is cleansed before it enters streams.
* travels across the osphradium
- to many places in many different ways
- under pressure throughout the system
- up roots to the rest of the plant
* treeing can be electromechanical or elechemical in nature.
* trickles into natural rock joints and freezes into ice, widening the fracture.
* triggers the release of enzymes in the stomach that are fundamental to digestion.
* turns brown-red in cooking or upon heating.
* turns into ice when cooled
- steam when heated
- to ice when it cools below freezing
* turns to steam if it gets hot enough
- when it is heated to the boiling point
- up in fuel in all aircraft
* two-edged sword that can either help or hurt when used during a freeze.
* two-electron ligand.
* type of matter.
* typical fluid used by pumps in applications such as irrigation and cooling, among others.
* undergoes evaporation
* unique chemical
- liquid and is the most common liquid on our blue planet
- substance which defies all chemical analysis
* uniquely polar molecule, like a little magnet.
* universal solvent , dissolving many substances found in nature.
* universal solvent and allows important chemical reactions to take place
- because it dissolves a great number of solutes
- in the biosphere
* uptake empties pores resulting in the movement of air into the pores
- in anthurium stems is affected by the composition of the vase solution
* use efficiency - ratio of water available for the crop to water applied to the soil
- and carbon isotope composition of plants in a cold desert environment
- as a method for predicting water use by weeds
- in crop production
- translates into less water being removed from the aquifer
* used for irrigation is chlorinated or otherwise known to be disease free
- in homes contains varying amounts of minerals
* uses for drink water
- livestock water
- nasal irrigation
* uses in food preparation
* usually comes from condensation, which can be prevented by keeping the tank full of fuel
- contains trace elements which vary with location
- determines soil color and influences the vegetation found on a site
- enters the surface sediments as precipitation
- flows year-round from a limited number of springs
- gets into the mouths of small children, providing a possibility for infection
- has other substances dissolved in it
- seeps to the surface in several springs
- soaks in rather than running off
* valuable and limited natural resource
* valuable natural resource relatively abundant in Japan
* valuable resource that is shared by everyone and often taken for granted
- most people take for granted
- sustains our industry, our natural diversity, and our health
- resource, and water shortages are a serious problem in many parts of the world
* vaporizes along the lakeshore and turns to ice.
* vending machines are systems where customers fill their own containers with treated water.
* verily is food, fire the food-eater.
* versatile solvent owing to the polarity of the water molecule
* very complex medium
- different thing from the gases it's made from
* very good conductor and directs heat away from the body
- solvent, and all natural waters contain dissolved substances
- hard medium to move through with speed and power
- hospitable environment for the formation of life
* very important and limited resource in Singapore
- element in training and racing
- example of hydrogen bonding
- factor in maintaining good circulation
- ingredient for a healthy compost pile
- nutrient that is often taken for granted
* very important part of having frequent bowel movements
- weathering agent in deserts
* very polar compound
- poor conductor for oxygen
- unforgiving medium in which to move
- unique liquid
* vital and sometimes scarce resource
* vital natural resource, particularly in the arid southwest
* vital resource for human health, economic development and environmental quality
* vital resource that can bring about natural resource regeneration
- living organisms require in order to survive
- which is much too precious to waste
- source for our existence
* vitally essential element for all living beings.
* wants to move back into blood-capsular fluid hydrostatic pressure
- run down and follow the line of gravity
* warmed by the sun expands and rises as it becomes less dense.
* washes away a woman's vaginal lubrication, which can make penetration uncomfortable
- soft earth, or when confronted by rocks, seeks a way around
- the natural oils in rubber that keep it elastic
- volatile sulfur that causes teary eyes
- out surfactant, a substance that allows our lungs to inflate easily and fully
* weighs about eight pounds per gallon
- ten pounds per gallon
- more than a heavy wood such as oak, but half as much as bricks
* well known blowing agent still used in the production of some polyurethane foams.
* well-known example of such a material.
* wills have results.
* wondrous medium.
* works A round-up of research into ways of using water more efficiently and keeping it clean.
* works to keep muscles and skin toned
- protect the mucous lining in the stomach
* yielding rocks are typically sandstones and, occasionally, coal seams.
+ Amaṯa, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: 1961 establishments :: Pitjantjatjara
* There is a school, a general store and a health clinic. Supplies are delivered once per week and mail is delivered twice per week. Water comes from bores and is stored in tanks. A swimming pool was opened in June 2007.
+ Causality, Causality in Philosophy, David Hume: Logic
* There is a third element, called force or necessity. Water is usually fluid and transparent. From these properties, it is not apparent however that a man can suffocate in it. Hume, 'Enquiry' 4.1.
+ Christian symbolism, Early Christian symbols, Elemental symbols
* Elemental symbols were often used by the early Church. Water is an important symbol to Christians. Water is symbolic in baptism. It may also mean cleansing or purity. Fire symbolizes both the Holy Spirit and light. It is often used in the form of a candle flame. The sources of these symbols comes from the Bible.
+ Classical element: Ancient Greece :: Science
+ Density: Measurement :: Matter
* Temperature has an effect on density. When the temperature of a substance increases,the density decreases because the atoms are moving all around the place having less mater in one space. When the temperature of a substance of a substance decreases, the density increases because the atoms move slower making the atoms stay in one place. Many substances follow this rule, but there are exceptions. Water is one such exception. When most substances freeze, the substance is more dense. When water freezes, the water molecules are actually farther apart instead of being closer together. This is because the molecules form crystals. The way the water molecules are arranged in an ice crystal makes it less dense than liquid water.
+ Digestion: Digestive system
* Food slowly enters the small intestine from the stomach. This is where nutrients are taken into the blood. It then enters the large intestine. Water is taken away from it. The food that is left is called feces. The feces are stored in the rectum until it can leave the body through the anus.
+ Electric potential
* The negative ones are attracted to the positive ones but cannot get to them because there is a wall between them in the battery. So you make them go 'around the house and through the back door' i.e. you make a circuit which goes from the negative side to the positive side. Then the negative ions go through the wire and mix with the positive ones. When all the negative ones go to the other side the battery is flat and needs to be recharged. Think of a turbine in water. Water passes through it moving down and turns it. When the negative ions move through the wire they go through things like bulbs, microwaves etc. Instead of moving them, they collide into them, but only some go through. When they collide they produce light and heat. The reason why we have electrical appliances today is because these negative ions collide into the positive ions in a circuit.
* Lakes, oceans, and rivers are made of water. Rain is water that falls from clouds in the sky. If water gets very cold, it freezes and becomes ice. Frozen rain can be ice or snow if conditions permit. If water gets very hot, it boils and becomes steam. Water is very important for life. However, some studies suggest that by 2025 more than half of the people around the world will not have enough water.
* Water is a fluid. Water is the only substance on earth that exists naturally in three states. People know of over 40 anomalies about water. This expansion can cause pipes to break if the water inside them freezes.
+ Erosion, Erosion by water
+ Fact, Facts as statements, False statements: Philosophy
+ Fuel cell, How to get energy: Energy
* Water is a molecule that consists of one oxygen atom and two hydrogen atoms. It takes energy to separate water into oxygen and hydrogens. And energy is released when they are put back together. A fuel cell does the latter.
+ Getty Center, Central Garden: Museums in California :: Buildings and structures in Los Angeles, California :: J. Paul Getty Trust :: Art museums
* San Diego Union-Tribune', November 30, 1997. Water plays a major role in the garden. A fountain near the restaurant flows toward the garden and appears to fall into a grotto on the north garden wall. The resulting stream then flows down the hillside into the azalea pool. The designers placed rocks and boulders of varying size in the stream bed to vary the sounds from the flowing water. A maze of azaleas floats in the pool, around which is a series of specialty gardens.
+ Geyser, Causes, Form and function: Geology
* Most importantly, the temperatures near the bottom of the geyser become high enough to start boiling the water. Steam bubbles come out of the top of the column. They burst through the geyser's vent. Some water flows or splashes out. This makes the weight of the column of water and the pressure on the water below less. When this pressure is released, the hot water turns into steam. It boils violently.
+ Great Lakes, Geography: Ecology
* Though the five lakes have separate basins, they form a single, connected body of freshwater. The lakes connect the east-central interior of North America to the Atlantic Ocean. Water also drains from the Chicago River on the south. The Chicago River originally flowed into Lake Michigan. The flow was artificially reversed to protect the quality of Chicago's drinking water that comes from Lake Michigan.
+ Gristmill: Grains
* A 'grist mill' consists mainly of a waterwheel and 2 stones for grinding grain into flour. Water pushes the wheel causing it to spin. This movement causes an axle inside to turn. The axle is connected to a gear which causes the grinding stones to spin. At the top, there is a chute filled with grain. The grain slowly falls through into the grinding stones.
+ Ice: Chemical compounds :: Water
* Ice' is the common name for frozen water. Other liquids, such as ammonia or methane or milk could be called ice when they freeze but the name would always be 'milk ice', for instance, instead of just 'ice'. Water becomes 'ice' when it is very cold.
+ Island
* An 'island' is a piece of ground that is surrounded by water. Water is all around an island. Islands are smaller than continents.
+ Israel, Economy, Agriculture
* The government develops, helps finance, and controls agricultural activity, including fishing and forestry. Israel produces most of the food it needs to feed its people, except for grain. Agricultural exports provide enough income to pay for any necessary food imports. Most Israeli farmers use modern agricultural methods. Water drawn from the Sea of Galilee irrigates large amounts of land in Israel.
+ Kaltjiti, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: Pitjantjatjara :: 1934 establishments
* Mail is delivered to Kaltjiti twice a week. Supplies are delivered every two weeks. Water is provided from four bores and placed in storage tanks for pumping to the community. Electricity comes from a diesel generator. Kaltjiti does not have a permanent police presence. State police are based at Marla and run patrols to the area.
+ Makiri, South Australia: Indigenous Australian communities :: Settlements in South Australia :: Pitjantjatjara :: Waterholes of Australia
* Makiri is located in a region of shrubland and sand dunes. The outstation here was established in the early 1980s. Since 1984, it has been governed and supported by the Irintata Homelands group from Kaltjiti. There is one house with solar power. Water is supplied from a rainwater tank and a bore. It is often used as a research base by scientists, as the area supports several endangered species.
+ Mimili, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: Pitjantjatjara :: 1920s establishments
* Mimili has an airstrip, and a small health facility. There is also a general store and a craft facility where art is made and displayed. A diesel generator supplies electricity to the community. Water is stored in tanks and comes from two bores. A police station was built in 2011, and state police are stationed there permanently. The local school has about 60 children. Attendance at the school benefited from the construction of a swimming pool, opened in October 2006.
+ New York City, Geography: Former capitals of the United States :: Cities with more than 500,000 inhabitants
* Water divides several parts of the city. Part of the Hudson River forms the border between Manhattan and the Bronx on one side, and the State of New Jersey on the other side. The East River forms the border between Manhattan on one side, and Brooklyn and Queens on the other side. Part of Long Island Sound forms the border between the Bronx and Queens. Newtown Creek is part of the border between Brooklyn and Queens. Some parts of the city are very separate from the others because of water, such as Far Rockaway in Queens and City Island in the Bronx.
+ Ocean, Color
* Although many people believe that the oceans are blue because the water reflects the blue sky, this is actually not true. Water has a very slight blue color that can only be seen when there is a lot of water. We then see the reflected light as the color of water.
+ Oil sands, Environmental issues: Oils :: Geology
* Getting the oil sands off the ground often destroys large areas of land. Much water is used to separate the oil from the sand and then left polluted. Global Environmental Harm'.
+ Oxbow lake, Why does this happen?: Lakes
* Water flows at different speeds at different parts of the river. At the banks, the water flows slowest. When the river bends, water flows faster on the outside of the bend than the inside. The fast water on the outside 'erodes' the outside of the bend. This means it breaks bits of the bank off. Together, these make the bend move in the direction of the outside of the bend.
+ Oxygen, Oxygen in nature: Nonmetals
* A drop of water. Water contains oxygen. This water is required by all living things to live.
+ Pipalyatjara, South Australia
* There is a small airstrip at Pipalyatjara. Mail is delivered once per week by air. Electricity comes from a diesel generator. Water comes from two bores and placed in storage tanks for pumping to the community. There is a school in Pipalyatjara, which also serves nearby Kalka.
+ Plant, Roots
* Water is transported from the roots to the rest of the plant through special vessels in the plant. When the water reaches the leaves, some of it evaporates into the air. Many plants need the help of fungi to make their roots work properly. Rhizobia bacteria in root nodules help some plants get nitrogen.
+ Ruminant, How rumination works, Details: Mammals
* The digesta is finally moved into the small intestine, where nutrients are absorbed. Water is absorbed in the large intestine, leaving the waste.
+ Sewage treatment: Waste management
* Cleaning bacteria may live in a small pond in simple works with enough land to build a pond. Larger works use machines to help the bacteria find the chemicals. Some works have rocks or pieces of plastic for the bacteria to grow on. Water is pumped over the rocks or plastic.
+ Surface tension, Effects in everyday life, Water: Basic physics ideas :: Fluid mechanics
* Rain water forms beads on the surface of a waxy surface, such as a leaf. Water adheres weakly to wax and strongly to itself, so water clusters into drops. Surface tension gives them their near-spherical shape, because a sphere has the smallest possible surface area to volume ratio.
+ Wallpaper, How to get rid of wallpaper, Water: Paper :: Construction :: Walls :: Printmaking
* Water is the easiest way to get rid of wallpaper. Water makes the wallpaper paste become not sticky, then the wallpaper falls off.
+ Water, Uses of water: Natural resources :: Hydrogen compounds :: Oxygen compounds :: Oxides
* It gives a medium for chemical reactions to take place, and is the main part of blood. It keeps the body temperature the same by sweating from the skin. Water helps blood carry nutrients from the stomach to all parts of the body to keep the body alive. Water also helps the blood carry oxygen from the lungs to the body. Saliva, which helps animals and people digest food, is mostly water. Water helps make urine. Urine helps remove bad chemicals from the body.
* Water is the main component of drinks like milk, juice, and wine. Each type of drink also has other things that add flavor or nutrients, things like sugar, fruit, and sometimes alcohol. The water in oceans is salt water, but lakes and rivers usually have unsalted water. The rest is salt water.
+ Well: Tools :: Aquifers
* Water is a problem for many African countries. Many charities are helping to build wells in local villages to help stop lengthy travel to distant water supply. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water birds:
Grey wagtail
* Most grey wagtails have bellies
- yellow bellies
* are water birds.<|endoftext|>### water channel:
Gutter
* Most gutters come in several sizes and shapes called profiles.
* also channel water away from the foundation.
* are channels
- conduits
- each subdi- vided into nine longitudinal channels and one transversal channel
- hand tools
* are located in roofs
- streets
- misfortune
- one of the two main causes for ice dams
- part of gable roofs
- the components that catch the rainwater as it runs off the catchment area
- workers
* contain edges and meshes contain nodes.
* even pull away from or fall off homes.
* help direct rainfall to downspouts.
* includes readsides
- sections
* mailing list.
* prevent damaging water from running across windows, doors, down the siding and into a house.
### water channel | gutter:
Clogged gutter
* are often responsible for rearing mosquitoes around the home.
* can cause water to backup into the house and lead to wall and ceiling damage.
River channel
* Most river channels contain water flowing at several velocities.
* can be good and bad therefore causing or preventing floods.
* display a variety of patterns when viewed from the air or on a map.<|endoftext|>### water channel:
Strait
* Most straits have strong secondary flows, across or counter to the main flow.
* Some straits have the potential to generate significant tidal power using tidal stream turbines.
* A 'strait' narrow, channel of water that connects two larger navigable bodies of water. It most commonly means a channel of water that is between two land masses, but it may also mean a navigable channel through a body of water that is not navigable, for example because it is too shallow, or because it contains an unnavigable reef or archipelago. The terms 'strait', 'channel', 'passage', 'sound' and 'firth' can be synonymous, but each is sometimes used with a slight difference of meaning. Many straits are economically important. Straits can lie on important shipping routes, and wars have been fought for control of these straits. Many artificial channels, called 'canals', have been constructed to connect two bodies of water over land.
* are the converse of isthmuses.
* connect separate seas and divide the territory of states.
Stream channel
* Most stream channels contain water.
* can be in contact with an unconfined aquifer that approach the ground surface.
* contain alternating regions of riffles and pools
Watercourse
* are bodies of water
- clearer, allowing for more sunlight to help aquatic plants grow
- sites
- watercourses
* follow ancient riverbeds, with gallery forest growing alongside.
* occur naturally, they serve to drain the land and assist in supporting flora and fauna. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Water quality
* Some water quality affects aquatic life
- growth
* affects consumption
- fish species differently
- the quality of education for Maine children
* can also affect the type of piping used for a geothermal system.
* can be a problem in hydroponic systems
- ponds
- change rapidly
- suffer from diffuse pollution by nutrients or pesticides
* can vary a great deal depending on source and time of year
- from city to city within a country
* can, and usually does, change considerably from top to bottom.
* concern for everyone in Arizona.
* depends on how well the source of the water is monitored, protected and analyzed.
* deteriorates with depth and is highly saline in some areas.
* faces threats from man's civilization, park visitors, and nature.
* fundamental indicator of aquatic ecosystem health.
* good indicator of whether sustainable development is taking place.
* has a direct impact on the value of lakefront property values
- water quantity
- major influence on aquatic life
- several different meanings
* impacts the health of our citizens, livestock, and wildlife.
* influences the health of many components of ecosystems, including humans.
* is affected by groundwater quality and the use of land on the shoreline
- the amount of industrial affluent discharged into canals and rivers
* is also important for our health and the environment
- terrestrial organisms
- poorer in ponds with large amounts of terrestrial vegetation
- related to larger patterns of land use over entire watersheds
* is an important cichlid aquarium consideration
- consideration when planning to raise animals
- issue to all people
- as important as quantity
- based on the bacterial, chemical, mineral, and solids content of the water
- critical for keeping clown loaches healthy
* is critical to the Everglades ecosystem
- health of the turtle
- survival of adults and juveniles
- defined in terms of the chemical, physical and biological content of water
* is degraded as a result of nutrient enrichment, toxic substances, and sediment
- by a wide variety of causes
- dependent on landuses within the watersheds
- determined by analyses of water samples
- essential for coral survival and growth
- everyone's responsibility
- impacted more frequently in the fall, winter, and spring than in the summer
* is important to both rural and urban populations
- the whole state
- measured in terms of physical, chemical, and biological quality
* is monitored and controlled continually, saving time and increasing yields
- in both watersheds before, during, and after timber harvesting
- part of their way of life and of ensuring our way of life
- particularly important to a flock affected by pox
- protected by many different laws
- the key to restoring grasses
* is the most important aspect of freshwater management
- environmental concern facing U.S. agriculture
- very dependent on the health of streams and waterways
* is very important for the survival of seahorses in an aquarium
- when keeping any fish as a pet
* is vital for human and ecological health as well as economic prosperity
- most human and ecological activities
* plays a role in the longevity of boilers, water heaters and water pumps
- an important role in disease epidemics in catfish culture
* refers to the physical, chemical, and biological characteristics of water.
* shapes the aesthetics and uses of a lake.
* varies from place to place
- greatly in the alluvial aquifers
- greatly, just as the quality of light varies
- with depth and location
### water soluble:
Few pesticide
* are water soluble.
* target one pest. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Acidic water
* Most acidic water affects health.
* Some acidic water flows into streams.
* can cause coral to expel their symbiotic algae, a phenomenon known as bleaching
- heavy metals such as copper and aluminum to be released into the water
- pipes to corrode
- reduce fish and aquatic invertebrate populations
* has amazingly positive effects on plant growth.
* increases products.
* is for germ killing, cleansing, sterilizing and healing treatment
- typically corrosive to any metal partsof the plumbing system
* mixes with deep water
Adequate water
* helps to flush out the metabolized fat and other excess waste.
* is also essential to keep body systems functioning efficiently
- crucial to both the health and economic development of communities
- necessary to prevent dehydration especially in cold, dry climates
Agricultural water
* are suitable for irrigation and livestock usages without any form of treatment
- without treatment
* comes from shallow wells, tubewells or springs.
Alkaline water
* Most alkaline water affects growth
* Some alkaline water has bases.
* causes arsenic, cadmium and selenium to dissolve
- loss of activity in many herbicides
* does conduct electricity.
* is the best drinking water for diatebetics and many other chronic ailments
- used for drinking and cooking
- water with special properties
Artesian water
* certain type of well water.
* comes from an aquifer higher than the natural water table.
* is confined under pressure, like water in a pipe.
* is water that flows up naturally through a bore hole
- is pumped from an artesian well
* phrase found on many bottled water containers and other refreshment products.
Bad water
* can make people sick.
* is indicated by cloudiness, bad smell, or a yellowish color
- the biggest killer of goldfish worldwide
* kills thousands every year.
Ballast water
* can contain aquatic plants, animals and pathogens.
* stabilizes ships, and is discharged at ports of call and en route.
Body water
* includes blood and other body fluids.
* is lost in urine, too.
Boil water
* Most boil water possesses thermal energy.
* Some boil water carries heat
- causes burns
* has effects
* possesses energy
* wills have results.<|endoftext|>### water:
Boiling water
* can be effective for a few mounds, especially when the ants are swarming
- cause burns
- concentrate potential nitrate contamination
* concentrates levels of nitrates in water.
* hardens eggs and softens potatoes.
* has a negligible effect on removing fluoride
- rhythms
* increase the levels of other contaminants.
* is ,in fact, the worst thing to do because it actually concentrates the nitrate
- an extremely effective means of disinfection
- by far the most reliable method to make water safe to drink
- caused by temperature and air pressure
- one of the safest methods of water purification
- pumped through a tube, where it mixes with ground coffee
- quite dangerous since it is easily spilled onto the skin
* is the best method of killing cryptosporidium
- way to ensure it is free of Giardia and other microorganisms
- most effective approach for killing cryptosporidium
- way to get rid of fire ants
- worst thing to do, experts say, because it actually concentrates the nitrate
- used to reshape the arms and hands
- vaporization of water
* is, in fact, the worst thing to do because it actually concentrates the nitrate.
* kills bacteria and parasites like giardia and cryptosporidium
- harmful bacteria and parasites
* kills the intermediate host
- organisms that can cause disease
* makes the nitrates or chemicals more concentrated and dangerous.
* produces large amounts of energy which are used to warm the planet
- steam
* remains at the same temperature for the entire time it's boiling.
* removes all gases
- chlorine, but concentrates fluoride
* takes up the aroma, and alcohol all the active properties. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Bottle water
* Some bottle water causes health problems.
* Some bottle water contains substances
- toxic substances<|endoftext|>### water:
Bottled water
* Most bottled water is purified by ozone.
* Some bottled water arises from natural sources such as springs, and is sold at premium prices
- features high sodium levels, something to be avoided
- waters contain natural or added carbonation
* can be as much as one hundred times more expensive than tap water.
* comes with many names.
* emits a yellowish sediment after a period of time, composed of iron hydroxide.
* good source of minerals.
* highly regulated product, subject to federal, state and industry standards.
* is also far more expensive than filtered water
- by far the fastest-growing segment of the beverage industry
- drinking water
- expensive and has a large environmental impact
* is located in backpacks
- refrigerators
- lower in minerals and salt
- no healthier than tap water
* is often no healthier or safer to drink than tap water
- superior in taste when compared to tap water
* is one of only five food products that have GMPs above what is required of all foods
- the most regulated industries
- recommended for use as drinking water
- regulated at the federal and state level
* is safe for pregnant women
- to use when preparing formula
* is sold at stores and some hotels in the country
- in supermarkets and convenience stores
- stored in plastic bottles and the chemicals in the plastic leech into the water
- used for drinking
* is useful as an alternative to soft drinks when thirsty
- to use during an emergency
- widely available in hotels, restaurants and convenience stores
* short-term solution to meet the needs of drinking water and food preparation.
* staple of daily life.
* tends to contains fewer impurities.
* type of purchased water.
* very popular beverage nowadays all over the world.
+ Santorini, Water: Greek Islands :: Calderas :: Wine regions
* Bottled water is recommended for drinking. Tap water can be used for washing, bathing and cleaning your teeth. In the area of Oia the tap water that comes from the local desalination plant is drinkable.
Brackish water
* are poorer in species diversity than either the sea or fresh water.
* is needed to keep the mangrove ecosystem healthy
- saltier than fresh
- water which contains more sea salts than freshwater but less than the open sea
* occurs in coastal regions where sea water and fresh water are mixed.
Bromine water
* consists of elemental bromine mixed with water.
* decolorizes on reaction with ethyne.
* is also a weak acid that bleaches litmus.
Brown water
* can result from bogs draining into a lake.
* is indicative of coastal, inland or river trade.
* occurs when normal sediments in the water lines become agitated.
Canadian water
* are also part of the Pacific ocean.
* provide habitat for two resident species of marine reptiles all turtles.<|endoftext|>### water:
Carbonated water
* contains dissolved carbon dioxide gas.
* is called 'agua con gas' and still water is 'agua sin gas'
- part of soda
* supersaturated solution of carbon dioxide gas in water.
+ Supersaturation, Examples: Chemistry :: Thermodynamics
* Carbonated water is a supersaturated solution of carbon dioxide gas in water. At the start, the pressure in the bottle is very high. This means that more Carbon dioxide gas can be put into the water than at normal pressure. When the bottle is opened, the pressure falls to the normal level, and the carbon dioxide gas escapes very slowly. Certain things such as small bubbles in the bottle can make this process faster. Such bubbles can be caused by shaking the bottle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Chilled water
* is circulated through the catheter to protect healthy urethral tissue
- used for comfort cooling, dehumidification, and process cooling
* is used to cool down computers as well as operate the air conditioning systems
- provide air conditioning for most campus buildings
Chlorinated water
* can reduce microbial load if water is used during handling.
* dries out the ear canal, allowing bacteria or fungi to enter the skin.
* is located in swimming pools
- toxic to wildlife in ponds, rivers or streams
* source of free radicals.
City water
* Most city waters have chlorine or chlorine byproducts that can cause problems with young plants.
* can contain a lot of calcium, which ties up the iron in the soil
- have chlorine in it, which can cause baby boas to regurgitate
* has various chemicals added to it to kill off the bacteria, like fluoride.<|endoftext|>### water:
Clean water
* Most clean water has oxygen.
* can come from sump pumps, downspouts and other sources attached to sewer lines.
* is also essential to aquatic life
- hard to come by in Iraq as is enough food and proper disposal of raw sewage
- an economic concern as well as an environmental one
* is an important component in eating well
- resource, from economic and other social standpoints
- basic to life
- clears
* is critical to our nation's economy
- plants and animals that live in water
- sustaining aquatic and marine life
- the health of farm families and their livestock
* is essential for agriculture, industry and recreation to prosper
- both healthy people and a healthy economy in the Red River Basin
- good health
- outdoor recreation, many industrial processes, and life itself
- sound metabolic activities in the turkey
* is essential to Illinois' economy and quality of life
- our bodies cleansing system
* is essential to our lives and lifestyles, every single day
- our lifestyles, every single day
- survival
- way of life
- public health
* is essential to the health and prosperity of our citizens
- multibillion-dollar industry
- forced through the membranes while particles remain suspended
* is important for cranberry production today and for generations to come
- to fish, wildlife, and people
- integral to human health, healthy ecosystems and a productive economy
- needed for drinking, sanitation and sustaining agriculture and livestock
* is needed for good health and to prevent sickness
- odorless, colorless, void of unpleasant taste and free of microbial residues
- one of the most important resources in any community
* is required for fish life to survive
- mankind to survive
- safe water
- scarce and people suffer from diseases such as cholera and diarrhoea
* is the lifeblood of our future
- one essential for healthy mollusks
- very important for washing the books and for the workers to keep themselves clean
* is vital for health
- humans, birds, and other wildlife
- to the nation's economy
* makes for livable neighborhoods.
* means lots of living things can thrive there.
* resource to share and respect.
Cloudy water
* can complicate the lives of aquatic organisms
- cut down on sunlight penetration and effect plant growth
- frustrate another animal - humans
* is generally the result of oxygen trapped in the water
- saturated with air
- usually the result of dissolved air in the water lines
Clustered water
* has no flavor and is colorless and odorless.
* raises the energy of the cell. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Coastal water
* All coastal waters remain closed to the harvest of shellfish.
* are a source of cod, capelin, lump fish, and sculpin
- particularly rich in meroplankton
* have a particular importance in supporting smaller vessels and low impact fishing.
* provide foraging grounds for hawksbill and green turtles.
* support critical habitat and nurseries for a vast number of important marine species
- fish, birds, invertebrates, and other wildlife
* teem with marine fauna, particularly mollusks, for which the Philippines is noted.
Coconut water
* Some coconut water contains concentration.
* is considered as one of the best health drink
- crisp, cool, and refreshing, and it is often used in drinks in tropical regions
- high in electrolytes
- milk
* is the liquid substance within the nut
- number one aphrodisiac
Conserving water
* can help to reduce pollution of our waterbodies
- mean substantial savings in sewer, energy, and water bills
* has significant long-term effects in regard to water management.
* helps save money energy, and the water supply.
* is also another way to reduce energy bills
- the number one way to prevent water pollution
- very important during drought periods
* reduces health risks, too.<|endoftext|>### water:
Cool water
* COOL water keeps capillaries from dilating and helps prevent further absorption of the pesticide.
* Most cool water contains oxygen.
* Some cool water increases density.
* carries more oxygen and eases the metabolic furnace of the fish
- provides a more livable environment for many species of fish
* constricts the fruit, pulling in pathogens.
* flows to the hot engine, where the water absorbs the heat.
* helps make fatty substances form solids, which are easier to grind.
* holds a higher level of dissolved oxygen than warm.
* holds more oxygen than warm water, and fish consume less oxygen at lower temperatures
* is absorbed more rapidly
- heavier than warm water
- more dense than warm water and remains near the pond bottom
- preferred because it is absorbed more readily than warm, hot or ice water
* reduces skin damage and minimizes pain.
* stops the burning process and decreases pain and swelling.
* tends to dampen hurricane activity.
Corrosive water
* can also cause leaks in plumbing
- cause problems related to public health, aesthetics and economics
* is the most common problem followed by bacterial contamination.
Dark water
* Most dark water absorbs sunlight.
* hides blood flowing cold in the lake's tides.<|endoftext|>### water:
Deep water
* are high in nutrients because of the rain of organic particles from the surface
- usually cooler than shallow waters simply because they require more time to warm up
- warmer than shoal waters in winter
* can cause serious damage to a modern car's electrical system
- retard light penetration
* carry all of the oxygen to the deep sea.
* clams with two pairs of simple bipectinate gills used only for respiration.
* filters out ordinary cosmic radiation background from above.
* has little or no dissolved oxygen.
* is located in waterfalls
- trouble
* is, of course, the haven of safety for nearly all fish life.
* means different things in different places.
* returns to surfaces.
* works differently than shallow water.
Deeper water
* rises into the photic zone, carrying nutrients with it.
* supports longer waves.
Dehydrated water
* hydrogen atom-and the most compressed form of water is steam.
* is the perfect addition to all high-fiber, protein, and carbohydrate diets.
Deionized water
* Purified water to control viscosity.
* is checked for nitrites and nitrates
- used in the batch cleaning process to avoid contamination
* kind of water from which all minerals and foreign elements have been removed.
Dense water
* Most dense water produces environments.
* produces ideal breed environments | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Dirty water
* Most dirty water leads to health problems.
* Some dirty water causes sickness.
* can cause a number of infections among other things
- spread disease to humans and animals
* contains a large number of rot-causing organisms.
* host for disease organisms.
* is taken away through drains and sewers.
* leads to serious health problems
* provides a food supply for the bacteria.<|endoftext|>### water:
Distilled water
* absorbs flavor from vegetables and spices for great tasting soups.
* acts as a solvent in the body.
* can corrode materials such as iron and copper in plumbing systems
- some metals such as iron and copper
* comes from the steam of municipal water that has been boiled.
* conductor since it is pure.
* conducts no electricity because the ions have been removed from the water.
* contains no solids, minerals or trace elements, and has no taste.
* does conduct electricity.
* enters the body with no minerals but leaves the body with minerals.
* exposed to classical music takes delicate, symmetrical crystalline shapes.
* fair dielectric.
* has no minerals to build up on appliances
- the longest shelf life
* helps to clean out our cells, organs and fluids.
* insulator since it is pure.
* is also essential for chemical and pharmaceutical processing
- basically condensation
- devoid of micro-contaminates that are inherent in virtually are other sources
- drinkable water
- essentially dead and of little benefit to body, skin or eyes
- in reality steam that has condensed back into water
- liquids
- neither acidic nor basic
- preferred over tap water because tap water often contains harmful chlorine
- purified water that has gone through a distillation process
- recommended when mixing cleaners with water
- stressed to avoid contaminants and minerals therein
- tap water that had been boiled to steam
- the only water that can be taken into the body without damage to the tissues
* is the purest form of water, the universal solvent
- water available
- water of choice for drinking and cooking
- treated to remove the minerals found naturally in the water
* is used for cleaning records and CDs for many reasons
- in the lye mixture
* is used to minimize water deposits in the steam chamber and the pressure chamber
- prevent mineral deposits on the instrument surfaces
- vaporized and recondensed, leaving it free of dissolved minerals
- very hypotonic because it contains no solutes
- water that was boiled to steam and recondensed to water
* leaches out the unusable inorganic limestone, rock residue, etc.
* relatively poor conductor because it has very few ions.
* removes poisonous substances and inorganic mineral matter from the human body.
Domestic water
* can become unsafe to drink if proper hygiene measures are neglected.
* is heated by a solar-thermal water heater.
Drink water
* Most drink water has enormous health benefits
- helps constipation
* Some drink water comes from lakes.
* contains toxins.
* creates conditions.
* has benefits.
* has enormous benefits
Enough water
* can collect to produce mosquitoes.
* falls on the soil so that much of it passes down to the water table.
* helps constipation.
* insures that both digestion and metabolism are working at their optimum level.
Evaporated water
* is chemically pure
- condensed and fed to a biological system along with the sanitary wastewater
* major part of an ecosystem and is crucial to the water cycle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Excess water
* Most excess water carries pollutants
- enters oceans
* can be harmful to plants.
* can cause plant roots to rot
- the color to look pale and weak
- keep the soil too moist, which damages roots
- kill
- lead to anaerobic conditions
- promote fungus and root diseases
- result in wood rot
* causes diseases, reduced growth rate, and loss of stand
- roots to smother leading to reduced calcium uptake
* flows over the ground and takes rocks and other loose weathered material with it.
* generated by root pressure at night can escape through leaf valves called hydathodes.
* has effects.
* is absorbed when the plant is watered and slowly given off as the soil dries
- released periodically through urination and perspiration
- transpired back into the atmosphere as part of the hydrologic cycle
* prevents oxygen from reaching roots, a primary cause of root disease.
* reduces the ability of many plants to take up iron.
* saturates the soil and results in damage to the roots.
* wastes time and energy.<|endoftext|>### water:
Fluoridated water
* allows exchange in the teeth of fluoride ions for hydroxyl groups in apatite.
* helps provide whiter, brighter, cleaner, and healthier teeth.
* increases the cellular uptake of toxic heavy metals.
* is an effective way to reduce the problem of dental decay
- the only consumer drug that is unregulated
- very effective in reducing tooth decay
+ Apatite: Minerals
* In the mid-20th century it was discovered that communities whose water supply naturally contained fluorine had lower rates of dental caries. Fluoridated water allows exchange in the teeth of fluoride ions for hydroxyl groups in apatite.
Free water
* develops positive pressure with depth below the top of a wet satiated zone.
* exists on the crystal surface.
* is essential for entry and spread of the bacteria
- large bodies of water in oil
* is necessary for spore germination and infection
- the bacterium to enter wheat tissue
- removed in a simple exchange process by diffusion
- required for fertilization and the production of a new generation of plants
Freeze water
* mixes with dust.
* reflects energy.
Freezing water
* can burst a cast iron pipe over a foot thick
- cause problems for homeowners
- sometimes do a better job of keeping things warm than fire can
* expands cracking and breaking the rocks
- in soil
- with tremendous force
* expands, and it pushes the walls of the cracks apart, making the cracks wider.
* splits rocks from mountains. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Fresh water
* -Remove from bleach and rinse thoroughly with fresh water.
* Most fresh water enters oceans
- flows into sea
- has concentration
* Most fresh water is frozen solid
- stored as ice or underground
- passes over gills
* Some fresh water causes brain infection
- severe brain infection
* Some fresh water covers earth surfaces
- enters atmospheres
* Some fresh water has hollows
- large hollows
- mixes with seawater
* becomes brackish as it approaches a coastal area.
* can hold more than salt
- really mess up the body's mineral balance and cause blood cells to swell and burst
- sit on top of salt water for extended periods of time
* comes into the ocean primarily as rain and snow, and runoff from rivers and melting ice.
* contains about one hundredth of the salt concentration of seawater
- no salt, no contamination, and is drinkable
* creates a hypotonic environment for aquatic organisms.
- the gill chamber from behind in the form of a current
- through a variety of small rivers and creeks
* evaporates from oceans.
* floats on top of salt water
- the seawater in a layer that gradually thins as it moves seaward
- the marsh, mixes nutrients with seawater and helps keep the marsh productive
* fluxes into and out of the central Greenland Sea region.
* forms layers
- surface layers
* freezes and expands, causing the chalk to crack open and break apart.
* fundamental resource, integral to all environmental and societal processes.
* has a mass density of one gram per cubic centimeter
* held underground is called groundwater.
* is an agent of nature, ever present, always active, always at work
- attractant, especially in winter
- important natural resource necessary for the survival of all ecosystems
- critical to life
- crucial for life on land
- derived from three permanent rivers
* is essential for human health, food production and economic development
- found in rivers, lakes, ponds, in subterranean waters, and in the atmosphere
* is less dense than salt water and floats on top
- lethal to a lobster
- limited to runoff during wet weather
- liquids
- made from sea water through an expensive evaporation system
- more apt to be contaminated than ocean waters
* is needed in liquid form
- to grow crops
* is obtained from rain water, surface water and ground water
- rainfall and from desalinization
- often more abundant in some seasons than in others
- present in the form of shallow groundwater
- scarce in Algeria
* is the lifeblood of farming
- good habitat
- most fundamental resource sustaining life on the continents
- used faster than groundwater is recharged
* is used for cooking and drinking only
- flushing
- rinsing the apples
- vital to the survival of the Key Deer
- water that has very little salt in it
* meets salt water
* precondition for human life and industrial development.
* produces more fresh water fish such as bass.
* renewable and variable, but finite natural resource.
* triggers the stinging cells. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Freshwater
* All freshwater is highly coloured with organic matter seepage from bogs and fens.
* Most freshwater algas find in lakes
- comes from seasonal rains, which vary with climatic zone
- is locked in the polar ice caps
* are poorer in phyla
- therefore vital for our food security
* contains much less salt than the ocean
* diatoms as indicators of environmental change in the High Arctic.
* freezes at a higher temperature than seawater.
* invertebrates from the Bermuda Islands and their zoogeographical affinities.
* is water
* lakes and ponds with extant species.
* marshes up river are distinguished by sawgrass, bulrush and pickerel weed
- with aquatic vegetation like lily pads and pickerelweed
* moves rapidly across the alveolar-capillary membrane into the microcirculation.
* often show a characteristic stratification.
* only reaches the Colorado River Delta when reservoirs created by man-made dams are full.
* sustains life.
* tardigrades inhabit aquatic mosses, algae, rooted and aquatic vegetation, mud.
### water | freshwater:
Freshwater fishing
* is good in lakes and local rivers.
* pursuit that is as diverse as the angling public.
Tidal freshwater
* marshes support a greater diversity of plant species than do salt marshes.
* wetlands form in upstream coastal wetlands where the influence of salt water ends.
Frozen water
* expands and causes the crack to get bigger.
* expands, cracks it some more, and lets more water seep in.
* floats at the lake surface.
* is found on chunks of rock hurtling into our atmosphere
- lighter than water, which is why ice floats in water
- plentiful in the solar system
- solids
- the form they have discovered on the surface of the Moon and Mars
Geothermal water
* is used to help speed the growth of fish, prawns and alligators.
* potential source of energy but has been developed only locally in Alaska.
Gray water
* can rapidly become black water.
* has few long-term effects on soil.
* is captured and used for flushing and for watering plants
- the water that is produced during bathing and in the galley
- waste water from the bath tub, shower, sink, dishwasher, or washing machines
- water that can be used twice
Green water
* is caused by an imbalance in the chemistry of the pond
- suspended algae
- healthier in terms of oxygen production and buffering of pH changes
- lower than pond scum
- very useful in the raising of daphnia and brine shrimp
* term used to describe unicellular algae.
Grind water
* enters ditches
- infiltration ditches
* reaches surfaces.
* takes places.
* uses for drink water | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Ground water
* Most ground water is discharged from the aquifer by underflow, withdrawal, and evapotranspiration
- found in aquifers
* Some ground water finds openings in the land surface and emerges as freshwater springs
- is more susceptible to contamination because of the soils and rock composition
* accumulates chiefly from rain that filters through the soil.
* behaves much like surface water in that it flows from high areas to lower areas.
* can be, and has been, contaminated by human activities
- become unusable if it becomes polluted and is no longer safe to drink
- carry additional radon into homes and other buildings, creating a health risk
- contain hydrogen sulfide or other naturally occurring chemicals
- enter cracked or broken pipes bringing any number of contaminants with it
- move across state boundaries
- pop through sediment patches on the sea floor or through freshwater springs
* carries nutrients from the forest's decaying leaves and needles out to the marsh
- with it anything it picks up
* comes from underground aquifers and wells.
* contains only tiny amounts of dissolved nutrients.
* creates hydrostatic pressure on basement walls and floors.
* dissolves minerals like calcium carbonate and gypsum from the soil and rock.
* erodes the limestone little by little, forming caves of varous size.
* exists in pores between particles in subsurface sediment or rock units.
* feeds wells and springs.
* fills the sinkholes in limestone areas.
* flows downstream, or toward nearby lakes and rivers
- from areas where the water table is elevated towards areas where it is lower
- toward and along the axis of the Gila River
* is affected by agricultural and urban land uses.
* is also a potential source for irrigation
- at risk from nonpoint source pollutants as they enter the state's aquifers
- the source of much of the water used for irrigation
* is an excellent water source that requires little purification
- extremely important resource in North Dakota
* is an important source of drinking water in every State
- surface water and nutrients
* is an important source of water for irrigation and drinking water supplies
- supply in Illinois
- particularly in arid regions of the west
- indispensable part of our ecological system
- cleaned by a natural filter as it flows through underground soils
- commonly less contaminated and more useful than surface water
- considered a renewable resource unless it is used faster than it can be replenished
- contained in aquifers, which are layers of bedrock saturated with water
* is contaminated with acids and organic compounds
- benzene
- naphthalene, methylene naphthalene, and dibenzofuran
- crucial to sustaining streamflow for habitat and for water supply
- discharged from the ground into streams and rivers
- drawn upward by evaporation at the surface
- essential to our everyday lives
* is found in soils and sands able to retain the water - much like a sponge holds water
- spaces between soil particles and rocks, and within cracks of bedrock
- the pores and cavities of rocks beneath the earth's surface
- under ground in rock formations called aquifers
- heated in underground reservoirs to form naturally occurring hot water and steam
- less likely to be contaminated than surface water
- limited and usually occurs at great depths
- never completely pure
- obtained from wells and springs that are open to aquifers
* is one of Alaska's least understood natural resources
- Florida's most important natural resources
- the most precious natural resources in South Dakota
- plentiful but is affected by salt in many places near the coast
- present in virtually all landscapes
* is simply water that fills pores or cracks in subsurface rocks
- flows beneath the earth's surface
- so high, water stands anywhere there hole more than a few inches deep
* is stored in aquifers
- naturally below the Earth's surface
- within the pore spaces of aquifers
* is the island's only source of drinking water
- main water source for rural households
- major water source in Warren County, serving virtually all households
- one that feeds rivers and springs during the dry season
* is the primary drinking water source for half of the state's population
- water source for much of western Kansas
- single source of drinking water on the island
- sole source of drinking water for many rural communities and some larger cities
* is the source of drinking water for over half of the U.S. population
- high-quality drinking water for most of the state's communities
- underground water that feeds our streams and water supply wells
* is the water below the surface within the earth that supplies wells and springs
- present underground in the tiny spaces in rocks and soil
* is the water that fills cracks and other openings in beds of rocks and sand
- the pores in sands or gravel or the cracks in fractured rocks
- is found beneath the earth's surface
- soaks into the ground
- underground water where all the pores in the soil are filled
* is used by animals for bathing
- local industries
* is used for agricultural, domestic, industrial, and commercial purposes
- domestic, irrigation, industrial, and agricultural purposes
- in irrigation, industry, domestic households and for maintaining livestock
* is used to irrigate crops and supply homes, businesses, and industries with water
- supplement precipitation
- very difficult to clean up
* is water beneath Earth's surface, often pumped for drinking water
- the surface of the earth
- found in pores or cracks in sand, gravel, and rock beneath the land surface
- in the saturated zone
- occurring in the zone of saturation in an aquifer or soil
- that flows underground through permeable soil and rock, often under pressure
* is water that has been seeped and stored into the ground
- gone through the turbines of a hydro-electric plant
- sinks into the upper portion of the Earth's surface
* lives in the geology.
* major water source for rural households in Crawford County.
* natural resource, but it fairly finite one.
* occurs almost everywhere beneath the land surface
- especially in permeable fractures and weathered zones
* occurs in both the glacial deposits and bedrock
- geologic formations called aquifers
- many different types of soil and rock strata
- predominantly under unconfined, secondary-permeability conditions
- under both artesian and nonartesian conditions in southeastern Florida
* oozing through underwater sediment banks can also cause slumping.
* percolates downward, comes in contact with the hot rock and is heated.
* poses a danger of corroding containers holding the radioactive waste.
* principal natural resource of Reno County.
* provides a vast supply of water for use in agriculture, homes, and industry
- most of the drinking water in the islands
- the total flow in the rivers and creeks when there is no rain or snowmelt
* pumping by humans causes land subsidence, which causes a change in the vegetation.
* reappears at the earth's surface as springs, seeps in wells.
* safe, economic and environmentally friendly resource.
* serves as a large subsurface water reservoir.
* significant source of drinking water for tribal communities in Arizona.
* travels through permeable soil on top of hard or impermeable layers.
* vast resource that underlies the earth's surface.
* vital link in the water cycle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Hard water
* Most hard water contains calcium and magnesium.
* affects pools in several ways.
* better for health because soft water adds more sodium to our diets.
* can also clog plumbing and make water taste bad
- leave a film on hair, fabrics, and glassware
- provide significant amounts of calcium
* can cause a build up of scale from mineral deposits
- off-colors and flavors
- skin to become dry and irritated and can make hair dry and frizzy
- white deposits or spots on glassware, dishes and silverware
- yellowing and rust spots
- contribute to incompatiblity
- have high levels of calcium and magnesium
- leave deposits that weaken or completely cut off the water jets
- reduce the effectiveness of dairy cleaning chemicals
- upset zinc levels
* causes films on glass shower doors, walls and bathtubs
- mineral build-up in dishwashers
- soap to precipitate, as evidenced by a bathtub ring
- soaps to curd in the water rather than make a lather
- toughening of the vegetable skin during blanching and canning
- unsightly scale build-up on plumbing, and other surfaces
* comes from shallow ground and contains calcium and magnesium.
* contains a great quantity of minerals
- dissolved calcium and magnesium ions
* contains high concentration of calcium compounds
- concentrations of calcium ions
* contains large amounts of calcium and magnesium, which reduce the effectiveness of soap
- minerals which make it alkaline
- more magnesium than soft water
* contaminated with calcium and magnesium ions enters the exchange column or bed.
* enhances the perception of bitterness.
* gives an alkaline cooking medium which affects color of foods, especially vegetables.
* has a heavy load of dissolved solids
- relatively high level as compared to soft water which has a low level
* have a tendency to form scale deposits in pipes and heating coils.
* impairs the cleaning strength of detergents.
* increases films and stains from soaps, minerals and other pollutants.
* interferes with laundering, washing dishes, bathing, and personal grooming
- the action of detergents, and can lead to poor cleaning of equipment
* is also the leading cause of skin problems
- beneficial to health
* is caused by dissolved calcium and magnesium in the water
- water passing through rock formations and picking up calcium and magnesium
- defined by the amount of calcium and magnesium present in the water
- essentially water containing broken down mineral particles like calcium and magnesium
- extremely high in alkaline minerals
- high in calcium and magnesium, while soft water is high in sodium
- of concern to the homeowner as deposits form on plumbing fixtures and appliances
- softened by a process called ion exchange
* is water that contains calcium and magnesium salts dissolved in it
- much dissolved a. Sodium and chloride
- has positively charged calcium, magnesium and iron ions dissolved in it
* leaves a drying mineral residue on skin
- ring around the bathtub because of precipitation with soap
* makes washing more difficult by decreasing the amount of lather or suds.
* occurs when large amounts of calcium, magnesium, or iron ions are present.
* prevents iodine sanitizers from working.
* problem that many people face in their home.
* restricts the cleaning function of soap.
* ruins thousands of hot and cold water systems and general household appliances each year.
* seems to be more of an issue with herbicides than with insecticides and fungicides.
* shortens the service life of pipes and chemical equipment.
* tends to leave a calcium build up on the fronds
- white mineral deposits on the ends of faucets and on shower curtains
Hawaiian water
* are so clear and blue because they lack phytoplankton
- the favourite breeding grounds for Arctic humpbacks
* have a high percentage of endemic species. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
High water
* can happen at any time during the year, after a prolonged rain.
* gulleys, with effects of groundwater.
* holds capacity.
* is the most difficult condition to fish for the tucunare
- tide
* makes for especially scenic waterfalls in northern parks.
* means flooded vegetation.
* takes places.
Holy water
* is located in churchs
- said to have the ability negate negative forces
- sprinkled where bombs used to fall
- the symbol of nature set free from sin
* is used against the assaults of demons from without
- to bless the bulls before the fights
* sacramental that remits venial sin.
Inlet
* Many inlets also serve as navigation channels for commerce and recreation.
* are bodies of water
- natural things
* are part of lakes
- sea
* is water
### water | inlet:
Air horn
* Some air horns produce sound.
* are fast and loud
- intake
- part of carburetors
* is an inlet
Fiord
* are deep U-shaped valleys that have been flooded.
* is an inlet
Jamaican water
* are great for dep water fishing.
* contain considerable resources of fresh-and saltwater fish.<|endoftext|>### water:
Less water
* affects both hay yield and quality.
* is absorbed into the ground.
* is lost by evaporation in the morning
- evaporation, and disease incidence is reduced
- through evaporation and transpiration
- to evaporation when watering in the evening or at night
- lost, and diarrhea is usually dissipated
+ Hydroponics, Advantages: Agriculture :: Botany
* Less water is needed than with soil-grown crops.
+ Square foot gardening, Benefits of square foot gardening: Gardening
* The loose ground holds the water better. This type of garden needs water less often than other methods. Also, water is placed very near the plant roots. Less water is wasted.
Limewater
* are water.
* clear, saturated water solution of calcium hydroxide.
* is used to test for carbon dioxide | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Liquid water
* Most liquid water becomes ice
- supports life
* Some liquid water absorbs energy.
* Some liquid water becomes vapor
- water vapor
- has skin
* Some liquid water turns to ice
- solid ice
* accounts for two-thirds of our body weight.
* acts as a UV shield, protecting potential organisms from UV irradiation.
* appears to be the critical ingredient for the development and sustenance of life.
* becomes a gas through evaporation , when subjected to heating
* boils to give water vapor, which gas.
* can dissolve a variety of compounds.
* consists of many closely packed water molecules arranged in a haphazard manner
- molecules that move relative to one another
* contains water molecules stuck together.
* covers most of the surface of our planet.
* disordered network of such bonded waters.
* dissolves a wide range of substances.
* expands rather than contracts when it freezes
* falls as rain or drizzle.
* freezes and becomes solid ice when the molecules lose energy.
* gains heat energy and turns into water vapor.
* has a higher entropy than ice, because it is disordered
- less hydrogen bonds which are continually forming and breaking
- the observable property of surface tension
* highly dynamic substance.
* holds a huge amount of heat energy and resists changes of state to solid or gas.
* is abundant on earth because the boiling point is rare on earth's surface
- actually quite rare in the universe
- also responsible for most of the erosion and weathering of Earth's continents
- blue for the same reason
- both a resource and lifeblood
- coffee's worst enemy during storage
* is considered a prerequisite for life
- an essential ingredient for life
- converted to water vapor during evaporation
- eddential for all known biology
* is essential for biological systems for many reasons
- life on earth and is the most probable solvent for life elsewhere
* is found in many places
- oceans, lakes, ponds, rivers, streams, as well as in the ground
- in a lower energy state than water vapor
- necessary for almost all living things
- of vital importance in chemistry and biology
- one of the principal agents of weathering
- only possible if the temperature and pressure are high enough
* is the essential ingredient for life on Mars
- key ingredient for supporting life
- main factor for life
- most important single substance for life on earth
- substance perhaps most readily associated with erosion
* is thought to be necessary for life
- exist beneath the ice because of internal heat
- ubiquitous on Earth
- wet and fluid
- wets
* is, in a way, the operational definition for life.
* means moderate temperatures
- there had to have been more of an atmosphere than there is on Mars now
* measure of water present in canopies.
* occurs naturally in air lines as a result of compression.
* seems to be the one element needed for the equation of life on Mars.
* universal solvent.
Living water
* complete water cleansing system.
* is the result of Torah learning.
Main
* are bodies of water
- part of infrastructures
- pipes
* is water
Meltwater
* are water.
* flow to the Arctic, Atlantic and Pacific oceans.
### water | meltwater:
Glacial meltwater
* carry sand and gravel from the glacier.
* is funneled away from the glacier in a partially buried river valley.
Metabolic water
* comes from combination of hydrogen and oxygen at end of electron transport chain.
* is derived from cellular oxidation
- water produced from the metabolism of nutrients in the body
Municipal water
* has chlorine, an acid.
* is generally soft due to the lack of minerals from filtration. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Natural water
* All natural water contains minerals and gases, and even microorganisms
- waters contain elements other than hydrogen and oxygen
* Most natural waters contain some iron.
* comes from springs, wells, lakes, rivers and faucets.
* has in it small amounts of dissolved mineral salts, which give it a taste.<|endoftext|>### water:
Open water
* Most open water absorbs heat.
* allows continuous evaporation of lake water, even during winter months.
* appears in gray-green tones.
* are habitats for loons, grebes, and ducks.
* attract waterfowl throughout the winter.
* attracts wildlife year round.
* is attractive to diving ducks in winter
- between the ice and shore in most areas
- darker and absorbs heat better
- essential for survival of free living stages and for the snail habitat
- extremely attractive in the winter when many ponds are frozen over
- highly absorptive in all bands, and appears black
- scarce in most of the Arctic throughout most of the year
* separates the coastal tundra from barrier islands holding back the ice.
Ordinary water
* conductor of electricity.
* has a surface tension that is too high to permeate the cells.<|endoftext|>### water:
Oxygenated water
* bubbles over and around rocks moving silt to quiet areas down stream.
* is necessary for aquatic animals to breathe
- taken into the mantle cavity to the gills
+ Cephalopod, Nervous system and behaviour, Moving around
* Oxygenated water is taken into the mantle cavity to the gills. By contracting the mantle's muscles, the water is pushed out through the siphon, made by a fold in the mantle. Motion of the cephalopods is usually backward as water is forced out forwards, but the siphon can be pointed in different directions. Some cephalopods can adjust their body shape to move through the water more easily.
Ozonated water
* increases oxygen and nitrogen content making the flowers fresher and longer lasting.
* is free of algae, bacteria, cyst, mold, viruses and yeast, parasites
- recirculated in the scrubber to initiate the oxidizing of the contaminants
Permanent water
* is necessary for drinking and feeding.
* is probably a physiological as well as ecological requirement
- necessary for metamorphosis
- the magnet that draws life<|endoftext|>### water:
Plain water
* Most plain water contains minerals.
* Some plain water contains calories.
* can cause problems, such as lowering the amount of salt or sugar in the blood
- grow algae or leave mineral deposits that clog spray nozzles
* contains dissolved minerals like calcium, magnesium, iron and sodium
* helps to increase the liquid bulk of urine.
* is best to drink, since electrolytes are replaced through the diet
- needed to break down all food, to flush the kidneys, and maintain hydration levels
- one of the best pesticides especially with aphids
* is the best liquid because it has no calories or caffeine
- only liquid without a natural sugar | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Polluted water
* can be a source of parasite and diseases
- damage vegetables, animals and people health
- harm, and even kill, animals who drink it and live in it
- have detrimental effects on animals, plant life and humans themselves
* can kill eggs and tadpoles
- fish and other animals
* causes diarrhoea, which kills five million children per year.
* continues to flow into the Black Sea.
* creates numerous costs to the public and to wildlife.
* does the worst damage to little children.
* fact of our lives.
* has many detrimental effects on the ecology of the surrounding ecosystem.
* hurts the wildlife in creeks, streams, rivers and lakes.
* is absorbed in plants the same way
- just one of the many environmental problems facing communities in the world today
- never safe to drink
* is the 'prime killer' of Iraqi children
- most common source of typhoid
- unsuitable for drinking, recreation, agriculture, and industry
* lead to polluted fish which lead to a polluted food chain.
* provides one of the ways in which viral diseases spread.
* raises filtration costs and taxes due to the affect on animals such as salmon.
Polynya
* are highly productive areas biologically.
* is water
Pond water
* Most pond water contains protozoans.
* has effects
- negative effects
Poor water
* can cause stress.
* has significant health care costs.<|endoftext|>### water:
Potable water
* does exist in a very few communities.
* is difficult to obtain in high-altitude environments
- ice free, uncontaminated water, fit for animal consumption
- produced by a desalinization plant
- tapped through artesian wells, both deep and shallow
- treated to destroy fecal coliforms which can make people ill if ingested
- used for drinking, cooking and personal hygiene
* is water fit for human consumption
- that is suitable to drink
* valuable resource in arid Australia.
Precipitable water
* is an indication of the amount of water that is available to produce rain.
* measure of how much moisture is in the atmosphere. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Pure water
* Most pure water consists of hydrogen.
* Most pure water has conductivity
- electrical conductivity
* absorbs light in the red portion of the spectrum, and scatters very little light.
* bad conductor of electricity.
* collects on one side of the membrane while pollutants accumulate on the other side
- membrane, while pollutants accumulate on the other
- the chemical dihydrogen oxide
* contains neither lime nor salts.
* contains no ions and is therefore a nonconductor
- solids, minerals, or trace elements
- only water molecules
- very few ions and so it poor electricity conductor
* exists only in a laboratory.
* has a neutral pH
- very low electrical conductivity
- an electrical conductivity about one millionth that of seawater
* has no dissolved carbon dioxide
- other substances in it at all
- smell , taste , or color
* has very LOW conductivity
- low conductivity and seawater has high conductivity
* is an example of a neutral substance
- irritant as it hypotonic solution
* is an odorless, tasteless liquid
- tasteless, clear liquid
- both the heat carrier fluid and the storage medium of the heating and cooling systems
- colorless, odorless, and tasteless
- crucial to hemodialysis, since impurities can kill a patient
* is essential for healthy life
- to our livelihood
- just as important for food preparation as for drinking
- neutral and is described as neither an acid nor a base
* is neutral because it contains equal numbers of hydronium ions and hydroxide ions
- no hydronium or hydroxide ions
- one of the few substances whose pH is seven
- practically colorless, odorless, and tasteless
- provided by natural weather cycles
- pure substances
- slightly acidic
- that which is pure in itself and can purify anything else
* is used as a final rinse in all procedures of the washing process
- to dilute rooting solutions and refill rooting containers
- virtually colorless and has no taste or smell
- water that is completely free of any other chemical compounds
* neutral solution.
* non-conductor of electricity.
* poor conductor since there are none of the conductive salts found in impure water
* requirement for high quality soap.
* very poor conductor of electricity.
+ Vodka, Things that are made into vodka: Alcoholic spirits
* If the still used is a pot still, the distillation is usually repeated at least twice to remove any foul-tasting or poisonous impurities away. Pure water is added to lower the alcohol contents to desired. This is called 'dilution'.
+ Water: Natural resources :: Hydrogen compounds :: Oxygen compounds :: Oxides
* Water' is the most common liquid on Earth. Pure water has no smell, taste, or color. Lakes, oceans, and rivers are made of water. Rain is water that falls from clouds in the sky. If water gets very cold, it freezes and becomes ice. Frozen rain can be ice or snow if conditions permit. If water gets very hot, it boils and becomes steam. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Rain water
* Most rain water contains amounts
- carbon dioxide
- has salt
* Some rain water flows into streams.
* can cause wood to quickly reach, or even go beyond, fiber saturation
- dissolve nutrients in the soil that are taken up by the roots of plants
* collects in lakes.
* contains small amounts of ions as minerals and salt as well as pollutants
- particulates and acid
* has a pleasantly neutral flavour
- both the lack of buffering and the possibility of very acid pH to start with
- natural nutrition and is devoid of chemicals thus far better than tap water
* has no added chemicals
- dissolved minerals
* hits the ground and infiltrates into the soil or runs off into a body of water.
* is absorbed and held by the organic-rich forest litter
- clean and pure
- collected and used as drinking water by most resorts
- nearly pure
- often too flat, and salty seawater causes literally acid rain in the sauna
- slightly acidic, depending on the amount of carbonic acid present
- trapped in the hole in summer, snow in winter
- very pure
* reaches rivers faster and can cause flooding | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Rainwater
* Most rainwater carries water
- conducts electricity
* Most rainwater contains materials
- other materials
- such materials
- flows to the sea along rivers, but some is taken up by plant roots
- is absorbed by the ground as fills the tiny spaces between soil particles
* Most rainwater passes through decay debris
- plant debris
* Some rainwater accumulates in leaves.
* Some rainwater collects in clefts
* Some rainwater has energy
- kinetic energy
- infiltrates into the soil where living plants can take it up through their roots
* also soaks into the ground.
* becomes a weak carbonic acid from contact with carbon dioxide in the air
- acid as it comes in contact with carbon dioxide, and eats away the softer rock
* can carry contaminants into our streams, rivers, lakes and ocean
- the herbicides into the sewer systems
* can enter a building through leaks in walls, windows or the roof
- and radionuclides can escape
- leach the radioactivity in the soil shield to groundwater
* collects in ponds.
- small amounts of dissolved minerals that have been blown into the air by winds
* drains away quickly because the soil is thin and porous
- through the soil into the aquifers
* erodes the joints and bedding planes.
* falls through polluted air containing bacteria, smoke, smog and chemicals
- to an impervious surface, and enters a catch basin
* fills pools and the water travels back down to the lake through tiers of carved rock.
* has few dissolved solids
- impact
* is absorbed by the soil into the ground
- another cause of flooded basement
* is better than irrigation water because it has less salt content
- for the plants because it has less salt content
* is collected for bathing and dishwashing
- in cisterns for irrigation
- collected, filtered, purified and stored for drinking and washing
- fresh water
- most often soft water
* is naturally acidic, and corrosive to metal tanks and household plumbing
- somewhat acidic because it dissolves carbon dioxide from the air
- often acid and can erode limestone easily
- pure when it drops from the heavens
- simply the carrier that transports the pollutants to open waterways
- slightly acidic because of the carbon dioxide dissolved in it
* is the chief article of diet at supper
- one type of water which a city can secure by itself
- prime source of freshwater on the Island, there being no rivers or streams
- purest form of water
- used for plants and in case of disasters
* leaches minerals out of the ash and into the soil.
* offers advantages in water quality for both irrigation and domestic use.
* passes through debris.
* penetrates plant tissue
* picks up particles and gases when it falls through the air.
* provides available water sources in many small island states in the Pacific
- the other minerals
* seeps into waste rock piles and combines with oxygen and sulfides to form sulfuric acid
- through cracks in the ground and through rocks
* sends mud down washes and creates flash floods that knock down berms and close roads.
* serves as source of distilled water.
* takes the quickest route to the sea and flows into rivers, streams, lakes and aquifers.
* trapped near foundations major source of moisture problems.
### water | rainwater:
Rainwater harvesting
* can eradicate poverty.
* is an everyman's water augmentation method
- old tradition practiced in all parts of the world including Texas
* major source of drinking water for many people around the world. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Raw water
* contains bicarbonates in amounts dependent on their origin
- varying amounts of mineral salts such as calcium, magnesium, iron and silica
* is the resource used for finished drinking water
- term used to describe untreated water
* is treated by several methods to obtain water quality standards
- with chemicals to allow for sedimentation of particles
- water that has been filtered from the nearby Columbia River
* refers to the water that the boat is floating in.<|endoftext|>### water:
Reclaimed water
* can have elevated levels of sodium and chloride.
* is highly treated wastewater that's safe for recycling
- part of daily life in drier regions across the United States
- sewage water that has been treated and disinfected using four different methods
- the highly treated by-product of the County's wastewater system
- treated sewer water that is generally used to water lawns
- unsafe for playgrounds and other places children use
- used for irrigation in place of our precious drinking water
- wastewater that has gone through a high-level treatment process for reuse
- wastewater, which has been highly treated and then made available for use
- water that has been recovered from a waste discharge and treated
* recharges the shallow surficial aquifer with fresh water.
Recycled water
* is competitively priced Recycled water is priced at or below potable rates
- domestic wastewater purified through primary, secondary and tertiary treatment
- treated to be safe and free from odor
* is used for irrigation, toilet flushing and other non-drinking purposes
- solely for landscape irrigation
* readily available alternative resource which is unaffected by weather.
River water
* flows into basins.
* has levels.
Runoff water
* Some runoff water flows into lakes
- is trapped for periods of time, for example in lakes
* can carry pesticides in the water itself or by adsorption to eroding soil particles
- transport chemicals and remove uniform amounts of soil from a wide area
* flows over the surface of the ground.
Safe water
* can also positively affect indoor air.
* is just as important for food preparation as for drinking
- produced by proper execution of fundamental treatment processes
* necessity of daily life.
* protects people from getting diarrhoea diseases such as cholera and dysentery.
Saline water
* can cause considerable yield loss before symptoms of leaf burn become obvious.
* flows out of the Mediterranean and Caribbean to the Atlantic.
* has a high concentration of many different salts, including calcium and magnesium.
* is heavier than fresh water
- mixed from density stratified pools during flow events
- more dense than fresh water
- used primarily as a coolant for industrial processes
* is, for instance, unusable on some soils, but viable on others.<|endoftext|>### water:
Saltwater
* Most saltwaters contain organisms.
* Some saltwaters conduct electricity.
* Some saltwaters mix with fresh water
* are located in sea
* creeps into every sandy furrow.
* cultured pearls can be rather expensive depending on size and quality.
* have effects.
* is denser than fresh water, and everything floats more easily in denser water
- freshwater and therefore settles at a lower level than freshwater
- particularly harmful to units containing oil-lubricated ball bearings
* marshes here, as elsewhere, are characterized by such plants as cordgrass and needlerush.
* sometimes gets into the cracks and pore s of rock.
* wetlands that are characterized by mud or sand and daily tidal fluctuations
- occur along many coasts | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Salty water
* Most salty water flows into oceans.
* Some salty water becomes depth bottoms.
* boils faster when cooking eggs.
* conducts electricity and in potatoes there is water and salt inside the cells.
* is heavier than ordinary water so it pushes harder against objects floating in it.
* means buoyancy, and buoyancy makes it easier for the calves to float and nurse.<|endoftext|>### water:
Sea water
* Most sea water absorbs carbon dioxide
- contains minerals
* Most sea water has capacity
- high capacity
* absorbs all the reds, yellows and greens out of the water
- red light most readily, then green and finally blue
* common name for sea and ocean water.
* consists of water with various materials dissolved within it.
* contains large quantities of sulfur
- salts from weathering of minerals from rocks
- water, salt and other minerals
* cools the molten rock, which quickly solidifies, forming new oceanic lithosphere.
* enters openings in the rock where it disappears
- the pores and fills the channels and bladders
* explodes into steam and boiling water, and molten lava and rocks blast skyward.
* has a history of therapeutic use
- about seven times the acceptable salt level
- mineral salt
* is also a very corrosive substance and can disintegrate many materials
- highly corrosive and damaging to microscopes and light sources
- hypertonic to their cytosol
- hypertonic, tap water is isotonic and distilled water is hypotonic to spring water
- injected into the earth to build reservoir pressure
- least dense when it frozen at the ocean surface and contains no salts
- less conductive than land
- salty because salts are dissolved in it
- similar in salt concentration as blood
- the basis for producing most solar evaporated salt
* mixed salt solution.
* mixture of water and various salts.
* more or less homogeneous solution of salts in water.
* moving inland is called a saltwater intrusion.
* passes through the baleen and the whales food gets caught.
* salty solution containing traces of nearly every element on earth.
* tends to be basic. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Seawater
* Most seawater contains phytoplankton
- has conductivity
- passes through gills
* Some seawater contains minerals.
* Some seawater contains other minerals
- valuable minerals
* Some seawater enters chambers
- vacuum chambers
- kills sea urchins
- passes through membranes
* also contains hundreds of trace elements that are important in many biological reactions
- lots of solutes in addition to salt
* can also create wetlands, especially in coastal areas that experience strong tide s
- seep into groundwater and common problem in coastal areas
- hold fewer dissolved gas molecules when it heats up
* consists of a small quantity of salt dissolved in water.
* contains a large quantity of dissolved salts therefore, has a high conductivity
- excess salts, some of which pass straight through the gut without being absorbed
- many soluble compounds in addition to salt
- plenty of sulfate
* does indeed contain all the elements, but in extremely small amounts.
* expands in volume with increasing temperature.
* gets denser when it gets colder or saltier.
- many advantages as an alternate, non-traditional source for coastal areas
* irrigates varieties of cotton and tomato plants that thrive on salty water.
* is collected from known depths using CTD-rosette sampling protocols.
* is full of ions that compete with calcium and carbonate
- nutrients from winter mixing
- given different names depending on the amount of solids dissolved in it
- heavier because so many particles are dissolved in it
- located in sea
- measurable in an estuary diluted with fresh water derived from land drainage
* is pumped in and out, simulating the tide
- into the mesocosm to provide the cod larvae with a source of planktonic food
- salt water
- saltwaters
* is slightly denser than fresh water
- more viscous than fresh water
- somewhat reluctant to take on more carbon dioxide than it already has
- taken into a system of canals and is used to extend the many tube feet
- the medium of transport and is propelled in and out of the sponge by ciliary action
- used for cooling and well water injection
* potentially rich but currently limited source of fresh water and minerals.
* provides elements.
* rushes in to fill the space that was taken up by air.
* seeps down through cracks in the ocean floor and circulates deep into the ocean crust
- through cracks in the ocean floor and is heated by warm rocks
### water | seawater:
Warm seawater
* Some warm seawater enters chambers
- vacuum chambers
* expands and is thus less dense than cooler seawater.<|endoftext|>### water:
Shallow water
* Most shallow water encourages root growth
- provides habitats
* are preferred to lower the risk of predation, and for reproduction.
* can be quite dangerous for a large submarine
- get deep and dangerous fast
* encourages growth
* is as dangerous as deep water.
* is located in lakes
- ponds
- pools
- swimming pools
- shallower before sunrise
* is used for puppies
- tidal pools
* limit boat size on low tide.
* makes fish and invertebrates accessible.
* means tiger sharks.
* provides bass opportunity to feed, deep water close by an escape route from danger
* sloughs in meadows.
### water | shallow:
Shallow cultivation
* encourages seed germination and depletion of the soil seedbank.
* has the advantage of weed control with little or no use of herbicides.
* helps prevent injury to crop roots
- the soil absorb and hold water
* is used to avoid harming roots
- useful in removing small weeds | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Shoal
* are also important to trout during late spring and early summer for similar reasons
- bodies of water
- more vulnerable to predator attack
* is water
+ Shoaling and schooling, Schooling: Fish :: Ecology
* When schooling fish stop to feed, they break ranks and become shoals. Shoals are more vulnerable to predator attack. The shape a shoal or school takes depends on the type of fish and what the fish are doing. Schools that are travelling can form long thin lines, or squares or ovals or amoeboid shapes. Fast moving schools usually form a wedge shape, while shoals that are feeding tend to become circular.<|endoftext|>### water:
Soft water
* can cause corrosion in pipes.
* dissolves appreciable amounts of lead, which is poisonous.
* flows from deep in the earth and contains sodium.
* has fewer minerals than hard water
- less insoluble ions than does hard water
* increases the saline content.
* is best for diluting to the proper strength
- easy to make lather with soap
- essentially free of dissolved calcium or magnesium
* requires less soap or detergent than hard water.
* wears away hard rock, if it persists.
* weekens the gluten during mixing and fermentation.
+ Psoriasis: Dermatology
* Dry arid climates seem to aggravate the condition. Washing your hands has a drying affect, which triggers the condition. When washing, water removes oils from our body, and has a drying effect on our hands. Washing with Psoriasis removes the dry skin, but then the skin underneath is raw. Hard water appears to worsen the condition in dry climates, but not as much in humid areas. Soft water appears better.
Softened water
* can cause the anode to wear out more quickly.
* carry sodium salts.
Soil water
* Most soil water holds capacity.
* Some soil water travels down to the water table and becomes ground water.
* can freeze and lift plants out of the ground.
* is available for plants to extract and use
- drier through the winter and stayed wetter through the summer
* is the amount of water available to a crop from the soil
- water held in pore spaces between soil particles
Spring water
* comes from a natural spring in the ground
- spring, such as an artesian well
- with or without fizz
* is magnetized
- used for both domestic and irrigation purposes
* possible source for livestock at certain locations.
* rises naturally to the surface from underground.
* source of surface water and surface water is protected by Wisconsin law.<|endoftext|>### water:
Stagnant water
* can become a breeding ground for insects and harmful bacteria
- create more problems than it solves
* created by Eurasian watermilfoil mats provides good breeding grounds for mosquitoes
- hydrilla mats provides good breeding grounds for mosquitoes
* is an ideal source of infection
- found in parts of it, and in others the carcasses of animals
- often a breeding ground for mosquitoes
- the favorite breeding ground of mosquitoes
- usually more damaging than flowing water
- where the infecting mosquito aedes aegypti breeds
* kills plants quickly.
* left from monsoon rains can increase mosquito activity.
* produces the worst emissions because the decaying vegetation generates methane.
* sitting in the reservoir during the off season can be a breeding ground for bacteria.
Stored water
* can contribute to mold and bacterial growth.
* is released to generate electricity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Storm water
* can also flow down a poorly sealed well shaft and contaminate drinking water
- become a major water-pollution problem
* collection of surface runoff following a rain.
* contains oil and grease, heavy metals, sediments, and lawn chemicals.
* contributes huge amounts of potentially toxic materials.
* flows directly into open bodies of water via an intricate system of canals.
* goes untreated into the ocean.
* is carried by gutters and down spouts that spill out to grade
- collected in the same sewage networks, which causes flooding in the winter
- held on the lands where it fell or melted
- inherently a pollution problem, and urban storm water is especially bad
- precipitation flowing off the land surface
- retained in a pond and released at low volumes
- storm water runoff, snow melt runoff, and surface runoff and drainage
- water that flows over land during and immediately after a rainstorm
* runs directly into surface waters without treatment.
Subsurface water
* does accumulate in the soil profile and commonly limits plant growth or operations
- and severely limits plant growth or operations
* enters the Caribbean Sea across tow sills.
* flows onto the surface and restricts the desired land use.
Subterranean water
* can remain stored for long periods or they can be moving.
* is held in cracks and pore spaces.
Sulfur water
* are corrosive and have a bad odor.
* makes cleaning clothes very difficult.
Supplemental water
* is one factor to help reduce stress build up.
* keeps plant looking more robust during summer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Surface water
* All surface water is disinfected, usually with chlorine.
* Most surface water gets evaporation
- is used to assimilate municipal and industrial waste
* Some surface water absorbs oxygen.
* Some surface water becomes bottoms
- depth bottoms
- flows in surfaces
* Some surface water has hollows
- large hollows
- waters come from ground water that has leached through soils highly laden with arsenic
* are also critical for recreational and navigational purposes
- highly alkaline
- more susceptible to contamination with pathogens than ground waters
- moved away from the equator and replaced by upwelling waters
- rare in deserts
- the most common source where oocysts can be detected
* becomes groundwater when it seeps downward to the saturated zone.
* can contain a number of different bacteria, viruses and parasites
- take on many forms including rivers, streams, wetlands and lakes
- vary greatly in the amount of salts that it carries in solution
* comes from streams, rivers, lakes, ponds, and oceans.
* consists of lakes, reservoirs, and rivers.
* contain abundant life.
* contains low concentrations of VOCs
- sulphates, chlorides, calcium bicarbonate and magnesium bicarbonate
* has an excessive load of faecal coliform bacteria and is costly to treat
- effluent limitations for temperature, salinity, pH and appearance
* includes both marine and fresh waters, but exempts ground waters
- lakes, rivers, streams, and ponds
* includes rivers, lakes, and reservoirs
- ponds, lakes, streams or creeks
* is almost non-existent, and groundwater is often too deep and polluted
- channeled to the pit floor where it percolates downward
- classified into five different classes depending on the cleanliness of the water
- cleaned of particulate matter and purified before it is considered safe to drink
- consistently a calcium bicarbonate type
* is contaminated with PCBs
- phenols, VOCs, and heavy metals including cadmium and lead
- distributed unevenly across Kansas mainly because of the state's climate
- evaporated from the earth by the energy of the sun
- exposed to many contaminants
- in lakes, streams, reservoirs, and surface depressions that capture and hold water
- limited to potholes in intermittent streams and stock ponds
- one of many sources for becoming sick from microbiological contamination
- open to the environment and more susceptible to contamination
- persistent even in the dry season
- polluted due to the lack of waste treatment facilities
- present throughout the year except in years of extreme drought
- scarce, but there are underground streams and rivers draining into the sea
- slowed by wind, while deep currents are slowed by friction with the riverbed
- slowly, but steadily dwindling
* is the main source of supply of drinking water
- primary source of water, and irrigation is the largest user
- residue of precipitation and melted snow, called runoff
- state's major renewable water source
* is the water above ground
- in streams, lakes, ponds, and rivers
* is the water that is found on the surface of the Earth
- lies directly on the earth's surface, such as streams and lakes
- treated by disinfection to remove bacteria
- used for about half of Alaska's domestic water supply
- variable across the region depending on storm rainfalls
- warmed by sunlight
- warmer than deeper water
- water from lakes, rivers, streams, ponds and reservoirs
* leaves the Great Basin only by evaporation.
* major source of drinking water for the coastal edges of Michigan.
* make up a significant portion of the water resources of the Chagrin River
- the majority of the water used for public supply and irrigation
* moves in to replace the sinking water, thus creating a current.
* persists throughout the growing season in most years.
* scarce resource especially in desert environments.
* seeps downward through soil and porous rock until it reaches impermeable rock or clay.
* tend to move from the equator to the poles, warming the air above.
* trickles two kilometers under the earth where it is heated by the earth' s core.
* turns over and mixes with deeper, usually less-oxygenated, water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Surround water
* acts as barriers.
* provides habitats.<|endoftext|>### water:
Tap water
* All tap water contains chlorine and possibly even chloramine.
* Most tap water contains amounts
- minerals
- oxygen
- sufficient oxygen
* Most tap water has chemicals
- conductivity
- low conductivity
- salt
- is safe for healthy adults and children
- provides aquatic habitats
* Most tap water uses for irrigation
- nasal irrigation
- waters contain heavy minerals and chemical purifiers, with a pH in the alkaline range
* Some tap water contains chemicals
- concentration
- lead, cadmium, and arsenic at levels that are of public health concern
- has minerals
* can add unwanted mineral deposits
- be too alkaline or contain too many minerals
- cause serious burns
- contain more lead if it is hot or if it has sat for a long time in the pipes
* causes the particles suspended in india ink to clump.
* comes in two flavors.
* containing chlorine is harmful to some creatures.
- chemicals that affect the taste of the tea
* contains chlorine which can damage the bio filter
- is used to kill bacteria and it is soluble in water
- chlorine, fluoride and other potentially allergenic chemicals
- less oxygen than rain water and probably contains chlorine
* contains many chemicals
- impurities such as iron, sulphur, phosphorus, even chlorine
- soluble chlorine which is constantly escaping as chlorine gas
- too many minerals for the ferret to handle, which can cause health problems
- trace amounts of chemicals such as radon and chlorine
* good conductor of electricity.
- chlorine that kills bacteria, good or bad
- far too many contaminants to be used in laboratories or for scientific purposes
- minerals and ions in it as well as bacteria
- thousands of particles in it
- very little oxygen in it
* is O-K to use but it causes salts to accumulate in the soil
- acceptable for watering most plants
- almost always safe to drink
* is considered safe in Nairobi and Mombasa
- Nevada and throughout the United States
- Oregon and throughout the United States
- desalinated
- drinkable everywhere
- filled with all sorts of materials which are toxic to humans and to aquarium fish
* is filtered by activated charcoal
- to remove chlorine and other substances that are harmful to aquatic organisms
- fluoridated to help prevent tooth decay
* is from desalination plants and is safe to drink
- rainwater caught on the roof
- generally a very good conductor because it has plenty of ions
* is generally safe to drink although some take the precaution of boiling it
* is potable, and dairy products pure
- except for occasional winter floods
- purified and has a very low bacterial count
- recommended for babies because it contains fluoride which bottled water lacks
* is safe for drinking
- to drink although it can often be salty in taste
* is safe to drink in all cities and resorts
- any Australian cities or towns
- nationwide
- theoretically safe to drink in all places
- treated to kill bacteria, and fluoridated, which is important for teeth
- un-safe to drink
- unsafe for drinking
- used only for doing dishes
- usually brown and contains sediment
* presents a variety of inorganic minerals which our body has difficulty absorbing.
* runs only one or two days a month, and it is often filthy when it comes.
* smaller source of radon in air.
Tidal water
* Most tidal water provides habitats.
* Some tidal water contains very little salt
- passes through holes
* are also abundant in smelt and mackerel.
* floods the land surface less often than daily.
* makes swimming in the warmest cove.
Tropical water
* Most tropical water has concentration.
* acts as a cyan filter and quickly removes color from a scene, beginning with red. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Turbid water
* decreases sunlight, which is essential for seagrass growth.
* has a cloudy or hazy appearance.
* is unsightly, unsuitable for swimming, and undesirable for boating.
* prevents light penetration, thus affecting all plant and animal life.
Unclean water
* leading cause of child mortality and illness in developing countries.
* poses a risk for gastrointestinal and other problems.
Unsafe water
* breeding ground of disease and poverty.
* can transmit many diseases.<|endoftext|>### water:
Warm water
* Most warm water affects regions
- helps plants
* Some warm water causes brain infection
- severe brain infection
* are necessary to fuel the heat engine of the tropical cyclone
- one requirement necessary for tropical corals to build massive reefs
* can cause infertility and mortality before spawning is achieved
- poor health and disease in fish
- evaporate, cooling the remaining water through the latent heat of vaporization
- interact with cool air such that the moisture goes into the air as it is warmed up
- signal a storm's strength since the heat provides feeds a storm's energy
* causes increased evaporation and more rainfall.
* contains a less oxygen concentration than cold water.
* continues to gradually build up beneath the surface in the western Pacific.
* encourages bacterial and yeast growth
- swimming, fishing, and crabbing
* expands and occupies more space.
* expands, and the ocean rises
- meaning a higher sea level
- physically lifting the sea surface
- raising the ocean's surface
* favour the growth of algae and the proliferation of aquatic plants.
* floats on cold water.
* flows along the eastern shores of major land masses.
* handicaps their ability to maintain themselves.
* has less oxygen and increases the stress on the animals.
* haven for fungus and bacteria.
* heats the air, and it rises as it nears the center.
- relieve pain and relax muscles
- support damaged tissues, and also provides resistance for exercises
- to activate the instestinal movement and kidneys
* holds less dissolved oxygen than cold water does
- oxygen than cooler water
* increases the metabolic rates of aquatic organisms.
* is better at killing germs
- confined to the northwest
- detrimental to fish and promotes rapid growth of pond weeds and algae
- everywhere as vegetable seeds grow in rotary machines
- helpful in removing wrinkles in clothing while in the washer
- known to damage fish habitat and harm the fish themselves
* is less dense than cold water
- dense, so tends to stay at the surface of the ocean
- lighter, less dense than cold water
- located in water fountains
- relaxing and therapeutic to the body and soul
- the engine that creates and sustains the storm
* keeps storms alive longer and increases their intensity, sending good surf to Hawaii.
* means lower oxygen levels
- more rainfall in part because heat rises
* moves into the stem faster than cold water
- stems more readily than cold water
* moving west feed the Asian monsoon.
* occurs off the Pacific coast of South America.
* opens the skin's pores and allows the oil to penetrate deeper.
* prevents snow accumulation but adds plenty of moisture to freeze into a glaze of ice.
* produces higher levels than cool water.
* releases from power plants, industrial facilities.
* sits on the top with colder, dense water below
- the colder, denser water in the deepest parts
* stimulates blood flow
- digestion
- the flow of blood to the fingers
* strips the oil from their skin and feathers.
* supplies the energy that powers hurricanes.
Waste water
* Most waste water affects quality
- water quality
* Some waste water provides nutrients. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### water:
Water flow
* are dependent on snow melt and natural runoff
- upon snow melt and natural run-off
* depends on the slope of the land.
* is an important transport mechanism for pesticides
- driven by transpiration
- highly variable during and between years
- initiated by exerting upward pressure on stem at center of faucet outlet
- measured in gallons per minute
- perpendicular to contours
- slowed to allow heavy solids to settle
- such that maximum cooling is achieved with minimum water flow
- the main factor that makes river ecology different from other water ecosystems
- used to activate values which open and close pipes producing a harmony of music
- usually constant throughout the year
Water harvesting
* can supplement wastewater recycling.
* is an age old concept in India.
* potential source of water for arid and semiarid lands.
* proven technology to increase food security in drought prone areas.
Water heating
* can be a major energy consumer as well.
* is normally, domestic water heating, agricultural and commercial usage..
* is the most cost effective use of solar energy
- third largest energy expense in U.S. households
Water softening
* is the most common form of water treatment for hardness.
* process for the removal of the hardness-forming mineral constituents in water.
### water-use intensive process:
Semiconductor manufacturing
* is built on process technology
- one of the major industries in Idaho
* provides high value added jobs around the world.
* uses more highly toxic gases than any other industry.
* water-use intensive process.
### watercolors:
Wash
* are general, unfocused light designed to evenly light a certain area of the stage.
* is watercolors
- work
* refer to the rinsing procedure and color for each cork.
Waterfront property
* Waterfront properties are plots of land.
* is susceptible to the natural erosion of waves and weather.
### waters:
Bay
* Some bays are part of sea
- possess dolphins
* are brackish, being fed by many fresh water streams and rivers.
* can form bog swamps or stay dry savannahs for most of the year.
* control the amount of water that passes.
* have properties.
* likewise yield no smell as they grow.
* provide habitats
- nursery habitats
### waters | bay:
Carrel
* are part of libraries
- workspaces provided to meet special scholarly needs of faculty and graduate students
* lock automatically when their doors are closed.
Thunder bay
* Thunder Bay is Ontario's largest port , and Canada's sixth largest port, rated by tonnage of cargo
- situated on the shores of Lake Superior, the largest fresh water lake in the world.
* Both are provinces. Thunder Bay is the only city one
Cove
* are bays
- caves
- inlets
- natural things
- the smallest indentations of land by a lake, sea, or ocean
* is an inlet | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters:
Estuary
* Estuaries act as a buffer between the ocean and the land
- also feed our hearts and minds
* Estuaries also provide protected transportation routes for cargo ships and barges
- vital breeding and feeding grounds for many birds
- reduce polluted runoff, control flooding, and support birds, fish and other wildlife
* Estuaries are a critical source for much of our ocean life
- primary nursery ground for many coastal fishes
- special end member of lagoons
* Estuaries are also home to a number of plants, trees and seagrasses
- ports and marinas that support shipping and other industrial activities
* Estuaries are also important for aquaculture, an industry that is just twenty years old in Maine
- homes for fishes, snails, crabs, clams, and baby animals called larvae
- near shore and influenced by the tides
- popular places to live, work, and enjoy outdoor activities
- sensitive to alteration and reduction of stream flow
* Estuaries are among the most biologically productive areas in the world
- productive on Earth
* Estuaries are among the most productive ecosystems in the world for plant and animal production
- natural places on earth
- parts of the marine ecosystem
- an interface between the continents and the oceans
- areas of water and shoreline typically found where rivers meet the ocean
* Estuaries are areas where fresh and salt water mix to form brackish water
- freshwater meets saltwater referred to as brackish water
- streams or rivers flow into the ocean
- at the bottom of the freshwater drainage network and, effectively, are a part of it
- bays where rivers empty into the sea
- between the rivers, mainland, and ocean
- bodies of water
- chemically and hydrologically different from lakes and rivers
* Estuaries are coastal areas where fresh and salt waters mix
- sea water mixes with fresh water, primarily from rivers
- complex, with a wide variety of environments that are constantly changing
- critical for the survival of many species
- delicate ecosystems
- economically important
* Estuaries are essential habitats for both aquatic and land plants and animals
- to our nation's economic productivity
- extreme environments
- extremely productive ecosystems
- formed when the saltwater mixes with freshwater
- highly variable in physical, chemical, and biological properties
- home to a fascinating variety of living organisms
* Estuaries are important areas for commercial and recreational boating activities
- coastal features, world-wide
- for the health of the oceans
- habitat areas for salmon
* Estuaries are important nurseries for fish and other aquatic life
- the young of aquatic animals
- two-thirds of all aquatic animals
* Estuaries are important nursery grounds for fish
- two-thirds of all animals that live in the sea
- incredibly productive feeding and breeding grounds for many animals
- lochs
- more diverse than any other marine environment
- natural things
- nutrient rich and very fertile
- often at the heart of local economies and traditions
* Estuaries are part fresh river and stream water, part salty oceanic water
- of rivers
* Estuaries are partially enclosed bodies of water that flow into an open sea or ocean
- water where fresh water and salt water mix
- regions where fresh and salt water meet
- particularly sensitive to the effects of toxic chemicals
- places at the mouth of a river where fresh water and salt water mix
* Estuaries are places where fresh water from rivers mix with saltwater
- meets and mixes with ocean salt water
- mixes with salty water from the sea
- rivers meet the sea
- prime habitat for species coveted by commercial fishermen
- regions along coastlines where streams or rivers flow into a body of salt water
* Estuaries are rich in animal life and are often a protected area where organisms seek refuge
- marine ecosystems that are created when freshwater mixes with saltwater
- river mouths
- semi or partially enclosed bodies of water where seawater and freshwater mix
* Estuaries are semi-enclosed bodies of water where fresh water from the land mixes with sea water
- embayments open to the sea at one end
- short-lived geologically and soon fill with sediment
* Estuaries are some of the most dramatic boundaries on Earth
- productive fisheries in the world
- productive habitats in the world
- spatially and temporally dynamic systems
- special water bodies that are open connections to the sea
- subject to wide fluctuations in salinity
* Estuaries are the lower part of the river where it meets the Gulf waters
- most popular fishing grounds in the country
* Estuaries are the most productive ecosystems in nature
- water bodies in the world
- mouth of the river where the river's tide meets a stream
- site of reproduction for many aquatic organisms and waterfowl
- zones where fresh and saltwater mix
- transition zones between saltwater and freshwater ecosystems
- transitional zones that encompass a wide variety of environments
- unique ecosystems where rivers meet the sea and fresh water mixes with salt
* Estuaries are very important to the lives of many animal species
- productive zones in the life cycles of most seafood species
- vigorous, vital ecosystems where plant species survive and thrive
* Estuaries are vital components of the planet's ecosystem
- habitats for thousands of marine species
- vulnerable to the introduction of a wide variety of toxic substances
- waste processors
- where freshwater from the land mixes with saltwater from the sea
* Estuaries are where rivers and streams meet the ocean
- discharge into the sea
- meet the sea and fresh water mixes with salt water
* Estuaries are where the river meets the ocean
* Estuaries can be large, as is the Hudson River
- filter sediment and pollutants from the water before it flows into the oceans
- have many different types of habitat
* Estuaries come in all shapes and sizes and go by many different names
- sizes, each unique to their location and climate
- covers a broad range of disciplines, including chemistry, geology, physics and biology
- depend on freshwater inflow for their ecological functioning
- differ from rivers in many regards
- display characteristics of both marine and freshwater biomes
* Estuaries form a transition zone between river environments and maritime environments
- where rivers widen at the coast
- function as nursery grounds for a variety of species of juvenile fishes and invertebrates
* Estuaries have access to the ocean, so they are influenced by the tides
- high production for organisms that can tolerate changing salinity
- many different types of habitats, vital to many important species of fish
- some of the worst pollution problems of any coastal ecosystem
- help protect costal land from flooding and erosion
- lie at the junction between marine and freshwater biomes
- occur when rivers flow into a coastal bay or inlet
* Estuaries occur where a river empties into the sea
- rivers meet the sea and many are now important conservation reserves
* Estuaries often have ports serving shipping, transportation, and industry
- serve as nurseries for young marine animals
- possess oysters
* Estuaries provide a broad range of conditions that call for tough, adaptable species
- habitat where numerous fish and crustaceans breed
- lot of food and nutrients to the developing salmon
- place where young animals can grow up
- wide range of habitats leading to a great diversity of marine life
- good quality water
- ideal spots for migratory birds to rest and refuel during their journeys
- sanctuary from the harsh action of ocean currents and waves
- shelter
- unique environments
- reflect the overall health of a watershed
* Estuaries serve as breeding sites and nurseries for thousands of marine animal species
- nurseries for many marine species
- the nursery grounds for shrimp, crab, oysters and the many types of finfish
- suffer some of the worst effects of water and air pollution
- supply a significant amount of N and P to open waters
* Estuaries support a diverse fauna, including a variety of worms, oysters, crabs, and waterfowl
- many resident species
- teem with a variety of plant and animal life
- tend to be naturally eutrophic because land runoff discharges nutrients into estuaries
- transform with the tides
- usually exhibit gradual changes in salinity as freshwater input increases or decreases
* Most estuaries are part of rivers
- form along coastlines where freshwater in rivers meets saltwater in oceans
* Most estuaries provide habitats
* Some estuaries cause health problems.
* Some estuaries are very large. They may be large ocean bays that have more than one river flowing into them. For example, Chesapeake Bay large estuary, and several different rivers meet the Atlantic Ocean there.
* is water | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | estuary:
Firth
* are estuaries
* is an estuary
Fjord estuary
* Fjord estuaries provide habitats.
* Most fjord estuaries provide habitats.
Healthy estuary
* Healthy estuaries provide good quality water
* Most healthy estuaries provide good quality water | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters:
Lake
* All lakes are temporary interruptions in a stream's course
- contain organic matter, such as algae, rooted aquatic plants and leaves
- undergo an aging process, whereby sediments accumulate over time
* Every lake has microscopic algae in suspension in the water
- several key locations where big bass are caught more frequently than anywhere else
* Many lakes are open year-round
- can appear dead at midday, only to come alive in the early morning or evening
* Many lakes contain some natural contaminants
- wild trout and are also stocked with hatchery-raised trout
- depend on rainfall as their sole source of water
- form slowly by moving one grain of sand at a time until a shallow lake basin forms
* Many lakes have parasites that can cause rashes
- salmon, lake trout, rainbow, brook, and brown trout
- occupy irregular ice-carved basins in rolling topography on glaciated islands
- occur at higher elevations and drain through streams to lower elevations
- stratify in winter because ice covers the lake surface
* Most lakes are at their lowest levels during the summer months
- fed by rivers and, to a lesser extent, rainfall
* Most lakes are in great shape as fewer winter storms left waters clearer than normal
- the process of icing up
- open to anglers year-round and can really fire up over the winter months
- still and contain a diverse plant and animal life
* Most lakes attract ducks
- geese
- contain fish
* Most lakes have areas that possess flats somewhere
- beds
- conditions
- either brushy or swampy banks, so they don t lend themselves to wading
- fairly rounded contours
* Most lakes have shallow areas
- water areas
- stable water levels
- temperature
- three layers
- types
- uniform temperature
* Most lakes have water levels
- hold big bass
- never freeze to the bottom
- now have a thin layer of ice
* Most lakes provide clean water
- drink water
- moisture
- smallmouth habitats
* Most lakes serve as habitats
- rich habitats
- stratify into three layers during late spring, staying that way until late fall
* Some lakes also contain Arctic char
- support commercial fisheries or are valued for recreation
- are accessible by snowmobile while others are by ski or snowshoe only
* Some lakes are big enough for waves to be produced
- that they can stay full through rain instead of inflows
- largely aquatic-insect oriented
- open bowls with low shores like a southern reservoir transported to Mars
- shallow, warm and have lots of aquatic plants
- warm enough to swim in
- become hunt territory
* Some lakes carry bass
- smallmouth bass
* Some lakes contain perches
- spine sticklebacks
- disappear when their source of water is diminished
- do have restrictions on boat speeds during certain hours
- draw down the water level in the winter to freeze the roots
* Some lakes have a thermocline during the summer months
- abundances
- density
- extensive shallows where fish cruise on their search for a meal
- gravel substrate
* Some lakes have natural beaches
- surface-water inlets and outlets
- nitrogen
* Some lakes have no structure, meaning a flat bottom or no weed beds
- surface streams flowing in or out
- visible once a part of the mainland
- lie near the highest regions of the earth, and others are far below sea level
- occur in broader valleys
- produce large numbers of crustaceans, such as freshwater shrimps, hog-lice and crayfish
- provide safe places
- receive Arctic grayling, and some Arctic char
* abhor all excesses created by humans.
* abound, and are identifiable in winter only by an absence of trees on the snow.
* act as history books, recording the events that impact a region over time.
* affect weather conditions over a large area.
* also constitute habitats for a variety of birds, fishes and other aquatic life
- lose water to ground water sources
* are a critically important component of the state's environmental and economic health
- surprisingly rare phenomenon in nature
- transitional and short-term phenomena
- about edges, orifices
- abundant even above treeline
- alive with geese and ducks, sometimes hidden by early morning mists
* are also common along slow-moving rivers and in low areas near the sea
- popular recreational locations
- an essential source of water in the United States
- at the same elevation, in the same way conductors are at the same potential
- better fly fished in the cooler water periods in spring and fall
- bodieses of water
- cold
* are common in higher glaciated areas
- on the outwash plain
- common, especially in glaciated areas
- complex and dynamic systems with highly individual characteristics
- crucial for discharging and storing flood water
* are deep and clear, and hold trophy size fish
- with permanent water, regularly supplied with an inflow of water
- different from south to north, from weedy to sandy
- dispersible in vegetable oil and thus can be mixed with fats, etc
- dry
- favorable environments for fossilization processes to take place
- generally larger and deeper than ponds
- important sources of drinking water, electricity and water for irrigation
- in blue and marshes in green
- large bodies of inland water
- larger and deeper than most ponds
- like animals in that they are born, grow, then die
* are located in countrysides
- dead bodies
- forests
- mountains
- parks
- state parks
- mostly of glacial origin, small in area but often deep
- part of the diversity of native habitats in Vermont
- pigment
- predominant in the ecoregion
- rather ephemeral features
- relatively short-lived features on the geologic time scale
- skies pieces placed in the Earth
- small bodies of liquid
- stations
- still frozen, but most moving waters are once again running free, either muddied or clear
- temporary storage areas for water
* are the combination of dyes and insoluble material
- water insoluble form of the dye
- therefore a kind of colour that can be solidified
* are used for boating
- diving
- fishing
- fun
- row boats
- sailing
- storing water
- water skiing
- very common on the end moraines and some of the outwash plains
- well suited for a number of types of fishing
- waterfowls
* become meadows.
* bioaccumulate differently.
* can also be man-made or natural
- valuable indicators of near- surface groundwater conditions
- form in volcanic calderas
- be nearly uniformly round, or they can be irregularly shaped
- become aged by the over fertilization
- dry up
- flood too, given enough rainfall
- form where landslides dam stream valleys
- have pond-like areas
- hold good numbers of redfish during the summer months
- lose more heat at night and wind can mix up the water layers
- stretch to thousands of square kilometers in size
- vary greatly in area, depth, and water type
* cater to boating, sailing, water skiing and wind surfing enthusiasts.
* commonly occupy the depressions created by sinkhole collapse.
* consist of layers that differ in chemical composition, illumination and temperature.
* constantly undergo evolutionary change, reflecting the changes that occur in their watersheds.
* constitute an important component of freshwater resources.
* cover about three percent of Earth's continental area
- more than a sixth of Uganda
- much of southwestern Labrador
* differ radically from seas, most notably in their isolation and oxygenation.
* eliminate color bleeding in water systems and disperse easily in high fat systems.
* eventually become extinct because of erosion and sedimentation.
* fill a few volcanic craters and calderas
- with silt, and chemicals that come with the soil cause algae-related fish kills
* formed by volcanic activity tend to be relatively small.
* get their water from precipitation, from rivers and streams and from underground water.
* go through seasonal water temperature changes.
- boats and canoes, while river is primarily canoe
- characteristics that differentiate TMDLs from other waters
- different meanings to different people
- energy supplied by wind and density currents
- fluid
- slush pockets and there double layer to the ice
- surfaces
* hold an abundance of life in the water closest to shore
- even bigger fish
- good numbers of waterfowl
* includes gaps.
* lie in ice-carved basins.
* look totally different in the dark than they do in the daylight.
* normally have non-salt water.
* obtain a leaden hue.
* occupy depressions in the bedrock created by glacial erosion
- the glacially scoured depressions in the bedrock
* possess fish
* produce larger fish.
* provide an important source of water for irrigation
- excellent habitats
* provide fishing and other water recreation
- for bass, bream, speckled perch, and catfish
- homes
- prefer habitats
- watershed, wildlife habitat, and recreation
* receive nutrients from fertilisers added to pastures to increase their production.
* receiving runoff from silt or clay soils often possess high turbidities.
* represent a wealth of resources whose quality is maintained by human management.
* respond to fertilizer just like a lawn.
- traps for materials generated within their watersheds
* sometimes change dramatically over just a few years.
* then can freeze over and thaw out several times in one winter.
* tint by dispersion.
* turn into acid.
* typically are clear and have sandy bottoms.
* vary chemically in terms of nutrients, major ions, and contaminants
- greatly in their properties depending upon their rate of mixing
- physically in terms of light levels, temperature, and water currents
+ Food coloring, Dyes and lakes: Food ingredients :: Chemistry
* Lakes are the combination of dyes and insoluble material. Lakes tint by dispersion. Lakes are not oil soluble, but are oil dispersible. Lakes are more stable than dyes and are ideal for coloring products containing fats and oils or items lacking sufficient moisture to dissolve dyes. Typical uses include coated tablets, cake and donut mixes, hard candies and chewing gums, lipsticks, soaps, shampoos, talc etc.
+ Ice, Geographical locations of ice: Chemical compounds :: Water
* Because ice floats, even large bodies of water that freeze, like some oceans, only form ice on the surface. Most lakes never freeze to the bottom. Even the coldest oceans, like the Arctic, only freeze on the top, leaving liquid ocean circulating below. Because of this the Earth's oceans are able to redistribute heat and the climate of the earth has less extremes of heat and cold than it would otherwise. If ice were to sink instead of float, the oceans would fill up with ice from the bottom, would remain solid and only some of the top would thaw. A solid ocean would not circulate heat. But because ice floats on the surface the water beneath can continue to circulate and the ice on the surface stays exposed and readily melts when the temperature rises.
+ Inflow: Waterways
* Some lakes are big enough that they can stay full through rain instead of inflows. An example of such a lake is the Great Salt Lake in Utah. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | lake:
Acidic lake
* Most acidic lakes have fish.
* Some acidic lakes have no fish.
Bear lake
* Bear Lake is in the extreme southeast corner of Idaho.
* Bear Lake is located in the mountains of northern Utah
- on the southeast border of Idaho and the northeast border of Utah
- on the Idaho border, and partly in that Territory
* Bear Lake is the focus of outdoor recreation in southeastern Idaho
- highest alpine lake accessible by paved highway in the Rocky Mountains range
- tributary to the Bear River
Coast lake
* are former bays that have been cut off from the sea.
+ Poland, Geography: European Union member states
* This coast has several spits, dunes and coastal lakes. Coast lakes are former bays that have been cut off from the sea. These areas are sometimes called lagoons. Szczecin Lagoon is on the western border with Germany. The Vistula Lagoon is on the eastern border with Kaliningrad, province of Russia.<|endoftext|>### waters | lake:
Crater lake
* Crater Lake is also the deepest lake in the United States and the fifth in the world
- ninth deepest lake in the world
* Crater Lake lies in the caldera of a once mighty mountain
- inside the top of an ancient volcano known as Mount Mazama
+ Crater Lake National Park: National parks in the United States :: Oregon
* Crater Lake has no streams flowing into or out of it. All water that enters the lake is eventually lost from evaporation or flowing away underground. The lake is re-filled only from snow and rain
- Lake, Dimensions and depth: Geography of Oregon :: Lakes in the United States :: Volcanoes in the United States :: Calderas
* The lake has an average depth of. Its maximum depth is. The depth changes slightly as the weather changes. On the basis of maximum depth, Crater Lake is the deepest lake in the United States. It is the second deepest in North America, after Great Slave Lake in Canada. Crater Lake is also the ninth deepest lake in the world
Dry lake
* Many dry lakes contain shallow water during the rainy season, especially during wet years.
* are generally small, round depressions in the surface of the landscape.
Eagle lake
* Eagle Lake is California's second largest natural lake, and one of the more unique.
* Eagle Lake is located in Colorado County Texas
- Polk County Florida
- the heart of Florida in Imperial Polk County
- shallow lake and minor winds make it hard to fish
Eutrophic lake
* are even older and more fertile
- generally most prevalent in all areas of the United States south of Wisconsin
- lakes with high concentrations of nutrients
* are often relatively shallow and often have weed beds
- shallow, with seasonal deficiency in dissolved oxygen
* have a large supply of nutrients and organic matter
- conditions that support many organisms
* show wide seasonal changes in their biological and chemical conditions.
Freshwater lake
* Most freshwater lakes provide homes.
* are most productive near their shores and near their surface.
* occur at many levels of mountain ranges
- the top of mountain ranges
Glacial lake
* is filled with sediment or is drained.
* reflect cloud-topped mountains.<|endoftext|>### waters | lake:
Lagoon
* Some lagoons have levels
- support fisheries that are very important for the island
* are also present behind reefs, or in the center of atolls.
* are bodies of water on the landward side of barrier islands
- important bird nesting sites and provide nurseries for fish
- man-made containment ponds for fecal waste
- natural things
- particularly vulnerable to the development of towns or cities around their edge
* can also provide a source of flush water
- become host to an anaerobic environment
* create odors.
* form natural aquarium of brilliantly colored tropical fish.
* gradually fill in, get shallower, and become salt marshes.
* have extremely variable water chemistry depending on climate.
* includes gaps. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | lake | lagoon:
Aerated lagoon
* are usually shallower than facultative lagoons.
* create aerobic conditions through mechanical means.
* use a mechanical device to supply oxygen to the lagoon.
Anaerobic lagoon
* digest and transform the manure into methane, nutrients, carbon dioxide and water.
* work best in warm weather.
Large lake
* Many large lakes occupy the glaciated valleys within the southern portion of the ecoregion.
* hold food in both shallow and deep water.
* vary greatly in their physical, chemical, biological, and geological characteristics.
Loch
* Most lochs apply the international rules for the sea.
* are inlets
- lakes
- natural things
Meromictic lake
* are deep narrow lakes whose bottom waters never mix with waters above
- lakes that never mix completely at any time of the year
* can have temperature inversions.
Mesotrophic lake
* Most mesotrophic lakes have some form of broadleaf weeds such as curlyleaf cabbage and pondweed.
* are between the other two trophic states in their characteristics
- in between oligo and eutrophic lakes<|endoftext|>### waters | lake:
Mono lake
* Mono Lake drink the hyperosmotic medium to gain water lost by osmosis.
* Mono Lake is among North America's most biologically productive lakes
- east of Yosemite National Park in California
- located in central California, near the Nevada border
- naturally salty and alkaline because it has no outlet
- part of a chain of alkaline and landlocked wetlands sprinkled across the Great Basin
- natural habitat for many forms of life that are important to our ecological system
- provides gulls with brine shrimp and flies in great abundance
- represents an extreme environment that is likely to harbor unique microbes
- tight web of life reliant on water
Mountain lake
* are rich reservoirs of life surrounded by marshes and meadows
- somehow mysterious often with stories about mountain spirits
* hold smallmouth bass and walleye.
Natural lake
* are a feature of the glaciated andscape
- landscape
* can form by various processes.
Northern lake
* Some northern lakes remain locked in ice.
* are slow to warm up.
Oligotrophic lake
* are cold and clear.
* are deep, cold and infertile with rocky shorelines
- nutrient-poor, and low in primary productivity
- generally clear, deep and free of weeds or large algae blooms
- lakes with low concentrations of nutrients
* have low productivity as a result
- nice clean water, no weed problems and poor fishing
* tend to be unproductive, clear, cold, and deep. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | lake:
Pond
* All ponds are usually without water during winter.
* Many ponds are built with water control devices
- home to species of waterfowl, fish, frogs and turtles
- have aerators or currents which slow or stop the formation of ice
* Most ponds also feature either floating goose nests or wood duck houses
- are home to native alligators
* Most ponds are shallow and support submerged vegetation throughout
- enough for sunshine to reach the bottom
* Most ponds attract amphibians
- birds
- ducks
- geese
- mammals
- mosquitoes
* Most ponds contain fish
- shallow water
- substrate
- trouts
* Most ponds have egg mass
- open water
- oxygen
- hold water
- possess fish
* Most ponds provide critical habitats
- environments
- stable environments
- used by frogs and salamanders for breeding currently appear unaffected by the drought
* Some ponds are created specifically for habitat restoration, including water treatment.
* Some ponds attract dragonflies
- eagles
- herons
* Some ponds become food sources
- home to many thousands of toads and frogs in spring time when mating takes place
* Some ponds have different plants and animals while others have none
- eels
- layers
- help animals
* Some ponds possess crocodiles
* Use chicken wire or fine plastic netting to cover the pond at the end of summer.
* also pose a serious drowning hazard
- vary greatly in size from a few gallons to many thousands of gallons
- work quite well as irrigation sources
* are a great way to study ecosystems and all types of life forms
- abundant in morainal areas
- also an effective way to manage stormwater due to their large holding capacity
* are an important but threatened habitat
- interesting aquatic ecosystem with numerous forms of life to study
- as unique as snowflakes
- better for watering than flowing streams, but they can become contaminated with heavy use
- bodies of water
- circular recharge or discharge areas
- concrete with liners also which won t leak water into earth
- frequently human-constructed
- generally small, shallow lakes that have a more uniform temperature
- home to a huge variety of microbes that represent nearly all kingdoms of life
- ideal places for fish to live
* are located in countrysides
- forests
- ground
- parks
- rural areas
- open to the atmosphere
- relatively short-lived ecosystems
- safest when they are fenced to prevent unsupervised use by children
* are shallow and warm
- bodies of water with plants on the bottom
- small bodies of freshwater with shallow and still water, marsh , and aquatic plants
- small, temporary or permanent bodies of shallow water
* are smaller bodies of still water located in natural hollows
- than lakes
- smaller, shallower, and warmer
- swamp
* are the traditional and inexpensive way to hold spawning populations of broodfish
- typical ecosystem of many amphibians
- used by both sexes to escape from moose flies and other pesky insects and to keep cool
* are used for aquatic life
- swimming
* are vital habitats for all kinds of wildlife
- to the health of our community
- beautiful birds, insects, amphibians and other wildlife
- insect-eating frogs
* can also form when a lake is infilled with organic debris or mineral sediment.
* can be dangerous depending on the season, age of the horse, and what lies within
- for swimmers, especially children
- permanent, semi-permanent, or seasonal
- go in sun or in shade
- result from a wide range of natural processes
* change every couple months.
- suitable substrate
* containing infective feces are important sources of infection for susceptible birds.
* created by beavers often serve as fish habitat.
* encourage slow percolation of storm water, recharging the local water table and streambeds.
* have components
- cypress trees growing in or around a depression
- existence
- variation
* help animals live, ponds help plants grow, and they keep amphibians moist
- provide water for many kinds of wildlife
* hold giant lilies and lotus flowers
* includes gaps.
* liners Pond liners keep water from seeping into the soil.
* lose depth
- water through evaporation and seepage
* naturally degrade many of the waste products that cause problems in intensive systems.
* often support a large variety of animal and plant life.
* play an important role in the functioning of many modern facilities.
* provide an aquatic habitat for dragonflies, fish, newts, frogs and other aquatic life
- great places
- homes
- water for livestock, and locally they are used for recreation
* raised fish have much more color than tank raised fish due to the sunlight.
* serve as watering sites for a variety of wildlife species.
* sometimes dry up during hot, dry summer weather
- flood their banks during spring melts and heavy rains
* tend to go dry if they have an inadequate drainage area or because they leak.
* usually have muddy or silty bottoms
- regulate the same water temperature ranging from the water's surface to the bottom
* vary in size from a few to many acres. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | lake | pond:
Beaver pond
* Many beaver ponds provide ideal wood duck habitat.
* Most beaver ponds contain fish.
* Most beaver ponds provide critical habitats
Duck pond
* give habitats for water fowl and other birds who use the water to bathe in and drink
* A 'duck pond' pond for ducks and other water fowl. Duck ponds give habitats for water fowl and other birds who use the water to bathe in and drink. Duck ponds usually attract people who come to feed the ducks
Permanent pond
* Most permanent ponds contain fish
- shallow water
* Most permanent ponds provide environments
- stable environments
Private pond
* are the second most heavily fished waters in Alabama.
* can easily introduce nonnative species and devastating diseases to drainages.
Small pond
* Most small ponds provide habitats.
* Some small ponds have ice covers
- layers
* are common between the foredune and the backdune in many dune complexes.
* have existence
- rings of open water
Vernal pond
* Most vernal ponds hold water.
* are an important part of the food chain
- ponds which dry up for part of the year
* dry up during the hot summer months.
* exist only during a wet season, such as the spring or autumn.
* fill with water in late winter or early spring.
* remain partially filled and the smaller ones are dry.
Salt lake
* Many salt lakes have large recreational values such as fishing, photography, bird-watching, sailing.
* appear in the virgin lands.
* are a good deal more varied in many physico-chemical features than freshwater lakes
- natural things
- normally dry and appear as glittering sheets of salt stretching to the horizon
* occur in many low positions, in places following lines of ancient drainage.
Several lake
* are so large that they almost constitute small inner seas
- without fish
* have sheer palisades that lichen has splotched with orange, green and brown.
Shallow lake
* Many shallow lakes are homothermous all the time except when the surface is covered with ice.
* tend to winterkill more frequently than deeper ones.
Small lake
* Many small lakes occupy irregular ice-carved basins in rolling topography on the glaciated islands.
* are highly susceptible to cycles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters:
Ocean
* Most oceans absorb heat
- cause rain
* Most oceans contain compounds
* Most oceans have distribution
- effects
- oxygen
- production
- surfaces
- waves
* Most oceans possess fish
- sharks
* Most oceans provide breed habitats
- sources
* Most oceans serve as habitats
- primary habitats
* Some oceans absorb sunlight.
* Some oceans are part of hydrospheres
- worlds
- have zones
- move jellyfish
- possess animals.
* An 'ocean' large area of salt water between continents. Oceans are very big and they join smaller seas together
* Take real measurements such as temperature and wave height and graph the changes.
* absorb a large amount of carbon dioxide
- both carbon dioxide and heat
* act like the mercury in a barometer, rising in response to reduced air pressure.
* also act as sink for carbon dioxide
- have layers of water at different temperatures
- participate in other matter cycles
* always empty into mouths of rivers.
* are a global sink for carbon dioxide
- key mechanism in transporting heat from the sun around the globe
- actually many shades of blue, green and even red
* are also a major source of food and employment and balance of trade
- essential to our economy
- generators of commerce
- superhighways for moving commerce
- very important in regulating the temperature on Earth
- always slower to cool down or warm up than land areas
* are an economic issue cloaked in environmental concern
- important part of our earth's ecosystem
- as deep as space
- bodies of water
- by far the largest animal habitat on earth
- connected to major lakes, watersheds, and waterways
- critical to all life on Earth
- dark because water transmits light poorly
- deeper than deep water wells
- essential to life, providing food, energy, resources, climate, and oxygen
- highways for products and people who move by ship
- home for all sea animals
- homes for many living things
- important to life on earth
- large bodies of salt water which separates deposits of land
- liquids
* are located in beachs
- futures
- globes
- low areas
- motion
- movies
- planets
- thes
- waterfalls
- low and continents are high relative to one another
- made of water
- much more than big pools of salt water
- normally unowned, accessible to all
- now mountains
- one of the largest ecosystems in the world
- sailing
- saltiest where they are very hot, such as the Red Sea, or very cold, such as the Arctic
- significantly cloudier than continents
- sinks for methyl bromide, for example
- sources for minerals and other resources
* are the largest among all the water resources
- surface water bodies that contribute to evaporation
- life-line of tourism
* are used for diving
- drinking
- kayakings
- swimming
- travel
- vast deposits of carbon
- important to people
- noisy
- vital to our survival and help regulate the Earth's temperature and rainfall
- wets
* become homes.
* can be rough with too much current to swim.
* cause most of the world's weather patterns
- relatively faint reflected light
* constitute by far the largest reservoir, however.
- huge deposits of carbon as calcium carbonate deposits
* cover a vast percentage of Earth's surface
- about three-quarters of the Earth's surface
* cover almost three-fourths of our planet
- the planet
* cover more than three-quarters of the surface of the Earth
- two thirds of the surface of our planet
- two-thirds of the earth's surface
- most of the Earth's surface
* cover three-fourths of the Earth's surface
- earth's surface making our planet unique
- two-thirds of the world's surface
* determine our climate and our weather.
* dives place emphasis on diving skills.
* dominate the Earth's surface and greatly affect daily life.
* drive global and regional climate.
* harbor almost all of the phylum diversities of the animal kingdom.
* has two life-important properties.
* have a lot of nutrients
- to do with what happens in the weather
- low albedo, snow a high albedo
* have a major effect on climate, because water in the oceans holds a large amount of heat
- the climates of continents to the east
- pattern of circulation
- global circulation patterns
* heat up and cool down much more slowly than land.
* help maintain stable temperatures on Earth.
* host more varied life forms than dry land environments.
* is lit with star light
- the closest ocean to that of a river
* make Earth an ideal site for life
- up over two thirds of the Earth's surface
* metaphor for great depth and breadth.
* moderate temperature variations.
* occasionally contain archipelagos.
* offer other energy sources.
* plan a key role in the Earth's climate because water warms and cools slower than air.
* play a key role in the distribution of heat.
* produce more oxygen and store more carbon than forests.
- many essential services such as regulating climate and cycling nutrients
* receive more than half of the energy entering the climate system.
* regulate the world's climate and provide more oxygen than the rain forests.
* remain one of the key parts of the climate system that are poorly observed and understood.
* rise and fall.
* see also Oceanography.
* serve a variety of important functions.
- vast heat reservoirs
* show cooling in the centers of the major basins and warming around the margins.
* show undersea physical features in rich coloring
- ridges in rich coloring
* sit on thinner, heavier crust.
* store energy.
* stratify just like lakes so that warm, light water sits on top of colder dense water.
* suffer more than just occasional oil spills.
* supply the water for the glaciers
- world's people with more animal protein than any other source
* support the greatest variety of life on earth, from microscopic plankton to giant whales
* tend to absorb some of the heat from the atmosphere
- be stable habitats
- have constant evaporation and clouds formed tended to be thinner
* too receive differing amounts of heat.
* touch every continent and culture, affecting jobs, weather, and wildlife. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | ocean:
Healthy ocean
* are vital to the health of the whole earth.
* exert multiple and profound influences over our lives.
Ocean life
* Most ocean life lives in one specific zone.
* adapts to water motion and the patterns of physical and chemical properties.
* can be very difficult for growing salmon.
* contains whales, seals, penguins and dolphins.
* is very different from the freshwater lakes where a loon hatches and begins life.
* provides a vital ecological balance.
* thrives in many parts of the Pacific, especially in coastal waters.
Open ocean
* Most open oceans have production.
* Most open oceans serve as habitats
- primary habitats
* Some open oceans have zones.
* are considered all areas beyond the shelves.
* have extremely low productivity
Pacific ocean
* are located in atlases
- southern hemispheres
- wests
- oceans
* are used for fishing
- sailing
- saltwater fish
- swims
* have salt.
Puddle
* Some puddles absorb heat
- are so shallow they're more dirt than water
* Some puddles provide breed habitats
- mosquito habitats
* are also a favorite source of nutrients
- covering materials
- full of leaves and weeds, floating
- located in waterfalls
- open air
* commonly form during rain, and can cause problems for transport.
* drying up in the sun is clearly an example of evaporation.
* form slowly if at all.
* prove an ideal breeding habitat for toads.<|endoftext|>### waters | rapids:
Rapid change
* can overwhelm human beings
- rupture the cell walls and cause the plant to die
* fact of life, for better or for worse.
* feature of contemporary life.
* have a tendency to burn out some people and frustrate others.
* is synonymous with the technology industry.
* is the one constant for today's distribution and manufacturing industries
- order of the day throughout today's customer-driven business world
- rule in the field of molecular biology
* tax the adaptability of individuals and societies. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters:
Sea
* LIFE per inch of trunk diameter.
* Most sea has adequate oxygen
- low temperature
- sodium
- snakes prey on fish , especially eels
- stars prey heavily upon mollusks, but there are exceptions
- urchins occupy places
* Some sea anemones form symbiotic relationships with crabs, shrimps or clownfish
- breezes cause thunderstorms
* Some sea causes beach erosion
* Some sea is part of hydrospheres
- worlds
- jelly has anatomies
- lamprey predation leads to extinction
* Some sea lampreys have levels
- puncture skin
* Some sea lampreys reach maturity
- sexual maturity
- slugs swim
- snails breathe use gills
- stars, like the purple sea star of the Gulf of Maine, have nine or ten arms
- turtles ingest particles
* Some sea urchins brood eggs in specialized pouches
- crawl using their spines, which they can manipulate like stilts
- destroy environments
- hide in cracks
- inhabit pits
* Some sea urchins live on sandy shores, other species live upon the rocks
- possess internal skeletons
- use feet
- seas look dark blue, when others are blue-green.
* and ocean are two different things. Seas are part of an ocean. In other words I agree with Osiris
* anenomes, for example, or coral polyps live out their lives attached to the same spot
- shell fish, small fish, octopi, crabs, and algae are common residents
* are important because water has been the catalyst for the development of life on our planet
- partially or completely enclosed by land masses
- plains
- rough with large swells
* breeze A coastal local wind that blows from the ocean onto the land.
* breezes moderate temperatures throughout the year.
* company limited by guarantee and a registered charity.
* cover the land and then retreat.
* form of audit.
* gulls feasting on small fish.
* hares sequester ochtodene in high concentrations and are deterrentto reef fish predators.
- consequences
- danger
- dire consequences
* have fish, and fish have fins
* includes bays
- gulfs
* is based on the principle of energy conservation
- dissolved and measured into the same proportion that existed at first
* kayaking paddles are much different than whitewater paddles.
* kayaks and longer, with a sleek v-shaped body for stability in rough seas.
* kayaks, like rafts, carry all our gear.
* mites lead complicated lives.
* place for penguins.
* provides fish.
* rise and fall over what is now North America.
* snails on the other hand, eat plankton and other small creatures.
* snakes quite common.
* turtles physical nests are affected by rising sea levels.
+ Sea snake, Poison, Natural function: Elapidae
* Most sea snakes prey on fish, especially eels. The latter stiffens and dies within seconds when bitten. One species prefers molluscs and crustaceans, such as prawns. Some reef dwelling species have small heads and thin necks, making it possible for them to get small eels from the soft bottom where they hide.
### waters | sea:
Sea lice
* are actually small parasites that affect fish.
* are parasites which have posed a devastating threat to farmed salmon stocks
- kill salmon and have been a major problem for the industry
* can infect very young salmon so that fewer make it out to sea or back to spawn.
* can transmit ISAv from infected to susceptible fish
- the virus
* die and fall off anadromous fish such as salmonids when they return to freshwater.
* escape predation on their host.
Sea life
* abounds in the thousands of tide pools and inlets.
* can sometimes cause injuries and even fatalities.
* depends on it for survival.
* includes fish, molluscs, oysters and other shellfish
- sea anemones, sea urchins, crabs, and starfish
* is abundant and varied
- varies with the season
- in B.C. coastal waters
- located in beachs
- observed in our tide pool and aquariums
Shallow sea
* are where the fastest currents move.
* have extensive distribution. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters:
Stream
* All streams are sinuous at some time in their geologic history over some part of their length
- small, fast and are filled with rocks and boulders of all sizes
- carry sediment
* All streams flow into the sea, yet the sea is never full
- to the sea because it is lower than they are
- have currents
- tend to move across a floodplain, cutting outside corners of stream bends
* Every stream leads to a river , and every river leads to an ocean.
* Many streams become faster flowing after heavy rains or the spring melting of winter ice and snow
- exist in the mountains because of the large quantity of precipitation
- follow seams between flows of different ages
* Many streams have dense beds of aquatic vegetation and other forms of cover
- spring and fall runs
- run almost entirely on sewage effluent during the dry season
- tend to dry up during the hot summer
- ultimately flow into bays or directly into the ocean
* Most streams are shallow enough that sunlight can reach the bottom.
* Most streams carry sediments
- cause erosion
- contain brook trouts
- flow intermittently and are often dry in summer and in autumn except after rainstorms
* Most streams flow into rivers
* Most streams have a steeper gradient near their headwaters and a gentler gradient near their mouth
- bottoms
- native populations of brook trout
- rocky bottoms
- slippery rocks that are coated with algae
- waves
- hold water
- originate from groundwater sources that come to the surface
- possess fish
* Most streams provide water sources
- transport the largest component of their sediment load in suspension
* Some streams carry carbon dioxide
- cease flowing during drought
- contain biomass
* Some streams flow all year long and are called perrenial
- into lakes
* Some streams flow through bottoms
- valley bottoms
- underground through unconsolidated sediments or through caves
* Some streams have natural levees , mound-like deposits of sediment that border the stream channel
- no surface flowing water
- shades
* also carry a dissolved load.
* are a major source of water and transportation for the world's human population.
* are an essential part of all watershed systems
- important source of freshwater for our reservoirs and the Bay
- bodies of water
- capable of carrying large amounts of sediment
- courses
* are dynamic and vital components of several ecosystems
- systems that change with every high or low flow event
- important sources of drinking water, irrigation water and wildlife habitat
* are located in bridges
- countrysides
- forests
- mud
- wildernesses
- wood
- motion
* are often tea-colored from tannic acid leaching from tree leaves and bark in wooded swamps
- victims of municipal and industrial pollution
* are places where data can be sent out of, or received into, a program
- information can flow between a program and various devices
- primary indicators of the health of the watershed within which they reside
- rich in biodiversity
- short and swift, and headwatered in glaciers
- small and fordable by large animals
- small, but some do contain fish
- smaller and can converge to create rivers
- sources of water for consumption, agriculture, and industry
* are swift and braided, and most are headwatered in glaciers
- often originate from glaciers, and carry heavy sediment loads
* are the arteries of life in the arid Southwest
- birthplace of major river systems
- primary force of erosion and therefore do a lot of deposition of material
- principal agent of erosion responsible for carving the landscape
- three dimensional ecosystems
* are used for bathing
- raftings
- swimming
- wash
- watercourses formed when water flows between continuous definable channel boundaries
* become rivers running briskly, their milky waters laden with glacial sediment.
* bring water to irrigate crops and to supply our domestic needs.
* can carry sediment, or alluvium
- either gain water from, or lose water to, the groundwater system
* carry dissolved iron from nearby mountains
- sediment along with water
* carve through hard layers of rock , breaking down or eroding it.
* commonly flow through floodplain materials previously deposited by the stream itself
- have shallow valleys and broad floodplains withmany sloughs and marshes
* construct flood plains that accommodate their maximum flood capacity.
* draining interior basins travel through narrow canyons across broad uplands
- oceanic islands typically have relatively low insect diversity and abundance
* erode because they have the ability to pick up sediment and transport it to a new location
- channels, produce arroyos, or dry gullies
* feed rivers.
* flow into reservoirs and reservoirs become our drinking water
- through areas with different soils
- to rivers and eventually to the ocean
* have a lot of energy at their headwaters
- direct effects
- endure power
- inch minimum size limits
- muddy water
* inhabited by the slimy sculpin are invariably good brook trout waters.
* join to form rivers.
* merge into rushing rivers and fill the oceans.
* naturally wind or meander.
* often begin in the mountains, and flow through valleys
- freeze solid to their bottoms, causing floods to occur over the surrounding flats
- run high and turbid in the spring
- start in mountains, where the land is very steep
* overflow generally occurs during late winter or spring and during periods of high rainfall.
* produce a stream bed whose cross-section reflects the flow regime
- many land forms
* provide habitats
- suitable habitats
- transportation routes, energy, and a means of disposal of wastes
* run into rivers.
* running into bogs are superficial, and they tend to disappear in the heat of summer.
* serve both as sources of water supply and avenues for the disposal of wastes.
* start out as freshwater springs or seeps.
* support such animals as muskrats, beaver, and amphibians.
* tend towards an equilibrium profile, that balance between sedimentation and erosion.
* typically are dry in the summer
- derive most of their water from precipitation in the form of rain and snow
* usually contain a higher concentration of dissolved oxygen than do ponds.
* yield salmon and freshwater fish.
+ Ocean pollution, Sources of ocean pollution, Nonpoint-Source pollution: Water pollution
* People often think that water pollution comes from big factories, but most of the pollution comes from everyday people doing everyday things. This kind of pollution is called 'nonpoint-source pollution' because we cannot point out where it came from directly. Every stream leads to a river, and every river leads to an ocean.
* Some streams flow underground through unconsolidated sediments or through caves. Especially with caves, a stream may flow aboveground for part of its course, and underground for part of its course. When a stream emerges from an underground course, it is termed a spring. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | stream:
Braided stream
* are wide, shallow, and heavily loaded with sediment.
* have multiple channels that interconnect like the strands of a braid.
Brook
* are located in bridges
- cities
- countrysides
- parks
- rural areas
- streams
* are used for fishing
- life
- water sources
* deterministic model that looks at hydrologic dynamics at the watershed level.
* have water.
* stickleback can reproduce when they are one year old
- have prominent mouths, large eyes and four to six spines on their backs<|endoftext|>### waters | stream:
Creek
* Many creeks quit flowing and either became intermittent with pools or dried up.
* Most creeks flow into rivers
- through glacial outwash and debris material within narrow valleys
* Most creeks have fish
- predatory fish
- serve as habitats
* also produce current - some a little, some a lot depending on their water shed.
* are dynamic systems.
* are located in countrysides
- forests
- meadows
- wood
- small rivers
- used for water
- usually high in the spring
- watercourses
* can become a raging force causing death and destruction
- rise in the middle of the night
* cease to flow and floodplains quickly dry out.
* chub readily take baited hooks and are often caught by children.
* often vanish underground only to resurge farther on.
* possess fish.
* run dry for most of the year.<|endoftext|>### waters | stream | creek:
Boulder creek
* Boulder Creek tributary of the South Platte River.
+ Boulder, Colorado, Geography: County seats in Colorado
* Boulder Creek flows through the City. Boulder Creek was named a long time before the city was built. It was named after the big granite boulders that have fallen into the creek over the years. Historians think that Boulder City was named after Boulder Creek. The water in Boulder Creek comes from melting mountain snow and small rivers West of the city. Boulder Creek is a tributary of the South Platte River.
Cripple creek
* Cripple Creek fast-moving meadow stream south of Rural Retreat in Western Virginia.
* Cripple Creek is in central Colorado, in Teller County
- one of three casino gaming towns in the state
- statutory city with a mayor, city council and city administrator
Silver creek
* Silver Creek has two separate but interconnected mountains.
* Silver Creek is an important spawing area for brown trout
- home to an abundance of rainbow, brown and brook trout
- located on the main East-West Union Pacific Railroad line
Ephemeral stream
* are especially vulnerable to gullying and destruction of vegetation
- most common in the arid and semi-arid regions of the western United States
- small, temporary paths which occur only during a rainstorm or after a flood
* have negligible aquatic resources.
Glacial stream
* flow over surface of lake deposits and lay down sand and gravel deposits.
* produce other deposits.
Healthy stream
* contain a variety of plants, insects, and animals.
* have flood plains and often have adjacent wetlands.
* mean clean water and livable communities for people and fish.
* support a wide variety of organisms.
Ice stream
* are different than glaciers in that they are bordered by ice instead of rock
- fast moving extensions of ice caps and ice sheets
* drain ice caps or ice sheets
- into the sea in a number of other places along the coast of East Antarctica
Intermittent stream
* are seasonal streams that flow only during certain times of the year.
* flow at least six months of the year
- part of the year
* serve as feeding and spawning grounds for many migratory minnows.
Mountain stream
* are to be found throughout the land.
* can become raging torrents when heavy rain falls.
* erode narrow, V-shaped valleys and waterfalls.
Perennial stream
* are Rivers under the law.
* flow all year
- in a few drainages
* have algae-covered rocky bottoms.
Rill
* are channels
- located in moons
* can enlarge to form gullies.
* merge to form larger streams and rivers. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | stream:
River
* All rivers are subject to fluctuations in flow
- change over time by the forces of nature and at the hands of humans
* All rivers eventually come together into one body of water
- flow into the sea
- flow into the sea, yet the sea is never full
- go to the sea, yet never does the sea become full
- have a gradual slope and eventually flow into a larger body of water such as an ocean
- join the sea and lose therein their Names and Forms
- lead to the great ocean
- run into the sea
- start at the highest point in an area
- tend to flow in a sinuous pattern
* Every river has a mouth, and the mouth has a voice
- point of origin
* Every river is the culmination of a large area of land
- sea, way it circles earth
* Many rivers begin in the Pine Ridge region of the Mayan Mountains
- change names numerous times over their length
- contain both, but some have only one or the other
- deposit their sediment in the ocean
* Many rivers flow by many ways but they fall into the sea
- out to the sea
- through a large watershed into the lakes
- throughout the country
- have dead slow water on the inside corners
* Many rivers never reach the sea
- refroze
- require a larger flow for whitewater rafts
* Many rivers rise in the mid- mountainous area and flow into the sea in all directions
- mid-mountainous area and flow into the sea in all directions
- run through valleys
- scour the landscape and have produced deep gullies, ravines and waterfalls
- start in Kashmir
* Most rivers also receive lighter fishing pressure than lakes.
* Most rivers are dry through most of the year and there is limited intensive land use
- glacial and turbid
- attract mosquitoes
* Most rivers carry dissolved minerals and organic compounds
- gallon water
- sediments
- change classification depending on the time of year and the water levels
- contain very little permanent water
* Most rivers flow from the sides of mountains and hills
- in only one direction, but don t expect the same of the river of life
* Most rivers flow into gulfs
- oceans
- only during the rainy season
- quickly in the steeply sloping sections near their source
* Most rivers flow through boundaries
- populous regions
- westerly in deeply incised canyons with bedrock controlled channels
* Most rivers have at least a few islands scattered along their lenghts
- certain environmental characteristics
- muddy bottoms
- surface areas
- their sources in hills and mountains which are areas of high rainfall
- underwater ledges and holes
* Most rivers originate from glaciers located in the surrounding mountains
- in central Angola
* Most rivers overflow once every two years
- their normal channels about once every two years
* Most rivers provide drink water
- remain within their channels indefinitely
- resemble snakes
- rise in the mountains to the east, flowing west and south to the Yellow Sea
* Most rivers serve as habitats
- suitable habitats
- show a concave-up longitudinal profile
- start in high mountains or hills and end in oceans
* Some rivers also have large changes in velocity across the river channel.
* Some rivers are bigger than others
- narrow and some rivers are wide
* Some rivers attract ducks
- geese
- begin where a natural spring releases water from underground
- contain salmon
* Some rivers flow from hills where there is no snow, but lots of rain
- into lakes
* Some rivers flow through centers
- private land
- underground through caves
- generate brackish water by having their river mouth in the ocean
* Some rivers have a reputation for producing big steelheads, others produce smaller fish
- deep ends
- gauging stations, which help determine how high the water is running
- lots of small channels that continually split and join
- pacific salmon
- rough surfaces with waves
- sections which have cut deep gorges with sheer rock faces
* Some rivers hold grind water
- only flow after there has been rain near the head water
* Some rivers possess crocodiles
- dolphins
- provide very little water for the rest of the year
- remain at or near above flood stage in the Carolinas and Florida
* Some rivers start from springs, especially in humid climates
- in lakes and underground springs
- still allow prawn and shrimps
* abound in various kinds of fish
- with hippos and crocodiles
* also are the source of life for much of the planet's animal life.
* also carry a dissolved load
- particulate and dissolved organic carbon from the land to the sea
- soil to lowlands, where it creates rich farmland
- solutes
- contain rock particles in suspension
- find new pathways when they present themselves
- play a major role in China, both for transportation and for irrigation
* also provide attractive habitats for a remarkable number of creatures
- fish, an important source of protein
- receive groundwater flow directly into the bed of the river
* also serve as roadways for commerce, exploration and conquest
- for transportation and trade
* always begin at their source , or headwaters , and flow downhill
- flow towards sea level and currents always flow towards ground
- make the air around it colder
* are a central part of the human psyche and the Australian environment
- dynamic, the only constant is change
* are a natural easement of public access
- force subject to change at anytime
- popular with frogs as a place in which to set up home
- potential source of water for irrigation
- prominent feature of pilgrimage
- source of food
- vital source of water for drinking water supplies, agriculture, and industry
- also conduits for transporting sediment
- amongst the most pervasive geomorphic agents on the earth s surface
* are an important feature of Kentucky geography
- way to move in Laos
- ancient as the hills and never run dry - unless subjected to severe environmental abuse
- arteries that feed all living things
- assisted by the processes of weathering and mass movements
- barriers to gorillas
- bodies of water
- common goods, legally speaking
- constanlty modifying their channel and surrounding landscape
- cools
- crucial parts of our geography and topography
- delicate ecosystems
- dirty and sometimes even have deers
- dry or full depending on the season
- dynamic and constantly changing
- essential in maintaining activity, progress, and life
- exaggerated in width
- few, and the waters they contain are high in demand
- fragmented by many agents, both natural and anthropogenic
- full of dissolved rock
* are generally short, swift flowing, and seasonal
- slightly warmer in winter and cooler in summer than lakes
- great places to catch fish
- high and off color
- highly oxygenated and the oxygen is usually evenly mixed from top to bottom
- home to a wealth of wildlife
- homes for big and small
* are important as waterways in the land for shipping things
- in themselves, being associated in Celtic trad
* are important parts of the human landscape
- hydrologic system because they return water to the ocean
- players in the water cycle
- in flood from Texas westward to Florida, and stretched northward through Virginia
- just a part of a bigger earth process known as the water cycle
- large natural streams that return excess rain or snow to the ocean
- larger than streams and eventually flow out into the ocean
- liable to shift their courses, particularly in tropical countries
- like roads
* are located in bridges
- continents
- mountainous areas
- planet earth
- towns
- wildernesses
- long flowing waters
- low and mountain lakes are frozen
- major forces for erosion and transport on Earth's surface
* are much more than flowing water
- smaller or lacking altogether in deserts and polar regions
- needed for irrigation
- normally the main channels or largest tributaries of drainage systems
- numerous, but few are navigable
- often remote and difficult to get equipment and people into
* are one of many bodies of water that cover the Earth's surface
- the great navigation aids in the north
- opaque, muddy in appearance, channel bed primarily sandy
* are part of our lives and our dreams
- our heritage
- the hydrological cycle
- water systems
- powerful forces that can change the shape of the land
- rich in trout and other fish
- short and they flow into the Caribbean Sea
- sites
- surface water supplies
* are the arteries that carry the vital water that is needed by every living thing on earth
- great cutting agents on plateaus
- lifeblood of our ecosystems and the headwater areas serve as the hearts and lungs
* are the main site where drownings occur, followed by the beach and the sea
- source of water, but they often dry up in the frequent droughts
- place where life began
- primary source of drinking water for half of Missouri's population
- principal part of Ukraine's water resources
- roots of the sea
- sharpest of boundary lines and have been responsible for many wars
- threads that weave together the natural and human elements of Canada
- veins of the earth, carrying the water that all life needs to survive
- water s roads
- thick with mud, and flooding occurs frequently and fiercely
- threads that weave communities together
- travel routes for people and provide the power of hydroelectric plants
* are used for boating
- canoeings
- raftings
- recreation
- swimming
- water skiing
- usually much wider than they are deep
- very sluggish and meander widely across very broad floodplains
- visible in winter due to their temperature differential
* are vital natural resources that provide everything from canoeing to furbearer trapping
- to internal transport
- widest at their sources where water flows fastest
* become ice roads in winter.
* begin high in the mountains, where melting snow gathers in small streams
- wherever water touches the earth
* break their banks under seasonal downpours and carve new paths.
* can also be barriers to land transportation
- means of irrigation
* can be Raging with rapids, waterfalls, and big rocks
- hazardous to inexperienced boaters
- wide and deep, and many empty into larger bodies of waters such as oceans or lakes
- begin in lakes or as springs that bubble up from underground
- carry pollution for long distances
- flood in fall, winter, and spring, so watch for fallen trees in the water
- have different origins and, as they travel, often merge with other bodies of water
- run rust red
* carry a huge volume of water for discharge into the lakes and ponds
- dissolved salts to the ocean
- freshwater and sediments to bays, estuaries, and the ocean
- it to seas
- nutrients and sediment from distant watersheds into the coastal zone
- pebbles, sand and constantly rub against the riverbed
- run-off eventually to the sea
- salt and sediment into the sea
- sediment, but also natural debris, most commonly branches and logs from fallen trees
- soil and sediment that have been washed into the river when it rains or snow melts
* carry the ions to the ocean
- lifeblood of the ecosystem, and one of our own most precious resources
- minerals to the sea
* carve gorges as they pass over the land by carrying rocks and soil away.
* cascade dramatically to the sea through forests of Sitka and white spruce.
* cause erosion by transporting weathered rock and soil downstream.
* change along their length
- course or suddenly flow underground
* changes dramatically with a change in water levels.
* collect water and allow it to flow downhill.
* come into the Arctic from the warmer south
* commonly are borders between states and between countries.
* connect our lands, wildlife and cultures.
* consist of a channel, bank and overbank or flood plain deposits.
* contain many species of fish, crocodiles, and hippopotamuses
- muskellunge also, especially in areas of deep water and slow currents
* continue to fall slowly or remain steady.
* convey the water and sediment discharge supplied from the drainage basin.
* deliver to the oceans elements dissolved within the water.
* develop whirlpools, ecosystems evolve.
* do move around.
* dominate the geography of the South.
* don t belong more to the hills or the plains.
* drain into the Pacific Ocean.
* dry up by opening of the forest.
* eat away mountains piece by piece and carry the mud and sand to the oceans.
* empty into the largest body of water, oceans.
* end where they meet the ocean, a lake, or pond.
* erode landscapes and in the process, they create new landforms and new landscapes
- the rocks they flow over
* eventually end up flowing into the oceans.
* extend across borders, with line thickness and color indicating base flow and source.
* feed the sea.
* fill with melting snow.
* floating popular pastime.
* floodplains as suspended sediment sinks.
* flow downhill due to gravity
- with their power derived from gravity
- downhill, they do cross lines
* flow from arid sugar sands and never run dry
- lakes, tears from the eyes, and the menstrual flow is periodical
- the central hill country to coast
* flow in a single direction, flushing out sediments and pollut ants
- short streams and disappears showing inland drainage
- the wilderness
- the Pacific through gaps cut by glaciers on the west side of the Andes
- naturally and wind endlessly through valley after valley
- valleys in the landscape with ridges of higher land separating the valleys
- western boundaries
- unimpeded across the swaths of continents
- where there was once dry sand, and angiosperms colonize any place of suitable moisture
* flow, everywhere.
* flowing east from the mountains have fertile lowlands.
* flowing into Lake Superior generally have cascades
- other rivers are listed by the rivers they flow into
* flowing over gentle slopes erode the sides of their channels more than the bottom
- soft sedimentary rocks can cut deep gorges and canyons
- through dry or desert areas lose water by evaporation, and become salty
* flows change throughout the season, usually with the highest water during spring runoff
- decline and smaller amounts of quality water reach cities and agricultural lands
- into the Arctic Ocean are believed to have a critical role in driving the climate
* follow different patterns depending on the type of ground they flow over.
* force their way through gorges and pour down steep cliffs to the sea.
* form and process in alluvial channels
- from rain water run-off, rain comes from clouds, and clouds mean an atmosphere
- the main part of the water systems of Azerbaijan
- when streams flow together
* freeze in the winter then overflow in spring.
* get their water from the oceans as ocean water evaporates and forms clouds.
* give water for cattle and other animals to drink and for people to grow plants
- drinking, bathing and washing clothes
- factories that make cloth, steel and many other products
* goes in and out of several lakes.
* harbor fish, amphibians and mammals that make their home in the water.
* have a microscopic protozoan called giardia lamblia, which upsets the digestive system
- persistent and rather rapid flow of water in a fixed direction
- short ice-free season and lakes are shallow
* have certain characteristics
- effects
- strong currents and under tows
- their sources in the snow-capped mountains
* hold many forms of life.
* includes estuaries
* increase in discharge and size with increasing distance downstream.
* inspire photographs, books, poems and films.
* introduce sediment to the longshore current along that coast.
* is used by canoeists when stream flow is sufficient.
* join each other, then flow to the sea if they are large enough
- larger rivers
* keep flowing to lower altitudes, towards the oceans.
* maintain unique biotic resources and provide critical water supplies to people.
* meander when the land is flat.
* mostly follow a winding course in their alluvial plane.
* move back and forth in a snake-like pattern causing erosion and deposition.
* name used for illustrative purposes only.
* naturally erode, carry, and deposit sediment
- evolve and change their shapes by eroding, transporting, and depositing sediment
- flow from high to low elevations under the force of gravity
* never become completely frozen because as soon as water freezes, it floats up to the surface
- flow in a perfectly straight line
* occupy the lowest areas of a landscape, such as the low parts of valleys.
* occur where there is water and gravity.
* offer a source of drinking water, water power, and transportation routes
- excellent habitat for a great diversity of life
* often carry glacial sediment from melting glaciers and glacial lakes
- define the distinctive character of communities
- have beautiful scenery
- receive less fishing pressure than lakes
- represent life
* open up much sooner than lakes do, and warm up even faster.
* overflow during the rainy season, flooding the surrounding countryside.
* overflow their banks and trees that once occupied dry land stand in deep water
- when they receive more water than they can handle
* overflowing can destroy houses and drown people.
* ox bow through the land, and pristine lakes and streams abound.
* play an important part in the economic vitality of our state and country
- role in the economic vitality of our state and country
* protected waterway due to the presence of the endangered Blue Mountain Duck.
* provide a source of fresh water that is completely replenishable within a short timeframe
- water supply
- beautiful scenery and helps plants to grow, making human life richer
- irrigation for food production
- more than water
- prey
- water for the essential needs of both tiny towns and huge cities
* revive and turn perennial.
* run from the top of Australia to the bottom to Tasmania.
* run through jungles or plains
- the land and empty their water, often stained brown, into the oceans
- with tawny-colored water
* runs the western United States, bringing water to millions of people.
* rush wide and milky white with rock pulverized by glaciers.
* serve as a chief means of transportation
- an important energy source
- the arteries of the earth, offering cleansing and sustenance to numerous lifeforms
* show up well in contrast with the surrounding snow cover.
* sometimes have dams to hold the water for people to drink, or to make electricity.
* spring up from the oceans, fall from the sky, and seep through the earth.
* swell with runoff rushing off the mountains.
* symbolize the lifeline of the earth.
* take inordinate lengths of time to try to cross
- some of the water to sea
* tend to cleanse themselves once pollutants are no longer dumped in
- move slower have warmer waters than the rapidly moving streams
* transport sediment as they meander through the geologic constraints of the landscape
- water from wherever it is to the ocean
* typically enter at the heads of the fjords and are backed by extensive flat lands.
* unite and generate identity and feelings of kinship and solidarity.
* usually begin as a trickle of water high in hills or mountains
- meander when the land is very flat
- start as small streams and get larger as they flow downstream
* wind past cities and towns to empty into estuaries and coastal oceans.
+ Arctic, Plant life
* Trees are almost seen on the tundra. Only in the protected valleys or along the riverbanks are small trees able to grow. Rivers come into the Arctic from the warmer south. The places along their banks are a little bit warmer than the rest of the tundra. This means trees can grow there. 0therwise only a few clusters of bushes grow sparingly. Berries are the only fruit that grows in the Arctic.
+ Colombia, Climate: Spanish-speaking countries
* Rivers are important as waterways in the land for shipping things. One of the most important rivers in Colombia is the Magdalena-Cauca. The Magdelena River divides the eastern and center mountains. It makes a fertile valley. The Cauca River divides the center mountain range and the western ridge, making another great valley. The Cauca is really a part of the Magdalena.
+ Great Lakes, Geography: Ecology
* Many rivers flow through a large watershed into the lakes. The lakes have about 35,000 islands. The Great Lakes region includes the five lakes and many thousands of smaller lakes, often called 'inland lakes'.
+ Kashmir, Water dispute: British India
* Another reason behind the dispute over Kashmir is water. Many rivers start in Kashmir. Some of them are tributaries of the Indus River basin, such as the Jhelum and Chenab River. These flow into Pakistan. Other rivers like the Ravi, Beas River and the Sutlej irrigate northern India. Pakistan has been apprehensive that in a dire need India under whose portion of Kashmir lies the origins and passage of the said rivers, would use its strategic advantage and withhold the flow and thus choke the agrarian economy of Pakistan.
+ Laos, Provinces: ASEAN Members
+ List of rivers of Greece
* This is a list of rivers that are at least partially in Greece. The rivers flowing into the sea are sorted along the coast. Rivers flowing into other rivers are listed by the rivers they flow into.
+ List of rivers of Saint Lucia
* This is a 'list of rivers of Saint Lucia'. Rivers are listed in clockwise order, starting at the north end of the island
- Vincent and the Grenadines: Geography of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
* This is a 'list of rivers of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines'. Rivers are listed in clockwise order, starting at the north end of the island
- Spain
* This is a 'list of rivers' that are at least partially in Spain. The rivers are grouped by sea or ocean. The rivers flowing into the sea are sorted along the coast. Rivers flowing into other rivers are listed by the rivers they flow into. Rivers that have their mouths in Portugal are given in italics
+ Rain: Precipitation
* A 'rainstorm' is a sudden heavy fall of rain. It may cause flash floods in valleys. Heavy rain for a long time may make floods on floodplains. Rivers overflowing can destroy houses and drown people. Also, landslides may happen.
+ Regions of Brazil, South Region
* There are many developed highways and railways throughout the region, although the latter is mainly used for freight. Rivers are used when possible.
+ River Song (Doctor Who), Appearances: Doctor Who characters
* They are told to meet in the United States. This future version of the Doctor is killed by an person in a space suit. The Doctor's current version is there with them. River tells the Doctor it is a life support unit. The suit has been designed by the hypnotic alien race, Silence. The girl is later seen regenerating in New York City, 1970. When she learns she will one day become River Song, someone the Doctor trust, Melody chooses to resurrect the Doctor with her energy. This causes her to lose the ability. The Doctor learns that she is the person who kills him in his future.
+ River, About rivers, The beginning of a river: Biomes
- Underground rivers
* Some rivers flow underground through caves. Underground rivers form in places where there are lots of cracks in the rocks above, so that in rainy weather, the water runs downs and collects in small underground streams. In other places, where there are caves, the small underground streams run together to form a river. The river can sometimes run through deep wide underground caverns. While many underground rivers flow gently, some underground rivers flow fast and have rapids, particularly after heavy rain. Many underground rivers flow out through a cave mouth to become an ordinary river
- Using rivers
* Rivers often have beautiful scenery. Many painters, story-tellers and poets have painted or written about rivers
+ Serenity (movie), Cast
* Summer Glau as River Tam'. River is a seventeen-year old genius with special powers. She and her brother are taken in by the crew of 'Serenity' after he rescues her from an Alliance. The Alliance's hunt to find River is mainly what the movie is about
- Synopsis: 2005 movies :: American action movies :: American science fiction movies :: Movies based on TV series :: Whedonverse :: Hugo Award winning movies
* The crew leaves 'Serenity' and finds a place to fight off the Reavers while Mal goes to get to Mr. Universe and send the message. Mal finds Mr. Universe has been killed and his equipment is destroyed. He finds a message that tells him about a hidden backup transmitter. The Reavers attack the crew, and make them move back. The crew tries to close a blast door, but it will not shut all the way. River dives through the hole in the door and closes it from the other side. This traps her with the Reavers. Mal gets to the other transmitter. The Operative gets there also and they fight. Mal wins but does not kill the Operative. He leaves him to watch the video from Miranda as it is being broadcast
+ Sud-Est Department, Geography: Departments of Haiti
+ Water bodies of Azerbaijan, Rivers: Geography of Azerbaijan
* Rivers form the main part of the water systems of Azerbaijan. There are 8,359 rivers of various lengths within Azerbaijan. Of them 8,188 rivers are less than 25 kilometers in length. Only 24 rivers are over 100 kilometers long. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | stream | river:
Braided river
* are usually wide but shallow.
* flow North-South and deposit across plains.
Few river
* flow into the Pacific Ocean since it is bordered by mountains.
* have a long term record of steady flow in the rock record.
Himalayan river
* Many Himalayan rivers originate from glaciers.
* are more active than most.
* have their source in snowfields and are thus perennial.
Icelandic river
* abound with salmon, while trout and char are plentiful in lakes and streams.
* are chiefly of two types, glacial and clear-water rivers
- cold, fast and crystal clear
Large river
* Many large rivers are waterways for barges and other commercial vessels.
* Most large rivers are formed from many tributaries.
* flow across the plains, but the water levels vary greatly with each season.
* have comparatively more species than small streams.
* make deltas on the eastern coast while rivers flowing towards west forms estuaries.
Lonely river
* flow to the sea, to the sea.
* flow, to the sea, to the sea, To the open arms, of the sea.
Major river
* Most major rivers are above flood stage.
* flow into a series of lagoons
Numerous river
* descend from the Andes toward the coast.
* flow into the sea
- to the sea fed entirely by rain fall
Old river
* are characterized by flood plains
- the most useful type of river for growing crops
+ River, About rivers, The last part of a river: Biomes
* As a river flows towards its mouth, the countryside around the river often changes from hilly to flat. As it flows over the flat land the river becomes wider and slower. Old rivers are the most useful type of river for growing crops. Corn, rice, fruit, cotton, hay, tobacco and sugar are some of the crops that are grown near old rivers.
River flow
* are lowest in winter, when power demands are highest.
* can vary greatly from one season to the next and from one climatic region to another.
* provides the buoyancy that supports plume stratification.
Sarayu river
* is mentioned in Ramayana.
* Sarayu' river which flows in Uttar Pradesh of India. Sarayu river originates in Himalaya. Sarayu river is mentioned in Ramayana. Ramayana mention that city of Ayodhya was on the bank of Sarayu river.
Several river
* flow from south to north, forming spectacular waterfalls.
* influence the Yellow Sea.
* run the risk of becoming dead because of industrial pollution.
Small river
* Many small rivers originate on the elevation and flow in all directions from there.
* are a different kettle of fish.
* flowing out of the mountains give rise to mangrove boarded estuaries at the coast.
* join together and become medium-sized rivers.
* makes large torrents.
Subterranean river
* flow underground in caves or caverns.
* provide a natural perennial irrigation system.<|endoftext|>### waters | stream | river:
Underground river
* Many underground rivers flow out through a cave mouth to become an ordinary river.
* Some underground rivers hold grind water
* can open up huge caverns where water continually drips through the roof.
* flow through caves that can sometimes be accessed by people.
+ River, About rivers, Underground rivers: Biomes
* Some rivers flow underground through caves. Underground rivers form in places where there are lots of cracks in the rocks above, so that in rainy weather, the water runs downs and collects in small underground streams. In other places, where there are caves, the small underground streams run together to form a river. The river can sometimes run through deep wide underground caverns. While many underground rivers flow gently, some underground rivers flow fast and have rapids, particularly after heavy rain. Many underground rivers flow out through a cave mouth to become an ordinary river.
Several stream
* flow together to make a river.
* have problems with high temperatures and high levels of fecal coliform bacteria. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters | stream:
Small stream
* Most small streams flow into streams.
* are repositories of contemplation.
* can simply be the headwaters of larger, better-known trout rivers.
* criss-cross wet sedge meadows and marshy tundra.
* drain the mountain ranges and all areas have internal drainage.
Smaller stream
* Some smaller streams go dry in late summer and early fall.
* have emerald shiner populations, but they are usually rare in fish collections.
* support both coldwater and warmwater fisheries.<|endoftext|>### waters | stream:
Stream flow
* Most stream flow is turbulent, and turbulent flow is important in both erosion and transportation.
* appears to be a major limiting factor for aquatic life during the summer months.
* can be high and swift during snowmelt runoff periods and during periods of heavy rain.
* depends on rainfall, runoff, and infiltration.
* has a high correlation to precipitation.
* is dominated by domestic wastewater effluent.
* measure of how much water passes by a given point in a river at a given time.<|endoftext|>### waters:
Waterfall
* Many waterfalls are in deep forests, where they get a lot of shade.
* Most waterfalls are at the head of gorges that they have worn back into a cliff
- part of rivers
- flow into rivers
- have water
* Some waterfalls have a lot of water flowing, others only a little
- energy
- gravitational energy
- kinetic energy
- more gravitational potential energy
* also occur where meltwater drops over the edge of a tabular iceberg or ice shelf.
* are a natural feature found in Hawaii
- significant example of both vertical and headward erosion
- also important elements in today's pools
- bodies of water
- common in the mountains
- literally places in steep segments of rivers where water falls vertically
* are part of rivers
- the characteristic geography of the island
- strongest in late winter, springtime and early summer
- temporary base levels caused by strong erosion resistant rocks
- the primary energy source for the electricity produced in hydropower stations
* can be breeding grounds for bacteria.
* cascade from mountains and plateaux to fill the coastal wet-lands
- in spumes and torrents, filling the air with the sound of arcing water
* develop as the granite forms cliffs and ledges.
* drop into fern-edged pools.
* form due to different factors.
* form in a variety of ways
- channels with different bands of resistent rock
- rivers that are young
* generally occur where the hanging valley meets the main valley.
* have pools that hold big fish
* normally form in a rocky area due to erosion.
* often form in the upper stages of a river where it flows over different bands of rock.
* plunge straight into the sea.
* pour over the metamorphic walls and feed pools and streams.
* send fresh water into the bay clouding the water.
* tower inside the curl of hairpin turns.
* tumble down steep canyon walls
- mountains to the sea and rain nourishes rich beech forest | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### waters:
Waterway
* Many waterways receive additional pollution from sources outside of the state.
* Most waterways have bottoms
- mud bottoms
* Most waterways have soft bottoms
* Most waterways provide municipal water
* Some waterways have regulations that prohibit certain uses, such as using power boats
- limit boat size and use
- possess dolphins
* are also boundaries
- an important component of a terracing system and soil conservation plans
- easily navigable, as there are few locks
- fringed with dense forests
- located in bridges
- major means of transportation for both goods and people
- plentiful and easily accessible for boating, fishing, kayaking or jet skiing
- second to only highways when it comes to accidental deaths
- well grassed areas designed to carry the discharge water flow safely downhill
* become narrow, deep channels and the flow of water is restricted
- narrower and shallower, blocked by fallen trees, logjams, and sandbars
* carry antibiotic resistance.
* change like the tides.
* help maintain wildlife and water resources.
* often cover wide areas that encompass more than one nation.
* raging with spring runoff and melted snow can be dangerous to cross
- from heavy snows can be difficult and dangerous to cross
### waters | waterway:
Grassed waterway
* are shallow and easy to cross.
* can nearly eliminate gully erosion.<|endoftext|>### waters | waterway:
Rapid
* Most rapids are swift and shallow, dropping around small boulders lodged in gravel bars.
* Some rapids are more dangerous in low waters, and some are more dangerous in deeper waters
- become easier in high water
- contain hazardous undercut rocks
* are few and mild, and geese, eagles, deer, and many varieties of ducks are common
- part of rivers
* are the fastest water flows in a stream
- on any stream
- turbulent water with a rough surface
- where the river bed is rocky, and the river runs fast over and around the rocks
* become more numerous and hazardous in low water.
* occur along most river courses so that the rivers are of little use for transportation.
* vary greatly by river flow.
Way
* affect behavior
- eat behavior
* encourage growth.
* facilitate growth.
* have consequences
- different environmental consequences
- term consequences
### weak electrolytes:
Weak acid
* All weak acids are weak conductors of electricity.
* Some weak acid is formed by rainwater.
* are weak electrolytes.
* can exhibit low pH readings just as strong acids.
* have high pK. Strong acids have low pK.
* ionize only slightly.
* remain largely in molecular form and dissociate only slightly.
* seep into the ground until they reach a zone soaked with water.
### weak electrolytes | weak acid:
Selenous acid
* is very toxic.
+ Selenous acid, Properties: Acids :: Selenium compounds
* Selenous acid is a weak acid. It can be heated to make selenium dioxide. It is more stable than sulfurous acid. It can be crystallized as a white solid. It is a weak oxidizing agent. It reacts with bases to make selenites
- Safety
* Selenous acid is very toxic. Just ingesting a small amount can kill you
### weak monoprotic acid:
Dichloroacetic acid
* induces peroxisome proliferation in the livers of both rats and mice.
* is carboxylic acid
- chemical compounds
* weak monoprotic acid.
### weapon | gun | firearm | autoloader | automatic weapon | machine gun:
Automatic
* are guns
- weapons
* is an automatic weapon
* machine gun
Automatic rifle
* are machine guns.
* are usually selective fire and use rifle bullets from a magazine
* Usually, an 'automatic rifle' semi-automatic rifle which fires a rifle bullet. However, automatic rifles are changed to give both semi- and fully automatic fire. Automatic rifles are usually selective fire and use rifle bullets from a magazine. This makes them different from other automatic firearms like the machine gun and submachine gun | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weaponry:
Ammunition
* can also include flares and incendaries - chemicals that start fires.
* composite of chemicals and metallic components.
* contains lead
- substances
* includes sections
* is an arms
- any material capable of being projected by a weapon and makes the weapon operational
- information
* is located in guns
- war
- materials
- the largest single element in rifle accuracy
- used in hunting
* weaponry.
* is mainly used to attack a target. Ammunition can also include flares and incendaries - chemicals that start fires.
### weaponry | ammunition:
Canister
* are containers.
* charging with fuel vapors normal function, especially during hot ambient conditions.
* have micropores, tiny holes that contain the desiccant and prevent leaks.
* is ammunition
Cartridge
* Many cartridges use glue to hold their internal components together.
* are ammunition
- mechanical devices
- modules of code performing specific application or system functions
### weaponry | ammunition | cartridge:
Cartouche
* are bands
* consists of chain, rope, and grass
- flowers, glass, and a tree
- grapes and flower
- leaves and flowers
Round
- applause
- calls
- cuts of beef
- earth
- helpings
- paths
- shapes
* is ammunition
+ America's Army, Gameplay, US/OPFOR Transformation for Teams: Shooter video games :: 2002 video games
* Every round starts with both teams spawning at the same time.
+ Round (music): Musical forms
* Writing music by making one part imitate another is called canonic writing. Rounds are a kind of canon.
### weaponry | armament:
Artillery
* are the same as crossbows.
* can fire smoke, help knock down buildings, or even help isolate an enemy position.
* is an armament
- artillery wether limbered or unlimbered
- part of batteries
- used to protect ground troops and sea forces from air attack
Cannon
* are a three ball shot from a corner spot or on the one yard line
- also generally only effective in dispersing waterfowl
- artillery
- body parts
- heavies
* are located in forts
- museums
- parks
- warships
* are part of body armor
- bombers
- tanks
- ungulates
* are used for battles
- weapons of war
* are used for the first time in a European battle, the Battle of Crecy<|endoftext|>### weaponry | armament | cannon:
Howitzer
* are special because they're made to fire higher than a cannon but lower than a mortar.
* fire a heavy shell in a high-trajectory from a short barrel
* A 'howitzer' special type of big gun used by an army. It has a short barrel, and is used fire a shell over a short distance. The barrel length of a howitzer is 15 to 25 times of the caliber. Howitzers are special because they're made to fire higher than a cannon but lower than a mortar. Howitzers are almost always used to shoot at targets on the ground, but they can be used for targets on water, or in the air. The name 'howitzer' comes from an old Czech word, 'haufnice', which was a catapult that could fire many stones
+ List of howitzers: Lists of weapons
* Howitzers' are one of two main types of field artillery, the other being the field gun. Howitzers fire a heavy shell in a high-trajectory from a short barrel. They have a short range, but they are slightly more mobile than similar size field guns. Since World War II howitzers have gained longer barrels and increased range to become gun-howitzers. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weaponry | armament | cannon:
Ion cannon
* are also extremely slower than lasers.
* are used in many science-fiction movies and television series
* In science fiction, an 'ion cannon' beam weapon. Because of its power, it is usually said to be a superweapon. An ion cannon type of particle cannon. The particles is shoots are ionized. Because of their electrical charges, they can cause electronic devices, vehicles, and anything else that has an electrical or similar power source to stop working. Ion cannons are used in many science-fiction movies and television series. Ion cannons are also used in many video games<|endoftext|>### weaponry | armament | cannon:
Mortar
* Most mortars used today are made up of a barrel , a plate for the barrel to stand on , and a bipod
- up of a barrel, a plate for the barrel to stand on, and a bipod
* Some mortars resist loss of moisture better than others.
* are building materials
- cannon suitable only for the high-angle fire of shells
- guns
* are located in armories
- brick walls
- mainly medium calibre weapons
* are used for grinding
- masonry
- plastering
- war
- usually smaller and lighter than howitzers and field guns
- vessels
* can fire from a trench or defilade
- many different bombs
- over walls, however
* deliver high-angle fire.
* fire high angle, and their shells land on top of objects.
* generally have thinner metal bodies than projectiles but use the same kind of fuzing.
* have smooth , rounded bottoms and wide mouths.
* occur in bedrock outcrops and as portable items.
+ Mortar (weapon), Design
* Mortars are mainly medium calibre weapons. However, mortars both bigger and smaller than this have been made. An example of a smaller mortar is the British 51 mm Light Mortar. It is made up of only a tube and a base plate.
+ Mortar (weapon), Design, Ammunition
- Special features of mortars
* Mortars can be very helpful if they are used in hidden places
- Use: Artillery
* Light and medium mortars are easy to move around. They are usually used by infantry units. Mortars can fire from a trench or defilade
- and pestle: Tools :: Laboratory equipment
* The 'mortar' is bowl-shaped, and used to hold the substance to be ground. Mortars have smooth, rounded bottoms and wide mouths. The 'pestle' is a stick used for pounding and grinding<|endoftext|>### weaponry | armament | cannon | mortar:
Larger mortar
* Some larger mortars have a firing pin that is set off by using a string instead of automatically.
+ Mortar (weapon), Use: Artillery
* Mortars used today are made up of a tube that a gunner drops a bomb into. The tube is usually set at between 45 and 90 degrees angle to the ground. The higher the angle, the shorter the range. When the bomb reaches the bottom of the tube it hits a firing pin. The mortar bomb's weight is enough to set off the firing pin which ignites the round and fires it. Some larger mortars have a firing pin that is set off by using a string instead of automatically.
Lime mortar
* are also flexible.
* hardens by absorption of carbon dioxide from the air.
* is attacked by acids which make it less durable and prone to erosion.
Heavy weapon
* are the railgun and concussion rifle.
* is an armament
Launcher
* are armaments.
* includes sections
* is an armament
### weaponry | armament | launcher:
Bazooka
* provides an apical cue for Inscuteable localization in Drosophila neuroblasts.
* recruits Inscuteable to orient asymmetric cell divisions in Drosophila neuroblasts.
### weapons:
Conventional weapon
* are weapons.
* rely on chemical or kinetic energy in the form of a projectile.
Weariness
* is non-existent when the fish are biting.
* relaxes posture into a naturalness that is difficult to achieve in an alert state.
* symptom of an unforgiving spirit, just as a rash symptom of poison ivy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Weather
* All weather function of heat transfer
- happens at the boundaries between air masses
* All weather occurs in the troposphere
- within the troposphere
* BIG factor in ballooning.
* Most weather affects communities
- earthquakes
- life
- locations
- microbial communities
- population size
- survival
* Most weather causes events
- growth
- drives population fluctuations
* Most weather occurs in regions
* Most weather produces clouds
- wind
* Most weather takes place in the lower layer of the atmosphere
- troposphere , the lowest layer of the atmosphere
* Provides daily weather information for cities around the world.
* Some weather affects air pressure
- daily activities
- depressions
* Some weather causes death
- destructive storms
- snow
- starvation
- transpiration
- induces current
* Some weather kills bees
- birds
- bison
* Some weather occurs in layers
- springs.
* ' is what happens in the sky. Weather includes wind, lightning, storms, hurricanes, tornados, rain, hail, snow, and lots more. Energy from the sun affects the weather
* There are four seasons which offer a variety of climate depending on the time of year.
* affects all of our lives
- areas
- every person every day
- everything
- experiments
- grow communities
- many aspects of people's lives
- most operations of worldwide transportation companies
* affects our daily lives and activities
- economy, creating stress and disaster, profits and losses
- outdoor furniture's looks and durability
- pheasants more severely
* affects the condition of open water and can change suddenly
- daily activities of people and business' of almost everybody in the world
- development of both lygus bugs and the crop
- number of insects available, so it definitely affects purple martins
* allows harvest.
* also can affect our psychological health
- prices in another way
* always influences crop acreages.
* appears to be an important factor for the majority of insect migrations
- play a role in their activity levels
* begins cooling when the balance shifts to more heat leaving than arriving.
* can also affect how quickly pollutants move away from an area
- transmission of diseases from other animals to horses
- be destructive when events such as hurricanes tornadoes and floods occur
- have an impact on pest populations
* can also impact a city's water supply
- aphids
- influence the size and frequency of waves striking the shoreline
- lead to altitudinal migration
- play a big part in producing trophy mule deer
- alter a fish's environment in several ways
* can be a big factor in fed cattle shrinkage
- factor in fruit production from year to year
- problem with mud and snow
- reason for the success or failure of an event
- topic of discussion in science, math, or social studies
- an important mortality factor
- hot, cold, wet, dry
- severe, even in summer
- unpredictable and severe
- become cold and wet
- cause poor pollination if it is cold or rainy during the time of bloom
* can change abruptly any time of year
- dramatically, even over the course of a day
- everyday, but climate always stays the same
* can change from hour to hour, day to day, month to month or even from year to year
- day to day, month to month or even year to year
- minute to minute and hour to hour
* can change quickly and avalanches can close roads for several hours
- in the mountains and can vary significantly at different elevations
* can change rapidly and with little warning
- at times, especially during the summer monsoon season
- during all seasons of the year
- from day to day or place to place
- suddenly or even be altered regionally for several years
- unexpectedly any time, but especially in spring and fall
- change, in a blink, from calm, warm, and sunny to a winter blizzard
- exacerbate air pollution problems
- go from cold to dry with the coming of a new season
- have a devastating impact on farmers
* can have a major impact on estuarine habitats
- water quality in estuaries
- profound effect on the behavior of bonito and albies
- significant impact on how a game plays out
- tremendous effect on both nesting success and poult survival
- help in producing economic prosperity or causing some disaster
- impede travel on rural roads
- move in any direction
- seriously affect a ship's ability to fight
- shorten the blooming sequence so all shrubs bloom within a shorter time period
* can sometimes help wildlife too
- run through a sequence of many years of cold, or hot, or wet, or dry weather
* can vary from bright sunshine to occasional showers
- cold and rainy to hot and dry
* can vary greatly both from year to year and from valley to mountaintop
- throughout the day
- over extremely short distances
- significantly between cities - and even between neighborhoods within a city
- substantially from year to year
* cans have effects
- profound effects
* causes damage
* changes from day to day and from season to season
- over the seasons Objects in the sky have patterns of movement
- hour to hour, day to day and with the seasons
- rapidly in all seasons
* changes rapidly in the first few miles from the ocean
- significantly from day to day, and over relatively small distances
* class of phenomena, it bunch of different things that people group together.
* covers protects material and stitching against UV sun rays.
* data an index to various real time or archive images and data related to weather.
* depends a lot on ocean temperatures.
* describes conditions in the atmosphere at a certain place and time
- that are happening right now
* determines daily and seasonal variations in biological activity
- the activity of rodents
* dictates distance, tire tread, and clothing layers.
* does have an impact on crime
- some influence on hay fever symptoms
- play a part in smog formation
* drives fluctuations
* encourages growth.
* events half-way around the world can affect local forecasts.
* fact of life.
* factor in a majority of aviation accidents
- the repair of a windshield
* factor in the replacement of a windshield or xxxx glass
- residential glass
- voter turnout
- peanut farmers face each year when they plant, tend and harvest their crops
- that dramatically impacts natural gas bills
* follows normal patterns
- rules
- spring rain
* forecasts influence decisions concerning human activity
- pricing
* generally governs what can be safely accomplished in the North Pacific.
* governing factor for all outdoor activities.
* governs many farm activities.
* happens and planes fly in the troposphere
- because different parts of the Earth get different amounts of heat from the Sun
* has adverse effects
- deterrent effects
- far more effect on fishermen than on fish anywhere
- little effects
- negative impact
* has positive deterrent effects
* impacts development
- mightily on food sources for wildlife
- virtually every citizen and industry in the country
* improves quality.
* includes rain, snow and changes of temperature.
* influences growth patterns
* is all about heat exchange
- always the number one factor when it comes to fly in a balloon
* is an entity that dictates our lives
- important factor in determining how much a customer pays each month for natural gas
- uncontrollable factor of life
- unpredictable factor in kayaking
- as varied in the spring and fall as the colors of blooming flowers and autumn leaves
* is caused by large temperature differences between the land and water
- the movement or transfer of energy
- characterized by ups and downs, activity and monotony
- cold and snowy through much of the year, and storms can last for days
- dependent on many factors, and is typically unpredictable
- different every year
* is driven by air pressure differences between one place and another
- temperature induced buoyant flows
- fairly uniform throughout the year as far as temperature goes
- highly seasonal with wide variations in temperature
* is important in the world of sports
- to everyone's life
* is influenced by the Earth's rotation, surface characteristics, and even human habitation
- located in moons
- made up of many things
- measured and predicted so that more accurate weather forecasts can be made
- most important when it's extreme
- natural things
- never an issue unless someone is showing signs of weakness like astuffy nose or cough
* is often a factor that effects where aircraft fly and how noise propagates
- unpredictable and can get very cold to extremely hot in the middle of the summer
- windy in Patagonia, but spring-like in temperature
* is one of the Earth's ways of managing itself
- chief external influences on migration
- driving factors in the dynamics of plant, soil and environmental interaction
- few things that can keep aerial acrobatics out of the sky
- key factors in any kind of pollution formation, and it is also true for smog
- leading reasons people log on to the Internet today
* is one of the most important factors that impacts agriculture
- natural controls of chinch bugs
- significant factors in determining the severity of wild land fires
- tracked things done by people all over the world
- perhaps the greatest potential source of colony stress
- physical events
- probably the most influential factor on plant growth
- recognized as the most critical element in fire behavior
- something that happens in days, or at the most two weeks, and then is gone
- the big uncertainty for all diseases of corn, soybean, and wheat
* is the condition of air during a brief period
- the air at a given moment and location
* is the condition of the atmosphere at a particular time and place
- in a place over a short period of time
- in one place during a short period of time
- over a brief period of time
- outside air at a certain time and place
- conditions of the atmosphere for one day
- day to day condition of the atmosphere
- direct result for changes in depth, width, velocity, and discharge
- hour to hour, day to day, state of the atmosphere
- instantaneous state of the atmosphere and is continuously changing
- largest factor affecting consumers of natural gas
- main factor affecting grasshopper populations
- major uncontrollable factor that influences the development of crops
* is the most important control on vegetation processes
- potent force on earth
- prevailing long-term atmospheric conditions in a particular region
- rainy stuff that falls from the sky
- result of the Earth's atmosphere
- second largest cause of airline fatalities
* is the state of the atmosphere at a given time and place
- at any given time and place
- at any given time or place
- at any particular moment in time
- over short periods of time
* is the term that denotes the state of the atmosphere at a given time and place
- used to describe the changing state of the atmosphere
- tropical, with little seasonal variation
* is unpredictable and changes quickly
- at all times
- variable and often changes quickly
- warm during the day and cool at night
* is what exposes fossils
- happens outside
- it's like outside each day
- what's happening right now or is likely to happen tomorrow or in the very near future
- when dark clouds come stumbling in on lightning legs, roaring and puffing
* key factor in air pollution exceedences.
* leading factor in general aviation accidents.
* major determining factors in causing the buildup of aflatoxin, a carcinogen, in grain
- force in how long the aspen hold their leaves after they turn
* makes differences
- huge differences
* means that sometimes it's cloudy, sometimes it rains, sometimes it snows, etc.
* measurable change in earth's atmosphere.
* monthly magazine for all who are interested in the ways of the atmosphere.
* moves into areas.
* national pastime.
* obeys physical laws.
* occurs because our atmosphere is in constant motion
* occurs in the lowest layer of the atmosphere, called the troposphere
- level of the air, the troposphere
* only becomes a factor if heavy spring rains wash out nests and drown very young chicks.
* physical phenomenon
* plays a critical role, greatly affecting the spawning activity of the horseshoe crabs
- far greater role in the state's power use than the economy
- key role in fishing success
- large part in the frequency of mowing
* plays a large role in our everyday life
- the disease's spread
* plays a major role in effective dissemination outside
- how the populations increase once they arrive
- significant role in determining the yield and quality of harvested hay
- slightly different role in crop production
- an important part in smashing world records
* plays an important role in farm management
- floral production
- many ways
- ozone formation
- promoting the development and spread of anthracnose
* plays an important role in the level of overall business
- numbers of a species one is likely to see
- transplanting
- when traveling anywhere
* predominant influence in the causation of cold injury.
* presents hazards by changing the conditions of a road
- the entire spectrum of seasons, but winters typically are rather mild
* primary determinant of life.
* probably is the most important factor that affects elm leaf beetle populations.
* processes at the surface regularly produce hurricanes, tornadoes, and cyclonic storms.
- damage wind
* product of the interrelationship between between oceanic and atmospheric processes
- winds and moisture
* promotes development.
* really changes people's state of mind.
* redistributes the incoming heat around the globe.
* reduces quality.
* refers to conditions in the atmosphere over a short period of time
- temperatures, precipitation, and storms on a given day at a particular place
* refers to the atmosphere
- atmospheric condition in a certain place at a given time
- circulation of the Earth's atmosphere
- condition in the atmosphere at a paricular time and place
- short term properties of the troposphere at a given place and time
* result of changing atmospheric conditions
- factors working together or against one another
* results from the interaction of many forces
- variations in atmospheric temperature, pressure, wind and moisture
* rules the laws of gain.
* satellites no longer limit themselves to cloud formations.
* significant factor in air transportation accidents.
* strongly influences development of gray leaf spot.
* takes places.
* term used to describe what is going on outside, such as if it is rainy or sunny.
* varies from one spring to the next and affects when crabgrass begins to germinate
- next and affects when it germinates
- widely across the continental USA, as well as in Alaska and Hawaii
- with yearly conditions and elevations
* works on wood in two ways, causing deterioration from wetness and dryness.
+ Weather, Causes of weather: Natural events
* Weather happens because different parts of the Earth get different amounts of heat from the Sun. The equator gets the most heat because the Sun shines straight down on it, while the poles get the least heat because the Sun shines on it from a low angle. Warmer air is lighter than cooler air and goes higher in the sky. Water can come with the air and when it cools, the water can go from a gas to a liquid through condensation. Then the water can fall from the sky as rain or snow. After the air goes into the air, it gets colder and goes back towards the ground. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Weather phenomenon
* Most weather phenomena occur in the troposphere, just below the stratosphere.
* Some weather phenomena bring heavy snow
- occur during thunderstorms
### weather:
Air current
* can carry the ascospores long distances to recent wounds on the trunk.
* carry the pollen to female cones, where fertilization takes place.
* deflect mechanosensory hairs on the antenna-like cerci at the rear of the abdomen.
* is weather
* know no international boundaries.
* move clouds all around the Earth
- in from all sides to replace the rising warm air and some times form a tornado
* speed up drying by moving the surrounding moist air away from the food.<|endoftext|>### weather:
Bad weather
* affects nesting, brood rearing and survival during winter.
* can cause damage to underlying soil as well as to the grass
- delay the onset of breeding, or can affect the survival of the young
- have a profound effect on lamb survival
- hurt people and their property
- keep people at home in winter
- sometimes cause birds' nests to fall out of a tree
* causes power outages.
* is capable of slow traffic
- weather
+ Weather: Natural events
* Bad weather can hurt people and their property. It can also just be a bother.
Cloudy weather
* can lead to algae die-offs while thunderstorms can cause pond turnover.
* reduces the sunlight available for photosynthesis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather:
Cold weather
* Most cold weather affects areas.
* Most cold weather has deterrent effects
- positive deterrent effects
* Some cold weather leads to inflammation.
- battery efficiency
* bad time for people to have to choose between food and heat.
* breaks down the growth inhibiting hormones and allows the tree to break dormancy.
* brings on interesting color changes in many plants
- one of the busiest times of the year for firefighters
- out their sweetness, especially if they remain in the ground during winter
* can affect people with facial rosacea as well
- also impact energy requirements
* can be deadly for pets
- hard on pets, just like it can be hard on people
- cause the plant to slow down or stunt it as well
- cloud and even gel any diesel fuel, including biodiesel
- easily kill piranhas
- have an effect on acne-prone skin
* can kill as easily as a fall from a cliff
- flower buds
- manatees if it makes water temperatures too low
- lengthen the time up to several weeks
- make the nasal passages' lining drier and more vulnerable to viral infection
- put extra stress on the heart and contribute to the hazards of over-exertion
- seriously affect soldiers' health and performance
* causes a desire to drives
- colds and flu
- frostbite
- no significant increase in protein requirements
- the hair to stand up, trapping and retaining body heat
* clots the blood, which can trigger a stroke or heart attack at any age.
* common problem for growers, especially when winter comes around.
* freezes the ground and the track, limiting a runner's ability.
- nothing to do with getting a cold
* has positive deterrent effects
* increases consumption.
* induces constipation, and warm weather diarrhea.
* is common at high altitudes, and black ice quickly forms on rock surfaces.
* is more damaging to marine and saltwater fish and other aquatic life
- than a low air temperature
- no match for a husky's ability to stay warm
- possible any time of the year, and snow has been recorded in nearly all months
- the number one killer of car batteries
* kills Texas' inshore fish by suffocation - they die from lack of oxygen
* makes plastic get harder
- the mercury contract and fall
* means it's time again to crank up furnaces, fireplaces or space heaters
- taking more time to dress properly
* prevents people in chillier regions of the country from growing bananas.
* puts a strain on the heart, even without exercise
- everyone's safety at risk
* relative term.
* seems to worsen the affects of altitude.
* slows the rate at which concrete hardens.
* takes places.
Cool weather
* can also cause slow growth and light green color of leaves
- keep the plant from flowering
* enhances the transmission of viral diarrhoea.
* helps increase the sugar content of the roots and attractiveness to deer.
* increases sugar content and storage life.
* interferes with the forage uptake of magnesium from the soil.
* is believed to cause the flower abnormality.
* slows down plant systems, including iron uptake. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather:
Cyclone
* Most cyclone causes waves
- contains wind
* Most cyclone occurs during months
- summer months
- produces wind
* Remove large airborne particulate efficiently and economically.
* Some cyclone causes storms
- occurs in temperate zones
* also have an effect, giving rise to a characteristic current
- produce flood rains which can cause further damage and death by drowning
* are a tropical weather phenomenon
- also common during the wet season
- due to the man-made disturbances in the ecology of oceans and their surroundings
- in fact one of the major decomposing forces of coral reefs
- low pressure systems with an organized circulation pattern
- normal weather during half the year
- our biggest storms
- predicted to become more frequent with global warming
- storms of wind that encircle a center of low atmospheric pressure
- the main natural threat to habitat and food loss
- vital to Korea's rice fields
* brings air
- cold air
- precipitation
* can also cause huge seas, putting vessels in danger both in harbour and out at sea
- have considerable impacts both on the land as well as in the ocean
- only move freely across the sea
* causes damage
* come in many sizes.
* create several dangers for people living around tropical areas.
* damages areas.
* demonstrate how much latent energy is stored in the world's oceans.
* enhances rainfall
- season rainfall
* form in central U.S., move eastward.
* has wind.
* have the capacity to impact on hundreds of kilometres of coastline and surrounding areas.
* hits regions.
* is an atmosphere
- located in oceans
- natural hazards
- programming language
- video games
- windstorm
* occur chiefly in the mid-latitude belts of both hemispheres.
* often swirl near the polar caps in late summer and fall.
* produces heavy rainfall
- tornado
* rotate clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere and anti-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere.
* separate the product gas from the sand and hot char that are entrained in the gas stream.
* sustains wind.
* swarm the fields every month or so, And hurricanes are common.
* tend to move along a predictable path at a moderate rate of progress.
+ Mozambique, Geography and climate, Climate: Portuguese-speaking countries
* Mozambique has a tropical climate with two seasons. The wet season is from October to March and the dry season from April to September. Conditions vary depending on altitude. Rainfall is heavy along the coast and is less in the north and south. Yearly precipitation changes from depending on the region. Cyclones are common during the wet season.
* Cyclones rotate clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere and anti-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere. Cyclone is the general term for a variety of low pressure system types, such as tropical cyclones, extra tropical cyclones and tornadoes.
### weather | cyclone:
Bomb cyclone
* Some bomb cyclones are hybrid storms, which share some other characteristics with hurricanes.
* are intense storms, often hybrid storms.
* form at higher latitudes
- during winter
- under strong upper-level winds<|endoftext|>### weather | cyclone:
Extratropical cyclone
* are created by inflow focused along their cold front and warm fronts
- winter storms, or typical low pressure areas
+ Inflow (meteorology): Meteorology
* Extratropical cyclones are created by inflow focused along their cold front and warm fronts. Tropical cyclones need a large inflow of warmth and moisture from warm oceans to become very powerful, mainly within the lowest of the atmosphere. Once the thunderstorms and their associated tornadoes do not get the flow of warm and moist air, the storms begin to dissipate. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | cyclone:
Tropical cyclone
* More tropical cyclones form in the tropical North Pacific than anywhere else in the world.
* Most tropical cyclone contains wind
* Most tropical cyclone produces heavy rainfall
* Most tropical cyclones approach the coast of southern China on a west-northwestward track
- create strong winds and heavy rains
- weaken as they come ashore or track poleward over colder ocean water
* Some tropical cyclone causes monster storms
* Some tropical cyclone occurs in temperate zones
* Most tropical cyclones create strong winds and heavy rains. While some tropical cyclones stay out in the sea, others pass over land, which can be dangerous because they can cause a lot of damage.
* form when warm, moist ocean air rises. The Coriolis effect causes the winds to rotate. They usually move westward in the tropics, and later move north or south into the temperate zone
* are also a seasonal occurrence
- among the most destructive natural phenomena
- classified into different categories depending on their strength and location
- destructive weather phenomena
- fueled by the energy from warm tropical waters
- hurricanes or tropical storms
* are like engines that require warm, moist air as fuel
- giant engines that use warm, moist air as fuel
- low pressure storms in the tropics
- particularly damaging
- ranked according to their maximum winds using several scales
* bring heavy rainfall.
* can bring high wind, higher waves and flood rains in summer
- occur during the wet season, usually forming within an active monsoon trough
- retain their force as far inland as Ontario
- sometimes degenerate back into a tropical wave
* come in a variety of strengths and sizes, and are classified by peak wind speed.
* destroy nests and accelerate habitat degradation.
* develop from tropical depressions.
- season rainfall
* form as a result of significant convective activity, and are warm core
- in tropical ocean areas, and some move from there into the temperate zone
- over all the world's tropical oceans except the South Atlantic
* has wind.
* pose significant risk well inland due to fresh water flooding.
* produce much of the rainfall in the Pacific area.
* tend to follow seasonal tracks.
* threaten the northern, mountainous parts of the country.
* vary in both size and intensity.
+ Tropical cyclone scales
* Tropical cyclones are ranked according to their maximum winds using several scales. These scales are provided by several bodies, including the World Meteorological Organization, the National Hurricane Center, and the Bureau of Meteorology. The National Hurricane Center uses the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale for hurricanes in the eastern Pacific and Atlantic basins. Australia uses a difference set of tropical cyclone categories for their region. The use of different definitions for maximum sustained wind creates additional confusion into the definitions of cyclone categories worldwide
- cyclone, Classifications
* Tropical cyclones are classified into different categories depending on their strength and location. The National Hurricane Center which observes hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean and Eastern and Central Pacific Ocean classify them into the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale
- wave, Atlantic: Weather
* Tropical cyclones can sometimes degenerate back into a tropical wave. This normally happens if upper-level wind shear is too strong. The storm can redevelop if the upper level shear decreases or stops. If a tropical wave is moving quickly, it can have strong winds of over tropical storm force, but is not considered a tropical storm unless it has a closed circulation
+ Tropics: Geography
* Tropical cyclones form in tropical ocean areas, and some move from there into the temperate zone. Tropical plants and animals are native to the tropics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | cyclone:
Tropical storm
* Many tropical storms batter the islands of the Pacific.
* Most tropical storms generate rain
- get energy
- occur in oceans
* Some tropical storms become hurricanes.
* Some tropical storms cause damage
- severe damage
* are cyclone
- likely in the cyclone season
- rare
- the only natural disasters with their own names
- thunderstorms
* can cause a lot of problems even without becoming a hurricane
- quickly develop into hurricanes
* churning into potentially dangerous hurricanes often hide behind a cloak of clouds.
* have different names in different parts of the world
- stronger winds than tropical depressions
- infrequently, most often in fall
* place thousands of people at risk from flooding, high winds, and tidal surges.
* resemble the appearance of hurricanes due to the intensified circulation.
* sustain wind.<|endoftext|>### weather | cyclone:
Typhoon
* Most typhoons strike in the autumn.
- identical in nature to hurricanes
- located in sea
- part of the landscape in Taiwan, which is frequently hit by the deadly storms
- rare , as Palau is outside the main typhoon zone
- the storms that form in the tropical waters of the western Pacific Ocean
- thunderstorms
* are very severe storms with powerful winds and heavy rains
- strong storms with wind velocities of two to three hundred kilometers per hour
* can occur in the rainy season.
* come a couple times during the summer.
* develop west of the international date line, while hurricanes are spawned east of the line.
* is cyclone
* occur almost every year
- both north and south of the equator
- in Japan every summer and are a feature of the Japanese climate
- throughout the year in the Northwest Pacific but are most frequent in summer
* often cause extensive damage in the west and southwest Pacific.
* relational database management system.
* usually cause little disruption to public utilities and few casualties.
* vary in size from tropical storms to severe super-typhoons.
* winds fan fires set by quake.
+ Palau, Climate: Freely associated states :: Micronesia :: Microstates<|endoftext|>### weather:
Dry weather
* Some dry weather causes starvation
- occurs in summer
* allows ozone to remain in the air
- weeds to get a head start on young peanut plants
* can be a problem with keeping plants growing and in an immature state.
* continues to impact all small grains.
* followed by heavy rains causes radial cracking in many tomato cultivars.
* is also a main cause of rough feet
- conducive to buildups of aphid populations
- important during the period of fruit development
* promotes development.
* slows top growth and tends to increase the ratio of roots to tops.
Extreme weather
* can kill within minutes
- temporarily limit our ability to ship birds
* causes damage.
* continues to delay planting and growth, while bacteria and fungal problems increase.
* has impact
- negative impact
Fair weather
* can affect decisions.
* is associated with an anticyclone
Good weather
* causes a desire to climbs
- travel
* is associated with high pressure areas, where air is sinking | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather:
Hot weather
* Most hot weather causes growth.
* aggravates Pitta, more so if it is also humid.
* can add danger and stress to farm work
- also shorten the life of a car's battery
- be as dangerous as cold weather
* can cause a rabbit to act lazy
- harmful bacterial growth in feeders
- the requirement for water to quadruple
- contribute by speeding development of the parasites
- make anyone irritable, especially animals
- shorten the life of a car's battery or cause failure
* causes a desire to swims
- lettuce sap to become milky and bitter
- people to water their yards more, which can overtax a water system's capacity
- radishes to become pithy and pungent
- the milky sap to become bitter
* encourages the elongation of a seed stalk.
* favorite time for all insects.
* improves reproductive rates in gilts.
* is difficult to have cows actively grazing
- hard on newly transplanted plants
- so much hotter in cold countries than in warm
* lowers reproductive efficiency in two ways.
* seems to have some effect on the birds fed the more restricted phosphorus diets.
* tends to make the plant bolt and go to seed.
* triggers a variety of medical emergencies.
Inclement weather
* can cause stones to sink into the ground, and engraved lettering to vanish
- create a serious hazard for a person with poor coordination or low endurance
* shortens outdoor soccer seasons around the world.
Mild weather
* allows more grasshopper larvae to survive to adulthood.
* benefits cash crops such as cherries, grasses, barley, mint, etc.
* has some bears out of their dens and visible. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather:
Precipitation
* All precipitation begins as ice crystals in the upper levels of the atmosphere
- falls out of a cloud as snow
* All precipitation starts as ice or snow crystals at cloud level
- out as ice or snow crystals at cloud-level
* Any precipitation falls the long distance through the clouds towards the Earth's surface.
* More precipitation falls as rain than snow
- in winter, when the storm track is most active, than in summer
* Most precipitation becomes surface water
- vapor
* Most precipitation causes excessive moisture
- comes in the spring and summer
- consists of ice particles
* Most precipitation consists of opaque ice particles
- falls along the coastline and aridity increases as one moves away from the coast
* Most precipitation falls as rain but includes snow, sleet, drizzle, and hail
- rain, and most rain falls on the oceans
- snow in Antarctica
- back into oceans or lakes
- from clouds
* Most precipitation falls in autumn and winter
- late summer and early autumn thunderstorms
- the winter months, and little during the summer
- on basins
- to earth
- has productivity
* Most precipitation is caused by a combination of different processes causing the air to rise
- found around the cold front
- produced by storms
* Most precipitation occurs as rainfall
- snowfall
* Most precipitation occurs during grow seasons
- summer, mainly as a result of convective storms
- warm seasons
* Most precipitation occurs in summer
- the winter, primarily as rain
- time
- passes through layers
* Most precipitation reaches earth
- soil surfaces
- takes place during the growing season
* Much precipitation falls at higher elevations during winter months in the form of snow.
* Some precipitation affects chemistry
- height
- soil chemistry
* Some precipitation causes exothermic heat
- comes in winter
* Some precipitation contains dioxide
- sulfur dioxide
* Some precipitation falls as snow
- infiltrates the soil surface and becomes soil water or groundwater
* Some precipitation leads to primary productivity
- salinity
- occurs as snow
* Some precipitation occurs during summer months
* Some precipitation relates to primary productivity
- returns to the atmosphere as evaporation
- runs from high areas to low areas on the earth's surface
* accompanies storms.
* affects air system performance and reduces the effectiveness of radars.
* begins when the air cools and the water in the air condenses.
* changes over the northern hemispheric extratropics during the last hundred years
- the fluxes of heat and water vapor from the ground
* creates runoff.
* decreases with latitude as one approach the dry belt of the two hemisphere.
* drives deer survival.
* evaporating into the air can saturate the atmosphere.
* exceeds evaporation.
* fall mainly in spring and autumn.
* follows patterns dictated by ocean currents and Earth's rotation.
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- snow mist
* increases the rate of regeneration.
* is acceleration
- an amount
- chemical processes
- drops
* lowers the ocean's salinity by adding fresh water.
* occurs in clouds when rapid condensation takes place
- several forms, including rain, snow, and hail
* occurs mainly during the winter and spring months
- in the form of continuous or intermittent rain, snow, or drizzle
- when water vapour cools
- with heparin
* passes through adjacent zones
* produces runoff.
* refers to a. rain, sleet, snow and hail b.
* removes salt, guanidine and endotoxin from DNA in solution.
* results in accumulation
- measurable accumulation
* separates heavy metals from the water they contaminate.
* starts in the cloud as snow.
* tends to be more acidic when a storm originates from a south-westerly direction
- spread throughout the year, with heavy snow buildup during winter
* varies by both season and geographic area
- greatly within the Antarctic Peninsula
- regionally even more than temperature
* washes aerosols out of the air. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation:
Acid precipitation
* Most acid precipitation has productivity.
* Some acid precipitation affects chemistry
- distribution
* can make forests more vulnerable to disease and damage by insects.
* contains sulfuric and nitric acids.
* harms forests, soil, and lakes
- thousands of lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams worldwide
* impairs many small lakes and ponds in New York.
* includes rain, fog, snow, and dry deposition.
* is air pollution
* threat to forests and aquatic ecosystems.
Acidic precipitation
* Some acidic precipitation contains dioxide
- sulfur dioxide
* affects water quality and biological communities.
* has a marked effect on the spatial distribution of sulphate in lakes.
Acidified precipitation
* has many adverse effects on the environment.
* leaches various elements from forest soils.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation:
Annual precipitation
* Most annual precipitation occurs in summer.
* drops rapidly and summer temperatures soar.
* exceeds evapotranspiration.
* is characterized by wide regional variations
- heaviest in late summer and early fall, occurring as rain
* ranges widely in various parts of the country.
+ Alikovo, Alikovsky District, Chuvash Republic, Climate
* The climate is moderately continental, with long cold winters and warm summers. The absolute recorded low was and the record high was. Annual precipitation is up to.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation:
Hail
* Most hails come from clouds
- fall from clouds
- occur in countries
* Some hails consist of large particles
- produce thunderstorms
* affects yields primarily by reducing stands and defoliating the plant.
* annually causes nearly one billion dollars in damage nationally.
* are bombardment
- calling
- exclamations
- greeting
- objects
* begins as tiny ice pellets that collide with water droplets.
* can be extremely dangerous both as projectiles and as a cause of hypothermia
- dangerous, particularly when accompanied by strong winds
- very short-lived but is usually associated with rain and a drop in temperature
* cause damage.
* cause significant damage
- structural damage
* causes hundreds of millions of dollars in damage each year
- millions of dollars of damage to crops and property each year
- more monetary loss than any other type of thunderstorm-spawned severe weather
- much damage and injury to crops, livestock, property, and airplanes
- severe bruising on the stalk which can result in breakage or stalk rot
* comes down at great speed, especially when accompanied by high winds
- in strange shapes, sometimes with ragged edges
- quickly and fiercely, without consideration to where it falls
* does fall in Egypt but is never bad.
* forms in very unstable convective clouds such a cumulonimbus.
* freezes from the inside out, while sleet freezes from the outside in.
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
- hailstones
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- snow mist
* is chunks of ice
- common during the summer thunderstorms
- primarily an afternoon or evening phenomenon in Colorado
- rain that falls as lumps of ice
* is usually part of a thunderstorm
- tornado-bearing cloud
* occurs during severe weather
- in spring and autumn
* processes within a supercell.
* sometimes forms in well-developed thunderstorm clouds.
### weather | precipitation | hail:
Large hail
* can cause serious injury and has even been known to kill people
- make a circular crack if the hail hits it hard enough
* common occurrence in strong thunderstorms, especially supercells.
* does extensive damage to property and crops every year.
* is also a threat to small mammals and it kills many birds.
Small hail
* can damage crops.
* is frequent with the springtime thunderstorms and has been observed during other seasons.
Heavy precipitation
* is observed over large areas of the tropical continents.
* occurs during mild winters which are dominated by mid-latitude cyclones. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation:
Less precipitation
* is transpired back to the atmosphere from plants.
* percolates through the soil to become ground water.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation:
Maximum precipitation
* is during the growing season.
* is in midwinter and early in spring, and the minimum is in autumn
- in midsummer, and the minimum is in autumn
* is in spring and in fall, and the minimum is in midsummer
- summer, and the minimum is in fall
- summer, and the minimum is late in autumn and in winter
* is in winter and early in spring, and the minimum is in fall
- in spring, and the minimum is in summer and in autumn
* occurs during the spring and summer seasons
- in the summer and the minimum is in winter | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation:
Rain
* Every rain causes urban creeks to fill rapidly to the tops of their banks.
* More rain can infiltrate sandy and gravelly soils than clay soils
- falls in the foothills, and a few evergreen plants such as palms and acacias grow there
* Most rain affects countries
- crops
- life
- brings water
* Most rain causes accumulation
- freshwater runoff
- ice accumulation
* Most rain comes from clouds
- in the form of afternoon thunder showers
* Most rain falls during grow seasons
- the summer, but is unreliable and there are years of drought
- typical wet seasons
* Most rain falls from altostratus clouds
- cumulus clouds
- tower cumulus clouds
* Most rain falls in autumn and spring
- cities
* Most rain falls in short little bursts
- time
- summer in brief, intense afternoon thunderstorms
* Most rain falls in the narrow belt along the eastern and southern coasts
- winter and evaporation rates can then still be high for the winters are mild
* Most rain fills lakes
- ponds
- goes into sewers
* Most rain has destructive effects
- ecological effects
- harmful effects
- serious ecological effects
- is produced by thunderstorms
* Most rain makes mud
- wet mud
* Most rain occurs during breed seasons
* Most rain occurs in late springs
- over time
* Most rain produces growth
- vegetation growth
- provides moisture
- reaches earth
* Much rain causes excess sap to travel upwards from the roots
- falls from tall bands of clouds called the eyewall and rainbands
* Some rain affects grind water
- reproduction
- attracts mosquitoes
* Some rain carries pesticide
- toxic metal
* Some rain causes death
- mortality
- oil residues
- consists of particles
* Some rain contains acid
- nitrogen
- smoke
* Some rain falls during summer and there is snow during winter
- from storms
* Some rain falls in graves
- months
- open graves
- summer months
- tropic zones
- into the ocean and some falls on land
* Some rain falls on coastlines
- stream channels
- surfaces
* Some rain fills rivers
- vernal pools
- increases acidity
- is generated by power
* Some rain is produced by burns
- coal burns
- kills trees
- leads to ice accumulation
- occurs over summer
- passes through layers
* Some rain produces accumulation
- avalanches
* Some rain promotes germination
* Some rain reduces fertilization
- gamete fertilization
- triggers germination
- turns into ice
- rains are highly beneficial with supplying the needs of microorganisms in the soil and crops
* accompanies severe windstorm
* adds to the precipitation amount much faster than snow
- water to the pond and reduces the percentage of salt in the water
* affects ability to see through the car windshield
- areas
* also affects visibility.
* also can indirectly contribute to losses during curing
- make a chemical change in some rocks
- pick up air pollution as it falls to Earth
- push sediments to different places
- come in early autumn and winter
- concern, although in Kansas, winter brings few wet days
- create puddles of standing water where malaria mosquitos breed
- eliminates aphids, spidermites, thrips and other small sucking insects
- helps to keep our reservoirs full
- impairs vision in other ways
* always brings growth.
* are frequent during the rest of the year, especially in late fall and in winter
- heavy during the winter
- monsoonal in origin and fall late in summer
- seasonal if they occur at a certain time of the year
* associates with storms.
* becomes groundwater by seeping into the ground and filtering slowly through rocks and soil.
* begins in Burma, heralding the monsoon season
- when lightning begins
* bleaches out the color and nutrients.
* brings TCE back to the ground where it then moves into streams, rivers, lakes, and oceans
- out many other animals, including the red velvet mite
* can also affect the transportation and concentration of airborne pollutants
- begin as ice crystals that collect each other to form large snowflakes
* can also cause grapes to split from internal pressure
- windows to mist up inside the car
- fall from stratus clouds
- begin to gently fall and then increase in speed to become a downpour
- carry excess phosphorus to waterways, where it nourishes algae
* can carry the germs in pet waste into lakes and other water sources
- late blight spores down through cracks in the soil to infect the tubers
* can cause accidents on the highways
- fertilizers to run off into an area's watershed
- it to crumble and wash away
- surface soil compaction and crusting which prevents plant establishment
* can cause the seed to germinate and sprout
- sheathing to delaminate or swell
- clean the air of the pollutants that cause smog
- enter cracks in the rock
- form in any part of a cumulonimbus cloud
- freeze on anything it contacts, including roads
* can leach out their toxin, but soil quickly makes juglone inactive
- pollutants from city landfills into groundwater supplies
- valuable nutrients into surface waters
- occur throughout the year, and there is usually some snow in the winter
- raise bacteria levels when storm-water runoff washes sewage into the lake
- really drop the temperature to the point of shivering
- trigger the dispersal of mould spores and wash pollen out of the air
* can wash animal wastes and sewage, along with the disease-causing organisms, into the lakes
- excess chemicals into rivers or other water bodies which drain into the sea
- migrating aphids out of the air
- oil, grease, and substances into the storm drain system
- watersoak wings and lead to drowning in the ocean
* cans have effects
- same effects
* carries away bits of soil and slowly washes away rock fragments.
* carves out creeks and riverbeds, washing silt to larger bodies of water.
- damage
- flooding
- further damage
- landslide
* cleans the air by washing away dust and chemical pollutants.
* cleanses the air from dust and pollutants.
* collects in the caves and flows underground to the sea.
* come in the fall and winter, as much rain as there is, anyway.
* comes and after a few years, it stabilizes the water table depleted by the drought
- into contact
- soon when fish bite readily and appear near the surface of the water
- with generally cloudy skies, while there are bright periods between individual showers
* commonly falls in coastal regions in the summer.
* cools the air , keeping temperatures from rising too high.
* covers areas
- wide areas
* creates conditions
- favorable conditions
- landslides
- slippery streets by lifting and transporting motor oil and other pollutants
* crystalline scent derived from nature itself.
* daily occurrence but tends to fall in short tropical showers during the afternoon.
* different type of weather.
* does fall occasionally in deserts, and desert storms are often violent.
* drains through sand rapidly and the upper layers of sand dry out quickly.
* drops associated with melting hail tend to be larger than other rain drops
- in the air have potential energy, for example
- that freeze into ice pellets before reaching the ground
* effectively absorbs ammonia gas and helped to eliminate the vapor cloud.
* eventually gives way to snow.
* fall irregular in spring and autumn, often in the form of heavy showers.
* falling into a open grave is the sign of bad luck
- on distant peaks creates floods that rush ever lower
* falling on the land also seeps into the Earth to form groundwater
- into the earth to form ground water
- onto a hillside can lead to it giving way and tumbling into roads or houses
- within a river basin, or watershed, runs downhill until it reaches a stream
* falls almost year round except for a several month period in winter
- and fluids seep out from under the surface of the land
- at three different speeds
* falls during all the seasons, but more frequently during the winter months
- the night in abundance
- for very short periods, mainly in the cooler winter months
- frequently and nights sink into coolness even in mid-summer
- funnels in the clouds Rain occurs when clouds get scrambled and melt
- multiple directions, bounces off of objects, is carried by the wind
* falls from the clouds onto the land, and into wetlands, streams and rivers
- sky, collecting in streams that flow into rivers that reach the sea
* falls generally in a short winter period and frequently causes floods
- winter, and mostly in the south
- horizontally rather than vertically
* falls in cities
- sheets, and temperatures are approaching freezing
- short time
- spring and autumn and there can sometimes be strong Mistral winds and summer storms
- torrents
* falls mainly at night
- in the summer, often for an hour or so in the afternoon
* falls mostly in summer
- winter and the mountain peaks are covered with snow most of year
- on average every second day during summer and more often in other seasons
* falls on the Earth because of the force of gravity that pulls things down towards it
- leaves of a tree
- pool of water
- only during the winter, but is often more sunny than cloudy
- onto the surface of the earth and runs into lakes, streams and rivers
* falls through layers of cooler air without freezing, becoming supercooled
- polluted air containing bacteria, smoke, and chemicals
* falls throughout most of the world
- the year , and more on the west than the east
* falls throughout the year, but summers are relatively dry
- with a minumum in autumn
- to the Earth and is absorbed into the ground
* falls to the earth and causes all living things to grow
- is pulled by gravity through spaces in the soil
- ground, the ground thaws and the season changes
- when the drops get too big and heavy to stay in the cloud
* falls, air currents rise, and water droplets freeze
- winds blow, plants bloom, leaves mature and are blown away
* fills cracks
* fly in aluminated polyester.
* form of precipitation in which water falls back to earth as a liquid.
* freezes on contact with the cold ground and accumulates on exposed surfaces.
* frequently falls as strong shower bursts.
* gives life to land and land carries the river back to the sea.
* has a lower isotope ratio than sea water
- consequences
- devastate consequences
- lower levels
- oxygen
- rainfall for each day of the year
* has serious ecological effects
- severe effects
- very specific sound characteristics when recorded underwater
* helps the cysts hatch and begin to grow
- to wash pollen out of the air, but it also breeds mold, mildew and weeds
- wheat grow
* includes diamond dust
- features
* includes frost mist
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- raindrops
- snow mist
* increases nitrate levels particularly after a period of drought stress.
* increases the amount nitrogen via road runoff and groundwater infiltration
- depth of the lakes
* is absorbed by carpet and then slowly released into the soil, reducing watering needs.
* is also a heat-dropping factor
- an instrument which records the music of the wind
* is always a possibility in the sub-tropical climate
- slightly acidic from the presence of carbon dioxide
- an example of when drops fall
* is another aspect that can mean a number of things
- force that works slowly
- way animals can get water to survive
- as cold as a swimming pool
- bad weather
- brown like dirt and the mud puddles it makes
* is capable of water gardens
- wet soil
- caused by a mixing of water, air, and heat in the atmosphere
* is common in the afternoon, and sometimes it rains all day
- fall and early spring
- year round with no real distinction between the wet and dry seasons
- common, it flows downhill, and everyone is surrounded by hills and mountains
- concentrated in the spring and fall
- contaminated by mercury and other toxic pollutants
- critical to the spread and development of the disease
- displayed in millimeters and is the accumulation for the current month
- distributed throughout the year with frequent inland snowfalls during the winter
- drops of liquid water falling from the sky
- effective for washing pollen out of the air
- essential for life
- fallings
* is formed by water from the ground
- when water molecules in the air collect around particles of dust
- frequent during the winter months, but offset by comfortable, sunny days
- fresh water
- heavy during the winter months, with some mountain areas getting snow
- intercepted by forest vegetation before it hits the soil surface
* is limited because cool air sinks into a warmer region
- in northwest China where it is cold in winter and hot in summer
* is liquid precipitation in the form of water drops
* is located in air
- forests
- made of water
- measured by using rain gauges
- mildly acidic and it slowly eats away rocks
- needed in small doses throughout the winter
- nothing more than snow that melts as it falls to warm levels of the atmosphere
* is often light, or in short concentrated bursts
- too polluted to drink
- only one kind of precipitation
* is our most common winter precipitation
- usual form of precipitation
* is part of the outdoors
- water cycle
- plentiful all year, heaviest in summer and early fall
- plentiful, but is immediately absorbed into the surface before it can collect in a pool
* is possible anytime, even snow in the winter months
- no matter what the season, no matter what the time of day
- precipitation of drops of liquid water
- prevalent in the spring
- water vapor evaporating from the earth and condensing in the sky
* is rare and irregular and diminishes progressively towards zero
- is mainly in the winter
- even in winter, and sand storms are common in spring
- relatively constant all year long
- television shows
* is the animal s worst enemy at the beginning stages of life
- cause of life for the body, while knowledge is the cause of life for the heart
- common enemy of racer, fan, sponsor, official and promoter
- driver to move things
- gift of nature
- loss of excess moisture in the form of water droplets
- major cause of soil erosion which brings sediment to the stream network
* is the most common form of precipitation
- important factor in the spread of foliage diseases
- visible result of surface tension
- natural mechanism to scrub air pollutants out of the atmposphere
- primary force of the earth's water cycle in which moisture is released from the sky
- principal factor in promoting disease
- result of excessive moisture in the atmosphere
- second most common weather form, varying in abundance throughout the year
- usual order of the day for winter
- water that falls out of thunderstorms
- way water returns to the Earth from the clouds
- uncommon except during the rainy season which lasts about six weeks during the summer
- very rare throughout the summer months
- war, which is where there are people who suffer
- water that falls and drops from the sky
* is water that falls from clouds in the sky
- vapor that forms on a dust particle that becomes heavy enough to fall from the sky
- wets
- when the earth is television
* keeps falling as puddles form.
* leaches the more soluble, highly digestible nutrients from hay.
* lily small summer bloomer that comes in pink, white or yellow.
* lowers a player's Temperature and can cause freezing, but increase hydration.
* makes grain
- plants grow very tall
- the flowers, plants and trees grow
* means cloudy conditions and low light intensity which slows growth
- the grasses grow again and make new seeds
* mostly fructifies the earth, allowing it to bloom and bring lushness.
* moves into areas
- north in the global greenhouse
* normally occurs during the afternoon or night, and humidity levels are high.
* noun or verb and refers to the water that drops from the sky.
* nourishes survival in the earth with growing and understanding as in all things.
- vertically, horizontally, diagonally, and from the ground up
- when enough pressure builds up inside the clouds that they just burst
* often comes in torrents, and updrafts and downdrafts are usually strong and frequent
- helps to melt the snow pack
* only becomes acidified when acids in the atmosphere cause the pH to drop below normal.
* part of an unending process known as the hydrologic cycle.
* percolates through the sand granules and away from the surface.
* picks up airborne dust, which can be a significant pollutant
- significant amounts of nitrogen, sulphur and sodium in the atmosphere
* plays a very important part in molding the face of the earth.
* poses two major possible dangers to a bird.
* pours down at night, Days are hot.
* promotes channel erosion
- fungal and mold growth too
* provides adequate moisture during fall, winter and early spring
- sufficient moisture
* reduces effectiveness
* removes odors from the atmosphere.
* represents death and all the accompanying emotions of grief, pain, and despair
- the blessings of growth and abundance
* results in growth
- plant growth
* rewets the forage and allows respiration to continue.
* running off the leaves is poisonous.
* runs off hillsides, so they're dryer and soil forms slowly.
* saturates the ground and fuels the creeks and rivers.
* seems to annoy most species, however, even aquatic animals
- be an important factor determining clutch sizes
- have a detrimental effect on scent availability when searching for evidence
* seeps into the ground at the surface of the cuesta.
* serves to soften the ground and brings prey species closer to the surface.
* shows consistent patterns
* slowly dissolves limestone.
* soaks through open fields and down into the underground storage areas called aquifers.
* sometimes falls in summer months.
* splashes the spores onto nearby branches and infections occur through wounds.
* symbol of emotional release in dreams
- or a cold object
* tends to release the spores into the air.
* tends to run off without soaking in, with the exception of mulched areas
- right off without soaking in, with the exception of mulched areas
- soften the ground and make roads slick
* turns first to sleet and then to snow as the temperature plunged to deep winter levels.
* undermines foundations of all types of buildings.
* usually falls during late afternoon or at night.
* usually falls in temperate grasslands in the late spring and early summer
- the late afternoon preceded by bright, sunny and fresh days
- only in winter and early spring
- occurs in the headwaters of the rivers which run into the lowland
- washes a lot of pollen out of the air - counts go down
* washes chemicals into the rivers and pollutes the rivers and streams
- freshly applied pesticides from lawns into sewer manholes or open drain cleanouts
- nutrients from burned matter into the soil
- out aerosols from the atmosphere in a few days
- particles from air pollution into the ocean
- soil from slopes which have been bared by bush fires, logging and construction
- the pollutants to the ground
+ Drop: Matter
* Drops are often circular in shape,English Wikipedia and sometimes when light is refracted through them, it makes a rainbow effect. Rain is an example of when drops fall. Drops are also like bubbles, except they hold liquid instead of a gas, like air.
* Rain' are droplets of water falling from clouds in the sky that are bigger than 0.5 mm. Droplets of water that are about 0.2mm to 0.45mm big are called drizzle. Rain is a kind of precipitation. Precipitation is any kind of water that falls from clouds in the sky, like rain, hail, sleet and snow. It is measured by a rain gauge. Rain is part of the water cycle.
+ Madrid, Geography: Capital cities in Spain
* The region of Madrid has quite a dry climate. Most rain falls in autumn and spring. The winters are cold because it is so high up, and sometimes there is snow. The summers are hot. At night it is much cooler. Then they come out again in the evening and often eat dinner late at night.
+ Mount Pico, Description: Mountains :: Geography of Portugal
* In winter, the top of the mountain is covered with snow. Rains are frequent the whole year.
+ The Lion King, The story: 1994 movies :: American children's movies :: Disney animated movies :: English language movies :: American family movies :: American musical movies :: American romance movies :: Movies composed by Hans Zimmer :: The Lion King
* While the fighting is going on lightning hits a dead tree and starts a fire. Scar and Simba fight on top of Pride Rock. Scar does not want to die and lies to Simba that the hyenas are to blame for everything. Another fight happens and Simba throws Scar over the edge. Scar does not die after the fall, but the hyenas attack and kill him the hyenas are angry that Scar blamed them. Rain falls and puts out the fire. Simba walks to the top of Pride Rock and roars. Much later the animals come back. At the end of the movie Rafiki picks up Simba and Nala's daughter and lifts her up high above Pride Rock so the animals below can see.
+ United Kingdom, Geography: Commonwealth realms :: European Union member states :: Current monarchies :: English-speaking countries :: G8 nations
* The weather of the United Kingdom is changeable and unpredictable. Summers are moderately warm, winters are cool to cold. Rain falls throughout the year, and more on the west than the east. The reasons include its northerly latitude and the warm water from the Atlantic Ocean's Gulf Stream. The usually moderate prevailing winds from the Atlantic may be interrupted by Arctic air from the north-east or, less often, hot air from the Sahara.
+ Water: Natural resources :: Hydrogen compounds :: Oxygen compounds :: Oxides
* Water' is the most common liquid on Earth. Pure water has no smell, taste, or color. Lakes, oceans, and rivers are made of water. Rain is water that falls from clouds in the sky. If water gets very cold, it freezes and becomes ice. Frozen rain can be ice or snow if conditions permit. If water gets very hot, it boils and becomes steam. Water is very important for life. However, some studies suggest that by 2025 more than half of the people around the world will not have enough water.
+ Weathering, Mechanical weathering, Rain: Chemistry
* Rain is another force that works slowly. The force of raindrops on some rocks make them wear down. Rain also can make a chemical change in some rocks. The water mixes with the minerals in the rock to break it down. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | rain:
Acid rain
* Is a form of air pollution which can cause widespread environmental damage.
* Most acid rain affects crops
* Most acid rain has destructive effects
- harmful effects
- reaches earth
* Some acid rain affects grind water
* Some acid rain carries metal
* Some acid rain causes death
* Some acid rain contains nitrogen
* Some acid rain is produced by burns
- coal burns
- kills trees
* Some acid rain reduces fertilization
* ' is rain that is unusually acidic. Acid rain can have harmful effects on plants, animals, and on humans. Acid rain is caused when gaseous compounds of ammonium, carbon, nitrogen, and sulphur are released into the atmosphere. The wind carries the gases high into the sky. There the compounds react with the water in the atmosphere and acids are made
* accelerates the weathering process.
* affects aquatic organisms in complex ways
- carbonate stone buildings and monuments in two ways
- forest productivity, which in turn raises costs in the forest products industry
- wildlife and vegetation
* by-product of our industrialized society.
* can affect an entire ecosystem
- plants also
- the ecology of lakes and the ground
- aggravate respiratory ailments such as bronchitis and asthma
* can also damage buildings made of limestone and concrete
- eat into limestone statues and buildings and corrode metal
* can also increase the weathering of silicate minerals in soils
- water acidity
- kill certain essential microorganisms
- result in human health concerns and damage to buildings
* can be especially harmful to plants and animals
- extremely harmful to forests, lakes and streams, and humans
- manmade or occur naturally
* can be very harmful to the environment in many ways
* can cause lakes and forest to dies
- leaching of important nutrients from the soil
- magnesium and calcium to be leached from the soil
- many problems including poor visibility and human health concerns
* can cause marble statues carved long ago to lose their features
- status carved long time ago to lose their features
- contribute to high acid levels in water and soil
* can damage building components such as stone, mortar, paint, and metals
- forests and reduce the productivity of agricultural crops
- forests, lakes and buildings
* can damage lakes and aquatic life and affect the human respiratory system
- plants directly
- plants, animals, soil, water, building materials, and people
- statues, buildings, plants, crops and forests
- trees and reduce fish stocks in lakes and streams
* can destroy soil
- the leaves of plants like in the picture at the left
- displace nutrients such as calcium and magnesium from the soils
- effect all parts of our environment, as well as our lives
* can even damage paint on cars and the outsides of houses and buildings
- eat away at statues and buildings
* can harm ecosystems in a variety of ways
- other plants in same way it harms trees
- plant life and actually kill plants
- plants and alter water ecosystems
* can have harmful effects on plants , animals , and on humans
- severe effects on vegetation
- hurt plants and animals, and can make lakes dangerous to swim in or fish in
- increase the acidity of soil, water and shallow groundwater
* can kill fish, pollute water injure plants, make soil more acidic, and damage buildings
- water plants, deform fish, and prevent fish eggs from developing
- react with aluminum in the soil
- turn limestone into gypsum, a soft mineral that traps dirt
* caused by pollution can also cause soil degradation.
* causes a decrease of microbial activity in the litter and in the soil
- acidification of rivers and lakes, damages tree foliage and degrades soil quality
- extensive damage to water, forest, soil resources and even human health
- the erosion or weathering of limestone
* changes the acidity of soil and water
- chemistry of lakes and streams, which destroys aquatic life
- quality of the forest soil, potentially stunting the growth of plants
* comes from polluted clouds
* complicated problem, but it is mainly from air pollution.
* continues to affect our lakes, forests, wildlife and even our health
- have a serious impact on the forests and on Quebec's maple syrup industry
* contributes to forest decline by removing essential nutrients from forest soils
- the corrosion of metals and the deterioration of paint and stone
* corrodes metal and stone work making the maintenance of buildings more costly.
* damages forests and causes lakes and streams to become acidic, killing fish
- many materials, such as marble, limestone, and steel
* damages the delicate ecosystems of lakes and rivers and their plant life
- leaves of trees
- waxy layer on the leaves of trees
* degrades forests and fish stocks in lakes.
* depletes forest life.
* describes any form of precipitation with high levels of nitric and sulfuric acids.
* destroys thousands of lakes and forests in the U.S., Canada, and throughout the world.
* does have a harmful effect on aquatic animals.
* eats away the rocks' surfaces.
* enters lakes and streams and can destroy many forms of life.
* falling on water bodies has a direct effect.
* falls into our lakes and forests, where many fish and plants live
- on nearly one-third of the country
* frequent phenomenon in and around industrial areas.
* general phrase meaning acid falling from the atmosphere.
* generic term that can include acidic fog and acidic snow.
* global problem.
* harms more than aquatic life
- plants, animals, and fish, and erodes bulding surfaces and national monuments
- thousands of lakes, rivers, and streams worldwide, killing fish and other wildlife
* has a detrimental effect on plant-life and hence on crop production
- way of eating away plants, and ruining soil that was otherwise farmable
* has many harmful effects on earth s air and water supply
- negative repercussions on both humans and the environment
- effects on plants and vegetables
* has severe effects on the environment and individual ecosystems within it
* has the effect on buildings and monuments
- same effect on buildings and monuments
- tremendous effects on the environment
* hastens the deterioration of ancient statues and art throughout the world.
* hits lakes and streams hard.
* impacts on calcium nutrition and forest health.
* increases across North America.
* increases the acidity levels of rivers, lakes and seas
* influences the forests.
* is acid precipitation
* is also harmful to humans
- the classic problem of transboundary pollution
* is another environmental problem connected with fuel use
- long-range pollutant influenced by vehicle NOx emissions
- pollutant that kills the aquatic plants and animals that many fish eat
- any polluted precipitation, such as rain, snow, fog, sleet, etc
- at least thirty times more acidic than normal rain
* is caused by natural forces as well as by man and industry
- sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides produced when fuels burn
* is caused by the burning of fossil fuels
- fuels such as oil and coal
- emission and atmospheric transport of sulfur and nitrogen pollutants
- mostly by burning minerals like coal which contain some sulfur
- primarily by emissions of nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide
* is caused when clouds absorb gaseous pollutants
- gases, such as sulphur dioxide and nitrous oxide are released into the air
- damaging forests and crops far from the sources and sometimes in a different country
- formed by the burning of fossil fuels, especially coal, which is high in sulfur
* is formed when certain gases dissolve in rain water to form acids
- invisible gases are released into the air and mixed with rain clouds
- harmful rain
- hazardous to the plant health
- known as a wet deposit
- literally acid in rain water
- made up primarily of nitric and sulfuric acids which fall to Earth as rain and snow
* is one form of pollution that results from burning fossil fuels
- of the greatest environmental threats to our nation's agriculture
- type of atmospheric deposition
* is only a problem in urban areas
- part of a cycle involving industry, people and traffic
* is produced by the burning of fossil fuels that have a high sulfur content
- when pollutant gases are dissolved and reacted in water
* is rain that becomes polluted as it falls through the atmosphere
- is more acidic than normal
- so strong it kills plants,animals, and fish
- still a very large environmental problem that the world is trying to solve
* is the one of the most important pollution
- popular term for precipitation that has an abnormally high acid content
- reason why some forests are being destoryed
* kills off portions of the detritus food chain
- plants and animals in the bay
* leaches aluminum from soil particles
* lowers the pH of rainfall, runoff, soil water
* major contributor of sulfur in Pennsylvania
- pollutant in the world today
* occurs when a. carbon dioxide combines with water in the atmosphere
- atmospheric pollutants become part of clouds and then fall as rain
* plays a role in the mobilization of toxic metals.
* pock mark deep in the surface usually from years of neglect.
* pollution problem because it transcends political boundaries.
* problem in Europe, Canada, and America because of it's widespread environment damage.
* problem that contaminates forests and lakes
- effects the Great Lakes region
* provokes eyes and skin irritation.
* recent problem, caused by factories and other modern inventions, such as cars.
* reduces the quality and diversity of their invertebrate prey.
* refers to any precipitation, rain or snow, that's more acid than ordinary rain or snow
- rain or snow that contains heavy concentrations of sulfuric and nitric acids
* result of air pollution from automobiles and coal-burning utilities and factories.
* seems to bring toxic methyl mercury into the food chain.
* soaks into the soil.
* starts out as regular rain.
* term that describes acid that essentially falls out of the atmosphere.
* threatens the planet from fossil fuels.
* weakens and kills plant life, decreasing the food supply for animals that eat the plants.
+ Air pollution, Air pollution, Acid precipitation
* Acid precipitation is precipitation, like rain, sleet, or snow, that contains acids from air pollution. When fossil fuels are burned, they let out oxides into the air. When these oxides mix with water in the atmosphere, they make acid, which fall as precipitation. Acid precipitation can kill living things, like fish and trees, by making the place where they live too acidic. Acid rain can also damage buildings made of limestone and concrete. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | rain:
Downpour
* are rain.
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- raindrops
- snow mist
Drizzle
* falls from clouds
- stratus clouds
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
- snow
Freeze rain
* Most freeze rain causes accumulation
- ice accumulation
* Some freeze rain produces accumulation.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Freezing rain
* Is rain that falls onto a surface with a temperature below freezing.
* can be very cold
- glaze roadways with ice causing extremely hazardous driving conditions
- result in ice storms
* falls from the cloud all the way to the ground as liquid precipitation
- in the atmosphere as a liquid
* is actually rain that makes it all the way to the ground
- characterized as either glaze or rime depending on the nature of the ice
- different from freezing drizzle only by virtue of droplet size
* is extremely dangerous to travelers since it coats roadways with ice
- rare
- found in-between sleet and rain
- just rain that falls onto a surface with a temperature below freezing
* is liquid rain that freezes to a surface such as the road or a tree
- water that freezes after contacting Earth
- made up of super-cooled raindrops that turn to ice upon contact
- more hazardous than freezing drizzle
- rain that becomes supercooled and freezes on impact with surfaces
* is the name given to rain that falls when surface temperatures are below freezing
- same thing as rain, except when it makes contact with the ground, it freezes
* occurs when rain or drizzle freezes on contact with an object or the ground
- water droplets hit a cold surface and freeze
* specific form of precipitation, as is rain, drizzle, sleet, and hail.
* winter precipitation type that can be deadly.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Frozen rain
* can be ice or snow if conditions permit.
+ Water: Natural resources :: Hydrogen compounds :: Oxygen compounds :: Oxides
* Water' is the most common liquid on Earth. Pure water has no smell, taste, or color. Lakes, oceans, and rivers are made of water. Rain is water that falls from clouds in the sky. If water gets very cold, it freezes and becomes ice. Frozen rain can be ice or snow if conditions permit. If water gets very hot, it boils and becomes steam. Water is very important for life. However, some studies suggest that by 2025 more than half of the people around the world will not have enough water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | rain:
Heavy rain
* Most heavy rain is produced by thunderstorms.
* Most heavy rain occurs in years
- over time
* accompanied by high winds and extreme temperatures are means of natural control.
* accompanies severe windstorm
* can also cause alkalinity to decline
- the lack of calcium, washing valuable nutrients out of the soil
- dislodge aphids
- produce dense fog that limits visibility
- slow egg laying
- carry sediment, nutrients, and bacteria into surface waters
* can cause flooding
- nitrates to leach downward in the soil below the root zone
- swollen rivers that are difficult to ford
- the abscisic acid to be washed out
- widespread flooding
- create flash floods
- disrupt mating and egg-laying
- erode or saturate soil and further undermine the rooting of an unstable tree
- flood the bays with fresh water, reducing salinity and killing the oysters
- kill immature cereal leaf beetles
- lead to flooding
- occur with little warning and even small streams are dangerous in flood
- result in flash flooding, inundating cars and endangering pedestrians
- trigger rockslides
- wash fertilizer left on the soil's surface into lakes, streams, wetlands, etc
* cause a river to change course, isolating two groups of lizards
- floods with loss of life and property
- sand and rocks to be washed down to lowlands and basins
* causes landslide.
* creates conditions
- favorable conditions
* fall in coastal areas during winter
- spring and summer, but autumn is fairly dry
* falls at a rate greater than four millimetres per hour
- on rapidly melting snow
* indicates a strong downdraft within a thunderstorm.
* is made by all the fingers on each hand hitting the floor quickly together
- one of the major causes of soil erosion
- unfavorable for rust because it tends to wash the spores off the leaves
- video games
* leach away salts deposited by fertilizing and by watering with the garden hose.
* makes roads and streets slick and dangerous.
* moves into areas.
* produce a hot and humid climate for most of the year
- floods which can raise a lake level several feet overnight
* reduces visibility.
* soaking into a steep slope recipe for mudslides.
* tend to aid in dissemination of the pathogen.
* triggers large numbers of males to congregate and call, forming choruses.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Less rain
* can lead to changes in leaf color and possible water shortages in wells.
+ Midwestern United States, Geography: Census Regions of the United States
* The land in the Midwest is generally thought of as being flat. This is true of several areas in the Midwest, but there are parts that are not flat. For example, the eastern Midwest near the Appalachian Mountains, the Great Lakes basin, and northern parts of Wisconsin, U.P. of Michigan and Minnesota are not flat. Also, the northern part of the Ozark mountain range is in southern Missouri. Prairies cover most of the states west of the Mississippi River. Less rain falls in the western Midwest than in the eastern part. This causes different types of prairies. Areas in northern Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin, and the Ohio River valley are not very developed.
Light rain
* Some light rain falls during the winter months.
* can last for days.
Little rain
* falls in Egypt, and dry, windswept desert covers most of the land
- a grassland biome
* is generated by the cold waters of the Indian Ocean.
+ Grassland: Agriculture
* There are several parts of the world that have grasslands. Grasslands are found in Africa, North America, Central Asia, South America, and near the coasts of Australia. The largest grasslands are in East Africa. Grasslands with a few scattered trees are called savannas. Little rain falls in a grassland biome. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | rain:
Monsoon rain
* are heavy and are usually accompanied by strong, warm winds.
* occur in most regions during the summer.
* pauses Rain drops fall from broad leaves One by one by one.
Rain shower
* Most rain showers affect areas.
* Some rain showers stimulate growth.
* are actually disruptive to the spread of powdery mildew
- good
- possible any time of the year
* can occur at any time, but full days of rain are usually rare.
* is rain
* occur throughout the year, but more frequently during the summer months.
* turn to steady rain, which turns to a downpour.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Rainstorm
* accompanied by lightning are common during afternoons.
* also increase glacial melt, as well as add their own runoff to a river.
* are typical of warmer weather, so always carry rain gear in late spring and summer.
* can also cause high flows and floods, especially on small streams
- make the desert bloom
* fills rivers.
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
- snow
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- raindrops
- snow mist
- storm centers
* occasionally cause flooding of the Namoi River.
* occur all year.
* often bring about serious road flooding and traffic disruptions.
* tend to come and go quickly.
* usually last no longer than an hour and are very violent.
+ Gunnedah, New South Wales, Geography: Towns in New South Wales
* Gunnedah Shire is 264 metres above sea level on the Liverpool Plains in the Namoi River valley. It is very flat. The tallest hills are only 200 metres above the flat plains. The climate is hot in summer, mild in winter and dry. Rainstorms occasionally cause flooding of the Namoi River. Floods can cut transport links to the town and cut it off from the outside world.
### weather | precipitation | rain | rainstorm:
Thundershower
* are rainstorm.
* is rainstorm
* usually develop just to the east of the dryline in South Africa.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Relief rain
* is also a very dense and cold mixture of precipitation.
+ Rain, Relief rain: Precipitation
* When the clouds can no longer hold the water droplets, relief rain begins to fall on the windward slope of the mountain. On the leeward slope, air sinks, it is warmed and further dried by compression. Therefore, the leeward slope is known as rain shadow. Moist winds blow in from the sea and are forced to rise over the land. The air cools and the water vapour condenses, forming rain drops. Relief rain is also a very dense and cold mixture of precipitation.
Spring rain
* awakens the earth and calls forth new life.
* bring vegetation growth, providing breeding areas and additional food sources.
* help to provide additional nutrients that drive the base of the food chain.
* induce the toads to breed.
* keep rodent populations in check.
* wash spores of the fungus to newly emerging leaf tissue.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Summer rain
* Most summer rain comes as brief thunderstorms or showers in the late afternoon
- fills ponds
- is produced by thunderstorms, which can be accompanied by strong winds
* Some summer rain causes mortality.
* can also stimulate growth of new basal leaves that can be very toxic
* cause the forests to come alive with verdant beauty.
* come in torrents when they come at all.
* comes mainly as brief thunderstorms in the middle and late afternoon.
* produce abundant growth of annual grasses.
Torrential rain
* associated with land falling tropical systems sometimes produce flash floods.
* is good tank rain, provided it falls straight down.
* occur in the central Pacific islands and regions along the South American coast.
* raise water levels hundreds of feet in only weeks and wash away entire cities.
* cause flash flooding in Vargas, Venezuela. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | rain:
Tropical rain
* forests contains over half of the world's known species
- house the greatest concentration of plant and animal species on earth
* provides much of the energy needed for worldwide movement of air in the atmosphere.
Warm rain
* Some warm rain triggers germination.
* falling into a cool air mass near the surface can form a fog.
* warms up a lake faster than air temperature.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rain:
Waterspout
* Most waterspouts occur during times of benign weather and tend to occur on successive days.
* are a type of tornado that actually form on water
- common in warm, humid areas, such as the Bahamas, above
- conduits
- full of rain droplets
- funnel clouds like tornadoes, except they occur over water
- like giant straws that suck up water and even fish
* are most common along the Gulf Coast and southeastern states
- southeastern states and the Gulf Coast
- likely to form when the clouds are growing
* are similar to tornadoes but occur over water
- in that they are a part of a cloud system
* are tornadoes created over water
- occurring over tropical waters in light rain conditions
- that form over water
- which form over water, though they are usually less intense
* are weak tornadoes that form over warm water
- happen over warm water
* exist on a microscale, where their environment is less than two kilometers in width.
* is rain
* often develop at the dark bases of similar flat-bottomed building cloud lines.
* sometimes move inland causing damage and injuries
- inland, becoming tornadoes, causing damage and injuries
* usually develop over warm tropical ocean waters
- dissipate upon reaching land
+ Florida Bay, Waterspouts: Geography of Florida :: Ecosystems
* Waterspouts are a feature of the area. There are as many as 500 waterspouts per year. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation:
Rainfall
* More rainfall also washes more nutrients off the land than during dry years
- goes into ground water during the fall than during any other season
* Most rainfall affects growth
- plants
* Most rainfall causes erosion
* Most rainfall combines with hot weather
- tropical weather
- contributes to development
- falls during periods
- fills oceans
- influences growth
- is caused by storms
* Most rainfall leads to growth
- plant growth
- lowers temperature
* Most rainfall occurs as a result of thunderstorms during the spring and summer months
- the air masses rise over the mountains and cool with altitude
* Most rainfall occurs during periods
- seasons
* Most rainfall occurs during the summer as afternoon thundershowers
- winter months
- winter, while the summers are characteristically dry
- winter seasons
- from late fall through early spring, while summer is dry
* Most rainfall occurs in areas
- arid areas
- the winter, but expect it any time of the year
- winter and early spring, but afternoon thundershowers are common in summer
* Most rainfall stimulates grass growth
* Some rainfall affects flavor
- fruit flavor
- regeneration
* Some rainfall causes diseases
- drought
- salinity
- snow
- turbidities
- leads to infertility
* Some rainfall occurs during thunderstorms
- results in soil erosion
* affects extent
- parasite distribution
* also can be a significant source of nitrates
- transports soils, through the erosive power of runoff
* appears in shades of green, and wet deposition in purple.
* becomes runoff.
* boosts growth.
* can also create roughness and shallow pools of fresh water on the ocean surface.
* can be critical at several points in the life-cycle
- heavy in winter
* can cause additional losses by prolonging respiration
- such a land to bring forth only thorny bushes and cacti
- varying amounts of phosphates to wash from farm soils into nearby waterways
- easily erode bare earth
- fall at any time of the year
- lead to mass movement through three different mechanisms
- reduce salinity and evapotranspiration can increase levels during dry periods
* carries fertilizers into nearby creeks and lakes, therefore increasing nutirent levels
- radionuclides into cavities of the fresh leafy vegetables and collects there
* causes effluent run-off and nutrient loss
- landslide
* continues to boost plant growth and development.
- to, and evaporation removes, moisture
* controls the amount of vegetation seen from space.
* creates sites.
* declines from west to east, while evaporation tends to increase from south to north.
* decreases in intensity, along with winds, though strong gusts are still possible
- but lightning remains a danger
* determines whether fresh fish come in or wait for cooling weather.
* dictates what grows where in Tunisia.
* drains into opencast pits, where it collects impurities that are difficult to remove.
* exceeds evaporation
- mms
* generally moves water-soluble nutrients down into the pile.
* has components
- conditions
- impact
- negative impact
- significant impact
* helps shape the land and affects the types of living things found in a region.
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- raindrops
- snow mist
* infiltrates or runs off dependent upon the nature of the soil and topography.
* influences compositions
* is almost totally absent in the Sahara region.
* is also a major danger to marine animals that have bodies adapted to saltwater
- the major source of energy that drives the circulation of the atmosphere
- different according to the places
- equitable in all summer months
- even throughout the year
- extremely variable throughout the year
- fairly uniform throughout the year
- found in rising air over the warmest water, and the east Pacific is relatively dry
- greatest in hilly areas and in the West Country
- heavier during the spring and summer with lighter amounts in winter
* is heavy and is distributed throughout the year
- occurs in frequent showers and thunderstorms throughout the year
- heavy, often with thunder and lightning
- high in coastal and jungle areas
- highest in the tropics, and lowest in the deserts and near the poles
* is highly irregular, leading to catastrophic droughts and floods
- seasonal in dry areas, and is less seasonal in wet areas
- important for spore deposition during long distance dispersal of the spores
* is important in the formation and maintenance of breeding ponds
- maintenance of breeding ponds and streams in some localities
- in spring and autumn
- infrequent and irregular, falling mainly in winter
- intermediate between that found in semiarid and temperate forest biomes
- irregular, historically causing periodic droughts and famines
- just one form of precipitation
- less effective when plant and litter cover on the soil surface is reduced
* is light and occurs primarily during the winter season
- overall with the heaviest falls in summer
- to moderate, and heavy snows occur in the winter
- light, and easterly winds often bring in night and morning cloud
- low and extremely variable but when it occurs can bring floods
- low, so leaching is reduced and nutrients are held in the soil
* is mainly during the cooler months
- summer months, with peaks in autumn and spring and frost in winter
- major driving force of the global water and energy circulation
- measured by detecting optical irregularities
* is measured in a tipping bucket that automatically counts hundredths of an inch of rain
- millimeters
- whenever the two tiny calibrated buckets fill, tip and empty
- minimal to non-existent, and sunny skies are the norm in summer or winter
- monsoonal but amounts vary depending on altitude and aspect
* is more at the tropics and on windward side of mountains
- frequent in summer months which are often hot and sunny
- or less evenly distributed throughout the year
- negligible everywhere, although a little occurs in winter along the Mediterranean coast
- one part of climate
- perhaps the most important factor in defining climate
- plentiful in all seasons
* is possible and it can even snow, although snow is very rare in summer
- prevalent all year
- primarily in the form of summer thunderstorms and is about double of Tucson
- rare and snow is almost unheard of during the winter months
- seasonal, varying in amount, space, and time
* is spread evenly throughout the year
- fairly evenly throughout the year, although snow is common in winter
- strong in the western Pacific, with little rainfall in the eastern Pacific
* is subject to annual and regional patterns
- drastic fluctuations in place and season
- twice as heavy on the Pacific coast as it is on the lowlands of the Caribbean coast
- unpredictable and highly variable, and falls during both summer and winter months
- unreliable in amount and season
- unreliable, and there can be long drought periods, as well as devastating floods
* is usually abundant and spread evenly through the year
- erratic during the monsoon season
- plentiful in the rainy season, with higher levels in the long rains
- variable and falls all year round
* lessens as much of the moisture is left behind.
* moves water-soluble nutrients through the pile.
* occurs as gentle winter rains or as erratic high intensity summer storms
- consistently year-round resulting in much greenery and vegetation every season
* occurs during observation periods
- frequently throughout the year
* occurs in all seasons, but is generally heavier in the winter months
- the colder months and fire determining factor
- mainly during summer months, with the highest falls recorded in the tropical north
* occurs only in the colder months
- winter and is followed by eight to nine months of sustained drought
* occurs throughout the year, with drier periods in summer and autumn
* occurs when air rises above the warm water in the west and the east Pacific area is dry
- moisture in the atmosphere condenses into drops
- the water vapour in the air condenses
* often contributes greatly to flooding.
* promotes development.
* reduces the roughness of soil surfaces.
* removes zinc from soil because the zinc compounds are highly soluble.
* replenishes the water in the ground.
* represents only one aspect of the climate.
* shows seasonal variation
* striking the surface of the earth has one of three possible fates in the hydrologic cycle.
* tends to be concentrated in a few violent storms
- increase with elevation and also to increase toward the north
* varies considerably by regions from the North to the South.
* varies dramatically across Africa
- from year to year
* varies from season to season and from year to year, particularly in the Negev Desert
- year to year and within growing seasons as well
* varies greatly according to the season and the location within the area
- from region to region
- very much, but decreases from the coast to the interior
- with monsoon changes
* varies, but some precipitation occurs most of the year-round.
* washes feces into the water where the bacteria persist for a time.
+ Afrotropic, Major ecological regions, Sahel and Sudan: Ecozones
* Rainfall increases further south in the Sudan, a belt of taller grasslands and savannas. The Sudanian savanna is home to two great flooded grasslands and savannas, the Sudd wetland in the Sudan, and the Niger Inland Delta in Mali.
+ Ain, Climate: Departments of France
* Climate in the Ain department is mostly temperate. Winters are cold and summers are very hot. Rainfall is moderate.
+ Andalusia, Geography, Climate
* Rainfall decreases from west to east.
+ Mozambique, Geography and climate, Climate: Portuguese-speaking countries
* Mozambique has a tropical climate with two seasons. The wet season is from October to March and the dry season from April to September. Conditions vary depending on altitude. Rainfall is heavy along the coast and is less in the north and south. Yearly precipitation changes from depending on the region. Cyclones are common during the wet season.
+ Palin, Climate: Arunachal Pradesh :: Towns in India
* Palin falls within 15' to 20' temperature zone often the temperature falls to 5 to 7 degree in winter. The regions is very cold during winter and very hot during summer. Rainfall is very high due to very hilly and high geographical terrain. Most of time it is coverred by clouds. The area is windy in nature.
+ South America, Climate: Gondwana
* The climate in most of South America is usually tropical. It is humid subtropical in the southeast. Rainfall is different according to the places. Temperatures can also be very different. The usual temperature in the mountains is degrees, while temperatures in the Tropics can be more than degrees.
+ Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park, Climate and seasons: National parks in Australia :: Protected areas of the Northern Territory :: Pitjantjatjara
* Rainfall is usually low, very hard to predict. Climate statistics for Australian locations'. Australian Government, Bureau of Meteorology. Retrieved 16 March 2012. Rain is most common between November and March. Droughts are common and can be very long. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | rainfall:
Abundant rainfall
* increases growth, producing a wider ring.
* mixed blessing when managing deer habitat.
Annual rainfall
* declines as one goes westward in the Great Plains.
* exceeds mms.
* is an area's precipitation measurements for the entire year
- heaviest near the coast and decreases gradually further inland
- spread throughout the entire year
+ Costa Rica, Geography, Climate: Spanish-speaking countries
* The location receiving the most rain is the Caribbean. Annual rainfall is over. Humidity is also higher here. The mean annual temperature on the coast is around.
Average rainfall
* exceeds mms.
+ Sunderland, Geography, Climate: Port cities and towns of the North Sea :: Port cities and towns of England :: Settlements in Tyne and Wear
* Average rainfall is below the UK national average due to an east coast location.
Excessive rainfall
* can cause crusing on the surface of soils.
* causes erosion.
Frequent rainfall
* causes almost continuous flowering, which results in two harvesting seasons.
* is the primary condition for the occurrence of an epidemic.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | rainfall:
Heavy rainfall
* Some heavy rainfall causes diseases.
* can also damage crops and speed up the loss of soil
- cause temporary increases in some lake levels
- drown small larvae and reduce numbers by more than half
* carries organic debris into the spring and clouds the water.
* contributes to the development of large mosquito populations.
* decreases population sizes.
* favours the development of severe disease.
* reduces mite populations in soybeans.
* results in varied vegetation and many rivers and springs.
* tend to lower carbon dioxide measurements, probably due to dilution from runoff.
* tends to obscure the difference between mid and tall grasses.
High rainfall
* Most high rainfall combines with hot weather
- tropical weather
- contributes to development
* Some high rainfall affects flavor
- fruit flavor
* causes spider mite populations to decline.
* makes leptospirosis relatively common in Hawaii.
* stimulates the growth of grass which creates an ideal habitat for locust breeding.
Intense rainfall
* can erode fresh volcanic deposits to form large mudflows.
* causes landslide
- two types of destruction
Low rainfall
* has conditions.
* makes areas inhospitable for forests.
* means slow chemical weathering of rock.
Natural rainfall
* contains dissolved air and a very small amount of dissolved solids.
* is slightly acidic due to dissolved carbon dioxide, picked up in the atmosphere.
Normal rainfall
* Most normal rainfall leads to plant growth.
* leads to growth
Tropical rainfall
* comprises more than two thirds of global rainfall.
* comprises more than two-thirds of global rainfall
- the world s total
* helps regulate global rainfall patterns.
Selective precipitation
* is used in water treatment to remove heavy metal ions from the water supply.
* removes phosphate from solution as insoluble salts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation:
Sleet
* Is rain drops that freeze into ice pellets before reaching the ground.
* Most sleet causes moisture.
* Some sleet occurs at temperature.
* also causes moisture on roads to freeze and become slippery
* begins as a snowflake which falls through a warm layer of the atmosphere
- snow, but it melts when it falls into a layer of air that is above freezing
* can accumulate like snow and cause a hazard to motorists
- slick roads
* consists of small particles of ice mixed with rain.
* falls as ice pellets that form when rain drops freeze before reaching the ground
- generally in cold weather while hail growth is greatly inhibited at cold temperatures
- in the atmosphere as a solid pellet of ice
* includes diamond dust.
* includes frost mist
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- snow mist
* indicates small particles of ice, usually mixed with rain.
* is an indicator of both cold and relatively warm air aloft in a winter storm system.
* is different from freezing rain
- formed when raindrops become frozen as they fall
* is frozen rain or ice pellets
* is just frozen drops of rain
- measured much the same way snow depth is measured
* is rain or melted snow that freezes into ice pellet s before hitting the ground
- that freezes after exiting a cloud
- raindrops that freeze into ice pellets before reaching the ground
* is raindrops which freeze before hitting the ground
- into ice pellets before hitting the ground
- small chunks of ice that are like small hailstones
- small, partly melted bits of ice
- snow that melts and refreezes before it hits the ground
- the same as freezing rain
- usually tiny clear ice pellets
* occurs during winter weather and type of winter precipitation
- in the winter
* occurs when raindrops freeze while in the atmosphere as ice pellets
- snow falls from a cloud and melts on the way down
- snowflakes only partially melt when they fall through a shallow layer of warm air
* only happens under very specific weather conditions.
* term for cold weather precipitation that has a few different meanings.
* usually falls in the winter.
### weather | precipitation | snow:
Corn snow
* is snow.
* produces the ability to use a soft edge.
Deep snow
* Most deep snow occurs in areas.
* Some deep snow covers food sources.
* can cause a motorist to become hung up where the tires no longer touch the ground
- greatly inhibit the ability of turkeys to both move about and find food
- make travel difficult
- melt into a lot of water
* hinders movement on foot.
* is difficult, with snow deeper than three feet forcing moose find other habitat
- typical of the winter season and dry, warm weather is typical of the summer period
Flurry
* Flurries are a light snow which falls for a short time.
* Flurries includes diamond dust
* Flurries includes frost mist
* Flurries includes ice crystal
- needles
- snow mist
- indicate snow
Fresh snow
* can be unstable, until it settles.
* falls each year on nearly one-fourth of the earth's dry land surface.
* has a high albedo, bare dirt has a low albedo
- way of erasing smells and muffling sounds
* piece of blank paper that records the faintest scribbles.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | snow:
Heavy snow
* can also reduce visibility and make life harder for snipers
- bend the seed stalks
* can block roads and cause downed power lines
- power lines to fall down
- damage trees and shrubs as the weight accumulates on branches
- fall during the winter months
* can impact the interior and is common along the southern coast
- of the state, especially along the southern coast
* cover the volcano in winter.
* covers an evergreen forest.
* falls with limited visibility.
* force the animals to lower elevations in search of food.
* is found in the Andean region and South Patagonia
- possible at the higher elevations of the central Rockies
* kills off many foxes, and they die of starvation.
* makes snow and ice removal much more difficult. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | snow:
Less snow
* exposes surfaces to freeze-thaw temperature fluctuations.
* means less snow to melt and feed streams and rivers
- snowpack for spring melting
Light snow
* can occur at higher elevations.
* creates scenes
- winter scenes
Little snow
* melt leads to a large ice cap, reaching almost in certain spots.
+ Mount Logan: Mountains in Canada :: Yukon
* Temperatures are extremely low on and near Mount Logan. It reaches near freezing in summer. Little snow melt leads to a large ice cap, reaching almost in certain spots.<|endoftext|>### weather | precipitation | snow:
Marine snow
* can also be a reservoir for other important elements, like nitrogen.
* is diverse enough to support numerous species
- the basis of much life on the ocean floor
* turns out to be one of the most important components of the mid water system.
* very rich source of nutrition.
+ Detritus: Biology
* In terrestrial ecosystems, leaf litter and other organic matter gets mixed with soil. The result is called humus. Detritus of aquatic ecosystems is organic material suspended in water, which is sometimes referred to as marine snow. Marine snow is the basis of much life on the ocean floor. It is the food of animals which operate as 'filter-feeders'.
Packed snow
* has less friction than unpacked snow.
* is usually wet new snow, and the sharp edges disappear immediately.
Permanent snow
* covers the highest mountain peaks.
* falls on open ground about two weeks after winter begins.
Powder snow
* can last on the northerly slopes.
* is usually dry or slightly moist.
Shallow snow
* tends to be less dense or compacted, so it is also weaker.
* turns to coarse, granular sugar snow over time, making a weak layer.
Snow flurry
* Snow flurries are caused by isolated patches of cloud where droplets have frozen
- the most common cause of precipitation traces in winter
- indicate snow
* is snow
Snow geese
* are an international resource - a migratory game bird
- birds principally of central and western North America
- harbingers of the changing seasons
- magnificent creatures
- migratory birds
- on the edges of fields and feeding on green grasses
- very wary birds
* are, to put it mildly, social animals.
Snow skating
* gives the sports enthusiast freedom from poles and boards.
* is to inline skates as snowboarding is to skateboarding.
Wet snow
* can melt down into a donkey's coat, soaking the hair and causing the animal to chill.
* is most likely in late autumn or early spring
- much heavier than dry snow
* makes it more feasible for snowboarding than skiing.
* tends to fall at elevated temperatures.
Winter snow
* Some winter snow covers areas.
* allows for ski-ing and all other winter sports.
* are fairly frequent, but most events are light and melt off quickly
- mostly light and quickly melt away
- frequent on the mountain tops
- generally light and infrequent
- wondrous
* covers most grasses, forbs and shrubs.
* is an important source of water in the spring.
* provide a white coat.
Snowfall
* Most snowfall creates layers
- has snowstorms
- includes precipitation
* Most snowfall is accompanied by gusty surface wind
- occurs during the evening hours
* Some snowfall decreases growth
- produces avalanches
* accompanies blizzards.
* are possible at higher elevations any day of the year.
* exhibits patterns.
* includes diamond dust
- flakes
* includes frost mist
* includes ice crystal
- needles
- snow mist
- snowflakes
- weather
* measures in metres. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | precipitation | snowfall:
Heavy snowfall
* Most heavy snowfall is accompanied by surface wind
* Some heavy snowfall produces avalanches.
* are common in the winter months
- infrequent and melt rapidly
* can make roads and railroad tracks impassable
- occur during short-lived events if the precipitation rate is high
* covers stores of buried food, and increases predation pressure.
* occur on average every thirty years.
Seasonal weather
* Most seasonal weather affects locations.
* can affect the hydration of the outer skin
- greatly impact groundwater flow<|endoftext|>### weather:
Severe weather
* More severe weather occurs in the spring and summer than any other time of the year.
* affects school safety in many ways.
* can cause accidents, or drivers can become dangerously stranded
- flooding, capsizing, and eventually sinking
- happen quickly during the summer time
- make eagle watching easier
* can strike quickly and sometimes with little or no warning
- suddenly and without warning
* includes events such as ice storms and major accumulations of snow.
* is any element of the weather that threaten peoples' property or safety
- rain accompanied by high winds, thunder and lightening
- sudden, violent, hazardous weather that comes from powerful thunderstorms
* occurs in a variety of ways in east central Florida.
* threat to the citrus industry.
Solar weather
* affects satellite transmission Radio transmission, electric power grid, and much more.
* is seen as the biggest threat to satellites.
Space weather
* All space weather related to the sun, is affected in some way, shape, or form by the solar cycle.
* can disrupt electric power and communications systems
- make waves on earth
* causes damage.
* has impacts on, for example, telecommunications and electric power systems on Earth.
* is weather.
* new term in the lexicon of science.<|endoftext|>### weather:
Warm weather
* allows for rapid egg-hatching.
* brings insects and they can make riding miserable for horse and rider.
* can cause beets to form hairy side roots
- create skin problems
- increase the risk of avalanches
- induce premature growth which can be damaged by subsequent cold and frosts
* causes individual sprouts to be soft and open rather than solid and tightly packed.
* favors infection and disease development.
* has blueberries growing rapidly and leaf tissue is quickly emerging.
* increases the number of grasshoppers that reach maturity.
* is slow to arrive in spring, and is tenuous in summer and early fall
- the time to take steps to prevent future ice dams
* makes for successful growing of apples, peaches, pears and cherries.
* means road repair in many regions.
* melts the ice and deposits the substrate.
* reduces quality.
* triggers the evolution of a new moth.
Warmer weather
* can in some cases spur crop growth, though in other cases it can be detrimental.
* is best for collecting flies
- needed to propel pasture growth before winter arrives
* reduces the amount of time needed for the eggs to hatch.<|endoftext|>### weather:
Wet weather
* Some wet weather affects cities.
* can cause the ground underfoot to be slippery.
* does indeed have an effect on ground conductivity.
* encourages growth.
* favors larval movement and the infestation process.
* increases the chance of being involved in a crash.
* is also a threat to children playing on wooden structures
- ideal for most fungal diseases
* major factor in disease development.
* means an abundance of tender green grasses and weeds to eat
- more pests in summer and so more pesticides are used
* produces conditions favorable for the increase of pathogens.
* slows reproduction and favors the development of their natural enemies. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather:
Wind
* All wind is caused by lots of people eating hot curries.
* Blows away or knocks down smaller creatures.
* Most wind affects temperature
- arises from heat
* Most wind carries dust
- energy
- fine particles
- kinetic energy
- nitrogen
- small particles
* Most wind causes cold weather
- evaporation
* Most wind consists of forces
- pressure gradient forces
* Most wind contains vapor
- water vapor
* Most wind creates environments
- mechanical forces
- weather patterns
* Most wind drives powerful storms
* Most wind generates power
- gets heat
* Most wind has energy
- mechanical energy
* Most wind is accompanied by cloudy weather
* Most wind is created by external forces
* Most wind leads to shears
- wind shears
* Most wind occurs in regions
- shallow zones
- produces gusts
- reaches earth
- removes materials
- turns propellers
* Some wind affects life
- aggravates allergies
- breaks weak limbs
* Some wind carries bees
- hails
- plumes
- pollen grain
- sand
* Some wind causes air
- blow snow
- tornado
- waves
- combines with snow
* Some wind creates storms
* Some wind drives air
- current
- large waves
- seawater
- generates electricity
* Some wind helps mosquitoes
- seabirds
- increases burns
* Some wind is caused by gravity
- generated by thunderstorms
- lasts for years
* Some wind moves poles
- penetrates lungs
- prevents snow accumulation
* Some wind produces pollen
- stand waves
- pushes gases
* Some wind reduces growth
- plant growth
- skin abrasion
- releases gases
* Some wind removes body heat
- uses turbines
* accompanies cold weather.
* affect the degree of ocean mixing as well as providing the momentum to drive ocean currents
- ocean's surface only
* affects animals' food stores, as well as their hunting and defensive strategies
- areas
- perceptions of temperature particularly with lower temperatures
* allows circulation and mixing of the lake water.
* also affects animals' food stores, their hunting and the way they protect themselves.
* also affects the rate of pollen collection
- spread of wildfires
* also can curl around and bring in ozone from the Ohio Valley
- spread the virus through the air
* also carries heat to or from outside building surfaces by convection
- materials into lakes
- the sacs between trees, spreading infestations further
- carry burning embers downwind, which can start new fires
* also cause the development of pressure ridges, rafting and hummocking
- warm surface water to accumulate on the western side of the Pacific
- causes waves
- contributes to the spread of wild fires
* also create suction
- various surface and internal waves, which can contribute to estuarine mixing
- dries fuels, and it causes fires to spread
- form thick clouds of sand
- generates surface currents that move sediment along shore
- has an effect on light penetration
- help in carrying the seeds for distant places
* also helps distribute warm and cold air preventing harmful hot or cold air pockets
- in the formation of sand dunes
* also helps to aerate the water
- redistribute the sun's heat from the tropics into the cooler polar regions
- water evaporate more quickly
- influences the likelihood of frost
- limits tree growth
- move toward the midlatitudes creating the w esterlies
- occur on a much smaller scale, for example dust devils or tornadoes
- play a key role in ozone destruction
- plays a role in the erosional process
- presents a danger when a fire is burning
- produces a mechanical shaking action which is known to affect plant growth
- tend to increase with height
- works to wear away or erode the rock
* always curve to the right relative to the place of origin
- flow from high to low pressure
- influence tides
- starts because two areas have different pressures or densities of air
* appears to be a method of seed dispersal, although distance of dispersal is limited.
* are a critical factor in determining regional weather patterns and climate
- regional weather patterns and global climate
- key factor in determining global weather patterns
- natural outcome of differential heating between hot desert and cold water
- problem due to mechanical damage, water stress, and disruption in pollination by bees
- symbol of strife
- affected by landforms and once airborne, there is less interference from the surface
* are also generally strongest in winter
- important in showing where and how fast the air is propagating
- calm and skies are clear or partly cloudy when the eye of a storm passes
- calmer in the morning, picking up as the day progresses and calming down before dark
* are caused by differences in air pressure
- when the cool denser air pushes the lighter warm air and causes it be displaced
- common both in winter and summer, predominantly from the northwest, west, or southwest
- controlled on a planetary scale by the heat of the sun and the rotation of the earth
- crucial for stellar evolution and for the energization of the interstellar medium
- dry and cold
* are generally light and temperatures cool so little water is lost through evaporation
- so very little water is lost through evaporation
- greatest at the highest elevations and along ocean coasts
- highly variable in time and altitude
- just strong enough to blow snow into large drifts and destroy visibility
- landward during the day and seaward at night
- larger in the winter
* are light and variable in summer
- most of the year
- at all levels
- lightest in the winter and highest in the summer, except for occasional storm systems
- movements of air which blow from offshore, moving seawater into the estuary
* are normally light near high pressure systems where the isobars are widely spaced
- responsible for toppling weakened trees
- one of humankind's oldest sources of energy
- part of Earth's atmospheric circulation
- planet-sized convection currents set in movement by Earth's spin
- produced by pressure differences between two locations
- related pressure differences - high to low
- renewable energy, resulting from the sun's uneven heating of the earth
- responsible for the largest changes in water level due to surge
- strongest in the winter, and lighter and more variable in the summer
- the main erosional force on Mars and windblown dust and soil erode craters over time
* are usually so strong that one can lean against the wall of wind
- strongest in the winter when high and low pressure systems are strongest
- variable during summer when the weather is sometimes sultry
* associates with storms.
* barely moves tree leaves.
* based loess deposits also form an important parent material for prairie soils.
* big factor in the formation of waves.
* blow anticlockwise around a depression in the northern hemisphere
- between areas of different atmospheric pressures
- clockwise around an anticyclone in the northern hemisphere
- counter clockwise around a low-pressure system
* blow from areas of high pressure toward areas of low pressure
- higher to lower pressure due to the pressure gradient force
- horizontally and vertically from all compass directions
- in cyclones
- inward toward an area of lowest atmospheric pressure
- out and away from the area of highest atmospheric pressure
- over the land, blowing fine dust far out into the ocean
- strongest near coasts, in mountain passes and on prairies
- such particles and gases onto all types of human and natural structures
* blow the clouds over land
- warm water because it is on the surface
- with awesome strength, and cast dead branches down to the ground
* blowing across a roof surface creates a negative air pressure.
* blowing across the face of the ocean produces a fine mist of sea spray in the lower atmosphere
- ocean surface often push water away from an area
- surface mixes the reservoir, bringing in life giving oxygen to all depths
- around and over a building can play havoc with air distribution
- at Mars makes dust storms
- from high and low pressure regions in the tropics push surface water basins
* blowing over the lakes greatly influence the microclimate of the forest
- surface of the sea causes friction at the interface between air and sea
- warmer water picks up more moisture, contributing to stronger thunderstorms
- the sand can create sand dunes hundreds of feet high
- through city streets can speed up, slow down, and markedly change direction
* blown dust and dirt can cause permanent eye damage
- organic debris and sub-surface water allows unique fauna and flora to develop
- soils include dune sands and loess
- weed seeds, especially bermuda grass, can be a real nuisance
* blows across the open spaces of the desert and picks up sand and other sediments
- as a result of a pressure difference and the rotation of the earth
* blows from oceans toward land, rising when it hits mountains
- ocreans toward land, rising when it hits mountains
* blows from the land to the sea
- sea to the land
- fungal spores from plant to plant
- in various forms of plankton, which in turn attracts bait fish such as shad and bream
- sand particles from side to side
- the seeds and pollen of weeds into farm fields, choking out crops
- up dry leaves from the ground
- upon the particles of dust and soil settled on the Earth s surface and cleans it
* borne salt can stunt growth.
* breaks connections of few xylem cells and leaves fall.
* bring rain and drought, destroy on their own, and generate a certain kind of chaos.
* brings air.
* brings cold air
- continental air
- rainfall
* can act on exposed beach sediments and create smaller-scale landforms on the beach.
* can affect canoes especially on wide or coastal rivers
- surface temperatures in the same manner as stack pressure
* can also be a factor affecting evaporation
- blow from areas with lower air temperatures to areas of higher temperatures
- bring blowing snow, dust and dirt
- carry spores of pathogens
- cause plants damage through sand abrasion
- change the thermocline
* can also create life-threatening conditions
- sound
- waves with heights that vary according to the wind speed
- curve or even rotate
- erode material until nothing remains at all
* can also generate vertical water motions by a process called upwelling
- by processes called upwelling and downwelling
- make valleys larger by erosion
* can also move and carve the snow in the same way it blows around grains of sand
- horizontally across the earth's surface near the poles and the equator
- pile snow too deeply on the plants, causing cane breakage from the weight
- shear off the top of an eruptive column making it appear shorter
* can also spread fungal spores
- venturia inaequalis fungal spores
- start up tides and then destroy ships
- transport particles by saltation along the ground and in suspension as dust
- alter surface materials, especially in desert climates, both by erosion and by deposition
- and do blow ashore, currents keep moving and invariably pass along the coast
* can be a detriment as the plant dries too quickly
- huge factor year-round
- particular problem in desert regions
- occasionally strong and the weather can change very suddenly
- significantly different in two air masses forming a front
- very severe and are responsible for extensive weathering of the rocks on the surface
* can blow chemicals from far away and acid raid can affect the soil of a field
- and acid rain can affect the soil of a field
- photochemical smog away replacing it with fresh air
- small soil particles to which the contamination is attached
- so slowly and gently that it can barely be felt
- spray off target, and even a slight breeze in hot weather can cause vapors to drift
- both break and move rocks the size of a grain of sand
- break down rock over a long period
* can carry a storm great distances
- chemicals to nearby neighborhoods and create many health problems
- infected plant material miles away from the original infection site
- ozone formed in urban areas long distances to surrounding rural areas
- pollen from one plant to another, but insects, particularly bees, are important
- pollutants hundreds of miles from their origin
- rust spores for great distances
- the virus particles very long distances - possibly a hundred miles or more
* can cause a wind whistle, a wind rush, and a wind roar
- antennas to vibrate, which can weaken the mortar joints
- damage to buildings and bring down power lines
- drift from liquid applicators and misplacement of dry materials
- erosion too
- pollen to be carried farther
- several problems for plants
- ships to drag anchor
- spraying problems during the growing season
* can change direction and intensity very quickly
- stability by redistributing snow
- chill the body as air moves over it
- choke or drive the tides
- come up unpredictably even on the sunniest warmest days
- concentrate swimmer's itch parasites in shallow beach areas
- control fire and water
* can damage crops
- flowers and reduce yields
- trees suffering from lack of moisture at any season
- deform waves from a simple sinusoid
- deposit material anywhere whereas water travels downhill
- desiccate young vines, reducing their rate of growth and delaying establishment
- destroy houses, buildings, and other structures
- dramatically reduce temperatures, and hypothermia can set in rapidly
- drift pesticides to nontarget sites
- dry out the plants
- effectively disperse urediniospores over great distances
- either enhance or slow a runner's speed
- erode by deflation and abrasion
- fan embers into a forest fire
- flood the shoreline and change the course of rivers
- force snow under their feathers, where it is melted by body heat
- form around clouds and cloud formation can produce wind
- grind rock right down to dust
- have two different effects on thunder
- intensify very suddenly
- make a hot day turn cold
* can move land, especially in deserts
- male moths and young caterpillars, but it doesn t spread the moths rapidly
- sediment grains over long distances when they are carried through the air
- silently, or wind can roar
* can only enter the body and wreak havoc when it encounters emptiness
- wear down solid rock over long time periods
- place large energy demands on a horse in winter, as can disease
- play a major part in moving sand on the beach face, sand flats and dunes
- prevent formation of fog
- produce several distinctive kinds of waves
- provide energy and it's also an agent of erosion
- redistribute the snow into drifts
- reverse direction or veer strongly within the inversion layer
- shred leaves and break branches, and sun can scorch the leaves
- slow dry fly fishing
- sometimes blow sand into towering dunes
* can spread fire rapidly to occupied homes
- fires quickly and over great distances to further disrupt biodiversity
- pathogens from one area to another, even many miles
- sediment over large areas
- the actively growing fungus to fruit in the upper tree
- stir up water and add oxygen
- transport the larvae some distance to other feeding sites
- trigger the formation of Phlegm
- work along with solar generation to provide more uniform power input
* carries a set of instruments to study the solar wind, as well as two gamma ray burst detectors
* carries fine particles of sand and grit that literally sandblast away the ink
- heat away by driving cold air through clothing
* carries pollen from the male cone to the female cone
- to the female flowers
- to the sticky receptive surface of the ovule
- rust spores between plants
- scent to the dog, but also disperses it
- snow creating blizzard like conditions
* carries the fungal spores from the cankers to developing leaf and twig tissue
- pieces , which grow when moisture returns
- pollen from the cones and spreads it
- thrips over long distances
* carry clouds over the land
- drifting sand punctuated occasionally by the fragrance of tiny flowers
- pollution great distances
- salt spray inland, leaving salt deposits on plants
- sediments from dunes to marshes or bays
- such high volcanic material completely around the Earth within a few weeks
* carrying sand can abrade and polish bedrock surfaces
- wears particles off rock like sandpaper
* cause a change in air pressure, cooling the surface water
- redistribution of pressure leading to changes in the winds
- sand-tinted features on the Martian surface to shift over time
- ripples in the water, which causes the wind to have something to push
* causes the generation of sound
- pond water to evaporate, increasing the percentage of salt in the water
- waves that travel in the ocean
* change direction and speed constantly as weather features move and change strength.
* changes directions and force without warning.
* characteristic of both countries.
* circles the Earth and plays an important role in determining weather conditions.
* circulate clockwise around low-pressure and cyclone systems in the southern hemisphere.
* circulating around a tornado are lowest near the ground.
* climactic factor to consider in deciding on a location for perennial plants.
* cloth that sails so birds have something to fly on.
* cloud in the sky's groin and the stars half blind behind it, bored of cycles.
* comes from a single direction
- outside forces or interior conditions such as emotions, diet and heredity
- sides
- the movement of air resulting from thermal gradients and the earth's rotation
* consists of both speed and direction, thus it vector
* constantly batters their leaves.
* contributes to storms.
* create dunes, water creates deltas, ice creates valleys, waves create spits and sandbars.
* created by the sun s heating of the atmosphere carry the water vapor over land.
* creates blizzard conditions
- movement and therefore all aspects of circulation in the body
- pressure which places the home's structure under strain
- same effects
- sliding, overturning, and uplift forces on a structure
- wave action
- waves that travel across vast oceans
* damages flowers
- tents
- windows
* deposited snow is usually denser.
* determine a balloon's direction.
* determines the pattern isotherms take and their speed of movement.
* distributes such vectors as mosquitoes, sandflies and blackflies.
* drive unchecked across the open ocean and hit the coast with great force.
* driven blade movement generates electricity
- circulation is circulation caused on the surface layer of the ocean by wind
- cold air also can intrude in insulation beneath siding and through sheathing
* driven rain can force water through otherwise tightly sealed windows and doors
- is considered flooding
- snow can also result in drifting snow
- waves generally have a larger impact on shorelines than boat-generated waves
* drives cold air under and through clothing
* efficiently mix the troposphere and evenly distribute the gases.
* erodes the Earth's surface by removing loose, fine-grained particles, called 'deflation'.
* even affects the particles it carries or moves.
* exerts a minor influence on distance and direction of seed travel.
* faces one significant environmental concern, mortality of migratory birds.
* flow across parallels of latitude, taking heat from equatorial regions to polar regions
- clockwise around a high pressure center in the northern hemisphere
- first in one direction, then in the opposite direction
- from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure
- in order to more evenly distribute heat between the equator and polar regions
- patterns are changed by the topography of land, water and plants
* forces air
* forcing following the midsummer upwelling events differ from year to year
- mainly produces annual variations in the thermocline depth
* form of kinetic energy, meaning that it is in motion
- solar energy
* generally blow from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure
- outward from high pressure systems toward low pressure systems
- impedes walking
- light and variable in direction
- move away from high pressure and toward low pressure
* generated noise is created by the action of breaking waves at the ocean's surface.
* generates our surf as it does everywhere on the planet
- stronger as particle gets colder
* gives voices to things such as to the rustling trees.
* greatly speeds up the process of body heat loss.
* hackle down to the point where silk is hanging and tie off.
* happens when the sun heats some parts of the Earth differently.
* has a defined direction or 'vector' with a certain density of moisture and velocity
- lot to do with turning rocks into sand, which is simply very small pebbles called grains
- low density compared to water
- speed and a direction
- unique symptom of itching, when it is lodged beneath the skin
- an effect on heat loss
* has kinetic energy in it
- the ability to transport, erode, and deposit sediment
- tremendous power
* have less effect on slope currents, which tend to flow northwestward.
* help in generating energy
- to spread surface fires and ignite spot fires
* helps birds fly
- butterflies flly more easily from plant to plant
- create extreme weather conditions in a number of different circumstances
- keep birds in flight
* increase productivity by keeping the water column mixed
- with height up to the jet stream
* increases heat loss from skin exposed to cold air, in effect lowering the temperature.
* increases the amount of water loss from a plant to the atmosphere
- effects of cold temperatures
- spread of fire and causes it to burn more intensely
* influences the concentration and flow of dust particles and machine exhaust.
* interacts with atmospheres.
* is air in motion relative to the ground
* is air that is moving across the surface of Earth
* is also a clean source of energy because wind turbines emit no air pollutants
- leading cause of soil erosion because wind can pick up soil and blow it far away
- part of weather
- type of weather
* is also another important weathering agent in deserts
- way deserts form
- important in cooling crowns heated by radiation from fire
- responsible for altering the water surface of oceans and lakes
- strong in the polar region
- always an important factor for shoreline fishing because it affects the water temperature
* is an effective form of erosion for many locations
- example of a renewable source
* is an important agent for transporting sediment in deserts
- factor in the climate
- factor, regulating life conditions at the seaside
- underused, abundant, and renewable natural resource
* is another force that causes abrasive weathering by blowing sand against rock faces
- natural factor which causes erosion
- normality on western rivers
- any motion of the atmosphere relative to the surface of the earth
- artificial satellites
- assumed to act on a pre-existing wave field
- by far the most important cause of ice compression
- capable of dry hair
- caught by turbines on wind farms and turned into energy
- caused because of pressure differences in the atmosphere
* is caused by a difference in air pressure
- air moving from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure
- differences in the atmospheric pressure
- different pressures in the atmosphere
- local temperature differences seeking balance
- relatively small differences in barometric pressure
* is caused by the rising of air heated by the ground which has been heated by the sun
- uneven heating of the earths land by the sun
* is caused by uneven heating and cooling of the earth's surface and by the earth's rotation
- of the earth's surface by the sun
- variations in air pressure
- warm air rising over cool air
- considered the primary agent in the transfer of olive pollen
* is created by air moving from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure
- temperature differences between the entrance and interior passageways
- due to the sun's inability to evenly heat the atmosphere of the earth
- derived from solar energy
- doubtless the major pollinating agent of beets
- exhalation
- free, renewable, and capable of producing non-polluting electricity at a competitive cost
* is important in arid regions, and waves are most important along coasts
- determining and controlling climate and weather
- the dispersal of most fungal pathogens
- to living things
- light except in thunderstorms, coming from eastern directions
* is located in fields
- made of air
* is made up of a series of gusts and lulls
- moving air molecules, but the wind is invisible
- movement in the air that can be seen or felt
- much greater on the roof of a building than on the street level
- named according to which direction it blows
- on Mars because temperature, air pressure and humidity are all on Mars
* is one natural force that causes air pressure changes in a building
- of the biggest factors in heat loss
- present in all moment of liquid and food
- produced as the sun heats the air
- really a form of solar energy
- related to spring according to the five elements theory
- renewable, and produces no emissions or by-products
- required for dispersal of the inoculum once it reaches the air
* is responsible for much of the structural damage caused by hurricanes
- piling water up along the coast
- simply air in motion
- subsidiaries
- talk
- technically the horizontal movement of air generally from areas of high to low pressure
- the air flowing horizontally with respect to the earth's surface
* is the breath of life
- time, hurrying by
- cheapest and fastest to build form of new generating capacity in the world today
- element used in moving things and breaking
- fastest growing renewable energy resource
* is the fastest growing source of electricity in the world
- horizontal flow of air from areas of higher pressure to areas of lower pressure
- load center which drives up weight and cost
- main method of spore dispersal
* is the most common cause of avalanches
- surface waves
* is the motion of air relative to the rotating surface of the Earth
- air, characterized by speed and direction
- atmospheric air measured relative to the rotating Earth
* is the movement of air around the earth
- caused by the uneven heating of the Earth by the sun
- from higher pressure areas to lower pressure areas
* is the natural motion of the air roughly parallel to the Earth's surface
- movement of air across the land or sea
* is the primary element responsible for lack of comfort in all golf conditions
- source of infrasonic noise
- product of the movement of air
- response of the atmosphere to uneven heating conditions
* is the result of air moving from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure
- solar heating and it simply increases the temperature of the earth
- second most important factor influencing potential evapotranspiration
- thing that keeps rowers off the water
- vehicle and origin of thought and action
* is the world's fastest growing energy source
- fastest-growing source of energy
- thought to be the main driving force along with ocean currents
- time and with every passage measure of wind passes a touch, a breath, a kiss, and time
- typically at peak production in the winter when water levels are low, and vice versa
* is used for power generation
- to generate electricity
* is very important to migrating eagles
- the erosion of the Martian landscape
* kill many more people in the arctic than polar bears.
* lift the moist air high into the atmosphere, and blow it about the globe.
* limitless resource.
* literally picks up and blows the sand away by a process called deflation.
* loses one point of strength at the end of each month.
* major factor in drift damage
- the development of unstable slabs on lee slopes
- problem in kiwi culture
* makes waves in the ocean
* measure time, shift and gather close.
* mix warmer air with cold air next to the ground.
* mixing in shallow water resuspends sediments and decreases water clarity.
* move areas of warm and cold air around causing changes to the pressure patterns
- parallel to isobars, from west to east
- sand and dust from region to region, often in spectacular dust storms
- the layers of air and disperse the cooling effect
* movement of air, and air is invisible.
* moves air
- through air
* moving across the sail of a kite creates pressure
- can lift the gulls, make eagles soar, take sailing vessels across the Mediterranean
* natural enemy of the mosquito
- energy source, occurring directly at the point of use
* naturally flow around the dome in the same way water flows around rocks in a river
- occurring resource
* necessary part of sailing because it makes the boat move.
* normally blows from one side of the slope of mountain to another side.
* occur because the atmospheric pressures try to 'even themselves out'.
- when the air is heated by the sun
* often blow as thermal currents move the atmosphere around
- blows the water onto streets or sidewalks, and evaporation is greater on windy days
- breaks the threads and carries the caterpillars to nearby trees and shrubs
- carry pollen to the right place, but other plants rely on pollinators
- develops along the oceans shore during the day because land heats up faster than water
- mount to gale and sometimes hurricane force
* only affects particles with positive or negative drag.
* passes through areas.
* pick up moisture as they blow across the ocean and release their moisture over the land.
* picks up dust from the surface and carries it into the atmosphere
- from light in the morning, to strong in the afternoon
* play a large part in hawk migration activity
- major role in every aspect of weather on Earth
- an important role by dispersing pollution or moving it to downwind areas
- the dominant role in the distribution of volcanic ash
* plays a key role in tide stands
- role in the mixing of the Bay's waters
- vital role in determining fish location, even in murky waters
- an important role on the weather, especially when temperatures are cold
- no significant role in cross pollinating tree fruit
* pollinated flowers usually have small or non-existent petals
- plants have light, fine pollen grains that can be carried far by the wind
- trees generally flower in early spring before leaves are present
* pollinating flowers however look very differently to insect pollinating ones.
* pose a greater danger than rain because floats can tip over.
* powered energy is both cost competitive with gas, and friendlier to the environment
- cost-competitive with gas, and friendlier to the environment
- provided by the wind, collected by using a wind turbine
* powerful force.
* powerfully affect the oceans and are an important force in creating currents.
* powers generators
- the voyages of sailing ships across Earth's oceans
* predominates in old age.
* primary factor in the heat loss of a pool.
* probably is the most important pollinating agent, insofar as it benefits our existence.
* promotes current
* provides environmental advantages over other forms of generation
- nearly continuous monitoring of the solar wind conditions near Earth
* push clouds around Earth
- water towards the equator
* pushes a sailboat forward the same way an airplane wing lifts a plane off the ground
- cars
- sea water
* pushes warm surface water
* pushing on the surface of the ocean make the water move.
* puts out fire.
* rank high among the important forces of weather that shape the surface of the earth.
* redistributes sand and other particles especially in arid regions.
* reduces the activity of insect pollinators.
* relief on hot days, as it helps cool the body by evaporation of sweat.
- smaller soil particles and leaves rocks exposed on the surface
- snow throughout the season subjecting the plants to desiccation
- the warm air which insulates the body
* renewable energy source.
* represent the working of a heat-distributing engine.
* rip through the atmosphere at hundreds of miles per hour.
* rotate around a low pressure center counter-clockwise
- counter-clockwise around a cyclone
* roughs up the surface of water and stirs up the bottom silt, reducing light penetration.
* seeps in through the weakest elements, e.g., openings, windows and doors.
* shake -Crack in a tree caused by high winds.
* shift from a general winter direction of west or northwest to south or southeast.
* sign of Spring in the high country.
* sometimes shift direction after a prescribed fire is started.
* speed increase with altitude case to updraft to tilt.
* spins the large blades which turn generators inside the turbine to make electricity.
* spreads the fungal spores to other plants.
* stirs the water, and deep water wells up around coastlines and close to the poles.
* swells a generated by local storms, close to the beach at which they break.
* swirl inward counterclockwise toward the eye of a hurricane in the northern hemisphere.
* tend to blow upslope during the day and downslope at night
- change direction less frequently on the wide-open prairie
- come from the east and southeast, and they drop their moisture on the eastern slopes
- follow the coastline even though they are northeasterly out to sea
- move in counter-clockwise motion around an area of Low pressure
- seek out the weak and old parts of a forest, breaking limbs and uprooting some trees
* tends to be closer together and swell farther apart
- blow close to parallel between isobars with lower pressure to the left of the wind
- bounce off a wall, producing eddies that can cause more damage
- force rainwater deep into any joint or crack
- increase the ill effects of the sun's rays
- shred the leaves, but the veins are still able to function properly
* then acts as the force which pushes the plant over or buckles the stem
- mix and disperse the carbon dioxide
* transport the evaporated water around the planet, influencing the humidity of the air.
* travel at much greater speed than other storms.
* travels over the water, dispersing.
- the turbine's rotor which spins the generator that makes electricity
* uproots entire plants
* usually becomes less of a problem as a baby gets older
* vary in direction and velocity, relatively constant being the north-west and the west.
* vast, worldwide source of energy.
* vector quantity, that is, has both direction and magnitude.
* very important force in shaping the Martian surface.
+ Lichen, Their life habit, Reproduction: Fungi :: Botany :: Bacteria :: Algae :: Extremophiles
* They make small groups of algal cells surrounded by fungal filaments. These 'soridia' can be blown by wind. Some lichens just break up into fragments when they dry. Wind carries the pieces, which grow when moisture returns. Also, lichen fungi can reproduce sexually by forming fruiting bodies containing spores.
* A 'valley' is a type of landformation. Valleys often start as a downward fold between two upward folds in the surface of the Earth. A valley is made deeper by a stream of water or a river as it flows from the high land to the lower land, and into a lake or sea. Some valleys are made by glaciers which are slow-moving rivers of ice. When a valley is made deeper or wider by water or ice, this is called erosion. Wind can also make valleys larger by erosion.
* Wind can move land, especially in deserts. Cold wind can sometimes have a bad effect on livestock. Wind also affects animals' food stores, their hunting and the way they protect themselves.
+ Pollen, Pollination: Flowers :: Plant anatomy
* The wind helps move pollen between plants. The pollen of some plants is very light. Wind blows it from the flowers on one plant to the flowers on another plant. The wind can move pollen a long way before the pollen hits the sticky top of a pistil.
+ Sailboat: Boats
* A 'sailboat', 'sailing boat' or 'yacht' is a boat that has sails. Wind blows against the sails, pushing the boat through the water. The word covers many kinds of boats, from small sailboards to large sailing ships. When the wind blows from behind, there can be used an extra sail, a spinnaker.
+ Weathering, Mechanical weathering, Wind: Chemistry
* Wind processes are called 'aeolian'. Wind erodes the Earth's surface by removing loose, fine-grained particles, called 'deflation'.
+ Wind, In outer space, Planetary wind:
* The 'doldrums' are in the equatorial region. It is a wind belt where air is warm, with little pressure variations. Winds are light there. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind:
Atmospheric wind
* Most atmospheric wind carries nitrogen.
* are able to distribute fallout over large areas.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Brass instrument
* Some brass instruments use piston valves
* are instruments.
* are located in brass bands
- jazz bands
- part of bands
* are used for music
- playing
- wind instruments
* can provide a musical outlet in a variety of groups.
* come in several different keys.
* involve the blowing of air into a mouthpiece.
* is wind
+ Transposing instrument, Natural harmonic series and timbre: Music
* Saxophones transpose into different keys according to their sizes. Brass instruments come in several different keys. It is always important for a player to come to a rehearsal or concert with the correct instrument. Often brass players become skilled at transposing. That means, if their music is written in the wrong key for the instrument on which they are playing, they can still play it in the right key.
Breeze
* Most breezes occur in regions
- temperate regions
* Most breezes produce motion
- upward motion
- provide moisture
* Some breezes create plumes
- occur at nights
* are blowing
* breathe upward.
* can carry the seeds far from the parent tree, thus helping maples spread to new areas
- form as cool air settles to the bottom of connected cave tunnels
* describe wind.
* fuel fire.
* penetrate atmospheres
- marine atmospheres
### weather | wind | breeze:
Lake breeze
* are a frequent feature of summer weather in southern Ontario.
* keep things fresh, even when the mercury hits the low eighties.
Ocean breeze
* can help clear away pollen and relieve allergy symptoms.
* carry salt great distances.
* hold back swarms of mosquitoes.
* keep temperatures pleasant year-round
- the area cooler in summer and warmer in winter<|endoftext|>### weather | wind | breeze:
Sea breeze
* Most sea breezes provide moisture.
* are breezes
- onshore winds caused by the heating of the land along the coast
- the flow of air from the sea to the land
* can build to a brisk breeze during the afternoon.
* happen during the day and land breezes happen during the night.
* occur during hot, summer days because of the unequal heating rates of land and water
- throughout the year
- when the land mass next to the water area heats up at a much greater rate
* occurs when warm air over land rises and cool wind blows in from the sea.
* play a major role in the coastal climate.
Calm wind
* allow the cool air to settle without mixing it with warm air.
* cause emissions levels to increase.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Chinook
* are native to most of the Pacific rim
- perhaps the most economically important and valuable of all salmon
* have a Black gum line which is present in both salt and freshwater
- black gum and coho have a white gum
- characteristic black lower jaw at the base of the teeth while coho's are white
- longer body with a conical head
- black gums
- large irregular spots on their back, upper sides and their entire tail
* returning to spawn vary greatly in age - from two to eight years.
* seem to prefer deep, fast streams with large gravel.
### weather | wind | chinook:
Young chinook
* Most young chinook stay in their natal water for a whole year, when they swim for the ocean.
* Some young chinook spend only a few months in the stream environment, some up to two years.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Cold wind
* Some cold wind causes snow.
* brings air
- cold air
* can sometimes have a bad effect on livestock
- tear at the stems and cause damage to root systems
* increases heat removal from the top of the ice.
* offer relief from the mosquitoes and permit the caribou to rest and feed freely.
+ Wind:
* Wind can move land, especially in deserts. Cold wind can sometimes have a bad effect on livestock. Wind also affects animals' food stores, their hunting and the way they protect themselves. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind:
Easter
* are festivals
- religious festivals
* comes each year at about the time spring begins
- from the name of an ancient spring festival
* feeling in our hearts of hope and faith and trust.
* fifty day season with many more Sundays to come.
* holiday filled with symbolism.
* is also a time of healing
- the third holiday associated most with spending time as a family
- in autumn in the southern hemisphere
- indeed the most important holiday in the Christian calendar
- like the Equinox, and the sun and moon are on opposite horizons
- observed usually a week later than when the Gregorian calendar dectates
- part of a process of claiming life in the midst of death
- traditionally a time of new beginnings
- unique in all the world s religions
* means joy, hope, happiness.
* moment of celebration in which faith bursts the normal bounds of report and memory.
* moveable feast, the date of which is determined by the phases of the moon.
* promenades of people in new clothes are a tradition in many European towns and villages.
* special festival in the republican calendar
- time as children can see live rabbits during the Easter holiday
* time of Catholic processions and concerts of sacred music
- rejoicing, remembering and renewing one's faith
- renewal both in the spiritual and the physical sphere
- renewal, to begin again, like spring
- springtime festivals
- traditions, and sunrise services are among the oldest
- transformation when the old falls away
- out of time that is our entrance into the Kingdom of God
- to look toward the renewal of the earth
* worldwide tradition containing many customs that peopl e believe t o be Christian.
### weather | wind | easter:
Eastern philosophy
* Eastern philosophies believe that it is caught in an endless cycle
- place emphasis on mutual dependence of humans and their environment
- recognise the non-material as the source of everything
* has no monopoly on mysticism.
* is based on the individual's experience.
Easterly wind
* are particularly dangerous because they create huge tidal waves.
* tend to inhibit tropical storm formation.
Gale
* Most gales occur in winter, when the prevailing winds are westerly.
* are almost constant, blowing from west to east, and strong tides also run from west to east
- craters
- heavy wind
- located in marses
* blow up frequently.
* is an open-source messaging system
Geostrophic wind
* flow parallel to isobars.
* occurs only when isobars are straight and evenly spaced.
Gust
* Some gusts associate with thunderstorms.
* are especially strong on clear, sunny days
- strong in the winter and weak in the summer
* can be significant especially in springtime
- reach speeds up to seven hundred kilometers per hour
* is wind
### weather | wind | gust:
Wind gust
* Sounds from electrical discharges in the dust clouds.
* can cause the blade tips to dip below their normal position
- vary so branches came down
* catch on ridges of crusty snow and flip the snow over to make a snowball.
* pick up hurricane force, accompanied by thunder and lightning. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind:
High wind
* Some high wind carries snow
- is generated by thunderstorms
* are a common factor in the formation of slab avalanches
- able to blow away loose soil from flat or hilly terrain
- common year-round, but are more common in late summer to early winter
- known to cause damage, depending upon their strength
* blow down branches and trees
- trees and create small and large gaps in forests
* can also bind or jam the actuator arm
- blow the newly hatched larvae long distances
- cause movable soccer goals to fall over
- be just as destructive as a tornado
- blow shingles off the roofs once they curl
- break branches
* can cause damage depending on how strong they are
- to curtains and window hinges
- motion sickness in people working on the top floors
- create hazardous situations, especially for small craft
- damage the leaf stem and shred the leaves
- deposit snow and fine dust inside presumably sealed boxes
- flatten the top of the cloud into an anvil-like shape
- happen any time of year
* can occur any time of year
- at anytime during the day and throughout the year
- result in extreme damage to property and lives
* can spring up quickly and, accompanied by low temperatures, can be dangerous
- quickly, creating waves as high as six feet
- topple trees, outdoor equipment, and electrical lines
* cause dangerous winds
- mechanical damage to crops, soil erosion and land degradation
- such fires to move quickly
* change the sunlight available to the understory by opening up the canopy.
* damages tents
* disperse local ozone but cause regional ozone through long-range transport.
* lead to rough seas, so expect winter waves to be higher.
* predominate in the ecozone.
* pushes sea water
* reduce the thickness of the boundary layer, speeding diffusion of gases.
+ Wind, Damage:
* High winds can cause damage depending on how strong they are. Sometimes gusts of wind can make poorly made bridges move or be destroyed, like the Tacoma Narrows Bridge in 1940. Power can go out because of wind, even if its speed is as low as. This is because tree branches could change the flow of energy through power lines. No species of tree can resist hurricane-force winds, but trees with roots that are not very deep can be blown over more easily.
Higher wind
* cause more heat loss due to more efficient conduction.
* have the potential to generate more electricity.
Light wind
* blow in a clock wise direction.
* brings air.
* can actually strengthen a tree's trunk, but strong wind can cause some damage.
* means short wavelength.
* prevail during equinoctial periods.
Local wind
* are small-scale winds produced by a locally generated pressure gradient.
* arise only in specific areas on the earth.
* can also generate waves
- produce extreme weather conditions
* take place all over the world. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind:
Monsoon
* All monsoon climates share three basic physical mechanisms.
* Learn about the monsoon pattern of winds in India and Asia.
* always blow from cold to warm regions.
* are a big wind blowing from the ocean to the land
- most typical in India and southern Asia
- rainy seasons
- seasonal winds that are caused by the differing heat capacity of oceans and continents
- steady trade winds along the western coast of the Pacific Ocean
- the seasonal changes of winds forced by continent-ocean temperature contrast
- very large-scale land and sea breezes, produced by changes in pressure systems
* bring lots and lots of rain
- torrential rains and flooding
* can bring on epidemics such as dysentery and cholera.
* cause wet and dry seasons throughout much of the tropics.
* comes from the Persian word mausam which means season.
* coming every three to seven years can add almost a foot of water to the mountain's surface.
* control the climate in Asia, producing wet summers and dry winters.
* develop in response to temperature variations between continents and oceans.
* is caused by land-sea temperature differences due to heating by the sun's radiation
- immoderate, and the rivers are in spate every year
- the name of the wind that brings rain to the Indian sub-continent, including Nepal
* term that means seasonal winds.
Monsoon wind
* blow from land to sea in the winter, and from sea to land in the summer.
* bring extremely heavy rain to southern Asia in the summer.
* exist in other parts of the world, too.
* have an impact on Thailand's tropical climate.
### weather | wind | monsoon:
Summer monsoon
* begin as the warm humid air masses flow towards the north from the Indian Ocean.
* bring large amounts of rainfall to tropical monsoon regions
- strong winds and rain to Taiwan
* rains cause avalanches and mudslides on many slopes.
Norther
* is wind
* reduce air temperature and blow surface water away from the coast.
* sometimes plummet the temperature to near freezing.
Northerly wind
* are more frequent in winter.
* hold back the ebb in the North Sea.
* prevail in winter, while southerly winds reign in summer.
* tend to bring in colder than normal temperatures.
Onshore wind
* are thought to cause cercariae to accumulate along shorelines.
* blow sediments from the beach, helping to form dunes.
* can blow steam plumes onto the land, causing visibility to be limited.
* cause waves.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Solar wind
* Most solar wind reaches earth.
* Some solar wind causes light
- northern light
- creates storms
- releases gases
* affects the magnetic fields of all the planets in the solar system.
* are the result of gas expansion in the corona
- very prominent after solar flare activity
- when the corona is expanding into space
* blast the Earth's magnetosphere, creating radiation storms invisible to the human eye.
* blow hard radiation through the airless night.
* blows away remaining gases
- some of Earth's atmosphere into space
* can also have a measurable effects on the flight paths of spacecraft
- have major impacts on communications technology on Earth
- hit the atmosphere and cause the atmosphere to ionize
* cause the material in the coma to trail behind the comet for a much as a million miles.
* comes from the sun.
* consists mainly of hydrogen and helium, the two lightest elements.
* flows out from the sun in all directions.
* impact the Earth and react to gases near the Earth's magnetic at poles.
* interacts with atmospheres.
* is astronomical objects
- slowed to subsonic speeds and heated very rapidly as it arrives at the bow shock
- solar radiation
- steady and relatively low speed
- the flow of matter, it is the energy the sun throws out into space
* pushes the vapor in a direction away from the Sun to form the comet's tail.
* squeezes some of Earth's atmosphere into space.
* stream of charged sub-atomic particles, eg protons
- particles emitted continually from the sun | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind | souther:
Southern blight
* is caused by a fungus
- usually a minor disease of beans in California
* soilborne fungal disease that remains in the garden from one year to the next.
* white mold at the base of the stem near the soil line.
Southerly
* Southerlies are offshore and gusty.
* is wind
Squall
* are brief, sudden, violent windstorms, often accompanied by rain or snow
- small-scale feature of disturbed weather embedded in the trade winds
- snowstorms which have heavy snow showers and only last for a short time
- stronger as night advances due to more cooling at the cloud tops raising instability
* can bring rain or snow at any time, and storm-driven, rapid drops in temperature are common.
* usually occur in the region south to south west of the High center.
### weather | wind | squall:
Snow squall
* are brief but intense periods of snow, accompanies by strong gusty winds.
* arrive quickly, but they also tend to pass just as fast.
* can develop rapidly in high elevations of the Rocky Mountains.
Stellar wind
* blow through galaxies, transferring huge amounts of energy.
* play a role in the evolution of nearly all stars at some point in their history.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Strong wind
* Some strong wind causes air.
* are a handicap to some tender plants
- associated with storms or the dry season
- detrimental to the development hurricanes from thunderstorm complexes
- infrequent in summer and mostly associated with thunderstorms
- more dangerous than still weather because they dry people out
* blow clouds round and round the eye
- in an anti clockwise direction
- loose soil from the ground after plowing, especially during droughts
* blowing over loose soil or sand is what causes sandstorms.
* can actually move a golf ball at rest, especially when on a putting surface
- also make outside work on ladders or rooftops more dangerous
* can blow birds off their course
- up big dust storms
- break branches onto power lines causing power outages
* can cause abrasion, tearing and desiccation
- damage that is equal to, or worse than, a tornado
- structural failure and turn loose objects into deadly missiles
- change heights and times significantly
- damage plants, so avoid windy sites, or construct or plant suitable windbreaks
- flow through gaps at the base of tall buildings
- increase moisture loss from the soil and vegetation
- lift into the air water droplets, especially from waves
- pick up quickly, channelled by the deep fiords
* can produce short, choppy, dangerous and reduced temperatures
- tornado-like damage
- snap off the snow laden tops of trees
* can topple trees and houses
- push cars and trucks off the road
- whip up great ocean waves that damage ships and flood land
* cause asymmetrical tree growth and mechanical stress.
* combined with temperatures in the teens or twenties cause frostbite in minutes.
* create blowing snow by picking up old or new snow
- large waves
* creates blizzard conditions
* damages windows.
* drives storms.
* eject particles from the sur- face in a mode of transport called saltation.
* force water from beneath the ice and can decay the edges of the ice.
* increase the concentration of oxygen available to the fire.
* lift more dust off the ground, which further heats the atmosphere.
* occur more frequently along the arctic coast than in the continental interiors.
* pushes seeds
* reduce the temperature contrast by mixing together the city and rural air.
* result from large pressure gradients.
* uproots plants.
+ Tristan da Cunha, Geography, Climate: Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha
* On Gough it is a few degrees colder. 1700 mm annually at the Tristan Settlement, and 3300 mm at Gough. Strong winds are common. Wind speed increases strongly with altitude, while temperature decreases. Thus, while the lowlands experience quite pleasant weather, the uplands may be covered in snow or battered by very strong winds. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind:
Summer wind
* are variable, with extended calm periods.
* can be a danger for small boats.
* help to cool off the hot, humid days and nights.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Thermal
* Most thermals span the boundary layer vertically.
* also tilt if the wind is stronger at higher altitude, the usual case.
* are a common source of low level turbulence for aircraft
- bands of warmer air raising
* are columns of heated air rising above certain ground areas
- spontaneously rising dry air
- gas stations in the sky
- most noticeable in mountains, but they waft around anywhere the terrain rolls and dips
- parcels of continuously rising air
- quite small near the ground but fan out and become larger as they rise
- updrafts of air that hawks use to gain altitude
- vertical convective currents that result from local heating
* can carry hawks and eagles very high in the sky.
* evolve over time, are influenced by terrain, and are shaped by and move with the wind.
* form as the sun heats the earth, and the air near the surface warms and expands
- surface air is cooled due to a sea breeze, forcing the warm air aloft
- downwind of a lake
- due to a convergence of cool air and warm air
* is wind
### weather | wind | thermal:
Thermal biofeedback
* allows a patient to consciously raise hand temperature.
* provides information about skin temperatures.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Trade wind
* are semi-offshore in the main surf area of the north shore
- very consistent westward winds near the equator
* blow hurricanes westward.
* drive the north and south equatorial currents.
* ensure year-round subtropical weather.
* force the moist ocean air up and over the islands' mass.
* help to cool the island and reduce humidity.
* is located in sea
* keep humidity low and Caribbean currents keep waters warm.
* make even the hottest days of the year tolerable.
* pick up great amounts of water vapor as they blow across the Pacific Ocean.
* prevail from the east and the monsoons come from the north-west.
* pushes surface water.
* pushes warm surface water
* reduce seasonal high temperatures.
* relax, sea level and sea-surface temperatures rise and the thermocline depth increases.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Updraft
* Most updrafts cause thunderstorms
- occur at time
* Some updrafts are generated by heat.
* Some updrafts come from heat surfaces
- land surfaces
- occur in thunderstorms
* are drafts
- found when a wind blowing at a hill or mountain has to rise to climb over the hill
* can recycle the droplets through the cloud, increasing droplet size.
* cause the cloud tops to grow higher and higher, sometimes as high as ten miles
* continue to feed warm humid air into the maturing storm cloud.
* dominate the circulation patterns within the cloud.
* indicate conditions.
* lead to convection.
### weather | wind | updraft:
Strong updraft
* Most strong updrafts occur at time.
* Some strong updrafts occur in thunderstorms.
Violent wind
* More violent winds are members of the hurricane family.
* Most violent wind carries fine particles
- is accompanied by rain<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Whistle
* Many whistles have the head glued or securely jammed into the barrel.
* Some whistles have a small ball bounces around inside the cavity.
* are devices
- located in swimming pools
- signals
- sound
- tonal in quality, like a high musical note or a dog whistle
- very old instruments
- wind instruments
* travel well at ground level due to their frequency and structure.
+ Recorder, History: Flutes
* Whistles are very old instruments. People have found some whistles that were made in the Iron Age. A recorder is a type of whistle. It has holes for seven fingers and one thumb. It also has one end bigger than the other. The first recorders were made in the 1500s. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weather | wind | whistle:
Susato whistle
* are a plastic whistle that have a lot of volume and are also very easy to play.
* have a robust resonant character and feature adjustable thumb stops for comfort.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Winter wind
* are common, and in the summer hurricanes sometimes happen
- some of the most vicious in the Mediterranean
* can deform dishes when mounting hardware is loose or missing
- lower the thermometer temperature causing body parts to freeze quickly
- remove a large amount of heat from the dwelling
- whip and severely damage unprotected plants
* have a drying effect on the small twigs and buds of many plants.
* pushes seeds.
* whistling through overlooked openings can quickly freeze exposed water pipes.<|endoftext|>### weather | wind:
Woodwind instrument
* All woodwind instruments are made of wood.
* Most woodwind instruments produce sound.
* Some woodwind instruments use a reed to make the sounds play.
* are instruments.
* are located in lockers
- music stores
- played in a variety of ways
* are used for enjoyment
- playing
* have several different embouchures.
* is wind
* make music by reeds or by blowing across a sharp edge.
* push teeth out, while brass instruments push teeth in.
+ Category:Woodwind instruments: Musical instruments
* Woodwind instruments are played in a variety of ways. The flute is played by blowing across the top of the mouthpiece. It is like blowing across the top of an empty bottle. The oboe and bassoon both have a double reed. It is like blowing through a drinking straw. The clarinet and saxophone have single reeds which are clamped against the opening of the mouthpiece.
Windy weather
* Some windy weather causes transpiration.
* follows rain
- spring rain<|endoftext|>### weather:
Winter weather
* Some winter weather kills bison.
* brings cold, ice, snow, and high winds to many areas of our country.
* can and does change suddenly.
* can be cold and snow-fall heavy
- dangerous or even deadly to a motorist
- extremely unpredictable
- unpredictable and sometimes very cold
- very cold and windy, even on sunny days
- bring ice, severe snow storms or extreme cold
- kill an unprepared person who is exposed to the elements within minutes
* has adverse effects
* is characterized by extreme cold, ice storms, and heavy snow or blizzards
- especially good at forcing water into the home
* is often responsible for low infestation
- the main factor that affects Dall sheep numbers
* tends to bring out the worst in older cars and trucks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits