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Arctic char
* Most Arctic char have dark blue or black backs.
* are abundant in all large abundant in rivers in the region, along the Atlantic salmon
- also favorite meals of many polar bears, whales, sharks and seals
- generally carnivorous
- streamlined fish and typically troutlike
- the most widely distributed resident or anadromous fish on Kodiak Island
* is also anadromous like salmon, migrating from northern lakes to saltwater to spawn
Ambient lighting
* is designed for general lighting and low visual-demand tasks
- the general room lighting that is typically supplied by overhead fixtures
* provides general illumination in a space.
Absenteeism
* also is up, with a number of parents keeping healthy children home
- results in overtime pay for other employees and hiring temporary employees
* cost in financial and productivity terms.
* curse to any organization.
* is absence
- detrimental to learning and performance
* problem largely due to low morale among employees.
* serious problem in the work force.<|endoftext|>Amputation
* Most amputations involve small body parts such as a finger, rather than an entire limb.
* Stop bleeding.
* are prone to infection and heal slowly.
* can also happen as an accident, which is called a traumatic amputation.
* implies disease, poisoning the system.
* is disability
- diseases
- helpful in controlling the pain
- operations
- sometimes the only means of relief
* is the loss of a digit or limb by trauma
- removal of one or more limbs, sometimes caused by trauma or another condition
* procedure that removes a portion of a limb.<|endoftext|>Add
* biologically based difference in how some areas of the brain function.
* brain-based disorder that affects all aspects of one s life.
* chemical imbalance that results in an immaturity of the brain.
* child's inability to concentrate, learn and maintain a normal level of activity.
* chronic developmental disorder that creates problems with attention
- disorder that begins in infancy
* common developmental disorder that has broad influences on development.
* condition of the parts of the brain that filter stimuli.
* disorder exclusively of childhood and adolescence
- of response inhibition and executive function, of the ability to wait
- that lies along a continuum just like anxiety and depression
* does occur in known biological syndromes, such as the fragile X and fetal alcohol syndrome.
* group of behaviors presenting itself differently in each child.
* is considered a childhood disease marked by inattentive, impulsive and hyperactive behavior
- similar to depression in that there low level of the neurotransmitter dopamine
* neurobiological disability characterized by impulsiveness, in-attention and hyperactivity
* neurological condition which affects behavior and learning.
* neurological disorder that affects the central nervous system
- with a genetic link
- problem that affects at least five percent of the population
* neurophysiologic genetic disorder that tends to run in families.
* tends to occur in families and is common in first-degree biological relatives.<|endoftext|>Anticoagulation
* can be a simple as aspirin or as complex as coumadin
- prevent the propagation of the clot and decrease chances of emboli formation
- reduce the extent of propagation of clot, even in the presence of stagnat flow
* is contraindicated in hemorrhagic infarct and uncontrolled hypertension
- essential for patients with atrial fibrillation without contraindications
- however, associated with an increased risk of bleeding complications
* is medical aid
- care
- recommended for patients with blood clots
- required with heparin or dextran
* term that describes the process of reducing clots from forming in the blood. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Adequate hydration
* can reduce wrinkling of the skin and drying of other bodily tissues.
* chronic problem for many seniors.
* helps cleanse the kidneys and rid the excess waste and uric acid out of the body
- to thin the respiratory secretions
* is important in the prevention of altitude illness
- key to avoiding hypothermia and altitude sickness
- required to protect the kidneys during chemoembolization
* supports the body's ability to make watery tears.
Artificial lur
* are also popular baits for snook
- popular for schooling bass, as is flyfishing with popping plugs
* including plastic worms and surface lures are good producers for bass. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Asbestos
* Comes from deterioration of damaged insulation, fire-proofing or acoustical materials.
* are fibers that occur naturally and are used in some industrial substances like insulation.
* becomes a health hazard when the microscopic fibers are inhaled into the lungs.
* can appear in fibrous crystal form and, when crushed, separates into flexible fibers
- be in ceiling tiles and flooring in older homes
- become permanently lodged in our bodies and can cause cancer
* can cause a lung disease called asbestosis, and a rare type of cancer called mesothelioma
- cancer of the lung and stomach, and breathing disorders such as asbestosis
- cancer, and mismanaging it very serious matter
- cancers which can be monitored for early detection
- lung cancer
- malignant and non-malignant diseases
- scarring of the lung tissue and cancer of the pleural lining
- serious health problems
- several kinds of diseases, both malignant and non-malignant
- pose a risk if fibers become airborne and are inhaled into the lungs
* cancer-causing agent when inhaled
- material that never decomposes in the environment
* carcinogen and exposure to it can lead to several types of health effects
- that mainly affects the lungs
* category of mineral fibers found in rocks.
* causes a variety of diseases including fatal cancers such as mesothelioma
- cancer, ammonia is an irritant
- serious illness and death
- sickness in some but by no means all workers many years after exposure
* commercial term applied to the asbestiform varieties of six different minerals.
* commercially relevant group of strong, ductile, and fire-resistant mineral fibers.
* common name for a group of naturally occurring mineral fibers.
* compound made up of calcium and magnesium silicate with long, flexible fibers.
* consists of fibers of various sizes, colors, and textures.
* containing building materials are present in many buildings.
* containing material can be a potential health hazard if the fibers are airborne
- in sound condition poses a lower health risk than when damaged
* containing materials are dangerous if disturbed or damaged
- only if damaged or disturbed
* dangerous carcinogen.
* enters the body through inhalation or ingestion.
* fibrous material found in rocks and soils worldwide
- used in a variety of building materials and industrial products
* fibrous mineral occurring in natural deposits
- once commonly used in insulation and fireproofing material
- that when airborne can become lodged in human lungs
- mineral, of which there are various types
* fibrous, heat resistant insulating material.
* fireproof mineral widely used in building construction and manufacturing processes.
* general term for a number of naturally occurring fibrous mineral silicates.
* generic term applied to naturally occurring fibrous hydrated mineral silicates
- for a group of several mineral fibers that have similar characteristics
- given to several naturally-occurring silicate minerals
- used to describe the fibrous form of six different minerals
* group of naturally occuring mineral silicates
- occurring minerals
* hazardous air pollutant and known human carcinogen
- which was once heavily used in building materials
* health threat when it is disturbed and becomes airborne.
* heat-resistant mineral once used widely in insulation and fireproofing.
* highly toxic product.
* includes chrysotile, amosite, crocidolite. tremolite.
* increases the risk of developing benign intestinal polyps.
* induces apoptosis in human alveolar macrophages
- of pleural mesothelial cells via reactive oxygen species
* is also a naturally occurring silicate mineral, but with a different crystal structure
- present in the backing on some vinyl sheet flooring
* is an effective insulator against heat, cold, electricity and noise
- extremely fine fiber that is easily inhaled
- occupational and environmental hazard of catastrophic proportions
- another occupational carcinogen
- associated with lung cancer and asbestosis, a disease which scars the lungs
- composed of long thin fibers and it makes an excellent insulating material
- dangerous only if the microscopic fibers are inhaled
- durable, fire retardant, resists corrosion, and insulates well
- fire resistant and tough
* is found in older homes
- shingles, asphalt, plastics, concrete, pipes and paint
- some vinyl floor tiles and the backing on vinyl sheet flooring and adhesives
- harmful when it becomes airborne
- hazardous only when fibers are released into the air and inhaled
- health hazards
- highly toxic by inhalation and possibly by ingestion
* is in the ceilings, heating and ventilating ducts, pipes and floor coverings
- sprayed-on building insulation above the tiles in parts of the buildings
- known to cause asbestosis, lung cancer, and mesothelioma
* is known to cause cancer and other respiratory diseases in humans
- women who have a high exposure to asbestos are at higher risk
- lung and other cancers and is considered dangerous when airborne
- pose human health hazards
- linked to several types of cancers
- made up of fiber bundles
* is mined both in open quarries and underground
- in much the same way as other minerals, such as iron, lead and copper
* is most dangerous in industrial settings
- when it becomes airborne in dust
- hazardous when it is friable
- odorless
* is one of the most hazardous materials encountered during demolition activities
- widely recognized construction health hazards
* is only a problem if the fibers are released into the air
- one of many materials used in brake linings today
- potentially a serious threat to human health and the enviornment
* is present in many common building materials used in private homes and in public buildings
- older buildings and was used for insulation
- primarily a health hazard when dry fibers become airborne and are inhaled
- probably the best insulator known to man
- recognized as a major health hazard
- regulated under the Clean Air Act as a hazardous air pollutant
* is released from serpentine rock when it is broken or crushed
- naturally through weathering and erosion
- resources
* is the cause of asbestosis, as well as a rare form of lung cancer
- common name for a group of minerals found in nature
- general name for several fibrous minerals and products
- leading nonmetallic mineral of the province
* is the name applied to a family of strong, flexible fibrous minerals
- six naturally occurring minerals that are mined from the earth
* is the name for a family of minerals which provide, primarily, fire-proof insulation
- group of natural minerals that separate into strong, very fine fibers
- given to a group of fibrous minerals
* is used as a binder in cement, as insulation, and in anti-fire walls
- for fire retardant materials and brake shoes and pads
- in the production of paints and plastics
- so widely that the entire population is potentially exposed to some degree
- very resistant to acids and heat, and has high tensile strength
* known carcinogen and mutagen in both human and animals
* leaves invisible, hazardous fibers.
* listed carcinogenic substance.
* looks like barbed wire under a microscope.
* major cause of health problems in America's homes today.
* makes women bleed more.
* mined mineral that is one of the most common environmental hazards in the world.
* mineral compound of silicon, oxygen, hydrogen, and various metal cations.
* mineral fiber associated with increased levels of disease when inhaled
* mineral fiber that can have very serious health effects if it is inhaled or ingested
- is mined out of rock
- fibre which exists in three main forms
- made of hydrated fibrous silicates
* mineral that exists in certain types of rock formations
- is mined from the earth
- was processed and used in many different building materials
* mineral-based material resistant to heat and corrosive chemicals.
* name given to a group of naturally occurring minerals.
* natural fiber that good insulator and is fire and corrosion resistant
- mineral made up of many small fibres
* naturally occurring fibre often used as a fire retardant
- group of minerals that can only be identified under a microscope
- material that was used commonly in buildings for insulation
* naturally occurring mineral found in certain rocks
- soil and rock in some areas of the United States
- often used in building materials and construction
* naturally-occurring mineral fiber that is mined from rock
* non-flammable mineral product once used for insulation and fire proofing.
* occurs in a number of distinct types
- homes and other buildings
- several different forms
- naturally, and is found in seams or veins in some igneous or metamorphic rocks
* ocurrs naturally in some areas.
* only becomes a danger when it is disturbed, causing the fibers to become airborne
- dangerous when fibres from the source are released and become air-borne
- presents a health hazard when fibers become airborne and are inhaled
* poses the greatest danger when it becomes airborne.
* potent carcinogen.
* recognized health hazard for humans.
* regulated material that can no longer be used in construction materials.
* related disease can takes years and decades to show.
* remains in schools, homes and commercial buildings across the country.
* serious threat to one's health because it can cause severe forms of lung disease.
* special type of long-thin silica crystal, usually of the mineral group chrysotile.
* suspected carcinogen.
* tends to break down into a dust of microscopic fibers
* term applied to some mineral silicates present in a fibre form.
* term used for several naturally occurring fibrous minerals
- types of naturally occurring fibrous minerals
* well-known health hazard.
* widely used, mineral-based material that is resistant to heat and corrosive chemicals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Africa
* includes Algeria
- Angola
- Angolan capital
- Barbary
- Benin
- Bissau
- Botswana
- Burundi
- Cameroon
- Djibouti
- Egypt
- Egyptian capital
- Eritrea
- Ethiopia
- Gabon
- Gambia
- Ghana
- Kenya
- Lesotho
- Liberia
- Liberian capital
- Libya
- Madagascar
- Malawi
- Mauritania
- Mozambique
- Namibia
- Nigeria
- Rwanda
- Senegal
- Somalia
- Sudan
- Swaziland
- Tanzania
- Togo
- Tunisia
- Uganda
- Zambia
- Zimbabwe
* possesses herbivores.
Androgenetic alopecia
* common form of hair loss in both men and women.
* is caused by testosterone and a genetic predisposition for baldness
- genetic, pattern baldness
- only one form of hair loss
* occurs much more frequently in men than in women.
* relatively new area of research.<|endoftext|>Ascension
* Skins Climbing skins are essential tools of travel in the backcountry.
* continuous process which never ends, for there is always progress to be made.
* is an instrumental solo in which employ a two-handed tapping technique
- basically a change in the focus of consciousness
- extremely easy to practice and quickly frees our nervous systems from stress
- holographic in nature
- movement
* is the process by which any planet, star, civilization or species evolves
- world's premiere developer and manufacturer of motion tracking devices
* means moving from a physically based reality to a consciousness-based reality
- one has ascended to higher levels of consciousness
* perfect place to lose weight.
* rising up in consciousness manifesting cellular changes in the body.
Actuality
* Actualities are the gospel of truth.
* is thus the negation of the negation of Essence.<|endoftext|>Arteriosclerosis
* Find out about the group of diseases labeled arteriosclerosis.
* Hardening of the arteries is caused by calcification.
* affects many people in developed countries
- the elderly most often
* can cause a variety of conditions.
* causes gradual destruction of the media with focal weakening of the wall.
* disease which clogs arteries in the human body.
* general term for thickening or hardening of the arteries.
* generic term covering a number of diseases of blood vessels.
* hardening of the arteries that leads to heart attacks.
* is another cause of dizziness
- characterized, in part, by a build-up of calcium in the arteries of the heart
- especially likely to occur in patients with high blood pressure or diabetes
- illnesses
- induration
- one of the precursors of hypertension
- responsible for most of the deaths resulting from heart attacks
- reversible with lifestyle changes
- the exact same thing as atherosclerosis
* is the general term for hardening of the arteries
- thickening and hardening of the arteries
* means hardening of the arteries.
* often leads to hypertension.
* possible cause in the elderly.<|endoftext|>Attrition
* Web site which monitors computer attacks.
* big word that covers up the fact that it's painful when people quit.
* happens when forces get tired and hungry.
* has to do with turning away from sin, simply to escape punishment.
* is also the result of their relatively short life spans
- decrease
- friction
- harmeds
- high in architecture
- sorrow
* is the normal wearing of the teeth due to functional activity
- opposite of retention
- unique because it directly relates to erosion of bedload rather than the bed and bank
- what occurs when people drop out of the study
- when waves cause rocks and pebbles to bump into each other and break up
* major cause of the teacher shortage.
* often occurs when a student begins to question college or career goals.
* refers to the number of students who transfer or withdraw in a given period.
Atmospheric change
* can affect agriculture.
* cause changes in vegetation.
* impact the environment in dramatic ways such as flooding. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Adrenarche
* begins before the rise in gonadotropin secretion.
* occurs usually one to two years before gonadarche and is independent of gonadarche.<|endoftext|>Archeology
* can also play into some big world problems such as climate change.
* involves uncovering and studying the remains of ancient cultures.
* is about the discovery and decipherment of the unseen, the unknown, the unrecorded
- actually a subfield of anthropology
- rooted in cognition
- the branch of anthropology that focuses on the material culture of human beings
* is the science concerned with the excavation and analysis of physical remains
- of recording, interpreting and recreating past life
- which studies people and societies through their artifacts
- study of the tangible remains of past human societies
* sub-discipline that uses material remains to study people and cultures of the past.<|endoftext|>Accessibility
* describes the ease with which all categories of passenger can use public transport.
* focuses on the challenge of writing accessible Web pages.
* function of both the supplier and the consumer or user.
* further enable people with disabilities to contribute and participate in society.
* implies the impact of communications on a network.
* involves page design that is navigable using adaptive technology.
* is also a frame of mind
- an essential attribute of a 'person-centred', sustainable built environment
- as important as compilation and analysis of data
- friendliness
- indistinguishability of deals
- measured by mode of transportation and by income group
- one of the things that makes the net worthwhile
* is the ability to move the freight between a specific origin and destination
- use the Internet even when functioning under constraints
- attitude that welcomes the gifts of everyone
- corner stone of mobility and walking is the basic form of movement
- ground rule when talking about nature and natural medicines
- responsibility which librarians have to their clients
* means productivity and efficiency
- that web sites are open to individuals regardless of their disabilities
* multi-faceted issue within the issues of life today.
* prerequisite for disabled people to enjoy equal opportunities.
* primary objective of public institutions.
* refers to how easy it is for readers to use documents for their purposes.
* related public good.
* revolves around words.
* simply means making resources usable by the largest number of people possible.
* subset of usability.
Aggressive periodontitis
* can affect young people who are otherwise healthy.
* occurs in localized and generalized forms.
Acrylic gesso
* is used to prepare surfaces for paint.
* popular ground for both oil and acrylic painting. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Alpha
* allows the body and mind to begin to heal.
* are either active, dormant, or suspended
- letters
- starts
* complete text-editing tool for programmers and Web designers.
* component used for transparency and blending and the like.
* fine double, easily separated in binoculars.
* general name for an architecture family.
* gets more potent the longer it is used.
* has three sites, beta and gamma have two in different places, and delta has one.
* heightened alert of a terrorist attack.
* is associated with a relaxed state of unfocused attention
- everywhere, from mapping the human genome to stock exchanges and the Internet
- one of the brightest objects in the night sky
- spoken the same in both Russian and English, but with different spellings
- the angle of the outer leg, measured in radians counterclockwise from south
* is the first letter of the Greek alphabet and omega is the last letter of the alphabet
- Greek alphabet, and Omega is the last letter of the Greek alphabet
- Greek alphabet, and omega is the last
- industry's technical index of filtration performance
- light trance and relaxation state, before sleep for instance
- oldest Greek-letter organization established in America by Black college women
- rotational acceleration of the jackshaft in radians per second squared
- significance level used to compute the confidence level
* is, by definition, symmetric.
* microcosm of Gainesville, inviting all types of people to donate, and they do.
* place to make friends.
* place where no question is off limits
- regarded as too simple
* refers to the dominant brainwave pattern associated with a particular state of mind.
* scaling constant specified by the user.
* state of light relaxation.
Actinic keratosis
* is diseases.
* is skin cancer's warning signal
- disorder
- the most common sun-related growth
* is, as the name implies, associated with sun exposure.
* premalignant abrasion on the skin caused by prolonged exposure to sunlight.
Abreaction
* is the discharge of psychological rubbish, usually by laughter.
* psychiatrist's term for the therapeutic discharge of old, and obsolete emotion.
* psychological term for the release of repressed emotion.
Atomic radii
* are useful in determining the average bond length between two atoms.
* vary in a predictable and explainable manner across the periodic table.
Affected newborn
* Most affected newborns die within a year.
* have elevated levels.
Amnion
* completely surrounds embryo.
* constraining support for lateral body folding in chick embryos.
* surrounds the embryo creating the amniotic cavity that is filled with amniotic fluid. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Aflatoxin
* affect organs such as the liver, kidney, heart, and adrenal glands.
* also attack the immune system, increasing risk of disease.
* are a group of toxicants formed by moulds in improperly stored nuts, grain etc.
* are among the most extensively studied mycotoxin
- highly carcinogenic materials known
- powerful carcinogenic substances known
- bisfuranocoumarins
- cancerous to the liver
- carcinogenic, mutagenic, teratogenic, and immunosuppressive
- examples of carcinogens in foods
- highly toxic to livestock, poultry and people
- know animal carcinogens
- mycotoxins produced by molds that grow on grain and nuts
* are natural mold byproducts that can cause cancer of the liver
- toxins that can be carcinogenic to humans and animals
- poisons produced by some fungi
- probably the best known and most intensively researched mycotoxins in the world
- produced by the molds Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus
- suspect carcinogens in humans and are highly toxic as well
- the toxic byproducts of mold growth on certain agricultural commodities
* are toxic and carcinogenic compounds released by fungi of the genus Aspergillus
- chemicals that certain fungi produce during crop infection
* can also appear in milk of lactating animals fed aflatoxin-contaminated feed
- invade feedstuffs at any point from field to feedbunk
* can, however, occur in corn and other grains when growing conditions are hot and dry.
* cancer promoter and an immunosuppressant.
* carcinogenic mycotoxin.
* cause liver cancer
- the liver to become pale tan, yellow or orange
* causes a variety of symptoms depending on the animal species
- considerable problems for beef cattle
* fungus that infects corn, cotton, peanuts and other crops.
* have mammalian toxicity.
* is converted into a potent carcinogen by the action of liver enzymes
- definitely a menace to humans
- extracted by aqueous acetone followed by clarification with ferric gel
* is extracted by aqueous methanol followed by clarification with zinc acetate
- by column chromatography for clarification
- just one of many mycotoxins that can adversely affect animal health and productivity
- made by the fungus Aspergillus flavus
- more than likely a causal agent or promoter of tobacco-associated cancers
- number one, ergot is the second leading mold toxin
* is one of several naturally occurring toxins that have potential as biological weapons
- the most potent carcinogens yet examined
* is produced by a mold known to grow on peanuts and other grains
- certain species of Aspergillus fungi
- the fungi Aspergillus
- the most studied and most widely known mycotoxin
- used to typify a group of toxicants known as mycotoxins
* known carcinogen at very low levels
- of particular concern to the peanut industry
* major concern with corn harvest.
* mixture of closely related molecules.
* natural fungus that is deadly in small quantities.
* occurs on moldy grains, corn, peanuts and other crops.
* often cause nervous symptoms in affected animals.
* potent biological agent causing injury to the liver, often resulting in liver cancer
- carcinogen produced in cottonseed infected by the fungus, Aspergillus flavus
* produced by an imperfect fungus potent carcinogen.
* reach the liver and destroys liver cells.
* reduce animals performance and overall health.
* sometimes contaminate certain foods.
* sporadic problem in the Corn Belt and a chronic one in the South.
* toxic compound formed by molds on improperly stored nuts and grains.
* toxin produced by mold in contaminated nuts.
* very potent poison and carcinogen that gets into grain in dry seasons. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Apoptosis
* Send feedback to apoptosis.
* allows control of cell growth and removal of possibly harmful cells
- the body to safely get rid of damaged or potentially harmful cells
* also occurs in free-living unicellular ciliated protists during conjugation
- spontaneously in many tumors
* also plays a critical role in many disease states
- vertebrate development and glandular homeostasis
- crucial role in sculpting the developing nervous system
- key role in growth and development
* also protects organisms by killing off defective cells
- the body from cancer
- provides a primitive form of defense against viral infections
* appears to be the mechanism by which the periderm is removed.
* begins with the shrinking of the nucleus and cytoplasm of the cell.
* biochemically and morphologically distinct form of programmed cell death.
* can have elements of murder, as well as suicide.
* comes from the Greek word for leaves dropping off of trees.
* coordinated process started by an external trigger, and resulting in cell death.
* describes how defective cells are programmed to die, making way for new, healthy cells.
* ensures that cells self-destruct on schedule and are eliminated from the body.
* form of programmed cell death in multicellular organisms
* frequently occurs when cells are unable to adhere to a substrate.
* fundamental biological process vital to cell differentiation and normal development.
* genetically regulated form of cell death.
* happens all the time in a healthy body.
* helps get rid of cancerous cells in our body.
* induced by the drug is involved in neoplastic cell death.
* induces loss of cytokine receptor expression.
* influences early development and later refinement in adult tissues.
* is accompanied by heightened expression of reaper and head involution defective
- activated by certain cell proteins and genes, some of which have been identified
- actually very important in the development and everyday function of an organism
* is also an important mechanism for eliminating cancerous cells
- crucial to keep the balance between cell production and cell death in an organism
* is also important as a means of dealing with threats to an organism
- to embryologic development
* is also the mechanism by which many cancer drugs ultimately kill cancer cells
- mode in which chemo-therapeutic agents and hormones induce tumor cell death
- an active process and involves the induction of several molecules and pathways
* is an essential part of growth, development and adaptation in multicellular organisms
- process in the development and homeostasis of all metazoans
* is an important mode of cell death at the end of the natural life span of a cell
- process in plants and animals that leads to S-phase
- associated with numerous disease states
- basically cellular suicide
- common to all retinal degenerative diseases
- crucial in development and throughout life
- delayed in cord blood neutrophils
* is distinguishable by highly characteristic morphological changes
- from necrosis on the basis of several criteria
* is essential for normal development and remodeling
- tissue development
- tissue development and remodeling, immune defense, and aging
- to control cell numbers in the immune system
- executed by a recently discovered family of cysteine proteases named caspases
- implemented by caspases, a family of cysteine proteases
- important for the normal development and maintenance of multicellular organisms
- increased in diabetic rat retinas
* is induced by caspase-family cell death proteases
- various triggers
- even a extremely low levels of radiation
- necessary in normal growth, but it's also necessary in fighting off attacks
- often contemporary with cell division in a healthy embryo
- one of the body's ways of maintaining a balance between cell growth and cell death
- perhaps the most widely researched topic in medical biology today
* is programmed cell death that removes damaged cells
- individual cell death
- regulable and is of fundamental importance to tissue development and homeostasis
* is regulated by a balance of proapoptotic and antiapoptotic mediators
- cytochrome c and a downstream protease in all mechanisms known to date
- signaled by UV photoproducts in actively transcribed genes
- small and inconspicuous
* is the body's way of replacing old, worn-out, potentially damaged cells
- function that enables the embryos fingers to separate
- immune system's way of eliminating unneeded cells
- magic bullet that is going to cure cancer
* is the normal end of a cell 's life
- process by which the body disposes of genetically damaged or unwanted cells
- process of regulated cell death and removal
- programmed cell death of superfluous or potentially harmful cells in the body
- terminal event in the natural history of cell differentiation
- underlying mechanism for ovarian follicle atresia in mammals
- tidy death
- used for numerous processes throughout development
- vital to life
* means cell death
* occurs in multiple cell types and can be triggered by multiple extracellular stimuli
- neurodegenerative, metabolic, and toxic diseases of the nervous system
* opens urodeal membrane, cavitates coprodeum, and removes chick urogenital ducts.
* pathophysiologic process distinct from, and preceding, necrosis.
* physiologic form of cell death present in many disease conditions.
* plays an important role in experimantal rabies virus infection
* precedes necrosis in dystrophin deficient muscle
- of dystrophin-deficient muscle
* procedes necrosis of fish cell line with infectious pancreatic necrosis virus infection.
* protective mechanism to remove excessive or genetically damaged cells.
* purges the body of pathogen-invaded cells, but also eliminates unwanted immune cells.
* purifies a tissue from cells that became useless or even harmful for the organism.
* reduces inflammation and slows the overproduction of skin cells that causes scaling.
* refers to programmed cell death.
* remains a central process in maintaining cellular homeostasis.
* removes chick embryo tail gut and remnant of the primitive streak
- excess cells to help shape fingers and toes
* selective process for deletion of cells in various biological systems.
* takes place by the help of lysosomes.
* tightly regulated process.
* topic of considerable research interest.
* type of cell death which is genetically controlled.
+ Apoptosis, Controlling the cell cycle: Cell biology
* This is important to the overall functioning of the organism. If, for example, the making of liver cells were to speed up and they never died, the liver would no longer function properly. The liver cells would eventually take over the organism's body. Apoptosis takes place by the help of lysosomes. Lysosomes rupture when the cell is old or damaged, this lets out digestive enzymes all over the cell and digests it, therefore killing the cell. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Adjudication
* is judgment
- the juvenile court equivalent of a trial
* procedure very much like a civil court trial.
Atmospheric research
* growing field for people with advanced degrees in meteorology.
* very large field.
Amoebiasis
* can affect anyone, however, the disease mostly occurs in young to middle aged adults
- present with no, mild, or severe symptoms
* common infection of the human gastro - intestinal tract.
* is infection
- present all over the world
American dragonhead
* is classified as rare in New York.
* native annual, biennial, or short-lived perennial forb.
* seedbanking species.
Apprehension
* common symptom.
* is an association of the choleric humour
- anticipation
- captures
- expectations
- fear
- reasonable awareness of hazard
- the training ground for both fear and courage in the human mind
Anhydrous lanolin
* can help in some patients.
* is commonplace in both the cosmetics and pharmaceutical industries.
Aridity
* affects many conditions important for plant survival.
* characteristic shared amongst all deserts.
* forms the basis of classifications of deserts.
* increases markedly in the rain shadow of the Pacific mountain ranges.
* is controlled by three climatic anomalies
- dryness
- quality
* presents two main obstacles to solitary behavior.
Administrative control
* are changes that are made by management.
* mean introducing work practices which reduce risk.
* promote operational efficiency and adherence to managerial policies.
* relate to policies, procedures, and training of occupants.<|endoftext|>Automation
* convention by which one application can control another.
* has the potential to significantly enhance the safety and efficiency of aviation.
* improves productivity, accuracy, and saves time.
* is about maximizing the power of the Internet
- another factor in the distribution of viruses and trojans
- common in almost every industry
- concerned with electronic control and mechatronics
- equipment
- high technology
- more geared towards manufacturing and processes
* is the name of the game, baby, and everyone wants to play
- step after the viewing screen
- substitution of machine work for human physical and mental work
- what is helping companies today stay productive and as a result profitable
* key means to manage costs and to increase productivity.
* means job loss
- using computers to make it much easier to send the same message to lots of people
* mechanism to manipulate an application's objects from outside the application.
* modern comprehensive industry standard for software integration.
* refers to intensive use of machinery in production.
* threat to some data collecting jobs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Aldosterone
* acts on the kidney to make it hold on to sodium and water
- kidneys to promote the retention of salt and water
- upon the renal tubules to enhance sodium reabsorption
* also acts on the sweat ducts and colonic epithelium to conserve sodium.
* causes myocardial and vascular fibrosis
- the kidneys to reclaim more sodium and thus water
* causes the kidneys to retain salt and water and to excrete potassium
- and water which increases blood volume
* causes the kidneys to retain sodium and water, increasing plasma volume
- reabsorption of sodium from the filtrate
* decreases salt excretion, which in turn can lead to high blood pressure.
* determines expression of sodium channels.
* enters the cell from the blood and binds to an intracellular receptor to form a complex.
* escape during angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapy in chronic heart failure.
* function of the inverse of the sodium intake as sensed via osmotic pressure.
* hormone in the body that increases androgen levels
- released by the adrenal glands
* increases blood pressure
- salt retention
* increases the kidneys' salt retention
- loss of potassium in the kidneys
* increases the reabsorption of sodium from sweat
- sodium and water reabsorption in the distal tubule
* is an example of a mineralocorticoid
- another hormone that raises blood pressure
- chemical compounds
- classified as a mineralocorticoid hormone
- concerned with the control of salt and water loss in the urine
- corticosteroids
* is important in regulating minerals in the blood stream especially sodium and potassium
- the pathophysiology of heart failure
- involved in maintaining blood pressure as well as water and salt balance in the body
- made by the adrenal glands, which are located above the upper portion of the kidneys
- one example of a mineralocorticoid
- produced and secreted by cells of the adrenal medulla
* is produced by cells in the cortex of the kidney
- regulated by a the renin angiotensin system
* is secreted from the adrenal gland in the presence of increasing levels of potassium
- in response to low extracellular potassium
- the key regulator of sodium reabsorption in the kidney
- unable to enter nontarget cells
- yet another hormone that comes from the adrenal glands
* mineralocorticoid which controls mineral and water balance in the body.
* plays the primary role in adjustment of sodium excretion.
* produced by the adrenal glands controls the reabsorption of sodium ions by the kidneys.
* promotes sodium reabsorption, increasing blood volume and pressure.
* reduces baroreceptor activity in the dog.
* regulates fluid and electrolyte balance
- salt and water levels which affects blood volume and blood pressure
- the amounts of sodium and potassium in the blood
* saves salt.
* spontaneously converts to the hemiacetal form, which is active.
* steroid hormone produced by the adrenal cortex
- in the adrenal gland that regulates sodium and potassium
- secreted by the adrenal gland
* steroid hormone that causes the reabsorption of sodium
- is produced and secreted by the adrenal glands
- with major effects on sodium homeostasis
* stimulates the active resorption of sodium ions and the excretion of potassium ions
- kidneys to resorb salt, ultimately functioning in retention of water
- reabsorption of sodium while enhancing potassium secretion
* then acts on the kidney to make it retain sodium and water, and to get rid of potassium.
* usually increases sodium reabsorption in the kidney
- promotes both sodium and water retention
* works in the cells of the cortical collecting duct, depicted at left
- together with the kidneys to regulate the balance of minerals in the body | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Ambiguity
* Ambiguities occur in the cells whose vertex set show many sign alternations.
* Some ambiguities can arise with de-localised charge systems, and with some metal complexes.
* dangerous technique in poetry.
* defines the richness of our intellectual lives.
* develops when one ear has both conductive and sensorineural hearing loss.
* fatal flaw in all forms of art.
* is absent, since codons code for only one amino acid.
* is an important element in much contemporary art
- representation of uncertain knowledge
- hypothesized to cause the processing of a sentence to be more difficult
- perhaps the one constant within human experience
- sayings
- uncertainty about the probability of an outcome
* leads to a spirit of tolerance toward the world and false religions.
* means having two or more meanings
- that the sentence or a word in the sentence has more than one meaning
* plays largely in modern literature.
* problem more of sentences than of individual words.
* structural feature of any language, and by extension, of any law.<|endoftext|>Adversity
* brings knowledge, and knowledge brings wisdom.
* can be anything from unemployment or underemployment to an expensive illness.
* causes some men to break, others to break records
- people to break and others to break records
* does that to people.
* is about trials and sorrow, but it is also about happiness, blessings and perspective
- as way to learn, grow and get better whether it be in football for life
- misfortune
* sometimes necessitates change, which can lead to success.<|endoftext|>Astrophysic
* Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
* combines the theories , observations, and experiments of astronomy and physics.
* deals with some of the most majestic themes known to science.
* difficult observational science.
* encompasses every conceivable scale that the universe has to offer.
* investigates the physics of stellar evolution and cosmology.
* is an area in which sense is one of the most important issues
- at a disadvantage to the more terrestrial sciences
- literally the physics of the many different types of stars
- one of the most exciting fields of scientific research
- that branch of astronomy dealing with the physical nature of heavenly bodies
* is the physics of celestial bodies
- science that applies principles of physics to many fields of astronomy
* is the study of how a star generates immense energy
- the physics of astronomy
- use of theories and ideas of physics in the study of space
- transformed after neutrinos discovered to have mass
* research to address the origin of the universe, galaxies and stars.
* spectator science.
* unveils new moons and planets in the universe.
* works with the assumption that the laws of physics are the same everywhere.
Australia
* includes Adelaide.
* includes Australian capital
- states<|endoftext|>Amplification
* can be developmentally, temporally, or environmentally regulated.
* is an increase
- in magnitude of some detectable phenomenon
- expansion
- one mechanism through which proto-oncogenes are activated in malignant cells
- the offensive counterpart to repetition
* is, say they, discourse which invests the subject with grandeur.
* leads to overexpression.
* means making a copy of a waveform, and the copy is usually larger
- that more than one copy is found in the cell
* occurs by repeated firing of one or more origins located within each gene cluster.
* only occurs from the carrier status when the gene passes through a female.
* provides deaf and hard of hearing children access to sound.
Afterlife
* Have a discussion on the belief in afterlife by ancient civilizations.
* is an oxymoron
- thought of a lot in most of the cultures
- video games | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Asphyxiation
* causes a desire to breathes.
* is an extreme hazard when working in enclosed spaces
- hypoxia
- likely to occur before the effects of carbon dioxide overexposure
* is one of the principal potential hazards of working in confined and enclosed spaces
- hazards of working in confined spaces
* is the deficiency of oxygen in the air, making it difficult or impossible to breathe
- leading cause of death in confined spaces
- major cause of death in avalanches
- most subtle danger of working with compressed gases
* means death from oxygen deprivation in the blood.
* occurs when the body fails to get sufficient supplies of oxygen to the tissues.
Atomization
* is annihilation
- division
* process that produces small droplets of the liquid.
* remains material - digitization is spiritual atomization.
Abscission
* is the detachment of leaves, flowers, or fruits from a plant.
* means cutting or severing.<|endoftext|>Atheism
* comes in many forms, both secular and religious.
* destroys the sacredness and obligation of an oath.
* inspires a devotion which is religious in itself.
* is always with respect to a certain, defined god
- beliefs
- content
- death
- defensible and logical
- fact like evolution is fact
- important because it is reasonable, and reason is of crucial importance in human affairs
- much more compatible with a universe infinite in time and space
- non-belief in a deity
- non-science just as theism is
- science Atheist philosophy is science philosophy
- sin
- tabu or ignored in all important Norwegian political parties
- thus merely Oedipal wish fulfillment
- unbelief
* lack of belief in god.
* non- prophet organization.
* non-prophet organisation.
* nonprophet organization.
* philosophy spawned in settings where people are surrounded by what they have built.
* ranges from strong to weak.
* rather extreme position to take with regard to religious belief.
* religion that believes the universe is the product of natural forces.
* religious institution.
* renders the human experience absurd, meaningless and empty.
* requires, at the ultimate level, mindlessness or absence of intelligence.
* self-reliant philosophy.
* still prevails among all classes of society.
* system of sin denial.
* thus becomes a belief system like any other religion.
* world-view, with profound implications.
Alignment
* A true is alignment
* TRUE constant that denotes true.
* Trues are alignment.<|endoftext|>Applied research
* advances knowledge in a the particular firm or industry.
* aims to solve specific and practical problems.
* form of evaluation research.
* involves the use of mycorrhizal fungi in agriculture and forestry.
* is aimed at the development of agents for vaccine and diagnostics development
- concerned with how the theories are used in educational settings
- conducted for the primary purpose of commercial or industrial application
- done to solve immediate, practical problems
- in the field of pest control
Alpha blending
* is used to show transparency in objects
- simulate paints of various opacity
* technique for adding transparency information for translucent objects
- which provides for transparent objects
Australian citizenship
* condition of employment.
* involves both privileges and responsibilities.
Acting
* are activities
- communicating
* are part of performance
- theaters
- performance art
- professions | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Abs
* also bears a faint rubber-like smell when compared to sytrene.
* are glycoproteins, containing sugars attached to protein.
* are important in host defense
- to protect from reinfection with the same strain
* can also prevent tire damage
- contain uranium, depending on the producer
* combines toughness and rigidity with chemical, stress-cracking, and creep resistance.
* has a high fuel content, and fires require strenuous efforts to extinguish
- tendancy to crack, or worse, to compresses under pressure
- poor chemical resistance
* is an acronym for a block copolymer made of acrylonitrile, butadiene, and styrene
- anti-lock braking system
- older and more flexible type of plastic piping, usually black in color
- made up of a diverse range of age and gender
- proven technology that helps drivers avoid accidents, when they know how to use it
- short for abdominal muscles
- the leading global source of bovine genetics and related animal care products
* soft material, but it can be hard to cut.
* uses a number of hazardous chemicals.
Actinic cheilitis
* denotes scaly or crusted patches of precancer on the vermilion of the lips.
* related condition that usually appears on the lower lips.
American consumer
* are about the only large group of people in the world who are diligently buying.
* benefit by having less expensive goods.
* list pesticide residues as a serious food safety concern. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Abuse
* All abuse can lead to alcohol and drug abuse, destructive behavior and even suicide.
* Most abuse happens when adults have a hard time controlling their anger
- with people children know and trust
- is perpetrated by someone whom the victim knows and trusts
* Much abuse falls under the category of domestic violence.
* Some abuse is rooted in a history of abuse that began in earlier years
- laxatives to move food through intestines quickly
* affects every corner of the lives of the people it touches
- the health of both the mother and the baby
* also cuts across all socioeconomic, racial, ethnic, geographic and age groups
- happens in same-sex relationships
* also includes activities that are illegal or dishonest
- neglect, abandonment, and exploitation
- occur in mental health and educational systems
- occurs at all ages
* are violation of the right to life, physical integrity, freedom of movement etc.
* can affect all types of women, in all types of relationships
- any family regardless of income, profession, religion, or education
- families of poor and rich background
- also be emotional and psychological
* can also happen at the hands of older children or children who have been abused themselves
- when family members are put down or touched in wrong ways
- result in mental disorders, blood disorders, and cancer
- arise from physical harm, sexual abuse, neglect or emotional abuse
* can be both mental and physical
- emotional, physical,sexual and psychological
* can be physical, economic, and psychological
- emotional, sexual, economic
- mental or some other form of neglect
* can be physical, sexual, verbal behavior tocoerce or humiliate, emotional or psychological
- verbal, psychological or even spiritual
- sexual, physical, verbal, or neglect
- verbal, physical, sexual, emotional, economic, social or psychological
- begin, continue and increase during pregnancy
- cause serious health problems for a baby even before it is born
- come in many forms - verbal, physical, emotional, psychological, and sexual
- consist of any type of hitting, punching, pushing, and biting
- damage a child spiritually, emotionally, and socially as well as physically
- exist in different forms and in different combinations
- frequently be the door that lays a person open to the seduction of the demonic
* can happen in all kinds of families
- any family, regardless of any special characteristics
- more often and get worse when women are pregnant
- occasionally or often, but control is the primary reason behind domestic violence
* can happen to any older person, but the greatest physical harm is often done to women
- person with disabilities
- anyone at any time, regardless of age, gender, or sexual preference
- when there is hitting, slapping, or kicking
- include physical, emotional, and sexual abuse
* can lead to antisocial behavior, depression, identity confusion and low self-esteem
- compulsive behavior and paranoia
- mean different things to different children, and can happen once or many times
* can occur against men as well as women
- even when there is genuine love and affection between the people involved
* can occur in a number of different forms
- financial or non-financial settings
* can occur in many different forms
- over a period of hours, days, months, or years
- produce heightened anxiety and abnormal stress responses
- sometimes be fatal, especially in younger children
- start even before the birth of the child, and can have adverse effects on the child
- take many forms ranging from physical and sexual assault to emotional or verbal abuse
* can take many forms, and can happen at any time during a relationship
- individuals react differently to abuse
- including physical, emotional, sexual, psychological and economic
- the form of physical abuse or neglect, mental abuse, or even financial abuse
* choice made by the abuser to control the behavior of another person.
* comes in many different forms
- forms, it can be physical, emotional, or mental abuse
- other forms, such as domestic violence towards both men and women
* complex psychological issue, a sickness.
* contaminates life, and emotionally responsible caregiving prevents abuse.
* creates medical problems and can cause serious illness or even death.
* crosses all lines of class, age, culture, race, religion, and sexual orientation
- social barriers including race, social class, and economic status
* destroys love and trust in dogs as well as people.
* does happen in dating relationships.
* family disease and it needs family treatment
- dysfunction that repeats through generations
* form of violence where one person directly hurts another.
* greatly affects a woman's health and well-being.
* happens all too often during pregnancy
- among both men and women in all types of relationships and situations
- even in dating relationships
* happens in all different kinds of relationships, including same sex relationships
- kinds of families and in all economic and societal groups
- socio-economic groups and income levels
- every sort of family, regardless of race, economic background or educational level
- the home, the community and in active and long term care facilities
* happens to many women of all ages, religions, cultural backgrounds and incomes
- people of all races, all ages, all incomes and all religions
- when people accept violence as an appropriate response to stressful situations
* has very little to do with anger, and everything to do with power and control.
* hurts individuals, families, and society.
* includes incidents between family members as well as non-related persons
- physical abuse, mental abuse, sexual abuse, neglect and financial abuse
* includes physical, sexual, mental, or emotional harm
- verbal, emotional, sexual, and financial abuse, as well as neglect
* inhibits the victim from taking action to protect oneself.
* involves actions that are inconsistent with sound medical, business, or fiscal practices.
* is Power.
* is about control in a relationship where the balance of power is uneven
* is abuse is abuse, no matter who is on the receiving end
* is abuse, despite what form the control takes
- no matter what the gender of the victim
- also common in teens who are dating
* is any act which puts another down, degrades or reduces a person's sense of self-worth
- behavior that is intended to hurt, intimidate or control another person
- controlling, hurtful act, word, or gesture that injures another's body or emotions
* is any kind of behavior that one person uses to control another through fear and intimidation
- used to dominate, control, or humiliate one s partner
- violence committed by someone in a position of trust, power or authority
- obvious lack of care for dog or obvious disregard for dogs needs
- threatening or harmful conduct including serious emotional harm
- anything that the listowner feels is abusive
- associated with miscarriage and low birth weight infants
- at record levels in every part of our society
- both a health problem and a public-health problem
- common in child marriages
- described as a form of torture
- directed toward a person and is rooted in the abuser's own anger, hatred, etc
- disrespect
- excessive or inappropriate health care services
- illegal, immoral, and inhumane
- like the undetected cancer that shows up with symptoms often ignored
- mistreatment
- more likely when there is drug and alcohol abuse in the home, by either male or female
- never a sign of love, even if the violence is followed by tender times of making up
- often the result of misdirected or inappropriate emotion or sexual energy
- one issue also that can be linked to gambling, both abuse of humans and substance abuse
- part of being human
- physical, emotional, mental, sexual, or neglect
- rampant within families today
- serious bodily injury, sexual abuse or sexual exploitation
- something that can vary in degrees
- strongly related to suicidal feelings
- supported by beliefs, values, and attitudes
* is the active participation in the physical maltreatment of the animal
- infliction of physical pain, mental injury, or physical injury on an adult
- mistreatment of one person by another
- misuse of the force police are entitled to use
- misuse, excessive use or improper use of a person or object
- responsibility of the abuser
- sole responsibility of the violent person
- weapon of the vulgar
- usage that is excessive
* is when someone or a group of people hurt others on purpose
- there pattern of physical and emotional attacks
* learned behavior whereby the abusers gain power and control over their victims
- behaviour
* major issue for women with disabilities
- public health issue, the second most common cause of death among young children
* makes victims feel afraid, trapped, humiliated, and ashamed.
* means being physically beaten
- causing intentional pain or harm
- emotional or physical attack
- mistreating another person
- to gain power and control
* occurs among all types of intimate relationships.
* occurs in a community that tolerates it
- wide range of situations and settings
* occurs in all ages, races, and socioeconomic and educational levels
- races, nationalities, and cultural groups
- more than a quarter of teen relationships
- regardless of race, class, religion, age, political affiliation or life style
* occurs when an individual consumes more alcohol than the body can eliminate
- significant harm is caused by the behaviour
* often begins or gets worse during pregnancy
- escalates in frequency and severity over time
- happens when people lose control of their anger
- increases in both intensity and frequency over time
- occurs with other problems, such as low income, health problems, poor mobility, etc
* pattern of behaviour that one person uses to try to control and dominate another person
- coercive control directed toward the victim
* pervades all social classes and all cultures.
* problem among the rich and poor and among all skin colors.
* refers to any act that is intended to cause or result in harm to another person
- harmful behavior associated with repeated use of the drug
- the receiving of unsolicited or offensive e-mail
* represents an action against a child.
* serious problem that needs professional intervention to cause change.
* shows hatred in that it harms and hurts.
* sign that the abuser has problems and needs help.
* significant factor in the lives of many older adults.
* takes many forms - from sexual and physical, to emotional and spiritual.
* tends to be cyclical in nature and escalates over time
- damage the self-esteem of both the parents and the children
- occur when an elderly person's mental or physical health worsens and stress rises
* usually occurs when a parent purposefully harms a child.
* very serious problem for women with disabilities.
* willful action or inaction that causes harm. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Abjection
* is humiliation
* remembrance of the pre-objectal stage.
Adulation
* grave fault if it makes one an accomplice in another's vices or grave sins.
* is flattery
Astronomical research
* assists the nation, directly and indirectly, in achieving societal goals.
* stimulates new advances in computing.<|endoftext|>Amebiasis
* can be fatal, especially to infants and children
- cause both intraluminal and disseminated disease
* is another disease which can cause proctitis and can be transmitted by ano-oral sex
- common in tropical areas where living conditions are crowded and sanitation is poor
- contagious
- contracted by swallowing the cyst stage of the parasite in contaminated food or water
- infection
- more common and more severe in subtropical and tropical areas
- treatable with antibiotics
* is treated with antibacterial medications
- medicine
* leading parasitic cause of death.
* occurs throughout the world from tropical to subpolar.
* parasitic infection of the large intestine.
Acclimation
* begins within a few days of exposure to the heat.
* is accomplished by enzyme reduction, gene mutation and gene transfer
- adjustment
- the gradual adjustment of a plant to new conditions
* naturally occurring physiological process in many temperate perennial plants.
* very important part of any athlete's life
- step for a plant's long and healthy life
Asceticism
* calls for severe abstinence and austerity.
* corrective practice, a vision of repentance.
* is doctrines
- immaturity
- the practice of extreme self-denial for the purpose of gaining religious advantage
- thus a refusal to accept fear as the final state of our being
- to remain pure amidst impurities
* lies in remaining pure amidst impurities.
* offers a critical perspective on sexuality
- practical examples of conservation
* takes holy living and corrupts it.<|endoftext|>Adsorption
* appears to increase with increasing organic content and decreasing pH of soil.
* begins right in the mouth and exceeds that reported when powder alone is used.
* depends on the substrate and the specific species in question.
* describes how tightly a compound becomes attached to soil particles.
* is exothermic and increases at lower temperatures
- generally temperature and energy independent
- higher in dry soils than in moist soil
- sorption
* is the collection of a substance on the surface of another
- first step in the viral life cycle
- useful for an electron source if the adsorbate increases emission
- well understood for single contaminants at high concentrations
- well-described by the potential of eq
- when one substance is being held inside another by physical bonds
* means to collect gas or liquid modules onto the surface of another material.
* occurs because of the attraction between chemicals and soil particles
- by condensation of the adsorbate in the adsorbents pores
- rapidly, such that strongly adsorbed chemicals essentially have no soil activity
- to specific cellular receptors
* occurs when atoms from a gas land on the substrate and bind to the solid surface
- contaminants attach or sorb to underground particles
- gas molecules become trapped in the pores of a porous solid adsorbent
* physical process which occurs without chemical reaction.
* refers to the condensation of gas or vapor on the surface of a solid.
* relies on the fact that many organic molecules are polar in nature.
* removes the metal from the water column and stores the metal in the substrate.
* surface phenomenon.
* takes place because of the attraction of ions to a surface
- in a filter bed in what is known as the active filter zone
- only when there are receptors on both the host cell and the virus | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Adoption
* Many adoptions involve newborn children.
* Most adoptions are a commitment on the part of a group or church.
* affects families in many ways.
* are also possible when the adoptive and birth parents reside in different countries.
* can involve all types of children and families
- literally make a world of difference to a family and to a child
* choice which benefits both baby and mother far more from than does single parenting
- andmother far more from than does single parenting
* common practice throughout the world and throughout history.
* court action to change the legal parenthood of a child.
* decision for the entire family.
* different way to build a family.
* entails a change to the legal status of a child.
* family issue.
* formal legal arrangement granted by a court.
* forms a legal parent-child relationship.
* gift of life
- love
* increases the chances of becoming pregnant.
* involves a life-long commitment to provide a child with a loving stable home.
* involves the State making decisions as to the welfare of a child already born
- permanent transfer of a child from one extended family member to another
* is an alternative family choice that is becoming more popular every day
- emotional event
- another method of fostering a family when one can no longer have children
- approval
- as ancient as human families
- blessings
- discussed among parents, children and even birth mothers
- for the benefit of children
- less cruel than abortion but polygamy is the biblical way to give a child a home
- mutually beneficial to parent, child, and society
- often the next move after birth parents have had their parental rights terminated
- permitted by single people and increasingly by same-sex couples
- possible for children whose parental rights have been terminated
- primarily a child-welfare service
- probably the only way that same-sex couples can share custody of a child
- proceeding
* is the acceptance of an innovation by a group member
- gift of life that builds families
- intentional act of creating a family
- legal process which gives a child a new and permanent family
* is the permanent legal assumption of all parental rights and responsibilities for a child
- process of adding a child to a family
- process through which an organization decides to acquire the systems or technology
- solution to an unwanted pregnancy
- very important for millions of people who are unable to have children on their own
* legal and social process that transfers all parental rights to the adoptive family
- procedure that creates a parent-child relationship where none existed before
- proceeding, a formality
* legal process by which a child becomes a permanent member of a new family
- that gives a child new parents
- which permanently gives parental rights to adoptive parents
* life long commitment on the part of the adoptive parents.
* life-giving alternative to abortion.
* loving choice that lasts a lifetime
- option that mothers can choose
* loving, caring, responsible, and selfless act.
* means coming to age.
* method of joining a family just as birth is.
* most selfless, loving gift which benefits parents, children and families.
* often occur because one or both parents have abandoned a child.
* partnership between the adopter, the shelter and the animal.
* permanent plan for a child who has been legally freed for adoption.
* personal decision that affects the lives of all involved.
* positive event that benefits everyone involved.
* process by which families are planned and formed
- that our society developed so that children can grow in loving surroundings
* statutory process that was unrecognized in the common law.
* tend to be more stable when a child in foster care is adopted at a younger age.
* tends to circulate parental status rather than children.
* terminates the rights, duties and responsibilities of the biological parents.
* usually ends the relationship between the child and the biological parents.
+ Foster care: Children :: Law
* Adoption is different to foster care. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Archaeology
* Greek word that means the study of everything ancient.
* Most archaeology is cultural resource management.
* acts as an academic fulcrum, integrating several fields of scholarly endeavor.
* also includes earlier pre-historic time periods.
* approaches the study of humankind from the things that people have left behind.
* attempts to understand prehistory through the study of artifacts.
* attests a world come apart.
* branch of anthropology.
* can help provide a historical foundation for biblical faith
- reinforce various faiths
* comes from the Greek archaiologia , meaning the discussion of antiquities.
* confirms that they are one of the earliest races of people.
* considers everything related to the human past
- past human life and how societies grow, change and become extinct
* employs scientific methodology.
* examines the material remains of historic and prehistoric cultures.
* examines the physical records of past cultures
- remains past human activities have left
* field that is also using computer modeling.
* focus within the Anthropology major, rather than a major.
* focuses on cultural history and strives to learn how human societies have changed.
* global discipline with no time restrictions.
* has less emphasis on natural sciences.
* interprets events and artifacts from the past.
* involves careful planning and the development of questions about the human past
- discovery, scientific analysis, creative imagination, and interpretation
- the careful measurement of the location of finds, walls, buildings and so on
* is about anthropology - the study of humankind
- digging
* is about discovery, a kind of detective work into the ancient past
- finding things that nobody has found before
- making connections between people and what they left behind
- also a science, and it sometimes creates more questions than answers
* is an ever-changing field of study
- ideal way to synthesize history, art, religion and science
- interpretive science
- objective science
- archaeology whether it is under or above the water
- broken up into a number of sub-fields
- concerned with understanding societies that existed in the past
- considered a branch of anthropology, the study of humanity and human culture
- incapable of dating anything well enough to see 'point events' of any kind
- interested in human beings who lived in former ages
- labor intensive work that is both physically and mentally demanding
- like owning an exotic car or motorbike
- more than the study of very ancient civilizations
- normally the examination of bits and scraps of people's behavior from the past
- often of hunters and gatherers
- one area of the sciences that interests everyone
* is one of the four fields of anthropology
- primary sources of urban planning
- technique of recovering the past
- part of the larger discipline of anthropology
- predicated on the notion of systematic, objective recording of data
* is the excavation and study of the material remains left by past communities
- means of studying past human ways of life
- only way to reconstruct the past for the prehistoric period
- part of anthropology which examines the lives and cultures of former societies
- physical manifestation of our heritage
- recovery and study of physical evidence
- science that studies human life through the physical remains of human activities
* is the science that studies the artifacts that previous residents left behind
- physical remains of the human past
* is the scientific study of human behavior based on material remains
- cultures based on analysis of material remains
* is the scientific study of past human cultures through their physical remains
- peoples and their cultures
- the past through material evidence that people leave behind
- study and interpretation of that heritage for the benefit of society as a whole
* is the study of ancient human history
- how humans lived in earlier times
- man s past
* is the study of material remains of past human life and activities
- such as artifacts and features and their contexts
* is the study of old monuments, relics, inscriptions, excavation sites etc
- objects called artifacts
* is the study of past cultures and their remains
* is the study of past human activities through the evidence of surviving physical traces
- people by the things they left behind
- peoples through the things they left behind
* is the study of people in the past based on their material remains
- the past through the material remains they leave behind
- societies that have come and gone
- the ancient and recent human past through material remains
* is the study of the human past by analysis of the physical remains of human behaviour
- interactions of humans and prehistoric animals, such as dinosaurs
- lifeways of people who existed in the past
- material remains of past human behavior
- past with a focus on human behavior
- where people came from and what they did
- usually a subdivision of Anthropology, the study of man
* is, quite simply, the study of human cultures from around the world and throughout time.
* large part of how the history of Germany has been compiled.
* looks at the physical records of past cultures.
* multidisciplinary field.
* needs archaeometry to achieve the same borrowing efficiency to study cultural remains.
* neglected field of study in eastern India.
* only deals with the human past.
* process of reinterpretation.
* science devoted to answering questions about the past
- in which the experiments can never be repeated
- that studies all cultures, present and past
* scientific method for studying past human cultures.
* seeks to describe and explain the nature and evolution of cultural systems.
* shows that religion constant process of inculturation
- they lived in houses of sticks and mud with clay floors
* studies the historical development of human cultures by analyzing cultural remains
- remains of past cultures to reconstruct former lifestyles
* sub-discipline of anthropology, as are ethnography and ethnology.
* traces cultural development by studying the things earlier peoples made and used.
* very broad and diverse discipline.
* way of life.
+ Clevedon: Towns in Somerset
* Clevedon' is a town in the county of Somerset, in England. Archaeology shows that many people lived here during the Roman occupation. The town of today was not built until around 1800 as a seaside resort. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Airman
* recent word that means somebody involved with flying.
* skilled worker
Adequacy
* is quality
- the ability to supply customers at all times
* refers to schools' capacity to meet state and federal mandates.
Adrenalectomy
* Adrenalectomies are ablation.
* decreases calcium spike duration in rat hippocampal neurons.
* is ablation
- the surgical removal of the adrenal gland<|endoftext|>Acuity
* Acuities are also inversely proportional to stimulus contrast.
* are developers of vertical market and bespoke applications.
* continues to improve as the retina matures.
* designer, manufacturer and marketer of precision dimensional laser measurement sensors.
* eye test measure of visual sharpness.
* is clearness, or sharpness of vision
- less than humans and horses, but greater than the cat
- linked to the size and structure of the eye
- sight
- tested by examining whether infants can discriminate vertical stripes from a grey field
* is the ability to distinguish the fine details critical to tasks such as reading and writing
- focus so that two objects appear as distinct entities
Atlantic menhaden
* are an ecologically critical fish species.
* have a laterally compressed body.
Agranulocytosis
* can occur.
* is blood disorder
- thought to be induced by dipyrone and aminopyrine via an immune reaction
Alabaster
* Is a stimulus for meditation.
* fine grained variety of gypsum.
* fine-grained massive variety of gypsum.
* finegrained variety of gypsum.
- based stone
* is calcites
- extremely heat sensitive
- minerals
- stones
- white
* rock material that is mined in many places in Egypt. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Acrylic
* -Modacrylic A synthetic fibre.
* All acrylics give off fumes or vapors when curing, and they are toxic.
* allow multiple glazes to be applied with less risk of compromising previous applications.
* also help make the surface of a pastel painting strong and durable.
* are a modern addition and use a synthetic polymer as a binder
- about the most durable materials available
- also an effective primer for exterior concrete block
- available in sheets, films, and resin adhesives
- basically water-based paints
- capable of working in a similar way
- easier to work with and less toxic
- expensive
- good adhesives and can support many times their own weight
- ideal for both work with an airbrush and on paper surfaces
- less expensive than oils, dry faster and offer a wide range of ready made colors
- more like wearing polyester
- permanent
- pigment suspended in a polymer binder which can be dissolved in water before they dry
- quick drying, durable, and adaptability to almost any surface
- usually less expensive than oils, too
- very good for painting on clothing for costumes
* are water-based and dry in two to four hours
- paints made from acrylic resins
- weaker than polycarbonates, but cost less
* belong to a diverse and complicated chemical family.
* burn readily due to the fiber content and the lofty, air filled pockets
- slowly and smell sweet
* burns readily unless modified.
* can also use all watercolour techniques.
* can be colorless and transparent, or pigmented
- the most versatile and easy to use of all painting media
- transparent, opaque and impasto
* come in tubes the same as oils.
* dry rapidly as well.
* enamel paints do have a clear-cut superiority over lacquer when it comes to engine castings.
* fall somewhere in between oils and watercolors.
* is available in many colors
- various colors
- better than wool for insulation in a dunking
- clearer than glass
- fabric
- lighter than glass and is shatterproof
* is located in factories
- paintings
- more impact resistant than glass
- much harder to blend colors
- plastic
- stronger than glass, and can be bent at various angles
* is used for art
* is, however, harder on the teeth and some smokers prefer softer vulcanite.
* make good substrates for both interior as well as exterior signage.
* never fades.
* normally dry very fast.
* offers a long-lasting, high gloss surface that is warm to the touch.
* often forms some gas as the solvent reacts.
* paints in assorted colors
- work well on baked polymer clay
* paints, and vinyl polymers are among some nonconvertible binders
- sealers and wax
- the most widely used paint medium, is very resistant to ultra violet light
* resists fading and general discoloration.
* saturates wood fibers, but the natural pores remain open.
* show a greater colour change from wet to dry than do alkyds.
* socks never lose their softness, even after repeated washing.
* stretches easily, so has poor dimensional stability.
* tend to have excellent lightfastness.
* tends to shrink to mass.
Assurance
* concerns the realization that a person has eternal life.
* is an inextricable part of saving faith
- banks
- certainty
- commitment
- insurance
- statements
- the confident realization that one has eternal life
* means comfort, and comfort means joy, peace, and love.
* product of saving faith.
Athleticism
* is energy
- invaluable when it come to learning about movement
* vital attribute for actors. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Advocacy
* involves acting on behalf of another individual, group or cause
- attempts to influence people and public perceptions
* is THE way to Make a Difference in the fight against breast cancer
- about people speaking up and having their own say
- active promotion of a cause or principle
- an important aspect of social work
- that act or process of advancing or defeating a cause, policy or proposal
* is the act of speaking in support of human concerns and needs
- first rule of traditional medical ethics
- heart of democracy and public policy
- methodology of working on another's behalf
- process of pleading the cause or defending the rights of another
- representation of specific positions on specific legislation or regulations
- when one person helps another to have their concerns, views and wishes heard by others
* means acting and communicating in support of a policy, idea or concern
- people helping people
- to take action in different ways to support an idea or cause
* professional mandate that can impact the daily lives of children and families.
* refers to the act of pleading or interceding for a cause.
* spectrum of activities based on concern for our children and all children.
Agricultural zone
* Some agricultural zones suffer drought.
* are sources from which many introduced species spread.<|endoftext|>Affinity
* is any emotional attitude which indicates the degree of liking for someone or something
- attraction
- determined by the interaction of the molecular structures of the receptor and the drug
- forces
- kinship
- relations
- relationship established by marriage
- resemblance
* is the degree of liking or affection
- drug's ability to attach itself to , or bind with a receptor, or site of action
- muse of interconnectedness, or the well-placed hyperlink
* plays a role in drug potency, but so does intrinsic efficacy.
* refers to the strength that a substance binds to a receptor.
* relates the drug concentration to the fractional receptor occupancy.
Affected neonate
* appear normal at birth, with dark hair at birth and vomiting is rare.
* are weak at or shortly after birth.
Autosomal monosomy
* All autosomal monosomies are lethal in very early embryogenesis.
* Autosomal monosomies yield non-viable embryos. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Albumin
* acts as a sponge to hold water in the blood vessels
- like a sponge to keep water in the blood vessels
* also transports various blood components and nutrients.
* are a group of amino acids in milk which also provide nutrients
- globular proteins
* are the predominant protein group present in blood plasma
- smallest and most abundant of the plasma proteins
* blood protein of immense importance to good health
- produced by the liver
* carry fatty acids and other small hydrophobic molecules from tissue to tissue.
* component of the all the protein excreted in the urine
- cell wall and is distributed throughout the rice
* decreases as cancer progresses
- in burns, liver disease, renal disease, pre-eclampsia, stress and sepsis
* facilitates zinc acquisition by endothelial cells.
* fluctuates so widely because it is very sensitive to changes in hydration of the body.
* helps create blood's high viscosity
- maintain the body's fluid balance by keeping water in the blood
* is also important in the blood transport of many drugs, hormones, and other chemicals.
* is an abundant protein in the body produced in the liver from amino acids
- egg by-product
- excellent measure of protein status
- considered by physicians to be a safe and superior product to hetastarch
- found in blood serum
- made in different strengths and different sizes
* is one of the best indices of nutritional status as it relates to outcome
- major plasma proteins
- many proteins found in plasma
- particularly useful in absorbing bodily fluid into the blood
- present as the main contaminant
* is synthesized by the liver and secreted into the blood
- the largest protein fraction in avian serum
* is the major binding protein
- blood protein made by the liver
* is the major protein in blood plasma
- present within the blood
- naturally occurring colloid and is still widely used
- preferred source of the protein, but non-plasma sources of protein can be used
- protein of the highest concentration in plasma
- useful as a plasma expander
* major blood protein, produced by the liver
- carrier protein
- protein produced by the liver
* makes up a large portion of the volume that leaks into the peritoneal space.
* nonspecific indicator of liver dysfunction.
* protein made in the liver
- manufactured by the liver
- that is present in high concentrations in the blood
- that's produced in the liver and circulates in the blood
- which is made by the liver and circulates in the blood
* reduces basement membrane hydraulic conductance in part due to arginyl side groups
- part due to arginyl sidegroups
* serves to increase the osmotic pressure of blood.
* simple protein
* ' is the name for a number of proteins that can be dissolved in water. Albumin is found in blood serum. Albumin is also found in egg white. The albumin index is used to measure the freshness of an egg. It measures how far an egg spreads if broken on a flat smooth surface. The older an egg is, the further it spreads.
* type of protein found in body tissues and fluids.
* very abundant and natural protein in the blood
- long-lived natural protein in the blood
* water-soluble protein made by the liver that is one of the main constituents of blood. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Access
* also means the ability or freedom of an individual to make use of library services.
* database management system that helps clients manage data stored in a computer.
* defines rights, privileges, and mechanisms to protect assets from access or loss.
* is approachs
- companies
- mediated by the lysine-rich tails of the histones that stick out of the nucleosome
- operations
* is the ability to fulfill one's own individual potential without artificial constraints
- means to further enhance the administration of justice
- right of a child to see the parent who they no longer live with
* problem in developing countries.
* refers to both the physical space and also the vital time periods when people want to travel
- the total number of minority graduates per year
* term used in lieu of visitation.
+ Woomera Test Range: Australian military :: South Australia
* Between 1955 and 1963, the British ran a series of seven nuclear-weapon tests at Maralinga, then inside the range. The Joint Project ran until 1980, when the British withdrew from the program. The range is still used as a testing site by the Australian Defence Force. Access is leased to foreign militaries and private companies for their own testing of weapons.
Astronavigation
* company that manufactures all-analog audio products.
* is navigation | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Baptism
* Christian sacrament of the washing away of sins.
* Most Baptism are with infants.
* also includes the moment of justification or righteousness
- means rebirth and renewal
- symbolizes resurrection , and a walk characterized by newness of life
- welcomes the baptized person to Holy Communion
* are central to formation and discipleship
- occasions of great joy, both in the life of a family and in the life of the church
- public events in the life of a Christian community
- very important to Orcadian tradition
* beginning, a new creation.
* begins the flow of that cleansing blood.
* birth of water.
* burial and a resurrection
- in water, and a resurrection therefrom, as is evident from Rom
* can also be in springs and seas
- be a theology to some and to others an experience
- help some people in their salvation
* causes rebirth.
* celebrates the new birth and represents a new beginning.
* ceremony rich in content
- with water
* cleanses the baby of original sin
- child of original sin
* combination of words, people, music, and pouring water.
* comes from the Greek word baptizo , which means to go down, dip or plunge
- Jewish tradition of having a special bathe before important occasions
* command from Jesus
- to be obeyed
* commemorates the burial and resurrection of Jesus.
* commitment to repenting.
* communal event.
* complete burial in water.
* consists of the processes of immersion, submersion, and emergence.
* covenant of mutual obligation
- sign
* covenantal ceremony.
* daily dying to sin and rising to newness of life.
* death, burial and resurrection.
* deed of faith.
* dramatizes the death to the old nature, and life to the new nature.
* follows when one hears the gospel and believes it.
* foreshadows the eschatology of the last day.
* gives a share in the common priesthood of all believers.
* has a particular obligation on parents
- significance in time and gives meaning to the end of time
- something to do with blood, because baptism and blood are for the remission of sins
* includes instruction and nurture in the faith for a life of discipleship.
* indicates the foundation of our salvation.
* involves a physical act in a physical element
- daily dying and rising
- membership in the church
- the pouring of water over the head, there is no immersion
* is about life and death
- turning from an old life and accepting the infinite possibilities of a new one
- water, and water is about all sorts of things
- administered to infants of Christian families and to new converts
* is also a water that cleanses
- an act of initiation
- necessary for salvation, because justification an grace are conferred in baptism
* is also the form under which begins the work of sanctification
- sacrament at which a person receives a 'name'
* is an act of both word and deed
- confession that is done by a converted person able to profess faith
- faith by which an adult makes a public declaration of faith
- obedience and faith
- trusting faith, gratitude, which is an outward expression of an inner reality
- that symbolizes death and resurrection
- action that suggests a total immersion
- essential ordinance for salvation
- external expression of an internal surrender to the love and leadership of Jesus
- identification with the community of believers
- immersion, a burial in water
* is an important event in the journey of life
- part of finding salvation
- step of obedience
- integral part of New Testament theology
- intrinsic part of discipleship because it demonstrates genuine faith
- introduction into the life of the church
- obedient act
- ourward wymboloic act signifying salvation and cleansing of sin
* is an outward act which publicly testifies to the believer's faith and commitment
- and visible sign of something that is spiritual
- ceremony that points to an inner change
- show of the new birth that has taken place on the inside
* is an outward sign of an inward spiritual change in a person
- inward work
- symbol of an inward grace
- symbolic act signifying salvation and cleansing of sin
- analogous to circumcision in the new covenant
- appropriate for any age, though baptism of infants and young children is most common
- as much a symbol of fellowship as it symbol of salvation
- associated with belief
- because of forgiveness of sins
- birth into eternal life
* is by complete immersion in water
- full immersion in water
- immersion according to the Scriptures
- pouring water over the disciple
- celebrated by immersion in holy water or by pouring water over the candidate's head
- commanded as the outward sign of the inward act of repentance
- conditional on believing which comes through an intelligent hearing of the gospel
- done for the purpose of removing our sins
- either by immersion, pouring or sprinkling
- equivalent to a vow of chastity
* is essential for maturity as a believer
* is essential to one's salvation
- faith in action
* is for all believers, male and female, circumcision was only for the males
- mature individuals who are old enough to make their own decisions
- the forgiveness of sins
* is for the remission of our past sins
- salvation of our souls
- initiatings
* is like a burial and resurrection
- the marriage ceremony
- looked upon as a working of grace and is required for salvation
- merely an outside sign of an inner work of the Holy Spirit in an individual's life
- never a private act, and it never concerns only the individual being baptized
- offered to people of all ages including infants
- often a part of worship
- one of most religiously profound rites that one experiences in religion early in life
* is one of the best ways to communicate the gospel to a non-Christian
- factors to which the Bible ascribes salvation
- only a figure or symbol of what has taken place in the believer's life
* is our beginning and our resurrection is the eternal ongoing fulfillment of that life
- spiritual rebirth
- part of the process of being born again
* is performed in the most expressive way by triple immersion in the baptismal water
- practiced following the new birth, both being signs of the covenants they represent
- preformed to expiate the sins of a human through a ritual cleansing of the soul
- received only by adults by immersion
- referred to as branding
- religious ceremony
- ritual drowning
- seen as a central defining sacrament of the church
* is something associated with grief and repentance for sin
- that is celebrated in a worship service with a community of faith present
* is symbolic and pictures certain Bible truths
- of burial
* is the Christian sacrament of new life
- Divinely ordained expression of faith
- act of cleansing or purifying someone
* is the act that destroys the body of sin
- washes away our sins
* is the beginning of Christian fellowship and growth
- a new life
- beginning, the initiation of the disciple
- burial of the old life that died in repentance
- church's sacrament of growth in the Kingdom of God
* is the first act of obedience
- and fundamental consecration of the human person
- of three sacraments that make up the sacraments of Christian initiation
- ordinance of the gospel
- step of faith taken by new believers in the book of Acts
- focal point of salvation
- foundation of biblical soundness
- gift that keeps on giving
- grave of the old man and the birth of the new
- guarantee of the reality of our repentance
* is the immersion of a believer in water and is properly called believers' baptism
- line of demarcation between sin and salvation
- mark of corporate, as well as individual faith
* is the moment of adoption into the Kingdom of God
- initiation into a whole culture and way of life
- natural progression of salvation
- necessary condition by which one can enjoy the privileges of the church
- occasion of salvation from past sins
- only one of the steps that is obeyed at a single point of time
- ordering for the servant ministers of the church
- ordinance that initiates into the fellowship of the visible church
- outward profession of the inward conversion
* is the outward sign of a new inward experience
- having been saved
- the inward change
- primary sacrament
* is the public announcement and symbol of our personal salvation
- confession of the commitment they have already made in their heart
- confirmation that an inward change has already taken place
- ritual that welcomes the individual into the church
* is the sacrament of Christian initiation
- belonging
- initiation and the door of grace
- initiation, the sacrament of belonging
- same everywhere in the world, and to everybody
* is the sign of belief in Jesus
- reconciliation
- source of true fruitfulness for every Christian vocation
- spiritual antitype or fulfullment of the type
- summary of the Christian faith and the history of salvation
- to Christian life what the wedding ceremony is to a marriage
* is to be by dunking or dipping the person into water, that is, a submersion or immersion
- wash away or cleanse one of sin and, thus, frees one from the bondage of sin
- understood as an outward sign of an inward change
- used to describe total conversion process
* life to be lived, a spirit to be filled with.
* literally means to immerse in water.
* makes use of water, enough water in which to be buried.
* marks the beginning of a new form of existence
* marks the beginning of the discipleship process
* means death to self, death to sin, death to death itself
- going completely under the water
- immersion in water, and is to be administered by one having authority
- many different things to many different people
- only an outward sign of an inward change
- repentance from sin and forgiveness of sin
- the daily, ongoing purification of thought and deed
- to dip under water
* metaphor for what is important.
* new beginning like resurrection to begin a new life after death
- beginning, a new way of life
* one-time event which is to be used daily
- experience in life
* performs a spiritual work in the believer.
* picture, type, figure and symbol of our salvation.
* pictures our death to sin and resurrection to a new life
- the washing away of our sin
* plays a very important role in the Gospel of Matthew.
* pledge of allegiance, a total physical commitment.
* possesses resurrection and redemption.
* practice for believers.
* public commitment to a life of corporate worship, fellowship, education, and outreach
- confession made in the presence of others
* reflects true repentance in the heart.
* removes the old man, or the veil, from off the heart.
* representation, a copy, a type of something else.
* represents complete washing away of sin
- three events in the life of the true believer
* restores supernatural life.
* ritual act of immersion in water
- made up of questions and promises, prayer, and washing
* sacrament of continual beginnings.
* sacred symbol.
* seed to be nurtured by the parents and the parish.
* serves as the rite of initiation into the church.
* shows the death of the old self and the rising to life of a new self.
* sign of entrance into the Christian community, either as an infant or an adult
- having been cleansed from sin
- inclusion in the covenant relationship, both for infants and adults
- which clarifies
* signifies our initiation into the divine family.
* spiritual cleansing when sins are confessed and repudiated.
* spiritual, unisex form of circumcision.
* still carries the magical power of life.
* symbol for cleaning.
* symbol of one's trust in Jesus
- our deliverance from darkness to light
- or sign
- that the heart has changed
* symbolic dying and rising
* symbolises formally becoming a member of the church
* symbolizes a bath-a thorough cleansing
- dying and a rising to new life
- death, burial, and resurrection, and can only be done by immersion
- our acceptance of that fact by faith
* symbolizes the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus
- fact of regeneration
- process of death and resurrection
- replacement of the old man by the new man
* take place beside streams, in rivers, lakes, oceans, in backyard pools, even indoors.
* time of being set free.
* transliteration of the Koine Greek word baptidzo , which always means immersion.
* unites all believers.
* very important part of the salvation experience
- step of obedience in the life of every true believer
* visible means of touching life with grace.
* washes away sin.
* word that gets a workout in the religious world today.
* works rebirth and renewal.
+ Assemblies of God, Beliefs: Christianity
* The AG is Trinitarian. They view the Bible as divinely inspired. The Bible provides the rules of faith and conduct. Baptism by immersion is practiced. Baptism is understood as an outward sign of an inward change. The change is from being dead in sin to being alive in Christ. Communion is also practiced. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Bronchial atresia
* is thought to be a congenital abnormality.
* rare anomaly presenting as recurring lung infections.
Basidia
* are characteristic of the Basidiomycetes
- in extensive fertile layer which are susceptible to rain when exposed
- located at the ends of tiny projections within the mushroom cap
* occur elsewhere on the fruiting bodies of non-gilled fungi.
* produce four spores at the end of microscopic spines called sterigma.
Biological concept
* Some biological concepts rely on reproduction.
* have important limitations
Behavioral research
* is also critical to public health
- similarly important for understanding and treating severe mental illnesses
* refers to studies of the behavior of individuals or behavior of aggregates.
* shows that children influence the purchasing decisions of parents, too
- most boys have different inclinations, different emotions from girls<|endoftext|>Blastomycosis
* can affect the lungs, bones, and skin.
* can cause rapid changes in the eyes
- respiratory signs such as difficulty breathing, tiring easily or coughing
* fungal disease caused by Blastomyces dermatitidis
- infection involving the lungs and occasionally spreading to the skin
* has a well-defined endemic area where it is found.
* is an uncommon, but potentially serious fungal infection
- diseases
- more common in the upper Midwest
- mycosis
* is primarily a disease that infects people and dogs
- lung infection, but occasionally it spreads through the bloodstream
- treated with anti-fungal medication
- usually a slow-growing infection involving the lungs and the skin
* occurs only in North America and Africa.
* rare fungal infection.
* starts out as a lung infection caused by inhalation of the conidia.
Benevolence
* is good willing, or the love of being and of happiness
- good, but altruism is evil because it requires sacrifice
- impossible in a society where people violate each others' rights
- kindness
- thought of as a feminine trait
* leads the soul out of itself, and sets it upon making others happy.
Beautiful girl
* have eyes.
* open doors.
Boas
* Many boas prefer to eat at night or with lights off.
* Most boas have heads
- teeth
- kill prey
- seek out prey
* Some boas eat hamsters
- iguanas
* Some boas have extensive scars
- mites
- live for decades
* Some boas live in deserts
- underground holes while others live in trees
* defend themselves by striking.
* live in tropical areas, forests, grasslands, and deserts.
* vary in color from brown to gray with irregular saddles down the entire dorsal body.<|endoftext|>Behavioral adaptation
* allow an animal to respond relatively quickly to environmental challenge.
* are a change in behavior that allow a species to better survive
- complex and variable and show an evolutionary relationship to landscapes
- important for winter survival too
- inherited behaviors
- the things animals do to survive
- thing organisms do to increase their chance to survive and reproduce
* can be a response to some external stimulus
- as simple as moving from place to place
- either genetic or environmental
* is as important as physical health in puppies.
* is the learned behavior-something the animal does to survive
- way an organism acts or behaves to stay alive
* works in other ways, too.<|endoftext|>Biomedical research
* commitment to life.
* continues to improve the quality of our lives, but it involves risk
- pave the way toward better diagnostics, treatments, and cures
* encompasses virtually all areas of the life sciences.
* form of biological research.
* funded by the federal government is public health.
* involves the world of medicine.
* is an approach used towards solving medical problems.
* is essential for enhancing human health and well being
- to the future of medicine
- the foundation of a good public health system
* provides fundamental information about living things. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Blight
* causes ash gray spots on the bud scales and stems
- brownish patches to develop on the skin and within the flesh of infected tubers
- severe reductions in forage and seed yields
* is active from about the blossoming period until rapid shoot growth ceases
- caused by high humidity
- desolation
- devastation
- like cancer
- plant diseases
* usually appears when warm, wet weather follows a dry period
- means a fungus disease
- occurs at blooming time
Barbarism
* bad part of speech in ordinary speech, in poetic discourse it is called metaplasm.
* is in the law of nature
- inhumanity
- one name for what was taking over
* is the absence of standards to which appeal can be made
- natural state of mankind
- tendency to disassociation
Beading
* are decoration
- molding
* continues to be a popular art form today.
* relatively simple way to make a very strong visual statement on a garment or accessory.<|endoftext|>Beechwood
* burns well and is used , among other woods , to smoke herrings in Scotland.
* is used in charcoal production, railroad ties, and pulp
+ Beech, Uses of Beechwood: Fagales
* The beech has been used for its wood by man for thousands of years. The wood is white, or reddish if grown on acid soil, but fine grained, smooth and heavy when first cut. It may split as it dries. It is a good wood for making ornaments, tool handles, kitchen utensils, furniture and parts of buildings. Beechwood burns well and is used, among other woods, to smoke herrings in Scotland. It can also be made into charcoal.
Birdseed
* is feed
* mixture of seeds, nuts, fruits, and vegetables provided to birds for sustenance.
Bigotry
* begins when heterosexuals ignore that human sexuality works the same way in gay people.
* can be a symptom of an underlying psychopathology.
* causes hatred.
* exists in the mind.
* is about ignorance
- beliefs
- bigotry regardless of the shade of the bigot
- intolerance
- opinion
- prejudice
- wrongs
* seeks to make opinion and belief mandatory.
* treats humans like objects.
Buying
* compare prices.
* comparison shops.
* are monetary transactions
- purchases
* are used for consumption
- entertainment
- pleasure
* cause brokes
- debts
- getting
- grief
- less money
- ownership
Bright sun
* can cause stopwatches to become difficult to read.
* is different from filtered sun, and bright shade is different from light shade.
* means deep shadows that often seem to mar expressions and features.
Beneficence
* is benevolence
- doing good while avoiding behavior that results in harm
- related to the making of decisions by one adult for another adult
* principle underlying our protection of incompetent elders.
* refers to the ethical obligation to maximize benefits and to minimize risks
- positive contribution to the welfare of others
Behavioral change
* Many behavioral changes occur during migration.
* are the most commonly reported effect in horses.
* can help prevent the formation of varicose veins.
* is the first way to modify habits and improve health.
* occur during premature puberty.
* resulting from depression often accompany physical changes.
Believability
* is concerned with the credibility of information
- quality
- the key ingredient in effective communicating
* refers to how life-like the behavior appears.
Biological monitoring
* Most biological monitoring focuses on some measure of the status of a target organism.
* can also indicate the presence of problems that extend over time.
* involves monitoring for macroinvertebrates.
* is specific to the type of exposure suspected.
* part of the medical monitoring program.
Brotherly love
* is an affection which is limited to particular characters
- benevolence
* manifests itself in a variety of ways.
* special kind of love, going beyond love for one's neighbor. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Brilliance
* is almost entirely the result of the cut and proportions of the diamond
- brightness
- intelligence
- knowledge tempered with compassion
- maximized by cutting a diamond to ideal proportions
* is the child's power of the heart
- intensity of light reflected from a surface
- total light reflected to the eye from both surface and internal reflections
* measure of the intensity and directionality of an x-ray beam.
Biological change
* begin immediately but require time to become evident.
* can affect cognition, which can affect behaviour.
* is driven by natural forces.<|endoftext|>Bad thing
* are also products of evolved ecological complexity.
* can also occur because of the mistaken thinking of decent people.
* cause pain and suffering.
* happen as a result of our own sin
- because bad people do bad things
* happen to bad people
- good and bad people
* happen to good people, and good things happen to bad people
- often with total disregard for cause and effect
* happen when a person doesn t focus
- individuals or industries or inventions get too far ahead
- television controls children
* lead to degradation and death.
Behavioural adaptation
* can be instinctive or they can be learned.
* happens more quickly than structural or physiological adaptation.
* relates to the behaviour of the organism.
Batting
* are attempts
- blinks
- stuffing
* is crucial to the game of baseball just as phonics is crucial to reading
- the substance that makes quilts fluffy
Bicep
* are easily recognizable large bumps on the upper inside of the arm
- easy to over train because they are among the smallest body parts to begin with
- muscular, and joints and folds in the body are nicely done
- part of arms
* curl The biceps curl works the muscle on the front of the upper arm.
* have two heads, triceps have three.
* strain and shoulder separations can occur with bench presses.
Brooder
* have eggs fertilized internally with development of the planulae within the polyps.
* often reproduce several times a year on a lunar cycle.<|endoftext|>Biological research
* Much biological research is done with tissue cultures rather than with whole organs or organisms.
* detailed description of living matter.
* examines pathological, biochemical and genetic aspects of the dementias.
* focuses on marine aquaculture with an emphasis on oyster reproduction.
* involves studying the performance of living things.
* is carried out using experimental animals such as mice and rats
- scientific research
- the scientific study of any form of life
* research project<|endoftext|>Buttermilk
* can be drunk straight, and it can also be used in cooking.
* healthy drink for psoriasis patient.
* is beverages
- dairy products
- good for malaria
- high in fat and lactic acid, and both help soften and hydrate skin
- invaluable for treating diseases of the heart
- made with a mesophilic culture
- milk
- mixture
- more digestible than sweet milk
- smooth and quite thick, with a sour, tangy taste
- soured milk
* is the easiest fermented milk product to make
- sour liquid left after butterfat is separated from milk or cream
- used in Germany for Quark production
- yellow
* refers to a number of dairy drinks.
* traditional ingredient in cornbreads.
Biochemical change
* cause walls to relax and to stretch.
* parallel the morphological changes.
Baited trap
* are common in parts of the Pacific Northwest
- one of the most effective methods for killing rats
* collect insects attracted to the odor of rotting carrion.
* rely on the rat's being attracted for feeding.
Beriberi
* can also cause seizures, deterioration of the central nervous system and vomiting.
* is extremely rare in the United States
- malnutrition | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Bedroom
* are located in apartments
- dwellings
- fraternity houses
- lofts
- part of dwellings
- rooms
- squares
* are used for privacies
- sleeping
* have beds
- chairs
- floors.
* The 'bedroom' room in a home where people sleep. A bedroom mainly has a bed and drawers to hold clothes in. Many bedrooms also have closets. Some houses have more than one bedroom, and the biggest one is called a 'master bedroom'. Master bedrooms also have bathrooms attached to them called an ensuite
* includes bases
- ceilings
- doorways
- mattresses
- room light
- sections<|endoftext|>Browning
* causes the proteins in the chicken.
* helps fire departments identify public and private funding sources to meet their needs.
* indicates oxidation or a lot of age.
* involves the enzyme polyphenol oxidase and can be suppressed by using sulphites.
* is only a sign that the outer shell has been exposed to air
- the main town on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation, which is in northern Montana
* junior majoring in Human Kinetics.
* process of purposefully rusting an item as a means of preventing further rust.
* still resides in Florida.
Billfish
* possess a heat-producing organ that warms only the brain and retina.
* rely on their vision for hunting.
Basidium
* Basidia cover part of the fungus's reproductive structures
- occur in a continuous layer covering the surfaces of the fungus's erect branches
* is the transient diploid stage in the life cycle.
Booking
* are authorization
- booking
- employment
- pacts
- registerings
- schedules
* is the process of fingerprinting and photographing a person who has been arrested.<|endoftext|>Bondage
* also becomes part and parcel of our existence.
* comes in many forms
- with trust
* includes the restraint of the body or mind.
* is bondage
- imagined by the mind, and liberation is imagined by it too
- only the idea of separateness
- sadomasochisms
- sex
* is the first step, the place where civilization wakes up
- process of birth and rebirth, the consequent miseries
- result of the work of an demon
* means sex.
* remains bondage, be it from a chain made of gold or one made of copper or iron.
* very controlling from of sex.
Boon
* describes synthetic carbohydrate chemistry as a still-developing field of research.
* is good luck<|endoftext|>Bedding
* All beddings are tie dyed in natural colors from the bark of trees.
* Make sure infants sleep on a firm mattress or other firm surface.
* Most bedding can cause foot infections, so keep it dry.
* Never let the bedding dry out, or become too wet.
* Some bedding can also cause infants to smother.
* Throw out mattresses and pillows that have been in contact with flood water or sewage.
* also helps prevent injury and foot and leg problems
- varies in how much particulate matter it puts in the air
* are devices.
* can be in the form of straw, wood chips or cloth.
* common activity throughout the active season.
* contains many valuable nutrients, especially nitrogen, as it absorbs urine.
* helps insulate animals from the cold ground.
* is an extremely important source for dust mite development
- important part of keeping a dog warm through winter
- another major source of inhalant particles in the equine environment
- sensitive to economic changes
- the name for the 'safe' material that the worms live in
- very important for drainage
* obviously needs to be a soft material, but litter can be made from hard pellets or granules.
* occurs around the full moon of every warm month.
* provides some insulation, warmth, and helps to absorb waste matter
- warmth, insulation, and comfort to housed animals
* series of visible layers within the rock.
Broadband wireless
* can support multiple voice and data lines.
* is the next technological discontinuity to change the Internet infrastructure
- used to provide two-way voice, data, Internet, and video services
* means many things to many people. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Big change
* occurs in phenotype.
+ Modern evolutionary synthesis, The theory: Evolution :: History of science
* Species only change little from one generation to the next. Big changes do occur, from time to time, but they are very rare. An example of a big change that occurs suddenly is polyploidy in plants.<|endoftext|>Bathroom
* Keep all electric appliances away from water
- surfaces spotless, fresh and dry
* Many bathrooms have small or no windows
- toilets that are closeted off to offer privacy in a crowd
* Most bathrooms have inadequate lighting, especially if there are no windows
- room for at least one storage unit, such as a medicine cabinet
* Remove any stains and mildew from sink, tubs, or shower stalls.
* Some bathrooms are part of palaces.
* are a common breeding ground for black mold
- communal and separate by gender
* are located in airports
- apartments
- bookstores
- buildings
- convenience stores
- flats
- gyms
- hotels
- houses
- libraries
- malls
- motels
- operas
* are located in public buildings
- places
- race tracks
- rest areas
- schools
- showrooms
- theaters
- near bedrooms
- part of dwellings
- restrooms
* are used for grooming
- peeings
- washings
* have big windows to bring in natural daylight
- plumbing
- showers
- sinks
* help sell homes.
* includes bases
- brims
- ceilings
- doorways
- floors
- potties
- room light
- sections
- shelves
* includes shower baths
- curtains
* includes toilet bowls
- seats
- walls
* means a room which contains a bathtub or a shower, or both.
* tend to be areas of high humidity
- have high levels of humidity, which can decrease a drug's potency
Buddhist meditation
* All Buddhist meditation aims at the development of awareness, using concentration as a tool.
* aims for spritual development in life and the purification of the mind.
* can become an escape from relationships and the feelings that arise there.
* focuses on emptying one s mind to become a vessel to let the universe in.
* is nothing but the process of objective observation of the nature of the mind.
Better
* are located in race tracks.
* causes betters.
* is good.<|endoftext|>Broadcasting
* are albums
- telecommunication
* can increase phosphorus loss due to fixation with iron or aluminum.
* fast-paced and dynamic industry that is continually changing.
* heavily practical and professional course in how to make television programmes.
* is also the noise that comes out of each person's mouth.
* is an experience that is more truly a shared experience
- important industry, an important part of America
- industry founded on high technology
- more than just radio and television
* is the most well known use of radio
- national broadcaster
- unusual even in the field of communications
* means propagation of information from one source to all potential recipients.
* medium that is capable of delivering the facts of issues in real-time.
* part of culture.
* popular and low-cost method for applying P fertilizers and manure.
* twentieth century industry, and television a post-war industry. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Bulgur
* Turkish word meaning hulled wheat grains broken into fragments.
* comes either whole, or cracked into fine, medium, or coarse grains.
* continues to swell after cooking if moisture is present.
* is actually whole wheat that is boiled, dried, then ground coarsely
- convenient since it can be either soaked in water or cooked to be edible
- fortified with minerals and vitamins to same levels as in cornmeal
- made from whole wheat that's been soaked and baked to speed up the cooking time
- one of the main ingredients in many of the favorite dishes of the region
- the star of the Middle Eastern dish Tabbouleh
- wheat kernels that have been boiled, dried and cracked
* is whole wheat berries that are first steamed, then dried and cracked
- that has been steamed, dried and then cracked into smaller pieces
- whole-wheat kernels that have been boiled, dried and cracked
* parboiled, dry and partially debranned whole wheat product.
* precooked, cracked version of whole wheat.
* wheat berry | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Biological control
* Some biological controls prey on only one or a few related species.
* affects a whole cycle of life over time.
* are also commercially available for a number of greenhouse pests
- invasions
* can be an effective, environmentally sound method of managing pests
- another important way to manage soil-inhabiting insect pests
- effective against whiteflies, especially in a greenhouse environment
- part of a system
- reduce the use of pesticides
* form of manipulating nature to achieve a desired effect.
* help reduce the amount of chemical pesticides released in the environment.
* includes the introduction of herbivore fish, insects or pathogens into the water.
* is an alternative to using chemical herbicides
- approach to reducing populations of harmful organisms with natural enemies
* is an important area of research into weed control
- component of integrated pest management of stored grain
- strategy for the management of mite pests
- indispensable component of an integrated pest management strategy
- developed and enhanced through the use of plant feeding insects and pathogens
- the control of weeds with plant pathogens or insects
* is the intentional manipulation of natural enemies to limit pest populations
- use of natural enemies by humans to control pest populations
- practical use of natural enemies to manage pests
* is the use of a specially chosen living organism to control a specific pest
- an organism to disrupt weed growth
- another living organism to eat, kill, or otherwise harm a pest
* is the use of natural enemies of an organism to control that organism
- to control pests
- one organism to suppress another
- other insects or pathogens to control economic pests
- under study and a number of insect species are being evaluated in Australia
* is used for pests that are exotic but established
- to eradicate mosquito infestations
- usually specific to a particular pest organism
* logical and important tool to the agricultural industry.
* means regulating pests via their natural enemies.
* means using natural enemies of the pest, like lady bugs to control aphids
- to pests
- methods to get rid of pests , instead of using poisons
* method being used in many artificial ponds to control aquatic plant growth.
* relies on populations of the weed and the agent to maintain the system.
* rely on predators and parasites to keep organisms under control.
* seem to combine the best of both organic methods and chemical pesticides.
* seems possible in very controlled environments.
* solution that is often offered by consultants to the Namibian government.
* targets specific pests with just as specific controls.
* use natural enemies to a pest, for example, mites that feed on mite pests
- other organisms to eliminate problem pests
* uses birds, insects, viruses, bacteria, fungi, etc
- fish and other predators to eat the larvae
- naturally occurring diseases, parasites and predators to control pests
- pathogens, predators, or parasitoids
* using natural predators more effective, long-term solution to pest control
- parasites is generally pest-specific
* utilizes living organisms to reduce pest populations.
+ Organic farms: Agriculture
* Flower growers and ordinary home gardens can use organic methods too. A example of organic farming which is often used in the garden is biological control. Biological control means using natural methods to get rid of pests, instead of using poisons. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Bacteroide
* are thin, pleomorphic, gram-negative bacilli that are nonmotile and nonsporulating.
* fragilis are the most common human anaerobic pathogens
- bacterium normally found in the gut
- enterotoxin dramatically alter their morphology
- strains express multiple capsular polysaccharides
- the most common organisms
* have anti-inflammatory properties which are essential against dermatitis.
* thetaiotaomicron and measured host transcriptional responses using microarray analysis.
Bioassay
* are the best determination of soil readiness
- gold standard for detecting the infectivity of tissues
* is assay.
* represent the interaction between plant and fungus in the field.
* retrospective assessment of intake.
### body part:
Body canalization
* Canalization conservative process that opposes evolutionary change, over several generations
- is management
* Canalization is the genetic restriction of development to one or a few potential outcomes
- suppression of phenotypic variation
Beatification
* allows a person to be honored by a particular group or region.
* is actions
- often a first step toward canonization or sainthood
- sanctification
* means that permission is granted for local honor to be given to a person.
* step to conferring sainthood
- toward sainthood<|endoftext|>Cultural control
* are effective when individuals have emotional ties to one another
- important in management of Russian wheat aphid and other cereal pests
- subtle and pervasive system of beliefs and practices
- very important to crops such as vegetables and fruit
* can prevent pest damage.
* disrupt the environment of a pest, an example is removal of infected material.
* is practised by removing all ripe and infested fruits
- useful in the reduction of sap beetle outbreaks
* relies on waste management and good sanitation to reduce fly populations.<|endoftext|>Competency
* Competencies are abilities essential to beginning the practice of dentistry
- any attributes of an individual which contribute to performance
- behaviors that distinguish effective performers from ineffective ones
- major skills or abilities needed to perform work-related tasks effectively
- sets of observable behaviors
- the skills knowledge and abilities that are required to excel as a leader
* complex construct that requires numerous measures.
* encompasses knowledge skills, and or attitudes necessary to perform job tasks.
* implies the ability to apply computer skills to a business environment.
* is ability
- the efficiency in running the government
* skill attainment.
Catering
* are occupations
- professional servicing
* business filled with great amounts of constantly changing information.
* is an opportunity to be individualistic with all the emphasis on imaginative foods
- often the key to enhancing food and beverage sales
* seller's market.
Courtroom
* are a foreign country and they have their own language
- formal settings
* are located in confessions
- courthouses
- maines
- rooms
* are used for court tv
- trials
Civil contempt
* contempt of court
* primary enforcement mechanism against delinquent obligors.
Calling
* are bands.
* cause busy signals.<|endoftext|>Corporate finance
* deals with the management of financial resources of nonfinancial firms.
* involves problem solving.
* is about things like the sale of stock by a company to the public.
* is concerned with the duties of the financial managers within the business firm
- financial management of the business
- finance
- more than just paying bills and providing facilities and space
+ Finance, Some simple finance ideas
* Corporate finance is about things like the sale of stock by a company to the public. Stock is ownership in a company, broken up into pieces. The stock gives whoever owns it part ownership in that company. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Censorship
* can also be a risk taken by artists who become associated with churches.
* can take many forms and affect many mediums
* causes blindness
- ones' worldview, including ones' sense of self, to fragment
* computation that warps the worldview like a flaw in fabric.
* concept that attaches to public organizations.
* does exist in many countries.
* exists all through the world.
* form of social control that has many unintended consequences or ironic results
* global issue concerning the Internet.
* has to do with making laws.
* highly contagious disease.
* involves prior restraint by the government of production or distribution of materials.
* is about preventing an idea from being presented.
* is an act of government that, by definition, precludes free choice
- effort to prevent information from reaching the public
- infectious disease
- censorship, even if it sneaks in through the backdoor
- counterintelligence
- criticism as a monopoly of the government
- designed to promote the truth and filter out lies
- government suppression of individual speech and it comes in many forms
- imposed against all medias, from newspapers to one's own speech
- informational violence
- intrinsic to any human organization
- one of the most contentious issues in the regulation of cyberspace
- practiced by other forces besides governments
- repression
- slavery
- still the first step to information and mind control
* is the banning of material to stop it being available to the public
- handmaiden of a police state
- height of vanity
- right to be protected from obnoxious information
- used by governments in war for military purposes
- what some people decide is good for others without their consent
* is when someone is forbidden by law to say or express something
- the government limits a person's ability to speak
* maintains societal imbalances of power by restricting access to information.
* means that the government restrains speech.
* natural side effect of free speech.
* normal part of using the Internet.
* occurs in many different forms
- when the government is involved
* prison to expression.
* red thread, sometimes a blood-red thread, through European history.
* takes the form of direct violence, legal measures, imprisonment and economic harassment.
* tool of the print culture and nation states.
* topic that everyone seems to have an opinion on.
* touchy subject in the arts and entertainment world.
* undermines all forms of entertainment.
* Now you clearly stated right of the bat that you were annoyed with people talking about censorship, but we'll move on from that contradiction. Censorship removes information, it does not add it. Censorship is bad and against policy. It is not fine.
* hides facts.' - Official policy, by the way.
* But the way he framed his argument it wasn't going anywhere. That and this discussion's tone is rather nasty. I don't mind a medical cut out explaining anatomy of the body. But the photos that look self made of someone playing with their johnson can easily be excluded. Censorship exists in wikipedia. CM16 proposed removing a few videos as unaccaptable to benefit the project in general by increasing the audiance.
* word of many meanings. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Civility
* also acknowledges the value of another person
- requires humility
* can decrease anger and other self-defeating behaviors.
* cornerstone of society.
* covers a host of matters in the relationships among human beings.
* demands adherence to the strictest standards of behavior at all times.
* emphasizes tolerance.
* good manners
* has deep roots in the idea of respect for the individual
- to do with identifying values as opposed to following fashions
* implies living in harmony with the past, the present and the future.
* improves the way justice happens.
* involves, much of the time, the biting of tongues.
* is an important model for adults to exemplify
- courtesy
- for politicians
- synonymous with courtesy, politeness, and relates to custom and civil law
* is the cornerstone of the legal profession
- foundation for communication, trust, and responsibility
- grease that keeps the cogwheels of society from freezing
- result of Arts
* is what gives savor to our lives
- is lost from society
- makes America the dreamland of the world
* kind of glue that holds a community together.
* means losing a chance to have one's emotional, wordy say, giving up impulse
- that the basic dignity and rights of each sovereign citizen is honored
* part of righteousness.
* popular word because it comes without political baggage or partisan implications.
* public good.
* requires resistance to the dominance of social life by the values of the marketplace.
* stresses regulation, control, propriety, decorousness and tact.
* suggests words like civics and civilization and thus is closely related to community.<|endoftext|>Californium
* good source of neutrons.
* is chemical elements
- in the second half of the actinide series
- metal
- metallic elements
- one of the few transuranium elements that have practical applications
* is radioactive and therefore harmful
- substances.
* ' chemical element. It radioactive metal. It has the chemical symbol 'Cf'. It has the atomic number 98. Californium transuranic element. It is in nature on Earth but is also in other parts of the universe. Californium does not have many uses
* radioactive element
- metal which memeber of the actinide group of the periodi table
* synthetic radioactive silvery-white metal of moderate chemical reactivity.
* very useful radioactive isotope which is man-made.
Colored lighting
* brings to life everything from torches to fluorescent lights.
* can also effect behavior.
Coastal flooding
* can precede or accompany major winter storms.
* caused by storm surge is the greatest threat to life and property.
* is associated with storms and high tides.
* kills people and devastates local economies.
* occurs following huge storms or tsunamis.
* occurs when a large storm or tsunami causes the sea to surge inland
- strong onshore winds push water from an ocean, bay or inlet onto land | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Collaboration
* are a set of classes that interact to achieve a certain goal.
* causes progress.
* continuous cycle of thinking, doing, and learning collectively.
* describes how people work together.
* diagrams Collaboration diagrams are also interaction diagrams.
* happens when people and organizations come together to achieve common goals.
* is cooperation
- more than teamwork, because it takes place outside of as well as within teams
- particularly important in advertising
* is the ability of components to manage their interactions in order to achieve a goal
- act of collectively creating a shared mutual understanding
- central means by which persons engaged in a leadership relationship interact
- core of business in the Internet economy
- means by which professionals create shared value
- primary means of empowering others and self through trust
- process of working together and sharing in decision-making
- soul of culture, but the system divides people
* means that parents and schools work together for the best interest of the child
- to work together by sharing ideas
- working with other people, as opposed to working independently
* means, working together to achieve a goal.
* multiplication of heads as well.
* occurs when companies work together for mutual benefit.
* often plays a key role in the advancement of mathematics.
* process of working toward mutual goals.
* refers to a process of working one with another
- the sharing of information, decision-making capacity, and responsibility
* social process centered on the sharing and production of knowledge.
* state of mind.<|endoftext|>Connectivity
* also means having something to connect with.
* belongs to the Basic rights of public information and communication.
* defines which pixels are connected to other pixels.
* is about relationships
- expressed in terms of the atom names
* is one of the best indicators for the reliability of a network
- leading technology megatrends affecting the world today
- properties
* is the ability of one machine to share information and resources with other machines
- basic stuff from which the Internet is made
- medium of information exchange
- understanding of the relationship between technology and curriculum
* mathematical expression of the order of complexity of the configuration.
* program or devices ability to link with other programs and devices.
* refers to findings of unexpected interconnectedness between elements of the system
- the type of access including LANs, Internet access type and speed
* trend that is very important to the computer world.
Connected knower
* attempt to see the world through the eyes of the other.
* come to understand other people's knowledge through empathy.
* use reason, inference and empathy in their meaning-making.<|endoftext|>Criminology
* also exists at the interstice between theory and practice
- includes the more specific discipline of penology
* is environmentally friendly
- sociologies
* is the body of knowledge regarding delinquency and crime as social phenomena
- fascinating interdisciplinary study of deviance
- multi-disciplinary study of crime, order and social control
- scientific study of crime and criminals
- sociological analysis of crime in American society
* is the study of crime and the criminal justice system
- processes of criminalisation and social control developed by the state
* presents a theoretical overview of crime and criminality.
* refers to any kind of study concerned with crime and criminal justice.
* relatively modern science, and emerged on two levels simultaneously.
Caseous necrosis
* can occur as well as calcification much like tuberculosis.
* refers to necrosis that has a crumbly, white, cheesy appearance.
Conventionalism
* is orthodoxy
* view about the status of theories in science. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Collusion
* is agreement.
* is an agreement for illegal, deceitful or fraudulent purposes
- arrangement
- costly to society also when correlation of private information is near perfect
- possible in both live and online poker
- probably the most common problem in early stages of disease diagnosis
* is the antithesis of competitive economic activity
- other inherent flaw of auctions
- submission of another person's work
* occurs when a person embezzles money from a company and tries to hide the evidence
- firms get together to set prices and divide up a market
* way of life.
Crystallisation
* method used to purify solids.
* natural phenomenon<|endoftext|>Colloidal silver
* appears to be a powerful, natural antibiotic and preventative against infections.
* has powerful antiseptic qualities when taken orally or applied topically.
* is also an agent that aids in the regrowth of injured tissues
- an alternative medicine consisting of silver particles suspended in water
- both a remedy and a preventive of infections of all kinds
* is considered harmless in any concentration for internal and external use
- the greatest all natural antibiotic
- to be extremely nontoxic and safe for human consumption
- found as a solution in bottles
- nature's antibiotic
* is one of nature's antibiotics
- the safest and most beneficial health products available
- proven particularly effective in cases of intestinal troubles
- reported to be non-toxic to the body
- said to act as a catalyst
- tasteless, odorless and completely safe
- the natural cure of the nineties and the next century
- yellow, and alloys of gold and silver create shades of purple-red and pink
* suspension of pure silver in water.
* takes away pain from cuts and burns.
Caloric testing
* assesses the symmetry of vestibular function.
* way to compare the response of each ear to warming or cooling stimulation.
Careless smoking
* is the cause of more than half of home fires.
* is the leading cause of fire deaths in North America
- related deaths in North America
- residential fire, followed by arson and heating appliances
- most common cause of residence hall fires and fire alarms
- number one cause of fire deaths in America
* major cause of fire.
Central cyanosis
* late sign of airway obstruction.
* makes a congenital cardiac disorder highly likely.
Corporate globalization
* is different than civic globalization.
* requires that companies communicate in various languages.
Contentment
* comes with being satisfied with what one has.
* is happiness in the past
- satisfaction
- soil in which true joy thrives<|endoftext|>Carob
* also contains tannin.
* brown powder made from the pulverized fruit of a Mediterranean evergreen.
* can be male, female or hermaphrodite.
* contains only traces of theobromine, the active stimulant in chocolate and cocoa
- vitamin A and B and other minerals
* dietary alternative to chocolate.
* food product
* has a delicious flavour and is seen as a healthy and tasty alternative to coffee or chocolate
- low fat content and contains no caffeine
- less fat and calories than chocolate
* is also high in amine
- an excellent source of pectin which makes it a good colon cleanser
- beans
- caffeine-free and shows to have health benefits
- considered a chocolate substitute
- foodstuff
- free from phenylethylamine which can trigger migraines
- grown in the Middle East producing a long pod which is ground into powder
- healthier than chocolate
- legumes
- non-toxic to animals
- part of carob
* is rich in calcium, potassium, and phosphorus
- vitamins and minerals
- used as a substitute for chocolate and also for a sweetener
- very soothing to irritated intestines
* low-fat substitute for chocolate.
* lower calorie and lower-fat alternative to chocolate.
* natural sweetener rich in B vitamins and minerals.
* useful alternative for chocolate. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Confabulation
* is memory
* major concern when retrieval occurs as a result of hypnosis.<|endoftext|>Career
* Many careers claim to be professions, but there are several characteristics of true professions
- start at age two and are over by age seven
* are like marriages or other major commitments in life
- occupations
- progress
* focus on strength.
* follow patterns.
* influence decisions
- migration decisions
* involve aspects
- classifications
* limit the amount of time required to develop a healthy social life.
* make contributions.
* offer stability.
* require advance degrees
* span decades
- years
Concubinage
* is cohabitation
* male prerogative, grudgingly tolerated by women.
* still exists today in various forms.
Corporate strategy
* Corporate strategies are global in production, marketing, and services.
* is shaped by functional strategies.
* plays a role in the automakers' decision.
Climbing
* motion sickness.
* are recreational activities.
* are used for enjoyment
- exercising
- personal satisfaction
* cause accomplishment
- blisters
- exhaustion
- exhilaration
- fallings
- sweating
- vertigos
Chronology
* Chronologies Use chronologies to find out who did what, when.
* Chronologies are useful for placing a case in the context of history
- play in the context of history
- provide descriptions of events and conditions in sequential order
* branch of History.
* is backbone of history.
* is the arrangement in order of time or occurrence
- of facts and events in the order of time
* spans the end of the classical period to the present.
Cognitive dissonance
* can explain lots of strange things.
* is an unpleasant state that is accompanied by heightened arousal
- by no means a full-proof theory for predicting attitude change
- most likely to occur in the purchase of a. sneakers
* motivates efforts to reduce in consistancy in our thoughts and actions.
Complicity
* concept that can be abused by prosecutors.
* is an important element in any kind of theatre which incorporates some improvisation
- guilt
* is the act of being an accomplice
- kiss of death
Chinese philosophy
* Chinese philosophies tend to lead people to live in harmony.
* comes from watching nature.
* says chi subtle energy that flows throughout the body.
Crying
* are crying
- located in funerals
* are part of life
- sadness
* cause a desire to help
- betters
Cabotage
* are rights.
* has a long history in the United States.
* is the trade or transport of cargo in coastal waters between two points within a country. | {
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} |
Coercion
* can take the form of wanton rape.
* creates feelings of fear, anger, and resentment toward mental health services.
* destroys self-respect and initiative and removes the potential for growth.
* form of interventionism.
* frequently results in violence and abuse to people who are receiving services.
* has more to do with obedience and social control than with compliance and medicine.
* impedes prosperity, security and happiness.
* implies one's forcing one's beliefs onto others.
* includes theft, violence, threats, fraud, pollution and breach Of contract.
* involves pain, and involves the discounting of feeling
- the use of force by government to gain compliance with policies
* is an inherently weak form of control
- overt threat of harm to obtain compliance
- basically the implicit conversion of data from one data type to another
- enforcement
- forces
- immoral, inefficient and unnecessary for human life and fulfillment
- one of many ways of stepping on others' boundaries
* is the essence of slavery
- initiation of physical force or fraud
- manipulation of another individual which results in a sexual experience
- negation of individual freedom, self-ownership, and individual sovereignty
- process whereby a value of one class is converted to a value of a different class
- purest form of communication
- to human relationships what salt and water are to automobiles
* is, above all, a form of violence.
* leads to a repression of freedom and responsibility, and finally to death.
* repressive tool of tyrants.
* takes various forms.
Computational geometry
* is concerned with the design of algorithms for solving geometric problems.
* is the study of algorithms for solving geometric problems on a computer
- efficient algorithms for solving geometric problems
Cerebral angiography
* involves x-rays of blood vessels in the brain.
* is the only way to arrive at the correct diagnosis
- primary method to establish the diagnosis of moyamoya disease
* remains the gold standard for diagnostic evaluation of putative AVMs.
* study of the blood circulation of the brain.<|endoftext|>Clinical research
* helps physicians understand how things work.
* includes any biomedical or behavioral research in human subjects.
* involves studies on patients, usually testing a new drug or new technique
- testing new drugs and other therapies in patients
* is central to the progress of clinical medicine
- conducted on individual patients with particular disease conditions
- considered applied research
- essential to the advance of mental as well as other health care and treatment
- in renal disease, nephrotoxicity and dialysis outcomes
- patient oriented research conducted with human subjects
* is the bridge between the basic research laboratory and the patient's bedside
- study of the effects of illnesses, prevention and treatment
* key aspect of improvement in quality of care.
* relates to most health problems experienced by animals.
* shows that eating in a very specific way can stimulate and repair the liver
- honey is gentle on tissue and rapidly removes swelling and pain
* term applied to the study and treatment of patients.
Collotype
* is the most accurate and beautiful method of photomechanical reproduction yet invented.
* photographic process in which a film of gelatin provides the printing surface.
Cecropia
* are among the most common plants with extrafloral nectaries and bead bodies
- easy to recognize
- effective colonizers
* have hollow stems that are easy to sever with a machete
- only one brood a year
- separate male and female trees and are well adapted for mass reproductive efforts
* occur abundantly in areas of large light gaps or secondary growth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Coriander
* can set seed quite fast in our warm climate.
* combines well with onion, sausage, clams, oysters, and potatoes.
* culinary herb in several countries.
* favorite spice in salsas and bean dishes, also combines well with cumin.
* grows best in full sun.
* helps reduce odor.
* ids the oldest known spice in the world.
* is also good for migraine headaches, by drinking coriander tea a couple of times per day
- available as whole seed and ground and principal ingredient in curry powder
- herbaceous plants
- one of the principle ingredients of curry and of other spice mixtures
- originally from the southwestern Asia across to north Africa
- part of coriander
- popular all over the world and is used in everything from hot dogs to pie and stews
- spices
- the spice which adds an aromatic quality to many dishes
* lowers blood pressure.
* native of the Mediterranean and has been used since early times
- region
* prefers full sun and a rich, well-drained soil.
* ', also known as 'cilantro', herb from the 'Apiaceae' family. Coriander is originally from the southwestern Asia across to north Africa. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Control
* Describe any engineering controls used to reduce exposures to the hazardous chemicals.
* aphids early in the season by applying malathion or insecticidal soap
- to reduce initial infection and spread
- early, before the population builds up
- on vegetables as needed by removing, spraying, or washing
- that transmit the virus
* aphids with insecticidal soap
- pyrethrum or rotenone
- sprays of malathion, rotenone, or acephate
* are objects that can be used on a form to add functionality or interaction
- the steps management uses to guide, monitor, and adjust the process
* arrays are a collection of controls with the same name that are referenced by an index.
* biting occurs after the first few bites accomplish the bird's desired result.
* buoys mark areas where vessel speed or wake is controlled for safety purposes.
* caterpillars on leafy vegetables, as needed, with Bacillus thuringiensis.
* central component to civilization
- issue in both diabetes and eating disorders
* comes from being able to make a movement and to inhibit it.
* concept that plays an important role in several psychological theories.
* dead plant with no signs of life.
* deals with the ability of a process to perform in a consistent, stable fashion.
* describes the relationship of the individual part of the system to itself.
* diabetes if it is an underlying disease.
* enables individuals to have a belief in their autonomy.
* flies and parasites to reduce stress.
* function that the group assigns to the leader to get the job done.
* has a great deal to do with levels of stress.
* includes measurement and evaluation of actions, processes and outcomes.
* insects inside and out.
* insects that carry the fungus spores from one plant to another
- to limit tree damage and entry wounds for the fungus
- using methoxychlor and malathion
* insects with a mixture of DDT and malathion
- insecticides such as diazinon or dimethoate
* involve implementing measures which reduce the hazard and risk in the workplace.
* involves application of insecticides in various forms including dusts and liquids.
* is activities
- aimed at isolation of affected individuals and personal hygiene
- also a factor in determining a person's stress level
- an abstract and a false theory, with no practicable meaning in everyday life
- based on the behavioral habits of mice
- brought about by the contraction and expansion of melanophores, or pigment granules
- by quarantine and destruction of infected animals
- described in terms of spinal flexion, extension, rotation and lateral bending
- economic policy
- essential in all aspects of life
- maintained by natural predators, disease, and insecticides
- man's major addiction, giving rise to all areas of arrogance
- mechanisms
- neural by parasympathetic and reflex
- physical and mental
- power is control
- shared between all enzymes in different proportions
- something usually thought of as positive
- spirit
* is the ability to influence policies and distributions
- start, change and stop something
- analysis of who or what initiates or controls the event in progress
- behavioral obverse of the coin of reinforcement
- essence of slavery
- key to food safety
- mark of a disciplined mind, a sign of the greatest of warriors
- power to tell an employee what to do, and when and how to do it
- process of restricting a behavior to a specific desirable autonomous subbehavior
- very important to people with eating disorders
* is what a guard does to a prisoner
- keeps people safe
- when change in one pattern consistently initiates change in another
* levers power the movement of the head of the mill forward, reverse, up and down.
* means being able to feel better, experience fewer attacks, and decrease asthmatic symptoms
- to monitor, direct, and restrict an animal's movement
* mites by treating their hiding places.
* motivates people through their attachments.
* nematodes and soil insects, sweetpotato weevils, and other pests.
* patternistic behavior with an agenda.
* process mastered through evolution and development
- of seeking out and elimination of external breeding and gathering sites
* refers to choice of initiation and termination of the social interaction
- how many of the heifer-raising practices a producer dictates to the grower
- how, when, and where the services are to be performed
- the decision maker's generation, evaluation and selection of alternative actions
* regulate the transformation of inputs into outputs.
* slugs, earwigs and aphids.
+ Instrumentation, Measurement and control: Science :: Measuring tools
* Instrumentation is also studying about control. Control is like how valve is managing the amount of contents flowing through it and break controlling over the speed. Control can change the parameter of the field or the variable.
+ Team Fortress 2, Game modes, Control Points, Standard Control Points: 2007 video games :: Shooter video games
* Standard Control Point, or Linear Control Point, maps play symmetrically. Both teams start with two controlled points, and a central point starts out neutral. The team that captures all control points wins. Control points closer to a team's spawn point are captured more quickly by the enemy team. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Classroom
* are located in universities
- part of schools
* are places where there is constant traffic
- thoughts, ideas, and beliefs are formed
- rooms
* are used for classes
- education
- experimentings
- studyings
- teaching students
* have fans
- floors
* includes bases
- ceilings
- doorways
- room light
- sections
- walls
* learn about animals.
* offer activities.
Corporate citizenship
* can make good business sense and can increase profits.
* fundamental aspect of our culture.
* is more than just making a financial donation.
Cubism
* completely flattens space and uses independent blocks of color.
* is art movement
- the complete flattening of space and the use of blocks of color
* lead to abstraction and necessitated a new way of looking at art.
* re-creation of objects.
* unique way of looking at the relationship between shape and space.
Coeducation
* is education
- the general pattern for education in America
* word for which the transition is pretty much complete.
Central planning
* characteristic of socialist and communist economies.
* is an economic system in which the government makes all major economic decisions.<|endoftext|>Carie
* Latin word meaning 'rot' or 'rotten'.
* affects nutrition, growth and weight gain.
* decline in Slovenia.
* disease of progressive destruction of the hard tissues of the teeth.
* is an infection of the tooth caused by specific bacteria.
* is an infectious disease caused by acid-producing bacteria in dental plaque
- the disease that can cause tooth decay
* progresses first form the enamel to dentin and then later on to the pulp region.
* spreads rapidly because of the lower mineral content of dentin and cementum.
Cubicle
* Most cubicles are light gray or brown.
* are located in banks
- buildings
- office buildings
- offices
- work
* are used for office work
- privacies
- storage
- workspace<|endoftext|>Competence
* allows an individual to feel good and be productive.
* continuum rather than an absolute standard of perfection.
* embraces both ability and perception.
* human decision.
* involves knowledge, skills and attitudes
- the exertion of skill and intelligence in pursuing and completing tasks
- understanding how to, and believing that one can, achieve various outcomes
* is ability
- derived from a synthesis of education and experience
- first an attribute of individuals
- measured by developmental milestones that change over time
- our deep, unconscious knowledge of language
* is the ability to acquire and apply knowledge and skills in the appropriate context
- capability for success through taking risks, reflection and self-correction
- employee's capacity to perform specific job practices
* is the ethical content of work
- standard for lawyers' work
- possession of the required skills and knowledge to perform the services needed
- then the capacity to take advantage of knowledge in actions
* means skill, knowledge, experience, and other qualifications.
* means the ability of a vector to acquire, maintain, and transmit a particular pathogen
- to use an array of knowledge and skills
* occurs in persons at any level in an organization and throughout any period of life.
* refers to a person's cognitive ability to acquire language.
* Where we very often see big disputes, though, is with editors who are disruptive while trying to help. Many editors have focused so much on this that they have come to believe that good faith is all that is required to be a useful contributor. Competence is required' as well.
Cultural change
* involves new frames of reference, new ways of acting.
* is accomplished at the same time as structural change
- an evolutionary process acting on WITs
- as important as technological development
* results primarily from discovery of new principles.
Christian scripture
* includes the scriptures of Israel.
* second important element of early Christian tradition. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cultural competency
* derives from both moral disposition and specific learned interpersonal skills.
* emphasizes the idea of effectively operating in different cultural contexts.
* exists on a continuum from being culturally destructive to culturally competent.
* is about developing skills
- based on best business practices, healthy competition and positive outcomes
* means considering many options and being more careful about making judgments.
Cultural meaning
* are common, shared, worked out together.
* is determined by a system of constitutive rules.
Cerebral ischemia
* can result in a stroke.
* produces perturbation of signal transduction systems in neurons.<|endoftext|>Copulation
* always leads to the fertilization of the ova within the body of the mother
- occurs in the water
* are relatively rare events and can often happen in inconspicuous places.
* begins before nest building and continues into the incubation stage
- when one of the palps is inserted into the female's genital opening
* can take from several minutes to several hours depending on species.
* common activity among all dolphin ages and even same-sexes.
* continues with decreasing frequency throughout incubation and chick rearing.
* deposits several hundred million sperm in the vagina.
* exposes female red-winged blackbirds to bacteria in male semen.
* generally take place at night, though they have been observed in the day.
* is injurious for the female beetle
- just the proper grammatical term for sex
- likely to accelerate maturity of the female
- natural in all combinations of sexes
- preceded by courtship behavior that includes intricate color changes
- their obsession, the focus of their existence
* is, in contrast to the spiders directly, directly with a penis.
* means the animal has entered the reproductive phase that soon leads to senescence.
* occurs at night.
* occurs during a short season in winter
- the nest building phase
* occurs in a molting pocket on the surface of the skin
- autumn, in migration or on the wintering grounds
- or outside of water
- shallow waters near nesting beaches
- mainly on land at the breeding colony
- offshore during fall and winter, each female mating with several males
- on the nest platform during the nest-building stage
- the same way in most of the live-bearing species
* occurs when the clasper is inserted and transfers the sperm
- there is cloaca to cloaca contact
* occurs with both male and female rising from the substrate towards the surface
- the two dolphins belly to belly
- within the small intestine and the female worms pass eggs in the feces
* often follows the acceptance of food by the female.
* permits the contact of eggs and sperm cells to form zygotes.
* starts early in the mating season and usually stops when nesting begins.
* takes place in the water
* usually takes place in the water.
Correlational research
* allows investigators to explore the relationships between variables.
* involves one or more correlation coefficients.
Circumscription
* common methodology for capturing non-monotonic inferences.
* form of non-monotonic reasoning based on minimizing predicates and formulas.
* formalizes several processes of human informal reasoning.
* is restrictions.
* tool to jump to certain conclusions.
Chorionic villi
* are a part of the placenta but contain fetal tissue
- fetal derived cells with a full set of fetal chromosomes
- the part of the placenta that extend into the uterine lining
- tiny parts of the placenta
* develop as invaginations of the cytotrophoblast. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Catholic
* Speak Out Advocate of homosexuality and artificial birth control.
* also celebrate saint's days
- couldn t teach or send their children abroad for schooling
- support changes in the clergy
- use statues as teaching tools
* are Catholic
- a religious minority in Vietnam
- accustomed to assuming a variety of positions in eucharistic liturgies
- cautious about diagnosing possession
- christians
- hard working people
- in the minority in Scotland and in the country's devolved parliament
- mainstream in American culture today
- neither a homogeneous bloc nor automatically motivated by their church's orthodoxy
- sacramental people
- serial killers
- very special people when it comes to their church
* baptize their infants.
* believe in a hell of different layers
- original sin
* believe in the existence of Purgatory as a place and state after death
- necessity of religious instruction in the schools
- life is sacred from the moment of conception to the moment of death
* believe that at the moment of conception new life has begun
- both faith and good works are necessary for salvation
- marriage lifelong commitment
- through the mechanical application of water, regeneration is imparted
- truth is one, absolute and unchanging
* believe the Bible is divinely inspired but written by human hands
- there are degrees of glory, which depend upon how one has responded to grace
* build their churches on a north-south axis.
* call elders rectors, or, more generically, priests
- priests 'father'
* celebrate marriage as a sacrament.
* cherish weekly consecration of the eucharist.
* claim to see the madonna in the walls of their homes every time there thunderstorm.
* cluster, they bond, they converge, they swarm.
* constitute the largest Christian denomination.
* couldn t carry arms, teach, practice law, hold office or vote.
* do ask saints for intercessory prayers
- that when they join a monastery or convent
* don t really care about the abortion issue.
* draw their ethical standards first from their family, like all denominations.
* earn indulgences through good deeds accompanied by confession, communion, and prayer.
* feel disgust with the media for focusing on priestly sex abuse.
* follow church doctrine only selectively, when they know it at all
- the Alexandrian Canon
* form the largest group in the major political party and tend to be more affluent
- single religious voting bloc in the United States - and the most fluid
* grow up making the sign of the cross.
* have America's lowest divorce rate
- a distinct history within America
- no problem with calling the consecrated elements bread and wine
- nothing to say about homosexuality
- saints for everything
- the same freedom as other citizens in making political choices
* know that love follows upon truth.
* make and bow down to idols
- individuals special
- up the majority of the Christian population
* normally believe in the importance of works and sacraments in getting salvation.
* object to Protestant bibles used in public schools.
* practice evangelism, too.
* recognize a real, if imperfect communion, among all baptized.
* refer to our clergy as priests.
* say they are discriminated against in jobs and in the allocation of public housing.
* see saints as models or examples of Christian belief and living.
* share views on issues that other voters do.
* sometime seem to think that the only sin is sexual sin.
* sprinkle when the Greek work for baptism literally means immersion.
* still believe in purgatory and indulgences
- they can earn their salvation
- think evangelization task just for priests and religious
* swing back and forth between the Republican and Democratic parties.
* teach a system whereby righteousness is infused in the sinner.
* tend to focus on salvation as a future event, something that has yet to happen.
* think Aquinas is the best teacher for one who wants to become a priest.
* think that donation is an act of charity, fraternal love, and self sacrifice
- sex within marriage sacrament
* use statues, paintings, and other artistic devices to recall the person or thing depicted.
* view organ donation as an act of charity, fraternal love and self sacrifice.
* visit Rome and shrines where miracles have taken place.
+ Christianity, Worship, Salvation
* Catholics normally believe in the importance of works and sacraments in getting salvation. The Catholic Church teaches that faith is important, but it also believes that salvation also requires good works and piety, such as obedience to commands, taking the sacraments, going to church, doing penance and giving alms, saying prayers, and other things, to receive eternal life.
+ Heresy: Theology
* Catholics say that good deeds are necessary as well.
+ Holiday, Religious holidays, Christian holidays
+ Thomas Aquinas: Christian theologians :: 1225 births :: 1274 deaths
* He was the theologian who came up with the Cosmological Argument. Catholics think Aquinas is the best teacher for one who wants to become a priest. Code of Canon Law, Can. His most famous books are 'Summa Theologica' and the 'Summa Contra Gentiles'. Aquinas is one of the 33 Doctors of the Church. | {
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} |
Civic change
* comes about from working with people's culture.
* is accomplished by multiple groups, individuals, and organizations.
Circulatory change
* are common in affected extremities in multiple sclerosis.
* cause even more pressure and pain.
Celtic spirituality
* believes in basic goodness of nature and of human nature.
* has much in common with the shamanic traditions of the world.
* is about waking up again in our lives
- solid and deeply rooted in a spiritual heritage<|endoftext|>Cook
* Many cooks believe that the additives found in briquettes change the taste of the meat
- wear disposable plastic gloves when working with hot chilies
* Some cooks also use mint, onions, or olive oil in their harisa
- substitute honey for sugar
* Some cooks use a cooking bag or foil tent to keep turkey moist
- another Mexican herb, cilantro, in recipes that call for epazote
- bread as an extender for hamburger meat or meatloaf
- cornstarch to make their sauces thicker
- the thick flesh in soups and stews
- wear gloves or clean the roots under water
- work fewer than five days a week
* are capable of better food
- cook food
- prepare meals
- smoke salmon
- warm food
* are located in kitchens
- restaurants
- more likely to die because they breathe the vapors as the mushroom is being cooked
* are motivated by the goal of eats
- skilled workers
- used for burns
* end with eats
- serve food
* prepare and cook a wide variety of foods.
* use anise seed to impart a licorice flavor to baked goods, liqueurs, and candies.
Clinical pharmacology
* expresses the combined knowledge of disease and how drugs affect it.
* is the scientific study of drugs in man
- study of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics in human beings<|endoftext|>Commercialism
* All commercialism is related to sex.
* constitutes an attack on the psychological well-being.
* distorts our culture by turning every event into a reason to consume.
* is basically the opposite of community control
- companies making money by commercials
- competitive, and forces the quality to get better and better
- information
- often abuse
- part of real life
* large part of the capitalist industrial aura.
* real assault on the value of political discourse.
* tends to concentrate capital.
* way of life as much as a system for making economic decisions.
Civil twilight
* is the definition of twilight most widely used by the general public.
* occurs just after the sun has set and the sky is still fairly light.
Coherent integration
* digital filtering process used by profilers.
* is essentially a digital filtering process used by profilers.
Chronic absenteeism
* behavior that is highly associated with dropping out of school.
* impacts on academic achievement.
* prescription for certain failure in the course.<|endoftext|>Compensation
* adversely affects severity and prognosis of chronic pain.
* attached to an office is an incident to the title to office.
* is an agreement between the employer and the employee
- based on a worker's quantitative output or production
- defense mechanisms
- measured by the loss to the property owner
- recompense
- the payment that employees receive in return for their labor
- where wetland mitigation banking plays a role
* measure of the cost to the employer of securing the services of labor.
* refers to the physiological response to an acid-base imbalance.
+ Compensation (psychology): Psychology
* In psychology, 'compensation' is a way people hide something that they cannot do well, by doing something else really well. They may not even be aware that they are doing it. Compensation can hide real or imagined problems and personal or physical inferiority. However it does not really solve the cause of the problem. Positive compensations may help a person overcome difficulties. But negative compensations do not, and can even make the problems worse. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Char
* character string containing the returned shift character.
* is carbon
- salmonids
- terminal representing character that are greater or equal to space character<|endoftext|>Clutter
* adds to the fuel of a fire.
* can create an overload of the visual system due to excessive luminance ratios.
* causes a life full of stress, frustration, chaos and wasted time
* gives dust and particles places to land, which makes cleaning more difficult.
* increases the likelihood of a spill or accident.
* inhibits the free flow of energy.
* is disorder
* is located in desks
- offices
- messes
- noise
- obstacles in that energy field and prohibits a person from seeing what is actually there
- often in the way of new growth
- one of the most common feng shui problems found in most homes and apartments
- software
- stagnant, stored energy, and it has a psychological effect
- stuck energy with far-reaching physical, mental, emotional and spiritual effects
- unattractive and causes accidents
* makes it difficult to move around and can be a fire hazard.
* promotes tripping and fire safety hazards.
* refers to advertising that is in the wrong place trying to reach their market.
* takes many forms.
* tends to hinder concentration and can create tension and frustration.
* type of land-use classification.
+ Housecleaning, Clutter: Home
* Clutter is too many things in the house. It is because the things have not been put away or because there is nowhere to put them, or both. Places people put things away are shelves, drawers, and hangers. When those storage places are messy or too full they are cluttered. They could be made clean and neat instead. A classic example of clutter is a hall closet with ten years of old boots, coats, and mittens piled on the floor.
Copying
* are repetition.
* is one of the ways by which apprentice scribes learn
- still how people think
* is the act of taking a specific copy and replicating it
- quotation of another author's text, word for word, without acknowledgement
- use of someone else's intellectual property , and it is therefore illegal
* means of learning.<|endoftext|>Cultivation
* Cultivate the soil around individual plants and between rows.
* also changes the soil environment affecting the number and kinds of soil organisms
- controls the larvae by destroying hosts plants
- increases the likelihood of phosphorus losses through soil erosion
* can also refer to the improvement of a plant species using horticultural techniques.
* helps break up crusted soils and speeds warming and drying of the soil surface.
* is acculturation
* is an Eastern concept for mind-body development and transformation
- effective means of managing weeds between rows and to a lesser extent within rows
- important process in overcoming the destructive forces of random natural events
- important in controlling many small broadleaves
* is practiced in our everyday life
- while the plants are young
- production
- said to ward off bad dreams and bring good luck
- socialization
* is the economy of force
- mechanical preparation of the soil required for the growing of crops or pasture
* mounds the soil around the base of soybean plants, which promotes new growth of roots.
* protection for the wild. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Chamomile
* Has a warming, soothing effect on the body.
* Use to aide digestion.
* acts as a carminative as well as soothing and toning agent for the digestive tract.
* appears to be generally safe, and can be used during pregnancy and lactation.
* calms the mind and is very soothing to the skin.
* can also be part of a soothing, healing skin regime.
* classic remedy for teething pains in children.
* contains aromatic compounds that provide a sedative effect, reduce muscle spasms and pain
- calcium, a natural nervine
- the amino acid tryptophan
* digestive tonic and increases the flow of digestive secretions.
* flowering plant in the daisy family that is native to Europe and Asia.
* frequently produces allergic rhinitis or anaphylactic shock in some people.
* gentle, soothing herb that calms both the stomach and the nerves.
* gives patience, peace and calms the mind.
* grows in well-drained soil in partial to full sun
- throughout the world
* hardy perennial that prefers moist soil and full sun.
* has a sweet light apple taste and aroma.
* has anti-inflammatory effects and is often used as a digestive aid
- properties
- many uses
* helps reduce stress and anxiety
- to relieve anxiety
- that soothes colds, asthma, fever, headaches, muscle cramps and pain
* is also a premiere emmenagogue, or woman's herb
- an effective diaphoretic herb
- superb for headaches of all types, including migraines
* is an annual that adapts to most soils, likes lots of water and full sun
- anti-inflammatory, soothing herb useful during the cold season
- emollient, softens skin and can help heal irritated skin
- essential oil with a long tradition
- excellent botanical for extremely sensitive skin
* is another anti-stress, calming herb
- good anti-inflammatory that s also soothing to gastrointestinal tissues
- herb that calms an upset tummy
- as much used as a carminative as a mild sedative
- available in a variety of preparations
- believed to be an antidepressant, and to help with insomnia
- commonly available as a tea rather than in tablets or capsules
- edible and medicinal
- especially useful for digestive conditions with a nervous component such as dyspepsia
- excellent for improving the skin's texture and soothing sore, dry skin
- high in Niacin to help digestion and circulation
- in the ragweed family
- kept on grow nutrient to reduce the flowering
- known as both a pretty flower and an ancient healer
- mild sedative, used customarily in mild sleep disorders, particularly in children
* is one of the best known and most versatile of medicinal plants
- selling herbs on the market
- gentlest of the oils
- mildest herbs known
* is one of the most beneficial herbs for hair
- popular herbal therapies in the world
- oldest herb-garden favorites
- very best nervine herbs
- perfectly safe for children
- proven to have a relaxing and analgesic effect for cancer patients
- put in shampoos to enhance golden highlights of blond hair
- reputed to keep nightmares at bay
- the most popular herbal calmative in the world today and is one of the safest to use
- thought to have relaxing and analgesic effects
* is used as a sedative
- extensively in Europe for the skin and hair
* is used in a wide range of products
- prosperity charms to attract money
- the treatment of burns, including sunburn
- to counter hair loss and add natural highlights
- useful in spells for luck and gambling as well
* member of the daisy family of plants, which includes ragweed.
* mild anti-microbial, as is red thyme oil.
* pioneer herb and can collect trace minerals
- plant and can collect trace minerals from poor soils
* provides calcium, magnesium iron, and trace minerals.
* reduces irritability
* relieves oral swelling and pain, and is useful against dermatological ailments.
* valuable herb that has been used for many centuries to soothe and re-vitalize skin.
* very gentle herb for children.
* works well at night time. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cultural competence
* continuous quality improvement process.
* is so important in business, diplomacy, and even tourism
- the responsibility of the total system
* process entailing lifelong learning.
* skill, and perhaps an ability that requires substantial effort to learn.<|endoftext|>Clustering
* according to similarity concept which appears in many disciplines.
* enables firms to share scarce resources
- servers to work in unison to support applications
* facilitates collaboration to overcome shared problems and obstacles.
* helps arrange ideas that have been generated by brainstorming.
* indicates a poor absorption of protein with bridging between gold particles.
* involves informally dividing a large number of ideas into smaller groups.
* means different things to different people
- groups of students take classes together
* organizes bits of information into forms that show their relationship.
* potted plants also helps to raise humidity levels, keeping plants more productive.
* stresses relationships.
* takes many forms, and can scale from two computers.
Cultural imperialism
* can take the form of an active, formal policy or a general attitude.
* is an important challenge to the Inuit way of life
- the conquest of one culture by another
Crackling
* are residues.
* is the process of laying a faster drying finish over a slower drying more flexible finish.
Chronic malnutrition
* can lead to physical problems, mental disability or slowness of development.
* has long-term implications on a child's physical and mental development.
* is the commonest cause of poor growth globally
- widespread
* leaves children more vulnerable to pneumonia, bronchitis and other infections.
* major factor in infant mortality. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Consumer
* Many consumers also think all low-fat foods are more healthful
- are concerned with security and privacy when shopping online
- believe that spoiled food causes foodborne disease
- buy organic food because farmers grew the crops without pesticides
- express concern about the amount of sugar they eat
- have an important role to play in preventing food borne illnesses
- still believe that all fats are bad and unhealthy
* More consumers mean less of the fixed available stock of goods to be divided among more people.
* Most consumers are concerned with price and quality when buying products
- assume that pet foods are safe, wholesome products that our pets thrive on
- believe that foodborne illness occurs somewhere other than the home
- feed on multiple species and are, in turn, fed upon by multiple other species
- probably use astragalus to prevent and treat colds and other minor diseases
* Most consumers use cigarettes as a calming agent or to ease the side effects of medication
- echinacea to prevent and treat colds, and to help heal infections
- essential oils for their aromatherapeutic properties
* Some consumers are concerned about preservatives and additives used in processed food.
* Some consumers eat different kinds of producers
- herbivores
- only plants, they are called herbivores
- feed on living plants and animals
- respond to financial pressures by spending money in irrational ways
* account for two-thirds of all economic activity.
* also are confused about the fat content of individual foods and the overall diet.
* are a driving force in the healthcare system
- also citizens, many of whom live in towns
* are animals that eat producers or other animals
- another classification of living organism
- anything that eats
- classified by the type of food they eat
* are concerned about food cost, food safety, and food production
- the relationship between their food and health
- every organism that eats something else
- grouped according to the type of foods they eat
* are heterotrophic organisms that eat food produced by another organism
- within the food web of a community
- heterotrophs that feed on tissues of other organisms
- objects or applications that use data provided by the other two kinds of objects
- only two-thirds of the economy
- organisms that depend on other organisms for food
* are organisms that eat or consume other organisms
- other organisms, or food made by other organisms- an animal
* are organisms that feed off of other organisms
- on other living things
- get their energy by eating other living or once-living resources
- have to eat other organisms for food
* are organisms that obtain food and the energy stored within food by eating organisms
- their food by consuming other organisms
- organisms, such as animals, that feed on producers and other consumers
* are people who use goods and services
- services, voluntarily or involuntarily
- with money to spend
- statistics, customers are people
* are the animals that eat the food the producer makes
- most intelligent people in the world
- ones that eat the producers
- people who evaluate and pay for goods and services
- users
* benefit when foods are abundant.
* can have large impacts on other organisms
- influence the outcome of competition between species
* comprise the largest interest group in the economy.
* depend on producers or other organisms for their food.
* do alter their buying habits as new products come into being and lifestyles change.
* eat other animals, plants, or protists
* eat the foods produced and decomposers recycle nutrients back into the ecosystem
- plants, and thus, indirectly obtain their energy from the sun
* get energy by eating other living things
- ingesting other organisms or the remains of organisms
- their energy and materials by eating other organisms
* have a profound influence on how products are produced
- freedom of choice also, as do workers and owners of resources in general
* is an user
* means mental health consumers.
* obtain energy by eating other organisms.
* play a key role in the functioning of the economic system.
* refer to customers, partners, suppliers and employees.
* search engine for information about consumer safety and consumer protection.
+ Food chain: Foods
* A 'food chain' shows the feeding relationship between different living things in a particular environment or habitat. Often, a plant will begin a food chain because it can make its own food. Organisms that can make their own food are called producers. Consumers are animals that eat producers or other animals. The animal that eats the producer is called the primary consumer. The animal that eats the primary consumer is called a secondary consumer. The animal that eats the secondary consumer is called a third order consumer and so on to fourth, fifth, etc. The direction of arrows between the organisms shows who eats what. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Chronic toxicity
* can often take many years to determine.
* is frequent in dogs
- thought to occur in one of two main ways
- unlikely to occur due to the corrosive effects of fluorine exposure
* produces decrease in body weight and loss of appetite.
* refers to single or short term exposure to high levels of the toxicant
- the effects produced by such exposure
* results from long-term exposure of low levels of toxicant.<|endoftext|>Cladistic
* describes branching patterns by examining dervived homologous characters.
* dominates today.
* helps to elucidate mechanisms of evolution.
* is a. a method for developing phylogenetic trees.
* is now the most commonly used method to classify organisms
- preferred approach to phylogeny
- simply a tool that can be used to classify things
- that discipline which attempts to determine which organisms are most closely related
- the dominant form of classification methodology and phylogeny analysis used today
- used to classify organisms based on their phylogenetic relationships
- useful for creating systems of classification
* methodology for classifying species into groups based on their characteristics.
* particular method of hypothesizing relationships among organisms.
* predicts the properties of organisms.
* produces branching diagrams called cladograms.
* school of taxonomy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Confidentiality
* addresses the release of potentially sensitive information.
* also allows lawyers receiving assistance to retain their pride and self-respect.
* applies to both information storage and transmission
- communications and medical records
* basis of developing group trust.
* concerns the prevention of unauthorized disclosure of information.
* consideration when intellectual property is the subject of the dispute.
* critical concern for victims of sexual assault
- of residential programs for victims of domestic violence
- issue for both employers and job seekers
* extends to information about either individuals or organizations.
* facilitates an air of trust between client and counselor.
* ground rule in nearly all mediations.
* group rule that can put all group members at ease.
* has much to do with the rights to privacy and autonomy.
* helps restrict sensitive information from disclosure.
* includes keeping the fact that an individual is seeking private counseling.
* increases the flow of communication between parties.
* is access to and use of confidential information and proprietary property.
* is also a key concern for businesses
- important for health care providers
- among a lawyer's duties to a client
* is an essential part of the doctor-patient relationship
- important element in relationships with every client
- inherent conflict in business plan writing
- issue when everyone knows each other
* is based on encrypted communications
- whether a waiver has been signed
- breached only in rare circumstances, such as ongoing cases of child abuse
* is central to a trusting relationship between an adolescent and provider
- the clinical relationship of trust
- critical to making teams work on behalf of abused children
- crucial to the practise of law
- discretion
- essential to sharing about adopted children
- fundamental to all aspects of cases dealing with sexual assault
- important for both parties to any private transaction
- maintained according to professional codes of ethics
* is maintained in a safe and comfortable environment
- accordance with laws governing the privacy of medical information
- with respect to institutions, individuals, and enterprises
* is mandated by federal law
* is of critical importance in the management of all medical records
- paramount importance in cancer risk assessment
- particular concern in education research
* is often a concern for teens
- an important factor in selling land or property
- one cornerstone of quality health care
- particularly critical for the effective treatment of mental illness
- privacies
- protected by law, except in limited circumstances
- roughly equivalent to privacy
- secrecy
* is the actual protection such information receives from the provider organizations
- cardinal principal in the exchange of credit information
- cement of human relationships
- corner-stone of any counseling or therapy relationship
* is the fundamental principle of the financial services business
- tool that allows the free flow of credit information
- main purpose of secure group communication
- practice of keeping private what occurs and is discussed during a meeting
- rule in working with both applicants and clients alike
- service that protects data from being revealed to unauthorized third parties
- used as a shield to protect the system's failure as well as protect the client
* key component of group work.
* major issue in today s workplace environment.
* matter of both contractual agreement and public duty
- respecting our patients' right to privacy
* means maintaining the absolute privacy of the therapy situation
- of providing the client with safety and privacy
* myth created to insure that women surrender babies.
* paramount concept of self-help groups.
* permeates the child-care system.
* permits open and honest communication and early treatment prior to public harm.
* primary concern for students with disabilities.
* protects the contents of a document
- interests of biological parents, adopting parents, and adopted minors
* refers to data and to limiting the access to private data about a person
- limits on who can get what kind of information
* refers to the nondisclosure of information received from or concerning patients
- privacy of personal or corporate information
* relates to the full and open disclosure necessary for the mediation process.
* requirement for respect for relationships.
* significant issue to persons with hidden disabilities.
* tool for protecting privacy.
* trust agreement that exists for the protection of all parties involved. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cyclaman
* Cyclamen -Reddish exotic flower.
* Cyclamen are colorful, easy to grow flowering plants for the winter season
- especially good in fast-draining containers in filtered dappled light
- come from the Mediterranean , from Spain to Iran
- has attractive foliage and white, pink or red flowers
- have very few insect problems other than mites
- prefer bright indirect light and love humid air
* Cyclamen prefer cool temperatures and bright indirect light
- light, but no direct sunlight
- require very bright light, which is difficult to provide in some homes
- resemble butterflies landed on decorative dark green rounded leaves
- thrive under high humidity
* Most cyclamen prefer at least partial shade.
* Cyclamen come from the Mediterranean, from Spain to Iran. They are also found from northeast Africa to Somalia. Each leaf or flower grows on its own stem, which shoots up from the hypocotyl. The variegation is thought by some botanists to be a form of natural disruptive camouflage to reduce grazing damage by animals.
Cerebral atrophy
* is the most common and least specific abnormality.
* reverses after the first few months of sobriety.
Canadian geese
* Most canadian geese have eyesights
- good eyesights
- long necks
* are monogamous, as are eagles, dik dik antelope, and gibbons.
* can fly fast.<|endoftext|>Counseling
* also can help people who are already infected manage their illness.
* can help a person develop a plan to help resolve or deal with personal problems
- families build on their strengths and deal with their difficulties
* can help people resolve difficulties and better understand themselves and others
- who suffer from depression to get to the root of their problems
- provide a means of learning how to achieve personal goals
- sometimes help people whose insomnia result of poor sleep habits
* collaborative process between counselor and student.
* confidential relationship between student and counselor
- service provided either on an individual basis or in a group
* dynamic profession that requires knowledge of research issues and procedures.
* helps people cope with vision loss.
* is an area that needs some attention
- evolving field of study and of practice
- important aspect of managing patients who have genital herpes
* is an important part of cancer treatment
- heroin addiction recovery
- interactive process in which both client and counselor participate
- basically a form of teaching
- for everyday people with everyday problems
- guidance of the employee's behavior
- literally education for life
- meant to assist people with problems of daily living
* is one of several therapeutic professions in the United States
- the specialty areas within the discipline of psychology
* is the fundamental function performed by consumer lawyers
- typical form of treatment when psychological reasons are causing impotence
- viewed as an avenue of self growth
* language intensive profession.
* learning process that assists students in taking responsibility for their lives.
* often helps people to understand and unlock that potential.
* process that helps people work out personal, academic, or vocational problems
- to help people take more effective control of their daily lives
* resource that many people utilize when they want help getting unstuck.
* skill that involves, training, practice, compassion, and patience.
* takes many different forms, depending on the roles of the people involved.
Contradiction
* is an important concept in Marxist thinking
- falsehood
- negation
- opposition
- something shared by propositions, which no proposition has in common with another
* is the eternal limit of the propositions, tautology their substanceless centre
- interaction of mutually exclusive demands to the same object
- order of our times
- relationship of mutual negation between the two
* part of our existence. | {
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} |
Cardiovascular endurance
* equals delivery of adequate fuel and oxygen to the active muscles.
* involves the fitness of the heart only.
* predominant element in health and physical fitness.
Clinical audit
* can be a practical way of encouraging clinicians to review and change their practice.
* refers to audit carried out by any health care worker and includes medical audit.
Cognitive change
* accompanies the healing of the memory.
* are probably equivalent to about a three to six month delay in progression.
* occur during the teen years.
Collagenous colitis
* affects primarily middle aged men and presents with bloody mucous diarrhea.
* is another variant in which diarrhea is the presenting complaint
- featured by chronic, watery diarrhea
Christian priesthood
* claims superiority and entices the poor of other faiths to conversion.
* function of the community as a whole.
Candidiasi
* Some candidiasis becomes blood.
* generally looks like cheese curds, which when wiped off, leave a raw, bleeding surface.
Confectionery
* Confectioneries are intelligent agents
- occupations
- retail stores
- shops
- sweets
* major cause of tooth decay.
* means candy cakes, cookies, and glazed fruits.
Clairvoyance
* form of purposeful dreaming arrived at via disciplined meditation.
* involves stimulation of the inner vision.
* psychic phenomenon
* refers to the ability to look at images in the form of pictures in the minds eye.
* term given to describe the act of clear sight. | {
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} |
Courtship
* again shows how important vocalizations are for owls.
* also involves head and snout rubbing and mounting by both males and females.
* begins soon after bears leave their winter dens.
* begins when a female encounters one or more males
- males go out in search of receptive females
- with a color change of the birds' bill, face, legs, and skin
* can sometimes be rather violent, with male and female bumping heads forcefully.
* consists of groups of males bumping and nudging the females and each other
- playing and wrestling, followed by mating
* displays from males indicate the presence of males that can fertilize eggs.
* encourages young people to look at all romance as being confined to marriage.
* frees young teens to see each other as potential friends rather than potential dates.
* happens during the night where the males nudge and bump other salamanders.
* involves a display, entailing mutual preening and feeding of the female by the male.
* involves male leading female around to potential nest sites
- singing, showing the female potential nest sites
- prolonged chases of the female by the male
* involves the male and female touching bills, bobbing and spreading the wings
- betta chasing the female in short spurts
- calling from the chosen nesting site
- various kinds of swimming behavior
* is an appetative behavior associated with the sex drive.
* is an important ritual for culpeo foxes
- culpeos, it takes place during the winter months
- appeal
- believed to happen while the bats are flying during the day
- complex, and is initiated by the female
- full of aerial displays, vocalizations, and food begging by the female
- initiated by the female and generally includes mating with a number of males
- performed by feeding and invariably accompanies copulation
- similar across species
* is the prelude to marriage
- system of dating and marriage
* precedes the actual act of mating.
* primarily involves the dominant male accompanying the dominant female constantly.
* time of affirming all that is attractive and desirable
- where couples get to know each other and make mistakes
* usually includes sound production, via a larynx and vocal sacs
- occurs in the spring when food is plentiful
* varies among species
- between different birds and happens during migration for birds that migrate
- considerably among different species
- from species to species
* way to avoid the heartbreak dating brings.
+ Poanes zabulon, Life cycle: Hesperiidae
* Courtship takes place in the afternoon. Females lay their eggs singly on the underside of host plant leaves. The caterpillar is either brown or green. It is often impossible to tell the difference between closely related caterpillars. The chrysalis is often formed inside a leaf shelter. It is brown.
Cognitive distortion
* Cognitive Distortion Includes abstracts, landscapes, fractals, and more.
* contribute to negative and self-destructive thoughts, moods, and behaviors. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Causality
* has a natural representation in the form of Directed Acyclic Graphs
- part to play in our psychological makeup
* however is set by the nature of human beings i.e. that they possess a rational mind.
* hypothetical law that says causes always precede effects.
* implies that an object can be synchronized to only one event.
* is also one with universal justice, personified as a divine judge
- useful in interacting with humans, as it plays an important part in our reasoning
- within space and time
- always an inference
* is an abstraction from the manifest universe
- essential question in the struggle between materialism and idealism
- certainly a central concept in many branches of science and philosophy
- defined relative to decisions using the concept of responsiveness
- either according to nature or arises from freedom
- identity in action
- located in the protuberances located halfway on the forehead
- theoretical
- used to analyse the results of scattering experiments and in optics
* new property.
* real and ac- tual fact.
* rests on mere instinct or belief.<|endoftext|>Conscience
* can never tell a person to do what is wrong, or to think what is unpleasant.
* causes a desire to help.
* emerges as the judgment of reason upon human action to be performed or shunned.
* form of truth which is the knowledge of our own acts and feelings as right or wrong.
* guide to good moral behavior.
* has rights because it has duties.
* is affronted by hurting, wounding, robbing or killing other beings.
* is an abstraction, and individuals put it into practice differently
- idealist
- invention of the human slave
- binding because it is tied to synderesis
- considered to be subjective
- morality
- no more than reason applied to moral conduct in order to regulate it
- one of the human person's most delicate organs
- shame
* is the ability to evaluate the right or wrong of something and to act accordingly
- application of our reason to a concrete situation
- basis for enduring mistreatment and misunderstanding without defending oneself
- chamber of justice
- discernment organ of the spirit
- focal point of each person's worth
- internalization of a certain ideology and set of values
- measure of our own attitudes and acts against the criterion of mutual love
- nest where all good is hatched
- practical moral judgment of the intellect
- sense of right and wrong
- universal
- what hurts when everything else feels so good
* kind of moral traffic light.
* luxury which only the poor can afford.
* moral faculty.
* refers retribution to a future state.
* voice within a soldier long before it becomes a force.
Cloudiness
* are bad weather
- opacity
* can be a sign of deterioration in some insulin
- an attribute of both older and Young wines
* causes differences over land and ocean.
* changes with each passing high and low.
* indicates carbon dioxide is present.
* is bad weather
- of such a character that high air humidity is sustained
* occurs when iron and tannins in the vinegar combine.
Curlie
* are an active dog
- of medium size
- typically of medium size, although they also come in pony and draft sizes
- willing, intelligent, people-oriented creatures that thrive on affection
* have a calm and gentle nature
- round, very hard hooves | {
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} |
Conditioning
* class that is designed to tone muscles rather than give an aerobic workout.
* continuous process that can insure development when done in a progressive way.
* definitely affects food choices.
* distributes residual moisture evenly in dried food.
* form of training.
* forms the basis of much of learned human behavior.
* has a direct effect on the quality of hair.
* involves the association of one stimulus with another.
* is an integral part of participation in athletics
- another important component of wrestling
- conditioning, regardless of the rationale
- physical, putting miles on a dog and building stamina into the muscles
- relative to culture
* is the act of preparing for a specific action or process
- learned association or connection of one thing with another
* is the process by which a habit is formed
- of learning to react to the environment
- that makes polymer clay ready to work with
- when some external stimulus gets connected to some sort of reflex
* plays an important role in nicotine addiction.
* process of consistent, gradually accumulated training.
* serves to relieve internal stresses that are produced during kiln drying.
* starts when fatigue begins.
* stops when stresses are relieved.
* type of learning.
* way of learning that involves a reward or punishment.
Creative nonfiction
* sort of socio-historic genre, even a cultural artifact.
* utilizes the techniques of fiction to tell true stories. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Consistency
* also relates to predictability in terms of performance.
* comes from practicing and doing the same things over with the same people.
* euphemism for totalitarianism.
* helps a child make sense of the world by knowing what to expect.
* is also a critical factor in perception
- form of structure
- an attribute of good databases
* is an important element of software accessibility
- factor in improving customer satisfaction
- coherence
- concerned with correctly reflecting the reality of the state of the resources
* is essential in behavior management
- maintaining normal blood sugars
- to maintaining or changing a child's behavior
- important if people are to be able to browse or analyze and see trends and patterns
* is important in dog training
- establishing and maintaining a productive relationship with a child
- order that a user can learn an interface quickly and easily
- the care of records
* is important to bankers
- older adults and to children
- within a system as well as between systems
- key in early language learning
* is one of the most difficult skills of parenting to master
- test of truth
- probably the most important factor in blood sugar management
- properties
- similarity
- the criterion of moral virtue
* is the difference between adhering to principle and doing whatever it takes to win
- winning and losing
- hallmark of rationality
- hob-goblin of small minds
* is the hobgoblin of little minds
- key in almost any aspect of life
* is the key to accuracy in all shooting, including muzzleloading
- any part of life
- healthy hooves
- most important factor in exercise fitness
- name of football
- secret of doing anything well
- uniformity
- when the hitting and pitching comes together at the same time
- where life starts to get more difficult
* key factor in security, because it fosters predictable behavior
- when it comes to prayer for protection
- word when guiding the behavior of young children
* living model of patience, determination and strength-regardless of shifting times.
* means that a task takes the system from one consistent state to another.
* measure of success.
* measurement of one dimension of workability.
* pertains to the size of graphics, their location on the page and their colors.
* plays a major role in parenting.
* refers to data consistency.
* refers to the congruence in a person's actions
- degree to which people act in the same way on different occasions
- whether a test has something about it that causes inconsistent results
* stabilizing influence that can make our lives simpler.
* virtue that applies to decorating as well as everything else in life.
+ Oscar Wilde, Quotations: 1854 births :: 1900 deaths :: Bisexual people :: Bisexual writers :: Disease-related deaths in France :: Irish novelists :: Irish poets :: Playwrights :: Writers from Dublin
* Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cacti
* All cacti are native to the Western Hemisphere
- succulents, but many non-cacti desert plants use the same adaptation
* All cacti have roots, and they perform a number of essential functions for the plants
- spines
* Many cacti also have a waxy coating that helps the plant conserve moisture in desert climates
- get their names from their shape or what they look like
- grow well on a sunny east or west facing windowsill
- have very long, fibrous roots, which absorb moisture from the soil
- live in dry places , such as deserts
- send down a long, strong taproot very soon after germinating
- stems have a globular shape, which for water storage, is the optimal shape
* Most cacti also change color in winter.
* Most cacti are native to the Americas
- self-sterile, requiring pollen from a different individual plant
- terrestrial but some are epiphytes
- without leaves
- come into flowers
- find in deserts
- get light
* Most cacti grow better with full sun or at least four to five hours of bright sunlight a day
- feet
* Most cacti grow in areas
- arid regions
- many arid regions
- pure sand
- subtropical regions
- wood areas
- slowly to moderately as houseplants, usually only a few inches a year
* Most cacti have arms
- lateral roots
- needles
- sharp thorns
- sticky substances
- succulent roots
- thin arms
- live in desert habitats, but some types can also be found in jungles
- perfer a slightly acid soil
* Most cacti prefer a slightly acidic soil
- full sun and sandy soil
- sunny locations
- produce perfect flowers
* Most cacti require bright light
- take in water
- thrive in an area with very dry periods and light rainfall
* Some cacti actually bloom flowers or produce berries.
* Some cacti adapt to life
- tropical habitats
* Some cacti are even cold-hardy
- grown in gardens , especially in dry areas
- pollinated by birds, moths, or bats
- spineless and others have their spines modified as coarse hair
- bear edible fruit
- create shades
- enjoy moisture
- grow as houseplants
* Some cacti grow in lavas
- pots
* Some cacti have black skin
- brown spots
- dead skin
- distribution
- growth patterns
* Some cacti have light brown spots
- many needles, some have few needles, and some have a medium number of needles
- organs
- pears
- purple flowers
- ribs
- sharp spines
- special organs
- the capacity to store food and water in succulent roots as well as in their stems
- thick skin
- unique growth patterns
- waxy skin
* Some cacti live in dry places
- make flowers
* Some cacti produce delicate flowers
- white flowers
* Some cacti provide food
- rely on roots
+ Cactus, Uses
* Cacti are commonly grown as houseplants. They are pretty and easy to grow. Some cacti are grown in gardens, especially in dry areas. Cactus can be used as a living fence. The wood of dead cactus is sometimes used for building.
+ Cactus: Plant families :: Caryophyllales
* Many cacti live in dry places, such as deserts. There are many shapes and sizes of cacti. Many cactus flowers are big and beautiful. Some cactus flowers bloom at night and are pollinated by moths and bats. Some cactus fruits are brightly coloured and good to eat. Goats, birds, ants, mice, bats and people eat cactus fruits.
Counterculture
* actively seek to change the dominant culture.
* culture of opposition and minorities
* is culture. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Condemnation
* can also refer to the condemning of unsafe structures.
* is an act of finality
- another term for guilt
- conditions
- disapproval
- objectings
* is the natural self's own judgment of itself
- power of a public agency to seize land, usually for public purposes
- result of unbelief
- same as eternal punishment
- sentence to eternal damnation
* load of bricks To the soul adrift in the sea of sin.
* means the judgment, death, and reprobation of man.
* serious disease that affects the heart, the inner being of a man.<|endoftext|>Cylindrical one
* are called carbon nanotubes or buckytubes.
+ Fullerene: Carbon
* A fullerene is any molecule composed entirely of carbon, in the form of a hollow sphere, ellipsoid, or tube. Spherical fullerenes are also called buckyballs, and they resemble the balls used in association football. Cylindrical ones are called carbon nanotubes or buckytubes. They are usually made in the form of a hollow ball or tube. The fullerene was found in 1985 by Robert Curl, Harold Kroto and Richard Smalley at the University of Sussex and Rice University, and was named after Buckminster Fuller because his famous Geodesic domes are similar in shape.<|endoftext|>Cutting
* Some cutting is needed to keep bugs and disease from killing trees with nests of bald eagles
- cuttings root easily in water
* Take cuttings from non-flowering shoots on many shrubs and climbers.
* are a common way to produce plants genetically identical to the parent
- means of asexual reproduction in plants
- popular and reliable way of propagating tree and shrub-like aloes
- also of fast growing trees
- biological growth
- cut pieces of root, stem and leaves which are planted in nurseries
- dilutions
- hitting
- movement
- parts
* are pieces of cactus stem without roots
- roots, stems, or leaves develop into new plants under proper conditions
- separatings
- stalks
- the fastest , most efficient way of reproducing a plant
* can vary in how long they take to grow their own roots.
* come from plants before their transfer in dark chamber.
* have the advantage of producing a larger flowering plant faster than seedlings.
* often die in the winter from frost
- root in live sphagnum, or rock wool
Chartreuse
* blend of yellow and green.
* come in two varieties, green and yellow.
* good color for fall walleyes in the weeds.
* is also excellent in murky water, especially for spotted and smallmouth bass
- beverages
- liqueurs | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Currency
* All currencies have values set against each other on a supply and demand basis
- currency is measured in american dollars
* Currencies are Swiss franc, euro, and yen
- more than repositories of value for use in market places
- tradable commodities
- what the value of the investment is expressed in
- can circulate as easily outside a country as inside
- contain effects of inflation
- do fluctuate
- rise and fall
- trend the best of all markets
- vary in both unit value and notation
* Most currency is in the form of federal reserve notes.
* driving factor in science.
* fixed point number that is best used for high accuracy calculations.
* fixed-point number with four digits to the right of the decimal point.
* is acceptance
- an icon or symbol of money
* is an important determinant in evaluating information found on the web
- economic good in itself
- controlled by interest rates and is susceptible to the fluctuation of interest rates
- documents
* is issued in coins or bills
- either coins or bills
- legal tenders
- liquid assets
- located in drawers
- made up of coins and bills or federal reserve notes
- prevalence
- printed on paper or minted from cheap metal
* is the Bermudian dollar, which is an even trade for the American dollar
- Brunei dollar which has parity with the Singapore dollar
- Thai Baht
- U.S. dollar
- Venezuelan bolivar
- coin of the web
* layered and distorted image of bills from around the world.
* means the coin and paper money of Australia or a foreign country.
* merely represents money.
* part of sovereignty.
* problem with some distributions.
* refers to the default currency for accessing data items that represent monetary values
- timeliness of information
* unique form of value and represents an equivalent.
* very important symbol of sovereignty.
Chronic tendonitis
* can lead to weakening of the tendon and subsequent rupture.
* is actually a much more serious issue that carpal tunnel syndrome.
Christian theology
* All Christian theology is based on the sin and guilt of both parents of mankind.
* can fit in science, art, morality, and the sub-Christian religions.
* is an attempt to interpret the words of the Bible
- disciplined thinking about the faith of the church
- faith seeking understanding
- in a state of ferment
- unified, a theory of role, a role of theory and a psychological paradigm
* teaches that guilt is an objective reality.
Chinese surname
* Most Chinese surnames consist of a single Chinese character, but a few have two.
* are, generally, monosyllabic.
Congenital nystagmus
* is that which exists from birth or soon after
- the most common
* occurs at birth or in the first few months of life.
Cleaning
* chemical spills.
* are chore
- improvement
- progressings
- removings
* are used for cleanliness
- organizations
- sanitation
- tidiness
* cause allergies
- health
- healthier environments
- healthy livings
- injuries
- using water<|endoftext|>Cohabitation
* appears to be less stable than marriage, even after other factors are accounted for.
* avoids the trouble and expense of a wedding and divorce.
* common type of partnership in Norway.
* doubles the rate of divorce.
* ends when the female leaves the dominant male's shelter for the last time.
* is an embracing of evil
- habitation
- increasingly an alternative to marriage
- much lower in Spain than in Britain
- now common among all groups of people
- on the increase because the social taboos against it have weakened
- risky- especially to young women and children
* is still extremely rare in the southern European countries
- most widespread among young people
- the sexual union between two individuals without the benefit of marriage
- very common in Quebec
* means living in a spouse-like relationship.
* violates the rights to reasonable privacy and the pursuit of academic goals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Construct
* are the basis of constructivism.
* is an idea
Censure
* is an expression of indignation, a reprimand aimed at preventing further offending actions
- condemnation
- the act of disciplining a fellow member through a vote of disapproval or condemnation
* is the tax a man pays to the public for being -eminent
- to the public for being eminent
* punishment which the president has virtually sought.
Containment
* can produce anxiety for some men.
* is policy
- restraint
* is the analog for how the therapist receives the client
- principle of keeping the femoral head in the acetabulum and preventing deformity
- used when one wants to change some aspect of the implementation of an object
* means the confinement of radioactive waste within a designated boundary.
* rigorous method to prove the existence of a shadow orbit.
* uses plants to immobilize the contaminants.
Currency speculation
* changes the comparative prices of goods and services overnight.
* sets off rapid changes of value in the foreign-exchange charts.
Chronic urticaria
* caused by foods is more common in children than in adults.
* challenge for medical therapy.
* common but frustrating problem to both patients and physicians
- condition and source of great frustration to patients
* lasts for a longer period
- several weeks, months or even longer
* occurs more frequently in mid-life, especially in women.
* refers to hives that last more than six weeks.<|endoftext|>Climatic change
* affects all living beings and organisms.
* are likely to lead to food security issues.
* can affect intertidal life in many ways
- also arise due to volcanic eruptions
- be a limiting factor for the evolution of many species
- result in areas of widespread drought
* follow predictable cycles.
* have profound effects on the distributions of plants and animals.
* presents a serious threat to African wildlife and ecosystems in the coming decades.
* takes place over long periods of time, like several years or decades.
* vary regionally.
Cosmo
* are drought resistant and readily reseed themselves as the plants die down in fall
- very easy to grow from seed set out in early spring, and grow rapidly
* don t thrive in overly rich soil.
* require moderate to little water.
Conscious sedation
* is done by combining several medicines to achieve the desired effect
- often helpful for some children who have special needs
- produced by intravenous administration of pharmacologic agents
* is used for pain relief during the egg retrieval
- to provide sedation and pain control during medical or dental procedures
* minimally depressed level of consciousness.
Carpeting
* are located in bedrooms
- beds
- cubs
- gyms
- houses
* are used for comfort
- decoration
- floors
- home decoration
- insulation
- noise reductions
- utilities
- warmth<|endoftext|>Cme
* appear and decouple from the sun, heading away into the solar wind, in a matter of hours.
* are also dangerous to astronauts in space
- huge bubbles of gas that erupt from the corona of the sun
- more common but less intense than solar flares
* can generate geomagnetic storms that disrupt or damage satellites.
* leave the Sun in all directions, and some reach Earth.
* produce large changes in the magnetosphere, which affects the ionosphere
- shock waves and clouds of plasma that can disturb Earth's magnetosphere
* results from the inflammation that accompanies the surgical procedure.
Claudication
* is caused by limited blood flow to the legs
- disability
* normally affects the calf muscles only.
* term used to describe the pain that occurs in the arms and legs during exercise.
* typically is treated with exercise and cessation of smoking
- occurs one segment below the level of the arterial obstruction | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Compassion
* Christian non-profit that assists needy children around the world.
* Cosmic Law.
* Latin derivative.
* abolishes the difference between oneself and others.
* acts as parent to all beings.
* also extends to all forms of life, the planet, and the universe itself
- involves purpose
- is demonstrated by showing humaneness and charity toward others
* always involves the desire to do something.
* can also fuel invention.
* carries kindness into action by assuming a stance of harmlessness toward other creatures.
* changes the frequency of our bodies.
* comes from our understanding of one another.
* commodity that is in short supply in much of East Asia.
* concern for the welfare and comfort of others.
* describes a way of being and acting.
* develops out of our spontaneous feelings of sympathy with others.
* dies for others in case they accept grace and mercy.
* divine quality.
* empathizes with the sufferer.
* evolves out of tolerance.
* feeling of pity that makes one want to help or show mercy.
* godly trait.
* goes beyond a personal form of love to a love of all creation.
* gracious system of thinking.
* has a number of strategies, using the legal system to promote effective pain treatment
- little to do with pity, or simply feeling sorry for the other
- no height or weight
* has the power to give birth to compassion
- heal
* includes consideration, understanding, and love
- qualities of sharing readiness to give comfort sympathy, concern, caring
* incorporates the concepts of mercy, pity and justice.
* indicates realisation of unity or oneness with other creatures.
* indulges patience, embraces charity, and radiates virtue.
* involves an emotional response to the suffering of another
- prayer
* is about caring for people - period
- deeds
* is an act of power
- tolerance, where kindness and forgiveness reign
- acting out of our inner connectivity, of our shared joy, of our shared grief
- action word with no boundaries
- adjective frequently used to describe state supported social programs
- emotion, sharing the suffering of another
- essential part of a rich life and a healthy society
* is an essential quality in a well functioning human being
- well-functioning human being
- important part of what they practice
- inclusive nurturing instinct
- inner feeling of empathy and caring for the feelings of others
- urge to suffer with another, to help
- born out of lovingkindness
- built on rationale and is free of emotions
- controlled by prayer
- deep tenderness for another under severe or inevitable misfortune
- different from pity or sympathy
- grace lived out in the real world
- learned by living life, by caring for others
- like the power which heals and faith is like the fuel which sustains the power
- literally the state of being attuned to someone else's suffering
* is located in hearts
- near responsibility in the geography of leadership
- lost in time and space
* is love in action
- with discipline
- mercy, and mercy is the heart of the law
* is our capacity to care about others and our wish to alleviate their pain
- way of sharing the pain of others
- part of recognizing the suffering of others as suffering
- perhaps the fundamental Buddhist virtue
- personal as well as societal
- pity accompanied by an urge to help
- rooted in love
- someone who listens and really cares
- sorrow for the troubles or suffering of others and or for oneself
- supernatural when the smart thing seems to be to look out for number one
* is the ability to share in some small way the experiences that another human has had
- sympathise with the plight of others coupled with a desire to help
- basis of all morality
- by-product of genuine love
- characteristic that sometimes separates good leaders from successful leaders
- core of self-esteem
- death of scorn, aloofness and pride
- defining characteristic that separates a true soldier from the ruthless barbarian
- emotion of caring for people and for other living things
- energy fueling our retrieval of lost things
- fundamental law of nature's own heart
- genuine regard for the value that every single person possesses
- healing emotion
- heart deeply moved to action in the best interests of another
* is the key to all world problems
- which opens the heart to love
- love one feels for all beings of the world
- maturing of kindness
- mean between callousness, a deficiency, and pity, an excess
- natural sensitivity of the heart
- power that heals
* is the root of all religious faiths
- duty
- third principle of the First Condition
- truest form of the human spirit
- virtue specifically dedicated to the relief of suffering
- wish to alleviate another's suffering
- world's richest energy source
- toward single mothers
- what sets in train the alchemy of change
- where peace and justice kiss
* leads to anger at evil.
* level of true spiritual awareness.
* major part of veganism.
* manifestation of love.
* matures by understanding of one's self in others and others in one's self.
* means being bold and caring enough to act to solve societal problems
- there and feeling with the patient
- drawing towards a conclusion
- empathy and kindness
- giving everyone an equal opportunity to make it big
- suffering with, doing with, being with
* means to feel or suffer with
* often works best on a small and human scale.
* opens the heart, allowing energy to naturally flow, resulting in strong growth.
* pervades all worlds and resides in the heart of all creatures.
* quality of strength.
* refers to our desire to alleviate the sufferings of all beings.
* relationship between equals.
* relief organization dedicated primarily to the care of children.
* response to suffering.
* sense of caring, thinking about others' welfare.
* state that is very often misunderstood.
* subjective reaction to the circumstances of another human being.
* term that most believers endorse but surprisingly few practice.
* universal wish for others to be free of suffering.
* willingness to hurt with someone.
* word that has to do with the guts
- perhaps simplifies the first step of the ladder to self-realization | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Conditional love
* is widespread today among adults in most relationships.
* thought or cluster of thoughts, from the mind.<|endoftext|>Constructivism
* also destroys the existence of a gay community horizontally.
* applies to learners of all ages.
* assumes an entirely different approach to learning
- that individuals are creative and dynamic
* builds off of problem solving and individualized learning.
* child-centered theory of learning that has been around for a long time.
* concentrates on learning how to think and understand..
* denies that people can ever understand an objective or fixed universal reality.
* dominates the environmental design of education.
* exists across all four spheres and in all settings.
* focuses on individuals rather than interactions
- processes of learning rather than on learning behavior
* has important implications for teaching
- the potential to represent an inclusive model of therapy
* holds that people learn by building on their current knowledge and skills.
* is about how knowledge is created
- all about creating personal knowledge
* is an all-encompassing theory of learning
- epistemology, a philosophical explanation about the nature of knowledge
- art movement
- based upon the child's active participation using their own experiences
- derived from the field of cognitive psychology
- now one of the leading teaching strategies in education today
- quite an opposite paradigm of Behaviorism as described and defined above
- similar to active learning, adult learning and self-directed learning
* is the exact opposite of transmission
- idea that learning is an active process of building meaning for oneself
- main underlying learning theory in postmodern education
- understanding that knowledge is constructed within the mind of the learner
* looks carefully at how children create and develop their ideas.
* modern theory of knowledge.
* philosophy as well as a psychology of education.
* provides general concepts for thinking about teaching and learning.
* recognizes that learning process.
* represents one of the big ideas in education.
* set of theories, held by a fairly diverse set of authors.
* theory of knowing and understanding that guides individual and group learning
- learning that has roots in both philosophy and psychology
* way of seeing the world.
* word used frequently by science educators lately.
Cardiac hypertrophy
* helps improve systolic function and unload cardiac muscle fibers.
* is considered a necessary compensatory response to increased afterload
- recognizable microscopically by the increased size of the cells
* response of the heart to damage. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Consciousness
* All consciousness is founded on an originary self-consciousness
- the result of vibrations
* activates mental models for solving problems.
* allows leadership to flow through individuals and groups.
* alone unites actions into the same person
- remote existences into one person
* begins with perception.
* can interact with matter readily enough.
* confronts itself with the aim of achieving absolute knowing.
* connects to words and thinking.
* consists of discarded information far more than information present.
* contains only subjective feelings.
* continues after death, and finds expression in a future life
- to function in the dream state and in the dreamless state
* evolves through forms to higher levels and the evolution collects in essence
- with an underlying wisdom
* exists by uniting mind, soul and body.
* expands with size.
* gives expression to the essence of freedom.
* involves experience or awareness.
* is experience
- subjective experience
* knows consciousness through consciousness.
* opens to sounds before images early in the morning.
* spirals from one level of awareness to another.
* starts with subjectivity.
* state of mind
* stimulates conscience.
* transforms when our egos are threatened and our hearts are challenged to open.
* unites substances, material or spiritual, with the same personality.
Choanal atresia
* congenital absence of communication between the nasal cavity and nasopharynx.
* creates a dead end at the back of the nasal passages.
* is the lack of a connection between the nose and the mouth.
* occurs equally across races.
Carnal love
* loves in order to be loved.
* shadow of romantic love.
Cadence
* are chord progressions which establish a scale.
* facility cost-reduction services company that helps national chains lower costs.
* is expressed in steps per minute
- prosody
- the world's leading provider of electronic design software and services
* student-run women's a cappella ensemble that specializes in popular styles.
* tightly knit group, and they often do things together.
Claustrophobia
* fear of enclosed spaces.
* is morbid fear of enclosed spaces
- phobia
- simple phobia
- sometimes a problem for certain patients
* is the fear of being closed in, trapped in a small space
- small enclosed spaces
* strikes some who walk into the bowels of the Earth.
Centralization
* determines which hierarchical levels have authority to make decisions.
* extends the sphere of controlled production at the expense of exchange.
* is combined with sovereignty of the people
- consolidation
- essential to realize the benefits of economies of scale
- gather
- integration
- the order of the media day | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cement
* are finely ground powders that, when mixed with water, set to a hard mass.
* based backer board is used under tile around bathtubs or shower stalls.
* can be a vapor barrier, too.
* chemical substance which is mainly used in the construction of buildings.
* consists of space-filling grains that are usually precipitated from pore water.
* contains calcium hydroxide, a very corrosive compound.
* fine, gray powder.
* flows around curves.
* is added to gravel, sand and water to make concrete
- also a basic ingredient in materials produced at other company operations
* is an ingredient in concrete
- used to make concrete
- international commodity
- another common material that is often made with shale
- basically a water hydration chemical reaction
- building materials
- changeable while it is wet and so are youth while they are young
- clay with the water cooked out of it
- everywhere and the underground gives off heat to melt snow rather quickly
- heavy and difficult to carry and therefore additionally expensive in transport
* is located in buildings
* is manufactured from limestone in a heated kiln process and reduced to a powdered form
- limestone, gypsum, iron oxide, clays, and possibly pozzolan
- only cement as long as it remains dry and loose
- part of concrete
- produced in relatively large quantities
- so fine that it can easily pass through a sieve that's fine enough to hold water
- solid objects
- solids
* is the binding ingredient of concrete, which is also composed of sand, water and gravel
- bonding agent
- dry powder and is chiefly made from lime
- raw material from which concrete is made
- strongest when it is less than one-forth of an inch away from steel reinforcing
* is to concrete as flour is to cake batter
- to fruit cake
- what flour is to fruit cake
- toxic, hard and breakable
* is used to make concrete and many other products for the construction industry
- which in turn is used for roadways, dams, buildings, and bridges
- vastly simpler and cheaper to produce compared to glass and ceramics
- well known to contractors to protect buried metal from corrosion
* major industrial commodity.
* manufactured product that looks like a fine gray powder.
* mixture of clay, limestone and gypsum added in right proportion.
* powder and is the central ingredient of concrete.
* product that is presumed to be used in a manner constituting disposal.
* provide a highly alkaline environment.
* reacts chemically with water to cause concrete to harden.
* throws off a lot of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
* when mixed with water forms the bond between the aggregate and sand.<|endoftext|>Camping
* are activities
- fun
- one of the most popular forms of recreation and vacationing in the United States
- outdoor activities
- recreational activities
* communal activity in a way.
* field built on personal relationships and value systems.
* gives families a time to be together, away from all the distractions of daily life.
* helps individuals build confidence and increase independence.
* is an inseparable part of Anatolian culture
- defined in the regulations as the use of park land for living accommodation purposes
- one of the most relaxing and affordable ways a family can enjoy a holiday
- simply the art of staying in one spot and picking off opponents
- temporarily living or occupying an area in the outdoors
- traditionally a mans sport
* method of Scouting that enhances and builds stronger programs and people.
* skill that can be used effectively in a game.
* strategy used in the real fucking world, and few people seem to realize that.
* teaches cooperation through playing, working, and planning with others.
* time when coffee, a small comfort from home, is an absolute necessity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Coloring
* All coloring is determined by natural ingredients of herbs, grains and oils used.
* Most coloring derivative of the annatto tree.
* Some coloring is done by natural drying from snow and other natural elements.
* appears over and over again in mathematics.
* are another type of additive.
* can help protect an animal by making it hard to see.
* favorite pastime for children.
* huge problem in mathematics.
* is also due in large part to the weather
- created by use of herbs, spices, botanicals, as well as oxides and ultramarine colors
- essential to the overall development of a child
- foodstuff
- marking
* is the last process in finishing a piece of metal work
- simplest form of enjoyment with appeal to young and old alike
* mixture of white and silver gray.
* result of added herbs and or spices.
* tactile and mobile learning tool.
* varies due to exposure to light.
Chlorophyte
* Most chlorophytes use flagellae for locomotion
- some locomotion
* Some chlorophytes are endosymbionts living within various protist and animals
- live symbiotically with fungi to form lichens, a mutualistic collective<|endoftext|>Conjugation
* allows hemoglobin to become more water-soluble.
* also stabilizes a carbocation.
* begins with two animals adhering to each other.
* can only occur between individuals of different mating type
- permit exchange of a plasmid containing a few genes or large groups of genes
* convenient means for transferring genetic material to a variety of targets.
* has advantages over other forms of genetic transfer.
* involves the transfer of genetic material between two bacteria via a sex pilus.
* is an example of the lateral transfer of genes
- as close to sexual reproduction as it can get
- classes
- inflection
- mediated by plasmids
- much rarer than binary fission
- only possible with closely related species of bacteria
- sets
* is the exchange of genetic information and is unrelated to reproduction
- necessary condition of their eternal youth
- process at which genetic information is passed among microorganisms
- sexual stage of the life cycle
- simplest method of sexual reproduction
- useful as an easy and efficient way to move plasmids between strains
- when two different strains line up longitudinally and exchange nuclear material
* little more complicated than binary fission or budding.
* normally takes place only between gametes from different filaments.
* occurs in many fungal species
- when bacteria is passed through two joined prokaryotes
- with 'generic' cells that can use hormones, etc to fuse
* only occurs between cells of different mating types
- gametes derived from distinct gametangia
* process through which a donor cell transfers DNA to a recipient cell.
* reduces their biological reactivity and enhances their rate of excretion.
* takes place between cells of separate plants growing near together
* type of sexual reproduction common during stressful environmental conditions.
+ Bacterial conjugation, Genetic engineering: Bacteria :: Genetics
* Conjugation is a convenient means for transferring genetic material to a variety of targets. In laboratories successful transfers have been reported from bacteria to yeast, plants, mammalian cells, and isolated mammalian mitochondria.
* Conjugation has advantages over other forms of genetic transfer. Agrobacterium'-like conjugation is also primarily used for dicots, but monocot recipients are not uncommon.
Collectivism
* continues to be pivotal in advertising.
* denotes managing all affairs in a collective way.
* encompasses all the ism's that seek to enslave man.
* is based on the altruist code of morality
- communism
- the doctrine embraced by every party in parliament
* leads to concentration camps, leader worship, and war.
* means viewing people as interchangeable units of a group.
* promotes collective guilt. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Citizenship
* Being a citizen full time job.
* also allows people to vote and hold public office.
* can be a guarantor of basic human rights
- tie to economic and social development, especially in a sustainable manner
* complex term that has matured, as America itself has grown older.
* encompasses respect for authority.
* entails a moral and intellectual bond, and an allegiance to all that America represents.
* has different levels.
* implies membership and shared values and concerns for the good of the total community.
* includes an awareness of the symbols of our nation.
* involves duties as well as rights
- of community service as well as a right to the basic income
- taking an active role in molding and shaping the social structure
* is about more than having a passport and the right to vote.
* is based on birth
- rights of birth
- whether the person was born in the country
- called ezrahut
- demeanor
- derived by birth within the country's territory or from one's parents
- different than permanent residence
- granted to legal immigrants after they complete the naturalization process
- in many ways a difficult and peculiar way of life
- just as important as athletic ability
- legal status
- man's basic right
- more than a passport
- perhaps the preeminent guarantor of human rights
- situations
* is the ability to apply knowledge necessary for effective citizenship
- basis for constitutional rights and duties
- exercise of mutual respect
- foundation of a healthy democracy
- most symbolic sign of attachment to the United States
* learned behavior, nurtured through involvement.
* legal phenomenon which includes existing diversities in the society.
* lifelong commitment.
* links our daily life and interests to larger public values and arenas.
* means engaging in public work and public work takes practice.
* often requires a tolerance for ambiguity and outcomes which fall far short of ideals.
* requires practice through active involvement in the community.
* sensitive issue that can force people to move.
* status or condition and is the result of both act and intent.
* two-way relationship and includes both rights and duties.
Conscription
* government-initiated system for requiring men to serve in the military.
* involves the degradation of human personality, and the destruction of liberty.
* is an expensive process for individuals, government, and society
- mobilization
- mobilization. * introduced in Athens. Young men are required to perform duties which are part military and part civic
Christian camping
* demands the investment of time, energy, and physical resources.
* is the biggest influence on a young person's faith outside their home life.
Communal life
* involves personal change.
* is both at the center of nationalism and at the center of socialism.
Chronic gingivitis
* can lead to a more serious condition called periodontitis.
* is inflammation that has been present for some time.
Cognitive dysfunction
* Cognitive Dysfunction can be a hard subject to broach, even with family and friends.
* following cardiac surgery is associated with cerebral oxygen desaturation.
* well documented symptom of whiplash injuries.
Clemency
* is good weather
* plays a very important role when capital punishment is applied.
Chronic abuse
* can cause neurological damage, kidney or liver failure, paralysis and death
- severe, permanent brain damage
* can lead to marked tolerance and psychic dependence
- psychosis, paranoia and aggressive behaviour
- psychotic episodes and violent behavior
* can result in addiction and retardive dyskinnesia
* causes serious psychological harm.
* produces a psychosis similar to schizophrenia. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Contracting
* is one of several approaches for implementing managed care in a correctional setting.
* is the art of selling skills to a paying client
- most frequent form of privatization
- used when a person provides a specific service for a set fee for a set duration
* transaction between parties.
* unique relationship between employer and employee.
Creative consciousness
* can create good, or evil.
* is enveloped in 'havingness'.<|endoftext|>Contemplation
* can spring out of emptiness, in poverty, dereliction and spiritual night.
* exists as a matter of law.
* form of concentration on values such as beauty and truth.
* is Western meditation and powerful technique because it liberates
- achieved through continuous repetition of a word or a syllable
- an inward regrouping, or ingathering, of mental resources
- books
- both a relaxation of our faculties and their total alertness
- consideration
- knowledge by love
- prayer without words
- produced when the mind, self possessed, is at rest
- supposed to lead to mystical insight
* is the foundation for all forms of interior prayer
- natural complement of both celebration and action
- primary essential whereby one is able to cut off the delusions
- second stage of repentance and change
- simplest expression of the mystery of prayer
- stage in which people intend to change within the next six months
- thirst caused by the seeming absence or the satiety of mutual presence
- vision
* mental process, meditation spiritual process.
* seeks an intuition of being beyond the dualities of life
- to sharpen the mind's reasoning ability
Corroboration
* is an important test of truth
- confirmation
- evidence which confirms the accuracy of other evidence in a material particular
- important when children's illnesses are diagnosed
- the tendency of our perceptions to reflect and confirm our preconceptions
* method reporters employ to access credibility.
Correctness
* function of the biological ground truth.
* is precision
- propriety
- quality
* is the death of style and variation in speech and writing
- lifeline of information
* measure of how well the program meets the assignment specifications.
* refers to the straightness of the horses legs.<|endoftext|>Comic_strip
* Comics are a collectible medium
- form of communication, after all
- living, breathing medium
- medium and superheroes are a subgenre, the main genre being fantasy
- two-dimensional medium for communicating stories graphically
* Comics are a visual medium, and many stylistic aspects are dictated by the size of the page
- storytelling medium
- essentially only a medium, much like painting, film or prose is
- like any other art form
- can be tools of good or of evil
- has a rich history of self-loathing
- mailing list dedicated to European comics
- world of line art, where cross-hatching is used to represent different levels of gray
* Some comics sing, dance and play an instrument.<|endoftext|>Cerebral edema
* can lead to coma, neurological damage, and death.
* complication that affects primarily children.
* is an uncommon but devastating complication of diabetic ketoacidosis in children
- correlated with the administration of bicarbonate
- diseases
* is the complication that every doctor looking after children with diabetes fears
- increase in brain tissue water causing swelling
* produces headaches, nausea, and sometimes seizures and coma.
* refers to brain swelling due to an accumulation of water.
* serious complication in many patients with brain tumors.
Cardiovascular training
* is important for good health, for fat burning, and for muscle-building.
* vital part of maintaining good health.
Clinical hypnosis
* can help people quit smoking.
* is conceptualized and approached as a system of skilled communication. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Confocal microscopy
* allows the dentist to see the diseased tissue fluorescing in green.
* has a number of benefits when compared to standard light microscopy.
* is used to follow the spatial and temporal changes in actin morphology
- localize the channel proteins in cells and tissues
* reveals the distinct cortical profile of yeast mitochondria.
Communicate
* are motivated by the goal of answers
- information
- interaction
* end with speaks.
* start with speaks.
Christian vocation
* entails the practice of stewardship.
* is for the sake of the neighbor in the world.
Cultural assimilation
* can happen either spontaneously or forcibly.
* involves accepting the symbols through which group identity is expressed.
Cheesecake
* Some cheesecakes leak during baking.
* are also very old, with evidence of honey-sweetened cakes dating back to ancient Greece.
* dessert that can be dressed up or down in a multitude of ways.
* disgusting food, generally, even if it is dessert.
* is baked from scratch using only fresh ingredients
- custards
* is done when knife inserted in center shows consistency of very stiff yogurt
- the center barely moves when the pan is touched
- pictures
* often crack.<|endoftext|>Christian baptism
* can only occur after salvation.
* command to be obeyed.
* depends upon faith.
* includes the potential of the call to the sacramental priesthood.
* is administered in three modes
- considered a symbol and a sacrament
- for the remission of past sins
- hope in action
- identification with the Christian message and the Christian group
- the foundation for our life together
* means a complete purification
- of sharing the fire which transforms human lives
* sign and a seal.
* takes place through water and the Holy Spirit.<|endoftext|>Cardiology
* contains information directly pertinent to the specialty of cardiology.
* is always a major contributor to an inpatient census
- classified as an internal medicine subspecialty
- considered a subspecialty of internal medicine
- one of the fastest moving fields in medicine
* is the branch of medicine dealing with disorders of the heart and blood vessels
- field of study that examines diseases of the heart and blood vessels
- study of the heart
- treatment of diseases of the heart and blood vessels
- traditionally a male-dominated field
* relates to diseases of the heart such as angina or heart failure.<|endoftext|>Competitiveness
* More competitiveness also means more production, which in turn means more employment.
* also means education, research and innovation including in the area of environment
- having funds on hand to do cost-sharing on federal grants
* entails that efficient education systems produce high-quality results.
* generates the illusion of value.
* goes beyond productivity because of issues beyond economics.
* is aggressiveness
- based upon the ability of businesses to continually innovate and upgrade
- compatible with raising living standards
- extremely important in business, and collaboration aids in competitiveness
- fostered by strong vertical hierarchies
- presented here as the ability for firms to enter international markets
* is the ability of a country's environment to sustain value added creation
- best response to consumer demand
- sine qua non of success anywhere
- strategic element that attracts investment
- way of sport
* major consideration in questions posed by globalization.
* meaningless concept when applied to countries.
* mediates the link between personality and group performance.
* part of human nature.
* result of efficiency, work ethics and an easy administrative system.
* team aspect.
* term that, for many, captures the challenges facing the U.S. economy.
Concupiscence
* disorder of the emotions and comes from original sin and leads to personal sin.
* is desire | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Compartmentalization
* design concept that relies on closely-spaced, padded seating.
* is dissociation
- most effective for wounds located adjacent to a vigorous, healthy branch
* separate process that takes place in wood present at the time of wounding.
Contempt
* is as ordinary as making fun of the way another person looks
- disapproval
- dislike
- disobedience
- disrespect
- murder committed by the intellect, as hatred is murder committed by the heart
* is present in the agony people feel about money and jobs
- wherever some people know other people who are different from themselves<|endoftext|>Covetousness
* affects every level of human life.
* can bring a person to the condition called apostasy
- about one's destruction
- pop up in any area of life
* creates needs and wants that seek to fill the vacuum within the soul.
* drives people to sacrifice the lives of others, even to kill, for their own ends.
* gives rise to that unbridled lust which plunges individuals into adultery.
* great danger in time of persecution.
* is an occupational hazard to be guarded against
- driven by greed
- envy
- found in the heart
- idolatry
- more than desire
- normal desire gone wrong
- one result of the fall of man
* is the basic reason for gambling
- desire for material wealth or gain, ignoring the realm of the spiritual
- exact opposite of contentment
- father of unsatisfied desires
- immoral desire for wealth by unlawful means
- last enemy of both the sinner and the saint
- most unfortunate evil of the human heart
- source of oppression
* makes people gamble.
* means 'the wish to have more'.
* mirage that produces wretchedness.
* sin that reaches out for men of every age.
* wicked disposition of heart, a root of lawlessness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Christian
* Many christians describe the end of the world as the rapture, where people are taken up.
* account for seven per cent of the population and are found in centres all over Indonesia.
* also believe in hell
- go through a metamorphosis, a transformation
* also have a distinctive view of death and dying
- duty to love others, and look to the heart of their fellow human beings
- the Bible for explicit guidelines for living a godly life
* always seem to want to predict exactly when the end of the world is near
- speak about saying their experience with others in order to preach their faith
* are a community
- kind of first fruits
- minority even in Southern Sudan
* are a minority in mainly Muslim Indonesia and churches are often attacked during unrest
- the predominantly Muslim countries of Central Asia
* are a people of decency and order
- hope who never despair, even in the darkest hours
- the book, that is, the Bible
- who seek reconciliation with one another
- praying people
- remembering people
- small minority of the population in the Middle East
* are a tiny minority in Bangladesh, east of India
- Iraq
- aliens in the world
- all members of the same spiritual army
* are also a people of dynamic memory
- good at rationalizing their sins
- over-represented in the professions and government
- susceptible to attacks by Muslim extremists
- arrogant religious zealots who have the audacity to say their beliefs alone are true
- atheists to the Roman gods
- barely able to live while their enemies live in luxury
- both the spiritual temple and the priests of the temple
- brothers and sisters to each other
- by no means the only people who deeply cherish the world and life within it
* are capable of rebels
- certain there is life after death
- citizens and taxpayers like everyone else
- concerned with conservation
- cross-bearers
- even guilty of avoiding closeness with others
- famous for believing in pie in the sky as their hope for a just reward
- godly, honorable people
- good people who exist as a blessing in society
- good, kind, loving people
- habitual learners
- hero worshipers like everyone else
- humans
- hypocrites
- in the majority in two-thirds of the world's countries
- interested in discovering the truth, as are scientists
- less than one per cent of the population of Japan
* are located in cathedrals
- churchs
- meanies, like the other big religions of the world
- monotheistic
- morning showerers
- most numerous in the capital, in lower Guinea, and in the forest region
- mostly in the lower economic bracket and quite poor
- nonentities in the eyes of men and women
- notorious for sticking their heads in the sand
- now servants in a pagan aristocracy
- one in the faith
- opposed to Sharia, arguing that it violates the country's secular constitution
* are part of a body
- family that cares deeply for one another
* are people of commitment
- conviction
- great joy
* are people who are called to obey authority
- looking in three directions
- forgive
- have new hearts
- put their faith in Jesus Christ, pure and simple
- with a mission
- religionists
- resident aliens
- said to be persecuted by the authorities
- saints
- scarce in parts of the west
- sinners like all people
- still sinners
- strangers and aliens within all cultures
- subject to common calamities
* are the largest minority group in Pakistan
- monotheist group
- majority in the total Christian community of Bangladesh
- most persecuted group in the world
- salt of the earth
- seasoning and preservative of society
* are to be the moral conscience of society
- bear good fruit and are known by their fruit
- care deeply for others
- flavor the life-styles of communities in which they live
- have a family relationship with one another
* are to live as children of the light and of the day, holy in their behavior or conduct
- pilgrims and strangers in society
- love one another and serve one another
- model selflessness before the world
* are to pray for and give honor to the kings and rulers
- the salvation of all in authority
* are to shine as light in the world
- lights
- show their religion by their lives
- treat all people with respect and honor
* are unique in living in the last days
- partakers of the divine nature
- uniquely inheritors
- usually well-dressed even if they are poor
* are, by far, the most populous religious body in the United States
- in point of fact, the richest people in the world
* assume the leading position in politics, and in the economy.
* bear responsibility for service to others.
* believe in a heaven for the saints and eternal suffering in hell for the sinners
- both Old Testament and New Testament
- equality of all men
- eternal life because of what occurred the first Easter
- grace
- magic
- one god in three persons
- moneys sent to foreign lands are used for soup kitchens and winning converts
* believe that Bible is the Holy Book
- death is real, and that it's hell to have to go through it even once
- from the sacraments flow grace
- in Jesus they have salvation or eternal life
* believe that it is appointed for human beings to die once and after that face judgment
- the holiest day in the year
- prayer can help in the healing of the sick
- salvation only comes through faith in the death and resurrection of Jesus
- some actions and beliefs are wrong according to absolute standards
* believe that the Bible is free from error
- Law of Moses has been abolished in favor of a better, higher religion
- only way to change human behavior is to change the human heart
- war is the result of sin
- there are no throwaways in life
* believe they are saved by grace through no effort of their own
- can be delivered from sin through their belief in Jesus
* belong to the age to come.
* bury their dead.
* call it heaven where the righteous abide for eternity.
* can also be cruel to each other
- say that other religions teach similar moral principles
* can be addicted to substances
- in modeling, just like they can be in other professions
- optimistic about a human future and the possibilities of culture
- divorce or remarry provided the spouse committed adultery
- get depressed
- have only one wife
- live in light of the future
* can only have one wife
- practice their faith secretly
- progress rapidly out of sinful living patterns as a result
- react in only one way
- work to heal broken families
- worship in their churches, but public preaching is forbidden in the Muslim nation
* carry their share of the blame for prejudice and inhumanity toward humans.
* celebrate All Souls' Day.
* claim that the Bible is divinely revealed and that the Bible is evidence for their god.
* come from every nation and tribe.
* commonly feel guilty about the way they look at themselves
- participate in the same things as the Holy Spirit
* consider freedom the ability to reject sin.
* constitute a spiritual aristocracy, and that is also due to blood.
* continue to be persecuted in many countries around the world.
* create, sustain, and nurture relationships.
* detest mortal existence.
* die daily
- just like other people
* differ from each other in terms of maturity and spiritual development.
* disagree about the age of the earth, solar system, and universe.
* do occasionally sin, and they do so without losing their salvation
- pray for peace on earth
- struggle with life's pain
* eat pigs.
* engage in public prayer for government.
* even have trouble controlling their sexuality and give in to temptation.
* expect atheists to consider their opinion, but refuse to reciprocate.
* firmly believe in forgiveness and reconciliation.
* generally accept the spirit of man as eternal
- recognize the necessity for the believer to live a holy, or sanctified, life
* grieve over the sins they commit unwillingly.
* grow as they minister to people who are vulnerable and dependent.
* have a responsibility to expose darkness, the occult
- robust view of the body, both in life and in death
- tendency to separate life into sacred and secular
- cocks, too
* have different callings, some to wealth, some to poverty
- levels of maturity and spiritual understanding
- practices of administering baptism
- extramarital affairs at an alarming rate
- many conflicting beliefs about the Bible
- only one spouse
- sex relations with animals
* have the Bible as a basis for answers, as other religions seek information else where
- responsibility to discern between true apostles and false ones
- their hearts circumcised
* identify themselves visually.
* interpret all of life in terms of their own covenant-keeping presuppositions.
* know that faith is founded on fact
- the value of unselfish love, which means caring for and serving others
- there continual struggle dealing with sin and self
- why people suffer
* like to name their children after characters in the Bible.
* live in community
- relationship to the central truths of their faith
* live in the diaspora
- longer
- now and in the future with faith, hope, and love
* mainly suffer from hunger and the extremely high inflation rate.
* make the distinction between people and their sin
- up just over two percent of India's population
* make up only a small minority of the population
- between fifteen and twenty per cent of the Israeli Arab population
- the largest non-Muslim religious group, and belong to a number of sects
* object to gay sex and marriages
- humanists because of their beliefs
* observe a new day in remembrance of their new creation and new redemption.
* often confuse organizational unity with spiritual unity
- perceive tithing as the ceiling for giving, but that is untrue
- resemble root bound plants
* often say that art is the sign of spiritual humanity
- suffering is caused by people doing evil
- view sharing their faith as the dissemination of textbooks of information
* oppose slavery, abortion, sexual immorality, cheating, theft, and greed.
* ought to be known as a people who pay their debts.
* practice witchcraft, agnostics and atheists as well.
* profess baptismal faith as they engage in discipleship in the world.
* provide various kinds of practical assistance to women faced with unexpected pregnancies.
* realize that there moral standard that is superior to personal and community ethics.
* recognize that no amount of good works is good enough to earn salvation
- they are stewards of resources and lives
* reject the very existence of the idea of luck.
* remain a small minority of the total population
- sinners and daily acknowledge their sin
* represent more than one-third of the world s population.
* respond differently to crises, to daily routines, and to responsibilities.
* see human nature as fixed and unchanging
- resurrection as a fact
- the future as unlimited
* seek the welfare of others, regardless of their religion.
* sometimes suffer from a reluctance to get involved in personal evangelism.
* still die, sometimes in horrible ways
- sin after their conversion
* strive to live open moral lives, and are accused of secret vice.
* struggle with the doctrine of hell also.
* stunt their growth due to lack of subsistence.
* support either school prayer or secularism.
* teach and practice moral purity
- creation as a fact because the Bible teaches it
* tend to exhibit a lower birthrate than the Palestinian population at large.
* think more in terms of holy communion
- of themselves as the good guys, standing up for what is right
* thrive in many denominations.
* traditionally believe that no human is without sin.
* travel in secret at night to avoid police when delivering Bibles.
* understand the importance of freedom
- shell to symbolize baptism
* use biblical arguments both to support and criticize charismatic worship
- one of two calendars
- the medieval prayer house as a sanctuary for silent prayer and reflection
* usually call their religious buildings churches.
* vary widely in worship.
* veer homosexuality as un-natural.
* walk by faith.
* worldwide resist religious persecution.
* worth their salt make others thirsty for the water of life.
+ Counting the cost, What it means: Parables of Jesus
* The disciples of Jesus gave up everything they had for the kingdom of God, even their lives. Christians believe the cost of being a disciple is worth the promised rewards.
+ Hyderabad, India, Geography, Population: Former good articles
* The city has a population of over four million. The Muslim community of Hyderabad is largest in Andhra Pradesh. Muslims are mainly located in and around the old city. Christians are small in number in the city. Famous Churches include those around Abids and Secunderabad like St. Josephs Cathedral.
+ Idol
* Christians disagree about what idolatry is. Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy see Christian art and icons as good, because they see Christ's Incarnation as having made images of God lawful. However many Protestants regard much Catholic art as idolatry.
+ North Korea, Culture and Religion: Divided regions
* It seems that Buddhists are accepted more than other religious groups. Christians are said to be persecuted by the authorities. Buddhists are given limited funding by the government to promote the religion, because Buddhism played an integral role in traditional Korean culture.
+ Original sin: Christian theology
* Then Genesis tells the story of how their oldest son Cain killed his brother Abel. And death came because of sin. Christians traditionally believe that no human is without sin.
+ Religions of Pakistan
* Christians are the largest minority group in Pakistan. They live all over the country. Many ethnic groups and many language groups have people who are Christians. There are many different churches, and many different types of churches, in most cities in Pakistan.
* Among Christians, it is a celebration of Jesus Christ returning from the dead. Christians believe that it is the holiest day in the year. Some people who are not Christians celebrate it as the beginning of Spring.
+ Temple: Religious buildings
* A 'temple' is a building where people go to practice their religion. In a temple people may perform religious rituals, ceremonies, and pray. Thus, a temple is a general term for a house of worship. Christians usually call their religious buildings churches. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Coastal zone
* are ecologically and economically important
- home to the oceans' bounty
- one type of ecosystem where biodiversity loss is of great concern in Japan
- the most nutrient-rich life zones of the oceans
* face flooding, as warmer oceans expand and rise.
* play a significant role in the economic development of many developing countries.
* provide nitrogen from runoff and upwelling occurs readily along the coast.<|endoftext|>Clone
* All clones are asexually reproduced beings
- offspring
* Some clones have flowers double-sized from average plants
- maintain a particular phase of the plants life cycle
* also face considerable health risks, with most animal clones dying even before they are born.
* are a group of genetically identical individual organisms produced asexually
- result of the union of a donor cell, a recipient cell and a surrogate mother
- also highly useful in biological research because of their genetic uniformity
- created by labs
- cuttings that can be grown to produce genetically identical plants
- genetically identical copies of a cell line
- immortal and produce monoclonal antibody
- people made in an unusual manner
* can develop from portions of stems, leaves or roots.
* refer to plants, animals or bacteria that are essentially copies of one another.
* vary greatly in resistance to disease attack and damage.<|endoftext|>Chapel
* are located in churchs
- priests
- prisons
- towns
- university campuses
- places of worship
- small churchs
- temples
* are used for christians
- meditation
- prayer
- religious services
- sanctuaries
- weddings
- worshippings
* is house of worship
+ Chapel, Chapels at churches, Special chapels
* Many chapels have a special purpose in the church. One of the most important uses for a small chapel within a church is to store the Sacrament, the wine and bread or wafer which is used for Holy Communion. Some chapels are designed to remind worshippers of a particular part of the 'Life of Christ', particularly the Crucifixion or Resurrection, or celebrate a certain Feast Day in the Church Year, such as the 'Assumption of the Virgin'.
Chronic laryngitis
* can have a number of causes.
* is treated differently, depending on the cause.
Christian life
* begins with a spiritual rebirth, a regeneration.
* is an expression of mutuality, reciprocity and equality
- formed by distinctive beliefs, practices, attitudes and virtues
- one of sowing and reaping
* life of Christian witness in word and deed.<|endoftext|>Coordination
* deteriorates in competition as a consequence of fatigue.
* function of management.
* is brought about by chemical agents and in animals by a nervous system
- classifications
- crucial among externally fertilizing species living in vast ocean environments
- defined by the polyhedron of anions that form about a cation
- one of the main goals in physical education
- the first physical ability to be impaired by alcohol
- timing
* noncooperative rational expectations equilibrium among electors.
* principle that enables the writer to maintain a coherent and consistent document.
* way of adding sentences together. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Credibility
* breeds trust and people buy from businesses they trust.
* characteristic that has to be inferred by the recipient of the message.
* equates to knowledge, trust and questions answered in plain language.
* includes perceptions of integrity, knowledge, charisma, competence, and experience.
* involves trustworthiness, believability, honesty.
* is also related to keeping our word
- an asset that pays high dividends
* is an important factor in selling a business
- tool in the fight against drug abuse
- driven by how people view what journalists do over time
- earned by treating people with dignity and respect
- important on the Web where users connect to unknown servers at remote locations
- power plus competence, the known ability to get results
- shaped by specific behaviors rather than a set of personality traits
- something that is earned
* is the coin in which great powers conduct their affairs
- name of the game in reaching farmers
* means honesty, trustworthiness, believability or integrity.
* refers more to the origins of the information
- to establishing the truth value or accuracy of the research findings<|endoftext|>Cruelty
* can include acts of physical violence and causing severe mental anguish.
* causes cruelty.
* includes both physical or mental cruelty.
* is abuse
- at the extreme end of unacceptable animal treatment
- condemned by all great men
- contagious in uncivilized communities
* is in evidence in professional sports as well
- the heritage of the caste-elite in the country
- located in war
- one of the infinite facets of the sea
- the antithesis of hunting
* occurs when people lose touch with the real world.
* often goes with war
- response to greater brutality
* part of life.
* persists in all markets.
* reigns among apes and monkeys as well.
* way people have of feeling strong.
Confirmation
* is another ordinance practiced by the biblical church and now is practiced by few
- information
- proof
- religious ceremony
- sacrament
* is the internal process of verification that uses the eye of reason
- means by which a person becomes a full member of the church
- sacrament which marks a mature affirmation of faith
* rite of passage, marking the entry into spiritual adulthood.
* sacrament which marks adult ownership and responsibility in the faith community. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Concept
* Some concepts make senses
- relate to physiology
* apply to humans
- students
* are a different order of reality from the physical world of rocks and people kicking rocks
- abstract elements representing classes of phenomena within the field of study
- abstraction
- clusters of semantic features
* are ideas or thoughts, especially a generalized idea of a thing or a class of things
- mental images
- nouns which usually take the singular
- symbolic generalizations of experience
- the 'genes' of ideas
- tools of reasoning
* can represent objects, activities, or living things.
* challenge imagination.
* come from observations
- sources
* connected to moral development include values, ethics, and morality.
* describe evolution.
* differ in infants, animals, and adults.
* emphasize beliefs.
* explain variation.
* have benefits
- descriptions
- economic potential
- existence only in the mind
- fundamental problems
- immense benefits
- important limitations
- possibility
* illustrate productivity.
* impact everyday life
* involve theories.
* is an idea
* pervade every aspect of cognition from reasoning to memory.
* play a key role in our understanding of the universe.
* provide advancement
- frameworks
- insight
- more information
- useful frameworks
* refer to the basic mathematical knowledge needed for solving mathematical problems.
* relate to activities.
* rely on beliefs.
* require characteristics
- interpretations
* support operations.
+ Singular: Grammar
* Concepts are nouns which usually take the singular. But when we talk of different types of rhythm, those are particular rhythms.
Cardiac transplantation
* is an accepted form of therapy for end staged cardiac failure
- recognized as a proven procedure in appropriately selected patients
* proven method for patients with end-stage failing hearts.
Candlepower
* is intensity
- often to measure the intensity of lamps that project light
* measurement of light intensity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Contrast
* Refers to how far the whitest white can be from the blackest black.
* Related to proximity is the idea of contrast.
* adjusts the level of video contrast for video playback.
* affects flicker and speed perception differently.
* applies to size, color, positioning, and typography.
* are a fundamental aspect of our ability to perceive and make sense of things
- an important element of life
* can apply to the size of type or graphics, or the use of color
- be a major problem when photographing people or animals in snow scenes
- include the difference between light and dark areas, or a marked difference in colours
* function of the angle at which the light strikes a photographic subject.
* helps define the depth of an image, and is important when projecting video images.
* is also very important for individuals who can see but have reduced vision
- an especially important principle in graphic design, it is crucial to communication
- comparison
- controlled by development and the contrast grade of the paper used for printing
- effected by how long film is developed or by agitation of the film
* is important in assessing neck disease
- to the visually impaired
- injected directly into the coronary arteries
- measured by dividing the lowest light level in a space by the highest level
- opposition
- scope
* is the balance of the space given to graphics, text and white space
- degree of separation between values
* is the difference between the projected white and black images
- in the light to dark areas of a photo
- juxtaposition of dissimilar entities or objects
- opposite of harmony
- positioning of dissimilar visual elements on a page
* is the ratio between black level and maximum white level
- of density to the logarithmic value of exposure
- tonal gradation between highlights, middle tones, and shadows
- visible difference in brightness from the darkest color to the lightest
- visual perceptions
* liquid that improves the visibility of structures within the body.
* measure of the rate of change of brightness in an image.
* measures the difference in light intensity between the dark and light areas of the screen.
* protostomates and deuterostomates.
* refers to the paper's difference between pure black and pure white on the exposed paper
- range of difference between elements
* travels through the intestines without reflux or obstruction and at a normal rate. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Carbonation
* also can upset the digestive tract as well as deplete calcium from the bones
- describes the incorporation of carbon dioxide into chemical compounds
* can be natural or from the addition of carbon dioxide
- cause a feeling of fullness and stomach upset in some athletes
- irritate soreness
* causes stomach bloating.
* contains bubbles that can interfere with the image.
* greatly reduces the strength and hardness of the affected concrete surface.
* increases the rate of absorption of alcohol into the bloodstream.
* inhibits drinking and can cause throat burn and stomach bloating.
* is diffusion
- especially active when the reaction environment is abundant with carbon dioxide
- kept in soda by pressurizing the container
- permeation
- the reaction of carbonate and bicarbonate ions with minerals
- therefore a large feature of glacial weathering
- what makes soda so delicious
* kills infection-causing microbes.
* occurs on rocks which contain calcium carbonate , such as limestone and chalk.
* quickens the effect of alcohol.
* reaction between carbonic acid and the minerals making up rocks.
* speeds alcohol absorption
- processing
- the absorption of alcohol into the blood stream
* tends to increase the absorption rate of alcohol.
* waste product.
+ Carbonation, Biochemistry: Chemistry :: Geology
* Carbonation also describes the incorporation of carbon dioxide into chemical compounds. This carbonation process is so important that a significant fraction of leaf mass consists of this carbonating enzyme. W.H. Freeman, San Francisco, 2002.
Collimation
* is adjustment.
* is the alignment of the images from the two objective lenses
- precise alignment of all optical components in a telescope
* lesson in humility.
* often drastic way of improving performance of a telescope.
* simply means that the light rays exit the instrument parallel to one another.<|endoftext|>Cannibalism
* Most cannibalism occurs during father growth in young fowl
- feather growth in young fowl
* can also result from overcrowded conditions
- be a simple or a very complex problem
- happen at any time, but it is less likely if the spiders have been fed recently
- occur if the female is stressed or disturbed
- therefore be a destabilizing force in a predator-prey system
* examines cannibalism in different societies and historic settings.
* is believed to be an important factor in limiting white-spotted sawyer populations.
* is common among cuttle fish especially around mating season
- with both predators
- common, but squids also feed on small free-swimming crustaceans and fishes
- easier to prevent than to treat
- fairly common among cephalopods
- frowned on in most human societies
- moral in a cannibal country
- one of the great taboos in most cultures and societies
- practice
- presumed to be the mechanism underlying density dependence
- rampant
- rare among woodlice, but it can happen
- restricted to warrior tribes who eat the flesh of enemies to gain their strength
- supposed to no longer exist and human sacrifice is supposed to be extinct
- wrongs
* is, therefore, an important cause of mortality for tuna larvae.
* occurs as a part of the foraging process
- frequently among all coccinellids
- in both dogs and cats but is infrequent
* prevalent problem in chicken and game bird flocks.
* results in longer copulation duration.
* seems to have been prevalent in the earliest times.
* sometimes happens when the animal is coming out of hibernation.
* varies in intensity from one species to the next.
* vice developed in confinement.
+ Garden dormouse, How the dormice live: Dormice :: Mammals of Europe
* Male Garden dormice may eat a rival dormouse during the mating season. Cannibalism sometimes happens when the animal is coming out of hibernation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Ceruman
* Cerumen also contains lysozyme, an antibacterial enzyme capable of destroying bacterial cell walls
- can build up in the ear for a number of reasons
- impaction in the elderly
* Cerumen is also slightly acidic, which helps further discourage bacterial growth
- an insect repellant and a waterproofing agent
- nature's way of keeping the ear canals clean
- produced by eccrine glands in the lateral portion of the external auditory canal
* Cerumen is produced in the outer third of the cartilaginous portion of the ear canal
- third of the cartilaginous portion of the human ear canal
Corporate sponsorship
* exists in almost every facet of our lives.
* is an area where marketing and development overlap
- the wind in the sails of the modern America's Cup
* necessity for any race to draw significant numbers.
* proven and effective means of providing schools with resources.
Chivalry
* Chivalries are courtesy
- principles
* belongs to societies distant from modernity either in terms of time or place.
* comes from chevalier, a knight, a man who followed prescribed rules of behavior.
* good manners
* is male chauvinism to radical feminists.
* provides many benefits women are reluctant to give up.<|endoftext|>Communism
* aims for equality, but it is on the basis of the same amount for everyone.
* considers morality to be relative.
* describes how to get along with one another and it is no secret as to how it was twisted.
* discourages extra labor and frugality.
* form of wordism.
* impugns the individual, religion and private firearms ownership.
* is about removing choice from the individual and giving it to the state
- abstract concepts
- all about the eradication of memory
- as corrupt, with black markets, as capitalism
- charity at the point of a gun
- dictatorial and repressive
- economy
- government
- humanism
- in essence a political system, and rejects a spiritual basis for life
- judeo- christianity without the afterlife
- located in chinas
- materialism and atheism
- neither the rule of a minority, nor of a majority
- now dead but poverty and wealth still exist on an international level
- only one front the world is fighting to prevent a world dictatorship
- political ideology
- simply the movement to overthrow the conditions of life imposed by the rule of capital
- socialism
* is the destiny of mankind
- doctrine of the conditions of the liberation of the proletariat
- embodiment of absolute materialism
- equal distribution of poverty
- masses serving for the common good
- scourge of mankind, the enslavement of a nation
- state ideology
- term used to describe any theory that advocates the abolition of private property
- unapologetically atheist in worldview
- where the government own and run most of the businesses and farms
* limits farmers from competing with their neighbors and working harder to get ahead.
* mean the Stalinist regime which ruled over Hungary.
* means abolishing nation states, which are an expression of capitalism
- racism by building multi-racial unity and internationalism
- sexism
- violent repression
* restrictive form of government, allowing little freedom of dissent.
* rules half the world today.
* sees competition as the root of all evils.
* system that has poisoned every society where it has ever been tried.
* takes the final step towards oppression of the intelligent and productive.
* theory or system based on the holding of all property in common.
* truthful, honest government, in which the people rule completely.
* uses force to separate itself from capitalism.
* word almost eliminated from conversations.
* world political party. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Corruption
* affects poor people much more than rich people
- the number of firms in a free entry equilibrium
* also contributes to the fragility of the Indonesian economy
- discourages investment
- hinders political and economic transparency, necessary in a democracy
* barrier to good government.
* becomes a way of life, institutionalized in the government.
* bedevils police forces, court systems, the customs service, and even the military.
* blocks social and economic progress and undermines faith in government.
* can also play a positive social role because it way of re-distributing wealth
- be graft or abuse of power and other unlawful things
- cast apocalyptic spells of death and destruction
- defeat any effort to use public power for a public purpose
- have a direct influence on business success
- occur at all levels in society and in all countries
- undermine local government credibility and can deepen urban poverty
* cancer that destroys our world from within.
* cause of some non-payment.
* causes inefficiency and unfairness
- people to lose faith
- vast sums of money to be mis-allocated by public officials
* challenges the popular legitimacy of democratic institutions.
* complex social, political and economic phenomenon.
* constant in human history.
* continues to divert public funds into the pockets of corrupt officials.
* creates political instability and conflict.
* crime against humanity.
* curse and an attack on the functions of any civilised society.
* debilitates and destabilizes government institutions.
* deep-rooted disease in India.
* difficult problem to speak of or solve.
* dilutes the influence of an individual voter.
* direct attack on the institution of democratic government.
* discourages foreign investment and disrupts normal business practices.
* distorts the decision making of both the public and the private sectors
- market's allocative mechanisms and powers
* drains countries of their vitality and erodes democracy.
* drives up costs and causes economic distortions.
* emerges as a core poverty issue
- key poverty issue
* exists everywhere.
* exists in both government and business
- every society, but in many developing countries, it's pervasive
* feeds and grows on government regulations and control.
* hampers economic growth, discourages public and private investment and worsens poverty.
* has a devastating economic and social impact
- long heritage in the archipelago
- subliminal effect on young people
- deep historical roots in Brazil and other developing countries
- harmful effects on society
- many victims, especially when it involves courts and law enforcement agencies
- social, political and economic dimension redtapism is the father of corruption
* hinders growth of domestic business just as much as acquiring foreign direct investment.
* impacts severely on law enforcement.
* impedes economic efficiency
- growth and investment and penalizes the poor
* implies acquiring wealth or other benefits through illegal means.
* increases because the government is giving away money.
* indeed has a long history in India.
* inevitably leads to political decline.
* infects both rich and poor nations.
* involves the abuse of public office for private gain.
* irrefutably exists at the highest levels of the Colombian government.
* is also prevalent within other departments belonging to the criminal justice system
- an ever-present influence throughout the political hierarchy
* is another force of environmental destruction
- major contributor to forest destruction
- problem in transitioning economies
- anything that diminishes the good
- as old as man, according to some people
- believed to be widespread at all levels
* is both a governance and a developmental issue
- personal and systemic
- common within Lebanese law enforcement agencies
- criminalized in many countries
- decay
- deeply rooted in our totalitarian past
- degradations
- dishonesty
* is endemic and reaches all levels of government
- at every level of the Liberian government
* is endemic in Guatemala and permeates all levels of government
- Russian society
- many Asian countries, including China
* is endemic in the government bureaucracy, civil service, and business
- land of the unfree
- within the political and military establishments
* is everywhere and the poorest people of the world suffer the most
- widely accepted as a fact of life
- evident at every level of the judicial system
- global in nature
- hard to control as there is no strong national government
- human activities
- immorality
- incipient in all human societies and in most activities
- inducements
- inherent in every political System
- inseparable from capitalism
- institutionalized throughout the entire forest industry
- integral to the organization of crime
- lewdness and idol worship
- motivated by personal gain and self-interest
- multifaceted and takes on different forms
- negligible in only two countries - Tunisia and Botswana
- now at the top of the public agenda in most Asian countries
* is often an expression of selfish indifference for authorities and their power systems
- at the root of environmental problems
- the price the church pays when it enjoys the favor of government
- one face of injustice
* is one of the most serious problems facing the world today
- security risks
- world's oldest and best established vices
- species of system breakdown
* is part and parcel of the U.S. electoral system
- of how government is run in the Philippines
- perceived as a social evil
- pervasive among customs, immigration and police personnel
* is pervasive at all levels of government
- officialdom
- in government and business
- present at many levels
* is prevalent and much crime is tied to commercial activity
- in Egypt
- rampant among government officials
- related to many local and global issues
- reportedly pervasive throughout the government, civil service, and business sectors
- rife and reaches into every aspect of life
* is rife in Ukraine at all levels of the bureaucracy
- the police force and civil service
- still widespread in many government departments
* is the abuse of offices of trust for private gain
- act of taking the loot and looking the other way
- dirty laundry of any agency, organization, or country
- foundation on which public management and economic relations are built
- greatest eroding factor in a society
- largest impediment to investment
- market for official discretion
- number one enemy of respect for law, strict enforcement of law and justice
- unwritten official court policy
- use of public resources for private ends
- worst form of disrespect
- their way of life
- universal and contagious
- very harmful for a society and country
- well entrenched in many countries in which Australian companies do business
* is widespread in Bulgaria, including among police and customs officials
- Nigerian government and society
- all branches of government
- yet another legacy of the colonial and apartheid eras
* is, of course, present in developed countries.
* main factor in the collapse of the Indonesian economy.
* major obstacle to economic development
- part of science, when it can take over physics in such an unlimited way
* major problem in Guatemalan society
* manifests itself as extortion.
* misallocation of capital, where resources are directed for noneconomic purposes.
* natural consequence of personal politics.
* normal political practice in many countries.
* pernicious and pervasive social evil.
* pervades daily life even in the prim and often hectoring countries of the West
- nearly every aspect of Indian life
* pervasive way of life in our society, and it is worse in many other countries.
* plays a major role in deforestation.
* poses a heavy burden disproportionately on the poor.
* pre-requisite to success in Capitalism.
* remains a major barrier to private and public transactions
- challenge to building democratic institutions of government
- obstacle in poorer countries
- problem with certain government officials
- serious problem in all nations, affecting all parts of society
* respects no borders, knows no economic distinctions, and infects all forms of government.
* rot that chokes off economies and undermines political legitimacy.
* serious economic problem.
* societal problem that manifests at domestic and international levels.
* spans a whole spectrum of unethical, immoral, illegitimate and illegal human activities.
* still exists in government offices
- plays a major role in the university admission process
- thrives, along with the black market
* subtle concept that can only be measured relative to a user's intent.
* subverts democratic institutions and destroys the free market system.
* takes many forms.
* threatens to undermine the legitimacy of governments.
* thus deters international trade and, consequently, hinders economic growth.
* transnational crime that calls for concerned international action
* typically occurs when users reboot workstations, power goes out, disk drives go bad.
* undermines good governance and the effective use of scarce aid resources
- the foundations of sustainable development in all developing countries
* universal phenomena and cuts across both developed and developing companies.
* weakens financial systems and the rule of law on which economic growth depends.
+ Crime in India, Corruption and police misconduct
* Corruption is widespread in India. In India, corruption takes the form of bribes, evasion of tax and exchange controls, embezzlement, etc.
* It could be an entire government doing what they say is good, but instead oppress people, or even a computer program which either gets technical malfunctions or gets infected with a computer virus. Corruption is very harmful for a society and country
- India: Crime by country :: India
* Crime' is present in various forms in 'India'. Organized crime include drug trafficking, gunrunning, money laundering, extortion, murder for hire, fraud, human trafficking and poaching. Many criminal operations engage in black marketeering, political violence, religiously motivated violence, terrorism, and abduction. Other crimes are homicide, robbery, assault etc. Property crimes include burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft, and arson. Corruption is a significant problem | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Cardiac rehabilitation
* Cardiac Rehabilitation helps individuals in the management of heart disease.
* decreases anginal pain and improves heart failure symptoms.
* is an important part of secondary prevention
- for anyone with heart disease
- safe for patients who have been appropriately screened and evaluated
- the bridge between hospitalization and normal living
* produces physiological, metabolic, and psychological benefits.
* program for patients who have had a heart attack or stroke.
* works well for many people with coronary artery disease.
Computerization
* cornerstone of daily business.
* enables storage of large amounts of data in small spaces.
* greatly facilitates the commoditization of information.
* is automation
- having at least one stand-alone computer
* is the future of nursing facilities
- modern equivalent of Calvino's chess game
- practice of management by other means
* permits effective and highly efficient management of large amounts of information.
Consumer demand
* can drive markets.
* fuels the marketplace and contributes to the depletion of wild populations.
* key determinant of the health of the overall economy.
Camphor
* grow either in full sun or light shade, and prefer well-drained, sandy soil.
* is chemical compounds
- commonly mixed with other ingredients to aid in the relief of particular ailments
- natural resin
* major constituent of the essential oil.
* occurs in spike lavender, hyssop and coriander.
* produces nose and sinus irritation.
* treats many ailments and medical conditions.<|endoftext|>Career planning
* chance to get back on track.
* continuous process of self assessment, exploration, and decision making.
* dynamic process occurring over the lifetime of an individual.
* dynamic, developmental process occurring over the lifetime of the individual.
* helps to ensure that an employee has a future with an organzation.
* is about making informed career decisions in an ever-changing world of work
- an individual activity that occurs throughout a person's working lifetime
* is an ongoing process from youth through adulthood
- throughout life
* life-long process.
* long-term process requiring active participation.<|endoftext|>Counselling
* allows people to work through and move on from the frozen, painful, feelings.
* can help one change a negative view of one's self, of one's past and of one's future.
* complex skill which is both an art and a science.
* does promote safer sex.
* is about the understanding of people's behaviour.
* is important because it helps children mature and make sound decisions
- in a marriage for two willing participants
- similar to other caring professions
- when people come to talk through difficulties or fears with a trained counsellor
* provides a purposeful relationship in which one person helps another to help themselves.
* way of facilitating choice or change or reducing confusion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Chicory
* Chicories have a slightly bitter flavor.
* caffeine-free herb that popular coffee substitute.
* contains a natural sugar, inulin.
* fairly well-known salad plant.
* hardy vegetable that is used in three basic forms.
* has a big taproot, like a parsnip or carrot
- deep taproot
- pleasant, mild-bitter taste that has been compared to endive
- good seedling vigor and a relatively deep taproot which provides tolerance to drought
* is an excellent bitter tonic for the liver and digestive tract
- herbs
- highly digestible for ruminants and has a low fiber concentration
- one of the oldest recorded types of plants
- part of chicory
- purported to have several health benefits, including possibly aiding in digestion
- roots
- salad green
* is the root of the endive plant, which type of lettuce
* native of Europe but is common as a weed in the United States.
* perennial carrot-looking plant with a deep root structure.
* prefers a rich, moist, well-drained soil and full sun.
* provides excellent spring and summer forage for grazing animals.
* regrows rapidly after mowing and can out-grow most weeds
- outgrow most weeds
* requires a high level of fertility for maximum production.
* totally safe and natural ingredient.
Capitol punishment
* gives a nation the right to take a guilty life.
* is used for 'national' and political ends.
Chilie
* All chilies are members of the capsicum family, which includes both sweet and hot varieties.
* are mostly perennial in their native habitat of sub-tropical and tropical regions.
* can grow for years while some herbs have productive lives of only a few months.
* come in red, yellow or brown.
* contain both soluble and insoluble fiber
- capsaicin, which is the source of their hot flavor
* range in color from bright green to deep red, depending on their ripeness.
Clowning
* also makes it easier for the clowns to cope.
* is about getting an audience to suspend belief
- an art form which requires skill in many of the performing arts
- the art of letting things happen and enjoying the beauty and delight of the moment
Civic dialogue
* planned and intentional aspect of the artistic experience.
* works toward common understanding in an open-ended discussion.
Corrugation
* allow knives to be ground in conventional head.
* develop most easily on dry, dusty roads.
* form of plastic deformation typified by ripples across the pavement surface.
* involves bending flat steel into curves or waves.
Caricature
* are exaggeration in personality and physical characteristics.
* is the art of exaggeration<|endoftext|>Capitation
* asks doctors to shoulder financial risk for their patients' care.
* gives doctors a financial incentive to use cost-effective types of care.
* is basically a financing system with an ultimate goal of lowering overall costs
- clearly a system that rewards doctors for withholding care
- taxs
- the insurance company practice of paying providers a set rate per member per month
* major paradigm shift in which physicians are paid more for doing less.
* method of compensating a physician employed by HMOs.
* refers to how the doctors are paid under the plan
- the financial arrangement between the doctor and the insurance company
* rewards people for withholding care.
* set amount of money received or paid out based on a defined membership population.
Christian counseling
* form of pastoral counseling, but pastoral counseling is broader in scope.
* is an important ministry in the church and in the community
- to address the wall of resistance in love and with spiritual authority | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Dissonance
* Notes that conflict, or sound outside of a chord in which they occur.
* creates attention and interest.
* deals with the uncomfortable feelings of inconsistency.
* increases tension level in people.
* influences behavior.
* is an inability to be flexible
- used to connect consonances
* lies on the cutting edge of today's industrial music scene.
* processes as self-affirmation.
* produces tension or stress.
Direct sun
* can also kill mycelium.
* is the best for growth and flowering and also prefers soil that is kept barely moist
- worst enemy of any automobile interior or home upholstery
* rays heat south-facing branches and southwest sides of tree trunks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Dopamine
* IS the molecule of survival.
* Some dopamine is recycled, it is absorbedby the neuron and stored once again within a vesicle.
* is an important chemical found in the brain. If the brain does not make enough dopamine, it causes an illness called Parkinson's disease. This can be treated by giving the Parkinson's disease patient a drug called L-Dopa, which the body converts to dopamine.
* acts as a messenger that controls movements.
* affects dreams , motivation , and sexual gratification , too
- parvalbumin expression during cortical development in vitro
* agonists combine with dopamine receptors to mimic dopamine actions.
* alone has five known brain receptors.
* also balances the body's appetite for food
- causes growth hormone release
- mediates the reinforcing effects of virtually all drugs of abuse
- stimulates the production of oxytocin
* appears to function as an inhibitor.
* binds to receptor on post synaptic neuron to induce impulse transmission
- uptake receptors on pre synaptic neuron for uptake and reuse
* brain chemical that helps produce feelings of pleasure and satisfaction.
* brings on feelings of euphoria which helps to explain why cocaine users keep using.
* builds up in the nervous system, producing the euphoria associated with cocaine use.
* can have either an excitatory or inhibitory effect on the postsynaptic potential.
* carries messages around the brain.
* causes nausea.
* central nervous system neurotransmitter, which is involved in modulating movement.
* chemical believed to be involved in aggression and self-injury
- in the brain producing feelings of satisfaction or pleasure
* chemical in the brain that acts as a link to messages being sent to brain receptors
- as a neurotransmitter
- allows neurons to talk to each other
- helps control the body's muscle activity
- messenger responsible for transmitting signals within the brain
* chemical messenger that transmits impulses from one nerve cell to another
- signals between nerve cells
- needed by other nerve cells that control movement
- produced by the brain, which is involved in communication between nerves
* chemical produced in the brain that controls movement
- enhances pleasure
* chemical that helps the brain transmit nerve signals
- is necessary for neuromuscular function
- transmits electrical signals to and from the brain
- used to make meth
* chemical which facilitates the flow of impulses from nerve cells
- helps transmit nerve impulses
* common chemical in the brain that helps pass messages between nerve cells.
* contributes to the action selection process in at least two important ways
- feelings of bliss and regulates feeling of pain in the body
* controls our sense of accomplishment and the cycle of addiction.
* depresses glutamatergic transmission in the rat parabrachial nucleus in vitro
- synaptic inputs into the olfactory bulb
* derivative of the amino acid tyrosine.
* does have several different receptor types.
* excites striatal neurons in the direct pathway.
* exerts a strong sympathetic effect on the heart and peripheral blood vessels
- an inotropic effect on the myocardium resulting in an increased cardiac output
* goes up in the light, melatonin goes down.
* has differing activities based on doses used
- many jobs and responsibilities in the brain
* helps carry messages in the brain
- transmit signals within the brain
* hormone-like substance that facilitates critical brain functions.
* increases excitability of pyramidal neurons in primate prefrontal cortex.
* inhibits and regulates muscle control
- vasopressin-dependent camp production in the rat cortical collecting duct
- voltage-activated calcium channel currents in rat pars intermedia cells
- neurotransmitter in the brain
- inhibitory neurotransmitter involved in mood and the control of complex movements
- intermediate product in the catecholamine pathway
* is another neurotransmitter
- reward neurotransmitter
- antagonist to prolactin
* is associated with movement, thought, motivation, and pleasure
- pleasure and a sense of alertness
- catecholamines
- converted by dopamine beta hydroxylase into norepinephrine
* is essential for initiating and coordinating the libido responses
- the coordinating movement and sexual arousal
- formed from the amino acid L-dopa
* is found in neurons unevenly distributed in the brain
- the brain and plays a role in maintaining a sense of awareness and well-being
- implicated in behavioral responses to all addicting drugs
* is involved in feelings of pleasure
- locomotor function, motivation, and reward-oriented behavior
- mood, energy, sexual drive, concentration, memory and muscle movement
- producing movement
- sex drive, mood, alertness, and movement
- with our natural reward system
- largely responsible for stimulating movement and other motor behavior in the brain
- linked to many functions and emotional responses
- made from the amino acid tyrosine
- manufactured in the substantia nigra
- needed to transmit the signals that control body movements to and from the brain
- neurotransmitters
- one of several such chemical transmitters found in the brain
* is one of the chemicals that allow communication between nerves in the brain
- most important neurotransmitters involved in the human sexual response
* is produced by an amino acid called tyrosine
- elsewhere in the brain too, and plays many roles in the body
- questioned as central to addiction
* is released in excess concentrations in psychosis
- when animals eat, have sex, or learn
* is responsible for the enzymic browning of sliced banana
* is stored in special storage containers calledvesicles located within the synaptic buttons
- on synaptic vesicles
- synthesized by a two step process from the l-amino acid tyrosine
- the brain's focusing agent
* is the chemical that carries 'messages' from one nerve to the other
- cocaine and many antidepressants affect
- hormone that controls pleasure levels
- immediate precursor of epinephrine in the body
- primary brain chemical involved in generating pleasure
- signal used by the neurones in the brain area most affected by the disease
- thing that gets released a lot when using cocaine
- transmitter mediating nigrostriatal inputs
- ultimately necessary for human muscles to function normally
* is used as a neurotransmitter in dopaminergic neurons
- most multicellular animals
- by the brain to act as a messenger between cells
- in early septic shock and in distributive shock
* is vital to mental function and also seems to play a role in sex drive
- normal brain function
* key neurotransmitter in the brain
- that opens a lock
* locks on to receptor molecules on brain cells and directs their behaviour.
* modulates female sexual receptivity in Drosophila melanogaster.
* natural chemical in the brain that is usually released only in small amounts
- neurotransmitter that helps the brain regulate movement and emotions
* neuro-transmitter found primarily in the basal ganglia of the brain.
* neurochemical that transmits nerve signals necessary for normal muscle movements.
* neurotransmitter found in the limbic system that controls emotional responses.
* neurotransmitter in the brain that is associated with pleasure
- linked with movement, attention span and certain bodily sensations
- mostly found in the basal ganglia
- necessary for normal cognitive function
* neurotransmitter that appears to be associated with pleasure
- determines a variety of critical brain functions
- influences how brain cells communicate with each other
* neurotransmitter that is intimately involved in reward and pleasure
- involved in many important cognitive functions
- regulates neuronal communication within the basal ganglia
* neurotransmitter which affects sexuality, locomotion, mood, tissue growth and repair
- is critical for normal movement
* neurotransmitter, a chemical that cells use to send messages to each other
- helps to pass messages between nerve cells
- substance involved in transmitting nerve impulses
- or chemical that carries messages to the body
* neurotransmitter, or message-carrying chemical, linked with feelings of euphoria
- that is involved in movement
* normally inhibits the outflow of electricity from the subthalamic nucleus.
* occurs especially as a neurotransmitter in the brain.
* plays a crucial role in the brain's activity
- major role in the regulation of appetite and growth hormone
* plays a role in controlling physical movement as well as emotions
- movement and in feelings of pleasure
- an important role in controlling movement, emotion and cognition
- important roles around the body, though still a lot is unknown
* potent drug.
* powerful inhibitor of prolactin.
* produces two different effects on the biological preparation.
* rapidly acting compound.
* regulates movement and is also intimately involved with mood and motivation
- prolactin gene function by binding to specific G-protein coupled receptors
* relays messages in the part of the brain that controls muscle movement.
* requires the unoccupied progesterone receptor to induce sexual behavior in mice.
* sample neurotransmitter that is useful in understanding addiction.
* serves as a chemical messenger helping to control muscle activities
- the major prolactin-inhibiting factor or brake on prolactin secretion
* sets a person's pleasure and pain levels.
* signaling chemical in the brain involved in many of the body's processes.
* stimulates the pituitary gland to produce a hormone which burns fat and builds muscle
* then accumulates in the surviving nerve cells
- builds up in the gap synapse between neurons
* triggers numerous nerve impulses that affect muscle movement.
* type of brain chemical called a neurotransmitter.
* very important substance in many different ways
- transmitter, particularly in central motor function
* works with acetylcholine in the brain to maintain steady movement.
+ Dopamine reuptake inhibitor: Neurology :: Drugs
* Dopamine is a type of brain chemical called a neurotransmitter. Dopamine has many jobs and responsibilities in the brain. Scientists think dopamine controls movement and the human sense of punishment and reward. Dopamine affects dreams, motivation, and sexual gratification, too. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Distal pancreatectomy
* is inappropriate because of the proximal location of the injury.
* takes out only the tail of the pancreas
- the body and tail of the pancreas
Different strategy
* Different strategies affect characteristics.
* Different strategies are used by companies
- large companies
Democratic socialism
* goal, a method and a way.
* is an international movement for freedom, social justice and solidarity
- democratic and communitarian
- thereby an oxymoron that has no basis in reality
Dietary change
* can also lead to increased gas
- alter the expression and activity of hepatic drug metabolizing enzymes
- change the course of the disease and prevent mental retardation
* can help dramatically
- improve nutritional status
- reduce uric acid levels in the blood
- relieve symptoms
* involve decreasing the amount of fat and sugar consumed.
* is an important initial approach to the treatment and prevention of hypertension.
Deep frostbite
* affects the skin and the subcutaneous tissues, as well as the muscle and bone.
* extends to a depth below the skin.
* involves skin, tissue, muscle and bone.
* is characterized by pale, waxy skin
- waxy and pale skin
- when the frostbite extends down to the tissues and muscles
Dynamism
* also arises out of the interplay of different systems of representation.
* can also derive from interactivity, as readers contribute their ideas or images.
* gives individuals both the freedom to learn and the incentives to share what they discover.
* is about change, and positive change at that
- doctrines
- strength
* requires that institutions respond to new realities.
Dreaming
* eye movement.
* are used for enlightenment
- fun
* cause car accidents
- confusion
- fantasies
- fear
- inspiration
- nightmares
Deep cultivation
* can stunt plants and slow down growth causing fibrous stems.
* injures roots and decreases growth and yield.
Deference
* device of the disempowered to gain a hearing.
* is civility
- courtesy
- politeness<|endoftext|>Defamation
* can consist of libel in written form or by slander, which is verbal.
* communication which adversely affects the reputation of another person.
* consists of a published false statement intending to harm the reputation of another
- false and unprivileged publication which results in economic damages
* crime because it is considered to have a tendency to promote breach of peace
- punishable by imprisonment or fine
* false statement about another that harms reputation.
* is an attack on another person's character
- intentional false communication that injures another's reputation or good name
- false or misleading injury to someone's reputation
- publication of a falsehood
- term that includes both slander and libel
- the legal term for slanderous spoken remarks and libelous written statements
* necessarily involves the idea of disgrace.
* occurs when one person's false statement injures the reputation of another person.
* statement that harms the reputation of someone else.
* takes two forms, libel and slander.
* tool of bullying. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Disinfection
* destroys all the microorganisms in a certain environment except for spores.
* is accomplished by the addition of chlorine and ammonia
- an integral part of disease prevention for both humans and animals
- by the addition of sodium hypochlorite solution
- done by chlorination
- important in the prevention of eye infections
* is medical aid
- care
- much more effective on clean vehicles
- needed because some bacteria and viruses can pass through filters
* is the final stage of secondary treatment
- killing of microorganisms
- minimum treatment for drinking water from a groundwater source
- most important single factor in maintaining a pool which is safe and healthful
- primary weapon against microbial risk
- process by which chemicals are added to water to reduce bacterial contamination
- selective destruction of pathogenic organisms
- with chlorine and dechlorination is with sulfur dioxide
* kills bacteria in water.
* means essentially the same as sanitation
- the destruction of disease-causing microorganisms
- to remove or kill pathogens
* preventive procedure designed to kill disease-causing agents.
* protects against infectious disease by reducing the number of pathogens in the water.
* reduces the concentration of organisms to safe levels.
* uses ozonation and, particularly, chlorination to kill disease-causing microbes.
* utilizes chlorination through a serpentine tank.
* way of ensuring that drinking water is free from pathogens.
Discouragement
* can be the root of ineffectiveness as an individual.
* is an attitude and attitudes are always a choice
- despair
- deterrence
- disapproval
- one of mankind's worst ills
- the opposite of faith
* means to lose heart.
* natural part of life.
Downie
* are the smallest of our resident woodpeckers.
* often camouflage the nest cavity entrance hole with moss, lichen and fungus.
* range in age from eighteen months to three years.
Dietary control
* is absolutely necessary for normal brain development.
* needs to be maintained throughout life.
Domination
* are the channel of mercy.
* exists where it is perceived.
* is about pleasure, a mutual pleasure
- also characteristic of xenophobia, racism and nationalism
- domination
- social control
- viewed as the appropriate role for men and subordination the role for women
* right, exploitation a contract, organisation an order of things.
Digitali
* can accumulate in tissues even when taken as prescribed
- cause Cardiac arrhythmias if hypokalemia occurs
* directly decreases sinus automaticity only at high, toxic, concentrations.
* slows the pulse and slows the conduction of nerve impulses in the heart.<|endoftext|>Defibrillation
* Most defibrillation occurs externally with paddles placed against the chest.
* can restore the heart's normal rhythm if it's done within minutes of the arrest.
* causes simultaneous depolarization of all Cardiac muscle fibers.
* consists of high-energy shock impulses.
* critical link in the chain of survival for treating cardiac arrest.
* is an essential component of effective emergency cardiac care.
- the electric shock applied to restart a non-beating heart
* is the key to survival from a cardiac arrest
- surviving a cardiac arrest
- most effective treatment for ventricular fibrillation
* is the only effective treatment for cardiac arrest
- of ventricular fibrillation
- proven therapy to restore a normal heartbeat after cardiac arrest
- way to solve cardiac arrest
* only works when the animal s heart has stopped.
* serves to depolarize the majority of the myocardial muscle mass.
* shocks a chaotic cardiac rhythm, without a pulse, back into a regular pulsing rhythm. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Disparity
* Disparities also exist in the prevalence of risk factors for cardiovascular disease
- exist between workers
* Disparities exist in both mortality and incidence rates
- outcomes among races, sexes, ages, regions, etc
- performance among subgroups
- often exist despite job function and length of employment
* arises from the fact that our two eyes have a slightly different view of the world.
* exists in the enrollment ratios for boys and girls in all our institutions of learning.
* is caused by humanistic value judgments concerning the badness of a particular murder
- inequality
* occurs when the funding allocation is determined to be disproportionate.
* precedes diversity.
Divine love
* conquers all and enlarges the powers of the soul.
* embraces all levels of thought and action.
* happens where faith in Jesus happens.
* is far different from human love
- reflected by human love in the biblical illustration of bride and bridegroom
- self-giving love
* is the balance between justice and mercy
- opposite of selfishness
- unconditional love
* pays the price for man's redemption.<|endoftext|>Dominion
* believes that high-quality education is the key component of economic growth.
* help desk, and customer service software system.
* incorporates the meaning of ruling, managing, processing, protecting, and so on.
* is an honor that provides a gentle hand that protects, respects and loves
- old word often heard to describe Canada when it was part of the British Empire
- areas
- authority to rule
- control
- dominance
- states
* is the nation s largest fully integrated electric power and natural gas company
- nation's fourth largest fully integrated electric and gas utility
* means stewardship over nature.
* significant player in the evolving electrical markets.
* type of the Kingdom of Heaven.
+ Hamilton, Ontario, History
* But factories demanded that people work hard jobs for long hours. Dominion is an old word often heard to describe Canada when it was part of the British Empire.
Demobilization
* is social control.
* risky enterprise, particularly in post-conflict scenarios.
Dwarfs
* All dwarfs have beards and wear up to twelve layers of clothing.
* Some dwarfs become black dwarfs.
* Some dwarfs have claws
- flowers | {
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} |
Dancing
* allows men to get their hands on and their bodies close to willing females.
* also can be an art
- increases cognitive acuity at all ages
* are diversion
- located in shows
- motion
- pastime
* are used for ballerinas
- celebration
- ceremony
- entertainment
- exercises
- fun
- pleasure
- professionals
* can also burn as many calories as walking or riding a bike
- be a form of praise and thanksgiving
- help people to reduce stress and decrease the risk of heart disease, diabetes or stroke
* cause blisters
- euphoria
- exhaustion
- expression
- fatigue
- happiness
- humiliation
- injuries
- movement
- sore foots
- sweat
* communication where two people relate and mirror the movements of one another.
* contact sport.
* different way to communicate with people.
* gesture of the whole body which can ally the body with the soul.
* goes back to primitive times, and magical powers have been attributed to it.
* has low impact on the muscles and joints so all ages can participate.
* involves the aesthetic, social, intellectual, physical, and spiritual parts of being human.
* is also a form of communication
- great form of exercise
- an another way of communication with people
* is an art because it is subject to rules
- form, despite the fact that it requires the prowess of an athlete
- important part of many festivals and ceremonies
- another activity which requires a partner
- both an art form and a form of recreation
- enjoyed by millions of people everyday
* is like playing an instrument
- weaving the energies into the etherical body, later to be integrated into the body
- movement, and movement is life
- often an important part of the ritual and spiritual aspect of music
- older than written language
* is one of the best ways to stay in shape and to releave stress
- most soothing forms of relaxation
* is the first line of social activity
- male's way of attracting a female
- no stress, no sweat, and no strain way of getting exercise
- outward expression of invisible emotion
* nearly universal experience, crossing cultures and countries.
* plays a very significant role in every Native-American nation.
* positive alternative to aerobic dancing or jogging.
* reduces both anxiety and depression, as do many other forms of exercise.
* refers to a back and forth quadrupedal movement which is distinct from pacing or spinning.
- skill
* vertical expression of a horizontal desire.
* way of expressing the spiritual, a way of incarnating what is inside.
Dialogue marketing
* is also different from data-base marketing
- polite marketing
* provides mechanisms for two-way communication between a customer and the company.
Deli
* are located in buildings
- cities
- malls
- office buildings
- shopping centers
- shops
- strip malls
- towns
- restaurants
* are used for eating
- social gathering<|endoftext|>Devotion
* consists in expressing love towards all.
* fruit which ripens gradually through the processes of self-restraint and virtue.
* has absolutely nothing to do with age, caste, creed, position or sex.
* is an opening of the heart to the grace that flows through love
- another word for love
- commitment
- prayer
- seen as a sign of weakness in a society that worships heroes and heroines
* is the bedrock of devotions
- gesture of contemplation, so it is more of an action than it is an emotion
- head of meditation, it is taught
- royal road to attaining the highest wisdom
- very important to human life
* manifestation of the heart that's trusting. | {
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} |
Demand
* can vary worldwide with the economy and with weather.
* drives the amount of hams processed
- market place and consumer choices have absolutely everything to do with supply
* fluctuates with the real rate of interest.
* increases due to a rise in income
- with activity and decreases in sedentary times
* is activities
- also age and income related, and is thus governed by changing demographics
- dependent on the price of oil and on government fiscal policy
- derived from consumers' tastes and and bound by their income
* is driven by addiction and poverty
- demographics and population growth
- general economic activity
- elastic when a small change in price effects a large change in demand
- measured over a given time period
- modeled as a continuous time stochastic process
- one of the most important determinants of a coin s value
- produced by a combination of population and the economy
- rationals
- specified as quantity being a function of price
- the amount of a good that consumers are willing and able to buy at a given price
* is the amount of goods or services that people want
- that people want to buy at a given price
- demand curve itself
- natural phenomenon for the progress and prosperity
- real standard of value
- usually a lagging indicator of economic activity
* key variable in setting up an inventory system.
* matter of quantity.
* measure used by economists to evaluate markets.
* pull inflation - Occurs when aggregate demand exceeds aggregate supply.
* refers to a list of quantities and prices
- the quantity of a good that is demanded by consumers at any given price
* rises and falls as the economy goes through cycles.
* varies with the time of year, nature of the opportunity and economic factors.
+ Service (economics), Key attributes: Economics
* Demand can vary by season, time of day, etc. For example a restaurant may be busy at dinner time but not in the middle of the afternoon.
* Demand is the amount of goods that people want to buy at a given price. Prices go up when supply is less, and demand is more. It follows the law of demand where as price increases, demand decreases and vice versa showing an inverse relationship between quantity demanded and price. This is known as the law of demand which assumes that the consumer is alive.<|endoftext|>Digital library
* Digital libraries are electronic equivalents to paper collections of records
- more than collections of documents, or clusters of hyperlinks
- vital for the worldwide sharing of information and knowledge
- have the potential of being able to provide more ease to access information
- is one of the greatest areas of multimediaaplplications
- provide access to a large number of images, texts, and data sets of all types
* concept that has different meanings in different communities.
Digital broadcasting
* entails converting pictures and sounds into digital signals for transmission.
* new system of transmitting TV, radio and the internet.
* new, more effective way of transmitting radio and television services.
Drinking
* are conducting
- consumption
* are used for enjoyment
- hydration
- intoxications
- pleasure
* cause hangovers
- headaches
- loss of control
- sickness
- stupidity
- swallows
- vomiting
Divine forgiveness
* destroys human sin.
* is the execution of the penalty, and that penalty is death.
* possibility for every man, woman, and child.
Devaluation
* causes inflation.
* has a serious impact on wages.
* help countries with trade deficits.
* is but one of the forces driving down prices and squeezing companies
- control
- regulations
- the lessening of someone or something
* leads to increases in the prices of tradable goods.
* makes imported goods more expensive and is inflationary.
* means inflation.
* raises food and medicine prices.
* vicious cycle with evil consequences. | {
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} |
Depreciation
* decrease in value due to wear and tear or age.
* deduction for the wear and tear of a property.
* has nothing to do with inflation.
* increases taxable income.
* is also a hard term for some people to grasp.
* is an allocation of the cost of an asset that has a life longer than one year
- amount deducted to recover the cost or other basis of a trade or business asset
* is an annual allocation of the cost of capital assets
- deduction designed to compensate for the taxpayer's capital investments
- estimate of loss in value from any cause
- expense that is used with the actual cost method
- based primarily on miles driven
- basically a measure of the loss of in value inherent in the property
- calculated on the historical cost of an asset
- considered to be a fixed cost of production
- figured on the basis of the home, exclusive of land
- financial loss
- mainly applicable to tangible fixed assets
- spread over time to cover the life of an asset
- the allocation of a past cost
* is the decrease in value of property over time because of age or wear and tear
- vehicle value because of age or wear and tear
- difference between what it cost new versus what an item is worth now
- formal term to express the amount of value an item loses over a period of time
- invisible cost of vehicle ownership
- largest single cost of owning a car
* is the loss in value that develops as an item ages, wears out, or becomes obsolete
- of value that develops as an item ages or wears
- used to determine the actual cash value of property at time of loss
- when an asset s value decreases
* loss in the value of property over the time the property is being used
- value due to any cause
* means more rupees for every dollar-worth of interest payment
- of reflecting on an annual basis the costs of capital equipment
* measure of the loss of value of a machine over time.
* non-cash expense to the business or enterprise
* noncash bookkeeping deduction for estimated wear, tear and obsolescence.
* percentage of value based on year of purchase.
* real loss to the economy.
* records the fall in market value of the asset
- physical deterioration of the asset
* reduces a capital item's Basis for figuring gain or loss on a later sale
- the amount of money a company makes
* represents the annual allocation of the cost of capital assets
- cost to the business of assets wearing out
* use of funds.
Different style
* depends on availability.
* has weakness.
Discretion
* has the meaning of acting on one's own authority and judgement.
* is an important part of freedom of information laws
- exactly what it means, the freedom to act according to one's judgment
- liberty
* is the eye of the soul
- opposite of routine and habitual obedience
- wisdom
* pervasive concept in administrative law.
Disorientation
* comes quickly in blowing and drifting snow.
* is also a common problem that relates to wandering and becoming lost
- caused by different stimuli
- common as memory problems increase
- confusion
- delusion
- frequent in the psychoses of old age
- used in some forms of hypnotic induction
* occurs in varying degrees from person to person
- wind-driven snow
* occurs quickly in wind driven snow and cold
- wind-driven snow and cold
- with the use of some drugs | {
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} |
Deconstruction
* form of critique.
* is about distinctive individual voices and sounds.
* is an absolute critique of absolutism
- emerging feature of contemporary critical work within developmental psychology
- innovative tool intended to contribute to a community's revitalization
- essential in a digital world
- justice
- seen as a tool for liberation
* is the careful hand disassembly of buildings for material salvage
- process of analyzing what is said in continuous iterative loops
* occurs in life as well as in literature.
* philosophical theory
* shows the multiple layers of meaning at work in language.
* way of bringing the repressed way of seeing back to consciousness
- spreading the blame, thus distributing the misery<|endoftext|>Discipleship
* commanded work of obedience for believers.
* commitment, typically involving several disciplines.
* common word in today's church vocabulary.
* happens in the context of community, i.e. being together.
* is an eternal process that is passed on from generation to generation
- lived out in the ordinary encounters of life
- love, commitment, and accountability
- of great importance after salvation
* is the goal of evangelism
- method of fulfilling the second objective
* is the process of learning
- towards growth and maturity
* life-long journey of growing in faith and love.
* lifelong process based on people's needs.
* often results in spiritual reproduction far beyond our expectations or imaginations.
* process as is the psycho-social development of a teenager
- that can fail miserably
- whereby people follow a path of growth in relationship with others
* relational journey that promises a time of accelerated spiritual growth.
* teaches converts how to create more converts.
Deep planting
* encourages bulbs to return year after year.
* is important because tubers only form between the seed piece and the soil surface
- the most common reason for failure of peonies to bloom<|endoftext|>Different thing
* Many different things can affect phosphorous assimilation
- the direction of movement , content and temperature of air masses
* Many different things can cause dry eye syndrome
- osteoarthritis
- trigger an allergic reaction
- contribute to child care quality
* affect people in different ways.
* are important to different cultures, neighborhoods, races and religions.
* cause allergies in different people
- stress in different people
* causes people to have a particular sexual orientation.
* lose their youth or grow old at different rates.
+ Winter storm: Severe weather :: Natural events
* Winter storms' or 'snowstorms' happen when warm, wet air meets with cold air. The warm, wet air mass and the cold air mass can each be 1000 km or more in diameter. Snowstorms affecting Northeastern United States often get their moisture from air moving north from the Gulf of Mexico and cold air from air masses coming down from the Arctic. In the Northwest United States warm, wet air from the Pacific Ocean cools when it is pushed upward by the mountains. Many different things can affect the direction of movement, content and temperature of air masses. All of these differences affect the type and severity of the snowstorm.
+ Youth: Life
* Different things lose their youth or grow old at different rates. For example, technology has a short life span and can only be considered young for roughly one year. In many countries, humans are no longer young at 18 years old.
Diction
* is expression
- the production of sounds
* mode of meaning.
* refers to the language of a poem, and how each word is chosen to convey a precise meaning
- singers pronouncing the words or vocals clearly | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Decryption
* involves turning the ciphertext back into plaintext.
* is achieved by inverting the steps of encryption
- carried out using methods of belief-propagation which are computationally economical
* is the inverse of the encryption process
- method of undoing the encryption to return to a readable form
- opposite of encryption
* is the process of reversing the unintelligible data into meaningful data using a key
- transforming ciphertext back into plaintext
* is the reverse of encryption, or transfer from ciphertext to plaintext
- transformation of encrypted data back into legible form
* means any procedure to convert ciphertext into plaintext
* refers to any procedure to convert cipher text into plain text.
Dimethyl sulfate
* colorless, oily liquid that is slightly soluble in water.
* is chemical compounds
- embryotoxic to rats and causes malformations among surviving foetuses
- used as a methylating agent in the manufacture of many organic chemicals
Dissociative amnesia
* can be very healthy and functional
- occur in response to intolerable stress
* involves partial or total inability to recall past experiences.<|endoftext|>Desensitization
* aims at attempting to lower the level of anti-gay rhetoric.
* decreased anxiety and aversion to violence.
* gets people slowly used to the idea of the feared object or situation.
* is also a procedure used in behavior therapy of phobias
- always an issue in today s world, be it to magic, violence or sexual content
- another important treatment component in helping people to achieve abstinence
- possible in a controlled environment
* means slowly exposing a person to what is feared.
* physical process
* problem caused by continued exposure to what is scary.
* requires hospitalization and monitoring.
* works on everyone of every age
- well for managing fear or anxiety
Depersonalization
* also occurs in the nonclinical population.
* involves an alteration in the individual's sense of self.
* is dissociative disorder
- objectification
- reinforced by media, advertising, television
* sense of unreality about oneself.
+ Derealization: Psychology
* Similar to derealization is depersonalization, but the two are different. Depersonalization is a sense of unreality about oneself. Derealization is a sense of unreality of the outside world.<|endoftext|>Divinity
* Divinities wear lots of eyeliner.
* alone can take in desire and be unaffected.
* can be perfectly natural, and most pantheists believe that it is.
* crystalline candy but special case as the crystals are dispersed in a foam.
* function of emergent evolution.
* is Love energy in physical form
- always present when a person lives a spiritual life
- just as likely to manifest itself as female
- quality
- seen as immanent
* is the chief raw material out of which gods have been fashioned
- magnet
- study of religion or theology
* means the undivided essence.
* relativity in the march of history.
* spiritual being
* wants to rule our lives.<|endoftext|>Dependability
* is also a key factor in the mortgage world
- an important factor in forage production
- essential to customer satisfaction
- one of the most important traits of a successful mentor
- responsibility
* is the hallmark of integrity
- watchword for any public safety installation
- thought of as the mark of successful people
- virtue
* means reliability, maintainability, and availability.
* necessary condition for systems acting in possibly safety critical environments.
* very important trait to have in a relationship of any kind.
Dating
* are chemical analysises.
* cause marriages. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Degenerative change
* are also causes of backache
- present in the intervertebral discs of all subjects by middle-age
- primarily in the photoreceptor layer
- visible on both surfaces of the joint
* emerge rapidly after the adolescent growth spurt.
* occur in the cells of the epithelioid layer in the placental hemisphere.
* result from lack of enzymes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Diabete
* Can cause high blood pressure, heart disease, small blood vessel disease
- donate if treating by diet control
* Learn about what it is and how it is treated.
* actually refers to several different diseases.
* alone is one of the leading causes of death by disease
- major risk factor for stroke
* also affects a disproportionate number of minorities
- blood circulation, slowing healing
- minority populations disproportionately
- the small arteries to the pelvis, causing vasculogenic problems as well
- ages and destroys the kidney and other body systems
- alters the immune system, thus decreasing the body's ability to fight infection
- appears to produce resistance to some of the effects of estradiol
* also can cause cataracts
- dull the sensitivity of nerves
- lead to kidney and heart disease and stroke
- causes birth defects in infants of mothers with diabetes
* also causes nerve damage, which can lead to amputation
- disease, heart disease, and stroke
* also damages blood vessels, decreasing the blood flow to the feet
- nerves, sometimes of the eyes or the nervous system to the legs and feet
- effects the blood vessels, kidneys and nerves
* also increases the risk of heart disease
- stroke, as well as the severity and mortality of strokes
- leads to other derangments which also increase atherosclerosis
- produces a neuropathy due to microangiopathy
- remains one of the leading conditions associated with vascular disease
- treatable risk for stroke
* appears most often in middle age and among overweight people.
* becomes more prevalent with age.
* can affect children and adults.
* can affect many of the chemical processes and tissues in the body
- parts of the body, leading to serious health complications
* can affect the eye in a number of ways
- many ways, and damage often occurs in the retina
- eyes and vision in a number of ways
- eyes, kidneys and the feet
* can also affect the large blood vessels
- be responsible for future amputations
* can also cause cataracts , a clouding of the lens inside the eye that blurs vision
- complications of pregnancy and congenital malformations
- optic neuropathy
- other problems with vision, circulation, the nervous system, and kidneys
- problems for pregnant women and their babies
- the weakness in the legs and the anorexia
* can also damage blood vessels in the kidneys
- the nerves in many parts of the body
* can also lead to blindness, nerve damage and sexual disinterest
- increased pressure in the eye - known as glaucoma
* can also make it hard for cuts and sores to heal
- the blood vessels close off
* can be a confusing and overwhelming illness
- cruel disease
- dangerous disease, but luckily it can be controlled
- highly individual thing to manage
- really insidious disease
* can be difficult to adjust to
- control, especially for the working poor
- especially grave when it strikes early
- life-threatening unless it's controlled
- particularly devastating for children
- rapidly fatal
- become a battlefield of conflict between parent and child
* can cause arteriosclerosis which leads to heart disease, gangrene and loss of extremities
- blindness, so eye exams are crucial
- blood vessels in the retina to grow abnormally
- cataracts, glaucoma and lead to damage of blood vessels within the eye
- changes in nearsightedness, farsightedness and premature presbyopia
- circulation problems that add to stroke risk
- circulatory problems, which can increase the risk of erectile dysfunction in men
- debilitating complications that develop gradually
- decreased blood flow to the feet, which can lead to nerve damage
- diseases of the eyes, kidneys, nerves and circulatory system
- eye problems that have no symptoms until the damage is well advanced
- high blood-sugar levels, excessive thirst and urination
- impotence
- kidney disease by damaging the parts of the kidneys that filter out wastes
- multiple health problems and can affect the eyes in various ways
* can cause nerve damage and loss of feeling in the feet
- poor circulation in the feet and lower limbs
- damage, or diabetic neuropathy
- pancreatitis, and pancreatitis can cause diabetes
- poor blood flow
- problems that damage the heart, blood vessels, eyes, kidneys, and nerves
* can cause serious damage to the kidneys, resulting in protein loss in the urine
- health problems, including blindness, kidney failure and nerve damage
- problems if left untreated or improperly treated
- severe health problems in pregnancy
- significant microvascular and macrovascular disease
- the following conditions of the feet
- transient blurred vision when a person's blood sugar levels fluctuate wildly
- vision loss or blindness
* can damage both the nerve and blood supply to the penis
- kidneys, eyes and nerves, and makes heart and blood vessel disease more likely
- nerves, as can surgery on the prostate or lower bowel
* can damage the blood vessels in the retina and steal sight
- kidney's ability to filter waste products in the blood
- nerves, causing a condition called neuropathy
- peripheral, autonomic, and cranial nerves
- tiny blood vessels in the retina of the eye
* can develop at any age
- during pregnancy in a woman who hasn t previously had the condition
- gradually over many years, often with no symptoms
- if the ability of the pancreas to secrete insulin is impaired
- effect the use of bone and muscles
- exacerbate gum disease
* can have an effect on every organ in the body
- no symptoms at all and if left untreated can damage the kidneys and eyes
* can have serious consequences
- lifelong conditions
- increase the risk of developing cardiovascular disease, especially hypertension
- indirectly lead to pancreatitis
- lead to a restricted blood supply to the feet and legs, resulting in cold painful feet
* can lead to an eye disease called diabetic retinopathy
- called retinopathy
- bladder damage, and people then leak because of that
- blindness and kidney failure
* can lead to blindness, heart attack, stroke, kidney failure, amputations and death
- stroke, kidney failure, and amputations
* can lead to blindness, kidney disease, heart disease or amputations, and it can be fatal
- heart disease, stroke and amputations
- failure, amputations, heart attack and stroke
- complications during pregancy that can jeopardize both mother and baby
- damage to the blood vessels, nerves, eyes, or kidneys
* can lead to heart disease, kidney failure, and blindness and nerve problems
- trouble, blindness and many other disturbing health conditions
- kidney failure, blindness and nerve damage
- more serious complications over time
- nerve damage in the feet and legs, resulting in a loss of sensation
- related complications such as heart disease, blindness and amputations
- retinopathy, a condition that damages the retina and leads to blindness
- serious complications, such as neuropathy, blindness, and gangrene
- shortening of muscles
- the kidney disease called diabetic nephropathy
- vision loss or even blindness
* can make bones more vulnerable to fracture and pose an increased risk for amputation
- the immune system more vulnerable to severe cases of the flu
- occur at any age
* can occur in anyone
- three separate ways
* can play a role in high blood pressure
- the development of astigmatism
* can result from autoantibodies against beta-cells of pancreas
- in severe infections of the skin, i.e. diabetic gangrene
* can run in families, and researchers are still studying how and why it happens
- start in childhood, but it often begins later in life
- stress out the whole family
* can take a long time to develop in a person's body - sometimes months or years
- eight years off people's lives, according to a UK study
- thus affect the patient s vision by causing damage to blood vessels in the eye
* come in two types.
* comes in different types
- two forms
* commonly causes nerve and blood vessel damage.
* controlled by insulin severely reduces the risk of congenital malformation.
* develops when the body stops making or becomes insensitive to insulin.
* disproportionately affects racial and ethnic minorities, the elderly, and the obese
- the Latin community
* eventually causes changes in the tiny vessels that supply the retina with blood.
* generally falls into one of two categories.
* gradually destroys the pancreas' ability to make insulin.
* greatly increases the risk of cardiovascular disease.
* has a genetic component, but the diet can keep it from becoming manifest
- tendency to make one feel all alone
- complications such as neuropathy, circulation problems and blindness
- many other effects on the eye
* has no age limit
- real effect on the immune system
- serious complications - blindness, kidney failure, amputation and death
- significant economic costs as well
* has two forms, insulin dependent and non insulin dependent
- major subsets
- primary forms, as well as some minor, transient ones
* isn t always at the center of life, but it s never far away.
* never takes a vacation.
* now is the fourth-leading cause of death by disease in the United States.
* often accompanies obesity and remits with weight loss
- adds to the normal difficulties of growing up
- creates erection difficulties
- is associated with femoral nerve or other cranial nerve lesions
- occurs in conjunction with high blood pressure, high cholesterol and weight gain
* primarily affects the blood vessels that nourish the retina.
* rapidly induces contractile dysfunctions in isolated ventricular myocytes.
* seriously increases the risk of developing cardiovascular disease.
* sometimes causes the focusing ability of the eye to weaken or to fluctuate from day to day.
* substantially increases risk of atherosclerosis, and therefore, stroke
- the risk of developing cardiovascular diseases
* undeniably increases the risk of heart disease.
* usually affects peripheral nerves in the feet, legs and at times, the hands. | {
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} |
Dying
* are used for meeting makers
- mortals
* cause death
- decayings
- funerals
- grief
- pain
- relief
- sadness
Dietary lutein
* sitmulates immune response in the canine.
* stimulates cell-mediated and humoral immunity in cats<|endoftext|>Dissemination
* consists of the scattering of cremated remains at sea.
* is about having people who can benefit from an innovation put that innovation to use
- by gravity and animals
- distribution
- mainly dependent upon animal activity
* is the communication activity designed to bridge the gap between the two mountains
- spread of the fungal infection from the lungs to other parts of the body
* process that has measurable components and leads to planned results
* refers to the spread or dispersal of the pathogen from an inoculum source to a host.<|endoftext|>Dental carie
* are a long-term concern for patients who have undergone radiation therapy
- supposed to be due, in part, to a low vitamin C intake
* are the main problem associated with a high sugar intake
- most common and often the most informative of dental lesions
* can involve any tooth or possibly all teeth.
* is caused by acid formed by bacterial breakdown in plaque of sugar in the diet
- the disease process of tooth decay
* lifestyle-dependent infectious disease.
* remains among the most prevalent diseases of both children and adults.<|endoftext|>Decentralization
* also applies to health and safety.
* costly way to treat organizational problems.
* facilitates farmers' participation in demand-driven projects.
* is also evident in technologies
- most common in manufacturing and least common in services
- often a political imperative
- part of a growing process of democratization throughout Africa
- social processes
* is the idea of the present and the future
- one thing that can explain the multiplicity of chronic pain
- only means to improve and develop government work procedures
- order of the day
- reform upon which most hopes hang
* multi-dimensional process that proceeds with success and setbacks.
* plays a part in creating urban donut holes.
* powerful democratic concept which involves how societies are governed.
* tends to increase both total and subnational spending on public infrastructure.
* wider trend going on in Europe.
Dental insurance
* Most dental insurance is group insurance.
* contract between the employer and the patient.
* insures employees against a portion or all of the cost associated with dental care.
Depravity
* is an inherent deficiency of moral sense and rectitude
- immorality
- replaced with divinity and reincarnation provides the hope for the next life
- transgression
* means bad, wicked, evil.
Dexterity
* can decrease with age.
* develops as the child handles toys or other objects.
* is an aggregation of agility, coordination and quickness
- described as the ability of the dog to avoid strikes and counterattack of the bear
- skillfulness
- used for feats involving speed and physical adeptness
Disfunction
* can lead to shock, tissue injury, anorexia, malnutrition and cachexia.
* hardcore-oi band from chicago.
* is pathology
Dense shrubbery
* can also act as a fence.
* typical feature in aspen-dominated forests.
Desecration
* barrage of eerily composed images that rely heavily on colors to influence mood.
* religious term that applies only when something is deemed sacred
* term with significant religious connotations. | {
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} |
Dislocation
* Most dislocations occur after birth and are related to unstable or dislocatable hips.
* are extended line defects and their motion involve the collective motion of many atoms
- more common after complex surgeries
* can also act as fast diffusion pathways
- affect a joint, the point where two or more bones come together
- lead to serious injuries
- recur
- slip in planes containing both the dislocation line and the Burgers vector
* come in almost every era.
* correspond to the insertion of an extra period in the stripe pattern.
* give rise to the characteristic malleability of metals.
* happens most often with hip replacements.
* is an injury that results in a bone being moved out of place
- disruption
- either unilateral or bilateral
- interruptions
- perturbation
- the most severe injury affecting the shoulder
- when the ball comes out of the socket
* means that the metal ball slips out of the plastic socket.
* move most readily in slip planes.
* often enter as pairs, or as loops.
* play an important role in bulk microstructural changes that occur upon poling.
* tend to occur after delivery.
Deportation
* is an explusion of an alien who is already in the U.S. either legally or illegally
- ejections
- issuing
- rejection
* often causes the U.S. citizen children of aliens to leave the United States.
* can also happen inside a country. A person or a group of people may be forced to move to a different part of the country, as a punishment.
Dietary selenium
* affects locomotor activity and startle responses in rats.
* comes from nuts, cereals and mushrooms.<|endoftext|>Detoxification
* begins as the mud dries, absorbing toxins and impurities
- in the colon
* enables the skin to easily absorb minerals from the kelp.
* form of treatment that addresses the client's physiological needs.
* is by dilution and oxidation, or application of potassium permanganate
- important for resolution of eczema problems
- medical care
- one of the most important paths to good health and long life
- only part of treating the addicted patient
- provided for alcohol, opiates, prescription drugs, and other substances
- required for certain drugs, such as heroin and barbiturates
* is the body clearing itself of alcohol and drugs and returning to normal
- elimination of various harmful chemicals from the body
* is the first phase of treatment
- step in treatment for crack cocaine addiction
- gradual withdrawal of an abused substance under controlled circumstances
- to make use of the healthy food to remove the toxins from the body
* occurs as the body rids itself of crack and adapts back to normal functioning.
* precursor of treatment. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Delusion
* are a common symptom of sever forms of mental illnesses such as schizophrenia
- reported side effect of Paxil
- serious error in thinking, but true beliefs have a high truth-value
- about the person s own experience, reflecting culture and the times
- common among individuals with schizophrenia
- commonplace within the sphere of medicine too
- dangerous because of the way in which they exist outside reality
- false beliefs or misperceptions of the world
* are false beliefs that are irrational and resist refutation
- have no basis in reality
- significantly hinder a person's ability to function
- usually involve a misinterpretation of perceptions or experiences
- firmly held beliefs that persist despite strong evidence to the contrary
- resistant to reason
* are thoughts - fixed false beliefs
- about unreal situations
- typically persecutory or grandiose, or both
- unshakeable beliefs which are obviously untrue
* arises from anger.
* cause for the origination of actions.
* covers everything from daydreaming through actual hallucinations.
* involve faulty thinking, and hallucinations involve faulty perceptions
- imagining that someone wants to harm the person or are very complex
* is an advanced stage of illusion
- deception
- ignorance
- misconception
- symptoms
* is the blight of mankind
- nature of ordinary beings
- root cause of many problems in life
* occur in most people with schizophrenia.
* often persists despite being presented with logic.
* stock in trade for the occult arts.
+ Schizophrenia, Diagnosis: Mental illnesses :: Psychosis
* However, thought disorder, disorganized behavior, or lack of emotional response are not present. Delusions involve imagining that someone wants to harm the person or are very complex.
Deep relaxation
* can help relieve pain.
* includes meditation, progressive muscle relaxation, imagery, and yoga.
* skill which can be developed and strengthened.
* works as an antidote to stress.
Despotism
* comes on mankind in different shapes.
* is barbaric and abnormal
- control
- the only practical ideal of anarchy
Drunk
* are capable of drinks
- drinkers
* are located in bars
- bridges
- concerts
- gutters
- jails
- parks
* become sober and productive people.
Disinflation
* can create a dilemma for policy makers, since it means increased unemployment.
* decline in the rate of increase in average prices.
* decrease in the rate of inflation.
* occurs when the rate of inflation slows down.
* physical process
* refers to falling inflation.
* slowing of the rate of inflation.
Deliverance
* is about savlation and the desire for the truth and light
- also a way to restore personal walls that have been broken down by sin and rebellion
- films
- of the soul
- recovery
* process similar to formal exorcism.
* release from bondage, imprisonment and captivity.
* represents a desire to energize the boring life of suburbia.
Decimation
* is an active process with measurable results
- destruction
* is the elimination of data points from a data set
- process of breaking down something into it's constituent parts
Driving
* lighting pipes.
* night blindness.
* parallel parking.
* smoking cigarettes.
* are actions
- dragoonings
- fun
- steering
- travel
* cause accidents
- boredom
- death
- fatigue
- injuries
- movings
- tension headaches
* cause traffic accidents
- jam
- transportation
- tunnel vision
Dioon
* Most Dioons are from Mexico where they live in dry conditions, though a few are more tropical.
* stems are moderate to large and accordingly, the cones are held well above the ground.
Deism
* denies revelation, in favor of natural law and scientific discovery.
* emphasizes, as civil religion does, order and law more than salvation and love.
* is confined to the elite
- rationalism
* still exists.
Dunk
* brand designed from the outset to be different.
* is shot | {
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} |
Direct compensation
* focuses more on employee wages, salaries, incentives, and gainsharing.
* involves monetary payments to employees for time worked or results obtained.
* is an employee s base wage.<|endoftext|>Distortion
* Some distortion is caused by the fact that all cables have capacitance and inductance.
* are very common in fingerprint images due to elasticity of the skin.
* causes straight lines to appear curved at the edge of the field.
* defect in a lens where images of straight lines appear curved.
* happens in perception, memory, and applying double standards.
* increases the higher harmonics present in a sound.
* is an illusion that appears as if it is changing size or shape off in the distance
- both growth and shrinkage of parts
- damage
- falsification
- measured as the greatest deviation from the long axis
- mistakes
- part of the human psyche
- the amount the image shifts closer or further from the optical axis
- where parts of the image are magnified more or less than others
* is, by definition, a deviation from the normal shape.
* measures a system's linearity - or nonlinearity.
* occurs as the distance between the lens and the subject changes
- when the cochlea changes the sound in some way
* refer to uneven aggregate embedment leading to a washboard surface.
Decorative lighting
* can help create a mood.
* provides illumination to a variety of rooms, each unique in function and design.
Digitalization
* brings complexity, which can affect all aspects of the user experience.
* double-edged sword, as it allows for easier piracy.
* is how computers work.
* is medical aid
- care
- the process of converting from analog equipment to digital
* makes it possible to overcome the separation between different networks.
* removes geographical barriers and saves time.<|endoftext|>Divergence
* aloft initiates upward air movement, reduced surface pressure, and cyclonic flow
- tends to be associated with surface low pressure area development
* are measured as absolute number of uncorrected differences.
* can also develop within a continent, resulting in a rift valley.
* conflict between momentum and price.
* is lateral spreading air parcels
- one of the few tools that generates effective signals when trends weaken
- serieses
- shown by the color of the wind vector
- the opposite situation to convergence, the moving away of elements from a common area
* normal state of affairs.
* normally occurs to the east of a trough in the upper troposphere.
* property of fluids including the atmosphere.
* refers to the fact that one stimulus can affect many responses.
* removes air molecules from our column of air, thus dropping the pressure at the surface.
* traces back to speication events that produced species.
Desertion
* can be a ground of divorce only when the departing person is an unbeliever.
* crime, according to the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
* grounds for divorce in states with fault divorce.
* is taken to mean almost everything, from mental cruelty to being aloof
- when one spouse abandons the other
* very common charge found in Civil War court-martial case files.
Deep love
* is the kind of love that attaches no conditions.
* seeks special ways to reveal and express itself.<|endoftext|>Dysfunction
* are perennial, and the tendency for organizations to screw up is perennial
- undesirable consequences of any element of society
* comes when they've wounded each other.
* happens in the central nervous system, at the head of which is the brain.
* has a psychological basis for some males and can contribute to well-being a.
* is illnesses
- often of mechanical origin
- pathology
* occurs in palatal, posterior pharyngeal wall and lateral pharyngeal wall musculature.
* word that is accepted in our program.
Deliberation
* is consideration
- discussion
- the work of many people
* type of inquiry. | {
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} |
Descriptive geometry
* is concerned with analyzing and solving space distances and relationships
- geometry
* study of points, lines and planes in their spatial relationships.
Deviance
* helps maintain social cohesion and the collective conscious.
* is but one step from that stage at which the society defines such behavior as a crime
- irregularity
- on a continuum from minor cultural variations to behavior that is destructive
Dissipation
* causes warming.
* danger to both health and truth.
* is determined by viscosity, and convection by conductivity
- dispersion
- due to microbial decomposition, with warm, moist conditions favoring decomposition
- frivolous, unjustified spending of marital assets
- humoring
- the result of irreversible processes that take place in inhomogeneous systems<|endoftext|>Dissociation
* can affect the patient's memory, sense of reality, and sense of identity
- become so intense that some women deny their pregnancies even to themselves
- include depersonalisation and derealisation
* common phenomena in cyberspace at large.
* disruption in normally integrated consciousness.
* failure to integrate experiences that normally go together.
* is also a survival skill of great value in response to trauma and abuse
- an everyday conscious experience which begins in childhood
- another word for 'self induced trance state', altered state etc
- chemical processes
- due to lowering of the firing threshold of limbic neuronal circuits
- employed by children to escape from their abuser
- low in patients with medically established brain damage
- separation
* is the first line of human defense in shock
- logical complement of the statistical concept of association
* is the loss of conscious awareness of the real world
- the ability to access information normally in consciousness
- minds way of breaking the connections between itself and the outside world
- natural process of providing insulation to an over-exposed aspect of self
* kind of emotional protection in otherwise traumatizing situations.
* means complete ionization in water.
* normal mental response to anxiety.
* occurs in many forms.
* psychological defense mechanism that also has psychobiological components.
+ Dissociative identity disorder, Definitions: Mental illnesses :: Psychology :: NPOV disputes
* Dissociation is a symptom. Most people experience normal dissociation, where they stop paying attention to what is happening around them. People with DID have pathological dissociation, which is much more serious. It involves problems with memory and attention that make it hard for people to work, shop and have relationships with other people. Everyone can dissociate but some people can do it much more easily and to an extreme that can be unhealthy.<|endoftext|>Donation
* are an investment in public lands to ensure they recieve proper care.
* gift
- of life, or sight, to others
* involves a surgical procedure to remove the needed organs and tissues.
* is an act of faith, hope and charity
- opportunity to help save a life or restore someone's sight
- the giving of the body to a medical facility or school
* occurs after a loved one dies.
* provide animals for sacrifice to feed the hungry in many countries.
* surgical procedure respectful of the body.
Directional lighting
* produces shadows that can help locate surface defects such as burrs or pits.
* provides visual queues as to the orientation of the cones. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Eternity
* beginning with no end.
* defines what is temporal.
* exists and consequently eternal being exists as well.
* forms a spiral.
* game for one to four players, human or computer.
* has no beginning, and no end
- nothing to do with time
- one dimension more than time
- only one dimension - it exists
* is an existence without beginning or end
- citizenship
- long and, sometimes, wide
- made up of ages, and ages of generations
- opposed to time
- over and under, before and after, in and around and through time
* is the present moment
- present, the now that never ends
- time intervals
- timeless and present all the time
* long time to live with ashes.
* long, long time.
* means no beginning, end or change
- that some things are changing all the time
* moves through time, and immortality is an ever-present potential.
* never-ending, infinite line.<|endoftext|>Emotional abuse
* IS abuse.
* affects the soul, and the soul is invisible.
* can also coincide with a child's developmental stages and challenges.
* can be active
- as random as the fallout from a nuclear explosion
- in the form of repeated verbal attacks
* can be just as damaging as physical abuse
- debilitating as physical harm
- more damaging than physical abuse
- serious and even life-threatening if left unattended
- verbal or behavioral, active or passive, frequent or occasional
- cause hypertension, ulcers, depression, and a broken spirit
- involve threatening, terrorizing, insulting, or inducing fear
- take place in public or at home
* causes stress or harm to the person.
* devastating, debilitating heart and soul mutilation.
* distorts the process of attachment and affective development.
* escalates to physical abuse.
* happens in all kinds of ways.
* harms self-esteem.
* hurts because it happens over a long time by someone who is important to a child.
* includes behaviors that degrade or make a person feel worthless, helpless or afraid
- making a child feel rejected, terrorized, berated, humiliated or isolated
- threats, constant criticism and put-downs
* involves an attack on a child's sense of self.
* is almost always present when other forms are identified
- behavior that attacks a child's emotional development and sense of self-worth
- both the most pervasive and the least understood form of child maltreatment
- consistent and chronic behavior
- easy to blame on the victim
- emotional violence
* is just as bad a physical abuse
- more pervasive than physical abuse and is much harder to identify
* is often a component of physical or sexual abuse
- hard to detect, so people tolerate it much longer
- one of the most common and harmful forms of child abuse
- present in all forms of sibling abuse
- probably the most common kind of abuse a child suffers
* is sometimes even harder than sexual abuse to define and recognize
- much more damaging than physical abuse
* is the infliction of anguish, pain or distress through verbal or non-verbal acts
- most difficult form of child maltreatment to identify
- systematic diminishment of another
- thesystematic diminishment of another
- usually more psychologically damaging than physical abuse
- verbal assaults, negative moods, family discord and double messages
- very difficult to categorize and measure
* is, by many victims' opinions, the most damaging form of domestic violence.
* leads to hurt and anger.
* method of control that includes a variety of verbal attacks and humiliations.
* occurs over time.
* pattern of behavior attacking a child's self-worth
- destructive behaviour or verbal attacks by an adult on a child
* scars the heart and damages the soul.
* takes the form of a systematic degrading of the victim's self-worth. | {
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} |
Enforcement
* is social control.
* is the act of carrying out sanctions for failure to comply with standards
- immediate process to ensure compliance to laws
* means to ensure that society stays within the rule of law.
* state of mind as well as a set of skills.
Embrasure
* are triangularly shaped spaces located between the proximal surfaces of adjacent teeth.
* have three functions.
Excessive sedation
* appears to be the main effect of an overdose of mirtazapine.
* associated with zopiclone is likely to impair motor function.
Educational research
* is research that educates.
* provides teachers with rules of thumb for practice.
* reports that learning is facilitated in smaller class sizes.<|endoftext|>Eternal life
* enables people to overcome selfishness.
* encompasses body and soul.
* family matter regarding the inheritance.
* gives meaning to life
- purpose to physical life
* has to do with a quality of being.
* is 'eternal bliss in Hereafter'.
* is an absolute for everyone
- infinite gift
- animation
* is by grace through faith
- considered a present reality
- equally dependent upon that food which endures forever
- essentially an attribute of love
- filled with righteousness, peace, and joy
- given by a gift
- in two four s or two creations one natural and one spiritual
- like a living water, like a drink of water from a brook or from a fountain
- more than a chronological event and change of composition
- open to all who believe
- salvation
- singularly the most important pursuit of life
* is the antitype of ritual observance
- believer's destiny
- certain consequence, or rather completion of holiness
- experience of endless nirvana
- hope and promise to all who come to faith in Jesus
- present possession of our calling
- to gain exaltation in the highest heaven and live in the family unit
* makes a difference in our lives even before death.
* requires forgiveness of sin.
Environmental career
* are in science, technical services, policy, and education.
* encompass many different types of jobs and employers.
Environmental monitoring
* enables temporal and spatial changes in the environment to be recorded.
* ensures compliance with environmental laws.
* includes measures of ambient air and groundwater quality.
* is an activity that is primarily the purview of the federal government
- important part of preservation
- important both before and after human disturbance
- required for some chemicals such as formaldehyde
* weak link in Albania's environmental management chain.<|endoftext|>Embezzlement
* Most embezzlements are actually a series or combination of crimes, rather than a single crime.
* are emotional as well as financial crimes
- generally both ego and habit crimes, and are rhythmic, predictable and cyclic
- very widespread, abuse of authority, misuse or misplacement of funds
* breach of trust.
* comes after long periods of bitterness, lack of contentment, and greed.
* is common and includes the sale of weapons, munitions and any other property
- frequently an offense of a bank employee or of a comptroller of a corporation
- larceny
- often the most misunderstood and complicated crime to discover, or to investigate
* is the act of diverting money fraudulently for one's own use
- main crime exposure when operating in foreign countries
* specific intent crime.
* violation of trust by people often regarded as friends and confidants. | {
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} |
Evolutionary adaptation
* are the basis for the correlation between structure and function.
* phenomenon of pervasive importance in biology.
+ Adaptation: Evolutionary biology :: Ecology
* This process takes place over many generations. Natural History Museum, London. It is one of the basic phenomena of biology. Evolutionary adaptation is a phenomenon of pervasive importance in biology.
+ Evolution, Darwin's theory, 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.
Emboli
* Most emboli are blood clots, but some are composed of fat, amniotic fluid, or air
- thromboemboli
* are clots that form elsewhere but are carried by the blood to eventually lodge in the artery.
* enter penetrating arteries of monkey brain in relation to their size.
* formed by atherosclerotic plaque can also block arteries.
* frequently originate in the heart, aorta, or carotid artery.
* usually lodge at divisions of an artery, where the vessel narrows.
Excitation
* influences neuron state, which has some inertia.
* is achieved by a series of short laser pulses
- arousal
- longitudinal to the optical axis of the cavity
* travels through the nerve surounded by a myelin sheath.<|endoftext|>Eurasia
* includes Afghanistan
- Andorra
- Asia
* includes Asian Russia
- countries
- nations
- Austria
- Bangladesh
- Belarus
- Belgium
- Bhutan
- Bulgaria
- Caspian
- England
- Estonia
- Europe
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Holland
- Hungary
- Iceland
- India
- Iran
- Iraq
- Ireland
- Italy
- Jordan
- Kazakhstan
- Kyrgyzstan
- Latvia
- Lebanon
- Liechtenstein
- Moldova
- Monaco
- Mongolia
- Nepal
- Netherlands
- Oman
- Pakistan
- Poland
- Portugal
- Qatar
- Romania
- Scotland
- Slovakia
- Spain
- Switzerland
- Syria
- Tajikistan
- Tibet
- Turkmenistan
- Ukraine
- Uzbekistan
- Yemen
Everyday life
* affects the way the church worships and believes.
* is about making choices
- based on believing, on faith
- characterised by routine
- impacted by the decisions of government policymakers
- made up of an overabundance of events
* is the dojo, the training arena for wisdom and compassion
- sphere of many of our most sacred actions
* presents situations
- stressful situations
Erysipela
* causes affected areas of skin to turn bright red and become slightly swollen.
* is treated with penicillin or erythromycin. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Encryption
* allows information to be translated into un-decipherable code
- people to use electronic envelopes to protect their speech
* also gives criminals and terrorists the means of keeping their nefarious plans secret.
* basic technology that is in great demand.
* can be a complex and sophisticated approach to protecting confidential data
- exist in many different forms
- help keeping data and communication confidential
- protect data while it is in transit, from one party to another
- provide a means of securing information
* complex technology.
* critical technology for securing information as it passes through the Internet.
* depends upon the use of keys.
* ensures the privacy of information on any transport or storage medium.
* fundamental building block of the information age.
* has a long tradition in the military defence field
- applications in many areas, including electronic commerce and message authentication
* helps protect private data from interception by a third party.
* involves the encoding of material such that the information is relatively inaccessible
- scrambling of data through a hardware or software embedded algorithm
* is also important on the database that contains the biometric information.
* is an easy way to protect vital data
- effective way to achieve data security
* is an essential component of information security
- part of the right to human expression protected under the Constitution
- important element in our search for internet security
* is another method used to provide data security on the net
- type of security measure used to protect data and information
* is at the heart of most digital commerce done over the Internet
- the growing Internet economy
* is based on a key that has two different parts
- factoring numbers into a product of primes
- public and private key technology
* is based on the kind of mathematical calculations that fill a blackboard
- mathematical scrambling and unscrambling of messages
- both the first and last line of Internet security
- critical to the future of on-line privacy
- designed for transmission security
- essential to hundreds of billions of dollars of e-commerce
- extremely important for passwords
- important in protecting client message data
- like putting a letter in an envelope
* is one form of cryptography
- mechanism used for secrecy
- of the best techniques to maintain the confidentiality of messages
- tool often mentioned when talking about securing music
- only one form of concealment
- seen by many people as a necessary step for commerce on the internet to succeed
- software technology that locks computerized information to keep it private
- speech protected by the First Amendment
- speech, and as such is entitled to protection
- standard practice for commerce on the internet
- technology that scrambles computer files and communications to protect privacy
* is the actual process of hiding the message
- armored car of the Internet
- best way to protect information communicated over the Internet
- coding of the message so only the intended recipient can read
- conversion of a message into an unreadable form
- envelope for the digital age
- glue and tape that seals an envelope
- locking of a message and decryption is the unlocking
* is the main component providing security within payment systems
- way of achieving confidentiality using computers
- most effective way to achieve data security
- only safe way to store confidential documents on a local hard drive
- principal technology for message secrecy
* is the process of converting data into a secure format for transmission
- information into a more secure format for transmission
- disguising information into an unreadable form
- encoding data for security purpose
* is the process of scrambling a message so that only the intended recipient can read it
- confidential electronic data into undecipherable code
- data so that only the intended receiver can use it
- scrambling of information for transmission back and forth between two points
- second building block for security protocols
- single most powerful and effective technology for protecting privacy
- technology used to protect information sent over the Internet
* is the transformation of data into a form unreadable by anyone without a decryption key
- some unreadable form
* is the translation of data into a secret code
- a type of secret code
- use of some means to disguise or obscure the meaning of a message
- way in which information is scrambled when it is sent over the Internet
* is used for all messages after a simple handshake is used to define a secret key
- many different things
- security purposes
- in more computer and network products for security purposes
* is used to ensure that all transactions are secure
- further secure the data contained in the packets
- keep online communications like e-mail private
- maintain the confidentiality of private data when traveling over the Internet
- prevent making copies
* is used to protect against eavesdropping
- spoofed packets and hijacked connections
- personal or business data from hackers or competitors
- store the code in a secret way
- verify messages, validate and authenticate users and authorize transactions
- vital for the protection of private information in digital form
* makes secrecy of identity easy, thereby creating a market for identity.
* mathematical mechanism designed to protect sensitive information.
* matter of clicking on a button or pressing a hot key.
* means any procedure to convert plaintext into ciphertext.
* means of scrambling information for transmission between computer systems
- to protect it as it travels across the Internet
* means to achieve that privacy
- ensure confidentiality
- turning meaningful words and numbers into coded language
* method for scrambling data in order to make electronic communications more secure.
* method of disguising data so that no outsiders can read it
- scrambling information to prevent others from intercepting it
* modern form of computer deletion for redaction purposes.
* permits buyers and sellers to verify and authenticate a transaction over the Internet.
* process of mathematically scrambling data
- turning written language into a scrambled, unrecognizable form
* prohibits eavesdropping in electronic data exchange media.
* promotes national security, prevents crime, and protects privacy.
* protects data from being monitored while it is being transmitted
- information from interception or eavesdropping as it transits the Internet
- private data in the event that an intruder gains physical access to a computer
* protects private information from being divulged even over open networks
- discovery when transmitted, even over open networks
- the security and privacy of communications and stored data
* provides privacy by protecting email as it moves over the Internet.
* refers to any procedure to convert plain text into cipher text.
* secret code that scrambles all data and every message sent to and from the server.
* secure means of transferring sensitive files.
* technology that employs complex mathematical algorithms to encode data.
* transforms a message into a ciphertext using an encryption key.
* transforms data into an unreadable form to ensure privacy
- some unreadable form to ensure privacy
* uses a mathematical formula to decrypt data
- codes based on mathematical algorithms to make communications secure
- mathematical algorithms that substitute strings of numbers for bits of information
- the factoring of large numbers to restrict access to certain files and locations
* using public or private keys can protect messages from packet sniffers.
* very important role in computer privacy.
* way of protecting the content of messages
- scrambling data so that only users with the right key can read the data
* way to rewrite something in a code, which can be decoded later with the right key
- write something in code, which can be decoded later with the right key
+ Prime number, What prime numbers are used for: Number theory
* This card is protected by a secret access code. Since the code needs to be kept secret, it cannot be stored in cleartext on the card. Encryption is used to store the code in a secret way. This encryption uses multiplications, divisions, and finding remainders of large prime numbers. An algorithm called RSA is often used in practice. It uses the Chinese remainder theorem. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Empowerment
* allows individuals to share knowledge, experience and ideas.
* also occurs at various levels, such as individual, group, and community.
* comes from visualizing and experiencing the music, the spectacle, dance
- within a woman
- with access to public transportation
* comes, in part, from control over satisfaction of basic human needs.
* directly impacts on the development of independent judgment skills.
* embodies vertical teamwork between managerial and non-managerial personnel.
* facilitates full participation of all cultural groups in today's schools and society
- transformation and transformation never occurs in a vacuum
* flows from motivation for learning.
* follows from believing in oneself, in one s family, in one s heritage.
* fosters feelings of confidence and also provides opportunities for self-growth.
* gives others the autonomy and confidence to act independently.
* giving of power that also provides for underpinning and support.
* happens while people interact in ways of mutual respect, tolerance and social support.
* heady experience quickly tempered by the reality of responsibility.
* helps build confidence and aids in relationship management.
* includes capacity building and strengthening in various dimensions.
* increases ownership of outcomes, and reduces the burden on management.
* involves an approach to programming rather than applying simple techniques
- shifting responsibility to employees further 'down' the management hierarchy
* is about being able to change things
- government being the people s servant
- power, which can be the ability to get intended effects
* is also a key aspect in providing motivation and direction to others
- women's overdue reward for filling the planet with humans
* is an essential process for women's advancement
- important metaphor for leadership
* is an overused and under-practiced term
- word and an underused process
- authority that is given with the ability to choose where to spend productive time
- how respect is implemented within the framework of a software company
- multi-dimensional, social, and a process
- now a widely-used sociological term
* is one of the greatest gifts to give oneself
- key ingredients to getting more done with fewer resources
- keys to institutionalization
- simply a new, different, and effective way of working together
* is the act of shifting authority and responsibility for work
- aim of social interaction in the context of public health
- instrument of change
- key to motivation
- means to enable and the ability to make possible a change
- preferred salve for society's wrinkles
- process of authorizing the union of the angelic and human together
- transforming and liberating character of participation
- too often synonymous with abdication by management
* means authorizing and enabling workers to do their jobs
- decision making at lowest level of organization is supported
- empowering parties to define issues and to seek solutions on their own
- giving people responsibility and support to actualize that responsibility
- helping someone regain a sense of being in charge
- permitting employees to make choices and decisions as they deem appropriate
- that every person has a voice and a responsibility
* natural extension of employee involvement.
* occurs when individuals or groups have opportunities and authority to take action.
* powerful tool of leaders.
* process that challenges our assumptions about the way things are and can be.
* socio-political concept and it goes beyond political participation.
* struggle even within families.
* term that means different things to different people.
* therefore involves notions of employee involvement in decision making.
* works in nature
- with people | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits