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Suction
* allows the conservator to control the amount of water used.
* also function of hose length.
* big part of the feeding process for the walrus.
* draws against Suction and Pressure pushes against Pressure
- greater density toward it causing mass and solidification of matter
- into the body and Pressure squeezes out of the body
* has an expanding movement and Pressure has a contracting movement.
* is applied to draw a small number of eggs into the tube
- created by the effects of centrifugal force acting upon the spinning air within the fan
- pressure
- produced by ventral movement of the throat
- stimuli to extend diaphragm
* is the attractive force that pulls together, composes and expands
- female of movement and pressure is the male of movement
- negative intraoral pressure generated to draw milk into the mouth
* is used to remove the pregnancy from the uterus
- secure the heart to the retractor and immobilize the vessel
* pulls blood into the penis, producing an erection.
* pump quickly and safely removes venom from bites and stings.
* takes place due to the contraction and expansion of a sac in the head.
* traps with light as the attractant are available to collect mosquitoes.
Successful rehabilitation
* condition of continued employment.
* psychological as well as a physical state.
Sharpe
* is the tight end with the loose lips.
* ratio A measure of risk-adjusted return.
Systematic research
* Some systematic research involves compiling and manipulating very large computer databases.
* stresses phylogenetic analyses of groups participating in coevolving systems.<|endoftext|>SAMe
* contains a compound that all living cells produce.
* distributes the methyl groups to DNA, proteins, neurotransmitters, fats and much more.
* facilitates enzymatic activity throughout the body by enhancing DNA re-methylation.
* helps to form proteoglycans, which are used to renew the matrix of cartilage.
* is essential for the regeneration of neuron axons following injury
- present in every cell of the body
* occurs in every living cell and is used in the body in several biological reactions.
* protects the liver from the damaging effects of drugs and alcohol.
Scientific visualization
* is an important tool for environmental research
- the compute-intensive visualization performed to evaluate data
- used across all disciplines to interpret large, complex data sets
* sparks innovation at the molecular level.
* uses computer graphics tools, but has a different aim.
Sacred geometry
* describes the self-organizing forces that shape and form the world.
* is older than Pythagoras, and common to many esoteric and spiritual practices
- prevalent in the arrangement of the signs
* is the key that unlocks all of the world's art, science, and architecture
- study of how the universe was constructed through number and form
Strong atheism
* is the certain belief that no god exists.
+ Atheism, Defining Atheism, "Weak" and "strong" atheism: Religion :: Philosophy :: Society :: Lifestyles
* Strong atheism is the certain belief that no god exists. Weak atheism is all other forms of not believing in a god or gods. According to this idea, anyone who does not believe in a god or gods is either a weak or a strong atheist.
Specular lighting
* is better suited to revealing textures on broad surfaces.
* makes the surface appear shiny.
Silique
* become tan and papery as they mature and contain shiny black seeds in a row.
* grow on short, rugged stalks and radiate out from the stem.
Slowness
* failure of speed rather a failure of ability.
* is books
- knowledge
- paces
* refers to dynamics, meandering to space, and walking to actions. | {
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} |
Sleeping
* can involve dreaming
- talking
* causes a desire to dreams
- death
- deeper breathing
- energy
- erections
- nightmares
- refreshment
- rejuvenation
- relaxation
- rests
- wasted time
* is located in beds
- part of daily routine
- sleep
* is used for babies
- resting
- wasting time
Signing
* accelerates a child's understanding of the concepts of language.
* are handwriting.
* helps children remember words.
* is associated overwhelmingly with deaf people.
Systemic change
* demands an interconnectedness between one change and others.
* involves all the parts of the system.
* occurs when countless small changes coalesce.
* requires learning new skills and healthy practices that can be sustained over time
- systems thinking
Studying
* scientific breakthroughs.
* are capable of prepare students.
* are used for contemplation
- reflection
- stupid people
* cause better grades
- good grades
- headaches
- increasing knowledge
- inspiration
- intelligence
Syncrometer testing
* makes it possible to know exactly which toxins cause the patient s cancer.
* shows it kills most pathogens immediately.
Silent stroke
* are strokes in which the effects are too subtle to be noticed when they occurred.
* cause tiny spots of dead cells inside the brain.
* occur in a good portion of the population
- the small blood vessels in the brain
- when smaller blood vessels in the brain are blocked or rupture
Salting
* improves the flavor, texture, and appearance of cheese.
* is seasoning.
* plays an important role in rind formation.
Steelhead fishing
* Much steelhead fishing occurs for fish that are visible on spawning gravel.
* great way to fill the early season gap between ice fishing and open- water.
* is done in cold weather in early spring, late fall and winter.
Simple syndactyly
* fusion of only the soft tissue components of two digits.
* involves only the skin and other soft tissues. | {
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} |
Survival
* Most survival depends on change environmental conditions
- mothers
- temperature
- drives population growth
- increases fitnesses
* Some survival depends on genetics
- homeostasis
- reproductive success
* affects performance.
* can occur if fire affects only part of an area or where fires are of low intensity.
* changes over periods.
* contributes to growth
* depend on type of virus and condition of disease.
* depends on ability
- approaches
- availability
- characteristics
- decisions
- factors
- how quickly they learn to adapt
- maintenance
- many factors
- production
- protection
- regions
- severity
* depends on the animals that they milk, butcher, and barter
- stage of breast cancer at the time of diagnosis
* discipline comprised by techniques and knowledge that comes from various sources.
* drives growth
* follows preparation.
* has consequences
- environmental impact
* includes human intrusion
- the survival of our values and family root systems
- inclusive fitnesses
* involves a sexual process called conjugation.
* is about coping, living after, going on
- animation
- based on an individuals understanding of the environment
- continuance
- definitely a major contributor to longevity
- desire and desire is suffering
- different from an act of greed
- directly related to the extent of the disease at the time of diagnosis
- existence after endurance
- fun
- greatest on plants having a nitrogen deficiency
- how most plants and animals thrive
- important exactly insofar as it contributes to reproduction
- in being part of the herd
* is life in slow motion
- reduced to economic imperatives
- natural processes
- necessary in order to survive
- now an issue between the human race and itself
- of the fittest society, since no individual human is fit to survive
- percent of smolts that survive and return as adults
- related to renal and pulmonary function
* is something that is achieved by creating the circumstances that are needed
- different to everyone and everything
* is stratified by disease stage
- survival to the plants
* is the ability to remain alive, often under conditions that have the potential to kill
- byproduct of productivity
- continuance of individual and species life
- strongest human instinct
- time from diagnosis to death
- to live, to live means hope
* leads to development.
* matter of knowledge and awareness.
* means being free to choose to survive
- competing for food and space, especially where both are scarce
- living or continuing longer than another person or thing
- survival of the species
* natural reaction known as staying alive.
* privilege which entails obligations.
* receives attention
- little attention
* recurrent theme in the lives of many young people today.
* requires behavior
- competitive behavior
- movement
* results in insect pressure
- lower pressure
* skill that human interference can compromise.
* word that can have many different meanings to many different people.
* worldwide organisation supporting tribal peoples.
Stickiness
* increases the attractiveness of the stock.
* is how long a visitor stays before they click on
- viscosity
* measure of the amount of time a user spends at a site.
* measures the amount of time that a user stays on a site.
* revolves around people and communities revolve around people with similar interests.
* term used to describe how long someone spends on the site.
Simultaneous contrast
* can occur with color or grayscale images.
* is the term that describes the effect. | {
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} |
Sentiment
* are powerful forces in motivating human behavior.
* based cohesion group where the members are tied to one another by their feelings.
* feeling disconnected from relationship.
* is feelings.
* is the foundation of all thought, it is the motive force behind thought
- poetry of the imagination
- virtue of ideas, and principle the virtue of action
* play a large part in human life.
Symmetric encryption
* is used for communication between browser and server.
* uses a private key for both encoding and decoding a message
- single key by both parties to encrypt and decrypt secure messages
- symmetric key
- one key to both encrypt and decrypt a message<|endoftext|>Shielding
* are protection
- shields
* can be by concrete, steel or other dense material, cooling by air or water
- direct the light to where it is needed
* involves the use of materials of high permeability.
* is obtained from a gas or gas mixture
- decomposition of the electrode covering
- particularly important for housings of computers, copiers, and other business machines
- provided by an inert gas,typically Argon, Helium, or a mix gas
- used to reduce radiation levels
* means surrounding of a cable by a metal foil one side of which is grounded.
* occurs when incident radiation is either reflected or absorbed by a material.
* provides a means to reflect or absorb electric fields that are present around cables.
* refers to fencing or other man-made barriers to conceal a facility from public view
- insulation around the voice coil and magnet on the speaker cones
* requires dense materials such as lead.
Systematic desensitization
* behavioral technique used to treat phobias.
* is also a technique used to treat auditory hallucinations
- most effective for the treatment of phobias
- one highly effective and commonly used technique for reducing fears
- psychotherapy
- used to help people overcome fears or anxieties
Stucco
* becomes dirty and oxidizes as it ages.
* cement based finish material and is available in standard colors.
* creates a great deal of strength to resist wind loads.
* is more durable than earthen plasters on exterior walls
- porous, and moisture passes directly through
- the most common building material used and is generally painted white or a light color
* plaster made of dehydrated lime, powdered marble, and glue constructed on a wire mesh.
Structural adaptation
* are adaptations that have to do with the animal's physical features.
* encompass the physical features that help earthworms to survive.
* is physical features of an organism.
Scandal
* gives cause or reason for another to sin, i.e., being an occasion for wrong doing.
* grave offense if by deed or omission another is deliberately led into a grave offense.
* is albums.
* is an attitude or behavior that leads another to do evil
- which leads another to do evil
- gossip
- sometimes the price of virtuous action
* is the serious suggestion that evil is attractive or per missible
- is attractive or permissible
- trouble
Stole
* are worn of differ- ent colors, according to the ecclesiastical season.
* is scarfs.
Sylph
* are loners, content to soar the skies with the eagles
- male and female, have many human characteristics, and are mortal, but have no soul
* often assume human form but only for short periods of time.
Specular microscopy
* can visualize the endothelial cells to help determine their health.
* valuable tool to enhance the success of corneal transplant surgery.
Scurvy
* is different because though starting in the mouth it extends to the intestines
- diseases
- malnutrition
* is rare in Occident
- the United States
- uncommon in the neonatal period
* occurs most commonly in young, rapidly growing young animals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Several thing
* can affect how well mitochondria work
- cause pecans to shed early
* can happen when the blood vessels are blocked
- vitreous separates from the retina
- occur when someone is bitten by a venomous snake
+ Dengue fever, Likelihood: Diseases spread by insects :: Diseases caused by viruses
* Dengue is becoming much more common around the world. Several things are thought to be causing the increase in dengue. More people are living in cities. Global warming is also thought to play a part in the increase in dengue.
Slow change
* can lead to permanent change.
* give living things time to adapt by the process of evolution over many generations.<|endoftext|>Saturation
* a. state of disequilibrium.
* affects the color and workability of the glass.
* can occur at very low temperature.
* characteristic almost exclusively found among the White non-Hispanic population
- indicating the vibrancy or intensity of a hue
* color function just as intensity was above.
* controls the color intensity
- saturation of color for video playback
* decreases if the band of wavelengths in a color is increased.
* determines the purity of the color combinations.
* indicates the degree to which the hue differs from a neutral gray.
* is an indication relating to the richness or vibrancy of the color
- inference method for tautology-checking used in industrial practice
- conditions
- diffusion
- filling
* is how bright or neutral one is
- much of the color is present
- independent of value and hue
- related to how much white content is in the stimulus
- required for the formation of clouds and precipitation
* is the brightness or vividness
- depth or intensity of colorlight red as opposed to dark red
- dominance of a single hue
- intensity of a color
- key to radio advertising
- limit of solubility
- measurement of color intensity
- natural Power-on state
- overall amount of color being applied
* is the purity of color
- the color, or how much the color is diluted by white
- result of nonlinear behavior which depends on the count rate
- soil water content when all pores are filled with water
- strength of the color
- typical in the spring when rain and snowmelt occurs
- where the amount of water condensing is equal to the amount of water evaporating
* means that the voids between soil particles are full of water.
* measure of color purity
- how much of the color is there, as opposed to just being a shade of grey
- the degree of pureness or movement away from gray
* move across the radius of the circle.
* problem with our noses.
* refers to how little the color is diluted by white
* refers to the amount of gray
- degree of hue in a color
- number of hydrogen atoms attached to the fat molecule
- richness or the intensity of a color
* represents the point where increasing vapor density results in condensation.
* simply has to do with how much hydrogen a fat contains.
* specifies the amount of white or gray in the color.
* stands for the strength of the hue component. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sulfate
* All sulfates are soluble except calcium sulfate and barium sulfate.
* Many sulfates are insoluble.
* Most sulfates are soluble
- originate from the oxidation of sulfate ores such as gypsum, anhydrite and pyrite
* act as oxygen sources for sulfate-reducing bacteria.
* also combine with precipitation to form acid rain
- contribute to local pollution and acid rain
* are a salt of sulfuric acid
- also responsible for the foaming effect of shampoos
- available in most waters due to outside contamination
- common in smog
- generally the largest contributor in the East and West
- mineral salts containing sulfur
- naturally present, at safe levels, in many foods
- odorless and tasteless
- slightly lower during cold weather
* can contribute to an undesirable taste in water
- make cleaning clothes difficult
- scatter the sun's light before it reaches the earth's surface
* cause a cooling of the atmosphere
- diarrhea in humans
* causes diarrhea in un-acclimated people, primarily travelers and newborns.
* come from natural salt deposits with various minerals.
* commonly occur in sedimentary deposits or as secondary minerals in ore veins.
* dissolve in cloud droplets and are efficiently removed by wet deposition.
* effect the suffatation of proteoglycans.
* form where oxygen is abundant, usually near the surface of the Earth.
* is chemical compounds
- common in seawater
- very soluble in water and leaches easily - especially in sandy soil
- widely present in natural waters in different concentrations
* means that the glucosamine is attached to a sulfur and oxygen atoms.
* negative ion and easily leaches in soils.
* occurs naturally in drinking waters, and at low levels has no known adverse effects
- soil and is also found in surface after as result of acid rain
* often come from the dissolving of minerals, such as gypsum and anhydrite.
* phosphate mimic.
* reducing bacteria and iron bacteria can co-exist in the same environment.
* strip away natural oils as well as hair dye.
* very common natural component of the Earth's environment.<|endoftext|>Similar adaptation
* are found in cetaceans like dolphins
- pinnipeds like seals
+ Dolphin, Sleep: Toothed whales
* Lyamin 'et al' 2004. There is danger from sharks. Gill, Victoria 2012. The details vary in different species or groups. Predator detection is the obvious function of this behaviour. Similar adaptations are found in pinnipeds like seals.
+ Pinniped, Sleep
* Lyamin 'et al' 2004. They may also sleep on land. In both environments, there is danger. Gill, Victoria 2012. The details vary in different species or group. Similar adaptations are found in cetaceans like dolphins. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sovereignty
* also serves to justify restrictive immigration policies in nations in the world system.
* can also be absolute or non-absolute.
* comes from the feudal system of medieval Europe where power flowed up pyramid-style.
* concept fundamental to our freedom
- that is either dying or undergoing radical transformation
* delegation from the people to the government of the right to govern.
* geographical matter.
* has various meanings in theology also.
* implies authority, and authority is the right to rule.
* is an abstract notion that makes people's feelings very strong
- ideological concept without geographical barriers
- inherent characteristic of any government
- internationally recognized concept
- indeed the key principle of the current state system
- of positive significance as a distinguishing feature of the nation-state
- often a hard concept for people to grasp
- really a feudal or imperial concept
- seen sometimes as individual, sometimes as group
- something nations are willing sell only to other nations
* is the defining attribute of a state
- embodiment of a sense of national unity
- honor of a nation
- necessary predicate of self-government
* means each tribe has the right to choose what it wants to do
- self-determination as a separate distinct governmental entity
- supremacy of authority to rule
- that the global system is based on a requirement for unanimous consensus
* particularly sensitive issue in the developing world.
* provides the theoretical foundation for the concept of the state.
* refers to the absolute power to govern
- sanctity of international borders
* resides exclusively in the people
- in the people from whom all state authority is derived
* suggests that a national government has a right to prevent secession.
* word that is often used wrongly.
+ Sovereign state, What a sovereign state is
* Sovereignty is a word that is often used wrongly. Lassa Oppenheim said that there is no idea whose meaning is more than sovereignty. No one argues the fact that from the time the idea of sovereignty was first used in political science until now, there has never been one meaning that everyone agreed on.<|endoftext|>Scholarship
* Some scholarships are memorials for people who have made contributions to their profession.
* also play a role in how a student's performance is measured.
* are a form of financial aid helping students to pay for their college tuition
- an investment in a student's future
- monetary awards for academic excellence or community service
- one means by which the university recognizes high achievement
- probably the most popular form of paying for college
* becomes spiritual when it serves the needs of others.
* commitment to learning.
* encompasses the activities of discovery, integration, application, and teaching.
* form of work like any other.
* is aid
- also an integral part of Greek life
- both the grasp of a realm of knowledge and a habit of mind
- creative intellectual work that is communicated and validated
- determined by academic average and pride in the pursuit of knowledge
- fundamental to the well-being of college teachers
- in form of hourly wages
- one of the most important aspects of college life
- pacts
* is the broader term which reflects inquiry into one's field
- organisation and distillation of existing knowledge
- wealth of the community
- thus the science of debugging cognitive illusions from reasoning | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Solder
* Most solder contains a rosin based flux, which, when heated, produces a substance called colophony
- is an alloy of lead and tin
* Some solders have a flux core , where the flux is inside the solder
- core, where the flux is inside the solder.
* Many times when a metal is being soldered, it oxidizes, making a layer of metal oxide that does not hold solder. Flux is added to react with the metal oxide and turn it back into the metal again. That helps the solder connect to the metal. Rosin common flux. Some electronics makers use fluxes that can be washed away with water. Some solders have a flux core, where the flux is inside the solder
* account for the largest use of tin in the United States.
* contain tin, lead, antimony, arsenic, cadmium, silver and zinc.
* contains a high percentage of lead.
* is alloy
* melt at a lower temperature than the metals to be joined.
* metal alloy consisting of distinct percentages of two or more metals.
Stasis dermatitis
* affects people with varicose veins.
* can also result in a rash that can break down into sores known as stasis ulcers.
* is most apt to affect the inner side of the calf
- often a chronic condition
* rash of the lower legs which is due to poor return of blood to the heart.<|endoftext|>Silken tofu
* creamy product and can be used as a replacement for sour cream in many dip recipes
- that good replacement for sour cream in many dip recipes
* custard-like product that works well in blended or pureed dishes.
* has a custard-like texture
- higher water content, so it is softer and smoother than regular tofu
- much finer consistency than other forms of tofu
* is made a little differently, with unstrained soymilk mixed with a natural coagulant
- soft and creamy and is used in dips and desserts
- sold at chilled and ambient temperatures in small board packages
- used in soups and salads, and for shakes and deserts
* liquidy version of tofu. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Spirituality
* affects all of the senses and frequently is difficult to describe in words.
* aims at unfolding the real nature of spirit or self.
* also offers a way to die when there's nothing else to live for.
* appears to support emotional development.
* begins at home - in every day life.
* broad concept that encompasses values, meaning and purpose.
* can help bring community into economics
- serve as a resource of strength
- take many forms
* causes compassion, sharing, caring, sacrifice and service to arise spontaneously.
* comes from people
- within the individual person
- in many forms, one supposes
* concerns itself with the question of how to lead a deeply committed Christian life.
* encompasses a variety of phenomena, including experiences, beliefs, and practices.
* exists from birth for the individual and is incorporated into everyday life
- within our hearts
* extends beyond the physical, material and self to a state called transcendence.
* force that drives the human desire for freedom and the pursuit of higher ideals.
* fundamental, continuous part of our lives.
* gives families a sense of belonging to and being loved by a higher being
- meaning and direction to our lives
- shape and direction to our lives
* helps one to trust and let go of fear
- the chronically ill people cope with the medical challenges of their condition
* impels one to conquer difficulties and acquire more and more strength.
* implies life.
* includes one s capacity for creativity, growth, and the development of a value system.
* involves motivation.
* is about becoming a whole new person forever
- conscious of that relationship
- caring and sharing
- creativity and powerlessness
- growing closer to whatever god is
- meaning and connectedness
- seeing other worlds, the realm of imagination
- strengthening every part of our lives
- the way of the monkey and the way of the kitten
- wholeness and completion
- alive in and personal to each soul
* is all about generosity
- relationships
- the light, and meditation is about searching for the light
* is also a strong part of their beliefs in success
- part of nature
- among the oldest, slipperiest, most subjective and most profound of human phenomena
* is an attitude that reveals life's meaning through everyday experience
- emotion a feeling
- experience of the holy
- important dimension that often grows more important as people age
- inately human trait
- individual journey
- inner experience on earth indirectly
* is an integral aspect of all human life
- part of everyone's make-up
- intimate experience, very close, very personal
- ongoing process that gets better with time
- undeniable part of human experience
- anathema to materialism
- as much part of our humanity as our sexuality
* is at the center of all aspects of living
- core of all religions
- basis and motivation for political activism
- central to many patients' lives
- communication in and through the transcendental guarantee of the spirit
- confined to the home, the church, or the community
- consciousness of infinite interrelatedness
- defined by different people in different ways
- dependant on spiritual accountability
- divorced from public life
- enhanced with a healthy body and strong mind
* is experienced in the midst of movement, through the celebration of life
- wrestling
- expression of the soul and includes art, literature, poetry, music and meditation
- for people who have already been there
* is for people who have been there already
- generosity of heart
- important to understanding a culture's values
- intricately interwoven into all aspects of Indian culture
- introversion
- located in churchs
- measured by experiences
- more important than mentality
- much more difficult to define than religion
- neither the privilege of the poor nor the luxury of the rich
- nothing that happens far away somewhere, unrelated with everyday life
* is one of the foundation faculties of the mind
- healthiest protective factors in mental health
- most important determinants of organization performance
- one's connection to life and the totality of all things
- our way of reconnecting to the real
* is part and parcel of being a human being
- of the essence of humanity
- perhaps the most important category related to religion today
- simply the way getting connected online translates into new kinds of community life
- something special unto itself that only needs postive ways and thoughts
* is something that a person is born with
- grows over time based on experience
- sought in success, achievement and works
- structured around subjective experiences with little regard for the Scriptures
* is the base from which grows self-esteem, values, morals, and a sense of belonging
- belief and acceptance of a power or energy beyond our physical selves
- burgeoning of divinity within the individual
- core of Indian art
- drawing out and infusion of spirit in one s life
- enemy of the capital-centered economy
- environment for wholeness
- essence of life that permeates all matter
- foundation of all progress
* is the fundamental essence of any valid religious and philosophical system
- part of any valid religious and philosophical system
* is the highest form of politics among indigenous people
* is the key to keeping 'warmed up' for the fight against sin, the world and the devil
- warmed up for the fight against sin, the world and the devil
- trust and respect
- most natural expression in the world
- oldest known spirituality on the planet
- path of the heart
- perfect health of the soul
* is the purity of our positive energy
- truth
- realm of self-victory
- source of all gifts
- sum total of the attitudes and actions that define our life of faith
- time-honored method for dealing with life s troublesome nature
- using of that spirit to enliven others
- way of the lover
- willingness to forgive seventy times seven
- their virtue to share
- there to gain control over the five senses
- understood by the heart
- without reference to religion
* is, perhaps, has always been, more central to human existence than religion.
* knowing by experience that there is an invisible presence that guides our lives.
* leads to that which is real and away from that which is unreal and unimportant.
* level of consciousness that transcends rationality.
* means a variety of things and covers a multitude of practices and ideas
- freedom from physical limitations
- prayer
- striving to feel connected to the rest of the world
* much used word in our lives.
* necessary dimension of being human.
* neglected area of study and research in the treatment of addictions.
* part of sexuality, as are culture and values.
* personal challenge to individuals
- thing, and it means something different to everyone
* personnal matter.
* plays an important role in maintaining physical health.
* provides healing, hope and sustenance.
* reaffirms the magic of life for children.
* recognizes that there is something sacred at the core of all existence.
* refers to each individual's beliefs about, and experience of, the meaning of life
- the intensely personal, devotional, life transforming aspects of religion
* religious category.
* science that deals with the spirit.
* seeks to bring head and heart together.
* seems more to do with experiences or feelings
- to be a basic human good essential for human flourishing
* spontaneous alchemy that occurs when all of the instincts are working together.
* starts with reality.
* state of connectedness to all life, honouring diversity in unity
- mind and a way of living one's life
* stems from the mind of a person.
* strong basis for all indigenous societies.
* suggests the forces that guide an individual.
* term used to define the relationship between life and spirit.
* therefore aims to develop the highest type of physical and mental things.
* thus has a direct impact on our physical and psychological well-being.
* transcends illness and health.
* transcends the individual and can be a common bond among people
- physical and material world
* transpersonal quality, it is beyond the ego and obsession with the self.
* truly centers in the mind.
* vision of perfection, faith, gratitude, love, surrender, humility, and grace.
* way of connecting
- life, a life of continuous prayer
- living in depth
* word laden with almost infinite levels of meaning
- that often gets misused | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sepsis
* affects twice as many boys as girls.
* are respiratory failure.
* can be a life-threatening situation, especially in people with a weakened immune systems
- cause high fever, severe lung injury and death
- lead to shock or multi-organ failure, which can rapidly lead to death
- occur when a person has a severe infection
* commonly occurs in injecting drug users.
* depresses the metabolic oxygen reserve of the coronary circulation in mature sheep.
* happens when the bacterium enters the blood and make it form tiny clots.
* increases brain intracellular free calcium in brain
- contraction-related generation of reactive oxygen species in the diaphragm
- endocytosis of endotoxin by hepatocytes
- lung glutamine synthetase expression in the tumor-bearing host
- oxidatively damaged proteins in skeletal muscle
* is among the leading causes of death in intensive care units
- an infection in the bloodstream
- caused by bacterial infection that can originate anywhere in the body
- characterized by disturbed microcirculation
- diseases
- the most common cause of death, followed by pulmonary complications
- treated with antibiotics
- very serious, and the risk of death is high
* jeopardizes the effectiveness of adjuvant chemotherapy.
* just presents in many ways in children.
* kills half a million people each year.
* major cause of death in renal failure.
* medical emergency requiring swift and decisive intervention.
* protects the heart of alcoholic rats from ischemia-reperfusion injury.
* refers to a systemic response to infection anywhere in the body.
* remains a major cause of potentially preventable mortality.
* serious inflammatory condition, caused by the body over-reacting to infection.
+ Bubonic plague, Different kinds of the same disease, Septicemic plague: Diseases caused by bacteria :: Pulmonology
Slovene
* are an industrious and educated people
- humans
* is grammatically complex, with lots of cases, genders and tenses.<|endoftext|>Sincerity
* counts when it is sincerity in the truth, the truth of Holy Scripture.
* human quality that can be admired but one can be sincerely wrong.
* is associated with the pure striving of the heart
- honesty of mind or intention
- most people's natural state, the one in which they feel comfortable
- one - sincerity to one's own true nature
- only the consciousness and analysis of the motives of all life's actions
- something people sense
* is the single virtue that binds divinity and man in one
- virtue that makes of truth a value and submits to it
- truthfulness<|endoftext|>Streptomyce
* are of special interest for two reasons
- round, chalky colonies
* exist in close association with plant roots, including mycorrhizae.
* form chains of aerial spores at the ends of filaments.
* griseus Responsible for the earthy odour of soil
- can have one linear chromosome
* grisieus produces an important anti-tubercular drug, streptomycin.
* make a wide variety of useful antibiotics, including streptomycin.
* produces streptomycin and other antibiotics.
* scabies causes a serious disease
- scab disease on a variety of underground vegetables
* species minitests.
* thermogriseus sp.
Sabotage
* can also work on a physical level.
* is destruction
- the damaging or impeding of the academic work of another student
* security hazard during all levels of conflict. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sadness
* Some sadness is part of the life on earth.
* allows internal grief to come out.
* can lead into hopelessness, into despair.
* causes a desire to cries.
* dead plant in the cold winter snow.
* is connected with the world of destruction
- due to the opposite, namely, contraction and concentration of the animal spirit
- emotion
- essential to joy
- feelings
- in the heart of every man, woman and child
- just as important as happiness
- located in funerals
- one ingredient in the sickening stew of depression
* is part of life
- the human experience
- perhaps the most common feeling found in grief
- slower to arise and resolve than some other emotions
* is the feeling of being depleted and experiencing loss
- key stage of the grief process that precedes acceptance
- sound of dull screaming
- unhappinesses
- unwelcome, a social barrier that makes others uncomfortable
- what a healthy human soul understandably feels in the present situation
* is, at times, an equally fitting emotion as joy.
* natural response to loss, defeat, disappointment, trauma, or catastrophe.
* normal emotion that everyone feels, just like anger and happiness
- state which everybody experiences at some time in thei r lives
* state of happiness.<|endoftext|>Survey
* Many surveys indicate that vegetarians have lower blood pressure.
* Most surveys rely on sight and sound to determine animal populations.
* Some surveys also analyze DNA in rabbit pellets
- find that consumers' number one health concern is pesticides on their food
- require people to look up and provide data from records they keep
* Some surveys show a direct correlation between income and alienation in the black community
- that minority social workers have higher earnings than white social workers
* are a method of gathering information from individuals
- popular method of gathering information
- an important method of gathering, summarizing and presenting large amounts of data
- examinations
- studies conducted over long periods of time
- used for collect information
* confirm that people fear pain, suffering, isolation, and being a burden on their family.
* document the presence or absence of certain species of amphibians over time.
* indicate that children have increased their intake of carbonated beverages in recent years
- few people consume required amounts of bone-building nutrients in their diet
* say having a companion animal increases lifespan and alertness among the elderly.
* show that about one-third of all adults believe they have food allergies
- men suffer from eating disorders
* show that most adult women smokers started smoking in their teens
- people are monogamous and most say that adultery is wrong
- women tend to reveal more flesh when they are ovulating
* suggest that bacteria have colonized much of the upper crust under the ocean. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Smoking
* 'current issue' that is never given the proper status of a 'current issue'.
* 'risk factor' for getting asthma.
* Focuses around the dangers of smoking.
* More smoking leads to more addiction, more illness and more early death.
* Most smoking begins during the stressful transition to puberty and junior high.
* accelerates biotin catabolism in women
- bone loss
* accelerates the aging process
- deposit of fats onto blood vessels
* accounts for more than one of every six deaths.
* activates genes that cause skin to wrinkle.
* acts as a short cut to a million emotional states.
* actually makes it more difficult for someone to play sports
- puts drugs into the brain more directly than intravenous injection
* adds flavor, convenience and increased shelf life to poultry meats
- to other sources of pollution
* affects a person's health in many ways, having both immediate and long term effects
- blood flow in veins and arteries, and is also believed to lead to impotence
- everyone
- fertility in both men and women
- how the immune system functions by causing oxidative stress
- many cells in the human body
- most organ systems and even affects other people through secondhand smoke
- nearly every organ in the body, including the heart
- oral health and overall health
- physical fitness
- practically every part of the human body
- pregnancy
- pregnant women and their unborn children
- small blood vessels
* affects the blood supply to the skin, weakening it and causing it to age more rapidly
- elastin in all body tissue
- mother's health as well
- penis in the same way that it does the heart, the researchers said
- quantity and quality of oxygen to the tissues
- small blood vessels and can cause a decrease in blood flow to the feet
- unborn as well
- women of all ages
* ages the skin prematurely.
* aggravates menstrual disorders
- symptoms of occupational asthma
- the effects of exposure
* allows for extremely high doses of cocaine to reach the brain very quickly.
* almost doubles a person's risk of stroke, independent of any other risk factors.
* already is blamed for promoting cataracts, another major cause of vision loss.
* also affects non-smokers who breathe the smoke of others
- others besides the smoker
* also appears to increase slightly the risk of placenta previa
- the risk of Crohn's disease
- boosts the risk of stroke
* also can contribute to varicose veins because it affects circulation and harms vein walls
- make the skin dry and leathery
- reduce the number of taste buds a person has
* also carries an increased risk of ulcers
- other significant risks during a pregnancy
* also causes an increase in bronchial mucous production and paralysis of the cilia
- blockages in the tiny blood vessels that nourish the hairs of the inner ear
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, such as bronchitis and emphysema
- diabetic eye disease to progress more rapidly
* also causes emphysema, bronchitis and diseases of the arteries
- probably damaging the lung by the release of proteolytic enzymes
- hardening of the arteries which can lead to heart attacks
- harm to nonsmokers
- heart disease, emphysema, and other lung diseases
- lung cancer, which kills many smokers
- premature wrinkles
- skin discoloration and the acceleration of wrinkles
- the release of endorphins, which create a tranquilizing effect
- changes drug levels
- contains a major social component
* also contributes to an increase in otitis media, or earaches
- blindness by macular deteriorations
- facial wrinkling
- hardening of the arteries and to atherosclerosis
- increased blood pressure
- loosening of the teeth
* also contributes to the development of cataracts
- risk of cardiovascular disease
- creates a higher risk for periodontal disease
- decreases blood supply to the face and skin
- diminishes one's sense of smell and taste
- disturbs glucose tolerance tests
- does major harm to indoor air quality
* also doubles a woman's risk for getting cervical cancer
- men's chances of being impotence
- enhances lung cancer risk in underground miners exposed to radon
- fire and health hazard
- hampers efficient processing of calcium
* also harms a woman's health
- thousands of nonsmokers who are exposed to cigarette smoke
* also has external or cutaneous manifestations
- pleasurable physical effects
- helps in preserving meat to a certain extent
- hinders the blood supply to the bones or interferes with the function of osteoblasts
- impairs a woman's fertility
* also increases a woman's risk of breast cancer
- blood pressure and makes it easier for blood to clot
- fatigue and decreases the smoker's sense of smell and taste
* also increases the amount of fatty acids, glucose, and various hormones in the blood
- effects of other risks, such as high blood pressure
- likelihood of coronary heart disease and is associated with osteoporosis
* also increases the risk for a stroke
- chronic bronchitis , emphysema , and lung cancer
* also increases the risk of asthmatic attack
- bone loss later in life
- complications
* also increases the risk of developing cervical dysplasia
- emboli
- oral cavity diseases and lung disease
- emphysema and cancer
- having a stroke
- infertility
- miscarriage and premature labor
* also increases the risk of miscarriage, still birth, or infant death shortly after birth
- stillbirth, or infant death shortly after birth
- other carcinogens even among passive smokers
- prostate cancer
- recurrence in persons who have survived a heart attack
- some skin cancers
- spontaneous abortion
- risk, as does a family history of the disease
- tendency for blood to clot
- influences cholesterol levels
- injures the lungs
- interacts with other risk factors
* also interferes with clearance of asbestos particles from the lung
- digestion, which leads to ulcers of the stomach and intestines
- the body's use of calcium
- is associated with heart disease, emphysema and stroke
- kills the cilia that line the lungs and take in oxygen and put out carbon monoxide
* also leads to bronchitis and emphysema and increases the risk of heart attacks
- clumping or stickiness in the blood vessels feeding the heart
- the early formation of wrinkles, especially fine lines around the mouth
* also lowers estrogen levels, in women, further contributing to bone loss
- prolactin levels in the blood
- testosterone levels, affecting the development of sperm
- women's estrogen levels
- major cause of heart disease
* also makes it more difficult to get oxygen from lungs to tissue
- the lungs less able to clean themselves
- plays into youths' obsession with staying thin
- poses special dangers during pregnancy
- predisposes to tuberculosis by causing poor nutrition and loss of weight
* also produces negative effects for people other than the smoker
- several other harmful effects that particularly affect women
- promotes inflammation and increases bone loss
- puts a cramp on deep breaths
* also raises carbon monoxide levels in the blood, depriving the heart of oxygen
- the risk of blood clots
* also raises the risk of cancer of the bladder, kidney and pancreas
- of the bladder, kidney, pancreas and oropharynx
* also reduces normal breathing capacity
- sperm counts, and increases the incidence of resp
* also reduces the body's testosterone production
- supply of oxygen and nutrients to the baby
- vitamin C levels, among other vitamin levels
- releases carbon monoxide into the body which lowers the amount of oxygen in the blood
* also results in discoloration of the teeth and fingertips and bad breath
- increased bronchial mucous production and paralysis of the cilia
- seems to increase the risk of complications
- serious health problem for pregnant women and their unborn infants
* also slows down the healing time, so that it takes longer to get well
- healing during ulcer treatment
- the body's ability to digest food
- spoils fasting
- worsens allergy symptoms
* apparently inhibits ulcer healing.
* appears to decrease an artery's ability to widen when necessary
- endanger the health of non-smokers too
* appears to increase the risk for developing diabetes
- of osteoporosis
* artificially elevates heart rate and increases metabolism.
* attracts inflammatory cells that release enzymes that digest the lung.
* becomes politically incorrect, with more public places forbidding smoking.
* behavior of the poor.
* blocks the stomach's natural healing process and greatly raises the risk of ulcers.
* burns off a lot of calories.
* can actually increase feelings of stress and nervousness
- the risk for occupational lung disease
- adversely affect the ability of both men and women to identify odors
* can affect a person's ability to smell and taste food
- blood oxygenation
- females with dysfunction in similar ways that it effects males
- aggravate headaches
* can also be a cause of problems in the stomach
- financial burden
* can also cause earlier menopause
- heartburn, because it stimulates the release of stomach acid
- our blood pressure to go up
- premature aging of the skin
- some very serious diseases
- contribute to breathing problems that disrupt sleep
- destroy taste
- effect the quality of sperm count, motility
* can also have a dehydrating effect
- side effects such as dizziness and lung problems
* can also lead to blood clots, the main cause of heart attacks
- other serious health problems, such as lung cancer
- place expectant mothers at risk for babies born with low birth weight
- put people at higher risk
* can also reduce male fertility
- the effectiveness of high blood pressure medication
- worsen snoring and sleep apnea, due to swelling of the nasal tissues
* can be a form of acceptance into a group
- dangerous
- hazardous to health for both smokers and non-smokers
- just as injurious to the heart as to the lungs
- very offensive to non-smokers
* can bring on a premature menopause
- early menopause and menstrual disorders
* can cause a slow and painful death
- wide variety of tongue problems
- allergic reactions and thus the cough
- birth defects, pregnancy complications, low birth weight and emphysema
* can cause cancer and death
- as well as heart disease, emphysema, and other diseases
- of the mouth, throat, lung, and bladder
- facial lines, especially around the eyes and mouth
- head and neck cancer
* can cause impotence and premature baldness in men
- infertility in both men and women
- laryngitis directly
* can cause lung and vascular problems leading to sickness and death
- cancer and heart disease
- cancer, head and neck cancers, emphysema and heart disease
- many problems, including low birth weight and premature delivery
- more cancer to develop
- peripheral vascular disease which can result in gangerene and amputation
* can cause problems after surgery
- for virtually all aspects of the reproductive system
* can cause problems in conceiving, during pregnancy and for the health of the child
- pregnancy and harm an unborn baby
* can cause serious health problems for anyone, regardless of age or gender
* can cause significant damage to women's reproductive sy stem
- sleep disturbance
- the skin to age prematurely, as well as take on an unflattering sallow tone
- unpredictable or erratic blood glucose levels in some people
* can damage heart blood vessels making it difficult for heart to pump blood
- the sperm and decreases fertility
* can decrease blood flow even more
- the amount of milk production
- destroy appetite and enjoyment of food because it seriously affects taste and smell
* can have a bad effect on babies, both before and after they are born
- more than long-term effects, such as cancer and emphysema
- impede healing and increase the incidence of dry socket
- increase both the severity of an occupational lung disease and the risk of lung cancer
* can increase the risk of a heart attack by three times and ruins cardiovascular health
- lung injury
- increase, decrease or even cancel the effects of medication
* can inhibit proper healing for any implant system
- the blood flow needed to maintain an erection
- interfere with the healing of wounds and fractures
* can involve coughing
- talking
* can lead to diminished sperm motility in addition to premature ovarian failure
- diseases such as lung cancer, emphysema and heart disease
- many physical problems, including emphysema, heart disease, stroke, and cancer
- lessen sperm quality
* can make a person more susceptible to periodontitis
- it hard for the baby to breathe
- the baby's body and head smaller
* can narrow other arteries, cutting off the supply of oxygen and nutrients to body tissues
- the blood vessel over a period of time
- promote serious dental problems like gum disease and oral cancer
- provoke or intensify a headache
- raise the risk of developing tooth decay because it decreases saliva production
- rapidly reverse such negative moods
- reduce the chances of success in games, sports and other leisure activities
- result in hardened arteries and poor circulation
* can speed up onset by two years
- the rate at which some drugs are eliminated
* can start a fire if the product is flammable
- products are flammable
- take several years off one's life by increasing the risk of lung and heart diseases
- wreak havoc on gum and tooth health
- wreck lungs and reduce oxygen available for muscles used during sports
* carries an added risk of dependency.
* cause of lung cancer
- the airway tissues to become damaged or destroyed
* causes a buildup of fatty deposits in delicate blood vessels
- drop in self-esteem, which is key for health and fitness in general
- great number of health problems
- host of health problems, from lung cancer and heart disease to impotence
- pregnancy to be high risk
- significant increase in the risk of bone loss and osteoporosis
- ageing of the skin
- around one in five deaths from heart disease
* causes bad breath and recent dental studies show that people who smoke have gum disease
- blockage of the small airways in the lung
* causes blood vessels to constrict, which reduces blood supply to the eye
- narrow, which decreases the blood flow
- cancer including lung, bladder, throat and mouth cancer
* causes cancer, along with a number of other diseases
* causes cancer, heart attacks, etc
- disease, chronic bronchitis, asthma and emphysema
- lung disease and cardiovascular disease
- cancers of the lungs, pancreas, bladder, skin, mouth and throat
- cardiovascular diseases
* causes changes in blood levels of certain nutrients such as carbohydrates and proteins
- the genes of our lungs and other places in the body
- chronic bronchitis and emphysema
* causes constriction of the blood vessels and major contributor to atherosclerosis
- deaths because it greatly increases a smoker's risk for several diseases
- difficulty in maintaining an erection
- disease and death
- diseases such such as mouth cancer, lung cancer , and emphysema
- dying
- emphysema and chronic bronchitis, which progress to slow suffocation
- emphysema, heart disease, impotence and stroke
- faster aging of the skin
- fatal lung cancer
- genetic problems in teen-age male sperm
- gum disease and tooth loss
* causes heart disease, cancer, chronic lung disease, and other diseases
- lung disease and cancer
- ill health
- illness and adversely affects a person's quality of life
* causes irreversible lung damage by breaking the air sacs within the lungs
- lesions in the lung
- lower grades in school
- lung and other cancers, heart disease, stroke, chronic bronchitis and emphysema
* causes lung cancer and many other diseases that are really harmful for our health
- types of lung disease
- pulmonary diseases
- in two ways
- cancer, and many other types of cancer, heart and circulatory diseases
* causes many diseases like lung cancer, bronchitis and coronary heart disease
- respiratory problems, including chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and lung cancer
* causes more deaths from ischemic heart disease than any other disease
- problems than addiction
- than eighty percent of lung cancer deaths
- mucous membranes to swell, which narrows the air passages
* causes nearly half of bladder cancer deaths in men and more than a third in women
- one in five U.S. deaths
- one-third of cancer, and that accounts for the major increase in cancer
- pleasure
* causes premature aging and wrinkling of the face
- of the skin and aggravates other medical conditions
- wrinkling of the skin and yellows teeth and fingernails
- reflux
- salivation and most smokers have no hesitation in spitting anywhere
- serious health problems and disease
- significant changes in the walls of blood vessels, impairing normal blood flow
- strokes and heart disease
* causes the blood vessels to constrict, allowing less circulation to the gums and bone
- causing an elevation in blood pressure
- opposite to happen
* causes the skin to age earlier
- have a pallid complexion and skin that wrinkles prematurely
- lose it's elasticity over time
- ulcers by at least three mechanisms
- wrinkling and the appearance of premature aging
- yellow stains on teeth, bad breath and early signs of aging
* certainly puts the baby at risk, and has been associated with learning disabilities.
* chemically changes segments of DNA called adducts.
* chronically deprives the skin of oxygen and nutrients.
* cigars every day raises the risk of heart disease and cancer.
* clear cause of cancer.
* clogs the arteries and causes heart attacks and strokes.
* combination of a physiological and psychological addiction according to studies.
* combined with exposure to high radon levels is an even more serious health risk.
* combined with radon exposure is an especially dangerous health risk
- is an especially serious health risk
* common social habit and tobacco is cheap by European standards.
* communicated disease.
* complex social phenomenon.
* constricts arteries and increases clotting to block arteries.
* constricts blood vessels and can intensify and prolong a flash
- causes wrinkling
- contributor to high blood pressure
- decreases blood flow all over the body
* constricts the blood vessels and makes the heart work harder
- the heart work much harder
- vessels, making the heart work harder and raising blood pressure
* continues to be the leading cause of preventable deaths in America today
- single most preventable cause of death in the United States
- increase among teenagers
* contributes to bone loss and increases the risk of osteoporosis in both men and women.
* contributes to low bone-mineral density and can cause osteoporosis
- more deaths than any other risk factors
- the development of atherosclerosis
* contributing factor in cancer of the lungs, mouth, and esophagus
- factor, especially in younger people
* controversial, hot-button issue, about which many people have strong opinions.
* creates a fire hazard and discomfort for non-smokers
- blood clots which can cause strokes
* crutch, a coping mechanism and a dirty, filthy, disgusting habit.
* cuts off blood flow
- the amount of oxygen reaching tissues
* damages the artery walls and allows more cholesterol to build up in the arteries.
* damages the blood vessel walls, speeds hardening of the arteries and raises blood pressure
- vessels, which remove breast fluid
* damages the bronchial tree and makes it easier for viruses to cause infection
- tubes and makes it easier for viruses and bacteria to cause infection
- eye, and reduces the oxygen that reaches the optic nerve
* damages the health of many people who are smokers, even causing premature death
- other people - in particular the vulnerable babies and children
- heart and blood vessels
- lining of the blood vessels and raises blood pressure
- lungs and speeds age-related lung changes
- microcirculation to the skin, making it dull, grey and lifeless
* dangerous and, for many, a lethal habit.
* deadly addiction , responsible for three million deaths each year.
* decreases absorption.
* decreases blood flow to the feet
- levels of several medications
- calorie absorption, which aids in preventing obesity
- circulation and interferes with proper healing
- estrogen production by the ovaries, leading to earlier menopause and osteoporosis
* decreases the amount of saliva that our mouths produce
- appetite for sweets, and is often used to replace dessert
- bone rebuilding that is constantly taking place in all ofus
- levels of estrogen in the plasma
- oxygen available to bones and partially blocks estrogen
- sex drive
* definitive risk factor for the development of coated tongue.
* depletes the body further of vitamins, which the pill also depletes.
* deprives the fetus of needed oxygen and other nutrients.
* destroys good health
- the balance between the protease and the anti-protease enzymes
* difficult habit to quit.
* diminishes blood flow both in the heart and in the penis.
* does impose costs on employers
- increase the risk of breast cancer for some postmenopausal white women
* doubles stroke risk
- the risk for stroke
* doubles the risk of cervical cancer and more women die of lung cancer than breast cancer
- developing pancreatic cancer
* doubles the risk of ectopic pregnancy and of having a low birth weight baby
- pregnancy, and of having a low-birthweight baby
* doubles the risk of heart attack
- disease and is the main cause of chronic bronchitis and emphysema
- patients having renal cell carcinoma
- stroke for men and triples it for women
- vision loss with macular degeneration
* dramatically promotes the development of atherosclerosis.
* dying habit.
* elevates the level of carboxyhaemoglobin.
* eliminates the protective effect of oral estrogens on the risk of hip fracture among women.
* encourages coughing and droplet infection.
* erases the benefits of exercise.
* even affects the sexes differently.
* exacerbates asthma, and maternal smoking during pregnancy increases the risk for the child.
* exposes the body to many cancer-causing chemicals that affect more than the lungs.
* fairly safe addiction in comparison to alcohol and gambling.
* floods the brain with dopamine.
* form of air pollution
- drug addiction because tobacco contains nicotine, an addictive drug
* frequent cause of early miscarriage in pregnancy.
* generally takes place in bars.
* generates high levels of free radicals.
* grave women's health issue.
* greatly increase a woman's risk of heart attack and stroke
- increases the chance of getting heart disease
* greatly increases the risk of a heart attack, stroke, or blood clot
- blood clot formation
- dying from diseases like emphysema and bronchitis
- having a heart attack, stroke, or blood clot
* habit - a way of life.
* habit and habits can be changed
- nicotine is addictive
- one of the hardest to break
- of whose models are adopted in the environment
- separated from common sense, and rooted in social practice
* habitual behavior.
* hard habit to break
* hardens arteries and cigarette smoke also has stimulants that increase heart rate.
* harms others.
* has a definite dose related relationship with Ischaemic heart disease
- deleterious effect in high blood pressure
- devastating effect on numerous bodily functions and systems
- direct effect on the growth of the fetus
- harmful effect on the skin for several reasons
- multiplying effect on the risk of getting from exposure
- toxic effect on bone in men and women
- variety of undesirable effects
- an adverse effect on the body's immune system and other defense mechanisms
- effects on personal hygiene
* has many complex effects on the lungs
- ill effects, one of which is degeneration of the disc
* has no effect on the oral clearance of quetiapine
- preservative effect
- several harmful effects on cholesterol
- significant implications for the drug therapy of a wide variety of conditions
* has the ability to kill
- highest percentage of deaths compared to other addictive drugs and alcohol
- well known adverse health consequences including being a cause of carcinoma of the lung
- well-established procoagulant and coronary vasoconstrictive effects
* health hazard for everyone
* helps make the hide waterproof as well
- preserve fish by reducing moisture content, thereby retarding the growth of bacteria
- promote cancers of the bladder, pancreas, kidney, stomach and cervix
- reduce stress
- to relieve anxiety, depression, anger, and boredom
* highly dangerous addiction.
* hinders the bones' ability to heal.
* hurts a teen's physical fitness in terms of poor performance and endurance
- the public health
* imparts the flavors of the wood into the meat.
* implies the responsibility is due to an individual's behaviour.
* imposes costs on society
- no costs on the nation's taxpayers that go uncompensated
* improves dental health.
* inappropriately can cause fire hazards.
* includes the carrying of a lighted cigarette, cigar or pipe.
* increases a person's risk of heart disease, cancer and stroke
- woman's chance of developing several types of cancer, including breast cancer
* increases a woman's risk of heart disease, stroke, and many forms of cancer
- reproductive disorders
- acid production and weakens the lower esophageal sphincter
- an adolescent's susceptibility to depression, according to a study
* increases blood concentrations almost as fast as injections
- sugar levels making it harder to control
- conversion of lactate to glucose during submaximal exercise
- impotence risk
- infant mortality and low birth weight
- lead levels in the body
- lung congestion and risk of complications
- muscle activity and can contribute significantly to wrinkles
- risks and can lengthen the healing time
- tension
- the chance for cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis
* increases the chance of developing cataracts and other eye diseases
- colorectal, bladder, kidney, and pancreatic cancers
- impotence in males
- serious side effects
- heart rate for a given level of exercise
- incidence of infection, cough, and sputum production
* increases the likelihood of getting acute bacterial bronchitis
- premature birth
- production of mucous in the nose and sinuses
* increases the risk for cancers of the bladder, pancreas, kidney, and cervix
- the urinary tract
- facial wrinkling two to three times for white men and women
* increases the risk for lung cancer by a factor of ten
* increases the risk of cervical cancer
- complications and delays healing
- developing the disorder
- exposure to radon
- hardening of the arteries, which decreases sexual response
* increases the risk of heart attack, stroke, blood clots and death
- disease caused by hypertension
- disease, which is America's number one killer
- liver cancer
- losing a genetically normal baby
* increases the risk of lung cancer and heart disease
- tenfold
- skin loss with both rhytidectomy and abdominoplasty
* increases the risks and dangers of everything exponentially
- of emphysema, bronchitis, asthma, and heart disease
- sensitivity on nicotine receptors in the brain
- smoker's risk of developing psoriasis
- toxic load in the body and probably contributes to arthritis
- vitamin requirements
* indicates an addiction to nicotine.
* induces tolerance to alcohol, which decreases the aversive effects of alcohol.
* inhibits the amount of blood flow which carries oxygen to the baby.
* intensifies their risk.
* interferes with the absorption of calcium from the intestines
- folic acid
- circulation of blood to the skin and can cause death of the skin flaps
* involves consuming an evil substance.
* irritates inflamed nasal passages and paralyzes the cilia which clear mucus from the lungs.
* irritates the lining of the nose, increasing nasal secretions and swelling
- lungs and airways narrow, encouraging phlegm and making it harder to breathe
- throat and prolongs symptoms
* is addictive , i.e., induces impaired reasoning, the link to crime
- It only takes a short time to become addicted to nicotine
- addictive, both physically and mentally
- addressed as a major risk factor in cardiovascular disease
- almost never acceptable indoors, except in areas specifically designated for smoking
- also a factor in some types of colon cancer
* is also a fire and safety hazard
- hazard and nicotine if ingested can poison children
* is also a major cause of cancers of the larynx, mouth, and esophagus
- contributor to the progression of coronary artery disease
- factor in coronary heart disease, stroke, and asthma
- risk factor for heart disease, stroke emphysema and many other cancers
* is also a risk factor for back pain
- stroke, which is the third leading killer of women
- severe oxidative stress and causes inflammation in the lung
- bad news for people with asthma
- common in films deemed suitable for young audiences
- dangerous if a mother is breastfeeding
- expensive for companies
* is also harmful to the developing foetus
- human mind and reason
- notable in that it is the leading cause of premature death
- one source of the air pollution
* is also related to hormonal problems for both men and women
- with decreased hip bone density in old age
- responsible for most cancers of the larynx , oral cavity, and esophagus
- stressful on the body
- the leading cause of chronic bronchitis and emphysema
* is also the major cause of cancer of the mouth , larynx , throat , and esophagus
- cancers of the mouth, voice box, and throat
- single greatest cause of cancer mortality
- very addictive because of the nicotine that comes in the cigarettes
* is an activity to be undertaken only by adults
- addiction that is physical, psychological and behavioral
- addiction, and most people find quitting a challenge
* is an addictive habit that is very hard to break
- adult habit
- avoidable cause of death
- expensive habit to maintain
- identifiable and quantifiable behavior
* is an important aspect of certain ceremonies
- cofactor
- factor in causing disorders of the stomach and duodenum
- indication of a risk-taking person
- individual right or choice
- inefficient and potentially deadly means of drug administration
- intensely addicting illness
- interacting variable
* is an unhealthy and dangerous habit
* is another ancient and common means of chemical food preservation
* is another cause of hoarseness
- stomach distress
- factor that raises the risk of ear infections
- habit most people pick up in their teens
* is another important source of cadmium
- cyanide
- formaldehyde
* is another insidious oral evil perpetrated on the public
- toxin
* is another risk factor for cervical cancer
- developing cervical cancer
- factor, of course for mothers, but also for their infants
- as addictive as heroin and cocaine
- associated with albuminuria and abnormal renal function
* is associated with an increase in heart attacks and stroke
- the incidence of rheumatoid arthritis
- back and neck pain
- cancers of the mouth, esophagus, pancreas, cervix, kidney, and bladder
- complications of pregnancy, early menopause, and reduced fertility
- half of all coronary events in women
- higher risk of infant death
- less education and with risk taking
- low birth weight and infant deaths
- lung, throat and mouth and bladder cancers
- many other risky behaviors, such as fighting and having unprotected sex
- other risky behaviors, such as fighting and engaging in unprotected sex
- pleasure because the nicotine in tobacco is an addictive drug
- shortened duration of breastfeeding and decreased milk volumes
* is bad for Crohn s disease and seems to be somewhat protective against ulcerative colitis
- all age groups
- anyone but even worse for people with diabetes
- everyone, but particularly for people with asthma
- many conditions including osteoporosis
* is banned around patients, even if the patient is smoking
- in California bars
* is banned in all day care centres, creches, after school clubs
- public places in Scotland
- guest rooms and in public areas
- health care institutions, except in designated smoking areas
* is banned in many public areas and facilities
- places and transit vehicles
- most federally regulated workplaces, such as banks and government offices
* is banned in most public buildings
- places in Stockholm, on public transport, in stores etc
- public transport vehicles
- taxi cabs
- inside all school buildings
* is banned on all domestic flights within the United States and Canada
- flights of less than two hours operated by national air carriers
- domestic airline flights and flights to Singapore
- most public transport including buses, trains, planes and taxis
* is believed to damage blood vessels, inhibiting the blood flow to the penis
- have started with cocoa leaves somewhere in Peru and in Latin America
- lead to an increased production of free radicals above normal levels
- start at a very early age in Ukraine
* is by far the leading cause of lung cancer
- risk factor for lung cancer
- most significant risk factor for bladder cancer
- number one cause of lung cancer
- host preogative
- categorized as either smoker or non-smoker
* is common among males of all ages and in all areas
- and codes of practice concerning smoking are the same as in Europe
- even in many hospitals
- considerably less common in nearly every age group of adult women than it used to be
* is considered a cofactor for the disease to develop
- trigger for asthma
- by some girls to be the solution to their anxiety
- damaging to the blood supply
* is dangerous for many reasons including the hazard of falling asleep with a lit cigarette
- nonsmokers who breathe the smoke from smokers' cigarettes
- to the health
- deeply ingrained in prison culture
- described as the most preventable cause of disease in the country
* is detrimental to maintaining good health
- vocal fold tissues
- different from drinking because everybody is affected
- distressingly common among hospitalized psychiatric patients
- down in both countries, as is littering
- equally popular among the poor, the middle class and the rich
- especially related to cervical carotid atherosclerosis
- estimated to be the single largest cause of preventable deaths in the United States
- evidence of addiction and therefore a lack of self-control
- expensive for smokers and for their employers
- far more common in lower social classes
* is forbidden in all public transport and public buildings
- university buildings and vehicles
- hospitals and clinics, but in many cases the ban is ignored
- most enclosed public places other than bars and small restaurants
- workplaces, schools, hospitals and in public transport
- inside public vehicles
* is harmful because it affects others and makes smokers feel bad
- in many ways, but it is most harmful to our lungs
* is harmful to fetus
- our bodies in many ways, but it is the most harmful to the lungs
- hazardous, at least sometimes
- higher among young women than young men, although males tend to smoke more heavily
- human activities
- identified as the number one preventable cause of death in most western nations
- illegal anywhere on the underground system
- increasingly popular among young adults
* is known to aggravate the effects of exposure
- be the leading cause of lung cancer
- bring on menopause more quickly, and have an antiestrogenic effect on women
* is known to cause bladder cancer
- heart disease, emphysema, and several types of cancer
* is known to cause lung cancer, and new evidence also links it to breast cancer
- depress antioxidants and to alter choroidal blood flow
* is known to increase osteoporosis
- the use of other addictive substances, such as heroin and cocaine
* is known to reduce sperm count, as well as the quality and viability of sperm
- the level of macular pigments
- like living in a toxic waste dump
- limited to the outdoors
* is linked to cancer of the lung, mouth, larynx and oesophagus
- lower birth weight, douching to reduced fertility
- stroke and a long list of other life-threatening conditions
* is linked with a cosmopolitan lifestyle
- number of cancers including cancer of the lung, bladder, mouth, and cervix
- emphysema, chronic bronchitis and other respiratory ailments
- the production of rheumatoid factor
* is more addictive than cocaine or heroin
- common among men and adults living below the poverty line
* is more prevalent among poor people
- in the more disadvantaged social classes
- than a chemical bond
* is much more common among teens living in less advantaged circumstances
- women with fewer years of education
- prevalent in some areas of the world with the attendant fire risks
- nearly always the main cause of emphysema
- no less an addiction than drugs
* is often a dissociated activity
- one of the major causes of heart disease
- the hidden cause of the disease recorded as responsible for death
* is on the increase among young people in both countries
- rise on college campuses
* is one of American women's greatest health risks
- many factors that can make a pregnancy high-risk
* is one of the biggest factors contributing to heart disease
- health problems facing our country today
- risk factors in cervical abnormalities
* is one of the greatest causes of stroke
- preventable causes of disease today
* is one of the leading causes of all statistics
- of fires
- of statistics
- that start teens on drugs
* is one of the main causes of debilitating diseases such as emphysema
- factors which cause heart disease
- risk factors for both stroke and heart disease
* is one of the major causes of disease and death in the United States
- of illness and early death
- risk factors for periodontal disease
- many factors affecting cardiovascular disease statistics
* is one of the most common causes of cancer, particularly lung cancer
- costly habits
- difficult addictions to overcome
* is one of the most important causes of preventable deaths in the world
- risk factors for pancreatic cancer
- preventable determinants of low birth weight
- risk factors that can be modified by a patient
- three main risk factors for coronary heart disease
- worst things kids or adults can do to their bodies
- three major independent causes of coronary heart disease
- today's major preventable health threats to children
- outlawed in most public places and offices
- part of adolescent experimentation and rebellion
- particularily hazardous to the female reproductive tract
* is particularly dangerous for teens because their bodies are still developing
- women who have other risk factors for osteoporosis
- in an adolescent
- harmful for pregnant women and their unborn children
- hazardous in persons at increased cardiovascular risk
- risky for people who have heart disease or high blood pressure
- perceived as an appropriate way to control weight
- permitted in outdoor workplaces, unless an employer or a local ordinance bans it
- physically and psychologically addictive
* is portrayed as a healthy, sexy, ordinary, fun-filled activity in advertisements
- being necessary in order to acquire a slim, glamorous and successful image
- possibly the main cause of leukaemia with adults
- prevalent everywhere
* is prevalent in present day Russia, yet cot death is rare in that region
- present-day Russia and Japan, but the cot death rates are low
* is probably less of a risk to health than breathing air tainted with toxics
- one of the oldest recreational rituals
- the greatest single cause of preventable illness in the United States
- proven to be good exercise for the lungs
- quite prevalent, although it is banned in all food restaurants
- rare among females
- recognized as a leading cause of bladder cancer
* is recognized as the most important cause of bladder cancer
- prevalent cause for lung cancer
- related to more cancers, certainly lung cancer being the most obvious
* is responsible for about one-third of all cancer deaths
- an estimated one in five U.S. deaths
- changes in all parts of the body, including the digestive system
- health problems among eighth graders
- more than one out of every five deaths in the United States
* is responsible for one in five deaths in Canada
* is responsible for one out of every five deaths in the United States
- five American deaths
- four cases of heart disease
- one-quarter of all deaths caused by fire
* is restricted in public areas
- some public buildings
- on public transport and in some public buildings
* is restricted to certain areas of buildings
- designated smoking areas in school buildings or on school grounds
- safer than sniffing
- socially acceptable in most societies
- stress related
- taboo, and so also are liquor and other intoxicants
* is the biggest contributing factor for sudden cardiac death
- culprit that limits oxygen supply
* is the biggest risk factor for heart attacks
- sudden death
- women and heart disease
- single threat to health faced by large sections of the population
- cause of a larger proportion of deaths due to some diseases than others
* is the chief avoidable cause of death and disease
- preventable cause of deaths due to cancer in the United States
- crucial factor in health inequalities
* is the greatest risk factor for lung cancer
- single preventable cause of death
* is the inhalation and exhalation of the fumes of burning tobacco
- of the smoke of burning tobacco encased in cigarettes, pipes, and cigars
- largest avoidable cause of cancer
* is the largest cause of death and disease that is preventable
- otherwise preventable death in the United States
- single cause of preventable disease in the world today
* is the largest single preventable cause of death and disability in the United States
- of death and disease in Australia
- risk factor for heart disease, stroke, lung cancer and oral cancers
* is the leading cause of avoidable death in America
- cancer and dietary factors are the second most common cause
- fire deaths and the second most common cause of residential fires
- laryngeal cancer
* is the leading cause of preventable death and disease in the United States
- illness and death in the United States
- illness, disability and premature death in Canada
* is the leading known cause of preventable death among women
- preventable death and disease among women
* is the leading preventable cause of death in our country
* is the leading risk factor for heart disease, lung cancer and osteoporosis
- early deaths
* is the main cause of lung and heart disease
- risk factor for kidney cancer, almost doubling a person's chances
- major avoidable cause of heart disease
* is the major cause of lung cancer in both sexes
- preventable cause of disease in the world
- risk factor for the development of small cell lung carcinoma
* is the most common cause of deaths and injuries from fire
- lung cancer and one that is within our control
- method of using marijuana
- harmful and preventable chronic health risk in Europe and North America
* is the most important cause of smoker's lung
- factor that young men and women can change
- preventable cause of premature death
- prevalent form of drug dependence in our society
* is the most preventable cause of death in America
- death in our society
- rapid and dangerous method of taking cocaine
* is the most significant and potent risk factor for coronary heart disease
- risk factor for sudden cardiac death
- nation's leading cause of preventable death
* is the number one cause of cancer deaths for men
- deaths from fire
- emphysema in the United States
- fires that kill older persons
- premature, preventable death and disease in our society
- preventable deaths in Canada
* is the number one preventable cause of cancer
* is the number one preventable risk factor for a variety of diseases in our society
- factor in women
* is the number one risk factor and cause for developing lung cancer
- for heart disease among young people
- number-one cause of preventable cancer
* is the primary cause of emphysema
* is the primary method of ingestion
- to cook larger pieces of meat
- single biggest cause of preventable illness in Wales today
* is the single greatest cause of preventable illness in the country
- killer in the United States by far
* is the single greatest preventable cause of death and illness in the United States
- of death in the United States today
- of illness and death in the United States
* is the single greatest risk factor for developing heart disease
* is the single largest cause of lung cancer
- modifiable risk factor in intrauterine growth retardation
- leading cause of cancer deaths
* is the single most important cause of cancer
- of problems in most pregnancies
- factor in infant mortality
- remediable cause of premature death in the Western world
- risk factor for the development of lung cancer
* is the single most preventable cause of death and disability in America today
- of disease and death in the United States today
- of mortality, responsible for one in every six deaths
- world's largest single preventable cause of illness and death
- thought to be a significant factor in eye health
- tied to colon cancer
- too complex and too multifaceted a behavior to be caused by a single gene
- triggered by certain times, places and situations
- unsafe at any age, in any amount, and for any period
- up among teens of both sexes
- used by young women as an appetite suppressant
* is used for chimneys
- conversations
- losers
- relaxation
- social values
- to preserve meat and fish
- very unpopular in the United States
- widely discouraged and is illegal in public places
- widespread and permitted in most public areas
* is, afterall, the number one cause of lung cancer
- among other things, a pastime
- for example, to be banned in public places
* keeps carbon dioxide from exiting the body in exhaled breath.
* key factor in sudden death from cardiovascular disease
- risk factor for low birthweight and infant mortality
* kills about half of persistent smokers who take up the habit in adolescence
- both smokers and their voices
- more people every year than all other drugs combined, including alcohol
* known cause of cancer, heart disease, and stroke
- stroke and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
* leading cause of cataracts in the old age
- fires in many more countries
- male impotence
- contributor to poor indoor air quality
- indicator in underweight and premature births
- risk factor for cancer, heart disease and respiratory illnesses
* leads to alcoholism , drug abuse , mental disorder
- cancer, lung disease, and many other deadly diseases
- gum disease, which can lead to tooth loss
- premature atherosclerosis, which in turn can lead to heart attacks and strokes
* learned behavior that becomes natural over time.
* legal activity
* leisure activity and in a free society consumers decide for themselves.
* lighted cigar, cigarette, pipe, or any other lit tobacco product.
* lightning rod for cancer and heart disease.
* lowers resistance to complications
- the sex hormones which stimulate bone formation
* mainly causes death through heart attacks, cancer, and lung disease.
* major cause of cancers of the esophagus, lung, larynx, oral cavity and pharynx
- oropharynx and bladder among women
- coronary artery disease and stroke
* major cause of coronary heart disease among women
- disease, which leads to heart attack
- dyspepsia and slows the healing of ulcers
- emphysema, lung cancer, and chronic bronchitis
- fatal apartment fires
* major cause of heart and blood vessel disease
- disease, America's leading cause of death
- ill health and the nation's high health care bill
* major cause of lung cancer, and one of the most preventable
- disease, coronary heart disease, and stroke
- oxidative damage
- sore throats
* major risk factor for cancer of the mouth, larynx, esophagus, kidney and bladder
* major risk factor for coronary artery disease and aggravates high blood pressure
- developing macular degeneration
* major risk factor for heart attack
- attacks and sudden cardiac death
* major risk factor for heart disease, stroke, lung cancer and various other cancers
- stroke, lung cancer, and chronic lung diseases
- oral and dental disease, including oral cancer
- in stroke and speeds up clogging of arteries
- of peripheral vascular disease
* major risk for heart disease
- several diseases including heart disease, stroke, and several cancers
- source of indoor air pollutants
* makes asthma and other lung problems worse
- eyes yellowish
- heart beat faster, raises blood pressure and causes hypertension
* makes it difficult for oxygen to be taken through the alveoli
- hard for a person to breathe
- our heart beat faster and also makes our blood vessels get smaller
- problems caused by diabetes worse
- the breath stink and stains teeth and fingers a yellowish-brown
* makes the heart beat faster
- smoker look older and like they never brushed their teeth in their life
- ulcers more likely to develop and also slows the healing process
* narrows blood vessels and decreases circulation
- makes it harder to breathe
* narrows blood vessels over time and also increase the levels of fats in the blood
- which can slow healing
- vessels, increasing blood pressure and putting a strain on the heart
* narrows the blood vessels and decreases circulation to the feet
* nearly doubles a woman's risk of having a low-birthweight baby.
* necessary and sufficient cause of lung cancer.
* occludes the arteries.
* occurs among both men and women who portrayed positive characters.
* often causes the stomach to make more acid
- decreases appetite, an unhealthy method of weight control that many women employ
- leads to disability and poor quality of life
* only aggravates allergies.
* partial sin.
* passes on cancer causing agents to the fetus.
* pediatric disease.
* person's habit.
* physical addiction and a behavioral addiction.
* plays a major role in heart disease and stroke, the leading causes of death in women
- no role in risk for mesothelioma
* pleasure that can lead to death.
* poor delivery system that exposes the person to harmful substances.
* poses risks to a developing baby.
* potential cause of fire almost everywhere.
* powerful addiction
- physical and psychological addiction
* predisposing cause for mammary duct ectasia.
* prevents fat from going into the fat cells
- the skin from healing because the free radical control is diminished
* primitive drug delivery system.
* probably causes cancer.
* produces cyanide, a retinal toxin.
* progressively impairs the lungs' ability to oxygenate the blood, leading to emphysema.
* promotes a condition called acidosis, which stimulates bone loss
- atherosclerosis and can reduce blood flow to the brain
- enlargement of the pores and impairs the overall health of the skin
* public health hazard, health officials say
- nuisance that causes health problems in many people
* puts a person at an increased risk for gum disease or periodontal disease
- strain on the heart and can contribute to artery blockages
* quickens the degenerative process of aging.
* raises blood pressure and narrows the arteries, which increases the risk of a heart attack
- homocysteine levels
- the risk of duodenal ulcers developing
* real breath killer, which can only be controlled by quitting.
* recipe for creating cardiovascular catastrophes.
* reduces blood flow and slows healing
- bone mass and lowers women's estrogen levels
- circulation to the skin and impedes healing
- fertility and leads to a host of smoking-related pregnancy complications
- fertility, a problem which can be reversed after breaking the addiction
- night vision
* reduces the ability of the blood to carry oxygen
- chance of achieving a pregnancy both naturally and from any treatment
- delivery of oxygen and nutrients to the gums
- flow of healing agents to the back
- levels of antioxidants and impairs blood circulation
- rate of lung growth
* refers to the greying or discoloration of a glaze, caused by underfiring.
* regulates cravings conditioned to external cues
- due to internal cues caused by decreasing nicotine levels
- emotional responses elicited by environmentally induced stress
* relaxes muscles, which makes acid leakage into the gullet more likely
- the sphincter and causes reflux
* releases gases that take the place of oxygen in the mother's blood.
* relieves stress, soothes the nervous system, provides contentment and counters indigestion
* remains a serious problem among youth in our nation
- concentrated in areas of social inequalities
- the leading cause of all fire deaths
* remains the leading cause of preventable death in Canada
- mortality in Canada
- number one preventable cause of death and disease in Canada
- single most important cause of death in our society
- unacceptably high among women of all ages, races and ethnicities
* restricts blood flow by causing vasoconstriction and promoting coagulation
- flow, which interferes with the proper healing of wounds
* reverses the tension and irritability that build up during periods of nicotine abstinence.
* risk factor for blood clotting problems associated with oral contraceptives
- developing rheumatoid arthritis
* risk factor for many cancers
- health problems, including heart disease, stroke, and cancer
- in throat and lung cancer
- inferring a minor increase in risk
- factor, since nicotine constricts blood vessels
* risk for premature menopause
- stroke, cholesterol is an indirect risk for stroke
* risk, as are many other things in life.
* ritualistic activity.
* ruins the health of many young people.
* seems to affect the liver, too, by changing the way it handles drugs and alcohol
- be rampant among the aboriginal peoples
* seems to damage the heart in many different ways
- memory and limit one's ability to remember previous experiences
- raise blood pressure levels and heart rate
- stimulate the recurrence of genital warts
* self-destructive behavior.
* serious health threat in many ways
- problem for employees and employers
* serious, serious risk factor.
* sign of individual expression and peace of mind.
* significant cause of the disease
- contributor to many diseases
- deterrent to good healing
- factor in the occurrence and severity of peptic ulcers
* significantly elevates the risk of stroke.
* significantly increases an individual's risk of heart attack
- fire hazard, and boosts cleaning and maintenance costs
- reduces life expectancy and hampers quality of life
* slows blood flow to the face and can interfere with healing
- healing tissues and can increase the risk of lung problems
* slows down blood circulation to the extremities
- lung growth and reduces lung function
* slows down the blood flow and can make heart and blood vessel problems worse
- recovery from illness and surgery and slows bone and wound healing
* slows the healing of existing ulcers and also contributes to ulcer recurrence
* source of pleasure to many people.
* speeds up the hardening of the arteries.
* stops the cilia from moving.
* strong risk factor for cardiovascular disease
* substantially increases the risk of having a heart attack.
* suppresses folic acid levels.
* suspected cause of infertility.
* symbol of the fire in the mind, the fire of ideas.
* takes a heavy human toll
- place at low temperatures and opening the lid or door causes quick heat loss
* tends to be more of a major factor than coffee consumption
- cause chronic coughing, which can add to problems with bladder control
- create a stronger craving for alcohol, and vice versa
- delay healing of peptic ulcers
- dry the food, kills bacteria, deepens color and gives food a smoky flavor
* thickens the blood by increasing the production of red blood cells
- lining of the lung
* too can make bad breath worse.
* tough addiction to conquer and requires real commitment and the desire to stop smoking.
* traditional method of food conservation for meat and fish.
* transforms people into social outcasts.
* true form of drug addiction and that is exactly how it's treated.
* type of immune deficiency.
* typically begins in adolescence.
* varies greatly by education.
* very addictive habit that is difficult to break
- type of drug abuse
- physical and mental addiction
- powerful, very deadly addiction
- serious health problem in Australia
- strong risk factor for heart disease and stroke
* way of letting the creative process take form
- to lose weight for some kids
* well demonstrated etiologic factor in the development of small cell tumors.
* woman's number one risk factor for heart disease.
+ Danger: Epidemiology :: Safety
* People often take risks, or do things that might hurt them. An example of this is crossing the road without looking carefully. There is a risk that you might get hit by a car. Some animals are dangerous because they might attack humans. Anything that involves a risk of injury or to health can be described as dangerous. Smoking is dangerous to health.
+ Factor (medicine)
* Smoking is a 'risk factor' for getting asthma. If a person already has asthma smoking can be a 'trigger factor' for an asthma attack. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sedation
* always precedes depression.
* common adverse side effect
- side-effect of neuroleptic treatment
* helps a woman's muscles relax during the procedure thereby reducing cramping
- diminish autonomic symptoms and agitation
* is administration
- given to younger children
- more common during the first several days after initiation of medication
- often more effective if a child is tired and, in the case of an infant, hungry
- significant at concentrations achieved from therapeutic dosages
- the most common adverse effect of the benzodiazepines
* major dose-limiting adverse effect of opioid therapy for many patients
- side effect of the drug
* precedes opioid-induced respiratory depression.
* usually disappears upon reduction of other antiepileptic medication
- wears off as the antidepressant effect starts to kick in<|endoftext|>Several adaptation
* exist in life cycle that assist transmission to the host.
* help a flycatcher catch insects.
* maintain cell shape in the face of solute concentration changes.
+ Camel, Habitat and adaptation: Camelids :: Domesticated animals :: Mammals of Pakistan :: Animals used for transport
* Several adaptations help a camel save water. Their large feet spreads their weight on the sand when they are walking. When there is food and water, a camel can eat and drink large amounts and store it as fat in the hump. Then, when there is no food or water, the camel uses the fat for energy, and the hump becomes small and soft.
Sudden deafness
* is also common from blood flow interruptions from various causes.
* occurs abruptly.
Sanity
* comes in several forms.
* is for people with routines, stress and a lack of hats
- mental health
- soundness of mind
* word for fools and cowards.
Skating
* are activities
- recreational activities
- rides
- sports
* are used for enjoyment
- entertainment
- exercises
- fun
- hockeys
- pleasure
- relaxation
- social interaction
* cause fallings
- injuries
- movement
- scrape<|endoftext|>Scheduling
* are planning.
* is an automated process that can schedule workers indefinitely into the future
- important part of time management
- another area in which people use different technologies
- one of many applications of GAs
* is the assignment of vehicles and personnel to operate transit service
- part that schedules transitions for execution
- process of ensuring that materials are at the right place at the right time
- used to cover things like jewelry, electronics, collectibles, etc
* natural domain for constraint technology.
* refers to how often a model is run.
* resource management framework allowing to trade precision for timeliness. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Socialism
* advocates a larger, more intrusive style of government than does capitalism
- larger role of government than does capitalism
* aims at subordinating all production to human reason.
* allows for laziness and economic complacency as evidenced by the collapse of communism.
* also continues to exist in many countries
- holds that all resources are owned by the state, and again no state exists
* can be evolutionary or revolutionary
- come about democratically or by revolution
- end both the exploitation of labor and the exploitation of nature
- mean only democratization of society
* claims to serve people as workers, as producers of goods and services.
* concept that is based upon the understanding of socioeconomic formations.
* considers itself to be the most scientific ideology ever.
* continues to deprive the Israeli people of economic freedom
- shrink the nation, while depriving the people of freedom
* creates a centrally planned economy
- more equality, but it takes away some work incentives
* dead ideology.
* describes a society in which people work together to increase the benefit of all.
* developing, growing system.
* emphasizes community with child rearing as a community responsibility
- children and child rearing as a community responsibility
* euphemism for capitalism in China.
* exists wherever the workers themselves directly manage the entire society.
* fails to recognize the human right to own property.
* has social production and social appropriation
- socialist or social ownership of the basic means of production
- some benefits, at least to the lower levels of society
* implies some central authority sitting in the middle with guns.
* is about making decisions with the aim of promoting the good of everyone.
* is an economic and governmental system where the workers own and run companies
- system marked by government control of industry
- expansion of democracy by the working class
- insidious, contagious and degenerating cultural disease
* is based on the people's
- upon the redistribution of wealth from the productive to the parasitical
- communism with movie stars
- discredited because only a free market economy can give a secure basis for democracy
- economic democracy
- entirely about greed
- inevitable because it has real solutions to the problems of capitalism
- inherently totalitarian in philosophy
- made of socialists
- necessary to end the ecological destruction caused by capitalism
- no religion
* is one of the most insidious evils ever devised by man
- type of collectivism
- only possible as the result of direct action by the working class
- placed in between capitalism and communism
- political ideology
- presented as perfection, while all other philosophies are flawed
- seductive in theory, but tends toward tyranny and serfdom in practice
* is the answer to the wars, anarchy and crises of capitalism
- best form of government for Kenya
- economical consequence, and a subset, of statism
- equal distribution of poverty
- essential first step to eliminate the middle class property and business owners
- future
- institutionalization of the free rider problem
- intermediate transition from capitalism to communism
- next and necessary stage of human development
- only way to end the horror of pollution and ecological destruction
- people's control over the means of production
- rejection of capitalism
- renunciation of rational economy
- system of economics least likely to survive a war
- theory of evolution applied to politics and government
- tyranny of the most dumb of society
- ultimate exploitative monopoly
- use of government force to achieve a given political and social end
- to replace the collapsed capitalism
* is when man exploits man, capitalism is the reverse
- wrong because it externally forces humankind to work together
* lays the basis for the conscious planning of human affairs, i.e. communism.
* means a classless society
- more equal distribution of wealth among the people
- society restructured according to the working-class principle of solidarity
- wageless, moneyless society
- common ownership of the means of production and distribution
- complete control of their tools and products by the workers
- democracy at all levels of society, including the workplace
- far more individual liberty than workers can possibly have under capitalism
- free access to the goods produced by society
- keeping account of everything
- more than just equality between ethnic majorities and ethnic minorities
- police states and clapped out economies
- public control of government and economics
- the end of class divisions, social inequality and the insatiable drive for profits
- voluntary labour
* persists, because some central authority is free to end dissention with a noose.
* perverts the law, making it an instrument of legalized plunder.
* practical organizational model of human community.
* presupposes a dictatorship of the proletariat.
* produces a huge shift in wealth followed by stagnation
* regressive form of government.
* rejects minority and majority
- the notions of private property and the free market
* requires a population dependent on the government
- state to act as the agent of resource distribution
- sacrifice, which is the antithesis of an individual's cult of individualism
* response to poverty, and the belief it can be eradicated.
* says the state owns the property and people just use it.
* science of considerable dimensions.
* seeks governmental ownership of all property
- to pull down wealth
* series of steps.
* society without commodities and without classes.
* stage on the way to communism.
* stands to communalism as capitalism stands to slavery.
* stresses universal coverage for all people.
* strives to bring the best out of human nature.
* system which is defined by governmental ownership of property.
* takes and redistributes wealth, but it is utterly incapable of creating wealth.
* tyrannical form.
* wishes to establish collective property relations in the major sectors of the economy.
+ Socialism, Overview: Forms of government :: Political movements
* Socialism is an economic and governmental system where the workers own and run companies. Its goal is to have the industries make money which can be used for the benefit of everyone. It wants to give workers control over their workplaces.
+ Socialist country: Forms of government
* A 'Socialist country' is a country where the government or the public as a whole has control over the economy. In a socialist country, the producing and dispersing of goods is owned by the government. Socialism is placed in between capitalism and communism. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Silkie
* are a hardy breed
- robust breed, generally very happy and love to play
- very game breed, full of bravado and have strong guarding instincts
- an Oriental breed and have feathers which look more like fur and black skin
- another well sought breed of bantam by people who are into raising bantams
- bantam chickens
- known to maintain a puppy attitude throughout life
- one of the oldest, most beautiful and unique breed of bantam chickens
- the quintessence of lithe and lanky, all arms and legs and long white tails
* come in white and black and other colors.
* have plumage that looks like hair rather than feathers and blue skin
- two seasonal moults but little hair is dropped<|endoftext|>Skepticism
* aims to find out the truth in all things.
* also extends to some degree to environmental science.
* comes in many forms.
* concept that can be used to destroy itself.
* defense mechanism, the nagging voice of reason.
* divine endowment.
* healthy response to denial
- trait in a genealogist
* helps to drive discovery and change for the better.
* implies open-mindedness.
* is an important part of the scientific method
- attractive to the human mind
- avoided through a theory of justification without a guarantee of truth
- doubt
- intellectual doubt, while atheism is absolute disbelief
- more common among women than men
- one of the fundamental characteristics of a good scientist
- part of human experience
- perhaps one of the best and most rudimentary spirits in mankind
* is the belief that knowledge about reality is impossible to obtain
- disposition, or art, of matching belief to evidence
* is the doctrine that absolute knowledge of reality is impossible
- true knowledge, or knowledge in a particular area, is uncertain
- first step on the road to philosophy
- human open-mindedness and questioning that has led to science
- inheritance doctors have gotten over the last century
- intellectual foundation of solipsistic nihilism
- opposite of uncritical acceptance
- position which doubts claims to knowledge
- rejection of reason
- unwillingness to accept hypotheses without adequate supporting evidence
- view that no-one can attain certain knowledge of reality
- unbelief in cause and effect
* is, in a way, the mediating influence upon curiosity which guides it toward wisdom.
* mark of illness.
* provisional approach to claims.
* sophisticated way of saying disbelief.
* very healthy habit when searching the Web.
Stucco keratosis
* appears to be produced by thickening of the epidermis.
* benign lesion that can be removed by curettage or cryotherapy
- usually mistaken as seborrheic keratosis
* is found across all races. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Strontium
* also bioaccumulates in the body
- has no regulatory guideline and is considered non-toxic
- occurs as a silicate in the mineral brewsteiite
- results in a denser skeleton
* byproduct of marijuana smoke.
* can accurately show researchers the exact location and time of a fish swimming in a river.
* has no biological role
- several natural isotopes, and many artificial ones
* is absorbed into the skeleton and can cause bone cancer
- already in the bones of American children
- also available in soluble forms including chlorides , nitrates and acetates
- an element that belongs to the group of alkaline-earth metals
- chemical elements
- chemically similar to calcium
* is found chiefly as celestite and strontianite
- in celestite and strontianite ores
- metallic elements
- one of the most common elements found on earth
- present in sea water and soil
- radioactive substances
- softer than calcium and decomposes in water more vigorously
* is used in producing glass for color television picture tubes
- red fireworks
- to make pyrotechnics
* non-essential mineral.
* provides insights into how much the animal traveled as their molars developed.
* resembles and acts like calcium.
* soft metal like lead and, when freshly cut, has a silvery lustre
- that reacts to air, to form a yellowish color
* soft, shiny metal
- silvery metal<|endoftext|>Surname
* Many surnames have alternate spellings or have changed spellings over time
- more than one origin
- variable spelling
* Some surnames are more common in certain areas than in others.
* appear to be written only for the heads of families and single individuals.
* are a very important part of a person's name
- particularly useful since they can serve as approximate genetic markers
- the focus of genealogical research
* cross into U.K. and Ireland, Canada, Australia and the United States.
* represent a person's family or clan.
Stroke rehabilitation
* can help people return to independent living.
* very important part of recovery for many people who have had a stroke.
* works best when the patient and their family members work together as a team. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Selenium
* Acts as an antioxidant and thus protects the body's cells.
* Most selenium is recovered from the electrolytic copper refining process.
* Plays an important role as a component of the antioxidant enzyme, glutathione peroxidase.
* Some selenium is lost when foods are washed, cooked, or processed.
* Works with Vitamin E in preserving the healthy elasticity of tissues and skin
- vitamin E to help protect cells against oxidation
* accompanies sulfur in volcanic effluents.
* actually aids in their removal from the body.
* also appears to help stimulate antibody formation in response to vaccines
- has powerful anticancer properties
- helps protect the eyes from cataracts and the heart from muscle damage
- is of concern, especially in areas that have a high incidence of white muscle disease
- plays a vital role in the functioning of the immune system
- prevents dandruff
* also seems to make platelets less sticky, decreasing the risk of heart attacks and strokes
* boosts immunity and detoxifier.
* by-product of copper refining.
* byproduct of copper sulfide ores.
* can also find applications in photocopying, in the toning of photographs
- produce electricity directly from sunlight and is used in solar cells
- be deficient in some areas of Georgia
* can be toxic at very high doses
- in overdose
- build up in the body if exposure is high and occurs over a long period of time
- cause side effects when taken in excessive amounts
- collect in animals that live in water containing high levels of it
- help fight premature aging and hardening of the tissues through oxidation
* causes the glass to turn an amber color when exposed to light.
* chemical element resembling sulfur.
* cofactor for vitamin E, as well as glutathione reductase.
* combines with proteins to make selenoproteins, which are important antioxidant enzymes.
* common toxic element in many parts of the western United States.
* component of glutathione peroxidase, an enzyme for removal of lipid peroxides
- the unusual amino acids selenocysteine and selenomethionine
* contains six stable elements.
* enhances the antioxidant effects of Vitamin E.
* exists in a number of allotropic forms
- several allo- tropic forms
* exists in several allotropic forms, although three are generally recognized
* facilitates the function of glutathione, which is also important in mercury detoxification.
* fairly reactive element.
* has a sparing effect of vitamin E by making it more efficient
- variety of functions
- antioxidant effects which help prevent damage to tissues caused by oxygen
- other viral connections as well
- several allotropic forms, but only three are generally recognized
* has some interesting implications in human nutrition
- rather interesting nutritional roles
- two colors which depend on the way that it is found
* helps eliminate arsenic
- toxic, heavy metals from vital organs in the human body
- keep youthful elasticity in the tissues
- regulate the glutathione peroxidase enzyme, a strong antioxidant enzyme
* helps to maintain elasticity in the tissues
- slow the physical signs of aging
- with the male reproductive system
* is absorbed through the intestines and stored in the liver, kidney's, and muscles
- added to lower the amount of bismuth required
* is also a critical cofactor in cellular vitamin E uptake
- part of enzymes that deiodinate thyroid hormones
- photoconductor, a material that changes light energy into electrical energy
- potent antioxidant that protects the lining of the arteries
- trace mineral required by the horse
* is also an essential trace nutrient for many aquatic and terrestrial species
- important mineral antioxidant
- available in nutritional yeast
- deficient in the Northwest, Washington and Oregon
* is also important for detoxification enzymes
- to prevent white muscle disease in foals and tying up in mature horses
- suitable for use in rectifiers
- the most toxic of the trace elements
- an anti-oxidant with activity as a free radical scavenger
* is an antioxidant and helps prevent breast tenderness
- is associated with the metabolism of fat
- involved in many important enzyme processes
- mineral with potential to fight cancer and elevate mood
* is an antioxidant which prevents cells in the body from damage
- works with vitamin E to fight free-radical damage
- element that occurs naturally as well as introduced by manmade activities
* is an essential cofactor of glutathione peroxidase and is an important antioxidant
- component of the antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase
- element for humans and animals
- metal that helps prevent damage caused by oxygen
- micronutrient in all known forms of life
* is an essential mineral for both dogs and humans
- whose biological role is unknown
* is an essential nutrient and is important for reducing cell membrane damage
- at low levels
- that help metabolize vitamin E and ensure optimal liver function
* is an essential trace element in nutrition for the prevention of disease in humans
- that occurs naturally in the environment
- element, but excess selenium is toxic to biological systems
- mineral that is vital to the health of the muscles and other tissues
- eye and upper respiratory irritant and a sensitizer
- immune booster which produces antibody responses to all forms of infections
- mineral for the prevention of prostate cancer and other cancers
- semi-conductor which is particularly sensitive to light
* is another anti-oxidant and is important for the maintenance of the heart beat
- important trace element
* is antagonistic to heavy metal toxicity
- metals including lead, mercury, aluminum and cadmium
- available as an inorganic mineral as sodium selenite and sodium selenate
- believed to prevent many kinds of cancer, especially breast cancer
- beneficial in stimulating the immune system and the pace-making system of the heart
- both photovoltaic and photoconductive
- bound to protein derived amino acids
- claimed to be a general cancer preventative
- correlated with decreased colon cancer rates
- destroyed when foods are refined or processed
- directly below sulfur in group VIa of the periodic table
- effective in at least partially controlling nutritional muscular dystrophy
* is essential for the immune system
- in human nutrition and has important antioxidant functions
- to a good diet
* is essential to mammals and higher plants in small amounts
- plants, but only in small amounts
- expensive and ruby glass the most costly glass in India
- five times more poisonous than arsenic
* is found in a few rare minerals, s'uch as crooksite and clausthalite
- minerals, such as crooksite and clausthalite
- brazil nuts, avocados, lentils, meat, fish and dairy produce
- different forms
- metal sulfide ores , where it partially replaces the sulfur
- some trace mineral salts
* is found in the germ of grains
- highest concentrations in seafoods, grains, muscle meats, and Brazil nuts
- most in sulfide ores like pyrite
- naturally in tuna and many nuts
- quite abundantly in our food supply
- frequently deficient, particularly in diets high in fat and sugar
- helpful for the body's glutathione peroxidase, which potent antioxidant
- identified as an essential antioxidant nutrient
* is important because when light strikes the charged selenium, the charge disappears
- for a healthy immune system
- in helping to keep tissues flexible with elasticity
* is in most soils
- the same group with sulfur
- isochemical with sulfur and substitutes for sulfur in the sulfide minerals
* is known to be toxic in high doses
- bind silver, making it also a chelating agent
- made by oxidizing selenide ores to selenium dioxide
* is needed for a horse's normal muscle function and health
- both innate and acquired immune function
- certain enzymes that help with normal body functions
- production of testosterone
- to activate a number of hormones produced by the thyroid gland
- nonmetal
- obtained as a by-product from other industrial processes
- often available in multivitamin and mineral supplements
* is one metal oxide that is used to produce reddish colors
- of the most volatile and toxic byproducts produced by coal-fired power plants
* is part of the body's antioxidant defense system
- enzyme glutathione peroxidase, which recycles glutathione
* is present in a variety of foods but only in very small amounts
- seafood, cereals, meats, whole grains and brazil nuts
- the atmosphere as metyl derivatives
- varying degrees in soils throughout the world
- rare in most foods
- readily available in broccoli, garlic and onions
- recognized as an essential trace mineral
- recovered by roasting the sludge or mud with sulfuric acid or soda
- released to air through coal and oil combustion
- reported to be high in some areas in Nebraska
* is required for normal upregulation of myelin genes in differentiating oligodendrocytes
- the essential antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase
- to get vitamin E to work
- responsible for elasticity of body tissues and increase in oxygen supply to the heart
- said to stimulate the metabolism
- software
- solids
- stored in muscle and other tissues, as well as in the liver and kidneys
* is the functional component of the enzyme gltathine peroxidase
- most popular toner among fine art photographers
- trace element with the greatest potential for toxicity
- therefore useful in photocells and solar cells
- toxic when taken at high levels
* is used in Xerography for reproducing and copying documents, letters, etc
- an array of important compounds in the body
- solar cells and light detectors
- to improve the abrasion resistance in vulcanized rubbers
- with bismuth in brasses to replace more toxic lead
* is very important to any cardiac maintenance program and to diabetic regimens
* keeps tumors from growing by helping to build healthy, cancer-fighting white blood cells.
* known anti oxidant.
* leaves the body mainly in the urine, and less in feces and breath.
* low-cost dietary supplement sold everywhere.
* metal commonly found in rocks and soil
- found in natural deposits as ores containing other elements
- which exists in nature only in the combined form
* mineral found in many plant foods and in some meats and seafood
- soil and certain foods
* mineral found in the soil in many areas of the country
- present in grains grown in certain areas
* mineral that is found in the prostate
- widely available from meat and animal products
* modifies the metabolism and toxicity of arsenic in primary rat hepatocytes.
* more recent addition to the list of essential metals.
* naturally appears in water and some foods.
* naturally occurring antioxidant
- heavy metal that is common in the dry soils of western Colorado
- mineral element
- trace element toxic to wildlife when concentrated
* necessary micronutrient.
* nonmetallic element closely related to sulphur.
* nutrient that is essential to the human body.
* nutritionally essential trace element.
* occurs as selenide in many sulfide ores, like copper, silver, or lead
- naturally as a trace element in most soils, rocks, and waters
* occurs naturally in drinking water, though in trace amounts only
* offers anti-bacterial, keratolytic and drying functions
- beneficial protection against cardiovascular disease and strokes
- strong protection for smokers
* plant essential nutrient.
* plays a critical role in the photocopying process.
* possesses anti-fungal qualities.
* potent antioxidant important in promoting and maintaining prostate health
- that can help to reduce cell destruction
- cancer-preventive antioxidant
* powerful antioxidant that fights free-radical damage
* protects against cancer of the liver
- methylmercury intoxication and other forms of mercury
- some cancers
- the body from heavy metal contamination
* relatively new dietary consideration.
* required mineral for most animals.
* seems to play an important role in the maintenance of fertility in laying hens.
* semiconductor and is used in photocells.
* stimulates formation of antibodies that combat bacteria, viruses and cancer cells
- to combact viruses and bacteria
* strengthens immunity, enhances longevity, and detoxifies environmental pollutants.
* supports the functions of vitamin E and is thought to prevent against cancer
- immune system and neutralizes invading toxins
* trace element found to a varying extent in soil
- present in alkaline desert soils
* trace mineral essential to life and proper nutrition
- found in many foods
- present in soil which is absorbed into the food chain through plants
* trace mineral with a controversial history
- antioxidant and anticancer properties
* valuable anti-oxidant.
* very rare element.
* vital antioxidant
- component of the metallo-protein enzyme glutathione peroxidase
- element to both prevent and treat cancer
* works closely with Vitamin E as an antioxidant or protector of body cells.
* works with vitamin E in the antioxidant defense system
- to fight cell damage by oxygen-derived compounds
+ Selenium, Occurrence: Chemical elements :: Nonmetals
* Selenium is very rarely found as an element in the ground. Most selenium in soil is in a very tiny amount. It is easily washed away. It is in very small amounts in the human body. Selenium is found most in sulfide ores like pyrite. This selenium is in selenides. Selenium is gotten as a byproduct. Sometimes selenium is concentrated in plants. It can also be leached into rivers when copper is mined. Too much selenium is bad for a river.
* Most selenium in soil is in a very tiny amount. It is easily washed away. It is in very small amounts in the human body. Selenium is found most in sulfide ores like pyrite. This selenium is in selenides. Selenium is gotten as a byproduct. Sometimes selenium is concentrated in plants. It can also be leached into rivers when copper is mined. Too much selenium is bad for a river. Some coal has selenium in it
- Preparation
* It is made as a byproduct when refining copper and certain other sulfide ores. Selenium is made by oxidizing selenide ores to selenium dioxide. The selenium dioxide is dissolved in acidic water to make selenous acid, which is reacted with sulfur dioxide to make selenium as an element. It is the red form that is made. To make the black form, the red form is heated and melted
+ Selenium, Uses, In materials
* Selenium is used in photocells. The gray metallic form is used, as it changes its electrical conductivity when light shines on it. Selenium is also used as a catalyst. The largest use is to color glass red. It can be used in special brasses instead of lead. It is used in some rectifiers
* Selenium is a trace element in the human body. Humans need very small amounts of selenium. Only about 50-200 micrograms are needed. Selenium can be toxic if more than 400 micrograms are taken. Once there was coal that had a large amount of selenium in it. People were getting selenium poisoning from the coal | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Stare
* are looks.
* means to be when used in progressive tense.
Solar disinfection
* can provide a simple, low cost technology for disinfecting drinking water.
* uses solar radiation to inactivate and destroy pathogens present in water.
Strong encryption
* concept that is difficult to define in general terms.
* is considered crucial to protect electronic privacy in the digital age
- one of the greatest achievements of the information age
- used to make secure transactions
* protects consumers, and helps law enforcement by preventing crime on the Internet.
* refers to the size of the key used to encrypt the message.
* tool that enables people and businesses to communicate securely.
Synchrony
* appears to be a ubiquitous property of cortex-like delay networks.
* developer of customer relationship management software.
* reduces defendability of mates while spatial clumping increases defendability.
* remarkable feat of coordination by the plants.<|endoftext|>Serendipity
* Serendipities are good luck
* also plays a role in the development of our personal toolboxes.
* chance occurrence happening between two people when they meet.
* includes spirituality and or the discussion of religion.
* is an important aspect of the sciences
- for travelers who seek personal challenges, both physical and mental
- good fortune
* is the Name of the Road to Paradise
- discovery of interesting new crops unexpectedly or by accident
* means the process of discovering something by accident.
* occurs in all places and at all times, making possibilities infinite
- when something beautiful breaks into life's monotony
* plays a role in research, and so do intuitive ideas
- significant role in human experience
* rare word for a very common occurence in science.
* still plays a role in what people read. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Slavery
* also is illustrative of primitive legal thinking.
* common practice that has at least tacit support of the government of Sudan.
* continues today as tribal militias capture women and children as war booty in the civil war.
* covers the entire historical period.
* degrading and humiliating condition regardless of the master
* denial of basic human rights.
* denies to the enslaved their basic human rights.
* devastating result of the country's civil war.
* discourages arts and manufactures.
* dooms thousands of human beings to hopeless ignorance.
* emphasizes the completeness and the degradation of the state.
* exists because it is popular.
* exists in Sudan
- various forms in our society
- when human beings become property
* forcibly uses one person to serve the purposes of another.
* goes back as far as the biblical days
- to prehistoric times but declined in Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire
* horrible practice for the appitimy of humanity.
* human issue.
* immoral, because it violation of the enslaved person's individual rights.
* is abolished in the British Empire
- French colonies
* is about oppression, exploitation, violence and reprisal
- power relationships
- accused of causing a rift between black men and women, too
* is an issue in many countries, including our own
- obscenity
- unjust system
- both an economic transaction between seller and buyer, but also a legal arrangement
- closely analogous to one of the critical issues of our own day, abortion
- coercion
* is common practice in parts of Sudan
- complicated oppression in body, soul, substance, relation, reputation
- daily rape
- dead, but the crime of institutionalized racism still exists
- economic suicide
- essentially, a human being being sold as a commodity to another person
- fact in Sudan and just as in Mauritania it is racial in nature
- forbidden in the United Mexican States
- freedom
- illegal unless it is for conviction for a crime
- incompatible with universal and fundamental human rights
- key in economic expansion
- labor
- legal, but extremely rare
- misery, especially when the master is harsh, selfish, insensitive, cruel, and powerful
- non-thinking action, rote behavior, following the impulse desires of the body
- of a very ancient origin
- one of the answers capitalism has found
- practised widely
- sixty years in the past
- slavery
- something imposed upon a human being by another at some moment after birth
* is still alive in pockets around the world
- legal in Decatur, Alabama
* is the abrogation or infringement of even one of the Unalienable Rights of one person
- direct control of labor through physical coercion and threat of harm
- institution whereby one person can hold ownership rights over another
- largest blight on American history
- long day of the master over the slave and of nights turned to days
- most commonly known reason as to why the Civil War began
- negro system of labour
- polar opposite of freedom
- price of ignorance and inaction
- tie that binds, but the legacy also keeps the two groups apart
- worst kind of stealing
- very common in the history of the South
* life with no accomplishment, no achievement, and no meaning.
* makes all work, and it ensures homes, food and clothing for all.
* means death.
* recurring theme in the literature of the Caribbean.
* remains a strongly accepted custom among the people who practice it.
* shared experience.
* still exists and subsidizes capitalists.
* still exists in America
- parts of Africa, where certain tribes buy and sell their ethnic enemies
* still exists in the Sudan
- world today
- today's world
* system in which human beings are owned and forced to work by their master.
* takes different forms in different lands.
* tragic part of the shared histories of all American societies.
* violation, by law, of liberty.
* withering blight upon the prospects, happiness, and freedom of our nation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sun
* Many suns arise and set
- revolve in desolate space
* are powered by nuclear fusion, mostly converting hydrogen into helium
- robust little parrots and adore their owners
* explode as supernovae.
* rise And shadows fall.
Sibs
* still resemble each other largely because they share the additive effects of genes.
* tend to be alike because they share genes in common which are received from their parents.
Sos
* believes that it takes more than food to fight hunger and poverty.
* works to alleviate and prevent hunger and poverty in the United States and around the world.
Successful change
* can only occur when people embrace and champion it.
* is something that makes the overall picture better on balance.
Systematic risk
* are unanticipated events that affect almost all assets to some degree.
* is the risk of holding the market portfolio
- the whole market undergoes
* refers to risk factors common to the entire economy
- uncertainty driven by changes the economy as a whole<|endoftext|>Shrine
* Most shrines have at least a honden, a hall in which the symbol of the kami is enshrined.
* A 'shrine' shrine holy or sacred place with something important inside it, such as the tomb of a religious person. Shrines are built in the surroundings of the grave of pious men. These are built to show respect and love for the one who died. People visit the shrines to pray for themselves and also for the dead. Shrines are common in Muslim countries.
- designated area for which the kami are believed to have visited or dwelled
- places of worship
- the center of Shinto, with each shrine being dedicated to a specific kami
* can infinitely enhance one's life and dwelling place.
* is house of worship
* often have a pool with running water.
* vary greatly in size, depending on the size of the area in which their parishioners live.
San
* are a type of neural network that uses sensors for inputs and outputs to actuators
- networked storage infrastructures designed to de-couple servers from storage systems
- the shape of the future for all distributed computing environments
* normally contain storage devices, servers, and switches.<|endoftext|>Stagnation
* always produces pain as a side effect.
* blight and curse to any church.
* brings disease and death.
* causes pain, cramps, clots, bloating, etc., during the cycle.
* common characteristic of addictive love relationships.
* is associated with death
- frustration, irritability, tension, and feeling stuck
- death for political parties, and old labour was stagnant
- inaction
- poisonous to the creative spirit
* occurs when all trees grow at about the same rate, then growth slows due to competition.
Superficial mycose
* affect the skin, whereas systemic mycoses spread through the body.
* are localized along hair shafts in in superficial epidermal cells
- on hair shafts and superficial skin cells
Serologic testing
* can support the diagnosis of sarcoidosis.
* detects the presence of antibodies in serum.
* is the mainstay of rubella diagnosis
- most common, and least expensive, method to test for toxoplasmosis<|endoftext|>Satisfaction
* Is The Death Of Desire.
* equals utility in economics.
* function of expectation as well as realization.
* is an accumulation of many experiences over time
- contentment
- emotion
- located in work
- negatively related to wife's employment status and financial satisfaction
- payments
- the final act which crowns the sacramental sign of Penance
* part of Penance as a sacrament, and a fruit of penance as a virtue.
* refers to how much the individual enjoys the relationship. | {
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} |
Seasoning
* are an essential aspect of Hmong cooking
- any additive that enhances the natural flavor of the food dish being prepared
- dry flavor blends that can include spices , herbs , and salt
- part of cooking
* can include fresh herbs, dried herbs, and a wide range of natural seasonings.
* play an important role in Malay cooking as they often enhance the food taste and flavors.
Superficial phlebitis
* affects the veins visible just beneath the skin surface.
* locates the inflammation in surface leg veins.
Seasonal change
* affect everyone differently
- people profoundly, too
* are due to the Earth revolving around the sun
- fluctuations in prices that occur at the same time very year
* bring about many changes in nature.
* can affect our horse's diet, too
- the likelihood of getting an infection, too
* cause leaves to turn brown and drop off in autumn.
* depend on the amount of sunlight reaching our latitude.
* do occur in the pelagic fish fauna of the Bay.
* varies greatly with latitude.
Sudden change
* are much harder on plants than gradual changes.
* can affect the life of the system.
* can cause digestive upsets
- some bacteria to die, produce poisons and cause metabolic disorders<|endoftext|>Seman
* All semen is initially relatively thick, and liquefies after ejaculation
- is food for the sperm
* Most semen has characteristics
- travelss through urethras
* Semen also contains natural prostaglandins, which help the uterus to contract
- has lymphocytes which can harbor the virus despite the use of potent antiretrovirals
* Semen can change color for several different reasons
- enter a woman's body through breaks in the fine lining of the vagina
- tend to smell a bit like chlorine
- transmit the virus
- pooling is an excellent option for men suffering from low sperm counts
- then enters the wider opening to the bladder instead of being expelled through the penis
* Some semen comes from seminal vesicles
* Some semen contains animalcules
- zinc
- enters uteruses
- flows through grooves
* Some semen has effects
- protective effects
* Some semen is deposited in cervixes
- vaginas
- released from the penis while the boy is asleep<|endoftext|>Strangeness
* is basically a resistance to decay against strong force and electromagnetism
- quality
+ Strange quark: Quarks
* Three strange quarks together form a particle called an Omega baryon'Strange quarks' are the third lightest quarks, which are subatomic particles that are so small, they are believed to not be able to be divided. Strangeness is basically a resistance to decay against strong force and electromagnetism. It was believed that this was a 'strange' method of decay, which is why the scientists gave the particles that name.
Successful marketing
* begins with understanding why and how consumers behave as they do.
* complex process which develops over time.
* is about developing relationships by establishing helpful, consistent contact
- measured by sales or responses
* team effort by individuals with disparate talents. | {
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} |
Scripture
* All scriptures regard attachment to wealth and possessions as a fetter to the religious life.
* Many Scriptures clearly teach that baptism is essential to receive forgiveness under the gospel
- scriptures show the Angel of the Lord is divine
* Many scriptures use fire as a symbol of destruction
- the same allegory
* Some Scriptures are in languages spoken by very few people in isolated settings.
* alone is the final authority on all matters of faith and practice
- ultimate standard of ethical activity
* also has much to say regarding wisdom in man
- serves as the standard for faithful Christian life and practice
* also teaches a doctrine called total depravity, referring to the extent of original sin
- that good works characterize a regenerated life
- uses several other terms
* always places the emphasis upon the physical death of our Saviour
- presents life as the result of faith
- uses the more direct language of repentance and faith
* attest to the efficacy of prayer in daily life.
* becomes one of many religious collections of myths and traditions.
* clearly teaches both the sanctity of life and the value of decision making
- tell men to love their wives
* comes alive in the psalms and gospel stories.
* commands people of faith to care for children without fathers.
* condemns such sins of attitude as greed, jealously, pride, lust, and hatred.
* confirms that all people are the prisoners of sin.
* consistently identifies homosexuality as sin.
* contains all things necessary for salvation.
* continually assigns seven as the number of the remission of sins.
* defines greatness differently.
* describes people even sitting on the floor, in the windows, etc.
* describes the church as a body
- responsibilities of each and their proper relationship to one another
- tongue as a sword
* does mention that the apostles met on the First day of the week to break bread
- teach the consumption of the earth, and a new heaven, new earth, new Jerusalem
* emphasizes the importance of doctrine, of teaching, of truth.
* enables people to stand for something else, to be different and to gain freedom thereby.
* form of nourishment that strengthens the soul making it strong and healthy
- the basis of all learning, and all subjects are studied from a Biblical perspective
* gives many examples of men being enticed by the sight of a woman.
* has authority in that it concurs with one's own self-evident experiences
- many lists of gifts
- no place in the physical realm
* holds a place of importance in our lives
- primary place in the monastic tradition
* implies the importance of desire.
* is above mortal beings
- adamant that greed is idolatry and a form of slavery to sin
- also the inspiration for cultural expression in art, music, and literature
- authoritative in every age and cultural context
- central to spiritual growth and outreach
- divine revelation
* is full of admonitions to live life with purpose
- stories and accounts that illustrate the truth being taught
- given by divine inspiration and is authoritative in all matters of faith and practice
- important to the development of sports psychology
- literary work
- made to be subservient to human teachings and traditions
- meditated upon by the use of chants and songs
- one of the most important strongholds of our faith
- primarily a record of written communication
- quite clear that sin produces death, physical and spiritual
- specific on the issue of conflict between believers
* is the beginning and the end of all true knowledge
- final authority and the only authority to govern the church by
- guide for humans
- key to life
- living Word of God
- mortar that holds the bricks together
- only reliable source of information about demons
- primary and unique source of theology
- standard of truth
- story of our salvation
- supreme and final authority in all matters of faith and practice
- tool that brings it into focus
- ultimate source of authority for Christian morality
- very life and Word of God
* is to be understood metaphorically rather than literally
- used as the source of doctrine, discipline, and Christian practice
- useful for instruction in righteousness
* labels other modes of healing idolatry.
* leaves no doubt about life beginning at conception.
* living document.
* makes no distinction between teachings for daily living, faith and moral
- regarding our humanness, born and unborn
* mentions the presence of angels at every great event in the Kingdom of God.
* often illustrates the different effects of the tongue.
* often uses garments as a symbol of what other people see, namely, our conduct
- white to portray purity and equates it with light to denote completeness
* plainly teaches that a person is judged when they die.
* prohibits adulterous and homosexual activity.
* pronounces twelve curses on the avaricious.
* read in the armchair roams around the surface of the brain.
* recognizes barrenness as a curse for woman, an unnatural state, a life-long sorrow.
* refers to ashes both as a sign of mortality and a sign of repentance
- only one archangel
- the image of a coin only in one situation
- three different types of death
* relates the principle of opposition to crucial states of human experience.
* requires purity before and faithfulness within marriage.
* sacred writing
* says that all men sinned - and the wages of sin is death, eternal, spiritual death
- when sin becomes full grown, it gives birth to death
- which is born of flesh is flesh
- the world is passing away, the Spiritual is eternal
* sees death as a destroyer.
* shows the dignity and value of womanhood, in singleness, marriage and motherhood.
* single, self-consistent truth, but beginning to end.
* speak of at least two ages to come.
* speaks of all kinds of joy which even non-believers experience
- quite differently regarding women's breasts than men's breasts
* states that where there is no vision the people perish.
* supports the tradition of celibacy as conducive to spirituality.
* teach that Jerusalem is where the church was established
- men and women have different roles without being fundamentally unequal
- the unity of husband and wife
* teaches that a wise person can be corrected by words
- all children are born with a sinful nature
- humans play an active role in their conversion and repentance
* teaches that man is hopelessly and helplessly lost in sin
- valued above beasts
- marriage permanent bond, broken only by death
* teaches that the church is to be the light and salt of the world
- good man is perished out of the earth
- what is really harmful is ordinarily sinful
- the baptism of covenant children
* uses trees to symbolize Israel, kings, individual believers, even our Savior.
* weapon wielded by the long arm of man's law.
+ Sport psychology, History, North American History
* Another area that Scripture focused on in his laboratory was how athletes could benefit from the field of experimental psychology. Experimental psychology is when you use experiments and science to study the brain and the mind. He also wrote papers about how sports affected who a person was. In his papers he argued that prisoners who participated in athletic activities while in jail showed improvement in general attitude. University of Nebraska Press. Scripture is important to the development of sports psychology. He is important because he is credited with some of the first work done in the field in North America. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Stairwell
* are located in apartment buildings
- houses
- tall buildings
* are used for climbing
- stairs
- wells
* have stairs.
Seepage
* can carry harmful bacteria into the contents of all but the most tightly sealed containers.
* is flow
- the movement of water from a flooded rice field into an adjacent, nonmanaged area
- water lost through the soil
* natural process with water that occurs everywhere, too.
* occurs when precipitation falls on the landscape and starts to soak into the ground.
Sociality
* also benefits animals via access to food and other resources.
* broad collection of ways in which everyone is included in the group.
* is more advanced in bees, ants, and termites
- nature
Septic bursitis
* is caused by the presence of a pus-forming organism, usually staphylococcus aureus.
* requires antibiotic therapy , often intravenously.
Salivation
* is common and urine and faeces are passed more frequently
- common, and abdominal pain and diarrhoea sometimes occur
- secretion
* often increases, and both pulse rate and blood pressure rise during the seizure
- is increased<|endoftext|>Syntax
* coloring distinguishes tags from text by using colors.
* describes the form or phrase structure of a sentence.
* is all the money collected in church from sinners
- concerned with the rules used to combine words into larger units of phrases and sentences
- grammars
- how information is represented
- part of formal systems
- primarily concerned with structure of sentences
- rules for manipulating symbls based on their shapes rather than their menaings
* is the grammer and rules of a language
- language, the symbols, the strategies employed by a search engine
- set of rules that define how a phrase is structured
- structure of words and phrases to make a sentence in any language
* is the study of how words group together to form phrases and sentences
- structure of phrases and sentences
* is the study of the patterns of sentences and phrases from words in a language
- rules and categories that underlie sentence formation
- what makes a complete sentence
* is the way the words are arranged to form phrases and sentences
- words are linked together in sentences
* means that words are put together into phrases using ordering rules that affect meaning.
* method of formulation.
* refers to the grammar of a language.
* refers to the rules that make sentences
- used to order words into sentences
- sentence structure of the poem
- way the words are put together to construct a sentence
Subsidiarity
* applies to all human institutions, including the state.
* is lower rank
- managed, organizationally, by defining the boundaries of the job
- one of the ideas used in federalism.
* This idea is used by governments, political science, cybernetics and management. Subsidiarity is one of the ideas used in federalism
* kind of surrogate for genuine federalism.
* requirement of democracy and sound common sense.
Spousal abuse
* difficult topic to experience, let alone write about.
* happens among every age, economic, social, racial and ethnic group in our society.
* is condemned in the Bible, just as divorce is.
* result of people addiction.
* serious charge that raises legitimate questions of character.
* takes many forms.<|endoftext|>Sterility
* also can develop in men, and the infection can extend to the prostate and the rectum.
* can also result from severe, untreated infection.
* is good and bad in Tripoli, at the same time
- important for culture results
- permanent
- rare in cases of unilateral orchitis
* is the most feared long-term complication of induced abortion
- ultimate effect upon the male
- very rare after a testicluar infection even if both testes are involved
* major issue for medical robots.
* occurs in almost all sexually reproducing organisms with odd-numbered sets of chromosomes.
* real possibility with sexually transmitted diseases.
* sanitary condition | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subtraction
* concept that many children have difficulty with.
* is arithmetic operations
- decrease
- just one form of arithmetic
- neither commutative nor associative
- opposite of addition
* is the inverse of addition and division is the inverse of multiplication
* is the opposite of addition, as division is the opposite of multiplication
- division is the inverse of multiplication, and so on
- usually the second of the basic mathematical functions learned
- very similar to addition except it subtracts the numbers
* means to take away part of or all of a group.<|endoftext|>Shopping
* compare prices.
* are buying
- commodities
- tirings
- used for fun
* cause a desire to buys
- bankruptcies
- callus
- debts
- less money
- panic
* favourite pastime for most people.
* form of patriotism.
* is an activity that can be performed for either utilitarian or hedonic motives
- for comparing price,quality and value
- life, leisure, and the pursuit of happiness with a credit card
- many people's favorite indoor sport
- often around or with other people
- one of many ways to surround children with meaningful talk
* is the area in which privacy is still largely unprotected
- chief sacrament of consumerist culture
- national pastime in Singapore, next to eating
* quest for meaning and personal identity.
* social activity.
* way of life.
Soft tofu
* good choice for recipes that use blended tofu or silken tofu.
* is good for recipes that call for blended tofu
- use in recipes that use blended tofu, or soups
- in recipes calling for blended tofu
Stasis
* is death
- inaction
- pathology
- the antithesis of evolution
* sets in when the available ecological niches are filled by existing species.
* time of limited change in a lineage.
Smiling
* are good.
* cause happiness.
Solar urticaria
* develops at a site of sun exposure within a few minutes.
* follows exposure to the sun or a sun lamp.
* rare reaction to sun or UV exposure.
Selenium tetrachloride
* yellow or white solid.
+ Selenium tetrachloride, Properties: Selenium compounds :: Chlorine compounds
* Selenium tetrachloride is a yellow or white solid. It evaporates easily. It reacts with water to make hydrochloric acid and selenous acid. It reacts with selenium dioxide to make selenium oxychloride, a mixture of selenium dioxide and selenium tetrachloride bonded together.
Superannuation
* is an accumulation investment specifically targeted at providing for retirement
- designed as a long-term investment to save towards retirement
- dismissals
* pension fund to which employees and employers make regular payments.
Spunk
* is courage
- so prevalent in anime because it is usually so appealing
* library of anarchist literature on internet.
Syncopation
* is as common in jazz as improvisation
- music
- rhythms
- the pulse of jazz and improvisation is often described as the life-blood of jazz
- when there's a note or tap on the off beat
* occurs when the normal rhythmic stresses in a bar are changed.
* results when stress is placed on weak beats rather than on strong beats.
* rhythm in which an accent is placed on a normally weak beat.
* takes place when an accent is misplaced, i.e., placed on an unaccented beat. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Style
* are a collection of formatting parameters within a document
- mechanism for categorizing architectures and for defining their common characteristics
- way to quickly apply formatting throughout a document
- the product of social conditions
* combines decorative patterns
- surface patterns
* defines the type of music such as jazz, rock, or country.
* depends on availability.
* distinctive manner of expression or a technique by which something is done or created.
* evolve and change as ideas spread from place to place.
* has impact
- little impact
- methods
- origins
- specific methods
- to do with body and mind
- weakness
* is an expression of everyone's own personality
- imaginative alternative to ideas such as identity and self
- direction
- important in scientific writing
- innovation of cultural minutia, mundane forms of self-expression and communication
- kinds
- part of carpels
- processes
* is the business of the particular writer and the age within which the writer lives
- by-product of the process or the way the music is played
- expression of the writer s personality
- image of character
- ingredient that can make or break an image
- insatiable desire if people to flaunt their individuality through fashion
- magazine of the Canadian fashion industry
- style with which it is drawn
- way the brand presents itself
* kind of verbal identity of a writer that reflects the way a writer sees the world.
* leads to creations
- criticism
- much criticism
* major factor in the world of the internet.
* means grammar and use of words.
* notion that applies to almost anything humans do.
* refers to both the layout and composition of the pages
- grammar, structure, and spelling
- how well the paper is written
* refers to the characteristics of a work of art, such as brushwork, color, and subject matter
- distinctive and idiosyncratic way one expresses oneself
- investment style or philosophy to which a company is most likely to appeal
- special way in which a writer expresses ideas
- way the ingredients of music are put together to create a distinctive sound
- word choices, sentence structure, and ornaments of speech
* reflection of personal makeup, a set of predispositions that people bring to the job.
* serves to define relationships between works of art that form discernable patterns, or sets.
* string that contains zero or more of the characters n , s , e or w.
* symptom of decadence just as fever, migraine, and nausea are symptoms of illness.
Severe stroke
* More severe strokes can ultimately lead to death.
* can cause coma or death.
* lead to severe disability or death. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Stroke
* Every stroke is different, and strokes can affect individuals in ways that are almost limitless.
* Most strokes also are atherosclerosis-related.
* Most strokes are due to blocked arteries, called infarcts or ischemic strokes
- ischaemia an inadequate blood supply to part of the brain
* Most strokes are ischemic meaning they are caused by a lack of blood supply to part of the brain
- strokes, in which an artery carrying blood to the brain is blocked
- begin suddenly, develop rapidly, and cause brain damage within minutes
* Most strokes occur because an artery in the brain becomes temporarily or permanently blocked
- from blockages in arteries
* Most strokes occur when a blood clot blocks an artery that carries oxygenated blood to the brain
- clot blocks an artery to the brain
- clot blocks an artery which is carrying blood to the brain
- result from clots blocking blood vessels in the brain
* accounts for more than half the patients hospitalized for acute neurological diseases.
* affect different people in different ways
- people of all ages
* affects all ages
- different people differently - so that each survivor's recovery is also different
- four out of five families and is the third leading cause of death
* affects more men than women, but more women die from it
- than three quarters of a million people every year
- mostly the elderly in our society, and enormously increases our health bill
- people of all ages and from all walks of life
* also can cause depression, as survivors think they re now less than whole
- happen when the carotid itself is completely blocked
- cause brain injury, although the statistics are tracked separately
* also is responsible for more injuries from falls than any other medical condition
- the most common cause of adult disability
* also occur as a complication of other diseases, for which patients are already hospitalized
- in early childhood
* are a leading cause of death and disability in people over the age of forty
- major contributor to memory loss in aging brains
- reality faced by thousands of individuals and their families each year
- abnormalities in the brain circulation
- also the leading cause of serious, long-term disability
- among the most preventable neurological disease
- another major cause of dementia
- attacks
- bands
- characterized by paralysis, usually down one side
- maneuvers
- marks
* are more common in men than in women
- older people
- motion
- motions of the mouse that can be interpreted by a program as a command
- often the result of long-term problems such as unchecked high blood pressure
- scores
- serious conditions requiring medical attention
- similar to heart attacks, but they affect the brain instead of the heart
* are the leading cause of serious, long-term disability in the United States
- long-term disability in women
- main health risk one encounters with carotid artery blockage
- major cause of aphasia in the older population
- nation's leading cause of disability and the third leading cause of death
* are the second most common cause of brain failure
- sudden loss of function of a particular portion of the brain
- tangible interpersonal contacts that satisfy psychic needs
* are the third leading cause of death in the U.S. behind heart disease and cancer
- death in the United States
- killer in the U.S., after heart disease and cancer
- touch
* blockage of blood flow to the brain caused by a clogged or ruptured blood vessel
- or rupture of the blood vessels that supply the brain
* brain attack and can lead to paralysis, loss of speech, vision or sensation
* can affect a person's body, mind and emotion
- anyone at any age
- muscles used in talking, and speech can be slow or slurred
- people of any age, from children to the elderly
* can affect the ability to speak, write, listen and read
- think clearly
* can also cause a person to have dementia
- depression, as survivors have difficulty coping with their disabilities
* can be a devastating illness for both patient and family
- very isolating illness
* can cause death or permanent disability
- loss of muscle control, numbness, unconsciousness, or death
- monocular visual loss, homonymous hemianopia, or cortical blindness
* can cause paralysis, affect language and vision, and cause other problems
- loss of motor function and cognitive problems
* can cause problems with speech, hearing, movement and learning
- the cranial nerves which involve vision or gaze
- severe disability or even death
- speech problems, weakness in any part of the body, or difficulty swallowing
- damage either the left or the right side of the brain
* can damage the brain in different ways
- complex system if nerves and muscles which control swallowing
- debilitate the people they affect, causing confusion, speech loss or paralysis
- either be due to ischemic or hemorrhagic processes
- happen if blood vessels to the brain become blocked
* can lead to a pseudobulbar affect, with episodes of excessive crying or laughing
- impairment of functions such as speech, vision or movement, and coma or death
* can occur because of hemorrhage or a blockage of blood vessels in the brain
- lack of blood flow and oxygen to brain tissue
- if a vessel breaks open causing a brain hemorrhage
- in young people and first-time users as well as chronic abusers
* can result from several different diseases
- in a variety of perceptual impairments
- rob people of the most basic methods of interacting with the world
* cardiovascular disease that affects the blood vessels supplying blood to the brain.
* cause too much glutamate to leak into the brain, thus killing brain cells.
* causes dementia by destroying critical brain areas.
* common disorder.
* commonly results in death or in enormous disability to victims
- death, or alternatively in enormous disability
* deprives the brain of oxygen-carrying blood, causing brain cells to die.
* devastating physical, financial and emotional experience.
* disease that affects the arteries of the brain
- vessels that supply blood to the brain
* disorder of the blood vessels in the brain, causing mild to severe damage
- that affects only the elderly
* form of cardiovascular disease that affects the arteries leading to the brain
- the arteries of the central nervous system
- cerebrovascular disease that affects the arteries of the central nervous system
* frequent complication for children with sickle cell disease.
* happens to the heart
- when a clot interrupts the blood supply to the brain
* has a disproportionate effect on women
- high incidence and, in some areas, is the leading cause of death
- many causes
* have several causes.
* interrupts blood flow to the brain, starving cells of oxygen and vital nutrients.
* is America's third leading killer and the primary cause of adult disability
- Britain's third biggest killer and the largest single cause of severe disability
- also a major cause of hospitalization and disability
* is also one of the leading causes of disability
- most intractable medical problems
* is also the leading cause of adult disability
- number one cause of serious, long-term disability
- an equal threat to men and women
* is another important neurological cause of instability
- overlooked disease in women, even among doctors
- believed to be one of the leading causes of transfer of the elderly to long-term care
- both a disease and a symptom, indicating an underlying problem in blood vessels
- caused by arterial clots which block blood flow to the brain
* is caused by the interruption of blood flow to the brain or spinal cord
- sudden interruption of blood flow to the brain
- common in older individuals
- considered one of the most costly medical conditions
* is one aspect of neurological dysfunctioning
- of the conditions commonly treated by a neurologist
* is one of the leading causes of death and disability world wide
- of morbidity and mortality in the world today
* is one of the most common and devastating side effects of cardiac surgery
- causes of adult disability in the United States
- causes of death in the United States
- only one-third as common in our population as acute myocardial infarction
* is our nation's number three killer, and a leading cause of disability for older adults
- third leading cause of death following heart disease and cancer
- really two or more related diseases of different causes and pathologies
- still the third-leading cause of death in the United States
* is the country s leading cause of adult disability
- largest single cause of neurologic crippling in our nation
* is the leading cause of adult disability and communication impairment in adults
- disability in Canada and the fourth-leading cause of death
* is the leading cause of disability among adults
- among the elderly
- and the third leading cause of death in the United States
- in adults in the United States
- hospital discharge to long-term nursing facilities
- serious disability in the United States
- severe long-term disability
- magnitude of the oscillation
* is the major cause of adult brain dysfunction
- disability in adults in the United States
* is the most common cause of brain damage in developed countries
- frequent cause of epilepsy among seniors
- important neurological disorder in Singapore
- nation's leading cause of disability and third leading killer
* is the nation's number one cause of adult disability and the third leading cause of death
- three killer and the leading cause of adult long-term disability
* is the nation's third leading cause of death and the leading cause of adult disability
* is the number one cause of adult disability in the United States
- serious adult disability in the world
* is the number three cause of death in the United States
- killer and the leading cause of disability
- number-one cause of adult disability
- number-three killer in the United States
- only major illness for which Asian death rates are higher than for whites
- result of a clot that cuts off blood to a certain part of the brain
- second most common cause of death worldwide
- single greatest cause of adult disability
* is the single leading cause of neurological impairment
* is the third biggest killer in the UK and is the main cause of severe disability
- highest cause of death in adults
* is the third largest cause of death in America at present
- killer and leading cause of serious disability
* is the third leading cause of death after coronary artery disease and cancer
- death and disability in the United States
- death and is the leading cause of long-term disability
- death and the leading cause of disability among adults
- death and the leading cause of disability in the United States
- death for American women
- death in America and a leading cause of disability
- death in America today and leaves millions of adults disabled
- death in England and Wales, after heart disease and cancer
- death in North America
- death in developed countries
- death in the U.S. and major cause of disability
- death in the U.S., and the top cause of permanent disabilities
- death in the United States after heart disease and cancer
- death in the United States and major cause of disability
- death in the United States, behind heart diseases and cancer
- death, second only to heart disease and cancer
- female deaths in Pennsylvania
- hospitalization in the United States
- killer in the U.S. and the most common cause of adult-disability
- most common cause of death in England and Wales after heart disease and cancer
- third-leading cause of adult deaths in the United States
* is the third-leading cause of death and the leading cause of disability
- world s number one cause of adult disability and the third leading cause of death
- world's third leading cause of death after heart disease and cancer
* kills more than twice as many American women each year as breast cancer
- American women every year as breast cancer
- women than men
* kills twice as many American women annually as breast cancer
- than breast cancer for instance
* lay term for heterogenous group of cerebrovascular disorders.
- serious disability and death in women
* leading cause of serious, long-term adult disability
- disability among women
* major cause of illness, death, and health expenditures
- disabler of older men and women
- health problem in the United States
- problem in patients undergoing cardiac surgery
* medical emergency that requires immediate medical care, just like a heart attack
- treatment
- swift action at the first sign of an attack
* misunderstood, life-threatening medical condition.
* occur at all ages, in both sexes, in all races, and in all countries.
* occur because high doses of amphetamine raise blood pressure far above normal levels
- of a problem with the blood circulation to the brain
- even later in life
- in men more than women, but women die more often as a result of stroke
- more frequently in older people but can occur at all ages including children
* occur when a blood clot shuts off the brain's blood supply
- clogged artery blocks blood flow to part of the brain
- person is having trouble perspiring enough to keep the body cool
- brain cells are deprived of blood
* occur when the brain's blood supply is interrupted by a clogged or a burst artery
- flow of blood to the brain is disrupted
- there blockage or rupture of a blood vessel to the brain
* occurs in all age groups even infants
- groups, in both sexes, and in all races in every country
- men more often than women
* occurs when a blood vessel to the brain bursts or is blocked by a clot
- piece of clot breaks loose and is carried by the blood stream to the brain
- blood clots inhibit blood flow to the brain
* occurs when blood flow to the brain is interrupted by a clogged or burst artery
- brain is interrupted by either a blood clot or burst vessel
- is prevented from reaching the brain
- vessels bringing oxygen to the brain burst or become clogged
- part of the brain's blood supply gets cut off
- there is insufficient blood flow to the brain
* often blots out vision either in one eye or in one side of the entire visual field
* often causes people to lose feeling in an arm or leg or have diminished sight in one eye
- in an arm or leg, or suffer diminished sight in one eye
- results when blood clots form on the surface of the plaques in the arteries
* produce waves of brain cell destruction.
* ranks as the third leading killer in the United States, behind heart disease and cancer
- is one of the most common causes of death and of adult disability
- only behind heart disease and cancer as a cause of death
* ranks third as a cause of death for middle-aged and older women
- in mortality, but is the leading cause of disability
* rare disorder in women of reproductive age.
* refers to the distance from the innermost track to the outer most track of a CD-ROM disk.
* remains a leading cause of serious disability and death in women.
* remains the third leading cause of death in the United States
- top cause of long-term disability in adults
* seem toresult from other stroke mechanisms, such as clot formation in blood vessels.
* serious medical condition and one of the leading causes of death in the country.
* tend to occur in older people
- run in families, and smokers are at additional risk as well
* tends to affect older people.
* type of brain injury caused by a sudden interruption of blood flow to the brain
- that is frightening to both the patient and the family
* usually damage only one side of the brain so symptoms appear on only one side of the body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Suffocation
* also can occur if a worker enters a bin containing caked, frozen, or spoiled grain.
* can occur if a plastic bag is used for the delivery of the inhalant.
* can occur when a person is trapped in flowing grain
- fuel burning heaters are used improperly or in poorly ventilated areas
- soft bedding becomes molded around a baby's face
* causes death as a result of insufficient oxygen reaching the blood
* common cause of death for domestic animals in Asia.
* is hypoxia
* is one common explanation for how coihng kills
- coiling kills
* is the final result a few minutes after ingestion of the toxin
- leading cause of injury-related death among children under one
* serious risk with users who inhale from plastic bags.
Syndication
* is an economical way to add content to Web sites
- organization
- selling
* is the aggregation of content
- process of disseminating data
* is where TV shows are sold to individual stations rather than a single network
- shows make the money
* way to find additional audiences and new revenue for their content.
Sightseeing
* are looks.
* can be an extreme sport some days.
* popular way to view changing landscapes throughout the year.
Superficial frostbite
* causes the skin to feel waxy, frozen, numb, and to possibly blister.
* involves freezing of the upper layers of the skin and tissue
- the skin and tissues beneath the surface
* is characterized by grey or yellowish patches on the affected areas
- yellowish or gray patches on the affected areas
Severe malnutrition
* can result from pancreatic involvement.
* is associated with decreased levels of plasma transferrin receptor
- rampant among children
* serious, life-threatening condition for children.
Seducer
* are abroad, whose work is to draw away people from the principles of religion.
* bad person
Serialization
* allows objects to be sent over a network and reconstructed on another machine.
* is needed to implement objects in files
- publications
- used to customize beans
* private protocol between the implementations. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Smallpox
* also lives on in the blood after a person has died.
* can cause millions of cells within the body to explode
- survive in the air for more than a day, giving it plenty of time to spread
* causes pus-filled blisters all over the body and can be fatal
- the development of blisters on the skin which fill with fluid and become inflamed
* classic epidemic disease that was sustainable only by large human populations.
* concern up and down the Eastern seaboard, in and out of the battle areas.
* derivative of cowpox, measles of canine distemper, and influenza of hog diseases.
* highly contagious disease, which is observed as a condition of the skin.
* horrible disease.
* is an acute infectious disease caused by a virus
- caused by the related 'Variola virus'
- considered worse than anthrax
- contagion
- eradicated as a disease through a worldwide vaccination program
- exceedingly dangerous to pregnant women
- extremely highly contagious
- highly infectious, fatal in a third of cases
- one of the biological agents mentioned as a possible weapon
- present in secretions and discharges from the nose and the mouth of a victim
- similar to chicken pox but far more deadly
- skin infection
- such a human disease
* is the only disease that has been completely eradicated
- been eradicated through the use of vaccination
- worse than alot of other really bad sicknesses
* much more dangerous virus if it ever got loose, than monkeypox.
* now exists only as stored virus at two research disease centers.
* particular favorite of bio-weaponeers.
* ravages Afghanistan every spring, killing about one-fifth of the children.
* serious infectious disease that no longer occurs anywhere in the world.
* spreads primarily by oropharyngeal aerosols from infected patients.
* viral disease.
* virus disease that normally spreads from person to person by airborne droplets
- that enters the respiratory tract
+ Cowpox: Diseases caused by viruses
* This disease affects the skin. The disease can be spread by touch from cows to humans. The virus that causes cowpox was used to perform the first successful vaccination against another disease. The disease vaccinated against was the deadly smallpox. Smallpox is caused by the related 'Variola virus'.
* Smallpox arrives in Europe for the first time.<|endoftext|>Serifs
* are decorative lines that are added at the end of the strokes of some letters
- fine lines added to the main strokes of a letter
- horizontal extensions of the vertical ends of the lines in the letters
* are the little curlicues on the edge of the characters
- lines and markings which make text more stylized
- tails and hooks attached to the ends of letters
* are the small cross strokes that are found at the ends of a letter's main strokes
- strokes at the end of the main stroke of a letter
* help the eye to stick to the line and thus facilitate reading.
* improve readability by leading the eye along the line of type.
* refer to the little flourishes and tails that traditional typography uses.
* tend to express organization and intellect.<|endoftext|>Stabilization
* allows spouses to stay longer and pursue a profession.
* begins at the youngest ages and proceeds upward.
* goal of laminitis therapy.
* has all of the advantages of acrylic while maintaining the natural beauty of wood.
* involves increasing the prices and reducing the quantities of imports.
* is configurations
- events
- improvement
- marked by a strong reduction of magnetic oscillations
- normalisation
- obtained by means of a spinning rotor about one of the principal axes of inertia
- standardization
- when the trunk muscles are working in unison to support the spine
* nonperturbative and nonlinear effect.
* protective measure that reduces the problems of corrosion in water lines.
* time to learn how to ask for help and build support networks. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Systolic dysfunction
* is associated with eccentric hypertrophy and thus increased heart size.
* means that there contractility issue.
* occurs when the ejection fraction is decreased.
Smaller one
* eat mice, rats, and shrews.
* Today, many buildings still remain in that style. Smaller ones are thought to be very beautiful, bigger ones are often seen as priceless works of art.
Spitting
* causes diseases
- disgust
- fights
* is used for baseball players
- pigs
- rednecks
Sterling
* is made of silver and copper
- money
* is the most common material used in the creation of authentic Indian jewelry
- preferred currency for donations
- primary material used for silver jewelry, giftware, holloware and flatware
* makes snack foods and bakery products and uses a massive amount of heat during production.
Societal change
* cause profound regulatory transformations over short periods of time.
* depends upon participatory communications.<|endoftext|>Synagogue
* Many synagogues also provide indoor mikvas
- sponsor their own youth groups
- encourage congregants to dress up in costumes
* Most synagogues also have a social hall for religious and non-religious activities
- have a social hall for religious and non-religious functions
* Some synagogues also have singles services
- are more informal, but usually women wear dresses and men suits
- can barely even keep the lights on
- designate separate rooms for men and women
* are and always have been bereft of icons
- houses of worship
- parishs
- places of worship
- temples
* are, for the most part, independent community organizations.
* have lending libraries as well.
* is house of worship
* offer education to both children and adults and often have a well-stocked library.
* often have a chuppah that couples can use and further decorate with flowers and greens
* refers to both the room where prayer services are held and the building where it occurs.
* seem to date their origin from the Babylonian exile.
* serve as centres of the Jewish community, under the leadership of a rabbi.
* support the various Jewish seminaries that train rabbis, cantors and teachers.
+ Shemini Atzeret, How Shemini Atzeret is celebrated, Simchat Torah, Simchat Torah morning: Holidays :: Judaism
* Some synagogues repeat the reading many times until every eligible adult is honored.
Superficial thrombophlebitis
* is usually a benign and short term condition.
* requires no specific therapy other than relief of discomfort.
Sheeting
* are fabric.
* is mechanical weathering due to the growth of mineral like clay
- when the water on the lens slides straight off in one piece | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Selfishness
* barrier to peace.
* biologically adapted trait.
* causes a sense of obligation towards other people, rather than a willing heart to help
- others to simultaneously complain about poor public education and high taxes
* causes some people to kill their unborn children
- take more from society than they give in return
* comes in many forms and is often hard to recognize.
* dictates what is offered and how it is offered.
* dies of inanition, and altruism grows because constantly fed.
* exists in a thousand different ways.
* fire that consumes the one who started it.
* generally motivates people to act.
* governs the world, and selfishness is the insanity of the age.
* implies a lack of concern for others and is truly harmful.
* is actually the detonator of all the cardinal sins
- born in fear and self-charity is born in love
- built into creation from the genes up
- childishness
- death
- diametrically opposed to love
- disintegrative while selflessness is integrative
- everywhere, even in the heart
- hostile to the growth of the soul
- isolation in action
- just the logical outcome, and the logical way to think, feel, and behave
- mankind's fundamental defect
- natural in children, and often dear
- never satisfied until it completely consumes
- one of most common human traits
* is one of the more common faces of pride
- qualities apt to inspire love
- seeking one s own advantage without regard for others
- stinginess
* is the cause of all evil
- devil incarnate in every man
- disease that causes all the problems, world problems AND person problems
- downfall of so many people
- great destroyer of happy family life
- habit that grows out of monopoly
- intention to gratify self as an end
- most sublime form of cynicism
- mother of sin
* is the opposite of charitable love
- root cause of all marital discord
* is the root of all evil
- other sins
- most all of our problems
- therefore the fertile cause of all misfortune and pain
* isolates people by souring relationships.
* killer of relationships.
* leads to pride, self gratification, gluttony, etc.
* muscle that needs developing.
* natural sin.
* normal trait in people.
* power for good in society and for the maintenance of order and of prosperity.
* prevents the individual from letting go of things, feelings, or thoughts.
* problem for adults.
* puts the gaining and keeping of wealth above the welfare of others.
* sees material wealth as an end in itself.
* sign of immaturity, of being unwilling to speak death to self.
* sin, when temporary, and for time.
* state of voluntary committal to the indulgence of the sensibility.
* uses emotional pressure.
* ' is having more concern for yourself than for others. It is caring, through thoughts or actions, more about your own needs than the needs and well-being of other people. It may be accompanied by a lack of empathy. Selfishness is the opposite of selflessness.
* weakness everyone have.<|endoftext|>Sociobiology
* applies knowledge from biology to explain social behavior.
* controversial area of scholarship for many reasons, some political.
* deals with the biological basis for the social behavior of people and other animals.
* is biology.
* is the craniometry of the future
- historical outgrowth of three prerequisite trends
- study of the biological and evolutionary basis of animal behavior
* is the systematic study of all forms of social behavior, in animals and humans
- the biological bases of social behavior
* places social behavior in an evolutionary context.
* represents the biologizing of tacit daily common sense.
Sacred thing
* act as totems to which groups and individuals ascribe power and importance.
* belong in sacred places. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Sponsorship
* also means schooling for children of families who have a new appreciation for education.
* are programs or research that are sponsored by a gift in kind or a gift of money.
* can mean sharing knowledge, experience, and dreams.
* common form of business support for the arts
- way for athletes to cover training expenses
* form of long term advertising.
* is an insidious form of advertising
- opportunity to realize new rewards in a personal relationship
- one branch of sports marketing
- something that companies do in order to obtain commercial benefit
- sometimes a one way relationship for the business entity
* is the fastest growing form of marketing communications
- fastest-growing form of marketing communication
* is the financial or material support of a programme or feature
- support, advertising and promotion of public events or organizations
- lifeblood of sport marketing
- world's fastest-growing form of marketing
- worst possible mechanism for distributing resources in any culture or society
Supernovas
* Some supernovas can be bright enough to see with the naked eye during the day
- leave behind a neutron star, pulsar, or maybe a black hole
* glow for months after they explode.
Simple excision
* cuts the cancer from the skin along with some of the healthy tissue around it.
* is similar to excision biopsy.
Systematic theology
* divides the chronology of the Bible into different ages or dispensations.
* runs into the problem of definition.<|endoftext|>Sensitization
* can develop over time
- happen, for example, if someone receives the wrong kind of blood in transfusion
- take from several days to several years to develop
* enables the nociceptors to more easily fire an action potential.
* increases the rewarding properties of addictive drugs.
* is achieved by dyes in the emulsion layers
- associated with humid environments
- caused by both direct and airborne contact with the proteins
- clearly a serious and material impairment of health
- different from irritation and toxicity
- immunisation
- processes
- sensitivity
* occurs during the mixing of the powders
- production and use of milk powder in various food industries
- through contact with latex proteins<|endoftext|>Scalability
* allows worlds of arbitrary size to be created.
* characterizes the ability of a system to grow to meet demand.
* frequently-claimed attribute of parallel systems.
* is achieved by encompassing capacity, manageability, and cost-effectiveness
- all about reliability and performance
* is also a function of how efficiently the client uses the database server
- an issue in terms of setup and management of accounts
- important as they grow
* is an important factor when designing web applications
- goal of parallel processing
- growth without additional complexity
- linked to the architecture of the infrastructure itself
- measured in terms of both the number of processing elements and the data size
- particularly important for systems with more than a dozen processors
- quality
* is the ability to handle the new material constantly appearing on the Internet
- key to the value and power of vectors
- only way to meet ever-changing market demands
- result of explicit meta-adapation when boundaries of applicability are crossed
* only refers to linear scaling.
* protects investment and facilitates growth.
* refers to how speedup changes as the problem size and number of processors increases.
* refers to the capacity to start small and then grow big without starting over
- increase in the complexity of communication as more nodes are added
- way a system expands to serve more customers
* specifies how a metric varies with load. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Theft
* Many thefts occur when people leave their office for just a moment.
* Most thefts are crimes of opportunity and can be prevented by taking simple precautions
- the result of personal property left unattended and in public view
* Most thefts occur when property is left unattended in an unlocked room or vehicle
- left unlocked or unattended
- valuables are left unattended
* also occur after hours when offices are broken into or entered without authorization.
* are a common social evil
- the most common reported crime, about twice as common as assaults
* can play a big part in someone's decision to ride their bike to school.
* contributes to the cost of doing business near town.
* crime of convenience and is the most predominant crime on most campuses.
* daily routine.
* generic term for the fraudulent taking of property.
* happen when rooms are left unattended and unlocked.
* implies the legitimacy of property.
* includes the taking of money or property by the following means.
* is an absolute term, like pregnancy
- attack on the dignity of human beings and their work
- immoral crime
- initiation of force
- committed in a number of ways
* is one of the biggest expenses in today's business world
- most preventable of all crimes
- part of pop music
- probably the highest risk someone faces when a laptop is in their possession
- punishable by death
- rampant on the Internet
- sometimes a problem in nursing homes
- stealing something without using a weapon or breaking in
- the appropriation of property without the owner's consent
* is the most common school crime overall
- frequently reported crime in long-term care facilities
- number one crime on college campuses
- result of the desire to take
* is theft in any form
- whether it involves words and ideas or physical property
* is theft, and trivialising the act of stealing can only encourage more of the same
- whether it is enabled by a handgun or a computer keyboard
* major problem in North American crops.
* means any act of stealing.
* moral issue, stealing money from our children.
* occur around automated banking machines
- when items are left unattended
* occurs in a number of ways
- most often when property is left unattended or unsecured
* result of opportunity. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Trade
* Some trades also have a master, which higher level of skilled worker.
* allows people to specialize in what they do best.
* are the learning of the soul in nature by labor.
* big issue in economic growth.
* brings economic growth, and with it, employment.
* can be binding contracts that call for the future exchange of items.
* causes the output of the export good to rise and that of the import good to fall.
* continues to be an engine of economic expansion for many countries of the world.
* contributes to a strong economy and a strong economy requires a healthy environment
- economic growth, overall income and employment over time
* creates wealth.
* denotes an exchange of things.
* descriptive cultural model used in the culture historical approach.
* determines the mix of jobs.
* does affect the distribution of income.
* enables all countries to gain through exchange and specialization
- countries to produce more of what they are good at and buy other products in return
* form of exchange
- structured communication
* grows between Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Subcontinent, East Asia and Oceania
- rapidly, but is still a minority part of the economy for most countries
* helps countries focus on producing what they do best
- to enrich nations too poor to improve their environment and working conditions now
* implies exchange of ideas and information with trade partners.
* includes imports as well as exports.
* increases incomes even if trade accounts are in deficit and no new jobs are created.
* involves many different countries and products.
* is about production and consumption
- the exchange of goods and services for money
* is also an engine for growth
- essential for economic growth in developing nations
- vital to the growth of value-added and processed foods and feedstuffs
- beneficial because it permits people to specialize in what they do best
- both a tool to encourage a richer world and to make a better world
- commerce
- commercial exchange for mutual gain
- done for acquiring gains, profits and wealth
- duty-free and lack of taxation is attractive to foreign investment
- especially important for developing nations
- exchanges
- extremely important to the farm economy
- important to improving the global environment
- increasingly the bigger part of what makes the economy work
- integral to the process of globalisation
- like the circulatory system of the body
- now just as important a factor as military strength in determining who rules the world
- occupations
- of continuing importance for both developed and developing countries
- often justified on the basis that it helps poor countries to develop
* is one activity where the interests of all nations intersect
- component of a policy framework for growth, poverty reduction and development
- of the best things that countries can do with each other
* is only one factor in job dislocation in the United States
- one-tenth of the value of financial markets globally
- possible when there's something to trade
- supposed to increase wealth
- synonymous with commerce and with commerce comes profit
- very important to Japan's economy
- where foreign and domestic policies meet
* language that people understand.
* lifts people out of poverty.
* means imports as well as exports.
* motor of economic wealth.
* naturally occurring process.
* occurs because of differences in endowments between countries
- between individuals, organizations, and nations
* often allows large corporations to create monopolies around the globe
- precedes the forward march of civilization
* plays a large role in the local economy.
* powerful engine for economic growth
- of economic growth, however, it can also fuel massive inequalities
* promotes economic growth, which enlarges the pie for everyone to share
- peace between countries
- prosperity
* requires search, negotiation, and exchange, which are activities that absorb resources.
* series of mutually beneficial exchanges between companies and individuals.
* significant instrument for economic growth.
* takes place in a complex social and economic environment
- time and involves some form of money or credit
* way of life.
* works because it powerful engine of economic growth
- puts people to work and creates jobs
+ National Basketball Association, Regular Season: Basketball leagues
* Before the trade deadline, teams can trade players. This can cause changes in the balance of power. Team bosses want to get the best players for their team. Other bosses want to lower their costs. Trades often happen on the last day. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Triangulation
* allows our bodies to perform a task in relation to an object.
* approach to synthesizing and analyzing history, media, and primary documents.
* are a natural way to organize two-dimensional data
- discrete models of surfaces
* divides polygons into triangles.
* frequently used tool of the enemy.
* is an important first step in many geometric algorithms.
* is the first step in exploiting image geometry to obtain geospatial information
- key to trusses
- process of comparing the data obtained from two or more contrasting methods
* is used extensively as a means of control for topographic and similar surveys
- for drawing measured survey lines
- to pinpoint a receiver
* means that information is solicited from a variety of sources and stakeholders.
* process in which data points are connected to form triangles.
* useful map and survival skill often taught in scout-ing and orienteering.
Taxa
* Many taxa are terrestrial and have a well-developed root system
- have cosmopolitan distributions
* Some taxa are also specialists of fungi, feeding on the spores produced by the fruiting bodies
- have fleshy covering on the seed called an epimatium
T o
* be prepared for war is one of the most effectual means of preserving peace.
* collect organisms there are nets for phyto- and zooplankton.
* is the average external temperature.
Transcript
* Most transcripts contain a common middle region.
* are a different kind of writing
- barely detectable in leaves and phloem
- word-for word notations of the contents of a document
* become restricted to the epidermis during the extended germ band stage.
* can yellow and fade.
* move from anterior to posterior.
Telcos
* Many telcos grow passively.
* prefer to control and manage, and their networks function in a controlled environment.
Thinking
* are part of reading.
* are used for ai
- animals
- being
- creativity
- dogs
- entertainment
- people
- projects
- reasoning
- resolving
- robots
- sorting
- understanding
- wonderings
* cause acting
- decisions
- depressions
- fatigue
- fresh ideas
- knowledge
- money
* cause new perspective
- thoughts
- tension
Tabulation
* are the start of a process rather than an endpoint.
* frequency count of each question's answers.
* is information
- investigations
Tough love
* determines when the person is ready to follow Biblical principles of finance.
* works only where there is an already existing relationship, and an appropriate one.
* I'd drop the second part and keep the children. Yes, could be delete. Tough love is sometimes the way.
Tribal sovereignty
* gives Indian tribes power to manage their own affairs.
* is essential to ensuring that their social interests can be met
- recognized by the United States government
* is the core of tribes' power to govern themselves
- foundation of tribes' ability to maintain traditional Indian ways
* predates the U.S. government.
Tonicity
* comparison of osmolarities between a cell and the solution to which it is exposed.
* is tension
- useful only in reference to a particular cell or tissue
* measurement of salt concentration in solution.
* thus varies depending upon the characteristics of the membrane. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Toxicity
* Most toxicity is seen in cell types that are rapidly dividing
- testing for food-use pesticides uses only adult animals
* Some toxicities can cause lysis of blood cells, the most common example being lead poisoning.
* Toxicities are subjective, objective, or both.
* Toxicities can also occur with collection of morels
- easily occur with some micronutrients
- mostly relates to site of injection
- occur at lower intake levels in infants, children, and pregnant and lactating women
* also occurs when higher doses are administered accidentally or deliberately.
* can also occur in the fetus
- result in withering and scorching of foliage
- be variable with methanol
- cause reversible nerve damage
* can occur in three different modalities, acute, sub-acute and chronic toxicity
- rapidly without the occurrence of warning signs
- result where high levels of iodine are fed for long periods of time
* causes primarily heart damage, and deaths due to heart failure have been reported
- weakness, confusion, diarrhoea and skin rashes
- weight gain as a protective mechanism by the body
* chemical property of matter.
* correlates best with the number of chlorine atoms in each homologous series.
* decreases as chlorine atoms are added or removed.
* depends on the amount of plant material ingested.
* hazard of boron application when adequate amounts are present for plant uptake
- that almost every laboratory worker recognizes, but understands poorly
* increases with higher water temperatures and acidity
- maturity or when the plant is drought stressed
* is an inherent property of all substances
- the material
- associated with relatively high consumption levels of at least one liter per day
- based upon risk versus benefit
- caused by both inhibition of cellular metabolism and nitrite oxidization of hemoglobin
* is characterized by an asymptomatic ring of yellow-orange crystals in the macular region
- nausea, episodic vomiting, and diarrhea in some cases
- compounded by the apparent palatability of yew
* is dependent on the amount people ingest
- concentration of the calcium hypochlorite
- dose related
- due to an excessive intake of nitrates or nitrites
- enhanced by acidosis and hypercarbia
- established by injecting lab mice with an extract of mussel tissue
- like that of phenoxybenzamine
- mainly a matter of blood contamination
* is measured by a decrease in light output
- testing liver enzymes with classic tests that are extremely sensitive
- in different ways
- morbidity
- one consideration in assessing the hazard in handling a particular pesticide
- provided in reference to mammals and to fish
- rare except in certain diseases involving vitamin D or the parathyroid gland
- secondary to hypoxia, reoxygenation toxicity, a d oxygen radical formation
- seen in the bone marrow, lymphoid organs, intestines, liver and testes
- similar to that of cyclosporine, with nephrotoxicity being a major adverse effect
* is the ability of a chemical substance to cause harm
- capacity of a material to produce injury or harm
- condition where harmful or toxic gases encounter breathable gases
* is the inherent ability of a material to cause adverse health affects
- substance to cause adverse health effects
- to impair health
- capacity of a substance to cause injury or death
* is the potential a chemical, such as a pesticide, has for causing harm
- substance has to poison humans, animals, or plants
- for a substance to cause harm to organisms with which it interacts
- quality, state, or degree of being poisonous
* major cause of illness, disease and feelings of general malaise.
* matter of dose.
* means poison.
* measure of the poisoning strength and is an unchanging characteristic of a chemical
* occurs as a result of intentional overdose or accidental ingestion
- through contact with skin and mucus membrane of eyes, nose, and throat
* often occurs because of the exposure of children to lead which can be found in many homes.
* plays a role in many conditions such as atherosclerosis and neurodegenerative diseases.
* ranges from acute death to chronic diseases, cancer and reproductive malfunction.
* reaches a peak when the plant matures.
* real but far less common cause of fish kill.
* refers to how toxic, or poisonous, the oil is to either people or other organisms
- the degree to which a specific insecticide is poisonous to animals
* relates to the waste's ability to contaminate groundwater.
* requires saturation of metabolic pathways of detoxification.
* results from the binding of ampho B molecules to cholesterol in the host's cell membrane
- in a reduction in light emitted by the bacteria
* seems to be related to the level of tolerance developed for the effects of the drug.
* simply means the ability to do damage to the fungus cells.
* tends to be chronic and result in alkali disease and blind staggers.
* varies greatly depending on different metal compounds
- in other groups of chemicals
- with both the concentration of vapor and the length of exposure | {
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} |
Tinning
* is applications.
* is the coating of the material to be soldered with a light coat of solder
- name for coating any solderable metal with a thin coat of solder
Tectonic loading
* can also produce subsidence.
* is particularly important in orogenic regions such as foreland basins.
Temporal arteritis
* causes the arteries in the temple area of the forehead to become swollen.
* chronic inflammatory disease of the large arteries.
* is an inflammation of artery walls that can impede blood flow
- the arteries in the head, forehead and scalp
- important to recognize in elderly patients with headache
- inflammation of an artery near the temple
- seen on biopsy from an elderly woman | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Turbulence
* Most turbulence occurs with the frontal zones or zones of strong surface convergence.
* affects larger scales primarily through fluxes.
* also affects the physical performance of a skimmer
- increasesheat transfer between a fluid and a surface
* can become quite severe and some aircraft have been damaged by turbulence.
* can cause difficult flight conditions at any time
- particle movement
- the pad fibers to break down
- occur when the sky appears to be clear
- rapidly mix away film cooling protection on turbine airfoils
- release radon gas to the atmosphere, lowering the level found in the water
* causes local changes in the refractive index of air
- outside air to mix with the plume
* consists of irregular fluid motions that vary greatly over time.
* decreases the possibility of using the energy in the wind effectively for a wind turbine.
* does something that changes the large-scale flow.
* does, however, increase the variation in the rate of climb from run to run.
* fact of life.
* is also a factor as pump impellers, etc
- associated with variations in density in the atmosphere
- assumed to be a property of the liquid phase
- atmospheric mixing and thermals are the primary mechanism of atmospheric mixing
- bad weather
- caused by obstructions to the wind, such as nearby trees or buildings
- chaotic behavior and the swirling patterns change unpredictably
- common close to the ground where wind speeds and air pressures fluctuate randomly
- disorder
- due to the friction caused by rocks and steps in the stream's channel
- flow characterized by recirculation, eddies , and apparent randomness
* is in a way a vortex phenomenon, an incompressible phenomenon
- the nature of business environments
- known to affect the performance of wind turbine blades
- only light
- required to help disk material lose angular momentum so it can accrete onto the hole
- severe in the squall-line thunderstorms because of violent updrafts and downdrafts
- simulated using a single field-equation model
* is the archenemy of wind power
- equivalent of rocks on a highway
- flow field that is characterized by eddy motion
- irregular, random component of fluid motion
- leading cause of in-flight injuries
* is the leading cause of injuries in aircraft, outside of accidents
- on airliners
- primary cause of nonfatal injuries to airline passengers and crew
- random, chaotic motion of air, caused by changes in air currents
- reality of our times
- term used to describe the movement or agitation of surrounding water
- treated as an ensemble of moving magnetic traps
- what happens when the wind gets bumpy
- when eddies begin to occur at all different scales
* key feature of many environmental flows.
* makes convective transport dominant
- such cavities by clearing away material during convective motions
* occurs also in biological contexts, e.g. in humans, animals and even some plants
- at all scales over which a system can be described as possessing fluid properties
* occurs in many kinds of flows and is used in many processes for positive purposes
- most engineering and environmental fluid flows
* physical phenomenon
- occurring in most fluids, yet is still widely unsolved
* point of view.
* primary factor influencing the noise level of a fan.
* produced by rapidly moving columns of air also generates low-frequency sounds.
* produces pressure and drag, inhibiting the free motion possible in water
- rapid mixing and transport of passive pollutants and particulate matters
* provides another way in which electromagnetic energy from a radar can be back-scattered.
* random swirling of water in all directions.
* represents bulk motions, independent of the mass of the atoms.
* tends to increase with engine speed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Turbulent flow
* are chaotic and very difficult to model correctly
- common in technology
* can keep fragments in suspension longer than laminar flow.
* have their limits.
* is an example of a chaotic, nonlinear function
- caused by channel topography and friction
- chaotic with instantaneous changes in both particle direction and velocity
- characterised by random fluctuations of speed and direction
- composed of coherent patches of swirling fluid called eddies
- random and chaotic
* lead to higher profile drag coefficients on streamlined bodies than laminar flows.
* occurs at higher velocities and depths.<|endoftext|>Teenage girl
* Many teenage girls have inadequate iron intakes, especially after they begin menstruating
- learn to diet by watching their mothers
- marry and have babies before they are ready
* Most teenage girls are close in age to their first sexual partner, whom they know fairly well.
* Some teenage girls are more likely to smoke than others
- get pregnant because they really want to
- give birth to babies as a way to prove their womanhood
* appear to be at particular risk of becoming smokers.
* are at especially high risk of having low vitamin and mineral intakes
- risk, as are minority youth
* are especially at risk because they lose iron during their period
- susceptible to scoliosis
- more prone to low self-esteem than boys
- most vulnerable to the disease, some contracting the deadly virus from older men
- now more likely than adolescent boys to smoke
- particularly vulnerable to low levels of iron
* drink less milk than boys.
* get naked and pose nude.<|endoftext|>Tracking
* also helps a dog learn to discriminate between the varying scents of individuals
- provides scientists with information about manatee social behavior
* complex process that takes time to learn and years to master.
* development of a dog's natural abilities and instincts.
* dying art, the kind that is often replaced with new technology.
* form of social control.
* involves teaching the dog to follow a human scent
- the dog's following a path which a person has previously walked
- using the five senses plus common sense to follow a trail through the jungle
* is an early warning system that ultimately can help prevent the spread of asthma.
* is another highly important aspect of the Internet
- sport open to all dogs
- by birth date and type of immunization
* is more than merely identifying and following footprints
- numbers and geography
- particularly important in learning to read
* is the ability to move the eyes smoothly and accurately along a line of print
- assignment to different courses of instruction
- continuous reporting of a satellite's or space probe's position in space
- fine art of laying out phat beatz, rhythmz, and soundz
- management of occurrence data
- way in which one sees and is seen by the image
* major contributor to clique formation.
* means it helps the laser follow any eye movements
- that the vision system observes and follows the users motion
* particular form of grouping.
* program to address the needs of students deficient in one or two skills areas.
* refers to how well the drum brain senses each pad hit.
* refers to the space between the letters
- way that a program tracks referred sales, leads or clicks
* science and has been since the beginning of hunting.
* sport that almost any dog and handler can enjoy
- the dog controls the pace
* type of ability grouping. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Taxation
* burden of United States citizenship.
* can be a powerful instrument of social policy
- impose indirect costs because it induces people to change their economic behavior
* concerns itself with value.
* deals with administration and procedures, corporate, sales, income and capital gains taxes.
* depends on the type of investment income the contributions generate.
* form of regulation.
* gives birth to the bureaucracy that collects and administers the taxes.
* has a long and complicated history in the United States
- economic costs and also affects budget constraints
- substantial implications for economic efficiency, equity, and stabilization
* involves an involuntary transfer of resources, borrowing voluntary transaction.
* is an exercise of power, a manifestation of sovereignty
- fiscally virtuous because it allows spending without inflating the economy
- governed by statute, i.e. by laws passed by legislatures
- imposition
- inevitable in modern economies
- inherent in the American system
- legalised theft
- merely one of several methods of public financing
* is one of the inherent responsibilities of property ownership
- three main things that governments do
- oppression of the people
- slavery
* is the act of seizing the wealth of others
- compulsory payment of a percentage of one's income for the support of government
- epitome of government coercion
- forcible, but routine, seizure of one's rightful property by the government
- responsibility of the larger community
- theft, regardless of what the government calls it
* legal area of great complexity.
* major source of the state financial revenue.
* matter of the market economy.
* municipal function.
* power concurrently exercised by the states and the general government.
* slows the economy, precisely because it hurts incentives to work, save and invest.
* tangible form of regulation.<|endoftext|>Trichinosis
* can also be present in other animals, like bear and deer
- simulate to some degree almost any other malady
* causes nausea, diarrhea, fever, muscle pain, and tiredness.
* food-borne disease.
* foodborne disease caused by a microscopic parasite
- which affects the muscles of the body
* is caused by roundworms in pork
- common in bears
- commonly confused with typhoid fever and oc- casionally with undulant fever
- diseases
- due to the effects of a pork roundworm
- infestation
- rare in the United States
- relatively common worldwide
- treated with oral antibiotics
- virtually nonexistent in the United States due to controlled production conditions
* parasitic disease obtained from eating raw or inadequately cooked pork.
* preventable disease.
* sometimes has no symptoms. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Torture
* always has a sexual component to it.
* brings false confessions, while some tortures end in death.
* can destroy a person's ability to feel joy
- have devastating physical and psychological consequences
* constitutes a gross violation of basic human rights and human dignity.
* creates evil and causes unacceptable suffering for individual victims and their families.
* crime against humanity.
* crime under international law'
* has no political, religious, cultural, gender, class or age boundaries.
* involves hurting an animal, giving the animal no option but to endure the pain.
* is almost synonymous with unbearable pain and suffering.
* is also endemic in China, where the use of electric shocks and leg irons is widespread
- routine in the interrogation of suspects in cases of common crime
* is an act that defies the boundaries of language
- aggravated, or worse form of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment
- attempt to destroy a fellow human being physically and mentally
- egregious violation of human rights and the inherent dignity of the individual
- extreme form of cruel and inhuman treatment
- inhuman form of gaining a confession
- banned but in two-thirds of the world's countries it is still being committed in secret
- believed to play a role in a number of deaths in custody
- common among serial killers
- endemic in many countries in Asia
* is forbidden at all times and in all circumstances
- under the Constitution and it criminal act under the Penal Code
- one of the most horrible things one person can do to another
- perpetrated worldwide, yet it is an international crime
- persecution
- pervasive in the justice system in Saudi Arabia
- routine in Algerian prisons
- routine, particularly in police custody
- sanctioned as a means of securing confessions
* is the act of allowing or causing excruciating pain for the purpose of punishment
- assault on a helpless human being
- deliberate infliction of pain to extract information or to punish opponents
* is the most convenient form of coercion in times of no war
- private of human rights violations
- to use pain to punish or force someone to do something
- unacceptable under all circumstances, in all places and at all times
* is used as an instrument of power
- by more than two-thirds the world's governments
* is used to extract confessions and to enforce discipline
- information or confessions and as a form of punishment
- interrogate prisoners of war
- intimidate, to silence dissent
- punish people, to obtain information, or to make people afraid
- silence the voice of dissent
- violence
- widespread and systematic
- widespread, even in the most civilized of nations
* leads to countless deaths every year.
* long-standing problem in Turkish police stations and gendarmeries.
* operates on the principle of reversal, which includes the perversion of all cultural taboos.
* persists daily, all over the world, even though it flouts international law.
* predominates as blood pours from open wounds and the intestines come out from the bodies.
* refers to an act resulting in severe suffering, either physical or psychological or both.
* results in physical disabilities, sometimes permanent.
* takes place in detention centres and in prisons.
* thrives in darkness.
* worldwide, man-made epidemic.
Tempering
* decreases hardness and strength, but increases ductility and toughness.
* form of heat treatment that controls the toughness and hardness of steel.
* helps to prevent the eggs from curdling.
* is actually a re-heating and slow cooling process
- especially important if fish are going from cool water to warm water | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Teleworking
* allows employees to perform some or all of their work away from an office setting.
* also reduces the costs and stress related to daily commutes in Northern Virginia.
* closes the gap between where people live and work.
* common way of distributing work.
* enables businesses to substitute technology for transit.
* has considerable relevance for disabled and elderly people.
* improves quality of life for everyone by preserving our environment.
* involves training people to work out of their homes through distance technology.
* is about doing things differently, but also about doing different things
- an accepted way to work
- in the doldrums
- more common in certain companies, sectors and occupations than in others
- transportation demand-reducing measure to reduce work commuting
* means working from a distance through the use of telecommunication technologies.
* new form of working still in a process of evolution.
* tends to be a traditional job transferred to home.
* way of conducting business across a telephone line.
Testimony
* is assertions
- evidence
- part of trials
- statements made by a witness under oath at the trial
* major element in the piety of evangelicalism.
* spiritual practice with a long history in the Christian community.
Tannery
* Tanneries release elevated levels of lead, cyanide, and formaldehyde into the ground water.
* is work
Truthfulness
* is harmony to the fact, harmony to the motive
- honesty
* is the basis for decisions, actions, words, relationships and beliefs
- characteristic of brotherly relationships in the church-community
- first pillar in the Temple of God-realization
* is the foundation of all human virtues
- the virtues of the world of humanity
* means simply telling the truth.
* mitigates egoism to some extent.
* quality of the righteous.
Typing
* misspell words.
* are activities
- skills
- subjects
* are used for communication
- fun
- using computers
- writing
* cause books
- communicating
- errors
- lesions
- letters
- pain
* cause printed paper
- stories
- text
Thrombotic stroke
* Many thrombotic strokes occur in large blood vessels.
* are the most common cause of ischemic strokes.
* is the most common type of stroke.
Transcendental meditation
* is an eastern perspective, it gives access to the inner quiet.
* lowers blood pressure.
* morning and afternoon ritual.
Travel insurance
* Most travel insurance covers emergency flights, medical expenses, and theft or loss of possessions.
* is an essential purchase for anyone travelling abroad
- generally a good safeguard against accident, injury and theft during travel
The
* are problems which affect the physical body but have a psychological origin.
* is an increased rate of rebleeding with placement of ventriculostomy.
Transcriptional control
* is relevant in the modulation of mosquito ferritin synthesis by iron.
* key step in the regulation of eukaryotic gene expression.
Trimmer
* can throw objects with force so keep children, bystanders, and pets from the working area.
* is capacitors
- joists
- machines
Transvaginal ultrasonography
* adds information on follicle number and size.
* is used to manipulate the ovarian follicular populations.
Toast
* are common in the Philippines, especially at business meetings.
* can make many different kinds of CDs.
* is born of bread
- breakfast food
- celebrities
- claimed to be useful for muscle warm-up as well as pain relief
- located in pockets
- made of bread
* state of being. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Training
* affects muscle phospholipid fatty acid composition in humans.
- exercising
- teaching
* change in skills.
* continuous process from puppyhood through adolescence, through young adulthood.
* directly affects skills and knowledge, it indirectly affects attitudes and motivation.
* function of management.
* is an investment in human capital
- people benefiting both the employer and employee
- of time, money and personal commitment
- associated with the learning of skills that are related to one's job
* is one method of learning new ideas and skills
- of the main strategies that organisations have to achieve their goals
- practice that is overseen by someone who knows what they are doing
* is the difference between performing a task in minutes instead of hours
- process of gaining facts and information or developing a skill
* is the process of teaching others specific skills to be performed under defined conditions
- someone a new skill, usually technical in nature
- upgrading the skills of the human resources already working for a firm
- responsibility of individuals
- tool that can provide motivation, skill, and confidence in the bear
* learned skill.
* learning process directly tied to specific situational results.
* means for the individual to reach full potential and for a business to prosper.
* person communication with their dog, on a level that their dog can understand.
* process, which involves learning in a well defined way.
* refers to activities specifically designed to build muscle and increase strength.
* specific means or method of nurse development.
* technique that always works on every child.
* very important aspect of the martial arts.
* way of life.
* widely used strategy in managing diversity in the workplace.
+ Skydiving: Sports
* Skydiving' is a sport involving a skydiver jumping down from an airplane while it is flying and parachuting to the ground. Skydiving can be done individually and with other people. Training is required to go solo. Some thrill seekers attempt to skydive without a parachute whilst flying through the air, and instead rely on the small parachutes they have professionals put on them.
+ Synchronized swimming, null, Equipment
* Training can consolidate muscle endurance, cardio endurance and increase flexibility. It allows a better performance during competitions.
* Training is different from exercise. Exercise may be an occasional activity for fun.<|endoftext|>Torsion
* can be either stationary or rotating uniformly
- occur with activity, be related to trauma, or develop during sleep
- then lead to infarction
* causes the loss of the right side of any paired appendages.
* crosses the nerve tracts and the mantle cavity is brought forward over the head.
* is an internal twist that generally occurs late in the snail's larval life
- uncommon condition, but a medical emergency
- decreased because the feet remain in contact with the board when the snowboarder falls
- distortion
- forces
- produced in an engine crankshaft while the engine is running
- resistance to twisting
- when a shaft is acted upon by two equal and opposite twisting moments in parallel planes
* occurs when an ovarian cyst causes the ovary to twist on it's blood supply
- the stomach rotates and twists itself closed
* points on an algebraic subset of an affine torus.
* process where the body coils to one side during development.
* takes place during the veliger stage, usually very rapidly.
* tends to occur in pregnant animals, especially cattle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Technological change
* allows capital to move almost instantaneously.
* alter entire cultures.
* are part of even broader changes at many levels from the local to the global.
* can affect every level of a company
- displace some workers from their jobs while it creates jobs for others
- move at lightning speed
* complex process whose workings are only partially understood.
* continue to revolutionize telecommunications.
* contributes to national competitiveness in two ways.
* implies that eventually more output can be produced by a unit of labor.
* increase ease of access to information, which influences where boundaries are.
* is also likely to affect the relationship between education and training
- concerned with the technical implementation of cadastral systems
* is one of the most powerful factors driving policy and the world of ideas
- principal drivers of competition
* is, above all, a social phenomenon.
* occurs as a single isolated event.
* reduces the resources that are needed to produce a good.
* take years to diffuse through the economy.
* tends to increase the rate of economic growth.<|endoftext|>Tenrecs
* All tenrecs are nocturnal, most hibernate in the winter, and many are dormant in hot weather
- eat insects and invertebrates, like worms
* Most tenrecs eat earthworms
* Most tenrecs have eyesights
- forelimb structures
- long snouts
- longitudinal stripes
- poor eyesights
- sensitive whiskers
- short tails
- spiny coats
- yellow stripes
* Some tenrecs have body temperature
- variable temperature
- hibernate through the hot dry season
- live in burrows
- look like mammals
- reach sexual maturity
* are a diverse family of mammals that resemble shrews, mice and even otters
- family of mammals endemic to Africa
- unique and diverse family of mammals, from another world and another time
- nocturnal and quite shy
- useful to humans because they consume large amounts of insects and small invertebrates
* can look like shrews, otters, moles and, well, tenrecs.
* constitute a diverse group of insectivores confined to the island of Madagascar.
* estivate during the dry season.
T m
* denotes the melting temperature.
* is the mean temperature along the vertical cross-section
- melting point
Transracial adoption
* controversial issue in our society.
* is the adoption by parents of an ethnically different child.
Terrible thing
* happen but people survive without becoming cruel to others.
* happen to women living alone who leave their doors or windows unlocked
- women, and children and men, every day
* including death can result from malathion toxicity.
Taoist philosophy
* describes the body according to the first two treasures jing and qi.
* opposes the classification and labeling of ideas and objects. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Theology
* Greek word that means knowledge of the gods.
* can animate the study of human language.
* constitutes the theoretical foundation on which church management is based.
* deals with metaphysics, eschatology, doctrine, etc.
* discipline in the curriculum like other disciplines.
* enriches the church as much as the church enriches theology.
* form of theory.
* game whose object is to bring rules into the subjective.
* generally believes that consciousness derives from something transcendent.
* grammar pastors can actually use in their work in the parish.
* has a sapiential vocation
- everything to do with life
* is about seeing things as a whole.
* is also as sensitive to the absence of facts as is any other science
- important because of the social and cultural significance of religion
* is an act of faith
- essential part of religion, which name for philosophy in practice
- banned by law from some universities
* is based on revealed truth and on articles of faith
- the strictest form of logic applied to revelation
- both scientific and contemplative
- critical scholarship
- faith seeking understanding
- linked definitively to mysticism
- more than a discussion of church, religion, etc
- nothing but physical cosmology based on the assumption that life as a whole is immortal
- one such discipline, and hence falls within the scope of philosophical inquiry
- placed within the sphere of the sciences rather than the arts
- shaped by history
- supernatural science
- systems
- tested when people think of geology
- that science whose subject is divinity
* is the foundation of Christian prayer and contemplation
- intellectual expression of matters of faith
- most relevant and practical of all the human disciplines
- only science that treats exclusively of facts
- queen of the sciences
- science of the first principle
* is the study of a religious tradition
- the nature of the divine
- work of trying to find rational answers to questions about ultimate reality
- thus like light reflecting off of a prism
- what emerges from living the Christian life
* mediates between religion and the cultural matrix.
* seeks to examine a religion from the perspective of a believer.
* word that strikes fear into the heart of many and induces narcolepsy in others.
Transrectal ultrasonography
* is used for the evaluation of a prostate nodule.
* safe and easy way to see the prostate gland.
Taoist meditation
* Many Taoist meditations enable the practitioner to leave the physical body.
* involves an open awareness rather than concentration.<|endoftext|>Toleration
* deal more with things, completions deal with people or experiences.
* device used to introduce a new law-system as a prelude to a new intolerance.
* implies that somebody falsely claims the right to tolerate
- the child puts up with an imposed activity
* is license.
* is the greatest gift of the mind
- mark of real religion
- supreme civic virtue
- very much a part of French culture
* solution to the fact of ethnic, religious, political and human differentiation.
* value superior to loyalty of blood or common heritage.
T c
* cuprates, whose superconductivity depends on subtle, phonon-free coupling between electrons.
* superconductors due to the applied temperature gradient.
Tech
* continues to be an important resource in economic development.
* font containing characters useful in mathematics, engineering and science.
* is an Ontario company that refurbishes and recycles used electronic equipment
- clearly an industry still dominated by men
* means of easily creating and updating software pograms.
* school
- designed to meet student needs in a competive, demanding and ever-changing world | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Temptation
* are common to humanity
- generally solicitations to do evil
- human experiences
* comes with the ability to choose good and evil.
* form of death
- test that can be a blessing in disguise
* forms the very climate in which faith develops.
* function of hunger.
* is bands
- desire
- influence
- one of the great tests of life and character
- something that is common to all
- subtle, working by degrees to cause a soul's destruction
* is the devil's principal weapon for destroying people
- experience of every person
* universal human experience.
* way of growing stronger in one's faith by overcoming it.
Traumatic dislocation
* are most common in football, snowboarding and basketball.
* occur as a result of a significant injury.
Teeth
* are capable of decay.
* are located in mouths
- plates
- part of zippers | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Teamwork
* Consider also the move towards teamwork in the workplace.
* affects how well the downline runs and how it gets new recruits.
* allows common people to attain uncommon results.
* also builds job satisfaction
- demands the ability to communicate in a group
* business, academic, and governmental concern.
* can also be a joining-together and sharing of knowledge and insights
- exist independently of teams
- improve individual performance
* changes how employees relate with each other.
* coordinated effort by a group of people for a common goal.
* critical skill both within the company and with customers or suppliers.
* fact of life for effectiveness in business.
* group of people working together to get a job done
- working together toward a common goal
* helps a person develop a sense of objective success.
* highly valued skill in the workplace.
* improves as individuals begin to listen to and learn from each other.
* involves a sharing of oneself
- two or more people working together on a task
* is achieved when the group members have a strong sense of belonging to the group.
* is also a big part of wrestling
- key for parents in providing their children a quality Christian education
- noun
- integral to many sports
* is an acquired skill needed in today's world
- activity that necessity in today's workplace
- essential element in electronic media production
- imperative in a flat, boundaryless organizational structure
- important aspect of our daily life in project teams or dedicated task forces
* is an important component of problem-based learning
- process learning
- ingredient in precision toolmaking
- way of achieving a company's goal
- integral element of computer assignments
- by working together, everyone achieves more
- cooperation at the highest level
- cooperative behavior
* is essential for living in our communities and in the modern workplace
- in accomplishing what needs to be done
* is essential to the performance of most sports teams
- success of today's businesses and organizations
- important for people on deserted islands and for people in laboratories
* is important in getting the best health care
- the work place
- treating pemphigus
- important, because musculoskeletal disorders are chronic
- increasingly important in the job market today
- inherent in all decisionmaking concerning special education
- necesary in most all sports
* is one of the most important activities for generating excellence in organizations
- skills in life
- ways to win the battle against workplace injury and death
- realm in which an understanding of learning theory can particularly pay off
- our way of life
- part of human experience
- personal involvement and collaboration in a team environment
- that aspect of a project which focuses on enhancing the human element
* is the ability to work together toward a common goal
- towards a common vision
* is the fuel that allows common people to attain uncommon results
- people to produce uncommon results
- ordinary people accomplish extra ordinary things
- hallmark of all successful organizations
- key to both individual medical practices and hospital wards
- mantra of flat as opposed to hierarchical organizations
- most important criteria in separating the strong from the weak
- name of the game at every level of command
- natural outcome of everyone being focused on the same agenda
- operative word for the workplace
- primary way to empower people and to obtain feedback
* is the vehicle for attaining organizational greatness
- used to reach our common goals
* is very important in any organization, and diversity is shared in working teams
- today's corporations
- to firefighters
* is what board governance is all about
- gets the job done
* is what makes it possible for common people to produce uncommon results
- the purchasing system work
* philosophy that promotes synergy.
* process for results and objectives that are set.
* requires trust and openness in communication and relationships
- visibility - the ability to see others while being seen.
* is created measurable results
* skill that requires training, practice, and evaluation.
* very desirable behavior among individuals with a common goal
- important aspect of high altitude climbing
* vital part of organizational life.
* way of life out in the real world. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Travel
* abroad means strange foreign currencies.
* booming business throughout the world.
* can be an investment into someone's profession by gaining an international experience
- as individuals, families or groups
- hazardous, and Lagos has one of the world's highest crime rates
- involve reads
* causes travel.
* connects the intellect with the senses.
* does present situations in which it's more socially acceptable to talk with strangers.
* ends with stops.
* has life changing effects on students, building maturity and self confidence.
* helps preserve history and historical sites, monuments and buildings.
* is about human interaction, hands-on experience
- all about the spirit of being in a place and how to communicate there
- an argument between places
- by far the biggest industry in the Internet
- different in that most people are skiing or snowmobiling
- human activities
* is measured in days
- time rather than miles out here in the Far west
- mental travel
- more than renting a bed or buying a seat on an airplane
- motion
- movement
- nourishment for the soul
- now one of the world's largest industries
* is one of America's cherished freedoms
- fastest growing industries
- Denver's largest industries
* is one of the fastest growing sectors on the Internet
- first luxury goods people buy
- largest businesses in the world
- most rewarding forms of introspection
- principal activities of the human race
- something most parents want for their children
- the chance to explore different cultures and environments
* is the largest consumer of time and expense
- industry in the world, it is also the most over-built
- nation's third largest shopping category after automotive and food
* is the number one industry in today s e-commerce marketplace
- spending segment for the online consumer market
- thus a form of education, perhaps the very best form of education
* major part of just about everybody's lifestyle.
* means adventure in Sarawak, where the highways are rivers and streams
- direction of movement
* night and day difference.
* occurs in a number of ways.
* often combines business with pleasure.
* remains one of the Internet's largest commerce categories.
* starts with leaves
- packs
- plans
* study in contrasts.
* useful database containing information on countries.
Traditional life
* is an ongoing cycle of ritual from birth, initiation, marriage and death.
+ Dauria (movie), Plot: 1971 movies :: Action movies :: Romantic drama movies :: Movies based on books
* After the Communist revolution in Russia, people suffer more. Traditional life ends in chaos and crime. Communism makes no happy end.
Tenure
* form of job guarantee.
* is legal rights
* practice which naturally follows from the philosophy of collectivists. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Terrorism
* affects some countries more strongly than others, of course.
* also has a high economic cost.
* always entails criminal activity
- tries to cause insecurity and restlessness in the society
* breach of human rights in a massive and most brutal form.
* can also cripple entire economies
- be a means for a nation to project power
- have widely varying motivations
- occur without buildings being bombed or women and children dying in the streets
- result from the conflict between tribes, religious groups, and political entities
- take forms other than bombs
* cancer that can be cured only by a military operation.
* causes a desire to hide
- sadness
* comes in all shapes, sizes and colors.
* common threat throughout the world.
* coward's way to fight.
* crime against humanity
- that affects innocent men, women, and children everywhere
- under several existing federal statutes
* criminal act in nearly all national and international legal codes.
* curse on the world.
* exists throughout the world.
* fluctuates by political events since it political act and statement.
* form of war
- warfare and a strategic issue in our region
* global menace, which clearly calls for global action
- problem that requires the concerted efforts of all concerned
* growing threat because people are desperate.
* has NO religion.
* has no national boundaries
- official criminal law definition at the international level
- religion, but terrorists have
- political, psychological and military objectives
- the potential to become a serious strategic threat to each and every nation
* invariably corrupts the culprits and the common human rights of mankind.
* involves inducing fear
- the indiscriminate use of force to achieve certain objectives
* is about fear and the fact that the terrorists have to hide means they live in fear too
- against religious teaching
* is an act of war
- anomalous dark corner in the field of human endeavour
- arm the revolutionary can never relinquish
- emerging concern among emergency responders
- established crime under international law
- evil to all
- inevitable result of an unjust society
- international phenomenon
- another nefarious international activity in which Syria continues to be involved
- born and live in democracy
- both a threat to our national security as well as a criminal act
- considered to be low intensity warfare
- designed to frighten and demoralize
- directed against Israeli civilian targets
- employment of merciless violence for a variety of ends
- equated to building homes as if both acts are equally reprehensible
- essentially a political act
- financed heavily by groups in various countries
- generally a response by the oppressed who have no other means to attain their rights
- intimidation
- multifaceted and differs from group to group and incident to incident
- no respecter of the sanctity of human life and property
- nurtured by anger and despair
* is on the rise in the USA and around the world
- worldwide
* is one of the major unresolved issues of the twentieth century
- oldest weapons used in the struggle of domination
- part of government's modus operandi
- political violence
- really only possible in free, or open societies
- still a reality of life for many parts of the world
- terrorism, no matter what the cause
* is the chief threat to peace
- global menace of our age
- language of hatred and despair
- new word replacing revolution
- one means for the weak to strike out against the strong
- plague of many nations
- politics of murder
- poor man's way of waging war
- practice of using fear to accomplish an objective, probably one that is unpopular
- single biggest threat to our national security
- strong arm towards power
* is the use of violence to achieve political goals
- or threatened use of force designed to bring about political change
- world's cancer today
- ultimately the weapon of the weak, the cowardly, and the marginal
- usually about making a statement
- widespread in the world
- wrong either committed by individuals, groups or Governments
* kills and threatens civilians in their person.
* looms large as a major threat today to free societies of the world.
* manifestation of hatred and when it is well planned, it is purposefully executed.
* means of matching the leader with society
- to an end
* much used term, with many definitions.
* new and emerging global phenomenon.
* occurs all over the world and is carried out by terrorists
- frequently in so many countries
* often emerges from the breeding grounds of political, economic and ideologic conflict.
* It is difficult to define terrorism. Terrorism has no official criminal law definition at the international level. Some definitions now include acts of unlawful violence and war. The use of similar tactics by criminal gangs is not usually called terrorism, though these same actions may be called terrorism when done by a politically motivated group.
* part of the dark side of globalization.
* persistent disease.
* political act, a response to U.S. foreign policy
* possibility at any time and any place if the soil is fertile.
* private-sector affair, usually employing homemade materials.
* problem that can only be solved by nuclear war
- which has troubled the international community for more than three decades
* product of desperation and nihilism
- psychological forces
* psychological game that thrives on fear
* reaches back to ancient Greece and has occurred throughout history.
* real entity that needs a consistent, realistic definition.
* relies on symbolic power.
* remains a complex phenomenon spawned by a mix of factors and motivations.
* represents a real threat for our society and to our peace of mind.
* rips apart the fabric of society.
* scourge against humanity
- that undermines stability
* serious threat to our political systems and our societies.
* social problem, a political, and an economical problem.
* specific kind of violence.
* supported by states is also war.
* takes a daily toll across the world
- many forms
* term that has been much bandied about in recent times in the world media.
* term, which everyone can recognize but few can define it.
* threat to all the countries of South Asia.
* thrives on confusion and panic.
* unique form of crime.
* uses violence as a first or second means rather than as a last resort.
* war of psychology
- without borders and without rules
* wave-like phenomenon.
* way of thinking.
* weapon that threatens all civil authority.
* works by the same principles as the protection racket used by organized crime.
* worldwide problem | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Teiid
* All teiids are egg layers.
* are classic examples of actively foraging lizards.
* generally live in burrows they excavate themselves or that are made by other animals.
* have good visual and olfactory systems.
* maintain high body temperature while active by shuttling between sun and shade.
Twilight
* always lasts about one hour at the equator.
* continuous, controlled discharge of censure and opprobrium.
* is albums
- also nice when landing lights on runways begin to glow
- declines
- medication given to induce light sleep and reduce pain sensation
- part of evenings
- sacred in Hinduism
- shorter at the equator
- soundtracks
- time of day
- when magic seeps into the air
Tan
* Any tan sign of potentially damaged skin.
* also exist in the homozygous state for the beige gene.
* make fine mothers who often have a big litter.
Toxic granulation
* appears as dark blue-black granules in the cytoplasm of neutrophils.
* is found in severe inflammatory states.
* stress response to acute infections, burns, and drug poisoning.<|endoftext|>Trap
* Some traps contain water and once the rat enters the trap, it drowns in a short amount of time
- have teeth on the jaws, which add to the physical trauma
- still use poison to kill the silverfish bug
* Some traps use chemical bait to attract insect species
- pheromones, the natural perfume that pests use to find each other and mate
- work on the principle that many insects are attracted to light
* Use large snap traps when rats have infested a building.
* are another mechanical method of pest control
- assumptions that are accepted without challenge
- carriage
- critical in the detection of weevil reinfestation
- designs
- devices
- drains
- effective at controlling some pests
- frames covered with web to form an enclosure
- less hazardous to use around children and pets
- mechanical devices
- more useful to monitor beetle emergence than as control devices
- mouths
- the best method of rodent control where poisons are unwanted or inadvisable
- useful tools for monitoring low level moth populations and detecting new populations
* can attract insects by using color, taste, and sex hormones
- humanely catch any small animals including cats, opossums, and reccoons
* determine the density and distribution of moths.
* help indicate the time cutworms feed on corn.
* is an adherent of a particular philosophy or nationalism.
* prevent rodents from dying in inaccessible places and causing an odor problem.
* specialized game of specialized skills.
* using protein baits also capture large numbers of nontarget insects.
Transcendence
* belongs to the profane world.
* common theme in movies.
* helps the person rise above the immediate stimuli and get a different perspective.
* is an anthology of minority experience
- being
- domination
- supremacy
* is the heart of mediation
- state where the mind has moved beyond everything other than itself
* means above all self-transcendence.
* occurs by reaching the abstract source.
* vital dimension of learning to BE as one is.<|endoftext|>Trucking
* driving force in the economy.
* highly diversified industry.
* is central to the U.S. economy
- identified as a concern facing rural food processors
- one of the most important aspects of the United States economy
* is the iron in the bloodstream of commerce
- largest and most important means of product transportation
- vital to the nation's economy
* plays an important role in the Florida economy.
* vital link in the chain that speeds products to market
- segment of the transportation system in the United States
Trisomy
* Trisomies are the most common type of chromosomal abnormality
- do happen by chance, but have a greater chance of happening as a women ages
* is aberration
* occurs when an individual has three of a particular type of chromosome.
* term used when an extra chromosome is present. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Transplantation
* complex, long-term process of which the actual surgery is only one element.
* focuses on diseases that have gone beyond the stage of reversibility.
* is also the best long-term treatment for kidney failure
- an accepted form of medical treatment because transplants do work
- movement
- now a standard form of treatment for advanced disease
- only one of many treatments for heart disease
* is the most exciting field in medicine and surgery
- natural solution to kidney failure
- only hope for patients with liver failure
- preferred treatment for certain people
- treatment of choice for children
* leads to normal, productive lives.
* offers many heart-failure patients a better chance of survival than drug therapy.
* treatment of the tumor and the underlying liver disease.
* viable option in the management of end stage heart failure.
Tapering
* is used to create the tip and tang of the blade.
* provides a decrease in drag and increase in lift which is most effective at high speeds.
Tracheae
* Most tracheae divide into airways
- enter thoraxes
- retain dead air
* Some tracheae are part of bodies
- necks
- divide into tubes
Torre
* is an unknown quantity to Murray.
+ Eve Torres, Personal life: 1984 births :: Living people :: American professional wrestlers :: Sportspeople from Colorado :: Female professional wrestlers :: Former WWE wrestlers :: People from Denver, Colorado
* Torres also participates in kickboxing.
Toxic megacolon
* can occur with associated risk of perforation.
* is one of the most important complications of ulcerative colitis.<|endoftext|>Tsunamis
* are extremely destructive to life and property.
* are gigantic sea or ocean waves
- versions of the ripples produced by a pebble tossed into a still pond
- huge ocean waves caused by earthquakes, or volcanoes that erupt under water
- immense sea waves
- much longer and travel much faster than ordi- nary wind waves
- mysterious creatures, waves both deadly and unexpected
- ocean waves produced by earthquakes or underwater landslides
- sea waves generated by an abrupt displacement of large volumes of water
- seismic sea waves, having nothing to do with the tides
- unlike other ocean waves
* bear little resemblance to the breaking waves familiar to beachgoers and surfers.
* become dangerous when they approach land.
* can be devastating on populated coastlines
- cause great devastation and loss of life
* can destroy towns with their crushing walls of water
- whole coastal communities
- move faster than a person can run
* can occur anywhere, but are most common in the Pacific Ocean
- at any time, day or night
- in any of the oceanic regions, but are most common in the Pacific Ocean
- originate hundreds or even thousands of miles away from coastal areas
- result from earthquakes
- savagely attack coastlines, causing devastating property damage and loss of life
* can travel across the Pacific
- thousands of miles with little loss of energy
- up rivers and streams that lead to the ocean
* do slow down as they approach land because the water is shallower there.
* have long periods and can overcome obstacles such as gulfs, bays and islands
- no connection with the weather nor with tides
- several remarkable features
* is the Japanese word for giant ocean waves.
* kill people.
* roar and people die.
* tend to have periods of five minutes to as much as an hour.
* travel outward in all directions from the epicenter of an earthquake
- swiftly across the open ocean
* typically cause the most severe damage and casualties very near their source
- emerge in oceans, usually after a quake drops or lifts part of the seafloor
Telemetry
* facilitates long-term recording of gastrointestinal myoelectrical activity in pigs.
* fundamental tool for wildlife research and applications.
* is important in water management, including water quality and stream gauging functions
- remote data acquisition | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Trochanteric bursitis
* common cause of lateral hip pain.
* occurs most frequently in overweight, middle-aged women.
Tontine
* is life assurance
- the only insulation quality assured to world standards
* play an important role in controlling working capital.
Thrombi
* can block narrowed blood vessels, causing heart attacks or strokes or leg pain.
* develop within the chambers due to abnormal blood flow within the heart.<|endoftext|>Tenderness
* depends on the age of the bear
- bird when processed
* gesture to one mortal from another only inconsequentially less so.
* is also a sign the turkey has reached a safe temperature
- compassion
* is felt at the junction, or joint, between the collarbone and shoulder
- in the area of the medial epicondyle and flexor pronator tendons
- harmful
- localized to the injured metacarpal bone
- probably the most important quality characteristic of red meat
- related to maturity and freshness
- reproduced when specific areas of the foot are touched
* is the key to understand women
- touch that elicits an incomparable feeling
- usually mild in uncomplicated colonic obstruction
- warmth
* natural healing flow of love and understanding.
* occurs in precise, localized areas, particularly in the neck, spine, shoulders and hips.
* reflects the amount of fiber in the spear.
* softness, a person who is loving, affectionate and considerate.
* tends to be greatest over the proximal portion of the tendon sheath.
* usually is localized to the calcaneal attachment of the plantar fascia
- occurs over the area of the nodule - at the bottom of the finger or thumb<|endoftext|>Temperance
* increases the amount a card can withstand when attacked.
* is about doing all things in moderation, instead of binging, splurging, and pigging out
- abstinence
- also a contagious virtue
- combinations
- involved in all phases of our lives
- limited to certain pleasures of touch
- love in training
- prudence applied to pleasure
- restraint
- self-control
* is the card of good health in all areas - physical, mental and emotional
- self-control and discipline that applies love to our daily actions
- time of prudence to allow the new ideas to grow and develop
- virtue of balance and moderation
- to life, health, and character as mortar is to a brick building
* keeps the desiring part of the soul in harmony with reason.
* means avoiding excesses.
* means moderation, restraint, and personal control
- self-control, the mastery of desires and passions
* signifies self control.
Tidal change
* affect the position of the salt zone.
* occur daily, shown by two high tides and two low tides each day.<|endoftext|>Tomb
* Many tombs contain remnants of codices, their fragile paper destroyed by centuries of damp.
* Most tombs have chambers.
* Some tombs are very elaborate structures of marble, capable of holding a number of coffins
- communicate with a few little temples, built with stone too
- have a lot of grave goods indicative of wealth and social status
* also are easy pickings for thieves because they contain valuables.
* are above ground to prevent the corpse's being defiled
- edge places
- grave sites
- memorials
- one of the most oldest forms of burying a person
* includes bases
- gravestones
- sections
+ Good Friday, Biblical account: Christian holidays :: Easter
* Jesus is hung on the cross for six hours in extreme pain. There is an earthquake. Tombs break open, and the curtain in the Temple is torn from top to bottom.
Testicular atrophy
* can also occur with steroid users.
* occurs in old dogs due to alterations in hormone concentrations. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Testing
* are examinations
- experiments
- human activities
- performance testing
* describes the use of tests for some purpose.
* discipline that is as important or more so than design or development.
* is an experience where the child is actively involved
- important part of martial arts training
- especially important in systems where bacteria is found
* is one of the basic tools of scientific and applied psychology
- formal steps used to gather information
* is the integrity of any program to attack addiction
- key factor in diabetes
- principal engine of nuclear proliferation
* is the process of creating, implementing and evaluating tests
- executing software with the intent of finding errors
- trying to discover every conceivable fault or weakness in a work product
- word everyone loves to hate
* method for strengthening things.
* process of executing a program with the intent of finding an error
- verifying that a program does what it is supposed to do
- that can be conducted in a manual or an automated fashion
* technique for obtaining information in an organized, reliable, and valid manner.
* thermometer for the health of education.
* way of measuring differences in treatment.
Unfaithfulness
* can hurt a relationship.
* is democratic by nature
- harmful to society
- quality
Urban myth
* abound about the birds being able to disembowel a man with their claws
- in modern culture
* are a common feature of our society.
Utopian
* are impractical idealists or dreamers removed from reality
- reformers
* have a very strict control on society.
* measure their months by the lunar cycle, and their years by the solar cycle.<|endoftext|>Usability
* branch of software engineering and needs to be approached in an organized manner.
* can increase trust in a system, brand or product.
* combination of factors that effect the user s experience with the product.
* concern in the design of any product used by humans.
* continuous process.
* discrete discipline.
* is about knowing that the best feedback is often no feedback
- psychological research, data collection, and data analysis
- all about making information discoverable
- at the state of using a stick to goad an ox in a certain direction
- critical to the success of computer systems and products
- defined by a product being easy to use, easy to learn and easy to remember
- everything when it comes to editing digital video
- gravy, earns little and risks much
- important to thesuccess of hardware as well as software products
- necessarily the next level in the Web's evolution
- related to accessibility
* is the ability of a person to use something
- concept of making things easy to use and understand
- degree to which a user can successfully learn and use a product to achieve a goal
- measure of the quality of the user's experience when interacting with a web site
- usefulness
* means the ease of learning and using a software system.
* measure of ease of use and feature effectiveness.
* measure of the experience of the user when interacting with something
- success of the design in supporting or enhancing human performance
* process, a product attribute, and a state of mind.
* refers to design features and how they stack up against human factors in site usage
- ease of reading and chunking
- the ease of use of the curriculum
* term that indicates the degree of user-friendliness of a system.
* very important area of engineering.
Urate
* are off-white, cream colored or slightly yellowish, and are opaque.
* are the result of digestion and metabolism of proteins in the bird's system
- soft but solid white chunks that get passed usually along with feces
Urial
* can live even higher up.
* feed mainly on grass but are able to eat leaves of trees and bushes if needed.
Unlimited access
* is being connected and actively engaged in legitimate activity.
* user being at the computer using the internet or downloading media. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Unpopularity
* is quality
* sign of leadership.
Unmarried girl
* have a private bedroom after puberty.
* wear their hair in many small plaits, reduced to two after marriage.
Unilateral atresia
* causes persistent nasal drainage and excoriation of the nasal vestibule.
* occurs more frequently on the right side.
Untreated gingivitis
* can advance to periodontitis.
* leads to periodontitis , a breakdown of the periodontal tissues.
Usability testing
* critical step in Web page design.
* involves real people working through real tasks while being observed.
* is the most important measure of how people and products work together.
* technique that can help to ensure good, user-centered design.
Ulcerative proctitis
* differs from ulcerative colitis in terms of where the inflammation occurs.
* milder form of the condition of ulcerative colitis.
Urban life
* is concentrated in the capital, whose population is mostly engaged in commerce.
* natural for people with low expenses and relatively high disposable incomes.
Unresolved grief
* can contribute to family dysfunction for many years
- lead to physical or mental illness, suicide or premature death
* is the cause of much drug abuse and self-destructive behaviour.
* reduces a person's quality of life and ability to function.
Unconsciousness
* can occur suddenly and without warning
- take place within one to two minutes
* do to emotions such as unrequited love and grief.
* is caused by illness, injury, or emotional shock
- followed by failing respiration and death within a few minutes
* occurs when normal brain activity is interrupted
- within seconds if the prisoner takes a deep breath
* state of mind<|endoftext|>Ulceration
* can also occur and care needs to be taken to prevent infection
- involve the nose, pharynx, palate and lips
* can occur internally and externally with severe overdosing
- secondary to inflammatory-cell mediated damage
- occur, typically on the inside of the leg just above the ankle
- result from the increased levels of acid
* common occurrence of the diabetic foot.
* develops when a secondary bacterial infection occurs.
* dominant abnormality in Crohn's disease.
* gradually develops as the skin becomes inflamed.
* is caused by several factors, but particularly by neuropathy
- very common among edema patients
* occur from infections or abrasions.
* occurs and bacteria enter blood and lymph.
* sometimes occurs spontaneously, and often as a result of trauma. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Urinary incontinence
* Most urinary incontinence fades away naturally.
* affects all age groups and is particularly common in the elderly
- both sexes, all ages, and people of all socioeconomic levels
- many female athletes who engage in high-impact exercise
- millions of adults and nearly twice as many women as men
- people of all ages and lifestyles
* becomes more common as people get older.
* big hurdle for some female athletes.
* can also lead to psychological problems, such as depression.
* can be a sensitive subject
- extremely embarrassing as well as unhygienic
- transient or chronic
* can occur at any age for any number of reasons
* chronic condition with little tendency to go away without treatment.
* common and often treatable problem among nursing facility residents.
* common problem among elderly individuals
- for many older women
- reason for nursing home admission and drives up the costs of care
* comprises a wide range of symptoms and disease conditions.
* costs ten billion dollars a year in direct and indirect costs.
* has a variety of causes.
* imposes a considerable drain on Australian healthcare resources.
* is abnormal regardless of age, mobility, mental status, or frailty
- an inability to voluntarily control urination
- caused by the failure of the urethral sphincters to remain closed
- common among male veterans and affects all age groups
- difficult to measure objectively
- diseases
- especially prevalent in women
- excretion
- more common in larger breed female dogs who have been spayed
- much more common in women than has been commonly recognized in the past
* is the accidental loss of urine from the bladder
- chronic leaking of urine
* is the inability to control the bladder function resulting in leaking urine
- flow of urine from the bladder
- urination, and is more common in women than men
- involuntary leakage of urine
* is the involuntary loss of bladder control
- urine at socially inappropriate times
- loss, or leaking of urine
- passing of urine
- last condition to come out of the closet
- leading reason for nursing home admissions
- loss of bladder control or uncontrolled urine leakage
- second leading cause of institutionalizing elderly people
- uncontrollable loss of urine
- unintentional loss of urine
* is uncontrollable escape of urine
- leaking of urine from the bladder
- when urine leaks unintentionally
* loss of urine control.
* major factor for skin breakdown, and infections
- health problem because it can lead to disability and dependency
- problem with the elderly
* medical term for any condition characterized by involuntary urine leakage.
* problem for over half of nursing facility residents.
* refers to the inability of the bladder to hold and store urine
- involuntary passage of urine, or loss of bladder control
* results when the pressure in the bladder exceeds that of the urethra.
* source of great distress to sufferers and their relatives.
Urinary continence
* depends on strong bladder and pelvic support.
* is difficult to maintain without the strength and support of the pelvic muscle. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Unconditional love
* applies to the divine love from human to human.
* desires the best for others.
* is about giving without expecting anything in return at all
- absolutely necessary for every growing and developing child
- basically acceptance
- born from forgiveness and forgiveness is born from acceptance
* is life's most powerful medicine
- precious goal
- offered to everyone
- often simple and unassuming
* is the absence of restrictions in the flow of energy that creates the body
- act of giving without any expectations
- basis for every parenting decision and action
- greatest lesson humanity can learn
* is the most powerful love
- stimulant of the immune system
- natural state of the heart and the heart is the seat of our soul
- what marriage is all about
* love that never changes.
* priceless gift no money can buy.
* requires giving and receiving.
* takes many forms.
Ununtrium
* highly unstable element and decays by emitting alpha particles.
* is an element that is never found in nature but has been created in a laboratory.
* radioactive, synthetic element about which little is known.
Unwanted email
* growing problem on internet.
* is junk mail, so avoid unnecessary proliferation of messages
- unwanted email
Universality
* contradiction in terms.
* is generality
- subject to taste
* leads to unanimity of thought which leads to unity in action.
* means that a concept can be applied in the same way to anything in the category
- all valuable property in the state is subject to taxation
Unresolved guilt
* is the center of the soul.
* produces shame which ultimately leads to neurotic behaviour.
Unsaturated zone
* means the zone between the land surface and the regional water table.
* occur below the water table when there is fluctuation of the water table depth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Ulcerative colitis
* affects everyone in different ways
- males and females equally and appears to run in some families
* affects only the colon, and has a different pattern of inflammation
- large intestine
- the innermost lining of the colon
* appears to be slightly more common than Crohn's disease.
* can affect the entire large intestine or the rectum
- be quite mild or very severe
- produce inflammation and extensive surface bleeding from tiny ulcerations
* carries an increased risk of colon cancer, and has a clear genetic component.
* causes inflammation in the large intestine.
* causes inflammation of the lining of the colon and rectum
* chronic debilitating disease for which there is little effective therapy.
* chronic inflammatory condition involving only the large intestines
- disease of the large intestine and rectum
* chronic, recurring disease of the large bowel.
* condition in which the lining of the colon becomes inflamed.
* devastating disease that impacts patients' daily lives.
* differs from another inflammatory bowel disease, Crohn's disease.
- that causes inflammation in the lining of the colon
* increases the risk of colon cancer.
* involves inflammation of the inner lining of the colon and rectum
- only the large intestine, or colon
- the colon or large intestine
* is also another cause
- serious and chronically affects the large intestine and the rectum
* is an inflammation of the colon that produces ulceration of the inside wall
- lining of the large intestine, or colon
* is an inflammatory disease of the colon or large bowel
- ongoing inflammation in the lining of the large intestine and rectum
* is characterized by continuous inflammation confined to the large intestine
- passage of watery stools with mucus and pus
- unpredictable flareups
- chronic, like Crohn's disease
- diseases
- incurable but can be treated to lessen the symptoms
- more common in the United States than Crohn's disease
- potentially curable if the colon is removed
* presents with diffuse continuous involvement of the mucosa.
* produces inflammation and breakdown along the lining of the colon.
* requires long-term medical care.
* seems to run in families.
* systemic disease limited to the colon and the rectum.
* term used to describe inflammation of the colon and rectum.
Unsystematic risk
* are unanticipated events that affect single assets or small groups of assets.
* is security specific risk and can be diversified
- specific risk to each individual company
Urban gardening
* can take many forms.
* is an important form of local food production.<|endoftext|>Versatility
* also means being open to the needs of employers.
* aptly describes herb plants.
* is often an essential element of a successful musical career
- skillfulness
* is the key to adapting to changing conditions during the summer
- decorating small spaces
- many women
- mushroom's middle name
- very important in bass fishing
* key component in the development of a successful and professional nurse.
* means protecting one's investment
- the ability to move from one type of music or performance environment to another
Voodooism
* folk religion, manifested by a series of complex ritual drawings, songs and dances.
* is an evil effecting every level of society.
* pervasive evil that affects every level of Haitian society.
* religious cult
Viral conjunctivitis
* can cause a similar clinical picture.
* is an occupational hazard of eye care providers
- very common, especially in the winter months
* produces less discharge but more tearing than bacterial conjunctivitis. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Vigilance
* also means preparedness.
* has meaning only if the nature of power is understood.
* is an important ingredient of drug abuse prevention
- attention
- most essential when vulnerable populations are involved
- perpetuated by awareness
- the key to safe blood products and derivatives
* is the price of bandwidth
- victory
- product of distrust
- proper presencing of a phenomenon within a context of absence
* means continuousness
- immediacy
- learning about the Net
- paying attention to what's happening in the world
* refers to constant monitoring, often of the news, weather, and financial markets.
Vasovagal syncope
* affects young children and women more often.
* is an abnormal reaction of the nerves to otherwise normal circumstances
- unusual response to emotional stress, excitement, fatigue, hunger or pain
- the medical term for the common faint
Visual alertness
* increases as they view their environment.
* is increased when babies can face forward to view their environment.
Voluntary simplicity
* fosters a richness of self and community relations.
* involves choosing to have a 'life' rather than a 'lifestyle'
- practical ways to live while consuming less of the earth's resources
* is another way of living more peacefully
- one of the leading trends in the United States
* lifestyle of integrity practiced with a whole systems view point.
Vocational rehabilitation
* is rehabilitation.
* process which is unique to the individual.
* serves people with varying types of disabilities.<|endoftext|>Vasodilation
* causes increased ultrafiltration across the capillary bed
- mild, transient erythema as the skin attempts to cool down
- warmth and redness
* decreases myocardial workload and oxygen demand.
* is dilatation
* leads to hypovolemic shock.
* occurs and can result in some edema before frank high-output heart failure occurs.
* refers to the opening of pupils in response to eye infections.
* then occurs, followed by a release of enzymes that cause cell necrosis.
* widening of the lumen due to smooth muscle contraction
- smooth musclerelaxation<|endoftext|>Verbal abuse
* can and sometimes does, turn physical
- be a weapon used by either partner in a couple
* can be just as life-threatening as a loaded gun
- painful as physical abuse
- cause as much, maybe more damage than the physical part of it
- leave more lasting emotional scars than any other form of abuse
- really hurt someone
- sometimes turn into physical abuse
- take many forms
* can, sometimes, be just as damaging as physical abuse.
* common form of mental injury and can lead to domestic violence.
* crazymaking means of dominance and control.
* escalates and often turns into physical abuse
- turns into physical abuse over time
* form of emotional violence.
* happens everyday.
* is always humiliating as it is nonrespectful towards the other person
- cruel
- hurtful and usually attacks the nature and abilities of the partner
* is just as bad as physical abuse, sometimes even worse
- damaging and just as painful as physical abuse
- manipulative and controlling
- much more than calling someone names
- part of everyday life at senior level
- personal and lowers self esteem in children and adults
- prevalent and includes intimidation as well
- primarily about control
- sometimes worse than physical abuse
- the norm in families of addicts
* occurs when a person is constantly berated for the actions or inactions.
Visual programming
* fast, easy to understand and very convenient way of programming.
* is the use of graphical techniques in computer programming
- graphics and graphical techniques in computer programming
* speeds almost all areas of software development. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Viral marketing
* allows a company to become more efficient with their marketing dollars.
* can be extremely powerful, as people tend to trust the opinions of people they know.
* capitalizes on people's network.
* depends on internet users helping to promote a product or service for somebody else.
* is an ideavirus in which the medium of the virus is the product
- really important to the next generation of media
- something that everyone talks about, but few actually do successfully
* is the marketing technique that offers two new insights
- most powerful form of marketing on the Internet
* key aspect to reaching a wider audience
- growth driver for Internet companies
* leverages the collaborative nature of the Internet to reduce the cost per lead.
* special case of an ideavirus. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Vaccination
* All vaccinations can have side effects.
* Most vaccinations have to be given by injection
- take effect in two weeks' time
* Some vaccinations can take up to six months to vaccinate.
* There are many diseases that are fatal to cats.
* also can prevent infections
- has substantial economic benefits for healthy working adults
* appear to be the best means for preventing diseases.
* are a last resort in aiding the highly communicable disease
- live dose of an infectious disease injected into the system of the animal
- vital part of proper equine management
- almost non existent in many villages
- also a way of protecting pregnant women from getting it
- an essential part of preventive health care
* are an important part of a healthy puppy or dogs life
- health maintenance
- preventative animal health measure
* are available each year to protect against the current strain of influenza
- for some forms of meningitis
- in combination with vaccines against other diseases
* are available to prevent many cat diseases
- dog diseases
- blood products and hazardous to our immune system
- comparable to that of cattle
- crude experiments conducted on innocent people
* are generally safe for breast-feeding mothers
- the cheapest and most effective way to prevent viruses
- good for people
- highly effective in preventing infectious diseases in dogs and cats
* are important as they protect the animals from infectious diseases
- to every child and to society as a whole
- injections of medicines the animal receives to keep it from developing diseases
- much more stressful on the underdeveloped immune system
- necesary part of life
* are one area to be considered in a preventive health program
- means of protection from diseases
- only for healthy dogs
- part of health management
- particularly important in the aging population
- something that have become popular over the last half a century
* belongs in the properly set up surgeries of qualified medical practitioners.
* biological weapon at the service of biological warfare.
* builds on the natural immune system to make a person resist certain diseases.
* can also increase resistance to disease.
* can be a powerful tool in disease prevention
- effective in the face of an outbreak
* can cause a variety of side effects in both cats and dogs
- the same effects
- control disease
* can help in the geriatric population
- prevent disease as well as regular veternary visits
- lead to autism
- lower a dog's seizure threshold and trigger a seizure
* can prevent disease caused by influenza
- many sheep diseases, which significantly affect profitability
- the onset of the disease
- protect for three to five years
- significantly decrease the incidence of pneumonia
* currently denotes the physical act of administering any vaccine or toxoid.
* decimates populations.
* do have some side effects.
* enables the immune system to recognize and fight the real thing
- selection of populations to be decimated
* encourages medical dependence and reinforces belief in the inefficiency of the body.
* enhances our natural ability to fight disease.
* establish protective immunity, which can reduce the risk of the disease.
* form of prevention or prophylaxis of infectious disease and cancers.
* has a place in veterinary medicine
- serious consequences, some of which take a long time to develop
- some risks
* helpful tool in maintaining resistance to brucellosis in a cattle population.
* helps prevent most cases of chickenpox.
* increases survival and creates more productive members of the family and community.
* interferes with diagnostic testing.
* is an effective way of avoiding the flu
- preventing suffering from chickenpox
- another important step in helping to prevent the disease
- as important for adults as it is for children in preventing disease
- big business, the success of which depends on sales
- by injection or tablets
* is common in countries where farmers rear livestock for themselves or for local trade
- the countries where the disease occurs
- considered the century's biggest public health success
- critical in the prevention and elimination of disease
- envisaged only in situations where an outbreak is of epidemic proportions
- generally effective, although carrier birds can develop amongst vaccinates
- immunisation
- like insurance
- manditory as there is no effective treatment for rabies in dogs
- most effective when it is planned to meet the particular needs of a farm
* is necessary for all cats
- to produce immunity and prevent illness after antibiotic withdrawal
- no substitute for responsible pet care
* is one method of preventing infectious diseases
- of several protocols whereby immunity is conferred
* is one of the best preventions against rabies
- main influenza prevention methods
- more effective ways to prevent specific diseases
* is one of the most cost-effective public health measures
- successful of science-based strategies to fight disease
- safest and most effective health interventions
* is practiced in order to establish effective immunity
- widely and is the recommended method for prevention
- preventive and administered to healthy persons to prevent illness
- probably one of the main reasons that pets are living healthier longer lives
* is recommended for all persons known to be at high risk of sexual transmission
- men who have sex with men
- to help prevent the further spread of infection
- regarded as a policy of last resort
- relied on to increase resistance to infection
- required for breeding females to be moved into some states
- safe during pregnancy
- said to have disastrous consequences for livestock exporters
- scars
* is the act of administering the vaccine
- backbone of prevention
- basis for modern rabies import controls
* is the best means of rabies control
- method for both control and prevention of bovine campylobacteriosis
- protection in preventing hepatitis A infection
* is the best way to limit rabies infection and therefore transmission
- prevent the disease and, contrary to public opinion, is safe
* is the best way to protect again diphtheria, tetanus, and pertussis
- again measles, mumps, and rubella
- against diphtheria, tetanus, and perlussis
- against polio
- against some forms of meningococcal meningitis
- against tetanus and diptheria
- essential first step in controlling infectious diseases
- insurance policy for a healthy herd
- key to better health for children
- medical sacrament corresponding to baptism
- most common form of prevention
* is the most effective and most reliable way of preventing typhoid fever
- control measure for canine Parvovirus disease
- defense against viral infections
- important way to make use of the immune system in medicine
* is the only available tool to prevent pneumococcal disease
- effective way to prevent influenza
- means of protection against blackleg
- sure prevention for yellow fever
* is the only way to prevent the disease
- provide long term protection against tetanus
- primary way to prevent feline upper respiratory disease complex
- process of using cow pox to inoculate, rather than smallpox
- single biggest cause of cot death
* is the single most important measure for preventing yellow fever
- to control Japanese encephalitis
- single, most powerful method to control contagious diseases
* is the surest way to prevent laghu masurika
- protect cattle from some pests
- used to try to prevent and control the spread of disease
* leads to social violence and crime.
* medical procedure and as such, has no place in schools
* normally gives a life-long protection.
* occur in our region without cost to parents.
* offers a potentially more effective and sustainable method of disease control
- protection for uninfected individuals
* only decreases severity of the clinical signs.
* painless outpatient procedure and takes only a few minutes to perform.
* part of routine childhood immunizations.
* personal choice.
* plays an important role in preventing influenza and rhinopneumonitis.
* prevent children from contracting the disease, thus making treatment unnecessary
- getting dangerous, life-threatening diseases
* preventive measure only.
* protect against viral diseases, in part, by eliciting the production of antibodies
- cows, but defending fetuses against infection is difficult
* protects animals and people from rabies
- individuals and society from the effects of disease
* provide antibodies, which the young normally get through the mother's milk.
* relies on the ability of the immune system to recognize foreign protein.
* remains the primary method of preventing and controlling influenza.
* represent a major assault on the body's immune system.
* stimulates the immune system with an antigen
- system, the body's defense mechanism
* therefore has a national impact on public health.
* typically are more effective at stimulating the humoral side of the immune system
- occurs at six to eight weeks of age in kittens
* way of acquiring or inducing resistance to infection
- preventing diseases caused by viruses
- reducing the chance of contracting an infectious disease
- to produce immunization
* weaken the immune system of a child.
* work equally well in all species and there are no special problems with sheep or pigs.
+ Immunity: Immunology
* Immunity' is the ability of the body to defend itself from 'foreign bodies'. This means rejecting infections, clearing up dust which gets in the lungs, and killing cancer cells. Vaccination builds on the natural immune system to make a person resist certain diseases.
+ Vaccination, Safety of vaccination: Immunization
* Vaccinations do have some side effects. These include swelling and redness around the injection site, a sore arm, or fever. Very rarely, the immune system overreacts so much to the fake virus that it damages other areas in the body. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Vagueness
* is essentially a procedural due process concept which is driven by notions of fair play
- quality
* serious impediment to prosperity.
* usually discourages people from bothering with trying to help.
Vestibular neurectomy
* eliminates attacks of vertigo in many patients.
* relieves the vertigo and usually preserves the hearing.
Viral myocarditis
* can lead to dilated cardiomyopathy, which can result in a failing heart.
* infection of the heart that leads to heart failure.
* is an infectious disease and is due to a chance infection with a virus
- preceded many times by a flu-like illness or gastroenteritis
Vertebrae
* Most vertebrae have delicate membranes
- spines
* Most vertebrae make up backbones<|endoftext|>Vegetative propagation
* allows multiplying cultivars that produce no viable seeds.
* can be by cuttings, budding or marcotting
- occur naturally or artificially
* form of asexual plant reproduction.
* helps to alter the size of the plant.
* is common in plants like orchids, ornamental plants and grasses
- especially beneficial to the agriculturists and horticulturists
- preferred for ensuring a rapid harvest and specific plant clones
- simply the transplanting of large or small pieces of the turfgrass
- the only method of retaining the cultivar form
- through rhizomes
* produces new plants without forming flowers and seeds.
Vibrotactile adaptation
* enhances frequency discrimination
- frequencydiscrimination
* shows different characteristics on the hand and the face.
Vibrational spectroscopy
* is very sensitive to bond orders and bond lengths between bonded atoms.
* measures characteristic vibrations between atoms within a molecule.<|endoftext|>Visual acuity
* decreases with age.
* diminishes with age.
* increases until the aperture gets so small that it begins to shut out too much light
- with increased luminance
* indicates how well a person can see at various distances.
* is affected by many factors
- at a maximum only in a small portion of the visual field
- expressed as a fraction of normal vision
- normal unless the foreign body is large and occupies the visual axis
- one of the most common ophthalmological examinations
* is only one measure of good vision
- visual function
- preserved except in very advanced disease
* is the degree to which the details and contours of objects are perceived
- term given to the capacity to discern detail
* ranges from normal to severely impaired.
* refers to the clarity of vision at different distances
- sharpness of the image
- spatial detail that can be resolved by the eye
* varies with the degree of hemorrhage
- malpositioning of the lens<|endoftext|>Vitality
* begins internally.
* combination of good health and great community.
* glowing complexion and sparkling eyes.
* is energy
- life itself
- lower both physically and psychologically
- that quality of a thing that makes it alive, a living being
* is the name of the game for seniors
- vigorous active principle upon which individual life depends
* persistent energy.
* refers to the faculty member's ability and interest in continuing to grow
- force which binds together the other six states of consciousness
* summation of good nutrition, enough rest and exercise.
Visitation
* can influence plant growth.
* form of custody.
* is artwork
- calamities
- deemed the right of a parent, as well as the right of a child, and is imposed by law
- meant to be a time for the parent and children to be together and enjoy each other
- visits
* means the father's right to spend time with the child.
* right of the child as well as the non-custodial parent. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Visualization
* allows the study of dynamics by observing model output in motion.
* also provides a means to counter the limitations of short-term memory.
* are animations that move to the music.
* attempts to program the mind to discover inner power and guidance
- transform research data into colorful, meaningful pictures
* can actually make the body healthy again or improve specific skills
- also be helpful in understanding how mathematical approaches work
- be different for different people
- help pain become more tolerable or detract attention away from it
- make science come alive, especially in teaching
- produce comprehensible views of real systems such as automobiles and airplanes
- promote knowledge sharing in all diverse learning environments
- take place through any one or any combination of the five senses
- use the power of the mind to relax the physical body
* changes perceptions and attitudes about stress-inducing events.
* comes from within the observer.
* constitutes an increasingly important part of computational science and engineering.
* critical technology for understanding complex, data-rich systems.
* directed form of thinking and imagination.
* embraces both image understanding and image synthesis.
* emphasize the relative position of hopping cells during motions.
* form of concentrative meditation that movie-style use of imagination
- prayer
* helps clarify the meaning of data sets
- scientists see the sound waves and detect anomalous behavior
* includes graphics, animation, and four-dimensional representations.
* is also helpful as a form of distraction from pain.
* is an affordable technology for quickly and realistically depicting data visually
- idea complex, a thought form, in a mental picture
- important component to the understanding of chemical concepts
- indispensable tool in helping people attain their goals
- another form of meditation
- comprised of thought and emotion
- considered by many to be an ability that takes years to master
- crucial for scientific interpretation
- distinguished as the representation of data using software tools
- especially useful for interrogating large data sets
- inherently less abstract and more direct than textual language symbols
- linked to many different types of content
- mental practice
* is one of the most important tools someone on a spiritual path can use
- oldest forms of healing
- type of model simulation
- part of a process of discovery
- particularly important in organic and biological chemistry
- similar to analogy
- something people have been able to do forever
* is the common language for communication
- graphical display of numeric data
- icing on the cake
- key to understanding anatomy
- mental homework
- mother of creation
- practice of meditating on a positive journey to and outcome of an event
- principle that pushes goals into reality
- process and result of viewing data and numbers as a diagram or drawing
- simplest means of creating inner impressions
- visual representation of information
* is used a lot to calm nerves
- widely in all aspects of sport today
* key element in motivation.
* learned skill.
* literally means the formation of mental visual images.
* method of computing
- that is similar to imagery
* natural way to close a workout.
* offers a method for seeing the unseen.
* often starts with the task of accurately importing real-world data
- takes time to emerge and grow
* plays a key role in the aviation industry.
* provides a way to demonstrate an idea so that it becomes understandable, embraceable.
* puts the imagination to work to help achieve a desired outcome.
* raises a collection of issues around what it means to represent textual information.
* serious part of fighting the anxiety-reinforcement component of tinnitus.
* strategy that helps students link old and new knowledge.
* technique in which the athlete imagines performing various tasks
- that can be used before or after a workout
- used in many false religions and especially in witchcraft
- which can be used as a part of progressive relaxation or by itself
* use mathematical models to simulate reality.
* very important part of learning.
* weakness in the electronic structure field.
* works out of the grey area of human perception and cognition. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Visual tracking
* is formulated as a problem of combining control with computer vision
- impaired and the sense of time is typically prolonged
* requires fast responses to constantly changing visual inputs.<|endoftext|>Vanity
* Vanities Consider door knobs that have the best grip when selecting vanities.
* causes a desire to grooms.
* distorted sense of worth.
* human character trait.
* is an all natural product that has virtually no side effects
- excessive preoccupation with appearance
- one manifestation of fear
- part of the human being
- pride
* is the emptiness within that result of pride
- most important trait for a man to have
- sin of a cosmetic christian word of today
- vanity
- vast in children
- what others have
* means conceit, excessive pride in one's appearance
- thinking of oneself as being superior to others
* result of insecurity, as is conceit.
* works for most women, most of the time.
V p
* is the velocity and f is the potential.
* varies between different sediment types and rocks.
Volition
* are individual efforts to secure the end chosen.
* is both an effect and a cause
- choices
- faculty
- influenced by knowledge and action and action is based upon knowledge and volition
* is the ordering of some action by thought
- place where free stuff reigns supreme
Vestibule
* are parabronchial outpushings into which air-capillaries open
- small enclosed, areas located at a doorway that serve many purposes
* have their own poles for support.
Virtue
* are habits that are inclined at a particular end, which is determined by our nature
- ideals people hold as standards by which to pattern their lives
- means between extremes
- qualities of the soul
* are the fifth order of angels
- reflection of the divine in the soul
- vices and vices are virtues
* decreases due to lack of interest of people in the perfection of the church.
* grow in a soul in proportion to grace.
* is good
- morality
Vasomotor rhinitis
* can cause congestion and a runny nose, especially around mealtime.
* condition affecting the mucous membranes that line the nose.
* is common and can be treated with a decongestant nasal spray
- rather common and often co-exists with allergic rhinitis
- thought to occur because of abnormal regulation of nasal blood flow
Victimizer
* act in their own interests and depersonalize their victims.
* bad person
Victimisation
* is mistreatment
* separate act of discrimination.
Vomit
* comes in all colors.
* has hydrochloric acid.
* is acidic and can erode teeth
- expulsions
* is motivated by the goal of ills
- sickness
- organic matter
- reflexs
* liquids only, or bilious after eating.
Vulvae
* Most vulvae produce thick mucuses.
* Some vulvae cover vaginas.
Vestibular dysfunction
* can appear early in human life.
* feature of certain developmental disabilities.
Volcanos
* can trigger earthquakes by the movement of magma in the volcano
- wreak all kinds of havoc
* creates steam, lava, rocks and stones. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Vibrato
* classic example of repetitive motion.
* deadly sin.
* involves both frequency and amplitude modulation.
* is achieved by rotating the entire hand using the muscles of the forearm
- an simple undulation in the air pressure
- merely the manipulation of pitch
- one technique used to crenulate sound when playing a musical instrument or singing
* is the pulse or wave in a sustained tone
- quivering expressive sound of a note fluctuating in pitch
- used to make a melody sound more beautiful by making it more expressive
- yet another way the guitar imitates the human voice
* occurs naturally, and is the result of proper breath support and a relaxed vocal apparatus.
* is used to make a melody sound more beautiful by making it more expressive. Singers use vibrato, especially when singing dramatic solo music such as opera.
* Violinists and other players of string instruments produce vibrato by moving the finger backwards and forwards on the fingerboard. Vibrato has to be learned carefully, as the hand needs to be very relaxed. Many beginners who start to use vibrato will try to vibrate too fast and this makes an unpleasant sound. Vibrato can be produced on wind instruments by small changes of breath control.
* tremulous or pulsating musical tone.
Veracity
* derives from instinct, and marks superiority in organization.
* is also a related ethical risk
- one of the most important bases of human society
* is the heart of morality
- strict observance of truth in all our communications
- truth-telling
* models a file as a collection of file attributes.
* propriety source-code commercial software product.
* refers to truthtelling.
Vengeance
* causes a desire to kill.
* happens as a natural response to the vindictive nature of fallen man.
* is an act of restoring wholeness to the community
- from ekdikesis, that which is enacted out of justice
- retaliation
- revenge
* strong and natural emotion.
Varmint
* bad person
* have few enemies other than man.<|endoftext|>Vulnerability
* Vulnerabilities are defects in the infrastructure
- holes, weaknesses, and problems that exist in computer systems
- things like inappropriate ports open on a firewall
* can mean being open to the power of loving.
* comes in different shapes and sizes and presents many levels of risk.
* complex concept, which has physical, social, economic and political dimensions.
* foster parent's middle name.
* has a scent which attracts predators of all types.
* is also an opportunity for positive change
- always a risk because what gives life can also cause pain
* is an everyday situation for some people, but a rare occurrence for others
- issue of risk
- being open to damage
- danger
- defined here as the susceptibility of people or things to harm
- feared as a sign of weakness or as a danger to functioning
- measured as fluctuations in consumption associated with inefficient risk sharing
* is the essential condition to reclaim sexual power
- inability to compete on an equal basis for resources and opportunities
- lot of all mortal creatures
* misunderstood term.
* necessary ingredient of trust and intimacy.
* relative measure, everyone is vulnerable.
* strength and a gift.
Ventricular diastole
* begins with as the pressure drops and the aortic and pulmonary valves close.
* is the period of ventricular filling.
Vertebrae
* are bodies in space
- bones that make up the spinal column through which the spinal cord passes
* contain concentric pairs of opaque and translucent bands.
* take their names from the regions of the vertebral column that they occupy. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Verification
* direct use of the definition of truth to decide if the statement is true.
* dominant theme in scientific methodology.
* is affidavits
- one aspect of security
- proof
- software development
* is the comparison of a claimant fingerprint against an enrollee fingerprint
- information as to whether the answer is correct or incorrect
* is the process of confirming that an implemented model works as intended
- proving that the system performance is within specification
- that assures that the product is bug-free
- test of correctness and validation is the test of rightness
- use of goal-factored production rules as a means of selection
* mathematical analysis showing that the behavior follows from the structure.
* refers to the print or electronic source from which the citation was taken.
* way of confirming the identity and evaluating the condition of an item.
Vexation
* are all the delusory mind-states that proceed from attachment to the idea of self.
* is anger
* subjective sensation of an irritating heat in the center of the chest.<|endoftext|>Validity
* concerns the design of lexical classifiers and the interpretation of results
- extent to which data measures what it is intended to measure
* credibility of the instrument to measure the phenomena.
* describes the extent to which an instrument accurately measures the phenomena of interest.
* is believability
- legality
- situations
* measure of how well the measure measures what it sets out to measure.
* refers to how well the technique measures what it claims to measure.
* refers to the accuracy with which an assessment measures what it is intended to measure
- appropriateness of the interpretaton of results
* refers to the degree to which a measure or scale truly reflects the phenomenon under study
- an assessment or test measures what it claims to measure
- extent the research has measured what it was intended to measure
* refers to the extent to which a test measures what it is intended to measure
- the study measured what it was supposed to
* refers to whether a test actually measures what it purports to measure
* relation between the premises and conclusion.<|endoftext|>Vocation
* Some vocation lasts for lifetimes.
* are a supply -side phenomenon
- way of being and a particular mode of doing in service to others
- plentiful in Korea
- the result of prayer twice over
* comes from the Latin word for call or calling
- vocare , to call
* goes beyond the idea of career, what one does, to the whole of a person, who one is.
* includes the single life, married life, religious life, and priesthood.
* is expressed in relationships, community involvement, and leisure as well as daily work
- from the Latin vocare , a call
- jobs
- labour
- mystery, in that it unfolds during the course of a lifetime
- occupations
* offer spirituality, community and the ability to make a difference in people's lives.
* person's regular business or calling.
* reality about which the secular world goes blank.
* touches the very roots of the human soul.
Victimization
* Any victimization combination of reported violent and property victimization.
* is about murder and death, domination and helplessness
- abuse
- adversity
- hardship
- never just child's play
- one of the strongest predictors of relapse for women
* results in loss of control of self, and one's place in society.
* tends to cause a loss or distortion of identity and personal boundaries.
Vasogenic edema
* Occurs when the blood brain barrier is disrupted.
* can displace the brain hemisphere and, when severe, lead to cerebral herniation.
* is more important clinically than cytotoxic edema.
Wordiness
* is verbosity
* result of idea generation.
Write
* are motivated by the goal of communicates
- writes
* start with thinking. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Wan
* Some WANs use satellites that orbit above the earth to pass information from one country to another.
* are the building blocks of e-commerce.
* can allow geographically dispersed computers to communicate with each and to share data.
* use phone lines or dedicated communication lines.
+ Wide Area Network: Computer networking :: Internet
* WANs are used to connect LANs and other types of networks together, so that users and computers in one location can communicate with users and computers in other locations. Many WANs are built for one particular organization and are private. Others, built by Internet service providers, provide connections from an organization's LAN to the Internet. WANs are often built using leased lines. At each end of the leased line, a router connects to the LAN on one side and a hub within the WAN on the other. Leased lines can be very expensive. Instead of using leased lines, WANs can also be built using less costly circuit switching or packet switching methods.
Woodie
* Most woodies are either trees, shrubs or vines.
* are swift flyers and rapidly zip around trees and other objects as they fly through timber.
Wonder
* are extraordinary events that differ from everyday happenings.
* is amazement
- astonishment
* is the feeling of a philosopher, and philosophy begins in wonder
- sense of amazement and the pondering and recognition of the beauty of something
* website dedicated to helping all users on the internet with their computer.
Wrecker
* bad person
* pull cars out of the snowdrifts all winter.
Wrestle
* broken bones.
* physical contact.
* property damage.
* are motivated by the goal of grizzly bears
- power
- struggles
* end with grunts.
Wasps
* also help with pollination when they feed on flower nectar.
* can also damage fruit when they create holes by eating the flesh
- become very defensive when their nest is disturbed
- cause very painful stings that stay swollen for a long time and itch badly
* have substantially fewer such natural enemies.<|endoftext|>Whirlpool
* Many whirlpools follow the contours of the body.
* also appear in the rock paintings found in other states.
* are appropriate for treating a person with venous insufficiency.
* come in comparable sizes
- various shapes and sizes, but all work on the same principles
* drag things to the surface.
* help heal granulating ulcers
- keep the back limber, and yes, swimming provides good exercise without back stress
* is bodies of water
- current
- mechanical devices
* provide the effects of gentle massage and superficial heat.
Wrath
* is fury
- mortal sin
- rage
- violent anger
* punishing anger, greasing the skids for lots of smiting and the laying waste of cities.
Whitewash
* bit of paint mixed with a gallon of water.
* cheap, watered down kind of paint.
* is defeats
- used to mark the foul lines
- wash
- watered down paint
* paint-like fluid used as a cheap protective layer on exterior structures.
Wild life
* includes kudu, mountain zebra and ostrich.
* is always abundant around headquarters during the winter months
- in abundance including nesting jaco parrots
W e
* are women of prayer, supported by faith communities.
* believe in fostering behaviors which promote physical health and personal well being
- the immortality of our souls and the resurrection of our bodies
Willpower
* can be extremely useful in certain parts of people's lives.
* encompasses a character's force of personality.
* is developed by making positive behavioral changes
- resolution
- what allows people to survive without food for weeks
* refers to one side of the conflict of motive, usually the socially approved side.
Weighting
* accounts for variation in human sensitivity to vibration of different frequencies.
* is based on household size followed by poststratification weights
- used to combine micro-indexes | {
"source": "generics_kb"
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Winery
* Many wineries produce fruit wines from apples, peaches and even blueberries.
* Most wineries grow some or all of their own grapes.
* Some wineries also bottle natural olive oil of high quality
- produce a combination of vegetarian and nonvegetarian wines
* Wineries are a fast-growing part of Missouri's agricultural economy
- establishments
- factories
- places
- plants
- hang their hoses with both ends down so any water can drain completely
- have brand names because they want to build name recognition
- often use proprietary alkaline cleaners based on sal soda and tri-sodium phosphate
Whipping
* Some whipping does occur in initiation into certain rites.
* are beating
- hitting<|endoftext|>Washing
* can also remove surface material
- remove most of the dirt and byproducts of past degradation
* does, however, help remove excess surface oils and dead skin cells.
* greatly lessens the chance of infection.
* helps remove the dust on plants that are small enough to be moved to a sink or tub
- to relax the fabric and removes excess fabric sizing
* is also the real test of durability
- an essential part of good hygiene and health
- cleaning
- done in the sea
- for women and children
- in natural water sources only
- laundries.
* ' is one way of cleaning, with water and often some kind of soap or detergent. Washing is an essential part of good hygiene and health
* is the first step in preparing vegetables for freezing
- greatest wear factor in all clothing
- opiate of the masses
- single most important means of preventing the spread of infection
- work
* promotes health and well-being, washing prolongs life.
* reduces the bacterial load as does soaking in citric acid.
* removes crypto from the surface, and cooking kills crypto
- dirt, chemicals and some bacteria
- fine grains of sand, clay and dirt from the rock
- the protective outer layer that helps preserve flavor and nutrients
- unbound antibody from around the cells
* stimulates the cow's udder and the cow produces a hormone called oxytocin.
* tends to dry out the skin and make eczema worse.
* used wine bottles is another way to reduce home winemaking costs.
Witloof chicory
* is usually room cooled after packing.
* member of the lettuce family.
Wickedness
* All wickedness is ultimately because people hate each other or are jealous or suspicious or afraid.
* is active evil , mischief
- against the natural order of things
- transgression
Walking
* are aerobic activities
- exercises
- movement
* are used for children
- exercising
- fun
- pleasure
- relaxation
- transportation
* cause blisters
- bunions
- energy usage
- injuries
- movings<|endoftext|>Zebras
* All Zebras have different stripes.
* also have a good sense of smell, good eyesight, and excellent hearing
- like to eat the strong and tough grasses
- occur in a crested variety
* can find a specific zebra with their stripes
- recognize other zebras by the pattern of stripes on their bodies
- run very fast and with endurance
* gallop, brown bears romp, river otters cavort, elephants stomp, and orangutans swing.
* mainly eat grass , but they also eat fruit , leaves and some vegetables.
* often intermingle with other animals.
* predominantly feed on grass, twigs, herbs, barks, buds, leaves, and shrubs.
* sometimes have special grooming friends in the herd.
* typically feed in a zigzag manner.
* usually travel in herds
- large groups, in which they stay very close to one another
+ Zebra, Life: Equids
* Zebras live in families with one male and lots of females. Zebras mainly eat grass, but they also eat fruit, leaves and some vegetables. They always live near water. They are endangered, and the numbers of zebra is dropping. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Zip
* are files that hold other files.
* compresses the contents of a file so that the disk space required to store it is much smaller.
* compression and archiving format that makes downloading files faster and easier.
* drives, on the other hand, are hardware storage devices.
* files A zip file compressed set of files or single file, with a.zip extension.
* lock bags Use for storing coupons, crayons, q-tips, makeup and cotton balls for travel
- sandwich bags and oven bags are useful for small loose items
- storage bags are good for keeping parts together and sterile<|endoftext|>Zone
* All zones have predators that hunt their prey in all zones.
* Most zones have sunlight.
* allow for interaction.
* are a subset of the wellness continuum
- invisible lines of energy that run longitudinally along the body
- metabolic, calorie burning zones
- of various colors, usually with shades of brown, blue, gray, orange, and green
- regions
- states
- structures
* are the only places where buildings can develop
- set of endpoints over which one and only one gatekeeper has jurisdiction
* attract ants.
* contain air
- carnivores
- water
* correspond to territory.
* have boundaries
- communities
- height
- irregular boundaries
- life
- rainfall
* provide habitats.
* suffer from pollution.
* surround expanses.
* vary in width.
+ SimCity DS, Gameplay, Zoning: SimCity :: Real-time strategy video games
* Zones are the places where buildings can develop. However, land value has a greater effect.
+ SimCity, Gameplay: 1989 video games
* Smaller areas are marked out. These are made either residential, commercial, or industrial zones. Zones are the only places where buildings can develop. Every city needs the right amount of each zone otherwise the city will not grow. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Subsets and Splits