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Web
* Caching A cache computer with sufficient disk space to store frequently used pages.
* Programming Many sites on the Web are collections of static Web pages.
* Some Web hosting providers limit the size of files that can be transferred over their networks
- web hosting sites provide web pages through the use of their own web designing tools
- webs even approach being monolithic due to their high silk strand density
* also allows web designers to supplement Web transactions with digital signatures.
* authoring involves the creating and embellishing a web page or website
- system is used to create web pages, related graphics, audio, and video components
* based commerce is the wave of the future
- shows are web based surf shows accessible over the web
* browsers all use point and click methods to locate and use their various functions.
* caching increases the download performance of frequently accessed Web sites.
* caching is one effective way to reduce latency of web access
- of the most misunderstood technologies on the Internet
- the process of storing Web content locally on a proxy server
* can help dieters lose weight.
* common media today to communicate with others over Internet.
* directories index a subset of the Web, broken down by categories much like a library catalog
- use people to review and categorize sites
* family oriented directory, search engine, and award site.
* forwarding involves redirecting a user from one url to another.
* full service internet design and hosting company.
* group of freelance web designers and trainers who work for themselves.
* hosting companies provide users on the Net with space on networked computer servers
- sell several types of accounts
- providers operate server farms that are dedicated to web site server hosting
* is an umbrella service that brings together freelance web designers, trainers and consults.
* is the display media
- informational wave of the future
- lack of standards for representation, fonts and keyboards for many Asian languages
* objects change over time, so each object has a limited life span.
* refers to the interactive web-page
- set of hypermedia pages accessible via the Internet
- weaving, as text textus does as well
* server a computer that responds to requests from Web browsers by returning Web pages.
* serving function which makes the computer able to store and deliver web pages.
* software system that facilitates the creation of readable programs.
* spinning spiders spin webs to catch insects
- spiders, as their name implies, create elaborate orbs of silk to capture their prey
* term synonymous with the whole vane.
* tool used to distribute reports anywhere and anytime through a standard Web browser.
* used for trapping insects is the most familiar, but varies with different species.
* vertical reach medium.
* watches specializes in online retail selling watches and watchbands.
* web design company based in Edinburgh, Scotland
- whois Domain For Sale - example top domain directory online
+ Norton Internet Security, Windows edition, Version 2009 (16.0): Antivirus software
* Notable new features include the integration of Norton Safe Web, a web rating service. Web blocks access to malicious sites. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### web:
Food webs
* Some food webs are very complex.
* are a central organizing theme in ecology
- model scientists use to show how food chains in a community are interconnected
- more realistic picture of what actual happens in the ecosystem
- another emergent property of ecosystems
- based both on free-floating algae and upon aquatic plants
- basically a bunch of food chains all in one
* are complex models of the energy flow
- complicated by the fact that many species feed at various levels
- cycles of what eats what
- defined by their biomass
- graphical depictions of the interconnections among species based on energy flow
- important for animals and human
- more complex, and consist of a network of linked food chains
- networks of feeding interactions among species
- often complex, with animals eating more than one prey item
* are, of course, collections of organisms.
* can support food chains that are long and complicated, or very short.
* connect many different food chains, and many different trophic levels.
* describe interdependencies among species in an ecosystem.
* describe the complex interactions within ecosystems better than food chains
- patterns of energy flow in an ecosystem by modeling who consumes who
- feeding connections between organisms in an ecosystem
- transfer of energy between species in an ecosystem
* do pose some problems for ecological studies.
* explore how all life is interconnected.
* have the same core features of a food chain.
* identify the relationships among producers, consumers, and decomposers in an ecosystem.
* illustrate the same information but use lines to connect each eater to what it eats.
* occur all over the world.
* represent complex patterns of feeding links among species within an ecosystem
- one of the most complex aspects of community biotic interactions
* show all feeding relationships at each trophic level in a community
- groups of animals that have the same predators and prey in an ecosystem
* show how many animals are connected in many ways to find food
- organisms are affected by each other
- that food energy can move through several different pathways
* show the interdependence among organisms
- more complex interactions between a range of organisms in an ecosystem<|endoftext|>### web:
Spider webs
* Most spider webs are very thin , but are also very strong
- thin, but are also very strong.
* A 'spider web' sticky net that spiders make from silk to trap their prey. When insects fly or crawl into the web, they get stuck and the spider eats them. Most spider webs are very thin, but are also very strong. Different kinds of spiders make different types of webs. Spiders make different webs in different places to trap many kinds of prey
* are a great place to look for clues.
* play a crucial role in the children's novel Charlotte's Web.
* stream down from branches of a tree.
### websites:
Online casino
* are websites.
* give away free money for everyone to play.
* have nude women and win real money betting and wagering online.
* offer virtual gambling over the Internet.
Weed killer
* Some weed killers kill dandelions
- vegetable plants
- weeds
* can be deadly to lilies, damaging their roots
- do the most damage to trees
- harm gardens, trees, shrubs and breed resistant weeds
- kill trees
### weed killer:
Atrazine
* are chemical compounds
- herbicide
* continues to be the herbicide of choice for most weed situations.
* runs off corn fields into lakes, rivers, streams and eventually our drinking water.
Paraquat
* herbicide that is widely used in many countries.
* is known to increase lipid peroxidation in leaf tissue
- one of the top three herbicides in use in the world
- toxic to humans
- used on corn, soybeans, cotton, fruit and a variety of other products
* non-selective contact herbicide with no soil residual activity.
* restricted-use herbicide.
* selectively concentrates in pulmonary cells. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Weight
* Every weight has a center of gravity.
* Gain in Pregnancy.
* Indicates the weight of a package in pounds.
* Is The Mass
- the weight of the case, without pallets, in a box
* More weight puts pressure on the bones and joints.
* Most weight affects friction
- health
- power
- survival
- has energy
* Most weight has gravitational energy
- potential energy
* Most weight increases pressure
- water absorption
- leads to health problems
- varies throughout years
* Some weight affects flight
- has health benefits
- helps diabetes
- polysaccharides stimulate activities
* acts against lift and works in a downward direction.
- wind, stability, and distance
* alone can vary by pounds from day to day.
* always acts downward toward the Earth.
* are usually numbers between zero and one.
* bearing on the legs and feet is important for someone in a wheelchair
- physical activity is essential for normal skeletal development during childhood
* body appetite Herbal Diet Product weight, nettle the herbal supplement preventative.
* can appear to fluctuate due to alternating bingeing and fasting.
* can be a good indicator of ripe fruit
- common household items
- either more muscle, more fat, or both
- fluctuate based on the dog's bone structure and diet history
- shift as a car drives
- when full of air, pump out air, weigh it again
* changes Changes in a diabetics' weight while they are sick sign of high blood sugar
- a lot faster than height
* changes over same years
- with gravity
* creates pressure.
* crucial factor in the cost of launching a spacecraft.
* decreases with age.
* depend on genetic background and food availability.
* depends on food availability and muscle mass gained from travel and hunting
- the balance between energy taken in via the diet and energy expended
- where they live and diet
* describes the amount of force that is acting an object due to gravity.
* determines how much energy is needed to be active.
* determining factor for proper use of any drug.
* differs from mass by a factor of a.
* downwards force caused by the Earth's gravity acting on the mass of the plane.
* enters the picture as a function of friction.
* factor as well as activity level
- to consider both in and out of the water
* feels lighter because of weight transfer to the hip and lumbar.
* fluctuates for a variety of reasons, especially for women.
* force caused by gravity
- the acceleration a mass is experiencing
- on a mass due to gravity
- that is always directed towards the center of the earth
- which vector and has a magnitude and direction
* force, and it has a direction
- pressure is force per unit area
- it is the pull of Earth's gravity on an object
- mass is the amount of matter
- so it's measured in newtons
* function of gravity.
* gain Several trials have reported an association between intensive treatment and weight gain.
* great concern for many people
- when backpacking
* has effects
- significant effects
* have a tendency to get caught up in bottom debris.
* helps to compress the knee to keep it stable
- store energy
* increases absorption
- suddenly
- with ages
* influences friction and inertia.
* is always an important factor in labor units.
* is an essential quality of every engine
- important factor while flying any aircraft at high elevations
- independent risk factor for insulin resistance and diabetes
- issue that dominates women's lives
- obvious measure of plant growth
- artifacts
- basically a function of calories in and calories out
- but one factor that affects the voice
- calculated by numbers
- coefficients
- commensurate with height
- crucial in cycling
- different from mass
- directly proportional to cross-sectional area
- equal to mass times the acceleration due to gravity at a given location
* is everything in an ocean rowing boat
- climbing, and trikes are generally heavier than bikes
- on an airplane
- exactly equal to force or load, commonly measured in pounds
- extremely important when backpacking
- how big the force of gravity is that is acting on some object
- importance
* is important for control and momentum
- in life extension
- in proportion to height and bone of the dog
* is in proportion to the height of the individual dog
- overall size and structure
- located in basements
- measure in bulk
- measured by displacement , which is the conventional means of measuring naval vessels
* is measured in newtons, the standard unit for force
- while mass is in kg
- units such as newtons or pounds
* is measured on a dry, fully rigged boat, excluding electronics, safety and personal gear
- scale
* is measured using a spring balance
- scales and weighing machines
- with underwear but no shoes
- monitored daily to determine fluid loss and reduction of weight
- more connected to culture than it is to genes
* is one of the biggest factors to determine a small boat's performance
- most important variables in tire selection
- primary causes of the structural deterioration of stained glass windows
- oppression
- part of weight machines
- physical properties
* is primarily a function of food volume and exercise
- power consumption
- probably the single most important factor in tractor pulling
* is proportional to mass but depends on location in the universe
- proportionate to body volume, measured in three dimensions
- sports equipment
- the action of a force on a mass
* is the amount of force gravity exerts on an object
- that an object weighs
- attraction of gravity
- barometer for health
- best method to measure cheese for recipes
- biggest factor in thread gage life
- center and main focus of their life
- cost center
* is the effect of gravity upon mass
- the gravitational pull of the earth on the aircraft
- expression of the force exerted by the earth on the mass of an object
- finished weight of the craft from the manufacturer
- focus of life
* is the force Earth's gravity exerts on an object
- acting on an object due to gravity
- by which an object is attracted by gravity
* is the force exerted by a mass due to the earth's gravitational pull
- an object in a gravitational field
- gravity on a unit mass
- on the object by gravity
* is the force generated by gravity
- mass when it is in a gravitational field
* is the force generated by the gravitational attraction of the earth on any object
- gravitational attraction of the earth on the airplane
- gravity exerts on the mass of the pilot and aircraft
* is the force of Earth's gravity acting on the paper plane
- an object due to the earth s gravitational pull
* is the force of gravity acting on a mass
* is the force of gravity on a body
- massive bodies, and form a very common load on a machine
- pulling on a mass
- on an object due to the gravitational pull of a planet or other heavenly body
* is the force that a gravitational field exerts on an object
- gravity exerts on an object and so can vary from place to place
- offsets lift
- the mass experiences when in a gravitational field
* is the force with which a body is attracted to the Earth
- an object is pulled toward the earth by gravity
- body is attracted towards earth
* is the force with which gravity attracts a body at a given place
- pulls on a mass
- pulls on an object
- force, gravity is the acceleration
- gravitational force acting on a body mass
- gravitional force exerted on a body but whatever planet etc
* is the measure of the Earth's gravitational attraction for matter
- earth s attraction for a body
- force of gravity on an object
* is the measure of the gravitational force between the object and the Earth
- force on an object
- measurement of gravitational force on the object's mass
* is the measurement of the effect that gravity has on an object
- force of attraction between two bodies
- measurment of the force of gravity on a mass
- most sensitive indicator of nutritional status
- name for the force of gravity
- net gravitational force of attraction acting on the mass of an object
- overall 'weight' of the glyph in the line
- primary defining factor for trucks
- product of an object's mass and the acceleration due to gravity
* is the pull of gravity on an object
- single biggest factor that affects a planing boat's performance
- term used for the magnitude of the force of gravity acting on an object
- to be in proportion to height
- used for exercises
- vital when holding the rod up for extended periods of time
* key performance factor in climbing.
* major cause, as it puts more pressure on the feet.
* measure of force, specifically the force mass causes in the gravity of the earth
- mass based on how much gravity there is
- the downward force gravity exerts on an object
* measure of the force of attraction of the earth acting on an object
- gravity pulling on an object
- on the object caused by a gravitational field
- or attraction of gravity on an object
* measure that the proper volume of ink has been injected
- inkjet ink has been injected
* measurement of gravity's effect on mass
- the gravitational force acting on an object
* measures at kgs.
* metal block, which has a chain with a handle attached to on it.
* more accurate indicator of solid foods intake than is volume.
* negative thing for arthritis.
* problem in the design of any flying machine.
* product of gravity and mass.
* provides resistance.
* pulling good chance to socialize the dogs and get out for a good time with friends
- is an introverted activity as is tracking
* ranges from grams
* ratio relative to the center of the family
* refers to the force of gravity exerted on the object.
* reflects variation.
* significant factor for serious cyclists
- in aircraft
* simply measures the pull of gravity.
* takes time to gain, and it takes time to lose.
* tends to be an indicator of functionality
- remain stable over the long term and people seem to have a homeostatic set point
* varies according to size
- because of plant fiber structure and density
- depending on a person's body structure, gender, age, and activity level
- with season, gender, age and health of an individual
* vary with sex and season, with males being heavier than females.
* vector and a force
- quantity, giving the gravitational force that acts downwards on a mass
* vital condition for our life to go normally.
* works in reverse when shrinking.
+ Mass versus weight: Matter :: Physics
* In the physical sciences, 'mass and weight' are different. The mass of an object is a measure of the amount of matter in the object. Weight is a measure of the force on the object caused by a gravitational field. In other words, weight is how hard gravity pulls on an object.
* Mass is measured in kilograms or pounds. A one-litre volume of water has a mass of one kilogram. Weight is measured in newtons, the standard unit for force. A one-kilogram mass placed on a bench presses down on the bench with almost ten newtons of force. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weight:
Additional weight
* can affect the bone and ligament structure
- lessen involuntary movements and cushion body parts from injury
* makes the body's cells resistant to insulin.
Barbell
* are straight or curved, some into half-moons or nearly circular
- the perfect choice for tongue, nipple, and male genital piercings
* have a ball at each end, one of which screws on.
* is weight<|endoftext|>### weight:
Birth weight
* Most birth weight has effects
- significant effects
* can also indicate whether a baby is born prematurely
- be an important indicator of community nutrition
* has a positive relationship with growth rate
* helps determine a child's potential for survival and future health.
* is highly related to calving difficulties
- lower when a baby is born prematurely
- only one of numerous factors that influence cognitive function
- recorded in grams
- related to calving ease
* ranges from kgs.
* seems to be widely accepted as a generally valid index of prematurity.<|endoftext|>### weight:
Body weight
* Most body weight ranges from grams.
* affects the energy cost of movement.
* causes bruising and splitting of watermelon flesh.
* changes over same years
* comes from muscle, bone, fat, and water.
* consists of other components besides fat.
* determines the dose for malaria treatment and prevention in children.
* gives no information on the amount and location of body fat.
* good gauge of hydration.
* increases at different rates during pregnancy
- with ages
* influences more than just socioeconomic status.
* is an arbitrary criterion that is often factored into our perception of physical beauty
- important modifiable factor that influences response
- based on the principle of energy balance
- decreased by holding the animal with a large magnet mounted on the end of a rod
- expressed as a percentage of ideal
- important when determining a toxic dose
- in a dynamic state and can be changed at anytime up or down
- measured daily
- more difficult to gauge because fat leaves no impression on the skeleton
- on the hands
- redistributed to help minimize pressure points and promote circulation
* is the most significant correlate of left ventricular mass in older men and women
- primary factor that affects drug dose
- single most important determinant of serum cholesterol
- thus neither a unitary nor an ele- mental biological quantity
- used to balence the boat against the wind
* key character in broilers for utilization of phytate phosphorus
- factor for risk of CTS and shoulder-joint degeneration
* measure of frailty and a possible sign of deteriorating health.
* needs careful monitoring to prevent obesity.
* plays an important part in physical attraction.
* rests on toes and palms of hands.
Counterweight
* are weight.
* is steel shot cast in place with epoxy
Dram
* are cheap and can store large amounts of data
- part of ounces
- responsible for most of the semiconductor market instability
- units of measure
* is weight
Dumbbell
* are items
- shorter and generally of a lighter weight than barbells
- simpletons
* can be as light as two pounds each. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weight:
Excess weight
* adds to heart strain
- strain on the heart
* affects the face and the figure, besides affecting one's self-confidence.
* aggravates osteoarthritis
- the potential for injury and adds to the strain on the joints
* burden to heart and kidneys.
* can accelerate arthritis in the knees, hips and spine.
* can also make joint surgery more difficult and risky
- result in disc degeneration and arthritis in the spine
- be very difficult to lose after the baby is born
- cause strain in regions of the body
- damage people's legs, especially the knees
* can make the heart and lungs work harder
- seriously compromise cardiopulmonary function
* carries many of the same negative effects for pets that it does for their owners.
* causes more stress on the joints and exacerbates existing arthritis pain.
* creates a higher risk of heart disease, high blood pressure and diabetes.
* does add age.
* health risk.
* increases risk of developing many health problems
- the heart's work
* increases the risk for developing arthritis in the back and knees
- osteoarthritis in the knees
- of other illnesses such as heart disease, diabetes and cancer
* increases the strain on the heart, raises blood pressure and blood cholesterol
* interferes with the body's ability to use insulin.
* is associated with an increased risk of diabetes
- believed to be a cause of hypertension in many individuals
* is linked to our life history
- poor health
- merely a symptom of underlying emotional, mental or spiritual causes
- more than being uncomfortable, it medical risk
- unhealthy because it increases the strain on the heart
* major risk factor for osteoarthritis.
* makes controlling one's body more difficult and energy-consuming
- the heart work harder and can cause many other health problems
* puts a strain on the entire circulatory system
- additional strain on joints and ligaments
* puts extra stress on bones and joints that suffer from the arthritic condition
- wear and tear on joints Exercise regularly
- increased stress on weight-bearing joints affected with arthritis
- more load on the healing tissues and on the arthritic joint
- pressure on a dog's joints, reducing mobility
* reduces the clearance of estrogen.
* risk factor for heart disease.
* stresses weight bearing joints.
* tends to increase blood cholesterol levels.
* very common factor in people with sleep apnea.
Excessive weight
* aggravates apnea and snoring.
* can put undue stress on such joints as the knees over time
- weight-bearing joints as the knees over time
* is an important factor in all three disorders.<|endoftext|>### weight:
Extra weight
* Most extra weight leads to health problems.
* Some extra weight helps diabetes.
* adds more insult to injury by placing further stress on already damaged joints.
* can also aggravate angina
- increase pressure on some joints and aggravate some types of arthritis
* causes tiredness possibly exacerbated by fluid retained in tissue.
* increases hypertension risk in women.
* means extra fuel every time the car accelerates
- more work for the whole body, including the ventilatory muscles
* puts more stress on weight-bearing joints, such as the hips and knees
Fat weight
* includes the fat stored in the fat cells and the organs of the body.
* takes days to weeks to change noticeably.
Gross weight
* are less useful on more modern coins as coin production became more uniform.
* is actually a measure of volume of the ship fully loaded.
* means the weight of a vehicle without load plus the weight of any load thereon.
Healthy weight
* Some healthy weight improves survival.
* differ among people of the same height because body builds and shapes vary.
* is supported by healthy habits.
* varies somewhat from person to person. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weight:
Heavy weight
* build muscle bulk, a hindrance in distance running.
* can cause lower back injuries.
* can damage developing bones and injure growth plates
- immature bones and joints
- put too much pressure on veins
* recruit both the slow twitch fibers and fast twitch fibers.
Higher weight
* increases the forces exerted on buildings during earthquakes.
* is correlated with health problems, especially in later life.
* translates into more meat or poultry produced per animal processed.
Increased weight
* increases the chance for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, certain cancers.
* is associated with diabetes, high blood pressure, and elevated cholesterol levels.
* tends to lead to increased blood pressure.
Lean weight
* includes the muscles, bones, tendons, ligaments, and water in the body.
* produces work and burns food calories.
Light weight
* allows for towing by most motorized vehicles, even some small compact cars.
* is also important to reduce inertial effects during an earthquake.
* provide a much better opportunity to isolate a muscle.
Lighter weight
* improves fuel economy, acceleration and braking.
* is important to cross-trainers
- experienced hikers
* reduces wear and tear on suspension components.
### weight | lightness:
Buoyancy
* is life
- tendencies
* overcomes gravity and helps relieve stress, both physical and mental.
* tends to drive small bubbles of the gaseous phase in the vertical direction.
### weight | lightness | buoyancy:
Neutral buoyancy
* is one of the main ways weightlessness can be simulated on earth.
* means a diver is neither sinking nor rising to the surface.
Lower weight
* helps lower the center of gravity, thereby improving stability, in airboats.
* means lower blood pressure for most people.
Molecular weight
* Most molecular weight is calculated by numbers.
* allows confirmation of elemental formulae.
* equals the sum of the atomic weights of the atoms in the molecule.
- expressed as grams per mol
- mass
- the average molecular weight of the combustion products
Net weight
* means the weight without the wrapping.
* measure of the volume of cargo.
Normal weight
* depends on other factors such as body structure.
* is crucial to hormone balance
- difficult to define because it involves more than just height and weight
Paperweight
* are heavies
- located in desktops
* come in several types , and they are collectible works of art.
* is weight
* require an extended annealing time that can take days because of their size.
+ East Asian calligraphy, Tools, Paperweight: Asia :: Chinese language
* They are used to weigh down paper. Paperweights come in several types, and they are collectible works of art.
Stable weight
* appears to be the healthiest course for people of all ages.
* depends on an even balance between energy intake from food and energy expenditure.
Tongue weight
* is the downward force exerted on the hitch ball by the trailer coupler.
* is the weight of the fully loaded boat on the trailers' hitch, or tongue
- the loaded trailer places on the towing hitch
Total weight
* increases absorption
- water absorption
* is how freight cost is calculated
- simply the total weight of the golf club
* ranges from pounds.
Troy weight
* is the system of weights used for gold or silver with twelve ounces to the pound
* refers to a system of measuring precious metals.
* system of measurement for precious metals, precious stones etc. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weight:
Weight control
* can also take some strain off bones and muscles so they can perform better
- help reduce the risk of endometrial and uterine cancers
* complicated issue, affected by many factors in life.
* difficult issue, especially for a child.
* is important as inactivity can result in considerable weight gain
- especially when arthritis strikes the lower back and legs
- when taking insulin
- often a lifelong battle for women
- one reason adolescent females frequently skip shots
- only one aspect of fitness
- possible by altering food intake and physical activity
* learned behavior.
* life-long process.
* question of balance. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weight:
Weight training
* Some weight training is also helpful in preventing bone loss.
* allows the muscle to contract against the pure force of the weight or tubing.
* are strength training.
* builds muscle mass
- muscles and therefore increases metabolism
- strength to improve performance in other athletic activities
* burns fat by boosting metabolism
- more calories per minute than cardiovascular exercise
* can aid in increasing bone mass while decreasing the risk of falls and fractures.
* can also increase our metabolic efficiency, making weight maintenance easier
- the metabolic rate a second way
- enhance a person s health and well-being
- increase strength and help prevent injuries
- prevent or at least delay the onset of clinical osteoporosis
- rebuild muscles that illness or corticosteroid use have weakened
* causes increased use of free fatty acids during recovery periods.
* enables the body to burn fat and gain muscle at the same time.
* has a positive effect on a person's mental well being
- many similarities with other kinds of strength training
* helps convert the extra calories into muscle rather than flab
- relieve stress, frustration, and anger
* helps to balance out the body
- fight degenerative muscle and bone loss
- maintain muscle mass in an aging person
- women lose body fat and build lean muscle
* improves cardiovascular fitness
- muscle firmness and density
* improves strength, endurance, metabolism, and heart function
- speed, and flexibility
- walking endurance in healthy elderly persons
* increases bone density and decreases the risk of osteoporosis
- fat -free mass and strength in untrained young women
* increases muscle mass more than other exercises
- which can increase metabolism
- speed, flexibility, strength and endurance
- the number of myofibrils inside each cell
* injures joints.
* is also a good way for athletes to maintain fitness during the off-season
- beneficial for middle-aged and older people
- the most efficient way of increasing lean muscle mass
* is an integral part of conditioning
- good health for people of all ages
- designed to build muscle tissue, which is very metabolically active
* is important at all ages
- because it increases muscular strength
- to the female athlete
* is one of the best ways to maintain muscle mass
- most versatile of all athletic activities
- recommended to help adults retain muscle mass
* is the best exercise around for modifying body composition
- way to build strength
- cornerstone of a lean body and a fast metabolism
- current term for the use of bar bells
- equivalent of hitting the cue ball
- most widely used and popular method of increasing strength
- only way to increase lean tissue and the only way to tone and shape muscles
* leads to greater muscle fitness, which in turn boosts metabolism.
* produces faster results and helps prepare the body to participate in sports.
* protects existing bone and helps build bone mass.
* safe kind of exercise when the motion is slow, controlled, and careful.
+ Weight training, Reps, sets, tempo and rest: Fitness
- Safety
* Weight training is a safe kind of exercise when the motion is slow, controlled, and careful. In similarity to many things, doing it wrong or without care can result in hurting oneself
- Weight training and bodybuilding
* Weight training has similarity to bodybuilding, but they have different objectives. Bodybuilding uses weight training to help make muscles larger and goodlooking, without care for more strength. They train to make their muscles larger and get low levels of body fat. Many weight trainers train differently and for the result of being strong and doing difficult things for a long time while not thinking about dropping body fat far under normal | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### weight:
Weightlessness
* Most weightlessness is experienced by astronauts
- orbit astronauts
* Some weightlessness increases excretion.
* also leads to deconditioning of muscles and calcium loss in bones.
* can deplete the strength and minerals in astronauts' bones.
* characterizes almost everything about modern culture.
- very different from Earth
* result of free fall.
### weight-lifting exercises:
Resistance exercise
* are weight-lifting exercises.
* can lead to increased swelling and damage to the muscles and joints.
* generate muscle tension on the bones.
* help replace flab with muscle.
* helps build muscle.
* is the most effective way to increase and maintain muscle strength.
* maintains skeletal muscle protein synthesis during bed rest.
* provides the stimulus for gains in muscle size and strength.
Welfare state
* are alive and well in most developed countries.
* have an effect on poverty reduction.
### well-defined hazard:
Wake turbulence
* is generated by all aircraft
- maximum when the airplane is Heavy
- the violent wind generated by large airplanes in flight
* well-defined hazard.
### well-known condition:
Fear of technology
* increases resistance to adopting new technology.
* well-known condition.
### well-organized:
Motorcycle gang
* Most motorcycle gangs are well-organized.
* called bosozoku are the bane of Japanese police.
### wells:
Injection well
* are wells.
* send waste underground into drinking water supplies
- wastes underground into, above, and below underground drinking water supplies
* vary in their potential to contaminate ground water.
Western state
* All Western states share the same electricity grid.
* Most Western states have prison firefighting teams.
* Some western states recognize both absolute and conditional water rights.
* have a strong history of economic ties to Canada and Mexico
- the highest proportion of extinct, imperiled and vulnerable fishes
### wet chemistry:
Biological chemistry
* includes the study of enzymes, vitamins, metabolic pathways, and body fluids.
* is wet chemistry.
### wheat flour:
Graham
* are lower in fat, higher in carbs.
* is wheat flour
### wheat-grass:
Crested wheatgrass
* is an introduced species, originally from Russian and Siberian steppe habitats.
* suppresses weeds.<|endoftext|>### wheat-grass:
Quackgrass
* acts as a host for various pests.
* is fairly drought tolerant and it can withstand high quantities of salt
- less aggressive in hot temperatures
- native to Europe and Western Asia
- often present when the time comes to remove alfalfa from the rotation
- one the most troublesome perennial grassy weeds in our lawns
* often invades aging alfalfa stands.
* produces long sharp tipped aggressive rhizomes.
* spreads through a lawn by underground structures called rhizomes
- very quickly, while bromegrass and fescue spread more slowly
* stands erect and can have many tillers.
* strongly rhizomatous, sod-forming, perennial grass.<|endoftext|>White matter
* carries information between nerve cells by conducting electrical impulses
- the nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord
* contains axonal processes plus glial cells.
* has a little more protein in it due to myelin and stains a little darker pink.
* includes all of the nerves, and much of the interior of the brain and spinal cord.
* is cut away from gray matter at top level to show nerves more explicitly
- nervous tissue
- the brain's circuitry
* is used to connect different areas of grey matter
- of grey matter. * of grey matter. If a section of white matter is damaged, the brain may be able to find a different route to replace the lost connection. The brain contains a third kind of tissue, which appears darker
### white oak:
Burr oak
* are resistant to fire damage since they have a thick dense bark.
* is white oak | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
White object
* is angular chert fragment, from encasing sediment.
* reflect all colours of light
- light and black objects absorb all light
- wavelengths of light
- energy, dark objects absorb energy
- whatever kind of light they receive
### white solid:
Ammonium carbonate
* is carbonate
- the attractant, and the flies are caught on surfaces coated with tangletrap
* white solid.
+ Ammonium carbonate, Properties: Nitrogen compounds :: Carbonates
* Ammonium carbonate is a white solid. It dissolves in water. It reacts with acids to make an ammonium salt and carbon dioxide. It has a slight smell of ammonia. It reacts with bases to make ammonia gas.
Antimony tetroxide
* is found as the mineral cervantite.
* white solid.
+ Antimony tetroxide, Occurrence and preparation
* Antimony tetroxide is found as the mineral cervantite. It is made by heating antimony trioxide with air, burning antimony in air, or heated antimony pentoxide strongly
- Properties: Antimony compounds :: Oxides
* Antimony tetroxide is a white solid. It is an oxidizing agent. It turns yellow when heated and turns white again when cooled<|endoftext|>### white solid:
Antimony trioxide
* causes pneumoconiosis in humans.
* is accepted to be carcinogenic
- chemical compounds
- formed when antimony is burnt in air
- found in two minerals, valentinite and senarmontite
- made when antimony is made
- shown for comparison purposes
- somewhat carcinogenic
- used as a flame retardant in adhesives, plastics, rubber and textiles
* white solid that dissolves a little in water
+ Antimony trioxide, Occurrence
* Antimony trioxide is found in two minerals, valentinite and senarmontite. Valentinite is a white mineral that is sometimes pale yellow
* Antimony trioxide is made when antimony is made. Stibnite is heated with air to make antimony trioxide. It is separated from arsenic by the boiling of the arsenic trioxide before the antimony trioxide boils. Antimony trioxide can also be made by a two step process. Stibnite is burned in air with calcium chloride to make calcium sulfate and antimony trichloride, which is reacted with water to make antimony trioxide
- Properties: Antimony compounds :: Oxides
* Antimony trioxide is a white solid. It is the most common antimony compound. It does not dissolve in water. It reacts with oxidizing agents to make antimony pentoxide and with reducing agents to make antimony or stibine
- Safety
* Antimony trioxide is somewhat carcinogenic. It is somewhat toxic when eaten or breathed in
+ Antimony, Properties, Chemical compounds: Chemical elements :: Semimetals
* They are made by reacting antimony with other metals. They react with acids to make the toxic and unstable gas stibine. They are weak oxidizing agents. They are somewhat covalent, having low melting points. Antimony trichloride is a colorless and soft solid that has a strong odor. Antimony trioxide is a white solid that dissolves a little in water. Antimony pentafluoride is highly reactive, as well as antimony pentoxide.
Barium oxide
* is barium
- made by heating barium carbonate with carbon
- very toxic when eaten
* whitish powder.
+ Barium oxide, Preparation
* Barium oxide is made by heating barium carbonate with carbon. This prevents barium peroxide from forming when it is heated. It can also be made by heating barium nitrate
- Properties: Barium compounds :: Oxides
* Barium oxide is a white solid. It dissolves in water to make barium hydroxide. It reacts with acids to make barium salts
- Safety | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### white solid:
Iodine pentoxide
* are chemical compounds.
* is made by heating iodic acid to in dry air.
* white solid, and iodine pentafluoride yellowish liquid
+ Iodine pentoxide, Preparation
- Properties: Iodine compounds :: Oxides
* Iodine pentoxide is a white solid. It breaks down to iodine and oxygen when heated. It reacts with carbon monoxide to make carbon dioxide and iodine. It is a strong oxidizing agent. It reacts with water to make iodic acid
+ Iodine, Properties, Chemical compounds: Halogens :: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals
* Iodine monochloride is a red or brown liquid. Iodine trichloride, as well as iodine trifluoride, are yellow solids. Iodates like potassium iodate are colorless solids similar to chlorates. Iodic acid is the only stable oxidizing halogen acid. Chloric acid, by comparison, is very unstable and dangerous. Iodine pentoxide is a white solid, and iodine pentafluoride is a yellowish liquid. Periodates, like sodium periodate, are colorless solids similar to perchlorates, although weaker oxidizing agents. They decompose to iodates when they are heated. Periodic acid is not as stable as iodic acid.<|endoftext|>### white solid:
Potassium arsenate
* is made by reacting amounts of potassium hydroxide with arsenic acid.
+ Potassium arsenate, Preparation and uses
* Potassium arsenate is made by reacting amounts of potassium hydroxide with arsenic acid. The amount of potassium hydroxide can be changed to make the different chemical formulas. Potassium arsenate was once used for medicine but is too toxic to be used now
- Properties: Potassium compounds :: Arsenic compounds
* Potassium arsenate is a white solid. It dissolves easily in water. It is an oxidizing agent. It is carcinogenic and highly toxic<|endoftext|>### white solid:
Selenium dioxide
* can dissolve in water to make toxic selenium compounds.
* has a characteristic odor of rotten horseradish.
* is chemical compounds
- formed during combustion of elemental selenium present in fossil fuels
- the most widely used selenium compound in industry
* is used as a coloring in glass
- in making organic compounds
- very rare as a mineral
+ Selenium dioxide, Occurrence
* Selenium dioxide is very rare as a mineral. It only is in places where coal caught on fire and the selenides were oxidized to selenium dioxide
- Properties: Selenium compounds :: Oxides
* Selenium dioxide is a white solid. It dissolves in water to make selenous acid. It easily evaporates. The vapor smells like horseradish sauce. It can burn the nose. It reacts with bases to make selenites
- Safety
* Selenium dioxide can dissolve in water to make toxic selenium compounds. Swallowing any more than a very tiny amount can cause selenium poisoning. Selenium dioxide is a weak oxidizing agent and does not catch things on fire
* Selenium dioxide is used in making organic compounds. Selenium dioxide is used as a coloring in glass. Cobalt in glass makes a blue color. When a little selenium dioxide is added, the glass becomes colorless. When more selenium dioxide is added, the glass becomes ruby red
Sodium bromide
* is only toxic in large amounts, like sodium chloride.
+ Sodium bromide, Properties: Sodium compounds :: Bromine compounds
* Sodium bromide is a white solid. It dissolves easily in water. When it is heated very strongly in air, it makes bromine gas. It also reacts with chlorine to make liquid bromine
### white wine:
Hock
* are joints.
* are part of hind legs
- ungulates
- short and well angulated, perpendicular from hock to ground
* is white wine
* require lameness prevention and maintenance care during shoeing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### wide-open field:
Artificial intelligence
* can assist in the processing and analyzing data used for approving loans.
* frees experts to do other things.
* has the same relation to intelligence as artificial flowers have to flowers.
* is also a stock feature of cyberpunk.
* is an effort to fashion computer systems that behave like human beings
- integrated part of our daily life and of many fields in research
- associated with systems that have the ability to reason and learn
- computer science
- limited only to monsters
- one of humankind's greatest and oldest ambitions
- technology
* is the computer modeling of human thinking or of human mental abilities
- science of making machines imitate human thinking and behavior
- study of how to make real computers act like the ones in the movies
- used to help pilots fly planes
* is, after all, a technology.
* refers to the machine's capacity to mimic intelligent human behavior.
* regards data as the raw material of information.
* tracks children's progress and adjusts pace and counting ranges.
* wide-open field.
### wide-open field | artificial intelligence:
Machine translation
* are artificial intelligence.
* complex technology that translates text from one human language to another.
* is AI
- one of the many possible applications of ontologies
- the process by which a machine translates text from one language to another<|endoftext|>### widespread among animals:
Homosexual behaviour
* is widespread among animals.
+ Homosexuality, Homosexual behaviour in animals
* Homosexual behaviour has also been seen in animals. Homosexual, transgender and bisexual behaviour includes sex, courtship, affection, pair bonding, and parenting. Homosexual behaviour is widespread among animals. Bruce Bagemihl did research in 1999. It shows that homosexual behaviour has been observed in close to 1500 species, from primates to gut worms, and is well documented for 500 of them.
### wild oats:
Cornflower
* also like cool, moist conditions.
* are excellent as cut flowers and tolerate poor soil
* is adaptable to many soils and conditions
- also easy to grow from seed
- an excellent thickening agent to add body to any soup
- used to promote and enhance phsychic sight, as well as normal eyesight
* wild oats
### wild oats | cornflower:
Annual cornflower
* Annual Cornflowers are great for growing in pots or beds in the greenhouse.
* perform best when they are slightly crowded.
Frontier
* are borders
- boundaries
- discipline
- political parties
- the borders between what has been and what is to be
- wildernesses
* keep people employed by creating new markets.
Wasteland
* are video games.
* role-playing games company based in Northern Ireland.
### wild | wasteland:
Heathland
* are lowland areas dominated by colourful heather, gorse and bracken
- therefore good places to see honeyeaters
* become woods unless they are regularly grazed, mown or burnt.
* occur on barren infertile land.
* usually occur on infertile soils.
Wildcat
* are cats
- felines
- good climbers and escape predators by climbing trees
- mammals
- predatory animals
- somewhat larger and more robust than their cousins, the domestic cat
* have agouti coats.
* includes sections.
* is an oil well | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### wildcat:
Mountain lion
* Most mountain lions are classified as animals
- big game animals
- predatory animals
* Most mountain lions eat large mammals
- meat
- organ meat
* Most mountain lions have bloody noses
- claws
- extensive ranges
- food
- toes
* Most mountain lions kill dangerous prey
- large prey
- mountain sheep
- mark territory
- take prey
* Most mountain lions use tails
- thick tails
* Some mountain lions have enemies
- limbs
- powerful limbs
- success
* Some mountain lions kill bobcats
- livestock
- live in parks
* Some mountain lions reach maturity
- sexual maturity
- share territory
* are a larger cat than bobcats and are tan in color with a long tail
- all over, although difficult to see and coyotes are common in lots of places
- also very common to the deciduous forest
- basically loners that are afraid of humans
- carnivorous, feeding on a wide variety of prey
- elusive and rarly seen
- essentially solitary animals
- important as top predators in the ecosystems in which they live
- kind of a gold color
- large, slender cats
- likely to chase things that run, since they associate running with prey
- mainly nocturnal
- much larger than bobcat or lynx
- now a protected species throughout the United States
* are solitary animals, except during brief mating times and when females have young
- predators that can kill elk of any age
- territorial and solitary
* are the guanaco's main predator but can only carry off one or two young
- largest species of the cat family found in North America
- their main predators, but wolves and grizzly bears can also prey upon the elk
- uncommon, but are occasionally sighted
- unpredictable and dangerous
* begin mating when they have established their own territory.
* can observe their prey from the ledges and then drop down on it from above
- run very fast over short distances, but they tire quickly
- take down any dog
* climb well and take to trees if pursued.
* cubs use loud chirping calls to communicate with their mothers.
* do inhabit the Grand Canyon
- well in captivity and have been bred successfully in many zoological gardens
* eat deer and elk
* exists in almost any place offering sufficient prey and adequate cover.
* feed on wild hogs, raccoons, rabbits, porcupine and birds.
* have a distinctive manner of hunting larger prey
- pinkish nose with a black border that extends to the lips
- considerable trophy value and are hunted for sport
- large hunting territories, and they eat most kinds of animals
- little lung capacity
- long bodies, round heads, and little round ears
- deer for sustenance
- more big game than wolves
* live here, alongside bears, coyotes, and files of deer
- and black bears can be encountered in the higher mountains
- their territory and pathways with visible spots of feces and urine
* occupy a wide variety of plant communities.
* prefer to kill their own prey.
* range, as low as, the headlands, but prefer to be away from people.
* rely mainly on vision, smell, and hearing.
* tend to avoid roaded areas.
* vary in size and weight, with males being larger than females.
Puma
* Many PUMAs are single counties.
* Most pumas are a light brown color, with black-tipped ears and tail.
* are carnivores
- living animals
- weapons
- wild cats
Sand cat
* are felines
- nocturnal, resting by day in burrows that theydig or modify
- well adapted to desert conditions
- wildcats
* have a long history of living in North American zoos, but have been poorly managed
- low-pitched meow, but can also bark to communicate at long distances
### wilderness parks:
Provincial park
* are wilderness parks.
* require special permits for the collecting of rocks and minerals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Wildfire
* can be especially devastating to timber resources when the weather is hot and dry
- both improve and devastate sage grouse habitat
- change direction and speed suddenly
* fire that burns in an uncontrolled and unplanned manner.
* is an homage to the men and women who fight fires
- any unplanned fire
- as destructive today as it was in early times
- rare, but landslides and avalanches occur abundantly
- the term used for an uncontrolled fire fuelled by natural vegetation
* major concern in a forested landscape
- force in Idaho's forests
* natural part of the life cycle of the boreal forest.
* occurs only during drought periods.
* phone-based electronic assistant.
* system of processors connected in a hierarchical network.
### wildfire:
Frequent wildfire
* mean that only small plants such as grasses live, and trees are rare.
+ Pampas: Geography of Argentina :: Geography of Brazil :: Geography of Uruguay
* Some of the wildlife includes the rhea, the pampas deer, several species of armadillos, the pampas fox, the White-eared opossum, the Elegant Crested Tinamou, and several other species. Frequent wildfires mean that only small plants such as grasses live, and trees are rare.
Large wildfire
* Some large wildfires destroy communities.
* can modify local weather conditions.
### wildflowers:
Indian pipe
* are wildflowers.
* bloom in summer to early fall.
* grow in areas of low light that tend to be rich in decaying plant matter.
* is actually widespread in eastern North America, usually in dry woods and scrub
- fairly widespread and can be found in old forests as far away as Maine
* white, waxy plant of a single stem topped with a single white flower. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Wildlife
* All wildlife faces hazards to survival, including weather, humans, pesticides, and so on
- feed on plants or other animals
- go through what is commonly termed an annual cycle of abundance
* All wildlife have different life requirements
- territorial ranges which can extend for a couple of miles to hundreds of acres
* All wildlife is rooted in the soil
- vulnerable to toxic chemicals found in water some more than others
- move in search of food in cycles relative to the lunar phases
- refuges are locations suitable for condominium developments
- requires food, water and shelter to survive
* Habitat the native environment of an animal.
* Most wildlife are wary of humans
- can survive for weeks without food but only days without water
* Most wildlife depends on insects
- riparian habitats for some or all of their needs
- eats fish
* Most wildlife is concerned with the preservation and improvement of habitats
- harmless and afraid of mankind, but there are a few animals that can pose a threat
- observed early in the morning or late in the day
- require a variety of plant species and sizes for homes and food
* Some wildlife can adapt to the urban environment where a food supply is present
- eat a variety of foods and others eat only a few different kinds
- however can damage the trees - rabbits and deer eat young trees
- possesses herbivores
- prefer to drink moisture that has condensed on foliage and so on
- prefers large canopy trees, others take to lower understory trees
- refuges construct artificial water holes
* abounds and includes pine martens, otters and red deer
- there's the chance to see many species in their natural habitat
- especially birds
* abounds in the air, on the ground and in the sea
- form of birds and maybe a crocodile or two
- many forests, rivers, lakes, and streams
- mountains that are intermingled with pine, spruce, birch, and aspen trees
- western forests, including elk, moose, bear, squirrels, and birds
- including wild horse herds, antelope, deer and beaver
- on land, in lagoons and in the ocean
* abounds on the land and in the sea
- prairie, including buffalo
* abounds with deer, elk, bear and more
- eagles and loons
* abounds, attracted by healthy habitats.
* abounds, from black bears to moose and deer, along with an occasional wolf pack
- mink and chickarees up to moose, bear and wolves
* abounds, including deer, elk, moose, and black bear
- several species of bats, salamanders, cave fish and insects
* adapt well to wildfire.
* also benefit as birds come to bathe and animals drink
- benefits when using natives because of the food and shelter provided
- seeks the shelter that many plants render
- suffers in the event of an ice storm
* appears out of nowhere both on the land and in the water.
* are a valued part of Anchorage life.
* are also important for medical purposes and for biomedical research
- subject to some of the same diseases as domestic animals
- an important part of the ecology of Tibetan rangelands in many areas
- creatures of habit
- dangerous and unpredictable
- free-roaming vertebrate animals
- indicators of the health of the environment
* are most active at dawn or dusk when lighting is limited
- in the mornings and evenings to avoid the heat
- on the shore and in the water
- reliable sentinels of effects of chemicals on human populations
- still an important part of the Earth's life support system
* assist with diet preparation, animal care, and environmental enrichment.
* becomes dependant on people for food and stops looking for natural food.
* build up an immunity afterwards and domestic stock can live to see another day.
* can act as reservoirs for diseases that affect both livestock and humans
- aid in the dispersal of the seed, often relocating the plant over long distances
* can also die from exposure
- harbor and distribute the infective stages of migratory parasites
- become dependent on human food, and even lose the ability to hunt
* can carry diseases which can be transmitted to people
- parasites and diseases which can be transmitted to people
- cause injury
- potentially interfere with human activity
- sometimes come into conflict with commercial interests
- spread rabies, skin diseases, tuberculosis, distemper and respiratory problems
* carry diseases that can pack an economic wallop if they jump to livestock.
* consists of bighorn sheep, coyotes, and other animals
- deer, moose, mink, otter and many birds
- reptiles, birds, and small and large mammals,
* contains information on birds, marine mammals, fishes, and sea turtles.
* depend on native weed-seeds and fruits of shrubs for food
- the riparian zone for food, water, cover and shelter
* depends on healthy habitats
* direct threat to human well being.
* finds food and habitat and make their contribution to the cycles of life.
* flies, walks, slithers or swims.
* frequently feeds along roadsides and sometimes jumps in front of cars
- make nests in buildings in hay lofts or among sacks of grain
* general term that usually has a postive meaning to most citizens.
* greatly outnumbers human inhabitants.
* habitats in managed landscapes
- trees, stumps, and underground
* has economic and scientific value
- great ecological, social and economic importance
* have specific habitat requirements
- their own daily patterns and are instinctively afraid of humans
* includes a large herd of deer that can be fed by hand.
* includes all fur-bearing animals, bats, snakes, and birds
- non-domesticated plants, animals and other organisms
* includes anything from bears and cougars down to soil bacteria, and everything in between
* includes bear, cougar, elk, deer, and moose
- deer, and turkey
- moose, beaver, red fox and coyote
* includes bears, beavers, deer, mink, and otters
- deer, mountain goats, porpoises, whales, and water fowl
* includes black bear, deer and wild boar
- marmot and marten
- bears, monkeys and antelopes
- boar, European black bear, lynx, jackal, chamois, deer, fox, badger, and weasel
- bobcats, coyotes, foxes, reptiles, and squirrels
* includes brown and black bears, wolf, fox, and migrating caribou
- bear black bear, sea mammals, ducks, geese and sea birds
* includes brown bear, black bear, mountain goat, and swans
- waterfowl, and shorebirds
* includes deer, antelope, wild pigeons, and tigers
- bears, mink, otters, squirrels and other small animals
- elk, bear, bighorn sheep, and coyote
- foxes and boars
- otter, moose, bear and wolf
- serow, macaques, dolphins, loris, porcupine, mongoose, linsang, and langur
- eagles and bears
- elk, deer, brown bears and wolves
- giant turtles, saltwater crocodiles, kangaroos and wallabies
- gibbons, elephants, tapirs, pigs, deer and the occasional tiger
- jaguar, deer, tapir, and numerous species of birds and reptiles
- jaguars, badgers, wild turkeys, and migratory birds
* includes many different species of insects, birds, and mammals both small and large
- threatened species including tigers and Asian elephants
- marmots, mountain goats, and bears
- monkeys, deer, iguanas, agoutis, large cats, andother mammals
- moose, mountain goat, black bear, brown bear, and waterfowl
- mule deer, bighorn sheep, mountain lion, lizards and many small mammals and birds
- muskox, caribou, wolves, and many nesting and migratory birds
- orca, humpack, and minke whales, grizzly, black and kermode bear
- owls, bats and deer
- polar bear, Arctic wolf, Arctic fox, ermine, lemming, musk ox and caribou
- rabbits, pheasants, deer, and boar
- red foxes, deer, turtles, snakes, salamanders and frogs
- river otters, turtles, muskrats, wood ducks, rails and frogs
- roadrunners, hawks, lizards, mice and squirrels
- sea otters, eagles, puffins, porpoises, moose, mountain goats and whales
* includes seals, puffins, oystercatchers, sea lions and sometimes whales
- sea lions, sea otters, gray, humpback, and blue whales
- sections
- several hundred species of birds, lizards, snakes, and scorpions
- small mammals such as squirrels, mink and raccoons
- the desert elephant and black rhino
- whales, deer, eagles, otter, seals, and many birds
* includes white-tailed deer, red fox, mink, owls, muskrat, birds and waterfowl
- small mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians
- wolf, caribou, lynx, marten, spruce grouse and snowshoe hare
* induces leopard, baboon and various antelope.
* inhabit very large areas, making the cost of periodic treatments prohibitive.
* is abundant and diverse, including pronghorn, mule deer, and white-tail deer
- includes bears, wolves, moose, goats and deer
- due to numerous woodlands, streams, and marshes
- including eagles, otter, whales, deer, raccoons, squirrel and mink
* is abundant with a large population of deer
- variety of species
- deer, turkey , cranes , and other animals
* is abundant, and the bear population is particularly healthy
- with whales, dolphins, seals, birds and bears showing themselves constantly
- adaptable, more so than humans
* is affected by global warming and severe weather
* is also abundant, such as waterfowl, turtles, frogs, alligators and snakes
- aesthetically pleasing to most people
- important to domestic tourists, and is an area of considerable economic potential
* is an important and valuable component of central Florida's ranch ecosystems
- indicator of environmental health
- attracted to plants and shrubs which provides for a more natural setting
- common, especially in National Park areas
- dependent on forests and open space for food and shelter
- essential for ecological balance and a big attraction to tourism
- everywhere - songbirds, deer, foxes, herons, hawks, and many varieties of waterfowl
- impacted because of reduced habitat area and lack of connected forest patches
- important to people
* is in abundance from waterfowl to reptiles and several other desert creatures
- with moose, bears and of course wolves
- less wary of a slow moving or stationary vehicle than a potential predator on foot
- limited to birds and their nests
- located in forests
- managed publicly using the best available information, based on knowledge and research
- nearly as varied as the plant life
- necessary for the continued survival of the human species
* is one of America's most treasured natural resources
- Colorado's most visible natural resources
- our most precious natural resources
- particularly vulnerable during dry years and in the winter
- present in all areas
- protected by a National Park Act
- sight
- threatened by poachers
- treasure of mankind and an important part of the natural environment
- very abundant with deer, turkey, sandhill cranes, geese, ducks and songbirds
- wild life and have their own agenda
* means the animals are wild , and under certain circumstances can dangerous.
* needs a right combination of food, water, shelter and space to survive
- variety of forage to thrive
- and habitat quality can shift over periods of years, seasons, days, or even hours
- clean drinking water to survive
- cover from predators
- food, water, shelter and cover to hide in
- human allies both in the wild and in captivity
* occurs in a tremendous variety of forms and colors
- atremendous variety of forms and colors
* often cross Tasmania's country roads at night.
* part of our common wealth.
* pays a heavy price for livestock grazing.
* play an important role in our environment.
* plays an important role in the lives of humans.
* prefer a legume and grass mixture to a single seeding of fescue
- open grasslands with a high concentration of forbs, especially legumes
* public trust on public land, a private trust on private land.
* rabies major source of infection for domestic animals, including pets.
* refuges also host good numbers of people
- feature waterfowl and other birds
- harbor songbirds in spring, Canada geese in fall, and bald eagles in winter
* relies on healthy watersheds for food and shelter.
* rely on rangelands and pasturelands for food and shelter.
* remains the main rabies reservoir in Europe.
* require cover for escape, nesting, and protection from weather
- shelter from the elements and protection from predators
* requires very specific habitats.
* roams freely on many islands and throughout the mainland wilderness.
* seek out their cover for shelter from extreme weather conditions.
* serve as environmental barometers.
* serves as a reservoir for many diseases common to domestic animals and humans.
* show strong preferences for spaces that meet their needs.
* speciality, with occasional sightings of foxes, badgers, mink, wildcats and otters.
* tends to be more active in early morning and evening
- congregate where two different habitats meet
* use different habitats during the day or seasonally
- the foliage, twigs and buds as food
* uses wetlands in many different ways.
* utilizes riparian areas for food, water and shelter.
* valuable natural resource.
* wandering on roads poses a special driving hazard in Namibia, especially at night.
+ Wildlife management: Ecology
* Wildlife conservation aims to halt the loss of species. It does this by taking using ecological principles to balance the needs of wildlife with the needs of people. Fundamentals of conservation biology'. Principles of conservation biology'. Most wildlife is concerned with the preservation and improvement of habitats. Techniques can include reforestation, pest control, irrigation, coppicing and hedge laying. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### wildlife:
Conservation of wildlife
* is important, but wildlife has no meaning without wilderness.
* relies upon a well-informed public.
Native wildlife
* Most native wildlife are nocturnal and thus usually feed at night.
* are specialists in range and diet.
* includes water buffalo, monkeys, reptiles, and tropical birds.
* is released back into their natural habitat.
Windshield
* Most windshields transmit light.
* Some windshields are part of aeroplanes
- airplanes
- automobiles
- cars
- jets
- motorbikes
- have ice
* are part of airplanes
- motor vehicles
- motorboats
- screens
* includes sections.
### winter perennial:
Mouseear chickweed
* has a fibrous root system.
* is found throughout United States into southern Canada
- very similar in appearance to common chickweed
* winter perennial.<|endoftext|>Wire
* All wire has resistance, capacitance and inductance
- wires age, starting from the time when they are first created
* All wires are connected to something in one way or another
- full of electric fluid
* Any wire fences, whether barbed or plain wire, can cause severe injury to horses.
* Most wire carries current
- electric current
- power
- conducts electricity
- contains resistance
* Most wire has conductivity
- copper
- electrical resistance
- inch diameters
- low resistance
- m diameters
- shapes
* Most wire is made of metal
- tungsten metal
- wires are black , but sometimes wires can have a differently colored coating
* Some Wires can be prone to itchy skin or grass allergies
- wire acts as insulators
* Some wire carries electrical energy
- electromagnets
- voltage
- creates heat
* Some wire has strength
- temperature
- is classified as solid, because it contains one strand per conductor
* acts as conductors.
* are actually hollow tubes, and little elephants run around and do everything
- alternately earth and live, with the bottom wire earthed
- covered with insulators like plastic to stop the electricity from leaving the wire
- like pipes
* are used to bear mechanical loads or electricity and telecommunications signals
- make connections
* break and heal as shapes are placed or removed.
* cages with levels are what ferrets prefer
- multiple floors are what ferrets prefer
* can form coiled clusters that resemble rams horns
- sit in limbo indefinitely
* carry the electric current from power plants to the cities or other areas where it is needed
- throughout a building
* conducts current
* connect to the heart.
* connects circuits
- lamps
* gives current.
- lower resistance
- possible routes
- secondary routes
* have a finite lifetime, after which they decay into nothing.
* is capable of short circuits
- devices
- different size
- finishing lines
* is located in space shuttles
- walls
- silver
- magazines
- part of electronic devices
- television shows
* is used for fasteners
* prevent fish from flaking off when moved.
* provides resistance.
* supports circuits.
* transmits sound.
+ Connection:
* Electrical Wire' is wire used to carry Electricity. When people touch wire that is carrying electricity, they get shocked, which is bad, so the outside coating of electrical wires is colored. Most wires are black, but sometimes wires can have a differently colored coating.
+ Electrical conductor: Electricity :: Basic physics ideas
* Some materials are 'insulators'. This means that they stop electric current completely. Wires are covered with insulators like plastic to stop the electricity from leaving the wire. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### wire:
Barbed wire
* can be more effective in controlling some animals than smooth wire
- use for lots of things
* defines the parameters of penal institutions.
* is all over the country, dividing the people
- less expensive and somewhat easier to work with than woven wire fencing
- made of steel
* was invented in 1867 in the United States by Lucien B. Smith. Barbed wire can be use for lots of things
Copper wire
* Most copper wire conducts electricity.
* Most copper wire has conductivity
- m diameters
- resistance
* attract other signals just like a radio antenna.
* better thermal conductor than steel or aluminum, and steel wire is the worst.
* carry messages on electric currents.
* contain only copper atoms.
* is flexible and comes in many sizes
- is usually used for wiring
- generally limited to a few hundred meters
* tends to attenuate quickly.
Frayed wire
* can cause fires.
* is capable of short circuits.
Metal wire
* Most metal wire acts as conductors.
* Some metal wire carries electricity.
Piano wire
* can become brittle after many decades, and any change in tension can cause it to break.
* controlled by hand winches span the vertical axis.
* is strong, but very hard to bend, brittle when bent several times, and springy
Solid wire
* consists of one strand of copper metal wire, bare or surrounded by an insulator.
* is useful for wiring breadboards.<|endoftext|>### wire:
Telephone line
* Many telephone lines carry a very low voltage
- have multiple uses
* Most telephone lines are twisted-pair cables
- can share voice and data simultaneously
* are a scarce and expensive resource
- connections
- located in roofs
* are often busy early in the day
- daisy-chained from one room to the next
- separate from electrical lines
- used for conduct
* can conduct electricity.
* have the lowest bandwidth.
* is wire
* use information theory to fit voice information down the line.
Telephone wire
* Most telephone wires are one or more twisted pairs of copper wire.
* carry sounds the same way nerves carry signals.
* is made up of one or more pairs of strands of copper wire twisted together
Thin wire
* Most thin wire conducts current
- has resistance
* provides resistance. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Wisdom
* All wisdom is the reward of discipline, conscious or unconscious.
* ' is knowing things that help a person to live sensibly and make good decisions. Wisdom is defined differently by many cultures. Some say that wisdom is something a person learns as they grow older. Other cultures expect people to complete certain rituals in order to get wisdom.
* arises directly from one's own experience, introspection, and realization
- from mindfulness and concentration
- through the realization of the unity of the senses and their object
* belongs to age and children don t know how to die.
* bodhisattva's purified buddhaland.
* can understand knowledge and decipher information.
* carries no ruler or scales to determine the worth of others.
* combination of knowledge and love.
* comes after information and knowledge.
* comes from elders who are tried in the fire of truth and righteousness
- experience, as does most lesser knowledge
- knowledge, experience, judgment, accomplishment, triumph, and defeat
- learning and is based in knowledge
- living
- the personal relating of knowledge and experience
- in many shapes and sizes
- only with age
- through knowledge of the self, through deep reflection and meditation
- when there is mindfulness and full concentration
- with age as age becomes age only with wisdom
* consists in the abolition of the very consciousness of the externality of things
- of knowing when to avoid perfection
* denotes the pursuing of the best ends by the best means.
* depends on the breadth and depth of people's perspectives.
* derives from way of life, and is as fragile as nature.
* encompasses both beauty and truth.
* explains the essence of things.
* feminine way of knowing the world.
* generally means a practical skill in the affairs of life, such as prudence, decision making.
* gift gained through perseverance in the face of despair.
* gives our souls power to experience divine things.
* has a moral dimension
- existence, principle has existence, the Way has existence, spirit is nothingness
* integrates both intellectual and experiential information.
* involves aims and purposes and ideals, which is even more than knowledge
- discernment and reflection on the riddles of life
* is accumulated emotion.
* is acquired by the experience of correct actions based upon true knowledge and insight
- through a lifetime of listening, observing and learning from mistakes
- using the body as well as the mind
* is an accumulation of experiences - good and bad
- affair of mental discernment in the highest directions
- understanding of the relatedness of facts and the consequences of behavior
* is another aspect of intelligence that has only recently been researched
- attribute of benevolence
- anticipation via knowledge
- born from a combination of gained experience and the comprehension of information
- categorized as someone feminine
- concerned with ideas and insights
- connected to prudence as health is to medicine
- content
- created out of the struggle to find a way to exercise authority as an expression of love
- described variously in Scripture
* is different from knowledge
- discernment of heart and discipline of mouth
- earned through experiences good and bad
- essential and is the ability to apply knowledge and faith
- for the soul, as food is for the body
* is found in silence as well as in words
- the realms of mystery, and is the only true path to revelation
- guided by ethics
- hidden in darkness
- impaired and extinguished by mental inattention, indifference and laziness
- inherent in evolution, as a wise change supports all life and is good for all
- insight and understanding of what is true and right
- intelligence shaped by experience
* is intuitive guidance that is more powerful and helpful than knowledge or the logical mind
- reason combined with scientific knowledge
* is knowledge applied, and the wise person seeks to apply knowledge to benefit humankind
- the intersection of knowledge, experience and enlightened discernment
- correctly applied to achieve the right purpose
- gained over time, analyzed and used with discernment
* is knowledge of first causes
- principles and causes
- tested by experience and tempered by discerning judgment
- with understanding
- knowledge, but it is also discernment
- life, and prosperity
- located in bibles
- marked by wholeness and happiness
- mental disease, stupidity is mental deficiency
- more precious than silver or gold or precious jewels
* is more than knowledge, information, and learning
- mere information and knowledge
- most evident when people know when and where to seek help
- necessary for good people, for good families and for a good and just society
- of age and thought
- only a subjective habit of mind rather than an insight into objectively existing things
- organized life
- profound self realization, an individual's unique fulfillment of their special potentials
- respect for the elderly, and opportunity for our children
- righteousness, and truth, and justice
* is rooted in knowledge
- watching with affection the way people grow
- said to be riches
- shared by all in the body
- simply good sense, the ability to make sound judgment
- something different from knowledge
- spoken in many tongues
- that quality of benevolence that disposes it to be directed by knowledge
- the ability of forecasting the results of any human behavior
* is the ability to adapt one's life to the realities of the world
- apply knowledge effectively
- judge correctly between all apparent facts in a given situation
* is the ability to live coherently in a chaotic world
- make sound choices and provide good counsel to others
* is the ability to use knowledge for the benefit of humankind
- in a practical way
- utilize awareness and knowledge in successful ways
- action that results from or the ability to respond to knowledge and understanding
- antidote to evil
* is the application of knowledge
- basis for practice
- beauty of men
- capacity to see things in the context of the whole
- combination of information, experience, and humility
- correct use of knowledge in a particular situation
- discerning exercise of knowledge
- enlightened use of knowledge, guided by love, to help others
- exercise and practical use of knowledge
- experiential vision of wholeness, interconnectedness and pervasive unity
- fine line between life and death that accompanies the sage who dances the way
- goddess of wisdom
* is the highest faculty of the soul and is potentially perfect in every person
- level of abstraction of our experiences
- knowledge to get the job done
- last rung of the ladder and is knowledge of a timeless nature
* is the most accurate of all the sciences
- benevolent use of knowledge and power
- perfect knowledge of the most important truths
- mother of all creation
- openness to keep learning from the experience of others and from one's own mistakes
- perception and the awareness of that realm of freedom
- perfection of knowledge
- power and ability to use the facts, in the ordinary practical things of life
- practical knowledge of how to attain that happiness
* is the proper combination of truth and spirit, faith and conduct, mind and heart
- use and application of knowledge
- prouncement of the truth
- prudent application of knowledge
- reissuing of discovered solutions at appropriate times
- right application of knowledge to the development of a noble and Godlike character
- science of the spirit, just as knowledge is the science of matter
- search for the meaning and the accommodation of it to our aging process
- second of the ten sefirotic emanations
- skill for living
- source of knowledge, and understanding is knowing how to use wisdom
- spirit of life
- sum of knowledge
- timely use of knowledge
- ultimate aim of learning
* is the understanding of knowledge, at least in the mental sense
- that knowledge is useless
* is the use of information in ways that ensure continued high - quality survival
- knowledge to reach worthy goals
- wealth of the wise
* is to live in the present, plan for the future and profit from the past
- serve the needs of the body, social as well as individual
- traits
- truth applied to the soul as guided by divine love
- understanding which knowledge to use for what purpose
- valued over knowledge
- what life is about
* lies in knowing which ones to taste and which are poison
- where the truths of religion and science conjoin
* means sorrow but also the life of truth
- understanding and working the principles that underpin decent human relations
* monarch who rules over all the virtues.
* often comes from divination plus life experience
- resides in the eye of the observer
* personal quality brought to the use of information.
* process that takes time and experience.
* produces happiness in the way that health produces health.
* putting together, knowledge a taking apart.
* refers to the integration of memory, comprehension, adaptability, judgement and creativity.
* requires deep awareness of self and others.
* seems to be a more complex construct than information and knowledge
- achieved by life long observation and learning
- have a function throughout life in terms of guiding development
* source of grief and sorrow
- joy and peace
* special knowledge in excess of all that is known.
* state of the human mind characterized by profound understanding and deep insight.
* term that expresses the perfectly intelligent character of love.
* therefore is the monitor and the guiding light of the soul.
* truer measure of one's worth than how many things one owns or how much one does.
* unites holiness and the common duties of life
- the facets of knowledge, character and skill
* virtue to aspire to and be granted or hard win.
* woman, who stands by the way, and calls out to everyone who passes by. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### wisdom:
Biblical wisdom
* dominates parent-child relationships.
* is drastically different from the many schools of modern philosophy.
Christian wisdom
* appears to be foolishness to the people of the world.
* profound thing which wears better than human wisdom.
Divine wisdom
* gives meaning to man's life.
* teaches the value of peace.
Folk wisdom
* is filled with ghosts who refuse to rest in their graves until their stories are told.
* says that allergies are seasonal.
Human wisdom
* is discursive, based on philosophy and the fruit of which is theology.
* leads to sin.
Spiritual wisdom
* leads to holiness.
* way of being alive.
Statecraft
* comes from soulcraft.
* is the skill of managing a state well
True wisdom
* is attached to the substance, False wisdom to the shadow
- fondness of truth, without guile or dissimulation
- natural and supernatural
* is the clarity of equality
- father of mercy and understanding
* qualitative value built on a quantitative foundation.
### without tails:
Hominoid
* All hominoids are without tails.
* also lack a tail.
Woman
* All human females have large mammary glands.
* Human females are doctors
- unique in that they outlive their own fertility, surviving well past menopause
- have larger breasts and hips than males
* Human females have two 'X' sex chromosomes, and are therefore called the homogametic sex
- wider pelvises than males and, on average, run less well
- produce primary oocytes throughout life
* Most human females are capable of having their first baby at about that age.
### wood-rat:
Pack rat
* abound along with day-time active cliff chipmunks, ground and rock squirrels.
* are exceedingly industerious individuals and work from dusk until dawn if uninterrupted
- nest builders
* build complex houses or dens made of twigs, cactus joints, and other materials.
* have a rat-like appearance with long tails, large ears and large black eyes.
* live anywhere from low, hot, dry deserts to cold, rocky slopes above timberline.<|endoftext|>### wood-rat:
Packrat
* are collectors
- common in the deserts and highlands of the western United States and northern Mexico
- small western rodents who love to pick up interesting objects, which they store away
- wood rats
* get their water by ingesting desert plants.
+ Pack rat: Rodents
* The 'Pack rat', which is also called 'Wood rat' or 'Trade rat', is a rodent of one of several species in the genus 'Neotoma'. Packrats are common in the deserts and highlands of the western United States and northern Mexico. They are also not related to the rat, other than also being a rodent.
Wooden object
* are painted and decorated with pearl, gold, silver, shell, and other objects.
* tend to cause bubbles.
### woodman:
Cabinetmaker
* are tradesmans
- woodworkers
* often work independently or for their own companies.
+ Cabinet making: Woodworking
* Cabinetmakers learn to use the tools of the cabinet making trade.
### woods:
Grove
* Most groves grow on limestone or dolomite.
* are forests
- gardens
* is woods
### woods | grove:
Aspen grove
* Many aspen groves are on moist sites where shrubs and wildflowers also thrive.
* are essentially hundreds of trees growing from the same root
- healthiest when they include trees at all different levels of maturity
Sacred grove
* exist in China, India, Africa and elsewhere.
* represent a traditional form of nature worship. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### woods:
Rain forest
* All rain forests are along the equator.
* Most rain forests date back some two to three hundred million years.
* absorb vast amounts of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
* act as an oxygen pump for the planet.
* appear in yellow, while grassland is shown in dark green, pink and blue.
* are basically jungles with many trees and plants
- biologically dense and diverse, providing habitat for half the species on earth
- critically important to the well-being of our planet
- dark and wet
- deserts, most animals are extinct, and Southern California is drowning in storms
- environments
- essential to recycling water
- home to half the animal species on Earth
- one of the richest regions on the earth
- part of the global weather system
- so large and thick that for many years very few people lived or went there
- tens of millions of years old
* are the predominant natural vegetation throughout the wet tropics
- primary oxygen source for the entire planet
- richest natural environments on earth
* are the world's most biologically diverse ecosystems
- important source of new medicines
- unique and diverse plant habitats
- vast repositories of natural resources
- vital to life on Earth
* contain incredibly diverse species of plants and animals.
* grow in tropical climates.
* have snakes like anacondas and animals like jaguars.
* help control the temperature by absorbing light and heat
- the world's weather
* is protected in two national parks and five botanical reserves
* occur throughout the world where both heavy rains occur and where forests grow.
* play a role in recycling the earth's water
- an important role in the global environment
* produce lumber.
* protect watersheds and prevent flash flooding.
* provide oxygen as well as foods, fibers and medicines.
* straddle the equator in a belt called the tropics.
* supports a diverse array of insects, and birds.
* thrive on every continent except Antarctica.
* vary from one another.
+ Rainforest, Rainforests in danger
* Rain forests are so large and thick that for many years very few people lived or went there. Today, however, that is changing. Millions of poor, often hungry, people live near the rain forests of the world. These people are desperate for a better life, and they think they can find it in the forests.
Woodwork
* includes sections.
* is artifacts
- work
* musicians band.
### woodwork:
Millwork
* are woodwork.
* is woodwork
### woody vine:
Skunk vine
* has a skunk-like, or rotten potato, smell.
* woody vine. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Word
* Counts the number of 'words' in a 'sentance'.
* Many words actually stand for or represent actual things or people in the world
- also have different meanings in other contexts
- are identical in spelling but differ only in pronunciation
* Many words have a form in which the accent shifts to a different syllable
- variety of meanings, depending on the context
- different meanings and the same spelling
- long vowel sounds
- more than one meaning, e.g., Web pages, spider webs
- structures and meanings which are exact copies
- the letters ie or ei in the middle
* Many words used in geography are everyday words
- today in America have their origins in Greek mythology
* Most words are names for objects in the world.
* Play A collection of sites on the Web that feature having fun with words.
* Some words follow spelling patterns, like at, or ake.
* Some words have a meaning that is commonly known, but are also used at times to mean something else
- stress pattern that varies according to their position in the sentence
- different meaning in different countries
- many forms
- more than one morpheme
- several stressed vowels
- special meanings in science
- the power of life or of death
* act as triggers for complex interactions within people and machines.
* allow a person to say exactly what they want to say.
* always have meaning in contexts.
* are a different kind of sign called a symbol
- form of mental shorthand for efficient utilization of higher concepts
- means of order, structure
- minor of society's attitudes and perceptions
- also merely symbols used to represent facts, ideas, objects, and experiences
- an important part of the Internet
- arbitrary pairings between a sound and a meaning, stored in memory
- block sculptures of reality, and writing is fundamentally a thinking process
- bones that survive the immediate aliveness and experience
- books
- capable of means
- chameleons, which reflect the colour of their environment
- combinations of discrete sounds
- crude symbols that point to some idea or construct
- effective tools to pull out the senses or memories carved in the body
- expressions of thoughts and ideas
- extremely powerful, and they leave an imprint on the hearts and minds of people
- fingers that point at the moon
- finite organs of the infinite mind
- full of meaning - even made up words create meanings at different psychic levels
- genes
* are important and powerful tools in shaping ideas, perceptions, and attitudes
- in conveying attitudes
- language
- like genes and sentences are like chromosomes
* are located in books
- mouths
- newspapers
- made of sound and sound is frequency
- magic to many people, especially when they come from the heart
- man's only tools for expressing thoughts or emotions
* are merely sounds until they become associated with an object or an action or a feeling
- more than arbitrary strings of phonemes
- one form of communication and the body is another
- only one form of communication
* are only symbols for the things they represent
- words to be used for nothing
* are part of dictionaries
- language, a cultural product
- phrases
- quotes
- what separates humankind from animals
- physical breathing shaped by our intellectual consciousness into emotional communication
- playthings that can control reality
- sacred, and many have a spiritual as well as a literal meaning
- seeds cast forth to grow in a mind
- social constructs with long histories
- speechs
- standards of communication
- statements
- symbolic representations of ideas and concepts
* are symbols for concepts
- of human ideas
- or verbal vehicles through which meaning is conveyed
* are symbols that can be of different meanings at different times
- take on a special sense according to our own personal experience
- with shared meanings
- the arbitrary symbols that allow for the existence of people, things, ideas and so on
* are the building blocks of language
- relationships
- symbolic systems
- clothes in which thoughts are dressed
- connective tissue between lives
- currency of culture
- metaphors and reflections of life
- mirrors of society's perceptions and attitudes
* are the most important images for human beings
- powerful drug used by mankind
- primary symbols in our lives
- signs and symbols of ideas
- stuff of ideas, the vehicle of thought, and the essential element of language
- threads that weave people together
- universal medium of exchange
* are the vehicles of intelligent communication
- through which ideas make themselves manifest
- things that are seperated by blanks from other things
- thoughts clothed in language
- thrillings
- tones that call the sacerdotal arts into play
* are tools for abstract thinking
- thought, feeling, and action
* are tools of communication
- used to shape reality
- which automatically carve concepts out of experience
- used for insults
* are what distinguish the human species from rocks and other hard, inanimate objects
- make people respond and react
- motivate people to read, act, and buy
* bring peace, mostly when language reveals truth.
* can also nurture our soul and spirit
- and do have different meanings and they are devoid of emotion or intonation
* can be powerful, words can hurt, and words can heal
- weapons as much as knives and guns
- bless a person or they can curse a person
- bring life and peace or death and destruction
- create a culture and an environment that appear to condone prejudice and violence
- express sadness, happiness, and love
* can have many meanings depending on the context and times in which they are written
- symbolic meaning
- kill, More often than thought
- lead to pain and hatred as well as to love
- literally change people's lives
- make people happy or sad, angry or loving, and so on
- mean a variety of different things to different people
- separate and divide, and words can quite literally kill
- shape thoughts and spread opinions and beliefs
* change meaning over time, sometimes slightly, sometimes dramatically
* come in many forms.
* communicate through their content and appearance.
* computer program designed for word processing.
* consist of atoms of thought
- consonants and vowels
* derive their meaning from the function they perform within the language game.
* describe all inanimate objects, as well, from different kinds of rocks, soils and minerals
- or work in a form of life
* do change their meanings, especially as they move from one language to another
- have meanings
- mean things and different things depending on how they are used and understood
* enable people to pass stressful emotion or feelings, as well as love, to others.
* exist because of meaning
- in a universal namespace
* express ideas, and ideas can change the world.
* function as different parts of speech.
* generate images, sensations, analogies.
* have distinctive shapes that are formed by the contour of the tops of letters
- magic, especially when they come from the heart
- meaning, they are the skins of living thoughts
- meanings, and ideas have consequences
- personal meanings, but they also have cultural meanings
- power, they carry energy
* have the ability to cut to the soul of a child
- power of creating realities, to model passions and heighten pleasures
* have the power to change our minds and to shape our lives
- heal wounds
- kill or to sustain life
- vibrational frequency
- weight, texture and form
* help to communicate.
* includes syllables.
* is presence, sight, sound, touch, feeling, smell, taste.
* is the expression of truth
- means to express thought
- used for mail merging information, printing envelopes and labels and designing forms
* kill, and words cause people to be killed spiritually, emotionally and physically.
* lists Total number of word lists.
* never end in consonants.
* often have different meanings, and some words have high emotional content
- multiple meanings, which can only be distinguished by context
* play an important role in our moods, health and happiness.
* produce meanings because they are situated in a system of difference.
* refer to objects, actions, motions, routines, and modifiers
- properties and logical connections
* represent mental constructions, concepts, which try in turn to justify experience to itself.
* reside in memory like clouds or stones.
* seem to communicate more clearly than do images.
* spoken from the heart are the words that heal.
* stand for ideas, and sentences hold words within a specific context.
* tend to represent general concepts, rather than specific things.
* used in a metaphorical sense are usually words that are used equivocally by intention.
* word-processing program.
+ Aosta, Aostan: Region capitals in Italy :: Valle d'Aosta
* Some words come from the Piedmontese language or Italian.
* The Cambridge encyclopedia of the English language'. All words are made from at least one syllable.
* A 'word' is something spoken by the mouth, that can be pronounced. It is also a collection of letters used together to try to communicate a meaning, and these can also usually be pronounced. Some words have more than one meaning, for example 'spring' can refer to the season, or the object. Some words have different spelling for example 'color' and 'colour', which are both correct. Color is used in American English. Besides English, every other language also has its own words.
+ Help:Pronunciation respelling key, Syllables and stress: Help :: Pronunciation
* A syllable is the smallest block of sound that a person can make when he or she speaks. Words can have one or more syllables.
+ Hyphen: Punctuation
* Some words can have a hyphen added to change the meaning. A re-formed group is different from a reformed group.
* Over the years, its role has expanded. It helps people learn American English while they learn about American life and stay informed about world news and developments in science. It provides listeners with information they cannot find elsewhere. It has a core vocabulary of 1500 words. Most are simple words that describe objects, actions or emotions. Some words are more difficult. They are used for reporting world events and describing discoveries in medicine and science. Special English writers use short, simple sentences that contain only one idea. They use active voice. They do not use idioms. Special English broadcasters read at a slower pace, about two-thirds the speed of standard English.
+ Polish language: Slavic languages :: Languages of Europe
* Some words are similar to the Ukrainian language.
+ Punctuation, Hyphen
* Words are written the same way but pronounced differently by different speakers.
* Some words are similar to the Polish language.
+ Received Pronunciation, Features: Dialects of English
* Many words have long vowel sounds. For example, the 'a' in 'bath' rhymes is the same as in 'far', not the same as in 'cat'. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Word group
* Word Groups Learn essential vocabulary by studying words divided into word groups.
* are groups of words around a common topic.
### word:
Abstract word
* are individual significant words in the summary of a work
- the opposite of concrete words
* refer to concepts or feelings
- intangible qualities, ideas, and concepts
* sum up the total effect of many particular, concrete things. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word:
Adjective
* Many adjectives ending in '-ing' describe the effect that something has on someone's feelings.
* Most adjectives add a t when used with with t -nouns, for example dejligt vejr
- become nouns by adding the suffix 'ness'
- come before the noun in a sentence
- tell which one, what kind, or how many about the words they modify or describe
* Some adjectives change their meaning depending on whether they are used with ser or with estar
- ending in '-ing' describe a process or state that continues over a period of time
- get their case endings from the third declension
* Some adjectives have identical masculine and feminine forms
- two forms, others have four
* Use in the sentence and with nouns.
* add meaning and inter- est to sentences.
* agree in both number and gender with the noun or pronoun they modify
- person, gender, and case with the noun they modify
* agree with nouns in gender, case, and number
- number, and case
* agree with the gender of the noun
- nouns they modify
* also answer several questions about nouns and pronouns
- are the words that make language more specific
- change form depending upon whether the word they modify is singular or plural
* always agree in gender and number with the nouns they modify
- have to be in the same case as their accompanying nouns
- modify nouns or pronouns
* are a part of speech
- subclass of the non-agentive intransitive verbs
- descriptive words like brown, magnificent and soft
- invariable
- like the leaves on a switch
- minor 'extras' in our language
- modifiers of nouns
- only one of the eight major parts of speech
- part of adjectives
- usually variable and take the gender and the number of the noun
- vivid colors
- word forms
* are words that describe a noun or a pronoun
- or pronoun - describing words
- inflect for gender as well as case and number
* are words that point out, describe or limit the meaning of nouns
- describe, or limit the meaning of nouns or pronouns
- used to modify or describe nouns or pronouns
* become attributes of entities.
* can act as nouns.
* can also become pictures
* can be in front of the noun or after a verb such as 'be' A beautiful girl
- pronominal - their declension is extremely hard to memorize
- weasel words
- precede or follow nouns in a sentence
- sometimes change their meanings according to the preposition they are followed by
* can tell what kind, how many, or which one
- which ones, or how many
* change according to the gender and the number of the noun which they qualify.
* decline for gender.
* describe a noun or pronoun
- nouns in terms of such qualities as size, color, number, and kind
- only nouns
- or limit the meaning of the words they modify
- people, places and things
* end in -a and take plural and objective endings to agree with nouns.
* ending in e , e.g. giovan e , can be either masculine or feminine.
* follow nouns, as in Romance languages.
* follow the normal rules for the plural
- noun they describe
* generally follow nouns
- have the same endings as nouns
* have strong and weak forms
- variants
* includes syllables.
* modify nouns by adding to their meaning adverbs modify verbs and other adverbs
- or pronouns and tell which, whose, what kind, and how many
- nouns, while adverbs modify verbs
* modify, or describe a noun or pronoun.
* mutate into gibberish.
* only modify nouns.
* precede nouns.
* provide description about nouns.
* sometimes appear without a noun and act as a noun themselves.
* specify and set nouns apart.
* still maintain the old Germanic distinction between strong and weak declensions.
* tell how many, what kind, and which one.
* tend to get lost in memory.
* used as adverbs are invariable
- identifiers are good
* usually follow a noun.
* usually precede the noun or pronoun it modifies
- nouns or pronouns they are describing
- remain unchanged when being used as adverbs
+ Noun, How adjectives become nouns: Parts of speech
+ Old Persian language, Grammar, Nouns: Iranian languages
* Adjectives are declinable in similar way.
* If his existence is in a legend, that's one thing. But if you just mean 'famous' well, use that word. Also, try cutting it out altogether. Adjectives get over-used and are often unhelpful and redundant.
* These words usually do not go with other kinds of words like verbs or adverbs. Adjectives can also describe nouns. In English, there are more nouns than any other kind of word. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | adjective:
Attributive adjective
* are a pain in the neck.
* take adjective endings.
Descriptive adjective
* describe the noun they modify.
* is an adjective<|endoftext|>### word | adjective | positive:
False positive
* Some false positives are attributable to substances such as asthma or allergy medications.
* are a function of instrument validity and the base rate of a phenomenon
- about one in a million
- more common in younger women than older women
- results that show coronary heart disease where none really exists
- undesirable test outcomes as such individuals are missclassified
* can lead to people undergoing unnecessary procedures
- result with excessive uptake of tracer in benign thyroid disease
- stigmatize, heighten anxiety, and waste resources on children
* do occur especially in heavily vaccinated cats.
* occur due to identification of mutations of no known significance
- more frequently among minorities than among whites
* occur when mammograms are read as abnormal, but no cancer is actually present
- test results are read as abnormal, but no cancer is actually present
- with strongly alkaline urine
* result when a test falsely or incorrectly reports a positive result.
Positive change
* can produce positive results at any age.
* is the work of both visionary individuals and committed groups.
* occurs when leadership and ideas come together.
Positive punishment
* is the 'addition' of an stimulus that decreases the chances of future responses.
+ Applied behavior analysis, Definitions and concepts, Punishment, Positive punishment
* Positive punishment is the 'addition' of an stimulus that decreases the chances of future responses. This stimulus that is added is something aversive. The addition of something that a person does not like will make them less likely to repeat the problem behavior.
Possessive adjective
* agree with the nouns they modify.
* are possessive pronouns placed before nouns they modify.
* serve as adjective modifiers since they tell whose.
Average word
+ Flesch Reading Ease, How it works: Linguistics :: Written communication
* Average sentence is 15 to 20 words long. Average word has two syllables.
* Average sentence is 37 words long. Average word has more than two syllables.
Chinese word
* Most Chinese words consist of two or more characters.
* are either pictographs, ideographs, or phonectic characters
- monosyllabic
Cognate
* are words in different languages but they are derived from the original word
- two different languages that show evidence of a common origin
* are words that are related through the same origin
- have approximately the same spelling and meaning in two different languages
- sound similar in both languages
Common word
* Many common words have a number of usages and meanings.
* Most common words have a large number of possible meanings.
* have special meanings in the social sciences.
Content word
* are words that have independent and concrete concepts.
+ Linguistic reduction, null, Categories: Linguistics
* Function words are words that signify grammatical relations. They are different from content words. Content words tend to carry more information. They are often stressed. Function words are often unstressed. They may be reduced, blended, linked or deleted.
Copula
* are a type of rock art associated with ceremonial events.
* includes syllables
- verbs
Descriptor
* are generally words or phrases that describe a topic
- individual words or multi-word phrases that have been hyphenated
- secondary indexing terms that further identify the contents reported in an article
* provide a way of comparing and contrasting molecules in a combinatorial library.
* refer to concepts and subject areas, rather than specific entities.
Different word
* can mean different things in different languages.
* have different orders of letters. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word:
English word
* All English words have vowels.
* Many English words can be nouns or verbs, with the exact same English spelling.
* Many English words have Greek and Latin roots
- an initial unstressed syllable followed by a second stressed syllable
- start and end with sounds that are combinations of two consonants
* Some English words are similar to words in another language, but have a totally different meaning.
+ Vowel: Letters (alphabet)
* The letters of the English alphabet are either vowels or consonants or both. A vowel sound comes from the lungs, through the vocal cords, and is not blocked, so there is no friction. All English words have vowels. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word:
Form
* All form is only the evolution of mind at different stages of development.
* All forms affect the skeletal muscles of the trunk and limbs
- are a reflection of the level of consciousness from which they are created
- live in deep water
* Every form has energy.
* Many forms are inflammatory processes affecting the tissues around the joint
- parasitic or symbiotic in the intestines of animals, eg
- vertically migrate to adjust their ambient light environment
* Most form hyphae.
* Most forms are aquatic, although a few are terrestrial, living in damp places
- live in shallow water, though one family is restricted to the deep sea
* Refers to the organizational structure of the music.
* Some form mycorrhizae with plants.
* Some forms act as an antioxidant
- also reproduce asexually
* Some forms are bacterial meningitis are contagious
- caused by bacteria , fungi or parasites
- motile, they swim by means of a rudimentary flagella
- relatively inactive in the body, and have limited ability to function as a vitamin
* Some forms can absorb so much oxygen in the water column that fish suffocate
- be highly toxic especially upon reaction with other chemicals
- cause blindness if consumed in even small amounts
- kill or cause serious illness
- emit toxic aerosols as they decompose, causing respiratory problems for people downwind
* Some forms have light and dark color phases
- saprobic nutrition
- two color phases, the darker coat and a yellow pelage
- reproduce asexually through budding
- spend nearly all of their time in trees, jumping from one tree to another
- use their snout, and a few use their tusks, to dig for food
* are HTML documents, written like any Web page with regular HTML code
- a set of moves and techniques that a student learns for every belt rank
- appearances
- conceptual work
- created by emptiness
- database objects used exclusively for reporting records to a printer
- documents with unformatted, blank spaces for inserting data
* are located in cabinets
- desks
- manners
- modules that have a graphical element
- mold
- objects in the database
* are part of packages
- percept
- screens used to display information for data entry
- sets of data-entry fields on a web page that are processed on a server
- shallow depressions near the base of plants where soil and air temperatures are cooler
- structures
- the maifestations of functions in all possible states
- threee dimensional shapes
- universals, characteristics shared by many individuals
- web pages that send the contents of fields to an active document
- writing style
* borate salts with basic compounds.
* carbamate upon exposure to air, which is corrosive when combined with moisture.
* chelates with metals, and is thus corrosive to aluminium, copper and iron.
* covers the relationships of masses, lines, and textures to each other.
* describes the shape and structure of landscape plants or plant masses
- visual elements which define the way an object appears
* emerges through a history of interactions at many hierarchical levels.
* explosive chlorine with chlorates
- perchlorates on contact with organics
* follows function and birds have some surprising and unique adaptations for life with flight.
* gametes that vary is size and form.
* gives shape to writing.
* has shape, and occupies space.
* is an expression of adaptation to the environment
- illusion, that is why it evolves, it degenerates, it gets corrupted, and it disappears
- created by gradations of color from pale tints to full saturation
- different from matter
- emptiness and emptiness is form
* is emptiness, emptiness is form itself
- no different from form
- exactly emptiness, and emptiness indeed is form
- form, emptiness is emptiness
- inference form, which refers to direct inference and indirect inference
- more than simply appearance, it is the whole of how information is structured and presented
* is no other than emptiness, and emptiness is no other than form
- emptiness no other than form
- one of the most widespread viruses in existance
- pyramidal in youth and spreading with age
- synonymous with structure
- temporal in the physical sense
* is the actuality of matter, which is pure potentiality
- arrangement of the different parts of a piece of music
- balance between tension and relaxation
- command that displays a data entry screen
- concretion of content, the revelation of a world
- goal, purpose and shape that is given to matter
- impression that objects within an image occupy three dimensional space
- physical manifestation of content
- principle of determination which accounts for the thing being the kind of thing it is
- result of the imperfections in the machine tools used to process the surface
- shape that the expression of content takes
- structure of dance
- total force residing in a thing as the very essence of being, doing and becoming
- thus visible shape, and the shaping force of the visible
- what provides coherence and imparts order
* often includes a sense of mass or volume.
* polynuclear aromatics with incomplete combustion.
* refers to everything visible and physical about the work of art
- how the phrases and larger sections are organized to make a unified whole
* refers to the fundamental basis for things
- organizational structure of the music, or how the musical ideas are arranged
* spindle fibers for separating chromosomes during mitosis.
* stands for the body and the physical world.
* story's shape.
* text file which is created with a simple editor program.
* three-dimensional shape.
* trimeric aggregrates of amine containing biomolecules.
* way of structuring the symbolic world so that there is shareability.
+ Cadmium oxide, Properties: Cadmium compounds :: Oxides
* Cadmium oxide can be a colorless powder, brown powder, or red-brown crystals. All forms dissolve in acid. It is carcinogenic. Breathing the dust is harmful. It is similar in some ways to zinc oxide.
+ Hepatitis: Diseases caused by viruses :: Liver disease
* In hepatitis, the liver is inflamed. There can be several reasons why the liver is inflamed. For this reason there are several kinds of hepatitis. The most common forms are 'Hepatitis A', 'Hepatitis B' and 'Hepatitis C'. Most cases of Hepatitis are caused by viruses. Some forms are caused by bacteria, fungi or parasites. The bacteria that cause Tuberculosis or Syphilis can also cause hepatitis, as can the parasite responsible for Malaria.
+ Nail art, Artificial nails: Body art :: Cosmetics
* Forms are fitted over the nail. Then an artificial nail is molded out of acrylic. Then the form is removed and the new nail shaped and buffed to a shine. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | form:
Acronym
* are abbreviations of common expressions
- the most common phrases used in writing e-mail or newsgroup postings
- very common in ordinary language and in many fields
* are words created by the first letter of a series of words
- formed from the initial letters of a phrase or title
* replace words, and then acronyms are developed to represent collections of acronyms.
Aesthetic form
* are the outward visible expressions of ancient traditions.
* play a crucial role in people's commentary about their social structure.
Aquatic form
* Many aquatic forms have internal fertiliz. too.
* live on the bottoms of streams or ponds, often under stones.
* swim sinusoidally or walk along the bottom of streams or ponds.
Differential form
* are of considerable interest now in physics.
* exist on any diff manifold, pseudoscalars only on orientable diff.
Electronic form
* are some of the most essential locations of digital signatures.
* can take many shapes.<|endoftext|>### word | form:
Fold
* are a type of plastic deformation that occurs in rocks
- especially well defined in layered, or stratified rock
- examples of ductile rock deformation
- formed by tectonic forces that act to compress Earth's crust
- groups
- most visible in rocks that contain layering
- pens
- present in the skin, which forms flaps along the lateral margins of the body
- structures
* can place permanent creases within fabric that are impossible to remove
- result in differential pressure on the stomach as well as pinching of tissue
* formed as detachment folds differ fundamentally from fault-propagation folds.
+ Scottish Fold, Characteristics, Social: Cat breeds
* Scottish Folds, whether with folded ears or with normal ears, are normally good-natured and calm. They can adjust to other animals within a household very well. They tend to become very attached to their human caregivers. They are by nature quite loving. Folds receive high marks for playfulness, affection, and grooming. They are often clever, loyal, quiet, and do well in changing home situations.
+ Vocal folds: Neck
* Folds are pearly white - females have whiter cords than males.
### word | form | fold:
Pleat
* are folds.
* increase the amount of media in the frame of the filter.<|endoftext|>### word | form:
Form of life
* All forms of life are either a single cell, or are made up of many cells
- part of a larger web of life
- evolve in close interaction with their immediate environment
* All forms of life have an aura
- cells and all cells have membranes
- certain power over their environment
- including humans absorb harmful doses of waste without their consent or knowledge
- share certain characteristics
- use essentially the same genetic code
* Forms of life are arranged in groups subordinate to groups, all in a few great classes.
* Some forms of life can exist without oxygen e. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | form:
Fractal
* All fractals are members of a complex and infinite family tree
- contain the element of self-similarity
* Most fractals also have an infinite perimeter and a finite area
- are just a graph of an equation using complex numbers
* also give rise to examples of nowhere differentiable curves
- have technological applications
* are a different kind of image
- fairly new concept in math and geometry, and quite different than the norm
- geometric application of recursion
- geometry of shapes which are equally rough at all scales
- good example of convergent infinite processes
- serendipitous art
- subclass of shape grammars
- visual expression of the dynamics of chaos
- actually a mathematical concept
- an example of a part of nature and science that are often considered artistic
- anything that contain self-similar images within itself
- art created with the use of mathematical formulas
- beautiful computer-generated images made using chaos theory
* are complex and recursive mathematical images that are really neat to view
- geometric shapes that commonly exhibit the property of self-similarity
- objects with self-similarity, which are created using some fixed algorithm
- complex, detailed geometric patterns found throughout the natural world
* are computer generated graphics based on mathematical equations
- images generated by iteration of equations
- different from other geometric figures because of the way in which they scale
- distinct from the simple figures of classical, or Euclidean , geometry
- educational because they illustrate many basic mathematical functions
- evident in the works of all artists
- excellent at creating realistic images, because they can model natural objects well
- geometric shapes which repeat on an ever diminishing scale
- graphic representations of some of the principles of the science of chaos
- graphs and they are graphic art
* are highly complicated and irregular geometric objects
- itterative
- images created by using mathematical formulas and complex mathematics
* are infinitely complex computer art
- self-similar , iterated mathematical constructs having fractal dimension
- intricate patterns repeating at different size scales
- mathematical functions of complex variables
* are mathematical objects that can be drawn by a computer
- with strange properties
* are mathematical representations of arbitrarily complex objects
- repititive elements of compound events or objects
- structures, which on an ever smaller scale infinitely repeat themselves
- mathematically based pictures which appear very complex and sometimes beautiful
- mathematics on display
- more or less related to chaos theory, complexitytheory
- part of the mathematics of chaotic systems
* are pictures designed by a mathematical formula
- that visualize the behavior of various mathematical equations
- sacred mandalas in the new millenium
- self repetitve images, looping within themselves infinitely
- self-similar structures
- sets of complex geometric shapes that look the same over a wide range of scales
- shapes that repeat themselves on different scales within the same object
- similar structures - they demonstrate their similarity at different scale levels
- simple pictures that visualize the behavior of various mathematical equations
- simple, nonlinear systems with complex dynamical properties
* are the beauty pageant of mathematics
- first schizophrenic styling products using optical brighteners
- geometry of nature
- place where math, science and art come together
- second essential characteristic of chaos
- very beautiful geometric figures that can be used to describe nature
- visual representations of mathematical formulas
* arise in the context of the behaviour of iterative systems.
* can also occur in the real world.
* can be anything that contains self-similar images within itself
- either regular or irregulas
- have fractional dimension
* do appear to exist and the patterns the plants display seem never ending.
* exhibit different kinds of self-similarity.
* exist natively as electronic images.
- borders between self and world
* get their name because they can be seen to have fractional dimension.
* have fractional dimensions
- many interesting applications, including image compression
* hold infinite spin and information and awareness density in their heart.
* imply nonlinearity in the process which created the fractal process.
* make it possible to understand chaotic behavior - infinity within finite boundaries
- the shapes seen in nature
* often look like objects in nature.
* play a key role in dynamical systems.
* show up in everything from cumulus clouds to leaves on trees.
* signify non-Euclidean or fractional Euclidean geometrical structure.
* turn out to be one way to measure chaotic systems.
+ Fractal, Uses
* Some fractals exist only for artistic reasons, but others are very useful. Fractals are very efficient shapes for radio antennas and are used in computer chips to efficiently connect all the components. Also, coastlines can be thought of as fractals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | form | fractal:
Fractal geometry
* deals with shapes made in nature
- the formalization of irregularity
* descibes the kinds of shapes that actually occur in our organic world.
* describes objects that are self-similar, or scale symmetric.
* dismisses Euclidean geometry and works on the edge of chaos and order.
* illustrates that shapes have self-similarity at descending scales.
* is an extension of classical geometry
- apparent everywhere in Africa from hairstyles to religious practices
- considered by many to be the geometry of nature
* is the geometry of fractional dimensions
- study of fractals
- used to describe the surface topography of the machined surface
* new form of mathematics used to describe objects having self-similarity
- language for the complex forms and patterns found in nature
* offers a framework for viewing certain complicated shapes as single entities.
* provides a multiscale quantitative approach to describing landscape patterns
- new way to explore and measure nature
* relatively new branch of mathematics which has intrigued many students.
* shows that shapes have self-similarity at descending scales.
* symbiosis of order and chaos which is to be discovered as a dynamic order.
* uses procedures rather than equations to model objects.
Growth form
* belong to the same species but look and function differently.
* varies considerably between species, altitude and site conditions.
Human form
* appear as well, as do plant forms.
* is naturally in opposition to nature
- the opportunity for the spiritual and moral progress
Liquid form
* have high lipid solubility and are quickly redistributed to other tissue.
* is created by cooling the natural gas to a very low temperature.
* stains teeth.
Modular form
* are functions which transform in a simple way under the action of that group.
* is an analytical function and it offer a short cut to the analysis of L-series.
Musical form
* are familiar to most people, as are visual forms like sculpture or painting.
* continue to evolve over time.
* is one area in which the two genders have been hypothesized to differ.
Oral form
* are safe to use in pregnant and lactating pets.
* is contraindicated in patients with clinically overt osteomalacia
- known hypersensitivity to etidronate
Organic form
* are less toxic than inorganic forms
- the inspiration for striking silhouettes
* express a harmonious unity where humanity feels at one with the world.
* found in ocean fish and seafood are relatively nontoxic.
Parasitic form
* Many parasitic forms are vectors of diseases and some are serious agricultural pests.
* enter their hosts via the digestive system or by penetration of the skin.
* live as ectoparasites or endoparasites.
* occur in the intestine of aquatic vertebrates, e.g. the opalinids.
* possess external hooks or suckers or both for attachment to the host.
Photosynthetic form
* are found in almost all branches of the bacteria, but in none of the archaea.
* have a distinct cell wall.
Plant form
* are representative of different parts of Oregon.
* is compact, round-oval in form.
* responds to the environment.
Pure form
* is obtained from fractional distillation of liquid air.
* lies at the other extreme end of the continuum.
Rhyme
* Most rhymes occur at the end of lines and are called end rhymes.
* also tend to include many words that begin with the same letters and rhyme at the end.
* help develop a young child's ear for language.
* is part of poems.
* lead to sounds, vowels and consonants.
* make children more aware of word sounds.
* provide practice in hearing the same sound repeated in different words.
Simple form
* can enclose space by themselves and considered as closed forms.
* cut from plywood have thickness, and they can be arranged in space. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | form:
Singular
* are forms.
* drug used to prevent the acute attacks of asthma.
* product that they are finding that helps with allergies as well as asthma.
* program for computational algebraic geometry.
Spore form
* are the most resistant.
* preserve the bacteria from starvation, drying, freezing, chemicals, and heat.<|endoftext|>### word | form:
Winged form
* are larger than worker ants.
* can disperse to new trees.
* develop in the spring, summer or fall and emerge from the soil to lay eggs on stems.
* have a black head and thorax and hold their wings roof-like over the back of the body
- less reproductive and damage potential
- two membranous pairs of wings, with the front pair larger than the hind pair
* migrate to crop hosts in the spring
- other host plants in the spring
* migrate to start new colonies only on crape myrtles
- colonies, usually on the same type of plant
* possess two pairs of wings which are unequal in size and have reduced venation.
Wingless form
* are large, usually black, ants
- the most common during the growing season, but both forms can transmit viruses
* have a tail just above the pointed abdomen, giving it a two-tailed appearance.
* settle on the tree and reproduce repeatedly.
Function word
* are words that signify grammatical relations
+ Linguistic reduction, null, Categories: Linguistics
* Function words are words that signify grammatical relations. They are different from content words. Content words tend to carry more information. They are often stressed. Function words are often unstressed. They may be reduced, blended, linked or deleted.<|endoftext|>### word:
Hebrew word
* Most Hebrew words change their meaning when pronounced differently.
* are made by combining a root with a pattern.
+ Hebrew language
* Hebrew is close to the Arabic language. Hebrew words are made by combining a root with a pattern. In Israeli Hebrew, some words are translated from European languages like English, French, German, and Russian. Many words from the Old Testament were given new meanings in Israeli Hebrew. People learning Hebrew need to study the grammar first in order to read correctly without vowels. The 'imperfect' is something like the future and the present tenses.
Homonym
* are homophones.
* are words that are spelled and pronounced the same but have different meanings
- differently, have different meanings, but sound the same
* are words that sound alike when spoken but have different spellings and meanings
- alike, but that are spelled differently and have different meanings
* are words that sound the same but have different spellings and different meanings
### word | homonym:
Homophone
* are clues where the solution sounds like one thing but is spelt differently
- homonyms
- two words that sound alike but are spelled differently
* are words that are pronounced the same but differ in meaning and origin
- same but differ in meaning, derivation, or spelling
- sound alike but have different spellings and meanings
### word | intensifier:
Image intensifier
* amplify the existing light.
* have nothing to do with focal length or field of view.
Key word
* are keys
- part of indexes
* are the words that are picked up by computer search engines
- carry the meaning
- words that provide clues to identify preceding or following proper names | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word:
Modifier
* Some modifiers are single words, but others are groups of words.
* also exist representing percent of vegetation cover and tree height.
* are additions or subtractions to a given base number that a circumstance provides
- either adjectives or adverbs
- genes
- moderators
- part of phrases
- special tools for altering nodes
- the Boolean operators used to connect search terms
- usually adjectives or adverbs
* are words or groups of words that describe other parts of speech
- phrases that modify other words or phrases
- that change the meanings of other words
* are words, phrases, or clauses that add description
- provide description in sentences
* can be task, personal, or psychosocial
- include acetonitrile, methanol, isopropanol, and tetrahydrofuran
* have a special meaning in opposed tasks.
* indicate some property of a method, field, or class.
* precede nouns.
* predict an employer's future losses by looking at their past loss experience.
* usually extend the life of pavement due to a decrease in distresses.
### word | modifier:
Friction modifier
* cause wet clutches to slip, according to motorcycle oil proponents.
* reduce the friction between the lug nut and bolt and cause false torque readings.
New word
+ Language, Universals of language
* New words appear, new form of saying things, new accentuations.
+ Vocabulary
* The vocabulary of a language is always changing. New words are invented or words change their meaning. This means that dictionaries have to be updated.
Nomenclature
* includes syllables.
* means literally to call by name.
* refers to the shape of the surface cells only.
* systematic labeling of complex strings of information.
* term that refers to methods of naming chem.
### word | nomenclature:
Binomial nomenclature
* gives each species a unique, two-word Latin name
- many descriptive clues about the plant
* is another term for binomen
- now our standard system for naming organisms, including trees
* is the method of giving scientific names to living organisms
- system of giving each plant a scientific name consisting of two parts
* two word naming system used to identify specific types of organisms.
Phylogenetic nomenclature
* is classification using cladistics to show evolutionary relationships.
+ Cladistics, Pros and cons
* Phylogenetic nomenclature is classification using cladistics to show evolutionary relationships. It is now the most usual type of classification used for groups where there is good evidence of how they evolved. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word:
Noun
* All nouns have a gender.
* Many nouns can be both count and noncount nouns.
* Many nouns have a special plural form if there is more than one
- both singular and plural forms
- variant forms as subject and as object
- take the same form as the verb with which they are connected
* Most nouns are dimorphemic, while verbs, adjectives and particles tend to be monomorphemic
- ending in the letter o are masculine, and most nouns ending in the letter a are feminine
- form their plurals by adding -s
- have one form for the singular and another for the plural
* Some nouns are countable in other languages but uncountable in English.
* Some nouns can be countable or uncountable, depending on their meanings
- name a group acting as one unit or refer to individuals within that group
- change spelling for the plural form
* Some nouns have a plural form and take a plural verb
- but take a singular verb
- different forms for male and female
- irregular plurals
- no singular form
- plural forms only
- plurals that don t end in s , e.g., children
- the same form in singular and plural
- two forms in their plurals form and each form conveys a different meaning
- however have a special form for the genitive
- look like plurals, but they are really singular
- possess distinct forms for the vocative and nominative cases
- present a kind of fossilised neuter suffix, coming from the ancient Latin neuter gender
- refer to one particular person or place
* also change form to indicate possession or ownership
- tend to have more syllables than do verbs
* are common objects, body parts, etc
- easier for children to define and understand at a younger age
- either masculine or feminine and are almost always derived from their cognate verbs
- invariable for number
- nouns and verbs are still verbs
- one of the eight parts of speech used in simple sentences
- ordered into 'common nouns', and 'proper nouns'
* are part of language
* are people, places or things
- places, things, and ideas
- persons, places, or things
- subject to the spaces within which they exist
- subjects of sentences
* are the names of persons, animals, places or things
- usually the first words which small children learn
* are words that name a person, a place, a thing, an idea, a feeling or an action
- place or a thing
- place, thing, or idea
- place, a person, a thing, or an idea
* are words that name persons, places, things, or abstractions
- things, qualities or actions
* become entities
- verbs, verbs become nouns, nouns become adjectives, etc
* can also be abstract things, such as 'suffering' or 'happiness'
- take a possessive form to show ownership
* can be objects like pens or pencils or even concepts like happiness or balance
- singular or plural
- contain verbs and verbs can contain nouns
- function as subjects, objects, and complements
* change their endings depending on how they are used in a sentence.
* deal with essences and complete substances.
* denoting living beings are epicene, ie.
* expressing possession always end in -S and always contain an apostrophe in their spelling.
* function as subjects, objects, objects of prepositions, objects of verbals, and as adjectives.
* have adjectives and verbs have adverbs.
* imply solely a person, place, or thing.
* name a person, place, or thing
- thing, idea, animal, quality, or action
- people, places, and things
* name things and objects model things
- or categories and serve as subject of the verb or as the object of prepositions
* occur in two forms, primary and secondary.
+ English grammar, Parts of speech, Nouns
* Nouns are things. They can be a single thing such as an apple. They can also be plural such as a box of apples. There is a special kind of noun called a proper noun, which is a name. For instance, Johnny Appleseed.
+ Esperanto, Grammar, Nouns and adjectives
* Nouns end in '-o'. For example, 'patr'o' means 'father'.
+ Grammar, Parts of speech, Nouns
* Nouns are 'thing' words like 'table and 'chair'. They are objects, things you see in everyday life. Proper nouns are places, people's names, or other things like days of the week. The name 'James' is a proper noun, as is 'Wednesday' and 'London'. Nouns can also be abstract things, such as 'suffering' or 'happiness'.
+ Noun, Kinds of nouns and how they are ordered
* Nouns are ordered into 'common nouns', and 'proper nouns'. There are also pronouns. The Cambridge Grammar of the English Language'. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | noun:
Abstract noun
* are nouns that name other things such as ideas, actions, conditions, and qualities
- the names of qualities, states or feelings
* are, well, abstract.
* have no plurals.
* refer to an intangible idea or quality.
Collective noun
* are countable
- plural if the writer considers the members of the group individually
- usually singular
* can be singular or plural, depending on how they are used in a sentence.
Common noun
* Many common nouns can refer to men or women.
* are all other nouns which represent people, places, or things
- either count or non-count
- names of general persons, places, animals, or things
- nouns in our grammar
- parts of a group
- predicates
- word forms
* refer to any of a class of people places or things.
Compound noun
* can also be concrete or abstract.
* take the plural form of the last noun.
Concrete noun
* are nouns that can be seen, held, or touched.
* name things that exist physically as sidewalk, bird, toy, hair and rain.
Count noun
* are common nouns
- count nouns
- things which can be counted
- usually objects which can be counted
* have a distinct form and can be counted.
* identify individual entities that can be counted, like armadillos.
* refer to things that exist as separate and distinct individual units.
Japanese noun
* have neither number nor gender.
* resemble English uncountable nouns.<|endoftext|>### word | noun:
Latin noun
* All Latin nouns have the properties of case , number , and gender.
* are 'declined', or changed, according to how they are used in the sentence.
* come in five classes, or spelling groups, also called 'declensions'.
+ Latin language, Basic structure and grammar
* The vocative case is almost always the same as the nominative case. Latin nouns are 'declined', or changed, according to how they are used in the sentence. A noun can be declined five different ways. These ways are called declensions. When a noun is declined, ten forms are made, two for each of the noun cases.
Plural noun
* are more than one thing.
* give names to two or more persons, places, animals, or things.
* name more than one.
Proper name
* are the names of people, countries, etc, businesses and organisations.
* is melanocarcinoma.<|endoftext|>### word | noun:
Proper noun
* are entities for they name single thing
- noun phrases
- places, people's names, or other things like days of the week
* are specific names and thus begin with capital letters
- of persons, places, animals, or things
* are the names of particular persons, places and things
- specific persons, places, and things
- unique persons, places, etc
- only nouns in English which have the first letter capitalized
* have their uses.
* keep the final y when s is added.
* name a special person, place or thing and begin with capital letters.
* name a specific person, place, or thing
- unit within that group and are capitalized
- particular people, places, things, or ideas
* name specific people, places or things and are capitalized
+ Grammar, Parts of speech, Nouns
* Nouns are 'thing' words like 'table and 'chair'. They are objects, things you see in everyday life. Proper nouns are places, people's names, or other things like days of the week. The name 'James' is a proper noun, as is 'Wednesday' and 'London'. Nouns can also be abstract things, such as 'suffering' or 'happiness'.
Singular noun
* give a name to only one person, place, animal, or thing.
* take singular verbs and plural nouns take plural verbs.
Opposite
* attract when Mars and Venus collide
- it comes to charged molecules
* do attract even when they're the same sex.
### word | opposite:
Reciprocal
* apply to fractions.
* are definites.
* is an opposite | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word:
Palindrome
* Read a list of palindromes, including some two dimensional palindromes.
* Some palindromes reorder complete words instead of each letter.
* are numbers that read the same forwards as backwards
* are sentences or lines that read the same forward and backward
- that have the same sequence of letters both forward and backward
- very difficult to write
- words or sentences that read the same backwards or forwards
* can be of even or odd length.
* mark the end of a gene.
* participate in the control of a gene function.<|endoftext|>### word:
Preposition
* Most prepositions locate an object in time or space.
* Some prepositions also function as subordinate conjunctions
- even consist of two or more words.
* Most prepositions tell where or when, or show possession
* are also important for many patterns because they often identify role relationships
- function words
- grammatical glue that express relations between a noun and something else
* are important little words
- metaphors
- parts of speech
- places
- terrible words to end sentences with
* are the little tags which fit the slots
- words that indicate location
- usually little words that indicate direction, position, location, and so forth
* become nouns, nouns become verbs, and conjunctions and suffixes just disappear.
* can also show location in time.
* connect nouns or pronouns to the rest of the sentence.
* show relationships between nouns or pronouns and other words in a sentence
- objects and ideas in a sentence
* usually have a wide range of meanings.
Primitive
* are formulas
- people
- the name of the group of shapes that are the basic building blocks of stuff
* divine the future by examining the entrails of chickens or the gall bladders of pigs.<|endoftext|>### word:
Pronoun
* All pronouns have antecedents.
* Avoid the use of awkward or unpronounceable pronoun combinations.
* Many pronouns can function as adjectives when they are followed by a noun.
* Some pronouns can appear in more than one classification
- change their form, depending on whether they are subjects, objects, or possessives
- depend on the gender of the replaced person
- have nouns or pronouns to which they refer, called antecedents
* Use a plural pronoun whenever possible to avoid gender bias.
* also cause a problem in cases where the number of references to a keyword are counted
- have a specific case
* are also an issue when using gender-specific language
- generic words that have little meaning on their own
- little words, but they're often troublesome
- remarkable in how infrequently they are used
* are special types of nouns
- useful for referring in more natural way to people in messages
* are words that are used in the place of a noun
- replace nouns
- used in place of nouns
* can function as subjects in sentences or as objects
- make speaking and writing easier
- really reveal our point of view and our values
- take the place of the subject of a sentence
* have different forms according to how they are used in a sentence
- special genitive cases, all lacking apostrophes
- the same gender and number as the noun they are replacing
* just replace nouns that have been mentioned already in a conversation or text.
* often use the dual number, which gradually disappears in other Germanic dialects.
* prey on the poor in spirit.
* provide a form of shorthand.
* refer to the nearest noun of the same number.
* replace complete noun phrases.
* shift in gender, person, and number.
* take the place of a noun, whether stated explicitly or implied
* where used refer equally to both sexes.
+ English grammar, Parts of speech, Pronouns: Grammar
* Pronouns are special types of nouns. They are not a particular thing. They can mean many different things. The noun before a pronoun that the pronoun really means is called the antecedent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | pronoun:
Indefinite pronoun
* Most indefinite pronouns are singular and take singular verbs
- require a singular verb
* are less specific than personal pronouns and have fewer forms
* name a collective group.
* refer to an unknown or undetermined person, place or thing
- persons, places, or things without specifying for certain which one
Object pronoun
* come before all conjugated verbs except positive commands.
* precede the verb and are divided into direct and indirect objects.
Personal pronoun
* are good words to help keep the distinctions clear
- pronouns
- quite appropriate in business correspondence
* have a sub-category called possessive
- what is called case
* help make writing sound like natural conversation.
* refer to specific people or things
- persons or things
### word | pronoun | personal pronoun:
Reflexive
* generally refer to the subject of the clause in which they stand.
* personal pronoun
Reflexive pronoun
* are pronouns that are used with reflexive verbs.
* refer to the subject of the sentence or clause in which they appear.
Possessive pronoun
* show ownership.
* work the same way as with pronouns describing people.
Reciprocal pronoun
* refer to the individual parts of a plural antecedent.
* show mutual relationships.
Relative pronoun
* can include the pronouns who, whom, whose, and which.
* introduce dependent clauses.
* relate a group of words to nouns or other pronouns in the sentence
- to another noun preceding it in the sentence
* take verbs which agree with the pronouns' antecedents.
Quantifier
* are determiners
* bind more tightly than all operators.
* includes syllables.
Sight word
* are high frequency words seen often in print.
* are words a reader recognizes instantly
- that connect the English language
Spoken word
* can manifest life or death, good or bad, positive or negative outcomes.
* is about sounds and memorization of a work
- also foreign language tapes, lectures, self-help and others
- one of the oldest forms of entertainment in the world
- the underground performance of written poetry
* poetry characterized by a poetics of presence.
* provide a universal means of communication.<|endoftext|>### word:
Term
* Some terms are ethnopsychology, traditional medicine, healers, or medical anthropology
- refer to parts of bones
* Some terms relate to ecology, limnology, pharmacology, toxicology and medicine
* Understand the terminology that is used in the medical, education, and public health fields.
* also appear in logic.
* applies to dyes derived from coal tar, which are used to color fabrics and leather.
* are analogous to noun phrases in natural language
- constants, variables or integers
- constituents
* are part of gestation
- propositions
- sequences
- points
- quantities
- strings that contain the printed representation of Prolog terms
- time periods
* can have several meanings, and concepts can have several terms.
* have meaning.
* includes syllables.
* is the type of insurance that everybody understands.
* represent concepts, or states of concepts.
* term, which name and arity are used as a predicate specification.
+ Term (mathematics), Definition: Algebra
### word | term:
Concrete term
* describe objects or actions that can be accessible to the senses.
* refer to objects or events that are available to the senses.
Incumbency
* is duties
- important in congressional elections
- positions
* weapon that trumps most everything else.
Long term
* exercising and low-fat eating is the way to keeping the weight off
- with portion control is the way to keeping the weight off
* exposures to low levels of lead can cause brain damage, and lowered I.Q. in children.
* feeding studies with test animals show depressed levels of cholinesterase activity.
* wearing of tight ponytails can actually encourage hair loss in some circumstances. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### word | term:
Predicate
* Most predicates relate to description of the world.
* are arbitrary sargable predicates
- boolean expressions
- one of two main components of a sentence
* comprise a verb with whatever modifiers or complements accompany it.<|endoftext|>### word | term:
Term insurance
* is basically a method of saving with an element of insurance
- bought by millions of people for a number of reasons
- designed to cover the risk of death during a certain period only
- generally the least expensive and least complicated type of life insurance
- life insurance that is in effect for a certain period of time only
- like renting the house with an option to buy
- one of the most affordable life insurance values available
- perhaps the most basic form of life insurance
- pure death insurance
* is pure insurance protection, comparable to auto or homeowner's policies
- temporary in that it terminates either at a specified age or a given date
* is the cheapest form of coverage over a limited number of years
- way to obtain the maximum amount of coverage
- most economical form of life insurance
- solution to financial security and peace of mind
- useful for people with limited income and high short-term insurance needs
- what everyone needs
* is, by definition, temporary insurance.
* life insurance contract that provides protection for a limited number of years.
* provides death protection for a specific period
- life insurance protection for a specified duration of time
### word | terminology:
Kinship terminology
* Kinship terminologies are one way of reflecting indigenous opinion
- vary in different societies from as few as twelve to more than fifty terms
* is of the Hawaiian type.<|endoftext|>### word | terminology:
Markup language
* allow the text and the spaces within it to be tagged with particular meanings.
* are human readable and separate structure from presentation
- incredibly important for the purpose of sharing information
* describe data.
* format documents, and HTML is an example of a markup language.
* help authors and publishers organize their work by structuring the content.
* incorporate markup instructions into a stream of text.
* involves formatting instructions in plain-text tag commands.
* is terminology.
* talk about appearance or roles.
* use tags to differentiate content from format and appearance control.
Medical terminology
* is the key to unlocking a whole new world of knowledge
- language of medicine
- used by convention and is evolving
- useful for some jobs especially forensic, oncology and pathology work
* specialized language used by health care practitioners.
### word | written word:
Trigram
* are the name of statistical data that models the probability of words in sets of three.
* written word
Work group
* are a common arrangement within today's business organizations
- often more effective when comprised entirely of one sex
- people who meet to accomplish a particular task
* play an important role in the success of an organization.<|endoftext|>### workers:
Athletic trainer
* Most athletic trainers work full time.
* Some athletic trainers work with military, with law enforcement, or with performing artists.
* are workers.
* carry out rehabilitation programs for injured athletes.
* deal with the prevention, treatment, and rehabilitation of athletic injuries.
* help athletes get in shape and stay fit so they can compete in sports.
* provide medical support and expert health care for physically active individuals
- quality health care, and educate athletes in prevention of injuries
* work with both professional and amateur athletes
- clients in preparation for, or participation in, sports activities | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### workers | pruner:
Anvil pruner
* are usually lighter in weight and are easier to sharpen.
* have straight upper blades that cut against flat lower plates.
* pinch the wood between the blade and a base, making the cut like a knife does.
* tend to crush the bark of the stem being cut
- stems
Hand pruner
* are useful for branches less than one-half an inch thick
- removing a few stray branches
* work fine for cutting small twigs.
Twig pruner
* causes twigs to drop off in late summer
- the summer
* have slender bodies that are elongated with a basic coloring of yellowish-gray.
University president
* are workers.
* train to be managers by teaching and research.
### workplaces:
Brokerage house
* are workplaces.
* is work<|endoftext|>### workplaces:
Fish farm
* Most fish farms have complex integrated farming and management systems
- feeders that put food into the water at set times during the day
* can have negative impacts on surrounding ecosystems as well
- provide food for the future, but only if wild fish stay abundant
* contribute nitrogen, phosphorus, and organic wastes to streams.
* float offshore.
* have amounts.
* produce large amounts of wastes, including dissolved inorganic phosphorus and nitrogen.
* raise genetically altered salmon which are forced to mature and spawn early.
### worse:
Higher number
* equate with higher packing density and increased capacity.
* mean more solar wind is reaching the earth.
+ Global Hunger Index
* To get the World Hunger index, the weighted average of the three numbers is taken. This number will be between 0 and 100. Higher numbers are worse.
Wrapping
* are covering.
* includes sections.
### wrapping:
Cellophane
* plastic wrap
* provides extra protection
Wreath
* Assemble all kinds of wreaths for holidays or for all year round.
* Some wreaths are made of flowers.
* also adorn doors and windows in many homes.
* are an eternal part of the festive season
- flower arrangements
* are located in front doors
- funerals
- ornaments
- the main use for spruce greens
- very popular home decorations that fetch an astounding price on the market
* come in all shapes and sizes.
* floral arrangement
* includes sections.
### wreckage:
Flotsam
* are wreckage.
* is wreckage
- that floats when a ship goes down
* refers to the cargo that ends up on the water after the ship sinks.
### writers:
Romance writer
* are writers.
* write about the appeal of romance in Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women.
Technical writer
* Most technical writers use computers for word processing.
* begin careers.
* create paper.
* prepare instruction manuals
* work in offices.
* work with experts
- technology experts
### written communication:
Affidavit
* are an important component of civil involuntary detention
- laws
* are legal documents which carry consequences for falsehood
- forms
- testimony
* is an instrument
### written communication | court order:
Divestiture
* are court order
- removings
- sales
* is court order
* is the company's move from a weak to a stronger market
- process of selling or spinning off aspects of business lines
### written communication | court order | garnishment:
Wage garnishment
* is an action of enormous impact on delinquent debtors.
+ Garnishment: Law
* Wage garnishments can adversely affect credit reputation or one's ability to open bank accounts.<|endoftext|>### written communication:
Deed
* Are The Measure Of A Man.
* are accomplishment
- condensations of thoughts just as rain condensation of vapor
- formal documents showing ownership and intent for property use
- important records
* are legal documents
- official contracts transferring property ownership
- records of land ownership and transactions
- simply the documents used to transfer an interest in real estate and are used only once
* are the documents used to transfer property
- most common type of land record
- proof of faith
- the manifestation of the heart | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written communication | deed:
Evil deed
* induce people to commit sins as harmful as tigers.
* lead individuals and whole communities to personal and collective disaster.
Good deed
* are links that form a chain of love.
* are the manifestation of a healthy spiritual life
- natural result of being good, and bad deeds are the natural result of being bad
* lead a person to wholeness and immortality, while evil deeds make one suffer.<|endoftext|>### written communication:
Draft
* are depth
- doses
- drinks
- pull
- regulators
- sketchs
- text
- wind
* can be a serious hazard for plants in the winter.
* is an instrument
- the depth of the hull structure below the designed waterline
* keep bats from trapping body heat and from maintaining optimum conditions for rearing young.
* often consist of cold air moving across a floor and, as such, are unpleasant.
* refers to the taper of the pattern, which allows it to be extended from a compacted sand mold.
* word describe the height of the part of a ship that is below the water line.
+ Seine, Navigation: Rivers of France
* Between Rouen and the sea, the Seine is navigable by ocean-going vessels, of up to in length, and 150.000 tons in weight. This section of the river has a length of about. Ships of a draft of up to can circulate. Draft is a word describe the height of the part of a ship that is below the water line. There are three bridges in this section. They can be raised. Because there are few briges, the river can be crossed by ferry, at different locations. Even if the port of Le Havre is more important for petroleum, that of Rouen is still important. About 25 million tons of produce is handled by the port of Rouen each year.<|endoftext|>### written communication | draft:
Check
* are bills
- blemishs
- consumers preferred method of payment for goods and services
- drafts
- human activities
- inspections
* are legal forms
- tenders
* are located in banks
- boxs
- cash registers
- checkbooks
- wallets
- obstructions
- part of ice hockeys
* are the DNA of politics
- most widely used means of transmitting money
* are used for bills
- payings
- weaves
- work
* cashing outlets use predatory pricing, making transactions overly expensive.
* occur when wood shrinks and the timber separates along grain lines.
* pets frequently during tick season, especially around the face and ears.
* snares frequently because they are often knocked down by nutria and other animals.
* stems, twigs, branches or trunks for damage or signs of the presence of a pathogen.
* vents, louvers, and chimneys for bird nests, squirrels, insects, etc.
### written communication | draft | check:
Background check
* apply to new hires, as a condition of employment, after the job offer is made.
* assist in the making of successful hiring decisions.
Downdraft
* are drafts
- laminar, in thin layers, and flow down like water
* can actually drive hawks lower and lower until they fall into the water
- change the temperature rapidly in an area in a short amount of time
* occur on the downwind side of a hill or mountain.
Money order
* Money Order Provides safe transmission of money.
* is checks.
Pact
* are books
- policy
* is agreement
### written communication | permit:
Marriage license
* Marriage Licenses are important records for genealogists.
* are legal contracts between the couple and the state.
* is legal forms
- license
Return
* are arrivals
- group actions
- incomes
- monetary values
- motion
* are part of everyday life in most businesses
- tennis
- runs
- turning
* flows, rip currents and backwash transports sediments offshore.
* is the gain or loss in value that results from an investment
- income from an investment
### written communication | return:
Annual return
* are the simple rates of return for the calendar years.
* is stock price appreciation plus dividends, sometimes called total return. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written communication | return:
Repatriation
* involves voluntary return home in safety and with dignity.
* is one of the corner-stones of Rastafari belief
- seen as the key to ensuring that ancestors are treated with respect
- the favoured solution for refugees exiled in the course of conflict
* means that people have been brought to a new area to start all over.
* often involves as much culture shock as expatriation.
Total return
* assume the reinvestment of any income and capital gains.
* broader measure of a security's performance.
* is increase in stock price and dividends
- the combination of price change and dividends reinvested daily
* is the sum of capital gains and income yield
- interest earnings and principal appreciation
Venous return
* is impaired and causes a fall in the cardiac output
- via the external and internal pudendal veins
* leads to filling of the heart.
Warrant
* are a form of stock
- pacts
- permission
* is an instrument<|endoftext|>### written language:
Code
* Many codes allow the use of metallic conduits to be used as grounding conductors.
* Most codes are a combination of phrases, syllables, words, or whole sentences.
* are capitals in machine readable usage
- concepts
- letter combinations or symbols used to represent words or concepts
- messages in which words are represented by letters, words, numbers or symbols
- regulations by military orders
- socially and historically defined
- the arrangement of words that make up the message
- themselves concepts, and they are also represented with models
* contribute to the well-being of a community.
* describe procedures, services, and supplies.
* govern construction, maintenance of structures and the use of structures.
* has restrictions.
* indicates evidence.
* is code of conduct
- cools
* is used for representing programming or mark-up code
- snippets of code which appear inside a paragraph of text
- to indicate that a fragment of text is computer code
* numeric code that uniquely identifies the message.
* protect the public's health, safety and welfare.
* provide for economy of space in computer systems.
* provides guidelines.
* written language.
+ Comparison of IOC, FIFA, and ISO 3166 country codes, Former countries and former country names: Country codes
* Codes are shown with their last year of use.
### written language | code:
Area code
* Some area codes cover a very large geographic area, up to an entire state.
* have a geographic identity.
* is code.
Bar code
* Most bar codes have a fixed number of possible bar widths.
* allow products to be quickly identified and moved.
* are like fonts.
* come in several different languages that are referred to as symbologies.
* consist of patterns of light and dark areas.
* is at the intersection where the physical world meets the digital
* pattern of bars and spaces which represent numbers, letters or characters.
* simulate data entry from a keyboard.
Binary code
* are specific to machines.
* bunch of ones and zeroes that all files are made up of.
- simply strings of ones and zeros<|endoftext|>### written language | code:
Building code
* Building Codes Learn how building code changes affect the construction process.
* allow trailers and mobile homes to be used.
* are a states' rights issue
- common in industrialized nations, but rare in developing countries
- complex and detailed requirements which govern home construction
- legal documents designed by a board of building professionals
- the public's first line of defense against earthquakes
* govern the performance of building materials in a fire.
* have very little to do with firefighting operating safety.
- mandates
* provide public safeguards.
* require exit stairwells to provide a good measure of protection in case of fire.
* require structures to be built to minimum standards
- constructed to minimum standards
- that structures be built in certain ways | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | code:
Color code
* are a six digit number for either background or text
- often difficult or impossible for blind and color blind people to understand
- six digit combinations of letters and numbers that correspond to a specific color.
* A 'color code' system for displaying information by using different colors. Color codes are often difficult or impossible for blind and color blind people to understand
Cryptograph
* are devices.
* is code
Fire code
* are a combination of several different laws and regulations.
* focus on preventative measures, early warning signs and means of escape.
* limit the quantity of flammable liquids stored and regulate the type of container used.
* prohibit smoking anywhere inside the house or barn.
Gray code
* generate compositions by changing two coordinates of the vector by one up and one down.
* variation of binary that eliminates much of the problem.<|endoftext|>### written language | code | legal code:
Criminal law
* are laws.
* can provide a very effective way of removing dangerous human beings from society.
* ' is the part of law that is about social norms. People who violate these norms need to be punished for the violation. It is different from civil law. Criminal law wants to protect certain values, such as life and limb, or property.
* considers a crime an act against society rather than an individual.
* consists of the criminal laws themselves and the law of criminal procedure.
* covers the really serious things like violence or stealing.
* deals primarily with crimes committed against the state, i.e. with social crimes
- with disputes among persons or groups
* exists to protect individuals against force or fraud
- people from the misdeeds of others
* includes misdemeanors, felonies and treason.
* involves a citizen or a business and the state.
* is an area in which the precise use of language is particularly important
- analogous to tort law and often provides parallel actions
- characterized by norms and values affirmed by society
- concerned with the allocation of moral blame
- intended to stop crimes or offences from being committed and punish offenders
- legal code
- made up of the criminal laws themselves and the law of criminal procedure
- one area in which the immigration laws can be seen at their most mean-spirited
- primarily concerned with the vindication of public law and order
* is the body of law defining crimes
- great centrepiece of any legal system
- web that binds the criminal justice system together
- used by governments to punish law-breakers
* is, today, mostly statutory.
* permits the performance of an abortion necessary to save a woman's life.
* prohibits certain acts and dictates non-financial forms of punishment.
* relates to crimes against the public including theft, sexual assault and murder.
* sets the acceptable limits of conduct in society.
* wants to protect certain values , such as life and limb , or property.
Matrix code
* are uniformly sized data cells placed on a square field.
* can be more densely packed with data than stacked codes.
Moral code
* are always relative to culture
- fixed ideas
* determines what is right within a society.<|endoftext|>### written language | code:
Morse code
* common example, where combinations of dots and dashes represent letters and numbers.
* employs a series of dots and dashes to represent a character.
* is another way people can talk to eachother
- communications systems
- essentially the binary coding of information
* is the most widely recognized means of signaling in the world
- only code understood by both man and machine
* language of sounds.
* method of sending information as a series of clicks.
* remains the simplest and most efficient way known to send messages via radio.
* translates the letters of the alphabet into a series of short or long beeps.
* works by assigning different letters of the alphabet to different rhythms. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | code:
Object code
* are similar to a software program loaded on a computer to perform a specific task
- the last four digits of the ten digit account code
- computer code
- produced by compiling source code into executable, machine-readable code
- the code that the computer reads
* program in a form suitable for incorporation into an executable program.
Postal code
* Look up postal codes for any address in Canada.
* are six characters long and are a mixture of three letters and three numbers.
* is code
Time code
* generated signal that can be put on the tape in two ways.
* ruler, a measure, a captured clock, time in a bottle.
Visual code
* are the arrangement of visual elements to communicate.
* use signs and symbols to create a particular view of the world.
Voluntary code
* are freely adopted guidelines to encourage desirable modes of behavior.
* can make corporations model citizens.<|endoftext|>### written language | code:
Zip code
* Some zip codes represent more than one contiguous location.
* are fairly large geographic entities.
- part of addresses
* represent postal delivery locations.
+ List of ZIP Code prefixes: United States Postal Service :: United States lists
* ZIP codes are numbered with the first number representing a certain group of U.S. states. The second and third numbers represent a region in that group of states or, in some cases, a large city. The fourth and fifth numbers representing a group of delivery addresses within that region. Other towns are often given ZIP codes in numerical order, usually alphabetically. Often, the biggest city in a prefix is given a zip code ending in 01.
+ ZIP code, Structure and allocation
* ZIP codes are numbered with the first number representing a certain group of U.S. states. The second and third numbers represent a region in that group of states or, in some cases, a large city. The fourth and fifth numbers representing a group of delivery addresses within that region. Other towns are often given ZIP codes in numerical order alphabetically.<|endoftext|>### written language:
Diary
* Diaries are an important chronological presentation of the life of the writer
- improvement of one's memory, an extension of the intellect
- journals
- located in desks
- writing
* Diaries contain a description of daily events
- health information
- describe events as they occur and express the thinking of the authors at the time
- have appointments
- help to understand one's eating habits
* Most diaries contain health information.
* Some diaries become a way for people to understand world events, like wars.<|endoftext|>### written language | diary:
Blog
* are diaries
- the internets newest form of expression and community
- websites
* contain glow recommendations
* cover same subjects
- stories
* can have one or more writers. If they have more than one writer, they are often called community blogs, team blogs, or group blogs
+ Blogger
* A 'blogger' is a person who keeps a blog as a major activity in their life. Blogs are usually free to read, but nevertheless some have made fame and fortune for their writers. Tavi Gevinson's blog is an example. Many politicians and journalists are bloggers, perhaps realising that this is one good way to contact the younger voters. Michelle Malkin's blog is an example of this kind of use. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language:
Document
* Some documents are indices to other documents.
* Usually refers to government documents or publications.
* are also related to non-document objects such as authors, publishers, and archives
- communication
- files created in word processors
* are in printed format, in microform, or in electronic format via the Internet
- the official language of the country of origin
* are information objects
- organized and presented for human understanding
- located in suitcases
- objects that are viewable and navigable with a viewer
- paper
- representations
- sets of related information
* are the DNA of knowledge
- building blocks of complex organizations
- currency of business
- files in which users store the content they create in an application
- means by which information is communicated, captured, managed and controlled
- pages users see when they visit a Web site
- raw material of the legal system
- used for storing information
- where information meets with people and their work
* come in many forms.
* contain examples
- financial information
- instruction
- look statements
- necessary instruction
* describe actions
- treatments
* give instruction
- overviews
* have definition
- different types of relationships among themselves
- extensive information
* imaging saves money by saving time.
* include information
- references
- such information
* is an object
- the programmatic, language-neutral interface that represents a document
* objects store data in memory or on disk.
* play a significant role in business.
* present information
* provide assessments
- basic overviews
- descriptions
- detail information
- details
- further guidance
- historical perspective
* provide more detail information
* tend to evolve as the technology advances.
* tree of elements.
* written in XML have a rich, hierarchical structure, the document tree<|endoftext|>### written language | document:
Ballot
* affect voting behavior.
* are companies
* is papers
* mode of decision still more censurable than sortition.
+ Instant Runoff Voting: Voting systems
* Voters rank the candidates from favorite to least favorite, with only their top choices being counted each time. Ballots are counted, and a series of simulated rounds is conducted. If no candidate has a majority of the votes in any round, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated, and those voter's next choice votes are then counted. This is repeated until a candidate has a majority.
Cash equivalent
* are items that can be converted to cash in a very short time.
* represent short-term investments with original maturities of three months or less.
### written language | document | cash equivalent:
Commercial paper
* cash equivalent
* corporate equivalent of government treasury bills.
* is an unsecured promissory note and is usually issued on a discount basis.
* is debt security
- that typically matures in less than a year
- short-term debt that is issued by corporations
- unsecured loans
* short-term promissory note issued by large corporations.
Certificate
* are digital documents that authenticate individuals or organizations
- official documents
- one of the most secure methods of protecting transactions over the Internet
- similar to many other forms of personal identification
- the equivalent of passports to travel the information highway
* contain important information
- statements
* provide knowledge.
* refer to sites that offer secure transactions online.
### written language | document | certificate:
Birth certificate
* are certificates.
* are legal certificates and are available to two formats
* have a number of important functions.
* legal document describing details of a person's birth.
+ Birth, Legal meanings: Biological reproduction | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | certificate:
Death certificate
* are a matter of public record in California
- legal forms
- public records in most areas
- the principal source of mortality statistics for the United States
- information about how people die
* give the age at death and the name of the informant, usually next of kin.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | certificate:
Digital certificate
* allow Web merchants to secure online communication and transactions
- proof of identity and the right to access information or services online
* are a crucial part of the trust model behind electronic commerce services
- an electronic means of identifying a user
- attachments added to electronic messages to ensure the messages' security
- crucial to Web security
- data files that can be used to identify users
* are electronic credentials that vouch for the identity of a user
- equivalents of a passport or identity card
- files that act like a kind of online passport
- important for many different businesses
- one of the key technologies for getting public key used pervasively
- small files that identify users
- software-based IDs that contain a user's credentials
- the most powerful method for identifying people and systems
* enable banks and online merchants to authenticate a consumer's identity.
* ensure that only the intended recipient can read messages sent.
* is one example of host or user authentication using a form of encryption.
* let users electronically sign and encrypt documents and mail.
* make it possible to trust an entity on the Internet.
* match a person to their signature.
* play a supporting role in Web site security.
* protect information from interception during Internet transmission.
* provide a method of authentication and originality
- practical way to use encryption
- enhanced security for protecting usernames and passwords
- secure identification for web servers as well as for individuals
Government security
* Government securities consist of treasury bonds, treasury notes, and treasury bills.
* is an oxymoron.
Penny stock
* are high risk, low-priced, highly speculative stocks usually issued by new companies
- low-priced stocks that typically start out at less than one dollar per share
- one common product sold in boiler room operations
* contain capital risks.
* is stock.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | certificate:
Probate
* are certificates
- validations
* comes from a Latin term that means to examine or test.
* court procedure through which an estate is passed
- process
- supervised process which is required of many estates after death
* court-supervised process which takes place after a person dies.
* involves a series of court proceedings that supervise the distribution of an estate.
* is the process by which courts verify that wills are valid
- of administering a dead persons estate, utilizing the court system
- used to transfer the property
- supervision of the distribution of a decedent's property by a court of law
- system that developed in England in the Middle Ages to avoid such chaos
* legal process for managing estates of decedents and disabled persons
- that takes place after someone dies
* process which is necessary to pass title from the deceased to successors.
* public record of the final financial affairs of the deceased person.
* refers to the legal procedure for the orderly distribution of property in a person's estate
- process of passing property to one's heirs after one dies
* state law process, controlled by state courts
- procedure while estate taxes are federal
* time consuming process that can often take in excess of one year. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Document imaging
* involves image capture and image processing, as well as storage, and retrieval.
* is the solution to the challenges of a paper driven world.
* key technology that can provide many benefits for courts of all sizes.
* technology of digitizing paper files.<|endoftext|>### written language | document:
Electronic document
* Electronic Documents can free people from the tyranny of paper.
* allow the case file to be searched by computer.
* are a complex array of data types, including audio, video, text and images
- easier to store, organize, and retrieve than their hard copy equivalents
- more permanent than paper documents
* can be image , plain text or formatted documents , such as SGML and forms
- very large
* help keep an organization from experiencing paper explosions.
* provide secure storage, instantaneous access, and ease of distribution. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Law
* Every law facet of the cosmic law which is rooted in the integrality of the universe.
* Many laws affect citizens in their everyday lives
- differentiate between people for reasons relevant to the particular law in question
- prohibit discrimination against homosexuals
* Many laws regulate the coexistence of citizens
- today's workplace
- say that the unborn child living person who has rights
* Most laws deal with concepts
- describe behaviour
- govern behavior
- have symbolic values
- involving human relationships are laws governed by the state
* Most laws protect children
* Some laws also require privately owned companies to have a smoking policy
- define marriages
* Some laws describe motion
- phenomena
- principles of practice that relate to all phases of rehabilitation
- encourage the adoption of disabled children
- even trap women in violent relationships
* Some laws govern energy
- inventions
- mechanical inventions
- medicine
- possessions
- reproduction
* Some laws prohibit handing flyers to people in automobiles
- insurers from asking people directly about their sexual orientation
* Some laws protect animals
- creatures
- girls
- moose
- the public's right to privacy concerning confidential personal information
- trees from being cut down
* Works community campaign by youth that works to make their community a better place.
* abiding citizens can use strong encryption to protect their trade secrets and personal records.
* addresses the legal controls of public authorities and the rights of citizens.
* affect markets and economic development, often in ways that are unforeseen.
* affecting marriage and personal status generally correspond to an individual's religion.
* affects culture.
* also can be a principle of action.
* are a binding customs or practices of a community
- major component of management and ecological control
- an important part of everyday life
* are different in all parts of the world
- every country and they change almost daily
- external restrictions on natural freedom
- generalizations that describe phenomena, whereas theories explain phenomena
- inadequate Sexual harassment is illegal in the United States
- laws by virtue of their form, rather than of their moral or political content
- orders issued by legislatures
- restrictions on individual behavior that insure peace and freedom for the whole society
- rules for good behavior
- society's values and standards that are enforceable in the courts
- statements, such as the law of gravity, that always apply
* are the conditions under which men, naturally independent, united themselves in society
- cornerstones of the legal world
- rules by which all people live
- things that men and women make, and that they can change
* are what constitute a government
- protects society from anarchy
- words agreed upon to mean a particular thing
* associated with skateboarding are trespassing and vandalism.
* based on the idea of risk is laws based on fantasy.
* basic instrument of European integration.
* becomes unstable as individuals seek to realize their true selves and exercise agency.
* begins by setting norms of conduct and concludes by teaching morality and values
- in philosophy
* bring order and predictability to our universe.
* can change the hearts of men
- effect the profitability of goods and services
- symbolize justice, or conceal repression
* central feature of Afro-American history.
* change over time.
* change, technology changes, and demographics change.
* concerning Homosexuality are in the Penal code under the infamous sodomy laws
- the rights of married persons to control their property vary from state to state
* concerns everyone and affects society on a daily basis.
* control the number of fishers that can be trapped.
* creates incentives, and incentives affect behavior.
* define employment.
* description of rightly-ordered relationships.
* does exist at the international level and it is called international law.
* dynamic field of study which is constantly evolving and changing.
* enacted by local, state and national bodies are primary sources of public policy.
* exist in Canada, states of the United States and states in Australia
- all kinds of societies, from the freest to the most totalitarian
* exist to ensure fairness and to defend the rights of all citizens
- guide human conduct
* field that is predicated on precedent.
* focus on protection.
* focuses on behavior that is required by society.
* forbids prostitution by underage people.
- choices
- most of life's everyday details
- the treatment of human employees, and to a lesser degree, chimeras
* governing prison conduct can be barriers to disease prevention
- scooters depend on whether they are motorized or non-motorized
- wills and probate and succession are all state laws
* governs the issuance of service contracts
- movement of planetary bodies, the growth of plants and the habits of animals
* grows out of the life and society of a culture.
* have components
- consequences
- exceptions
- follow important consequences
- limitations
- long life cycles
* help to make sure people have rights and that their rights are taken care of.
* imposes the duty of care for others.
* include versions.
* includes all the rules of society
- statutes and judicial decisions
* influence our lives in many ways and play many roles in society
- property rights, the ability to trade and enforce contracts
* influences the exercise of governmental power in many ways.
* involves the legal and regulatory issues faced in an information security environment
- facing an information security function
* is about conflict, power, and the most deeply held values of a nation.
* is about the logical application of rules and the precise use and interpretation of language
- resolution of conflict, and the resolution of conflict is about communication
* is also a helping profession
- an expression of values and norms
- information that is communicated to the public
* is both a dependent and independent variable in social change
- professional discipline and a social phenomenon
- theoretical and practical discipline
- central to the order of a society after the liberal revolution
- experience developed by reason and applied continually to further experience
- itself the expression of a state of order and rhythm eternally established in the universe
- kind-of a process of solving problems
- made by people
- merely a creation of human beings
- one strategy for social change
- politics
- simply the determination of individual obligation as laid down by a legitimate authority
* is that course of action demanded by the nature and relations of moral beings
- which is clea r and certain, the ultimate basis of every rational action
- where the government tells the people what to do
* is, by definition, the absence of trust
- in a sense, the action arm of social science
- therefore, a profession in which learning never ends
* key instrument in environmental management.
* leads to business administration, politics and law itself.
* librarians in all types of libraries produce newsletters.
* lies at the heart of Western conceptions of the state and public order.
* limit behavior that interferes with the safety, freedom, and property of others.
* made by a judge in deciding cases is called common law
- person are the laws of religion
* model to give meaning to human behavior and natural phenomena.
* natural phenomenon, which ought to be followed.
* permeates all aspects of our lives.
* pervades all aspects of society.
* pervasive influence on almost all aspects of life in the United States.
* play many roles in our society.
* plays a crucial role in articulating and implementing social norms
- role in our understanding of race
* preserves life and provides justice for all according to compassion.
* primary instrument used by society to control and evaluate human behavior.
* profession governed by strict deadlines
- of words
* prohibit damage.
* prohibiting sex or marriage between closely related adults protect the species.
* property of interaction.
* proscribing suicide also proscribe assisted suicide.
* protecting women are lax in many post-communist countries.
* provide general guidelines
* rapidly changing field.
* reflects society and culture.
* regarding importation of methadone vary widely from country to country.
* regulate the sale and advertising of goods.
* regulates liberty
- the conduct of everyone living in a given society
* regulation for our activity, for the frame and behaviour of a democratic society.
* relate to operations.
* relating to economics are crucial to economic growth.
* represents power and authority.
* require agencies
- county circuit courts
- inspections
- urban water agencies
* requiring motorcyclists to wear helmets are in effect in many countries.
* resides in a structured interaction between humans.
* response to information received from the public.
* restricting freedom of expression have no place in a democratic society.
* rests on morality, and morality on religion.
* rule of action.
* rule of conduct enacted by competent authority for the sake of the common good
- laid down by a competent authority for the sake of the common good
* service profession.
* set of rules and sanctions to enforce rules that applies to a society
- designed to help people get along with each other
* sovereign prerogative.
* states that, in the absence of an external force, the momentum of system remains unchanged.
* symbolizes the order, the peace, the rules, the rightness of everything.
* synthesis of form and content, yet it is formal only on the surface.
* system of reasoning based on rules.
* tend to develop separately over time.
* theme that ties together the broad goals of our foreign policy.
* tool to obtain certain ends.
* topic that inflences all our lives.
* touches almost every part of life in the United States and the world.
* very broad and diverse profession.
* way of crystallizing political decisions
- life, and justice part of the life process
- thinking about how human beings interact, and ought to interact, in social settings
+ Republic: Forms of government
* Countries with a king or other monarch and free elections is called a Constitutional monarchy. What makes a republic different, is that the people do not need the permission of a king, or other higher power, to choose leaders and the type of government they want. Laws are made and enforced in the name of the people.
+ Social contract
* A 'social contract' is an agreement between the people of a state and the government of a state. The people agree to follow certain rules made by the government. These rules are usually called laws. Laws help to make sure people have rights and that their rights are taken care of. One kind of social contract is a constitution. A constitution sets limits on the powers of government leaders, police, and other people who have authority.
+ Uluṟu-Kata Tjuṯa National Park, Management: National parks in Australia :: Protected areas of the Northern Territory :: Pitjantjatjara
* It says how to deal with problems, and sets penalties for people who break the rules. Laws also protect traditional designs from being copied.
+ Violence
* Violence' is when someone attacks someone else, often to get them to do something they do not want to do by making them feel pain or fear. Violence can mean anything from one person hitting another to a war between many countries that causes millions of deaths. Different people may see different acts as violent. Laws are created often to control violence. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
American law
* apply in the United States.
* limits the armed forces in law enforcement.
* permits abortion.
* prohibits foreign governments from making campaign contributions.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Antitrust law
* Antitrust Law Describe the primary statutes for protecting consumer credit.
* affects no other profession in the U.S. as much as it affects physicians.
* apply to the activities of physician unions.
* are legislation under which the United States government acted to break up any trust.
* defines certain behaviors as illegal.
* has great impact on California businesses and consumers.
* holds monopolies to a higher standard than ordinary companies.
* prohibit price fixing and other types of explicit cartel or monopoly behavior
- using monopoly power in one market to expand into others
* prohibits companies that have monopolies from tying separate products.
* protect competition.
* regulates the relationship between labor and management.
* seeks to make businesses compete fairly
- maximize market efficiency and to protect consumers
* tool to enforce the claims of any second-rater against any innovator.
* violate property rights, punish success, and harm consumers
- the essence of capitalism and a free society
Aviation law
* covers the regulation of aircraft, locally, nationally, and internationally.
* very narrow subspecialty of law.
Bad law
* are ones that turn good people into criminals.
* scourge on human kind.
Bankruptcy law
* allows companies to operate while they restructure.
* is federal law, making the filing fee for bankruptcy the same in every state
- governed by federal statute and supplants state debtor-creditor law
- very different in the United States than it is in foreign countries
* prohibit discrimination based upon a debtor filing for bankruptcy protection.
* provide a way to divide borrower's assets.
* specify a priority system for collection of the debts of a debtor.
Biblical law
* Many Biblical laws command proper treatment of animals.
* establishes the parameters of economic transactions.
* requires the dowry, a sizeable amount, as the wife's protection against abandonment.
* say some food is tainted.
* stands against a centralized government embodied in an unitary state.
Canadian law
* categorizes firearms by class.
* forbids capital punishment.
* protects both individual rights and the rights of society.
* tries to protect people from hate and protect free speech at the same time.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Case law
* are biblical laws dealing with specific cases
- civil laws
* consists of decisions handed down by the courts as they hear cases.
* defines misconduct as a substantial and intentional disregard of the employer's interests.
* is distinguished from statute law
- studied to understand underlying concepts
- that law as interpreted and set forth by appellate courts or courts of review
* is the collection of published legal decisions of the courts
- law as decided by previous court cases
- principles of law established by judicial decisions rather than by legislation
- used to explain various types of tort liability
* refers to the decisions of courts and administrative bodies.
* result in formation of precedents in law.
Chinese law
* allow accused to be defended by family members.
* requires organized social groups to register with the government
- with the state | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Civil law
* are laws that deal with noncriminal acts in which one individual injures another
* come to the knowledge of subjects by public and explicit promulgation.
* deals more with an individual's rights and responsibilities.
* defines our rights and duties
- relations between persons
* forbids the harassment or libelling or slandering of others.
* govern the smooth operation of a society.
* helps people solve their arguments.
* is Roman-Dutch law while the criminal law is based on English law
- an extrapolation of the structured order of the universe
* is based on legislation that is found in constitutions or statutes passed by government
- the Napoleonic Code, itself based on the older Roman Law concepts
- between private parties only
- divided into two general categories, Contract law and Tort law
- practised in Latin America, in most of Europe and in much of Asia, including Japan
- primarily legislative in origin and is based on statutes or codes
- to encourage the good and punish the evil
- when an individual or corporation sues another individual or corporation
* manifestation of society's moral order.
* regulates the relations of citizens among themselves.
* require at least as much trust in government as criminal law.
* speaks of marriage as a contract.
+ Law, Civil law and common law
* Civil law is based on legislation that is found in constitutions or statutes passed by government. The secondary part of civil law is the legal approaches that are part of custom. In civil law governments, judges do not generally have much power, and most of the laws and legal precedent are created by members of parliament.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law | civil law:
Common law
* adapts as the community and society changes.
* comes from decisions of courts of law.
* gives the state ultimate sovereign right over one's land.
* is based on legal precedent, customs and traditions dating back centuries
- defined by judges
- judge-made law
- scientific law, so instead of being made , it is discovered
- what has evolved as judges decide cases, one by one, over hundreds of years
* permits a parent to contract for a child.
* regards suicide as an offense against the temporal sovereign.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law | civil law:
Legislation
* collection of written principles which guide behaviour in society.
* generic word also covering both statutes and delegated legislation.
* governing the practice of nursing exists in every state.
* is also generally governs administrative processes and procedures.
* is an important component of injury prevention
- unnecessary burden on banks and financial institutions
- civil laws
- only one mode of governance
* is the art of compromise
- enactment of new laws
- genetic code of society
- legal fetish of the age
- primary source of law as opposed to case law or jurisprudence
- process of making laws
- source of all agency power
### written language | document | law | civil law | legislation:
Criminalization
* allows for the printing of money by organized crime interests.
* are legislation.
* is legislation
- the domestic face of imperialism
Decriminalization
* increases drug use.
* is legislation
* is the opposite of legalization
- way to go
Environmental legislation
* Some environmental legislation relates specifically to the electricity industry.
* impacts on every type of company or public body.
* takes different forms in different countries.
European legislation
* bans the landfilling of durable goods.
* is usually in the form of directives or regulations. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law | civil law | legislation:
Federal legislation
* applies to employees of the federal government and federal corporations.
* governs how colleges and universities supervise student records.
* is the only mechanism which can create uniformity amongst the states.
* prevents guns from moving between jurisdictions with different laws.
* prohibits the unlawful possession, use or distribution of alcohol.
* protects right to practice forestry.
Commercial law
* focuses on intra-state transactions.
* involves a process of balance between various conflicting goals.
* is based on English law
- the primary business of much of general civil practice
Company law
* allows large companies to own property just like the individual.
* is an important part of the framework within which companies operate
- based on British law
Comparative law
* deals with the study of different national legal systems.
* is the comparison of legal systems.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Conservation law
* are a set of rules that forbid all such non-occurring decays
- intrinsically related to the invariance of a physical system
- the most fundamental laws in physics
- very important tools in solving mechanics problems
* require that the polarizations of the two particles be exactly correlated.
+ Conservation law, Purpose: Basic physics ideas
* Conservation laws are helpful for people when they do problems in Physics. This is because if they know that a thing is conserved, it gives them more mathematical information about the thing they are doing the problem about
- Types of Conservation laws
* Conservation laws can come in two types, global, or local<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Constitution
* All constitutions give access to power to a certain group or class.
* Many constitutions have a general equality and equal protection clause.
* Most constitutions predate the automobile.
* Some constitutions are thin, quick and warm, while others are slow, cold and flabby
- make ratified international treaties and covenants part of national law
* are about shared public values supporting a political process
- beginnings
- determined and guided by the political culture that is in force in society
- economic documents as well as political documents
- properties
* are, after all, only words written on paper
- by necessity, written documents
* contain many of the laws of our country.
* define the distribution of power.
* is also the name of the instrument containing the fundamental laws of the state.
* is the contrivance of man, while government is of divine ordination
- internal document that records promises between the union and the members
- supreme law of the United States
- world's oldest commissioned warship afloat
* literature of prohibitions.
* never give the government the power to legislate over the people.
* provide the basic legal structures and assumptions for tribal governments.
* reflect the ideologies of a particular country.
* regulate and sanctify fundamental policy choices.
* represent theoretical expressions of a polity s practical political life.
* serve different purposes in different governments.
### written language | document | law | constitution:
Indian constitution
* is the longest of all constitutions in the world.
+ Indian independence movement, India's independence (1947 to 1950)
* In this partition many people died and got separated from their families. On midnight of 14th August 1947, India became an independent country, and still is today. On 26th January 1950, India adopted the constitution. Indian constitution is the longest of all constitutions in the world. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law | constitution:
State constitution
* Many state constitutions make the public schools a responsibility of the state or local government.
* Most state constitutions are a mirrored version of the U.S. Constitution.
* do much more than simply set forth the outlines of the state government.
* guarantee all children the right to a free public education.
* vary greatly in their treatment of administrative agencies.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Contract law
* applies when a college guarantees certain rights to students when they register.
* are jurisprudence.
* can be a mechanism for agreeing on and enforcing privacy policies.
* defines consideration as an exchange of some benefit or some value.
* governs much of what happens to intellectual property.
* is covered partly by the common law and partly by statutes
- usually state law rather than federal law
* prevents opportunism in exchanges involving the passage of time.
* protects justifiable expectations and the security of transactions.
* recognizes the equality of bargaining power between individuals.
* seeks to protect rights created between parties by their mutual agreement.
* sets rules on agreements to buy and sell items and services.
+ Law, Types of law
Corporate law
* establishes a structure under which all corporations operate.
* has important intersections with contract and commercial transactions law.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Current law
* considers corporations as legal persons.
* defines cultures and stocks as laboratory wastes infectious to humans.
* imposes sanctions on foreign countries for the detonation of nuclear devices.
* limits optometrists to the use of topical pharmaceutical agents.
* makes it unlawful for people to marry or have sexual relations with their relatives.
* refers to a list of all taxable property.
* requires the use of physical force for someone to be charged with rape.
* states that a person is charged with involuntary manslaughter.
Customary law
* are also sources of law.
* differs from formal law in a number of ways, including the fact that it is unwritten.
* has a role to play as a management constraint.
* is essentially the law of civilized nations
- from unwritten tribal practices
- necessary in remote communities as it provides swift and effective punishment
* tends to be insensitive to gender equity.
Discrimination law
* concern the gay and lesbian communities.
* is concerned with the motivation behind an action.
Divine law
* are laws.
* is higher than the laws of men.
* requires the couple to stay together until death, even if they have no children.
Elder law
* encompasses all aspects of planning for aging, illness, and incapacity
- many different fields of law
* have components.
* is also concerned with protecting working seniors
- that area of legal issues which concern older adults
Employment law
* complex area of law.
* encompasses a wide range of issues and concerns in the workplace.
* is one of the fastest-developing areas of law
- the law which governs the relationship between employer and employees
* provide rudimentary health and safety standards for the workplace.
English law
* allows most contracts, except for the sale of land, to be made orally.
* is derived from English common law with a heavy influence of medieval Germanic sources.
* requires people who marry in the country to establish residency. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Environmental law
* Many environmental laws provide for both criminal and civil penalties.
* affect virtually everything people in the United States do.
* apply to many activities that businesses carry out.
* are a community's safeguard that toxic chemicals are managed safely
- framed in terms of species
* encompasses every aspect of the practical application of environmental policy.
* give power to the people.
* graduate-level subject, that is studied in law school.
* is an area where there has been tremendous growth
- based on national as well as international law
- concerned with our natural heritage and our cultural heritage
- one of the fastest growing disciplines in law schools today
* limit the freedom of use as well.
* protect the environment, which in turn protects people.
* requires a reduction in hazardous material usage and hazardous waste generation.
* runs parallel to biopolitics.
European law
* is applied with a reservation in respect of human rights.
* prevent companies from sharing data without permission from the customer.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Family law
* body of law that changes frequently.
* deprives mothers of financial equality in marriage.
* dictates whom one can marry and sets forth minimum ages for marriage.
* field that traditional legal lexicography has somewhat ignored over the years.
* gives women inferior status in property, inheritance rights, and divorce
- inheritance, and divorce rights
* is an area of joint federal provincial-territorial responsibility
- another highly specialized branch of business valuation
- for individual member states to decide
- important for women as it regulates divorce, custody, and financial settlements
- the name given to a variety of situations, including the following
* socio-legal course.
Finnish law
* allows police to confiscate material they believe has been stolen.
* part of the Scandinavian legal family.
French law
* applies in France.
* prevents the sale of objects with racist overtones.
* prohibits the sale or display of objects that incite racial hatred
- exhibition of objects associated with racism
* requires that a corpse be either buried or cremated
- all vehicle occupants wear seat belts
German law
* defines a slave laborer as someone forced to work in a concentration camp or ghetto.
* impose strict regulations on the treatment of personal data.
* requires women to attend counseling before having an abortion.
Gun law
* are different in every state.
* don t stop crime because criminals ignore gun laws.
* promote crime and violence.
* punish honest citizens.
Haitian law
* prohibits cultivation, production, distribution, sale, and possession of narcotics.
* requires a passport to enter the country.
Health law
* burgeoning area of study, practice, litigation, and research.
* encompasses the operation and regulation of health care institutions and professionals.
Indian law
* bans abortions of female fetuses.
* uses emotions and feelings but rationalist thought rejects it. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
International law
* All international law is part of the law of the United States.
* allows the death penalty.
* are laws.
* continues to evolve today.
* defines the levels of appropriate compensation.
* exist for the conduct of games.
* exists and universally recognized norms of conduct exist.
* forbids direct attacks on civilians and civilian targets.
* forbids the confiscation of land by an occupying power
- targeting of civilians in wartime
* gives democratic society the means to defend itself against barbarism.
* governs interaction among nations
- relations among international actors in both public and private spheres
- two or more nations
* grants commercial fisherman the right to have freedom of the high seas.
* guarantees the right to bring grievances before the international body.
* impose upon the nations certain duties with respect to individuals.
* imposes numerous restrictions on the death penalty.
* increase the potential of impacting fish and aquatic resources.
* is also increasingly applicable to individuals in their relations with states
- always in the process of development
* is an important weapon in the fight against women's violence
- integral part of United States law
- composed of the rules and norms which regulate state conduct
- more than a group of vague concepts or general principles
- ultimately the governing law in the Middle East, as everywhere in the world
* operates automatically, as such, within the national legal system.
* prohibit dumping trash at sea.
* prohibits attacks on civilians
- capital punishment for offenses committed below the age of eighteen
- executing the mentally impaired
* prohibits the forced return of refugees to a country where they fear persecution
- return of any person to a country where there is any such risk
- use of starvation as a weapon even in times of war
* protects children's rights to childhood
- the right of all individuals to flee in such situations
* recognizes that every state has a legitimate right to expropriation.
* regards private ownership as sacrosanct.
* relates to agreements between nations.
* requires combatants to wear uniforms.
+ Naval mine: Explosives
* International law says that nations have to say when they put mines in an area. This is to make it easier for civil shipping to avoid the mines.
### written language | document | law | international law:
Maritime law
* are international laws.
* is among the oldest branches of law
- an international law
- the fundamental conceptual basis of international space law
Irish law
* is the oldest, most original, and most extensive of mediaeval European legal systems.
* requires children between the ages of six and fifteen to go to school. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Islamic law
* Some Islamic laws governing women's lives are discriminatory.
* aims for a happy marriage and so allowances have been made for known human tendencies.
* allows men to have up to four wives
- the marriage of girls as soon as they can conceive
* decrees punishment by amputation, public stoning and execution.
* encourages men to have more than one wife.
* favors mediation to justice rendered by a judge.
* governs the Muslim community.
* is affirmed as rational law
- controlled, ruled and regulated by the Islamic religion
- followed in affairs involving human relations
- probably the most widely practiced theocratic legal system
- supposed to serve the Muslim society
* is the basis of the constitution and there is no freedom of religion
- law of justice
- very strict regarding the necessity of having the woman's consent for marriage
- well-defined through a tradition of jurisprudence
* makes no distinction between children and parents.
* permits polygamy, and many chiefs and village heads have more than one wife.
* prohibits investing money in alcohol, tobacco, gambling and pork producers.
* requires men and women to be separated in the prayer hall
- strict food preparation standards
- the consent of both the parties before marriage
- women to be completely covered except for their hands and eyes
+ Mosque, Rules and behaviour in mosques, Men and women pray in different parts
* Islamic law requires men and women to be separated in the prayer hall. Ideally, women should pray behind men. Muhammad said, women should pray at home, not at the mosque. Muhammad thought women should not be forbidden in mosques. The second caliph Umar at one time stopped women from attending mosques, especially at night, because he feared they may be teased by males, so he made them to pray at home.
Japanese law
* forbids the extradition of Japanese nationals.
* holds that a husbands absence constitutes divorce.
* is based on the postwar constitution.
* prohibit mangas from showing hardcore pictures - explicit drawings.
* prohibits religious organizations from owning for-profit businesses.
* recognise divorce, granted on mutual consent, on a form signed by both parties.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Jewish law
* focuses entirely on natural relationships to establish parental rights and duties.
* forbids euthanasia in all forms, and is considered an act of homicide
- smoking on the day of rest
* holds that abortion is murder, plain and simple.
* is built on the concept of mitzvah, or obligation
- far closer to British common law than to ancient Roman law
* mandates abortion in certain cases, like saving the life of the mother.
* prohibits infanticide, human sacrifice, and killing for sport
- the mixing of two kinds of anything
* recognizes divorce, made official by a document called a Get
- that the woman who gestates and gives birth to a child is the child's mother
* requires burial in the earth
- male children be circumcised on the eighth day following birth
- that the entire body of a person be returned to the earth
* stipulates that almost all commandments can be violated to save human life.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Labor law
* applies to employees.
* determines the rights and obligations which arise out of an employment contract.
* give workers the freedom to choose where they want to work without undue pressure.
* governs the relations between employers and unions.
* provide for equal rates of pay for equal work for men and women in the public sector.
* requires unions to negotiate and enforce contracts for members and non-members alike.
* restrict the right of contingent workers to form unions and bargain collectively.
* vary greatly between countries, as do the local systems of enforcement. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Labour law
* are foundational to national governance.
* limit all under-aged performers' working days.
* prohibit employers from retaliating against workers who attempt to unionise.
* provide for conciliation and arbitration of industrial disputes.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Law enforcement
* Law Enforcement can use records to address the safety of a situation.
* can also be the work of soldiers in emergencies
- verify records to help stop identity theft
- work with owners to improve security and design their spaces to reduce risk
* comes in many different shapes and sizes.
* constitutes another problem male street prostitutes have to face on a daily basis.
* culture, like any other.
* depends upon the attitude of the people as a whole.
* family tradition.
* fast-paced, physically rigorous and mentally demanding profession.
* has a much weaker effect on preventing accidents than did safety course
- right and a duty to track criminals, that is their function
- role in guidance, training, and even certification
- unique needs when it comes to warning the public of emergency situations
* includes sheriffs, police, and state agencies.
* is about values.
* is an increasing target of gang violence
- increasingly global and intelligence-driven activity
- ineffective method of controlling cannabis use
- another area in which foreign language skills can be crucial
- chiefly a local governmental function in our State
- dangerous work
- enforcement
- of the opinion that someone is dragging their feet
* is one of the fastest growing public sector expenditures
- key variables determining elephant distribution
- major components of the criminal justice system
- step in countering domestic violence
- only the part that steps in when all else fails
- primarily interested in tracing contacts
* is the business of local police agencies
- responsibility of government
- rule of the day
* job that inspires a lot of popular fiction.
* legitimate obligation of government, perhaps the ONLY legitimate duty.
* makes no official distinction between younger people and the elderly.
* means causing a law or rule to be obeyed.
* necessity in any society.
* partnership of officers and the citizens.
* profession with professional requirements.
* protects property.
* ranks among the lowest-paid, most overworked and dangerous professions.
* remains the first and most effective tool of professional wildlife management.
* rewarding and fulfilling career.
* specializes in police activities including effective patrol services to the public.
Local law
* apply to the theft of pets.
* bans nudity.
* prohibit acquiring or keeping such animals as pets
- viewing pornography in public places, such as the library
* require drivers and passengers to wear seat belts and motorcyclists to wear helmets.
Marriage law
* allow for the understanding of the married couple as full adults in our culture.
* are the oldest laws in existence.
* is according to many legal systems a part of 'family law'.
Martial law
* are laws.
* is declared in Hawaii
- military law
- the prerogative of the president
+ Court-martial: Trials :: Military
* Martial law is military law. It can mean the law the armed forces are subject to, or to a time of emergency, such as wartime, when the military are give extra powers over civilians.
Media law
* affects the way information can be obtained and presented in many different ways.
* applies equally to all media of communication.
* is about the relationship between the government and the media industry.
* landscape of shifting sands and moving targets. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Mexican law
* allows foreigners to own real estate.
* bans foreign involvement in domestic politics.
* prohibits foreigners getting involved in domestic politics.
* recognizes and incorporates the legal systems of the indigenous populations.
* states that beaches are public property.
* treats all traffic accidents as both a civil and criminal offense.
Modern law
* combines libel and slander into the generic tort of defamation.
* recognizes the autonomy of the person and one's ability to own property.
Municipal law
* is embodied in constitutions, statutes, regulations, and court decisions.
* rule of conduct prescribed by the supreme power in a state.
Muslim law
* forbids alcohol, but most hotel bars and restaurants serve alcohol.
* requires all women to wear baggy clothes and keep their hair covered.
National law
* Most national laws provide for some level of less protection of minors.
* apply to the Internet and other global networks.
Nigerian law
* forces no one to be circumcised.
* prohibits religious discrimination.
Norwegian law
* allows police to impose fines which can then be paid or disputed in court.
* forbid any driving under the influence of alcohol.
* requires everyone to wear full-body wet suits.
Obscenity law
* are also woman-hating in their construction.
* vary from state to state, and often, from community to community.
Patent law
* allows for patents on processes.
* are jurisprudence.
* business tool for increasing market share and profitability.
* covers machines and processes
- specific and well-delineated ideas for physical objects
* defines the space where science and law intersect.
* highly specialized area of legal practice.
* is the ONLY specialized branch of law.
* protects inventions that are novel, useful, and unobvious.
Philippine law
* prohibits cousin marriages.
* regarding paedophile activity are severe, and are strictly enforced.
Physical law
* Most physical laws describe behavior.
* Some physical laws govern inventions
- mechanical inventions
* are there to explain experiences.
* demands that any earthly structure be built from the ground up.
* dictate a star's structure and composition.
* equate observables of one kind to others.
* is the law of the material universe.
Power law
* are specific in the sense that they can exhibit extremely long or heavy tails
- the statistical counterpart of punctuated equilibrium
* describes how something expands and loses energy.
* predominate in the mathematics of turbulence.
Privacy law
* define appropriate or inappropriate information disclosures or releases.
* exist at both the state and federal levels.
* protect the living.
Private law
* are acts passed which affect one person or entity.
* governs the legal relationships between citizens.
* regulates the relationships between persons. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Prohibition
* are actions
- refusals
- time periods
* can increase the number criminals in society.
* causes crime and violence to increase.
* contributes to the spread of heroin addiction.
* has the effect of demonising heroin and dehumanising heroin users.
* increases crime, reduces self-responsibility and increases governmental power.
* is repressive of religious rights
- responsible for the ease that children have getting illegal drugs
- the fundamental principle of drug policies
+ Combat stress reaction, History: Conflicts :: Mental illnesses
* Sigmund Freud studied the effects of war neurosis. His concluded that under ideal conditions the tension between impulses and prohibitions are kept at a minimum. Life experiences create impulses or reflexes, and these impulses create drive. Prohibitions are developed over time and come from parents or other adults. Traumatic stress can cause powerful impulses that a person can no longer repress. For combat situations this could cause service-members to flee, or to blindly attack. The attempt to repress these impulses eventually leads to the psychoneurosis symptoms and even loss of physical functions. Charles R. Figley and William P. Nash. Dec. 4th 2006.
### written language | document | law | prohibition:
Interdiction
* increases the production and consumption of drugs.
* is the key to stopping drugs from crossing our borders and reaching our neighborhoods.
Property law
* governs liability for different classes of uninvited persons on private property.
* regulates the relationship between members of society and things.
Public law
* are laws which pertain to the general public or classes of citizens
* determine the legal use of substances.
* dominates in government-controlled societies.
* focuses on criminal, administrative, constitutional and international issues.
* protects consumers by prescribing suppliers' conduct.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Religious law
* Some religious laws forbid female landownership
- ownership of land
* is law based on religious beliefs or books.
* square peg that doesn t fit well in the round hole of American law.
+ Law, Religious law
* Religious law is law based on religious beliefs or books. Examples include the Jewish Halakha, Islamic Sharia, and Christian Canon law. Until the 1700s, Sharia law was the main legal system throughout the Muslim world. In some Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia and Iran, the whole legal systems still base their law on Sharia law. Islamic law is often criticised because it often has very harsh penalties for very minor crimes, and often results in the mistreatment of women and minorities.
Roman law
* develops as one of the unique contributions to western civilization.
* is still the law of the land in continental Europe.
* replaces Celtic customs in Gaul.
Romanian law
* forbids persons with a criminal record from running for the presidential office.
* governs the Employment Contract of a foreign citizen in Romania.
Russian law
* allows foreign nationals to adopt Russian orphans
- republics, where gold is mined, to hold some stocks, too
* defines organized crime differently than most other countries in the world.
* prohibits a person who has a passport from a foreign country to hold public office
- foreigners from establishing media outlets
* provides for a minimum wage, which is revised regularly to take account of inflation.
Saudi law
* forbid the importation of firearms.
* makes marriages with foreigners difficult, although less so for men than women.
* permit convictions based upon uncorroborated confessions. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Scientific law
* are constant and absolute
- descriptions of the ways that matter and energy behave
- descriptive generalizations having predictive value
* are the evidence used to support a conclusion
- same everywhere
- universal
- used to describe natural events or relationships
* describe things.
* form the core of scientific knowledge.
* grace given to Christian men.
* includes old common law.
Securities law
* apply to any offer or sale of a security.
* are laws.
* governs the raising of capital for business purposes.
* impact individuals and companies in different ways.
* is governed under both federal and state law
- the body of law that regulates the sale of company shares to the public
* prohibit stockbrokers from making false or misleading statements.
Several law
* govern accessibility of websites.
* help protect the environment from damage by human activities. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
State law
* Many state laws prohibit employment discrimination
- recognize that when someone is drunk, they are unable to give consent
* Most State laws distinguish between sexual abuse and sexual assault.
* Most state laws ban the disclosure of mental patients' records in order to protect their privacy
- of mental patients' records to protect their privacy
- protect the confidentiality of communication between patients and physicians
- provide for capital punishment, usually by hanging
* Most state laws require children to be immunized against certain diseases
- that both birth parents give consent before their child can be adopted
* Some state laws guarantee the right of all workers to see their work records
- prohibit the moving of house plants
* affect wills, trusts and charitable gifts made in contractual agreement.
* allows corporal punishment in public school
- gay couples to serve as foster or adoptive parents
- people to care for up to two unrelated children without state permission
- radio waves to register six volts per meter
* applies in a patent context when the licensing of a patent is involved
- to issues concerning the validity, revocability and enforceability of contracts
* are in a constant state of flux.
* ban cockfighting in every state except Louisiana, Oklahoma and New Mexico.
* classifies amphetamines and methamphetamines as stimulants.
* controls distribution of both real and personal property.
* dealing with domestic relations vary widely and change frequently.
* define a wide variety of items as litter.
* defines a liquidation as the selling off of existing inventory
- relative as a spouse or the parent of a minor
- an assault as a physical injury or a serious physical injury
- sexual contact as intentional touching of sexual or intimate parts
* determine when in an individual's life compulsory schooling begins and ends, for example.
* determines the laws governing the operation of a homeowners' association
- who the heirs are and how much they receive
* do affect records management.
* establishes the borders of school districts to coincide with town boundaries
- right of certain citizens to carry concealed weapons
* exist which regulate subdivision and land use.
* fix the ages at which young people are considered minors.
* forbids mistreatment of farm animals
- smoking in bathrooms, corridors, elevators, and stairways
- the possession of alcoholic beverages as a minor
* govern hunting
- marriage
- the election of municipal officers at general state elections
- what rights a landowner has regarding archeological remains on private property
- wills, trusts, and charitable gifts made in a contractual agreement
* governing corporations vary from state to state.
* governs procedures relating to the suspension of pupils
- the release of agency records, documents, and other information
- wills, trusts and charitable gift in a contractual agreement
* guarantee investors the right to inspect and copy corporate records.
* help protect shareholders and creditors of dissolving companies.
* includes the constitution, laws, regulations and judicial decisions of any state.
* make carrying guns around a school illegal and punishable.
* makes parents legally responsible for any abuse of public property by their children.
* mandates that all dogs, cats and ferrets be regularly inoculated against rabies.
* outlines the powers and duties of local boards of health.
* permits notaries to administer oaths and affirmations of office.
* prohibit harassing wildlife
- people from owning wild animals such as raccoons
- the use of live lures
- yard waste from being mixed with regular household waste
* prohibits alcoholic beverages
- convicted felons from possessing guns
- donors from giving money to political causes in the name of another person
- gambling and the use or possession of illegal drugs
- possession or use of fireworks
- possession, use or sale of alcoholic beverages or illegal drugs
* prohibits smoking in public areas
- buildings
- on trains or in stations
* prohibits the importation and possession of snakes and other illegal animals
- keeping of any of our native wildlife as pets
* prohibits the sale of bodies or body parts
- tobacco products to minors
- unlawful possession of controlled dangerous substances and paraphernalia
* protect bobcats in many areas.
* regarding carrying concealed firearms vary widely.
* regulate mortgage brokers
- what kinds of work youth can do and the hours they can work
* require agencies
- an unmarried mother to sign a document declaring the paternity of the child
- motorists to drive with dimmed headlights when the windshield wipers are in use
- rabies vaccinations for all dogs
- that vehicle owners have automobile insurance
- urban water agencies
* requires all dogs and cats four months and older to have current rabies vaccinations
- three months of age or older to be vaccinated against rabies
- over the age of four months to be vaccinated against rabies
- parents to support their children
- businesses to list all hazardous substances on chemical inventories
- children riding bicycles in public to wear helmets for protection
- condoms to be worn in all sexual activities in legal brothels
- dogs be vaccinated against rabies
* requires every citizen to control the spread of noxious weeds on their land
- dog or cat to be vaccinated at four months of age and annually thereafter
- parents to send their children to school unless otherwise provided by law
- people in the front seat of a car or truck to wear their seat belts
- pets to be vaccinated against rabies
* requires that a helmet be worn when riding a moped or motorcycle
- all cats be vaccinated against rabies
* requires that all dogs and cats over four months of age receive rabies shots
- be inoculated against rabies
- over four months of age be licensed and vaccinated against rabies
- animals be spayed or neutered before they re adopted
- bodies be positively identified through a scientific process
- the use of bicycle helmets
- vaccinations of dogs and cats for rabies
* says abuse is hurting or harming a person who is receiving services.
* sets forth the form of the oath of office for most public officials.
* vary about grandparents' custody and visitation rights
- considerably in how they set prices, which trade practices they regulate, and so on
- on the subject of sperm donors' rights and responsibilities
- significantly regarding the employment of midwives
- widely with respect to interstate shipment of alcohol beverages
- widely, and few federal statutes address workplace privacy | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | law:
Statutory law
* appears in state and federal codes.
* are laws.
* is law enacted by the legislature and embodied in the statutes
- passed by legislatures
- recorded in books called laws, statutes or codes
- republished in a federal or state compilation of laws and codes
* refers to laws or acts or statutes passed by the California legislature
- that have been passed by a legislative body
Substantive law
* includes contract law , tort law , and so on
- and tort law and so on
* is contrasted with procedural law.
Swedish law
* allows a person who unwittingly buys a stolen car to keep it.
* prohibits the use for breeding of dogs with any congenital heart disease.
Tax law
* defines the gross estate and the taxable estate of the decedent.
* is divided into both federal tax and state tax
- one of the most complicated subjects in the legal world
- written law
* make it difficult for foundations to grant money to individuals.
* tends to change over time.
* vary widely among nations, as do national pension and health care programs.
* work against employment and have adverse ecological outcomes.
Thai law
* relating to family and inheritance matters is based upon codified traditional Thai laws.
* requires car drivers and front passengers to wear seat belts
- foreigners to carry passports at all times<|endoftext|>### written language | document | law:
Tort law
* aims at compensating people for damage resulting from a breach of a duty of care.
* applies when one person is wrongfully and involuntarily harmed by another.
* apportions the cost of harm.
* comes into affect when there are serious breaches of public trust.
* covers the general scope of injury law.
* deter corporate wrongdoing.
* enforces duties independent of promises.
* fills a gap in property law and contract law created by high transactions costs.
* governs intentional and negligent conduct between people.
* imposes a general duty to avoid causing others foreseeable economic harm.
* is based on the use of force
- the area of law that defines the rights of citizens with respect to one another
Traffic law
* apply to bicycles
- people riding bicycles so obey all signs, signals and pavement markings
- persons operating motorcycles
* apply to persons riding animals or driving animal-drawn vehicles
- bicycles or skating or gliding on in-line skates
* help road users predict each other's actions.
Tunisian law
* permits the export of foreign currency declared when entering Tunisia
- prosecution of citizens for their conduct outside the country
* prohibits parties based on religion, race, language or region.
* prohibits the existence of any political party based on race, religion, or language
- export or import of Tunisian bank notes or coins
Universal law
* are of several types
- the same for all beliefs, all religions, all cultures, and they never change
* concerns the balance which transcends logic or rationality.
* embodies the spirit of sacrifice and service towards others.
* operates much like other natural and governmental laws on Earth.
Letter of credit
* Letters of credit are the aging ladies of trade
- have many uses in shifting credit risk and providing liquidity
* Letters of credit is credit
- documents
License
* are a way to maximize the economic value of an invention.
* is an instrument
- authorization
- credentials
- legal documents
- liberty
- permission
* requires tests.
Pardon
* are legislated acts of mercy
- warrants
* is an action
* marking religious and national events are common in Muslim countries.
### written language | document | pardon:
Condonation
* are forgiveness.
* bar to a sentence of divorce.
* is someone's approval of another's activities.
* potential defense to a divorce complaint that alleges marital misconduct. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Patent
* allow inventors to exclude others from making, using, or selling the invention.
* also promote the dissemination of information.
* are a form of intellectual property
- personal property
- regulation
- long-established means of encouraging innovation
- social contract between inventors and society, meant to benefit society as a whole
- an attempt to prevent dominant players from controlling markets permanently
- concerned with how something is done
- documents granting ownership rights to some previously unpantented property
- first-title deeds transferring land from the government to private individuals
- generally the most relevant form of intellectual property to research scientists
- important as an incentive for the private producers of knowledge
* are legal documents granting ownership rights to an invention
- rights to invention
- protecting the rights of inventors
- means to protect inventions
- part of a whole process of creating value
- personal property within the broader category referred to as intellectual property
* are products of federal statute, with roots in the Constitution
- the legal system
* are the equivalent of copyrights for physical machines
- friends of both inventors and the public
- incentive businesses have to invest lots of money in research and development
- initial transfer of land from government to private hands
* are the most common form of intellectual property
- important form of publication for industrial research
- to protect ownership of processes or technologies
* attempt to promote commercial risk, while assuring the benefit of another's work to society.
* can stifle creativity and scientific research.
* cover methods.
* describe the boundaries of inventions as deeds describe the boundaries of real property.
* generally cover inventions, meaning technology.
* give companies the right to determine who gets access to genes and at what price.
* govern use.
* have the purpose of protecting one's inventions.
* is papers
- the right to make, use or sell a particular application of an idea
* measure the creativity and technical innovation of an organization.
* medical term that means open.
* protect content and copyrights protect form.
* protect ideas which can be physically expressed in a machine, design, or process
- have been reduced to practice
- inventions - whether part of a product, or a complete product
* protect inventions and improvements to existing inventions
- ornamental designs
- inventions, methods or processes that are unique, non-obvious and new
- technological inventions
* protect the rights of individuals who make discoveries or inventions
- inventors to their inventions
- useful processes, machines, and compositions of matter
* provide the right to exclude others from making, using and selling an invention.
* relate to applications.
* traditionally protect utilitarian items such as machinery or other kinds of hardware.
* usually refer to products or processes that contain new functional or technical aspects.
+ Patent, Parts of a patent: Intellectual property law :: Technology
* Patents are usually very long. They include a number of smaller parts. A patent usually includes a section that briefly describes the idea called the abstract.
### written language | document | patent:
Design patent
* apply to the aesthetic or ornamental appearance of products.
* cover the ornamental appearance of articles of manufacture or machines.
* refer to any new ornamental design for an item.
Plant patent
* are the only legal means of protecting a proprietary plant.
* cover newly invented, discovered, or asexually reproduced plants.
* protect asexually reproducible plants
- new varieties of asexually reproducing plants
- plants reproduced by methods other than seeds | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Questionnaire
* are documents
- forms
- survey instruments designed to collect the opinions of a specific audience
* cover information.
* provide insight. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Resolution
* Indicates the number of dots that make up an image on a screen or printer.
* Refers to crisp, distinct images
- how many locations represent the waveform at each given sample
- the physical information space of a given output device
* Web content management systemf or Internet, intranet and extranet sites.
* are votes that express lawmakers' intent.
* broad process, moving through many states of consciousness.
* bunch of dots that are assigned or mapped to a given space.
* can also refer to the number of bits per pixel.
* decision procedure for propositional modal logics.
* defines the distance at which objects can be seen and identified.
* determines the amount of ink used to create a single dot.
* function of the thickness of the slice illuminated by the X-ray beam.
* has a major effect on the number of bytes generated when scanning.
* is an important instrument characteristic in astronomy
- indication of digital image quality, which is determined by the number of pixels
- another term for the sharpness of an image
- breakdowns
- controlled by wavelength of the propagating electromagnetic wave in the ground
- decisions
- determination
- expressed as the size of a pixel in terrain coverage
* is expressed in pixels
- terms of the number of pixels displayed horizontally and vertically
- harmony
- key Resolution is the number of dots per inch that make up a picture
- mainly a function of the wavelength of the source with which objects are radiated
* is measured by the number of dots per line
- in dots per inch
* is measured in pixels and dots - the more pixels, the sharper the image
- or dots
- which are simply colour dots that make up the picture
- noted as the horizontal pixels by the number of lines vertically
- only one measure of an image's quality
- papers
- physical phenomenons
- policy
- remission
- sharpness, which is the size of the file
- simply the number of pixels per inch
* is the ability of a binocular to distinguish fine detail
- camera, monitor, or system, to represent fine detail
- detector to differentiate between two objects
- lens to distinguish between small objects
* is the ability to distinguish between two closely spaced points
- two closely-spaced points
- two things that are close together
- multiple targets
- two points of light as separate and distinct
- make out detail and is determined by how big across the telescope is
- see fine detail
- separate objects very close together
- amount of information an image contains
- degree of detail that is retained in the magnified image
- difference in intensity between a channel and the two adjacent ones
- end of a conflict by the victory of one side or the other
- extent to which a machine can differentiate between objects
- limit up to which two small objects are still seen separately
- mechanism by which a computer on the Internet can discover what a name refers to
- number by which a camera's clarity is commonly measured
* is the number of colored dots used to make up a picture
- dots per inch available from the scanner
* is the number of pixels displayed on screen in vertical and horizontal direction
- or dots that make up the screen
* is the number of pixels used to display the interface expressed as width times height
- to represent the desired object
- units available to represent graphic detail in an image
- overall sharpness, usually measured at the center of the field
- phase that follows sexual arousal and orgasm
- separation of protein bands relative to their band widths
* is the size of the slice time can be divided into
- smallest contrasting object pairs that can be sharply distinguished
* is the smallest change that can be distinguished by a measurement instrument
- detectable change in distance
- measurable change that can be detected
- move that can be made by a positioner
- reliable measurement that a system can make
- standard measure of scanner quality
- term used to describe the quality of the picture produced by the digital camera
- true optical resolution of the scanner
- where most people make mistakes when scanning
* means the number of dots per inch
- latitude or longitude lines for a complete superquadric
* measure of how sharp an image is or the amount of detail included in the file
- the smallest object that can be seen in an image
* measurement of clarity or detail
- how many pixels can fit on a screen
* measurement of the imaging system's ability to reproduce object detail
- smallest detail that can be distinguished between two points
* measures the amount of detail that can be seen in an image
- cameras ability to reproduce an image
* plays a large part in the ability of a map to accurately describe the earth s features.
* property of all detectors and is generally a way of measuring their quality.
* qualitative expression of how much detail can be observed through a given telescope.
* refers to how many pixels display on a monitor screen
- sharpness of the images and the size of the image on the screen
* refers to the ability to distinguish the smallest visible objects on a photograph
- two objects as separate entities
- observe fine detail
- amount of detail that the scanner can reproduce
- area represented by each pixel on the satellite image
* refers to the density and size of the scanned image
- of the screen image
* refers to the detail actually revealed in the image of a real specimen
- and quality of the images the monitor can display
- discernibility or clarity of objects in an image
* refers to the number of dots on the screen
- that can be printed within a specified area
- used to compose the picture
* refers to the number of pixels in a picture
- or picture elements in a picture
- or screen dots
- per inch or the number of pixels per centimeter
- that fit on the screen
- quality and sharpness of the printer's output
* refers to the sharpness and clarity of an image
* software application used to create and maintain corporate minutes.
* square root function of the theoretical plate number.
* way of measuring the sharpness of a digital image | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | resolution:
Color resolution
* describes the number of colors the monitor can display at one time.
* is the number of bits used to describe the color of one pixel.
* refers to the number of colors displayed on the screen at one time.
Dispute resolution
* communication and idea generating business.
* is authorization.
### written language | document | resolution | factorization:
Prime factorization
* is the technique used to find that unique factorization.
* mathematical algorithm that many organizations use for encryption.
High resolution
* has two main effects on a viewable image.
* is all about pointing lots of pixels at a small area
- very important for image clarity
* refers to small values of the minimum resolvable distance
- the number of independent components that are available for development
Higher resolution
* is used to set crossovers or analyze frequency or standing waves.
* refers to greater quality and sharper reproductions.
Image resolution
* affects both the quality and file size of an image
- file size-the greater the resolution, the larger the file size
* is the primary parameter for performance characterization of a micro-CT scanner.
* refers to the spacing of pixels in the image.
Interpolated resolution
* is the resolution enhanced through software
- where the image is enhanced by the software that comes with the scanner
* uses mathematical computations to increase the number of pixels scanned.
Screen resolution
* is important when viewing websites for example
- measured in pixels across, pixels down, and number of colors
- one key factor that determines the look of a web page
- really how many dots or pixels can be displayed on the screen
* measure of how much information is displayed on the screen at one time.
* refers to the dimensions of the pixels displayed on a monitor.
* represents the number of pixels that are displayed on a computer screen.<|endoftext|>### written language | document | resolution:
Spatial resolution
* function of tip size.
* improves in direct proportion to bandwidth, as well as frequency.
* is defined by the size of the imaging voxels
- determined by the rate at which the scanner samples the image
- on the characteristic length scale of the phenomena
* is the ability to distinguish between adjacent structures
- amount of surface detail a system can detect
- smallest area which can receive a distinct and desired application rate
- visualization of a physical entity, such as a tumor
Vertical resolution
* defines the resolution between the earth's surface and the top of the model.
* is measured with horizontal lines
- the number of horizontal scan lines that make up a picture | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Source code
* are the computer programs that run all of the plane's electronic systems
- designs that make software and Internet sites function
- programming language that run the computer's systems
- programs that make software and Internet sites work
- typed instructions that people create directing computers to execute programs.
* In computer programming, 'source code' text file version of a computer program or software that contains instructions that the computer follows to do something. Source code is written in a programming language which a human can read and change. A large program may contain many different source code files that all work together. These days most source code is 'compiled' when it is finished. This translates the code into assembly language or machine language which is much faster and easier for the computer to read, but hard for a human to read
* form of expression and communication for computer programmers everywhere.
* is created by programmers
- films
- text files
* is the human-understandable text that makes up a software product
- instructions programmers write to tell the computer what to do
- only format that is readable by humans
- original representation of a computer program
* is the set of instructions necessary to create software applications
- underlying programming instructions that comprise an operating system
- term used in web site designing and development
- used for programming
* mere transformation of ideas into something a computer can understand.
* program in a form suitable for reading and writing by a human being.
* raw file, as raw as web pages and word processing documents.
* refers to the human-readable list of instructions to perform as a program
- set of commands and instructions making up a program
* set of instructions and comments created by a computer programmer.<|endoftext|>### written language | document:
Statute
* Some statutes relating to sheriffs also govern the powers, duties and liabilities of constables.
* are a source of law.
* are laws enacted by a legislative body
- made by parliament
* are laws passed by legislatures
- our elected officials
* are laws that have been created via the legislative process
- passed and are now in effect
- which have been enacted by a vote of the legislature
- the laws passed by elected federal, state, and local legislatures
- written by men to control society
* is an act
- the superior type of law because it overrides common law
* noun that refers to a law or rule.
* prohibit demonstrations.
* provide definition.
### written language | document | statute:
Criminal statute
* punish adults for contributing to the delinquency of a minor.
* specify the forms of maltreatment that are criminally punishable.
Federal statute
* Many federal statutes protect workers, the public, and the environment.
* governs the reproduction of intellectual property in any medium or format.
- discrimination in employment based on sex
- the growth, use or distribution of marijuana for any purpose<|endoftext|>### written language | document:
Ticket
* are legal tenders.
* are located in lotteries
- movies
- operas
- pockets
- race tracks
- shows
- train stations
- trains
- wallets
- reservations
* are used for documentation
- inventories
- proof of purchase
- speeding
* have cost.
* is papers
+ C2c, Route
* Tickets are fully interchangeable between the two operators. The District Line runs alongside the c2c tracks from Bow to Upminster, with c2c services providing the fast service and the District Line providing the stopping service. Cross-platform interchange is provided at Barking between the two.
+ Las Ventas: Sports buildings :: Buildings and structures in Madrid
* Most fights start at 7 p.m. when the sun is not too hot. Tickets are sold for 'sol' or 'sombra'. The 'sombra' tickets for seats not in the sunlight cost more. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document | ticket:
Plane ticket
* are big-ticket items that travelers are delighted to research online
* are located in airports
- briefcases
* are used for bribery
- coachs
- collecting information
- first classes
- flying
- travelling
Theater ticket
* are ink.
* are located in box offices
- pockets
- shows
- theaters
- tickets
Train ticket
* are located in depots
- purses
- trains
- purchases
- tickets
* are used for train travel
Web document
* are any kind of file used on the Web
- documents
- ordinary text files that can be created with any word processing program
- unique because they contain graphics and hypertext
* can be complex objects that can contain text, video, graphics and even sound.
Web marketing
* is the most efficient medium for reaching many people with the same message
- time control
* new specialization in the field of marketing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Web page
* Most Web pages are related collections of links to other Web pages
- contain lines of text which are too long to be easily read
- web pages are simple displays of information for which no processing is required
* Refers to one specific page of a Web site.
* allow businesses to market their goods and services to a much larger clientele.
* are a collection of computer files
- dynamic feature of the Internet
- reflection of an individuals creativity and knowledge
- simple tool to organize multimedia content
- specialist type of on-line writing
* are actually electronic files stored on computers located all over the world
- text files stored on a computer
- also documents
- basically billboards that people can read
- dynamic entities
- dynamic, evolving documents that can frequently change
- electronic documents that can contain text, images, sound, video and programs
* are examples of hypertext documents
* are files stored on computers called Web servers
- generally a mixture of text and images
- hierarchical collection of pages
- just text files open in a browser
- like digital magazine pages
- often one of the first resources people consult in seeking information
- one of the most important ways to convey information in the business world
- plain text files that transmitted across the Internet to a browser
- publications for the public
- screens full of information or pictures
* are simply computer files stored in directories on a server computer
- files stored on a computer that has been set up as a dedicated Web server
- temporary graphic images created when browsing software interprets HTML instructions
* are text documents with graphics, multimedia, and links
- documents, and they take very little space
- files marked up by HTML tags
* are the browser's manifestation of several files on a computer called a server
- building blocks of virtual classrooms
- components of Web sites
- individual files that make up a Web site
- newest form of advertising for businesses today
- typically a combination of text and graphics
- websites
- what most people mean when they talk about the Internet
- works of arts by hundreds of people
* can be any size, length or width.
* can contain information, graphics and links to other web pages and files
- graphics, and hyperlinks to other Web pages and files
* can contain text, pictures and even sounds
- pictures, sounds, movies, and programs that run in the browser
- include text, graphics, sound, files, and programs
- vary greatly in their range of content and complexity
* contain links, usually indicated by underlined words, to other Web addresses.
* convey information using text, color, graphics, and links to other web pages.
* employ digital images for a variety of uses.
* have information
- more information
* include information
- summaries
* provide general information
* tend to be approximately of uniform size
- fancy, with colors, graphics and different fonts
- contain all sorts of fonts, colors, etc
* use a lot of images to convey information
- forms to collect relevant information from different people
* use hypertext links to break up a large document into components
- to display links to other pages
- more than one form of information
- only one space between sentences
+ Web browser, Web browsers and HTML
* A web page is one page of a website. Every web page has a web address.
+ Webpage
* A 'webpage' is part of a website. It is in the form of text and images. Web pages are connected by links. Clicking on a link makes another webpage appear. Webpages are hosted on web servers and downloaded and viewed with a web browser. Web pages are sent to the browser in HTML code. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | document:
Webpage
* are similar to a business card where a website is more like a resume' with a coverpage.
* are the best way to advertise on the internet
- vanity mirror of the Internet.
* A 'webpage' is part of a website. It is in the form of text and images. Web pages are connected by links. Clicking on a link makes another webpage appear. Webpages are hosted on web servers and downloaded and viewed with a web browser. Web pages are sent to the browser in HTML code
### written language | document | webpage:
Home page
* are individual pieces of information put on the Web by individuals all over the world
- web pages
* refers to the first screen presented when an end user connects to another site.
Homepage
* are files or documents which introduce a particular website
- the web pages that exist on the Internet
* is the term used to describe the main entry point to a web site.
Drama
* includes stage direction.
* is dramatic work
- emotionality
- episodes
- writing style
### written language | drama:
Comedy
* Comedies are drama
- funnies
- light-hearted dramas, designed to amuse and provoke laughter
- located in television
* can be tragic when foolishness leads to wasted lives.
* curative art-form empowering the audience and the comedian.
* genre, and it has many aspects.
* socially acceptable form of hostility and aggression.
* state of mind.
### written language | drama | comedy:
Farce
* are comedies.
* is built to reinforce monogamy.
* use slapstick and physical humour to be funny.
+ The Author's Farce, Meaning: 18th-century plays
* The play is a farce. Farces use slapstick and physical humour to be funny. They also use absurd plots. A farce also makes serious situations funny. Fielding thought that theatre was becoming bad. He mocked theatre and theatre audiences in his play. Freeman 2002 pp.
Low comedy
* Low comedies are comedies.
* is based upon situations which stress physcical discomfort.
Romantic comedy
* Romantic comedies are comedies
- probably the most maligned genre in cinema
* can either be heart warming or heart retching.<|endoftext|>### written language:
Essay
* are attempts
- books
- paper
- written by authors
* counts the number of words in Essay.
* describe problems.
* explore aspects.
* Most essays are short. This does not have to be the case. John Locke's 'An Essay Concerning Human Understanding' and Thomas Malthus's 'An Essay on the Principle of Population' are long essays.
* can have all sorts of purposes. For example, an essay can be very argumentative, it can talk about points for and against the essay question to give a balanced argument or opinion.<|endoftext|>### written language:
Fiction
* Most fiction is narrative writing, such as novels and short stories.
* are elaborate stories that assist people in understanding an otherwise confusing situation
- the most powerful of all the architects of our souls and societies
* can be in the form of novels or short stories.
* differs first and foremost from other forms because it is about emotion.
* exists as a mode of discourse that is fundamentally sensual.
* form of knowledge, and is treated by many as a repository of true stories.
* is an act of the imagination
- art of the imagination
- history, human history, or it is nothing
- literary work
- nourishment for the mind and the spirit
- one of the major literary genres
- rooted in truth
* is the lie that tells the truth
- line which connects two facts
- telling that startles, the telling that teaches
- truth inside the lie
- unity of fictional character and the self
- used deliberately to make the events come alive in everyone's mind
* often wraps itself in truth as a way to get a story out.
* refers to invented or created stories.
* story that never was real.
* tissue of literal lies that refreshes and informs our sense of actuality.
* usually combines elements of both fact and imagination.
* way to teach the faith by example. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | fiction:
Celtic fiction
* draws on Celtic myth and what is known of Celtic culture.
* has a strong emphasis on the heroic, especially in the battle between good and evil.<|endoftext|>### written language | fiction:
Dialogue
* are more than discussions where people share opinions or blurt out ideas.
* ' or 'dialog' shared inquiry or the art of thinking together. Dialogue and the Art of Thinking Together,' p.1. Dialogue rhetorical, literary and theatrical format. It means a written or spoken conversational exchange between two or more people.
* belongs to the nature of human beings, as beings of communication.
* communication skill essential to achieving a consensus decision.
* decoding is the process of determining from a recording what has been said.
* drives communication and communication is crucial in the business of learning.
* fundamental component in the process of peacebuilding.
* has an important effect on perceptions of capability and locus of control.
* healthy enterprise from which all parties can benefit.
* is about increasing understanding rather than changing minds
- also the of group psychotherapy
* is an element in the art of rhetoric
- exchange of points of view
- open-systemic means of communication for mutual, cooperative growth
- communicating
- conversation with a purpose
- essential in the formation and diffusion of a culture of peace
- governed by social usage that provides the unconscious with a ready-made disguise
- people structuring people
- rooted in the dignity of the human person
- scripts
- talk
* is the fundamental tool for change in relationships and in organizations
- most rational and human way for coming to terms with each other
- operation that transforms certain givens by exchange groups
- parent of resolution
- real source of order in human societies
- recognition of one another s opinions
- unifying expression of duality
- words that people say
- two sides working together toward a common understanding
- when two or more people are speaking to each other
* living experience of inquiry within and between people.
* means a conversation or discussion Or a conversation
- conversation between two or more people
* mutual search for truth by means of a skillful use of the highest abilities of reason.
* plays a key role in making meaning and thinking together.
* process in which both sides have to participate.
* refers to any spoken words that occur in a film.
* way of conversing.
* word denoting a very Canadian concept, an open, frank channel of communication.
+ Dialogue, History: Fiction :: Rhetoric
Dystopia
* are fiction
- states
- video games
* is conjured up in a political culture that is masculinist, fascistic, and militaristic
Fan fiction
* creative outlet for fans obsessive about any TV show, artist, book or video game.
* form of derivative use.
* is about writing and kinship with people
- written by hundreds of thousands of people across the globe<|endoftext|>### written language | fiction:
Historical fiction
* Historical Fiction Lists many historical fiction writers and their works.
* Use for works set in historical periods.
* fictional story that is set in an authentic historical setting.
* is fictional work
- meant to bring the past believably alive
- the emphasis in literature
* pleasurable way to learn about events, places and persons in history.
* story that is totally dependent on the time period for the plot to work.
* uses the past so as to better understand the present.
* valid form of family history writing. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | fiction:
Legend
* Many legends have their roots in the actual physical features of bats
- record the disappearance of the moon and sky
- surround the tiger, including stories of man-eating tigers
- tell about the origins of boxing in Greece
* Most legends describe gods.
* Some legends have four trees holding the sky at the corners of the world.
* also record that the creatures often sat in trees, coming down only to find food.
* are a kind of imagined history
- simplified way of dealing with mythology
- an important way of passing on history and culture
- attempts to explain reality, and their contents usually become objects of belief
- books
- history that happened a long time ago
- located in maps
* are often a mix of history and imagination
- about traditions and beliefs
- people who are known for changing the ways that things are traditionally done
- the stuff that dreams are made of
* can also be famous or historically significant people , places , art , etc
- focus on religious and supernatural topics, real individuals, or places
* describe conflict
* generally explain how a natural occurrence originated from the spirit world.
* has it that a soul eater consumes illnesses
- drinking from a peridot goblet can increase the potency of medicines
- fairies used to come down to frolic and bathe
- firecrackers ward off evil spirits
- in ancient times, ginseng was a fairy in the likeness of a male infant
* hold that the peafowl can charm snakes and addle their eggs.
* is the of the oldest forms of literature.
* often introduce and integrate objects or activities into our daily lives
- present historical facts
- tell of animals that offered themselves up for sacrifice
* say dark clouds rolled off the Gulf of Mexico and blotted out the sun
- that wearers of turquoise are invincible to wild animals and snakes
* says firecrackers ward off evil spirits
- tiger-eye quartz gems purify the bloodstream and organs from pollutants
* teach cultural values and morals.
+ Ancient Greek boxing, Where it came from: Ancient Greece :: Boxing
* The activity was called 'pyx' or 'pygme' in Ancient Greek. Archeologists have found evidence that this activity was probably done by the Minoan and Mycenaean cultures. Many legends tell about the origins of boxing in Greece. One legend says that the heroic ruler Theseus invented a type of boxing where two men sat face to face and beat each other with their fists until one of them was killed. Later, the boxers began to fight while standing. In Ancient Greece, most sports were done naked, boxing too.
+ Così fan tutte: Compositions by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart :: 18th century operas
* Legend says the opera was based on a real-life incident that occurred in Vienna. In the 19th century, the opera was considered somewhat naughty, and was rarely performed. Modern critics however realize the music is some of Mozart's finest, and the opera is now frequently performed around the world.
+ Folies Bergère: Buildings and structures in Paris :: Entertainment venues
* Daytime view of the theatre, showing art deco sculptured plaque. Legend reads 'The most celebrated music hall in the world'.
+ Sherwood Forest: Geography of England :: Forests in Great Britain
* Sherwood Forest' is an ancient woodland near Nottingham, England. Legend claims that they lived near the Major Oak. Its branches are now supported by props.
+ University of Cambridge, History, Myths, legends and traditions: Cambridge :: Colleges and universities in England :: 1231 establishments
* Many legends exist about places in Cambridge. For example, there is a story about the 'Mathematical Bridge' in Queen's College. Newton built it without using any bolts or screws. Some people then took it down to see how it was made. When they tried to put it up again they couldn't do it, so they had to insert many bolts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | fiction | legend:
Indian legend
* describes the horse's origins.
* has it that the giant sea stacks of Olympic Coast are the eyes of ancestors.
* refers to the loon as the bird with a broken back.
* tell of a great flood that had destroyed most of the earth
- horned serpent
Novel
* are about human choices and the pattern of human lives through time
- books
* are created by authors
- writers
- fictional work
- located in bookstores
- reads
- stories
* is fiction<|endoftext|>### written language | fiction | novel:
Graphic novel
* Many graphic novels are paperbound folios that require supportive shelving.
* are books in comic book format, many dealing with more adult subject matter
- of comics
- long-form comics that use elaborate artwork to tell a serious story
+ Comics: Art
* There are many kinds of comics. Comic strips are short comics which are often found in newspapers. Comic books are thin comics magazines. Graphic novels are books of comics. In Japan, comics are very popular, and Japanese comics are popular around the world. The Japanese word for comics is manga, and people use this word for Japanese comics in English and other languages.
Historical novel
* Many historical novels show both soldiers and 'people at home' during wars.
* focus on teenage protagonists involved in significant historical eras.<|endoftext|>### written language | fiction | novel:
Romance novel
* account for a large portion of the books purchased every year in the United States.
* are a billion-dollar industry
- about relationships
- one of the most popular genres in publishing
- the most commonly read category of book
* celebrate love in a way no other genre does.
* contain much more explicit sex than mainstream fiction and other fiction genres.
* deal with the gritty areas of life.
* exercise the reader s sense of fantasy, granting imaginative projections to reality.
* have other types of covers as well.
* make up half of the mass trade paperback market.
* written by straight women are very different in the way they eroticize men's bodies.<|endoftext|>### written language:
Journal
* Many journals have a presence on the internet.
* Some journals are the working notes of people who are attempting difficult work.
* are a less formal kind of writing than essays, stories or poetry
- particular kind of periodical that are cited differently than popular magazines
- an advanced form of freewriting
- axles
- electronic journals available on the Web
- forums for storing finished products
- in the humanities and social sciences
- located in libraries
- often the official or semiofficial publication of a group or society
- one means to support practice in writing
- periodicals
- personal thoughts penned by young and old of both sexes
* are publications which are published on a regular basis and at least once a year
- reference work
* are scholarly magazines published by and for professionals in specialized fields
- publications containing reports of research conducted in a particular field
- specialized, scholarly publications written by authorities in the field
* are, and always have been, published primarily for library usage.
* can exist without paper.
* contain information
- much useful information
* have pages
- templates
* include announcements
- news
* provide information
- topics
* publish observations.
* represent all major religions of the world.
* serve an important role as repositories of medical information
- as a means of self-expression and practice in writing
* simultaneously serve as the medium of conversation and the repository for knowledge.
* usually contain articles written by people within a single academic field
- offer great amounts of information on the state of a country and people | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | journal:
Electronic journal
* are digital issues of a serial publication
- equally or more expensive than paper copies
- journals that exist in their full texts online
- probably most common in the sciences, and least common in the humanities
- the wave of the near future
* can help to increase access without increasing library costs
- support multi-media, some even include moving images
* is also a new phenomenon in law, as indeed they are in other disciplines.
Medical journal
* are complex entities with multiple functions.
* publish information on research in cardiac care.
Professional journal
* Many professional journals focus on education, psychology, rehabilitation, or early childhood
- publish articles every year or two on the job market
* are responsible for attracting and evaluating new contributions to knowledge
- the lifeblood of scholarly communication in the sciences<|endoftext|>### written language | journal:
Scholarly journal
* are often concerned with very specific subjects, indicated by their titles
- professional or refereed journals
* contain articles that have been written by experts in their fields
- written by academic researchers
- in-depth information on a subject, including reports of research
* cover the humanities, social sciences, political and general science.
* employ footnotes or parenthetical citations to reference their sources.
* publish articles that communicate recent research results in a field of study
- report the results of research
* report research, theory and analysis on topics in academic disciplines.
Science journal
* are a way for students and teachers to communicate.
* is the global weekly on research and has articles on line.
* provide opportunities for children to record information.
Scientific journal
* Some scientific journals describe research methods.
* are intended for a scholarly audience.
Trade journal
* are magazines that cover specific industries
- technical in nature
* contain news and highlights within a given profession or industry
- practical information of interest to people in particular industries
* report on events and trends in a business or occupation.
* specialize in news and information for professionals in a certain occupation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language:
Literature
* Covers all forms of writing from short stories and novels to movie scripts.
* Includes poetry, prose, and stories of the afterlife.
* LIterature is art.
* Most literature confirms that women are usually depicted in submissive roles as objects for men.
* Some literature describes photosynthesis
- does exist that addresses life expectancy in persons with severe disabilities
* Some literature suggests hormonal levels differ by ethnicity
- that women have developed healthier lifestyles than men
- supports the cause and effect of androgens and sex drive motivational activities.
* ' group of works of art made up of words. Most are written, but some are passed on by word of mouth. Literature usually means works of poetry and prose that are specially well written. There are many different kinds of literature, such as poetry, plays, or novels. They can also be put into groups through their language, historical period, origin, genre, and subject
* Vary by language, chronology, idiom, genre, and authorship.
* addresses the ways human beings live, individually and in a range of groupings.
* also shows that nucleomegaly is due to precocious or abnormal aging.
* belongs to the humanities.
* broadens the minds and hearts of human beings.
* can be fiction, non-fiction, and poetry
- nonfiction, and poetry
- conjure effects outside of society
- make the abstract real and personal because it creates individual memories
- play an important role in the classroom
* deals with human experiences, feelings, and emotions.
* describes aspects
- human situations, tells stories and enshrines myths
- violence and conflict at the heart of the human condition
* discovery of the transient and the durable from the past and the present.
* encompasses written material intended to entertain or inform.
* enlightens the mind, soothes the soul, and inspires and educates all who touch it.
* gateway to human experience, a wider horizon and a key to other cultures.
* has a particular power to comprehend worlds, as physics is able to comprehend the world
- real power to produce social changes
- tradition going back to the middle ages
- something to do with society
* human document
* increases language output and causes imaginations to soar.
* is able to give great fame to men through time
- about the human society
- an avenue for gaining insights into a culture
* is an imitation of a sequence of events
- events or objects
- invention by the middle-classes for their own benefit
- investment of genius which pays dividends to all subsequent times
- anything made or written using language
- as old as speech
- born every day
- bound up with social, political, historical and even economic development
- chosen to represent forms and styles of many periods
- closest to religion when it tries to contain all human desperation
- concerned with form alone
* is created by writing
- from words and takes advantage of the laws by which they are governed
- divided into types of literature
- essential to civilization
- everything that has ever been written
- human thought described by words
- interpreted as a vehicle for understanding what it means to grow old
- just a small part of literacy
- literary studies
- literature, and nothing else
* is located in book stores
- conferences
- good homes
- libraries
- meetings
- public libraries
- shelfs
- more than the profound expression of profound ideas
- news that stays news
* is one of the few academic subjects left that teaches morality
- mediums where women's voices have most been heard
- most affordable forms of travel
- noblest creations of humankind
- pathway to knowing and understanding the world
- part of culture, culture is that meeting-place
- professions
- read by people in all walks of life
- replete with poems, narratives, and plays in which prayer plays a major part
- restricted to popular musical styles
- romantics
- seen to have a responsibility to enhance life and act as a foundation of civilisation
* is studied by genre
- through the utilization of paperback books and anthologies
- to understand plot, analyze characters and compare various literary styles
* is studied with emphasis ion cultural contexts
* is supposed to be the reflection of the national life
- help people see things from different perspectives
* is the art of words
- creative expression of human experience
- highest quality of language for any nation
- illumination of human experience, good and bad
- journal of the feelings of the human race
- lie that tells the truth
- living link to minds of the past
- most elaborate form of human expression and communication
- orchestration of platitudes
- result of individual writers working individually
* is the study of representation, ideas, language, and culture
- the written word
- top sector in terms of both sales and volume
- totality of written messages that a society produces in whichever form it chooses
- vehicle used to establish a bond of trust and friendship
- writing of a time, a place, an era
- ultimately a result of language
* is used as a source and stimulant for written composition
- by one person at a time
* is used for a work of creative literature, such as a poem or short story
- entertainment
- pleasure
- professors
- reading
- studyings
* language art.
* means of exploring the subterranean depths of the human personality.
* mimetic or representational art, so are sculpture, dance and drama.
* nowadays trade.
* nurtures the imagination, inspiring young minds to reach for new horizons.
* often appears in the form of bedtime stories
- has concordia as an ideal of marriage
* part of the English.
* provides children ways to use their imagination.
* reflects a culture, defines a people.
* related to negotiation skills refers to negotiation as an activity with another person.
* result of the human's wrestling with nature and with one another.
* reviews present critical essays that survey and synthesize research in a particular area.
* stylizes human experience by presenting characters and actions concretizing abstractions.
* subcase of language for special purposes.
* subjective discipline.
* transforms things, experiences, and desires into words.
* transmits ideas, reflects societies and eras and expresses the human imagination.
* way to give math meaning.
+ Human, Culture, null, Art, music and literature: Hominins
* Literature is anything made or written using language. This includes books, poetry, legends, myths and fairy tales. Literature is important as without it many of the things we use today, such as Wikipedia, wouldn't exist. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | literature:
African literature
* is as varied and complex as the many peoples of the African continent.
* teaches new views of cultural imperialism, oppression, and liberation.
Ancient literature
* contains frequent references to fevers consistent with malaria symptoms.
* mentions honey and honeybees with much gratitude for their bounty.
English literature
* is written by authors from many countries.
* kind of training in social ethics.
+ United Kingdom, Literature: Commonwealth realms :: European Union member states :: Current monarchies :: English-speaking countries :: G8 nations
* English literature is written by authors from many countries. The UK has eight Nobel laureates in literature. Seamus Heaney is a well-known writer who was born in Northern Ireland.
Great literature
* Many great literatures have their foundation in epic.
* deals with themes of ambition, passion, and good and evil.<|endoftext|>### written language | literature:
Historiography
* Historiographies are literature
- writing
* Think of history as an ongoing conversation about what happened in the past, and why.
* is also the study of the development of historical method
- history as knowledge production
* is the history of history
- study and research of history
* is the study of history
- how and why people study history
* is the study of the history of history writing
- techniques employed by the individual historian
* is, of course, the writing of history, or the study thereof.
* links many facets, concerned as it is with interpretations of the past.
* occupies a prominent position in the ancient written literary tradition.
* refers to the way in which historians have interpreted history.
* then is value-influenced construction of past reality.
Irish literature
* dates to the pre-Celtic peoples inhabiting the area now known as Ireland.
* depicts the heroes and nobles as being blond.
* reflects the spirit and history of the Irish people.
Medical literature
* Some medical literature supports the association between smoking and hearing loss.
* confirms the potent neurotoxic effects of aluminum, copper, lead, and cadmium.
* supports the fact that smoking in public places is hazardous to non-smokers.
Rabbinic literature
* is made up of five major kinds of works.
* represents a massive corpus.
Recent literature
* suggests a possible connection between air toxics and the exacerbation of asthma.
* talks about the correlation between bras and breast cancer.
Roman literature
* contains much about the reactions of individuals to medicine and doctors.
* is very similar to Greek literature.
Scientific literature
* contains more articles on fruit flies than on human sexuality.
* reports tests of a human vaccine based on the same technology.
Sutra
* are concise aphorisms.
* is literature
Traditional literature
* continues the oral tradition and reveals the values and beliefs of a culture.
* is classified as non-fiction.
Notation
* circle with a line through it vertically.
* is the leading manufacturer of casual and career women's clothing
- used to assign call numbers to individual information packages
- very important for mathematics
* method for recording movements and dances
- transcribing movements and dances
* part of a model's syntax.
* refer to hours worked and wages paid.
### written language | notation:
Decimal notation
* is itself a shorthand notation for the representation of numbers
- mathematical notation
- the key to our doing arithmetic easily
* varies from country to country.
Dirac notation
* is introduced and used in the description of angular momentum and electron spin.
* representation of a vector without an explicit choice of a basis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | notation:
Exponential notation
* combines the angle and axis of the rotation into concise quaternion expression.
* convenient way for scientists to write very large or very small numbers.
* is an example of a shorthand notational scheme
- used on many calculators and programming languages
- useful in situations where the same number is multiplied repeatedly
* method of expressing a square number by using a base and an exponent.
* way scientists write very large or very small numbers.
Figurine notation
* is used in print and computer chess.
+ Chess notation, Algebraic notation, Figurine notation: Chess :: Notation
* This is algebraic notation with little figurines instead of initial letters for the pieces. Figurine notation is used in print and computer chess. Since it avoids initial letters for pieces, it is more international.
Hexadecimal notation
* convenient way of representing the values in a byte with two characters.
* is mathematical notation
Mathematical notation
* Some mathematical notations use diagrams , or small drawings to show the underlying concepts
- diagrams, or small drawings to show the underlying concepts. * diagrams, or small drawings to show the underlying concepts. One example is the Penrose graphical notation which is used to show tensors
* is notation.<|endoftext|>### written language | notation | mathematical notation:
Binary system
* All binary systems contain an unseen low-mass component, presumably, a white dwarf.
* Many binary systems involve neutron stars.
* Most binary systems are too distant to be resolved as visuals by current telescopes.
* are important because they allow astronomers to determine the masses of stars.
* detected by such astrometric means are called astrometric binaries.
* offer unique methods to understand stellar activity and mass loss.
Decimal point
* are mathematical notation.
* is mathematical notation
Number system
* come in many sizes.
* serve the purpose of representing numbers in different ways.
Musical notation
* highly developed symbolic language, in which symbols represent ideas.
* is also an informal language as is the set of conventions used in a road map
- part of scores
- the international language that spans all instruments<|endoftext|>### written language | notation:
Scientific notation
* Scientific Notation Explains how scientific notation is used to manipulate very large numbers
- makes adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing numbers much simpler
* allows very large or very small numbers to be written in a more convenient form
- writing big and small numbers with only a few symbols
* is the standard mantissa E exponent form used in most languages.
* is used in different contexts to express extremely large and very small numbers
- more operations and with real-life problems
- to track the decimal point in more formal calculations
* makes it easy to express how precisely a number is known.
* represents numbers as a base number and an exponent.
* shorthand for writing very small and very large numbers.
* works on the basis of exponents.
+ Slide rule, Basic concepts: Mathematical tools
* The user determines the location of the decimal point in the result, based on mental estimation. Scientific notation is used to track the decimal point in more formal calculations. Addition and subtraction steps in a calculation are generally done mentally or on paper, not on the slide rule.
Spectroscopic notation
* is based on facts taken from molecular symmetry.
+ Molecular symmetry: Symmetry :: Theoretical chemistry
* Scientists can find molecular symmetry by using X-ray crystallography and other forms of spectroscopy. Spectroscopic notation is based on facts taken from molecular symmetry.
Vector notation
* is simply a short-hand way of expressing information in a compact but precise way.
* requires working knowledge of trigonometry. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language:
Paragraph
* are a device to create firm structure in writing.
* are part of books
- chapters
- pages
- paper
- stories
* contain references.
* describe events.
Poem
* Many poems are lines of writing that rhyme.
* are a way for people to express themselves
- art
* are located in book stores
- bookshelfs
- part of poetry
* are used for classes
- communicating
- enlightenment
- reading
- romance
* are written by famous poets
- greek poets
* includes chapters
- paragraphs
- verse lines
- word order
* is literary work
* make pictures with words.
* written language.
### written language | poem:
Elegy
* Elegies also have love and war as subjects in addition to death.
* Elegies are albums
- laments
* lyric poem written to commemorate someone who is dead.
Epic
* are long narrative poems celebrating the deeds of historical or legendary heroes
- poems which tell the story of a hero
- probably the oldest surviving form of poetry
* is an advocacy group fighting for privacy and free speech on the Internet.
* still exist in the oral traditions of the world.
* system for management, display, and analysis of oceanographic in-situ data.
### written language | poem | epic:
Rhapsody
* Rhapsodies are joys
- music
- software
* is an epic
Haiku
* is software.
* often describe 'a moment in time'.
Narrative poem
* are ones that tell stories, an epic or ballad.
+ Narrative poetry: Poetry :: Oral tradition
* Narrative poems can be short or long. Some are novels or short stories written in verse form. Many older narrative poems were designed to be passed on through generations as a way of recording history.
Sonnet
* Many sonnets are love poems.
* also has important applications in computer science.
* are poems
- the mosquitoes of literature
* electromagnetic simulator tool capable of analyzing high frequency circuits.
* have a specific rhyme pattern, though.
Scroll
* Most scrolls are wound around rods of bronze, ivory, or wood.
* are documents
- manuscript | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language:
Software
* Most software modeling paradigms use multiple models to model a process.
* affects people, and so it has aspects of psychology, anthropology, and sociology.
* applies to the programs run by or associated with the operation of a computer.
* are programs that are run on computers
- the programs that run on a computer
* can facilitate and can impede human work and individuals in societies
- influence cooperation and motivation, as well as how children interact with each other
* capital-intensive industry.
* computer program that does some kind of work.
* contains information.
* core of Engineering today.
* form of intellectual property
- nostalgia
* general term for computer programs.
* includes descriptions.
* involves language and programming.
* is about automating processes and procedures
- communication and sharing and working together
- always a tool, used to perform a function
- an increasingly important element in military systems of all kinds
- analogous to the meaning of the words written on a page
- applied logic
- basically the root of all common computer security problems
- capable of copy files
- code
* is computer code
- that has been written by computer programmers
- copyrighted intellectual property that is owned by the author
* is created by people, and quality software is created by people of quality
- events on the screen that affect the mind and heart of the viewer, with interaction
- instructions that make a computer do something
- intellectual property, as are books, movies, and music
- located in computers
- made up of programs, and programs are the representation of algorithms
- now as important as hardware in astronomy
* is one of the largest capital expenditures made by companies
- world's largest software and services vendor
- sets of instructions that tell the hardware what to do
* is the fuel that brings computers to life
- instruction sets that make up all applications or 'programs'
* is the instructions that a computer follows to perform a specified task
- tell the computer what to do
- the computer follows
- primary means by which modern avionics systems are created
- programming that communicates with the hardware
- programs and data that a computer uses
* is the programs that run on a computer
* is the set of instructions that tell a computer what to do
- tells the computer what to do and how to do it
- step by step instructions that tell a computer what to do
- soul of a computer and the core for information technology
- stuff that turns a computer into a tool
- total interaction between the human user and the program over time
- world's great intellectual property industry
- used by engineers
- written in computer languages
* is written to perform functions or tasks
- solve people's problems
* is, perhaps, more analogous to literature and music than it is to mechanical invention.
* known as a browser is used to view web pages.
* large part of a child s learning experience.
* logical product which uses discrete functions to achieve some desired effect.
* manufactured product, as is an automobile or a pharmaceutical drug.
* means one or more programs, capable of operating on a computer, processor, or controller.
* measure of what needed to run the data visualization software.
* media for dynamic content.
* music composition and arrangement application.
* plays an important role in our life
- many roles in the early childhood curriculum
* program of instructions
- or an application that users run on their systems to perform various tasks
* provides alternative solutions
* refers to a computer program or set of instructions
- programs like word processors, HTML editors, or games
* refers to the computer programmes needed to run the computer
- information and knowledge used to perform useful functions by the computer
- people who work with computer hardware
* rendering is, by it's nature, a very processor- intensive system of rendering graphics.
* set of computer instructions that tells a computer what to do
- instructions, or a recipe, for a piece of hardware to follow
* slightly broader term that means the same thing.
* software company that designs and distributes entertainment software.
* technology that knows no political bounds.
* tool to increase profits and productivity
- make life easier and more productive
* usually has an average life of three years.
* way to deliver functionality.
+ Computer software: Computer science
* The word software was first used in the late 1960s to show the difference from computer hardware, which are the parts of a machine that can be seen and touched. Software is the instructions that the computer follows.
+ Computer: Tools
* Modern computers are electronic machines. A computer is only useful if it has both hardware and software. Hardware is the physical parts the computer is made of - for example keyboard, mouse, screen, tower, and the circuits inside it. Software uses the hardware by taking input and changing it in to useful output.
* Software can be very problematic. Showing the desktop of Windows Vista is practically impossible due to copyright. You might be able to show Gnome running as a desktop, but showing the default desktop is an issue.
+ List of chess terms, F, Figurines
* Software is available which permits chess authors to compose text with diagrams and figurines. Together with standard symbols, this makes texts available for international sale. For this to apply, the text should have little or no prose, or use a widely understood language like English.
+ Vietnamese alphabet, The alphabet in computers, Open source: Vietnam :: Alphabet :: Austro-Asiatic languages
* Some software is free to use. An open-source software program for the Vietnamese keyboard has already been written. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | software:
Application server
* are software.
* are the brains behind a Web site
- cornerstone of Internet business applications
- usually computers with large hard drives and a lot of memory
Application software
* are programs designed to fill specific function.
* is programs that do work users are directly interested in
Bind
* contains interaction, molecular complex, and pathway records.
* lck on cytoplasmic face of membrane.
Cryptographic software
* is essential to development of commerce in information.
* protects information and identifies who made the information.
Educational software
* are focus on pedagogy or other effects.
* is one of the most popular and fastest-growing categories of software
- used to enhance skills taught in the classroom and to foster creativity
Encryption software
* is the last and most important barrier in information security.
* protects privacy by scrambling information into unreadable text.
* uses complex mathematical formulas to scramble information stored in computers.<|endoftext|>### written language | software:
Free software
* better way of doing things, regardless of what is going on in the stock market.
* enhances the ability of software to be widely supported and deployed.
* is about freedom
- called freeware
- essential to protect the human rights of the user
- free stuff
- libre software
- referred to as freeware
* is software that costs nothing
- everybody is free to copy or modify
- users have the freedom to distribute and change
- the software that kills the closed, nefarious software product industry
* means freedom - freedom for all, for developers and for users of the software
- that users have a certain set of freedoms
* tends to appeal to people who think for themselves.
* works when people are fair.
+ Free software, Free software and open source
* Free software is very similar, but different from open source software.<|endoftext|>### written language | software:
Open source
* Anyone can see how the source code works and can change it if they want to make it work differently. The opposite of open source is closed source. Closed source software is not available to everyone. Open source is almost the same thing as free software.
* barn-raising, a community gathering that can improve everyone's lives.
* describes a new way of developing software with tremendous benefits to end users.
* improves communication and facilitates sharing ideas.
* is about giving software away for free and allowing others to redistribute it
- both a child and a parent of the Internet
- computer source code made freely available
- on the side of cosmic justice
- primarily about software licensing
- software that can be freely shared with no one person owning the code
* is the best way for businesses to guarantee complete control of their IT agendas
- common denominator
* term used for software source code published on the Internet for all to use.
Proprietary software
* is non-free software, while commercial software is software sold for money
- that which remains the intellectual property of the company
* scheme to divide and maltreat other people.
Shorten
* are software.
* cause shortens.
Software testing
* is meant to see how the software works under different conditions.
+ Software Testing
* Software testing is meant to see how the software works under different conditions. These conditions might be different depending on what the audience is. Testing is done to understand if it will work correctly, partially fail to work properly, or totally fail to work properly. Each test may be used to see how one, or many, parts of the software work at a point in its development.
Spreadsheet software
* has many applications in the electoral field.
* is an inexpensive tool for recording, sorting, and analyzing information.
* is used to develop statistical process control charts and graphs
- solve problems within case studies | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | software:
Statistical software
* is used for applications
- data analysis
- in the analysis of data and in statistical inference
* is used to analyze illustrative data
- results
- discover patterns and trends in the data
- illustrate concepts and remove computational drudgery of statistics
System software
* is computer programs
- the set of files and resources that the computer uses to run itself
* set of programs that mostly control the internal performance of a computer.
Telecommunications software
* is application programs.
* program used to allow the computer to communicate through a modem.<|endoftext|>### written language | software:
Web developer
* Some Web developers pride themselves on being able to hand-code every bit of HTML for a Web page
- produce entertainment or personal sites as well as business sites
* Web Developers develop Web-enabled applications and programming for dynamic Web sites.
* are in the business of developing and maintaining other peoples web businesses.
* have skills designing, producing, branding, building, and supporting websites.
* is software.
* needs knowledge.
* use cookies to store information on a visitor's personal computer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language:
Text
* Many texts refer to, or are written by, people identifying with the other gender.
* Most texts claim that the optic nerve carries impulses from all over the body to the iris.
* Some texts imply that carbon in ashes acts as a catalyst.
* All text following a space is taken as the text to use for the link.
* are characters, numbers, and symbols
- historical documents, authors their creators, and vice versa
- sites where relations of power are constituted, waged and contested
* based psychotherapy involves seeing only the written word.
* converters Convert documents to and from other file formats.
* covers theories.
* cumbersome method of dealing with large amounts of quantitative information.
* editing means modifying or changing the letters or words used.
* explores concepts.
* gives explanations
* happens to be the primary medium for the conveying of information and knowledge.
* has copies
* includes chapters
- descriptions
- paragraphs
- references
- word order
* is an important part of visual layout
- internal system language used to construct contexts
- operation that takes one input, a word
- books
* is capable of books
- fades
- created by typing
* is located in book stores
- libraries
- newspapers
- matter
* is part of bibles
- publications
- passage
- spoken by synthetic speech , in different languages
* is the attribute for the color of the text, or foreground
- graphic representation of speech
- lowest common denominator between all computers
- medium of choice for abstract ideas and concepts
- one most used for saving web pages
- original medium of the Internet and is an integral part of all web pages
- stuff of the web, the root of all media
- type of paper used for printing book pages, brochures, and most better printing
* is the words, sentences and paragraphs on a Web page which are visible to the end-user
- sentences, and paragraphs in a document made up of characters
- type produced by HTML tags, either headings , paragraphs , or lists
* is used for html files and other plain text files
- reflection
- studyings
- teaching
- to place text on the screen in a variety of type styles
* is what is used for writing
- they are taking, written words and knowledge
* is written by people
* often imply that only woody plants have secondary growth.
* presents information
- much new information
- overviews
* processing itself stands on assumptions about how to tokenize and normalize text into words.
* provides general information
- perspective
- summaries
* reading software reads aloud text in the computer.
* refers to the words and sentences that make up a writing or a passage.
* searching and database searching are traditional tools for discovering information.
* symbolic form of language used for the transmission of ideas.
* type of linear long-data object.
* very important element of vector graphics.
+ Linear A: Unreadable writing systems :: Minoan culture
* Most texts seem to be lists. A few are probably short dedications, as they are found on libations. So far, no long texts have been found. Straight lines, such as those used for Linear A, are not very practical to use on clay tables. For this reasons, most writing was probably done on other things, such as papyrus or parchment. The problem with these items is that they are not as durable as clay.
### written language | text:
Ancient text
* Many ancient texts lift up mother-worship as a norm.
* recommend the monsoon period to be the best season for Ayurvedic treatments.
* refer to the neem as 'the blessed tree' and the 'cure for all ailments'.
Electronic text
* Electronic Texts Use the internet to search through electronic texts.
* is text. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | text | electronic text:
Hypertext
* Some hypertexts consist solely of navigable webs of interlinked fragments.
* allow writers to move well beyond the one, linear dimension in traditional books.
* allows access to data bases and information
- articles and books to be connected with other texts on the internet
- different people to write in their field of specialty
- document creators to insert links and names to point to other relevant items
- documents to be published in a nonlinear format
- information from multimedia sources to be included in a single document
- people to jump around to different locations and types of information
* are open systems.
* are texts that rely on links to provide their structure
- with links to other texts
* binds related documents together on a computer or network.
* comes in many sizes and shapes.
* denotes an information medium that links verbal and nonverbal information.
* destroys the illusion that scholarly literature is made up of unique, independent works.
* enables material to be arranged hierarchically.
* exists in time , perhaps more so than any other medium
- solely on computers
* forms webs of knowledge.
* is electronic text
* take on meaning and structure from the programs they are created in.
* work on ethics in education.
* works because it mimics the hyper-dimensional linking in the brain.
Gnostic text
* concern the fall of man from the divine to the material world.
* show that women held senior roles as teachers, prophets and missionaries.<|endoftext|>### written language | text:
Header
* are beams
- bricks
- different sizes of fonts that can be used for headings
- harvesters
- hits
- jumps
- part of walls
* includes chapters
- paragraphs
- word order.
* also help make an article clearer and easy to see the structure in the table of contents. On the other hand, try not to use too many subheaders that are not needed, because this can make the article look messy. Short paragraphs and single sentences normally do not need their own sub-heading, and in these cases it may be better to use bullet points or bold text instead
### written language | text | header:
Headline
* are albums
- located in newspapers
* are part of newspaper articles
- singles
* describe observations.<|endoftext|>### written language | text | header:
Title
* are distinctions by which a person is known
- legal rights
* are located in books
- libraries
- pages
- records of land ownership
- the stuff of which dreams are made
* are used for books
- writing
* bundle of rights in real property.
* form of proof.
* includes chapters
* is Birth of a Nation
- the manner in which real and personal property are owned
* is the right to enjoy possession of that which is our own
* refer to traditionally feminine associations, in rebirth and the seasons.
* says it all really. Please leave my bots unblocked, as well as account creation by my IP and email by my username. It's all explained there, but if you want more reasoning i can give it.
* is trivial for an encyclopedia subject, content is unreferenced as to pov.
### written language | text | header | title:
Job title
* change in an attempt to identify the work the person is doing.
* figure greatly in the salaries paid.
* vary between departments within the civil service
- depending on the employment setting and the kinds of individual who seek services
Marketable title
* Marketable Title Enables an owner to sell property without objection.
* means that the land to be sold is free from lawsuits and the threat of litigation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language | text | header | title:
Native title
* is another form of title to land
- defined by reference to the traditional laws and customs of indigenous people
- extinguished by valid grants of land to non-indigenous people
- the legal expression of one of Indigenous peoples' most fundamental human rights
* non-discriminatory recognition of Indigenous culture.
* racist title.
* recognises rights that have previously been denied on the basis of race.
* stands between usufructury and proprietary rights to land.
* unique interest in land that can only be enjoyed by Indigenous people.<|endoftext|>### written language | text | header | title:
Title insurance
* adds security and peace of mind to home ownership.
* closing costs that is required by all lenders.
* contract between the insurer and the insured.
* differs from other forms of insurance.
* guarantee of marketable title.
* is an agreement to compensate for loss arising from undisclosed title defects
- insurance policy or contract issued by a title company
- integral component of real estate transactions
- for the buyer s and lender s protection
- perhaps one of the most misunderstood of all types of insurance
- simply a contract of indemnity
* is the application of insurance to real estate titles
- the general principles of insurance to real estate titles
- way of making certain
* one time expense that provides certain insurance coverage for title problems.
* one-time charge that protects against title claims.
* plays a major role in making certain home ownership is safe and secure.
* specialized insurance policy.
* type of insurance that protects the owner or lender.
* unique form of insurance.
Heading
* are lines
- part of tables
* give information.
* includes chapters
- paragraphs
- word order
* serve as the titles of sections in a document, or of the whole document.<|endoftext|>### written language | text | heading:
Subject heading
* are 'official' terms used to categorize titles under a common topic
- standardized terms and phrases used to describe the overall topics of a book
- terms that comprise an index to the library collection
* are terms which describe the content of an article
- have been designated as official representations of concepts
- uniform ways of describing a topic
* are words assigned by librarians to describe the overall content of a book
- chosen to standardize the terminology for a concept or topic
Herbal text
* Most herbal texts attribute the actions of elecampane to alantolactone.
* Some herbal texts extend the therapeutic use to pneumonia and asthma.
Hieroglyphic text
* are an integral part of many ceramic vessels.
* describe the activity and, in a few cases, document the speech of the workers.
* tell of pyramid towns and cite the names of mayors and overseers.
### written language | text | instalment:
Cliffhanger
* are contests
- episodes
* is an instalment
Literary text
* embrace many types of poetry, fiction, drama, and criticism.
* operate within culturally-specific contexts.
Lyric
* are capable of poems
- rhyme
- part of songs
* is text
* sometimes have to do with their emotions or their opinion of society.
+ Bad Religion: 1980s American music groups :: 1990s American music groups :: 2000s American music groups :: 2010s American music groups :: American punk bands :: Musical groups from Los Angeles, California
Plain text
* is also the most common type of data to be encrypted
- simple text with no special formatting
- simply text without any special formating or codes
* is the lowest common denominator
- more traditional format of e-mail | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### written language:
Transcription
* Getting around safely major concern for people who have poor sight.
* Most transcription occurs in the euchromatin regions and in the nucleus.
* absolutely requires anchorage of genomic DNA to the nuclear matrix.
* are conversations in written form.
* can occur even in a region of nucleosomes.
* defects in malignant rhabdoid tumor.
* governs the regulation of gene expression and functional identity.
* includes follow information
* inhibits the replication of autonomously replicating plasmids in human cells.
* is activated because the lactose molecule has bound to the repressor protein
- at the heart of gene expression and is thus subject to strict control
- central to all biological systems
- communication
- often synonymous with gene regulation
- recognized as a legitimate keystone function of medical records
- recordings
- suppressed when DNA is bound by protein and rendered inaccessible by a polymerase
* is the act of copying the recipe into a manageable shape
- first output of the genome and is highly controlled during development
* is the first step and the key control point in the pathway of gene expression
- in producing proteins
- that leads to the expression of the genes
- major target of regulation of gene expression
* is the process by which DNA directs the synthesis of mRNA during protein biosynthesis
- dictation is converted into an electronic medical report
- genetic code information is passed from one cell to another
- of converting the spoken word to a written, digital format
- representation of the spoken word
- transfer of genetic instructions in DNA to
- turned on by a molecule called a repressor
- used extensively in the medical community
* means to listen to a recorded voice and to write down what it is saying.
* occurs in the nucleus from a DNA template with properties of a minichromosome
- three stages, initiation, elongation, and termination
- inside nucleus in eukaryotes
- when the repressor substance is bound to the promoter gene
+ Romanization of Ukrainian, Transcription
* Transcription is the representation of the spoken word. Phonetic transcription represents every single sound, or phone, and can be used to compare different dialects of a language. It is more specifed as the Transliteration.
+ Transcription (genetics): Cell biology :: Molecular biology :: Genetics
### yarrows:
Common yarrow
* are yarrows.
* is also native to North America.
* is an important food source for deer in autumn
- old medicinal herb known by several names
- found in pastures, roadsides, embankments, and waste ground
* weedy species and can become invasive. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Yeast
* Many yeasts produce alcohol, but cultured wine yeasts make the best wine.
* Most yeast belongs to phyla
- causes candidiasis
* Most yeast has ethanol productivity
- yeasts have affinities to Ascomycota, but a small percentage have affinities to Basidiomycota
* Some yeast attracts pests
- becomes hormones
- can switch gender completely
- candidas cause infection
* Some yeast causes diseases
- fungal pneumonia
- gases
- intestinal problems
- vaginal infection
- consumes food
* Some yeast contains fish oil
* Some yeast grows in gastrointestinal tracts
* Some yeast has applications
- particle size
* Some yeast has small particle size
- participates in sexual reproduction
* Some yeast produces acid
- ethanols
- lactic acid
* Some yeasts are psychrophilic, and so they can grow at relatively low temperatures
- cause problems for humans
- form buds that fail to detach themselves
* also assists in improved digestive efficiency
- gives flavor to the wine
* are a family of fungi closely related to molds
- highly specialized sub-group and have little in common with molds an d other fungi
- natural part of a woman's vagina
- part of our everyday lives
- source of B vitamins
* are a type of single-celled fungus that can have many uses
- unicellular fungus
- unicellular growth form
- able to grow in a more acid environment compared to bacteria
* are also ascomycetes
- good model organism for studying the evolution of multicellularity
- usually one cell, but they are larger than bacteria
- well-suited for biochemical analysis
- always present in the vagina in small numbers, and symptoms only appear with overgrowth
- bacteria which have a type of cell division called budding
- easy to work with in the laboratory
- eukaryotes, sharing the same superkingdom as humans
- even more important in food production
- examples of an organism that reproduce by budding
- found in the Basidiomycota and Ascomycota
- fungi and related to mushrooms
- important for bread, beer, wine
* are important in making bread rise
- the preparation of foods such as bread
- organisms in the production of alcoholic beverages and in the making of bread
- in the fungi kingdom
- intermediate, being faculative anaerobes
* are microscopic fungi capable of fermenting different carbohydrates
- fungi, single-cell organisms of the plant kingdom
* are microscopic, one celled organisms
- single-celled organisms that are classified in the family Fungi
- much larger than bacteria
- of two kinds
- organisms that naturally harbour plasmids
- oval, unicellular fungi that reproduce by budding
- oval-shaped and slightly larger than bacteria
- parasitic organisms that absorb our nutrients and produce toxic waste
- part of the group fungii
- passed from adult beetles to larvae in various ways
- placed in huge vats of corn or other organic material
- responsible for turning the wort into beer through a process of fermentation
- simple fungi
* are single celled organisms that are ubiquitous in our environment
- fall under the family of 'fungus'
- live mainly in waterlogged anaerobic soils
- cells that divide to form clusters
* are single-celled eukaryotic organisms related to fungi
- small, lemon-shaped single cells that are about the same size as red blood cells
- still single celled organisms like the bacteria
- the other morphological category of fungi
- tiny organisms that normally live in small numbers on the skin and inside the vagina
- types of fungi
* are unicellular , which are eukaryotes
- eucaryotes
- organisms, normally ovoid or spherical in shape
* are unicellular, all others have septate hyphae
- but they can clump together to form chains of cells
* are used in making bread, wine, beer and solvents
- production of bread and liquor
- useful in the making of bread and fermented drinks
* are, basically, the ecologist and the undertaker of life.
* belong to a group called fungi.
* can also completely desiccate and still live
- grow in the blood and cause a very serious infection
- occasionally cause respiratory infections
- attack sugary foods such as fruit and jam and cause spoilage
- be man-made, called cultured yeasts, or they can be wild yeasts
- break down some compounds to make others
- cause foods to ferment
- create territorial poisons to mark their turf, called antibiotics
- follow glycolysis with alcohol fermentation
- gain energy from oxygen and sugar
- go on a rampage until things get back to normal
* can grow in the presence or absence of air
- on plants or animals without the host even knowing
- indeed be germs
- make bread rise
- only ferment maltose and simpler sugars
- provoke a number of reactions in some people, particularly skin disorders
* can reproduce by budding
- producing a bud
- respire in both ways
- turn into a deadly pathogen causing infection
- use a variety of organic nitrogen compounds, including urea and various amino acids
* carries out fermentation to produce alcohol from sugar.
* catalyst for the decomposition that produces oxygen.
* catalyzes the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide into oxygen and water.
* causes a tiny volume of dough to expand to a remarkable size
* causes the conversion of sugar into alcohol and carbon dioxide
- wort to ferment
* comes across as fruitiness and effervescence
- in hundreds of varieties, but beer is most commonly made with ale yeast or lager yeast
* common leavening agent.
* commonly grow as single cells and are useful in the production of wines, beers, and bread.
* commonly reproduce asexually by a process called budding
- by asexual budding in which a small protuberance is pushed from the cell
* comprises tiny organisms that reproduce both ways, sexually and asexually.
* consumes sugar
- the sugar and converts it to alcohol and carbon dioxide
* contains small nuclear RNAs encoded by single copy genes.
* continue to be important causes of nosocomial bloodstream infections.
* create the wine by metabolizing the grape sugars.
* digests sugar in the wort producing alcohol.
* does all the work of making alcohol and carbon dioxide out of malt sugars.
* eat sugar, they burp carbon dioxide and they pee alcohol
- the sugar in wort and create alcohol as a by-product
* eats sugar and produces ethanol and carbon dioxide, yeast is the unicellular form
* enzymes respond to the living micro-organisms in the body where they metabolize readily.
* exhibits growth.
* exist in two mating types, a and.
* exists naturally as part of a normal, healthy, vagina.
* extract A water soluble preparation extracted from common yeast.
* feeds off sugar and the only way to keep it at bay is to starve it.
* feeds on sugar, but most commercial yeast can do just fine without it
* ferment the sugar in the dough, producing ethanol and carbon dioxide.
* ferments sugars into alcohol and carbon dioxides gas.
* flourish on all types of sugars and simple carbohydrates.
* form a subtype of fungus characterised by clusters of round or oval cells
- tiny buds that break off and grow into larger cells
* fungus that feeds on sugars
- reproduces asexually
* general term for single-celled fungi that reproduce by budding.
* grow better in the presence of oxygen because they can completely oxidize the sugar
- by budding or fission and hyphae grow apically and branch laterally
- in typical creamy wet convex colonies
- on sugar and produce carbon dioxide
- well in warm, moist areas
* grows better when at least half the flour is added before any oils or salt
- quickly in water that feels a little warm
* have a cell wall, like plant cells, but no chloroplasts
- many advantages as a genetic research tool
- no spores because they are single celled
- simple nutritional needs
- the remarkable ability to live as either haploids or diploids
* helps bread rise and beer ferment.
* is actually a living organism
- type of fungus related to mushrooms
- added convering fermentable sugars into alcohol
* is added to agitate the maltose, converting it to alcohol
- bread to make it rise by producing millions of tiny bubbles of carbon dioxide
- ferment the sugars into alcohol and carbon dioxide
- turn the natural sugar into alcohol
- airborne throughout a bakery, and sticks to work surfaces, aprons and bakery equipment
- alive
* is also a fungus, and gives off carbon dioxide as it grows
- producing pathogenic and non-pathogenic manifestations
- popular organism for studying genetics
- source of various enzymes
- good food
- the final component that determines the flavor of the beer
- always present in the female body
* is an airborne mold and goes everywhere in the building
- ancient leavening, brewing, fermenting agent single celled microscopic fungus
- example of a single celled fungi
* is an organism that ferments
- is normally found in the vagina
- ovoid or spherical unicellular microscopic fungus
- unicellular organism and oval in shape
* is by far the most common type of organism found in a diaper rash
- type of organism found in a perineal rash
- common example, and it is fed sugar during the process
- difficult to kill and requires a concentrated effort to cure the infection
- dissolved in the warm water
- found in the air and on many surfaces but it requires a special environment to grow
- in everyone's body
- just one example of a single-cell eukaryotic organism
- less likely to flourish in a dry environment
- microorganisms
- naturally present as an airborne organism just about everywhere on earth
* is needed for the fermentation of wine, beers and other alcoholic drinks
- to activate the fermenation of the beer
* is normally found in the vagina, it only causes problems when it overgrows
- present in a healthy vagina and thrives in that warm, moist environment
- now cultured using water, sugar, and other nutrients in large fermentation chambers
- nutritious and in small amounts gives bread a good yeasty flavor
* is one of the earliest domesticated organisms
- essential ingredients in bread production
* is one of the most fascinating living things
- important microorganisms known and utilised by mankind
- only one leavening agent that can be used in making breads
- our example of asexual reproduction
- pitched into open copper vessels, but the wort remains there only during the lag phase
- present everywhere in our environment
- probably the simplest organism that ages
- responsible for making bread rise
- rich in protein
- said to have first been noticed when an Egyptian bread maker was making bread for the king
- single-celled, and reproduces either sexually or asexually
* is the basis for many vitamin and mineral preparations
- enzyme that breaks down the sugars into alcohol and carbon dioxide
- heart of the breadmaking process
- microorganism that is responsible for fermentation in beer
* is the most important ingredient in beer brewing
- persnickety part of wine
- prevalent infection, which causes vaginal itching
- name given to a very diverse group of single-celled fungi
- natural substance that enables beer to be fermented
- organism that makes the whole process work
- primary rising ingredient in bread
- treated with vaginal creams, ovules or with oral medication
- unicellular, while mold is multicellular
- used as a model to teach some of the more actively researched areas of cell biology
* is used for commercial production of breads, pastries and cakes in baking industries
- fermentation, converting the sugars of the grain to alcohol
* is used in bread baking
- fermenting wine, soybeans and fruit juices
- making wine and other alcoholic drinks, and for making bread
- the Bible as an illustration of the invisible power of sin
* is used to leaven bread and produce ethyl alcohol for making beer and wine
- make an alcoholic beverage
* is used to make bread and alcoholic drinks
- usefully to make alcohol
- valuable because it helps make bread and beer
* kind of fungus.
* likes to be fed sugar and flour before drowning it in other liquid
- live on sugar the most
* live a very simple life, they eat sugars and they give off carbon dioxide as they breathe
- almost everywhere, including on the skin and in the mouth, vagina, and intestinal tract
- as small, individual cells, between the size of bacteria and our own cells
- in liquid or moist habitats
* live on sugar and simple carbohydrates
* living creature, metabolizing, reproducing, and living off the ingredients in the beer
- fungus that is used in baking
* living organism which feeds on sugar
- with a finite life expectancy
* living, microscopic fungus.
* love dark, moist, warm places, thrive in sweet environments, and multiply very rapidly.
* loves and feeds off of sugar.
* major ingredient in many pet food products.
* make alcohol, so if silage smells like alcohol, many yeast are present.
* makes beer
- beignets airy and light
* makes bread dough rise because it live single-celled organism
- rise and helps develop the flavor
* makes carbon dioxide gas that acts as a leavening agent
* metabolize sugars into carbon dioxide and ethyl alcohol.
* microscopic organism.
* mixes with water.
* naturally living, beneficial micro-organism
- occurring micro- organism, of which their are several varieties or strains
- occurs in everyone in minute harmless amounts
* naturally rich source of proteins, amino acids, minerals and B-complex vitamins
* needs a warm environment to make bread rise.
* needs for fermentation
- proper fermentation
- moisture to survive
- oxygen to reproduce and produce strong cell walls
- some initial oxygen in order to get a good start
- sugar in which to ferment, but too much can kill it
* normal inhabitant of the intestines of healthy men and women and the vagina in women.
* normally grows in the vagina and also in the anus.
* nuisance infection.
* occurs primarily in women because the vaginal area warm moist environment.
* offers the advantage of being highly amenable to genetic manipulation and analysis.
* often conjures up the world of baking in people's minds.
* one celled microorganism of the fungus type.
* one-celled fungi that reproduces or grows in the presence of certain foods
- fungus which converts sugar to carbon dioxide gas
* only causes problems when it grows too rapidly.
* plant, according to the biologists, and is capable of reproducing itself.
* prefer an acidic environment.
* prefers water to milk.
* produce alcohol which is also toxic
- antibiotics and recycle nutrients
- carbon dioxide to expand the structure, such as dough for bread baking
- characteristic creamy, opaque, pasty colonies on the surface of culture media
* produces alcohol as a natural byproduct
- fermentation which cancer needs to feed off of
* provide a useful system for drug testing in several ways.
* provides vitamins for bacterial growth.
* refers to any non-filamentous fungus.
* releases carbon dioxide and water as it metabolizes sugar.
* represent the decomposers present in sewage and natural waters.
* represents a good example of a facultative aerobe.
* reproduce asexually through budding and sexually through the formation of ascospores
- both sexually and asexually, but the latter is more common
* reproduce by an asexual process called budding
- forming spores or by budding
- the process budding
- most when they have ideal conditions
* requires a warm, wet, environment and a food source to multiply and thrive
- the gluten to bind it well
* respires both aerobically and anaerobically.
* show narrow-base budding and characteristic variation in size.
* simple, one-celled plant.
* single celled organism that is used in the fermentation process.
* single-cell eukaryote that produces carbon dioxide.
* single-celled organism that breaks down sugars into alcohol and carbon dioxide
- organism, a type of fungus
* source of betaglucan , which is considered a good antioxidant.
* takes longer time to rise than chemical leavening agents.
* tend to cause fungemia as well as focal involvement of skin and other sites.
* thrive in a warm, humid environment
* tiny life form that grows quickly under the right conditions.
* unicellular fungus important in baking and brewing
* use a similar mechanism to obtain iron
- fruit sugars as a substrate for cellular respiration
- sugar and flour as a substrate to produce alcohol and carbon dioxide in fermentation
* usually reproduce by a. symetric binary fission.
* very common vaginal infection
- general term, and covers a broad range of unicellular fungi
- simple single-celled organism
+ Fermentation: Biochemistry
* Yeast is an organism that ferments. When yeast ferments sugar, the yeast eats sugar and produces alcohol. Other cells make vinegar or lactic acid when they ferment sugar. This is used to make beer, some types of fuel and to make bread rise.
+ Fungus, Structure, Reproduction
* Fungi may be single celled or multicellular. Yeast is single-celled, and reproduces either sexually or asexually.
+ Leavening agent, Yeast: Baking
* Yeast is a common leavening agent. It is a fungus that converts sugar to ethanol and carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide makes the bread rise. This is slower and makes the bread more soft. Most of the ethanol evaporates when the bread is baked. The yeast is also killed when the bread is baked.
* Yeast takes longer time to rise than chemical leavening agents. It also can be killed by heat or salt. Yeast is normally sold in small packages. These contain yeast fungi. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### yeast:
Ale yeast
* Many ale yeasts tend to flocculate at the top of the ferment as the ferment diminishes.
* ferment at warmer temps and finish much quicker.
* is most comfortable at close to room temperature, and ferments fairly quickly
- what is known as a top fermenting yeast
* prefers warmer temperatures, and ferments more quickly than does lager yeast.
* tends to ferment at higher temperatures and to flocculate at the top of the beer.
* vary in cell morphology.
Brewers yeast
* includes all the essential amino acids.
* is loaded with B complex vitamins, minerals, nucleic acids, and high quality protein.
Brewing yeast
* comes in several forms.
* eats the sugar, and produces alcohol and carbon dioxide.
Candida yeast
* Some candida yeast causes infection.
* are extremely common in the environment and on all mucous membrane and skin surfaces.
Different yeast
* are used by bakers, brewers, and vintners to make their bread, beer, or wine.
* exhibit different degrees of flocculence.
* produce different results, and have different tolerance levels.
Fission yeast
* divide using an actin-based ring similar to the contractile ring of animal cells.
* simple unicellular eukaryote which provides a powerful tool for genetic studies.
Lager yeast
* Many lager yeasts give off a sulfur-like aroma during primary fermentation.
* are bottom fermenting, operating best, slowly, at low temperature.
* is very delicate yeast.
Nutritional yeast
* Some nutritional yeasts can interact with medications.
* good source of B vitamins.
* is called just that-nutritional yeast and has a kind of cheesey flavor
- yellowish in color and usually comes in flakes
Red yeast
* contains chemicals similar to statin-like drugs.
* is intended to provide nutritive support to help maintain healthy cholesterol levels.
### yellow pine:
Ponderosa pine
* are prolific and pine seedlings grow in the shade of mature trees.
* is yellow pine<|endoftext|>### young bird:
Baby bird
* Most baby birds begin their lives in a platform or cup-shaped nest
- eat bugs
- go through stages
* Some baby birds require care.
* are active and fairly independent shortly after hatching
- hatched blind and helpless
- ready to leave the nest several days before they can fly effectively
* are very delicate
- difficult to hand-raise
* can also develop bacteria and yeast infections from the ingested material.
* create quite a ruckus when eating.
- constantly
* fall from their nests when the trees they are living in are chopped down.
* get pneumonia in wet weather
- yeast infections in their crops
* go through several stages
* grow VERY fast
- surprisingly fast
- very fast because they eat a lot
* hatch from their shells and grow stronger each day.
* have an egg tooth, which they use to peck out of the egg
- no immune system
- to be fed every fifteen minutes , but thankfully, only during the day
* learn a lot faster from another bird then they do from humans.
* learn to hop before they fly
- survive by imitating their parents
* leave the nest before they can fly.
* need animal proteins
* open their mouth for food and flutter their wings.
* require attention and contact with people to maintain their affectionate nature
- specific diets
- to be fed at two-hour intervals
* young bird
Eaglet
* Some eaglets start immediately to stretch their wings and soar on the rising winds.
* are eagles
- relatively non-aggressive
- young birds
* break through the shell by using their egg tooth, a pointed bump on the top of the beak.
* develop feathers within the first month, and begin to fly at three months.
* is an eagle | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### young bird:
Nestling
* are ectothermic at birth and rely on their parents to maintain internal temperature
- fed regurgitated insects by both parents
- fully feathered baby birds who are still in the nest
- helpless and naked at hatching but grow quickly
* beg for food by crouching with their mouths opened wide, waving their heads.
* die from starvation, adverse weather, and attacks by raccoons, owls, and other animals.
* have no feathers, are blind and only tiny bills.
* make a noisy grating begging call when seeking or expecting food.
### young children:
First grader
* are young children.
* make dinosaur fossils out of plaster and clay in their study of geologic time.
### young discipline:
Underwater archaeology
* is archaeology
- the study of shipwrecks and ancient artifacts beneath the seas
* young discipline.
### young fish:
Parr
* are young fish.
* collection of image manipulation code.
### young persons job:
Police work
* is one of the most stressful jobs in the world
- people work
* young person's job.
### young women:
Medical worker
* Most medical workers are young women.
* face emergencies on an everyday basis.
Youth group
* Many youth groups make money year-round by recycling newspapers and cans.
* Some youth groups are places where people look for victims
- require spiritual chiropractic in order to realign aching members of the body
* ministry that is for youth.
Zero
* are a type of share that has a predetermined redemption date and price
- as important as any other number
- digits
- integers
- numbers
- one class of share issued by split-capital investment trusts
- part of kernels
* indicate lines which make up the edges of waterbodies.
* is an amount<|endoftext|>Zinc compound
* are numerous and are widely used.
* can be corrosive in the stomach
- move into the groundwater and into lakes, streams, and rivers
* occur naturally in the air, soil, and water, and are present in all foods.
+ Zinc, Safety: Chemical elements :: Transition metals
* Large amounts of zinc metal are toxic. It can dissolve in stomach acid. When too much zinc is eaten, copper and iron levels go down in the body. Zinc compounds can be corrosive in the stomach. Zinc compounds put in the nose can ruin the sense of smell.<|endoftext|>Zooid
* alternate biserially on branches, with individual zooids tapering proximally.
* are narrow in the proximal portion, wider distally
- organisms
- short, widening distally and tapering proximally
- very small , highly modified individuals
* carry prominent ciliated tentacles.
* eventually detach to form a. body is dorsoventrally flattened a. gametes.
* is an organism
+ List of animal phyla, Phyla, Deuterostomia: Invertebrates :: Lists of animals :: Groups of phyla :: Glossaries
* They have a long fossil record. Zooids carry prominent ciliated tentacles. A minor phylum.
+ Portuguese Man o' War, Structure: Cnidarians
* Physalia' look like a jellyfish, but they really are not. The Portuguese Man o' War is not a single animal. It is rather a siphonophore. This is a colony of four kinds of zooids. Zooids are very small, highly modified individuals. These zooids are specialized polyps and medusoids. Grzimek's Animal life encyclopaedia'. Each type of zooid does not have some structure and functions. It depends for survival on the others doing what it cannot do by itself.
+ Siphonophore
* A siphonophore is not a single animal. It is a colony of four kinds of zooids. Zooids are very small, highly modified individuals. All the zooids in a colony are genetically identical. These zooids are specialized polyps and medusoids. Grzimek's Animal life encyclopaedia'. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Ace
* AcE program to aid gene prediction accuracy evaluation.
* Many aces identify somewhere in the gray area, which is referred to as the ace spectrum.
* count as ones, but are also considered to be one greater than a king.
* inhibiting drugs block an enzymatic process that causes blood vessels to constrict.
* is the Colombian link with the Dominican Republic. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Aba
* actively encourages the conservation of birds and their habitats.
* also adjusts root and shoot size in order to increase water and mineral consumption.
* big part of both germination in young plants, and stress responses in adult plants.
* binds to receptors at the surface of the plasma membrane of the guard cells.
* can affect the cell in three different ways depending on the tissue involved.
* closes stomates in response to water stress.
* copolymer with different repeating units.
* highly effective treatment for autistic children of all age groups.
* induces oscillations in guard cell cytosolic free calcium
- various genes under drought conditions
* is an efficient inhibitor of germination and occurs in high concentrations in dormant seeds
- terpenoid and contains three isoprene units
- based on the science of psychology
- do novo synthesized in response to osmotic stress
- expensive to make, sensitive to light and quickly gets inactivated inside plants
- incorporated in Florida
- made by any nonmeristematic cell faced with a lack of root derived nutrients
- metabolized to phaseic acid, dihy-drophaseic acid, and dihydrophaseic acid glucoside
* is the professional organization for the discipline
- science of behavior
* is used as a treatment for some psychological disorders and developmental disabilities
- to change a person 's behavior
* methodology that can be applied everywhere, with anyone, at any time.
* moves up the plant to the leaves.
* plays a role in both germination in young plants and stress responses in adult plants.
* promotes dormancy in winter buds and seeds
- synthesis of proteins involved in dessication tolerance e.g. during seed development
* relies on data to make decisions about behavior.
* slows growth, and is the main player in seed dormancy.
* small organic molecule that controls the growth and development of plants.
* stimulates the transport of potassium ions out of guard cells, causing stomata to close.
* technique, which has proven to be an effective teaching method for children with autism.
+ Applied behavior analysis
* ABA may also be used to find out why some behaviors have changed. ABA is based on the science of psychology. Applied Behavior Analysis. Merril, Prentice Hall. ABA is used as a treatment for some psychological disorders and developmental disabilities. An ABA based treatment is called a behavioral intervention.
* ABA is based on behavior principles that were discovered using experiments. These experimental behavior principles were first discovered by psychologists. Psychologists studied the behavior of animals and people by doing experiments. The behavior principles are based on what psychologists learned by doing these experiments. ABA applies these experimental behavior principles to real life behavior. ABA is used to change a person's behavior. It is used to make a person's social behavior better. Socially important behavior is behavior that happens in a person's everyday life. Improving social behavior will increase the quality of a person's life
- analysis, Analyzing Behavior
* ABA relies on data to make decisions about behavior. This makes decisions better because they are scientific and objective. Objective means that they are based on facts rather than feelings. To make objective decisions, behavior must be measured a lot. So behavior analysts are always collecting data about a person's behavior
+ Applied behavior analysis, Characteristics, Behavioral
* A behavior is anything that a person does. ABA has to be based on behaviors. What a person actually does is the thing that is studied. Feelings are not studied because they are internal so they cannot be measured. ABA treatments measure rates of behavior. A rate is how often the behavior happens
- Technological
* Baer, Wolf, and Risley use the word technological to describe the amount of explanation necessary for a treatment. A behavioral intervention must be explained very well. If an intervention is not explained well it is not technological. Anyone with the proper training who reads a treatment plan should be able to do the intervention and get the same results. A treatment plan must define the behavior being studied and all of the things that could happen during the behavioral intervention. ABA relies on technological treatments because they are universal. Universal means that they can be used in different places by different people and get the same results | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Automata
* Every automata has one or more.
* Some automata have similarity.
American citizenship
* combines freedom with responsibility.
* is for life.
* sacred trust committed to the keeping of candor and courage.
Avidity
* can compensate for low affinity.
* is enthusiasm
* measure of the overall stability of the antibody-antigen complex.
Amnesia
* Most amnesia is due to physical causes.
* is animes
- diseases
- nightclubs
- venues
* refers to a partial loss of memory.
* state of mind
Atmospheric turbulence
* can extend over meters or kilometers.
* hastens breakup.
* is also constant throughout the plume travel distance
- caused by random fluctuations in the wind flow
* is the factor which theoretically most affects the visibility
- great equalizer
Acanthosis
* is skin disorder
* refers to an increase in width of the stratum spinosum as a result of hyperplasia.
* velvety hyperpigmented rash found on the nape of the neck or axillae.<|endoftext|>Atopic dermatitis
* affects children and adolescents.
* can be hereditary or simply caused by a variety of every-day conditions
- occur in children or in adults
* chronic skin disease that usually affects children.
* chronically developing dermatosis currently treated symtomatically.
* condition caused by environmental or airborne allergens.
* hereditary form of the condition that usually becomes apparent in infancy.
* includes an immune component wherein the skin's immune system is over-reactive
- environmentally-linked skin disorders such as eczema
* involves more itching and if located at the folds of the arms and knees.
* is an illness associated with immunoregulatory abnormalities
- inherited condition characterized by dry, sensitive, itchy skin
- associated with a personal or family history of atopy
- caused by a combination of genetic and environmental factors
* is characterized by a very itchy, burning rash
- dry, itchy skin
- itching , scaling, swelling, and sometimes blistering
- one of the most common symptoms of protein intolerance
- predominantly a disease of infancy and childhood
* is the most common of the many types of eczema
- type of dermatitis
- prototype of food allergic skin disease
* is very common in all parts of the world
* lowers resistance to infection and increases the risk of developing cataracts.
* lymphocyte-mediated skin disease.
* occurs in people who seem to have very sensitive skin.
* runs in families along with asthma and allergic rhinitis.
* seasonal disease.
* skin disorder characterized by itchy, inflamed skin.
* very common condition
- disease that exists world wide
* very common skin conditions and has been related to early cataract formation
- problem
- common, inherited condition that causes itchy, inflamed skin | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Assimilation
* assumes that relatively tenuous culture gets to be united to one unified culture.
* begins in the European culture and then spreads to other cultures.
* causes immigrants to abandon their own culture and become part of the larger crowd.
* comes with the passage of time.
* continues to melt ethnic separatism.
* filter, which by definition subtracts.
* form of symbolic violence.
* goes on in the tissues.
* has strong transferency in family ties and influences.
* involves the incorporation of new events into preexisting cognitive structures.
* is an innate behavior caused by migration
- another example of how languages change phonetically
- genocide
- like a nuclear chain reaction
- more a biological process than a matter of choice
- relationships
- social processes
- takes place only within the vegetative biomass
* is the acquisition and integration of perceptions into mental structures
- greatest threat to our existence
- incorporation of individuals or groups into another culture
- passage of the food molecules into body cells
- process of including new people into the life and ministry of the church
- to taking up, making part of and making like oneself
- total acculturation of a group to the point of lost identity
* means that one of the sounds becomes more like the other one
- using existing mental frameworks and patterns to understand a new information<|endoftext|>Alienation
* also plays a powerful role in misguided patient behavior.
* byproduct of isolation.
* directly affects our state of health mind, body and soul.
* is actions
- an important cause of the disintegration of societies
- dislike
- fundamental to our make-up and is the single greatest cause of human suffering
- how people understand themselves in relation to their entire society
- increase by a cultural emphasis on competitive materialism over cooperation
- increased in societies which have oppressed minorities
- one of the most influential forces that cause individuals to leave the community
* is the child of cultural invasion-which is born of the underpinning of a culture
- daily rationed bread
- normal method of people relating today
- point where people give up their human, subjective qualities for material needs
- precursor to persecution
- result of sin in our lives, and it dominates our existence
- usual and normal state of middle-class white American adolescents
- transfers
* more limited term referring to the transfer of income without transfering source.
* occurs when title to a property passes to another party, such as when a property is sold.
* serves a purpose of preserving identity, control, and power.
* tend to increase as interaction between different culture and languages increased.
* In sociology, alienation more complex and difficult idea. Alienation is how people understand themselves in relation to their entire society. A good example of this is how people think of themselves when they are working and doing a job. Karl Marx wrote about this. This kind of alienation happens when people do work that they are not interested in or find boring. However in almost all societies some people may have to do jobs that they don't like because they need to make money. This can be seen as a type of alienation because a person's true feelings and their actions are separated and unrelated.
Atomic excitation
* can occur in all phases of matter.
* occur through collisions with electrons.
Adenosis
* benign proliferation of the terminal lobule.
* is disorder
- one cause of diffuse calcifications seen on mammograms | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Alliteration
* are phrases or sentences that have the same beginning sounds
- that begin with the same sound.
* term that describes a literary stylistic device. Aside from tongue twisters, alliteration is also used in poems, song lyrics, and even store or brand names
* is consonance
- one form of repetition that ought to be used with special care
- part of rhyme
* is the repetition of consonant sounds, assonance is the repetition of vowel sounds
- initial consonant sounds
- used to make the sentences flow in the motion of a serpent
* means that every word in the sentence begins with the same letter.
* poetic device where the author uses similar consonant sounds in a row.
* uses a repetition of consonants.
* way of putting words together that have some of the same sounds.<|endoftext|>Allergic rhinitis
* affects more people than any other kind of allergy.
* can be a precursor
- cause sneezing, itchy or watery eyes, or a runny or stuffed up nose
- drag on for weeks or months
- occur seasonally or year round
* causes symptoms such as nasal stuffiness, runny or itchy nose, and sneezing.
* common cause of sinusitis.
* is an allergen-induced inflammation of the membranes lining the nose
- allergic reaction of the lining of the nose
- inflammation of the nasal mucosa which is triggered by an allergic reaction
* is caused by airborne pollen
- allergies to certain plants, pollen, or dust
- substances that trigger allergies, called allergens
- common in both adults and children and often has a strong family history
- coryza
- extremely common in all Arab countries, surprisingly more common in Bahrain
- hypersensitivity reaction
- inflammation of the nose resulting from an allergy
- similar to asthma, except in one respect
- the fifth most common chronic condition in the United States
* is the most common allergic disease, with one in five Canadian adults affected
- chronic disease in children
- form
- very common
* reaction to seasonal airborne allergens.
* requires contact with the environment.
Anamnesis
* is memory
- the opposite of amnesia
* rare disease in which the person affected has many animal characteristics.<|endoftext|>Anaemia
* Following diagnosis, many coeliacs sufferers are anaemic.
* Most anaemia is due to malaria.
* affects around two billion people worldwide.
* associated with inadequate intake of folate is common.
* causes diminished mental and physical capacities.
* covers groups of conditions characterized by paleness of skin and membrane.
* is almost always present
- also a risk factor for developing infections after surgery
- basically lack of red blood cell count in the blood
- chronic and severe
- common among women
- directly related to nutritional deficiencies
- frequently present, and sometimes skin rashes along with joint pains
- made worse by some illnesses, particularly hookworm infection
- one of the common problems present before the diagnosis of coeliac disease is made
- very common
* results from the shortage of oxygen-carrying red blood cells that fuel body function.
* significant problem, particularly among pregnant women.
* simply means that the levels of haemoglobin in the blood are low.
Asian girl
* are the prettiest and most exotic women in the world.
* lean towards complacency when it comes to sun exposure. | {
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} |
Amnesia
* can be permanent , or it can be temporary
- result from a shock, or from halting between two opinions
* common plot device in film noir.
* is another danger that usually follows a sleepwalking episode
- central to the mannered theater that is life in Washington
- common for people with one of the dissociative orders
- devastating on the individual level
- forgetfulness
- important in assessing severity of brain injury
- potentially a symptom of a serious problem and requires prompt medical attention
- said to be retrograde when the memory loss is for events prior to the injury
* is the colonization of memory
- disease of the exiled
- loss of memory
- total loss of memory
* means serious memory loss.
* prevents memories of a trauma from entering the survivor's consciousness.
* problem with remembering things.
* results from loss of access rather than loss of stored information.
* severe form of memory loss.
* shows an incomplete response to treatment.
+ Amnesia, Causes
* Amnesia can be permanent, or it can be temporary. Damage to the brain, or the use of certain drugs can cause amnesia. Some of these drugs are sedatives. Another well known cause for amnesia can be drinking too much alcohol. Those kinds of causes are called 'organic', because they can been directly seen. Other causes cannot directly be seen, they are called 'functional'.
+ Anterograde amnesia: Neurology :: Symptoms
* Amnesia is a problem with remembering things. In anterograde amnesia, people have trouble making memories last - they forget. With Anterograde amnesia, the longer-term memories from the time before the event remain intact. The amnesia may be partial or complete.
Adjacency
* Adjacencies are nearness
- control the distribution of routing protocol packets
- describe the same pair of label spaces
* is assumed within a field
African life
* involves walking great distances and the stick is an integral part of the bush life.
* revolves around markets.<|endoftext|>Adherence
* continues to be a major contributor to the success of anti-HIV therapy.
* is an absolute requirement for the initiation of cell cytotoxicity
- dependent on specific recognition systems between epithelial cells and bacteria
- monitored in the laboratory by hemagglutination of red blood cells
- support
* is the ability of a fired or nonfired color to stay in place on a given surface
- important first step in development of an infection
* is the key factor upon which arrest and reversal therapy depends
- to long-term success for safe, effective, lasting weight loss
- most important factor associated with the virologic success of therapy
* means that the bacteria attaches itself to the intestinal lining cells.
* problem throughout the different areas of medicine and throughout the world.
* vital factor in intestinal colonisation.
Attributable risk
* estimates the excess risk of disease in the exposed compared to the nonexposed.
* is of most relevance to a societal appraisal of the harms of drug use
- the disease rate in exposed persons minus that in unexposed persons<|endoftext|>Affluence
* also causes poverty.
* fosters an addiction to greater affluence.
* helps to mask moral and spiritual poverty.
* is associated with smaller family size
- linked to better nutrition, which promotes early growth
* is the amount of carbon-producing activity per person
- experience in which our needs are easily met and our desires spontaneously filled
- provide-ance of Life for our sustainment
- wealth
* leads to the denigration of the profit motive on which that affluence rests.
* seems to affect management of breast cancer. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Accommodation
* are changes in the way things are done
- interventions that allow the learner to indicate what they know
- investments that facilitate business activity and boost productivity
* change in the focal length of the lens which occurs when viewing close objects.
* is adjustment
- alteration
- an optical change in the eye
- characterized by cooperative and unassertive behavior
- helpings
* is located in inns
- motels
- theaters
- produced by changes in the shape and refractive power of the lens
- settlements
* is the key strategy that society has used to attack disability discrimination
- process our eyes use to read
* is used for comfort
- showers
- sleeping
- stays
- when the eyes focus to look at something close
* motor function that is often forgotten in the assessment of infants and children.
* occurs in the lens when the eye focuses to view an object far away
- eye focuses to view an object up close
- young people when they look at a near object, such as when reading
* occurs when the ciliary muscles relax
- suspensory ligaments relax
* refers to the relaxation of the rectal ampulla after an initial increase in pressure.
Alliance
* are a way to manage complexity and interdependence
- between people
- coalition
- connections
- instruments for survival, growth, and extending skills and services
- organizations
- treaties
* is fusion
* kind of relative relationship which always targets a third party.
* often occur between brothers or other relatives.<|endoftext|>Acidosis
* can also lead to the problem of ketosis.
* can be a life-threatening condition
- dangerous if untreated
- what causes the chest pain
- create an unhealthy internal environment that leaves the body s health vulnerable
* causes potassium to leak out of cells and into the blood
- move from within the body's cells into the blood
* condition of decreased alkali reserve of the blood and other body fluids
- often found in patients with cancer, high blood pressure and heart disease
* generally promotes depressed mental activity culminating in coma and death.
* is caused by an accumulation of acid or a significant loss of bicarbonate
- due to the rapid fermentation of starch in the rumen and over-production of lactic acid
- pathology
- present and of the proximal renal tubular type
- probably the number-one problem on dairy farms today
- the most important digestive problem when feeding grain diets to cattle
- usually present and so too a normochromic-normocytic anemia
- very dangerous and people can go into a coma or die from it
* leads to decreased appetite, nausea and vomiting.
* occurs when cattle consume too much grain in a short period of time.
* reflection of impaired oxygen delivery and utilization.
* stimulates osteoclastic activity and inhibits osteoblast activity.
Anti-
* trogens compete with estrogen to bind to estrogen receptors
- work by blocking the effects of the hormone estrogen in the body
* trogens, particularly tamoxifen can inhibit breast cancer growth.<|endoftext|>Artificial lighting
* can also affect the appearance of makeup on the skin.
* can cause disorientation and misorientation of both adults and hatchlings
- or misorientation of both adults and hatchlings
* demands large inputs of energy and energy costs money.
* is an option that makes sense in many situations
- less important for growing ducks
- light waves
- produced by electricity
* serves a key role in their work, even when working outdoors.
* simple solution to compensate for a lack of natural light. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Adhesion
* allows water to stick to a dry surface.
* are bands of scar tissue that form after surgery
- fibrous bands connecting structures that are normally separate
- often difficult to diagnose
* are the body's way of bandaging itself
- healing itself
- major cause of small bowel obstruction
* attach to muscles, decreasing their ability to work properly.
* begin to develop within hours of surgery.
* can also cause blockages in the tubes themselves
- pain
* can also form after an inflammation
- inflammation in the abdomen or pelvis
* can come a few days after a surgery or years
- in various sizes, length and structure
- obstruct blood flow and cause chronic colic and pain
- result from pelvic infections or from previous surgery
- trap body organs
* causes wetting through H-bonding to substances that are also polar.
* develop as normal tissue responds to some form of injury
- following any operation in the abdomen
* form as a response to inflammation , infection, surgery or trauma.
* frequently develop during the first three to five days after surgery
- improve without surgery
* gradually form from the tendons onto the joint capsules, and a rigid deformity results.
* involving the bowel can cause a bowel obstruction or blockage.
* is an alternative to claws, which works best on smooth surfaces
- important component of bacterial infections
* is excellent to glass and to most other oxides
- glass, most other oxides, and to metals such as aluminum and silver
- improved by baking
- measured by a double cantilever beam test
* is probably the single most important property of paint or stain
- required for protrusion to be converted into movement along the substrate
- superior to petro-based epoxy products
- support
- supposed to manifest itself at an appreciable distance before actual contact of bodies
* is the attractive force between water molecules and other substances
- tendency of molecules of different kinds to stick together
* much stronger attachment to the endometrium than the loose apposition.
* normally occur at the site of the surgical procedure.
* occurs when the cell comes into contact with a surface.
* often lead to reduced lung function in some patients.
* prevents the bacteria from being washed away by tears and blinking.
* similar force, but it occurs between the liquid and the material that contains it.
* tend to form following surgery, inflammation, trauma or radiation therapy treatment.
Alar
* growth-regulating chemical that was used on apples.
* pesticide that shows up to some degree in all fruits.
* preservative used to prolong the shelf-life of apples.
* synthetic growth promotant.<|endoftext|>Artificial life
* branch of Artificial intelligence.
* can simulate biology or create smart computer systems.
* imitates traditional biology by trying to 'recreate' biological phenomena.
* is related to artificial intelligence
- the representation of biological phenomenon on the computer
* new area that offers novel solutions to the management of chaos.
* studies the rules governing complex systems.
* This is done with simulations using computer models, robotics, and biochemistry. Artificial life imitates traditional biology by trying to 'recreate' biological phenomena.
* subset of artificial intelligence. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Authentication
* frequently involves associating a unique cryptographic key with a user.
* high-tech method of preventing wireless cloning fraud.
* is any process through which one proves and verifies certain information
- authentication
- critical to achieving trust in electronic commerce
- how the user's identity is validated
- important with electronic mail
- markers
* is the ability of one entity to determine the identity of another entity
- to verify a person's identity and assure the validity of transactions
- act of verifying a user's identity in order to prevent unauthorized use
- determination that a person is truly who they claim to be
- foundation on which they all rest
- process by which a claimed identification is verified
* is the process by which users prove they are who they claim to be
- prove who they are as they log in to a network
- designed to verify a user's identity
* is the process of approving the record's description elements
- determining who the user is
- establishing the validity of the user attempting to gain access
- identifying who a user is
- properly identifying people and things
- proving identity
- verifying a legitimate use of an identifier
* is the process of verifying that a message was sent by a given person
- a person is indeed who they claim to be
- information is coming from a trusted source
* is the process of verifying the claimed identity of a user
- identity of an individual
- used to verify identity
- whereby individuals and services confirm their identity
* is the verification of the entity's identification
- identify of a person making a request
- used by many network programs
- verification of identity or other attributes of parties to a transaction
* means establishing proof of identity between two or more entities
- for the company to identify an individual
- that users verify their identity by entering a username and password
* mechanism to verify the authenticity of both the sender and the message.
* method to validate the identity of the sender.
* process for verifying if a.packet of data or a connection is valid
* refers to the process by which one party determines the identity of another.
* simply describes the numerous methods that positively identify a user.
* way of determining whether an item is genuine and described appropriately.<|endoftext|>Amortization
* Relates to gradually writing off the cost of an asset.
* also creates incentives for banks to restructure loans.
* commonly used method of billboard removal.
* is another device used to limit the duration of non-conforming uses
- decrease
- recorded over the legal life or useful life whichever is shorter
* is the act of reducing the amount owed on a loan
- basis for fixed rate mortgages
- calculatio n of payments to repay a loan at the end of a fixed period
- death penalty
* means that the loan is paid slowly, over time.
* refers to loan repayment over a period of time.
* tables Mathematical tables that lenders use to calculate a borrower's monthly payment.
Adaptive change
* causes distress in the people being led.
* occur throughout the entire body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Avoidance
* allows it to fester and grow and get out of control.
* are signs of listener intimidation, fear, holding back, lack of ego power, etc.
* can prevent people from seeking help with their problems.
* common behavior among the walking wounded.
* is acceptance
- an area of defense
- any response that prevents an aversive event from occurring
- rejection
* is the best treatment for people with anaphylaxis to foods
- way in which to reduce exposure to environmental pollutions
- measure that attempts to avoid the threat altogether, such as firewalls
- most effective method of dealing with allergies
- number one treatment for all allergic disorders
* is the only real way of tackling food odors
- way to prevent an allergic reaction to food
- used to shy away from aversive events that one anticipates
- where the aversive situation is prevented from occurring, or prevented from escalating
* occurs even when parasite-rich pastures are high nutrients.
* often is an animal's primary means to protection from extreme temperatures.
* very significant factor in river otter social behavior.
Agricultural research
* has an important role to play in alleviating pressure
- many roles to play in improving health in developing countries
* is as much about human health as it is about growing corn
- one of the pillars for food safety in developing countries
* yields a cornucopia of safer, healthier, and tastier food products.<|endoftext|>Acclimatization
* big factor in heat-related illnesses.
* develops at a rate that depends on the degree of heat stress imposed.
* eliminates the effects of stress.
* generally refers to the ability of living things to adjust to changes in climate.
* has to do with adjusting sweat-salt concentrations, among other things.
* increases the biodegradation rate substantially.
* involves a stepwise adjustment to heat over a period of a week or sometimes longer
- all systems within the body
* is adaptation
- an important component of high-altitude climbing
- the key element to summiting the highest peak in the Western hemisphere
* is the process by which the body becomes accustomed to heat
- of the body adjusting to the decreasing availability of oxygen
* response that occurs in individuals who travel from lower to higher altitudes.
* usually occurs in a short time, within the organism's lifetime.
Atrial pacing
* can be very effective in preventing bradycardia-mediated atrial fibrillation.
* is contra-indicated in patients with complete AV heart block.<|endoftext|>Agape love
* carries burdens and shares sorrows when human love gives up or burns out.
* choice based on biblical values.
* decision of the lover.
* defines loving relationships.
* is divine love, sacrificial love
- just the opposite to human love
- pure love
* is the spiritual fuel on which the church is powered
- willing of the highest good of a person, irrespective of grateful response
- transformative love
- very concerned about the well-being of the one being loved
* love focused entirely on the other person. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Accountability
* also applies in the domain of academic production
- gives people redress over decisions which are unjust or damaging
- implies a high level of transparency over monetary policy decisions
* amplifies the status quo effect when change creates victims.
* begins when a child is able to reason and discern right from wrong.
* can be therapeutic to one's soul.
* central theme of honest communication.
* comes from relationships and responsibility
- through election of judges by the people
- with a price tag the state has been more willing than ever to pay
* commitment and a value that drives our whole organization.
* contemporary watchword in higher education.
* critical component of good governance and a touchstone in all organizations.
* defines the responsibilities of users, operations staff, and management.
* demands disclosure and explanation of the process of decision making.
* focuses upon the issues and needs of others.
* foundational principle of reparation.
* has a diversity of dimensions
- nothing to do with personal behavior
* holds officials responsible for their actions.
* includes all areas of budgeting, planning and forecasting expenditures.
* includes the responsibility for self-examination of one s internalized beliefs
- stewardship of funds, time and other resources
* is about blame and judgement
- voting and attending and serving and asking questions
* is also an issue multinational corporations face
- increasingly important in the delivery of services by the private sector
- an essential element of effective management
* is an important aspect of teacher training
- organizational attribute measured through the accreditation process
- part of any democracy
* is an outgrowth of community and of relationship
- community, of relationship
- another basic when it comes to government spending
- associated with delegated authority and is distinct from responsibility
* is based on accepting responsibility and repairing the harm done
- public information and knowledge
- central to leadership in an academic setting
- critical in any field, but especially in education
- essential to improving education for all children
- focused primarily on student achievement
- holding a person responsible
- inseparable from democracy
* is key in education today
- to achieving good outcomes
- measured by results
- more than salaries, training, time spent at work or benefits
* is one of the most important aspects of state insurance regulation
- traits that employers value most in employees
- ways in which society learns
- the keys to enhancing the participation of parents in education
- part of what forecasting is all about
- simply the process of closing the loop
- something that public education has shied away from
* is the ability to connect security related events to the originator
- cornerstone of America's participatory democracy
- correct, and effectual basis of a free and civilized society
- essential aspect of true brotherhood
- final act in the establishment of one's credibility
* is the foundation inherent to quality services for children with disabilities
- of our freedom
- stone that ensures high standards
- key to determining the success of school counseling programs
- linchpin of good management
- mark of true responsibility
- new savior of public schools
- obligation to account for responsibilities conferred
- process through which public knowledge is created
- quantitative equivalent of an individual s willingness to be at risk
- standard against which responsibility is measured
- understanding and meeting of responsibilities
- watchword of donors
- willingness to step forward and be counted
- thus the measure of responsibility
* is tied to the provision of knowledge
- up with common morality, professional ethics and law
* is very important in the construction industry
- when it comes to marketing
- vital to responsible government
- what parents, teachers, business leaders and taxpayers want from our schools
* key component of Australian democracy
- role in our society
- to public school success
* leads to responsibility.
* learning process.
* less strict relationship than discipleship, which has some similar traits.
* means answering to someone else for our actions
- specifically registration of ownership
- taking responsibility for acting on all the expressions of solidarity
* means that a person's actions are in line with what they say
- the voters can see the actions of incumbents
* means the capacity to call public officials to task for their actions
- existence of a stan- dard
* measure of the entire instructional process.
* measures the responsibility for action and for the consequences of action.
* professional obligation.
* real and major issue with governments and foundations.
* requires figuring out who is accountable
- that people communicate with one another and that translates into time
* resides less in individuals than in teams.
* state of responsiveness.
* true measure of commitment to one's profession and clients.
* two way street.
* two-way street.
* vital key to overcoming temptation and sin.
* way of correcting mistakes, abuses of power, incompetence and ignorance.
* works best when it is expressed in a relationship between two individuals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Androgenic alopecia
* genetic condition that can affect both men and women.
* genetically predisposed condition that can affect both men and women.
* is another factor that can cause male-pattern baldness.
* is the most common cause of baldness in men and women
- name for male and female pattern baldness
* nonscarring variety.<|endoftext|>Amarylli
* Most amaryllis are Dutch or African hybrids selected for flower size, color and ease of forcing.
* are easy to grow and have few pest problems
- gigantic bulbs usually grown just one to a pot
- notoriously difficult to flower in other parts of the United States
* do best when their roots are left undisturbed.
* grow tall and top heavy.
* like to be slightly rootbound.
* naturally bloom in the early summer.
* prefer a humus-enriched, sandy soil that is slightly acidic.
* require bright light, cool conditions and moist soils like other flowering plants.
Appellate jurisdiction
* is the power to review decisions made by lower courts.
* means the authority of a court to a. serve as a trial court. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Adaptation
* All adaptations are physical characteristics
- help organisms survive in their ecological niches
* Continues Over more millions of years the animal gets longer, thinner, and faster.
* IS part of evolution.
* Many adaptations develop long after birth.
* Most adaptations are complex, making understanding the process of adaptation difficult.
* Some adaptations are defense mechanisms which can give the prey an advantage against enemies
- so opportune that some species from way back are still living today
- help plants and animals get food, water, and oxygen
- serve to discourage predators and parasites
* allow organisms to succeed.
* allows for the diverse biota found in given sets of conditions.
* also depends on the size of a spot of light shown on the retina in a complex way
- help the observer determine an animal's diet
* are approaches by animals or any organism to live or survive in a specific condition
- dependent on the environment
- how an animal is built, or how it behaves, that help it to survive
- inherited traits from the parents that help a species survive
- physical characteristics or behaviors that help a plant or animal survive
- slow changes in response to pressures from outside the organism
- special features that allow a plant to live in a particular place or habitat
* are the complement of traits that increases the fitness of the owner
- most important features of all organisms
- result of evolution
* are traits giving an organism an advantage in a certain environment
- that affect an organisms ability to survive and reproduce
* become more common by evolution.
* can be a body part or a behavior that help an animal survive
- on a molecular level, like a change in DNA, or they can be behavioral
- physical, behavioral, or mental
- structural, physiological or behavioural
- help organisms survive without light or under extreme pressure
- protect animals from predators or from harsh weather
* change in function that promotes survival and self-actualization.
* common property of many sensory receptors.
* consists of the gene transcription and translation processes.
* contribute to diversity in species.
* decreases the actual number of sensory messages sent to the brain.
* describes the changing traits that enable reptiles to live in their environments.
* differ depending on what environment an animal lives in.
* dynamic process of mutual influence.
* enable an organism to survive and reproduce in their habitat
- species to maintain homeostasis, avoid predators, find and eat food, and move
* help an animal to survive so that it can reproduce
- organism survive
* help animals move, stay warm and find food, water and shelter in their environments
- warm, and find food, water and shelter
- survive in their environment
- to find and eat food, to avoid predators, to move, and to reproduce
- polar bears survive in the wild
* here change of behavior in a simulated environment.
* is about changing our way of life to cope with an increase in the global temperature
- responding to change
- alteration
- always adaptation to an environment
- an important approach for protecting ecological, social and economic systems
- another key factor in survival
- any heritable trait that increases the organisms chance to survive
* is associated with having relatively few thoughts of either extreme type
- the reversible methylation of four transmembrane receptors
- change in species, a result of the mutation of many individuals of that species
- considered to take place in one biological and three psychosocial modes
- crucial to the process of natural selection
- evolutionary change that improves the chances of survival and reproductive success
- how groups of plants evolve over time to survive different environments
- never more important than when the environment changes
* is one of the basic phenomena of biology
- characteristic features of life
- hallmarks of Australian native flora
- major ways new species evolve
- mechanisms of evolution
- most overused terms in biology
- physical events
- powered by natural selection
- process resulting from two components, selection and genetic variation
- regulated through the endocrine system
- relatively slight in animals that live in caves for short periods of time
- seen from chemical environments to disease to frogs
* is the act of adjusting to environmental conditions over a period of time
- bending a structure to fit a new hole
- adjustment of animals and plants to their environment
- condition of organisms being well designed for life in their environments
- fulfillment of human needs, including our own
- genetic change in a population caused by natural selection
- key idea in explanation of the ecological relationship of animals to their niche
* is the key to health, happiness and life itself
- parasite success
- survival for any butterfly
- law of the animal world
- phenomenon most usually considered as the main effect of selection
* is the process of building schemas through direct interaction with the environment
- learning from the environment and adjusting to changes within it
- result of natural selection
- temporal change in the decision strategies used by decision makers
- what keeps everything in harmony
* living things adapt to their environment.
* makes organisms more suited to the environment in which they live.
* matter of life and death.
* means nothing more than the result of natural selection.
* natural process that occurs for every type of organism.
* occur because of genetic mutations
- slowly through evolution and are irreversible
- through natural selection
- when the ecology alters and directs the change in traits in species over time
* occurs as adaptive responses promote integrity and wholeness
- because reproductive success is connected to an individual's genotype
* occurs in individual organisms as well as in species
- most sense receptors
- through the slow process of evolution
- when living things change in response to their environment
- with increase of frequency of the best suited phenotypes
* plant or animal that is fitted to live under certain condition.
* plays a significant role in human evolution.
* proc- ess in which a sense organ gradually ceases to respond to a constant stimulus.
* process of responding positively to environmental changes
- seeking a maximum level of human functioning
* really means responding to change in order to survive and prosper better.
* refers mainly to changes that occur over generations under constant exposure to a stress
- to the process of adjusting thinking to the environment
* result from the operation of natural selection.
* serves to extinguish symptoms of dizziness provoked by motion or visual stimulation.
* tend to be about finding prey, escaping from predators, or reproduction
- reflect the past life of a species
* usually develop in response to a change in the organisms habitat.
* very important aspect of normal healthy vision.
+ Adaptation, Ecological niches
* All adaptations help organisms survive in their ecological niches. This implies an increase in biological fitness.
+ Adaptation, Functions of adaptations, Adaptations with multiple functions
* Many adaptations serve more than one function. This is often the reason some traits become so noticeable that they almost define the species concerned. The antlers of male deer serve a sexual function as well as a defence against predators. Man's large brain serves not only for language, but also for thinking and problem-solving
- Compromise and conflict between adaptations
* Adaptations are never perfect. There are always tradeoffs between the various functions and structures in a body. It is the organism as a whole which lives and reproduces, therefore it is the complete set of adaptations which gets passed on to future generations
- Traits with no function
* Adaptations tend to reflect the past life of a species. If a species has recently changed its life style, a once valuable adaptation may become a dwindling vestige. Animals which live in dark caves often lose, over a long period, their colours and eyesight
- General principles: Evolutionary biology :: Ecology
* Adaptation is, first of all, a 'process', rather than a physical part of a body
+ Evolution, Darwin's theory, Adaptation, Limitations
- Adaptation: History of science
* Adaptation is one of the basic phenomena of biology. Evolutionary adaptation is a phenomenon of pervasive importance in biology. Through the process of adaptation, an organism becomes better suited to its habitat
+ Natural selection: Evolution :: Metaphors referring to nature
* This is true even with children of the same parents. Some of these differences might make one organism better at surviving and reproducing than others in a particular habitat. When this organism reproduces, it passes along the genes, which gave it the advantage, to its children. Some adaptations are extremely long-lasting, useful in many habitats. The evolution of wings in birds is an example. Others are good only as long as the environment stays the same. If the environment changes enough, then another organism might do better. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Acquisition
* are a marriage of convenience that offers mutual benefits
- software
* can play an important role in the growth and expansion of any business.
* encompasses all aspects of obtaining materials for libraries.
* is an unconscious process through which students become proficient by using language.
* is the conscious choice to learn
- process and act of obtaining materials for a library's collection
- unconscious process that occurs when language is used in real conversation
* process that usually takes a long time, possibly even years.
* refers to the process of obtaining a biometric sample from an individual.
Annihilation
* is actually a merger of two mods
- destruction
* is the idea that death is final, without eternal suffering
- process in which a particle and a related antiparticle disappear
* situation where one group attempts to wipe out the other group.
African buffaloes
* are notable for their apparent altruism
- the maintenance hosts
- violent and dangerous animals which have never been domesticated
- wild animals found in the woodlands and forests of Africa
* make various vocalizations.<|endoftext|>Astrobiology
* addresses three basic questions, which have been asked in some form for generations.
* embraces the big scale of astronomy and the small scale of biology.
* forum for lifelong learning.
* growing field right now with the possibility of looking for life on other planets.
* is biology
- concerned with the origin, distribution, and destiny of life in the universe
- multidisciplinary
* is the search for the origin, evolution and destiny of life in the universe
- study of Earth science, space science and evolutionary biology
* is the study of life in a cosmic context
- the cosmos
- on the moons and planets of the stars
* is the study of the origin, distribution and limitations of life in the cosmos
- evolution, dispersion and future of life in the universe
- evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe
- possibility of life other than on the earth
* new field of science that is actually growing up on the Internet
- scientific field for the study of the possibilites of extraterrestrial life
* remains a science with no data to support it.
* spectrum of sciences focused on learning more about life both on Earth and off.
Allogeneic transplantation
* is an infinitely more complicated and severe procedure
- the treatment of choice at relapse
* uses marrow from a family member or unrelated donor.<|endoftext|>Acculturation
* appears to be one issue that impacts the degree of risk young women of color face.
* has various components, e.g., enculturation, socialization, and assimilation.
* involves behavior changes, attitude changes, and thought changes.
* is considered to be on a continuum with traditional and bicultural individuals
- content
- education
- simply the acceptance of culture traits by one group from another
- social control
- the process of adopting the values and customs of the dominant society
* occurs whenever two or more cultures come into contact with each other.<|endoftext|>Alias
* are a convenient way of simplifying commonly used commands and or switches
- way of making one email account seem like many
- additional email addresses that simply redirect to an existing mailbox
- most frequently the letter symbol for the particular direction
- names
* are other names by which a host is known
- under which a network is known
- shortcuts to other records - individual contacts, groups, or other aliases
- simply abbreviations for commands
- television shows
* are useful for constructing mailing lists, forwarding mail, and synonyms for user names
- indicating a range of services that refer to the same physical servers
- video games
* provide a means of shortening the name of a command or sequence of commands. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Antithesis
* exists between wilderness and civilization.
* is figures of speech
- opposition
- the substitution of letter for letter, as olli for illi<|endoftext|>Amoebas
* Most amoebas reproduce asexually by pinching off a part of the cell membrane to form a new organism.
* Some amoebas cause deadly infection
- death
- diarrhea
- disease in humans and animals
- extensive tissue damage
- illnesses
- form a shell from found material that they glue together to form a protective covering
- infect brains
* change shape like that, only the forces are internal.
* feed by moving over to their prey and then wrapping their pseudopods around it
- surrounding, engulfing, and digesting food
* lack flagella, and most reproduce asexually
- they reproduce asexually
- glagella and most reproduce asexually
* locomote by means of cytoplasmic movement
- ways of cytoplasmic movement
* move and feed by means of pseudopodia , temporary extensions of the cell.
* move by means of a process known as a. vacuolar contracting
- extending pseudopods
* work out sets of relations with their environment as well.
Australian currency
* follows the decimal system.
* is decimal with the dollar as the basic unit
- the only legal tender<|endoftext|>Audit
* are a fact of life for taxpayers in the United States
- examinations
- the thermometer by which business is run and is used as a means of security
* controls to save time and effort in auditing.
* data collection process based on counting physical objects, such as records or inventory.
* is the bread and butter of accounting
- work of accounting
- only language HMOs understand
- used to find out who changed a document, when it was changed, and what was changed
* review of printed materials.
Autobiography
* Autobiographies are biographies.
* Most autobiographies start with the birth of the writer and end where they are now.
* is life history<|endoftext|>Arrogance
* can only come from blindness to reality.
* causes a desire to judges.
* comes from thinking things are easy
- in many fashions
* common affliction of the newly elected, and it is often fatal
- emotion expressed by many people throughout our society
* dangerous deviation of they who are in a weaker position.
* false sense of superiority, often covering intense feelings of low self-esteem.
* form of self-imposed blindness, a form of vanity, one seeing only oneself.
* human attribute.
* increases in inverse proportion to the public's capacity for outrage.
* is born out of fear and insecurity
- confidence
- destructive and disdainful
- disease of modern society
- disregard for the truth and contempt for people
- ego plus ignorance
- exaggerated self-esteem
- often a defense against the terror of being alone in hostile territory
- one state of mind being called for
- pride
- sin
- something that comes from youth
* is the ability to rationalize behaviour
- egoism of inordinate self-importance
- enemy of humility
- great enemy to the believer's spiritual life
- polar opposite of humility
- usually detrimental and fosters a negative-minded culture
* major barrier to growth.
* notoriously powerful deterrent to enlightenment.
* power, it power which destroys the spiritual life.
* usually means believing oneself to be superior to others.
* common emotion expressed by many people throughout our society. I also made improvements with stronger definitions and more proper sources. If that's not enough, please tell me the real reason of why.
Adaption
* are inherited changes that occur over time that help the species survive
- the current variations in a population
* biological process
* is how they determined where to grow their crops.
* transient property that depends upon continued exposure to the toxic conditions.
Absentmindedness
* is one of the many hallmarks of pregnancy
- preoccupation
* time consuming habit that can be overcome. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Auk
* are from a completely different evolutionary family than penguins.
* feed on fish and invertebrates.<|endoftext|>Authenticity
* criterion of validity.
* discovery that requires time and effort.
* has special applications when dealing with people, especially difficult people.
* is believability
- credibility
- personal power manifested in the world
- seen as a means to attainment of genuine happiness
- that which is genuine, true, and real
* is the ability to portray the individuality of the consultant, thus to model humanness
- costume worn by contemporary styles of alienation
* relates their language to their culture.
Aggressive hydration
* aids in eliminating chelated iron by maintaining an appropriate urine output.
* is also important to help thin secretions and facilitate expectoration.
Agnosticism
* denies that there revelation, and therefore denies the Bible.
* is an intellectual disease and feeds on snobbery
- important in big cities, especially Montevideo
- surely the safest of all non-religions
- unbelief
* milder form of gnosticism.
* much more reasonable human state.
* religious orientation
Aerobatic
* also requires a lot of gas.
* calls for proper coordination and precision flying, accuracy in all phases of manuever.
* is unlike any other form of flying that todays average pilot has performed.<|endoftext|>Agate
* Most agates are naturally grayish and are artificially colored
- greyish and are artificially coloured
- no larger than three inches in diameter
- occur in cavities of eruptive rocks or ancient lavas
* appear red, brown and orange in color.
* are a form of chalcedony and are deposited by fluids that infiltrate voids in volcanic rocks
- usually white with swirls of grey and black spots
* come in many shapes and sizes
- various colors
* comes in a range of colors
- most colors
* display a variety of colors arranged in curved bands with various degrees of translucency.
* feel heavier than other stones of the same size.
* form of chalcedony with bands or patterns of various colors
* have many colors.
* helps in healing, especially blood, skin, and intestinal conditions.
* is gemstones
- minerals
- precious stones
- quartz
* occur as spherical or almond shaped inclusions in basic volcanic rock
- in igneous rocks such as volcanic lavas
* quartz mineral originally formed in the bubbles within a volcanic lava bed.
* semi-precious gemstone that consists of thousands of microscopic quartz crystals.
* very common stone that is often used in jewelry.
Aortic regurgitation
* can range from mild to severe.
* causes a decrescendo murmur that is an early diastolic murmur
- dilation of the left ventricle
* is caused by a damaged aortic valve
- characterized as producing a blowing type of murmur sound
- the diastolic flow of blood from the aorta into the left ventricle
Abuse of women
* is justified by the belief they failed the test of goodness and niceness.
* major public health, medical, and social problem.
* occurs in all socioeconomic levels, all races, and in all neighborhoods.
Audacity
* cross-platform multitrack audio editor.
* is boldness
- brass
- software<|endoftext|>Anticipatory grief
* allows the family to prepare for the inevitable death.
* can be just as painful and stressful as the actual death of the person
- have positive and negative effects on the family
* coping and a balancing of competing demands.
* helps reduce the pain already felt by parents
- by premature parents
* lowers the degree and intensity of grief at the time of death of a family member.
* natural reaction, and it has some benefits.
* normal reaction and an integral component of a life-threatening illness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits