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Magical realism
* expresses emotions of the real and the unreal.
* happens as truth in another dimension.
* is the possibilities that start with realities
- writing of Spanish and Latin American authors
- used in painting, writing, and in everyday life
Matriculation
* is admission
- an event in which a speech is made about the upcoming school year
- the ultimate academic and professional matter in an institution of higher learning
* process designed to promote student success.
Malocclusion
* Most malocclusions are inherited, some are acquired.
* are most commonly a result of hereditary or traumatic injuries.
* is believed to be hereditary
- disorder
- most often hereditary
* leads to difficulty in biting, chewing and swallowing of food.
* poor relationship between upper and lower teeth.
* refers to the alignment of upper and lower teeth.
Mousetrap
* are a staple of slapstick comedy and animated cartoons
- games
- maneuvers
- traps
- very dangerous and unpredictable, even for cats
* is play
Muscular conditioning
* includes calisthenics and weight training.
* is done through exercises against resistance.<|endoftext|>Mercy
* also involves the way in which needed correction and discipline are given.
* byproduct of justice.
* disposition to forgive the guilty
- pardon crime
* feeling compassion that makes one person want to save or rescue someone else.
* has a direct relationship to misery
- meaning more synonymous with compassion
* involves love, compassion and forgiveness of sin
- tolerance, understanding and forgiveness
* is actions
- also one of the greatest expressions of love and morality
* is an attitude of love and forgiveness toward someone who is miserable and undeserving
- integral part of forgiveness and creativity
- blessings
- for all that seek forgiveness of sins with a heart that desires change
- grace for bodily and spiritual needs
- leniency
- long-term love applied to an immediate situation
- love forever remembering people who deserve to be forgotten
- manifested through compassion, forgiveness, caring and humility
- relief
* is the ability to see things with another's eyes, to experience another's feelings
- walk in someone else's shoes and feeling what other people feel
- beginning, the foundation, the ground of our being
- fitting response of a heart overwhelmed with the mercy it has received
- great peace of truth, the great gentleness of love and forgiveness
- greatest expression and highest order of kindness
- heart of spirituality, and of right living
- justice of sensuous life
- outward expression of pity or compassion
- personal investment of life that adds to human capital
- unifying and elevating power that makes compassion possible
* means compassion towards an offender.
* relates to sinful humans.
* sign of love.<|endoftext|>Morphogenesis
* balance between wall synthesis and wall lysis.
* gives rise to tissues, organs and anatomy.
* is also dependent on muscle which is structurally connected to the hypodermis
- growth
* is the formation of the physical structure of the organism
- reshaping of the embryo as cells migrate to different areas
* means creating form.
* refers to the development of shape or form.
* relates to the formation of three-dimensional shape.
+ Developmental biology
* Modern developmental biology studies the genetic control of cell growth, differentiation and morphogenesis. Morphogenesis gives rise to tissues, organs and anatomy. These are the processes which turn a zygote into an adult animal.
Monetary compensation
* is also a decision made by the employer.
* subset of total rewards. | {
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} |
Monitoring
* are observations.
* continuous process of evaluating intelligence and counterintelligence.
* exposed workers is an important component of prevention of adverse health effects.
* involves the periodic collection of data to study changes in an environment through time.
* is an essential tool in population management, and is fundamental to conservation
- important aspect of mitigation, especially in areas of scientific uncertainty
- employed in tracking populations of beneficials as well as pests
- essential for the detection of change on the Earth's surface
- how most of people receive information
- that part of management that involves collecting information about the managed system
* is the act of checking that standards are met
- assessment of the amount of oxygen dissolved in the internal jugular vein
- collection of information about a project over time
- continuous acquisition and display of data
- observation of data streams for specific events
- periodic observation of selected parameters for quantifying changes over time
- tracking of the performance or outcomes of a project
- used to indicate whether, what, and when pest management measures are needed
* long-term process of collecting and analyzing data to detect changes over time.
* painless procedure accomplished by skin-surface devices.
* refers to the assay of samples before and after treatment or remediation.
* tool used to assess the trends of natural communities and rare species.
* way of assessing the presence of pests and the size of their population.
Molecular recognition
* is also important in the emerging field of supramolecular chemistry
- an essential process in all biological systems
- due to the complementarities of non-covalent forces
* is the bread and butter of molecular biologists
- specific binding of molecules to each other
* relies on how well two molecules fit together. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Meaning
* accrues through what people do and how they look.
* are determined by what is said, rather than how it is is said
- ideas
- in people
- located in life
- messages
- the product of social processes
* associated with appearances emerge in social interaction with others.
* combination of semantics and pragmatics.
* complex operation of projecting, blending, and integrating over multiple spaces.
* concept that is relative and arbitrary.
* exists only where people hear, where people make connections.
* flows naturally from people's connection with everything else in the universe.
* function of context.
* has something to do with experience, and each individual has a different experience of life.
* human category.
* involves a relationship between language and the world.
* is an act of imagination
- effect of cultures
- important element of representation
- intention, aim, or design
- assembled in semantic networks in which words are inserted in classes
- central to human existence and art
- constructed by individuals situated in a culture that influences that construction
* is created out of the causal, chaotic events of life
- through shared and accumulated knowledge
- defined in terms of reference and truth
- described in sets of triplets, much like simple sentences
- essential to human existence
- found instinctively in languages
- important in mathematics and geometry is an important source of that meaning
- imposed by people and cultures
- in contribution, in living for something higher than self
- largely a function of the contexts within which events occur
- only meaning when it is made with other people
- produced by a system of relations between signifiers
- relative to the culture that creates that meaning
- seen as a construction of a social unit that shares a stake in a common situation
* is something people create for themselves
- with infinite context
- studied in the sub-fields of semantics and pragmatics
- that which provides value or significance
* is the being of all that has been created and the nature even of our selfhood
- central fact of human existence with which psychoanalysis has to deal
- instinct that makes life possible
- understood in relation to personal expression, imagination, intuition, the unconscious
- use of syntax
* is what happens when it is looked at
- lets one perceive rewards which are concurrent with struggle
- written into music
* relation between a word and a combination of teaching cues and sensory experience.
* reside only in people.
* state of mind in about the same way that running state of water.
* truly mysterious quality that arises at the juncture of inner and outer realities.
Mental training
* is an opportunity for coaches to help their athletes become tougher.
* teaches how to focus on the task at hand.
Mailing
* is mail
- transmissions
* lists Online mailing lists for writers
- Way to send e-mail automatically to many people on a regular basis
Marital love
* is love that lasts.
* requires self respect, self-esteem, and a sense of personal boundaries and limits.
* strong love, an enduring love, a never ending love.
Maternal love
* brings an ethic of care and is shaped by compassion.
* is our first taste of love, the origin of all feelings of love. | {
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} |
Mail
* Domains A subset of domain names.
* are little rings that are attached to each other.
* breathe onto a stomach after cause rheumatic heart disease.
* bunch of chain made into clothes.
* is an inetorgperson attribute the preferred to address , multivalued
- collections
- communication
- essentially individual to individual, or individual to small group, communication
* is located in fridges
- houses
- mail boxs
- post offices
- tables
- one of the most popular web-based mail services on the Internet
- private communication
- software
* is the most commonly used method of communicating on wide are networks
- popular form of direct advertising in use today
* means of private communication.
* program that gives access to every e-mail service.
* provides the transport mechanism to import mail messages.
* travels at the speed of light.
* uses temporary storage in memory and on disk to improve access to data.
* way to register.
* web-based email system.
+ Diomede Islands
* The people who lived on Big Diomede Island were moved to mainland Russia by the Soviet government. This village there has a school, and a local store. Some eskimos there are famous for their ivory carving. Mail is delivered by helicopter, weather permitting.
+ Diomede, Alaska: Cities in Alaska
* There are no roads on the island. There also are no banks or restaurants. A general store has basic supplies. Diomede is the only place people live on the island. Mail is delivered to the island by helicopter.
+ Pipalyatjara, South Australia: Towns in South Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: Pitjantjatjara
* There is a small airstrip at Pipalyatjara. Mail is delivered once per week by air. Electricity comes from a diesel generator. Water comes from two bores and placed in storage tanks for pumping to the community. There is a school in Pipalyatjara, which also serves nearby Kalka.
+ Tjuntjuntjara, Western Australia: Towns in Western Australia :: Indigenous Australian communities :: 1980s establishments :: Pitjantjatjara
* The community is governed by a local council. Facilities and services are managed by the Paupiyala Tjarutja Aboriginal Corporation, a non-profit organisation. The community has its own health clinic. The community school, Tjuntjuntjara Remote Community School, was opened in 2008. Both the clinic and the school are helped by the federal government. Mail is flown in by plane once per week. A truck delivers food supplies to the community once every two weeks. There is no police station.
Micas
* All micas form flat, book-like crystals that peal apart into individual sheets on cleavage planes
- plate-like crystals
* Most micas have particle shapes
- unusual shapes
* Some micas contain aluminum.
* Some micas have high thermal stability
* often deform by kinking, which involves slip on the basal plane.
Maternal smoking
* doubles the risk of sudden infant death syndrome.
* has a strong adverse effect on infant birthweight.
* is associated with a greater risk of allergy at birth.
* poses the greatest danger, but paternal smoking also increases risk.
* relates more closely to childhood respiratory infection than paternal smoking.<|endoftext|>Mense
* continue only when moving about, and cease when sitting or lying down.
* flow only at night or only in the morning.
* happens in the first days of the menstrual cycle.
* usually occurs for a period of five days, after which the preliferative stage begins.
+ Menstruation, Physical appearance: Female reproductive system
* Menses happens in the first days of the menstrual cycle. This is the changes that happen in a woman's body every month. These changes are started by changes in hormone levels in the blood. Menstruation usually starts around the age of 11, even as early as 9 years old, and ends when the woman is too old to have children. However, some women can still have children from the age of 50-70. | {
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} |
Mutual masturbation
* is considered a safe sexual activity.
* provides a satisfying and pleasurable form of sexual intimacy and release.
Militarisation
* channels social or personal frustration into violence.
* concedes power and influence to arms traders.
* confers social status for military prowess.
* inclines people to resort to violence more readily instead of discussion.
* is an extreme form of patriarchy
- social control
* protects soldiers from prosecution for criminal actions.
* strengthens authoritarianism and reduces transparency.
* subordinates civil rights to military needs.<|endoftext|>Men
* attack women because they have issues with power.
* batter other men in intimate relationships, women batter men, and women batter other women.
* commit acts of sexual violence against women.
* experience a gradual decline in orgasmic activity after late adolescence
- hormonal shift in middle age, similar to menopause in women
- more gradual and incomplete loss of testicular function with increasing age
- various types of stress in intimate heterosexual relationships
* gain prestige by providing food for public consumption, especially during feasts.
* impregnate women, but women bear and nurse children.
* inherit their single X chromosome from their mothers.
* is taken to mean both all people and non-female people.
* is the helmet which protects the face, throat, top and sides of the head
- symbol of a moon goddess who is aged and wise rather than young and beautiful
* love to see women's bodies.
* measure men by what they possess, by their physical condition, and how smart they are.
* migrate primarily to work while women migrate for social, economic and personal reasons.
* offer prayers and sacrifices to their own personal gods, which are usually inanimate objects.
* perspire more than women, their pores are larger, and they have oilier and thicker skin.
* rape The great majority of all sexually violent crimes are committed by males.
* report burning, often severe, during urination, and discharge from the penis
- difficulties in attaining an erection or orgasm while on ecstasy
* risk death to reproduce.
* study physiology to report on body reactions during flight.
* suicide four times more than women.
* use kangaroo meat as food or as pet food
- persistence because generations of ancestors have proven that it works
- rape as a means of continuing male dominance by keeping all women in a state of fear
- women's bodies to form alliances or bonds with each other
+ Fisting: Sexual acts
* Man to man fisting is sometimes used to humiliate the fisted. It is sometimes used to initiate the fisted one into a men's club or other all-male organization. Men fist each other for pain and pleasure. They fist for the pleasure of having their anuses stretched. They fist for the pleasure and pain of having their rectums and colon filled with something large.
+ Susan Brownmiller: Feminist scholars :: 1935 births :: Living people :: American activists :: American feminists :: American journalists :: Jewish American writers :: Time People of the Year :: Writers from New York City
* Brownmiller says that rape has been defined by men rather than women until now. Men use rape as a means of continuing male dominance by keeping all women in a state of fear. All men benefit from this. Brownmiller also participated in civil rights activism. She joined CORE during the sit-in movement and volunteered for Freedom Summer in 1964. She first became involved in the Women's Liberation Movement in New York City in 1968. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mummification
* is conditions
- fairly unusual, though, occurring only when conditions are very dry
- no longer a practice in Egypt
- one way to to have a life after life
* is the preservation of a body, either animal or human after death
- process of drying out a dead body to prevent it from rotting
* process where the dead had to go through in order to be buried in Egypt.
* progressive approach to death and sets the stage for spiritual guidance.<|endoftext|>Meekness
* bears fruit when rooted in repentance and faith.
* involves keeping power under control.
* is characterized by a willingness to suffer wrong rather than do wrong.
* is compatible with great authority and power
- strength, power, and authority
- humility
- strength submitted under authority
* is the expression of being poor in spirit and mourning over sin
- freedom from anger or inner agitation
- natural outgrowth of poverty of spirit and mourning
- opposite of violence and vengeance
- selfless aspect of love
Mechanical loading
* is an important physiological stimulus to net bone formation.
* regulates osteopontin and myeloperoxidase.
Mutuality
* certain form of ownership that can be found throughout the economy and society.
* fuzzy concept.
* is central to communities
- reciprocity
* is the key that distinguishes flirting and sexual harassment
- process of loving and way of speaking of love
* means equality, fairness, justice, a right relationship.
* sharing of our lives, a sense of deep solidarity.
Modernization
* culture bound concept with no universal meaning.
* encourages international trade and trade fosters wealth.
* entails a tendency to no longer be ruled by traditions
- the reinvention both of space and time
* is adaptation
- believed to involve the development of nationalism
- found in markets
- improvement
- the guise under which the superpowers are continuing to build up arms
* takes place in every segment of the economy.
Mathematical concept
* are important in chemistry
- introduces by showing children how math is used in everyday life
- often difficult to understand
* enrich computer science, statistics, economics, and the natural sciences.
* express relations.
* have a profound influence on the world outside of mathematics.
* used to describe knots include polynomials, group theory, and topology.
Mature love
* is stable, a union of two people who respect themselves and each other.
* means liking a person as well as loving. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mediation
* allows couples to make their own decisions
- disputants to control the decisions that affect their lives
- for the cleansing of the mind and the soul
* can be a form of problem solving.
* can help business people solve problems without filing a lawsuit
- people to move beyond their positions to understanding of their interests
- to preserve and improve relationships
- occur in cases where someone is thinking about or has started a legal action
* chance for both parties to really hear what the other is saying.
* civil alternative to adversarial litigation.
* collaborative method for ending disputes quickly and inexpensively.
* commonly used strategy to assist students with conflict resolution.
* communal process with involvement of trusted leadership.
* confidential process in which a neutral person guides the parties in problem-solving
- where decisions are made in a private conference room
* confidential, cost-effective way to resolve conflicts which arise in daily life.
* conflict problem-solving process.
* consensual process that bears no relationship to litigation or arbitration.
* cost-effective way to resolve claims or specific issues relating to claims.
* cost-free way for people to work out their disputes without going to court.
* disciplined approach to dealing with conflict between individuals or groups.
* dispute resolution process that helps people in conflict create their own solutions
- is non-adversarial in nature
* emphasizes taking personal responsibility for resolving conflict.
* empowers people to resolve conflicts in a cooperative and supportive environment
- solve their own interpersonal problems
- the parties to create an agreement that they all can live with
* enables people to retain their own decision making power
- decision-making power
* encourages people to deal efficiently with conflict and craft a solution.
* equips people to constructively intervene when others are in conflict.
* facilitated form of negotiation.
* facilitates agreements between disputing people.
* facilitative process.
* flexible way of resolving a disagreement.
* form of alternative conflict resolution.
* form of alternative dispute resolution required by the judicial process in Maine
- structured negotiations
* has a long and varied history in almost all cultures of the world
- strong roots in civil law and in labor negotiations
* helps people communicate and work together to resolve their differences
- have difficult conversations
- in conflict better understand the other person's perspective
- make their own decisions to resolve their conflict
* helps people to solve their differences in a fair and friendly manner
- understand each other better
* human experience, and an important one.
* improves communication and understanding.
* is an alternative approach to the traditional methods of resolving disputes
- to a legally imposed form of dispute resolution
- way to resolve disputes without the necessity of a hearing
- avenue for parties in conflict to work together to solve their problems peacefully
- effective conflict management process for resolving disagreement in the workplace
- effective, less costly way to tackle difficult workplace issues
- efficient and economical way to resolve disputes
- effort to resolve problems without destroying relationships
- extension and condensation of real life
* is an informal and private way for people to work through a disagreement
- but structured process intended to resolve disputes quickly
- process that is voluntary and confidential
* is an informal process where a mediator helps people with a dispute to reach agreement
- the parties can openly discuss their concerns and needs
- two parties sit down with an independent third party
* is an informal way to resolve disputes between two parties
- integral part of the collective bargaining process
* is an opportunity for employees and management to jointly resolve their disputes
- to resolve differences in a safe and creative environment
- option for couples who are seeking a divorce
- organized form of negotiation
- another form of negotiation
- assisted negotiation in divorce cases
- concerned with having students master their own thinking processes
- considered an alternative way to resolve disputes and to reduce conflict
- cooperative problem-solving
- different from other forms of dispute resolution
- hard work and is designed to come up with a way children can be with both parents
- intervention
- meant to provide a safe space for two or more people to talk through a conflict
* is one answer to a societal problem of seeking a timely day in court
- way for people to settle disputes or lawsuits outside of court
- procedural help in negotiating
* is the distinct professional practice of alternative dispute resolution
- forum of choice for resolution of many types of real estate disputes
- most familiar form of conflict resolution
- peaceful settlement of a dispute with the aid of a third-party intermediary
* is the process by which a neutral helps the parties reach a resolution of their dispute
- of two or more people settling problems without going to court
- used to help two or more parties come to an agreement
- thus a consensual and co-operative approach to resolving conflict
- tied to the distribution of power in society
- used to resolve disputes in a wide variety of settings
- when a neutral party attempts to assist the parties in coming to an agreement
* is, in effect, the voluntary sharing of information in an effort to resolve a matter.
* joint process to resolve workplace disputes.
* kind of 'negotiation assistance' technique.
* labor conflict resolution tool aimed at finding a better way.
* lets people speak for themselves and make their own decisions.
* living process which evolves as a result of the parties' participation in it.
* means of dispute resolution outside of the courts
- to further other business objectives
* method for resolving conflicts
* method of resolving conflicts
* n idea whose time has come.
* natural process used by people in everyday situations.
* non-adversarial process for resolving disputes
* non-binding form of dispute resolution.
* nonbinding intervention by both sides to resolve a suit and is common in civil cases
- procedure to attempt to settle a dispute
* part of family counseling for people getting divorced
- the juvenile criminal justice system
* part-time activity that supplements income.
* peaceful way to stop conflict.
* places people in control of their lives.
* practice governed by a process ethic, the heart and mind of which is impartiality
- that involves using a third party to resolve differences or seek solutions
* preferred method to solving domestic disputes.
* principled process for collaborative decision making.
* private, informal way to resolve a dispute.
* proactive, professional, confidential, and informal way to resolve disputes.
* problem-solving process that allows the parties to develop their own solution.
* procedure designed to resolve work-related conflict.
* process assisting couples in reaching agreement.
* process by which a neutral mediator helps facilitate a resolution to a problem
- an impartial party tries to help people resolve a dispute
- designed to facilitate settlement
* process for resolving disputes with the aid of a neutral
* process in which a neutral facilitates settlement discussions between parties
- parties retain more control over the settlement
- of alternative dispute resolution involving a third party as a mediator
* process of dispute resolution focused on effective communication and negotiation
- resolving disputed issues without going to court
- settling a dispute without going to court
- working toward a common understanding and ag reement
- often used to resolve interpersonal problems
* process that helps parties to plan for the future
- people who have a disagreement reach a settlement
- introduces a third party adviser to a situation
* process that is flexible to the needs of the parties
- was used in many ancient civilizations to resolve disputes
- works, and a process that keeps relationships intact
- to help parties to agree a way out of a problem
* process used for resolving workplace differences between two or more parties
- in helping people resolve conflicts
- where two or more people settle their problems without going to court
- whereby parties to a dispute meet with a neutral third party, a mediator
* process which can be relatively quick and inexpensive
- is cooperative and constructive
- resolves disputes by compromise and agreement
* promotes learning and accepting the differences that exist between people.
* provides a victim rights intervention that humanizes the criminal justice system.
* rapidly expanding field of practice for lawyers
- growing method of resolving disputes
* recognized professional skill for which training is available.
* refers to mediations of subcontract cases and corrections of international contracts.
* route to direct negotiation between discordant parties or areas in the organization.
* safe forum in which spouses can vent their emotions.
* saves time and money for families and schools.
* serves to minimize the adverse effects of divorce on families.
* service provided to encourage mutual resolution of workplace conflict.
* settlement process.
* shared problem solving process.
* simple way for family members to resolve conflicts before, during and after divorce.
* skill that involves good communication, problem solving, and critical thinking.
* structured problem solving process.
* technique used to help two or more parties resolve a dispute relatively informally
* term which has been used to describe many different processes.
* thoughtfully structured process that can be used in a variety of conflict situations.
* thoughtfully-structured process that can be used in a variety of conflict situations.
* tool to resolve conflicts.
* transforms the way people perceive each other and their aims.
* voluntary act of the negotiating parties
- alternative to traditionally punitive consequences
* voluntary and confidential process where disputing parties meet with a mediator
- conflict-resolution process
- dispute resolution process to help parties resolve conflict
- process designed to assist people in resolving conflict and disputes
* voluntary process that aims for a solution acceptable to everyone involved
- people in dispute can use to reach agreement
- which people in dispute can use to reach agreement
* voluntary, confidential way of solving disagreements, conflicts, or disputes.
* voluntary, informal and collaborative process for solving problems
* voluntary, informal process of dispute resolution
- used to solve disputes
* way for parents to settle child support issues without going to court
- of helping people resolve conflicts by talking to each other
* way of resolving conflict between two or more people
- trying to reach agreement with the help of a neutral party
* way to negotiate solutions to disputes
- resolve disputes by asking a neutral person to intercede
- work through a disagreement or conflict between two or more people
* works in a variety of situations
- situations where people are willing to come together to find workable solutions
- when it creates an environment in which parties can settle their case | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mental imagery
* bridge from perception to the mind.
* helps some children manage mild to moderate persistent pain.
* seems to be a common human cognitive experience.
Mental toughness
* is many things and rather difficult to explain
- positive thinking and positive living
- the guys who can deliver and do the best job when the game is being decided
* large part of tennis and a handy life skill as well.
* very key characteristic for people to have on the court and in life.
Myocardial ischemia
* can cause angina , which is painful
- lead to angina pectoris and myocardial infarction
* deficiency of blood supply to the heart muscle.
* is reversible, but if it continues, myocardial injury results.
* means that there is inadequate blood flow to the heart muscle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Malnutrition
* adversely affects women's participation in the economic system and their productivity.
* affects a large proportion of rural children
- three times more children under four in the countryside than in the towns
* aggravates cirrhosis.
* already cause of over a third of deaths of children under five in Africa.
* can also be a major cause of obesity
- heighten the adverse impacts of toxic substances
- impede mental development
* can also occur because of the drugs anti-appetite effects
- if the food is inadequate in one or more of the required nutrients
- reduce the effectiveness of the immune system
- stem from disease
* can cause disability as well as increase susceptibility to other disabling diseases
- falls
- suffering in the brain
* can have an effect at any time of development but is most profound early in life
- long-term effects by stunting growth or causing mental retardation
- lead to anemia and weight loss
* can result from the lack of food resulting from meth's reduction in a user's appetite
- in decreased immune function and decreased ability to heal
- selectively destroy central vision at the retinal level
- severely affect a child's intellectual development
- trigger ADHD, and large numbers of U.S. children are malnourished
* causes severe health problems, and can also affect education
- the body fluid to be hypotonic from decreased protein and sodium levels
* chronic problem among children
- in all areas
* comes from a wide variety of reasons.
* common contributing factor to feather plucking
- problem among elderly people living in nursing homes and in the community
* continues to be an important problem.
* contributes more than any other single factor to disease and injury worldwide.
* contributes to liver disease
- more than half of the under-five deaths in developing countries
- the risk
* decreases a person's ability to fight off infection.
* deficiency disease
* frequent problem and, in turn, contributes to many others.
* general term that indicates a lack of some or all-nutritional elements.
* handicaps the ability to learn, to work, and to grow.
* has economic ripple effects that can jeopardize development.
* human-made disease.
* impairs many aspects of specific and nonspecific host defense.
* increases the risk for contracting a number of medical conditions
- severity of the disease signs
- susceptibility to diseases such as diarrhea and malaria
* is also a serious problem
* is an example of the inadequate care and treatment provided by the nursing home
- independent predictor of mortality in excess of the primary diagnosis
- issue for two out of five nursing home residents
- ongoing problem
- another possible adverse effect of alcohol
* is associated with higher cancer treatment-related morbidity and mortality
- more than half of all deaths of children worldwide
- poverty
- caused by lack of proper food
* is common among nursing home residents
- during high water
* is common in both anorexia and bulimia
- children with cystic fibrosis, because few nutrients are absorbed
- within the Swedish health service
- endemic in developing countries
- endemic, reaching fifty to sixty percent of the population outside Baghdad
- epidemic
- equally severe in adults
* is high and rising
- for a fertile country with a relatively stable food supply
- high, as are chronic eye and skin conditions
* is more and more likely to result from over consumption
- pronounced in rural areas
- much more common in the UK than people think especially among the elderly
- now endemic amongst children
* is often both a result and a cause of social and economic under-development
- more common than undernutrition, and few so-called healthy patients are well
- on the increase and there are growing concerns over the health of vulnerable groups
* is one of the greatest dangers
- main consequences of chronic hunger
- major public health problems in developing countries
- most serious problems facing the third world countries today
- worst effects of sanctions
- prevalent and diseases like malaria, hookworm and tuberculosis are endemic
- rampant
- rare
- reported to be high and increasing
- rife, as are serious diseases such as malaria and aids
- rooted more in poverty environmental degradation and social disparity
- serious, and even life-threatening
- social problem
* is the inadequate intake of any of the required nutrients
- most visible and problematic effect of land and water shortage
- omnipresent physical and psychological fact of the Iraqi people
- thought to account for half of child deaths
* is visible in a generation of children and teenagers who are small in size
- many villages
* is widespread and children's bellies are distended with hunger
- the incidence of infectious and parasitic diseases is increasing
- widespread, especially among the young and the poor
* kills or seriously impairs large segments of the world's population.
* kills, maims and disables.
* later can cause insult.
* leading to generalized tissue wasting prominent feature of chronic uremia.
* leads to a decrease in quality of life and an increase in health-service expenditures
- diarrhea and dehydration, and ultimately death
- disabilities as well
- hypomagnesemia when dietary intake of magnesium is low
- infections
* lowers the bodies defense against invasive disease
- body's resistance to virulent and chronic illness
* major cause of illness and death in cancer patients
- contributing factor to the development of hypophosphatemia
* major factor in readmission to hospitals
- that contributes to growth retardation in children
* makes cirrhosis worse
- people more prone to illness
* manifests itself in a number of life-threatening ways.
* occurs when too little food is eaten to continue the body's functions.
* opens the door to a number of medical conditions.
* problem in many developing countries.
* refers to insufficient, excessive, or imbalanced consumption of nutrients.
* remains a chronic problem for many
- major health issue today, particularly in rural areas
- an impediment to development for women and children
* renders millions of people around the globe less productive.
* represents another major threat to the lives of young refugee children.
* results from insufficient intake to meet the patient's metabolic needs.
* seems to be self evident.
* serious problem for Guinea
* severely deprives the body of Jung.
* significant factor in the development of pressure ulcers.
* silent emergency
- epidemic among seniors
* still threatens the lives of millions of children worldwide.
* term which covers problems of both under nutrition and over nutrition.
* then leads to disease and death.
* threatens a country's future.
* very real threat to the community, particularly the very young and old.
* wide-spread problem throughout Haiti. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mental purity
* arises above variations in association of thought.
* is almost impossible for ordinary persons.
Masochism
* involves humiliation, or being made to suffer.
* is an essentially psychological ritual re-enacting whatever inspires someone sexually
- sexual pleasure
* is the association of passively endured cruelty and violence
- experience of suffering accompanied by pleasure
* seems to be most common among successful, individualistic people.
* whole different ballgame.<|endoftext|>Myocardial infarction
* All myocardial infarctions have a central area of necrosis that is surrounded by an area of injury.
* can occur during dissection as the roots of the coronary arteries are damaged.
* is associated with significant mortality, morbidity, and disability
- diseases
- ischaemia which has progressed to irreversibility
- myocardial cell death due to prolonged ischemia
- part of heart attacks
* is the leading cause of death in the United States
- medical term for a heart attack
* is uncommon in women of reproductive age
- with lightning injury
* occurs when one or more coronary arteries are completely occluded.
* presents in the elderly the same way it does in younger people.
* remains the leading cause of death in the United States. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Masturbation
* allows some dissipation of sexual tension before, and to some extent during marriage.
* also allows a woman to be sexually active when no partner is available.
* bad habit.
* becomes a problem when boys masturbate together.
* becomes a substitute for healthy friendships or emotional intimacy with others
- intercourse in marriage
- almost universal at puberty with normal surges in hormones and sexual drive
- an uncontrollable habit
* brings self gratification.
* can be a little, uh, self-involved
- radical act in redefining men's relationship to their bodies and to women
- sexual addiction
- also indicate sexual addiction
- harmful
* can become a bit of an obsession with some boys
- obsessive to some people and, thus, produce a tremendous amount of guilt
- definitely become an addiction
- even help to relieve menstrual cramps
- get really old after six or seven years
- help address an imbalance in sex drive
- involve direct stimulation by the hand to the genitals or other parts of the body
- never bring true satisfaction
- offer more than just producing spunk
- relieve the tension of sexual energy, and even loneliness, temporarily
* causes baldness, warts, insanity and impotence
- ejaculation
- neither physical or psychological harm
- orgasm
* completely normal, healthy activity.
* continues to be common.
* daily activity for most people.
* done in front of an image is lust and a perversion.
* form of learning and practice that is known in every culture.
* has no medical causes.
* healthy and natural part of sexuality.
* helps people who choose to abstain from sexual intercourse for any reason.
* inspires creativity.
* involves stimulating one's own body, usually the genitals, for sexual pleasure.
* is absolutely sexual
- almost exclusively a male activity
* is also a healthy way of achieving the same goal
- release to young unmarried men
- an ever-renewable health resource
* is an activity that sex researchers and sex therapists believe to be healthy
- erotic meditation
- important part of many men's lives
- individual thing
- both physically and emotionally harmful
* is common in both mares and stallions, before and after puberty
- to both boys and girls
- completely normal and healthy
- contentment
- done by males and females of all sexual orientations
* is especially hard to talk about
- important in keeping a marriage sexually balanced and happy
- fairly commonplace among college students
- freedom
- harmful because it can lead to psychological problems in some people
- joy
* is just about everyone's original sexuality
- another form of sex
- one form of sexual expression
- literally an intellectual experience
- more dangerous than smoking
- nature's own way of easing stresses and strains
- normal human activity
- normal, and most children fondle their genitals
- of special concern to parents and providers
- often a healthy and safe way to express oneself sexually
* is often the first way a person experiences sexual pleasure
- person knows sexual pleasure
* is one of nature's most wonderful methods of detoxification
- the safest sexual activities
- way people express their sexuality, and it normal part of growing up
- our first natural sexual activity
- practiced by virtually all males and most females
- presented as a normal phenomenon of adolescence
- private behavior and young people have a right to privacy
- quite common in preschool and kindergarten children
- real sex
- restricted almost exclusively to males
- safe as long as there is no exchange of body fluids
- self-centered
* is self-stimulation by touching the genitals to produce an orgasm
- sex on the Net
* is the best feeling in the world
- experience of sexual orgasm produced by self-stimulation
- favorite pastime of most men and lots of women around the globe
- most practiced and least discussed sex act
- self stimulation of the genitals for pleasure or self comfort
- stimulation of one's own sexual organs to bring about orgasm
- unhealthy and can lead to medical and psychological problems
- very common during adolescence
- when a person strokes or touches their genitals for pleasure
- widespread throughout mammals for both males and females
* is, after all, a normal behavior for most children
- in effect, the political ground on which Whitman tests the theory of democracy
* leads to nervous breakdown.
* lessens our sexual dependency on our spouse.
* normal and safe way to release sexual feelings
- behavior in children
- physiological activity
* normal, healthy part of life.
* occurs more often when they are sleepy, bored, watching television, or under stress
- throughout puberty previous to any relationship
* offers a sexual outlet when there is no partner in a person's life.
* orgasms for women and teen girls who have sex themselves are orgasms from masturbation
- who masturbate themselves are orgasms from blowjobs
* perversion of the sexual act.
* prepares the mind and body for sex.
* prohibits procreation.
* remains the missing link in our understanding of human sexuality.
* requires one to fantasize and to lust, therefore sin is involved.
* risk-free sexual activity because no body fluids are shared with a partner.
* stunts the growth.
* technique used by many young men to increase their level of control.
* tends to peak when children are between the ages of three and five.
* usually occurs during, or shortly after, voyeuristic activities.
* violation of the Bible's teachings.
* way to gain sexual self-knowledge.
* when done with the express purpose of birth control is anti-life.
* widespread and frequently occurring experience in both sexes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mecca
* city in Saudi Arabia.
* is considered a holy city.
* is in present-day Saudi Arabia
- the Middle East and More speicific a city in Arabia
- located in Saudi Arabia and is where the Kaaba is located
* is the most holy city in Islam
- spiritual center of the Muslim world. * holiest city in the Islamic world. Every year, millions of Muslims take a pilgrimage to Mecca. This is called the Hajj, where they follow in the footsteps of Muhammad. All Muslims who are able to do so are expected to do the Hajj at least once in their life. The Kaaba and Masjid al-Haram, the holiest mosque in Islam is here. Mecca is closed to non-Muslims except some journalists reporting on the Hajj<|endoftext|>Morbidity
* Most morbidity is neurological
- secondary to infection caused by improper drainage
* Refers to the potential loss of health for a specific population.
* also refers to medical problems caused by a treatment.
* associated with allergic rhinitis has significant economic consequences
- hemorrhages depends on the site of involvement
* declines drastically, especially in developing countries.
* includes hearing loss, neurological deficits, and mental retardation.
* is another term for illness
- assessed in terms of function and cosmesis
- associated with the complications of phimosis
- chiefly the result of infection of the tissues
- common during the first month of tube use
- high in terms of recurrent fracture and deformity
- highest in suckling mice
- incidences
* is limited to cataract formation
- localized discomfort and cosmetic disfigurement from loss of hair
- mild cosmetic changes
- low, but mortality is high
- mainly due to infectious, parasitic and vector-borne diseases
- minimal and limited to cosmetic appearance
- quality
- rare, and the organism appears to be part of the bird's normal microbial flora
* is related predominantly to induced hypoxic insults
- primarily to pulmonary, hepatic and skeletal involvement
- somewhat more common and primarily a result of lacerations or perforations
- the number of cases of the disease in a population at one time
- unusual, and mortality is rare
- variable, depending on the etiology of the syndrome
* occurs when a thrombus occludes a major dural sinus or cortical vein.
* rates the incidence of a disease in a population over a specified time period.
* relates to pain, probable loss of tooth and dehydration
- severity of anemia and diagnostic workup
* usually is secondary to pain and limited function.
* varies over time, geography and age groups.
Managerial finance
* deals with financial decisions in a business organization.
* focuses on the management of non-financial firms.
Mechanical control
* involves the removal of invasive species by hand or with machines
- use of machinery to cut Spartina from a large area
* involves the use of weed harvesters, seines or even hand removal
- seines or even removal by hand
* use physical disturbance to remove pests. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Meditation
* Finding the calm within major key to stress reduction.
* Is a state of focused attention through which one emerges into a clear awareness.
* Learn how to use breath and awareness to quiet the mind.
* Some meditations suggest closing the eyes and just empty the mind.
* affects both body and mind
- man's whole being
* allows more control over the mental processes and form of self-discipline.
* allows one to become more aware of what is happening within
- calm oneself and to achieve self-awareness
- focus and clear the mind
- the person to take care of the daily disturbances quietly and peacefully
* also creates a state of metabolic restfulness far deeper than that of deep sleep
- enables individuals to gain greater control over their emotions
- enhances psychic ability
- has links to the making of art
- lowers the immune system resistance and induces the relaxation response
- stimulates the pineal gland
* arises spontaneously from correct movement through the series of postures.
* awakens the soul awareness in the seven chakras.
* based only on colors can result in serious disturbances of consciousness.
* calms the body by putting it into an altered state
- mind and the body
* can also be objectless, for example consisting of just sitting.
* can also help an angry or frustrated child to calm down and rethink a situation
- to temporarily calm children and reduce their stress level
- inspire prayer to share with others
- lead to mental quiet
- and does enable individuals to achieve significant changes
- be a source of relaxation
* can be an act of compassion for the community
- exercise, a path, and a form of dance in the mind
- as simple as mentally focusing on breathing, a word, or an image
- very good for a person's mental health
- calm the mind, allowing it to focus on our conduct and actions
- come in many forms
- create a mental refuge from stress and aggravation
- decrease stress and cardiovascular risks
* can help balance the nervous system, and contribute to less stressful anger management
- most people feel less anxious and more in control
- people relax which, in turn, can reduce stress and even relieve pain
- reduce stress, which causes crime
- increase awareness
- mean sitting quietly and breathing deeply for a few minutes
- occur as imagery, as prayer or as chanting
- raise blood pressure
* can take many forms and has many uses
* causes peace of mind.
* changes the makeup of both the body and the mind.
* clears the mind and relaxes the body.
* complementary way to manage stress or distress.
* complete rest for body and mind.
* concentration practice to calm the activity of the mind.
* conscious effort to change how the mind works.
* constant cancelling in thought of crystallization inherent in particularization.
* creates space, openness, and silence.
* deep relaxation of body, mind, and spirit
- state of mental and physical relaxation coupled with an alert mental state
* denotes a lengthened carrying of the same train of ideas.
* develops positive thinking by insisting on practising perception of the self.
* differs in that during it our mind is very active.
* enables relaxation, awareness, mindfulness, peace, and the relaxation response.
* enhances powers of observation and sharpens the mind.
* exercises in many kinds of spirituality often start with a focus on breathing.
* falls indirectly within the ethical realm.
* focuses on the mind and the body relaxes naturally as a result.
* form of guided thought
- mental relaxation
- prayer too
- stress reduction with philosophic psychological and physiological aspects
* forms a large part of Buddhist life.
* frees the mind from stress and ideas that enslave it.
* further develops the brain and with that the intelligence of the person.
* gesture of total being that encompasses and integrates body and mind.
* good example of how the mind can affect the body.
* has many forms
- positive physiological and psychological benefits
- measurable effects on the pattern of electrical impulses flowing through the brain
- no conflicts with any religion
- roots in all the major spirtual practices of the world
* helps calm the mind and can lead to insight
- in solving dilemmas
- promote better health
- the human mind to relax and be open to receive intuitive information
* helps to clear and purify the mind
- settle the mind and nervous system, and to directly experience inner calm
- shift awareness from the rational to the intuitive mode of consciousness
* improves clinicoelectroencephalographic measures in drug-resistant epileptics.
* improves the enjoyment and quality of life in every aspect
- soul's psychic sensitivity
* increases self-confidence and feelings of connection to others.
* induces a state of deep rest that lessens the effects of stress on the body
- sense of oneness
* involves coming to a stillness of spirit and a stillness of body
- control of mind and mind is most unruly
- focusing one's thoughts, engaging oneself in inner contemplation or reflection
- giving the mind over to the consideration of truth
- long, sustained practice
- taking the time to clear and calm the mind
- withdrawing from external reality and achieving deep relaxation
* is about experiences that are often beyond the mind's knowing
- quieting the mind
* is also a form of giving, of giving up
- effective when combined with other mind-body techniques
- invaluable as a tool for self-healing
* is an act of life
- supreme beauty
- activity that can lead to deep relaxation
* is an age-old method of alleviating stress and tension
- helping people to find inner peace and harmony
- alternative therapy to relieve physical and mental stress
* is an ancient art, a way of quieting the mind
- concentration practice that develops calmness and insight
- art that requires patience
- effective way to manage a stressful situation
- effortless concentration on a single point over an extended period of time
- essential part of human nature
- extension of prayer, the service of the heart
* is an important part of many religions
- spiritual discipline
- integration of consciousness
- intense spiritual act that brings the soul into harness
- unbroken flow of thought towards an external object or an internal idea
* is another form of relaxing oneself when they have been under a lot of stress
- tool that reduces stress and promotes an overall sense of well-being
- way to experience inner peace and tranquility
- as ancient as our ability to reflect inwards
- at the heart of Buddhist philosophy and training
- basically a process of concentration, deepening and expansion
- both the end and the means to itself
- called a spiritual discipline
- concerned with energy flow - energy which is fiery and impersonal in nature
- creative use of mental energy
- dhyana, the seventh step in the ashtanga system
* is done in Alpha, and hypnosis, and sleep, where dreams emerge
- to help develop focus and concentration
- effectively a form of sensory depravation
- essentially the science of light, because it works in the substance of light
* is for anyone wishing to just be, and be quiet
- overall physical and mental health
- found to be very useful in controlling hypertension
- fundamental to religion
- intended to purify the mind
- learned in early childhood and practised frequently
- life without name, without form
- likely to increase the neural activity in the system
- meant to bring about awareness, nothing else
- medicine for the mind
- mentioned as a form of mental stimulation
- method of purification of the mind
- more central to their lives than sex, food, or sleep
* is one of nature's miracles
- the best stress relievers known
- way of bringing body and spirit together in harmony and clear communication
- participatory observation
* is practiced because it cultivates awareness and the ability to sustain awareness
- to foster mindfulness
- primarily concerned with caring for the mind
- probably the crux and fundamental value of yoga therapy
- psychological activity
- pure awareness and concentration
- simply a form of consciously relaxing
* is simply the art of becoming aware of the present moment
- mental self-control
- study of the Inner self
- skills
- some thing that is of daily life
* is something done in quiet caves by tranquil people who move slowly
- like dusting one's mind
- very few really understand, it involves Quieting The Mind
* is the art of calming the mind and focusing it on a spiritual object
- centering consciousness in the true self by quieting the mind
- doing nothing
- opening to each moment with calm awareness
- bath of the mind, just as a water bath freshens the body
- beginning of creativity
- best way to train our mind to be strong, firm, and calm at the same time
- concentration of the inner truth of fundamental reality
- conscious placing and maintenance of attention
- contemplation on the foundational principle of religion
- eye of the soul which enables one to see the light that never changes
- focus of the mind upon that which is virtuous
- foundation of every religion
- grand means of growth and grace
- healing of the mind
- key for opening the doors of mysteries
- life of the soul, action is the soul of mediation
- means to spiritual enlightenment
- natural way to provide deep relaxation for body and mind
- observation of oneself
* is the only means to stabilize the mind
- method that can bring about harmony in our life
- real royal road to the attainment of salvation
- passageway to insight, focus, awareness, and the awakening
- path of development
- perennial source of hope for the whole of humanity
* is the practice by which there is constant observation of the mind
- of resting the mind
- premise in achieving peace of mind
* is the process of both refinement and nourishment
- calming and training the monkey to be still
- discovering our true identity, our innate divinity
- knowing, realizing the true Self within
- learning how mind works and how to be
- slowing the mind and developing insight
- using our mind to establish communication with our inner-self
- result of experience
- seventh stage in Yoga
- source of life, of revitalisation
- time honored technique for taming, training and transforming the mind
- tool to look inward to find where real happiness is
* is used for relaxation, enlightenment, and health
* is well know for decreasing stress and strengthing the ability to concentrate
- known to lower blood pressure and increase oxygenation in the body
* key for unlocking and unfolding one's positive potential.
* kills all pains, sufferings and sorrows.
* leads to the purification of the mind.
* lets down the barrier between our rational consciousness and spiritual depths.
* living activity, an inherently experiential activity.
* lowers biological age.
* makes use of light imagery to generate feelings of love, peace, and healing.
* means a variety of things in today's world
- bringing something back to the mind again and again
- eating the word, digesting it, and incorporating it concretely into our lives
- of transforming the mind
- serenity in life
- to continuously think of something, or to rest upon one thought
* measurably reduces stressful reactions in the body.
* mental discipline that ultimately leads the mind to a purified state
- exercise that reduces stress in the mind and correspondingly in the body
* method for acquainting our mind with virtue
- of calming the mind and body
* natural process for restoring balance and harmony in the physiology.
* naturally alleviates stress - getting to the root cause of the stress.
* offers health and wellness for mind, body, and spirit.
* part of all spiritual traditions.
* path to creating and maintaining that place of peace and stillness within
- which is rooted in the ground of a vision of the human design and possibility
* period of time set aside every day to quiet the mind.
* plays a vital part in reducing stress and promoting good health
- an important role in the practice of vigilance
* positive attitude of mind.
* practice of mindfulness.
* probably does reduce stress.
* process of concentrating the mind on an object or activity
- cultivation
* provides a higher awareness of the details of everyday life
- the deepest possible rest and relaxation, vitalizing mind and body
* purifies the mind, speech and body.
* quiets the mind, allowing the freedom to perceive other levels of reality.
* reduces activity in the nervous system
- stress and helps maintain calmness in any life situation
- stress, deepens relaxation and revitalizes the body, mind and spirit
* reference to prayer.
* reflecting nonjudgment, nonpossession and untouchability leads to magic.
* relaxes vessels, reduces blood pressure.
* restores natural power to the mind just as charging restores power to a worn out battery.
* result of discipline.
* results in our experiencing physical well being.
* revered tradition.
* safe and simple way to balance a person's physical, emotional, and mental states.
* seeks to focus the mind and slow down all of the distraction.
* seems to have an effect that contributes to slowing down and being in the now.
* self-directed practice for relaxing the body and calming the mind
- technique used to calm the mind and promote inner harmony
* solitary practice.
* state of being, arrived at through understanding.
* state of consciousness that can be understood only on a direct, intuitive level
- understood only on by doing
- heightened mental awareness
- mind which is free of conflicts
- quiet that amplifies the intuition
- rest while remaining awake and alert
- that has to be achieved
* strengthens a child s powers of concentration.
* synthesis of the experience of mind, body, breath and environment.
* takes place at a higher level of mind and implies mental dynamics
- the form of focusing on technique and form
* teaches people to be comfortable doing nothing.
* technique of directed concentration
- used to restore a state of peacefulness relaxation, and inner balance
* tool in developing psychometry
- used to further clarify tarot card symbolism
* useful self help technique that can be used without any adherence to any religeon.
* usually involves intense concentration and oblivion to external distraction.
* very common way to deal with stress.
* way of bringing the non-duality of wilderness mind back home
- pure prayer marked by silence, stillness, and simplicity
- seeing clearly the totality of one's being and experience
- silence, stillness and simplicity
- to enlightenment
* way to gain insight and awareness
- get inner peace
* word which has many definitions.
* works because it allows the central nervous system to become more integrated. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mitochondria
* Many mitochondria are present, along with abundant endoplasmic reticulum.
* Most mitochondria have cell membranes
- outer membranes
* Some mitochondria are located in mammals.
* divide by binary fission , similar to bacterial cell division.
+ Mitochondria, Inheritance: Organelles
* Mitochondria divide by binary fission similar to bacterial cell division. In single-celled eukaryotes, division of mitochondria is linked to cell division. This division must be controlled so that each daughter cell receives at least one mitochondrion. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Marketing
* Covers the concept of supply and demand.
* affects almost every aspect of our daily lives
* aims at getting an unwilling public to do what the marketer wants.
* applies to almost every facet of the business industry.
* are capable of increase demand
- commerce
- commercial activities
- shopping
* basic function of business.
* business plan.
* can also involve the selling of ideas
- play an important role in dissemination of information
* central topic in the world of for-profit enterprise.
* change-management system.
* combination of art and science.
* company's window on the world.
* complex discipline
- interaction of many activities leading to an eventual exchange
- process involving many different skills and activities
* component critical to the overall success of a business.
* consists of the steps that lead up to and results in sales.
* dialog between customer and supplier.
* discipline that guides the entire organisation.
* distinct discipline with a variety of opportunities.
* dynamic business marked by intrinsic growth and change
- fluid field changing with the domestic and global economy and technology
* emphasizes the flow of goods and services from producer to consumer or user.
* fight to establish a perception in the consumers mind.
* focuses on the relationship between the firm and the markets it serves.
* form of communication.
* gives creative individuals a chance to sell a product or service.
* has an even more profound effect on the relationship between businesses and consumers.
* highly evolved science of making a profit from transactions.
* human activity directed at satisfying needs and wants through the exchange process.
* involves concepts like price and product
- everything a company does to retain and attract customers
- the transfer of products or services from an organization to the consumer
* is about education, planning, and activity
- image and desire
- learning what makes people tick
- mutually satisfying exchange relationships
- organizations and individuals staying 'in tune' with their environments
- positioning, and relationships
- selling more stuff, to more people, for more money
- advertising that focuses on what parents want
* is an activity savvy companies engage in year 'round
- that facilitates exchange
- that's supposed to create opportunities for sales
- aggregate of functions involved in moving goods from producer to consumer
- expanding career area within business
- important factor on the Internet
- integral component of real estate investment and asset management
- investment in future sales
- organization's primary function, a blend of art and science
- as central to farming and ranching as harvesting and grazing
* is both a science and an art form
- social and managerial process
- demand management
* is essential to all types of organizations
- organizations in their search for survival and growth
- everyone's business, regardless of title or position in the organization
- everything the tobacco industry does to encourage the profitable use of their products
- form, force, and power
- fundamental to improving the image and overall use of public transportation
- important Marketing most important part of being a business
- involved with the flow of goods and services from the producer to the final consumer
- manipulation and deceit
* is more about perception than about the actual product
- than just selling or displaying goods
* is one area where some companies try to cut back in lean times
- of the crucial disciplines within the broad area of business management
* is one of the most important parts of the management of museums
- visible aspects of a free society, and affects every person each day
- product differentiation
- recognized as a critical function of business
- research, which is certainly an area with which social workers are well-acquainted
- seen by many people as the way of doing business
- something integral to everything a professional is and does
* is the activity that makes business work
- area where farmers normally suffer in Pakistan
- arena where agents build credibility
* is the art of creating genuine customer value
- making people want what they never knew existed
- cornerstone of the free enterprise system
- development and sustaining of value in a society
- distinguishing, the unique, function of business
* is the foundation for building a business strategy
- from which sales are executed
- group that hires the most MBAs
- key to success or failure of any new business endeavor
- management of exchange processes to satisfy wants and needs and relationships
- modern form of warfare in the real world
- motor that powers our economy
- one aspect of business where planning is crucial
- part of business that transforms production activities into financial success
- planned process of exercising influence on customer behavior
- planning, designing, pricing, promotion and distribution of goods and services
- process by which companies satisfy customer wants and needs
* is the process of meeting the demands of consumers
- needs and demands of consumers
- purposeful actions which bring about successful completion of goals and desires
- science of transaction and provides a theory of exchange
- set of activities that aims to satisfy the customer while making a profit
- thinking part of a business
- way a company sells products and services
- weekly magazine for everyone involved in the marketing of goods and services
- treated as an active, dynamic process which is motivated by basic human drives
- viewed as an activity that pervades all hospitality decisions and actions
* is what makes a biz grow and flourish
- where the firm interacts directly with the customer
* major part of an aquaculture business.
* management discipline concerned with exchange processes in competitive markets.
* means trying to convince someone to buy a product or service.
* now defines the way companies manage their business.
* occurs when people decide to satisfy their needs and wants through exchange.
* people-oriented profession encompassing all types of companies.
* planning process based on exchange and needs.
* plays a major role in the success or failure of all organizations
- the role of intermediary between the organization and the customer
* process that a. facilitates exchanges
- has a beginning, a middle and an end
* repetitive task that requires a series of calculated steps.
* research-based method for acting strategically.
* significant functional area in virtually all modern organizations.
* specialized field which is vital in today's competitive global economy.
* technological discipline, plain and simple.
* technology-driven discipline. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mutual respect
* goal worth striving for.
* increases with regular interaction with partners.
* involves listening to others without interruption.
* is an important concept when dealing with others
- factor in game control
- central to the success of a godparent-godchild relationship
- earned by the demonstration of mutual respect
- life-giving
- paramount in our environment so that all relationships can flourish
- the acknowledgment of the innate integrity of all sentient beings
* is the foundation for positive customer relations
- of peaceful co-existence
- key to eliminating some of the conflict between parents and teens
Mediocrity
* abounds in music, as it does in life.
* is defined when players plateau, unable to go further
- life's greatest sin
- obscurity
- quality
- the quicksand on the path to achievement
- to human endeavor what entropy is to physical systems
Microbial life
* contributes to valuable ecosystem services that directly benefit humans.
* is still the dominant life form on Earth
- the glue that binds together the macroscopic world
* survives on dairy products.<|endoftext|>Mitigation
* begins the process of healing and replacing that world.
* can be a strategy for avoiding extinction or endangerment
- take a number of forms
* concept that involves taking measures to protect property.
* emerges as major strategy for reducing losses caused by natural disasters.
* is an important part of emergency management
- necessary to avoid or reduce the causes of adverse climate change
- that which tends to soften, temper, or make less harsh or severe
* is the cornerstone of emergency management
- effort to reduce loss of life and property by lessening the impact of disasters
* is the key to reducing the human and economic consequences
- survival in every natural hazard situation
* is the ongoing effort to lessen the impact disasters have on people and property
- the impact of natural disasters on people and property
* key component of emergency management.
* means to lessen the effects of or prevent an emergency or a disaster.
* saves money and it saves lives.
Manufacture
* Some manufactures now print the amounts of cholesterol, fatty acid, and potassium on their labels.
* carnitine from lysine and other nutrients.
* hemoglobin in the red blood cells.
* is transformation the fashioning of raw materials into a change of form for use.
* refers to articles which are made, and includes all manufactured articles.
* word which has the same roots.
Mandatory testing
* implies universal testing without education, counseling, or informed consent.
* is an infringement of individual liberty and violates the right to privacy.<|endoftext|>Monotheism
* also develops in the great civilizations.
* challenges the fundamental tenets of Mesopotamian civilization.
* comes with an extensive set of sexual constraints.
* have to test the quality of faith and devotion of every believer.
* is affirmed by a single primogenitor
- easier than monogamy
- itself a concept that can be challenged on a metaphysical basis
- just a euphemism for monopoly
- opposed to both henotheism and polytheism
- preserved by subordination and origin
* is the belief in one god
- faith of the world
- opposite extreme to polytheism
* major cause of the current state of the world's ecology.
* marks the first step out of nature worship, mysticism, and superstition.
* perception that there is only one.
* personal choice made by individual practitioners.
* still has some sort of duality built into it.
Metaphysic
* rest on an a posteriori basis of sensory experience.
* simply means the way thought and physical reality interact.
* thus is made dependent on the theory of knowledge. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Muscular endurance
* combines both aerobic and anaerobic energy.
* comes from higher reps and high intensity.
* is important for good posture and for injury prevention.
* is the ability of a group of muscles to exert a submaximal force numerous times
- muscle to exert a force over a period of time
* is the ability to lift a lighter object multiple times
- mild to moderate weight many times
- repeatedly perform an action
- sustain the force generated by a muscle group
* refers to the ability to repeat muscle exertions.
Morphological change
* are often present due to the accumulation of substrate molecules.
* occur in response to the binding of pheromone to the receptor.
Mental abuse
* can be a very vague term at times.
* is just as bad as physical abuse.
Malignant histiocytosis
* is the more aggressive form and usually leads to death in a matter of weeks.
* progresses rapidly and has usually metastasized by the time it is diagnosed.
Molten silver
* flows down into the cavities left by the wax objects inside the mold.
* is poured in iron dies to give it a form of rough mold.<|endoftext|>Mage
* Many mages also fear insanity, especially in the form of Quiet.
* Some mages direct the spread of entropy towards certain objects
- risk their lives providing security for a corporation or fighting crime
* are individuals in Mythic Europe that can cast magic
- mystical people who use their brains over brawn
- spell wielding socerers
- the purest of the spell casting professions
* can see through the eyes of their familiars
- select from five spheres of magic - fire, water, air, earth and astral
* do it with their hands and mouth.
* generally turn outwards, learning how to control the world and seeking to understand it.
* have 'titles', determined by what magical power they wield
- the power to remake reality, for good or evil
* specialize in the casting of spells, offensive ones in particular.
+ World of Warcraft, Gameplay, Classes: 2004 video games :: Blizzard video games :: Massively multiplayer online role-playing games :: Windows games
* Mages cast spells using arcane, frost, or fire magic. Mages wear cloth armor and are very vulnerable to melee damage. They have access to massive ranged spell damage and area of effect capabilities.
Mohair
* bear with glass eyes.
* comes from goats and is essentially similar to wool
- the Ankara goat
* is almost non flammable, extremely light and exceptionally warm
- cloth
- fabric
- resistant to shrinking and stronger than wool
* possesses great tensile strength.
Marking
* also play an important part in identifying and describing different horses.
* are decoration
- designs
- evaluation
- inanimate objects
- material handling
* can be a sign of stress.
* common behavior among feral cat's and a common complaint of cat owners.
* is an individual skill much like dribbling, trapping, heading, shooting or passing
- triggered by the presence of other cats
- urination on upright objects
Meninge
* are membranes within the dorsal cavity and are composed only of connective tissue
- three-layered membranes that surround the brain and spinal cord
* pass thru intervertebral foramina, continuous with connective tissue around spinal nerves.
Moist snuff
* is put between the gum and lip or gum and cheek and held there.
* looks like wet tea and is sold in small cans or sacks.
* potent carcinogen and has been proven to be a cause of cancer in humans. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Myth
* Attempted or completed suicides happen without warning.
* Being seriously obese can result in a number of diseases and serious health problems.
* Make-up protects the skin from outside elements,such as wind,dust,ect,ect.
* Many myths deal with the relationship between mortals and divinities.
* Many myths exist about domestic violence
- sexual assault
- vasectomy
* Many myths exist in believers' minds concerning giving
- our society surrounding fat
- relate stories and wisdom drawn from animals in the world
- say it was born from the marriage of the earth and sky
- speak of how all life upon the planet, especially human, sprang from the seas
* Many myths surround aging
- sex after heart disease and stroke
- spaying and neutering
* Most myths have some basis in the real world of facts and observations.
* Some myths try to explain the natural world
* A 'myth' story that may or may not be true. Myths are generally very old. This means there are no records or other proof that they happened. We know about them from older people telling them to younger people. Some myths may have started as 'true' stories but as people told and re-told them, they may have changed some parts, so they are less 'true'. They may have changed them by mistake, or to make them more interesting. All cultures have myths
* Understand the political use of myth.
* abound about breeds of cats and dogs and even horses that are supposedly safe.
* also deal with the past.
* also give women a false sense of security and dis-inhibit the behavior of rapists
- of security and disinhibit the behavior of rapists
- has an esoteric function, which is almost the opposite of the exoteric function
* also have a descriptive function, explaining facts beyond normal reason and observation
- spontaneous quality, having been created by an outburst of human imagination
* always have their origin in an experienced reality.
* are a collective dream of a culture and are no different than a personal dream
- about the gods
* are among the most persistent, resilient, lasting, and enduring artifacts of culture
- oldest, most powerful, and most entertaining forms of literature
- an important part of every society, including our own
- as old as humanity itself
- complex organizations of meaning and signs
- different from legends because legends are usually based on historical events
- false beliefs that most people think are true
- formulative in that they attempt to create order out of the disorientation of illness
- important to a nation's sense of identity
- imprints of human behavior
- integral to communal propaganda
- just stories that someone made up at some point in time
- like records, and how records are made to be broken
- meanings and values in narrative form
- metaphors for the metaphysical universe
- more than history in that they grow from personal and shared memories and imagination
- myths because of the great truths they talk about
* are narratives people use to remind themselves of the paradigms they hold as True
- themselves of what they hold to be True, and why
- natural expressions of reality
- oral technologies that unwrap time, moving one into the timeless
- our self-interpretation of our inner selves in relation to the outside world
- part of all our folk tales, stories and religions
- powerful forms of persuasion
- reflective of the human experience, even the human experience of fantasy
* are sacred stories about past events or about events in the future
- stories, histories are secular stories
- simply narrative elaborations of culutrally shared perceptions of reality
- so much a part of human culture, no matter what their origin
- social property
* are stories about gods and goddesses
- naturally occurring things
- the gods and their adventures
- attempting to explain a natural phenomenon using gods or goddesses
- based on some truth
- of our search through the ages for truth, for meaning, for significance
* are stories that are more true than actual events
- so true they can never happen
- narrate the structure and origins of a culture
- often contain the deeper truths
* are stories which are in some ways fictional and in some important ways true
- interpret the universe, and infuse it with personal meaning
- someone believes is true
- with religious content, about gods, goddesses, and heroes
- stories, narratives, about the origins of things that humans practice or engage in
- symbolic narratives connected to the original experiences by the symbols themselves
- symbols of faith combined in stories about divine-human encounters
- tales of the early stages of culture and cosmos
* are the ancient pre-histories of the stories that reappear in our lives
- bridge to the collective unconscious
- creation traditions and the mental supports of rituals
- storehouse, or library, of a group's identity and history
- stories the Greeks told about their past
* are traditional stories occurring in a timeless past and involving supernatural elements
- universal truths applicable regardless of era, culture, gender, age, etc
- vehicles for transmitting eternal wisdom
- what help people switch from victimization stories to empowerment stories
* are, for the most part, allegories and personifications of nature.
* articulate the fundamental truths about the shape of the universe and the nature of humanity.
* belong to our evolution of social thoughts.
* can be life-giving at times, destructive at others
- interfere with the ability of persons with disabilities to have equality in employment
- protray values, living conditions and attitudes in different cultures
- reflect certain beliefs or facts in Greek life
- serve as stumbling blocks to happiness in marriage
- span cultural and generational boundaries
* coexist with mathematics.
* combine religious purposes with explanatory purposes and have been widely used in literature.
* complex cultural phenomenon that can be approached from a number of view points
- approached from a number of viewpoints
* create a sense of oneness with nature.
* create, maintain, and legitimate past, present, or future actions and consequences.
* define and explain the relationship between society and the supernatural.
* differ from fairy tales, in that they refer to a time that is different from ordinary time.
* distort the real world, mangling the spirit and confusing the heart and mind.
* do injury to individual persons, families and to children.
* dominate people when they are alienated from their lives by wage labor.
* exist along side of scientific thinking and play a significant role
- in every culture in the world
* explains how something came to exist
- the cycle of life and death in nature
* has it that dolphins sometimes guide ships through treacherous waters.
* have a universal and a culture-specific aspect
- the power to touch our imaginations
* heal and teach people.
* help explain and create cause and effect relationships.
* help people come to terms with difficult periods of their past
- organize their experiences and embody a culture's assumptions and values
- to develop together and individuals to develop within themselves
* inspire philosophers and scientists alike, who, in turn, become weavers of myths.
* invest life with meaning.
* involve fantastic events and heroic endeavors.
* is about maturing and growth and decay and death
- alive and well in the marketplace, and in our consumer subconscious
- also evident in media political and commercial propaganda and images of gender
- always concerned with creation
* is an attempt to understand the world
- experiment in conversation and an experience in the human being
- old traditional story or legend
- aware of reality, but reaches beyond concrete experience
- based on quality, ideology on quantity
- common to all cultures with culturally-determined variants
- fictional work
- nourished by silence as well as by words
- one of the fundamental forces in the human universe
- poetry by nature, whereas the nature of history is prose
* is the conscious compression of a universe of meaning into a set of archetypes
- disc operating system of humanity
- mode of simultaneous awareness of a complex group of causes and effects
- pattern that knits together self, society and comos into a meaningful matrix
- symbolic bond between two worlds
- used both in connection with natural events and as a model of human experience
* live and grow and extend themselves.
* means to meaning.
* occur, for example, in history, law, sociology, and economics.
* often explain the origins of customs and features of the landscape
- inspire great works of art
- prevent people from doing the right thing
- surround, and explain, heroes and heroines
* play a role in their everyday society.
* play an important part in our lives
- role in human life both personal and collective
* portray human issues in ways that adolescents can understand.
* powerful source of meaning in human life.
* psychic phenomenon that reveals the nature of the soul.
* reconciles human beings to the world.
* reflect their time, place, and race.
* rises out of archetype and ritual, ritual translates to metaphor.
* seek to explain the origin of humanity.
* serve an important function in society.
* shows how powers that rule the world attain their position.
* speak a symbolic language and make use of metaphor
- of a formless void or egg which was the beginning of the universe
* structure of values, set into a story.
* takes many forms.
* transcend the senses and permeate sensibility, conditioning moral and emotive reflexes.
* usually come from rituals
- try to explain aspects of nature
* view of reality.
* way of relating.
+ Myth, Mythology
* One important type of myth is the creation myth, which describes how that culture believes the universe, or 'world' was created. But now, there is talk within the scientific community about what existed before the Big Bang. To those are comfortable with the Big Bang as the ultimate, or only solution to the question of the beginning of the universe, the Big Bang may have itself become a myth. Myths are often final answers with great authority, and strong emotional ties.
* Mythology' is the collection of myths for a culture. A myth is a story or series of stories used to explain the world around you and describe what is happening, such as why weather happens. Myths usually have heroes, gods, and creatures that are bigger or more fantastic than real life, or sometimes just normal people doing amazing things. Some myths try to explain the natural world. One example is the Greek myth of Arachne. She believed that she could weave far better than anyone else, including the goddess Athena. So, Athena challenged Arachne to a weaving contest. Arachne lost, then was turned into a spider. This myth explains why spiders weave webs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mathematic
* Consider the problem of estimating the variables of some system.
* Find out the distance between the earth, sun, and moon.
* Most mathematics governs predictions.
* Most mathematics has quantitative values
- includes electronics
- is based on a few fundamental principles and definitions
- refers to reality
* Some mathematics has external reality.
* There are hundreds of mathematics related professions and careers.
* also becomes a means to solve real-world problems
- enables human beings to make logically correct judgements
- helps children understand, organize, and analyze their science experiences
* are abstract, so they are difficult for many children to master fully
- metaphysical tools
- the basic math skills of addition, subtraction, multiplying and dividing
- used to show how likely something is to happen to the particle
* can also be the basis of a teaching career at the secondary or college level
- describe chaotic behavior and structures
- be a useful way of coping with the world
- describe how fluids move using mathematical formulas called equations
- enrich other scientific disciplines, and vice versa
- even be a matter of life or death
* can help in the interpretation of experimental data
- standardize developments in one field for use by others
- help, to recognise the principles of evolution
- say something about the world
* continually solves new problems and embraces new techniques and technologies.
* define a 'group'.
* defines relationships between one object and another.
* enables children to know that they are right without depending on adult authority.
* entails much more than the study of arithmetic, algebra, trigonometry and geometry.
* have many abstractions including the seven postulates of Euclidean geometry.
* play an important part in the formulation of many constraints.
* specifically enhances thinking and technological skills.
* strongly supports calculations involving the interaction of force and energy.
+ Fluid dynamics: Fluid mechanics
* It is one of the oldest parts of the study of Physics, and is studied by physicists, mathematicians, and engineers. Mathematics can describe how fluids move using mathematical formulas called equations.
+ Molecular symmetry, Point groups, Group theory: Symmetry :: Theoretical chemistry
+ Schrödinger's cat: Quantum mechanics :: Basic physics ideas
* Mathematics are used to show how likely something is to happen to the particle. This is very convenient when making quantum physics calculations.
Manuscript
* are for the most part written on skin, parchment , or vellum
- hand-written copies of Scripture before the invention of the printing press
- rare and valuable items that can only be consulted in one place
* is autographs
- books
Multicellular life
* All multicellular lives start out from a single cell.
* helps microorganisms to survive a starvation and other deleterious conditions.
* is faster, smarter, and more successful than unicellular life.
Materiality
* facts and circumstances determination.
* is an absolute requirement for a conviction of perjury
- matter of law
- meant to convey a sense of significance or importance of an item
- necessary to spiritual accomplishment
- quality
- relevance
- the quality of materials in an environment
* makes people understand their social environment and the living world.
* mixed question of law and fact.
Misconception
* Many misconceptions exist about electronic organs
- what can happen during the final days and weeks of a person s life
* abound regarding allergy to food additives and preservatives.
* also reduce patient participation in clinical trials.
* comes from facts
* is an idea
* leads to consequences
- term consequences
Muscular hypertrophy
* common finding in the sigmoid.
* occurs with the natural levels of testosterone found in the body.
* surrounding the narrowed lumen indents the stomach, causing concave defects. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mobilization
* begins when a unit is called up at the onset of war or contingency operations.
* can mean different things in different contexts.
* continuous process of organization, education and collective action.
* is assemblies
- human activities
* is social control
- events
* occurs around common identities.
* simply stretches soft tissues by moving joints through a full range of movement.
Manakin
* are notable for their elaborate courtship displays.
* have among the most elaborate courtship displays of any birds
- short tails, rounded wings, and a short but wide bill with a small hooked tip
* inhabit tropical forests, feed on fruit and insects, and nest in bushes.
Modality
* is part of physical therapy
- senses
- the property by which one sensation is distinguished from another
* refers to the number of modes a distribution has.
* term from modal logic.
Molluscs
* All molluscs possess a fleshy mantle.
* Many molluscs also have a water filled mantle cavity, and feed using rasplike radula.
* Most molluscs possess a foot, mantle, mantle cavity, radula, and calcareous shell
- shells
- retain shells
- share unique characteristics
* Most molluscs thrive in sea
- shallow sea
* Some molluscs absorb nutrients
- can grow pearls as big as golf balls
- possess feet
- show cephilization in their nerve gangli
Mynas
* also take nectar, and are sometimes seen with orange flax pollen on their foreheads.
* appear to be omnivorous, feeding on fruits, berries, grains, flower nectar and insects.
* are distinctive because, unlike most other birds, they walk rather than hop
- birds in that they walk rather than a hop
- hole-nesting species
- large, conspicuous passerines
- stocky brown birds with a shiny black head and shoulders
Mitochondrial dysfunction
* can cause many of the common side effects attributed to NRTIs.
* lies at the heart of the sideroblastic anemias.
* primary event in glutamate neurotoxicity.<|endoftext|>Misuse
* appear in movies, on television, and in computer software and games.
* applies to equipment that is used improperly or for purposes other than originally intended.
* can actually cause chronic daily headaches known as rebound headaches
- cause serious injury or death even in shallow water
- lead to temporary and even permanent damage to the cornea
- result in sudden and permanent hearing loss
* defense recognized in strict liability.
* is either departmental misuse or operator misuse
- intoxication, illegal use, rowdiness, or destructiveness
* usually refers to use that creates problems or harm, either for the individual or others.<|endoftext|>Metabolic acidosis
* befalls rapidly with ensuing multiple organ failure.
* can occur secondary to anaerobic metabolism
- result from elevated production of organic acids
* common finding, particularly in cats.
* frequent consequence of renal failure.
* is acidosis
- most common in pediatric overdose
- the second most common cause of acid-base imbalance
* is treated with slow IV infusion of sodium bicarbonate in fluids
- sodium bicarbonate, given intravenously
* means that the blood is more acidic and the urine is less acidic than usual.
Misery
* desires companies.
* is books
- due to the perception of objects
- grief
- hardship
- located in jails
- place no one wants to dwell in
- read on the faces, in clothing, the absence of dental care, damaged hands
- sadness
- the hankering after sense-pleasures
* reigns on Earth from the weakness in the skies carried by the fearful souls below.
* state of mind, our response to situations.
Marketing research
* involves identifying and solving problems.
* is about marketing decisions
- statistics
- research
* shows that people believe they get what they pay for.
Mechanical harvesting
* common practice for seed production fields.
* is difficult when leaves are weakened by blight. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Muscular atrophy
* can cause serious problems in a person 's life.
+ Muscle atrophy: Physiology
* Muscular atrophy can cause serious problems in a person's life. As the person loses muscle strength, he will lose the ability to do more and more things. When he tries to do things, he will be more likely to have accidents.
Moulding
* commonly involves adding profile to at least one side of a piece of timber.
* is controlled in the manufacturing process
- one of the ways of forming a rubber compound into a useful part
+ Wells Cathedral: Cathedrals in England :: Anglican Cathedrals :: Somerset
* Much of the structure is in Early English architecture. Many mouldings look almost like sculptures. This adds to their vitality. The eastern end has kept much original glass, which is rare in England.<|endoftext|>Morale
* condition of the spirit relative to the willingness to perform tasks.
* includes satisfaction, commitment, loyalty and a sense of common purpose.
* is absolutely necessary in a profession where people are asked to risk their lives.
* is affected by losses, and improves or degrades the performance of units
- an issue that needs to be dealt with in all aspects of the work environment
- the top determining factor of job satisfaction and success
* suffers when management conceals, withholds, or distorts.
Macroeconomic stabilization
* can both increase and decrease saving.
* depends to a large extent on the consistency of economic policy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Methanol
* also affects the basal ganglia
- causes blindness
- evaporates from water and soil exposed to air
- is the fuel of choice for fuel cell vehicles
* basic building block used in the production of a variety of chemical derivatives
- organic compound, which plays a role in biogenesis
* becomes poisonous only when it overwhelms the body's capacity to remove it.
* breaks down into formaldehyde
- formic acid and formaldehyde in the body
* burns at a much lower temperature compared to petrol.
* by product of oil refineries and can be made by fermentation of plant material.
* can be dangerous
- cause blindness when consumed internally
- poison a platinum catalyst
* carries an additional risk because it is odorless, colorless and tasteless.
* causes swelling of the optic nerve and degeneration of ganglion cells in the retina.
* chemical commodity.
* clean burning fuel that can be used to power cars
- transportation fuel made from domestic natural gas
* clear, liquid fuel made primarily from domestically produced natural gas.
* colorless liquid and when mixed with other liquids is almost unrecognizable to taste.
* colourless liquid at room temperature.
* consists of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
* contains hydrogen and is the auto industry's favored fuel to power fuel cells.
* contains no aromatic compounds and therefore produces no benzene emissions
- sulfur and has exceptionally low NO x characteristics when burned
- only half the energy per gallon of gasoline but has a very high octane rating
* cumulative, human-specific toxin.
* detergent and has the ability to absorb water.
* dramatically enhances the catalytic activity of serine proteases in anhydrous solvents.
* evaporates very easily even at low temperatures.
* fatal poison.
* flammable liquid that can cause coma, convulsions, blindness and death.
* flammable, dangerous fire risk, and toxic by ingestion.
* has a low cetane number, meaning it resists ignition more than conventional diesel fuel
- slight fruity odour
- an agreeable odour, and a burning taste
- slightly more energy than ethanol
* initially causes confusion and ataxia for several hours, similar to other alcohols.
* is alcohol.
* is also a highly practical source of hydrogen
- product of decaying organic material
- an ingredient in paint and varnish removers
- the fuel for the direct-methanol fuel cell
- very flammable keep away from open flame or high temperature
- an acute poison when swallowed or breathed in high concentrations
* is an alcohol and a liquid at room temperature
- made from natural gas, biomass or coal
- experimental teratogen with experimental reproductive effects
- extremely flammable liquid
- ideal hydrogen carrier for fuel cell vehicles
- industrial alcohol used in the manufacture of dyes and anti-freeze
- chemical compounds
- colorless, slightly less viscous than water, and has a slightly sweet odor
- completely miscible in water
* is considered as intermediate step for the marked penetration of individual cars
- by the world's major automakers to be an ideal hydrogen carrier
- derived from natural gas, of which there is an abundant supply
- easier in handling than gases and requires less safety precautions than hydrogen
- easy to store and easy to distribute
- excreted almost exclusively through renal elimination
- explosive, but the leak was considered minor
* is extremely corrosive to the eyes
- harmful to the optic nerve
- extremly flamable
- flammable, and dangerous fire risk, and toxic by ingestion
- found in paint remover, solvents, paint, varnish and automotive products
* is found naturally in fruit juice and distilled spirits such as whiskey, wine, and beer
- the body and in many foods such as fruit and vegetable juices
* is highly toxic and causes damage to the optic nerve and blindness in small doses
- readily absorbed by inhalation or skin contact
- many times more toxic to humans than to rodents
- measured in breath, blood, and urine before and after exposure
* is metabolized by hepatic alcohol dehydrogenase to yield formaldehyde
- primarily in the liver
- to formaldehyde and formic acid by hepatic alcohol dehydrogenase
- methane with one hydrogen molecule replaced by a hydroxyl radical
- more corrosive and more toxic than gasoline
- one chemical found in aspartame
* is one of the safest and most environmentally sound fuels available
- part of a normal diet, and the body can easily metabolize small amounts
- poisonous and if ingested can cause blindness
- polar and can have dipole-dipole bonds
* is produced by oxidation of wood chips at high temperatures
- the hydrogenation of carbon monoxide
- commercially by the catalyzed reaction of hydrogen and carbon monoxide
- mostly from corn
- primarily as a derivative of natural gas
- quite corrosive and poisonous
- recycled for reuse
* is released into the air primarily from the pulping process at paper mills
- when such esters are digested
- seen as a good fuel for fuel cells
- slightly more toxic than gasoline
- soluble in groundwater, but is also readily biodegraded
* is the main ingredient
- most viable alternative clean fuel for autos
- only alcohol that candidate for large-scale substitution in Europe
- simplest alcohol, containing one carbon atom
- their largest pollution emission to the sewers
- toxic substances
* is used as a fuel
- major solvent for paints and varnishes
- replacement for petrol for environmentally friendly cars and buses
- an extractant in chemical processes and as a denaturant in ethanol
- transport fuel
* is used for making dyes, perfumes and synthetic fibbers
* is used in chemical syntheses and as an industrial solvent
- the creation of methanphetamine
* is very flammable and burns with a pale blue flame
- is sometimes used as an additive in gasoline
- toxic, causing blindness and death
* is well known to be poisonous in large quantity
- poised to supply a future fuel cell market
- what is added to meths to make it unfit for human consumption
- wood alcohol that has killed or blinded thousands of skid row drunks
* is, moreover, very poisonous.
* liquid alcohol fuel made from clean, domestic natural gas
- fuel produced from syngas
* makes a good automobile fuel, in fact it is used in professional automobile races
* more polar molecule which can form hydrogen bonds between molecules.
* natural and harmless by-product of metabolization of many commonly consumed foods.
* neutral solution and shows negative results for all acid tests.
* occurs as a flammable, mobile, colorless liquid that is miscible with water.
* poisonous substance associated with blindness.
* potent nerve poison.
* precipitates proteins, reducing diffusion before crosslinking.
* produces less carbon dioxide than does gasoline, which has two hydrogens for every carbon.
* promotes atmospheric methane oxidation by methanotrophic cultures and soils.
* quickly converts to formadehyde in the body.
* reacts with ethanoic acid to give methyl ethanoate which is an ester.
* requires less oxygen to burn than gasoline.
* suffers from many of the same problems as ethanol.
* thus breaks down into formaldehyde and formic acid in the body.
* vaporizes quickly and the jug gets filled with the vapor.
* very misunderstood alternative fuel.
+ Glow fuel: Hobbies
* Methanol is the main ingredient. It provides most of the fuel's ability to burn. In order to burn the glow fuel, a glow engine must have a glow plug. The glow plug burns very hot as the engine runs because of a catalytic reaction with the methanol. Since the engines turn very fast, a phenomenon known as thermal inertia helps to keep the plug glowing as the engine runs. A small amount of electricity is used to cause the glow plug to glow as the engine is started. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mesophyte
* are common land plants which grow in situations that are neither too wet nor too dry
- land plants that grow under normal conditions
- of two types, sun plants and shade plants
- plants that grow under well-balanced moisture supplies
- the most common type of plant so there are endless numbers
- very intermediate in water use and needs
* generally require a more or less continuous water supply.
* grow in environments where it is neither too dry nor too moist.
* have medium available water because they are found in moist soils and climates.
* make up the largest ecological group of terrestrial plants.<|endoftext|>Molarity
* Describes the concentration of a solution in moles per liter.
* is concentration
- expressed as moles per liter
- measured in moles per liter
* is the concentration of a solution in grams per liter
- moles of solute divided by the volume of the solution in liter units
* is the number of moles of a solute dissolved in a liter of solvent
- solute dissolved in one liter of solution
- solute per liter of solution
- solute that are contined in one liter of solution
- ratio between the moles of dissolved solute and the volume of solution in liters
- way chemists describe concentration
* way of determining the concentration of a solution.
Memorialization
* is ceremony
* time-honored tradition that has been practiced for centuries.<|endoftext|>Modulation
* is accomplished through the use of polarization effects in crystals
- passage
- revisions
* is the changing of a signal from one form to another
- conversion of data from binary to analog and demodulation is the reverse process
- first of three efficiency related features unique to the linear compressor
* is the process of converting digital signals into sound signals
- shaping a signal to fit a given communications channel
- transmissions
- used to control the rate of reaction
* move in the opposite direction.
* reversible form of cell division.
* takes places within a composition or a movement of a composition.
* two part process, a current called the carrier, and a signal bearing information.
* uses sound waves rather than electrical signals in order to represent digital data.
* way of taking a digital signal and encoding it on a radio frequency.
Mt. Etna
* is kind of a cross between a shield volcano and a strato-volcano
- one of largest continental volcanoes.
* erupts in Sicily, Italy<|endoftext|>Measle
* Some measles causes pneumonia.
* also appears to cause a secondary vitamin A deficiency
- can cause pneumonia, brain damage, seizures or death
- causes acute problems of malnutrition, diarrhea, and pneumonia
* are a disease that is very troublesome and can often be deadly
- highly contagious to children
* can be a killer and can also cause long term development problems and fits
- major cause of death in such situations
- serious and life threatening illness
* can cause brain damage and injure childrens' eyesight
- death and severe disability
- high fever, rash and cough
- manifest as a congenital or acquired disease
- precipitate subacute sclerosing panencephalitis and encephalomyelitis
- result in serious, sometimes fatal complications
- sometimes lead to dangerous complications such as pneumonia
* continue to have a presence in the United States, affecting primarily young adults.
* frequently results in serious diarrhoea.
* occur more commonly on smooth-skinned cucurbits harvested in fall and on heavy soil types.
* pneumonia in young adults.
* still causes deaths in Australian children
- occurs throughout the world, and is frequently imported into the United States
- poses a public health problem
* usually begin with cold-like symptoms followed by a high fever and a rash three days later. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mitochondria
* Is the powerhouse for our body.
* affect all aspects of mammalian reproduction.
* aggregrate about axoneme fusing into mitochondrial matrix.
* also contain a bit of DNA which controls how they work
- derive from symbiosis , but chloroplasts are found only in plants and protista
- differ in the fuels they can bum
- have their own DNA , remnants of a bacterial chromosome
* are a part of eukaryotic cells
- the cell that is responsible for energy production
- third-partner in photorespiration
- typical example
- about the size of an average bacterium
- actually the fat-burning chambers within the body's cells
* are also a site of free radical production
- difficult to detect
- another source of free radicals in the eye
- bacteria that became specialized as energy producers
- bounded by two membranes, and usually contain a small genome
- brown
- cellular organelles that are required for energy production
- critical components of cellular energy balance, calcium dynamics, and apoptosis
- crucial for maintaining cardiac function
- double-membraned
* are energy factories deep inside each cell
- producers inside cells and contain DNA for limited protein construction
- energy-generators
- essential for oxidative phosphorylation
* are essential organelles for all eukaryotic cells that use oxygen
- that can arise only from pre-existing mitochondria
- to the regulation of energy production and metabolic rate
- exceedingly important as storage tanks for calcium ions
* are found in almost all eukaryotic cells
- animal, human, plant, protist and fungi cells
- both plant and animal cells and are the site of cellular respiration
- frequently ellipsoid and can be branched, cell nuclei are frequently ellipsoid
- highly susceptible to oxidative stress, which reinforces the other factors
- important organelles for cellular energy
- known as the powerhouses of the cell
- maternally inherited, so genetic variation arises largely from mutation alone
- membrane-bound organelles, and like the nucleus have a double membrane
- membranous organelles in which aerobic cellular respiration occurs
* are microscopic energy factories housed inside the body's cells
- organelles that are scattered throughout the cytoplasm of all cells
- minute energy boosters that fuel our very life
- more numerous
- numerous and have flattened mitochondrial cristae
* are of the discoidal cristae type
- flattened christae type
- tubular cristae type
- often difficult to see in living cells
- one organelle
* are organelles bounded by a double membrane
- of eukaryote cells
* are organelles that provide much of the energy cells use for the work they do
- release energy to be used by the cell
- serve as power sources to the cell
- within cell that when damaged, can have devastating effects on the body
- outside the cell kernel and provide the necessary energy it needs to survive
- packed in the distal portion of the cell near the contractile fibrils
- parts of human cells that provide energy for the cell
- power generators in the cytoplasm of the cell
* are present in both animals and plants
- to varying degrees in different eukaryotic cells
- pseudocolored in red
* are responsible for aerobic cellular respiration
- converting glucose to energy
- producing cellular energy
- rodshaped structures scattered through the cytoplasm
- self sufficient with regard to cardiolipin biosynthesis
- self-replicating and bound by membranes
- shaped perfectly to maximize their productivity
* are small organelles floating free throughout the cell
- that function as the biological powerhouses of the cell
* are small, oval bodies that provide energy for cell growth
- shaped organelles surrounded by two highly specialized membranes
- threadlike particles in the cytoplasm, the fluid inside the cell walls
- some of the most important structures in the cell
- somewhat like cells within cells
- special because they have their own ribosomes and DNA floating in the matrix
- specialized parts of cells largely responsible for generating energy
- structures essential for many cellular functions including energy production
- subcellular organelles present in all cells except erythrocytes
* are the batteries of the cells that provide usable energy
- cell's energy factories
* are the cell's power plant
- cellular organelles responsible for the life-sustaining process of respiration
- center of cellular enzyme activity
* are the energy packs within cells
- producing organelles of the cell
* are the energy sources for cells
- energy-processing machinery in cells
- energy-producing powerhouses of the cell
* are the main source of energy in cells
- within the cell and are essential for multicelluar life
- organelle in the cell that manage energy consumption
- organelles that convert energy to forms that cells can use for work
* are the part of cells that convert pyruvate into energy
- turn fats and sugars into energy
* are the power plants of the cell that use oxygen to create energy
- cells, where energy for all life processes is generated
- powerhouse of our bodies' cells
- powerhouses of the cell, producing usable energy
- primary energy producers in cells
- site of energy production for cells
- sites where cellular respiration takes place
- source of energy production by oxidative phosphorylation
- tiny powerhouses of the cell
- working organelles that keep the cell full of energy
* are thought to be the descendants of certain alpha proteobacteria
- of certain alpha-proteobacteria
* are tiny powerhouses within cells intimately involved in energy production
- rods found inside all human cells
- sac-like structures found near the nucleus
- unique in having their own sets of DNA, separate from the nucleus
- useful in tracking kinship
* are very abundant in cells that require lots of energy
- efficient at generating proton gradient
- small structures that are present within every cell in the body
- vital structures within the cells of the human body
* become concentrated into the sheath of the middle piece
- filiform
* carry their own genes.
* contain DNA and are capable of self-replication
- in the form of a ring
- a complete genetic system
- enzymes that convert food into energy
- inner membranes called cristae
- the only DNA outside the nucleus in mammalian cells
* contain their own DNA, and a single cell can have hundreds of individual mitochondria
- genome and are capable of transcription and translation
- working parts that are very much like the ones in bacteria
* contains DNA for self replication.
* cover the nuclear surface at specific developmental stages.
* develop by division, too.
* divide on their own by a process that resembles binary fission in prokaryotes.
* exist in very few numbers during the early stages of oogenesis.
* has a inner and outer membranes, the inner one with shelves called cristae.
* have a double membrane structure, with the inner membrane being highly folded
- fluid-filled space called the matrix
- negative charge inside to help import positively charged proteins
- several dozen genes, mostly specialized in aerobic cellular respiration
- unique behavior during development
- about as much in common with bacteria as apples do with oranges
* have an inner membrane and an outer membrane
- system called thylakoid membranes
- diverse metabolic functions, which vary from tissue to tissue
- double membranes, consistent with the engulfing mechanism
* have their own DNA, and new mitochondria arise only when existing ones grow and divide
- circular chromosomes, with a small number of genes
* have their own genetic code and protein-building parts
- material
* is found in all animal cells that convert the energy in food into fuel for the cells
- more of a eukaryotic thing
- very abundant in muscle cells distributed along the myofibrils
* live inside the cells of all animals, plants, and fungi.
* make usable energy from glucose.
* manufacture crystals of hydroxylapatite.
* metabolize nutrients to generate usable energy.
* move around the cell along microtubules.
* occur both in animal and plant cells, plastids only in the latter
- in animal as well as in plant cells, plastids only in plants
* oxidize food to water, carbon dioxide, and energy.
* perform cellular respiration.
* play a crucial role in the metabolism of mammalian cells
- pivotal role in cell death
- vital role in cell function
- an important role in cell proliferation and metabolism
* plays a crucial role in oxidative metabolism.
* posses their own DNA and ribosomes.
* possess two membranes each, with the inner membrane folding into cristae.
* produce enzymes that convert food to energy
- the energy necessary for the cell to function
* proliferate and form long chains and rings.
* provide the cell with energy through metabolism
- energy that drives that cell
* replicate much like bacterial cells
- within the cell and have their own DNA and ribosomes
* replicates independently from the rest of the cell.
* reproduce by binary fission.
* require large amounts of oxygen to support energy metabolism.
* resemble bacteria in several other respects.
* serve as the major sites for energy production within the cell.
* supply the cell with energy by hosting the reaction between glucose and oxygen.
* surround the photocytes.
* synthesize protein using biochemical pathways similar to prokaryotes.
* tell cells when to live and die, and control cell growth.
* then insert iron into heme, which is later turned into hemoglobin.
* use oxygen and glucose to produce most of the cell's energy.
* utilize a slightly different genetic code than does the nucleus.
* vary in number and location according to cell type.
+ Endosymbiosis, Endosymbiotic theory: Evolutionary biology :: Cell biology :: Microbiology
* Mitochondria live inside the cells of all animals, plants, and fungi. Mitochondria were once bacteria, but now they cannot live outside animal cells.
+ Plastid, Genetics and evolution: Botany :: Organelles
* Almost all chloroplasts are thought to derive directly or indirectly from a single endosymbiotic event. Mitochondria also derive from symbiosis, but chloroplasts are found only in plants and protista. The chloroplast has its own DNA, which codes for redox proteins involved in electron transport in photosynthesis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Mixed incontinence
* combination of genuine stress and urge incontinence
- types
- urge and stress incontinence
* is often a combination of both conditions above - stress and urge incontinence
- the coexistence of stress and urge incontinence
- when the person experiences a combination of stress and urge incontinence
* mixture of any of the above-mentioned causes.
* refers to a patient having more than one type of incontinence.<|endoftext|>Naturism
* common practice on many isolated beaches.
* is about accepting the human body for what it is - nothing to be ashamed of
- personal enjoyment of being naked
- characterised by the practice of communal nudity
- characterized by social nudity
- first about accepting oneself
- founded on family participation
- restricted to certain beaches
- the very essence of getting back to nature and becoming true denizens of the earth
* response to the effect of the power and influence of nature upon human emotions
* social activity that appeals to men, women and children of all ages.<|endoftext|>Newts
* Many newts have red spots along their sides
- toxic secretions that are dangerous
* Most newts eat food
- worms
- enter water
- feed upon insects
- go through three life stages rather than just two like most amphibians
* Most newts have porous skin
- spines
- throats
- whitish throats
- leave water
* Most newts live in ponds
- prefer food
- undergo complete metamorphosis
* Some newts eat insects
- feed in lakes
- float in ponds
* Some newts identify mates
- potential mates
* Some newts live in habitats
- moist habitats
- migrate to ponds
- occupy trophic levels
- swim in lakes
* Some newts swim to surfaces
- water surfaces
Nucleoli
* Some nucleoli are visible.
* contain at least one, usually several, associated centromeres.
Nummular dermatitis
* can resolve completely, though typically it persists for years.
* condition confined to the skin.
* is more common in males
- rare in children
Nopale
* are a nutritious and delicious member of the cactus family
- the young flat paddles of the prickly pear cactus
* have a tart, green bean-like flavor.<|endoftext|>Normality
* balanced mixture of all four.
* barely balanced equilibrium of tensions.
* continues to be confused with health.
* curse for the weak.
* form of craziness sanctioned by local custom.
* is always equal to or greater than molarity.
* is an alternative way to express the concentration of a solution
- amount
- conformity
- equivalents per liter
- important in statistical inference
- the possession of the confident
* matter of definition in a given society.
* pre-condition for certain analyses of data, including many hypothesis tests. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Netting
* allows water to flow through.
* also can safeguard plants from birds and insects.
* also protects against hail
- tree limbs and fruit spurs from breakage and damage by raccoons
- reduces wasp and bee nests as well as damage from Japanese beetles
- works around individual plants
* can be very useful at preventing bird damage to fruit and vegetables
- provide a physical barrier between the birds and the nest site
- reduce deer damage to small trees
* comes in various mesh sizes, colors, and materials.
* involves using nets, including active netting with the use of cannon nets and rocket nets.
* is also useful around buildings for covering window or other openings.
* is an excellent way of controlling birds
- inexpensive way to make the pond cleaning much easier
- located in backpacks
- most efficient in short and thin crops and less efficient in tall dense crops
* is one of the most effective methods of excluding woodpeckers
- methods of protecting the harvest from birds
- textiles
* is the most effective way to control the birds
- keep birds out of the planting
- used to hold bunch-type grasses together when planted as sod
- weaving
* placed over plants when pests show up can safeguard plants from birds and insects.
* prevents the adult from landing to deposit eggs on the plant.
Neurobiology
* is biology.
* tries to determine how a schizophrenic brain differs from a normal one.
* very diverse field.
Nonfiction
* is about facts.
* is factual information
- writing about real-life situations
- prose
* makes up a much larger proportion of boys' reading than of girls reading.
* series of facts and suppositions.
Northern
* generally stick to weed beds, although they can be found at anytime and anywhere.
* usually reach sexual maturity in the third year of life.
Nuclear fallout
* causes cancer, physical abnormalities and often, immediate death.
* is caused by the explosion of a nuclear weapon
- mobs
- radioactive dust created when a nuclear weapon detonates
Nervous control
* has a shorter duration than endocrine control.
* is electrical in nature and fast.
Nondestructive testing
* is undoubtedly one of the world's most important professions.
* method of finding defects in an object without harming the object.<|endoftext|>Neoprene
* Provides moderate abrasion resistance but good tensile strength and heat resistance.
* also acts as a wind and vapor barrier to reduce convective heat losses.
* contains chlorine.
* has moderate resistance to oils and gasoline
- one of the highest heat retention or insulating factors of the modern age materials
- the advantage in rough weather of rebounding after being dumped on
* is also a synthetic rubber
- best when the water is very cold
- compatible with some acids and caustics
- comprised of many small bubbles
- cool in summer, warm in winter
- ideal for cold weather and water sports
- known for being shock-absorbent and waterproof
- more expensive than natural rubber latex, nitrile or vinyl
- non-inflammable
- of two main types
- oil-resistant
- pigmented with carbon black which is produced from the burning of oil
- unreactive to many industrial chemicals such as oil, grease, petrol, other solvents
* is used for making hose and tank linings
- in petrol industry in the form flexible pipes or hoses
- to make conveyor belts, car belts, gaskets, etc
- water resistant and snug on the boat
- well suited for many acids and caustics
* provides better traction under one's knees and is more durable.
* recommended material for personal protective equipment.
* supports keep joints warm and swelling down. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Nurture
* cause of miscarriage, and so is an excessive drink.
* comes from the Greek word paideia, meaning, tutorage, education or training.
* helps mold able minds.
* is acculturation
- probably more important than nature in the development of human personality
- simply the result of nature and environment
- why identical twins are really different individuals
* means training with structure.
* plays a very big role in early human development
- as significant a role as nature in our partnering
* virtue, the giving and receiving of which is essential to the moral life.
Neural control
* exploits biomechanical structure of the arm.
* is more important than local control for skin vessels.
Nuclear shielding
* occurs for all nuclei.
* replaces mass conversion.<|endoftext|>Neonate
* Many neonates recover in a couple of months.
* also have the potential for self care.
* appear much more sensitive to acebutolol.
* are altricial and have sparse, light-colored hairs
- at particular risk for meningitis
- babies
* are especially prone to apnea following surgery
- vulnerable to conjunctivitis and pneumonia if the mother is infected
- naked with non-functional ears and eyes
* can acquire the disease by breast feeding.
* develop abdominal distension, ileus, and bloody stool at several days of age.
* exhibit a diminished response.
* feed readily on pink mice.
* generally have no haptoglobin.
* have a much higher incidence of developing a more generalized infection and meningitis
- higher survival rates in warm than in cold weather
* learn at sleep.
* often start eating very soon after birth.
* react wildly when a small treefrog or lizard is placed in their cage.
* spend first the few months in near reefs but move to the open ocean by the first winter.
Neurogenesis
* continues to occur in HD patients and, in fact, increases as the disease progresses.
* refers to the production of new nerve cells.
Nodular goiter
* are a common result of maternal iodine deficiency.
* remains one of the great enigmas of thyroid disease.
Necrotic enteritis
* common infectious disease of breeder ducks.
* is primarily a disease of broilers, roasters and turkeys.
Nephrolithiasis
* common affliction with a high rate of recurrence
- condition likely seen in chiropractic practice
* is another name for kidney stones
- pathology
* is the medical term for the presence of stones in the kidney
- presence of one or more stones in the kidney<|endoftext|>Narrative
* Some narratives describe clairvoyance attributed to children.
* are a hierarchy of instances
- natural, engaging means of communication
- acts of sensemaking
- stories that build up to a climax of action
* cooperate with visual depictions in ways that facilitate both conception and deception.
* exist in an ambivalent relationship with the ideologies that inhabit and shape a culture.
* fancy word for an account of real or imagined events, in other words a story.
* interviewing' is the process of eliciting 'stories' from respondents.
* is part of life before being exiled from life in writing
- subjective account reified as objective knowledge
* is the process by which the author reveals the plot
- author reveals the what happened plot
* means telling a story, with a beginning, a middle, an end, and a point.
* refers to a process or technique.
* text-type rather than a genre.
Nephrosis
* causes protein loss in the urine.
* is non-inflammatory nephropathy and nephritis is inflammatory kidney disease
- pathology
Neurological change
* associated with aging can cause dysfunction to both static and dynamic balance.
* involve the lateral cortical tracts and fasciculus gracilis.
Neuronal plasticity
* can appear after suitable rehabilitation, but is also reported spontaneously.
* is the basis of learning. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Nms
* Some nms are part of millimeters
- mms
* is more common in children and young adults, although it can occur at any age
- primarily a disorder of excessive heat production
* occurs more frequently in young men.
* stimulates the nerves controlling the muscular activity.<|endoftext|>Normalization
* comes through concentration on a piece of work.
* considers the dependencies among attributes within and across entities.
* correction for isotopic fractionation.
* encompasses all life areas.
* encourages drug users to target realistic health goals, set by the users themselves.
* is associated with the identification of a reference line for the expression vectors
- like sex
- social control
- the process which moves a relation from one normal form to a higher normal form
- very important with long hospitalizations
* occurs by limiting the number of connections an afferent makes.
* process of strict adherence to certain guidelines known as normal forms.<|endoftext|>Necrosis
* appears as bronze-colored areas of cellular necrosis
- sunken necrotic spots which appear shiny from the back of the leaf
* can result from a sudden traumatic injury, infection, or exposure to a toxic chemical.
* continues and the uterine lining is shed.
* discoloration caused by plant viruses.
* gives tissue a scorched, blackened appearance, giving rise to the name fireblight.
* is accompanied by drops of dark brown exudate on leaf tip and on underside of leaf blade.
* is dead liver cells
- tissue or plant parts
- death
- rare
- seen as individual pyknotic nuclei
- the death of cells within a living organism
- usually a sign of malignancy but is occasionally seen in benign mesothelial reactions
* occurs as gradual drying of interveinal areas followed by drying of the remaining tissues
- at tip and margin of leaves causing a definite hook at leaf tip
- due to the production of host-specific toxin by the fungus
* passive type of death which occurs when a cell dies of physical alteration.
* refers to a set of morphologic changes that accompany cell death within a living body
- death of a cell or tissue
- traumatic cell death resulting from, for example a severe burn or injury
* term medical students love to use.
Neurone
* Every neurone is made up of a cell body and long thread-like fibres.
* are brain cells that specialize in communication
- commonly long and threadlike in shape
- extremely sensitive to states of anoxia
- highly specialized cells
- negative
* come in two sorts, sensory and motor.
* communicate through specialised structures called synapses.
* depend on astrocytes in a co-culture system for protection from glutamate toxicity.
Nocturnal enuresis
* is incontinence that occurs during sleep
- more common in boys than in girls
* is the medical term for bed-wetting
- urinating during sleep
- most common form of incontinence in children<|endoftext|>Nationalism
* affects language attitudes.
* can also cause instability when there lack of fit between states and nations
- fall on the right, left or center of the political spectrum
* connotes identification with and loyalty to one s nation as just defined.
* defines nationality on ethnic rather than civic terms.
* derives from a grouping of people who share common cultural and social experiences.
* differs depending on type of government.
* helps the stability of a country.
* is always both a political and cultural entity
- ambitions
- deaf to gay identity
- doctrines
- responsible for untold human suffering
- sometimes a defensible sin
* mobilizes populations time and time again.
* presents one of the greatest challenges to the survival of multiethnic states.
Nash equilibria
* are stationary points of the dynamics.
* characterize the operating points of such networks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Nile
* are aquatic in nature
- extremely agressive, even as hatchlings
- rivers
- very active and eat frequently
* can be extremely rewarding animals
- inflict serious wounds to an inexperienced handler
* eat a variety of food.
* grow excessively large and have specialized requirements.
Organisational change
* is essentially about people and the human factor.
* social process requiring cultural change.
Otolaryngology
* branch of medicine related to disorders of the head and neck.
* is abbreviated from a still longer name - otorhinolaryngology
- the medical specialty that focuses on disorders of the ear, nose, and throat
Ostracode
* Many ostracodes eat decaying organic matter.
* Some ostracodes have long geologic ranges and apparently narrow envirnomental tolerances.
* are small molluscs that are good indicators of water temperature and salinity.
Overproduction
* is production
- unique to the capitalist economy
* key factor in magazine industry wastefulness.
* particular form of waste which many companies carelessly overlook.
Outdoor lighting
* can cause intrusive and unnecessary pollution of our countryside
- eliminate hiding places
- provide protection and increase safety
* is another way in which homebuyers dress up the exterior
- one of the most inefficient uses of energy today
- the major source of light pollution
* popular and effective way to scare off unwanted intruders.
* represents a relatively small percentage of all lighting in use.
Oldtimer
* is an old man
* remember catching coho the size of a grown man's leg as the salmon swam upstream to spawn.<|endoftext|>Originality
* is ability
- an ability to think independently and imaginatively
- described as the degree of uncommonness
- more important to some people than the amount of money spent
- often just a matter of seeing familiar phenomena in a new light
- originality, no matter what medium it arises in
- power
- quality
- skill at producing ideas that are different from the obvious
* is the ability to do, make, or think up something original
- key to password protection
- to create something from zero
* refers to unique, unusual responses.
* way of life for children.
Overland flow
* is assumed only to occur when the ground is saturated.
* is the most direct route for protozoan transportation
- water transportation
* occurs over saturated soil, usually adjacent to stream channels
- when precipitation exceeds infiltration rates<|endoftext|>Obscenity
* Obscenities fly now and then, but they are never gratuitous.
* is 'all vulgar references to body parts or functions
- always a act specific conclusion, to be made on a case by case basis
- anything that gives the judge an erection
- different than political speech
- illegal
- in the mind
- indecency
- inherently subjective
- legal in the absence of state or local laws to the contrary
- our abstracted notions of the taboos surrounding the body
- phrases
- profanity
- that which tends to deprave or corrupt
- the illegal form of pornography
- whatever happens to shock some elderly and ignorant magistrate
* leads to many ills.
* legal determination, using community standards
- term, which describes hardcore, illegal pornography
- terms of art
* wall that imprisons, keeps souls in their separate hells.<|endoftext|>Online marketing
* different kettle of fish.
* enables everyone to reach existing and potential customers around the globe.
* is all about getting the right message to the right person at the right time.
* is an ever-growing medium to reach a more diverse clientele
- extremely cost effective and totally trackable form of marketing
- no different than traditional marketing
- one of the most exciting promotional concepts since the invention of television
- the most cost-effective way to attract more customers and increase revenues
* specialized field and it requires knowledge and experience. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Online training
* course or series of courses designed to teach specific skills.
* is an alternative to traditional classroom-based learning
- one of the top growth areas on the Internet<|endoftext|>Overexploitation
* affects the vast majority of the world s reefs.
* can damage intertidals directly
- lead to resource destruction, including extinctions
* is always a threat to any species
- another reason species become endangered
- development
- one of the main threats to global biodiversity
* occurs when a resource is consumed at an unsustainable rate.
* reduces population sizes, affecting interactions within an ecosystem.
* threatens one-third of endangered vertebrates , as well as other groups.<|endoftext|>Openness
* also implies opening previously protected domestic sectors to foreign investment.
* can mean many different things.
* change in spirit, as well as a set of skills and practices.
* includes all possible qualities, including masculine and feminine.
* involves an acceptance of the unknown, the unexpected and the unforeseeable
- removing mental obstacles to what's outside, like prejudice and preconception
* is essential for economic growth, which can help pay for health care and sanitation
- fundamental to the political health of a modern state
- key to public satisfaction
- normal, healthy, and natural
- sociability
- spacing
* is the ability to respect other people's place and position
- culture of the age, and in most ways that is good
- spice that helps to make difficult decisions more palatable
* key condition of a relationship built on trust.
* refers to the degree of sharing with others, one's inner thoughts and feelings.
* requires information to be made freely available to everyone as fast as possible.
* virtue in regulation.<|endoftext|>Opportunity
* Most opportunity relates to human population growth.
* allows situations.
* arises from activities
- drill activities
* causes a desire to surprise.
* depends on conditions
- economic conditions
- experience
- local economic conditions
* directly relates to the amount of time set aside for market analysis.
* exists in countries
- develop countries
* has consequences
- serious consequences
* increases likelihood
- throughout one's life, but inescapable obligations tend to intensify with age
* is artificial satellites
- possibility
* is the opposite of risk
- plan of interventions to foster growth and change
- presence of circumstances that promote the use of electronic channels
- time they had to commit the act
* leads to opportunity.
* occurs in regions.
* relates to growth.
* relates to human growth
- professional skills
* stroke of good fortune which presents itself, and can be either grasped or lost.
* word heard less and less in day to day living.
Overindulgence
* causes both young and old to lose control of their tongues
- golden-yellow tinge to vision on following day
* damages health and shortens life span.
* form of child neglect.
* is humoring
- indulgence
- simply an outward symptom of inward insecurity
- to indulge to excess
* means that children have too many toys.
* occurs mainly with young children.
* produces malnutrition and obesity.
Ovarian torsion
* can occur in normal or pathologically enlarged ovaries, fallopian tubes, or both.
* is an important yet notoriously difficult diagnosis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Optimism
* also reflects on bottom-line business profit
- relates to setting and maintaining goals
* appears as a moral imperative
- to be socially desirable in all communities
* can also help stop violence.
* can be a self fulfilling prophesy
- contagious
* characteristic that is the basis of positive thinking.
* faith that leads to success.
* force multiplier.
* helps people look at the better side of things
- pay attention to useful negative information
* ignores the dilemma of human suffering by making evil and misery part of a perfect world.
* includes initiative and long-term thinking.
* increases happiness for it is contagious
- with income and education
* is about thinking non-negatively, rather than thinking positively
- an attitude to life that prevents people from becoming apathetic, or giving up hope
- as justifiable as pessimism
- associated with mood, coping and immune changes in response to stress
- based on observation of positive possibilities in the external world
- compulsory to the one who lives in Spirit and in Truth
- dispositions
- due to the nature of investments
- essential to promotability
- faith in people, in the human potential
- infectious when positive results are seen
- merely a state of mind
- more an innate predisposition to view the world in a certain way
- regarded as a stable personal trait that buffer against stress and ill health
- related to self-esteem and life satisfaction in rural college undergraduates
* is the assumption that everything is going to go well
- faith that leads to achievement
- only productive way to think
- ultimate perception
- wholeness and health
* is, in part, the ability to compromise with the facts of life.
* leads to better moods, better health and longer life.
* learned behavior.
* means believing that positive results are likely.
* methodology or technology that can be learned.
* strategy for making a better future.
* tends to reflect a person's outlook on life and their personality.
* word that comes from a Latin word meaning the best.
Obedience training
* helps make dogs more manageable and responsive to commands.
* is essential in preventing aggression in dogs
- important for any dog being adopted into a new home
- very important in a relationship with a new or old dog
* keeps dogs safe.
* starts when they are young.
Optical flow
* Any optical flow is simply the projection of the scene flow onto the image plane of a camera.
* is the apparent motion of brightness patterns between images.
* measure of the apparent flow of brightness in a sequence of images.
Oxali
* All oxalis have foliage that closes at night or on cloudy days.
* are perennials, most of which can go dry in the summer.
* grow from bulbs, rhizomes or tubers, depending on the variety.
Organizational change
* involves people.
* is about changing each individual, one at a time
- really about people change
* shift in the processes underway in a corporation.
* slow and often discontinuous process in a complex organization.
Ohmic heating
* can enhance food quality by limiting heat damage to the sauce and food particles.
* has the advantage to heat materials rapidly and uniformly.
* is an efficient way of processing foods containing large solid particulates.
Osmium tetroxide
* has a strong odor resembling chlorine and rotting raddishes.
* highly toxic powerful oxidizing agent with a strong odor.
* is chemical compounds
- noncombustible, use extinguishing media appropriate for the surrounding fire
- regarded as a substance with poor warning properties
- very toxic and the only important commercial compound of osmium
* powerful oxidising agent with a strong smell. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Overuse
* also causes muscle fatigue
- has the potential to cause nausea or diarrhea
* can cause anxiety and insomnia
- increased redness and irritation in the eye and can even lead to permanent damage
- nausea and vomiting, making it unpleasant to abuse
- photosensitivity in some people
- the skin to dry and flake
- create resistant strains of bacteria
* can increase the risk of side effects and can lead to eye damage
- effects and lead to eye damage
- inflame the tendon and cause grating and pain
* can lead to micro-tears in the soft tissues, which can become swollen and painful
- upset stomach, bleeding in the digestive tract, and ulcers
* can result in inflammation, pain, and restricted movement
- systemic absorption with the usual antihistamine side effects
* is development
* problem for farms in suburban areas.
* syndromes that involve long-standing poor posture are a common cause.
Overcoming adversity
* can often make a person stronger.
* has a way of adding physical muscle and mental determination.
* is something to be admired in people.
Ongoing research
* has scientists trying to identify a gene causing migraines.
* is essential for the treatment of cancer.
* suggests that bulking up stool can help bulk up muscle.
Operational philosophy
* is the philosophy of action-directed goals.
* views any language as a certain way of organizing experience.<|endoftext|>Oriental
* Most orientals have small eyes.
* also require birthright rolls.
* are a high energy breed, and very social, both with people and other animals
- sociable, talkative and affectionate, as well as playful
- very affectionate cats and also very active
* bloom when the other lilies are finished.
* have strong beliefs about the flow of life forces, just as many Native American groups do.
* practise also the blessing of rivers or the sea.
* preserve in salt.
* represent a diverse group of cats that have their foundation in the Siamese breed.
* see their governments as predators, populated by corrupt power-seekers.
* vary depending upon their ancestry.
Offering
* are contributions.
* is located in churchs.<|endoftext|>Overtime
* is hours prior to or beyond posted building hours
- worked in excess of forty in a work week
- money times
- one technique that employers use to deal with skill shortages
- part of ice hockeys
- similar to overtime in college games
- simply hours taken away from the life of employees
* is time away from rest, family, loved ones and leisure activities
- periods
- work time
* means the hours of work carried out in excess of the normal hours of work per day.
* rule under the Employment Standards Act. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Obedience
* All obedience is based on faith and love.
* alone is That for which faith aspires.
* always involves the human element of intellect and ability.
* becomes a reflex, strengthened by instant rewards or positive reinforcement.
* carries in it the life-blood of religion.
* change in belief or behavior in response to pressure from an authority figure.
* complicated act of virtue, and many graces are exercised in one act of obedience.
* corollary of faith, and generous giving is an act of worship.
* direct result of selflessness and humility.
* does provide help in the storms of life.
* focuses on respecting authority.
* form of guidance.
* helps faith, and faith, in turn, helps obedience.
* implies subordination to a higher rule or authority.
* is always the outward manifestation of faith.
* is an abandonment of discernment in a wealth of discernment
- act, but submission characteristic of the heart
- especially important concept for housewives
* is an essential evidence of sanctification or holiness
- expression of faith
* is an essential part of faith
- military life
- important military virtue because it is intrinsic to the military function
* is an outward act that is predicated on an inward attitude
- sign of an agreement
- another area where dogs are tested
- as basic an element in the structure of social life as one can point to
* is both the manifestation and evidence of faith
- way and the means to reach the goal
- capable of transforming the social order
- compliance
- dangerous, and blind obedience is evil
- faith in motion
- feminine
- for doing every good deed and showing every consideration for all men
- from our own mind and heart
- hard work
- healing and refreshment
- important in monasticism
- included in justification by faith
- love doing what it is told
- more important than love and compassion
- necessary for a proper relationship with other human beings
- never a flight of responsibility, but rather being plunged into greater responsibility
- obedience and disobedience is disobedience
- one's prior duty
- our witness to the world that our faith is genuine and real
- proof of love
- simply a matter of doing the right acts
* is the ability to hear
- action of putting our faith into work
- appropriate response of a servant to their master's orders
- basis upon which a successful Christian witness can be built
- confirmation of belief
- core of all spiritual life, it alone can overcome the craftiness of our ego
- cornerstone to all aspects of dog training
- criterion of faith
- evidence of reality of the covenant relationship
* is the first degree of humility according to the Rule of Saint Benedict
- vow of releigion
- food of all the saints
- form of change in behavior when commanded by a higher authority
* is the foundation for character
- from which all other virtue is built
- fruit of love
- gateway through which knowledge, yes, and love, too, enter the mind of the child
- highest dictate of reason as well as of conscience
* is the key to a close relationship
- climbing in faith
- order and peace
- the sanctified life
- mark and confirmation of one who is truly redeemed
- means of walking in the light
- mother of all kinds of virtue
- one key of life
- only true form of success
- opener of eyes
- outward evidence of genuine trust
- path to life
- prerequisite to power and effectiveness
- proof of love Love proves itself through actions
- root of much evil
- stone Despised by all the world
- surrender of personal power
* is the test of love and love is the content of obedience
- one's love
- orthodoxy
- token of our faith, and acceptance of forgiveness
- voluntary slave's lifeblood
- when each dog is judged against a scorecard
* leads to obedience as surely as sin leads to sin.
* long-term commitment.
* mark of conversion.
* means doing what parents say
- shifting our expectations to being a blessing instead of just being blessed
* occurs when people follow a direct command.
* produces order and orderly behavior replaces all chaos.
* promise to be a faithful listener.
* relates directly to the blessings and cursings.
* response to grace.
* setting in which freedom can more easily and more perfectly operate.
* sign of faithfulness.
* stems from control and control from obedience.
* subject that requires careful thought.
* takes the place of disobedience, faith makes up for faithlessness.
* way of life for the missionary priest.
* wonderful sport where dogs love to demonstrate their abilities.
* word that holds a lot of connotations, some negative. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Outrage
* is atrocities
- controversy
- inhumanity
- organisation
- trouble
* judging pattern that fails to accept reality as it is.
Objectification
* form of oppression.
* is an inevitable aspect of representation
- realization
- representations
- the functioning of an actual entity in the becoming of an actual entity
- when men view women as objects
* kind of metasystem transition.
* term signifying treating people as things or abstractions.<|endoftext|>Oppression
* applies to the same groups of people that discrimination does.
* can take the form of excluding entire categories of people.
* comes from hate
- the concept of being weighted down, and is often shown as such
* is common in America, the land of the free, and comes in many forms
- complex, and the way different oppressions interact is complex
- depressions
- in the eyes of the oppressed
- persecution
- possible when government does more than ensure justice
* is the grain of daily life
- misuse of power to the detriment of others
- what they remember of their lives in that country
* negative force, and as long as it exists, everyone is impacted.
* occurs when someone with power uses it against a less-empowered person.
* often leads to revolution and the human quest for freedom and liberty of conscience.
* requires the oppressed to be vulnerable.
* takes many forms
- two major forms, external and internal
Oblivion
* comes when the soul is dried up with material cares.
* grows stronger with every passing day, and the afterlife grows less eternal by the minute.
* is at times a means of survival and a condition for a fresh start
- obscurity<|endoftext|>Octopi
* Most octopi have glands
- muscles
- poison glands
- suckers
- tentacles
- types
* Some octopi attain weight
- cause inflammation
- change color
* Some octopi eat crabs
- shore crabs
- go into shells
* Some octopi have beaks
- kill humans
- penetrate shells
- use mimicry
* also crawl about the ocean floor, using their tentacles.
* are also out hunting at night
- carnivorous scavengers, and search for food by crawling along the bottom at night
- sexual and mate polygamous
- solitary, eight-armed animals that live on the ocean floor
- top predators
* can perceive shape, color intensity and texture.
* have gardens
- separate sexes
- tentacles, elephants have trunks
* range around the world.
* stay near the bottom, and even big ones are timid.
* thrive on the broad continental shelf.
Osteitis pubis
* is one of the many sports-related injuries that cause pain in the groin area.
* represents inflammation of the symphysis pubis.
Offender
* bad person
* is the name given to a person who sexually abuses children.
Operational research
* is used by a large variety of organisations.
* systematic way of dealing with decision making. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Opacity
* Opacities block light and blur images before they reach the retina
- can occur in any area of the lens
- develop from bleeding in diabetic retinopathy or trauma
* affects a documents readability.
* contributes to the inability of some countries to borrow in their own currencies.
* controls how transparent the lightning is.
* determines the transparency, if any, of the stamped pattern.
* is also very important, since green and purple are colors that play against each other.
* is an indicator of changes in performance of particulate control systems
- orthogonal issue
- improved by optimal sizing of the titanium dioxide particles
- quality
- related to particulate pollution
* is the inverse of transmission or reflectance
- light stopping power of a a material
- opposite to transparency
- resistance of a gas to the flow or radiation
- thus a vital quantity in any calculation of stellar structure or stellar pulsation
* measure of how visible a plume of smoke is.
* measurement of the degree to which smoke obstructs the view of objects behind it.
* measurement, on a percentage scale, of how much light is blocked by the exhaust plume.
* measures the amount of light that can penetrate smokestack emissions.
* physical phenomenon
* refers to a paper's ability to prevent print from showing through to the other side.
* refers to the appearance of the radiographic image of the patient
- extent to which radiation is blocked by the medium it is travelling through
- incomprehensible context in which content is presented<|endoftext|>Online shopping
* IS the way of the future.
* comes naturally to young consumers.
* fast and easy way to buy gifts at great discounts.
* is all about speed and convenience.
* is made easy in a variety of fashions
- simple through the internet
- more likely to result in offline purchasing than online sales
- subject to the same laws that apply to phone or mail order shopping
* is the business everyone is talking about
- holy grail of just about every big online player
- wave of the future - and the future is now
- very similar to buying from mail order catalog
- what s in store
* new way to find steals.
Overland travel
* is more about people than destinations.
+ Crime in Benin: Crime by country :: Benin
* Overland travel can be dangerous. Highway bandits block the road. They then steal the car. There is very little security on the roads. The borders between countries are not strong.
Observational astrophysic
* interprets the electromagnetic radiation emitted by celestial objects.
* is like astronomy.
+ Astrophysics, Types of astrophysics
* Observational astrophysics is like astronomy. Like astronomers, observational astrophysicists use telescopes to study the Universe, but observational astrophysicists study the physics of what they see to explain the Universe.<|endoftext|>Overexposure
* can cause a rash, itching, redness, or sunburn
- impaired judgment, dizziness, headache, drowsiness and even death
- lung damage, including decreased lung function
- symptoms of non-fibrotic lung injury and membrane irritation
- unconsciousness, liver and kidney damage and death
- result in silicosis, a lung disease which in severe cases can be fatal
- severely irritate and burn the skin or eye causing permanent damage
* causes painful burns on skin - lasts for days
- swelling of skin - lasts for days
- severe damage to target organs
* is exposure.
* major fault in color slides.
* tends to create images which are almost all blacks and whites with no middle tones.
Ovipositor
* are structures on female insects in which they deposit eggs.
* reproductive organ and it is located between the cercus. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Pelvic adhesion
* are actually scar tissue that forms between two or more internal organs.
* can be a serious detrimental quality of life issue
- cause mechanical kinks in or blocks to the fallopian tubes
- lead to infertility and reproductive problems
- often create a significant barrier to fertility<|endoftext|>Punishment
* Is there a difference between discipline and punishment.
* always decreases the probability of an act occurring again.
* can also impact on the development of morality in complex ways
- cause blind dogs to become more depressed, anxious or aggressive
* form of attention, and attention is what dogs want most of all.
* help in building concepts like rewards, pleasure, and pain.
* is an external force for controlling parents
- extremely ineffective method of modifying bullying or rejecting behavior
- undesired form of training
- another word that carries strong connotations in everyday language
- consequence of action
- defined by the person being punished
- jail time
- located in jails
- social control
* is the application of the unplesent or unwanted to reduce the occurence of behavior
- basis for sentencing dispositions in criminal cases
- human right of a criminal
- infliction of pain for good reasons
- pain that one deserves for violating the law
- presentation of an aversive stimulus
- process of making a behavior less likely to occur again
- use of harmful methods to change behaviors that are less than desirable
- used for the purposes of controlling and retribution
* is used to hurt, to cause physical or psychological pain
- penalize children for wrongdoing, and no learning results from it
- suppress behavior
- violence
- whatever works to stop a child from misbehaving
* kind of action.
* means of inhibiting responses by presenting aversive stimuli.
* method that has little use in bird training.
* necessary aspect of child rearing
- part in any legal system
* negative response to a behavior.
* penalty inflicted for an offense.
* retaliatory act to appease anger.
* reward for attention starved children.
* sacrifice some people are willing to take.
* serves as a deterrent to crime and a shield for the innocent.
* teaches children to stifle their feelings and often perpetuates a cycle of anger.
* way of releasing anger
- to modify corporate behavior
+ Applied behavior analysis, Definitions and concepts, Punishment
* Reinforcement is always the first thing that is tried when trying to change a behavior. Reinforcement produces long-lasting results and is better for the person. However reinforcement does not always reduce problem behavior. If reinforcement does not work it may be necessary to try punishment. Punishment is effective but it can have bad consequences. It can cause emotional harm if it is not used correctly.<|endoftext|>Proprioception
* fundamental indicator of our existence.
* gives the wearer feedback as to the position of the terminal device.
* involves the sense of where the body is in space.
* is different from intuition
- generally unfamiliar to most people, but is extremely important to an athlete
- intact in the distal extremeties
- minimally impaired at distal toes and fingers bilaterally
- often synonymous with balance
- sensitivity
- tested by measuring how the patient responds while standing on a moving platform
* is the name given to our brains awareness of our bodies in space
- sense of oneself in an environment
- used when a person touches the tip of their nose while keeping their eyes closed
* refers to kinaesthetic awareness.
* seems to involve certain parts of the sensory nervous system.
* is used when a person touches the tip of their nose while keeping their eyes closed. Even though they cannot see their finger or their nose, they can sense how to touch them together.
Plushie
* are soft and cuddly, and are made to be loved.
* can be almost any size from a few inches to six feet tall, or larger. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Physic
* Explain the nature of matter.
* also applies when trying to stay grounded during a tackle
- combines with other disciplines
- explains why a firework shoots into the air
- seeks to construct models which can be used to explain or predict complex interactions
* are located in universities
- natural science
* based modeling growing area in computer graphics.
* can be a powerful influence for people interested in perception and robotics
- explain why certain living things take unusual shapes
- lead to careers ranging from engineering to space research
- predict the future with enough knowledge about the present
* clearly mentions that the laws that hold good for the atom also hold good for the cosmos.
* consequently occupies a central position in science and technology.
* even makes an appearance in palaeontology.
* generally begins with a study of mechanics.
* say for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
* shines light on the mathematical structure that lies underneath nature.<|endoftext|>Parallelism
* allows large-scale problems to be solved
- larger problems to be solved while reducing the computation time
* allows the computer to perform more than one function at a time
- database system to divide tasks so that they can be completed sooner
* contends that the mind and body interact independently of one another.
* function of the tester and probe cards.
* is achieved through concurrent processing of tasks on individual processing units
- also a kind of repetition
- an important characteristic of clear syntax, especially in long sentence structures
- common to the fossil record
- exploited in allowing all nodes at one level to be active simultaneously
- referred to as a special form of symmetry
- similarity
* is the ability for multiple calculations to occur in a given instance in a computer
- nature of hardware
- similarity of grammatical structure among heads or items in a list
- use of two lines to express the same idea in two ways
- used to enhance system speed and developmental flexibility
* key concept being studied in circuit and novel architecture design.
* operates on both semantic and grammatical levels.
* refers to a sound that compliments an image
- the external form that a listener or a reader perceives in a poem
* technology that is seen as very distant by a large number of industries.<|endoftext|>Permutation
* Demonstrates how to calculate permutations, and how they appear in cycles.
* Every permutation is equivalent to a product of transpositions.
* Every permutation product of disjoint cycles
* Take a set A of n different elements.
* also have a parity which is changed by a transposition.
* are when order is important.
* cascades with normalized cells.
* illustrates the number of ways to arrange elements in a definite order.
* is an extension of inversion that can be applied to genetic programming
- ordered arrangement of a set of distinct objects
- transformation
- used in the strict mathematical sense that only order is changed
* means a combination of certain units in all possible orderings.
* method of establishing significance without making assumptions about the data. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Phonology
* also provides a useful guide to the complex evolution of black-white speech relationships.
* branch of linguistics.
* constrains the mental orthographic representation.
* examines the way sounds are grouped together into systems in particular languages.
* has two levels.
* involves analyzing how sounds function in a given language or dialect.
* is concerned with the sounds of language
- use of language elements such as vowel or consonant sounds
- considered as a list of phonemes and allophones
- divided into two sub-branches
- part of linguistics, which is the scientific study of language
- the sound system of a language and the rules of sound sequences that make up words
* is the study and identification of the meaningful sounds of a language
- of biological rhythms
* is the study of how sounds are organized into unique systems for different languages
- speech sounds are organized and how they function
- the sound systems of a language interact with each other
- speech sounds and their patterns in a given language
- the discrete sounds of a language
* is the study of the sound patterns of language
- systems of languages
- unconscious rules governing speech-sound production
* looks for the sound system within a particular language.
* studies the sound system of human speech
- systems in the world's languages<|endoftext|>Prosperity
* also has profound effects on demographics
- involves aspirations, choices and power
* can be a detriment to spiritual maturity
- the crucible in which character is proved true or false
- come at a high environmental and social price
* comes from economic growth, which is linked to globalisation and technical advances
- the labor of workers, investment of savings and private enterprise
* depends on the ability to evolve with financial stability
- turning a profit and having elite housing structures
* function of the ability to adapt to change.
* goes with freedom and order.
* is about both the quantity, as well as the quality of the American work effort
- creating the feeling of success
* is an aberration between recessions
- economic condition
- created by productivity, by increasing value without increasing cost
- good fortune
* is more than material wealth
- monetary and material gain
- now the defining characteristic of American society
- often a greater test of our spiritual stability than adversity
- supposed to mean well-being
- that period between the last installment and the next purchase
* is the condition of having good success
- natural outcome of creativity, which itself is born of inner peace and happiness
- out-picturing of substance in our affairs
- rational sense of hope against the suffering that is mere survival
- real way to balance our budget
- result of identifying and exploiting opportunity
- spiritual birthright of all people and nations of the Earth
* lack of perfection without regret, because it is change ahead of necessity.
* leads to a cleaner environment and improved working conditions.
* matter of individual choice.
* means different things to different people
- jobs, but also competitiveness on the world market
* mental and spiritual construct long before it becomes a physical reality.
* network of health centers, schools, practitioners, products, speakers and services.
* often comes with a price
- leads to lower birth rates
* parent to peace, just as desperation feeds extremism and violence.
* relies on peace, and peace on reconciliation.
* result of respect for the needs of the consumers.
* seems to have returned after the decline of Kings and wars.
* sometimes bad thing for some people.
* tends to produce laxity and spiritual apathy in any age.
* usually promotes peace.
Parsimony
* crucial factor in scientific tests.
* is an ancient guide for inference
- frugality
- stinginess
* is the cause of capital
- idea of stinginess
- immediate cause of the increase of capital | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Pottery
* Allows people to craft clay into pottery.
* also provides a very effective means for dating in the Mediterranean.
* can also help archaeologists date sites
- have many shapes or colors
* coarse-textured ware of either earthenware or stoneware.
* form of Native American art that exemplifies the personal level of tribal life.
* forms one of the most common and abundant types of artifacts found at archaeological sites.
* glazes and most enamels contain lead, as do many paints commonly used in printing.
* has many uses in our native culture for storing water seeds, food and also used to eat from.
* historic art which has been passed down through many generations.
* is all in the family with the Kings
- also good for cooking and eating out of
* is an art as old as human culture and civilization which shows peaks of human civilization
- utensil
- dated by form, colour, and technique
- hobbies
- important to archaeology
- made by moulding clay into the desired shape and baking it in a kiln
* is made from clay baked in a kiln
- products, formed, sanded and highly polished
- that is moistened and shaped
- more than a physical creation
- one of mankind's oldest art forms
* is one of the most common artifacts to survive the ravages of time
- important artifacts to an archaeologist
- pivotal to the economic and social structure of the pueblo
- poured by hand into ceramic molds, then turned and cleaned
* is the human seed that springs forth from the Earth
- measure of a country's civilization
- trade
- treated using natural dyes to produce special appearances on pot surfaces
- usable art, rather than just food for the soul
- very fragile and light in weight
- when clay used to model shapes and then fired in a kiln
- workshops
* logically follows agriculture because they used pots and other ceramics to cook grains.
* plays an important role in Martinican history.
* remains a mainstay in the Catwba culture and tradition.
* survives well in nearly all environments.
+ Clay: Sedimentary rocks
* Clay' is a fine-grained silicate mineral made when rocks break down. When wet, clay has a plastic quality, and can be used to make pottery and bricks and other things. Pottery is when clay used to model shapes and then fired in a kiln.
Patronage
* can exist among politicians.
* habit left over from less enlightened days.
* is approval
- social control
- the way that the truth of the church is transmitted to culture
* liturgical act.
* system where a political leader hires and fires whoever they want.
Political risk
* exists when governments are unstable.
* force a re- assessment of investments by organizational risk managers.
* loss exposure faced by firms doing business on an international basis.<|endoftext|>Pricing
* are evaluation.
* depends on the quantity, frequency, and complexity of changes.
* function of size, materials, and labor.
* has the impact of holding down inflation.
* is affected by the number of garments, the number of print colors and the garment type
- also relative to supply and demand
- an important part of selling, and influences how much is actually obtained
* is based on costs, supply, and demand
- the quantity and type of product to be returned
- defined by the numbers of simultaneous users
- directly related to a site's complexity
- driven by supply and demand
- nothing more than the perception of information
- one of the major topics in both economics and marketing
- relative to how each person runs their business
* is the critical element in achieving a profit and factor that all firms can control
- root-canal of software marketing
* key area of competition in the industry.
* marketing function that takes engineering to execute.
* matter of perception by the buyer.
* plays a central role in economics.
* relates to the amount charged for goods and services. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Physical thing
* All physical things have a size.
* have a wide variety of forms and substance
- only formal definitions
- physical characteristics that can be examined equally by all parties
Papaverine
* occurs naturally in opium.
* relaxes involuntary smooth muscle and increases cerebral blood flow.
Prenatal testing
* involves either amniocentesis or a chorionic villus biopsy.
* is used to diagnose abnormalities in the fetus.
Poor lighting
* can accentuate light colors or create dark shadows under participants eyes.
* can cause eyestrain and headaches
- glare, contributing to eyestrain and visual fatigue
* leads to bud drop and poor growth after flowering.
Paresis
* involves slight to extensive weakness in part of the body.
* is disfunction
- intermittent or incomplete weakness
- one kind of paralytic dementia
- paralysis
- slight or partial paralysis
* means weakness.
Pricing strategy
* Pricing strategies help marketers solve the practical problems of establishing prices.
* plays an important role in every Business.<|endoftext|>Pilgrimage
* are a feature of many religions and cultures
- form of devotion that find expression in many different traditions
* brings about the forgiveness of lesser sins.
* consists of both a visit to a place and a meditative consideration within oneself.
* duty required of every Muslim man or woman.
* is an art which brings peace to the soul
- enactment of the sacred by the body in relationship with the earth
- essential part of life and living
- important part of our religious heritage
- as venerable a theme in Christian literature as it pillar of Muslim practice
- both a communal event and a private act of transformation
- like a national sport in India
- the second source of income in the country falling well below the oil revenue levels
* journey, one guided by the heart and the spirit.
* lasts for about a week in the beginning of the twelfth month of the lunar calendar.
* means different things to different people.
* multi-sensory experience where subtle and amazing things take place.
* passage from one world to another.
* sacramental act.
* sacred journey that everyone can participate in through reading the gospels.<|endoftext|>Pubic lice
* Most pubic lice have lifespans
- shapes
* are also completely curable, using a cream or shampoo rubbed into the pubic hair
- difficult to see because of their location and appearance
- frequently the color and size of small freckles
- insect parasites that are transmitted sexually
- more common in adults
- parasitic insects which differ in appearance from head lice and body lice
- small white specks resembling which looks like a tiny white speck against the hair
* are smaller and have more compact, crablike bodies than head or body lice
- than the other two species, and have a short body resembling a crab
- t iny insect-like creatures, which live in the genital region
- tan to greyish-white in color
* are tiny insects in the genital area that cause redness and itching
- parasitic insects that live on coarse human body hair, such as pubic hair
- wingless insects that cause itching in the genital region
- tiny, flat-bodied, wingless insects that live on the skin
* attach themselves to the base of pubic hairs where they bite the skin and lay their eggs.
* can also involve eyelashes, eyebrows, beard and body hair
- live in beards and eyebrows
- infect the pubic area and cause intense itching as well as a red rash
* cement their eggs to hairs in the pubic or perianal regions.
* infect hairy parts of the body, especially around the groin and under the arms
- especially around the pubic hair
* is an infestation of small parasites that causes redness and itching around the genitals
- diagnosed by a physical examination of the infested area
* live in the hair around the sex organs and lay their eggs on shafts of hair.
* occurs when adult lice lay eggs, called nits, on the hair shaft close to the skin. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Perfect love
* casts out fear, and that includes the fear of death.
* drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment.
* is source only to light, life, healing, harmony and peace
- the ability to give without receiving
* means one is always satisfied with one's partner.
Paleobiology
* emphasizes the study of fossils as organisms.
* includes several branches, of which two major ones are paleozoology and paleobotany.
* is about the history of nature
- biology
- paleontology
- published quarterly and focuses on the biological aspects of paleontology
Pulmonary rehabilitation
* does improve the symptoms of dyspnea and health-related quality of life.
* helps individuals with lung disease lead a more active life.
* improves frailty in ambulatory patients with chronic lung diseases.
* increases gait speed in patients with chronic lung diseases.
Progymnosperm
* are believed to link ferns to gymnosperms.
* stems are eusteles.
Pediculosis
* is an infestation of head lice on the hair of the head
- another name for an infestation of head lice
* is the infestation of the hairy parts of the body or clothing with lice
- medical term used to describe the condition of being infested with lice
* skin disease caused by infestation of lice.
Pavlovian conditioning
* has a significant influence on human emotions.
* is largely responsible for our motivation to respond in any situation.
Physical evil
* consists in a privation of a perfection due to the nature of the being.
* is partly a punishment for actual sin
- the privation of a natural good desired by a human being<|endoftext|>Profitability
* good short hand method for determining the worth of a particular customer.
* improves dramatically when a company cuts turnover.
* is an important element of financial performance
- based on the ability to satisfy customers and management
- dependent on what the traders themselves decide to do
- driven by cost and revenue
- essential in the business operations of any enterprise
* is essential to business success
- the agricultural system
- gain
- key to the success of organic agriculture
* is the ability of the business to generate income in excess of expenses
- by product of good service
- key to keeping our farmers on the land
- net result of a large number of policies and decisions a firm makes
- rate at which profits are generated from invested capital
- result of the efficiency and the interaction of the parts
* is, if they are lucky, one or two per cent.
* measures the financial performance of the farm over a period of time, usually a year.
* occurs when income exceeds costs over a specific period, usually a year.
* problem which is of major importance to all Michigan growers.
Permeation
* can occur through most materials including metals, ceramics and polymers.
* is different from penetration
- diffusion
- molecular migration between polymer molecules
- when pesticides pass through the materials itself
Promise
* are windows into a person's integrity.
* is bands
- commitment
- dedication
- expectations
- speech acts
* set of five basic promises made to every child in America.
* word softly spoken, but never heard.<|endoftext|>Praise
* form of adoration and it is an integral part of worship.
* is also a form of prayer
- an important ingredient in parenting
- approval
- commendation
- located in beds
- one form of social approval
* is the mode of love which always has some element of joy in it
- most important element in religion and in the psychological life of the worshiper
- outgrowth of faith, worship, and adoration - as well as of confession
- what teaches a dog what to do
* non-expense method to increase morale, motivation and productivity.
* type of reward that is based on competition | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Polity
* is administration
- akin to the word politics and refers to church organization
- one of the world's leading social science and humanities publishers
- order
- organizations
* means form of government.
* mixed regimes which combines elements of democracy and oligarchy.
Pampas
* Most pampases are part of Argentina.
* has no set routes of dispersal.
* is taken from an Indian word meaning plain.
* threatens the productivity of plantation forests and land of high conservation value.
Political philosophy
* attends to political life.
* begins by asking what kind of political institutions fit human nature.
* compass of leadership.
* indicates government is most efficient with maximum individual freedom.
* investigates the principles which underlie the structure of a good society.
* is regarded by some as including political activity itself.<|endoftext|>Pessimism
* acknowledges both angel and brute in man s permanent constitution.
* can also become a self-fulfilling prophesy.
* comes from the ancient as well as the modern ruling classes.
* is abnormal
- also partly a failure of imagination
- belief systems
- despair
- dispositions
- rooted in the same soil as the inability to be at the disposal of others
* is the dominant mood at present
- order of the day, inside and outside Japan
- widespread
* negative, unscientific, and emotional reaction.
* replaces optimism.
* requires action, whereas optimism means staying the course.
* self-fulfilling prophecy.
Pilotage
* is primarily the art of navigating by landmarks
- the using known landmarks in an attempt to navigate
- trade
* method of determining location of an airplane by following a map.<|endoftext|>Proteomic
* approaches to analyze protein kinase specificity.
* complex discipline requiring a long learning curve.
* depends on bioinformatics because of the large amount of information that's generated.
* gives an overall view of developmental changes in gene functions.
* has applications beyond cancer
- broad applications in disease diagnosis, drug discovery, and agriculture
* involves studying the gene products of a disease or developmental state.
* is all about the proteins that the genome tells an organism to make
- an emerging technology in modern drug discovery and is complementary to genomics
- even more difficult than genomics, because the chemistry of proteins is so complex
- one of the tools used to explore the complexity of intracellular signaling networks
- really just high throughput protein biology
- simply the study of the complete set of proteins encoded by a particular organism
* is the analysis of all proteins in a cell, tissue, or organism
- automated, large-scale study of how proteins work
- global search for and identification and prediction of protein function
* is the next step to understanding how cells work in the body
- wave of molecular medicine after genomics
- study if the protein complement of the genome
* is the study of how proteins function under different situations
- protein function in living organims
* is the study of proteins for drug development
- that are expressed by the genetic array of an organism
- the complete protein complement of the cell, tissue, or organism
- systematic study of the full set of proteins encoded by a genome
* promising new field comprising of the study of protein expression and function.
* proposes to examine thousands of proteins at once.
* rapidly expanding field of research into how proteins encoded in genes work.
* seeks to provide functional information for all the proteins. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Pulmonary edema
* can develop rapidly.
* common cause of death.
* disorder where the lungs become filled with fluid.
* does present with a prominent peribronchial pattern.
* is an acute complication of left ventricular failure
- cardiovascular complications
- classified as either high pressure or permeability pulmonary edema
- evidenced by difficulty breathing and sometimes blue gums
- fluid in the lungs
- lung diseases
- signs
* is the abnormal accumulation of fluid outside the vascular space of the lung
- accumulation of fluid in the extravascular spaces of the lungs
- most severe manifestation of pulmonary venous congestion
- unrelated to gas embolism from pulmonary barotrauma or decompression accidents
- water in the lungs
* life-threatening condition.
* presents a threat of suffocation.
* seems to be more common in fresh water aspiration.
* serious emergency and the causes are many. etc.
Proper hydration
* is also critical to performing well and staying safe
- an important factor in healthy hair and in promoting good health
* is essential after conditions that involves injury to the skeletal muscle
- for good performance in exercise
- important to sustain proper cell and tissue function
- one of the easiest ways to improve both health and job performance
- the most crucial aspect of sports nutrition
- vital in hot weather conditions<|endoftext|>Parthenogenesis
* also occurs in some lizards
* involves embryos growing without fertilisation.
* is also common in plants and invertebrates
- common among arthropods, some species of fish, amphibians, birds, and reptiles
- events
- fairly common
- rare in beetles, except in the weevils
- reproduction
- seen as a possible way to clone primates , with the emphasis on human cloning
- the ability of an unfertilized egg to develop and hatch
* is the development of an adult organism from an unfertilized egg
- egg without the fertilization of a sperm
- unfertilized egg into an adult organism
- process by which an unfertilized egg develops without being fertilized
- study of the growth of an organism from an unfertilized cell
* is when an unfertilized egg can develop into a new arthropod
- develops into an individual
* occurs in a number of lower animal species
- many species
- rotifers and some roundworms, insects, fishes, and lizards
- turkeys through the doubling of haploid cells
- two fashions
- when offspring develop from an unfertilized egg
* often happens where there are no males of a species in the vicinity.
* plays a role in the social organization of some bees, wasps, and ants.
* process by which an unfertil- ized egg cell grows into a new organism.
* refers specifically to the development of unfertilized eggs.
* subtype of asexual reproduction. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Purity
* belongs to both mind and body.
* character- istic note of the Order of light and truth.
* concern with all health food supplements, including shark cartilage.
* describes freedom from anything that's false or insincere.
* is also a state of health.
* is an expression of the relative amounts of impurities and contaminants
- important value in Hindu and Sikh culture
- attained by freedom from Desire
- continual, immediate confession of and repentance from sin
- determined by unalloyed altruism and utopianism
- everything in design
- hard to find in sports
- measured by chemical assays
- physical and mental, since both are inter-related
- strictly a virtue in the mind of the beholder
* is the basis of Biblical peace
- fractional distance from the white point that the sample lies in the xy diagram
- repelling of desire by desire and the total extinguishing of fire by immaterial fire
- state of purtiy of the mind
- to demonstrate true wisdom and reason, unswayed by selfish desire or ego
- viewed as a sickness
* key factor in oral absorption.
* matter of what comes forth from our hearts.
* means having impurities removed
- sexual abstinence for the unmarried
* measure of the skewness of the label value distribution.
* prerequisite for evangelists and all saints.
* simply means being 'uncontaminated' in a polluted world, an impure environment.<|endoftext|>Poker
* 'black art' because it is played against humans who are far from perfect.
* bottomless pit of decisions and actions with financial ramifications.
* combination of luck and skill.
* common example of a game with incomplete information.
* complex mass of pot situations and player tendencies.
* family of gambling card games , but is often considered a skill based game.
* gambling game which involves some luck, but also some skill.
* game of cards - but in reality it's a game of the mind
- chance
- human beings
- people
- probabilities and deception
- risk management
- skill and chance
* has so much more to do with people that it does with the cards.
* is about money.
* is an endurance game as well as everything else
- example of a game of incomplete information in which chance plays a role
- implement
- different because it's meaningless without money
- like chess in certain ways
* is one of America's contributions to the world's games culture
- the most ancient and challenging of gambling games
* is played all over the world
- by any number from two to eight with an ordinary pack of fifty-two cards
- with one deck of playing cards and dealt only by professional dealers
- poker's extra-vibrant internet newsgroup
- poker, whether the player is English, Chinese, or American
- probably the most well known of all card games
* is the art of the bet, combined with smooth talking and high emotions
- game of life in a nutshell, with rules
- greatest game ever invented
* is, after all, a gambling game
- of course, a game that can be played with real playing cards.
* gambling game which involves some luck, but also some skill. In poker, players make bets against each other depending on the value of their poker hand. Bets are usually made with plastic or ceramic discs called 'chips'. Bets may also be made with real money, but chips are more often used because they are easier to handle and count. At the end of the game, players either swap their chips for money, or the chips are counted to determine the order of winners
* male dominated sport.
* name used to describe a wide range of games that perhaps have very little in common.
* people game.
* varied card game with many different variations.
* zero-sum game. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Perjury
* common crime committed so frequently that it is taken for granted.
* crime of the third degree punishable by a severe penalty.
* crime with a five year penalty
- five-year penalty
* criminal offence, and it occurs when a witness tells a lie.
* felony, with a possible sentence of four years in prison.
* form of obstruction of justice.
* is Perjury
- another name for lying under oath
- essentially a form of obstructing a justice
- far narrower than the lay concept of lying
- misdemeanors
* is punishable by imprisonment in state prison for two, three, or four years
- law
* is the criminal offense of making false statements under oath
- twin brother of bribery
- to lie while under an oath to be truthful
* legal term, applicable to legal circumstances only
* means lying at a trial.
* requires proof that an individual knowingly made a false statement while under oath
- that a person knowingly and willfully set out to deceive
* resulting in execution of an innocent defendant is punishable by death.
* serious crime, and lies are wrong.
* wilful and knowing telling of an untruth or a lie about a material fact under oath.
+ Crushing by elephant: Asia :: Punishments
* The elephant would step upon the head of the condemned, the one commanded to die. Usually, handlers trained the elephant to put its large foot gently on the person's head. At this point, witnesses looked under the elephant's foot to make sure the prisoner was the one who committed the crime. Often, the condemned would scream and beg the witnesses to say it was not him. If a witness stated this was not the criminal, they would probably commit perjury. Perjury means lying at a trial. In those days rulers could punish perjury with death. Few witnesses denied the condemned was the criminal, because then the elephant may crush them instead. Then the mahout, or elephant driver, gave the order, and the elephant would push down with its weight. The skull broke and the foot crushed the head flat.<|endoftext|>Print
* also help to hide the outline of nursing bras, pads and nipples.
* are two-dimensional, made by depositing or removing material from a hard surface.
* can be a medium for scripture or pornography, even from the same press
- have energy to hold down a wall the way paintings do
- stress accuracy and balance over emotion and visual images
* is copies
- fabric
- graphic art
- graphics
* is located in newspapers
- perceived as being replaced by digital information even as print proliferates
* is the medium for facts
- most abused term used in the world of art
* leads to electronic communication, which leads back to print.
* refers to a real-time report of actual trades in a specific security.
* resist yellowing and fading caused by age and exposure to sunlight.
* series of images drawn in a two-dimensional visual plane.
* tend to evaporate quickly from non-porous surfaces in cold, dry weather.
* tends to make people think linearly, simply because print is accessed in a linear manner.
Proliferative retinopathy
* begins when areas of the retina no longer receive sufficient blood supply.
* is the most serious type of diabetic retinal disease.
Paneling
* are construction materials
- panels
* are part of swing doors
- walls
* is used to construct tunnel ends or outside surface areas.
P p
* corresponds to a print statement, where P is an arithmetic expression in postfix notation.
* is the price per share of preferred stock.
Perdition
* is both a place and a spiritual condition
- described as conveying the idea of loss or destruction
- imagination
* means loss of the soul, eternal damnation.
Psychological testing
* can show the child's profile of strengths and weaknesses.
* procedure with limited aims.
* shows their ability to use symbols. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Precision farming
* are agriculture.
* can affect both input costs and crop production
- help farmers cut input costs and reduce pollution
* has many other applications.
* involves the adoption of both new technology and a new level of management.
* uses information to increase a farm's profitability.
Preemption
* complex legal matter which can only be finally determined by court decisions.
* is appropriations.
* is legal principles
- rights
- the transfer from normal operations of signals to a special control mode
Previous research
* indicates coronary heart disease is the leading killer of women
- that tyrosine phosphorylation can prolong sodium current
* suggests that smoking can damage the endothelium.<|endoftext|>Persistence
* byproduct of passion.
* can vary greatly from soil to soil.
* characteristic of true biblical faith.
* depends upon many factors including degree of algae and weed infestation.
* describes how long the herbicides remain active after application.
* form of mental illness.
* forms the infrastructure of a business organization's information assets.
* implies that the bytes have a meaning that extends in time.
* is also a specific computer term.
* is an important negative criterion in the ecological assessment of chemicals
- often neglected aspect of prayer
- another quality that military personnel learn early in their profession
- diagnosed by otoscopy or pneumotoscopy
- durability
- extremely important in starting and growing a company
- greater in heavy, clayey or organic soil than in sandy soil
* is greatest at low temperatures and high levels of organic matter
- in sandy soils with low organic matter
- key to success in killing a sturdy plant like privet
- measured by half-life
- more common in infections of the upper urinary tract
- often a requirement for some aspects of bird-watching
- power in marketing and sales
- related to delivery means, weather, vegetation, humidity, and other factors
- seen when plants are rich in lipid content
- sparked by emotion
* is the answer in trying to control snails
- fuel which keeps the engine chugging up the hill
- key to a lot of things in life
- lasting power of a pesticide
- name of the game in finding the right job
- notion of activity versus passivity
- number of students who have completed or are still enrolled
- password to success
- single characteristic found universally among all successful entrepreneurs
- storage part that requires the serialization
- strength of the weak
- tool that turns a job into productive work
* is to the character of man as carbon is to steel
- what carbon is to steel
- what bureaucracy inevitably substitutes for brains
* measure of students continuing or graduating
- the length of time the chemical remains active in the soil
* necessary trait for a farmer.
* ranges from short to long and is greatly influenced by environmental conditions.
* refers to the amount of time a pesticide remains in the environment.
* represents the effort expended on a task over a period of time.
* state of mind.
* stochastic phenomena.
* usually decreases over sexual generations for other traits.
Polychrome
* decorative style, which utilizes at least three colors on the same piece of ceramic.
* is work
* means many colors.
Pure heroin
* is relatively non-toxic but is very addictive.
* white powder that tastes really bad
- with a bitter taste
* white, odourless powder with a bitter taste. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Phrenology
* is an example of the dangers of biased science and misconstrued data
- divination by the bumps on the head
- one science that can help mankind reach the pinnacle of our existence
* is the science of body features
- study of the shape of the head and the lumps thereupon
* life science
* represents the beginning of the strong localizationist doctrine that is present today.
* says a person's behaviour is determined by the size of their brain.
* true science, which is there to benefit humanity.<|endoftext|>Polypropylene
* allows air to permeate the ingredients while holding in moisture.
* comes in two types.
* continues to experience pressure on prices and margins.
* disintegrates and causes major contamination in the finished textile product.
* exhibits high stiffness and good impact strength.
* floats, and is the most resistant to chemicals of any other rope.
* is also a good wool substitute
- good at transporting moisture, creating a wicking action
- very strong
- best since it is strong, non reactive, and accepted for long term healing
- chemical compounds
- common in underwear fabrics as it wicks water efficiently
- flammable as hell
- great for one-sided lamination where flexibility is needed
- much stronger than polyethylene, with half the weight
- plastic
- practically non-absorbent
- softer than a polyester film, but has excellent clarity
- solids
- today's fastest-growing thermoplastic packaging film
* provides high levels of durability and portability while minimizing weight.
* shares similar properties with polyethylene.
Physiological adaptation
* allows animal to perform functions.
* can often be a response to a specific environmental stimuli.
* involves coordinated adjustment by ALLl physiological processes.
* relate to the general functioning of the body.
* work the same way.
Pugilism
* contact sport
* is another term for the sport of boxing.<|endoftext|>Profanity
* abounds in all parts of the land among young and old.
* consists of several uses of the s-word.
* crutch for conversational cripples.
* hurts others, makes others feel like less of a person.
* includes one f-word for humor.
* indicates a lack of intelligence and maturity.
* is acceptable in creative pieces or when quoting someone else
- always a subjective concept
* is an indication of an inarticulate and weak mind
- utterance
- foul, indecent, or sexually provocative language
- indicated as a sin
- one form of careless, sinful speech
* is the language all programmers know best
- one language all programmers know best
* is the one language that all programmers know the syntax of
- programmers understand
- understood by all programmers
- quickest way to get locked out
- used affectionately
* knows no bounds regarding either class, race, gender, education, or geography.
* stirs emotion.
* strong sign of a weak vocabulary. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Pharmacology
* Provides a thorough understanding of the mechanisms of drug action.
* also begins in third year.
* can only address the brain as a whole.
* describes the interaction between drugs and organisms.
* diverse field that utilizes aspects of many other disciplines.
* encompasses physiology, biochemistry, pathology, and of course drugs
- therapy in medicine as well as investigations of basic cellular mechanisms
* includes the study of how drugs work at molecular and cellular levels.
* investigates the mechanisms by which drugs act on living systems.
* is Murder
- an integrative rather than an autonomous science
- concerned with understanding the action of drugs in the body
- pharmaceutics
* is the basis of much of the research and development of new drugs
- classic discipline for studying cellular signaling
- science concerned with the study of drugs and how they work
* is the science of drugs
- mixing and dispensing of drugs
* is the study of drug actions on biological systems
- drugs and their interaction with molecular and physiologic systems
- effects of chemical substances on living organisms
* is the study of how drugs and chemical substances affect living organisms
- substances affect living systems
- the actions of drugs on the cells and organs of the body
* is the study of the effects of chemical stimuli on biological organisms
- of drugs and chemicals on living organisms
- mechanisms of actions of drugs and classification of drugs
- properties of drugs and their actions on living tissue
* part of biology....
* plays a major role in human health and society.
* provides a strong foundation for future employment both in academia and in industry.
* studies the effects of drugs and how they exert their effects.
Physical training
* improves skeletal muscle metabolism in patients with chronic heart failure.
* involves coaching, practice, motivation and focus.
* is an integral part of leadership development
- very important to self-defense
* reduces peripheral markers of inflammation in patients with chronic heart failure.
Prostration
* are a way of accumulating truly good potential.
* is compliance
- extreme and it often ends in death
- motion
- movement
- the symbol of physical surrender
* purify negative karma of the body.
* way of divesting oneself of arrogance and self-centredness.
Philosophical theology
* has a place in a discussion of the Christian faith.
* organizes theology according to a particular philosophy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Perfectionism
* also affects their relationships with other people.
* becomes ingrained in the very fabric of a person's personality.
* can actually lead to procrastination
- inhibit creativity and spontaneity, which are especially important in mentoring
- range from school achievement to relationships with siblings and even cleanliness
* common ailment, too, among successful women
- personality trait among lawyers
* concept that plagues our society in many ways.
* contributes to pessimistic beliefs, feelings, and actions.
* is actually a group of related expectations
- one expression of an underlying fear of rejection
* is an attempt to master and control the environment
- attribute to the stress building process
- obstacle to organized living
- more likely to complicate than enhance one's relationships
- often a culprit in staying stuck
* is one of the biggest enemies of success
- two great criticisms leveled at the Christian church
- rooted in the foolish and futile attempt to do the impossible for dubious reasons
- salvation by works returning through the back door
* is the enemy of self-esteem
- most misunderstood aspect of the personality of the gifted
- voice of the oppressor, the enemy of the people
* leads to a way of life that demands control
- increased depression
- paralysis
* life of the oppressive.
* often results in rebellion or self-sabotage
- underlies the fear of failure
* sheds light on people's desire for structure and guidance.
* starts to develop in people at a very early age.
* stranglehold on the personality's growth.
Proper planning
* can be the difference between life and death
- have an effect on the type and rate of crime
* is the first step in landscaping to reduce water use
- key to addressing problems concerning the country's water resources<|endoftext|>Pupas
* Most pupas develop into adults
- mature adults
* Most pupas emerge as butterflies
- moths
- enter cocoons
* Most pupas go through nymph stages
* Most pupas have eyes
- heads
- reach adulthood
* Most pupas survive for months
- several months
- take food
* Some pupas become adult beetles
- emerge as adults
* Some pupas have buds
- holes
- mandibles
- patterns
- shells
- siphon tubes
- spines
- sterna
- thin shells
- wing buds
- lose ability
- possess mandibles | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Predictability
* gift to children with alcohol-related birth defects.
* goal of all arts and sciences.
* is also another characteristic of printed text
- another word that indicates that a system is efficient
- certainty
- especially applicable to films based on true stories, historical events, etc
- essential to forestry businesses and everyone dependent on the forest economy
- important to a sense of justice as well as to economic decision-making
- likely to be linked to the state of the economy
- one of the things investors and analysts, and consequently CEOs, want most
- still the reason sitcoms draw big audiences and big advertising dollars
* is the death of contemporary dance
- hallmark of women's collegiate rowing
* leads to stability in a child's life.
* makes it possible to explain and understand behavior.
* means being consistent and predictable in daily affairs both expressed and implied.
* modulates human brain response to reward.
* powerful aid to information access.
* reduces uncertainty, making use of resources more efficient.
+ Personality psychology
* Personality' is a term that describes traits a person shows consistently at different times and in different situations. If we understand a person's personality we may be able to predict their behavior in many situations. Predictability makes it possible to explain and understand behavior. A person's personality can often suggest their internal thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Intrapersonal functioning is a term used to describe the stable processes that underlie these thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Carver, Charles S., and Michael F. Scheier.
Practical theology
* deals with worship, education, administration, and writing sermons.
* studies the practice of faith and ministry in church and in society.
P r
* is the inactive form of phytochrome.
* represents a permutation of n elements taken r at a time.
Paleozoology
* is the study of fossil remains of animals.
* offers very many evidences that animal life has gradually changed. | {
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} |
Polarization
* aids both normal immune response and the invasion of malignant lymphocytes.
* can also help separate the three types of fluctuations
- result in a total breakdown of responsible thinking
* controls change in momentum.
* defines the atmosphere.
* exists in the ovum with the animal and vegetal halves.
* fenomena in nuclear reactions.
* general property of waves that describes the orientation of their oscillations.
* has to do with the direction in which the electromagnetic fields are vibrating.
* helps reveal key aspects of nuclear structure
- saturate colors by removing the sheen of reflective objects
* increases resistance and decreases responses.
* involves interference.
* is an essential feature of systems with flow
- optical phenomenon
- based on the premise that there are good guys and bad guys
- circular
- conditions
- horizontal
- in general described by an ellipse
- measured by passing the photon through a polarizer
- one way the system preserves balance, but it is an unstable and conflictual balance
- physical events
- produced in a room temperature volume
- reduced between people who want to do business
- reflected in political and communal policy choices
- strengthened by the streams of blood dividing the two ethnic groups
- the direction in which the photon's electric field vibrates
* natural thing for people of our society to experience.
* necessary and unavoidable stage of any process of transformation.
* occurs at so many levels of medicine
- often and without hesitation when talking in terms of black and white
- when light is scattered in the atmosphere
* phenomena in high energy reactions.
* process by which a charge can be effected on the surface of an insulator.
* property of transverse waves.
* refers to the direction of oscillation for the electromagnetic wave of a photon.
* relative measurement which allows for simple and extremely accurate calibration.
* sensing typically involve polarizing filters or beam splitters.
* strongly effects the velocity of light waves.
* technique by which light can be filtered through a translucent film.
* term given to name the unequal sharing of electrons in a covalent bond.
* thin wafer-like film that is sandwiched between two layers of plastic.<|endoftext|>Painkiller
* Many painkillers have the potential for causing adverse reactions or interacting with other drugs.
* Some painkillers have beneficial secondary effects.
* are given for relief from pain.
* have their time and place, as does the drugless profession of chiropractic.
* is located in drug stores
- pharmacies
- video games
* only provide quick but temporary symptomatic relief.
* reduce the number of leg movements, but have little effect treating insomnia.
* treat the symptom of pain rather than the root cause.
* work best when the headache starts.
Parsee
* are members of a religious group in India.
* rely on vultures to dispose of their dead, and the bodies are piling up.
* worship fire as a symbol of god.
Paleobotany
* is also about trying to understand past environments and economies
- biology
- botany
- paleobiology
- the study of fossil plants
- today a diverse and dynamic field of study
- where plant fossils are studied.
* Paleobotanists look for and identify plant remains from the distant past such as coal balls. Paleobotany is also about trying to understand past environments and economies
Phonation
* complicated process in which sound is produced for speech.
* comprises mechanical and aerodynamic phenomena.
* is communication
* is the ability to make any sounds
- production of sound through vibration of the vocal cords
* refers only to the larynx and vocal folds. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Physiological change
* Many physiological changes occur during exercise.
* Some physiological changes preceed an emotional response.
* can at best serve a therapeutic function.
* occur in man during space missions also at the renal level
- with aging
* produce other bodily responses.
* start to occur from the first moment of achieving orbit.<|endoftext|>Penance
* are of many kinds.
* becomes a force capable of giving life, that is able to burst out free of any impediment.
* is also a part of Christian stewardship
- both an act of contrition, and an act of devotion
- kind of like physical therapy, or like training
- punishment
- remorse
- sacrament
- said to effect forgiveness of post-baptismal sins
- simply another word for punishment
* is the forgiveness of sins to penitent people, by a priest
- giving up of desires
- set of prayers one has to say to atone for the sins
- wall around chastity and the citadel of sanctity
* takes many forms in Christian life, and process of conversion and repentance.
Parasitic protozoa
* are found in organisms such as ticks, flies and mosquitoes
- in an essentially isosmotic environment and so lack a contractile vacuole
* have many adaptations in energy metabolism.<|endoftext|>Programming
* allows people and computers to communicate more easily.
* are activities
- lifestyle
- located in television
- work
* common entry point for people starting out in the computer science field.
* complex process, and since it is done by human beings, it often leads to errors.
* constant learning process.
* creative process, one which requires a multiplicity of skills and talents.
* human activity
- endeavor, an artistic one, like writing or music
* is an act of creation, as are mechanical invention and the arts.
* is an art form that fights back
- which requires constant learning, curiosity, and creativity
- endowed with a multitude of languages
- just the process of writing a computer program that performs some specified task
- like creating universes
- only one part of computer science, but it is the most basic and most central part
- primarily an act of communication
- problem solving rather than an observational discipline
* is the ability to implement algorithms in a programming language
- act of creating a program
- area in which many IT and computer professionals find their first jobs
- art and science of creating computer programs
* is the art of making life difficult for the debugger
- teaching procedures to a computer
- essence of computing science
- glue that ties everything together
* is the process of designing algorithms whose intended executor is the computer
- writing instructions that tell a computer how to perform a task
- way the content or signal is manipulated to convert into useful information
- to make command that a computer follows to perform
- what a programmer does to create a program
* is, in general, the art of solving problems.
* knowledge activity.
* occurs in all nine subject areas in the discipline of computing.
* process frought with frustration and errors
- that follows the general guide of the software life cycle
* profession, just like welding or accounting or dentistry.
* state of mind - languages are simply tools.
+ Read-only memory: Computer memory :: Computer science
* Comes 'unprogrammed' from the factory. Programming consists in removing connections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Pop
* Many POPs are endocrine disruptors and several pesticides are both endocrine disruptors and POPs.
* Most POPs are either pesticides or byproducts of industrial processes.
* accumulate in body fat and are passed from mother to fetus in the womb
- fat and their concentration increases at each step of the food chain
* affect reproductive systems.
* are chemicals or by-products that resist degradation in the environment
- effective in preventing pregnancy when taken consistently and daily, at the same time
* are highly stable chemical compounds that can last for years or decades before breaking down
- organic compounds used as pesticides or in industry
- toxic and very resistant to natural breakdown in the environment
- long-lived chemicals that build up in the food chain and slowly poison animals and humans
- mainly pesticides, industrial chemicals or by-products of industrial processes
- mostly pesticides like DDT, later shown to have dangerous side-effects on birds and humans
- persistent organic pollutants
- primarily products and by-products of human industry that are of relatively recent origin
- semi-volatile chemicals
- stick tights with no meat inside
* bioaccumulate in living organisms, persist in the environment and have long-term toxic effects.
* build up in the fat of game animals such as polar bear.
* can accumulate in fatty tissues in animals and humans
- kill, cause birth defects or generate diseases such as cancer
* can travel great distances around the globe through the atmosphere
- through the air and water thousands of miles from their source
* commonly used way to retrieve email from a mail server machine.
* comprise a large number of chemicals that have a wide range of uses.
* cornucopia and a continuum.
* defines how unfiled e-mail is downloaded from a mail server to a client mail program.
* derive from sources like pesticides, dioxins and industrial chemicals.
* differ from other pollutants because they are extremely difficult to break down.
* have a number of noncontraceptive benefits
- the potential to injure humans and wildlife even at low concentrations
* is about entertainment, and politics is about debate
- accepted as an art form
- also a method for retrieving e-mail from a mail server
* is an acronym for P ost O ffice P rotocol
- old fashion word for pawn
* is short for persistent organic pllutants
- popular music
* is the grandfather figure that many people can relate to and appreciate
- hot new acronym for Persistent Organic Pollutants
- oldest and best known message protocol
- used to receive and read e-mail from a web page
* mechanism for allowing people to download mail from the server to which it is delivered.
* migrate by air and fall onto into the water in the colder regions.
* permeate through the membrane and are absorbed by and therefore concentrate in the lipid.
* protocol for retrieving email
- that mail programs use to download mail from a POP mail server
* rather simple protocol that retrieves messages from an user's inbox.
* refers to the way that e-mail software like POPmail gets mail from a mail server.
* represent a very small percentage of organic compounds.
* service provider's location for connecting to users.
* spread easily through air and water and are found virtually everywhere.
* stems from mushroom caps
- out of large mushrooms
* tend to accumulate in the fatty tissues of fish, seals, polar bears, and humans
- concentrate in colder climates such as Canada's north
- migrate towards colder regions of the north | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Peasant
* are farmers, fishers, artisans who make pottery, weave mats, make cloth
- located in villages
- tenants who work on someone else's land for wages
- workers
* common man
* consume what they produce, recycle waste, and pollute little.
* drank water, wine, and beer and ate soups and gruel made of grains and vegetables.
* have a symbiotic relationship with the larger society.
* homesteads usually consist of extended families.
* see land as their only means of access to better income and security.
* spend their days laboring in the fields, and usually work a seven day week.<|endoftext|>Precision
* computer program for statistical power analysis and confidence intervals.
* cutting in confined conditions is an important factor in tree maintenance.
* describes how close repeated measurements are to each other
- values are to each other
- the exactness of a measurement
* fuzzy concept.
* guided weapons have very little to do with the recreation of governmental infrastructures.
* involves the choice of apparatus and the skill with which it is used.
* is accuracy
- an indication of how finely something is measured
- another form of poetry
- concerned with the number and accuracy of distinctions made by an instrument
- everything in drag racing
- fully awake integration of mind, heart, body and environment
- how close replicate determinations are to each other
- key in medical equipment
- measured by analyzing duplicate samples
- related to random error which causes random variation in the measurements made
- the agreement among repeated measurements of the same quantity
* is the degree of exactness with which a quantity is expressed
- to which a number of measurements are reproducible
- heart of science
* is the key to making urethane products with the desired properties
- storing two bits per cell
- name of the game in radiation therapy, and millimeters count
- number of images that are relevant against the number that are irrelevant
- opposite of variation
* is the percentage of hits in a search that are about the desired resource
- returned material that is actually relevant
- proportion of the items found that are relevant to the search
- term used in science to describe the reproducibility of a measurement
- what creates energy and movement in a design
* measure of exactness
- how many of the returned documents are indeed relevant
* measure of the degree to which a set of many values agree with each other
- likelihood of chance effects leading to random errors
- total variability in the results for any given benchmark
* quantitative concept.
* refers to how close a set of measurements are to each other
- together a group of measurement actually are to each other
* refers to how closely individual measurements agree with each other
- multiple measurements of the same quantity cluster to one another
- well a given measurement or results can be reproduced
* refers to the consistency in grouping of results in measurement
- degree of preciseness of a measurement
- number of digits displayed in the representation
- reliability of the information extracted
- repeatability of the readings
* relates to how closely measurements agree with the true value.
* represents the maximum departure of all readings from the mean value of the readings.
* specifies an instrument's ability to repeat a given measurement.
* way of life. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Planning
* affects the allocation of resources.
* applies to situations that last over a period of time.
* are designs
- events
- preparation
- thinking
* central management role in any organization.
* discipline that is difficult to achieve and difficult to maintain
- to be learned
* family function.
* form of learning.
* implies the ability to predict outcomes from certain actions.
* involves choices and choices invoke values
- determining time, place, and sequence of actions on the basis of analysis of data
- research, analysis, and communicating the results of planning
- the simulation and virtual execution of processes through computer applications
* is about making choices
- also a function of government enabled by legislation and overseen by judicial processes
* is an action taken prior to completion of transactions
- word
- activity that has been ongoing since the beginning of civilization
- important part of the work of councils
- iterative or evolving process beginning with a statement of objectives or goals
- orderly procedure that brings about a desired result
- central to the attainment of all goals
- concerned with the management of change in the natural and built environment
- extremely important in saving lives
- important to eat well in older age
* is one of the four functions of management
- most important aspects of radiation treatment for breast cancer
- primarily for controlling growth for an orderly society of stakeholders
* is the ability to monitor, influence, and profit from change
- activity of managing change in the built and natural environment
- development of a vision of the future that guides real-time decision making
- dynamic process by which options are developed and maintained
- function of moving forward while staying alert
- key to saving lives
- power source of performance
- privilege and responsibility of local communities, and they do it best
* is the process of defining work units for mechanics to perform on the maintenance floor
- developing a method of action or procedure to reach a goal
- that makes a vision happen
- profession that is dedicated to helping society manage change
* is the thinking that precedes the doing
- takes place before the action occurs
- to saving people
- way in which a teacher plans for, adjusts, and follows up on instruction
- what makes things happen
* key skill for setting a course of action for reaching goals.
* kind of search in which one constructs a course of action to meet specific goals.
* means of anticipating the future and organizing activities in response
- making tomorrow happen
* normal process in learning the complexities of rulesets.
* occurs in the frontal lobes, one type of metacognitive thinking.
* often focuses on solving problems.
* pervasive process within public policy-making and private development.
* problem in forming procedural networks that satisfy all posted constraints
- solving technique
* profession for people who want to improve the quality of life in cities and regions
- that is dedicated to managing change
* sets the context in which to do certain things.
* tool to promote long-term, sustainable economic development.
* tool, a process for helping to create the good life.
* way of deciding how to manage state lands.
* wide-ranging field that touches each of our lives on a daily basis.
Popular sovereignty
* means that the people rule.
* suggests that power rests with the people. | {
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} |
Proxy
* Proxies are a combination of hardware and software used to connect office networks to the Internet
- agents
- also annual payments made by the parochial clergy to the bishop, etc., on visitations
- daemons that can spawn processes remotely in lieu of rsh
- market entities that act on behalf of the agents and enforce market rules
- power of attorney
- type of connection that includes increases security measures.
* Many proxies are even more forthcoming with information. With enough proxy use, there is more than enough information to make a comprehensive ISP abuse report with. Proxies may bypass certain things, but they rarely keep you safe from being identified. Think about it, most the open proxies out there are computers where the software was set up wrong. Sometimes you get lucky, but most times you are screaming your identity to anyone who chooses to look
Pleasant fragrance
* helps neutralize odors.
* remains long after use aiding in odor control.
Postpartum psychosis
* consists primarily of depression and mania with psychotic features.
* frightening and devastating mental illness.
* is the rarest and most severe of all postpartum disorders.
* rapidly changing state of confusion, agitation, and affective lability.
* serious emergency and requires immediate medical attention<|endoftext|>Printmaking
* allows an artist to produce multiple images from one original source
- the artist to reach a wide audience by producing multiples of the same image
* encompasses many art disciplines and there are different types of printmaking.
* form of expression in progress.
* fundamentally different kind of art form from painting and drawing.
* has a longstanding affinity for architecture
- facilities for lithography, etching, serigraphy, and other print processes
* incorporates both painting and drawing techniques.
* is art
- considered particularly as it relates to the book and paper arts
- one of the oldest and most significant art forms
- the making of a print
* matrix-based art.
* method to make more than one impression of a picture.
* more social art form than most.
* tool like painting tool.
* very expressive art form.<|endoftext|>Planting
* are collections
- farming
- human activities
- outdoor activities
- placements
- positioning
* consists of blending two different types of corn.
* dates influence aphid abundance.
* increase habitat and natural food supplies for birds frequenting residential areas.
* is also useful as a screening device and for shade and shelter.
* is an act of faith
- expression of optimism and belief in the future
- fun because trees grow apples
* outdoors depends on plant hardiness.
* resist insects and disease.<|endoftext|>Plasticity
* happens when neurons are stimulated by events or information.
* involves an intricate interaction of endogenous and exogenous factors.
* is also the basis for a promising new therapy for stroke
- increased by moisture and lowered again on drying out
- represented by a block resting on a base with friction between the two surfaces
* is the capacity of the nervous system to change
- essential feature of clay that makes pottery production possible
- opposite of elasticity
- ubiquitous, although it varies widely in magnitude, as well as in direction
* is, in turn, controlled by the work hardening of the material.
* just means how easily something can change shape.
* means that topographic structures depend dynamically on sensory experience.
* normal aspect of the brain that allows it to adjust to inputs.
* occurs when neurons are stimulated by events, or information, from the environment
- the stress goes beyond yield strength on the stress-strain curve for plastic
* physical property
* refers to the brain's capacity for modification
- pliability of modeling clay
* varies with water content.
* well-known phenomenon. | {
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} |
Preoccupation
* is an idea
- with destiny change for people and our planet
* often contributes to what others experience as rude behavior.
Pacific halibut
* grow much larger than California halibut, over four feet over a hundred pounds.
* is one of the most valuable commercial fish species in the North Pacific.
Parenting style
* are broad categories that can overlap, shift, mix, and change over time
- patterns of child rearing practices, values, and behaviors
* can influence the way in which children develop.
* is the single most important factor associated with conduct disorder. | {
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} |
Privatization
* allows policymakers to avoid tax increases without eliminating essential services
- private firms to produce and sell electricity
* also creates opportunities for criminal activity
- helps cities cut costs, eliminate debts, and reduce their risk of liability
- seems to lead to reduced employment levels
- strikes at the moral and social fabric of our society
* appears to be increasing dramatically in all sectors throughout the nation.
* can be in different forms
- promote renewables by introducing new capital
- provide new housing in areas where available housing is limited
- raise costs to consumers
- take many forms
* commitment to the free market.
* continues across the region in banking and other sectors.
* currently focuses on the sale of state-owned assets for cash
- state-owned assets through tenders or cash auctions
* depoliticizes the system for the government.
* destroys the public accountability inherent in public services.
* endangers public safety.
* essentially supports mergers and acquisitions.
* has two meanings.
* hurts workers' ability to negotiate wages and working conditions.
* includes the process of selling state-owned enterprises to private investors.
* involves American people taking their saving for retirement into their own hands.
* is already a common practice in state governments
- also a concept that has had a hard time being implemented
* is an essential element for transition to market economy
- invitation to corruption and to loot the public coffers
- but one aspect of the structural reforms occurring in the economy
- easily one of the largest global transfers of property in modern history
- economic development
- encroachment into our municipal commons
* is one of the major economic transformations of the past twenty years
- most popular and controversial economic policies
- strategy whose time has come
- perhaps the most controversial form of restructuring
- responsible for more recent foreign ventures
- social control
* is the act of governments transferring ownership of firms to the private sector
- beginning of a viable middle class, which is the first step toward democracy
- equivalent of a tax cut for workers
* is the key to successful macroeconomic reforms
- telecommunications growth
- name of the game
- only means to generate the capital needed to rehabilitate the sector
- process of converting ownership from the public sector into the private sector
- transference of properties from the public to the private sector
- under consideration in many school systems
* key characteristic of higher education in developing countries.
* limited tool to be used to enhance cost-saving efforts.
* means a loss of local control
- competition
- shrinking the government sector
* means the destruction of jobs at family-supporting wages
- virtual dismantling of public services in favour of private business
- unionbusting
* national issue within each country, so long as universal service is ensured.
* occurs when a government run firm is turned over to the private sector.
* proliferates, resulting in the selling of health to citizens who can pay for it.
* promotes corruption and corruption promotes privatization.
* proven, successful approach being adopted throughout the world.
* radical scheme to solve a modest problem.
* response to that eventuality.
* risks a reduction of the involvement of volunteers and the community.
* seems to be gaining ground in parts of the world outside of the United States.
* shifts the burden of paying for higher education to the student.
* simply means more public money going to profits instead of patient care.
* term that has been so loosely used that it has many different meanings.
* threat to all public services.
* undermines collective bargaining
- local economies by putting people out of work
* very important step towards improving the performance of the banking sector.
* widely demystified process.
* works in the private sector
- to preserve nature in another way as well | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Psychiatry
* attracts dilettantes who read in order to find a glib solution to their own problems.
* branch of medicine.
* can be full of quackery
- empower itself and regain the authority that it deserves
* focuses on affective , behavioral, cognitive , and perceptual disorders.
* has much to offer for chronic pain
- no interest in civilization
* is an instrument of the coercive apparatus of the status
- full of theories, many of which oppose each other
- perceived to be a resource for the affluent
- therefore a branch of medicine
* maintains a close collaboration with pediatrics.
* medical specialty dedicated to the treatment of individuals with mental disorders.
* observes that women have been conditioned to be more observant of personal relationships.
* obviously requires a medical degree.
* powerful entity in our legal and social system.
* rehabilitative specialty that is constantly helping in the process of assimilation.
* relatively new science
- young science and there is still much to be learned
* requires a doctor with the appropriate qualification
- medical degree with a specialization in psychiatry
* science in development.
* specialty of medicine like surgery, internal medicine or pediatrics.
* treats people who are sick and who require treatment for mental illness.
* uses diagnostic labels for authorization to intervene and fix.
* very dangerous disorder, and often resistant to reason.<|endoftext|>Pyroclastic flow
* are an extreme form of hazard.
* are extremely hazardous because of their high speeds and temperatures
- due to their high speeds and temperatures
- mixtures of hot gas, ash, and dust
* are one kind of sediment gravity flow
- of the most dangerous and destructive products of a volcano
- the result of explosive eruptions of molten or solid rock fragments, or both
* can be one of the most lethal volcanic phenomena and severely damage our life
- form in several different ways
- move at high speeds along the ground and pass over substantial obstacles
- trigger other hazards, as well
* cause more death and destruction than any other volcanic hazard.
* is another major hazard associated with some volcanic eruptions.
* originate from explosive fragmentation of volatile-rich magma.<|endoftext|>Parking
* are driving
- maneuvers
- positioning
- rides
- rooms
- storings
* can be a problem when many people drive to the same place to go hiking.
* exists for people with mobility impairments.
* is an important, though often neglected, element of the urban transportation system
- the major hassle of owning a car, other than the expense of upkeep
* problem that directly affects the fan.
+ Cypress Gardens, History: Theme parks :: Florida :: Gardens
* The rides and animals, however, were gone. The reopening prices were reduced. Cypress Gardens and Splash Island now have separate ticketing, though seasonal passes are available. Parking is now free.
+ Parking, Parking a vehicle: Traffic
* When driving along a road, the driver may see a space big enough for him to park his vehicle. Then he can adjust, leaving equal room between the two cars. If the space is wide enough for two cars he can drive forwards into the space instead of reversing in. Parking correctly takes practice and some experience. The driver should not ram or scrub a wheel against the curb. This can puncture the tire
- Places to park, Car parks and parking lots
* On a busy highway, an area just off the main road is available for parking. These are called layovers or rest areas. Sometimes there is a curb. Sometimes there is a rest room or vending machines for drinks and snacks. Sometimes there are full-scale restaurants and souvenir shops. Parking is risky. These areas typically are not supervised and are often the haunt of criminals such as prostitutes and drug dealers
Platonic love
* involves a. disgust with sex.
* is love from the neck up.
* type of love that is non-sexual. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Pleomorphism
* concept that today sounds very strange.
* natural phenomenon
* refers to the amount of variability, or atypia, of tumor cell nuclei.<|endoftext|>Patriotism
* assumes that our globe is divided into little spots, each one surrounded by an iron gate.
* can be a cloak for self-interest
- lead men to do very evil things
* consists in building up a strong revolt against foreign governments.
* describes our relationship with our country.
* does act as restraint on some forms of plunder.
* gives a people identity and personality.
* is colorless and creedless
- different from nationalism
- essential for man's welfare
- for the poor
- human emotion
- in political life what faith is in religion
- like germ warfare
- love of country
- loyalty
* is the action, practice or process of loving, supporting and defending one's country
- respectful allegiance to one's country
- virtue of the vicious
- willingness to kill and be killed for trivial reasons
- worship of male-dominated states
- virtually unheard of among the general population
* lively sense of collective responsibility.
* loyalty to a certain place or idea.
* means equipped forces and a prepared citizenry
- to stand by the country
* necessary ingredient if a nation is to flourish in the new global economy.
* pernicious, psychopathic form of idiocy.
* poor second to love of family.
* requires temporary deferment of personal aspirations and ideologies.
* subset of justice.
* usually works well in gathering people's support at any time.
* is different from nationalism. Nationalist thinks that every ethnic group should have its own nation, so nations are to serve the people. In other words in nationalism the nation is just a tool to have freedom for an ethnic group, while in patriotism the nation itself is the highest value.
* word which represents a noble idea.
Pulmonary angiography
* is costly and invasive
- diagnostic gold standard
* is the gold standard in making the diagnosis
- third method of discerning IPVDs<|endoftext|>Politeness
* good manners
* is actions
- activated by tender feeling toward the sensibilities of others
- courtesy
- good nature regulated by good sense
- related to the interpersonal dimensions of power and distance
* is the art of choosing among one's real thoughts
- selecting among one's real thoughts
- beign mask which conceals thoughts and judgments about the candidate
- oil of civilized interaction
* means giving the other person a choice, recognizing their individual preferences.
* very important aspect of social interaction.<|endoftext|>Parity
* Indicates whether parity is odd or even.
* also applies to serious emotional disturbances of children
- becomes an issue with transmitting data from one computer to another via a modem
* binary calculation used as a checksum to verify a single byte of information.
* comes with a connotation of everybody being average.
* fairness issue.
* fundamental condition of achieving integration into the healthcare system.
* is about more money for the medical parts of mental health care
- an important public health issue
- another error detection method often used with automatic data reading
- conservation
- equivalence
- pregnancy
* is the information stored to provide error correction in case of drive problems or failure
- word bandied about by supporters of the salary cap
- used to check a unit of data for errors during transmission over all types of media
* method used to check the integrity of data stored in memory.
* property important in the quantum-mechanical description of a physical system.
* redundancy code capable of correcting any single, self-identifying failure.
* simple and nearly useless form of error checking
- mechanism to detect characters corrupted by line noise
* technique used to check for errors in transmission. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Political unrest
* can cause rapid migrations of large numbers of people to new geographic areas.
* is another reason that people migrate.
Phenotypic plasticity
* can facilitate adaptive evolution in gene regulatory circuits
- potentiate rapid evolutionary change
* common feature of organisms living in changing or variable environments.
* is hypothesized to be an adaptation to variable environments.
Pepsinogen
* is activated by the removal of a small fragment.
* is an enzyme
- in the stomach responsible for the formation of pepsin
- that starts protein digestion
- converted to the active protein digesting form, pepsin
- produced in cells that line the gastric pits
- secreted by the chief cells
- the enzyme in the stomach that hydrolyzes proteins
Patronymic
* are an old and common type of byname in most period European cultures
- common in almost all European cultures
- names
* is the custom of assigning last names based on the first name of the person's father
- oldest type of Western surnames and is found in almost all European countries
Pure consciousness
* is just the simplest form of our own awareness, located at the source of thought
- our spiritual essence
* is the fundamental level of awareness, the basis of all thinking and behavior
- source of the unlimited creativity and intelligence of the mind
Pseudopodia
* are false feet which use the same contractile proteins that are in muscles.
* can occur as multiple rounded or needlelike projections or as a single advancing front.
* extend from the cell surface and later detach to form the blood platelets.
* radiate from the central body.
Peachick
* Most peachicks can fly within days of birth.
* stay Juvenile until they'r three years old and can mate.
Prokaryotic flagella
* differ structurally from their eukaryotic counterparts.
* spin like propellers, whereas eukaryotic flagella move with a whiplike motion.
Pulmonary emboli
* are a major cause of death following operation.
* can be life threatening or fatal in some circumstances
- very dangerous
Psychological counseling
* is the cornerstone of treatment for eating disorders.
* religious wolf in pseudoscientific clothing.
Protective headgear
* decreases the chances of brain or spinal cord injury.
* is for all riders, although especially important for jumping and racing.
Physical presence
* is an important dimension of communication and intimacy
- the actual place where a person lives
* means that gaming events become social events.<|endoftext|>Parke
* has a dry climate.
* is on the main Australian transcontinental railway line between Sydney and Perth.
+ Parkes, New South Wales, Geography
* Parkes has a dry climate. The winter temperatures are rarely lower than 0 degrees Celsius during the night. In summer daytime temperatures can be as high as 40 to 45 degrees Celsius. Temperatures in the low to mid-30s are most common
- Wales: Towns in New South Wales
* Parkes' is a city in New South Wales, Australia. In 2006 there were 9,826 people living in Parkes. It is the centre and main city of the Local Government Area of Parkes Shire. Parkes is on the main Australian transcontinental railway line between Sydney and Perth. The Newell Highway between Victoria and Queensland goes through the city
Parental control
* help parents keep tabs on the in-line images.
* is lost at the age of majority.
Psychological change
* accompany aerobic exercise in healthy middle-aged adults.
* can be part of menopause
- happen simply and rapidly
Pure corundum
* colorless, trigonal crystal with a hardness between that of emerald and diamond.
* is colorless. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Punctuation
* Use a comma when linking two clauses with a conjunction in compound sentences.
* affects meaning and expression in reading.
* appears to be only used in Latin transliteration.
* are shallow depressions, pores are deeper depressions, and spines are self-explanatory.
* branch of syntax.
* cognitive skill of little interest to professionals.
* does Braille, as do numbers.
* have special meanings in different contexts.
* horse of a somewhat different color in resume writing.
* is an attempt to emulate speech patterns
- important feature of written communication
- conventional rather than scientific, and has evolved over time
- grouping
- interruptions
- one area where different countries have different conventions for historic reasons
- text's sole inflection, and without it much textual communication breaks down
* is used in suffixes
- to emphasize points
* separates modifiers in a sentence.
Pulmonary oedema
* dilutes and removes the normal surfactant.
* impedes obviously the air to circulate within the lungs where water increases.
* occurs most frequently after delivery.<|endoftext|>Pep
* allow investors to save tax when they buy shares.
* allows a peer to ask for routing information to route messages to another peer.
* are instruments for setting environmental standards, goals, protocols and guidelines.
* four-week program of two or three antiviral medications, several times a day.
* is an informational resource for parents, educators, and children's software publishers
- converted to pyruvate, releasing energy
- designed to help people express themselves through the beauty of the arts
- for children in first and second grade
- life
* then enters the reverse glycolytic pathway.
* tool for the design and verification of parallel systems.
* two-way street that also encourages parents to spend more time at school.
Punching
* can involve bruise
- clench fists
- fighting
- hurt
* causes broken bones
- fights
- hurting
- pain
- police reports
* is cuttings
- harmeds
- punch
* is used for hurting
- punishment
- recreation
- revenge<|endoftext|>Political correctness
* applies to management and labor alike.
* big eater.
* concept from another planet.
* dogma that allows no compromise.
* is an evil that the general public have been subjected to for far too long
- bad when it is enforced by ostracism, force, or fraud
- censorship
- correctness
- dependent on theological correctness
- described sometimes as simply a form of good manners
- one of the major tools for maintaining that power
* is the coin of today's communication
- enemy of flirting
- natural continuum from the party line
* lives in the computer industry.
* spreading infection of totalitarianism.
* suppresses artistic expression.
Parting
* are separations parallel to the bedding.
* is like cleavage, but only occurs along planes of structural weakness in twinned crystals.<|endoftext|>Peeling
* also improves the texture of less than perfect tomatoes.
* can also occur when alkyd or oil paint is applied over unetched concrete.
* can reduce the amount of fiber in a food
- fiber, so try to eat the peel of apples and pears
* consists in removing the outer coat by means of a narrow-bladed knife.
* is effective in removing most of the affected tissue
- much more effective at removing residues than washing
- often due to poor maitenance of the coated surface
- the flaking away of the stone surface from the substrate in strips or layers
* makes the skin underneath vulnerable to infection.
* occurs because something under the paint film is preventing the finish coats from adhering.
* removes some fibre as it removes the skin.
* sometimes helps, but valuable nutrients often go down the drain with the skin.
* usually occurs in about a week. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Presence
* brings life.
* deserves consideration
- further consideration
* facilitates actions.
* increases offspring survival
- potential
- resistance
* is an intensity that defies description
- attendance
- impressions
- proximities
- spirit
- the feeling of being together
- when contamination exists in a medium due to some historical use
* leader's way of being.
* means the experience of being in a virtual environment.
* occurs when a thing is what it appears to be.
* provides indicators.
* sign of power.
Pure love
* can emanate only from a heart immersed in peace.
* is pure energy and it is an endless flow
- the chief manifestation of education
* means, simply put, living for the sake of others.
* willingness to give, without a thought of receiving anything in return.
Psychosocial rehabilitation
* growing movement in community mental health today.
* hybred ecletic blend of various therapuetic models.
* is an important intervention model for deaf consumers.
Prattle
* can also be a noun.
* is chatter
* message board system implementing a clean linear model.
Polyunsaturate
* are healthier as saturated fat can block up arteries and lead to heart disease.
* can also help reduce blood cholesterol.
* have several double bonds.<|endoftext|>Psychosis
* Psychoses occur when repressed and unconscious forces overpower consciousness.
* can affect people to different levels
- be a presenting feature of a frontal aneurysm
- happen to anyone
- last for months
* develops from even mild stress, dysphoria, fear of abandonment, and emotional pain.
* has many forms.
* is addictive
- considered a mental and behavioral disorder
- diseases
- frequently evident in manic episodes
- insanity
* is mental disorder
- illnesses
- states
- more contagious than German measles
- most likely to occur in young adults and is quite common
- played with cards and only cards
- seen in a wide range of organic disorders and schizophrenia
- severe neurosis
* major source of distress for patients.
* means ' loss of contact with reality
- a loss of touch with reality
* mental condition
- illness characterized by losing contact with reality
* occurs less frequently in children than in adults.
* serious mental illness.
* symptom of schizophrenia, but it can occur in other mental illness as well.
* takes place in the far future or in the distant past.
* temporary mental state.
* term for symptoms like hallucinations and delusions
- used to refer to conditions in which a patient has lost contact with reality
* varies greatly and the term covers a number of related illnesses.
* can affect people to different levels. Some people can continue with mostly normal lives, while other people will need medical help.
Physical purity
* involves keeping the body pure.
* requires the removal of unwanted contaminants from pure seed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Phobia
* Some phobias are more common than others.
* In psychology, phobia is considered an anxiety disorder. Phobia is different than just being scared of something. The fear is so strong that it affects, and often damages, the sufferer's life. For example, the person will usually do everything they can to avoid the thing they fear. If they cannot avoid that thing, they will suffer from very strong anxiety which can damage their social relationships, their ability to work, and other areas of their everyday life.
* affect people of all ages, from all walks of life, and in every part of the country.
* are emotional and physical reactions to feared objects or situations
- extremely common
- generally irrational and excessive
- highly comorbid
- illogical fears of places, situations, objects, etc
- intense fears associated with places or situations
- intense, irrational fears that lead to the avoidance of the thing or situation feared
* are irrational fears about specific things or situations
- or unjustified fears that prevent people from functioning normally
- irrational, involuntary fears of common places, objects, or situations
- more difficult to deal with but often respond well to psychotherapy treatment
- much more common in women than in men
- persistent, irrational fears of certain objects or situations
- quite common
* become disorders when they are disabling or distressing and interfere with functioning.
* can progress to the point where they interfere with daily life.
* come in all shapes and sizes.
* have their root in the imagination.
* is anxiety disorder
- diseases
- in vogue today to describe all sorts of fears which afflict people
* lead to avoidance of the things or situations that are feared.
* occur in several forms.
* often begin in young children between the ages of three and eight
- deal with real ancient dangers
- take a long time to get established, and once they do, they can become very ingrained
* takes many forms.
* tend to be chronic and resistant to treatment.
* term that refers to a group of symptoms brought on by feared objects or situations.
* type of anxiety disorder distinguished by irrational fear.
* usually start when a person child or a teenager.
* vary in their severity.
Priority
* Priorities change once a person has had cancer.
* governs how quickly mail is delivered across a network.
* is determined by the atomic number of the atoms in the groups
- high status
- important in Arizona where times of drought occur with frequency
- the term used to describe the superior rank of a security interest
* strictly increasing function of probability of occurrence and severity.
* word used increasingly at international scientific meetings.
Posting
* are an exchange of information, ideas, and opinions
- listing
- posting
- social events
* form of publication.
* is the act of placing a message onto a newsgroup.<|endoftext|>Protozoa
* Many protozoa enter the body via the digestive tract or cause their pathological effects in the gut.
* Some protozoa also make long-term survival spores.
* Some protozoa can cause disease in humans
- serious diseases, such as malaria or dysentery
- produce a cyst, which provides protection during adverse environmental conditions
+ Spore: Plant anatomy :: Fungi :: Bacteria
* Spore discharge in land plants'. Oxford University Press. They are also made by bacteria for long-term survival. Some protozoa also make long-term survival spores. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Propagation
* is by division as it comes into spring growth or by seed
- they come into growth or by seed
* is by division of roots or by seeds
- strong plants at the beginning of the growing season
- seed or by division of plants
- dissemination
- physical phenomenons
- procreation
- reproduction that is deliberately controlled or manipulated
* is the increase of plant species from one generation to the next
- mating of male lions and lionesses to create cubs
- method of making multiple hybrids from one plant
- process of creating new plants from a variety of sources
- production of new plants
- when plants are reproduced and more plants are made
Physical life
* begins by birth
- with a birth, spiritual life likewise begins with a birth
* is the visible manifestation of life.<|endoftext|>Pacing
* are gaits.
* is important in building trust and establishing emotional safety
- one of the ways Civil War mapmakers used to measure distance
- probably the oldest form of distance measurement
- the name of the game in covering long distances, just as it is in running
- when a pacemaker sends tiny electrical signals to the heart through a pacing lead
* means a steady rate of stepping out, of breathing and exertion.
* refers to the mirroring of someone's speed of movements.
* skill that takes many miles to develop.
Predestination
* has to do with questions regarding salvation
* is destiny
- fate
- prevalent in the minds of a large portion of the inmate population
* is the basis for dealing with suffering
- godly ministry, evangelism and prayer
- destiny of man planned in advance
- sine qua non of assurance
* is, indeed, a Biblical doctrine.
* literally means to make certain or to secure someone's destiny beforehand.
* rich doctrine of practical faith.<|endoftext|>Personification
* common feature of the ancient languages.
* form of metaphor.
* involves giving an inanimate object human qualities.
* is defined by giving human characteristics or qualities to nonhumans
- embodiment
- people
* is the English name for the figure
- attributing of personal characteristics to inanimate objects for effect
- description of an inanimate object as though it had human capacities
- giving of human qualities to an animal, object or idea
- new sensation, When stuff acts human it improves the presentation
- technique of giving human abilities to non-human objects
- tropes
- very common in poetry
* means to give human traits to things or animals.
Project
* are complex tasks that require students to plan, organize, or create a product or event
- how officers document and evaluate problems they are trying to reconcile
- interestings
- located in shelfs
- plans
- sequences of actions directed towards a goal
- social events
- the means of delivering change
* based learning common method of reinforcing student learning in technology.
* is work
* planned activity, leading to the accomplishment of a certain objective.<|endoftext|>Popularity
* deals with a person's insecurities.
* factor of the number of links pointing to the domain on other web pages.
* is calculated by measuring the number of sites linking to a site
- measured by the number of times users click through to a particular product
- no index of truth in mathematics or the natural sciences
- quality
- something that people strive to be, the person who's so-called cool or in style
- states
- the crown of laurel which the world puts on bad art
* measure of how many people like something.
* socially transmitted disease.
Physical control
* are useful primarily for reducing populations.
* can mean sitting in a car, even without the keys in the ignition.
Projective geometry
* exists in any number of dimensions, just like Euclidean geometry.
* is all geometry
* regards parallel lines as meeting in an ideal point at infinity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Polluter
* bad person
* like to operate under a veil of secrecy.
* pays' is green propaganda.
* tend to dump on communities least able to defend themselves.<|endoftext|>Pyrolysis
* also has limited commercial application due to economic and technical barriers.
* form of heating without the use of oxygen.
* has the advantage over gasification that bio-fuel has a much higher energy density.
* is the only technology that directly yields a liquid fuel
- thermal degradation of polymeric materials in the absence of oxygen
- transformation
* method that heats plant matter in an oxygen-free environment.
* needs a use for residues.
* often precedes combustion.
* only takes place when fire has a continuous source of oxygen.
* uses high temperatures without oxygen to break down and destroy organic compounds.<|endoftext|>Probation
* condition of an offender's original court sentence by a judge.
* frequently imposed sentence.
* has a role in accountability as a part of treatment.
* is legal processes
- liberations
- sentence served while under supervision in the community
* is the liaison between the individual and the court
- period during which a decision about continuing employment can be made
* period of time during which the student's enrollment is in doubt.
* priveledge that is extended in lieu of incarceration.
* punishment which falls one step short of dismissal.
* sanction that allows a lawyer to practice law under specified conditions.
* sentence imposed by courts of criminal jurisdiction
- ordered by a judge, usually instead of, serving time in jail
* sentencing alternative to incarceration in jail.
* specific legal term that is defined in the Education Code.
* status which implies a 'watchful attitude' by the school.
* type of sentence imposed by a judge in lieu of incarceration.
Parental love
* helps the children to get along with each other.
* is sacrificial love
- the breath of life to offspring
* key element in fostering amazing accomplishments in children.
Periodicity
* comes easily to people who have two well matched legs.
* creates the identifiable forms that extend through time.
* cyclical variation in a characteristic being measured.
* is basic to life
- essential for synchronization and coordination of intracellular processes
- regularity
* is the most useful aspect of duration because it gives beat and rhythm to music
- time frame displayed in the chart
Pheresis
* is dialysis
* special way to give platelets needed by cancer patients.
Pure silver
* does occur in nature, but is rare.
* has a brilliant white metallic luster
- the highest electrical and thermal conductivity of all metals
* is also very soft because it allows slippage to occur easily
- essential to life
- relatively soft
* tarnishes very little, but is too soft for jewelry without being alloyed.
Paleoanthropology
* is the science of human origins and evolution
- scientific study of human evolution
* is the study of human origins and evolution
- the fossil evidence for human evolution
- vertebrate paleontology
* little kid trying to answer big questions.
* subfield of anthropology, the study of human culture, society, and biology. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Polyploidy
* arises in two distinctly different ways.
* can be a mechanism of speciation
- form speciation in plants because they can self-fertilize
- occur in two ways
* condition
- wherein organisms have three or more sets of genetic variation
* consists of a duplication of the entire genome.
* even allows the formation of new species derived from different ancestors.
* involves a multiplication of chromosome sets
- doubling the number of chromosomes
* is an important mechanism in the evolution of plants
- phenomenon in plant evolution
- another means by which rapid speciation can occur
- associated with apospory, self-fertility, and varying degrees of pollen sterility
* is common among plants and much less common among animals
- in many plant species
* is common in plants and important in plant evolution
- but rare in animals
- much rarer in animals
- particularly widespread among extant plant species relative to other eukaryotes
* is the condition in which each cell contains three or more sets of chromosomes
- duplication of chromosomes in an organism
- presence of three or more of each type of chromosome in gametes or cells
- used extensively in developing agricultural varieties
- very common in plants, especially in angiosperms
* rare and often lethal condition in animals.
Proper lighting
* can help compensate poor vision in many ways.
* has as much an effect on productivity as furniture design.
* increases safety, production and accuracy in working areas.
* is also important for accurate color perception
- important with digital photos
- more than just a source by which to see, but it also affects our frame of mind
* reduces the chances of accidents and crime.
Permanence
* expresses time in general.
* implies reproduction with a potential geometric increase.
* is difficult because of human vulnerabilities
- durations
- length
- numbness and death
- the main ingredient of a bond
* word of degrees.
Political legitimacy
* is based on majority rule, supported by both Melanesian and Western tradition
- the result of transparency, efficiency and democracy
* rests on direct election by secret ballot.<|endoftext|>Prudence
* also shapes the character of the person.
* cardinal virtue in the Christian life
* disposition with true reason and ability for actions concerning human goods.
* governs every action, and judges all of the virtues, including the theological ones.
* helps keep the stress out of life.
* is discernment
- human activities
* is one of the enduring virtue names
- world's smallest foxes with the biggest ears
- practical wisdom, sagacity in adapting means to ends and in foreseeing consequences
- roughly equivalent to what is currently being called emotional intelligence
* is the ability to deliberate well regarding human actions
- intellectual virtue of practical reason
* is the virtue of that part of the soul which can form opinions
- the adult life, to deal with people among complicated tasks
- wisdom applied to practice
* product of experience and a possession of reason.
* replaces wisdom as the first virtue.
* virtue concerned with commanding correct means. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Privatisation
* affects practically all economic sectors.
* also extends to the energy and financial sectors.
* can never benefit ordinary people.
* denotes more involvement of private sector in business.
* increases accountability, individual responsibility and productivity.
* inevitably leads to foreign ownership of our community assets.
* is seen as the key to helping the economy, and to cementing political reform in place
- social control
- the first step in the modernisation of enterprises
- unpopular among many voters because it threatens their government jobs
* means job losses.
* natural progression from corporatisation.
* political process to make it economically successful.
* sensitive subject in many developing countries.
* supply side approach to bringing about increases in economic growth.
Political empowerment
* More Political empowerment means to realize women's creative energy.
* comes from voting and seeking public office.
* is an integral aspect of participatory development.
* makes up for the shortage of literacy.
Practicality
* is the device that brings employability
- usefulness
- utilities
* necessity for researchers to explore their imagination without constraint.
* refers to the cost, the time, and the convenience of using a data source.
Pseudopodium
* Many pseudopodia are formed simultaneously.
* emerge from anywhere in the cell surface.
Postural instability
* can also cause patients to walk with a stooped posture.
* direct result of imbalance in the body's pedal foundation.
* late symptom typically emerging ten or more years into the disease.
Piling
* are posts
- puttings
* can also create depressions in sediments that discourages eelgrass growth.
* serve as a roost for cormorants. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Philosophy
* All philosophies deal with ontology, epistemology, and ethics.
* Philosophies are normally about something, like a philosophy about life
- yet another diversity
- can be moral, immoral, or amoral
- do things
- stem from culture
* Sketch the development of human thought.
* Some philosophies hold that man and the world are by nature imperfect, corrupt or evil.
* addresses questions about the ultimate nature of reality including our place in it.
* affects how they see the world and what they appreciate.
* aims at the logical clarification of thoughts.
* also appeals to the analytical mind
- connects with the human sciences such as psychology through the study of mind
- contributes uniquely to the development of expressive and communicative powers
- has alot of overlap with law
- means systematic or scientific understanding as well
* attempts by means of concepts to transcend concepts.
* attempts to find solutions by means of human reason
- integrate all human thought and experience into a meaningful whole
- provide answers for seemingly unsolvable problems
* battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language.
* big, frightening word with several meanings.
* broad subject which can range across both fiction and non-fiction.
* broadens the range of things one can understand and enjoy.
* can deepen one's understanding of many aspects of life
- sometimes assist individuals in their personal lives
* combination of two Greek words, philein sophia, meaning lover of wisdom.
* comes alive most vigorously when it interacts with other disciplines
- from the Greek philosophia , meaning love of wisdom
- in many forms, and has many associated practices
- to be identified more and more with analysis and critical thinking
* concerns itself with the fundamental issues of justice, morality, knowledge, and reality.
* confronts human values precisely as values.
* considers fundamental questions of the nature and meaning of chance.
* consists of human thought.
* core discipline in the humanities.
* creation of the mind, an expanse of intelligibility and hence of reality.
* cultivates a sensitivity to values, to systems of thought, and to other people.
* deals with many of the same issues as psychology but in a less empirical way.
* deals with the fundamental aspects of reality and value
- most general questions of life, existence, and reality
- theories about the most basic beliefs and values that people have
* dictates that the basis of truth is in math.
* discipline that at first seems incommensurate with the military environment
- becomes most concrete as one shares one's own experiences
- cultivates critical thinking
* discipline that encourages questioning and independent thought
- students to be free thinkers
* disciplined study in that it uses specific methods.
* emphasizes the construction and evaluation of arguments.
* encourages people to become critical thinkers.
* enhances the ability to perceive the relationships among the various fields of study.
* enlarges our conception of what is possible and enriches our intellectual imagination.
* examines every aspect of life and the world with the desire to discover truth
- the structure and meaning and ethics of violence
* fundamental humanities discipline.
* furnishes the resources for integrating knowledge and values into a coherent whole.
* gives the way to attain immortality.
* has a presence in a number of sectors
- rather odd status among the core disciplines of the humanities and social sciences
- very long history
- for centuries rested on the conception of humans 'sitting and thinking'
- no axioms since it is simply what reason knows by means of concepts
- the tools for the solution of philosophical problems at hand
* helps people to understand the world and the way people act and think.
* highly interdisciplinary subject.
* identifies a person's boundaries, and the hierarchy of beliefs.
* indeed has no other origin.
* influences daily education in many ways.
* involves learning to assess ideas and participate in controversy
- the construction of arguments
* is about asking questions, looking for answers
- understanding, but about self-conscious understanding
- values and critical thinking
- actually the history of the thought processes of men through the ages
* is all about making our beliefs consistent
- rational, systematic knowledge
* is also a living practice
- particular way, or ways, of thinking
- subject that can be fruitfully combined with a large number of other subjects
- an academic discipline with a certain history and content
- like math because it deals with ideal objects, objects of thought
- always a conversation in which there are a number of voices to be heard
* is an academic discipline in that it is the study of the history of thought
- activity that uses reasoning and rigorous argument to promote human flourishing
- ancient discipline teaching skills that are always in demand
- attempt to get clear on some basic issues in our lives
- attitude of mind towards doctrines ignorantly entertained
- expression, perhaps the ultimate expression, of human freedom
- intensely practical science
- interactive discipline
- interpretation of the world in order to change it
- another word for thinking
- belief systems
- book philosophy
- characterized by abstract informal thinking
- concerned with arguments
* is concerned with issues of central importance to human life and society
- enduring importance to humankind
* is concerned with the discovery of causes
- nature of mind and thinking
- structure and growth of knowledge
- transmission and evaluation of basic beliefs and values
- ultimate questions
- defined by everyone as love of truth and devotion to wisdom
* is different from any kind of extreme, whether in thinking or living
- ordinary ways of knowing
- essential to a martial art
* is everywhere, but literature is one of the richest lodes of philosophical thought
- hidden in human relations - the heartbeat of everything
- hierarchically prior to physics
- impartial judgment without prejudice, underestimation or overestimation
- intercultural because it is founded on the basic structure of the human mind
- known as an academic discipline on college campuses
- literally the love of wisdom
- love of wisdom, or striving for wisdom
- made up of many different sub-fields
- metaphysics
* is much like particle physics
- more than the acquisition of a certain kind of knowledge
- one of mankind's oldest and most complicated endeavors
* is one of the most ancient and prestigious of all academic disciplines
- world's oldest subjects of study
- subject in which formal logic is fundamental
- with education, which continually develops and renews the capacity for new habits
- our attempt to understand the world
- possible as a rigorous science at all only through pure phenomenology
- related to one's true self and the artist's own audience
- religion's access to science
- religion, with a different name, mode, and function in human experience
- responsible for providing a model explaining the purpose of the universe itself
- systematic reflection upon the common experience of mankind
- taught to undergraduates primarily as a contribution to their liberal education
- that discipline in which questioning is central
* is the action of trying to create new ideas
- activity by means of which the meaning of statements is clarified and defined
- analysis and evaluation of basic assumptions
* is the art of life
- rational thought
* is the attempt to answer certain persistent human questions
- think clearly about puzzling matters
- understand fundamental issues by means of careful logical reasoning
- bleeding edge of social change
- child of a recognition of the inadequacies in life
- conceptual presentation of ideas about reality
- cornerstone of the humanities
- critical examination of human life in order to find a life worth living
* is the critical study of alternatives
- ideas fundamental to life
- development and exercise of right love for all that is of value
- discipline devoted to the study of the fundamental questions of everyday life
- discovery of the meaning behind life
- essence of religion
- foundation for reasoned truths and principles of moral conduct
* is the foundation of all disciplines and philosophers draw on all fields of study
- strategy, which preceeds investment selection
- human condition writ large and analysed
- interested search for wisdom
- love and pursuit of wisdom
* is the love of science
- the wisdom, the search for truth
- or at least pursuit of philosophical wisdom
- most important aspect of life
- mother of all the sciences
* is the oldest form of scholarly inquiry, dating back all the way back to ancient Greece
- systematic, scholarly inquiry
- origin and end of all serious thought the world over
- passion to understanding the ultimate principles of the whole of reality
- putting of our thought and language in order
- quest for understanding of the world, including man's place in it
* is the rational aspect of religion
- foundation of religion, and religion is the practice of philosophy
* is the science of becoming
- ultimate ground
* is the search for the truth
- truth through reason and logic
- self-expression of the growing spirit in man
- serious and systematic attempt to investigate such questions
- study of central questions of human existence
* is the study of fundamental problems about the nature of reality, knowledge, and value
- questions about the nature of reality, knowledge, and value
- human beings and the world by thinking and asking questions
* is the study of the ideas that shape our thought and activity
- processes governing thought
- sum of mankind's attempts to answer the questions at the heart of being human
- system of all philosophical knowledge
- systematic abuse of a terminology specially invented for that purpose
- viewing of viewpoints
- work of rational speculation
- thus central to the liberal arts
- understood in the existentialism as one of the basic existence ways
* is, in consequence, identical with religion
- contrast to ideology, concerned with the understanding of the reality
* life-long occupation, and there are few philosophers.
* literally means love of wisdom.
* matter of life and death.
* means 'the love of wisdom'
- of teaching people the way to live the good life
- the love of knowledge
- thinking, especially about the most fundamental questions
* means, above all else, freedom of thought and free play of ideas.
* often deals with two opposing perspectives, the nominalist and the idealist
- explores the conceptual foundations of other disciplines
* part of our knowledge.
* pretends to do everything, to solve all the problems of the world.
* progressive science , like physics or mathematics.
* provides an integration of all the arts, sciences and religion into a cohesive whole.
* pursues a dialogue of human persons across the centuries and across cultures.
* question of life and death.
* rational enquiry into the forms, contents and implications of experience.
* refers to any moral system.
* remains central to understanding the strengths of Western civilization.
* seeks to explain life
- understand underlying patterns of thought in our cultural achievements
- unify our lives, and to clarify the values that give life meaning
- truth and knowledge according to the light of reason alone
* set of beliefs and values that guide a person's actions.
* social practice.
* special way of signifying the world and turning reality into discourse
* strives to pursue truth and to gain knowledge.
* subject of reason
- with a long history and a short memory
* supplies the raison d etre of religious practices, even of ritual, image and symbol.
* takes place in discourse.
* teaches people how to understand, analyze, and evaluate concepts and arguments
- to think clearly and to act authentically
- precision in reasoning and clarity in expression, which are assets in any field
- skills in thinking and acting, values-based reasoning, and character development
* team sport.
* tradition replete with techniques for keeping conversation alive.
* traditional route to the study of law.
* tries to look at the role of a nation in human affairs.
* uses reason and syllogisms, theology uses scripture, and poetry uses stories and fables.
* vast and far-reaching discipline, one that touches all facets of life.
* way of acting together, it is real dialogue.
* work of the fallen human mind, earthbound and limited.
+ Category:Philosophy: Humanities
+ Philosophy, Is philosophy good or bad?
* Very few people would dispute this. It is easy to argue that philosophy is a good thing, because it helps people to think more clearly. Philosophy helps people to understand the world and the way people act and think. Philosophers believe that asking philosophical questions is useful because it brings wisdom and helps people to learn about the world and each other. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Physiotherapy
* begins very soon after surgery.
* client-centred profession which aims at optimising quality of life.
* encompasses many different techniques.
* helps to maintain normal back movement and posture
- strengthen the supporting muscles of the spine and correct poor posture
* is essential during all phases of treatment
- to maintain mobility and function of the joints
- important to prevent contractures and scoliosis
* is one of the main forms of help
- primary factors in the successful delivery of rehabilitation
- therapy
* key factor in maximising independence and dignity for all.
* plays an important role in the recovery of stroke patients.
* provides a program to assess and treat balance and dizziness problems.
* plays an important role in the recovery of stroke patients. It also plays a major role in treating children with cerebral palsy. It also plays a vital role in cardio pulmonary rehabilitation.
Political life
* develops firmly fixed distinct powers, laws, and institutions.
* is the way business in a democracy is carried out.
Political realism
* is aware of the moral signifigance of political action
- based on a pluralistic conception of human nature
* stresses the rational, objective and unemotional.
Parental smoking
* increases the incidence of acute respiratory infections and asthma in children.
* is associated with cot death.
* risk factor for the initiation of smoking by youth.
* tends to establish smoking as normative behavior for children.
Premier
* are heads of state.
* chief of state<|endoftext|>Positivism
* can never be the sole mode of knowing for human beings.
* consists of both philosophy and polity, i.e., application of philosophy to society.
* emphasizes observation and measurement.
* fails in spiritual things because it leaves out the human heart.
* form of mechanical materialism, a form of regression anyway.
* is an outmoded philosophy of science
- built on success and achievement
- by no means universally accepted by scientists
- empiricism
- needed for accomplishing complex things with groups
* is the apotheosis of sound reason
- concept that what defines science is the requirement of verification
- fundamental ingredient for success
- notion that empirical sciences are the only adequate source of knowledge
- sceptical response to realism
- search for other, multiple factors as the cause of human behavior
* is, above all, a philosophy of science.
* paper tiger which is fair game for any small game hunter who wants to shoot it down.
* philosophy that has many theories for the whole spectrum of life.
* says that what perceived gain, a plus, good thing.
* tries to narrow things down to the observable.
Political instability
* disrupts market dynamics, which affects the natural flow of the economy.
* fertile breeding ground for poverty.
* harms the well-being of the Taiwanese people.
* increases the rates at which professionals emigrate to the developed nations.
* is also a factor in Bolivia, Peru and Ecuador
- political events
* reverberates across continents and oceans.
Psychological research
* Much psychological research is conducted using animals.
* fundamental part of road safety.
* is now a widespread source of corporate inspiration.
* shows that animals are most comfortable in a familiar environment. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Photojournalism
* compact between the audience, the image-maker, and the institution.
* craft that requires more than just an eye for the beautiful.
* implies documenting without being involved.
* is about revealing truths, advertising photogrpahy is about creating deceptions
- thinking, feeling, about communication
- an advanced course for students intending to pursue photojournalism as a career
- reactionary photography
- society's system of checks and balances
* is the art of news communication by visual image
- telling a story through pictures
* peculiar art form.
* requires the development of both verbal and visual communications skills.
Physical love
* depends on type and polarity.
* is an intimate, artful way to communicate, to convey.<|endoftext|>Planaria
* are flat little worms that live in water and look like tiny arrows
- free-living
- freshwater predators and scavengers
* can live for up to three months without food
- only move again a solid surface like a stone, stick or leaf
- reproduce both sexually and asexually
* has rudimentary eyes which produce no images but detect direction.
* have an extensible pharynx located near their middle that they use to take in food
- eyespots to detect light
- two tiny eyes on the head
* live in both saltwater and freshwater
- independently in water
* provide food for larger animals.
* receive oxygen and release carbon dioxide by diffusion.
* ' small aquatic genus of flatworm. The term is also used for other similar flatworms. They are fresh water animals which move in a smooth wave-like manner. Planaria are free-living. They can live in fresh water or very damp soil, depending on the type.
Quadricep
* are on the front of the knee, and hamstrings are on the back of the knee.
* serve as a synergists muscle if knees are bent slightly during stretch.
Quanta
* are identical, and each oscillator can hold any number of quanta, up to the total number
- systems as both structure and information
* come in integer numbers.
* has no mass and takes up no space, yet extends out into the universe.
* is Taiwan's largest notebook maker, and also makes motherboards and desktop-PC systems
- now the world's number one volume manufacturer of notebook PCs<|endoftext|>Quitting smoking
* can decrease blood pressure
- greatly reduce the risk of developing cancer
- help reduce wounds that result from poor blood flow
- lengthen lives and improve health
- prevent osteoporosis by preserving bone
* has both immediate and long-term beneficial effects
- great health benefits for women of all ages
- major and immediate health benefits for smokers of all ages
* helps decrease the frequency and severity of chest pain
- lower cholesterol levels and blood pressure
- reduce complications from interactions with other drugs
* is harder for women than for men
- health care
Quantitative research
* focuses on statistical modeling and reporting as the basis of understanding.
* is based on numerical data
- linked with the philosophical and theoretical stance of positivism<|endoftext|>Qualitative research
* can reveal how parts fit together to reveal the whole.
* focuses, therefore, on judgements.
* form of inquiry gaining popularity and acceptance in the social sciences.
* is about listening to what people say, getting an idea of their feelings, etc
- an important methodology in many fields of study
- associated more with words
- based on individual, often subjective, analysis
- conducted from a scientific perspective
- polysemous when it comes to method
- probably the oldest form of inquiry
- synonymous with ethnographic and participant observation methods
- used to achieve a variety of objectives
- when only a few cases are examined, but in great detail
* relates mainly to interviews done on a small scale.
* utilizes raw data that come from a source closer to the object of study.
* way to explore issues and ideas that are important in strategy formation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Quinine sulfate
* darkens on exposure to light.
* is extensively metabolized, mainly in the liver.
* occurs as a white, crystalline powder, which darkens on exposure to light.
Quaternary consumer
* are too large and fierce to be prey for other animals.
* do exist but are more rare than other types of consumers.
Radicalism
* bright light most safely viewed from a distance of many years.
* is ideology
- now, for right or for wrong, most associated with the left of politics
* literally means pertaining to the root.
* means going to the root of the problem and exposing injustice that society obscures.<|endoftext|>Redundancy
* Describes a system where more than one device is used to ensure reliability.
* basic architectural concept for systems requiring a high operating safety level.
* causes the neurons to cluster.
* critical component of human communication.
* is an attribute of both developed less developed states
- important factor that provides long term resilience to the ecosystem
- issue that usually goes along with scalability
- based on how much current is drawn out of it
- configurations
- embarrassment
- inherent in the process of assessing the learning needs of educators
- more a function of application design than hardware infrastructure
- most important when developing new processes and in very large chips
- repetition
* is the answer to the connectivity dilemma
- basis of trans
- heart of neuroplasticity
- incorporation of duplicate components into a system
- key to long life and happiness with computers
- noun form of the word
- opposite of information, a measure of unsurprisingness, of old-hatitude
- unnecessary repeating of a word or a synonym
- very important for call centers in which lost calls often mean lost revenue
- vital to normal day to day human interaction
* key component to successful warfare.
* mainly covers situations where there reduction in the number of employees.
* problem in a number of firms.
* property whereby more nerve cells exist than are needed.
* provides the ability to reconstruct lost or destroyed records.
* small price to pay for being clear.
Roentgenium
* is produced artificially.
* radioactive, synthetic element about which little is known.
* synthetic radioactive metal and has only been produced in minute amounts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Risk
* Being alive risk.
* Factor a personal attribute that correlates with an increased risk for developing skin cancer.
* accounts for probability of an event as well as the potential loss.
* also exists in the social context in which young people grow up, such as family and school.
* also increases after a heart attack or with malfunctions in the way the heart pumps blood
- when people are drunk or high on drugs
- plays an important role in international capital movements
- varies by type of cancer
- works to increase the cost of the drug
* are inherent in any form of investment
- measures of the threat of hazards
- present in every human activity
- the possibilities of a loss
- time based - Risk future phenomenon caused by today's actions
* associated with cigarette smoking is independent of culture
- drug use arises from sharing injection equipment, i.e., needles and syringes
- liposuction include infection, bleeding, incomplete removal of fat
* based pricing applies to all loans except real estate loans and lines of credit.
* can mean different things to different people.
* challenge to calculate in the present an unknown future.
* clear and certain cost of business.
* comes in a variety of forms and fashions
- all shapes and forms
* commodity whose potential downside is often shared.
* complex and often subjective notion
- multi-attribute concept
* complex, multidimensional concept that manifests itself in various ways.
* concept that used in the chemical industry and by practicing chemical engineers
- used to express the material effects of an uncertain environment
* convolution of exposure , hazard , and vulnerability.
* crucial factor to investors weighing whether to put their money in stocks or bonds.
* declines with the number of years of smoking cessation.
* decreases when people at risk move to areas of lower risk.
* digest that describes many of the technological risks that happen in today's environment.
* encompasses the uncertainty of future reward in terms of both the upside and the downside.
* essentially means uncertainty of outcome or the possibility of an adverse outcome.
* exist as a consequence of uncertainty.
* exists, especially in capital markets.
* expresses a person s chance of getting sick or having something happen.
* fact of business and of life
- life for any investor
* factor that can dramatically affect transplant cost
- plays a big role
* function of behavior and nothing else
- the inherent hazard and level of exposure
* fundamental aspect of every business.
* game of military strategy and world conquest.
* generally depend on age, general health, specific medical conditions, and heart function.
* has everything to do with the probabilities of making incorrect financial choices.
* increase the older the mother is at the time of birth.
* increases with age and family history of ovarian cancer
- age, duration of use, smoking, and perhaps increased body mass
- exposure involving deep injuries, and large numbers of viruses
- stress, an illness that has lowered resistance, fatigue or overwork
* increases with the number of cigarettes smoked and the duration of smoking
- first-degree relatives affected by prostate cancer
* is actually the reason exchange trading of the basic agricultural products began
- always involved in making a choice
* is an act, activity, or asset of the state which presents a potential for loss
- apprenticeship in flexibility, a game with life's unknowns
* is an essential element of life-long learning
- part of life
- inescapable factor in veterinary decision making
- inherent part of capitalism
- input in the business of generating returns
* is an integral component of today's business environment
- part of the stock market
- interpretation or assessment that a person makes about a given set of circumstances
- objective, quantitatively measurable entity
- associated with where the excess fat is stored on the body
- board games
- characteristic of the relationship between humans and geologic processes
- confused with hazard, but risk is actually a problem of probabilities
- considered to be part of investing
- danger
* is dependent on frequency of smoking, tar content, and age at which smoking began
- upon the duration of an individual s exposure
- dose-related with individuals smoking four or more cigars at greatest risk
- driven by a number of factors
- everywhere in business
- exposure to possible loss or injury
* is increased among women from the time of menopause
- by having more than one partner
- when oxygen is given in surgery
* is increased with dehydration and concurrent use of nephrotoxic drugs
- diabetes, vitamin D deficiencies, or diets low in calcium
- increased age, size, and exposure to the outdoors
* is inherent in business
- to life and especially, to the stock market
* is involved because excess ingestion of iodine can cause thyroid disorders
- when fixing a future value on a vehicle
- low in persons in monogamous relationships and mother to child during birth
* is measured by dispersion of outcomes or the standard deviation or variance
- standard deviation on the horizontal axis with return on the vertical axis
* is measured by the variance of the asset s rate of return over time measured by ex-post data
- volatility in the price of a stock or other security
* is part of everyday life
- living in a highly technological world
* is part of the adrenaline rush
- investment landscape
- present in all human activities
- probability times consequences
- proportional to the number of cigarettes smoked
* is related to the dispersion of a distribution
- extent of exposure to a hazard
- spread of our results
- risk whether it is short term or long term and the damage is irreversible
- risk, whether the company is small or large
- shown in levels of standard deviation, a commonly used measure of volatility
- the chance of being harmed or suffering loss
* is the chance of injury, damage or loss, often expressed as degrees of probability
- loss associated with future investment returns
- realizing low returns or perhaps even a loss
- coal in the various locomotives of the economy, whether local, national, or global
* is the combination of probability and consequence
- the likelihood and the consequence of a specified hazard being realized
* is the cost of aggressive objectives
- attaining anything of real value
- currency of life
- downside of a gamble which is described in terms of probability
- driving element of climbing
- exposure to the chance of injury or loss
- intersection of threat and vulnerability
- keyword, used first as a noun then as a verb
- lack of certainty
- likelihood of getting a disease
* is the likelihood of harm or injury arising from the particular hazard
- some outcome occurring given the presence of some factor
- mirror image of opportunity
* is the opposite of opportunity
- safety
* is the possibility of danger or harm
- loss, damage, or any other undesirable event
- suffering harm or loss
* is the potential for losing money
- realizing low returns or even losing money
- price volatility of a particular investment
- primary factor governing scheduling, performance, and reporting of audits
* is the probability of injury, disease, or death under specific circumstances
- occurrence multiplied by the severity of the consequences
- or likelihood of something undesirable happening
* is the product of hazard and vulnerability
- probability and consequences
- the probability and the consequence of a considered event
- property that causes value to vary in uncertain ways
- relationship between toxicity and exposure
- road to gain
- sensitivity of an indicator to an ecological disturbance
* is the variability of an investment's returns over time
- then the proportion of subjects who become cases
- tied to the most sexually active group
- to a developing self as protein is to muscles
- uncertainty, particularly uncertainty about future cash flows
- ventures
- volatility of returns
* is what an entrepreneur is all about
- is at stake, what is lost if our forecast is wrong
- sets investing apart from saving
* major aspect of human behaviour.
* means an estimate of the likely occurrence of a hazard.
* means the likelihood of the harm being realised
- probability of adverse effect consequential to hazard
* measure of the financial and human costs associated with the occurrence of such events.
* measure of the probability of an adverse event occurring
* measured quantity.
* measurement of the likelihood of an undesirable event occurring
- severity of threats
* natural part of life and therefore a part of many sports.
* part of change and growth
* product between chance, vulnerability and value-exposure.
* quantifiable concept.
* refers only to the agencies that cause fires
- to the chance of significant losses of service related to various scenarios
* relative concept.
* resulting from obesity are high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, diabetes and cancer.
* synonym for all the adverse outcomes that the organization wishes to avoid.
* taking As risk is spread out among more people, the more people are willing to take risks.
* term often used by insurers and bankers.
* time relativistic term.
+ Danger: Epidemiology :: Safety
* Risk is different from prevalence.
+ Obesity, Health issues: Health problems :: Physiques
* Risk is associated with where the excess fat is stored on the body. Abdominal obesity is particularly dangerous.
+ Standard deviation, More examples, Application examples, Money: Statistics
* Risk is one reason to make decisions about what to buy. Risk is a number people can use to know how much money they may earn or lose. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Religious profanity
* is called 'blasphemy'.
+ Profanity: Human communication
* Religious profanity is called 'blasphemy'. The verb is to 'blaspheme' and the adjective is 'blasphemous'.
Retirement planning
* is an issue of personal and public responsibility
- another significant way of helping people help themselves
* key part of financial planning.
* process, one that is fluid and changeable as circumstances dictate.<|endoftext|>Relocation
* also facilitates the spread of disease from one area to another.
* fact of life for many employees in both the public and private sectors.
* involves leaving jobs, children changing schools, and many other personal issues.
* is hard on animals
- often a part of getting a new job or promotion
- probably the number one reason that dogs are abandoned
* means being established in a new residence or place of business.
* often scares people who have children in school.
* way of life in the military and it can be stressful.<|endoftext|>Rehabilitation
* aims to hasten and maximize recovery by treating the disabilities caused by stroke.
* allows an individual to participate fully in society at home, school or work.
* assists the person in coping with disability that results from spinal-cord trauma.
* can help an individual regain strength and abilities and function more independently
- people learn new ways to communicate more effectively
- restore a person to good health or useful life, as through therapy and education
* helps the person with the disability to make the best use of their present abilities.
* involves improving mobility and learning how to take care of oneself.
* is also a key part of society's responsibility towards young people
- an empowering process in which persons exercise control over their lives
* is an important part of stroke treatment
- tool for the management of coronary artery disease
- ongoing process that continues throughout the life of a stroke survivor
- medical treatments
- part of acute and chronic patient care
- physical therapy
- restoration
* is the art of returning the injured to a state of optimal function
- medical management of patients with major disabilities
* is the process of helping the patient achieve maximum functional potential
- regaining function after illness or injury
- restoration of normal form and function following disease, illness, or injury
- vindication
* is, therefore, a partnership between the disabled person and society.
* literally means to restore ability or physical function.
* means the restoration of or improvement in an employee's health and functionality.
* misconception when applied to criminals.
* process by which the affected people can begin their normal life.
* refers to the restoration of lost function.
* seeks to restore both form and function following illness or injury.
* team sport with the patient and family included first and foremost.
* unique field that focuses on the whole person and all of their needs. | {
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} |
Retirement
* consists of leaving a career job and thereby losing most or all labor income.
* frees adults from having to live near places of employment.
* is an important transition time, both for individuals and for married couples
- issue on everyone's mind at some point in their life
- option that can be based on personal choice rather than necessity
- as much, or more, a spiritual transition as a financial or life-style change
- considered a reward for a life spent hard at work
- experienced differently by men and women
- more a state of mind than a stage of life
- no longer a brief period at the end of a person s life
- often a time when people think about moving, for many reasons
* is one form of termination of employment
- of the biggest decisions that a person makes
- status
- terminations
- the great equalizer in the world of equine elders
- withdrawals
* major change of lifestyle.
* means the freedom from the necessity to be involved in social relations.
* planning A benefit of better times is the chance to plan properly for retirement.
* relatively new concept in human history.
* signal for society and for the individual of the beginning of old age.
Regatta
* are meet
- sailboat races
* is meet
Ratification
* common term in the secular world.
* is agreement
- the act of approving a UPA by an official who has the authority to do so
Racial harassment
* can be verbal or physical.
* committed by school district employees against students constitutes misconduct.
* hurts the person or group it is directed to, divides society, and promotes racism.
* includes harassment because of race, colour or ancestry.
* is considered a form of racial discrimination
- discrimination and it is illegal
- one means by which racial discrimination is practised
- still a major problem in schools
* occurs in schools. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Rye
* can be overseed by air more consistently than many other cover crops
- whole, or flour, grits, or meal
* common rotational crop that is known to suppress weed growth through rapid competition.
* contains little gluten, so produces breads with low volume and a dense texture
- substantial amounts of soluble fibre
* good source of amino acids, carbohydrates and protein.
* grows best on poor, infertile, sandy soils than other cereals
- in cold, infertile soils
* has finer roots and it's residue lasts longer into the season.
* huge success at growing in poor soils under frigid conditions.
* is aged in charred oak barrels for at least a year.
* is also very susceptible to ergot
- tolerant of low winter temperatures
- another grain used for baking as bread
- cereal grass
- commercially available as malt, roasted malt, and in rolled, flaked, and whole grain form
- cross pollinated and sterility is frequent
* is more cold tolerant than oats and generally produces more forage than either oats or wheat
- plentiful because conditions are too harsh for growing wheat
- planted primarily for grazing but occasionally is harvested for grain
- resistant and oats are immune to the insect
- second only to wheat for flour production
- still one of the most important flour sources in Northern Europe and in Scandinavia
- supposed to have originated in the Orient
- the main winter grain in the north, where winters are more severe and the soils less fertile
* is the most popular bread corn in Finland
- winter hardy of all the cereals
- used as a winter cover crop
* is used chiefly as flour for bread and as livestock feed
- bread, as livestock feed, and as a pasture plant
- for baking and flavouring as well as for livestock feed
- usually ground and fed in mixtures of other small grains
* long-day plant.
* provides the most biomass to turn under in early spring.
* strongly flavored grain, and too much rye in the batch can result in unsold beer.
* tends to start producing stems earlier in the spring than other cereals.
+ Belarus, Culture, Cuisine
* Foods are usually either slowly cooked or stewed. A typical Belarusian eats a light breakfast and two hearty meals, with dinner being the largest meal of the day. Wheat and rye breads are eaten in Belarus. Rye is more plentiful because conditions are too harsh for growing wheat. To show hospitality, a host will give an offering of bread and salt when greeting a guest or visitor. Retrieved 21 March 2007. Retrieved 21 March 2007.
+ Evolution, Evidence for evolution, Artificial selection: History of science
+ Mimicry, Vavilovian mimicry: Ecology
* Rye is now a crop.
+ Nikolai Vavilov, Vavilovian mimicry: 1887 births :: 1943 deaths :: Evolutionary biologists :: Geneticists :: Russian botanists
* Rye is a now a crop.<|endoftext|>Riparian zone
* are critical to the health of rivers
- extremely important in providing habitat for many species of fish and wildlife
- good sites for trees
- of great historical importance
- the interfaces between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems
* dissipate stream energy.
* have a high water table because of their proximity to a river or stream.
* help keep the soil from eroding during floods and on a day to day basis.
* provide excellent habitat in all coniferous forest associations.
* vary greatly in their vegetation density and moisture.
Random testing
* is the most likely procedure to identify substance abusers in a workforce.
* way to make testing more complete.
Redneck
* are located in trailer parks
- the glue holding society, American society in particular, together
* common man
* know how to respect, love, and care about females.
* react to the thought of a pass by a gay man with fear, distrust and occasionally even hate.
Read
* are located in mail boxs
- publications
* end with sleeping.
* start with open books
- eyes | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Rotational molding
* break through manufacturing process for small sailboats.
* is characterized with much lower rotational speeds than the centrifugal casting
- used to produce plastic tanks
Receptive relaxation
* is one of the deglutition reflexes.
* largely vagally mediated reflex.
Remembrance
* is an important part of history
- carved deep into the fibre of our being, and reflected everywhere in our rituals
- memory
* is the final act of caring that heals
- way to redemption<|endoftext|>Righteousness
* All righteousness is rooted in belief.
* always hates evil, wherever it is found - even within the church
- points in two directions
* begins in the heart and in the life of the individual
- with personal regeneration
* brings people together.
* can satisfy the needs of hard and soft, food and drink.
* comes by faith
- only from good deeds
* composite of all that is good.
* demands that a price be paid when the law is broken.
* embraces all the relationships of human existence.
* exalts the nation that exalts righteousness.
* grows out of liberty, of social and economic opportunity and equality.
* heart condition.
* includes all the virtues and none is left out.
* involves perfect conformity to some standard or law.
* is about acting rightly toward one another in relationships
- an attribute of the heart
- correctness of thinking, feeling, speaking, and acting
- different for different people
- godliness and rightness
- integrity, virtue, and purity of life
- life and joy
- light, and light is bliss
- manifested by our obedience, love, and compassion
- morality
- obedience to the law
- offered to all because all are guilty of sin
- personified
- reached only through salvation, and salvation is by grace
- rectitude, rectitude of some sort
- richer than riches
- right living or having a passion to always do the right thing
- shown more in acts than in words
* is the aspiration
- best of all that is good and is the radiant goal of life on earth
- divine order, divine law
- gift of Tolerance
- health of the soul
- key to a good life
- only distinguishing factor among people
- purity of the soul
- refuge of the gods, and by righteousness is everything attained
- response of faith to revelation
- soul's true food
- spiritual spark of life
- state of one who is righteous
- universal law that stands for order, evolution, progress and projection
- way of knowledge and wisdom
* is to be understood as truth, holiness and pristine purity
- remain free from sin it is our guardian of the heart
- undermined when one infringes on the human world
- what most frequently causes conflict
- within every believer
* law, and has been such from the foundation of the world.
* legal term.
* matter of the heart.
* produces joy.
* refers to the status of our individual souls.
* word that means right standing.
Russian tarragon
* can form seed.
* grows easily from seed but has a slightly bitter, more pungent flavor.
* is much coarser, has paler leaves, and a more bitter taste. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Recruitment
* crucial factor in the recovery and long term sustainability of fish stocks.
* is accomplishment
- achievement
- the actual number of eggs surviving to become juveniles
* is the process by which young fish are added to the adult or fished stock
- of locating, identifying, and attracting capable applicants
- one goes through to join a fraternity or sorority
- specific time when fraternities seek new members
- success rate at which spawned fish grow to reproductive size
- time for women to explore joining a sorority.
* has many different steps. First, the company needs to advertise that it has a job available. People then send an application. This usually includes a curriculum vitae, which summary of what a person has done until now in their life. The best applicants are selected and they come for an interview. This might also include some further tests or exercises to do
* measure of how many young survive long enough to potentially enter the fishery.
* mental and emotional process that begins long before the first sexual act occurs.
* process of including new acquaintances into daily activities.
* strategy that, if successful, can serve job growth and diversification needs.
* time when potential members meet current members of Greek organizations.
Regione
* are circular areas of moderate topographic relief.
* have inhabitants, just like other areas of supernatural aura.
Reminiscence
* gives seniors an opportunity to share experiences and memories with others.
* helps individuals sum up their life and put the various pieces in order
- resolve conflicts and fears and helps older adults cope with grief and loss
* is common at the end of life and many people find it helpful to reflect on their lives
- memory
- presented as a metaphysical category and a specific mode of knowledge
- the process of reviving past events and experience<|endoftext|>Raf
* Raves are a way for the youth to escape the troubles of the world by dancing
- all night dance parties where disc jockeys electronically mix dance records
- all-night dance parties popular with young people that feature electronic music
- also great places to meet people
- basically psychedelic drug intoxicated dance parties to new wave techno music
- big parties held in remote areas where teens stay up all night dancing to techno music
* Raves are parties set up in various venues by promoters - in warehouses, fields, stadiums or clubs
- with special lighting and sound effects and are synonymous with drug use
- popular and widespread, and cater to high school and college age people
* Raves are usually the places where designer drugs are sold
- warehouses where people dance
- where people hang out and dance
- have loud music and light laser shows to increase highs
- provide open spaces for dancing amid psychedelic lights, video, smoke or fire
Reverberation
* also has the effect of amplifying background noises.
* basic acoustic property of a room.
* can cause echoes
- effect the directionality of a hearing aid
* helps to externalize the sound.
* is measured in time
- reflectivity
* is the persistence of sound in a room after the sound source has stopped
- an enclosed space caused by repeated reflections
- when sound persists even after the source of the sound has stopped
Retinas
* contain millions of neurons, and even during diabetes only a few die at any given time.
* detach for a variety of reasons and many can be surgically repaired. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Revenge
* beverage best served cold.
* can be a motivator in boxing.
* causes a desire to writes.
* common but poorly understood motivation for human behavior.
* concept that most people can relate to, after all.
* coward's dagger, striking at an opponent's back in fear.
* dangerous game in international relations and interpersonal relationships.
* dish best eaten cold
- served hot, at least in South Florida
* group action
* is also a burden towards oneself
- an exercise practiced by weak and immature minds
- retribution, taking payment for damage done
* is the ending of wrath, the beginning of peace
- misguided attempt to transform shame and pain into pride
- very base of human impulses
* reason for murder, like greed and envy are motives for murder.<|endoftext|>Regurgitation
* can be severe and can vary with the severity of the ischemia
- very important to some animals , such as birds for example
* common reaction of an animal to ingested toxic substances or overeating.
* is common in ferrets with megaesophagus , a relatively rare condition
- flow
- illnesses
- recalls
- the expulsion of undigested food from the mouth, esophagus or crop
- when the stomach contents moves into the throat
* normal part of the courtship behavior
- process used to feed babies
* often occurs after overfeeding, or in combination with burping.
* can be very important to some animals, such as birds for example. It is used by a number of species to feed their young. This is especially when the young is in its nest or home and the parent hunts for food. Or some birds can occasionally regurgitate pellets of food that is not digestable, such as bones and feathers. Owls are known to do this.
* symptom of megaesophagus or other esophageal disease.
Rhinos
* Most rhinos has-part skin
- toes
* Most rhinos possess bodies
- horns
- reach ages
- retain incisors
* Most rhinos use horns
- tails<|endoftext|>Romanticism
* conception analogous to the morality of the period.
* contrasts with classicism, and often was a revolt against classicism.
* is an attitude of mind rather than a set of stylistic criteria or traits
- ever-present temptation and danger
- artistic style
- idealism
- in most of modern pop the same way sugar is in everything at the convenience store
- quality
* is the conceptual school of art
- journal of Romantic culture and criticism
* looks away from the rational brain and to the liberation of the imagination.
* refers to the artist's own subjective style of expression.
* regards hierarchy as a repressive social fiction.
* values the beauty in exotic locals, the supernatural, and the imagination.
Recirculation
* condition which can occur during a low hover in ground effect.
* is circulation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Rabie
* Most rabies affects animals
- is found in wildlife, such as skunks, bats and raccoons
* Most rabies is transmitted to animals
- other animals
* Most rabies occurs in animals
- many wild animals
* Some rabies is carried by raccoons
- transmitted by cats
* Some rabies kills humans
* Spread by bites or contact with the saliva of an infected animal, rabies is always fatal.
* affects both animals and humans.
* affects the brain and sometimes causes animals to lose their fear of humans
- the spinal cord and eventually causes death in any animal
* affects the central nervous system and is classified as a virus
- part of the brain that controls behavior
* also causes vampire-like symptoms, insomnia, delirium, and strange behavior
- occurs in dogs and cattle in significant numbers
* always concern when an animal bite occurs.
* attacks the brain and spinal cord.
* breaks out through the animal population, worsening human interaction.
* can also be a threat in blood-sucking bats
- large animals, such as cattle and horses
- appear in two basic forms, dumb rabies and furious rabies
- be present in a variety of wildlife species
- cause hoarseness, probably due to laryngeal paralysis
- infect almost all mammals
* can infect any mammal
- warm blooded animal
- warm-blooded animal
- humans or dogs or cats
- many different mammals from humans to dogs to bats
- occur in a paralytic form
- take one of two forms
* continues to be a serious health threat to the pets and people of Oklahoma
- problem in communities across America
* does exist in the U.S., especially in the wildlife population, so it real threat
- occur through the entire year in Texas in both wild and domestic animals
* effects wild and domestic animals.
* has a very broad host range
- narrow host range in nature
- world-wide distribution except for the UK and Australia
- negri bodies
* incubate in a raccoon for some time before symptoms appear.
* is almost always fatal once symptoms occur
- to animals and people once signs of the disease appears
- also present
- by far the most important immunization
* is common in raccoons, skunks, bats and foxes
- cyclical
- dangerous, deadly, but almost totally preventable by vaccination
- difficult to diagnose
* is endemic in Arctic fox and can be transmitted to other wildlife
- Argentina and reported in other countries
- Kenya and most other African countries
- our wild animals
- some countries
- the arctic and in brown foxes
- throughout the continental United States
- fatal if untreated
* is fatal to animals and humans once symptoms of the disease develop
- and, if untreated, can be fatal to humans
* is fatal to both animals and humans
- man and animals
* is fatal when it reaches that stage
- left untreated
* is found in all U.S. states except Hawaii
- of the United States, except Hawaii
- invariably fatal once symptoms appear
- lethal in humans
- more likely from carnivores rabbits, etc
- no longer only prevalent during the period following the wildlife breeding season
- now a rare disease in dogs and cats in most of the United States
- only present on the islands of Svalbard
- possible in all warm-blooded animals
- present close to the border with Oman
* is present in Austria, although there have been no incidents reported in recent years
- Europe, North and South America, Africa and Asia
- Vermont, as in other areas in the Northeast
- the State and all pets are required to be vaccinated
- preventable if care is taken
- probably the biggest fear people have of bats
- public health concern in throughout the United States
* is rare in England
- dogs, cats, rodents, and plant-eating animals
- routinely fatal and major public health concern
* is spread by bites or saliva of infected animals
- the bite of an infected animal
- from animal to animal by bites or scratches
* is spread from infected animals through bite wounds
- to people or other animals by saliva
- the bite of one mammal to another
- in the saliva of an infected animal
- mostly by wild animals
- through a bite or contact with an infected animal's saliva
- to humans in the saliva of an infected animal
- via saliva through a bite from an infected animal
- when saliva containing the rabies virus gets into broken skin
* is still a nearly universally fatal disease, and is irreversible when it becomes symptomatic
- serious problem for both people and animals in developing countries
- worldwide threat to canines and people alike
- usually fatal to humans and pets unless treated immediately
- very difficult to diagnose
* is very rare among rodents like squirrels, rats, mice and chipmunks
- in the modern wolf
- widespread throughout Central America
- widespread, particularly in dogs and bats
* kills almost any mammal or human that gets sick from it.
* occurs in almost every state.
* occurs in animals in Europe and North America as well as in less-developed countries
- North America as well as in the less developed countries
- many areas of the world
* occurs most often in small, wild animals such as skunks, bats, foxes and raccoons
- naturally in many wild animals
- throughout the world with the exception of the Australia, United Kingdom and Japan
* often produces unusual behavior in animals.
* primarily attacks the nervous system and causes an encephalitis.
* ribonucleocapsid as an oral immunogen and immunological enhancer.
* slowly destroys the central nervous system by attacking the spinal cord.
* takes two distinct forms.
* usually results in death among domestic animals and wildlife, except in bats. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Radioactive fallout
* affects mainly our food and drink.
* blankets the earth.
* is no respecter of neutrality
- sometimes highly concentrated
Religious observance
* are limited to the prayers over the candles, wine and bread.
* promotes values like decency, respect and virtue in our society.
Research library
* Many research libraries interfile periodicals with books.
* Research libraries are in every country in the world
- make public and accessible a host of private or previously inaccessible pasts
Radioactive strontium
* is much more of a health risk than stable strontium.
* replaces calcium in the bones and can produce leukemia.<|endoftext|>Radiology
* branch of medicine that uses x-rays for the diagnosis and treatment of disease.
* contributes significantly to hospital revenue.
* frequently underutilized diagnostic tool in the medical and surgical care of rabbits.
* is an important topic to the education of students and the practice of chiropractic
- irreplaceable discipline that does great service to humanity
- both a diagnostic and therapeutic tool
- inherently an imaging system with low contrast resolution
- intended for diagnostic radiologists or physicians who interpret x-rays
* is the branch of medicine that involves radiography and radiotherapy
- which uses radiant energy to diagnose and treat diseases
* is the study of images of the human body for diagnostic purposes
- used everyday in general and specialty practice
* medical science
* monthly scientific journal devoted to clinical radiology and allied sciences.
* screening tests for feline heartworms.
* short-term service enterprise.
* specialty that is usually very expensive both in equipment and in film stock.<|endoftext|>Running
* car crashs.
* are administration
- capable of wind
- events
- human behavior
- operations
- physical events
- running
- sports
* are used for competition
- escapings
- exercises
- fun
- pleasure
- speed
- vigorous activities
* cause a desire to rests
- accidents
- callus
- cramp
- exhaustion
- fallings
- good health
- heart attacks
- injuries
- leg cramp
- muscle cramp
- pain
- shortness of breath
- sore foots
- stitchs
- sweating
- weight loss<|endoftext|>Restitution
* form of discipline that encourages students to achieve self-discipline.
* helps victims achieve healing and holds offenders accountable for their actions.
* is about how one gets something
- mandatory in all criminal cases in which the defendant is convicted
- often the foundation on which the bridge of reconciliation is built
- something that is paid by the convicted defendants to the victims in the case
* is the remedy when someone harms another, takes their property, or damages it
- willingness to pay back or restore wherever possible
* means payment of crime related expenses to a victim from an offender.
* monetary award that comes from offender and goes through court system to victim.
* occurs when what is owed is repaid in one form or another.
* permissible term of a pretrial agreement.
* remedy historically and today dispensed in law and equity proceedings alike
- of the criminal court
* universal human right.
Resurgence
* bi-monthly magazine of vision and action.
* is events
- improvement
- recurrences | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Romance
* Most romances start about the time the central characters meet.
* Some romances have women as chief protagonists
- use older themes, loosely connected to classical stories
* are about finding love and being safe
- an important part of medieval literature and often involve magic and the supernatural
- often replete with magical events, faeries, dragons, wizards and enchantment
* bridge between the sexes.
* causes a desire to cooks
- kisses
* comes in many forms.
* focuses on love and character growth.
* form of vernacular story originally in verse but later in prose.
* grows through knowledge, love, and time.
* is about love, and love is universal
- but only sometimes about sex
- adults loving adults
- by far the most popular of fiction genres with many millions of readers worldwide
- either in contemplation of, or inside, marriage
- how most relationships begin
* is in the hearts of people who have abandoned romance
- little details of life, which are unique to every relationship
- life living itself
- novels
- respect, consideration, kindness and companionship
- set apart from all other forms of love by the intensity of bliss
* is the environment in which love flourishes
- expression of love
- glamour which turns the dust of everyday life into a golden haze
- largest and fastest selling genre in paperback fiction
- temporary loss of critical faculties
- used to sell women on almost every single product, from cars to food
- written primarily by women for women
* physical power which is magnetic and attracts two people in a spiritual sense.
* serious film about a woman's sexuality.
* state of being
- mind
* topic that has been of interest since the beginning of civilized man.
* verb, meaning an action.
Responsible citizenship
* includes the practice of leadership.
* is an active role, one that implies participation
- indispensable support for free politics and a free political economy
- essential to the survival of society
- the goal of all education
Registered mail
* highly secure form of delivery that is documented at each step of the way.
* is mail.
* is the most secure method of sending valuables through the mail system
- safest way to send valuables
Regimentation
* characteristic of totalitarian societies.
* is imposition | {
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} |
Radioactivity
* All radioactivity is man-made.
* Most radioactivity is on the surface of the metal and can be scrubbed off.
* also has uses in medicine, industrial processing, space power, and food sterilization.
* builds up in turbine.
* can also have an effect, as is the cause of smoky quartz
- be either spontaneous or induced
- contaminate bag-house dust generated during steelmaking
- destroy the gland
- ionize molecules
- occur both naturally and through human intervention
* collection of unstable atoms that emit ionizing radiation to become stable atoms.
* departure from the normal state.
* flows ceaselessly from the upper reaches of the river to the Pacific Ocean.
* is also.
* is an amount of a radionuclide in a particular energy state at a given time
- emission
- energy pulse and therefore damages what it passes through
- associated with an exposure dependent risk of some cancers notably leukaemia
- caused by nuclear emission of high energy particles
- considered to pose a unique risk
- dangerous
- followed using scintillation counting
- found in naturally occurring sources and in artificially produced ones
- inversely proportional to metabolite level
- involved
- measured in terms of the number of disintegrations that occur per second
- present in the mud at several spas
* is the ability to produce radiation
- basis for absolute dating
- emission of radiation when the nuclei of certain atoms become unstable
- process by which nuclei are transformed to more stable nuclei
* is the spontaneous decay of unstable atoms
- emmission of radiation from unstable nuclei
- term used to describe disintegration of atoms
- transformation of an atomic nucleus by one of several mechanisms
- tried to keep 'stents' clear
* is, and always has been a part of the earth.
* large contributor to the pollution problem.
* makes giant grasshoppers, which attack central Illinois and eventually Chicago.
* natural and vital part of our environment.
* occurs when an excess of neutrons in a parent isotope makes the atom unstable.
* often destroys the gland, so that the body needs replacement thyroid hormone.
* penetrates the environment in many ways.
* refers to any material, solid, liquid, or gas, that emits radiation spontaneously.
* results from the process of making power.
* statistical phenomenon.
* survives chemical change unaltered.
Redevelopment
* is another form of bureaucracy in Fresno and most urban centers
- improvement
- primarily a means for local governments to increase their tax revenue dollars
* process created to assist local governments to revitalize an area.
* refers to constructing new development on previously developed parcels of land. | {
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} |
Respect
* also encompasses respecting the privacy of individuals, families, and the culture
- involves attempting to understand and affirm the other's emotions
* begins with a fundamental understanding that all people possess worth as human beings.
* cognitive model that directs almost every action of a villager's life.
* comes from a belief that individuals and groups are equally honorable
- the Latin roots re, meaning again, and respicere, meaning to look back on
* creates a feeling of honor which nourishes people at a soul level.
* describes the affection family members have for each other.
* empowers others to claim their rights and to achieve their potential.
* focuses on the moral obligation to honor the essential worth and dignity of the individual.
* form of love.
* grows as groups strive together, process, and celebrate.
* gut feeling based partly on prior experience, partly on wishful thinking.
* includes caring about the feelings of others and their property.
* involves acknowledging the rights, needs, inherent worth, and dignity of others
- an understanding of the importance of each thing, each animal, each person
* is about causing harm to someone
- also at the root of all relationships
* is an important component of Japanese culture
- inherent part of the martial arts
- attitude
- demonstrated by their behavior and the language they use with elders
- different from love and fear
- earned from trust, and love is earned from respect
- for every species in the world, including all four races
- given to consumer and family preferences, culture, religion, and personal values
- high opinion or regard for a high quality
- important concepts
- in contentment and comfort in abstention
- intrinsic to a person's quintessential humanness
- measured by the depth of a smile
- messages
- often the key to many relationships
- one of the great gifts of sports
* is one of the things men treasure a lot in relationships
- treasure the most in relationships
- related to obedience
- showing regard for the worth of someone or something
* is shown through actions that exhibit consideration for self and others
- to different people in different ways
- similar to compassion but different in some ways
- something that is earned
- taught by every religion
* is the art of love by which married couples honor what is unique and best in each other
- center of the circle of life
- currency of survival, to be paid and maintained
- essential concept between any two life-forms
- evidence of worth
- foundation for successful relationships
* is the foundation of harmony in families and peace between nations
- self-worth
- quality of keeping faith with the potential within others
* key concept in accepting differentness
- ingredient in nourishing relationships and creating a just society
* life skill that many inmates know little about before they become incarcerated.
* major issue in the female world.
* means a harmonious relationship with others
- seeing the best in others, regardless of who they are
* necklaces that can be sent as greeting cards to loved ones.
* reciprocal relationship which, when it works, promotes harmony.
* refers to being tolerant of one another s dress, culture, religion, gender, and race.
* requirement in the workplace.
* universal trait.
* way of being
- viewing another person
- to regain credibility and to rebuild a reputation with someone
* word working women use again and again to describe what they want.
Recreational fishing
* does little damage compared to commercial fisheries.
* has enormous social, cultural and economic importance.
* is also an important part of Alaska's economy.
* is enjoyed by millions of anglers worldwide
- people of all ages and from all walks of life
* makes a substantial contribution to the local, state and national economies.
* significant component of the overfishing problem.
* vital part of coastal Alabama's economy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Retaliation
* form of employee misconduct.
* group action
* is adverse action taken because of opposition to unlawful workplace harassment
- returns
* serious offense which can result in disciplinary action.
* tort, which involves civil penalties including punitive damages.<|endoftext|>Retinol
* acyltransferase activity by retinoic acid receptor-selective retinoids.
* also stimulates collagen production and enhances skin strength.
* form of Vitamin A and is known to moisturize skin and reduce wrinkles.
* is an A
- antioxidant
- another term for vitamin A and indicates that it is involved in the retina of the eye
- chemical compounds
- esterified to palmitic acid and delivered to the blood via chylomicrons
- found in liver, whole milk, cheese and butter
- stocked in retina mainly in an acylated form
* is the chemical name of vitamin A. Retinal and retinoic acid are related compounds
- form that is ready to use and is found only in foods of animal origin
- purest form of vitamin A available and is widely used in personal care formulations
* works on the surface of the skin to renew and restore skin's appearance.<|endoftext|>Reforestation
* Most reforestation is in pines.
* aims at restoring the diverse forest geography.
* allows increased growth without effecting grain, strength, color, etc.
* brings land back into production.
* can create as many jobs as deforestation did in decades past.
* improves the mechanical behavior of soils, thus restoring the stability.
* is an important function in the conservation of New Jersey's forests
- essential to maintaining the wealth of the forest
- good for the environment, good for economy and good for the industry
- just one part of managing forests for today and tomorrow
- reclamation
- rehabilitation
- the building block by which tomorrow s forests are constructed
- widely recognized option for mitigating the effect of greenhouse gases emission
* requires production of seedlings in specialized nurseries. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Relaxation
* Managing stress is absolutely essential for physical health and a sense of well-being.
* Most relaxation leads to sleepiness and dullness.
* actually part of the normal stress response.
* begins with the eyes and the mouth.
* can also help to reduce pain
- include quiet breathing, deep breathing, or progressive relaxation
- keep blood pressure in check, reduce muscle tension and promote sleep
- lead to personal and spiritual growth
- provide peace of mind, restful sleep, increased energy and thinking power
- reduce anxiety, nausea and vomiting and pain
* comes between phases of tenseness
- in as many forms as there are people
* common biproduct of meditation
- by-product of meditation
* encompasses both the physical and the mental.
* focuses on being aware of the effects that occur.
* form of control.
* helps people to get away from their stressful situations and focus on themselves.
* is also conducive to positive thinking.
* is an active process which increases cerebral output instead of diminishing it
- important feature of hypnosis
- associated with a predominantly alpha brain wave pattern
- critical to the retraining of the body
- emotion
* is essential to beginning the process that eventually leads to orgasm
- maintaining peace of mind
- followed by stimulation of the metabolism as a new vitality flows into an organism
- located in parks
- meant to be felt and experienced
- nature's antidote to stress
- part of recreation
- relief
- something everybody has a hard time with at some point in their life
* is the act of reducing, releasing, or loosening of something that is tight
- bed-rock of effective stress management
- body's natural antidote to stress
- cornerstone of comfort during labor
* is the key to overcome a fear, habit, and many other symptoms
- the door of the subconscious mind
- lack of contraction
- opposite of tension
- practice of being calm
- process of turning-off the response to demand
- thus the sine qua non of mental and physical health
* key component in biofeedback treatment of many disorders
- to slowing down the aging process
* learnt skill which improves with practice.
* natural process, as natural as walking, talking and whistling.
* often produces an altered state of consciousness.
* plays an important role in the creative process.
* relieves pain or keeps it from getting worse by reducing tension in the muscles.
* seems to mimic the action of the beta-blocking drugs used to control blood pressure.
* skill learned through training and practice
- that anyone can learn with practice
* skill, just like swimming or typing.
* state in which there is no movement, no effort, and the brain is quiet. | {
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} |
Recovery
* also encompasses the re-establishment of an emotional equilibrium.
* gift that keeps on giving.
* includes development of self-esteem through active participation in society.
* is about being more in truth than lies and in truth choosing to love self and others
- dealing with life on life's terms
- acts
* is an active process, literally a change in the direction of one's life
- ongoing process that begins by taking care of first things first
- associated with an abrupt fall in temperature, also known as crises
- both a physical and mental process to which consistency is the key
- improvement
- process that plays out over time and is influenced by many things
- related to the severity of swelling in the brain
* is the condition where it increases again
- key to growth in any body part, particularly as a person progresses
* is the process of obtaining materials or energy resources from solid waste
- recovering intelligence
- retrieving or freeing immobile, inoperative, or abandoned materiel
- returning to normal
- reason for the creation of the universe
- recovery of life and of freedom
- restoration of health by means of the operation of forces intrinsic to the organism
* life long commitment.
* life-long process and affects every area of a patient's life.
* lifelong commitment that necessitates major lifestyle changes
- process characterized by periods of growth and sometimes relapse
* matter of life and death for many physically, for all psychologically and spiritually.
* occurs when one person is willing to reach out to another.
* philosophy, a way of living daily life and dealing with everyday situations.
* process that includes many tools and resources
- is different for everyone
- takes many years
* refers to the percent of feed water that becomes permeate.
* shows people how to regain control over their lives
- structure their thoughts
* system s ability to restore services after an intrusion has occurred.
* term used to quantify the performance of an appliance.<|endoftext|>Reverence
* feeling of deep respect, love, awe, and esteem shown for someone or something sacred.
* is actions
- attitude
- contact with the essence of each thing and person and plant and bird and animal
- dignity acknowledged by behavior
- due to every degree of dignity
- located in churchs
- of capital importance to all the fundamental domains of man's life
- the combination of admiration and fear, awe and dread, wonder and terror
* natural aspect of authentic empowerment because the soul reveres all of life.
* perception of the soul.
* supernal form of worship.
* timeless attribute.
Regularity
* allows people to arrange schedules.
* describes such phenomena as the rising and setting of the sun.
* gives structure to life.
* is important in feeding
- quality
- symmetry
* key factor in academic success.
* means a bowel movement every day.
* psychological tonic.
* refers to the correctness of a gait, including purity, evenness and levelness.
Resting
* new ideas.
* are used for dreaming
- new perspective
- peace
- refreshment
- rejuvenation
- relaxation
- sleeping
- stopping
- thinking
* cause dreaming
- laziness
- recuperation
Retinas
* Most retinas have cones
- layers
- pain receptors
- rod cones
* Some retinas are part of eyes
- faces
- have ability
Religious bigotry
* comes in many forms.
* stems mostly from ignorance, fear, and spiritual competition. | {
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} |
Recent research
* More recent research seems to indicate that depression leads to heart disease.
* Some recent research does point to soda consumption as a possible factor in teenage obesity
- shows that stress and strenuous activity can impact pregnancy outcomes
* argues against the addiction theory in all types of animals.
* concerns the development of a synthetic blood substitute for humans.
* confirms the use of elder for colds, coughs and the flu.
* focuses on the role of ambient physical characteristics in human well-being
- understanding optical properties of materials using light forces
* indicates Selenium has a particular affinity for skin cell support
- a direct link between diet and the leading causes of death in America
- ducks and Canada geese can excrete infective crypto into water supplies
- medication can change one's chemistry, too
* indicates that a leading cause of colic rapid change in fiber
- link between xenoestrogens and breast cancer appears to exist
- apple cider and honey can dramatically improve cancer cure rates
- bear spray can be effective against some bears when used properly
- buried feces decompose more slowly than previously thought
- cranberry juice can work to support urinary tract health
- even low levels of smog can have an effect on human health
- geese prefer certain grass species over others for food
- great white sharks probably only attack humans by mistake
- large nuclei are deformed , causing magic numbers to shift
- lutein protects against heart disease and cancer
- mercury can have a detrimental effect upon immune system activity
- muscle tissue throughout the body has an element of local memory
- psoriasis is likely a disorder of the immune system
- surface deposits of diatomaceous earth play an important role
* indicates that the best time to build bone mass is during adolescents
- concepts of numbers and arithmetic are present in newborns
- wood beneath dressed wounds rots faster than wood left undressed
* links the brain and emotions as powerful partners.
* points out that some sheep seem to be more resistant to foot rot than others.
* pushes back the dates for omnivory in evolution.
* reveals sleep patterns change at puberty.
* reveals that palm and coconut oils are relatively unhealthy
- women are often willing to pay more than men for improved services
* shows an increase in pigs per litter from adding folic acid to sow rations
- however that cystic kidneys are inherited
- it has anti-cancer properties
* shows that apart from motor functions cerebellum also has some emotional role
- bullying has actually increased and become more vicious and cruel
- children do better when their mothers take care of themselves
- depression runs in families
- education is the primary driver of parental interest in the Internet
- experience has considerable effects on the adult brain as well
- exports spur productivity growth and, hence, real wage growth
- lauric acid is present, which is also present in human mother's milk
- lithium lowers the risk of suicide for people with bipolar disorder
- microbial communities are dynamic over space and time
- obesity is related to a higher Alzheimer risk
- sexual harassment is common in middle schools and high schools
- simple dietary changes can often keep the heart beating normally
- smokers have a fifty-percent chance of becoming impotent
* shows that there are increasing levels of stress experienced in the workforce
- one-thousand pandas left in the world
- wrinkling is related to vasoconstriction
- violence in the home shapes young lives from the earliest months of life
* suggests chamomile acts as a natural antihistamine.
* suggests that IUDs work by preventing sperm and egg from joining
- Neanderthals matured at the same rate as humans
- basil can help fight bacteria, viruses, and chronic diseases
- certain bacteria are beneficial and necessary for health
- circadian time highly variable clock type
- diets high in stearic acid help lower total blood cholesterol
- drinking expectancies are related to alcohol consumption patterns
- exercise is at least as good as medication for treating depression
- human agency is altering the climate
- it is some kind of opiate, chemically related to morphine
- plowing on a dark night decreases the germination of some weed seeds
- stem cells can engraft with much less toxic preparative regimens
- the evolutionary origin of venom lies deep in the squamate phylogeny
- that, on average, wild females give birth only every eight years
+ Island of stability: Physics
* Recent research indicates that large nuclei are deformed, causing magic numbers to shift. Hassium-270 is now believed to be a doubly magic deformed nucleus, with deformed magic numbers 108 and 162. However, it has a half-life of only 3.6 seconds. See reference in Hassium.
+ Squamata, Evolution of venom
+ Stick insect, Defences, Secondary defences: Insects
* A number of species are equipped with glands at the front which release chemical compounds. These chemicals may give off unpleasant smells or cause a stinging, burning sensation in the eyes and mouth of a predator. Recent research suggests they manufacture their own chemical defense substances. Some species employ a shorter-range defensive secretion, where individuals bleed reflexively through the joints of their legs and the seams of the exoskeleton when bothered. The blood contains distasteful additives. Stick insects, like their distant relation the grasshopper, can also discharge the contents of their stomachs through vomiting when harassed, a fluid considered uneatable by some predators.
+ Suicide prevention, Treatment | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Revelation
* continuous process, confined to no one group and to no one age.
* has a system of symbolism.
* is History in symbolic language right up to the present time
- apocalyptic literature written is graphic symbols and visions
- important in the major religious traditions
- insight
- new ideas
- part of new testaments
- written in symbolic language
* particular mode of awareness and perception that occurs in certain rare individuals.
* relational event.
* seems to be the common denominator of reported mystical experiences.
* speech act
* study of the future.
Rutherfordium
* has no biological role.
* highly radioactive chemical element.
* is produced artificially and only small amounts have been made
- the first transactinide element
* synthetic radioactive metal created by nuclear bombardment.
Resuscitation
* can deliver a person from the brink of death.
* causes life.
* implies a commitment on the side of life.
* is merely the reanimation of a corpse
- revival
- the prompt treatment of lifethreatening problems
* restarts the heart when it has stopped beating.
Renal osteodystrophy
* consequence of chronic renal failure related to the calcium metabolism.
* is the most complex, multifactorial metabolic bone disease.
* occurs in people with chronic renal failure.
Rbi
* are highly revered in baseball.
* come in bunches.
Rheumatism
* being a blood disease, requires constitutional treatment.
* causes stiffness of muscles and pain in joints.
- causing pain in the joints, muscles or fibrous tissue
* is arthritis
- attended with loss of motion and often more or less deformity
- neuritis of the joint nerves
- one of the chronic ailments and is closely followed by consumption
- the painful inflammation and swelling that afflicts joints and muscles
Recurrent stroke
* Having more than one stroke can mean patients have more problems recovering.
* causes progressively greater impairment and increased likelihood of mortality.<|endoftext|>Realism
* can often be another term for opportunism.
* consists in starting from the world as it is and modeling action according to that reality.
* corresponds to the traditional view of science that links reality directly to observation.
* is about recreating life in literature.
* is also important when formulating a vision
- in the nature of the beast
- an important concept in fine art , drama and literature
- art seen as is
- increasingly important in categories such as dolls, model trains and action figures
- most manifest in the form of sculpture
- pessimism, and it causes great, unnecessary suffering in businesses
- practicality
* is the dramatic mode at which American playwrights have thus far excelled
- kind of fiction that confines itself to the type of normal life
- only literary mode capable of representing the totality of society
- removal of possibility in light of accepted practice
- second oldest school of philosophy
- standard of modern art
- view that the world exists apart from our perception of it
- what people are used to now
* is, in a sense, the natural or pre-philosophical point of view.
* representation of what the world seems to be in the eyes of the artist at that time.
* subjective metric.
* tends towards collectivism, nominalism to individualism.
Ruman
* Rumen ciliate protozoology.
* Rumen inert fat sources include calcium salts of fatty acids and hydrogenated fats
- fats for lactating dairy cows
Rhinocero
* are large plant eating mammals which are able to reach more than a tonne in weight.
* have thick, protective skin
- sensitive skin
* use their horns to shovel the ground, fight for territory and for defensive purposes.
Ritualistic abuse
* involves the use of rituals and is perpetrated in the name of an ideology.
* is perpetrated under the guise of a multitude of belief systems. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Reproducibility
* defining attribute of empirical research.
* distinguishes science from another human activity called magic.
* is also a seminal factor to excellence in research
- dependability
* is one component of the precision of a measurement or test method
- of the main principles of the scientific method
- reliability
* key aspect of scientific research.
* materials problem.
* refers to how close a group of measurements are to each other.<|endoftext|>Rub
* Most rubs contain paprika, black pepper, ground chile, and garlic powder.
* add flavor and can form a crispy crust on the food.
* are blends of dried herbs and spices that flavor the exterior of meat as it cooks
- dry mixtures, usually made of pulverized herbs or spice powders
- mixtures of herbs and spices that are rubbed directly into meat before it's cooked
- the newest craze in cooking
- visible sign posts made in fall and winter by bucks rubbing their antlers on tree trunks
* combine with the juices drawn from the meat and work like a dry marinade.
* contain a very small amount of sodium.
* is contact
* provide visual cues and scents that inform other deer about the rub maker.
Reproductive strategy
* Reproductive strategies are diverse within the subphylum and include both sexual and asexual cycles
- the behaviours which maximize an individual's fitness
* Some reproductive strategies enhance chances
- infant survival
- require energy
Racial integration
* is one of the components of that diversity.
* raises black performance and lowers white.
Religious life
* follows the Muslim calendar.
* plays a primary role in preserving Jewish traditions and culture.
Reduplication
* is prevalent in Burmese and is used to intensify or weaken adjectives' meanings
- repetition
- syllables
* is the process whereby part or all of the word is repeated
- use of a repeated sound segment in a lexeme
- words
* occurs in all moods and in all verbals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Rhetoric
* comes last, as the use of language and logic in persuasive communication.
* creativity activity when authentic and can bring others to a sense of spirit.
* dehumanizing tool used to gain power.
* facilitates certain types of actions, events, interaction styles, relationships, etc.
* is about effective human thought in the realm of communication interests
- also more directly connected to the manipulation of language
- anatomy
- argument, and argument implies two sides to things, criticism, dissent, and assent
* is at the center of philosophical inquiry
- social theory
- communicating
- concerned with appearance, philosophy is concerned with reality
- essential because it teaches how to communicate, both in writing and in speaking
- in itself a theory of knowledge
- literary studies
* is located in courts of law
- parliaments
- made of words
* is one of the Western world's oldest disciplines
- arts represented by Jupiter
- chief contributors to the interdisciplinary field of composition
- speech that is used to persuade someone
- still the art of power
* is the ancient art of argumentation and discourse
- art and science of how to tell a story effectively to any given audience
* is the art of discovering the available means of persuasion in the given case
- persuading people to bring about the greatest good
- ruling the minds of men
- using language, verbal and written, effectively and persuasively
- or science of using written or spoken words to persuade others
- counterpart of Dialectic
- epitome of the liberal arts degree
- mechanics of discourse
- power of finding the available arguments suited to a given situation
- science of speaking with elegance and persuasion
* is the study of argument, of talk
- how human beings use symbols, usually language, to influence other people
- the various kinds of forms and impact that utterances have
* is used for persuasions
- the masses
- very much in science when analyzing evidence and theories
- workers
* learned technique for making an intended effect on an audience or reader.
* means the power of persuasion, the art of persuasion.
* theory of knowledge for planning in practice.
* word that has come down in the world.
+ Trivium (liberal arts), Rhetoric: Middle Ages :: Liberal arts :: Cultural history
* One way of studying the world is to look at communicating with words. Rhetoric is the mechanics of discourse. Discourse is the process of two or more people communicating about an idea. Young men studied rhetoric in order to learn how to instruct and to persuade.
Realness
* is about earning status through pain
- actuality
* street-wise urban survival technique used by most gay, lesbian and transgender youth.<|endoftext|>Renunciation
* corollary of spiritual maturity and a necessity and act of ripened wisdom.
* develops out of our innate urge to avoid suffering and pain.
* is actually the result of real spiritual emotion
- basically a recognition that all existence is suffering
- considered the goal of life
- rejection
- resignation
* is the essence of spirituality
- priestly honorarium
- step necessary for resurrection to happen - no renunciation, no resurrection
* means renunciation of desire, renunciation of selfishness.
* poor substitute for incarceration.
* status from which one can directly culture internal spiritual life. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Readability
* exists when the content is divided into logical, manageable subsets.
* improves when sentences and paragraphs are relatively short.
* is also an issue when typographic forms change and move over time
- important in business advertising
- as important as content
- concerned with the problem of matching between reader and text
- defined in terms of good page layout and design
- intelligibility
- more to do with the flow, or resistance to flow, of reading text
- only one of many factors known to affect comprehension, but it deal breaker
* is the ease of understanding the style of writing
- measurement of how well the symbol is interpreted
* measure of the ease with which a given passage of text can be read and understood.
* refers to how well the observer can correctly interpret the intended expression.
* very important tool that teachers can use to accelerate learning.
* virtue, fulfilling desire.
Subconsciousness
* can do anything.
* state of mind
Scientific concept
* Some scientific concepts involve live organisms
* are abstract and systematic.
Seismic survey
* collect data about oil- bearing rock formations several thousands of meters deep.
* use low frequency acoustical energy generated by explosives or mechanical means.
* used in oil and gas exploration can damage whales' hearing.
Structural change
* begins with the conversion of each heart.
* have enormous impact on monetary policy.
* is natural in a capitalist economy.
* occurs within the world system also which has impact on women.
* refer to changes from the evolution of the market.
* result when collagen and elastin quantity and quality are reduced.
Supernatural thing
* All supernatural things are ultimately explainable purely in terms of natural things.
* occur that defy scientific understanding.
Stricture
* also develops in women, though much less often.
* are scars that narrow the urethra and obstruct the urinary flow.
* can result from infection, trauma, and congenital malformations.
* is criticism
- mandates
* tight spot somewhere along the urine channel.
* usually occur in the small intestine but can also occur in the large intestine.
Stomata
* are open during the night and closed during the day to decrease water loss.
* originate from highly regulated asymmetric and symmetric cell divisions.<|endoftext|>Satire
* concept that can only be understood by adults.
* general studies course in literature.
* is located in television
- one of the older forms of human comment
- the reaction of the human intellect to the eternal scam
- traditionally the weapon of the powerless against the powerful
* ' form in art or writing which ridicules either a person, government, or an institution, often through the use of humour. Satire can either be in paintings, plays, books, songs, TV or movies. It also is used to stereotype people.
* often points out ironic or bad things that powerful people are doing. Its adjective is 'satirical'
* literary technique that mixes criticism with humor
- used to poke fun at human foolishness
Systemic toxicity
* includes neuropathies, nausea and vomiting, and lethargy.
* occurs from absorption of podophyllum. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Silicone
* Some silicone lubricated condoms actually have less taste than many unlubricated condoms
- silicones can be corrosive when used on aluminum
* also has much less tendency to cause reaction to sensitive skin
- helps reduce scarring
- leak easily, even through microscopic holes in a solar loop
- leave a residue on metals
- tends to leave a greasy residue even after buffing
* are carbon compounds that have a silicon atom bonded to an oxygen by a double bond
- common in containers and medical devices
- greases in which both the base and the oil are synthetic
* are important products of silic' on
- silicon, prepared by hydrolysing a silicon organic chloride
- ingredients widely used in skin care, color cosmetic and hair care applications
- inorganic polymers , that is, there are no carbon atoms in the backbone chain
- often a good choice for low temperature seals
* are organic compounds
- compunds in which some carbon atoms are replaced with silicon
- polymeric synthetic silcon compounds
- relatively expensive and can be attacked by solvents
* are used in many products
- shaving products and personal lubricants
- versatile assembly fluids that are used to seal, cushion, and attach
* based polishes can dry leather out over time and can make leather slippery to sit on.
* can exist in physical forms ranging from low viscosity liquids to solid elastomers
- provide performance with minimal material fatigue
* chemical polymer that has excellent water repellency and a very slippery feel.
* common mineral, and is used in food, beverage and cosmetic industries.
* continues to be used ubiquitously in foods and many other products.
* easily migrates as either a liquid or vapor onto other components.
* exhibit excellent resistance to heat.
* features excellence resistance to ozone, sunlight, and oxidation, and is very color stable.
* great material for dildos and plugs because it feels warm to the touch
* has an advantage in high temperature environments.
* have a very low freezing point, and a very high boiling point
- biological activity
- excellent chemical and electrical resistance
* is also highly resistant to heat after it has cured
- the main ingredient in a medication for infant colic
- very porous to helium
- an artificial material that feels like natural breast tissue
* is an excellent electrical insulator and conducts heat well
- material to use for sealing any gaps or adhering surfaces together
- inert substance and rejection is extremely rare
- chemically inert, flexible, stable, and resistant to weathering and temperature
- closer to the consistency and weight of a natural breast
- cytotoxic and immunogenic
- essential to seal around bathtubs, showers, lavatories, etc
- hard to remove
- light-weight to reduce drag
* is located in contact lenses
- hardware stores
- tubes
- windows
* is made of silicon along with oxygen, carbon and hydrogen
- up of numerous major toxins and known carcinogens
- now six times as expensive as rubber
- preferable to rubber
- relatively expensive, as are silicone-based lubes
* is the least reactive material used for implant construction
- non-stick, hydrophobic, lubricious component
* is used for bonding
- entertainment
- glue
- permanence
- varnish
- whole specimens and thick body and organ slices to obtain a natural look
* is used in intravenous tubing and in shunts for delivering chemotherapy
- the making of rubber and also plastic
- to seal between the glass pieces and the frame
- very similar to a substance used to treat a baby's stomach gas
* make good elastomers because the backbone chain is very flexible.
* offer a wide array of compatibilities with organic oils, waxes and pigments
- heat stability and are unaffected by sterilization
- and is slippery when felt between the fingers
* provide a layer of long-lasting protection with UV and fade resistance
- outstanding resistance to compression set, sunlight, ozone, oxygen, and moisture
* provides a high degree of biocompatibility and is high resistant to encrustation.
* resist bacterial growth and can be molded to a shape that cushions the foot.
* tend to induce stress cracking.
* translucent material that allows for greater detail and flexibility of movement.
* weighs the same as breast tissue and feels and looks more natural.
* zipper and hardware lubricant. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Structural genomic
* includes the genetic mapping, physical mapping and sequencing of entire genomes.
* is only one aspect of what robots can contribute to molecular biology.
* new and rapidly developing field in biology.<|endoftext|>Simplicity
* aims at modesty, reduction, unity of material, and in the organization of function.
* breeds speed breeds the ability to perform a wide range of extremely complicated tasks.
* can encompass the whole world, without being consumed by it.
* desire to be alone with one's self or with another person in like circumstances.
* form of genuineness.
* function of the perceiver as well as the perceived.
* has the power to change minds and change the world.
* is an expression of a change in consciousness
- detachment from everything, including itself
- freedom, lightness, and transparency
- man's highest good and dignity
- often the soul-mate of happiness
- part of country music's longevity
- quality
* is the basic of artistic work
- beauty of a woman
- cornerstone of programming language design
- discipline of common sense
- exact word to describe Assisi
- fourth goal of web design
- idea of getting by with less
- last step of art and the beginning of nature
- name of the game in internet real estate
- secret of seeing things clearly
- sensation of the universe
- shortest distance between two points
- watchword when organizing a Web site
- thus a function of the perceiver as well as the perceived
- what makes the people unique
* is when companies are designed so people can navigate infinite choices
- time is organized for getting stuff done and thinking
* major key in helping to solve complicated problems.
* term often used to describe the Greek way of life.
* word that often comes up in praise of the local cuisine.
Strong quadricep
* are less likely to cramp or fatigue.
* protect the kneecap and the front if the knee joint. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Strategy
* Many strategies exist to increase men's constructive participation in reproductive health.
* Some strategies are used by marine organisms
- protozoan parasites
* Strategies achieve results.
* Strategies affect characteristics
- outcomes
- apply to problems
- are companies
* Strategies are methods and programs to achieve goals and objective
- to achieve goals and objectives
- military science
- norms
- specific actions or activities needed to accomplish goals
* Strategies are the means of changing the current situation
- policies that guide decisions
- things people do to try to prevent a behavior such as substance use among teens
* Strategies are used by companies
- large companies
- successful companies
* Strategies can have consequences
- negative consequences
- carry capacity
- deal with problems
* Strategies depend on ability
- conditions
- status
* Strategies encourage expansion
- population expansion
* Strategies encourage rapid expansion
- ensure survival
* Strategies evolve over time
- years
* Strategies focus on appreciation
- capital appreciation
- likelihood
- follow approaches
* Strategies guide actions
- crucial decisions
* Strategies have advantage
- aspects
- effects
- indirect effects
- limitations
- potential
- properties
- help decisions
- identify numbers
* Strategies include advice
- analyses
- assessments
- bonds
- development
- dietary advice
- includes goals
- increase chances
* Strategies involve components
- exploitation
- implement several different responses
- selections
* Strategies lead to advancement
- medical advancement
- make senses
- observe in mammals
* Strategies promote follicle growth
- production
- rice production
- propose manipulation
- provide frameworks
* Strategies refer to procedures that enable learners to solve specific problems
- the instructional techniques through which teachers can facilitate learning
* Strategies reflect evidence
- factors
* Strategies require cooperation
- information
- knowledge
- show use
* Strategies support goals
- term goals
- take advantage
* Strategies use management techniques
* Strategies use modern management techniques
- utilize knowledge
* Strategies yield dramatic results
* business design concept.
* course of action created to achieve a long-term goal.
* is an abstraction , a construct
- how to gain an advantage in a war involving planning and campaigning
* is key in the game of badminton, and the game requires constant thinking and planning
* is the art of making war on a map
- focus and execution, the goal
- framework for strategic and operational plans
- key concept that gives structure to future choices
- logic or rationale of a business that details both goals and methods of achievement
- planning on paper
- thought and research that supports every solution
- what Generals do in developing broad battle plans for winning a war
* major factor in curling, as important as shooting skill.
* plan of action
- when it refers to an intended or desired pattern of future actions
* set of decisions made.
* single idea that solves more than one problem or creates more than one opportunity.
* skill of continuous improvement and effective corporate leadership.
+ 5000 metres: Running
* Much of the distance's popularity is due to the challenge it gives to both amateurs and professionals. It is a distance race that demands a great deal of endurance as well as speed. Strategies also play a key role, and the combination makes it attractive to many.
+ Chess, Stages of a game
* Chess is an easy game to learn the moves, but a difficult game to master. Strategy is an important part of the game. First of all comes the 'openings', about which a great deal is now known. The best-known move, the King's Pawn opening, is the white player moving his king's pawn on e2 forward two spaces to e4. Black can reply to that move in various ways. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Shanghai
* China-based telecom equipment manufacturer.
* also has Buddhist temples
- the best reputation in China for the art of hairdressing
- is the centre for the Yangtze River Delta Region
* belongs to the North Asia hot monsoon climate, with four distinctive seasons.
* game of strategy, memory, and luck.
* has a relatively long history of using genetic engineering
- subtropical maritime climate, four distinct seasons and moderate rainfall
- varied climate with cold, damp winters and tropical, humid summer
- very large and diversified industrial economy
- an astronomical observatory and many research institutes and learned societies
* is China's biggest port city.
* is China's largest and most cosmopolitan city
- prosperous city
* is China's largest city and is an area of great importance for industry and trade
- the biggest market for IT products in the country
- largest, most modern city
- main center for industry, commerce, foreign trade, science and technology
- most populous city and the largest city proper in the entire world
* is also a paradise for gourmets
- railroad terminal
- an important city for tourism
* is an important hub of communications
- industrial, educational and financial centre
- ancient as far as computer games go
- feminine
- neither cold in winter, nor very hot in summer
* is one of the biggest cities in the world
- greatest cities in the world
- situated on the east coast, upstream from the Pacific Ocean on the Yangtze River
- something people simply get caught up in, like jelly
- sometimes an afterthought
* is the center of economy, finance and trade in China
- chief producer of industrial goods, and a major export base in China as well
- commercial metropolis of the Orient
- economic and commercial center of China
- head office for marcus evans Greater China
- head, entering the gorges is called entering the mouth of the dragon
- industrial center of the largest country in the world
- largest commercial and financial centre in mainland China
* is the largest industrial base in China
- city in China
- last place on Earth that needs economic guidance
* is the most busiest city of China
- famous place shopping in China
- modern and one of the most traditional of Chinese cities
- pearl of the East
* major centre for high-tech industries as well as textiles
- cultural and educational center of China
- port and a center of industry, education and research
* memory game played with mah-jongg tiles or a variation thereof.
* metropolis brimming with energy.
* municipality under the direct jurisdiction of the central government.
* represents the cooking of the East and more particularly the Eastern seaboard of China.
* sits in the Yangtze River delta, which is sediment dumped over millions of years.
* stands for different things to different people.
* is fortified for the first time.
Stagecraft
* Teaches the art of producing sets and props for theatrical productions.
* is concerned with the technical elements of the theater
- craftsmanship
Spatial competence
* emerges gradually over long time periods in interaction with environmental input.
* is central to many disciplines and real-world skills.
Savannas
* are tropical grasslands with widely scattered clumps of low trees.
* exist in places that are warm throughout the year.
* occupy higher sites, namely the alturas, and are maintained by annual burning.
* typically experience a rather prolonged dry season.
Superficiality
* child of consumerism.
* is depth
- equated with appearance
- only skin deep
Surprising
* can involve grab
- heart attacks
- hide
- kisses
- knocks
- laughs
- scares
- screams
- shoutings
- smiles
* causes accidents
- annoyance
- fights
- funnies
- humor
- joys
- laughter
- shockeds
- urine
* is used for birthdays
- scarings
- shocks
- special occasions | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Smut
* also differ in having only two spore stages, teliospores and basidiospores.
* are diseases caused by fungi
- divided into leaf, culm, and head smuts
- members of the Basidiomycetes
- worldwide in distribution and can be of major economic importance
* causes blistering, shredding and dying of stem and leaf tissue.
* develop haustoria and infect a range of angiosperms, gymnosperms, and pteridophytes.
* fungus which produces massive amounts of black spores.
* is carbon atoms that are poorly linked
- funguses
- harmful to the healthy moral development of children
- plant diseases
- promoted by plant injury caused by cultivation, insects, and hail<|endoftext|>Sadism
* arises from a base of perverted love and is the favored tool of fanatics of all kinds.
* involves causing physical or psychological pain or suffering to another person
- gaining pleasure from seeing others undergo discomfort or pain
* is different from minor manifestations of aggression in normative sexual activity
- said to be active in nature, while masochism is said to be passive
- sexual pleasure
* is the logical extension of behavior that arises out of male power
- name given to the perversion in which there is an association of active cruelty
* manifest itself both in individuals and in entire cultures.
Standing
* are lists
- motion
- situations
- status
* still is often the best way to reduce aggression in the dog that is chasing.
Significant change
* can occur in individuals and in society.
* disruption in our expectations about the future. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Spectroscopy
* Covers new developments and research in spectroscopic technology.
* allows astronomers to determine the chemical composition of stars
- study of temperature, velocity, rotation, and composition
* breaks up the sunlight reflected from a satellite into the light's individual colors.
* comprises absorption, emission, or scattering.
* delves into the interaction of light, visible and invisible, with matter.
* gathers information about the composition and motion of astronomical objects.
* helps to explain basic mechanisms and tailor materials for different applications.
* involves measuring the interaction of electromagnetic radiation with chemical species
- the interaction of light with matter
* is also a useful technique
- at the heart of astrophysical inference
- chemical analysises
- different from imaging
* is more than group frequencies and chemical shifts
- obtaining data
- one of the most important tools of the astronomer
- second to photography with regards to importance
* is the analysis of the intensity of light at each wavelength
- basis of most astrophysics and most active research in astronomy
- measurement of the response of a material as a function of frequency
- most powerful tool of observational astronomy
- observation and interpretation of spectra
* is the study of electromagnetic radiation
- something using spectra
- spectra, ie characteristic wavelengths or colours
* is the study of the component wavelenghts of light after they have been dispersed
- interaction of light and matter
- interactions between light energy and matter
- unique frequencies of light that atoms and molecules emit orabsorb
* measures the intensities of light at different wavelengths
- type of chemical bonds which exist in a substance by the light it absorbs
* method that separates a star's light into a bar of several different colors.
* plays an integral part in modern forensic science in the identification of substances.
* qualitative analysis
* reveals chemical composition of stars
- the composition and redshift of the supernova
* scientific measurement technique.
* shows the presence of water ice, which probably covers rocky silicate cores.
* small field.
* uses hundreds of filters.
* versatile technique for infrared sampling.
* very useful technique for chemists.
* vital tool for astronomers and provides a wealth of information.
* way of essentially getting living chemistry.
+ Organic chemistry, Spectroscopy: Chemistry
* Spectroscopy is the study of the interactions between light energy and matter. We are able to see colors because of energy absorption by organic and inorganic compounds. When a plant undergoes photosynthesis, it traps energy from the sun, and this is an example of an interaction between energy and organic compounds.
Sharksucker
* are known to follow divers and attack to divers' legs.
* have no known predators.<|endoftext|>Sporulation
* begins with a reorganisation of the cell cycle.
* common mode of mold dispersion.
* develops on the necrotic areas under humid conditions.
* involves chromosome distribution and spore morphogenesis.
* is complex and differs widely among the fungi
- reduced somewhat by cooler temperatures
- reproduction
- the formation of spores that occurs in bread mold, mushrooms, mosses, and ferns
* occurs during cool, moist weather
- from lesions whether they are on leaflets or on stems
- on the underside of leaves and appears as brown to gray
- throughout the year, peaking during fall and winter
* proceeds when conditions are no longer favorable for growth.
* starts at the embryo end and moves along the suture of the grain. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sweat
* Many sweats start with fasting.
* also helps to remove waste from the body
- produces odour
* are a ritual of purification, of spiritual renewal, and of healing.
* body coolant, plain and simple.
* can actually exacerbate acne by mixing with sebum and clogging pores.
* consists of water, salt, and other chemicals produced and excreted from the body.
* consists primarily of water and some electrolytes, specifically sodium and chloride ions
- with small quantities of minerals like sodium
* contains far more water than electrolytes, so replacing water is most important
- which many sports drinks contain
- mainly water
- salts that can change colors and damage fabrics, especially silk
- waste products
- water and salts
- water, sodium, chloride, magnesium and other minerals
* contributes to body odor when it is metabolized by beneficial bacteria on the skin.
* cools the body and prevents internal heat from getting too high
- by evaporation, which removes heat from the body surface
* cools the body quickly during cold weather and wind evaporates it faster
- weather running
* evaporates off of the skin to cool the body down.
* good indicator of exercise intensity.
* helps mosquitoes choose their victims.
* hypotonic solution of sodium chloride.
* includes both respiratory and skin loss.
* intensifies the odors to annoying or even asthma-inducing levels.
* is also a common source of pheromones
- capable of drips
* is composed mainly of water, with a small amount of sodium
- of salt, water and a few body wastes
- comprised mainly of water and sodium and chloride ions
- condensation
- critical so that evaporation cools the horse
- hard on leather
- located in beds
* is made of salt and water
- up mostly of water but also contains minerals, urea, lactic acid, ammonia and sugar
* is mostly water , but it also contains some salts
- with small amounts of salts and amino acids
- only a perfume when fresh, free-flowing
- produced and released in warm conditions
* is produced in apocrine sweat glands in the same way
- the sweat glands
- to cool the skin down
* is released from sweat glands beneath the skin, and as it evaporates, the skin is cooled
- through pores in the skin
- rich in electrolytes
- saline solutions
- salty and found on tools and oars
- secretion
- simply the body s cooling system, much like a home or car air-conditioning system
- singles
* is the catalyst
- cologne of accomplishment
- lubricant of success
- result of excessive physical and emotional exertion
- smell every sportsman loves to have
- water, salt, some urea
- wicked and evaporates away from the skin
* keeps our bodies from over-heating.
* literally becomes the water of life.
* migrates to the outside of the fabric, which keeps the inside of the shirt dry.
* mixture of water, sodium, and potassium.
* needs energy to turn from a liquid into a gas and evaporate.
* occur when the fever is breaking.
* problem because it becomes ice in a soldier's gloves and socks.
* produced from the rest of the body is made by different glands - called eccrine glands.
* produces lactic acid, which at close range smells like fresh-baked bread to a hungry mosquito.
* safeguard against some kinds of bacteria, and carelessness.
* spontaneously drips from an individual's hands when hyperhidrosis is severe.
* usually generates bacteria.
* washes microorganisms from the pores and skin surface.
+ Sweat, How sweat is made: Integumentary system
* Sweat is produced in apocrine sweat glands in the same way. However, the sweat from apocrine glands also contains proteins and fatty acids, which make it thicker and give it a milkier or yellowish color. This is why underarm stains in clothing appear yellowish. Sweat itself has no odor, but when bacteria on the skin and hair metabolize the proteins and fatty acids, they produce an unpleasant odor. This is why deodorants and anti-perspirants are applied to the underarms instead of the whole body.
+ Thermoregulation, Endotherms, Humans: Physiology :: Zoology
* The human body has automatic responses to help regulate temperature. This increases blood flow to the surface of the skin where its heat can more easily radiate away. This process is called vasodilation. Sweat glands also produce greater amounts of sweat. This liquid is secreted onto the surface of the skin. Sweat needs energy to turn from a liquid into a gas and evaporate. This energy is called the latent heat of vaporisation. The body supplies this heat and so it cools down as the sweat evaporates.
* Sweat' is a liquid that is made by the skin when the body is hot. Sweat is made in sweat glands under the surface of the skin, and it comes out of tiny holes in the skin called pores. Sweat is mostly water, but it also contains some salts. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Salience
* Latin derivative meaning in front of the battle lines.
* concept that recognizes the most 'eye-catching' image.
* is prominence.
* means information that stands out and attracts the observer's attention.
* sales and marketing consulting firm.
Solar heating
* can make slow-flowing creeks several degrees warmer than the rivers they empty into.
* is ideal for swimming pools
- reversible
- stable in price
* requires almost no energy transformation, so it has a very high efficiency.
* sets up convection currents, and thus is the source of the energy of moving air.
* uses panels to collect energy from the sun and convert it into heat.
* varies with time and with the reflectance of the surface.
Salivary flow
* decreases in all older people.
* is decreased due to destruction of salivary glands
- during night time and during sleep
Supplication
* is prayer
* special privilege of prayer to meet special needs.<|endoftext|>Spontaneity
* characteristic feature of Korean traditional music.
* comes by listening carefully to pick up sounds and words of agreement or disagreement.
* direct result of a teacher s level of comfort in front of a class.
* happens when work becomes a game.
* is an adequate response to a new situation or a novel response to an old situation
- essential to group creativity
- perhaps the unexpected and, most often, effective level in creativity
- quality
- related to an increase in randomness
- something that can occur at any time
* is the ability to rise creatively to any situation
- actor's self permission to freely follow the unexpected impulse
- key to a fulfilling life
- mind moved naturally, or an intellectual self-determining movement of the soul
- spice of life
* means open and honest communication.
* modern fetish of a dangerous kind.
* refers to responding from a natural feeling from within.
Saloon
* are located in cities
- dodge cities
- far wests
- towns
- wild wests
- part of pubs
- places of civilization dedicated to playing to the wildness of masculine nature
* are used for beers
- cowboys
- drinking
- fighting
- playing cards
* have swinging doors.
* includes bases
- ceilings
- doorways
- floors
- room light
- sections
- walls<|endoftext|>Speculation
* Many speculations exist about the origin and composition of dark matter.
* is one of the market roles in western financial markets. The others are hedging, long term investing and arbitrage. Speculators do not plan to keep an asset for a long time.
* comes when popular imagination settles on something new in the field of commerce.
* form of gambling, and one is sure to lose as one indulges in it.
* has the same economic and social effects on society as robbery.
* is hypothesises
- investments
- sources or causes for the spread of false doctrines
- when money goes into existing assets instead of new assets
* serves a very important role in the market economy
- an honorable function in capital markets and is regulated in a variety of ways | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits